HomeMy WebLinkAbout1980-06-11 - Orange Coast Pilot' I
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Hooker Says Liz Taylor, Poet
.Judge Traded Trade Slaps . '
Favor for Sex At Soeial Gala
.,. .............
81.:APP!D Mct(UEN
UzTaytor
.
Cocaine
Pushers
H11nted
Orange County Sheriffs in·
veaUgators said today they are
seeking warrants against addi·
tional persons sought in connec-
tion with an alleged cocaine
s muggling operation that was
broken up Monday night in San-
ta Ana.
Five persons, including two
men from the Laguna Beach
area, were arrested by un-
dercover sheriff's invesligators
and agents of the rederaJ Drug
Enformcent Administration,
who claim they seized three and
one-half kilograms of nearly
pure cocaine during a meeting
w.ith the alleged dealers at a
motel.
Those arrested were Daniel
Arlen Wisner. 35, 917 Balboa
Ave .. Laguna Beach; Thomas
James Taylor. 28, 22362 tst
Street, Soutb Laguna; Robert
Ray Pion. also known as Robert
Ray Pyne, 38, Lancaster: Gary
Marlin Henson, 29. Kauai ,
Hawaii, and Patrick Dugan, 36,
also of Kauai
Sheriff's Lt. Wyatt Hart said
that two or three persons still
are sought ln the investigation of
what he described as a major
Orange County-based cocaine
sales operation. The drug actlvi·
ty wu primarily centered in
La1una Beach and Colta Heu.
Hart said.
The seized cocaine in its uncut
form was valued at 1700,000,
Hart said. U sold in Its cut form
on the street the drug would be
worth about S875,000, be added.
Investigators also seized about
1,000 tablets of the hypnotic
Quualude and about three
pounds of blgb crade Hawaiian
marijuada, Hart said.
Confidential law enforcement
sources-said today that both
Taylor and Henion were
believed to be involved in drug
sales activtt.les 1n the Oraqe
Coutaru.
Each of tbe five persons ar·
re1ted wu booked lnto Oranee
County Jail on 1usplclon ot aales
of a controlled subetancJ. Bail
was set at '10,0oo eacb.
(let ()OCAIN£, r.,e AJ)
Meaeure Killed
SACRAMENTO <AP> -A
Senate com•lttH TuHd11
.klllecl a bill that ~d laav• lfWlt lt.ee belp to VWiaam War vettT .. riposed to the Caneer·
caustnc .\lent Oran,. dilOliant
after 1enal.ors heard testimony
t.bat the American r ovemment
could be liable for Injuries to
Vletnamr f H well
•• raft -----.1gn ups
e .ate alts
Bkgcle Built For ••••
John Cunningham (on two-wheeler) and earlier this week along Newport Beach's
Troy McKee (bringing up rear> drew Ocean Front Avenue near 34th Street.
some double takes as they went for a spin
Sex for Told
Witnesses Sa y Judge 'Traded for Leniency'
Cuyabop County ts pretldinl ln
the non·Jury trial.
Ma. Wl1Uam1 was the lotb
prosecutloll witDeN to testify.
"I felt J h.S to ao back Md re-
Senate
Snarled
On Vote
WASlDNGTON CAP) After
m~ting through the night, ~
Senate was snarled today in
round-the-clock parliamentary
wrangling that blocked a vote on
renewing peacetime draft
registration.
Every major test vote pointed
toward eventual approval of a
House-passed program requir·
mg an estimated 4 million young
men to ~gisterthis s ummer.
Bu\ opponents fought efforts lo
bring it to a resolution. and
when the 24·hour mark of
marathon filibuster passed at 10
a.m • there was no indication
when a final vote would come.
In theory, the Senate could
stay in Session around the clock
until 3:23 p m. Saturday -100
hours since debate limiting
cloture was invoked -before a
vote could be forced on the is-
sue.
The registration plan calls for
spending $13.3 million to register
19-and 2X>-year-0ld men at local
post offices, probably in mid·
July. Two weeks would be set
aside for registration -one for cs. oun. Page AZ>
Discredit Charged
MOSCOW (AP) -Vietnam
has Issued a document charging
tbe United States with trying to
discredit that country's attempts
to "reeolve the quesUon of tbe
Americans reported mlasinl in
Vietnam." tbe Soviet news a,en-
cy Tass reported.
Co ast
•
M • W!fnHIM. Jn I!. 1119
Fo Defeets Told ·
Probe Slaoim TmnarniaiOn Slippage
Patrio ts Teed
Duffers Aim at Ayatollah
LANESBOROUGH. llus. CAP> -Dick V..Ue's quandary
was how to I.bow the world bis invention for drtvin1 ra.a,e
t-.rget.s. He needed someth.log readily identifiable, somethlnt
the public would want to hJt.
Vinette settled OQ tbe Ayatollah Ru.bollab Khomeini.
Now Baker'& Driving Range ln this small western
Massachusetts community is dolne ,a rouam, business u duf·
fers try to hit a four-by-four portrait ol Khomeini on a tartet IS>
feet from the tees.
When the target Ja struck, a hom IOWld.s, an American na1.
unfurls. blocking out the ayatollah's picture, and the &oil ball
goes soaring in the air.
TM NJt'f'iW .....,,_, ,...aftle
s.19'1 M•"nllV'.._. aa arm ot lM ,..._part.UC. Depart· m•t. tGW the ~ f• Amo
satet1 llM ma.eh it bell .....
had been kllled In acetdenta
cauaed bf_ Ford tranamiuion
1Upp.... Nlfl'SA baa been lo·
•••tlptlna the tra111ml11loOI ..... ,..,...
TIM center asked for a fedl:ral
eourt Gl'der Jut month to ~
NHTSA to make the~ ol
a.n "lnttiaJ determination" ol a
def ed. In the suit. the ftlllld
clalmed NHTSA found that hrd
transmissions were 1J to 14
Umes more likely to Jump from
park to reverse than
lraosmiuklm of other maau!ac·
turers.
Ford has said 22.8 millioe
transmissions were under in·
v•tJption. In a letter Hill to
Ford officials Tae&day, the
federal government sakt the de-
feeu appeared in cva from 199
to 1979.
"We would· pmer to ~Polld
to an official statement lrom
N HTSA," Ford spokesman
Cbuck GUDluahian aaid wbeo
aalred fcw eommeot today.
Transpartal.ion department of.
ficlals declined lo discuss the
matter.
\
"There has been a lot ol reaction from the public. We've
bad peopl~ get fruttrated and start throwing the balls at the
target," says Vinette, wbo ruoa a plumbing and beatint busi·
neas in additioe to flta tlnkerin&a u an inventor. ·~ '---------------------"'
. In the past, Ford and NHTSA
maintained they were unable to
say what should be fixed or
replaced ln the transmission&.
Ford has said the accidents
were the result ol drl vers not
firmly placing the shift lever in Intruders
Beat Pastor
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The
pastor ol Our Lady of Guadalupe
church In San Jl'ranciseo lost two
front teeth. bad b1s nose and a
few ribs broken. but lntraders
dido 't touch the coot.enta ot tbe
church safe or Father Elwood
Geary's wallet.
Father Geary said Tuesday
that two young men approached
him Monday night out.side his
c hurch located alop the
Broadway tunnel and ordered
him to break into a basement
window or the rectory.
But they apparenUy believed
the priest when he told the at·
tackers he didn't know the com·
binat1on to the safe. Father
Gear y said the elder of the pair
whipped him with a pistol and
then clubbed him several times
in the stomach and back with
the buU of a gun.
Fro• Pa~AI
COCAINE ..•
Hart sa id th e arrests
culminated a three-month ln-
vest1gat1on into cocaine lraffidt·
ing in the county.
"There has been a dramatic
increase in air and marine
smuggling, into Orange County,"
Hart said.
The cocaine, he added. is
believed to have been smuggled
fnto Hawaii for ultimate dis·
lribution in Orange County from
South America. The cocaine, Hart aald, was
about 90 percent pure.
He said it is believed that the
drug arrived in Orange County
via John Wayne Airport.
Pool Noise
Drowned Out
Next time Irvine police get a
report of a loud wingdi ng shal·
teriog the midnight calm on
Teacben Avenue, they may di.a·
patch officen oo tiptoe 10 u DGt
' to add to the din. ·
Reaponding to a report ol a
loud pool party tn the 17000 block
of that atreet about mid.night
Tuesday, police said they found
a lone parapl~gic aoaking bia
sore llmbl in his Jacu.al.
The suspect waa told to keep lt
down to a low' bubblin1 euraJe.
DAILY PILOT
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Fro• Pap ,ti
DRAFT ••.
persons born in 1960 and one fOC'
persons born in 1981.
Failure to register is a felony
that carries a maximum penalty
of five yea.rs lD prison and a
$10,000 ftne.
A court cballenle of the ~ gram seems virtually assured
following a 51--40 voce late Tues·
day blocking women from reg·
isteriog along with men. The
American Civil Uberties Union
has vowed to file suit lo test the
constitutionality ol any registra·
lion system that excludes
women.
Registration opponents led
by Seo. Mart Hatfield. R-Ore ..
forced repeated roll call votes to
stall final action . Hatfield
sometimes voted against his
proposals, merely to give
himsell the parliamentary right
to request that tbe wbole vote be
-reconsidend.
Through the nlgbt, as some
senatons napped in their offices
and otben alept at home,
Republicans held control 9' the
Senate floor and kept debate go-
ing.
As dawn broke over the
Capitol. GOP leader Howard
Baker, R-Tenn., told the almost·
empty chamber that the United
Stat.es is "slipping steadily" in
terms cl manpower and equip.
ment compared with the Soviet
Union. He said a bl& increase in
def enH speodlnl wm be re·
quired.
Baker and teftf'al otben who
aupport the plan helped reg-
istration foes prolon1 debate,
aaytne the mln9'11Y bad a rtabt
to carry on itl ftlbt u Iona u
Senate rules permit.
The Senate voted Tuesday lo
impoee debate-llmiUnl cloture
and CUJtail the discuuion -now
six d.,a old -to an additiooal
100 hours.
••J know ol no other iasue the
Senate will take up that wUJ be
of more tmportaMe," Hatfteld
sai~ in \IOWtnl to try to keep the
Senate wortdq OD rect-tration
the full 100 hours.·
Senate Democratic ~ader
Robert C. Byrd accused Hatfteld
of waging a "post.cloture
filibuster" and urged the Senate
to mcwe onto other business. He
said be would keep the Senate in
session around the clock until a
final vote wu taken or a~
meot was reached on a specific
t1me to scbedale a ftnaJ vot.e. The laat UJQe the Senate met
all night on ftllbuster was Sept.
27. urn, oo a ctebate over de-
regui.tMm ol n$ral cu prtce1.
Fro•P~,lf
SEX •••
ben and OPee lo u Akron boteL
Vt. Pryor told Special
Proncutor Orval Koover tbat
Barbuto pve her lUil Ian 8Dd
babJ•ittinl moM1 ..
''It wu '20 or '10 oc whatever
I would uk him f«," tbe Mid.
Allo teetUftal Tudday WU Eleanor Brtdcel, 17, a eoety
eourtbome clerk wbo akl IM
waa -~ a ~ raAM ud air eoodldoeer f«. ber office wbUe
tM W• bavinl a IUUal rela· Uoublp wltb Barbuto frolll im to mt.
llllren R~
YOB&lllT& <AP> -Ne~ bellcopten and ,.rer ,...,...
NICMd tw = e111n-. lia ........ ~ .........
aaa were llOwa te Va!!I ...... ~ .. ,.,.. ........
park. ·
lo December, Ford recalled
80,000 light trucks from the 1980
model year to rix defective
welds lt said could cause the
transmission to slip from part to
reverse. Ford said the truck re-
call had "absolutely nothing" to
do with the vehicles in the
NIJTSA investigation.
The next step ta a beartnc to
determine lf a formal recall or-
der sOOVJd be issued. A re<:all
would cost the nation's No. 2
auto maker several hundred
million dollars. The formal letter apparently
was not supposed to be mailed to
Ford unt.11 Monday to give of.
ficials Ume to review the gov.
emment's findings. But tb.rougb
a mix-up, a source told 'J1)e
Times, the letter was sent Tues·
day instead.
The lar5'esl car recall was in
1971 for 6 .7 million General
Motors Corp. cars to replace
eo1lne mounts.
The tnnamission cue bas at·
traded almost as mucb publicl·
ty u the controversy involving
t.be Pildo, tbe popular aubcom·
pact ol the 1.t'10s whole fuel tank
WU said to be ausceptlble lo
puncture and fire when the car
w u st.ruclt from the rear. About
1.3 millloo were recalled.
On Tuesday, NHTSA Hid it
had launched an invesUgaUoo ol
General Motors' 1979 station
wagons because of reportl ol de--
f ecUve defoggers causiDJ ahat·
tering ol rear windows. It ureed
GM to recall and correct about
87 ,000 Chevrolet. Pontiac,
Old.lmobUe and Buick wapm.
f'ro•Pap .lf
SLAPS •••
ment on the columallt'a ac·
count M la Tayklr bad llltef'nlllted
abootinC ~ a ftlm iA E'n.lland to
attend the pla. and to die au--
dience. &be and llcKaen ap-
peared to be oa aood term.a. M
ooe polnt. in fact. she save \be
poet a ldu OD the Ups. Trouble aroae. however. when.
wlth the hour growing late,
ainger Johnny Cash took up a
half hour instead of
hla allotted· 10 minutes, Martin
said. McKuen was nm on tbe ~
aram. 1ay1 Martin. but Miu
Taylor announced: "I'm aoiDI
to read my poem now-or not at
all."
The columnist said R.eynold.s
then aet Illa Taylor off b)' n-
muting, ''Good, sM'I not.-..,
to do It."
But inatead of att1ctin1
Reynolds, lbe stnaet Mdluen
with her open band and be
slapped her back, t.be columnist
said.
Illness Hit
In Deaths
DUNELLEN, N.J. <AP)
J aequel~na Ac kermaa 'a
diabela, wtdda ~ tbe am·
ptatadoD ol fCRll' ol Mt toel. ..
puently 10 d~1Hd bu busband diet be lier wttb a
kalfe aad llammer aDCI U..
klu.d ... ..,...,. $ ...... ..,. Palke Aid t.bal tbe
1>041 of l '7·1Hr-ol Cbarl•
Atkanlum wu tomd • .....,.,
rallrMd ~ 11._.., ..._. • t.rllla ,... o.t. Polee Said be .........., .............
.O.JuMliwUll•llMiillaJ• UM ttaea to M ktlW .
• ... IE I ODlllb' Pi"~Dlllt•1 .. nC•11t1111 .............. iaW AebrlUI
.,.. dilU•ld by Jm .U.'1 W· ....
• i
o.llt' ...... S.-"--rrs HARD TO TELL ne STARS FROM THE ... LA8H ON LOCATION IN LAGUNA
B•adt 8eeow Trenure f.a.nd Tr.._ Pattl lft Souttt Leguna Becomes Movie Set
TidepOols Auditioned
'ThieF Caught Rolling in Laguna Surf
By STEVE llJTCRELL
Of ...... ""' ..... Actor James Caan atood
barecbested on the beach witb
ht. arms crossed, peertoc out ot
a pair ol sunglasses as director
llicbael Mann sprinted from
rock to rodr 1oottn1 for • place lo &boot.
Actresa Tuesday Weld, wear-
ing a white sun dreu, played m
a Udepool witb ber 10QD1 son,
Patric\, occulooally &lancing
over u Ila.ma contlaued bis .earch f« the nest ahot.
About 7S cut and crew mem·
hers stood around tbe rock.a
below Treasure Island Trailer
Park in South Laguna, sunnina
themselves or grumbling over
Mann's painstakln& Han:h of the tldepOols.
"By the time he finds what he
wants. it's going to be dark."
grouaed one crewmem ber as he
lit a cigarette.
"We won't be back in LA unW 9."
The mm crew arrived in the
usually quiet South Laiuoa
trailer com.muruty early Tues·
Laws•it Flied
day mornmg, but couldn't begin abootln& until about noon when
the sun broke through the low
ckMads.
. About a dozen Treasure Island
residents stood at.op the bluffs
overloc*ine tbe ftlm ccew and
wrekbed as cameramen f11med
one s.eg:ment of .. Thief," a Unit-
ed Artist.a production that is ex·
peded to ~ lD the the.a.en nestllQ. .
Ad« nm Bel-.bl. the bratMr of .. An.lmal Houae'a" John
WabL w• in the 11Urltine with
a JOUDC aetraa named Patty ....
Al cameras rolled. tbe eouple rolled Oft.r and o•er la the
water. eatU 41reccor •a.nn .... ._"Cit. ..
"Ola. tt·s going to be one ot
THOSE ldnda ot moYies, '' C19e
Treature hlaad resident
clucked.
Aft.er the shot. the cameras
were taken down. arid Mann
began bis 45-nunute search for
the next scene on the rocks JUSt
south o( the old pier at Treasure
ls land
Caan appears w the fllm as a
P yramid Scheme
Hearing Slated
Orange Coonty Superior Court
Judie OreUa Se.an has aet a
June 24 bearinC on a lawsuit
whicb seeks to bar further police
and court actioa qalnat penons
involved lD pyramid scbemea.
Attorne)' l uoo Landesl, in a
clus action suit filed on behalf
of two persona taken Into
cuatody t. their invohemeot in
the 1et-rlch-qutclt acbemes,
uked Judie Sean Tuada1 foe
a temporary restralnlD& order.
She dmled tbat request but set
the bnnq lD JudCe l:dward
Wallln'a court to ove 'both Lan·
deu and a repraentaUve ol the
District Attorney's Office a
chance to arpe tbe cue.
The lawsuit claiJm invuicla ol privacy. baruament and ln·
friogement oo fr. apeecb and
free uaembly by law enforce-
ment qendes aeetinl to eod
pyramid parties.
The two clients represented by
Landess are Patricia Mer·
riweatber o( Mission V1eJo and
Richard Crispano ol Anaheim.
Landess said the main thrust
of bis case is that t.be laws pro-
hibiting endless chains are un·
coostihdioaaUy vague.
He said be is tryin.C to prevent
the District Attorney'a Office
from filing complaints against
those al.ready arrested or cited
by police for their involvement
in pyramid parties.
Landess said be would seek an
injunctioo at the June 24 heari.na
against enforcement of the laws
prollibiting pyramid schemes.
Crispino was acrested ln April
ln Garden Grove at a pyramid
party wbi.le Miss Merriweather
was taken into custody in
M ission V>eJO where she was at-
tendine a pyramid meeting.
thief recently r eleased from
pri&on and Tuesd ay Weld
portrays the thtef's love interest.
The rotund Belushi is Caan's
electronics man for exotic break-ins and million dollar
capers.
Whtie most of the film ts being
shot in Chicago, the segment in
South Laguna takes place in
California as the thief tat.ea a
break from hil hecUc crime
acbectul4!. And Tuesday It appeared
everyone but llano was takinl a
break from fllmine.
''Ob. Gea, now a bun& ol
nn-.tbers are atartlng to ail
o.er oe tbat beach," one crew member aaya, pointln& to a
small bay just north ol the roeb
where Mann la still gulag
throueh bla lena. "They don't let the public
down here. do they?" one film
official asked. "That's all we
need Is a lot of people standing
around the set."
But by late afternoon, even the
dozen or ~o elderly Treasure
Island residents appeared ready
to walk back to their mobile
homes for dinner. ''They c~ to do anytb.t.ng else out here?
one older gentleman asked as a
property man rushed by. "Who
knows?" the crewman said.
• 'Th11 was suppo&ed to take ~
a day.''
1930s Menu
Draws 3,000
WHmNG, Ind. <AP> -
For four brief hours, the
1930s came alive again
and a crowd ol aome 3,000
waited hours ln a dri.ule
to eat seafood at prices
most folb would expect to pay tor l>a.lt.
To mark the 70tb an-
njversary of Phil Smidt &
Son restaurant. mana1er
Michael Probst dug up the
oldest menu he could find
and offered the rare at tJte
same prices; Froe legs,
usually $10.95, went for
$1.50; lake perch, normal-
ly $10, was $1.25.
'• l like to do tblnga
special," said Probst. "I
thoueht it would be a areal
way to thank people."
FATHERS IAYSAYINIS
10% OFF ALL KNR SHIRD
OFFSHOrE
-..
I ,....
HOBIE
TEMNIS
SPECIAL
FREE
STRINGS -
tp
p
7
beaan PGrinl ovtt' UM propoeed
1-.al budaet. ...
Admlalllraton atao pointed
out Uuat frill&• benefit peymenta
wlll coat an add1Uonal SJ lllillion
MU filcal year. aaOltly bitcauae
of an increase in health in-
•ur1nce premiums.
Teachers were franted an 8
percent raise aat mooth
retroactive for the ftscaJ year
.~ ..........
LATE ACTOR HIOHL Y HONORED BUT GRAVE UNMARKED
~nn.'venary ot John Wayne'• Death ObMrved
Q11iet Tribute
Duke's Horwn Continue
BJ STEVE KARBLE
Oftlleo.lly ...... Sleff
The Yiew of the ocean was ~ured by early fos and
the hillside cemetery WU clesert4!d today in Newport
Be.cb.·
One arrangement of nowers tucked in a basket next to
the fiagpole was the only indication' that today marks the
first anniversary of John Wayne's death.
The nowers, a park caretaker noted, were probably
left by a friend or a fan of the movie great.
· Btrr THE DAY· is expected to be little different from
others at Pacific View Memorial Park. where Wayne lies
in an Wtmarked grave somewhere in the rolling hllls.
"We've received a few calls but nothing is planned," a
cemetery spokesperson said ... We haven't heard from the
f amUy )n a long lime."
NEWPORT CITY LEADERS, who ordered nags nown
at half staff last year when the movie star died at age 72.
said nothing special is planned to mark the anniversary.
The John Wayne Tennis Club has no fanfare planned
either. But the town and the nation bas far from forgotten the
silver screen cowboy.
One year after his death, the movie hero has been
awarded the nation's highest civilian honor, has an airport
in Orange County named after him and soon will be the
subject ol a television film biography.
Boob have also been written about .. The Duke" and a
Cold medal inscribed "John Wayne. America" was or·
dered struck by the Congress this year.
CEMETERY OFFICIALS SAID many fans and
curiosity-seekers poured into the park la.st summer looking
for their hero's grave. They were disappointed when told
the location of the grave site is a secret . Only family members and a few park officials know
ex1cUy where Wayne is buried. .
"It just seems better that way," remarked one
cemetery spokeswoman. "You never know what could
happen. People do strange things."
.. She aaid people who show up at the park with flowers
or other tokens of remembrance fOf' Wayne are direetecJ to
the flagpole and asked to leave them there.
•-THE FAlllLY HAS been seen here several times but
they 1cDow where to go and never stop by the offlce or
brilli lt to anyone's attention that they're even here."
Wayne's funeral was kept in that same low·key tradi·
Uon. It was a private 6 a.m. service. Only family members
attended. .
W,.yne'a friend and business associate Keo Wlllli said,
"ftat'a the way Duke wanted it. He wanted a livina
memorial only. His tradition."
llS IVGGEST THAT other friends of the movie star in
"ewport Beach probably were Tememberin1 Wayne ln "a petwa,."
•'We loc*ed UuW1h tbe old newspaper clipp&np lut idlllt _.,,. Ml4 'Thank God for John Wayne.' He wu a It•~ lnlluence ln tbll couM1y and '8wre are no other ~ fllJ horilon that I aee with bia tiDd at at.ability and
,'~··· '
and an to reeetve an add.lt.ioDal
I ptreml neat year. N•· .. •dli•• employees aJao received I perffal retroactively
tbla year. Acbnini1tra10n bave
written an utldpeted I percent
more in salaries for those
employees into next year's
budlet, but saJary necotlatloas are ust settiDI under way.
T e proposed bud1et under
llaiSe Salarie s
study projects total expe. oditures
of about $48.2_mUliOD_»ext fiscal year, -dOWD about ll00,000 from
lut 1ear'1 budleted M7 ml.Won.
Revenue losses next year re-
sult from decUninc student
enrollmmt, used u the buia for
allocat1na state fundi to local
dlatricts, and a reapportionment
system 6rdered by the courts to
level out money coing to both
rich and POOr d.lstrtcta.
Newport-Mesa pre. viously was
considered one of the "richest''
school district.a ln the state.
' Trustee&. led by board Presi·
dent Kenneth Wayman, have or-
dered district administrators to
cut back this year and are now
reviewing the results of those
cutUng acdons.
So far. the board has taken on-
ly one major cut in addition to
laying off 98 teachers and 70
other employees.
A recent decision to charge for
s tudent busing to and from
school is expected to cut dastrict
spending in that categor y in
half.
ort Growth Plan
·'
Revealed by Advisers
55 Daily
Flig hts
By 2000?
By DEWRES BROOKS IRWIN Of Ult o.ity ~ St.eft
Expansion at John Wayne
Airport should be geared to ac-
commodate a maximum of 6.1
million passengers on 65
average daily commercial jet
flights by the year 2000, airport
consultants have recommended.
Stephen Allison. of VTN
Consolidated Inc .• told the coun-
ty Airport Commission Tuesday
night the recommended figures
were based on consultants' goal ot redud.nl atrpon not.e b)' 7 .a
decibels over the 1ame time period.
The expansion strat.en out·
lined in the recocnmatdation is meant to nearly trlple t.lie
number of pua..-~
ualn1 the air'port llild alpdfic.bt-
Jy lncttaM tM ,,......, '11 daib'
rugbts ~ 1lmU1taneoua1y re-
ducing noiae, Allison saJd.
The Irvine firm la preparing a
master plan to 1ulde 1rowth of the county airport through the
year 2000. Fln1l decisions on aU
aspects of the master plan wru
be made by the Orange County
Board ol Supervisors. .
Under the consultants' pro·
posal. air carriers would be
forced to implement certain
noise reduction polic~es. such as
buying new. quieter jets, before
nights could be lncreased. . -
The VTN recommendations
map out a 10-year schedule for
meeting the 7.5 decibel noise re·
duction goal, if noise programs
begin in 1982. B
The recommendation package
suggests that supervisors fend
end off daily flilbt increases un-
til 1988. when, under VTN's pro.
Posed noise reduction program.
noise will have been cut by five
decibel!.
Presently 2 .3 million
passengers use John Wayne
Airport. Average daily flilbts by
commercial Jeta are limited by
supervisors' ocder to 40 per day.
In addition, 237 acres or land
in Newport Beach, Co.ta Mesa
and Santa Ana Hei1ht1 are con-
sidered "lncompatlble'' with the
nearby airport.
The Vl'N plan would sbrink
that lncomp1Uble area to 30
acret, which means none ol the
Newport Beacb and ea.ta llee1
land would remain within the 65
community noise equivalent
level.
The 65 CNEL rattna. roucblY
equJvaJent. to a decibel noiae
meaaurement la coaaldered too
high foe commercial, resldent.lal
and industrial \&lei.
Alllaon told airport com-
mluionen and an audience ol about • penou jhat th_, n)COID· mendatlOGI were greumtnary
and may ebaftle u a relQlt OI (8"~,Pa••AJ) ....
Bktft!le B tdl t Fer ••••
John Cunningham <on two-wheeler> and
Troy McKee (bringing up rear> drew
some double talces as they went for a spin
earlier this week along Newport Beach's
Ocean Front A venue near 34th Street.
. ;
Lawsuit Aims . .
To Pro hibit
Pyramid Bust
Orange County Superior Court
J ud1e OretU Sean bas set a
June 24 hearing on a lawsuit
which seeita to bar further police
and court action against perioos
involved in pyramid schemes.
Attorney Jason Landess. in a
class action suit filed on behalf
of two persons taken into
custody for their lnvolvemen\ in
lhe get-rich-quick schemes.
uked Judie Sears Tuesday for
a temporary restraining order.
She denied that request but set
the bearing in JUd1e Edward
Wallln's court to give both Lao·
dell and a repreeentative ol the
District Attorney's Office a
chance to argue the case.
The lawtwt claims invuklo ol privacy, baruament. and in·
frlqement on fne speech and
free aaeembly by law enforce·
rneat .,encles seeklnl to end
pyramid parties.
NAACP Official
Fears Violence
Benjamin Hooks. director of
the National Associalloa for the
Advancement of Cblored People,
predicted today that violence
may erupt this summer in
America·s cities due to what he
termed the failure of the federal
government to deal with
"grave" unemployment and
housing problems in the black
community.
''I've seen some angry people
all over the nation in these last
few weeks -some very anarY
people," Hooks told reporters
following an address in Anaheim
to delegates to the American
FederaUon of State, County and
MunJcipaJ Employees, the na-
tion's [ar1eat public employees unJoo.
Hooks, a Baptist minister,
said that recent rtota in Mi1m.l
reflected· the potential for
further unrest in all or
America's m-..or cities.
He aald tbat his or1aniuUon
wlll not CCIDdone violence in any
form but added that he believes
the potential for unrest exists
nonetheless.
New Settlements
Irk Egyptians
Hooks called oo blacks
throughout the country to Join in
a massive voter registration
drive to swing the balance of
power in both the White Hou.:-e
and the Congress toward provid·
ing more jobs and better housing
ror the nation's impoverished.
He said the NAACP is com·
milled to spending $1 million
toward that registration drive, "even ii it Pt.Its us in debt." The black leader decried what
he called the ''general tenor" or
the Congress to spend money for
military purposes rather than
social services .
"The whole budget-balancinB
fever is a shell came," Hooks
said.
Wead1er
Nl&bt and momitla low
clouds wltb mostJ,y sunny
afternoon Thursday.
Hlcba .in the upper 80I at
the beaches to mid or up·
per '10l Inland areas. Lowa
tontsht 55 to eo.
INSIHH•A~
r ..
Ltodl Lee ....... • Wbo wUI
1taDd trial JulJ 14 for alJetedb
impl'llclftlna and ..uall1 • .,...
ln1 ao U·r••r·old malt
hUebbtker, llH ftl•d a W
mUliQD dalm a1alnat the CltJ of
l"owitaln Valley. asaertln1 that
hla olvU rl1hts have been
violated.
Tbe claim wu routiMly de=
nJed by Fountain Valley ~
Council 'ful!lday nJl.bt. penl((.
Uni a formal lawsuit to be ftled
lo the m.tter wltb.ln six maadlil.
Slapstlek
tn a letter to the dt1. Heater's
attorney, Jolm N. P'lood, said Ida
client ls seeklns dama1es because~ the .. IUepl and UD·
reaM>oable and prejudicial con.
duct ol Fountain Valley police officers . . ..
The attorney accused tbe
police department of "eivlng
faJse and extremely prejudicial
1Df9rmatioa" to tbe press and to
nelebbora. He said the police
falsely stated or inferred that
Heater was the "freeway killer"
and was extremely dangerous.
Taylor, McKuen Trade Blow.4J
NEW YORK CAP> -Elizabeth faylor and poet Rod McKuen
traded slaps backstage during a
celebrity-studded Gala for the
Performing Arts at Wolf Trap
Theater Park in Viratnla, the
New Yortc Post said.
Ador Bmt ReynoldS trlaered tbe Incident June 3 but didn't get
slapped, columnist Jack Martin
•wrote Tuesday. r None or those involved was
• immediately available for com -
ment on the columnist's ac-
count.
Miss Taylor had interrupted
shooting of a fllm in England to
attend the gala, and to the au-
dience, she and McKuen ap-
peared to be on good terms. At
one point. in r~ct, she gave the
poet a ktss on the llps.
Trouble arose. however. when.
with the hour growing late.
singer Johnny Cash took up a
h a I r h ·o u r i n s t e a d o f
his allotted 10 minutes, Martin
said.
M cKuen was next on the pro.
gram. says Martin. but Mls~
Taylor announced: "I'm going
lo read my poem now-or not at
all."
The columnist said Reynolds
then set Miss Taylor off by re·
marking. "Good, she's not going
to do iL"
But instead o f attacking
Reynolds. she s truck McKuen with ber open hand and he
slapped her back, the columnist
said.
The claim alleges that
Huter'$ basic Constitutional
rtghts have been violated.
Heater, 48, was amsted May
8 at his Fountain Valley home,
after a hitchhiker from Covl.na
told police that Heater picked
hlm up at a freeway ramp, im-
prisoned him tn the Fountain
Valley home and s ubjected him
to various sexually abuses.
Arter his arrest. Heater's 1976
conviction on similar charges
was publicized. along with his
lengthy record of arrests on
other sex charges.
McNally Sc/Wdnles
Final Graduation
Heater has been placed in
Orange County JaU in lieu of
$250,000 bail and has been or-
dered to stand trial July 14
before Orange County Superior
Court Judge James Turner.
Study Raps
Transmission
fu Fords Costa Mesa's old McNally High School will graduate its
last class Thursday when 70
seniors receive diplomas.
Next year, the continuation
school will have a new location
overlooking Upper Newport Bay
and a new name -Back Bay
AIRPORT •••
public comment before the
master plan's final version ls re-
leased in July.
"The 7.5 number is not a bard
and rest magical number. It's
just a trade off between noise
and servtce," Allison said.
Reaction from at least two
county supervisors was swift,. ·
Supervisor Thomas Riley,
whose district includes the
airport, supported VTN's noise
reduction program a nd its goal
of knocking down the noise level
by 7.5 decibels.
He said that the county should
s trictly enforce the proposed
noise program from the begin·
ning.
Jn addition, Riley agreed with
consultants that no daily flight
should be added to the present
limit of 40 until the 1988 noise re-
duction goal of five decibels is
reached.
However. Board Chairman
Ralph Clark took issue with a
couple of the consul,tants' rec-
ommendations.
fie asked that the noise reduc-
t.loo goal be changed to seven
declbles rather than 7 .sand urged
that fllgbts be added before the
1988 bench mark flOted by VTN. "The surrounding commuruty
should still receive the bulk of
the benefits of any nOise reduc·
tlon, but the airline and tra~l
ing public should also receive
immediate rewards," Clark
wrote iii a letter to airport of-
ficials.
-··-~--
•••. c.tlJ -· ~""'*"'-°'-.. _..., ,....._ ·-·
, ••• , ...... (tt4)MMltl
O' I C1•~"1f \C-..nl
High School.
Newport-Mesa Unified. School
District trustees approved the
name change Tuesday night.
The school, which houses only
students over 16 years of 11ge
who have experienced dir·
ficultles in regular com·
prebensive high acbools. will re·
locate this summer a t the
former Monte Vista Elementary
School campus.
The elemeot.ary school, locat-
ed at Monte Vista Street and
Irvine Avenue in Costa Mesa,
was closed down last year
because of declining enrollment.
McNally students have beer.
housed in portable building!>
since 1966 on the old Clara
McNally Elementary School
campus at 19th Street and
Newport Boulevard.
That seven-acre campus.
named after a teacher who once
taught there, bas been sold to
Pacific Federal Savings.
McNally's student body voted
to nam~ their school Back Bay
High in recent homeroom poll-
ing efforts, said Marge Conry,
secretary to McNally principal
Jack Coleman.
She urged the board to ap-
prove the new name. noting that
a stigma is attached to the
McNaUy continuation achoo!
oame.
W ASlllNGTON <AP) -The
Transportation Department
notified the Ford Motor Co. that
a three-year investigation has
shown t.ransm.iasion sllppa«e de·
fects in 16 million automobiles.
government sources reported to-day
The sources, who asked that
they DOt be ldeoWied. N1d aucb
a findina usually results tn a
formal recall whJcb. were it or-dered, would be the largest in
automot!ve history.
The defect is in the
transnuss1on system of 1969-1979
Ford passeilger cani, causing
them to s lip from park to r.e-
ve r se without warning, the
sources reported.
The Transportation Depart·
ment bad no comment on the re·
port, except to say that the legaJ
process in the case bas oot been
completed. It said it might have
· e1n announcement th.is weet or next week.
The National Highway Traffic
Safety Adminlstrat.lon, an arm
of the Transportation Depart.
ment, told the center for Auto
Safety la.st month it believed 88
bad been killed in accidents
caused by Ford transmission
alippage. NHTSA bu been in-
vestigating the transmissions
I bree years.
----JlJST)BREAKING----.....
Attackers Wipe Out ..
Depot With Grenade
By Tbe Aaocta&ed Presa
An armed a,roup blew up an oil depot In western Iran with a
rocket-propel)ed areoade and also attacked an Iran-Europe
railway station. Tehran rad.lo reported today.
Police pursued the attackers but did not capture them. the
broadcast 1atcl. 1bere wu DO indication who wu reaponaible
and DO meatioD of casualties ln the incidents late Tuesday at
Salmas 1n Azerbaijan, a regioo near Iraq and Turkey where
saboteurs have been active in reeent months. Fire at the oU de-
pot was still ralinl today. the broadcast said.
The incident occurred a few hours after Iran'• revol~
leader, Ayatollah Rubollah KbomeJ.ni, warned a1ainat internal
strife and said his regime miaht self~truct unless the lllamic
hardliners controlline Parliament ball their political war wttb
President Abolbassen Bani-Sadr.
s...,, WarnlMg Hai# .. d
· EL MONTE <AP> -1be Air Quality Manaaem-t Dlltrtct
forecast unbealtblul air quality Tbunday for seml&IYe MODlo
and Polludoa Standard Index raUnga of 138 lo tbe Saa l'einaDdo
Valley, Santa Clarita Valley and tbe San Gabri•l·Pomoaa valle~ and 154 lo tbe Rlveralde-Saa Bernardi.Do area.
Good air quall\y wu expected ID tJM reel ot tbe JOUtll eoen
air balla. A PSJ ratlnl of 42 wu foreeaat far t.M coutal, balaDd Oran,. Countr, Bl1 Bear ud blp and low deMrt anu. ~
PSI 75 wu apectect la the 8aMlnf area and a PSI ntlal Ot '2 wu foncut for tbe mettopoUtaD area and Hemet·Elllnore ana.
(Meler.no" ...... Pl•'
, o.lt't "'9e ~ W LM ~.,,_
CLINT WORTHINGTON II GRl!ETIO BY THE GANO AT THE BANK THIS MOANING
lrvtne Bank Emp&oy" ..... h .... Ag91n on llcyde Ride from Phoenix
Equestrian
Horse Owners
Get Break
As one or his final acts as st.ate
parks director. Russell Cahill
gave lrvme Equestnan Center
horseowners a reprieve that will
allow them to keep their animals
an the new Crystal Cove State
Park for at least 18 months.
Cablll, who announced Tues·
day he will resign his state post
at the end or the w«k. said the
eq uestnan center ~hould stay
open unW planruog for the new
park Is completed 1 Related photo Page AIO >
The state direct.or was to mttt
with members or the Irvine
Coast Equeslnan Planning Com-
mittee last Friday. to discuss
the panel's concern that they
would be forced to close by Ott. 31.
But Cahill canceled the meet-ing.
The state parks department
has araued that the equestnan .
center la DDt compat!bte wtth the
new Crf1ta1 Cove State Part.
and ordered the facility, located
between Corona del Mar and
Laguna &Mob. diamanUed by lb! end ot die,...,.
Hut lut mooth, a peUIJOe ton· t.a in in& more t••n 5 ,000
signatures was presented to
Cah 111 by Assemblywoman
Marian Bergeson < R-Newport
Beach> citing the publlc use ot
the equestnan cent.er and the
need to keep 1t.
A s pokes woman for Mrs.
Bergeson said the a s -
semblywoman ls "very pleased
with his <Cahill'•> decision."
"Mrs. Bereesoo saw DO reuon
to move anyone out of the park
area unW the state decides what
it's going to do with the park."
aide Julie FroeberR said.
R e becca Nel so n . a
spokeswoman for lhe 400·
member equestrian committee.
said the reprieve wUI 1ive the
center time to prove horses a.re
"an lntegral part ol the park plan."
The 25-acre stable and riding
facility was leased to the
operators by the Irvine Com·
pany prior to state purchase ol
the park land.
Beats the Mall
_Cyclist Overcomes Setbacks
87 aJCllAJlD GREEN Of-Detty~-
Clint.on Worthlngton pedaled
his 10-speed bicycle Into the
parking lot of the Bank of Irvine
this morning, thus winning his
race from Pboerux against six
letters.
The %1-year-old man said nat
tires. a broken chaan and an en-
rounter with a coyote were all
wortbit.
..It's great to prove the post
office's slowness:· he said. "J
would do it again."
Worthington dropped SIX let·
ters m Phoenix mailboxes Mon-
day everung. He then hopped on
his bicycle and rode off for
Irvine. determined to arnve in
town before his letters
Bank employees confirmed
this mommg that the letkrs
hadn•t arrived. They said the
mail isn't delivered until 10 a m.
Worthington arrived at the bank at 9 45
He says he is unhappy with tn·
c reaslng postal rates and the
poss1ble end or Saturday mail
deliveries.
For smular reasons he raced a
letter from San Francisco to
Irvine -and won by a full day
-1n May of 1979. That trip took
him 3days
81cyclmg at night on the des·
ert betwee n Phoenix and
Southern California is scary, he
said .
"It's dark on·lhose roads," he
said. "All you see are trucks A
coyote jumped an front of me
and scared the heck out of me ·
An employee or the HanJc of
Irvine. Worthington said he ha~
occasion to observe the shortcom1n~s of the U.S. Postal
Service because he handles loan
paymenL.;; that often are late
bet aus.• of what he s ays is slow
m<11l :.en l<'t·
Three More Hunted
In Cocaine Ring
Orange County Sheriffs in·
\ esllgator5 said today they an·
seeking warrants against add1·
llonal persons sought m conne<.··
t JOn with an alleged cocaine
s muggling operation that was
broken up Monday night in San·
ta Ana.
Five persons, including two
men from the Laguna Beach
area, were arrested by un·
dercover sheriffs investigators
and agents o( the federal Drug
Enforcement Administration.
who c laim they seized three and
one-half kilograms of nearly
pure cocaine dunng a meeting
with the alleged dealers at a
motel.
Those arrested were Daruel
Arlen Wisner, 35. 917 Balboa
Ave.. Laguna Beach: Thomas
J ames Taylor, 28. 22362 1st
Street. South Laguna; Robert
Ray Pioo. also known as Robert
Ray Pyne, 38. Lancaster: Gary
Martin Henson. 29. Kauai . Hawall. and Patrick Dugan, 36.
also of Kauai.
Shenff's Lt Wvatt Hart ~aid
that tv.o or three pt>n,ons still
are SOUJ?ht In the ln\'eStigation Of
v. h.it he desert~ as a ma1or
Orange County-based cocaine
sales operation. The drug acL1v1-
ty was primarily centered in
Laguna Beach and Costa Mesa,
Hart said.
The seized cocaine in its uncut
form was valued at $700.000,
Hart said. If sold in its cut form
on the street the drug would be
worth about $875.000. he added.
Investigators also seized about
1.000 tablets or the hypnotic
Quualude and about three
pounds of high grade Hawaiian
marijuana. Hart said.
Confidenllal law enforcement
sources said today that both
Taylor and H e nson were
believed to be involved in drug
sales activities in the Orange
Coast area
Each or the fi ve per ~ ar-
rested was booked into ar>qp County Jail on suspicion o es
or a controlled su e.
FATHERS DAYSAYINIS
10% •F ALL KNR SHIRTS
OFFSHOrE
HOBIE
TENNIS
SPECIAL
FREE
STRINGS
Wl1MPURCHA~
~HIWRAMI
ffJ
..
~'1or0il
.. AILGlERS. Alierla <AP> -
: Tbe world oU cartel, after a bit·
~ terly divisive three-day meeting •
• set In motion today another
round of price increases that
C1>uld force American con-
. sumers to pay as much as 3
cents a gallon more for gasoline
and home beating fuel.
Kuwait quickly announced a
price increase of S2 a barrel ef-
f eclive July 1, and Venezuela
said it would raise its price by
bet ween $1 and $2 then.
Sheik Ahmed Zaki Yamani of
Saudi Arabia, the leading
price dove and world's largest
oil exporter, said the Saudi price
might go up $1 or $2, but the
world oil glut probably would
rule that out for the moment.
The 13-nation Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries
set a reference, or benchmark
price ol $32 a barrel -roughly
halfway between Saudi Arabia's
. $28 and Iran's $35. OPEC also
fixed a ceiling of $37 a barrel.
whi c h will prevent hawks
Algeria, Nigeria and Libya from
making large price increases in
a new round of "leapfrogging."
But the "compromise" agree-
. ment was mostly for public con-
sumption. because individual
· members may wail as long as
they like before putting their
prices in line with the new
benchmark. • OU industry analysts in New
~ York said the. latest OPEC de·
cislon will not immediately af·
feet prices in the United Stat.es
. as Jong as Saudi Arabia does
not.
But the energy commissioner
of the nine-nation European
Common Market. Guido Brun·
· ner. said i.ri Brussels that the
price standard was "a further
conaiderable burden for the
world economy" that would
worsen ''the tendencies roward
recession and inflation.··
Under. the accord, middle·
priced countries, led by Iraq and
including Kuwait and
Venezuela. are lo raise current
prices o( about S30 a barrel by
$2.
But prices at the lower and llp·
per ends of the spectrum will re·
main unchanged -at least for
now.
Saudi Arabia. for one. said it
would not raise prices at Otis
time, a lthough conference
sources said a Saudi increase
would come in the next few
m o nths . Ira n , which sells
virtually identical to that of
Saudi Arabia and Iraq, said it
would not decrease the cost of
oil.
As a result. OPEC prices will
r emain disunited as they have
been since early 1979.
Over five sessions, the con·
ference bounced from discord to
agreement as some ministers.
like Iranian Qil Minister Ali
Akbar Moinfar. announced they
had achieved unanimity. Others.
like United Arab E mirates Oil
Minister Mana Saeed aJ-Otaiba.
said there was no agreement on
; ~ anything. .
:· In a communique issued at the
:· end of the conference session.
: the 20-year-old cartel said it had
:·decided:
-: "1. To set the level of oil price
: for a marker crude up lo a ceil· :: ins of S32 per barrel.
: "2. 'Mlat the value differen-
:· tials which would be added over
: 1nd above the said celling ol tM
; marker crude price level of $32
: on account of quality and geo-
: ,raphical locations sbouJd not
• exceed in any case $5 per barrel. ~ "3. 1"h1S pnce structure wm
• be applicable as of July 1. 1980. !; to be ttviewed in the tripartite
: meetln1 to take place next
:~autumn.
:. Many OPEC memt\tn ague
:· produc:Ucm must be redu* to : eUminat• tM current world oU
: 1111t ..S pnvent another. A pro-
: ducU.. cutback would help sup-
• port ..._ prtCe:s cbarled by Iran
and other OP.EC bawb.
Natio11alitg Noticed
111pem.ort fOi' approval, prob.
ably tomlUmenatJDOOtb.
The Ol'der to prepare an
amendment to tbe JO·c•ll~ TtN
CUP political campalp reform
ordiQance, ulled b)' tbe board
on a 4.0 vote, with Supervisor PbUJp Anthoay abltalnJn1.
Anthony said lat.r tb1t bil re-
luctance to v~ on tbe issue was
because be la now a candidate
for re...wetlOn In a ceaerat elec·
Uoa ~at Fountain
VaU., . Roser Stan·
top,
The TIN CUP ordinance.
adopted ln 1'78. waa U.. ....Wt ol
a 1roe rooU petltiGn drive led
by former Oraqe County plan.
nln1 con:un11aioner Shirley Grin·
die.
The ordinance limited the
Included la the or'dlaaee .,..
a provltlon for iner..... In those llmitatlon1 baaed on
federal formulae ueed ftr
calc\ltaun.-coa t of llvtna changes.
Appeal Slated
In Miller Case
By DAVD> KUTZMANN
Of Ille o.ity l"llf'I Steff
The attorney ror con victed
c hild stealing de f e nda nt
Kamalla Miller says s he hopes
her client is given probation
rather than jail time because
she needs therapy and help.
Defense attorney Heidi
Mueller also said she plans Lo
appeal Mrs Miller's conviction
by an Orange County Superior
Court jury Tuesday afternoon.
The convtct1on on burglary and
C'hild stealing charges stems
from the disappearance of her
young daughter. VaJeena. from
t he house of t he c hil d "s
,.,. •• ,........ grandparents a nd legal guar-
dian~ in Huntington Beach in
1978
Light-haired boy named Dung. who says
his father resides in the United States. is
one of a number of half-American children
a m ong the boat people who have fled Viet-
nam and jomed refugee camp of about
6. 700 in southern Thailand. His pals call out
that he's Amer ican.
The eight -woman. four-man
JUr) took only about an hour and
;.i half to find the-defendant
guilty
Lagunan County's
Aide to Anderson
By FREDERICK SCHOEllElll.
ot•O.lly ...........
Button-down collar. wing tip
shoes, short hair -you look at
Maril Ellis and you think, con-
servative.
F iscally, yes. Not s urprising.
He's a commercial real estate
agent.
On social issues. however. El·
lls describes himself as a '"pro-
gre1tive."
Conservative on the one hand.
progressive on the other -two
traits that make EJHs very com-
patible with the man he wants to
set? as the nation's next presi·
dent -John B. Anderson.
At ?A. Ellis. a Laguna Niguel
r esident. is Orange County
coordinator of the drive to place Ande~on's name on the No-
vember general election ballot as
an independent candidate.
The Anderson campaign mus\
sec ure mo re than 100 ,000
signatures statewide to do that.
Ellis predicts the goal will be
achieved easily. '
Ellis described himself as
h e r etofore apolitical. He
steered clear or student politics
while studying business at UC
Berkeley (''it didn't seem like 1t
mean\ ver y muC'h "') and has
never ~n active in partisan
contests.
Along came Anderson. "I got
a phone number out of <Los
Ange lee Times political re·
porter> Bud Lembke's column
and l got in touch with An·
derson's coordinator ... Ellis
said.
· "I'hat was a bout two months
ago. Anderson's C'a mpaign in
Orange County was in a state of
disarray."
At the lime, Anderson, ul ·
timately unsuccessful, was try-
ing lo get b1s name removed
from the California ballot as a
Republican candidate in the
June 3 primary elecUon.
Now the push Is toward No-
vember. and Ellis said be hopes
he can 10 tbe distance. He said
he's thankful his position with
AshwUJ:Burke in Ir :ne allows
him the freedom to work on the
campaign.
"It's a once-in-a-llfetime op-
portunity," Hid Ellis, "to be ln·
volved in a v~~t campaign and
an historic cJu\l,len1e to the \wo-
party system.'·
"U we 1ucceed. il wm really
be earthsbatln& -ll will be tbe
firat time an independent bas
bffn elected,'' he added.
Andenon, accordlni to the
Ni1uel Shores resident, Is a "ttroac and forceful leader"
and a "WuhlJllt,On lnllder" who
know• bow the le1lalathe aystem works. Anderton baa
been a con•r•uman for 20
yean .
... Mtd ... , ......... Prill·
dtat cm-and aepubltc:a con-
teDd91' Bluld Bea~~ INrial~tM .. a11dld ~~·· TM wi,•IW ~. mi .... ..,. ................ .
ol • s-•· or ....... ... Wit bl • Raf.a, ··tMat tie ...
CNffy ,.. ... SUff,....
WORKING FOR ANDERSON
Laguna Niguel'• Elli•
convey a strong feeling of
trust."
Ellis was the man behind the
scenes that helped assemble a
breakfast meeting Tuesday. An·
derson addressed more than 600
persons \ll the South Coast Plaza
Hotel in Costa Mesa.
lromcally, perhaps. Ellis only
had a few brief minutes to speak
off.the-cuff with the candidate.
Ellis. however. said he'~ not
daunted bv not being able to
have instant access to Anderson.
As for his views on particlpat·
Ing in the campaign, Ellls re·
called the words or Abraham
Lincoln, saying, "He who has
the heart to criticize should have
the heart to help ...
And, .. agreement is not essen-
tial. participation is."
Court Mulls
Book Conflict
LOS ANGELES (AP> -The
controversy over accused mass
murderers wbo seJJ their We stories to their lawyers has
reached the Calilomla Supreme
Court with the chief Justice ques-tloniaa tbe court'o rt1ht to play
"Bil Brother" and bar s11eh cl ea la.
Chief J....U~ Roee Bird made
her comnientt aa tbe court
heard arsuments ln the case of
Billy Joe Muwell. cbar1ed with
tbe to DOtor1ous ••Skfd Row Stab-
ber" sla)'lncl.
Reagan JI ows
Resignation
'If Senile'
NEW YORK <AP I -Rooald
Reagan, who at age 69 would be
the oldest president lo take of.
fice. says if he is eleded he
would aeL recular medical
cbe~kups and would resign if
any serious sign of senility were
detected, The New York Times
reported Wday.
"lf I were president and had
any feeling at aU that my
capabilities bad been reduced
before a second term came. I
would walk away. By the same
token I would step down also ...
the Republican candidate said In
an interview.
Six doctors ha\•e given the
former California governor a
clean bill of health. saying rus
mediC'al problems were mlllOr.
such as hay fever and moderate
hearing loss in both ears. The
hearing problem docs not re·
quire a hearing aid
Reagan. who said he has made
it a practice to issue reports on
his health since he e ntered
politics. told the newspaper that
he was as alert as he was 20
years ago and that he "never
felt better
Reagan's doctors told the
Times that physlolog1C'aUy the
candidate a ppeared younger
than his b1olog1cal 69 years. and
s aid t here was no me diC'al
reason wh) he could not ser\"e
as president.
Judge Byron McMillan set
sentencing for July 10 and al·
lowed Mrs. Miller to remain free
on her own recognizance .
'the 25-year-old woman had
been free on Sl0.000 bond put up
by supporters tn Arkansas and
Minnesota.
But when prosecutor Robert
Molko began to ask McMillan to
consider mcreaslng bail follow-
ing her conviction. the" judge re·
marked he was.n"t worried about
her not appearing ror sentenc-
ing.
He said abe could bud back to
Arkansas. where she was anesl·
ed. if she wanted. but he added
that be didn"t \)link she would
becaUM she'• interested in the
welf•re of ber child. who la
agaia la.I.be paardianship of her
grandpare.nta.
Ms. Mueller told reporters
t hat McMillan was showing
through his remarks that he
didn 't believe Mrs . M1ller·s
crime was aggravated
The defense auorney also said
sh(' is certain her C'lient would
appear Cor sentencing July 10.
when she could rece1 \e a state
prison term or fi\•(' years -four
>ears for burglary and one year
and a day for chlld steahn~
But Ms Mueller s aid the tiny
woman. who never denied she
took her 6-year-old C'h1ld. was in
need ol therapy and aid to help
her overrome her problems
A defense psychiatrist had
test1f1ed Mrs Miller was severe
ly mentally d1 ~turbed . both
befor£'. during and after she took
the C'htld b;. breaking into her
parenL5' homt July Jl. 1978 The
parents h ad been u warded
custodJr o ( both Valeena and
Jason, who has s ince died. after
JURY CONVICTS HER
Kamalla Miiier
a custody battle 1n a Long Beach
court.
A year-long, nationwide hunt
followed the disappearance or
Valeena. endin g in a sm all
Arka nsas town i n July. In
another custody ball.le there. the
grandparents again were made
g uardians of the child . The
grandparents now live in Las
Vegas.
Molko. who in his closing
arguments said the case was not
a question of O)oral rights but pf
legal ri&bts. told reporters he
wasn't tertain what punishment
he would recommend for the
s lightly built defendant.
The prosecutor said the .jury
could have become emotional
a nd taken three days to de ·
liberate on the case or gone
"directly Lo the issues" to make a swifl ruling.
The jury apparently discount-
ed the testimony of Seawright
Ander s on . a for ens i C'
psyduatrist. who testified that
Mrs. Miller was '"grossly dis·
turbe<f"' and obsessed with get
ting her daughter back when she
lost custody in the original 1975
<.·ourt battles
Ms . Mueller said the jury
C'ould not identify with Mrs .
Mill er because they came from
d1rferenl socio-economic back
1Zrounds
The attorney said the overrid·
mg C'Oncem in her C'lient's life 1s
~etting her daughter back.
Mrs. Miller wept quietly after
the vt>rdict was announced.
Gem
Talk
1111 J C Hl'Ml'URIE:S
Cmi/IM C~olog11t. ~GS
!Make £im~n '
Jn ..-.-,, .. nclent tlma. the ,.unna of fine "f!f
pltb wu ~to the male petM>lllJCS who
rulco 1ne pclt>Ul....a. TuJ .. y, every man hn
thii prhilqt 8ed caa ,.., like a Kina '"'hen wurina
really llauaampk:s of 1hc ic,.el.-r's art.
Karat told cuiittnb. tit l:M:S. bli.:ki"' anJ b11110ru
'" 111.u.llM la *"Y dilfercn1 dftlrn~
Mecullnc ,.... _.. wtdl coforful eemt Of cn1raved
wllh lnta • Cll CMUho dell1h1 1he e)._ att<J Pf0¥ide11'1wj11 1~1Mnt l11•ucy.W.
will be ,_, to "'1rJtlll )"OU Oil r collertlotl
ot Inc "*' .. .....,.-.t 111111\ the euct Item you
· ,.tnt '° ~ W. a fO)'ll feclil\I. "'
11lelftbtne( .. ~n Cicm 5.lct«y, )OU
~-..... CMlldmct f'lm,
11lird of 4th~
NONS. llAY'8S .... ...,.. -...............
tea au. .. ~ ••ar. ,..._ u.. rourt11 ot Jll!1, ud u.. aqwa New.-.. 9ed QtJ o..ill.........., c•'l ...
dMMwtlludlt .... ftl• .......... ·
· ~. dlie ...-JclNl aavMtl '""DCl9dertU a move to Pf'ClllUlit ..u · wtal pyroUdmlc UAJIJtUoaa wlWa t.be
ell)' Cii•'h" II . .. t111 ...._ • .._. llt•worb Moin u.. ._. w. on
..... -.. c ..... P*' .... Ill Urie ... c..,. ~
Club ..., Newport o.ma Aqutlc Pan. •t off C.OUt
ffitlrway. Private nreworlla cll1play1 bave been iUecal In
Newpart IMda for many ye ... 8cMne .....,..., hive IUI·
aea.t WI la• b .. lacked a certalD lmlvenal 1...,ort
•IDOlllC tbe citi8eD.ry.
BUT. MCIC TO TBE formerly lei•I abows. lo
Newport, tbere was really only one public display. Thal
•as die fbeworb abot off Balboa Pier. You eould Jusl wander dow'D to tbe beach, flop ell) \he sand and watch iL
Neapc41 Dlw la a pay.to-see show and Bil Canyon,
after all, ii a llri•ate aate-l\W"dlnl community. That's
· like lain& down to Lquaa Beach to walcb tbe flreworb at
Emerald Bay Ol lnine Cove. Yoo need to climb up on a
pobUc bill and bope you don't lose vislblUty in low ckMad
cover. Anyway, baclt at the Newport council chambers. t1'e . ·-.
Miss Uberly Sd /or~ Fowth in Ncq>of1
city lawmakers poodeted the question of prohibiting all
-0verbead displays this year and struck a compromise.
The city will allow two out d the three shows.
This might be characterized as a 33 perttnt ban.
The show they decided to prohibit was the only true
public one -at Balboa Pier. That figures. _
APPUENTL Y 'I'll& a&\80NING beTe ..a tbat the
Balboa fireworb were '° POPWU' •mGnl the popalaeoe that the spectators tied ul> tramc ~ the N..-,orl·Balboa
Peninsula for about three bou.rs. This is probably true.
Now the questioo will be UUll without lbe public
pyrotechnics, will lbe PenimuJa road.a still be tied up oa
the Fourth of July? We shall see.
MA YllE WHAT WILL happen is that Fourth ~ ·JuJy
celebrants will aU rub over to grab a free vantace point
ne ar Newport Dunes or Big Canyon and thus tie up traffic
in that sector for three hours.
An'j'Way, tbo6e ol us among the rabble who liked the
aerial displays. of Fourths put at Balboa t»ter .,_•t get
one this year.
ALSO, NEWPORT authorities have cleartJ announced
that they will be cracking down on unauUaoriled ud U·
le1a1 use ot ftreworb wlt.hio the city Um.ill tb1I l.Ddepen.
denceDay.
Clearly. this ls going to be a calm and quiet Fourth ot
July ln Newpart Beach. No traffic coqatioo. No Wiei1
pyrot.edmlcs.
When it's all over, rm lolnC to mate a apee'-1 elfort
to congratulate the city leaders oa this new era at tn.n·
quility.
llast Hurts
Airlin e
Executive
LAKE FOREST, lU. <AP> -
PoUce say they have no leads on
the 9ric1n o1 a paekqe bomb
that exploded ln the home d
United Airlines Prelldent Percy
A. Wood, &eaviD& him with "ex·
tenslve" ~ iA his face. left
hand and left let. Wood, 60, was
in lood condiUon late Tuesday
~fler surgery
10 Lake
F '1'>re s t
Hospital.
Police said a
guard had
been posted
at the airline
ex ecut1 ve·s
ho sp ital
room.
"He said he wooo
didn't know why someooe would
do lhis to him." said a neighbor
who comforted the wounded ex·
ecutive.
CHICAGO FBI spokesman
George Mandich said the ex-
plosive was contained in "not
too big a package" delivered to
Wood's home in the wealthy
lakesbore suburb north of
Chicago.
No one claimed responsibility
in the bombing. Mandisch said.
Police Qrlef Bernard Prals said
whoever coastructed the device
"bad to know a little of wb.at
lbey were doing. It bad t.o be trtccerect somehow and it bad to
be sale enough to get there."
Wood underwent surgery to
remove bomb fragmenll from
bis face and ha.Dd&. Doctors said
Wood suffered "oo permanent
damage," ac-cording to boepital
spokeswoman Joyce Fit.z~ald.
However. she said the cuts were
extensive and Wood may require
plutiC SUf'lt!r)'.
FBI AGENTS said the bomb.
which aploded at about 3:48
p.m. ED't. appareaUy wu de·
livered by mall. Praia said Wood
told him the bomb WU COO·
taiaed i~ a .P•1•r·wrap~d
pack ... dilplMCI ... book in
bia l"Olldlide mail box.
The packace exploded as Wood opened it In &be kitchen,
Prals said. Wood walked to the
house Of oeilhbors wbo sum-
moned tbe ambulance and
police.
•
Colorado Fears Floods
Mo re R ai"' M,elting Snow Send Rivers RiBing
<:..t_,lt'ftlfkr
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11.8. s 1 nrr••rw
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0.1• City
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o.a..... u SJ .,..,.. • n St~ ., ,.
THE SCALE of fi1hllnC .as still not clear, but W~
reported wttneaini clubea in
villages outside Kabul.
diplomatic 50Utte5 said.
Defensive moves t.ak~ by the
Sov 1et occupation forces
although the city was not yet
dirttlly threatened. included a
beef-up of armor and an ·
tiaircrafl nnging KabuJ. Res1·
dents spoke of rumors of armed
guerrillas having infiltrated the capital in rttetll days , an anfoc·
mant said.
Some of the fiercest fighting
has oecurred at Pa&bman, the
former summer cap1lal d the
deposed Afghan kmg wb1ch Ltes
wesl ol Kabul.
INTENSE factidna,I clashes
there were reported between
party workers support.Jng and
o pposing Afghan President
Babrak Karmal, brought to
power last December an a Sov·
iet-engineered coup. The town is
the hometown or the late
Hafisullah Amin, the man be
replaced.
Kabul Radio acbowledged
troop movements near
Pagbman, lS miles west ol the
ca pit.al.
Neaes S addnas
Mrs. Diane Nicholson. former girlfriend of convicted
ldller Jack Potts. Wipes her race as she leaves federal
court Tuesday in Atlanta after hearing the judge tell
Potts that bis request to drop his appeal to avoid execu·
tion would probably be the Jut chance to sale his llle.
'Carter Inclined
To Punish Clark
, WASHINGTON (AP> -President Carter says be would be b>·
cUned to p~ former Attorney General hmaey Clark fbr
travellne to Iran, and Clark says the pres1deot's remarks have eJ·
fectivdy poisoned any case the government may have bad.
In an impromptu news conference aboard Air Force ~
Carter said 'Tuesday that the tnp by Clan and nine others to a eoo:
ference on "The Cnmes ol America·· aaainst Iran was "dam~
to the oat.loo's foreign pol.cy and to careyin& out sanctloas ..... •-t Iran." _.......
But ~ pres~t said the decision of how and whether to prO·
ceed aga.anst Clark and hil companions woo.Id be up to Attomey
General Benjamin R. CivUetta.
''MY GUESS WOULD be be would Sffk dvtl peoaJUes,"
Carter said.
Convict.ton f<X' violating the criminal section of the lnlema·
l)onal Emergency Economic Po-wen Act. which Carter invoked to
ban travd to Iran, is pun.ia.hable by up to 10 years lD prtsoo and a
SS0,000 fme.
The prestdent's talk of prosecuting Cla,rk and the otbers con-
trasted w1th a statement Sunday by Secretary of State Edmund S.
~usk1e, ..-ho saad the travel ban was intended to prevent people
fro m going to I ran rather than punishing people who violate the
policy.
a, CA&TB& NOTED that 1t is Civiletti and tumsel!
--who bear the responsibility foe deddin& who to
And my own inelktedon ii to eafol"ce my dlreetlve.
wtucb I presu.me to be lela1. and when people violate it, to see that
an appropriate punishment ls leried.'' be said.
...... beel\ .... °' "-9QOd otd.,.. ...
an ..... --aflOft'l Witt .... bNly ...
ocCClllons. Oftd P*> ..... "' "*' most PNCtOul ~ : 111' Clf\ .. Ameltcan .......
A IOlflng ~at a~ PlfCe II
~ '°""' llMI .,_our~~ .._ • llt;o.,.... cw:dlso ••+ tiw ...,y '°°"' • ..-. ..... and ... ..e.c-"°"' lnctud9 .... fW IHGftd ... ..
and .. ~ fftod9 •"* ~bow c:wta,,... .... ~ leMOe .....
~ II ,.,....... WOHOC~ of quatlty
and courtoo9 ....... at -.-a coet. ... ,. pro.cl to be port of o MCOftCI
geMf'OtfOn .. good ""' clop. oftd ....
MeMOltM 1o .. ---.,... to~
'«~c9*;o•o-.•.,. .,_ wood and .... Pf I ft lo::AINAe
top fteW CIHtOM fttot ftt OfGCefttlfy fft
..... IPOC9 and~ tor ·---lftg.
....... .: ...... , .........
BZVSBLY HILLS <AP> -A amall a)lklaive de.tee ... all )ult oqt•kte a Wildiq tbat uaed to
house the Jraftlu couuJ1te and it believed to be
tbe bale ol the mllltant lluallm S&uc:teDts Aaoeia-
tion of Los Anaelea, '(' J poUce 58icl. ~ ..i1TE No one was htjured, Ji~ including two Los
---------Angeles County Sheriff's . bomb squad' experts who
were attempting to move the device Tuelday nJ&ht
when it exploded. Beverly Hills Police Sgt. Larry
Leffler said.
~·•• Cra11ll It. Ub Tltrtt>
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The Federal Aviation
Administration ls invesUgatlne a light plane that
r.lummeted into a residential area of Compton kill·
ng the pilot and two passengers.
One ol the victims was identified as Earl Keo·
dricks, 39, who lived at 203 S. Holly, Compton.
Police were wilhboldi.ng the identity or the
second victim pending notification ol relatives.
However, they did say tbe second victim was a
black, 40-ye.ar-oJd male. Tbe thJrd victim, an adult
p:ia_l.e, bas not been ident.ilied. Police said the
)>OCl*es were burned beyond recognition.
Fruit ·Fli_.,, In rad_. t,·11 y
MIRA LOMA <AP> -Black swanm ol fruit ~es are invading Mira Loma and multiplying by
e thousands as five acres of oranae peels
, wnped on local farmland rot in the sun.
About 40 angry and sometimes tearful
townspeople demanded Tueeday that Rivenlde .l:owrt.V superviaon take adion against tbe dairy ~that bOucbt the rinds for cattle feed a month qo,
then heaped them dear a tract of new homes.
kl•n••a11 ,.iC"la.,, fl11.-... ird
SAN DJEGO tAP> -The slim victory by Ku
.k1us Klan leader Tom Metzger in the 43rd
"'COiigreukmal Dbtrlct primary last week. wu a
tabul~ mistake. a local put.y afticlal said.
• Tbe allegatloas Tuesday by llQerlal Coant.y
. J>emocraUc Party Cbalrm&a Fernaado Slqb ea ...,ted a ,...,,r at tliit muaUy w.-.atfid
.• Democratle Central Committee meetiq, at· ed by J(etqer and at least five bod,yparda.
Aecordjn1 to Sanga•s band counting.
.Met.zger"s vote totals in Imperial COWlty have re-
.peat.edly come up 360 votes abort of the semi·
emcial total &DDOUDCed after tbe election.
--------...---
. ~ ........
Searela l•r Pare•t•
Marty Renault. center. with her adoptive
mother. Omah Johnson. left, listened dur·
ing a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing
in Sacramento Tuesday as her natural
mother. Winnie Ferguson of Texas.
testified in favor of a bill that would make
lt easier for adult children to find their
natural parents.
Strangler Case
To Test frop. 5
LOS ANGEIJ:S <AP> -A television newsman
who covered the Hillside Strangler cue is spark·
ing the flrst court test of Proposition ~. passed a
week ago by Calllomia voters.
The newly-estabUsbed state constitutional
amendment protects reporters from contempt of
court.
REPORTER WAYNE SATZ of KABC·TV in
Los Angeles cited the new law Tuesday in musing
to tum over portions of his interviews with two
former prostitutes who have testified they worked
for strangler defendants Anaelo Buono aDd Ken·
netb Bianchi.
Def'ense attorneys for Buono bad subpoenaed
both the broadcast tapes and the .. outtakes" -
·port.ions ol tbe film or tape not used oo the air.
Satz provided Municlpal Court Judee H. Ran·
dolpb Moore only wttb videotapes ol the televised
interview wttb Rebeka Spear and Sabra Haonan.
MOO&E CONDlJCl'ED the preliminary bear-
ina on tbe Sats subpoena in seem Tuesday, but
made no deciRan oo the mauet. He postponed the rul1DI for mt least a day until be could view the fUm Slits YOluntarlb' turned Oftl". lkloao'a attoroeya reportedly aoupt t.be in-
terviews to compare tbem wtt.h statement.a the two
girls made in testimony during an ongoing closed·
door preliminary bearina on cbaraes against
Buono.
JUNE 15th
FOR
DAD
"the contemporary man··
Tiit ••••••
DrmMt
Long & short sleeve
cotton/poly blend gives
vou a permanent press
tim.sh.
Blue. white. tan & yeflow.
Long 11.•. Short 1&•
T1U: 1~11YI
Big: 17·22
Sleevt: 33-38
1111 DH 11 TII ., ......
SoMdl & lttlpes In
the newer wktttls.
11.•
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~= 1MI. 12-14.101-12111 . ... ,.,,, ............ ..
OAl&.."f Pll.OT
Brown Amendment Defeats Auto Smog Check
"' SACRAllENTO (AP) -It .ometlmea takes a '40n the Whole, I would say the bU1 would llafe
procram to taJ wbo b on wbat aJdt ln tbe •IDOU>' mbted alr quality impact.•· Gary Rubeutetn. dep-~ Ot'el'aaaal wlt.itle lDlpediarw. uty eucutive omcer of tbe 1tate Alr ~
At least that'• tbe war tt wu Tuesda)'. when Board, told the committee.
, tbe Brown .clmln1atraUOD UMd aa amenclmut lt ;
woaJd DOnDa11.J ~ to defeat -inlpeetioo bill
tt aaee supported. Freak Blast
The actmlnlftration wum anmaal inlpeetioa t.o
ensure that atlto •moc devices are kept wortiJli.
But lt coateods th.at an lnlpeetioD bill by Sen. John
Foran, D-San Francilco, wOuld aetually lncreue
air polluaioo in some areu.
TBA'I' •EASUaE, 88", would pave the way
for annual inlpecUons ln most parts of tbe state. ll
would a1m remove tbe state's ability to enfatte it.I
new ear emtuion standardl.
So Gary Davi.I, Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.'s
chief ol staff, was in a C.apitol baUwaJ Tuesday
lobbying foe an amendment to require an inspec-
Uoo mecbod the admtnistratiaa opposes, in bopes it
would till the -Foran bill.
Witb some bill opponents voting aye, tbe
amendment was adopted by the Assembly
Transportatloo Committee, and apparently sbift.ed
enough votes to till ~bill on a ~s roll call.
THE MEA.svaE WAS lbe last of sneraJ in·
spection bll1a still alive th1s season, but Davia saJd
after the vote that the adminlstraUon still hopes to
enact an inspeetfoo bill it could support.
Committee chairman Walter ln1alls. D·
Rivenide, said there was a chance the proposal
could be revived, but added that he was "very
pessimistic" that the lawmakers would approve
~ such a prospect lhls year.
The state has been under pressure for more
than a year by the federal Environmental Protec·
lion Agency to implement an annual test program.
Currently vehicles must be checked only when
sold.
TO SPUR THE STATE oo. the EPA impc»ed a
moratorium la.st year oo major new stationary
sources ol smog, such u industrial plants, ln
Caillomia.
An EPA spokesman, Michael Walsh. said the
moratorium would be Utled it the state eaaded the
Foran bUJ and Implemented annual insped.iom ln
areas where federal air quality stand.ards are
violated, wbkb 1.ocludes most ot t.be state.
In an attempt to pick up support for \be bill.
Foran amended it to reduee Callfomia'1 oew car
aoU-1mog studaf'4s. That -got the proposal
through the Smale but it ran into trouble in the AA·
sembly.
TOE lllLL WAS AJIENDED again in• sub-
com miUee to retain California st.anda.rds for most
new cars. But the bW also removes tbe mt.e's
abllily to enforce tbMe standards, wbicb are
generally tou,cber th8ll the federal IOftl'1UDeDt'a.
Tbe Brown admlnlatration opposed the
amended btll, cont.endin1 It would increase some
types of pollutants and lead to more SJDOI in some
areas.
ActorP~or
Still Critical
SHERMAN OAKS <AP> -Comedian-actor
• Richard Pryor remalned In critical but stable con-
dition today with burns suffered when an ether and
cocaine mlxtute exploded in a freak drug acddent
at his home.
There was no immediate word oo whether the
comedian's chances for survival had improved
overnight. Sherman Oa.ka Community Hospital
ac:hedu.led a nm conference today to diac:uss his
caae.
THE :Jt. VEA&-OLD Emmy and Grammy win-
ner, tnown for bis zany but incisive humor, was
"fairly alert" Tuesday, the hospital said. He
cracked jokes with actor Jjm Brown and other vis·
it.ors, but doctors warned be still faces Jess-than·
even odds for survival for the next few days at
least.
Pryor told bum specialist Dr. Jack Grossman
that be was mating a cocaine derivative called
"free base" with liquid ether when the ether ex·
ploded and hi.a clothes caught fire Monday night.
according to Police U . Dan Cooke. "Free base,"
which i.s smoked in a pipe, is the byproduct of a
chemical reaction between cocaine and ether.
AF'l'E& THE FIA•ES were subdued, Pryor
ran from his house and -rejecting offers of help
from police officers and paramedics called to the
scene -broke into a slow run.
June Tbompsoo, who lives near Pryor. said
she saw him jogging with an ambulance and two
uniformed men trallioe behind Monday night.
"He appeared to be delirious," abe said. "That
man was in sheer acooy ... l was unabJe to un-
derstand most ol what be was saying."
118.. 1'llOllPSON SAID sbe did bear Pryor
plead wttb officen: .. C'moa, gin me a seeond
cbanee -I know I did wroog but l'ye got some
good in me.•·
Coote said it was Dot known what sparted the
Monday explosion and "we may never know."
Early reports indicaled a cigarette light.er bad ex
ploded. undtng the comedian running from his
.bome in names .
Cooke said no cbarges against Pry~or were con t.emplated.
JUNE FUR SALE
< 20%0FF
1' SPECIAL REPRESENTATIVE WILL PRESENT THE
COLLECTION IN SOUTH COAST PLAZA ON
THURSDAY AND FRIDAY, JUNE 12 AND 13.
CHOOSE FROM A LARGE, SELECT GROUP OF
I. MAONIN FUR COATSANOJACKETSAT A
SAVINGS OFF OUR ORIGINAL PRICES. THIS IS THE
SALE FOR OFF.seASON SHOPPERS WHO
RECOGNIZE THE QUALITY OF AN I. MAGNIN FUR
AND PREF£R THE TIME TO SHOP CAREFULLY
BEFORE THE FALL FUR SEASON BEGINS. FULL-
·LENGTH COATS, WALKING COATS AND JACKETS
ARE INCLUDED IN THIS SALE. ANO EXPERIENCED
I. MAONIN FURRIERS WILL BE ON HAND TO
ADVISE AND ASSl$T. IF YOU WISH, YOU MAY
TELEPHONE AHEAD, ANO WE WILL: HAVE A
FURRIER READY TO SHOW YOU SELECTIONS WHEN
YOU AA RIVE. SOUTH COAST P~ FUR SALON .
FUR PROou(:Ts LA8Et.EO TO SHOW
coUNTRY OF OfUGIN
I. ·~ Cll9". ..... ,.. ,..,.. Mid tbat ...
Of eledrGille ~ass .... Clltctl'* .... Would .... ll"Oeel"I
.... ~botllUmeMd....,. JMlt all CCIDIUDel' ....._. W9N aaUlfted wtl.b tM
ayatem that~•• oa ~DI• wttb a Mtl• • ol i~ NH imtMt~ b1 the RamMI'. 11lole ecmumer advocat. contended that atioPl)en were clel>riYed ol the p,.-ocauw to check pricea when ~~~ • Item Ud • tbe7 an runt up oa cub
Last week Oraqe County •uoerviaon aaid tbey bad conaumen bl mlad .._ tJMf1 at.ded-an ordluDce ,..
qulrln1 l~1lble price l•I• oa all ttema 1old ln supennartef.a la unlncorporat.ed areuof thecoUnty.
&lpervtaora, however, left room for a contln\&an~ of
tbe nc>-priee-~ pollcy when they asreect that each chain
operator could operate one at.ore on a acanner-on.ty
format.
1bat probably wu a wise decialon. If consumer dla-truat ol the system la ovucome. the electronic scanners should speed 1boppln1 time and ultimately save
supenna.rket--patl'Onl money.
Tbe only way to overcome that dlatrust la for
supermarkets to provide a simple and clear shelf pri~
system, something that coaaumen have complained bu
so f~r been Jacking.
In return for the aubltanti.S savtnp DW'DOl'tedlY in
store for supermarket aperaton as a reauft of the aWltcb
to electrootca. aboppen deserve a aystem that telll tbem
in simple.to.read terma bow much a lroceJ'Y item coeta.
Appointment Backfired
For months before the June prlinary electloa the name ol. Ediaoo Miller, Gov. Brown's ~trovfliiii ap-
pointee to the Oranae County Board ot SUperytaon wu in the beadlines.
His controversial service record, b1s connection with
the Tom Hayden-Jane Fonda Campaign for Economic
Qemocracy and his aometlmes W-adviled. att.eotlon-
getting ploys as 3rd Dlatrtct supervisor attracted COUD·
tywide attention. ·
Then Republican Auemblyman Bruce Nestande
made some headlines hhnself by living up what ap.
peared to be certain re-electioo to hla state olfioe in order
to run against Miller la the superviloria1 campaign.
Indeed, with little interest ln the presidential primary
here, and no real contests for state offices, the Miller-
N estande race even won statewide notoriety.
So what happened oo June 3? Moet of the voters in
Orange County were simply bystanders in the race
because the two candidates weren't even oo their ballots.
That's because county supervisors are elected by dis-
trict. And the choice here was strictly up to voters in the
3rd District.
They took the matter in hand and gave Miller a real
shellacking at the polls, defeating the incumbent by
roughly 72,000 votes to 18,000.
That's not to say the rest ol tbe COUDty voters were
completely out of the argument. Enough of them were
sufficiently interested in sencttng Gov. Brown a meaaa,e
about bis arrQgant and offensive aPPOintment ol Miller to
help put nearly a quarter ol a millioo dollars tDto the
Nestande campaign war chest.
The irony is that ii Brown bad made a reasonably
wise appointment last July-lnatead of being the cynical
smart aleck -be could have been something of a hero
with a good number of voe.en and contributors in bi.I own
party. And Jane might be happily holding court on the
state Arts Commission.
"All's Well That Ends Well."
Costly Discoveries
In the interest of keeping fellow taxpayers up on what
they're getting for their money these days, we offer a few
gleanings from a $500 million federally financed
"knowledge development" program.
This baa to do with solving employment problems of
young persons between the ages ol 18 and 24 and ii de·
signed as background for the Carter administratido'•
Youth Act of 1980.
Some of the less·than-startlina ftndinaa:
-Youth unemployment la far more aeJigua than of
ficial government statistics imply.
-Policies designed to increase tbe number of joba
would have a dra~c:s on solving youth emp)oy. ment problems. < Goo4 -but what PC>lides?)
-Yeuth programs focus mainfy on deve&op. illl the lkilla of the young IO they wW be able to become
prodllctlve workers as adult.a. <Tfurt•1 an idea I>
-Youth joblessness is related to Juvenile dellnquen-
cy and other unsocial behavior. <We alway.a 1uspected
that!>
This of coune is Just tbe begim»ng. Tbe follow-up will
be a number of federally financed youth programs hued
on these profound finctl~ Just thought you'd to know. • OpmloM exprMMd In the tpec:e abOve at• thole-o4 the OaHy Piiot.
Other views exprened on lhi• page .,.. thote ol their autl'torl and'
artist&. Readet comment is Invited. ~The o.itr PllOt, P.O.
Box 1580. ea.ta Mesa. CA 92828. ~ (71•) 142-4321.
EXecutive Rules Out of Band .
la a rn.tie lobb~ effort
0... hnY 8NwD la.a baited r:·• ~a ....... to ...... Wmff1na jOWtiS from 1Ji1e G • ee.u.,. bnDCb of 10Ye11UD111t.
Tb• blH authored by A• Hmblymaa Daa Boatwri•bt
would b•ve permitted
teal•l•Uve
veto of •d·
mlnJatraUve
reaulatlona.
Brown aald
be viewed
the propoaal u ••• lel1oSaS
cballenae to
the underly·
inl concept ol our form ol CfJll·
emmtDt..''
,THAT 18 a daalJc uample of
twiat.W a phrue for ~veDience. ~ ~ cba•teac-e to 1ovemmeat already eldsta lD
the uaurpaUon of le1i1latlve
ROwera by tbe exeeutlve. Brown
aboalcl read the atate comtitu-Uoa :
n deuiJ proytdes that.. ''Tbe
Jack Andenon
pow .. of at.ate'°" ..........
l•-•l•l•tl••· •••cuU•• ••d Jadictal," wttb tbe turtlMr "'°" .talona tbat. ,,,_w e-...S
wtU. tbl eurdM of OM poRI'
m•r not aerelM ettlaer ol tbe otben •.. '' •
U 1'0 1'llS powers of tbe aAstetature, tM CODltitudoa lt
apeetfte. ctetetU.1 PNdMb llow tie l•W!I an to be -..w. It Ill
pro¥idild tbat DO bW may be act.
ed apaa umil 31 dQa aft.tr In· trodacUon, printed wltlt all ameadmellla. read three t1IW
oe tbNe ...,.... ct.an ta eada
boaae, approwed bJ a m~
of each boUle and atped by tbe govel'DOI'.
And It ta allo apeetftcaJJ.J stat-
ed um. "tbe Lel1alature may
make no law except by statute."
Notwttbttaadln1 tbeae pro-
vtak>m. Callfonlam .... IUbjett to UterallJ t.boul&Dda of lawa wblcb bave come into belq
wltbout enactment by the
Lelillature and wblcb are not etatutea. Tbese are tbe ad-
mlniltnUve reculatlou lldiapled
I;
~ t •
bJ dlea19d,..ecNJlb•1•U. eL&lM:ltm •
TBS•Ql1BSTIONA•LE
aut.borb tor tbeM .........., atem lrom u .. het tb•
Le1l1lature b•• dele1ated nowen to tbe aecutift to make 1·naa. IDd recullldoaa'' to .. forw ....... Aad tbe t'Ollrtl, =--.. feet •lldl ........ ..... med~wllo an~adtMI .,. ,....,_.,.to tbe ptlblk, .....
bekl tlMm to ...... tM .....
foree Md effftt as atatutea. vw.ue of reoa&aUou eaa re-
1u1t iD .... , • .u Uld deprtftltioD
of tbe ab lltJ to eat'• a
UveWllllod.
UDllM euc:tmeat., propGled
repbidcm aettber' ...... to be
priDaed wttb 811 am1•llllM'lt9 JO up prg to...,. ... pablilbed add read tbree .,. nmnbal.
DOI" ttped by die ., ... w DOI'
.. ,_ elle. <>Dee .. pted tllley caa onty be ,.._ by ,....e
of • ...-. a diffk91l 8Dd Clftm lmPGllllble~. Tlmdelaptianof~
power ..... --=----m•J ,_.. •· ~..., asWJ U. LCtalewn .a tt • to tbe eaecutl•• bnaell to "promutiata" naa. to ilQle-
ment tbe Jlftll'atD. 8'lt • time
went by the rellanee oe * •· eeutive to complete~ ol
aa enactment became ••Ddanl.
TODAY rr bu developed to
tbe poiat tbe qecutlve br.clil
bas eoCDe to .tbe view that tis .. an iDbenat powet'. aw. udrM· ulatiou are • 'promulaated,.' wt.Dy-alD.J by tlae carloaa, nm
where tbe LeP!ature h• re-
fQaed to act and 1ruted DO
autbority and oft.ea iD open de-
fiaace ~the ~lure.
Boatwrtcbt'•· meuu.re ii Juat one in a aeries of efforts by
te1ta1m.on to re1a1n control ol
tbe powen ao foollably delecat-
ed away over tbe yean. But bis
bas hem the most fon?eful effort
aad promkes to be the most ef.
feetlve.
Amutn1ly some lelitlators
bave-oppoeed bia propoaal oe tile
crounda review of new recula-
Uom would create a tremeodoua
worklo..t for the Lepalature.
Tbeir ~ are not well
fOUDded, or once the neeuuve
kAew tbe f'elr\llatlou must be
approved by tb~ Letl•latu.re none would be adopted wit.bout
careful~ beforehand.
Bvr EVEN ti that were not
tbe case, when did tbe
lqiabtcn become privtJeced to ataft lbeir .._, 1be eomut•
Uoo ..,. lawmaldac ia tbelr job
bowe\W ameb time end wort It
may take. lleeljq year arouad
tbere ea be DO aeme for det-ec•U.C tbelr powsa to muleet-
ed people. let aJone daqeromly b&eDCl1n& the duties of tbe ex-
ecutive met tecWaUve bl'uet.a
of gOftl'Dllllmt at great harm to
tbe j)Ublic.
And ~ opposition ot Speaker Leo Mccarth.y aod Senate Pfesi.
dent Pro Tem James llUls ts
completely mystifying. Both
have repeatedly declared tbe
need for stronger "legislative
OYenigbt.." a phrase meanink
c&oeer watch oo the executive to
mate ceJ'tain it carries out the
policim of tbe i.e,tslature. No
better' plllCe to begin such watcb
tb&n Cbe eftectift renew of a-
eratift f'ICIUtkma.
CIA Agent Says Secrecy Covers Bungling
WASHINGTON -A veteran
CIA agent baa just wrltteo an
exploelve book, charging that
the agmey's top bras haft' re-
peatedly lied about its secret
operatiom to the public, the
Con1msa and even the preai·
dent. Tbe revelations could
atJlllie tbe coegreulooal cam·
palp to loaeen the leash oo the
CIA.
The qent. Ralph McGehee.
apeat 25 ,..,.. wit& the ClA in •
variety ot U ·
al111ment1.
He bu pro·
duced • UD· pQblhbed
maau•f!~t that de
maar. ol the
CIA I ar1u-
m ea ti for
1reeter
aecrecJ. llJ
aHoclate Dale Vao Atta lo·
t.ervlewed lkGMee, and ... al·
lowed to examine the book·
lenath .manmcrlpt. 14~ ia DO PbWp ~.
out to delVOJ tbe CIA by ldlati·
fytn1 former collealuel aDd _.
daouriaa thelJ' Uva. · But bl:a dlaifhmonJIMDt nma deep. ....
be lays out the re&llOaa for lt
artlculate1y GD mon1 poueda.
•'I dld not reaeb my
apoat.y ....U,.'' be nplalm,
Art Hoppe
noting that be chose tbe CIA for
a career in 1952, fresh out of
Notre Dame, where be played
four years on undefeatea foot·
ball teams.
E88ENTIALL Y. M cGebee
charges that the CIA uses
secrecy lo cover up ln~m
petence. bureaucratic bunC)ing
and Ulegal activities. "Other
tbaD identity of sources aod any
unique t.echnolocical c<>Uecticm
processes,'' be writes, the CIA
"does not have aoy secrets to
protect.''
Here are some of McGebee's
charges:
-"It bas been my observa·
Uoo tbat most everythinc an
aaency official says about the
aaency ls either false or so mia·
leading u to convey a ll"e•Uy
false lmpreaaioo. •• be declarea.
-EVDY woao in public annouaeemeata by CIA offidala
should be eumined ror clecep.
Uon. For instance, tbe word
"curreuUy," as in, "we cW"TeDt·
ly no ..,_. employ Amertean
joumalistl u CIA operatives.••
may mean no«btnc more tha
tbat the newsmen were fired in
time for the announcement and
then rebired.
-Artlclea on the CIA in nme
and Newsweek two yeara a«o
·'drew up>o officiaJ CIA sources
wbo C'ODdmM'd t.beir policy of ~
deviatiAa dilten91t.Y." For U ·
ample. GDe of tbe stories report·
ed that a bum.an qeet pnMded
tbe first solid ewideoce tbat
China .. aboul to .et otf an
atom bomb. ''tbereby ~
t.be •PY satellites." llcGebee
bad penouUy beea ... tpect to
check that dAlm aDd fomd it to
be WlbW -but ft auited the
purpceea ol CIA ....... who Want·
ed to Juatify use of buman agent&
-Preskleat Fbrd was livm a
1lowin1 acco.t of a supenpy
with auppoMd accea to critical
lnalde inf.-matian. •• ~ meo-
Uooed WU tbe fad \.bat the
.. ent bad bem eomPkteb UD-Pf'Od&aettw ....... &la -...
aalaey ol IMI tMD SJOO a IDGll&b
bad been •~!Jed.'' ,..._.e: Meo.Me dutifully
submllt.ed tu• ...-.a1pt to tbe
CIA, add made &be deJeUoaa or·
dered. Tbe aame7 .... rdUled
commmt toua.
INFOUllNG IV AN: Tiie daW in Sovlet·Amerleao relatlooa
ba a n 't t.terrupt.•41 the
Row of U.S. ~t' · b'I:•·
Uom U..t are *'Pl*' ~ to t.be Soviet Ullloa. courtelSJ of
the America &ppaJfft.
Tbe U.S. IO'Y•rame•t ea-
-.
c hanges publications with
several countries. Tbe Soviet
Union, a you might guess, gets
tbe best of the swap -six times
more pampbkts packed witfl 1•
times mare informer.Joo.
Tllia __,.. Sea. Jim Sasser.
0-Tt!llD.., who bas conducted bis
own privae investigation. Heft
are aome ol bia ftndinp:
-It cost $1%,000 in fiscal year tm to MIMI the Kremlin aonae
23,000 documents, i.ocludiQg the
Defeme lnteWgeoce Agency's
"Review of Soviet Ground
Forces" and CIA maps and
atlases of Afgha nistan,
Yllgoslavia, Angola. PakistaD.
brad md Saatb Korea.
-n aJ8T Jast about as much over the tame period of time to
see that f1del Castro received
our ~ JMlbUcatiom. lD-
cl udin1 eo9lea of the U.S.
Army's field manual, tedmical
manual and a autde to tbe
LANCE mjMlle
-Ewn lbe lnnian ~
ment la on Uncle Sam'• fNe
mailing lilt. 'n.e boaqe bolden
get some 3.100 publlcaUou at•a
coet of$1.-lbat year.
Tbe cost n,un.. bacidelataUJ.
don't lncll.9de malliq, wbida lt
a1ao paj,d by tbe American tl!IJ· payers.
A Long Trip Abroad Can Betp, a Candidate
"Klnd of," says Paddy.
"Tbe fact la, Joe, that 1n UUI
1reat. lad of oun, the flnt tblna
a pl'elidea.t'• 1ot to do in order
to 1et btmaeJf re-elected to our
oaUon'• offtce la to 1et the bell
o'8t of tbe country."
• wut"9pnlitn• tolt.Q"'-
aadmlndtblatore.'' . ..,.. ..,, Joe, .... ,. .......,.,
"Loe* Ill za-. ID '11, = to CblM aad "'-iD al~. t
In '1'. U. fardllelt Pnllldmt l'onl ........ r.rto Rko. lo
be wiDI tlMi PllM'tio R.leaa -.
and 11 toclQ pla1laa Soll la Palm......._
''No. ...... ..,. ...., • ·11r =-of tlle II l'/J,i ..
alao ... ,,.. -.................
..... of•: .......... .,
pe~aadU.e-; 1 I~ ,..., ...
_ _. __
• •08COW CAP) -WM Uilted a.t• It,,...._ wtth teebAJcal probleme "'-""' H• 1,ace •-.sa.. ~ SO~ UMoa .. ....-. -... • .. ••lb a ~ procram al..S at enbanclllt Ute •· ._,... Of ._ ud ._...,._.ca klna·teno or-, M&al waa .. .
ftle .......... IDOlll .... "'die &oYN\ ....
.......... WU cltaJlietiurd WI moeUl ..... two
A ....... ,.. ..... tllto arblt 00W tM N-
............. Tl~ two..,.. after'• 8"· let.ll&mpl'taD crew to~ .
•eaoa •~ca 8llOTI .\&It beeoaUna .. ,,..
q .. t .. ~ ... ftiibll," bcMNd wttru 9"t« •pace «ll'l'~t Boril ltmacrfUo. 1a U...S"• enrmmt newspaper lsve1tJa.
• He likened the apace effort to a ''coemlc rela)' race ...
By eontrut, the last American tlluned space • nlabt WU 1a July 19'15 wbeft Apollp ll linked with a
Soyus capsule for a jol.nt U.S.-SovJet miuloa dur-
illl • brWbloom 1n Eut·W•detente. ~-Problems with~rotective Wea~ oc.ber' '<components have back by two years -to
• March 1Slll -the e~ launch date for tbe
jumbc>-siled, swept-wiq America spac~lbuttle • ~ TBEBE HA VE ll£EN UNCONna•ED re-
ports that the Soviets may be developina their own
reusable sbUlll~ cnft, . . ..
=-However. Western space expena in MOICOW ~generally expect that for the Ume being the Soviet
• manned apace program will continue to ~~Ute
¥. Salyut-Soyuz orbital complex system it bU been
• perfecting since 1971.
f. The orbital complex conslst.s of a cylindrical
»Salyut space station -47 reet long and weiehiDg
.1' almost 21 tons· -plus Soy\lz capsules docked at I
~ either end. Unmapned careo ships are used to send ~ fresh supplies, mail, replacement equipment and i
other items to the Salyut's crew .
.,. The current station, Salyut 6, has been in orbit t
8 since-Sept.29,19'17.
~ ACCOllDING TO SOVIET SPACE offtclals,
cS.Salyut 6 has traveled more than 370 million miles
,.;-equivalent to about 11 times the minimum dis·
D-tance between the Earth and Mars .
• 1 Over 32 months, the Salyut bas served u an
. .orbiting home for 10 cosmonaut crews of two 111en
.(each, carrying out • variety ~ scientific and
~biochemical experiments.
• Last year, Soviet cosmonauts Valery ltJunln
;,:,and Vladimir Lyakhov spent 17S ~: 31 minutes
aboard Salyut 6 -a world space endurance re.
~c:ord· .• Jtywpin la back aboard tbe statioo liGDC widl
,_coemenaut Leonid Popov. Wes~ ·~~ d servera apeculate that the two. lamicbed Al!lru t, • ~ay be afmlng for another record mmtdon -: or '1 ~leqt •Y ID Ol'bit long en<JUCb to send ~ . ~ •t.be opening of the Summer Olympics ID M
,;J,o.July 19. -
: · TfJB SALYUT·SOYVZ SYSTD aiao ._.
.dtelped the Kremlin reap preattge tbroaP Ute or--~I ot five aueftAive .,........,,., eftW9. 1aftllt.. mg Soviet ..flllbt. ~m..-. ad cos.._...,
.mam CiecllcMkwakia, Poland. ICMt 0.. ..,.
lhl.lgarfa and Hungary.
Bulgarian Georgy Ivanov and bis commander,
Nikolai Rukavtabnlkov, were fOl"Ced to retum to
&artb prematurely ID April 11'19 after tbeJ failed. .;,!~~re~J'!t~rweek·looa
~. Following tbe most recent joint Oigbt -
llUngarian Bertalan Farkas and Soviet V-1er'Y
d!Jul>uov -an Izvestia COIDIDeotatQr .ea pain.
jtedly t.batWmt European utninauta are nat llated # go into apace with their American colleapes .-aw a& least 1982. «, •
TD GOVERNllENT-CONTaOLLBD Soviet
p.ewa media routinely devote heavy coverage to
~F•cb a~ shot. •· However, veteran Moscow observers say tbe
'\Ustness·al·usual tempo <>f the Soviet space pro-
gram h~ led to considerable drop lD lnt4inilt ~mong the general public compared to tbe beady,
~uslast.lc days of the 19605.
'!Y
~Retail Sales .
·still Plunging
~
WASlllNGTON <AP> -Plunging retail·sales
'\nd cutbacks ln planned capital apeod.ing by bust· isesa indicate the nation's ecmomy la stru sllding,
iJ>OSSlbly further than durlna the last recesaloD.
The Commerce Department said TuesdQ n.
, ~ sales dropped 1.$ perctlJt in May. the fourtb
Jt,ralabt mmlh·tbey have fallen.
';T. In • separate report, the deputlDnt uld ~
·IMISH9 baw scaled pla.nued spencliq thJa JUI' for
~ plat md equipment, to 9.9 pereent more tbm
19'19, iDsteed ot the 11.1 perc«sl lncreue projeded
.~ ..... ap.
.:i The nta1l aalee drop, to 7.3 pt!reftlt ~
tMlt Jalluary peak, was more than doubl~ UM! i~ percent decline in the last four-month ·tan ftOm
115ept.em1ter tbroulb Deeember mt~ tbe ~fl
the nation's wont recession sinee World War 1L
, .
'•
~·
'1
~. Ju,,.11. 1~ DAii. Y PIL.0., :I f
Low•yleld Cl@atrettes
I
S"nate Democretlc Laader Robert C. Byrd saya
controla on con·
•umer credlt
ahould be aban·
doned due to the
unintended im-
pa ct OP the
automobile in·
dustry.
Surgeon 6eneral Eyes Smoki[,rg
WASHINGTON <AP) -11le a1C11110ND, ~ 4 1171 ~ day, ... a.told lQiriNe ta U
U.S. 1uraeon 1eneral is redlrect· to Conireaa. ratied the question years."
ln1 retearch on 1mok1q ln ao of whether people 1mokln1 low·
eftort. to determine whether tar and low-nicotine clgaretta
Amertcm1 an dolnl themselves might be dolntr themselves mare
even more b-.rlb by 1mok.lng harm by smoldn1 more often or
more but tblnldnl lbey're 1et· inhaling more deeply.
tint ie.. w UMI nlc~ Dr . Dr. Joune Luoto, medlcal of·
Jullua a. IUcbmoDd told 15 doc: fleer for Cbe Smoll:lng and Health agency tn the Department of ton eel sdenttall ~t • con-Health and Human Servtcn,
ference that the trend to low·tar aald cJ1arettea with 15 mllll·
and &o.nleotlne ct1arettea bad grama ol tar or less aceounted
led to changes ID people's amok· ror ooly 2 percent or cigarette
ins hablts. sales in 1967, but 46 percent to-
From June 16 to July 15 .t From July 16 to Sept 1 ~
CJGAaETrES TODAY Jaave
8D •vera1e 13.8 mg. or tar and o.t m•. or nlcotirle, she said.
Charles R . Schuster. a
University of Cbica10
,peycboloty and pbarmacololY
profeaeor, eaJd research also ii
needed to determine whetber
low"')'teld cilarettes "with tbeir
unfortunate lmpllcaUon of a aa.fe
cigarette, encourage inltiation ol
smoking.''
.FARES.
Fly to Chicago for~ low~ $111 one-way.
There's no lower fare to Chicago. And best
of all, on Continental there are no restrictions.
Including no advance purchase.
Our $111 fare is good on every Coach seat,
on every nonstop fligh4 every day of the week.
Anytime between June 16 and July 15, 1980.
Children 2 thru 11 fly for only $83.
After that, our fare will increase
slightly to $125 one·way, children $93.
But these will still be the lowest
unrestricted fares to Chicago.
~ii .... n This summer, the
lowest unrestricted fares
going to Chicago are on Continental. Along with
some of the friendliest1ie1Vicc in the sky and
wide-body Golden Jet comfort
So call your naveJ agent. company travel
de~em or Continenlal Airli nes.
LOS ANGELES TO CHICAGO: 11 :50 am ~
12:00 noon!' 12 :10 am.
CHICAGO TO LOS ANGELES: 9:00 am,
6:35 pm~ 6 :45 pmr
t!Wof ~.f"-V•V..<ro~ ....,.._..._a_ .. ,.. ,....,. ___ , ...... _, ___ _.... ..... f I t ·-· ··ou SHOULD SEE US NOW
The Proud Bird with the Golden Tai I.
CONT INENTAL AIRLINES~
U.S.A. /Canada/Mexico/Hawaii/Micronesia/ AustraJia/New Zealand/Fiji/Samoa/and the o!nt.
'
• • • for UiforJ110Ci011 1-•tlU.. to
,__.,,. o/ 2 ~nalflue Cu•
lrea Gold.a RetrieNr Dor. talcen
frez• ow 1ao,,.. 4/24/BO. Dow• are
lif• •i• (42"" 18" lai«la) & oppro"imately
15016e. apiece. Pletue coll (714) 646-6149.
,46eolaiely NO quealtdru oabd.
8CIDIH'Z, A CATllOLIC wbo oppc»e1
abortioo. tint tried to dJvet the bW to the Auembl.1 Jud.lclary CommiUee.
wbere lt mlabt have bad a better
chance. But that move wu defeated on a 4·7 vote.
He coatettded that the biU d.ldn't
belong ln th• Health CommlUee
because aborUoo lsn't a buJtb problem.
He said the commit.tee ualpmeat "to
me la akin to sendtna a capital punbb-
..
__ ..._.--....----P-.. tJJ.6!FD.;Carpot1l PO YOU "EED
A LAWYER? You are invited
to a free,· P.ubllc Seminar where you wlll
learn how you can pay no Income tax and recover taxes you have paid the
past three years.
You can participate in a highly profit
motivated investment that has a four-
year history of pasltive cash flow and
significant tax savings.
Seating Is limited• Reservations required
644-2507
Gerald L Kozak, Tax Planning
Newport Center
3S'9 San Mlouet Or., Suite 110
Newport Beach, Callfomla 92660
IAbwtillg ~ aDOilatxt'>
Begi,m July 1
A carpool S)'ltem J>nDOled by the Ora_q•
County Tramlt District la ~beduled to atut .IW,
1.
Tbe countywide carpooUna efforts wm beneflt
employees of large buainesaes such as t.bole Int.be
Irvine Industrial Complex.
A meeting of the tranalt dlatrtct, the Oranae
County Transportation Commtaston and the
Southern California Association of Govemmenta
<SCAG> apparenUy answet'ed quesUou the re·
glonal agency asked about the propoMd system.
Tom Jenkin•. executive dlreetor of the
transportJlUOll c-omoaluloa told coq:uplJ!f~
Monday that SCAG repraentatlvea were aatJafted
with county offtclaJs' anawen to four major coa--«mL .
SCAG asked, among other thlnp, wbetheT
OCTD couJd organize enough carpoo&en to meet
federal and s~t.e air pollution standarda on a
S2SO, 000.a · yeaJ"budget.
• lffll 11m •1111 smas:
.... ,..,U.•llll&t* ..... ...,
MELLER & SNYDER
A Professional Law Corporation Also in quesUon was whether the transit dis-
trict, as a ~al governmental ageaey could help
meet regionaf needs.
·-----------------------.. The transit district's proposal to take over the carpool organliatloo run by Las Ance~-bued
4000 McArthur Blvd., Suite 760 <East Tower> Irvine 851-8\21 ask for John Connolly, Attorney at Law
-------------------------Commuter Computer bad been questioned by
RUGBY
STYLE •••
for the active man!
First Rugby shorts and now the
Rugby pant. Authentic gear
from New Zealand for leisure
or active sports. 1003 cotton,
brushed inside, wasbfast. pre-
~hrunk. Available In six great
team colors.
I
SCAG. the state energy commission and the
private firm.
OCTD asked to take over the countywtde c:ar
pool system after critldzing the private firm's ef •
fort&.
Fees Doubled
Newport Dunes
Hikes Achnission
Persons will pay more to get lnto Newport Dunes effective immediately as a result ol action 'tuesday by the Orange County Board of
Supervison.
Children under 12 will pay~ ceou and adult.a
$1. 7S under the new admission scbeduJe approved
by supervisors.
That's nearly twice the fees of 2S cents for
chiJdren, is cents for teenagen and Sl for adults
preseutly paid by those who visit the park on Up-
per Newport Bay.
The present fees bave been in effect since 1974.
The operator, Newport Dunes Inc .• said its request
for new admission prices was prompted by a sub-
stantial increase in operating costs.
The county, wbkb recdves 22 perceat of the
gross receipts from admiuioft fees, expects to
gain $3,800 per year from the~ pri~.
Last year's Income from the Newport Buch park
was '3),650.
~ --~~~~~-,..--:-~~~~~~~~~~~---f . ---(coupon).-... I~ FRIDAY/SATURDAY •.1
COUPON SPECIAL I I AT sP1REsn~\~~~o 2i;~~~"o~~:MESA ONLY -•
I •:i TllfW9fl -5Cll .... kllll k~" ~/lmM. tt1'01 Mdlttlw ... ,. Slit..,. :
fwy I w S,...Uc.tl 111sa. 3125 M.-BM. (Mii Saia !*go Fwy.) Md l'ltlY I c ~
...., " ,,_.. llll'DS. Of'-.. llr ti-... C..,.. 9'M tor llP lo 4 diners It a,.cuf ......
' I !2L~~!.~!E~~~.:. .. ..!!:.~. I i I roll.ANOOESS£AT. .~
I !!'!~~!1!!.~oi~L8!~~~-~~'!~i powo. roll. ~0 OlSSERT •
- --fcoupon) • -.. !
1 SUNDAY 1i
1 COU1f!!~00!!. CIAL •I
I ATSPIAESllAVINE-SPIRESICOSTAMESAONLY 13
nw.,.,., •·Ml.--. llld c...-.. ~. t7101 llacArtW ""'· Ill SM Di11t f Medical Center fwy.) tf $flm/c.tl lltu. ft35 """' .... ( ... Slit °"II fwy.) IM...., I CU .... ...., ...... ,,a.°"" -......... c.,o. ...... ., ............ Specilt.... :
Natru!s Directors I !!9..~~!..t~~ ... DJ!'!...m..:..:..!:.'!.11 ~~-~-~~~-~~~-~~--~-~--~~-The ·~~tm~t ~ ~nt.er. ~ ~~~.~.~~~.~:~:~:=~~~~B~.
lhrH key adminiatraa.ors Ma. Brown was ap-B S D F '
' .
at UCl Medical Center in pointed to the pacsUon of at · · wy. 1. ·~ ~::n~ ~;s~~~°m a:t :::~A-!:~!!:.ctor or ' ...-.. a • COSTA MESA• 3125 Harbo< BIVd.
Gonulez, director of Ms. Caldwell is the f'•• 1, li&!fa•ra••• (near S. D. Fwy.)-•• cllntcalservices. I •-d" '
new asaoc a..., ll'ector ~ -... - - -.. j N o r m a B r o w n . of prolesaJonaJ services. ~
Alethea Caldwell and Ms. KasteUc was ap-
Sumiyo Kutelic have pointed asaodat.e dlrec·
been named as uaoclate tor .of ambulaa.ory care
directors of the medical services.
•
1 Crimina/JJ Surrenthr
PEKINd <AP> -More tban l,40t mm1nala have atven themselves up in Futlea ~
since a c•mpaip .,__., lut year to ecluc:atAt peo. '
pie in the law, the People~•~ reported.
Tbe campai1n baa lnchaded botb study
aeuloal and open triall of ''l;yp6ea& HIM,•• tM
paperaald.
In addition, lt uld, tblN b8d bem • .... ot cuea of paNatt twulq la dell• 1111t eldll •
and wive1 tunllDa lD buabadl nated • crimlMI
cbaraea.
Man's 14KYeHowGo1d
9 Diamond .97 carat
DIAMOND RING
Lady's 1 BK White Gold
1.30 ct. Sapphire . 75 Carat Diamond
& DINNER RING ~ 5112500 . . Reg. $2250.00 ....
Lady's 141< Yeffow Gold
-1.04 Carat Diamond
SOI.IT AIRE RING
Lady's
14K Gold
26 Diamond ACCUTRON
BRACELET
WATCH
Reg. $2250.00
Sf9r
Complete Stock
14K Gold
PIERCED
EARRINGS ... ~
• .
Lady's Platinum
1.35 Carat Diamond lady's 14K White Gold
53 Diamond 1.80 Carat
·PEAR SHAPE RING
Lady's 14K White Gold
21 Diamond .56 Carat
DINNER RING 6 DIAMOND RING
Reg. $800.00 . ~3·~
18K Yellow Gold
10 Diamond 1.58 Carat
ft~ DIAMOND ·
~~ EARRINGS
.04 c.atTot. Wt. Reg. 1125.00 ..•............. 15911
.06 c.at Tot. Wt. Reg. $180.00 ............•... '7911
• I 0 c.at Tot. Wt. Reg. $200.00 ................ "'''°
.15 Ccraf Tot. Wt. Reg. $300.00 .............. '149'0
.20 c..t Tot. Wt. Reg. 1386.00 .............. 1189"
.23 c..t Tot. Wt. Reg. M00.00 • .. .......... '199"
.34 c..t Tot. wt. Reg. teo0.00 ..•.......•••• '299"
.14 Cm .. Tot. WI. Reg. 11050.00 ............... '499"
.II C... Tof. wt. Reg. 11100.00 •.•...•....• :. 154911
.76 c..tTot. wt. Reg. 114196.00 .............. '839•
.t4 C..Tot. wt. Reg. 12750.00 .••.•...•••• 'l 365•
1.00 C... Tot. wt. Reg. $2925.00 ........•. 1 145,.
1 .. 40 C...Tot. Wt. Reg. 16100.00 .••.•••.•. '2550"
14 Karat Gold
DIAMOND
PENDANTS
LargeGrQUp
WEDDING BANDS
Ladies' & Men's
Values to S300.00
s7 ..
All Other
W8EDD.ING ANDS
lnclucUng Sets
70%0FF
-..
,·
Di WT -TM llotor' ~ la &ally Youna'1 '--......... oltt.
· Federal Workers
Denied Hot Water
. • ..
~ . ...
WASHINGTON (AP> -TM IO"rUleal la dstH'll eo&d waler on the baDda ol 140,000 federal
--~ees in the Wuhlnatco area. n.e idea II lo 11ve tbe '°" of beatiftl bOt •at.er. at lealt UllUl the weather tvu cool9r la 5et1ember.
THE Ol'nCIAL ESTlllATE IS that tum.lDI
-oll the bot water ln eJl)ployee rest rooms durtn1
tbe summer months will save the equivalent of
.. OMS barrela ot fuel oil, or about SG0.233.
,. To the American Federation or Government ~ E119J>loyees, however, lt is a foolish ellercise. ~ ''It'• 1e1turlng," says spokesman Gree ~.r Kettefldr . .,It's symbolism and futile aymbollsm at
i: ~·"
AM Don Molntrr•, vio• Pl'Hidellt of the • ~ W uhiqtan-area federaUon, lnsl.stl: "A person wbo
worb tOI' the IOVtrD~ent lbcNld have Uae aame rettroom facWties as anyone else."
WHATEVER THE WO&KE& DISEN ·
~bantment, thin1s apparently could be
: worse -at least for those not liven to cold
showers.
General Service Administration officials
slrtssed that employees who ride bicycles to work
and then a.bower ln federal building gymnasiums
would not be denied hot showers.
; RoQen 8tew1n, a11l1tant to the reat•al GSA adminitltrator for the Washington area, aatd u would be •WY and counterprodw:Uv1 to do anJthing that might drive such ener1y-savera
back into their cars.
• 4 • J . .
. .
. . .
. . . . . . . . . . .
. . •' . .. . • . . .
GSA regi011al officials ln other sect.loos of the
country also may tum off tbe hot water if that's
the way they choose to meet requirements callinl
for a s percent reduction in energy consumption
tbia fiscal year.
Ten Awards Given
Retail Clerks Union .!:c,'m;'. , ~ o..-
Local 324, bead-•-tntiieiu......-,we
quartered in Baena ~ ...... aow .. 1•1111111r1 Park, b11 announced .. _._,.,._......,'~
that 10 Orana• Co11t .,..; •• •••"'1 ••ec•• "' .. arH 1tudmta have won ..,......,.._
coU~ae acholanhlps and Scholarship recipients
vocational awarda. were e lt her Re ta II
Winnen include: Clerks Unioo Jntmben ::r.-9.!:1~!::~ or members' lmmedlatel
e.c11. 11•: P...i JanMonwskl, WOO; relatives, a spokesman
..-Cl PN <:oMMmbe _. CWr'll E. Sald ~IDMCt\. • •eat• Netlees Betlda 'IW•lees I
~MC>nUAmlS
1.agun.1 Beech
4'94-9415
~ ..
Sen Juan Ceplstrano
•95-1n&
.ua.n•e.OM N•MMOMI
646-2424
eo.taMesa
173-9450
..a~ .... .,.,,. . .,
MCMIT1MAY
110 Broedw.y
co.taaNea
M-9150
SMmf&nmal.
NOllTVMT Wll1CLWCMUIL ~. Cf9matloot
427 E. 17th St .
Co.'-Mela .. .•.
Deatlu
Elaewhere
WASHINGTON CAP) -T1M pa1Dtul Hri• fll nb&• lbota that bu~ Amencam from th• fatal dlM ... for
dteadet ProbablY wtU be nplaeed by a
newly 1pprovtd vacoloe, 1peelalf•ta
Hl• '
Tbe f'ood and Dtut AdlftlnlltraUoa
epproved the wer, more effective vac· d.IM. It • ., developed ln J'rance and
baa .... med f(W yean ID Surooe.
TBS VACCINE18 lJ.8. dllt.rlbutor
uya all 1tate bealtb departmeats
Aould ... " 1uppllel of the vaed.De by
tM ... of .... moatll. Tb• vacdn• l• made from rabies vll'UMI..= In cultu.rt9 of human
cella, ol 4Ja duck ecp like the old oo•. Tbe vacetne proteeta virtually all
NO.a. ....S '° rU.. u4 bu fewer advene iuctlcm than the duct eu
type, the FDA aaid.
Ail lidded feature ls that the vaccine
provldll .......... aftw ftve IJdectlou inatead ·~ U. 23 n..irec1 wHh tie oldtr
type.
"TBIB~--•NTOl18 ~ for rabies lb this countrv. • said
Dr. W lll1m Winkler of the federal Cea• for l>tleNe ~ wbo Hid &"9
vteclae lhoGld nplaee IDGR ol tM d•
mand for the old one.
Wlnkler •aid ln a telephone lntervtew
that about I0,000 1et ]>recauUonary
rabla vaccm1•1ont Heh year ln th.la eountry, •ua111 aft.er havlnl beelJ bit·
ten by anlm1J1 IUlpect.ed or Uvina the dlleue.
W"*ler noted th.at lb• vacclne, like
tbe duck ea variety ta DOt useful after
1ymptoma ol tall• de•etop. Tbe rabies virus lltttekl tbe nenoua system and
after l)'IDPtolm 1uc:b ., mmde ap.,ma
and hMdacbe occur, the outcome lB
alma.t alnya fatal. he Wd. .
AGOSZSllVE PSEVBNTIVE
meuu:ret to reduce upoeures tbe lut
20 yean have cut contlrmed human
cases to less than 5 per year ln this
COUJ\tQ, tM the dlMue \lluaUr muna
deatb Lm1a&S treated early. beaald.
The vaccine is ,ivea u a series of
five ~eetiona into the muscle al tbe
arm f1!'et • month's time. aec ... lt
tak" ' dl1S to 10 day1 for th. body to
cMHlop nbies antlbodlw thr'oulh the
vaccllle. tbe fl.rst sbot g accompanled
• with a doM of rabies lmmUM gloiultn.
Thia ,W,.•Hn, which comes from the
blood plasma or previously vaccinated
hu1aan doaan. atYes launedlate but
taaiporarr uttboilr proteetJoo until the
TU OLD VACCINE, alao med with a
•bot of lmmun•Jlobulln. •uaSly la
ldven u ~ ..W 21 dall1 lboU und9r' th.e akin ot the abdomen, falJowed bJ
two later boolter abota.
Frequeat llde•tffeets of the old nc·
cme are snen palnl, fever~ lnitatJon
and ltddne at tbe lites ol tbe ~. '
aller-1e reutloat. •ad, • rare oe· · ca1ion1, paral,Uc reaeUou ta th•
nervom Qltem.
WJtb the new •aeelDe, the l'DA Md.
about 25 ~of tboee ln-. report.
ed pain. neWnc and lrrtt.tion at the
slte of tbe UUect1ona and few reported
symptoms ol headache, oa111e1 and
dizzlnest. No neuroloaleaJ reactlou
bave bMll reported, U. qeaq ecWM.
THE NEW VACCINE ta made by
lnstltut Merteux ln Lyon, France. and
will be dlftrtMted b1 t.b• Merieua lntUIUte of Jllamt. S>r. PlllJ• Cob•, a vice prwtdent of
Merteux. Nld tblt he anUctpatM a de-
mand for Utt vacclnt alld that lntt.ial shipments will cover the needs of all
states for about oae to two months. Later
Ul1I year then wU1 be 1DOl"t &ban enoulb
vacclnetosupply all demeodl, he added .
·~ Stat• Park• a d
Recreation Dt~
Russell Cahill• •· signed effect.Ive June
15 becaute hU wtfe'a
sertou1 Uln•H re-
quires b1a "full atten-
tloo.1' He 1ald it 1$d
nothing to do with the
threat on his life for
which three men
have been jailed .
•:
i
' •
Just by coming into Mutual Savings. .
~
.
' # .... ~
WiJJ_~you one free book the next time you
drop by a Mutual SaVings office. Choose either
"The Complete Scarsdale Medial) Diet" by Dr.
Hennan Tamower or "California's Top 10
Vacations" by Walter Houk~
The bestselling diet book suggests what to do
LONG·TERM ACCOUNT
Ettecttve Jime J thna June u
With only $100 .and a mlnlmu11t tenn of 80 monthe. you'D
be ...,q blgh lntemt which la aMnpOUnded cWy. 'lbla
WXXJUDt II..._,~ a US. GcMnlmtm ~ID $JOO.OOO.
No benk.,. thJI much!
9.50°/o I 0.11°/o
Annual YleJd
when you want to lose a few pounds. The vacation
boo k shows you where to go when you want to
get CNJay, .
While you're chooslnQ.some easy reading,
you can also choose an easy savings plan. At
Mutual Savings, the choice ls yours.
~Mw5tln,wiell
Our MOMV Market Aa:iowlt _,. high Interest With
a minimum $~000 and 6 montt.. This account • bwuntd btl a US. GcMlwwlt Ae-=w eo $100,000. No ... .,.th .. ~f
8.665°/o 8.979°/o
Annual Rate Annual Yield
~ 1 ..
\
~. \ ,
".
'
~
·' ..
#I
iJ
:J .,
..
..
t .;
' t I
I
l ' I • ' . -
I A
"
.
\ • • l
I
I
-. --·------
Kathleen W-mkler. 30. ot Philadelphia, Pa.,
won flJ"St prize in the First International
C•l Niellm Violin Competition lD Odenae,
Denmark. ~ burst into tears when bear·
ing the results and was deeply COUdled
when receiving the award from Queen
Margrethe of Denmark.
Gift Aw&rded
By Oil Firm
NEW YORK (AP> -At least 230 IDOl'e cancer
paUenta can be treated wttb the rare anti-viral
subs&aDee interferon as the l'9Rllt of a $2 million
gilt from~ OU Co., charity oftidab say.
But it cOuld be a year or more befon tbe new patients join those now receiving interferon· from
the American Cancer Society.
Tbo Cancer Soeiety and the ooo-proftt i.
terfel"OD FoundatkJn of Houstm will share equally
.. tbe Shell gift. Tbe IDODe)' will be Uled to buy in-
.llirfenm. a substance produeed by the body to belp ._t virus-infeetiom. for t.aa with cancer pa • ....
L_.~ paEJDIJN.UY Bn1DIE8 IL\VB Al· .--ialerferon may be of vahle. In emeel' treat.
iaent. but resutta are mixed and la ......i in-
terferon bu not worked u .!ftll • MteNisbect • cbemotberapy, tbe Caneer Soeiety•1 Dr. Prank
, llauscber Jr. told a news ecmfaw.
I But RaUHber Nld tbe ............. terfena a ............ and M*s u.e ..._ wm
.......... patleela..., ..... fNm tL neewer ~ w'11daalrwl1111-4to t..i iatafenln CID Uoat • petteal1, .. _ ....
,mllllon -Its tarsest liqle lift ""' -.. tnM-lSt to 200 patienta, Rauseber aakl. Tbe • milh
'
Ci•en to tbe Hoaatm foundaltkJa Will tnet •to lit patlenU .t the M.D. Andenoo ~ ud Twol' ,.
lmtltute ID Boustoa.
Ut18CllES MID TllAT BY 'l'llE -..1 of tbe year. private and federal ·money ,...,.. bne been
pledced to teat interferon cia aome i.a. cmeer-pa·
tienu, enough to live a clear wwer ...._, it is
useful. . I However, scarce supplies ma.y limit bow-awift-
ly these patients can be treated. Tbe Caneer Sode-
ty baa only been able to bay enoucb lDterfene to
( test it Clll IOme 75 patients ID two y,ears. despMe
t available funds.
Curreotly. interferon must be extraded ft'om
~ white blood cells or other ceUs grown in an l artiftdal culture. Most of the world's supply is
made in Finland at a cost cf about $S0 per miDioo
i.nternatiooal units. Cancer patients receive up to
nine million mlits a daY for weeks or even IDODtha.
BOWEVElt, SEvEltA.L PllAIUIACEVTICAL ~ companies are planning to mate interferon by
: various met.bods, i.ocluding tbe use ol bacteria
~ altered by recombinant DNA to behave like tiny
interferon factories.
~bert Byrnes, vice praideot of 0...tedt
Inc., said the bloteclmoJolY compuy bu uted
the U.S. Food and Drug Admlailtratioo for ap.
proval to increase produetion ~ tm.erfenJG from bacteria. GeMDtei:b, Of San Franctaco; aaa
Hoffmann-La Roche lDc:of Nutley. N.J., hope to I betbi cUnicallrialanextyeor,beuld.
MEDICAL CARE:
HOW TO
GEi
MONEY'S
WORTH._
...
LOI ANOa.&I <AP) -""° .. ,., .... ~ ....
to ........ la ...... meet.,,
former ltate AttomeJ a..ai
belaaltattalle ...............
Tb• San Rafael attorney
repre91F«1 N. Ant.a D81Mbt. a
San Praadsco builder. and
Manyn I. Sllberbeq, a Su
Prudleo real eltate broker.
.,... .. ,.. ....... .......,,..
ud die tpfWDOC' -tile 9UUea wbo 1fnM aad Aped tie law establl1btn1 tbe benefits. ·
Cannan said. ltvelle Youqtt and a fOrmer
Je1lala:.On wbo are 1Mlliaa beaeflta uader Uae mldUpl•
• Mealltor peoaton formula.
Attorney L1DD S. Carmaa aUd
hit cllmtl claim the formula
Uled to determiiae the beDel1ta b
.. ,...,........, llliil t Mcmable .. -
called tbe peutona "an UD·
eoa1tltuUoaal &lit of public faD119.•·
TllE ... .0&1111U 11 .,.,
med to determ1ne beDeftta for 1t
former .ute ottlclala. Tbe rtlbtt
of six otben, lncludlq former ao.. Boaald Reqan and Gov.
Edmund G. Brown Jr. will be
determJned by tbe Youneer cue.
THAT VIOLATED CBP.am
and balmee8 provided by tbe
separation of powers ~
of the eomtltuUon. be aald.
GREAT
S5
.. TD PUBLIC Employees
Retiremalt System board la not
maklDI these defenses, and we're aoing tQ make tbem oo
behalf of tbe taxpayers."
Carmmaakl.
Canmn fUed motic1m In Los
AD1eles Superior Court to ID· terveae In Youaaer"• suit and a
separate action brought on
In an. more t.baD S3 mlUlon ID
back beDefita alone ride OD the
1uita. •
Under the formula,
benefldartes who held eight
years would 1et pensions larger
than their old state salaries.
The motions filed by Carman
claim that the formula ii mi-conatltutlonal because it
simultaneously provided
'I:be taxpayen' motioM Mio
clalm1 tbe fonnula violated the
It.ate C.omtttution becawae It is
exceaalve, arbitrary and UD·
reasonable.
Canzum and the Jeclalaton,
whole requests for pemklm UD-
der the formula we" turned
down by the nttrement board.
tl1ed separate IUita ln February · :::f.. tbe courts to overturn the
Heartno on the modoall are scheduled later thia month, be
said.
$10 ..
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• Axed focus; just Ad Price
aim and shoot.
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S32.95
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Factory Rebate -10.00
YOUR PRICE AFTER REBATE
Wiil w. rebate oner, rece1we n1ua1>1e
C..h-88ck Cetllllcetle worth $10 on
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3.99
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128 TO 11.88 (/!)
12 VOLT
CAR UTE 169 5 :.'~~a%~1~:n:~,'~~ plu;1
red iense flasher 10< emer-
gency s19na1. •u
'
Lightweight & compact·
ness ... Cord & plug storage
secuon ... Plugs Into most
12V cigaretlt lighters •11
•
Tm mJDY. WBICB 4 POSTAL SerYict
• ......" dleU-it to reltue. WP obtalaed from
,• IMtCIE 1•alldUree. ! ......... CUtii-.._ PftJllN trtmllllai~-
·:....,.. fNID tM man qeeq•a Mtwt. eoq,....
.• )u Mt derided tbe luae, but many Obltrv.era •-~ )*'t U... a..ialaton to m-• even deeoer cut.I.
• PWtmiater Geller.a Wllli~6 If. .BOiser baa Mild U. llMJlt likely c.....ity any m~ loea of
• ~isS.~ Vet)'.
.. The IWd)' aays tbe 80UIDUal savtn1 lo ending ::, S.bardaJ delivuy la atlraetive "but the rtaka to
:• senice and fUture postal revenues are blab." .· •• ': TllB STUDY &\ID DSOPPING Saturday de· ·:livery aat cmly would cllt oil mall CID tb,at day, but
. ' al1q delay deliveries CID oeblrdus and create new
:· operatiftl problema for tbe PMtal Senlce.
• Tbe atudy aaya that, wit.bout Saturday de·
:; liftl')', leUen that should be clelivered on Friday,
·• but are delayed, will not arrive unW at least Mon· .; day. ·
·: "Our curnmt Mrvlee falharee, if they occur on
; the Wl'CJD8 day (I.e. Friday), will be magnified." it
said.
Operalloaal protierm for tbe Postal Service in
ellmtnating Saturday deJivery would come mal..nly
on Monday, when about a third of the week's mail
would be ready for delivery. To handle it would
: mean either ll·bour day• for mall carriers or use
of more part-time workers than labor •ll"ffments
·allow. ID addition, more equipment for arranging
mail for delivery would have to be bought.
"THE DEUVERY OF 4LL accumulated mail
: oa Moaday is not a viable option," the task force
• concluded.
• The alternative is delaying delivery of mail to
· Tuesday or later in the week. it said.
: Stopping short of recommending that Saturday
: delivery be retained, the task force said it "is re-
: luctant to endorse five-day delivery as being in the
• best interest of the Postal Service and ils : customers."
: It urged that deliveries be maintained Mon-
: days through Saturdays at least for 12 to 18 montbs
: to plan any transition. U that cannot be done the
• change should not be made unW after the heavy
: Christmas malling seasoo, it said. .
; Subway Record Set
: LONDON (AP) -Police set. Jolm Trafford
: and bis 13-year-old son Stephen, claimed a London
: subway riding record, visiting all 2168 stations in 18
• hours, three minutes.
: Their station-bopplng cut 19 minutes off tbe ~
: cord and raised $22.280 for1a bospital charity, sub-
: scribed by policemen all owir Bdtain. ~ • Fatber and SOD snj\Ck~ CIO aanClwlcbel and
: orange drinks while they covered the 237 miles of
: uodergrotmd . . .
W'faafag Tri•
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Bay area realdeoll -IDOlll of
them, that II -can now clalm
tbat UMlr tap water ll bet&#
than tbe llMJlt npenalve P'Nncb
bottl..S waten.
OD tbe othel' band, if you UV9 In Daly City, Vallejo or San
Mateo, your water can be
Weened to awimmln1 pool water
orwone.
Tll08£ WE&E THE flndtn1•
of an expert panel com-
mlaaklc*1 by the San Frandlc:o
Chronicle for the area'a flnt tap
water tastJ.na contest.
tbe Judpl. Tbe only waters to
do •one wen from Daly City,
Vallejo and San Mateo.
TWO SAN F8ANCl8CO waten, oae from downw,na and
the other from Rulalan Hill, rat-
ed l2tb and 18th NIJ*llvely.
" OP .._y QW"--1'1-w
Wl~ll ... r wrote, ''I drink-. m t111 -..rt.··
ROMD&'!ftl8 eom81~---Vallejo's driDt .. Nmlndl
my bl1h school swim
pool."
Benet rwponded to V
with a llmplil "Up."
Lui-place San Mateo, wbldl
earned Just 11 polnta compared
to 42 for San Rafael. baa water which Label termed .. really un-
pleuant, oae ot the wont."
Members of UC Irvlne Publications
Department received two national awards
from the Cou.ncil tor Advancement and
Suppc>ll1 of FAtucaUon for tbeiritera on campus events. From left, P Chan·
ning, and Dianne St. Cloud, rh from
Tbe three men ud two women
wbo iatbered at the Fairalcm&
Ho\e-1 for the event 'f'ated tbe
water of San Rafael topa amoq
20 waters tuted. Fremont and M lll Valley Ued for second, and
Lafayette and Concord tJed for
fourth.
An expemlve French water
called Cootnxevllle. which ~
Chronicle expected lo flnlth
near the top, wound up 18th Md
drew commenla such as
"weird" and "nauseaun1" from
Collection of aamplet was
aupervlaed by Arthur von
Wleaenber1er, a water consul·
tant to 1everal American
breweries. He wu joined oa tbe panel of Judges by Profeuor
William Bruvold. a water quail·
ty aut.bortty from the UDlversity
of Calilomia; Francois Label,
co-owner of the Cbateau de la
Tour winery in France; Jane
Benet, Chronicle food editor:
and Sandra Rosenzweig ,
restaurant critic for New West
masu.ine.
The experts were servpd the
waters one by one in wine
1luses and were not told the
communiUes they represented.
Di1cua1lon among the judges
wu not pennitted. Eacb sUenUy
recorded bis or ber ratings on a
seale of 1 to 10 in five cateeortes
COINCIDENTALLY. LQ&T
was the only Judie to awird a
perfect score to the P'Nacb
water, which be says be drtnU regularly back bome.
"It i s very sweet •qd
pleasant," be said. ••A lood water."
But Rosenzweig a9d oelaers
came down bard on the Oollbu .
Sbe wrote that it tasted ''Uke valley water."
Laguna Beach, and Vivian Chang of Costa
Mesa .
CO ECTI N ·In t9'e Seera
advertlalng
! aupplHIMt ef'r9cltlwe
; June 11 thru June
14th there I• en
advertl ...... nt fot a
191714 Stereo .,...... wlttt • tr9ctl
Play/Record. The
reguler price and
aavlnp ahown are
lncorNCt. n.. correct
regular price la
$199.95 and the
correct aavlnga la
SH. We elncerely
'99ret tNa emw.
{Sears]
lU.U,llOUIU<JtANV<O. • -
We've come a long way
since our first shopping
center. For example,
there's the new Wood-
bridge Village Center.
A home for over 50
stores and services,
including restaurants
and a 5-screen movie
theatre .
It's an excellent ex-
ample of Irvine's con-
tinued growth toward
the goal of becoming
an energy-efficient,
economically-balanced
city. Growth guided by
two important factors .
The City's farsighted,
living Ceneral f>lan.
And concerned resi-
dents from the commu-
nity, City government
and The lrVine Company
who work together to
make it happen.
We may not always
see ere-to-eye on every
detai , but the result
has been, and will con-
tinue to be, a city that
gets better to live in
every day.
Projects like the new
Woodbridge Village .
Shopping Center
Good
continue to bring the
residents of Irvine the
security of a substantial
tax base and the
energy-saving conve-
nience of shopping
close to home. And
there is much more to
come. For information
on this growing new
city, please visit or call
The Irvine Company
Information Center.
Culver Dr. exit off San
Diego Fwy. (1-405). To
comer of Barranca.
(714) 551-1500.
'IHllBTOf
COIJNTRY
-CROSSOVERS
1"'5, . 5'' t-TUa :GIQSSEllES EACH I•• I . .__,,_. ... __ ,......,,.
_.. ...... ~Uf "Clwr ...... -<lnTAl utu•MAlnlMlf ... Mnln.
IWIL! I
·-_, ..,_ ......... •WIWI lllSOll .,.. .... ._.._.,._,.. .... .. ..,_ .... aw-... __ _
FAMOUSAlllS1S
LP'S OI CASSETTES
:.2'' •me,,.._,. . •.-n· ..... 1't"'4''
0 t11&1a au.vs• ttanaacuou
art •••• la ooaeert," U•• ......... qUoC.ed ........ ,. •·1· ltdlo9 allO WU~ U 111•
tnJ be l"tltptd lut 1•ar la a dit-11nemeat over • 'queaUonabl• enette.1" lncludln1 "altertnc
doeumeotatl<m fot eome ot tbe f1mUy'1 taJt ahelten." Bledloe made b1a alle1auom in
a 51-pqe depollUoo liven to the
House aubcommtttee on com-
merce. oonawn•r and monetary
affaln, chaired by Rep. BelUamin
Rosenthal, D-N.Y.
TRg HVNTS, WHOSE invest· ,
meat.a a1lo include oU • .cas ud
RIG. 15.99 U.
10~
!!f~.8'1t tbl&'I Uae extat Of !1-" --r., 81...oe was cauabd by
FoftUM U aaylDI, ... SU•er lt looked ..... ftn{ .-... ot ....... nee1 ID UMt 1D01'D1n1 ad ta df9o e.--tbe two 1ent.iem. au ••• .. They buy and sell all•er
to1etber. They b1ve other ln-
t«elt1Lye1. but ltJver ls fint ud
'pime m tbtir milw:ll. The strateo
ii deYrmlDed daily on whether
Bwaker and Herbert wUI buy or sell in their own nam• or cor-
porate name•,• " Bledsoe was
quoted .. aaytac.
B•·SDIOS QlJft' after 15 years
witJt llunt fllDlly complllies. The
=3 49 =-1!! m ,.. u, """"" ... "~" IGLOO "PLAYMAB" la OIEST
OR CAMPMASTll SLEEPING BAG
12-IN. LACQUER A SELICI GIOUP Of
CHINESE 8ASIE1S OIWALL tOOlS
l0f99 Copoctty k e dint ho• Sleep boo~ nylon tOVef and
twlng-Oown ltd. Save. Tri<o linlno. lnOS".
Thew beolitlet c-ln JICH*n• HoM.,..,., pllen. •<r.-drt..f
-In ....,. ellOfiC •lytel I Mta, more I Oad • IOol dlMt.
Keep up with news of yotK
commllitty. All the ~
you need comes to you fNf!fy
day, the DAILY PILOT
3 ·Pl. MEN'S · BRIEFS .
IEG.4.29
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40-PllCI
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MEN'S lllT Y ·NICI
lidf aG1IMHmS flUll' Of 111 IOOM~ flUll' Of 1HE ~
TU• SOI MEN'S HANllES ;
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WELCH'S
SljftJUICI =129
<IO-oi. rw,i. O' White. ~ tlOCia .... tMiy)
llG.4tt
6.99
l'le·~hfunl< Wiii\ piping. S·lll.
.W14~ PllCI Cl9ICI
100% 'IM'fl fll!'v. woh "'--'-Xl. ='=" ~ He r.:."'::'r:i: -. J 59 ~ s.-10.1s 111.Jt allouf.Sove! 1." ,
Mlll'SmLES
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··2" ··" °'"'. towol, & ..... ttyifl. :JCMO.
SIUCllD GROUP OF :
COUITl.£Y NECl11ES ·
u:rt;.") 99 '
"'
.. we're ontt out tor 1 •*· .. you lftGdll ue whlt"I w. 're out fOf' 1 runr'
SHOE
MISS PEACH
I
f i
0
I
l t
~
by Jeff MacNeUy
••
BUT SHE's SIJ~ Ger
Pl.EN.TY OF \f«>N'T powi:R ...
by Mell Laiarius
,---
'
' L_ rr: -oc
~y·
L: '--A.Jt _. I.A~ -I I
OR. SMOCK
LONG! OUT! WIDE I •
<See , YA
PON'!
L..OOK
'TOO HO'T ,..0 M e .'
THE FAMILY CIRCUS by Bil KHne GORDO by Gvs Arriola
JUDGE PARKER by Harold Le Ooux
,_,::c:========•F;;;tt".LV(iilll ~UlER Y£l, HOW ~eo.Tl 'IOI.I~ WHY OON'T YOU ~
MOTHER COMING ro 6Ef MC At I ro COME 6f"E,.OA o.\Y
!if'ENCER ~ARM~? WlfH ME. ctfH7
.tlJlr:.---.-:~
"Mommy! Y'know the bubble gum Bily lost?
Wei, I found itf"
DENNIS THE MENACE
(;, .
'
\
by Kevin Fagae • •
1'1ltf tl>A~ 1.oo.(S "'°'" &C1'1'(~ ~tll( """1b0"-~ ~
I tlf«ct ~ -~ 1\CM
-''O'S e(tNl:r ~attt!J'f"~
~(1'
&oASlO.
by George Lemont
WHSN eus1Ness
IS SL-OW, He GOSS
COM PL-e-re L-Y
e>ONKE!RS .1
TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE
ACROSS ,_.
1 enourw S2 r,..
6 Hcnlco6ar M SofMtt-ve
lO Pomdge tlrr 2 woros
1• ~ Pfllla 51 VWMllft tube r:T"!'l-.T":T~n=t::m"llnTT"r=r.:.
15 0.-C LAM to~ Wm
te ~ 61 Aldlc:t
17 Dlnglr 12 /IOOt ~
111 P-.i 13 Enll!Wlel
2 words JIC:* -
20 Olp. " l-'
21 &t~ 65 S90C*I
23~1on 24~ DOWN
29Slllt.. IEdgll
29-..., 20ll
30~ 3 Trlctt
31 8'ormld ' nw.-Prtfill
32To--· 5 0...CS py.-ey 6 Wild otf 28 Blkilll llllCll
38 St 7 MclultM9rd 21 Auld rock
37 At-. 8 Be.. 30 Of"-
• Hcnl lood • Born 32 Dully
39 --bllll '° llN...n1 33 n.. .a "'°"°"" 11 Not~ S-4 Cofnlort
44 Sllna -12 Bar.. S5 c.....
45T.... tSUnl-37Coms .. v.w. 11 Omeg'11NP .a KJtcNn
• -lllOftd9: 22 MorOl9 ~
8odety 25..... '1111'wp!etl
60 Tendlrq 29 Mulic llCM •2 -89Y.
5, MounUln 27 AttWfl Ontano
"3 Sullfy
•5 Vtfllcie
46 e.tl
47 Monoc:ll lic
"**9·
'8 LMtee:Ver
4tS9M 51 Ooublll
53 Dllty
64~111*9
5eQIClp
57 HaNftl rOOIQ
5twratti
World Airim"' Cua .. .,.~ ......
TM ~ eut·tllroat alrUM
priM W11: la CM eoaat~ .......... --... Um•., rtl· ... cOllll ........... WUaaJ. t1 • ........, u.e•curten wW
loH rao:.:J oa tbe roetH. alrUMI lndua\ry anal1ata
">'· World Alrwaya fired the lat.t
•hot in the war Tuesday by cut.
Una lta fare to • until lbe end ol June on fli&bts between
Newark, N.J., and both Los
A.ft1ele1 and Oakland and OD
nt1hta from Loa Aa11lea to
Baltimore.
THAT UNDERCUT the $99 fares announced last week by
Eutem Airlines and mat.cbed
by United, Trans World and
American Airlines. Those fares
at first were for night-coach only
until the end of June, and it is
not clear whether the discount&
will be continued. Florida Raises r-TWA and Eastern said they WON'T BE BEATEN
Edward J . Deley ' •nk • A other airlines were expected to q will not match the S88 fare. 1be
n ing ue make similar decisions. to discuss specific costs, but 0. The price cuts -prompted by Julius Maldutis. an analyst with
TALLAHASSEE. Fla. <AP> -Flonda's 18-the efforts ol World and East.em Salomon Brothers, estimates the
-Olds won't be able to buy a legal drink after to break into tbe coaat·to-coast cost of nytng a Boeing 747 from
30. markets -are sure to produce New York lo Los Angeles, in-
Gov. Bob Graham, saying he had seen the losses. accordfng to Industry eluding fuel, labor and deprecta-
' becaUM tbl alrliae ii not .. will . known 8Dd rues from N.,..n
ud OMlaad, r.U..r tlaM tbe
IDOi'• »OPUlar KMmldJ -Saa rr...et.eo a&rpotU. "We will flcbt to Nmala tbe lowetl·fare carrier In tbe tl'a~ market," ukl
.Edwa.rd J, D.Uey, World'• PNll-
d.ent. "We clo aot l.Dt.end to let t.6e other canfen undercut the
low r are1 we ltart.ed."
ALTBOVGll EASTERN aays it
bopea to make mone1 at •·other carrien aay the)' ex-
pect to loee moaey.
Chuck Novak, a United
1Pokelman. said the airline g.U
about :u cents a mile from eacb
paasencer at the '89 fare, com-
pared Wlth 8 or 9 cents oo most
nights.
So far. rares have not come
down nearly as much on
other transcontinental nicbts.
and for travelers from Boston or
Wastuniton with time to spare,
ll ls less costly to take a bus or
train lo New York before fiyiq
to California.
"I would hope we wouldn't be
extending this lo other
m a r It e t s • ' ' "• a i d S a I l •
Mc Elwreatb, the director of
marketlnl at"!"' A. 18-ear-old drinking age push liquor into high analysts and many or the lion. at about $22,000. Those
u ls, signed a bill raialng ~e age to 19. The alrllnes. But that isn't seen as coats have risen sharply in the 0 ~~R E' ~CES
ttrtlh1t-1·., age was lowered ln 1973 when the age or crucial. last year. along with the cost of r l'lt.:J.a v r A
r majority rights was dropped from 21 to 18. fuel . which represents more
Educators backed the measure raising the age "EVEN IF WE lose a jlllioo than hall ot the direct costs. ~~~ULT o ~p
some lawmakers worried it would be dollars this summer , we have to ~ ~
ch ed ln court because It excludes 18-year-protect that market," said THAT DOESN'T include the SAINT JOSEPH, Mich. CAP>
olds oo active duty at Florida military bases . David Frailey, a vice president other costs of an airline, inchid--An 88-year-old miniater ls due
ti or American Afrlines. "We have ing the C<l6t of marketing, ticket· in court June 17 to face a pre-
3 Billi• D led been fl ying these routes for ing and general overhead. The liminary hearing on assault on ona many years and will not be number of seats on a plane charges sternming from a dis·
EW YORK (AP> _ Individuals and corpora-driven out." vanes, but a typical 747 might turbance at h.lS Benton Township
have donated a record $oil.3l billioa in 1979, There are seven carriers ny. have 3'10 seats. producing a total Church, olf1clals say.
801 increase of 9.3 percent, accordlng to the Ing the New York-California of $31,560 if all seats are sold at The Rev . W.E. Ellis oft.be PiJ.
rf
. •
·. .........
Couples Reunited
PEKING <AP) -·More than 4,500 married
men and women, separated by tbetr work asalgn~.
menta in North China, will be reunited as a result
of wort tranalers, the People's Dally reported.
Ending such separations will help raise the en-thuai~m o( the couples and provide unity and
stability needed for the government's moderniza-
tion, the Communi.st Party paper aa.id. I' PUBUCNOTICE --PUBUC ___ N_OTl_C_E __
l"tCT1nOUS Ml1fWH.S ~nous eulfW•I&
NAME STATifMalfT _... ITATW*#T Tlw -W.0 .,.._, It ~ lluM· n. ........... _._ 11 ..... lllltt-
-•l' _,,.
J O. CONS l AVC TION 001 'J"°"° AMGEU. HOI ,,,.,_ ~. --" ~. CAIHrni. Aw-................ 9Mdl, ~ ._., "'49 Jo ~too. *' S.4"fton., ,_ Mioclrf. "°1 w.,_ a-.
........,.., 9"Cll. c,.I•-·...., ~-· ..... 8Ndl. Cellfomi•,,....
''"' boeiN'U l>.t...,.,.,...., by....... ~· ......... "'~by ....... cttv!Owal ......... . .>o ~~ ... ,,,,,.,,,..,
f~I ............. wa\ tlled wtt11 -1"1111 ,._ w• Iii.ct ..,.,. -
'-'• c....-Of o.._ ~ ,,. C-y OWll "'0..... c-y °"Mey
J-J. "'°' "· , ... ·::;;"' ··--...... w..ct 0r-~ o.ity ot. ""*._er-. c-te Oelly ,..1e1t, ,_.._"·It.ZS. -,. Mr.11 ... .-•• 11.11-,....,
PU8UC NOTICE A t!rican AMociatioo of Fund-Raising Counsel. routes. Pan American World $88. That ls enough to cover the grim Rest Church allegedly
;John J . Schwartz, president of the counsel, Airways on Monday dropped one direct costs but not nearly clubbed two deacons when --l"H:TtnousM1siN11u t.be1ota.I equalled 1.83 percent or the nation's of Its two New York-Los Angeles enough to rover the other costs. parisbooers blocked a cbUl"Cb l"ICTinouseu ... ' NAMUTATll.,..NT
s naUooal producL flights and analysts think some Malduus says. And few planes aisle in a June 1 protest against Tiie..:::, s;.::.a: ~ __.. -~.~--. 1
'-... """'
l~vtduals contributed $36.54 billion lut year, other carriers, possibly lnclud-fly full. him, authorities said Tuesday. -" CHAHHfL Pflns. m ~-.
b -· ll" t __..•""--in•-l -•~ · g C 'tol Ai ill .t-... W ld d l tit Th de •....& f VAUA!OELMAJt "TED .... lt-19Md\.C...Homo•92MO c ... _ .• percen1 mo,.., Ul&U u"o ev"™". m ap1 rways, w ... ..,., or an 1 s compe ors e aeons were trea\.eU or o....s..-t.Wtem. _,....,, M•~· s1 .. ••. '°' w. >~c1 'abualnessesdooated$2.3blllion,whlle outbytheendoftheyear. believe World must charge head injuries. ~..,.. ~,,._,. ~ ........ ca11t .... n1 •
• a -..... bllll Tb airlin aJl f lo f d D ........... t» /,._...,, ._ ... ..,..., liiiiliiiiiiiiii;i;;:•v~~-.... __ ·QW;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~c.i..~~~~~!=!!i=~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;•e:;:::;;;::::;:::;~es;::;;g=en-=er:::;;;;;;:;:Yi;;;;;;re.:.uae;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;•w;;;;;;;e•r;;;;;;;:ar;;:es:;:::;t;o;::;:•r•a•w;;;;;;c;us;;;;;;to•m••e;rs;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;m;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;m;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::m;iil~o--.i..~•..n T~'IMl!wsstsc.onouci.ow .......
Tllh -"""' " , --"' • .,...,io..a. aAT~A WD tlln SIT., .IUIE 11-lt, 1111111 -._... --:-~ ,._ .. ~ -~=~? :F5 ~~~=. ~
DALY ... SUN.1«Mli .. ,~ ~a... ~..,_., . ,.,..,
3rd a FAIRFAX. ..... .,,._ ........ a '"'°"111 Pl.tllt•,,.., 0r-. ~ 0.11,, Pooc. DAJL.Yf..t;SUN.10-7 _,,_____ J-•.11.lt,ZS,ltlO n.tMD
•....................... iiiiim. ....................................................................................... ..
Poilll1ll1 F11hio1 Topi
Thia little tank goes a long way In your eummer
scheming. It's aa dreeay or caaual as you make It.
Cotton/nyk>n blend In • nifty knit. Shine-on COIOr'I
In nwtte nnl8h. MIAea' .a..
............. ~ .... ___________________________ _...., ..............
Great For MJ .... r
22
Our Reg.
9.57-9.96
Color sp111ud
2-Po. Swi ... its
Gel In the swim end .....,
Soper new season autta In
a heat wave oC ootcws end
flattering styiea Nyton-
ll ycr a spandex. For
miNes.
~"' .,. -·-
PVBUC NOTICE
IN THE "MESA CENTER .. -17TH
STREET AT ORAN&E AVE. .
CISTA•SA
WOMEM'SAND
GIRLS' SHORTS
.. HAMSTEtr
"LOVEH STUFF' ...,., 105 ..
"WIANGLB" etc.
'
ASSORTED LADIES' MENS KNIT SHIRTS
TOPS ..,UarrAM• "HA ... TIM ..
"LAMD UUll" •140.• MOfF SHOIE .. SPORTCOATS
........ ,...._ .. GOLDEN WAVE"
.. GOLD ltAGS.. s... u .. 46 ..
--WU Ctalr :!ta:?~::.~~ a.,.-.... se.ts. & L-..
a to $1.00 s3 88 t!.~n.t.t ...=:· etc. Sl1et 1-., SU.00 .. $65.00
:AfrS1·" s2 88 sruPlllCI .... • s1i.uaii
U NICI .. 54 •88 tf. .. ~oo·~···· :~ .. = .. ~2.88 e .. ::t.to~".... • aeg. to $14.00 s7 88 s31.11
MEN'S • .,. .. Sil.ft $ 6 88 SAU PlllCI . . . . • ::t.to~°ioo. ~ 4.88 ~---~,,.,,,._~,,.,,,._~....;cli:ICli:::i1C11Ca:ll:==CC1:a:111:1: --~im
GOLF SHIRTS uu NICI . . . . • ::t.'°.::c'i00
. ~···· ::tato.:.'lioo.~.I. 99 a----M-EH-'S_B_EL_T_S_--t tf. .. .:.k ...... ~.9.88 :~ .. ~uo.~6.88.
BOYS'O.P. SHIRTS % ., ..__ ____ ____. ::t.~ .. ~••r--~----~~~----~~~ VJ OFF LEv1sJ~?~15M' ON BIG & TALL
LEVIS JEANS. JOCKEY ~" SPECIAL GROUP CASUAL PANTS
CORDUIOYS. ITC. UM0~~14EAR :11.a~"~.11.88 MEN'S SHORTS ~·•••" ·ur sa 88 ~ OFF .. ~~·· S¥es .... w... ... .... loy • 3 . ~1: s12.88 .......... ~~.. .... ...... w ... _ ... •············ --~·'"" ~ ............ ......
llG&TALL
DIBS SHIRTS
s 11 88 ________ ..... SAU PlttCI • . leg. to s5 88 ... Hry ...... -it .. -4 sw......... • MEN'SANDsovs· !?."F_.s13.a SIS.00 ..... co1on.sa.. toM.2 s12 88 -~ uuPllCI •..• • ~ ..... ,,4.00 s5 • =to 54. · • • • , 110.P~~w:f !Avr 1--------t-----:---~~ to 7-s12 88 SAl.IPllCI ••• e .. =.\~~~.·. :~~ MEN'S PANTS "~IOLT' um:&-ca s14· •• :r_.~·~ .. ~1.11
'?URITOM ... ETC. "CATCH rr .. o.,.· .. GOLDEN WAVr "LEVI'S ....... 5 ..
Sb.et to 14 sa. 22 to 44XL ~MGR.. llCi .Ir TALL -::t.'°r:.'c'a00.~8.88 ::t.te~oo-~5.88 ~te s12 88 % ., SPORJ SHIRTS ...... :t:°PllCI .. • llG & TALL .,.,,_.,,W.,AMC•
s11.oo $11 88 ..._1os1i.oo $6 88 ...... _ DRESS PANTS -c•• 1 cur .....
SAUPlllCI • • SAllNICI ••.• • s14 88 M~s J•CKETS 0 HA.-A1" ""GAYS"' .,.... • ' t •........ ., •
S SU.00 m A IM AC: K '• ••LI 'f IS .............. a.a ........ .
SAU
::::rmcas.12.11 .... ':.!!-3.00 .... 7.88 SAUPllCI •. • "PAClflC DAIL.. ,, .... lal.AS."'PUln'AM" ....... ...... .. ..... . SAU...-...... -um•-.a•--Totr loo-Mt ..... .,.. ....... ......, ...... ue1..-..... IL to sa 11 su.oo s15 88 efMn. ~ IMcll ..... 111 ....... ..,... _, ..... DXL• .... ::t: . s13 11· ::t.=•.... • SAUPllCI .. • 1~t..~. •.::.~!:.---!! ::::..-, .. ~~':'e.C:-r:.:' ...... ,., .. '7 •
SALINICI • • • .. ,.~11 88...,_ ___ M_EN_·s----1 ~~"-:;...-.. ::: s.w,_. • . =-$.14.88 sru,_ ... • SWEATSHIRTS st111.. l .,,__ :lt.=-' .... ::t.t;.:l.M ....
...... s16. WOMEN'S ifti'PllCI. • .. s3.88 ~-!t'2 Mf i:':.c. •12.• i.:...C. •12. ~:s ~ND .;,Y'S ... ..,., ... :~LS' & -i:r._ ., ••• ;:,_. $14.
SHORTS .. DITTOS.. .MEMS SWEATERS MEMS SUITS
.. ~~·w .. .a.vE.. ..LOVIN STUFF' "PURl1AM" & SPOITCOATS ..... mn ~ ,..... ..,AIMIM PANTS.. ...... _.. .. ..._.. ... ._.,
SblilJtto40..W Ml A.-Ul--M • ..... J .............. II • ..,., $ ~· ... ttea •• 111 .. •1•10 •..W, of ........ ...,.. I • rthed II ,,_ ....... ..... SIUO I 88 .. COIDUIOY" ,." .• " •..-..,.., ..._ 1ec11dl;1 . ....,.., .. .,.-..,.. IHlt•er ... • • ii at8d
SAl.IPllCI •••• • $5 88 .. , ... , ..... ....._ tw•w&h lie. •• • ._.._Ute4'.,... offeredfor ... IYIRYrr..MSTOCSISOMSAU:
.._., .... to..!!.';.00... e MANY wnN POCUIS. •.. ........ _, ..... ...... ,, ..... SA • SAl.lr..-...... IOO'Mt......... °'*•••SToc.SUITS
;.-.. NICI •.•. ~ ...... ::t: •12 88 ;-.:~·.!.~"lT~=• l ... $tlt.tl .. Sl60.0I
:la:'NICI •• e Wlf!'CI •• • ~~r=. .... SJO.oO SAUfllCI ......
%-%&_ ..
f I
OAll. Y PU.OT
Van Hor.ns trill Be Quite a Pair
8.J ltOG&a CA&IJION °' .. ...., ... _.. TMn aren't rn•n¥ who can •ar t.My'v• a~ 1tbJ.Uc t.hrUta both u • pl~r ~ aad coedl. lut'h u Nl•tton CoUet• baak.i· ball ~ Ezra Val\ Hom.
But Ear• takea lt one .alep further Satur·
day nllbt u be and an expected l ,IOO fan•
vie• the Oranae County All·atar bulletball
I••• feaWtlna the cream ol graduating hilh tebool talent ln Orange County.
HIS SON, STEV!9, a two-Ume All-Cl F . , -•'P for ~cla Hieh. la a member or the
• favor~ Rebe¥ at Oran1e Coast College.
"I've beet\ waiting for many years for
one of ,.y sons to play in an all-star aame."
1ays Van Hom, a Costa Mesa resident who
has been batUing leukemia the past 15
months.
"It's my greatest lhtUl as a parent."
Known as "Zeke" by many, Ezra Van
Horn's coaching thrills include six league
championships while a coach at Western and
Los Alamitos high schools and a South Coast
Conference crown at Fullerton JC.
AS A PLA VER. he was a gem while com
pellng for Orange Coast College and Chap-
man College.
In the fall, the thrills become two-fold, as
a parent and coach , when Steve enrolls at
Fullerton Junior College to play under his
dad's tutelage.
And Ena admits it, if Steve wasn't going
to be coming to Fullerton, he would be call-
ing it quits there.
At 6-5, 185 pounds, Steve Van Hom led
Estancia to 42 victories a nd a pair of Sea
View League championships in two years.
for Eltancla ~ pa.at two yean, he'll be Just
one of several oulatandin& members of the
South Ju11ernaut under La Quinta High
Coach Dick Kats.
"Coach Katz aaya he wants t.h1s game to
be tbe bJcJ>est acorina game of lhe series." 11ya~ve.
Wlt.b S-10 Clayton Olivier and 6·S auard
Ron Holmes lending their talents. il can't be
considered a pipedream.
AS FOR STEVE, he'll be one of the front
line in the Rebel's 4·1 offense.
While al Estancia bis biggest thrill was
as a Junior when the Eagles ~eated rival
Corona del Mar in the first round on the way
to the league crown.
"They (Corona del Mar> came in our
gym really cocky," recalls a relishing Van
Hom.
AS FOR THE FUTURE, whlch begins at
Fullerton. Steve says: "After a e<>uple of
years at FuJlerton I think I'll be ready for a
higher level. I feel my dad can teach me a
lot."
Ezra thinks so. too.
"Steve does some things I don't like. but
I'll take care of that. J really want to coach
him and he's hard·nosed. he can take 1t.
"Plus, he 's a fine basketball player and
he's going to do some growing up "
STEVE'S HIGH SCHOOL coach. Larry
Sunderman. responds to query on his two·
time AJl·CIF star: "It was Just a plea.5ure
working with the talent and dedication of a
Steve Van Hom "
Steve's thoughts on working und_er Sun·
derman? "I-le was a good coach an<f a good
friend But what really made it was that he
<Sunderman> knew what was going on."
HE WAS A 60 PERCENT shooter for the
Eagles, averaging in the 20s both years. But
even more apparent was his aggressive style
or play, sometimes so aggressive that it re·
s uited in a technical foul or two from an un-
appreciating official.
While Van Horn was the dominant player
Van Horn 's driving and inside play that
dominated high school opponents may be
over with his movement to lhe perimeter. but
the drive that made him <and his dad) so sue·
cessful, remains. STEVE VAN HORN (42) LEADS SOUTH AU-STARS.
It's Showtime
Angels Can Still
Please Crowds
By DAVE CVNNINGHAll Of.._ o.11\' .._ SJaf'I
For a last-pJace ballclub. the
Angels can still put on an enter-
taining show.
In fact. for a few moments in
the ninth inning Tuesday night,
it seemed as if s<>me or the 1979
"Yes We Can" magic had re·
turned to Anaheim Stadium.
A NEAR·CAPACJTY crowd of
38.996 stood and cheered as 24
year-old Mark Clear reached
bac;k for has best fastball ..
and mighty Re~~i(' had struck
out. From the roar. vou wouJd
h ave t.t>ough t it was the World
Series.
One night carli<.'r Jackson belt-
ed a ninth·anning homer to hel~
the Yankees • to an 8· 7 victory.
but this time it was the Angels'
turn. as they snapped a six
1tame 106ing streak with a 6-5
\'ictory
'·Mark threw the ninth IMlnlit
like he wanted the win." said
Rod Carew, who delivered the
winning hit in the eighth inning.
"He really slammed the door on
the Yankees. ft was somethina we needed badly.··
..... ~.
ANOTHER THING THE
Angels Meded badly was a soli d
outing from their s t arting RON CEY PUTS HIS HEAD ANO SHOutOEAS INTO PITCHER PAT ZACHARY.
LA Fights Its Way Into Seeond
' Benchrclearing Brawl, Honw.rs Don't Help as Dodgers Lose, 54
BAKER STRUCK AGAIN with a two-
run homer in the fourth, but that was when
the Meta went to work.
Tom Hausman, 2·1. came on for Zachry
and allowed just three hits the rest ol the
way.
pitcher. since the bullpen bas
been nm ragged over the past
month <onJy one complete game
in ~past 30 days>.
But Frank Tanana 's eight
strong innings didn't mean near·
ly as much to the team as they
did to him personaily. If Tanana
had been bombed. 1t could very
well have been his las t ap-
pearance in an Angel uniform.
By purchasinl( southpaw Andy
Hassler from Pittsburgh the
Angels 111creased thei r pitching
corps to 12 bodJes Tuesday, and
v. hen Hassler arnves Thursday,
somebody will ha\'e to go.
S PECULATION FROM in-
siders and outsiders alike pro-
duced two likely candidates for
the chopping block -Tanana
and veteran Jim Barr.
General Manaiee r Bunie
Bavas1 was asked before the
game if Tanana was actually
making lhe most important start
ofhtshfe.
"I know what you're getting
at." Bavasi said. "Yes, this is
an important start for Frankie,
but every start 1s importanL We
aren't showcasing him, ii that's
what you mean."
Tanana, who was generally
pleased with his effort, doesn't
buy Bavasa·s comments.
"I KNOW I WAS probably be-
ing st»Owcased, but J didn't feel
any extra pressure." the out-
s poken southpaw said . "I
thought I pitched pretty well,
but I know we've got 12 pitchers
now . and somethlng's gotta
give."
Tanana got no decision for his
seven·i.nnin& stint and allowed
four nms oo 11 hits, but he kept
the Angela in the game and last·
ed longer than any other starter of the put week.
Canadiens Select
Wickenheiser 1st
The Meta Ued the game wtth rou.r runs ln
the fourth, using Joh.a Steams' bad·bop
two·nm aln&le to triuec the rally. "Wbetl the team goes bad peo-
ple start point1q the fin1er, but
I'm not the reUC>n we're In last "I IDT A CllOPPS& to sbortstop aJld I place," Tanana said. •'Thla ls a
got a break," said Steams. "I think rve team 1am~1.. and tbe blame
had ooe other ball like that 1n five years in rests oo 2S amereot auys. We've
the m~." all been playiq badly."
DocSaen' shortstop Bill R\mell wu Mn ·, CA&B1', WllO HAS taken
more surprtMd. tome beat blllllelf ln the form ol
"It <tbe field) WIS nJte ud amootb beblnd·tbe-baclt trltlclam for not
around there. It bun't beeo chewed up. 1 buaUJ.na, a..-. with Tanana.
went over and lookecl for a divot. but the "You can't IO around plcklnl
ball mede the divot.•• on 8..,.. When you lose aamea,
Arm STEAltN&' hit. JOtl YOQqblOOd ~ ··= ~ ::Sm·~ ead l:mott Mllddo& bk s.,.ce rues for Catew laid. "We have tot-t!Ht ftMl two NM cl the Ulnil\a.. .._.__ --..a do -r Doul flynn'a two-out 1\81 slnale in UM ~~.~ lllN Mt 1et WD OD
1t.tla produced the decldlng run alter a Whtie tbe primary pro .. m -----~::r. ~ ltike .ior....., ad ----•alk-.-to har tieen .,tet or pttdllQI. "\hf'
Tiit ic. ended • pel'ICIGal llx·a•m• wtn· An1ets have allo been p= lllifl .tuiU ,.. Loi Alls••• starter Bob by the abeence of dutcb .
...... &::1. and bocked UM Dodaef'I from .. -9fC>t lD tb1 NaUoa&l LM,_ W• THAT WASN'T tM caae Tw· •...._moved tnto ftnt'plflf'e. d•l'· LltU FreddM Pat.et de-
'llllJ lllea. memwblle, haw WOD u ol Uured ~=~~~~t blow bJ ..., lut.,,... Md bave cUmbed lnto -Dive
. fourth pl~ m the NL Eut. f (9ee ANGEL$. ••••• ,
Sims Set,
He's Lion
At Heart
PONTIAC. Mich. CAP) -Bil·
ly Sims examined the 10Jd
replica of a dollar bill hanging
around hb neck an4 said he was
relie ved to sign finally with the
Detroit U.ons. "I don't play negotiations -J
play football," Sims sald Tues-
d ay, after he had signed an un·
disclosed contract that bis agent
says makes him the highest-paid
rookie in pro football his tory.
THE UONS MADE Sims, the
1978 Heisman Trophy winner.
their No. 1 pick in the National
Football League draft April 29.
But as contract discussions
drageed on, it appeared the
former Oklahoma running back
might defect to the Canadian
Football League as did last
year 's No. l NFL draftee, Tom
Cous ineau.
Not so. according to Sims. who
says he considered himself a
Lion "in my heart" since he was
drafted and attended a Detroit
m ini -camp for rookies.
''I'm glad it's ovt'r," said
Detroit Coach Monte Clark, who
presented Sims with a Lions
jersey with the number 20.
Noting that he has worn the
number 20 since his high school
days m Hooks. Tex .. Sims pre·
dieted. "I see some pretty good
things com ing from th is
number."
Jarry Argovitz. Sims' a~ent,
was happy Wlth the contract.
· · 1 wouldn 'l trade it for the
contract of any other player in
the league," Argovitz said.
Argovitz says he is bound not
to reveal any specifics of the
contract by a confide ntia lity
clause written into the agree·
ment. But he said, "I got every-
thing l wanted." .
The negotiations began with
Argovitt demanding $4.S million
for ~ years. Detroit General
Ma nager Russ Thomas coun·
tered with a $700,000, four-year
deal.
Argovitz says a breakthrough
1n the stalemate came last week.
when Montreal of the CFL ex·
pressed interest in Slms .
Thomas and Argovitz met over
the weekend,. and then Sams
Joined them on Monday to ham·
mer out a final contract.
Argovitz had nothing but
praise ror Thomas.
Lansford
Gets 3-day
Suspension
Today Angel third baseman
Carney Lansford begins a three·
day suspension that be doesn't
thanlt he deserves.
Lansford was ejected from
Sunday's game with Ba ltimore
after being picked off second
base and arguing with umpire AJ
Clark on the call.
LANSFORD BUMPED Clark
with his body just after being
thrown out, and Manager Jim
Fregosi quickly stepped between
the ump and his young
ballplayer in an attempt to cool
things down.
Before Tuesday's game.
Lansford l"eeeived a telegram
from American League Presi·
dent Lee McPhail informing him
that be had been fined $250 and
suspended for three days, begin·
nlng today.
t.ansford saJd he could win an
appeal ii he decided lo rile one,
but. he doesn't need the aggrava·
Uon of a three-week wait and hearing.
.. l'M NOT THE KIND of
person who want.a to remain in
the public eye. I just want lo get
this over wtt.h," Lansford said,
"You just can't win with the um·
pirea. I knew they #ere 1oin1 to
do something to me, ahd they
did."
Lanalord says be dldn 't lnten.
tiooally bump Clark, but lost h1I
b1lance ln the beat ol tbe arsu-
ment.
"He bumped me as much IS I
bumped bim," Lansford added.
"Umpltea a.re not auppoeed to provOke stuff, they're auppaeed
to atop tL"
F&EG081 AOaSED TH.At
Clark wM 1~ hJ1 temper M
mucb • Lamford. ••I WMt • t.o calm Camey
dowll, bililt I 4iiDded up lrYiU to
cool off tbit umr•re,.. f"rejoel
Hid. "lie wean' In contlol fl
tba. altuatioa.''
LaDlforit had never .,._ ftaed
befon, aDd Ma cml1 otW •· lion eame ill ~ nnt _.. ........... (Alli'tl II, .. , • wben be ~am• {a~ a a ptncb
nmner. made an W·Um.cl com·
~t to umptn BUI Hatler, and
... told to ••t clown • -o. .. c.,..... .• .
•. ..
sBrea
Griffith Says Comparisons,
Paeuore Won't Tax Him .......... , ....
SALT LAil& ClTY -o.n.11" OIU'fttla .. 11 ... Ill AU"t '9act I .. !" &M pr..,.. M 'U fHe u a Na·
tiollal l•taet~ Aalecl.U. ...... -cw 'Y le• r,:-:: ~ wttt. I.any BIN ... a.Ma
TM ... All·AIDeritU .~ ft'tla NCAA ch1mokNI
Lo.a.vtne wu tM ~ p&ck U. ~·· NIA draft, ud
wW play few U.. Utab Jau, • fUnthlM U.at baa MVW bad 1
WlanlqNe«d, I
Ccmldend by muy ICOULI the l°' taleat la tbe draft. Grlfftth antlctpat Pf'el·
aure to cnatch the 1uperb roolde SUIGl\a
of the LUera · JohNon and the CeJUca ·
Bird, the NBA Rookie ot the Year.
"Bull I'm Just lookin& LO do • Sood
Job." Griftltb said by telephone from Ma
LoultvWe, Ky., bome. "I'm not b\liktifta
up a lot of prdlure few m)'Mif.
"I WM I can belp tbem ln 1 lot ot
waya. reboundina as a auard and provid-lnc aome spark to t.heir oftenae. Abo, the •• , .... ,nt
t.lnd ol enthusiasm that makes other players oe>-want to
ptay ban!," Grilftth aa.id. •
Not only ii Grtnitb a ~at leaper, he's an accurate
shooter. scoring 22.9 points a game and hit tin& s.5 percent
from the field as a senior.
"I think be has unusual talent. There are maybe only two
other players who can stay airborne with him -dunk with
him," said Frank Layden. Jazz general manager r-------,,... •• el Clw Daw-----
He's selling doors but Don Marplly wishes he could
be wearing a silver whistle once again in the NBA but a
heart attack bas caused his retirement. "To ref in the
NBA, you have lo be able to suck in the whistle and let a
play happen," Murphy says. "Sometimes. you'd swear
a player was going to run into somebody and cruelly
tbem. You'd be ready lo blow the whisUe, and the guy
would clear himself with an unbelievable move. Those
guys do the impossible ...
lif.wH• Lead•~(·. Hrf#U ll•r•
WlllJe Aikens drove in four runs to lead II
Kansas City to an 8..C victory over Cleveland Tues·
day nieht in American League action. but at was a
costly win for the Royals . All-star thtrd baseman
George Brett ~as injured in the third inning when he stole
second just pnor to an Aikens home run. Club offi<'1al!' c;;rnt
he suffered ligament damage in his right ankle .Succcsl°>l\'C
doubles by Barry ~~nell and John Mavberrv 1n the )\econd
1nnmg and Jim Clancy's four-hitter g<1ve
Toronto a 1 ·0 va<'tory over the Chae ago
White Sox Lance Parrish and Al
Cowens hit successive two-run doubles
and MU& Wlkox tossed a six-hitter as
Detroit beat Minnesota, 8·3 . . Al
Oliver hit hi s sixth homer of the year and
added an RBI single to lead Texas to a 3-1
vktory over Milwaukee . D""a>ne
Murphy collected four h1ls to pace
Oakland to a 7·4 victory over Ball1mon·
Atniu · · · An 1 lth·tnnang homer by Fred Lynn. Boston's fourth in the game. gave
the Red SoX a S.'4 victory over Seattle . . Jn the National
League. Tony Beraaaard's two-run pinch homer bighltghted ~ontreal's five-run sixth inning that gave the Expos an 8-4
''!Ctory over San Diego. .WUUe Stargell and Mike Easler
hat home runs to propel Pittsburgh to a ~-3 win over Cancan·
nata. Easler also tripled home a run . Homers by Greg
Luzi.ask! and Garry Maddox carried Philadelphia to a 4.3 v1c·
tory over San Francisco . . A thr~·run homer by Dale Mu~hy and two·run shot by Gary Matthews led AUanta to a
5·2 victory over ~t .Louis. handing new Cardinal managec
Whiley H~n.og hts fmil loss . . Jo5e Cruz hit a two-run
double in Houston's three·run thud inning to help the Astros ~at the Chicago Cubs. S·2 . . . For the first tame in their
h~story._ the Detroit Tigers will retire a number Al KallDe's
No. 6 v.ill never be •rn by another Tiger . . Atlanta has
announced that catc"tier Bllf Pocoroba bas been reactivated
and catcher Joe. Nolan has been assigned to the team's Class AA~ farm ~t Richmond. Pocoroba had been sideuned since ~pnl 19 with a torn right forearm muscle . . Boston
sagned its 10th and 22nd draft picks. Outfielder Brian ~l of ~aremont. picked on the lOt.h round, and George Me~erod, a
J>l\.cber from Mineola, N.Y .. were added to the team's farm
club roster .... Home run king Haak Anoe Is W'ldergolng
treatment ln a hospital for a wom di~ in his back and is un-
dergoing other tests.
.................. ...,.. ,. .... s .....
STATZ OOLL&OS, Pa. -fte a1U.'1 ftnt !I lady bat• real fltb 1tory."'
"&bl at a real bis CM -about 25 IDebea.''
11id Ooo&ld DaUl)aenbaup, de> an.cs u 1"'4k
for ,......._ aM Mn. CerW' • 1Wr weekend trout filb1Ac u~ ta PwJl•Mla. Tiie caNn •liwed ••81 fro. Cam& DPtd to ftllt la c::.m. O...~ Creek. ........ b....... ... •.. d>lf at nearby 8outb
Wlllt•= Hljla ldanl. Nkt the C n ftlbed hard and
broke for a pkeie ~
''1bl ~ ._. llllO • lot of flth. a lot of blc onu.
but be dkta"t land \Mm alltitber." Daupabauch sald.
h 11•F•Pt ... ls•'' S9• ... Clwflt"
OCZANPORT. N.J. -rw more tba.n ~years. !!J Oseal' Roy POlt played die IM>rses al Moa.moulb ,
Park ncetnck. ID09t ot tM time wttb uneventlul
retalta -tf meuured la.._. woo. But t.be New Yortler, wtlo died recently. viewed it dlf·
feunUy. Moamoutb •aa tlDd ol a seeond bome. And so Thurs·
day. <>Kar Boy Post. n, came home for rood u be wt.bed.
Orte Ol b1J tut two requests was that his ashes be scat·
tered across the track. wbicb bis son Leroy did Thursday
before post time.
TM other showed Oscar was a hone player to the end -
and befond.
Still followinf. inltructions. Leroy placed a pa1r of $20
beta on hll father a favorite dally double numbers.
But Dame Fortune appreoUy wasn't amused or stm· pathetic. ·
Tbebonel ftnl.abed third and last.
aad•U Teti••------
On this date in bueball ln 1972:
Hank Aaron's •rand slam homer POwered the
AU.anta Braves to a JS-3 vtci.o?' over the Philadelphia
P,b&lUes. It wu tbe.ath bonier of Aaron's career. and
hts 14th grand slam <tying Gil Hodges' National League
record>.
On this date in 1938:
J.ohnny ~ander Meer of the Cincinnati Reds hurled
the ftrst of hl5 two consecutive no-h1t games. blanking
t.he Boston Braves. 3-0.
Today' a Btrtbday:
San Diego Padres infielder Dave Cash is 32.
IA1f10la Plarrd ,, .. Probath111
LoYola University's basketball program was •
placed on a ooe-year probation by the West Coast
Athl47tlc Conference after league officials de·
term1ned the Los Angeles University played an m·
eligible athlete during the past season ... Unbeaten Sqar
Ray 1.A'Onnd is rated a 9-S favorite over il*r1o Duran Ul the
June 20 welterweight boxing championslup at Montreat
. Dupe Pfa~r of Mexico successfully defended his World
Boxing Council bantamweight title against JapC1ncst-
challenger Eljiro Murata with a LS-round draw today A
Cleveland Ca"aliers stockholder says the NBA has decided lo
keep the 1981 All-star game in Cleyeland rather than move at
to Los Angeles ... Mania Cobb a member of the board o(
the National Football League· Pl~yers AsaociaUon who has
been at odds ...,,;t~ the wtion leadership. said he has resigned
... A former First Pennsytvania Bank official has denied
that the bank ever demanded that Philadelphia Eagles owner
Leonard T~ repay a $5.5 million k>an on IKs than a day's
n~t1ce or forfeit control of the football team ... Spectaaabr
81d as through racing tn California. at lea.st for the time be·
1ng "Aft<'r considering where he would go oo lbe weight
!>Cale 1f ~t· won the Gold Cup. under 134 or 135 pounds, we
h~ve decided not to run him." trainer Bad Ddp says . . A
C)ty councllman and a businessman have testified they st.art·
ed carrying pistols aod bad police (UMd their homes in New
Orleans because of telephone threats received after Mabm·
mad All denounced them ... Canadian Football Leigue
s::a mes will be televised throughout the United St.alts this
season on the ESPN net.work . . . Two of hockey's greatHt
goaltenders and a left wtng later turned Hecuuve joined the
sport ·s hall of fame. Lonae "Gamp" Wonley and Barry Lam·
ley. two men who spent t.beir careen· stopping opposition
shots and Ll'll#I PatrtcJl on the St. Louis Blue-s. were the
h~norees . . . Bob Niemaa. the individual world champion.
failed to make the top 10 in the Un.al cross country race but
held on to wm the star-studded Scandinavian ~ modern
pcntalhJon championships in Uppnla, S~ . . . BUJy ~acMillaa was named head coadl of the Colorado Rockies
.. The Cleveland Cavaliers announced the signing of Dan
Roblscb. their starting center last scasoo who had be<"ome a
free agent.
T~e-.K•flle _)
TV: No events acbeduJecl
RADIO: Baseball -Dod&era at New Yon Mets s p m
KABC <790>; New York Yankees at ~--eb 1·-pm· K~PC·· ( 710). ,_.. • . .,., . .. ....
FREDPAT£K
E'ro•PagrBI
ANGELS •.•
smacldng a two-run homer in
the ehtbth inning. tying the game at·.f.-4.
It wasn't a majestic blast (the
ball actually bit t.be &op of the
fence oo Us downward fiight>.
but the S-6 veteran short.st.op got
the Job dooe just the same.
Tom Donohue followed with a
smgle to left and Ride Mitler
bunted safe!} Rtch Gossage was
Called OUl O( the bullpen and
promptly struck out Carney
Lansford for the second out. but
t.ben came Carew
"I saw c pitching coach > Stan
Williams tell Gossage to keep
the ball away from me." Carew
says, "so I was looking for a
fastball on the outs1de part of
the plate."
THAT'S EXACTLY WHAT he
got. and Carew punched It into
left field. sronng Donohue with
the ga~·wmoer
The Angels don't have much
tlme to rest on their laurels.
Mcau!>e tonight Tomm>' John
( 8-21 tak~ his renowned sanlter
to tht> mound in an attempt to re·
m.un the wannangel-tt pitcher an
the Amencan L~agUt'
for someone on the Angel
roster. it wiU be the last game.
When Hassler arrives Th~.
Tanana or Barr or som y
else will be uked lo tum in thetr
unifonn.
*
AltOaL. leOTlll -V-IC-ff"'"'°' wtlt•
........ -re.ecMd -~ty ·~ "'-I•~ Tlw --lf'Clo.dH .,....., "'''-"" -· --~.-.-----'-· •1111-~·---·--·~ ~ ................. ,_ . ...,.._
-toP•t-11 ... -to~t-fM "-•· .. -~ ..._ .... ,..,..... .......... _ _...,,.-.... -~-.-.... --~~ .. ----._, ................ ( _____ ,..
~ -,, ..... W.-..-Cll---... _ V'll---... -··-~ .... 10-.... h ........... _. ··-~
----,_ ... , • 11-.c.._ ,~oro OI l2 1'0
-• •~ EllA.. Se,.,""'.,. .. "•-~ H
...... a Jn l•A .. '" Ill• ·-· ef rotlf'f ~ --~~ ... c-.....
... ff' --.........,, -"' .... W .... I (I-................ two .. _\_,,.,~.,. _.,..,._....,.... ..,. .. ~ ... ~
_.. ,.. ""' ...-. _.., • l• J• 'Mord -• -
:::::-" -,_ .......... 11 ,. ··"' • 11~
Anglers Bag Limit
Larry Wel&h of Laruna Beach
caught a limit of one to 1...,.
pound trout on cheese at
Anaheim Lake tteeotly and Jim
Nakata landed a 3~-pound trout
in bis limit that wu taken oo t.be
North Shore oo Zeke's floating
balL
More than 2.500 pounds or
trout were planted 1JI &be lake re-
cenU,y. aceordiDc tA> maaacer
Job.a Moore.
GLEWOOD (AP> -1'be Na·
tlo al Basketball AsaociatlOQ
cha pion Los An&elea Laten
were outlnt.ermaofblanames
IA 11'1 NBA draft of colleae
pl~e
'Ole • wbo WOil the NBA
cbamplomhlp lut month, were
witbout a ftnt·round Mleetion. It
weal to Oeve1aDd la U.. tnde
whJcb 1ent Don Ford to I.be'
CavaHen last Febnaary in ex·
cbanae for Butch Lee and a ftrst.
roundaelectloa ln 1982.
THE LADD' Plll8'I' Mitt·
lion came in the&ec00d roundaod
was No. 31 overall, with wtaich
tbeytookWayneRob1naon.afour·
year starter at Virginia Tecb.
Robinson, a .... ~!'-pound .
forward, finished his collectat.e
career as the fourth-leading ~
bounder in scbopl b.latory and the
10th ~ scoret" OYerall IOI' tbe
Gobblers. He avttaced 15.2potnta
and 8.2 rebo\m<b as a senior.
Wltb their second choice ln the
second round and No. :n overall,
the La.ken picked Butch Carter. a
6·5, 200-pound pard from In·
diana. Carter was the seeood-
leading scorer ror the Hoosiers in
1979·80withan 11 .1 average.
Los Angeles was without a
selection in the third round. Jn the
fourth round. the Lake rs took
guards Tony Jackson of Florida
State and Ron Baxt.erofTexas.
ln the fifth round. the Lakers
took forward Rlck Raivto of the
University or Portland. In lhe
sixth round. they selected guard
Otis Boddie of North Alabama.
LOS ANGELES PICKED
forward Charles Davis of Van-
derbilt in the seventh round and
center Melvin Hooter of F.din·
boro State in the eighth round
before puslng.oo tbe final two
rounds.
Davis was an All·Southeastem
Conrerence forward his jWlior
year as Vanderbilt went from
IO· 17 to 18·9 This year. as a ~enior.
the 6·7. 215-pounder was injured
and played ut only three games.
The Pblladelpb ia 76ers
c.ha~enged the select.ion, ques-
t1on1ng whether Davis was eligi-
ble to be picked. but the choice was upheld by the league.
SD Drafts
Anderson
Two-yur AU-American Paul
Andenoo of Southern c.llfornia
College, was a ae•enth·round
draft pick Tuesday by the San •
Diego Clappers ID the NBA ·s COi·
le~e draft
Anderson. the No. 2 scorer in
tht> nat100 wtth a 31 .4 average
last season. is the all-time scor·
ing leader at SoCal with 2.021
points over three seasons.
A former Corona del Mar High
standout. Anderson stands 6-3
and played guard both in high
school and college.
Whlle at SoCaJ. he shot at a S8
percent clip from the floor and
J:Onoected on 223 or 26S free
th rows for an 84 percent
average .
Anderson was one of two
Orange Coast area players
taken in the draft. RJcb Bran·
nlng, a former Marina Hieb mr
out of Notre Dame UDivenlt)',
WH taken on t.be fourth l"OUDd by
Indiana.
HOT TUB SALE
MISIA--llYS
~eball Standings
AlllE&ICAN LEAGtJE NATIONAL LEAGVE .. .,. ....
COMPlETE TUB $649
l<>da)"a best ~00\ tub. three feet ~P. w11t1 seats.
flOOf s~a and all hardwate' Limited otter'
SPA SALE S788
This includes an elegant. traditional 5"rfoot spa.
~e llritn jet mauage htt•nos installed. ready for
immediate h<>Ol\up.
IN STOCK NOWl
We heye OYer 50 tube' and a.pas Of drtterent sizes on
dlaPIA'f Too-. ~ chemicals -all in stock'
CALll'CJRNIA COOPEAM1E
Open 011ty ol>CluOtng Sunday
ORANGE COUNTY
10591 Beach Blvd.
714/827-3940
(In Stanton. between een Rd. a'1d Katefla)
DAllY PILOT
IF THE WEEKI
*********************** ! 1977 BUICK :
• B.ICTIA SID.AH •
• Automatic transmission. air cond .. •
• power steenng & brakes. split PoWer •
•seat. pewer windows & door k>ctcs • ! AM /FM stereo w /tape, crulse controf: :
• vinyl top & more! (~SYD). •
: ·s4495 ! • •
: 1977 OLDSMOBILE :
it CUTLASS SUN.aa T·TC» •
at Cruise controi. split power seat. ttlt •
at wheel. power windows & door locks • ! and rallye wheels with beauty rlma. :
,..(086RTR) •
! 5•295 ~:: ·!"'·!~it)!~·-*·*******it'~ .. ir~..l
MOn••ova
5•115
WettDt.--
Kanaaa City
Chicago
Oakland
SeatUe
Tuu
Minnesota .ua•
W L Pd. GB
34 20 .830
28 26 .s19 e
21 28 .491 7~
2fl 29 .473 8~
2$ 29 .463 9
22 32 .407 12 n 31 .404 u
Bu&DIYIMa
New York 33 20 .m
Milwaukee 28 23 .Set t
Baltlmore 21 21 .:iOO er.;
Toronto 26 26 .500 e~
Boston 26 Z1 .491 1
Cleveland 2S 28 .490 1
Detroit · 23 21 .480 ai,.,
T.......,.•k-&"9tff I, ........ Y0t• 4
ll:•"WiCltyl,C..-..1_,
0.ll'Ml.~J Teus l, ,_..._..... t
0.-1 .... 1. e-tilMf"t. '°' .... ~ ~' ( '' '""'"V'' T.-y'tO-H_Y_r.-•11.i ....... llCl-J.N.11 .. ,II_..,....,._, WI .ot Oell._,. ,_., ....... .....,
OllMI City t.._,. S-1 _. S,CltW'I ~ .t c-....-<Wlltt•S.._ ~WI,!." M._...4~Nl .. 0.....1....._
HI.fl T..-UWr.-.. •SI el ~ t~ .. ,, .. Te.._ I...._. •ll • llllilt• t I ,..,_ •s1 ... ...... , ................. , ........... ..
W L Pd.. GB
Houston 32 21 .804 DM&en 32 22 .m ~
Cinelnnati 30 24 .W 2~
San Diefo 2$ 30 .4.55 8
Atlanta 22 30 .423 9~
Sao~ 22 33 .40011 .... ,.. ...
Montreal ao 20 .eoo
Ptttaburlh 30 22 .577 1
Philadelphia 27 23 .$40 3
New YOl't 24 rr .fn &~
Cbk&IO 22 28 .'40 8
St. Louil 19 35 .352 13
T ......... tc.w .._YMIS. ...... t ............. s..oi...· PM....._.4, S... Ff'~l-J •~S.SLL.ount .... ~ i. Clflc._.,, )
"-""'-Olk•t TtlleY'tO-
.,..._.( ....... '·II •t ,..._ Y'en IS..00 ... J.11
'°911 0...,. 1°"1K Ml .t ,..,.,_ I~ .......
5-"'~ ~ l·fl .. -·--· I L.erdl ..n,"
14 ~•wh It "•nc11 •·41 •' •t1•1tH 1McWlll5-,_.I ft
............. ,,,, •• "" ,.,, •t ''""-'' l~..-Wt.1',11 ~l~Hl llt....._..(___, 141,11
~ .. ~
~
OC»IT'ICU IE
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DATSUN
IAIWICK WILL
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SfRTOfFHIS
IACIC
Comt fn For
Yax Free T-Shirt
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TU8D.ESS WHntWAU
2 FIBERGLASS en TS &
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l POlYESTER RADIAL SOOY PUES•~.,_.....;....;.~..----4--=-..
$
·WHITEWALL TIRES
36MONTH LIMITED WARRANTY*
• foty ,_ W"1'f to ...Id . ,.__,_,.. .. .._.
..:.IP.
... -
... , ..... JUMH,1•
addition of Marina rv.nner Jlm Taylor to the
llAet&J>. " "We 1tlll bave Frank Seurer," sa11
Tbomp10D, referrlDI to Edl1on·1 All·CIF
quarterback.
Wltb Bell &oet fQr the Sopth, the 1ame will take
on a decidedly dllfettnt look. V1llou ol three or
four toucbdowD favortUam for the Rebela IUddeoly
becomes no more than a mirqe.
TD L088 OF BELL leavee the South's nm·
nlnlf back pletw'e lD a 1cr1mble with Jeff Banner
<San Clemente), Scott McKemte <El Toro>, Vlc
Pl"awl <Santa Ana), Taylor.and Pat Compton <San·
llaao> all liven a shot at the •tarttna berth. Bell'• Jersey wu retired at Ed1lon Hieb re-
cently. "Player of the year," not. Workman. "We
get another one and we'U retire that jersey. too."
Despite the Jou of Bell, Seurer, Blll Malavaal.
Tim IDman and Mark Boyer to araduaUon, and the
expected Improvement lo the Westminster and
Fountalo Valley campe, Ed1lcm la •lain being
touted aa the team to beat f« &maet Leque and
CIF Btl F1ve Conference laurela.
Mike Alexander, a S-2, 205-pounder la tbe belr
Getting His Own Way
'n.ere'1 Nothing Re/,evant About Salata
BJ BOWARD L. RANDY Of .. DMtr ........
. Paul Salata la a man ot many
..,.rd.I and be apparently bu
bad tbe laat one lo •tatina the
sllltb renewal of Irrelevant
Week in Newport Beacb.
·When be wu accused of pay.
bag a band1ome bonu1 for
'brone llcGrtff ot Florida MM fo •ilD • profeuiooal coatract
9ith the Hamlltoll Ontario Tiler Cat.a ol the Canadian Football
League, be only smiled and nld. .. it's all irrelevant"
WHAT IT ACTUALLY
amounted to wu that Salata bad
oaee qalD had bis own way in
p~odq tbe annual spool t.bat
boaon tbe Jut player aeJected
lD the· Natiooal Football Leque
pt.)<er'I draft.
-Punumrt to aect.loa 8, para·
~pb 336 ot the by.Jaws ol lr·
reJ,evant Week, the Lowtman
Ti-pphy winner la the lut player
ae1ect.ed 1n the draft and lf auch
p}~yer defect• or otherwise
eafmlnat.ea bimaelf. the next to
last player selected will be
honored." Salata l&.Y$ with eome
semblance of re&IOlllJla.
When tbe draft wu made re-
cenUy, Salata WU in tbe Loi
Ans-elm Rama offices trytq to
make a deal with the Plttabur&b
Steelen to switch with the Rama
for the 1aat choice.
B1JT TRZ WILY Steelen,
bowlna Salata from b1a ticket ....a&>1n1 days at USC and bltet' for h1i -brief appearance 1n tbe
NFL, wouldn't pve ID and tbe
PAUL SALATA
Rams were forced to mate the
next-to-last selection.
That's wbeo Salata went to
work lo earnest. He reportedly
contacted all Canadian Poot.ball
Lea1ue clubs to try for the best "deal" be could ftnd to ault b1a
pocketbook and at the same
time eet lrcGrtff out ol the nm·
nin1.
No one la accuainl Salata out·
rlabt ol p.,U,1 the bonus for
McGrifra aicnln& but rumon
have It that he was actively lo·
volved lD order to cet the Rama'
final ae1ection u the boootte for
Irrelevant Week.
Whatever happened be·
btod lbe scenes, Salata bas
dee land that the Rama· final
pick, Kevin Scanlon, will now be
the recipient ol the Lowaman
Trophy. He moved to the bottom
of the 11.at when McGrUI defected
u a draft c:lodier <from the NFL>.
Thu.a the highest of the lowest
players taken lo the slx year bis·
tory of Irrelevant Week
<Scanlon's 332nd) ia oow the
honoree.
But before Salata pounda the
gavel for the opening public
session. be may w&sb that
McGrlff was back and that
Pittsburgh had stayed witb him a
bttlonaer.
ONE TBING Salata Ukes to do
la talk and be la ready lo divulge
a few thousand words of wisdom
oo Irrelevant Week at any time.
But oo.ce be introduces Scanlon,
be may have trouble gettin& i.D
another word.
"l liketo talk.'' ~anloo says.
"In fact, when I fint tried out
for football, I teamed only the
quarterback talked lo the bud·
dle. So I knew right away that
was tbe Polltioo for me."
Thus with McGriff • conacleo-
Uoua objector to aomethi.D& be
doesn't know anythlng about <Ir·
relevant Week) and with the
flexible by-laws of tbe pre·
1Udi11tator ortg.lnator of the
celebration, anythlne can hap-
pen.
And it probably will before
Salata ftnlabea untan&Ung tb1a
one .
It'• lrrelevant but the week·
1001 celebration get.a under way
June 23 at the Balboa Bay Club.
SC3's Wldte Slglls Frenchman
Abandons
Yacht Race P.act Could Be Worth $2 Million
CJ,.EVELAND <AP>-Veteran I a.-eland Browm l'UJlD1nc back ~ .. Pruitt 1a no aoacer assured =ltal'tbll role oo the team, in Ii ot the Bl'OWDI' tllDlnl of
No. 1 Graft cbolce, u•man 'l"ltWob:t-...-·.,wbmerCbarMI Wblle. ~ wbo ltarred lo USC'1 ~ Bowl=overObloState ,_,., ~ala-year pact
tbe BrOwu T\leldQ worth
,..... tban $1 mllUon. U be ,,.ronm aceptlanally lo the Na-
ijop) f'ootball Le.,.a., hia COil·
tract coukt be worUa more tbaD S2
m&llloa beeauae of Incentive
-=-ttcontaina, •aid hia aeeot. Mike Ttvpe. •
ft.on MID TllB asreemeat ... riiiacMd .,.. Mftl'ai ....
a(ea I I I 181 l....,U.tioal. .~··rm·.._. .. to be laere la ~.tcir.-S.udfor'Mdtla ,_.._ .. I._,, wlllt uadl die
11th ~ 1Ul1 (die Mn " tlal •ow•' •m..,. camp),'' Wblte, 1814.
lie bad walked out "' a mbd·
LACC CCNdlee Set
LOS ANGELES -Loa
Aal_.. OC ._ 1ll1tW nn
llead footNll ud Naketball
coaeMa. .roa. l:nlaaw. a former ....
t.111& It Cll: Pol7 (Pom•• ), ...
h•edJe .... toc6all d11619 ..... ................. 't• at ..... llGlllC" oc. di .. _. .. , ,, ........
camp for Cleveland rookies 1n
May whlle bis contract t.alb were
ltiU up lD tbe air.
"When lt'a time to 10 to wort,
the fam wtll get a dllferent look at
the type ol player and peta<JO I
am.''Whlteaaid.
Browns owner Art Modell
added: "After bis first 200-yard
day, we'll for1et all t.bla bual-
neaa."
White's apnta bad previously
made it known be wu willlDI to
play lo Canad.a lf an adequate con-
tract C()U)d not be wortea out wttb
the Browns. However, on. ot b1a
aeenta, Mike Ftaa.a1u. aald •·no
serious Del<ltiationa" ever took
placewtththeCFL.
wan B'S CONTaAcr 1a not
taanateed. in the MDH tbat "be bu to make tbe team,.. llodell
old. Tbe l"UDlllaa beet .......
quired to take a ~cal •-amtnldort befonllCDIDI.
A baDUI for 1tanlq wu lD-
cJudecl. tbete&mNld, tbouebPN-
clM-....wweDOtdtaeloeed.
CMdl Sam auu.u.. ..sci be ..... :.~YI Wlllte'• npgta. U. IOI' l1 at 9oulblr'D
Califorida. IN'Wh•ns tbe tQillfJ'-
plqued Praltt .... DOtdllp&Q9d.
Tb• coach laSd be did not ln'4Dd to
altenulte Pnlitt ad Wblle Udl ........
"We're •Ult IOlil to pla1 'UM
beet .... ·' ltulliBno 1Ut. "Ill CWM&e> U. u nceUent op..
===,:~~,ft .......................
Gi'.11 .......... ;i .... ••
PLYMOUTH, Eneland <AP>
-A Frenchman and bi.a yacht
became the firlt casualties 1n
the ain1lebanded yacbt race
acrou the Atlantic Monday and
a Dutchman retired, but
French.men held the fint three
places one day out from
Plymouth.
Jacques nmatt waa plucked
from the ocean by a Royal A.tr
Force helicopter from Brawdl!
South Wales, afte r an RAF
Nimrod aircraft on exercile
spotted tbeaailor lo hia dlnab.Y.
The helicopter radioed-that
Ttmatt., 41. wu fli ud well after
abandoalna bi.a craft, the •toot
moaobalJ, Motorola .
Tbe rwcG for the alnkia1 waa
not tmmd•teb' mown. "!\mat.
from Le a.n11, luid .. ta dls-
tnu ~ wb.a bewa m
mllH from Land'• E:.!f UM ~ttp.olltqJ •
Datebman Pietter Laa1, a
41·1••r·old televl1loa
cameraman, p•t back to
Palmoutb ab08rd '-1• 14·foot
mODObull. Ll4r OOU, .. ,..... be wu fMllq unwell. TIM orlaDl*'I Mid .,_.
Riludeli of Nantes. 1ail1u tbe
U.foo& triaaru VSD tooi tM
leed Iii U. 1.000.nillt race tO
Newport. ll.1 .• from Bric
LOta .. otPartt lD GaaloUilt JV.
OUM' de Kenaaoa ti Parta
18 b1e IDGliioball Krlter VI wM lD
Udrd *" ..a ~ Weld ol PDrt Lm11r1•. na., ... UtW la~ IUiit......,.. .. ....
'
p===· Utll'' L f? .,......_.....,__._ ,.. ........ ..._ ...... ......... ..._ .. I J If~ OQ' ?N:W,.. -t MOllTe•IV Olt CO., tlht ...,_--, IM 9 1111 ..... 4'-... &.99, 17 .911J .... c...... CA ....
• ,'11"'~~=-...:=-===r.·:~ ....... ,.~~----.... = ... ca.--............. '!14. ... • HMcy ... -......._ ......... .CA-ltw•• C...... ....C. PI 4WAlltlll T1Nt ....._ 11 Cl t dtf We Dr.,f.._,CA ... ....... ..... ...... "L MlllMI.-...,. ••:c&. , .-..J,..,.... Hus•-...._CA ... •PP•,,_ to m:·• vacaDCJ at Ucbt end after an "'" .....,..... .. ..., .. .. '"'• ...._. 111 11 • ... .., • • lmprwlve1 , c:e.iy Cllftl •Or-. c..tY • _......, ... J-t, Na .,_.LAI ... ____ _.
Inman, tall7. bu bem added to the Pt.,., ,,. .......... --.. ...... Sou.a. an _.. __ --u a 11--•• ,,_..,.. °'""' c... o.tw ~ C-ty OWta • 0r-.. GM1MY • Wl-•"9-* .-. -,,_ .. , ... ,,..,..... ... ... _ ...... ·p-
&BCENT co••VNICATION wlth BtDnJ PU .. U't -........,~ c.. ~Piiie Rlcanlo. tbe ex.co.ta lleu fflCb ud OraQ&e -__,._. ,,.. ... ,...,,.,,.. 7411
Coat CoUece •tar wbo .... belD mumc It lD tbe NOJICI! 01' DUTM 01' ft18LIC NOTICB
Pl'Oil u • plaee-kleter for tbe Dltnllt Uom. l"e• THOMAS HIOOl .. I AND NOTIC. 01' HATH 01'
veala Ida CODtiDu.lq rile lD tbe pro rub. 01' l'•TITION TO AD· L• ROY l'•ED•ltlCK IUcardo abow1 up o. loei Bucblbeu.m'e l.lat lo MINIST•R •STAT• NO ••••• Oft COITA M•SA
-Pro-F.a.u Wetkb U GDe ~ u. .-caiee w'bo A·1MS19· CALlflORNUt ANO oil
la '°"""'" overlookecl. T 0 a I I h e I r s • ft • T I T I 0 N, T 0 A D s..,. Bucbabaum: ••RJcudo bMD't mJ.ued a bffeflctarles, creditors MINll1WR as:raT• ,.0 •
fl 'd --• '--'de ... _ Ml &-and contingent creditors of • • e~ .-uat Ul'lll .., 1111 OTer two years, leta b1a Thom as H I g g I n s of A-1147.._ ldcb aw~ twtftly and adjmta to PCIOf' anapa." N e w P 0 r t 8 e • c h T o a I t h • I r s •
Re's rtcbt. but be'• late, too. We've been aa,· California, and persons bentflcl•rles, creditors
lot that for the lat two yean. JUsbt now. Rlcanlo who may be otherwise In· and contl= creditors of
ia ••altinl the •to camp·1-with a ltna.k ot at terested In the will and/or le Roy rederlck S.er ..... . •nd persons Who may be atraiPt tleld 1oata without a m1a or a block lnaide .state· otherwf• Int.rested In the the 40, a fteld loal pereeat,aae ol 10 lo the NFL and A petltlOn has been filed wltl and/or estate· only four m1ues lo IO PAT IU.emptl. by Richard A. H~b .. In A petition hes been flted
Detroit. with No. 1 (Benay Blcardc>) cettint ln I the Superior Court of by Frederk L. Beer In the
hia ldcb. vtatta ADabelm Stadium Sept 'J for an Oranoe COUnty requesting Supertor COurt of 01'8.,ge exbibltion same .. aloat tbe Rama . that he be appointed H County requesting th&t _ * * * . :~~t~.:-"~~:: !; Fredertc L Beer be ap.
OCEAN VIEW BIGB wltb 1·8 Wayne· Thomas Hl,.,.lns <under pointed as personal
C 1-...1-... _ ... n • .... representative to ad· ar --...r ~ ..ey gun, la entered ln the San the Independent Ad· minister the estate of Le Dlmu Bultetball Tournament ln December. Tbe m inistration of Estates Roy Frederick Beer <un-
tourney, which annuallY attract.a teams such aa Actl. The petition Is set for der the Independent Ad· Pasadena. Verbum Del, Loa.a Beacb Poly and hearlnQ In Dept. No. 3 at mlnlstr•tlon of Est•tes
Palos Verdes Is tentatively lbt.ed for Cal State 700 Civic Center Drive, Act> The petition Is set for
Fullerton. · '.:~:\1.,~,~nfi% °Ju~~~· he•rinQ In Dept. No. 3 at • * • 198C)at 10.00a m ' 700 Civic Center Drive,
DANA HILLS HIGH football coach Don IF YOU OBJECT to the West, In the City of Santa
DeGroote is 0Herin1 • football camp for or•ntlnQ of the petition Ana, Gllltornla on July a,
younptens, with two-hour MNiODI dally at 5 you should efther appea; 19T?: ·~~og~CT to the
be&innina Mooday for the five-week camp. ~tou'~obhea~ecr~nQlonasndor'taf1t1• orantlnQ of the petition, -The fee ii $50 and further lnfonnaUoc can be • • you Shoutd either appear obt.alned by calll.na ~L written Jectk>ns with the at the hearlnQ and state
w1s1m~~~~
tar TH£ A mt/ q ()( l/IE t1£(C[
Galindez, Bunwtt
To Fight Saturday
court before the hearlnQ. your objections or file Your appearance m•Y be written obJections wlttt the
In person °' by your at-court before the hNrlnQ torney. y · I F Y o u A R e A our ~ranee may be
CR E OITOR or a cont· ~~r~ or by vour at-
lngent creditor of the de--I F y O U A R E A ceased, you must flle your CREDITOR or a cont-clalm with the court or lngent creditor of the de--present It to the personal CH~, ~OU must f11e your representative appointed claim with the court or
by the court within four present It to the personal
monthS from the date Of representative appointed first issuance Of letters as b t.._ provided In Section 700 of Y ,.., court within four months from the date of the Probate Code of first Issuance of letters as Callfomla. The time for provided In Section 700 of
flllno claims will not ••· the Probate Code of r~~~ ~Or cs!~ 1:'~~~ Callfornla. The time for
ln<;1 noticed above. . flllno claims will not ex-YOU MAY EXAMINE plre prtor to four months the file k~ by the CO\.lrt from the date Of the ttear-
f i · 1"9 noticed above. I you are nterested In the vou MAY EXAMINE ~':s\e'J:'t~~o!1:: ,: ~ the file kept by the court.
celve special notke Of the If YOU are lntettSted in the
Inventory of estate assets estate, you may file a re-and of the petitions, •c· ouest with the court to re-c o u n ts and re Ports ~elve speclal notice of the
deScrlbed In Section 1200 inventory of estate assets
of the C..llfomla Probate and of the petitions. ac-Code counts and rttport s · described In Section· 1200
RlcMrd A ......... At· of the CallfOrnla Probatl'
torney •t uw, J'6 San Code.
Miguel Dr., Suite 300, Wiiiiam C. '-*"~ Newport BNch, C.. 92660; Jr ... _ •t , -tel· (714) ~ •• ~·-·-J' ......... ~.,,...,a.-. c-A O.Ol'f P•IM E . 17th St., Sutte 212, ~,. ''· 11. iw 2-cosu Mtw, ea. mv. ~°' .... ~ Oeofy ....
PUBLIC NOTICE .)-I I, 11. M. 19 l•n•
l '
,.,.
BASE&Atl: I TENNIS
... North's Big Plays Kiii Rebels, 4~3 · Volleyball
Clime Set
., aoon CA11UOH __ ..., .... ....
n., ............. ~
-..u.ar__,~.._ .. u..
looli AJI ....... _..... ...... ...
l"9M IDd I 1 I llJI' • b'Cllll fOW' =~ ...... L. .. -r.:r,=: '•••b• l cH••c at Anahetm•• t.aPalma ...-~ But ~ Ute ~·, deftnH
1ppeared lb.abbr at Um• (lout mls-
CVff h lt allo pco• .. 1d UM stoppers lO
"' vp • thrw·rua n1Dtb 1DAlnl and an "9twa1 •.a ridor)I in u l.rul1qJ ·u tM Uth auoal Oranp County
All·a&.ar 1ame -.t loto the boob u the~ YankM victory. nei.ottom l1De wu .~in by
Dave c.tmo'• two-out l\8111"'.le ln
th• 11th to ~ JUTJ Jfartlll. who
IOt aboard Oil a lWO-OUt lnfleld
&al•.
AND SB'M'ING IT UP for the
North In the ninth wu a \hree-run
bunt. llnlted by Steve Motea' infield
bH, a boomin1 triple by J oe
Castaneda and CasWlo's fiy·ball tri·
ple lo short rtsht.
That gave the Yankees llfe, but
what kept them from drowning
earlier were two defensive plays that
be ld the South 's arsenal t o a
-minimum.
In the slxt.h frame with the South
nursing a 1-0 lead on Brian Drazba's
an rlftee ny, hicb plated Mater ~l
H11h tHmmat• Pett Bull. t he llehll loaded \be b&MI on eatchat'a
lntuflNOCe, a walk and an enof.
a1JT CAlftU.O, who wa 1uUt.y of
the m.i.cu.. cam• \II wlt.b • d.M q atop of Kevtn SUwtnak1'1 Uner and
ftlpoed to NCOnd tor an lnAlnt ~ndlni
doubleoiay.
And Ole defensive •~m ol the nilht wa1 turned ln by 1 North outnetclet
II PREP B.4SEB.4U
ln tho 10th lrul1J\I when Paul Cicero
drilled one lO deep center with extra-
basea potential. perhaps an inside-
the-parkhome run.
But Moses raced O'f:W and n agged
it down as the ball was tailing away
with a spectacular catch. Moments
later Edison Hlah's Rick Abbott
slapped a double to right and Frank
Spear walked, but winning pitcher
Mark Stone got Dana Hills' G~g
Zoch t.o wtufC to end the threat
THE LATE -INNING r1reworks
over shadowed an earher display oC
overpowering pitc hing by both
squads.
BeaU's leadoff single m the fifth in·
ning was \.he first base hat by either
Jenkens Honored
Benefit Wheelchair Tourney Set
By DAVE CUNNINGHAM ~ -OaltY ...... 5~fl tr Corona del Mar is to win an un-
Association orf1c1al fo'rank lla m·
mond.
team. htnty batten went down on Ab boll aot aboarcl l n tb•
alrlket .net only 1lx rree puaea were el&htb lnninl when tbe North defense
lHued by 10 pltcbeu durln1 tho reu apart wit!a a couple ol .ron ud
evening. eventually waa one ot two rwmen to
Ocean Vlew Hlah'a Jack Rehlboll~ &COR toe the South without beoeflt of
waa the looe Or::se Cou t &Na a bue hiL
pltcb4r to perform he allowed Oil· Lartmu allo stood out delwl=
ly one hit and no n&Dt ln bia two-ln tbe flfth Uulln& whea '*-~
lnnlnt 1Unt. Spear's tbroW from first to laAock out
CO&ONA Dl!L •A•'• Carl and taa pinch runner Glen Aebrma.n .Ehmann contributed to the Soutb'a · at the plate, killinl a po\entlal tytn1
1coring in the fltlb bmlng when be run.
ad vanced Beall to second with a But ln the end, tbe South'• iDabWt.y
ajn1le to left and after Estada'1 to break it open ln the atxtb, com·
Bob Larimer advanced both n.umers blned wtth the North's bll defemive
wltb a tapper lO the plteher. Drube'• plays and clutch hitting wben \be
Une drive to cent.el' broke the scortn1 game wu on the line in the ninth.
tee. • lW'Decl 1t around.
Debbie Or•••· • former w .. tmit11ter
w,.b 8cllool atar ~ ......
setter for the U.S.
women '• Olympic
•olleybalJ team, •lll
eonduct • 1erle1 of b1a ...,.._. for •et·
ten ~ J1lllilor and MG.lor
hllh sihool ate ln thiJ
area.
The eHDLH will be
held at tlw AmerlcH
Natlooal voa.,batl Al·
aoclatlOD 11m. l721Z
Newbolle street. FOUft·
Lain Valley. .
L IMITEO TO SUPP\. Y OM HN"+O
WENTE BROniERS
BOTT\.E CASE
P£TAIL RETAIL
Blanc de Blanc. 750ML 2.83 30.80 2.57
Chablis. ~ML 2.12 23.00 1.92 TODl'S
VODKA
l .75UTER
GRAND
MAR NIER
23-0UNCE.
Blanc de Noir. 750ML 3.12 33 .88 2.83
Dry Semilton. 750ML 2.95 32.00 2.67
Grey Riesmlg. ~ 2.83 30.80 2.57 precedented seventh straight CI F
tennis championship lo 1981, it will
have t.o do it without Craig Jenkens.
Although Parks is a key hgurc an
getting wheelchair tennis oH th~
gr ound, he makes no bones about the
·fa ct that he is also the ~port's ~--T 645 1211 Johannisbefg Ries~ 7':/)ML 327 37.84 2.97
Petite S-aah. ~ 2.83 30.80 2.57 A 16-year-old junior whom coaches
called "a promising talent.'' Jenkens
w as b1led in a motorcycle accident
t wo months ago.
"BE WAS A NEAT KID." teaching
pro David Salt& says. "It's really a
sham e. A lot of people liked Craig a
helluva lot.•'
Jenkens was no budding superstar ,
and the varsity was so loaded with
talent that be spent this past season
on the JV squad. But, as almost any coach who
knows will tell you, playiag JV at
. ¢•J TENNIS
Corona del Mar probably means you·re good moqgb to play varsity at;
a lot of~ schools.
JENKENS DIDN'T RAVE a spot
on the varstty roster locked up for
Corona del Mar·s lmt season, since
most d the top players from this
season's team are returning.
Realizing that. Jenkens branched
out, spending more time at water
polo and surfing. But be remained a
solid t.ennis proeped.
''He was a normal Southern
California kid . He loved sports, and
he was very family-oriented," com·
m e nts Brad Parks, who knew
J enkens !or years.
PARKS, WHO MADE headlines
coast to coast for his work in the Na·
tionaJ Foundation of Wheelchair Ten·
nis, decided to dedicate a tournament
to J enken's memory.
Los Caballeros Racquet and Sports
Club w i ll h ost the N a tlon ai
Wheelchair Tennis Championships
Sept. J.3.14, and Parks has arranged
to have tbe name or the tournament
changed.
It will oow be called the rlJ'St an-
nual Craig J enkens Memorial Na·
tiooal Wheelchair Tennis Cham·
pionshiJl&.
''IT'S JUST SO•ETBING we
wanted t.o do, kind of to remember
Craig, t.o booor bis m emory," Parks
explained.
The tournament awards banquet
will have several guest speakers. in-
cludinl act.or Lloyd Bridges, tennis
coach Vic Braden and U.S. Tennis
greatest player.
PARKS OFl'EN PLAYS exh1b1·
tions against able-bodied play~:. and
holds his own, but he has never lost a
m atch against a nother wheelchair
player .
"There's a guy named Randy Snow
in Texas who's out to get me." Parks
says, hinting that he may have some
t rouble in t he upcom i ng cham·
pionships. "He was a good Junior
player before he was paralyzed, and
be can tut some pretty gOOd spin
serves.
"I can whip him right now," Parks
adds, "but I think he's working on a
li ghtwe i g ht c h ai r s o h e ca n
maneuver better. He wants to get
m e."
THE ONLY DIFF E R E NCE
between wheelchair tennis and the
usual version of the !port is that each
player is allowed t wo bounces or the
ball. rather than one. The fact that people confined to
wheelchairs can play tennis at all Is
s ufficiently amazing to a ttract the al·
tention ol the TV program "That's
Incredible."
Talks are underway for a se~ment
which would not only feature Parks'
tennis feats, but his track exploits as
well.
Dolphins Win
Tino Alverez scored three times
Tuesday night, the second game 1n a
row i.n which he has scored a hat
trick, t.o pace the Huntington Beach
Dolphins to a 5· 1 victory over the
Fountain Valley Flames in American
Speed.soccer Assoc1at1on play
A nowd of 324, the smallest
turnout this season al Los Caballeros
Racquet and Sports Club, saw the
Dolphins even their ASA record al
1·1.. Huntington Beach exploded ror
three fourth-qua rter goals to break
open a close 2·1 contest. Tbe Dolphins
fired 63 shots on Fla mes goalkeeper
KeHy Dunn, while Fountain Valley
responded with 44 shots on Oolphlfl
keeper Rieb Gomez.
Fountain Va lley is now l 2 1n
s~cerplay. Thursda y's 8 p.m contest pits
Orange against the Newport ~arh
Breakers.
.--------Fine Shau Since 1903
Leather Moc Brown Cowhide Mens womens
canvas Oxford W"lt• and Navv Mena womens
1son 1r.
BOTTLE (,A.St
LIQUEURS ~ETAIL
Amaretto Di Saronno.12-0z 5.1 3
Drambuie. 23-0Z .. ... 1132 125.68 10.48
GaIUano. 2>0z ... .... 10.25 113.77 9.49
Kahlua. 23-0Z . ... . . .. .. .. . . .. . .. ............. 8.23 91 .40 7.62
Midori ft\don, 23-0Z ......................... 9 .75 108.33 9 .03
Southern Comfort. 1.1>urER ...... 1224 67.96 11 .33
11a Maria. 2.3<)Z ............... .... a.n 97.35 8.12
Bl.£rU)S
HRm Walker Imperial. OUNIT .... 5.50 6 1.00 5.09
KeSsler. 1 ~ _ ....... 10.53 58.50 9.75
Seagnlms 1 Crown. 1 1~ UT'ER 1 J .85 65.71 10.96
BOURBONS
Ancient Age. QUA.RT ..•.. 5.99 66.55 5.55
E.arty Tmes. UTER ..... ... 6.33 70.32 5.86
H. Walker Ten High. 115LJTER 9.78 54.35 9 .06
I. W. Harper. OOART . 739 81 .99 6 .84
Jim Beam, 1 ~UTER ... 11 52 64.00 10.67 .
BRANDY AND COGNAC 11 .37 Christian Bros •• 1 ~UTE R 12.29 68.2 1
E & J . 14.ITE.R .. 6.85 7627 6.34
CowvoisierV.S., 150"'1 12 .79 14 1.95 11 .83
Martel v.s.P .. 750ML ) 2 .19 135.25 11 .2 8
CANADIANS
Black velvet. I {JTl:.R . 6.47 7 1.90 6.00
Canadian Club. 1 15urE.R 15.79 87.65 14.61
Canadian Mist. LITER 6.45 71 .64 5.97
Seagrams V.O .• 1 75LrrLi. 15.79 87.65 14.61
GIN
Beef eaters. 1 75 LITER 15.75 87.35 14.56
Gilbey's, 1 75UTER l 0.18 56.54 9.43
Gordon's OUAAT. 5.55 61 .61 5.14
Seagram's OUART 5.65 62.61 5.22
Tanquenry. 1 75UTH 16.69 92.68 15.45
RUMS
Bacardi U.& ~ t.75UTER 10.95 60.83 10.14
Castillo Lt. & Dk.. LITF"R 4.55 50.52 4 .21
Myers Jamkan. 750 ML 73 5 81 .50 6.80
SCOTCH
Dewars White Label. 1 75 LIT CR 18.39 102.00 17.00
Chivas Regal, CXJAAT 15.65 173.87 14.49
Cluny. 1 75LITER . .. 1229 68.17 11.37
J & 8 ,0<JAR T .... 10.19 I 12.75 9.40
Johnnie Walker Blk •• 00/\RT 14.79 164.29 13.70
Lauders. I 75 UTE.IL 11 AS 63.39 .10.57
TEQ<.DLA
Cuervo White, • ·l.ITtR .7.17 79.56 6.64
Don Emilo Wh. & Gold, I 75LITER . 9.0Q 49.98 8.34
Sauza Gokt. QUAflT . 7 .70 84.92 7.12
VODKA
Crown Russe.. LITER .. 4.55 50.45 4.21
Kamchatka.> ~UTER 8.27 45.95 7 .66
P,opov, I 75-UTER ..... 7.15 42.89 7.15
Smirnoff. UTER ...... . 6.11 67.88 5.66
Gllbey's Vodka. 1 '74WfER 7.97 44.25 7.38
DRAMB<JIE
~R
CO<JRVOISIER
COGNAC
2)-0(.l'tCE
1048 1183
CASE Of 12 r'4 l.95
Pinot Chardonnay. 750Mt 425 46.40 3.87
Pinot Noir. 750ML 2.95 32.00 2.67
Vin Ros~~ 2.12 23.00 1.92
. ~~ /\ "1 /1 /I~ ~ SEBA.511ANI TAYLOR &
-~ ~~E~i ~
L
QIAMPAGNE AND SPARKLING WINES
Andre. 75().'o\L . . ••.•••••. . ...... 2 . .39 26.01
Almaden Bl. De Blanc. 750-ML •... 5. n 62.95
Almaden Brut. 750N.-... . ...... 4.95 53.95
Chandon. ~-········· ................ 7.15 78.00
Christian Bros .. ~. .. ............ 4.03 43.92
Franzia. ~... .. ......... .. ........... 2.07 22.50
Jacques Bonet. 750-ML ....... 2 .18 23.76
Le Oomaine. 75().ML . .. 3.06 3335
Lejon, 750~ . . . . . . 2.44 26.60
Paul M~on, 750 ML . 4.9 1 53.52
Mumms. 750ML .. .. . 12.84 140.00
A . Papagni Spumante. 750ML ... 437 47.60
Martini & Rossi Spumante 150 ML. 7 35 80 .14
2.17
5.25
4.50
6.50.
3.66
J.88
1.98 ..
2.78
2.22
4.46
11 .67
3.97
6.68
3.71 Torri Dei Conte Spumante 750-ML .4.09 44.49
f\/vi/~
COORS
LIGHT BEER
12-0<.JNCl
12~ACK 3s9
WARM
'1!
OLYMPIA
BEER
vvvv
BOTTl.E CASE
PARD<JCO WINE RETAIL RETAIL
BurgWldy. 750ML 2.58 28.08
Chablls, 750-ML 2.83 30.80
Cabernet Sauvignon. 1~ 4.03 44.00
Chardonnay. 7'0ML 4.40 48.00
Chenln Blanc, 7~""'-2.95 32.00
French Colombard, 750-ML 2.75 30.00
Gamay Beaujolais, 750-ML 2.83 30.80
Pillot Noir, 1~ 4 .04 44.00
Zinfandel. ~ 2.92 31.74
SIMI WINE.5 23.95 Burgundy.~ 2.12
CabemetSauvtgnon, ~. 6..56 71 .45
Chenfn Blanc, 7'(Wl\L 4.88 5324
Garney Beaujolais. ~ 3.83 41.75
Qewwztramlner. 7~ 5.65 61.55
Plnot Nor. 75C)ML 6.36 69.25
Rose of Cabernet.~ 3.94 42115
Zlnfandd. 750t'\L 5.65 61 .55
1
BOTTLE
CASE RETAL 2.34-
2~7: 3.~; 4. .
2.67 2~ 2.5'7-.
3.67
2.65
1.92·
5.96' 4.#
3.48"'
5.13
5.78
3.58
5.13
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PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
,M:TlTIOU. IWM•H&
...,_STATaMallfT'
TM ......... ,_._. It clloif>o lluW·
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PVBUC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
flJCYTTIOUS au1t .. aU
MMllll ITATIUQ llT
Tllo foli0wlfl9 --Is 4111"9 llusl· ........ c; E . GOOOltlCM<l>Mf>A .. Y, 1111
&.ker St .. GoRe llMM, c..tlfor11Wi '216» GaYlen E_. Gotdrl<ll, U4
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GaYten E. COOdrkfl
Tiie. ..__ w• lllllCI WIUI h c-•• ciano Of <>reno-c-1, .,, Jwwt,t•
PUBLIC NOTICE
PtlBLIC NOTICE
PICTITIOUI au1t111u ll~iTATIIMaNT
ri.. ,........,. _....,. ., CIOl"9 ~
"'"el TIFFANY SANOS. ISJt c-t••I
·-· ~ CaOfornl• ..,._, TIH"''I At,..,_, JOI Knob Hiii
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Publlll!N Oraftt9 Cont Oflly PlloCl------------Jww 11, te.2S.Jt1t,1, 1• u a e PtTBUC NOTICE
PUBUC NOTICE
PVBUC NOTICE
PICT1TIOU•au•Ue1U
N .... S'tATl!MaNT The 1(11_.,. __, " ~ .,_,.._
PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NO'nCE Pt1llUC NOllCS
..
.. ..
1;'°'·
\.
Buslaess
Sun Plant Powers Park
NATURAL BRIDGSS NATIONAL
MONUllENT. Utab (AP) -'n. wwtd'I lara•t
solar flM!rO ~ ~ • ..._. u lwo ceo·
turiee' wan.la ol tDel for u.e dMeel plut lt replaces,
ls now ~ out power for thla ..emote park ln soutballen 1.Jlab.
• .,,_ proJed wu DeYer justlfied on the bull
that lt would be 1111 i.mmedl.ie cost aaver for the
Nati«W Park Service," park olftdal Pete P•rry
said.
For $.1 mi.Uion , it provides 100 kilowaUa of
direct conent foe sill stall bouaea, malnteoance
facilities. the part visitors eenter and a water
sanitation system. The diesel generators that bad
powered the area used about $1.S.000 wortb ot had •
year.
The mooumenl ls 38 miles from the nearest
power system in Blandlna.
Federal. state anid prinite officials 1~red
over the weekend to dedicate the facWly, which
has been l.n operation• week ..Sa half.
Parry said the solar coUecton a~ ~ to
further "al~maUve enero system& and to sol"
the problem of electrical power 1eneration at the
naUonal ~ument. · ·
A major purpose ol the plant -a joint v•ture or the Park Service. Department of Enero and
the Massachusetts lnsUtutc ol Technology Uncotn
Laboratory -is fot research into deslan and teat· in& solar power generation.
The 266,029 s ilicon solar cells from three
manufacturers are mounted In panels .
YOU CAN EARN Condo Ban
TURLOCK <AP>
Conversions of apart·
ment.s to coodom!nluma
may be banned in a one-
mile radius around Cal
State Slanialaus. 'Ibe Ci·
ty Council agreed to in·
corporate that bound•ry
in an ordinance being
considered l o control
co ndo minium co n -
vf'r~i~
14% ANNUAL
INTEREST 6 MONTHS
MATURITY
MINIMUM INVESTMENT S40,000
CONSTRUCTION LOAN PACKAGES
• SECURED BY REAL ESTATE. IMPROVEMENTS
AND CASH ~VE ACCOUNT BALANCES
this is nat a syndication offering . . .
A~ATED PROPERTY ADMINISTRATORS . INC .
PAUL R. NOBLE. PR&<;. ALLAN wtLUAMS, V.P. bkr.
22762 ASPAN PLAZA l207, LAKE FORFSf
&» 1215 or 710..1230
MILLIONS TO LOAN
SS0,000 TO $2,000,000
2MD & 3RD TRUST DEED LOAMS
IMYCDIATE FUNDING ON HOMES AND UNITS
90 DAY Tt> 15 YR. FINANCING
INTEREST ONLY OR AMORTIZED
NO PREPAYMENT PENALTY ON SHORT TERM
UC£HSe0 MORTGAGE LOAN 8AOICP .
711195~1055
•
4000 MacARTHUR BOULEVARD I
KOU FlNANCIAl! TOW!RS
SUITE470
NEWPORT BEACH. CALIFORNIA 92880
., 1011N CVNNJrr ,., .............
TUCSON. Arb. -......_ 100.-ad uo•
atree ot ~ faradand., 1101De OOCI UMd for
&f'OWiDI hi*" IJ'lde COUoa. aN k1Je DOW bee .. the water tab&• la flWDI ad tbl COit ol &MUD.....,
water lJ rillnl· · .
SJowl)'. hOwever. soaM ol tbl land la belaC
made productive ••aln wtth a crop Uaat II Rill a -
pertm.ul, but wblcb IOtne ID-
novat1'9 farmen and unlvenl·
t1 olflclatt believe could
bcuaa the bull ot a 111-.tor' .,_. bidmtay.
TM _.. ts Jo,_ -,_.
ncma~ ._ ta. em·
plialia -.... -.d•yllatilt -~ a 1llllab daat .... IO lttle.....,.
tlllllll it tlt.dlll& oa~ ll•e mid.
lmleti.lma IDOlllltllMloua lilndl
that are ao boeWe to moat other
vecetatloo. ...
Jojoba la amuinf. It produces on. a fiDer'
1rade lubrlc•Un& ol than that from. I.be ea-
dan1eM sperm wbale. an oU ao pure lt requlra
UWe or 80 reflnlnc. It baa potential in cosmetics.
foods .... poliablJll waxes.
NomDDY KNOWS BOW many uses there are
for JojoM, but mou&b la lmoWD to aatowMt most
people: aodles, •'*"•l feed. ornemental b9d1es.
mufcb. tiatiles-atz.lq and even in* produelion of
penlctll.llL
And yet, after •alydng a aanple from the
Universtb of A.ri.la9a. a major oil eom~ said
jojoba'a futw-e mi1bt even be • prod~ of
numer.a other product.a. such • reslm, depen·
dent on jojoba ·a rare alcohof.
Offlclala ot the Office of Arid Land Sludi•.
Univenity of Arizona. are in a mild dilemma:
They do not wiab to raise unwarranted hopes, and
they do not wish to dub hopes either. But they are
excited.
a. LESLIE RAWLS, a former lndJana farmer
now with the Arid Landa unit. wales, "it la on tts
way to becominl an established acncultural pro-
duct."
What la needed, said Rawls, la more acreqe
than the 6.000 to 10,000 acres expeded to be under
~ 1 . ·. \
TO ~AND I .ueprtMWf~·~1
ho•effl'. there 11 e.-.r and pertaapa ... : • cnater .-...mace. JoJoba """9 onl1 • frectioa Of.
die •"'-8orbed bf col*On. Rawb estimates 9': at a'*'laqe.fltth. ;..: J
Tbe enis> tberelfbN ts more naturally suited "~: aoua.tm MU.ona than ii cotton, wbicb ID • ~.:
WM i...-1 00. tbe dUl)' land with the ald of tr~ ; riaatka .. ~ ·
There we ditnculU• too. Mature plants caai:'
1unrlve tr.t. but young 1')ant.a mliht not. Jay.:.:
lkleenzie, a re<:ent. bualnet1 gradu.te of Artz.on-.• .
now &~·a man11eci. says tMy loet mo.t:
teedliap last year. • •
There are cflallen1ea also lnvolvinl sex de-~
term1natloa. Femal• produce the teed, 6ut teJU,na .
males md femalel apart ta difficult for sever&
years. And, in the wtld at lent, the male contrfbu·.
t.aot to tbe leed .. unknown. : ~
SunllDd, wbidl claims to be elready In me~·
black. now Gffen l1mJW pu1nenhlpa to weal~
lD•eston u one way of,......_ hmda. · -.:
It'& main busineu, liowever, C'Ontlnuea to M:
the IJ'OWlnl and selling of seed and aeedlinp.,:·
various grower services, clonlna. pl.mat.Ion ~
velopmert.. and proselytizing. . : ...
Over The Counter
I
f ... ... ,
IU81NE88 / 8TOCKS •
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
.. ..
I • ' '"" -· .. w· 1>'-~ I ,, ...... ,., -\ .... .,...._ ..
14t.h .... 17'9. \-. ., ... _ ·-.. Jllol • ,.,.
14\ill'J• "" Z'1't. • ....
~.Junel1,tll0 N
..
9J IYLYIA roaTBa
M .U ~ ba¥9 fiCMlnd. 1DON ol the aaUoft'*
'5·10 million commuten -especially 1oa1-ctlltuee drtv., -ban be.a blnbll to cu and vu pooll ud .av· Ina .. macb u .. pere..t m ouUa.ya, I u COit.i are *tu.Uy dlftded. I.be eo lillle-a·d&y -u.oot
mlle-•·1UI' -car commuter cao ha.Ive upeDMI. from
28.9 c.nu a mile to H .• cent., by addia1 a stn1le
p .. ,._. Wltb two more riden. ouUan e&a be baJvect ~-------_.., •l•ln «O 1.2 cents. But usually lt
doesn't work tbta
logical wa)'. A
pauengei-who doesn't
have full.Ume use or the
car la unlikely to M
wllllng to pay $90 a .
montb to the auto owner for a two-hour dally ride with'
three other people .
ENTER THE "PASSENGER TRUCK" -the convert-
ed cargo van with seats. windows and other creature com-
roru added. A aroup or 15 nei&hbon or coworkers, or the
firms that employ them, can buy or lease these plush
$12,000 vehicles; and figurine insurance, interest pay-
ments. fuel and maintenance. these vans can be run 15,000
miles-a.year for three years for about Sl cents a mile.
That's almost twice the cast or an intermediate-size
sedan for that di.stance. But divide the 51 cents by 15 and
each rider owes just 3.4 cents a mile, only $42.50 a month,
less than half the per-passenger cost in a four-rider car
pool.
There are smaller vans. but the large r the unit and the
greater the d.Jstance traveled. the higher the savings
Plus, you must carry at least eight persons to qualify
for su<'h added possible tncentlves as Investment tax
<'red1ts, use of special traffic lanes in rush hours.
privileged parking places and fuel allocation pr1onty
t'ertificates.
ON TOP OF THOSE 1nd1v1dual inducements, van
poolers have lhe patrioht' satisfaction of helping to solve
the energy crunch. reducing pollulton. cutting vehicle con·
gest1on and ea.sing the parking pinch.
A good deal? For many people, it is So why, after twf')
fuel import squeezes, and a near-doubling of car cosls
stn<'e 1972, are lhere only about 9,000 van pools running"
There are these roadblocks only now beginning to
be overcome.
Federal foot-dragging and bureaucratic In-fighting,
state·level confusion and complexity In vehicle and driver
hcensm1t. msurance industry reluctance and concealed op..
postllon from auto·related and public-transit bus interests.
THE ESSENCE OF van pooling is that it removes 13
cars from the road for every truck added. So Detroit tor
Akron. Houston, Pittsburgh> can hardly be expected to
embrace the con~pt.
Chrysler bluntly states It Is "the ooly automobile com-
pany actlvely promoting van pooling In the U.S." But one
is better than none and Chcysler ls pusblng bard.
As for federal and slate 1overnments, they've spent
less than S7S million -out ol an available S8 billion
annually for transpor'Utioo -oo van pooling, but $$5
milUoo has been spent in the pa.st two years and ouUays
are slated to grow.
c;()llE INSU&ANCE COMPANIES sWl classify van
poc>ls as "common carrlen." forcing poole~ to pay pre·
rn1ums as hlgb as S2.SOO a year. But a few companies are
1ntroducin& s~ial polici~ at more normal ~-S700 a
year rates.
lntemaJ Revenue Service so far bu failed to wue
clearcut rullnp oo investmmt tu credits for commuter
vans. prneot.i.ng use ol the vans by corporations durinC
t.be day ror other purposos.
~ORWiiiGifQ) ~ l ~ti~~~LJ®K
"Sales MotlvatJoa" is the title for an Oraage Coast
College seminar scheduled for 7 p.m. today in rine
arts ball 119 on the campus, 2701 Fairview Road Costa
}tesa. Registration for the free session will be 'at the
classroom site. Information s:iS-5880.
The board of directors ot Mercary Savtaga aDcl Lou
AasoelaUoe. Huntington Beach, has voted a reauJar
quarterly dividend of 12\l'J cents per share to stoctholden
of record J uJy l.
Gold, Metal Quotations
By Tile A~ated Press
Selttted world gold prtces today:
IAodoa: momine fixing $:595.00, off ss.oo. afternoon
fixing ~.oo. off $8.00.
Paris: afternoon fixing $598.56, ort S0.96.
Frankflll't: fixing $.597.0t, of{ Sll.00.
Zm1cb: $601.00 bid, up Sl.00; $606.00 asked.
New Yort: Handy & Harman mid·morain1 $S81.00. olf $8.00.
New Yon: Eneelhard selling price mid·morning $596.00, off •. 00.
N .. Ya: Enaelhard fabricated 1otd mld·momtng '816.88. otr ...
* * * NEW YORK (AP> -8&ftcly le Harman sUver 118.100.
up$CUO.
Eftlelhard aUver Sll.050. up SO.SO. fabricated sllftt'
$11.905. up S0.52S.
•. * *
NEW YORK CAP) -Spot nonferrous metal prices m.
day .
Oopptt .93 .. ·.9''4 a pound, U.S. destinaUoo.s.
Lad 34·'5 ~.pound.
ZIM 37~ centa a pound. delivered. ,,. ams a pound. •aa11.-».-....oopernut.
PfeCl tl»G7 troy oa. N. Y.
\
... ... . .. ••
'.
Suitor Suited
Richard 'Thomas it the suitor who will go
to any length to capture the girl in "Get·
ting Married," a rebroadcast on "The CBS
Wednesday Night Movies" at 9, Channel 2.
irom '* oon• Wld Hewlf· ~ and 8.J. try 10 help a
young korewt MIO 19 trying
to aYOld conac:rlptlon Into
tne•my.
• THE llEMfY HU
SHOW
• OY9'EA8Y
~~,~· INM Shew. lcCHRl
• MACHEll. / LStNJt
RQ»ORT
7:30 8 NOeODV'S TAUONG
.. Ho9i. Ptllllp Md<eon and
AAM-on H-explore a pro-
O'MI of -education IOI'
~ .. G OUHU8GAME
TMtert>owd IMP lrog,
l•teet tap dance, plang41
~~or•-
1linl>-8 HOU.YWOOO
80UAIES I (fl fN::E THE MU8fC
AU. IN THE fAMIL Y
Atdlle latlOnalttw hM theft
of -nalle trom ttl9
Pllnt.
Cllaalld Lbt 1119•
8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles e KTLA (Ind ) Los Angeles 8 l<ABC-TV (ABC) Los Angeles
()) KFMB (CBS) San Diego D KHJ-TV (Ind) Lo& Angeles 9 KCST (ABC) San 0 1e90
• KTTV (Ind.) Los Angeles
8) l<COP·TV (Ind) Los Angeles e KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles
• KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach
• OOOOTND
EYerYthlng -to be cornlnQ up ,_ !cw IN
Ev-unUI .. !fie gc)Od
plenc run Into M80I
• ~ILEHAEA
REPORT ID OMAT
PEN'OAMAHCO
"TrellblReB Of Modern
0ence·· Ooc:umenltlry loot·
age. photogr .. end c:;on..
temporwy d8nOerl helo
•lluslrate the 1119tory of
Americen modem dance
lrorn leadote Ounc.n 10
Mlfttle Grllharn (Al
(I) P.M. MAGA1IHE
A Vlllt to ttie twnoua ~
eoy Store nignlclub In Loe
Mgelea; e IOolt el the
sport ol wlleelchal'
t>ullefbell.
e.\00 8 CAPTAIN AMENCA
Captein Amerlce tell• on
an lndul111111et who II
trveetenlng to del1roy en ·
AmeriC8n a.., unleU he
~ I 4 milllol> In gold
bullion. (Pert 2) CR) Q REAl. PEOPLE
Repotta on e gelher1ng of
mysllea, e MIN ~
conteet. milk certon bolt r-. ~ denc:lng end
lurnltunt that ~
Neenderthel Man ere
featured (CCICRI 9 WOVIE ** ··LeOy F,_._,., ..
(111721 JOMP" Collen.
Mickey H11glly. The
•ntamoue doctot'• daugho-
Ull' hndl l'lerMlf ceugtol UI>
In lhe reeul\I o4 lnOlher
..... ; • ••i.c.(11W .. .. , .. ,....., .................. ,.._._.. ........ .............. ......... ., .... ...................
• fmit ..... AT ICNOm
T'Oflt'• ..... "°""' 11m ~·• Good TN n...tre IMll* T~
T11ollet. IV .. Y" ·~~....... Kftllftl ~
,WM loll ts 1 atn NM' Md ""*"'""' • ft.M.MMAZINI
A IOOtrlf .. ..,..oafd
and dlMIOnd -11«;
Soon Mofllmll .... ... c-oc. tt-. ,..,. ...
tew>Nllonl~ed tM b6f
WOl'IWl'a GloCl*'9 ....... ,_
• MCMI • * * * .. ...,_ WlllQll A c.ia." 11855) .,..,,.. • o.n. ....... WoM. • itTONQKT
Holt: a.. Aob9na. Carol
Mortofl NOOt1I on "'9
~--lltulfloll '°' llUIO -un Md tfle ..... of.,..,_""" .......
In SOUllwn c.-omlL Cl> THE IAXTEM t:30. THEOOOOO&...a
O.C-wll'9e~~
.-nctodolla' Dee """" 911 , 1·
.,..~ neiQtlbot In In
""" ~ ~ end 1119 kid pew ofl With OOld
«:Mn.
e<MEAT
PBll'OAMANC& MT,--.,.. Of Mod9rTI .,.,_ .. ~'°°'·
•• ptlotogr .. end~
~.,., d9ncer'a ..
lltuslrete tM hlaory of
~ modem d8llce "°'" IMdOl'a Ounc:M 10 M.rthl Otlheln. If')
• OUEll8 WHO'S
PAEOHAHT: AH \Jf'IMTI
Severel ellperla who
~In 1M 18n
-~ documert-lerv ofter "*' .......
rnenta of the curT'9fl1 19en-
eoe pregnency etlala,
lrlCludlnQ e .,,.,., "' ...
ectMttee end lttttuOel °' government. 1c1>0011,
media. reMlfCh end
pet9ftta.
(I) KEEN'S ll'eOPt.E
8:GO 8 (I) C88 MOVIE • • • "'Geftlno Merrted-
c 19781 AlcNrd ~ a... AmlltrOnQ. G Off NNT .. ,.,,,...oeca-.-
w .. and Arnold~"""
Mr. Orvmrnond .. In flnen.
ciel lrouW end ICJCJI¥ tor
$30 mUc1rt In......,.._ (CCI
(ft\
• 9 CHANJE"I
AHOl!1.8
A partv tor the Ange6I on
Char11e'1 ,.. yedtt ..
lnlenuc>ted by meroenet•
-Ind 1'9YOMkltlllflet
f\ght1ng """' gold bullion
atored be6ow d9c* CAI
KCOP e 8:00 -"Rebel Wit.bout A
Cause .. Ttlll 1955 movie wu the tut for
Jam• Dem ln h1I brtllimt btat ebort acUnc c..._. Natalie Wood alto ttan.
J
KCET 8 8 : 30 -Great Performances -.. TraUblazeu of
Modem Dance" Hlatory of American
modern dance is illustrated wlth
documentary footage, photographs and
contemporary dancen .
KOCE 8 9:30 -.. To Say I Am"
Special focuses on chlldrm unable to
talk and the technology that allows them
to communicate.
...... YGfWWA
CNJMOe
• WIN°""'"
0.-t hOel: "°" Vy.
61..a.: UN OoncMn. &In
Oley. ,..,... Menti.y.
Lynn Swe""• Joenne
C...id)'. ~&Mon
HO 8 '04l fACTI OI UR
8lelr _, Sw Mn~
llwotwed wfttl e group Of
glrtl~~~
nL
I NEW\.YWED QAME
CM.-.WHO'I
~:AN~TE
S•varel e11pert1 wflo
ecipeeted In the 1877
--~ documen-'*'Y Ofler their --"*"' "' .. Q.rr9nt ~ ege p1egnenc:;y Cfllle,
lnc:Mllng a ~ Of the
ec;tMtlee end em1udel Of
•• WQM
Oen ...,..,.. '° pr.-.. ........... "°"'~ a_ wllo_... '° kJI '*
In Oldlr '° _.. control °' '* ........ "1NfiCance.
l(R) NA110NM. NEWI
~IHOW
tO;IO • NEW8
<Mae~
P'MQtWfT f'OU.O'#-W 11:001·8 (I) QI NEWS .-wl.YWED~
MOVIE • •'it M~ Alll*"'
(tM1) W9lm ~.
~ ~ .8dlel..
en.oooOOUPll
Fe gllta Oecar In lrouble
wtU\ the lr"1erNI ~
SerWle ..., 11e·1 c-.cs In
on e ,,,..,, men..
-....at«-
... (1) aM*lttllP
~
Peppr. ~ -b9ll'O ''•Mleued atetHlde.
ece.n.. to IWy With '* -~ZONE A timid bank c:;le'k
~ IN 8blllty IO reed
~people'• mlnda.
• ...a&OH:
IMfl08848l.E
The IMF t..-n Mtt out to
Wlllrete e 100 ~
taimlly • ~c,. •• .,
Denna Pnoe jolr'I &wnenl
In ltM9 lflOw.
12:11>. MOVIE * * '"' :•tJrtt•tflful Wife" I t9881 81.. AucS.-an.
MlCflel Bouquet,
• MOVIE **'h ··n. 0. Wtlo T~
The Weet" (194111 Yvonne
De c.no. Scott 8'.oy 1:00 G TOMOMOW
Guett1. lnv11t1gallve
reporter Antflony
~ ectOI' Rober1
Sec:fll
•O INETTA
The OMlflbeO COi ~.-on °' a oer9ller prompts 8....na 10 -. the
ONtfl °' ,.. °"'" ......, . (~ D MAVEAOC
Bt• eet.llObhee fllrnellf -• llogrl-'1ek• gembW In a w...-n 1own.
t2:00 G * •'it ··0noe Upon A
Horee" I 1958) 0.. Aowwi.
01c:t< Marttn. • * ** "TortlUI flet••
{11142) S~ TrKy.
Hedy L.M*T.
., •••• ··&e10f
Eden"(t856)~~
JIJlle Herri.. L 3:00U ••• MA...,AI
&oellM f t95e) Jeff
dler. George NeOer.
3:30 •••• ~••John And
~ (\119111 Ouetln ~ men. Mle Fenow.
by Armstrong & Batluk
I HEY'VE.13E£N OUT 10 G£T
E:.'l/EN W rTH L6 £VE~ S.NCE
"THAI GA.ME UE>T YEAR_~~N
JOHN SPIKED THEIR~
'Guess Who's Pregnant?' Frank, Dull
Be's Tough
Reb Brown is a former Marine turned
s uperhero on the special, .. Captain
America," to be rebroadcast in two parts,
tonight from 8 to 9 and June U at the same
time on Channel 2, CBS.
'Today' Host
Has Big Week
NEW YORK <AP> -A ralle, a two-year coo·
tract and a wedding add up to a big week for "To-
day" host Jane Pauley.
Ml.a Pauley, who is getting married Saturday
to "Doonesbury" cartoonbt GarTY Trudeau, bas
been signed to a new contract as co-bost with Tom
Brokaw ol the morning NBC televialoo show, the
Daily News said today. She also will continue aa
network correspondent and anchor of the Saturday
night news and received a "hefty ra.l&e," the News
said. When she joined "Today" ln 1976, b• salary
was reported at $200,000.
~ TOPS 'STAR WAD'!" ........ .cMI-
By PETEa J. BOYE•
LOS ANGELES <AP> -1 suppose lhat Public
TV. impervious as it is to the ratings numbers
compiled by A.C. Nielsen . is the perfect televiaion
forum for the documentary. Oocumentaries can be
dry going, and on PBS. the sound o( viewers stam·
peding to other stations rings rather softly.
A great many documentanes that would never
make it to the air on a commercial network flnd
life, If not wide audience. on PBS. Even the
notorious "Death of a Princess" would not have
met the entertainment standards of a commerclal
network. and It.a high rating OD PBS owed more to
the accident of controversy·stirred publicity lban
to dramatic value.
FORGIVE ME. BUT I FIND a great many of
Public TV's documentaries -serious·rninded and
dripping of import as lbey may be -just too dull
to bear. Still, I can't begrud&e them lbeir time on
~~vfc'!~Uc Broadcasting ( ]
I syspect such am-TV REVIEW
blvalence will greet
tonight's PBS documeo----------Lary offering, "Guess
Who's Pregnant'? An Update." <Channel so. 8:30
p.m .; Oiannel 28, 9:30 p.m .)
Public service lt.seU, this. an uPdate of an
origtnal um documentary that painted a dark pie·
ture ol the teen-age prepancy problem. It ts ln·
formative, thoughtful, Paimtaldn&lY researched
and thoroughly frank ..• and oh, aodull.
HOWEVER, BRACED BY THE advice that U.a
purpose is not entertainment, but lnformaUon, you
might ftnd the viewing well worthwhile.
Partly because it is OD Public TV, "Guess
Who's Pregnant" eacbews the "Shock 'em'' •lant
EVERY THURSDAY· FRIDAY· SATURDAY
Mey 21-JUM 21
Nell Simon's •••
"THE GINGERBREAD LADY"
Directed by Louise vaft Vlenen
Tidc.ir. auo teu••• • •· ~ si.oo CURTAIN -t.:10 ft.II.
I "° Od wmt T!!I Ai I ..
NEWPORT THEATRE AR1'8 ceNT!A
2I01 Clfl °"" Group ..... a lnforlu•on -111-a1a
one would expect from a networt tnatmert of the
subject for a coldly lnfonnative approach. Num·
hers take place over shots oC steamy cars in drive.
in lots.
And the numbers are 5cary. In 1977, the
documentary found that one in 10 Amen can teen·
age girls become pregnant every year. That figure
stall st.ands. Wllb ooe ~turbmg d.ifference: In the
age.range 10-19. <expanding the survey to girls
aged 10-12> another 300,000 girls become pregnant
each year.
OF GlllU AGE l4 TODAY, UM docwnentary
Jaclyn Smith,
ff113band Split
LOS ANGELES <AP> -A
the last of TV's orlainal
"Charlie's Angels ." has
separated rrom actor·bu.sband
Dennis Cole.
A statement laaued TueedaJ'
by Ml.SI Smith's publicist. Jeny
Pam, said the separation was
amicable and no divorce was
planned. Cole, who married the
actress in 1978, moved out ol the
couple's ~verly Hills bome
and waa staying with frteods,
said Pam. The two have no children.
Mm Smith bas been under a doctor's care
since she suffered whlpla.ah last week in a car ac·
cldent here. Pam said she waa "in great paln aod
is hoping ahe will nol have to be put ill tract.ion."
,,,, ............ , ....... .s:::..! .--. -· ... .;4 •" • ·-·
rmds. "four ln 10 wm be prepant by age 20." .
Youngsters are engaging in sex at e-ver
younger ages, one in five American kids bavtng
bad sex by the age of 15.
"What's so temble about teen·age pregnan cy., .. 1t u. asked.
The economic burden on society and the moral
question w.1de. says Dr. Mary Calderone, "Thl'
younger the t.een·age girl, the higher the heaJth
problems for both her and her baby."
Dr Calderone. of the US. Sex IntormaUon and
Education Council. says flatly, "There ii no
reuon that c:an possibly stand up for a pregn8llcy
1n someone under 18, in a social sense or a
medJcaJ-beaJUJ seoN."
THE DOCUMENTA•Y'S PREFERENCE ror
staUstics and a cold eye does not mean it doesn't
t.AJte a point of view. On the contrary, government.
parent.a, schools. the media and teen·a•en
tbemSe.lves are roundly assailed. •
"Guess Who's Pregnant II" tackles a beavy.
duty social problem. and is bold enough to ak
questions and suggest answers. It's nol much fun,
but its point ls well made -ii noc. well taken.
Alas, tbe ramlUes and teeo·aeen for whom it
is Intended will be watching rerun.a of "Charlie's
Angels."
'·
..
Wldlmdly. June 11. 1te0
·i ~
! ; « eeping in s•ape i While on stage, entertainer Tom Jones appears m ll«ht-
; fitting clothing, his shirt open to the beltllne. Before each t performance, Jones works out doing calisthenics. lifting
f {
weights and a ~ession on the heavy bag as he is doing
here at the Friars Club in New York recently. He turned 40 Sunday, statini "I have only two vices. Champagne
and cigars."
• I
Parody
Lawsuit
Nixed
NEW YORK <AP> -Cop~ law lbou1d be ••601pltable to tbe
bumor of a parody."
•aid -appeall court ... cU1mlHlnl a damace 1ult atem.mbur from a aklt oa NBC·TV'a
0 SaturdayN\CbtLln: ..
A publlaber aad
copyrlf bt owwaer tau
sued be Natlonal
Broadeuttna eo. attar
tbe comedy •bow used
tbe tllDe ••1 Love New
York" in a parody called .. , Love Sodom''
two years ago.
A lower court judge
dJsmlaaed the $50,000
ault, contending tbe skit
salirbed "-Yor F.dward
Kocb'a efforts to pro-
mote New York City
tourism and therefore
made "fair use" or the
tune. Tbe 2nd U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals
agreed.
t:Fondas,
Hepburn
In Film
Hard hat days· and honky-~k dights.
r • ' i
, HOLDERNESS. N.H.
<AP > -A Victorian cot-
• tage on Squam Lake has
~ been chosen as the site ~ for the rllmini or a mov-
.. le starring Henry Fon-~ 'da. Jane Fonda and
: Katharine Hepburn, the t movie's producers said.
' Filming or "On
tt Golden Pond" wlll begin
July 15. according to
Gary Martin, an official
• •
of IPC Films. IPC.
owned by Miss Fonda and Bruce Gilbert, pro-
duced "China Syn-
drome" and "Coming
Home."
MARTIN SAID the
local budget for the film
will be $11 million. He
_ Jaid construction and
electric generating
.,..equipment was moved
,l!lo the privately owned ~cottage overlooking a
secluded cove. ..
The movie will b e
directed by Mark Rydel.
• .. director of "The Rose"
·-:starring Bette Midler.
MMn'IN SAID a pro-
duction support swr of
·~~about 60 will be hired
.: focally. But be said the
•cript, being extensively
rewritten, calls for few
extras.
He described the mov
le as a family film, but
declined to give details
because of the script re-
visions
MARTIN SAID the
• movie's production
AUpervisor. Stephen
Grimes, loo ked at
several sites before
• making his choice.
Mart.in said a second
story will be added to
. -tlle cottage for the film-
i;ng.
Ms. Hepburn and Ms .
F'o n d a were lo the
Holderness area looking
for homes to rent during
• : production. A produc·
....., lion headquarters has !· been established at a !-Wiers Beach inn. i:· Martin said the movie
.-: probably will be re-~ leasednextyear.
2Ac(iuitted
LOS ANGELES (AP>
-A U.S. Diatrict judge baa acquitted two ot·
fldala ol a IAs An.leles
women'• clothing
manuf.marlnl nrm of
cb9: tbey carried out · a f lnoiee ~beme
tbat alle8edl1 cost Unit·
ed Callfornle Bank
S811. 741. The defendant.a were Marvtn aod Lester
Sllort.
------
The
most
outrageous
of em
all
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THI NT NII-"'
PVBUCNOl'ICE
Pl18UC NOTICE
., .. ,
PublitNO Or ..... (MM o.ilf ........ ------------4J-~ "· , .. ,,.... ntt.«I 11We9"Gll C:OUtl'T
CM'CM#IOlllNA COUMTY CMt Mlt ~•eo ...,... ...........
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PUBLIC NOl'ICE
CIK..DICMIC...• ~WMw•ss I• , .. M.e.r fll ... ~ "9t.I• 9'AMS STATWM«WT lloft o4 JOt4N HENRY MAHLEY. TM ... ~ per_,• .,.. ~ "'-•cti .. ...,,,., P-. ..,._ M :
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JAMESll.fOWl.Ett.~ Co•lt Htoll••Y. Su1uet Be.ell,
YOO ARE -.utEllY ~ "'-' GMlfonlla ....
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C.illo•"'•· 10< Ille C°""'Y of S.fl CSllfOmlsfMJ 0..00 . ..C ,,_ CoYrt lit_.,, of Oeo¥1· MttlW G. OehK•. llOS1 M•t1n•
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1•. el I JI P M.. of llWI 0.Y. l1W1> TIHs li.1-... fl..., wtltl the
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MAHLEY; ii ... ~ t'-Ml _ ................. <flildllWtlfbe
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P\JBUC NOTIC'E ~---c-.->•C-t ......... -""<•-11\el .. .01-------------
.... _ <llltcl --~ , .. -· 0..., LAHCE MICHAEL MAHLEY • .s teOnaCW IWTCWTtOW pr.,... ...... Ills peu1i-Oft Iii• TO at•An
-..... SCCUttlTY •Wff•cn
II ,.... -to _. IN -OU of _, 1'9Q.. '"' -•117 U4C.I .....,_,.In --·'YOU"'°""' CIO NOTICE IS HEREllY GIVEN le'"" "° ..,_.., 10 ~ "°"' P'•.0•"9. ti (•.,Cl•ICM'\ d A & M HUSICEY c;()l.O
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"-" 0 l-•11 C .. llonllo, -e MCurlty Int-SI I\
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Mrta.~~ II. It. "9 ....... ,...,its sf o.ii.sr -~ ll'O-
P'1BUC NOTICE
per1y -~,.., at •>a llrfsto1
Str-4, WW C. c:.i. MeM, ~of °' .... SC-of c..~ ... ~ _, •-ff A & M _.., GOid -·'"'" ....-STa.,....flfT Tile oforftald M<WifV tr-11on
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----.... do-,. ""'9, ..... •:• A.M ••• THE SOME•SET COMP ANY, A"'e•idfl lnte~loftsl &#-. H<
ttOO En!~ Strwt. S...M *• S-. Sovttl Olive Slr•I. ~ •ft911n. ( t. ....... c..i ...... 92/ti 90011
•w~tl-(llllH C•,..•••r. • $s I••.._ toe. 5e<ur.d PA•
Collf-l• <.._ ......... ··" ..... •fl ~· -~ ....._... ..... s.-c. ~ ... SosM• -· -..., ... ~for "'9 --.,..,. Cellfot',...'7115 leM..-,-. SAME. Wtt4si..O."'-°'C.~ hk , OATEO: "-J. IW.
• Cel'-~-.JIU -Vie AMl!ltlCAH --.a. --c.i--._. INnRHATIOHAL 11.AHIC,
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APtor .1 stUw~-
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T" 11141 7SU:aa
PUBLIC NOTICE
"'ICTITl~ e U$1MESS
14~ nATEMEN'
T IW lot-..o _.'°" '\ CIOt"9 bin> ...., ..
AllA ~TlitUCll()M CO. 1411
5. We-."--. CA f1I01
Pl18UC NOTICE
PVBUCNoncg
.... ........,..., .. ,
... QM. y fllt.OT
'Taxi' Guy~.
Make Movie
lb ..,. TllOILU
HOILYWOOO <AP) -,,_."Tu.a·· E' Toa, 0maa IDd DU"1 De\'Mo, aN U1 r •aeatkm from U. TV HM to eo4lu' w1:f rM GtaDIUUm ID • movie c.U..S .. Loft, llas."
Wbat a dllfereoce a blt .... cu m11re. Won ''Tut:• Danu wu earrinl a c....., 11 a
ptlMftllMr tn Maab.attu. DeWo WU·~. f alr UYinl •a c:M.ractar ad.or ln ntma.
NOW TONY II ITAaalHO IN"fHturea
("H~ ~") and TV "'°'"9. <"MW"der CaaH.un You••>... iadl>aany bu,_.... W. produe·
Uoe compuy todeYelop movt ... °"" at Gokttr1'a Studkll tbe ~ are •oendlnl ott-..n.. ween tn "Love. Mu, ' wt\lcb 11\1)' do
for oraniutam wbat CUot ICutwood d1d tot Chim
panaeeL
Tbe plot: Dama Inherit.a $5 mlWon from hla
circus-owner father wtth the 1Upu11t.lon th1t ht must keep three orup from harm for nve yean.
DeVlto la a clreus hand wbo belP9 Dann pard the
apes tram vil1a1m wbo w&Dl to breaktbe will.
1E881CA WALTBa AND STACEY Nelkln alao
atar in the movte. produced by Robert L. ROien
and dlreeted by Jeremy Joe Krooaberc from hla
acrtpt.
J dropped by Goldwyn'• State 3 to watch the
actlon. The orang• were before the camera, 10 the
human act.ors were available to talk. Oanu, 27.
waa shirtless and looked as ii he aUll could ao the
limit u a middleweight. He remains dazzled by
what baa happened ln two yean.
"It's the typical Hollywood story," he re·
marked. "A guy walks into Gleason's gym looklng
for somebody to play In a boxing picture. The next
thine J know I'm fiylng out to Hollywood for a
screen test."
THE BOXING FILM DIDN"T matertallie. but
the test led to his role aa Tony Banta, tbe cabble· boxer of .. Taxi." Although be bad fought 13 pro-
fessional bouts and won 10, he admitted, "I waa
frightened -that's the word, friahtened. Here I
was acting with Judd Hirsch, me a novice totally
unsure of myself. I expected to be eaten alive.
"Just the opposite was true. Judd and every-
body else made it so easy for me that I felt right
al home. It's the best job in &how business, having tun all day long."
The series. he commented. "has made me sol·
Yenl, taken me off the streets, allowed me lo buy a
house and bring my parents and brother out here.
Not bad for a guy who used to make a buck by sell·
lng Jeans outa the back of my car ."
STIU., HE CQNTENDED, be could have been
not otlly a contender but a champion if he bad
stayed with boxi.na.
Danny DeVilo, 35, ill short, rotund and totally
unlike the irascible dispatcher Louie DePalma of
"Taxi." Danny even plays the violln.
A graduate of The American Academy of
Dramatic Art.a, be hu had wide experience in New
York theater Sbakespeere in the Park. TV and
IUma "One Flew Over the CUckoo's Nest".
Delfgllted
Actor Richard Saunders, who portrays
newa director Lea Neasman in the televlalon series, "WKRP In Cinelnoatl:'
klases the "Silver Sow'• award he received
at the NaUonal Feeder Pig Show in West
Plalns, Mo. Jn the TV show, Nessman led
off hls newscast with bog futures on the
day militants seized the United States Em-
hassy In Iran.
Dobson Does Comedy
HOLLYWOOD (AP> -Kevin Dobson will play
Barbra Streisand's husband ln "All Night Long."
The romantic comedy also stars Ge ne
Hackman, Diane Ladd and Denni.a QuaJd.
~
m··-.. ..... Jiii ~~~
...... 4,....._7:00-9:l0
M .·s.t-7:0CM:O
s-•~*4:>•1:00-•:>o
HAS NEVER
GONE THIS FAR
---------~
.. Ii.ACK
ST ALUOH'"CGJ
.. APOCALYPSE
HOW' CRI , ....
I ''THE EMPIRE (NI
8TAIKES BACK ...
-MIMMn-
I ""HOLLYWOOD
KHIGHTS1
.' Ill
'"THIE EMPIRE . .oi
STIUKES BACK0 __ ...,...._
''THIE QOHQ SHOW'' "WHICH WAY
•• UP?" '"' ..... ~ ... a•wm·N•
..... ITllAIC'.
''THE FIRST
EPIC HORROR FILM11
-Jack Kroll Newsweek Magazine
'. I .
~
D~ney Does It Again
'Noah's Ark' Called 'Nifty,' 'First Rate'
81aollEaT0880aNE .....................
The Dlaney orpnlsaUOO hU
one of It.a n1ftJelt new releue:e ln moot.bl (yean?) In "The Last
'1l1bt of Noah's Ark,·· a frllky
little adventure rum ln wbicb El·
Hott GouJd and Genevieve Bu·
Jold lead two lddl and an old ~·2t full of animala into 10DM
Pacific i1laad aurv i val
•eapadel.
Produced by Roa Miller, It
•bouJd be a weleo11Je •ddIUoo to
&n)' exbibltor's summer releaae
l(bed.ule. KJda wW lap It up, and
it woa•t lnsult mom and pop.
TOBU AllB 8EVBSAL re·
a1on1 the film looks ao cood
a Ion aside several Dl 1oey1 of
Jate. For ooe thJ.q, the cutlac
of Gould and BtaJold -
newcomen to tbe Buena Vi.ta told -oves the cweraU project a freab. diJtinctlve loolt.
For another. the picture
nolda any cootie-pattern ap-
pearance by virtue of lu olfbeat
<though admittedly lmplaualble>
acreenplay by Steven W.
Carabataos, Sandy Glaaa and
George Arthur Bloom from an
original story by E neat K.
Gann, t.he gent r ble ror
''The Hleh and the i&hty. •·
EquaJfy an as la the
and reallsUc look ctutt.
.MOJ'IJ:
RJ!;YIEW .. .
m ucb ol It ftlmed on locaUon ln
Kauai, Hawa11, and a far c~
from the aouad st.ace •I0t1 that 1 a usual -pouibly outdat.s -
Dllney trademark.
INJ'l1AU. v. TSE Tl'l1.E may
cause 1ome confualon •llh
tlcket,buyen since UJe content
has nau1bt to do wltb tbe
biblical Noah or that byaone
TIIS UST "UOHJ' M NOAWI Alli( 9-VleU
.... ..._. ........................... llOftMllMlr ~ ....................... J9'1 WllllM>\ Olrec:ter ........................ c~ Jerron Or ...... Alty .................. lrMttK.O-T.......,.
c.tll ,,.... ~. ~ ... ..,. !Hdly k~:v:l Uur9ft. Vl-t 0-dltnle, =.~ .:._. ........... ~~ ... ~ w1111,,,,...-........~W1>1t1,,. .._...,_ .,,., ........ wu•..-.·o
ark·ln-the-flood oo~ helmed by
J ohn Huston. Thia Noah (played
by Gould) ill a pennilua pilot.
circa 1980, who is hired by an evangelist ( Bujold> to fly a
ramshackle 8 ·29, complete
with livestock. to a mission in
e South Pacirlc.
Two orphans <Ricky Schroder
and Tammy Lauren) stow away
ST ARTS FRIDAY
EOw•dlOnema
548-3102 .
UONfBACt(
581·5880
~~
• .tGENt 6o "W111aa .... • •UD&
"-US .... .
"THE PRISONER
OF ZENDA'•
,,." on tM fil&ht and, to com~
mitten, the pJa.ne IHI pWJ.I
and lJ forced to crub·lad ~
uoebarted illa.nd lnbabtted ~
two Japanese mllltary ..._.
<Jobo FuJloka and Y•al
Sblmoda) who've never ~
told World Warn WU ~tJ years before.
THE aEMAlNDES O::& rum perb aloa• .. the
combine brains and brawn
convert the plane lnto a 1hlp M
can aall tbe Pacific <tilt;
"Noah'• Arlt") and steer ~ one-anl ma la included~
back to safety over the ~ r
horizon. Bad weather, a ~
and nature notwithataad1A• ~
they succeed. ~--.J-At no time does "The ;w ,
Noah'& Ark" ra e afo .
dramatic bonel, AS".t1l does cGlt-, alateatly entertiin in the _,..
of pure eacaplam and Predti· ,
tabillty. Production values &de /
consistently flral·rale, witjl ,
Charles F . Wh eeler's p~
grapby especially luah and 0-,
resting. Prest.on Ames has macSe •
first rate use or the J{awali
locales ln his production desio
and, except for a few djf
strelche11. the edttlng of Gordon
B. Brenner and direction <ii
Charles Jarrott keep actlvitlel
humming merrily.
NOW PLAYING
CINEMA WEST
191-3135
YIEJOMALL
4""220
Chapter . ~m Two\u •t
PLUS •
"NOAMAAAE"
~10•" IT"'""8-• ~·..,_..
.. THE IMAGE OF
BRUCE LEE0 (R)
Pl.US
''THE DAY TIME
ENDED0
"THE IMAGE OF
BRUCE Lee··
PWllA)
"l'HE DAY TIME
ENDED••
J0ttH TRAVot.TA "URBAN
COWBOY" <PG>
-"""" ...... ,,., '*· •.•..••
...
_..,...kArlcet Shopper •Slnglel C•l•nd•r
~rmet •Club C.lenar
~.JuM1t,tMO
J • ..
----
.. • .. . . . ~ BylOCllAELDOUGAN
~ °'_.,.,,......,.
, When God sent three angelic
•representatives to see 99·
?-ear-old Abraham, accord·
ing to Genesis 18: 8, the qing
patriarch served them roast
J'eal with a side dish of yogurt.
That's what modern yogurt
makers would have us MliHe,
aa1way. The Kln1 James
'•ersion or the Bible says tbe
~avenly vlsiton ate butter 8Dd
pallk and, ln fact, that could
Jlave been the way they made
,.09urt il'I those days, altboulh
U.e evldenee is hardly coo-
elU1iw.
Noaetbelesa, yogurt -iermented milk containlna a ...... ,,, .. ,"...., ..
-._ '8m a •tllM ID I M .. (ao ,_ ioi.cled>
.......... Gng.
. IN '111.B GEOaGL\N region of
tM Sariet Union. yogurt is a
~~almost evf!f'f meal. As it
llbeplJl8Dl.,.1easms, people arowad those
.,.U Un to <or cla.lm an age of>
}ti plua and.stlll toil in tbe fields
'well p.a the Cf!Dlur7 mark. So it
Is not surpris1q that the 1oemt
mfths mclude claims that it pro-
uaul1atee ~evjty.
Earopum reach for a cup ol
yogurt as retutarly aa we snack
an candy ban.
· In fact. yogurt ls a popular
food l1em almost everywhere in
the world except in the United
States. But. 11.ke big cars and
disco. that statement lies oo the
edge ol ob&oleec:eoce.
Over t.be put decade, yogurt
bas abed ita Old World sUgma
and crept into the foreground ol
America.a food coosciousness.
This is due in part to our in·
creasing awareness of nutri-
tional needs, a oew stress oo
diets and a somewhat anti·
establUhmeat prefereace for
tilings Dftural <what could be
more natural, one wag uked,
then leU:iag milk go sour?).
Equal .credit goes to the
yog,arl manufacturer•
thelDMlves. wbo have b.arnesaed
the poweT of m~-romou-ai t«)s' iw to tbeee
~..t.,._.,.....w1-.U..: :.,
generlltico yogu.rt pusier.
Mmger, 21, ls planalJ:li dlrec·
tor for Dennon Yogurt, which
claims to be America's largest
selling brand (his dad ls chap-man o( the board). They
are tbe guys who finrt put that
fruit oo the bottom, giving their
product a couuterpoint to plain
yogurt's natural tartness.
It worked.
F&OM 1MZ THROUGH 1962, Dannoo produced only plain
yogurt.
"We didn't make any money
for tbo6e 10 years, either," said
Meuger, reeeoUy in Newport
BeHh to at&end a wedding aod
talk about yogurt. '"The year we
began maJdDg money was the
year we put strawberry pre-
serves iD the bottom.'' Thinel ....Uy took off some lt · years ......
"In the 1960s Dannon became
a counter-culture food," said
Meuser. "Today college cam-
puses are among our most bard·
core uaen."
~~St-".._.
Tim Metzger
Dannon does not enjoy na·
tiona! dlstribution. alt.hou&h that
is being resolved. With tbe com-
pletion ol a plant in Fort Worth,
Dannon initiated an express
truck route to th& West Coast.
THE PltOBLE•, Met.qer not·
eel, i.a tbat 10IUJ't contalna live
cultuns (Illa ~ some ._"t
and purists shun them) IO it bas
an extremely sbort shelf life.
Although Danaon is the I"«·
ge11t yogurt manufacturer in the
market. it la by no means alone
ln the field. MQ!U commerda.I
dairie11 have jumped on the
yogurt wagon and new products
are aPPHl'iog almost we4?tly.
They have come up With a
variety ol gimmicks. Metzger
tells of visiting one yogurt outJet
that, like an Ice cream palat.-e.
offered a "flavor of the week "
It was chocolatt> mint
Others, inc luding Dannon,
Cold Kills Fresh Tomato Flavor
Contrary to occasional
aegative reports, s tore·bought
&omaloee a.re as meaty and have
u much flavor poteotial as
tboae .mlch Granclm.a uaed to s.row. Yet a great deal of the
navor and aroma of toda~
fresh tomatoes la lost wben they
ar• Alnd la the refriaerator; a babit molt ol us mve practiced
for years. •
Ceamwn ba.e come to ez. feet .... old f esbloned" quality ln
fresh tomttoes every month ol
every year lo every city In
America. Yet. tomatoee are a warm temperature crop.
Tlleretcn, men of die tomatoee
ln toda1'1 tupel"aarkets are
1rown in the warm belts of
Callfcnla. Florida ancl llaleo
and travel areat dl•tances to
mbMCedallJ tllteDeverywbere.
Ern:NllVB aESEAaal by
lbe Uamnity ot Callfonlla bu ~ed'dlllt ...... .,... .... below ...... .....,,..... ......
...... s. ..... ~frelb
temato•• ar• alhe and
-...-...: ._ react to their
enviroement. They will reach
their peat of navor If stored at
temperatures betw~" 50 and 70
degrees, the average tem·
perature in most kitchens.
Where can fresh toma&oes be
kept lf not In the refrigerator? In
a banging or count.er-top basket
or in a ripening bowl; anywhere
practical that ls out or the direct
sunllabL
TODA Y'S STOaE·BOUGHI'
tomatoes can deve&op the "okl·
faabloaed .. navor, aroma and
texture of Grandma'• 1arden
fresb tGmatoes. But to taste u
navorful a tbole of yeateryear.
they mmt tie Jumdled in the same
ma.DDS'. And that meam fresh
tomatoes mUlt be kept away from
the ref~. Remember cold
destro)'afretbtomatonavor.
To purcbue tomatoe• for
moet verutlll11. it ls ~ tbat ooe pick u ••sortmeat
eada time ODe maneu -Mleet
the ~ aDd ripest for im·
mediate ... la ~ and tat· 1n1. and pi& mab&N tomatoes
for home storage of several
days. Set the latter, stem ends
up. in a fruit ripening bowl or on
a cowiter. Even green tinged
mature tomatoes ripen
beautifully at room tem•
perature. Just like bananas. California has 17 tomato grow.
ing aftU, and these l)roduce
more than ooe third of the na·
lion's frail tomatoes from mid·
May tbrouab October.
Home economists suggest US·
Ing f reab tomatoes in coolrl.na as
well as iJJ aalads. Stews, braised
and aauleed poultry, flab and
meats, sauces and aoupa all
tute frelber and Upter with
fre•h. Instead of canned,
tomatoes.
Economlze this week by uatni
· all tbe stale bread you bave on
baud in an unu•ual Cheesy
Tomato Pie. a variation of
Qutcbe Lorraine. Tbla tlme
U..re'• no cruat to bake ainee the
bread ls cubed llrst and preued
lDto an ailed ~ plate. Callfomla
frHb tomatoH and 1rated
natural Swlu or Jack cbeae.
plus a few Muontnp, coQlpl'i.8e
the simple filling. Perfe<:t to fric
as a busy day's qukk dinner.
CHEESY TOMATO PIE
4 cups sUghUy stale bread.
cubed
~ teaspoon dried basil
3 medium ripe tomatoes
1 ~ cups &rated Swiss or
Jack Cbee9e
zeus
1 teaspoon salt
Dash bot sauce
~ teaspoon dry mustard
1 i,., C\lPI milk
Heat oveo to 37$ degrees. OU a
9-lncb pte pan. CUt bread into
l ·lncb cubes. Preu lJlto pan.
Sprinkle wltla baall. Remove
skin and core ol. tomatoes: cul
Into '4·lncb •Uces. StuUq at
the outer edae ol pan, overlap
the tomato tlfce1 maw top ta cov-
e red. Sprinkle with 1rated
ebeese. ( Uae the blender for
1ratJ.na). Comblne tbe restol.tbe
tnsredlmu. Pour 1enuy at tbe
edle ol. the pan IO tbe liquid wt1J
be at.orbed by the bread. Bate
IO to «> mlnutea or unW cbeete
1a pulJY l.Dd brown. Kues •-to s ..mnp.
Food
ltave inlredueed lines of ~
frozen yogwt and ••yogurt en a
stick:•
A llAJOR OONTENDE• for
Daooon customers in the
Califonia marttet b Yoplait, a
EuropelUI brad with its OWD de-
wt.ed eult foUowtD.g and • Ila.
atadcled tielewiaioo M•ertisia& e•~-(Wl~4ing thai&. llGll
only doea Yoplait taste pretty
goed. bul It abo enables Y'* to
speak~ Prach), sun. )'OgUrt remaiJls untnown
to the average American palate.
"Our real rompetit.Jon. ~
it or not. is still tbe miDd·liet of
the Alnerican public," said
Metzger. ~Si:zty.five pettent ol
the people in Ws country don't
eat yogurt." •
On tbe otheT' band. be saNl 3S
percent of the populace eat
yogurt regularly and a quarter
or those slurp some down every
day.
ManJ live in California.
where ao fad is apt to go GDtriecl.
Metzger said some 20 percent of
Danaoa'• c:ustGmers are bere.
althoagb bis ls a New Yorlt-
bued ~.
W1llle most pet9C>b8 prefer to
eat f~ yogwt.. there
are • nw•"'er et aes fer &be plain .a.., as well .
Y0191t bufta mhl a •ariety 11
lngnwtW•• .. wltb the straiCbt
ttulf to cre.te 4enerts uaat
wetdi la Ill a mere 150 ~ • For namp'e, J'OU" em acid tW
~ ol frosm fndt .. eoneentrate; one teupoce Of navorec1 aea..u. dasert po.ae..
pudding mix, instant pre·
sweetened tea. or maple &YnJD;
one tablespoon of applesauee
witb a dasb of cinnamon.
sweetened coconut flakes or
canned fruit aecta.r.
CSee Y°"UllT. Page CZ)
Cold-temperature villains lutk in lflldgeqlol"&
Keep fresh tomatoes out of th&teltigetalot
Questions Kids Ask About. Food
To obt~in a eopy •. Had a
ebeck or aaoae ord9r to tbl 8-e~et~...u. U,8. Oot•'911111ut Pr1DUDI Of· ftce, WMN,,.,_, D.C. W.
Some of tbe ...... u. ....
cllala wttt, .. "did pntdltmte tld8 ...., Mt bull •• ··111ow food ~,.... tbe farm~ tlile tallle,"
"will 8\Jlo8Cla make ID• 1troa1•r. ' .. .,Ill cows llH eltoeolate mHk ta th• fut\tt9 <ltow food. wW daul• la u. *" aa..d>" and "what are
MID• foodl I eaa ll"OW (M11 1tep1 w 1tartla1 your owo ........,, ..
,... ........... jO&umieto
the3newest
9· s flavors.
Save up to 45¢!
9-Uvee Oat Food olfera variety that reeds like a reetaurant menu.
With flavon eo enticing, even Monie can't pus 'em up!
Be a hero to your budpt and your cat. Oip theee coupons and bring home
the Liver & Bacon Dinner, Fish & Uver Feast. West.em Menu :"'
'Thmpt Im.icky appetites with theee throe 9-Uves goodies. And save!
lERRIFICI
TERRIRCI 1ERRIRCI
AND WU CAN
QUOJEME
A DRU• VACATION •N DYNaMds
POR.llD~~
SWEEPSTAKES . -,.
(2 OM.'( PILOT Wectnnday, Ji.tM 11. tllO FOOD
•
<l'NID Pa•eCU
IP YOVa SWEET tooth ii on
bold, try • teupoon of insW>l
oalon soup mix. a packet ot lnl·
tant ee1eteble broth mix, a
tablespoon ot canned tun• fiah ·
or devUed ham or two tables·
3 to 4 tablespoon• finely
cbgpped chtves or acalllon.a, ln· clUilinc 2 inches of the creen
t.of: a m.lx1n1 bowl combine the
meat, oo1on and aaJt and. pepper.
Knead with your bands until
well blended. Taste for seuon· in,. Form the mixture into balll
>bout one inch in diameter and
set aaJde.
eently bul tborouply. ~ cart not t.o mub the e111. Tate
for 1euonln1. Garnllb wltb the
oUvea. Serve dulled.
Summe r Food
poons of coua&e ebMle.
Or UM your lmatiftallon.
Jt'a strawberry tJme. Dkl you
lcnow that witb tbeee JoveJy nid
berries you can have brealctaat in a elaas that contat111 three ol
the four foOd groupe? Plac:e a
e111, 1 cup 1Uced 1trawbentel.
2 t.ableapoona ausar and 1 ~
pooo vanilla ln a blender eon·
t.ainer. Cover and blend on hip
speed for a •minute or until
smooth. Add 2 cups mtlk 9Dd
blend just until foamy. Thia
yields 3Y.i cupe of Strawberry
Blender Breakfast.
Even more ereatlve are re·
cipea mini Yol\ll't t.o make ever·
ythin1 from salad druslna t.o Pour the yogurt tnt.o a large.
heavy pot. Uain1 a wbiak or
fork. beat in the ftour and lbeo
the broth uotll well blended.
Season with the aalt and pepper.
Brina slowly t.o a boil. sUrrt.na
constantly In one direction.
When \be mlxt\D'e la thickened
slightly, add the meatballs and
rice and simmer 10 minutes or
until the meatballs and rice are
tender. Stir in the remaining in·
gredlenta. taste for seasoning
and cook five minutes. Serve
bot.
pie. Here are a few:
BLUE CHEESE D8ESSING
11.U.u.&l~npa
i,; cup mayonnalae
~cup crumb'-«! blue cheese
1 cup plain )'OIWt
In small bowl. mix mayon·
nalae and blue cheese. Fold in
yogurt. Cover and chill until
Hrvine time. Serve with salad
greens or with raw vegetables
Ha dip.
BOT YOGtl&T SOUP WITH
MEATBALLS
<Senee4)
i,; pound lean beef or lam.
sround twice
1 ama1J onion. grated
Salt and fre1bly 1rouAd
black pepper t.o t.ute 3 cups unflavored yogurt
1 table91JOOD flour 3~ CUJNJ beef or lamb broth
..-cup uncooked IODJ·erain
white rice
Y.i cup drained canned chick·
peu,rtmed
l i,; cups chopped spinach
leaves or a combination of sonel
and spinach
3 to 4 tablespoons finely
chopped fresh coriander leaves
or panley
3 to 4 tablespoons finely
chopped freab dill
SPINACH AND EGG SALAD ""11 YOGURT
8enes4
4 C!UPI spinach leaves
2 to 8 scallions, finely
chopped. Including 2 l.ncbes ol
the arem lGpl
l cup unflavored yogurt
~ cup olive oil
Salt and freshly ground
black pepper to taste
4 bard-cooked egp, chopped
12 black otives
W uh the spinach thoroughly.
Drain. Dry with paper towel.a.
Shred and combine with the
scallions In a aalad bowl. Beat
the yogurt. olive oil and salt and
pepper with a fork until well
blended. Add the egp, Pour tbe
mixture over the s pinach. Mlx
• • •
Butterinilk makes a s mooth,
low-calorie dressing for green
and/or vegetable salads. Here's
how: combine 2 cups buttermillr.
1 can (6 ounces> .tom ato paste;
mix well. Stir In 'h cup chopped
green papper, J tablespoon fresh
lemon juice, 2 teaspoons fmely
chopped onion, ~ teaspoon saJt
and a dash of pepper. Cbill 2 to 3
hours, allowing it to thicken and
flavors to blend. This yiel~ 3
cups .
• • • Milk cows numbered 10.8
million ln February, which la
down from 1979. Milk produc·
lion, however, averaged a re·
cord 920 pounds per cow in
February. which Is 7 percent
greater than the previous year.
Three percent of that figure is due to tbe extra day in the
m onth.
Be Alert for Apricots
By MITZI AYALA
~-........ SACRAMENTO -
Vou have t.o be alert if
you want t.o buy fresh
apricot.a. The problem la
that while supermarkets
generally need a two·
week lead time to place
their newspaper ad·
vertising. apr ico t
growers know only one
week ahead of time
when their crop is ready
for harvesting.
Since the season in
any one area luts only
two, or at most, three
weeks , many
supermarkets never do
manage to advertise
freah a p rlcols. "If you're relying on
newapaper adl," cau·
liOlll Stan Tufts, • third·
generation Winters
grower, "you may find
the 'cot' season i.s over
before you knew it
started."
MARKETING fresh
apricot.a ia aucb a tricky
buaineu that ooly 5 per·
cent of California's S34
million crop la ever sold
fresh. If you an lucky
enough to find fresh
aprlcols in your local
supermarket, bow can
you select good ones?
•·A void abri veled or
m uaby-looltln1 ones."
uy1 Jack Hestllow,
manager of th e
California Apricot Ad·
vllory Board. .. Apricot.a
with a yellowish-orange
or golden color are re·
ady for lmmediate eat·
Ing, but tf your market
happeM to have only
one l.lnged with gr~n.
yo u ca n buy them
anyway and count on
them ripening in a few
days at borne
.. U the greenish ones
have any color at all,
they already ha ve sulfi·
c1e nt sugar content to
ripen wto a very good
frwt."
The process can be
speeded by put.ting the
aprtcots In a ripening
bowl, or if you don"t
have ooe, Hest.ilow sug·
gest.a "the old original
r i pe ni ng b owl -a
brown paper bag."
ONCE r ipe. th e
apricots can be held
three or four days In the
refrigerator. "Put them
in a plastic bag or the
vegetable cnsper ." ad·
vises Eddie Tufts o f
Winters. ··vou want to
make sure they won't
dry out.'" she adds.
Eddie a lso says,
"So me of the n e w
apricot var1et1es have
g r eat eye-appeal .
They're large and col·
orful and stay fresh for
a long time. But don't
overlook the smaller,
leas colorful older
vartettes. They are ex·
treme ly tas ty and juicy ...
Besides tasting de·
llc1ous. apricots are a
nut ritional bargain.
Each apricot contains
only 18 calories, but pro-
v ides a pproximately
1,000 International U nits
of Vitamin A, or 20 per·
t"en l of the Recom·
me nde d Dally Al·
lo"ance.
Vit amin A J l>
sometimes referred to
as the beauty vitamin.
since it is important for
ma1nta1nlog he althy
slun and glowing hair. It
ls also essential fo r
g rowtb and ma i n ·
tenaace of body tissue,
strong bones and teeth,
and &ood eye&tgbL
this recipe for an apricot
facial masque. Jt's a
favorite among growers'
wives.
APRICOT FACIAL
Cover 12 dried
apricots with boiling
water, a nd let s t a nd
overnight. Next morn·
Ing, puree in blende r
with 6 ttreeo gr apes or
s ix rai s in s . Add
powdered milk to
thicken to spreading
consistency. Spread on
face Wltb finder and let
set unW dry, about 15
minutes. Rinse off with
warm water.
Tuft's s on, Stan,
doesn't have anything
good t.o say about using
cots for a faciaJ masque,
WREN THE fres h but be thinks Apricot
apricot aeaaoo ls over, Creams are a great
you can get the sam e dessert.
abundant Vitamin A in STAN'S APRICOT
dried apricots, canned CREME
apricots, apricot nedar, ~fresh apricots
or fnneo apricots. it• cup dairy sour
A p r l c o t s a r e cream
economically important 2 ta b I es po on s
not just as frwts. but chopped walnuls
also f or t be i r b Y • Halve apricots and re·
products. Apricot oil. be· move pits. Blend sour mg high In Vitamin A. la cream and walnuls in a
used as an Ingredient lo cup; spooo Into hollows
m a n y cos m e t i c s . in apricots. ChlU unUI Apricot pits have proven serving time.
to be the most effective For more free apricot
abrasive known for r eci pes write to
cJearunc out Jet efllines. "Apricot Reef pea,"
ff ow do a p rt cot CaHfomia Women for
irowen use their pro-A1rlcuJlure, California
duels? Eddie Tufts may State Fair, 1600 Expoai-
owe her lovely complex· lion Blvd., Sacramento
ion to the Vitamin A in ~13.
• I
~.June 11, 1te0 ONLV PILOT h .
Carbo ConftDion: How ·to teR the 'Good Gµys' ·
··~-"' " •Mill .... eom,... ~7 ratea to tae
Cattliiieij4ntee Illa•• IMI ...._ Htoc~e\M wttti,.. to bt ..........
10 wt.I lb• nddtn eta .....
Ae\uaUJ UHn la 1tO ,...... ., an. Juat • n..r """**' ...... ti.. carbob7drate .. 1ood
IU)'a'' .... ''bid~· .•
I n.-JoW.fat Ciit· aad ,....,: edd to cab-~--------------""'· to prevent attcldna. Sprelld reaWDJn1 rteot. "S&Jt.frel Crifnc ~
tac• ct.ile bat• mlxWn and lola Combine rteoua cbeete. ta chec!M m1xtuN over Herb• an4 Splc••.'' l :'t ..-.... tbroi.a1~. Pour loto 1 •II· thawed ud dralned all. Top wtth ft.na1 tayei-.. Tb• Troubled Tuauay ~ 11apooD cln· an, ueiddcdwl .... Top S--'-1 1pfnach, and scatuons. ot noodles. Pour remain· Ceokbook," ••Cooldn1
umqa w tb • Uonal cin· ~-Combine tomato 1auce ing uuce oHr top. 'For Your RYPeracUve
\4 ltlllll O. Dubn•I namon ud nutme1. lf Diet• and orecmo. Spoon ~ oC s p r l n It l e w t t b Child .. and •'The ll'oodl-
,.. tMlpOOa Wt d .. lred. Bab l.Q • ~ the aauce over the bot· mozzarella cheete and Depreaaton Connec· ~ ~ ...,.r de1rH ovea for 30 By June Roth tom ol an 8 x 12-lnch Parmeaan cheese. Balle lion." Ir you have a
Ualnc a 1..,.. u.mtt. Il'.~~br:'~~I =k~ " baking dish. Arrange a in a '350-depee oven for 1pectal diet queattoe.
aaute c~ and afi ti "' layer Of noodles alde by 40 minutes, or unW top ~u can a ~ to June plea ID bu ter unt I f 0 • aentnp. 1 e", beaten . 2 cupe tomato aau~ aide over the sauce. la browned and ch~ ta p th care ol tbe Dally
tender, about 15 to 20 8PINAat LAMGNA 1 packace uo. t,.t, teaspoon oregano Spread half the ricotta melted.. Makes 6 aerv· llot, P .0. Box 15e0,
minutes. Add cooked 1 pa=.! (8-ounce) ounce> frozen cbo .. ..-d 1 cup shredded low· cheese mixture over ings. Costa Meaa, Calif. 912J8a.
noodle• and toaa laaasna et. cooked spinach thawed .,r~ fatmouarellacheese noodles . Top wi tb *** Please enclose a self-throup. Comblne col· aocldralned • 2tablespoooagrated anotherlayerofnoodles. June Roth h the addressed stamped en.
TBS .. GOOD 11111.• ta1• eheeH, e,., cln· 2 cups low-fat ricot· ~ '-"UJ>Sliced Parmesan cheese Spoon a thin layer of author of more lban 20 velope for a personal
a r • th~ c 0 m P 1 ex _n_a_m_o_n_. _n_u_t_m_•_1_. _•_a_l_t _u_c_b_eeee _______ s_c_ai_u_ooa_. _lnc_h•_d.tn_g_to_P' ___ R_lnse __ cook __ ed_noodl __ es_•_•_u_c_e_o_v_e_r_n_o_o_d_l_e•_·_c_o_o_k_boo_k_s_. _1_n_c_1 u_d_l_n_g_re_p_l_Y_· ------
carbobyd,..tes that are
found In craiu. fruiltl
and vec«ahle1. They In
dude potato., rtce, corn, wheat pasta and other
food• that have pre·
v1oualy been banned from the diet beuuae
tbey were tbou1ht to
have too many calories
for a weigbl·~k>us
public
Stud.lea have shown
that beU.er health results
can be bad from a high
complex carbohydrate.
lower meat and fat, and
drasUcally reduced in·
take of sugar diet.
The "bad guys" are
the concentrated sweet
carbohydrates -sugar,
honey, syrups and such. or these, the one used in
highest amounts ls sug·
ar. the least nutritious or
all foods. It ls a high
calorie ingredient that
appeals to the taste
buds , but not to the
waist line.
Sugar is hidden in sur-pris ingly large quan·
lilies in our processed
food supply , in ric h
pastries and cakes, and
1n ice crea m and s herberts:
AMERICANS averaged well over 100
po unds of s ugar COD·
s umplion for each
person each year. and
the total is escalating.
Fortunately, some
manufacturers aucb as
tb06e who produce baby
foods have reduced or
eliminated sugar from
their products. Many
persons are wisely llmll·
ing their intake ol sucar
and switching to freab
fruit for quick ebet'IY to
tbe boclf.
It is wise to increase
the a mount or complex
carbo hydrate "good
guy '' foods in your
menu. Comparatively
s peaking, the calories
are not as high aa beef
meals, and lbe benefits
o f vitamins and
minerals are excellenL
Here are some com·
plex carbohydrate re·
cipes that will be a
welcome addition to
your family's menus.
BROCCOLI· NOODLE
C~EBOLE
J package CS.Ounce> wide noodles, cooked
and drained
1 pound broccoli.
cooked and chopped into
sm all pieces
1 cup low.fat ricotta
cheese •
l eg~. beaten
4 tablespoons grated
Parmesan cheese
1-: teaspoon salt
1 to teaspoon pepper
Combine the cooked
noodles and broccoli.
Combme ricotta cheese. egg, 2 tablespoons of the
Parmesan cheese, salt. and pepper. Add the
noodle·broccoll mixture
and toss lightly to mix
through. Pour all into a
greased casserole. Top
with remaining
Parmesan cheese. Bake
in a 350-degree oven for
JO minutes or until lop Is
lightly browned. Makes
4 servings.
CABBAGE·NOODLE
APPLE BAKE
6 cups s hredded cab-
bage
2 C\11)1 peeled, thinly
sliced cookinl apples
3 tableapoooa bUtter
1 package (IH>Unce)
wtde noodles, cooked
YOrtS 74ra ArtrtlYERSARY
LOW OVERALL PRICES
SEEDLESS
GRAPES ... 49
J68
FROZEN FOODS
~~Chicken 399
~~ .75 l>a~te~
T:~~ 259 • .>OUl'Oa di'.:.nt wtClU (lit ''IUCJl> Green Mushrooms
~~ndOike }89 ~~1HSSwce
~~&Cheae.35 •o::rg eomLr."; Sweet Sour e
~·a::. .67 ~~ tit Frvb
,-.. -.;.,..,.. .. .,. ...... .,. ......... .. •I . .., I' 11 DOUBLE COUPON . 1: I ~ Hs coupon alone ....,, .:1y onr ITWVec1Utf' • ~ dr I 11 coupon and gt'I dOUtlW llw ....w.g. ~ VIJn\ l'b 10 lncluc>-,..,.,.... 11
I lrtt coupona. coupono Qf~-~ ~ ~ or f.on:.rd llw '""'°' a I tM Item I' I . , __ .__. ... _.... .................... , I ....,..,..,_ ... .,,._ '~--......... ~ 'I .. .,._. ,_. ........ ,, -...... I\. .... I ~-------------='i -------------------------• , ....... w ............................ ...
!• _ ... 02.0!1]~2~ ... _ ... :!
I I <OUl>O" •rd get ~ !hr ~ from Yon\ Noi 10 ~ '"'°""' j I I frtt cQUll(lm ~ ,,_ a-On.-Doll. or f..c"(lr(I uw ·~ ol I
•I ltwkm ·--·----· ---· I• I -·--·-~---···-I I .... ~.,. ...... .-~ ., ........ , ·-I I _.,.",._,_ ..... .._._._.._,_,__,. I ·-----------------------------~
1"811 ......... [> ,,.,, 'l
\""""1 •~ \,. (t,S\'('tiriiof~ ~ .. ~J •"
GROCERIES
~~~Mix.64
.69
.89
.69
.85
.61
MEATS
l. .au. U'C". av tOPo Hfld~Staka
t~~~ ....
f.a.t MCi-Q}'llpCIJT Bed~5teaks
I #ft!: ~ -1.lNO T1J'ClC I' Bed Cube Stab
~Ri;S:.roco°'°
U1 2 48
lll 2 79
UI )39
ll! 258
l.9 ]88
HEAL TH f., BEAUTY
~~~ .79 ~~~ }15
.43
.78
.99
.79
.59
.69
.99
~~'lw,yShailpOO
~nba
219
)55
]47
}79
PRODUCE
~~Onnee Juice ]27 11~ .88 Aunt 8}Np . ~Greenae.w .41 ~~Julee .87
~Orange.Juke .88
Plltrick CUdatcY Kim ~ C-"" 98 A::i.n~ha.c 194
~v~rur .29 ~~ .33
~"'*-.79 ~~ .... .42
m...~~ 149 ~~ f'rtedOnlona .53
.89 ~~9MZT
109 ~~ee-AI 139 ~l'OlnlllO~
..or..-..,m:m .98 R1™.. .... 0enn VwS..Dn11._. •'*H*D'JI ~ ....
CIC:..n.m.ao. ·n::......... .
~ 291 ~-Pllill\Chl
m,Glilc ... "129 im'Cclmedll..i
.75 ~'L":iRcofu
0....-1•1.tM ........ O....Awe.
.49 ~38
.18
}17
145
·.75
J05
111
.25
)19
~Or.al\Mr .4 7
~CopperO.. .63
~~~ .79
~.,,..._ J79
l I< l(IOH
~
t~
l'.er-8eoldt
~.~.-.OMta
s='L.. Voclca
~-~
146
]79
679
939
679
219
349
1069
, 199
~~1:'byPowder
~~on
~+:; 288
~Alts fRMIVe 2 19
~~~~~128
~F~ J35
c.,. ....... ...... a.109""r ..... Dr.•~
"'LAO f Al<)lfll Romlllne Ldtu~
~~CIU<HY Bel1WCf8
f:~~
~~
~
L&.49
tA .29
L&.49
rA .59
t:A .59
(A .to
&&.12
FOOD .
Beef lJp Yo-or Diet with Flank ·steak
····-you quick· eoM or alow-roul u I the
""' llep in PttParin1 nank ateall la lhe-aame.
BftaUM nm bu a uni·
que texture with a d~·
finite lenithwise 1nan
to the meat. it's ad visa·
ble lhat you first IC'Ofe
tbe meat on bo&b &Idea to
cut t.hrouP tbe craln.
When you're flnlahed,
the steak wilt laan
aballow crisscrou cuts
on both sides, ln a
diamond pattern. This
step isn't merely de-
coratl•e; it promotes
tendemess by cuttin1
tbrouth tbe coarse fain
and allows seuonas, sauces OI' martnadee to
penetrate more deeply.
U tbe meat is to be
broiled or pan-fried,
scoring it will keep it
from curling up.
If you want to roll.Al
up and slow-roast 1ll.
scoring makes the meat
flexible moqgb fcw roll-
ing.
HEaE'S ROW: Lay
the flank steak flat oo a
cutting board. with the
grain running horizon-
tally -in other words.
left to right. Make
shallow diagonal slices
about ol'le-balf incb
apart, first in one direc·
lion, then in the other, so
that ooe side of the steak
1s scored with crisscross
cuts.
Turn the steak over
and r epeat the p ro-
cedure on the other side.
The steak is now ready
to be seasoned or
marinated for quick-
cooki.ng under the
broiler or over the
barbecue or in a non-
stick akWet with no fat
added.
Or you can ftll It witll
flavorful ingredients.
roll it up tightly and
slow-roast it in the oven,
basted with tomato Juice
or other liquids. l-lere
are some su~estions.
MEXICAN
SLOW-BAKED
STEAKRQLL
J •;, pounds beef
flank steak
T11na
Grill
Witb warmer tem-
peratures ln the
forecast. don't waste a
moment of that
beautiful weather. Get
out on tbe patio or In the backyard and pull out
the barbecue grill. Plan your menu to in·
elude appetizers and
cook them right on the
grill prior to the main course. Our suggestion,
Tuna Pick-ups, can be
prepared ahead,
refrigerated and then
placed on the grill when ready to coot.
A flavorful nllit.ag of
tuna, sour cream and
minced cmioo nestles in·
side bite--me dough rolls
made from patty shells.
The appetizers coot up
brown and crispy in a
foil pan you can mate
yourself. Double a sheet.
of beavy duty aluminum
foil into a large rec·
tantle to fit your grill.
Fold up the sides about
1 ~ to 2 lncbea. miter the cornen a ......,U. and
place cm tbe pill rack.
TtJNA l'ICK·UPS
1 pacta1e ClO ounces> froaen patty
abella,tbawed
1 can (t ounce•> tuna. ped.ed In water v. euptoar enam
1 tealpOoll minced
onion
Boll patty lbelll into
ed-lnch netanales: cut
each rectan1l• Into
ei1btb1. Comblne re-
m alnin1 ln1redlents.
Place ~ teaspoon of
tu.aa mixture on each ~· ol clouP: roll up; Hal end• wltb ·fork.
l'Ulfft. eeam aide dowu, on fou pa llUlde fr'OID alam.._ wrap. Wltb
... .... eklMd, eooll .,. ....... •to• =:•41!9_. &•rain• to ...........
•4J11' IMi
• ta ltl•••••n 1 Meded, tbopped •M•••d ntr•·•hrp 1 &atit.poclll ¥t.aecar Cllli........ • l cup plain OI' IP'Cf I ltHPo•• cblll tomatoJulce .-•••r (or mo,., to lcore flank ateak. t.t.> Sprlnld• with cbHH,
OpUonal : \ teupoon cblll powder, cumtn,
tvmta .... <or ~ tea•· ont11uo and 1arllc. Roll
&e•taaeC
,ooe pamd Cumin) • VP enstJtwtM. By S.rbara Glbbonl
Opticmal: l teuPoOn ~''i:f •ll* onlOt'I covered lp a 300-delree
dried onpno =.tom ~.i\n ,:,~ o v • D • h • l l n I o o ·
t e Io v • 1 • r It c , 1Uck loaf pan. Arranae catkMLllly with pan li-
peeled, m1nced ateak roU on top. aeam· quid, unUl lender. ror
l cm6oa, peeled, lhln· 1lde down. Mill vtM1ar about 2 boun. Maka six lJ .UC*t and tomato juice; PoW' servln11. 17$ calories
1 b•l 1 P•PP• r . over meat. Balle un-each. <One-half cup
ADYlll'ISID ma
AYllUllLm GUAIAlflllJ
£JOI Of IH(SllnMS IS llt()UttlO 10
8l llUOlt Y AYAUll( IOI WI Ill
(ACM lllAl!l( I llASAl I. IJtV I AS
SPICUAU 1 NOTED II 111$ All f
Ill( 11\111 DUI Of All ADWtllVD lflW
Ill W1U Of I 11 YOU YOUI OOCl Of A
OOMPAl!Alll Jn M MU AYAllMU
lllfllCl1!1C Ill SM!( SAYlllCS Oii A
rw~c· INllntr.G YOU 10 """ OU IHl AOWltlfS(l) m M A I llf
AD¥11TISlD Piii(( 111114111 lO CAYS
PltCEUJffCTIVE WO .. JUNE 11 THIW TUEi., JUNE 17. 1110.
•
cooked nee per serving
adds UO ctioriea. >
ITAUAN BEEF llOLL
CBMCCIOLE>
Follow precedina re-c I pe. but omit cblll
powder and cumin.
SublUtule pa.-1barp Romano cbeeM for the Cheddar. YANKEE
PO'l'·&OAl'l'ED
9l'MllaOLL
114 pounds beef
nank steak 2 lea1poon1 pre·
pared mustard
2 tablespoons Wor·
cbestenhire aauce
Optional: l amall
oolon, peeled, srat.ed
1 raw carrot, pared,
erat.ed 2 tablespoom
minced lr.b panlq Salt, pepper, to taste
1 ~ cupe tomato or
lomato-ve1etable Juice
Score 1teak on both
aldea. Spread one 1lde of
the . ateak with mustard
and Worceatenblre
sauce. Sprinkle with
grated onlcn and carrot.
Roll the 1teak up
lenathwt.se, encloelna all
veeetablee and season-
ln1s tmlde. Place the
rolled steak, seam-side
down, in a non-stick
bread pa OI' amaU loaf ~D. ,.,.. C. tbe tomato
utce. ROMt tmeoYend,
a-......ov•for 2 houri or more, uatU
tender. Bute fnquently
with the Julee (wbJch
turn1 Into a naYOrfUI
1auce). To aerve, re-
move beef roll and allce
Into plnwbeela, topped
with sauce. Makes -llve
aervln11. 195 caloriea
eacb (ooe-b.alf cupful of
cooked fine noodJ• adda
100 calories>.
.il llMnn tuft llUlnlD. llO Ulf TO 0Hl£1S
OI f'OI llSA&I • COMMtllCIAl WSI.
FMll.YMI ._ ...
Ht lirllil CllOPI
FAllll..YPM ...
Ht CUiied llllk
FAMILY PM ...llll.IUCQ
Ml8111111
...
Ll.•1 1•
--·'~ ............................... .,...
FOOD
Forecast
Bright
There's good news at
the meat case.
Pork....-. are up
and it is predicted that they will continue to
cJlmb IA the months
ahead.
For the consumer, this
me ans lbere will be
more chops. loin roasts,
steaks, ribs, smoked
sbou1der rolls . hams.
bacon and other pork
cuts to select at affonla-
ble price&.
Pork apeclals al tbe
supet'marltet will be fre-
quent, offering excellent
o pportuniti es to put
meat on the dinner table
without straining the
food budget.
To fully understa nd
this good fortune, it is
necessary to look at the
pork industry and a few
or the specific factors in·
fluencing pork prices.
Right now the pork in~
dustry is in the middle
of a major buildup, ex·
plains the NationaJ Live
Stock and Meat Board.
The number of hogs
coming tq illarltet is in·
creasing, and as a result
ret ail pork prices are
becom i ng m or e and
more attractive in keep-
ing with the law of supp-
ly and demand.
It's ao Ouke or acci·
dent that supplies are in·
c r easing. Profitable
prices for bogs have pro-
vided the needed incen·
tlve for producers to ex·
pand. But because pork
production depends oo a
biological proc~a. not
an assembly line, ex-
pansion baa taken time.
The interval between
the port producer 's de·
cision to step up produc-
tion and • actual in·
crease io retail pork
111pplMI ii llmolt a year
and a bait. 1'b1I Ume it
takes to exp9Dd produc-
Uon 11 part of wbat ecODOllliltl call tbe .. bo ..
cycle ...
Supply 1111 't tile only factor that determlnu
the rel.ail ,nee fl pen. Competitive meats
.,.. allolnflueatlal. •
Beef DOW ls In ibortel'
supplJ, IO more con-
aumen are barn1QI to pork .... l8creu1q de-
mucl. • ne ail fGr men pork a. a1IO llrGal b9caue coea...-. have more
mon•J •••liable to = • tbi per captta lllllr ilK'OIM ia P ·
..... to ...... ~ • ... ,..
laflatlili u uotlter ---~··,... ... lltlf
~&,,. _ ..... .....
........ ... , .. to ......... =. --· .. I U fita Na; ••
CLUBSTUI
lll.l Cfllll:a
1111.t.19•
It cat. $24?
BEEFUBOBS s2•!
\ ,
,. . D 04-t t IJ 4'7 CHUCK STEAi -aane olilllJ ················ c. I 1. == $1 3! U .S O.A. Choice Bea-Loht cut ol ..wr.Lly llJld.
7-Bone Roast ..•••• '15? Boneless Roast::0 r: . 0-Bone Roast •....• '1 1!
W> fl A. Ch<"Cf' bft.f-Chock cuL U.&D.A. RoUed Sh.ldr. Chudi cut. U.S.D.A. C"'°-blitl-Ch~li cul
Sausage ITAUM mu •••• '1'? Sliced Bacon •••..•. 99! Bratwurst ....... 11'?
Our Own Hot of' Swt!C't-No nltrita. El Rancho Thicker MRanch StyleM Pork and ~inc-No n1lt1LN.
Fryer Wings •••••••• St CHOPPED STEAK Fiia lmlll... U.S.D.A. Cnde "A',,_,, ''Y"ll cbkbfta
Meat Loaf ••••••••.• s 1'?
El Rancho'• own rudy· with freeh eep
SILllDI STUI Cbicke11 Livers ••••• 89! :.Ssa:::··· $21~ Bar M Ham ••••••••• s1'?
~n.Halr ... ~Waw.dded u:ru $ 3 ·~ n f'=resb=rree=U=.s.DA==C'*"="'=·a=,..=· ··-==~=Ill======~
Delicatessen Ii Kraft Swiss ............... 99°
· Frozen Foods ... ~; Pound Cake ~Ill '1 39 King Salmon .•.... '3~
10 '• ounce s>«luc-
Grape Juice ........ 83' Waffles 1m1m1 ······-· &r
12~can Wekll'• Purpi. 12GWKe p«lta,cf'-DownyO.b
Chopped Onions ••• 45' Stouffer Piua ... s2n
12 ounce pacbp· ~-Ida bnnd 12·318 oz. pacbp-f'ruch bt.d M-luu
·:~~Whip Topping ••. 53°
\ . ._,/ 9 OL from S I 1tld
~nn;~tft
. OF THE SEA
TUNA
KRAFT
MAYOllllAISE
32 01 Jar
~•BJ u.. Pile&
Red Snapper •••••• '1'?
Pr.It hcilk Fllleca.
Mahi Mahi •.....•.•• s21?
T,,,.,_) delllfht ..• f'raRn defrwl«I
Halibut Steak ....•• 13'!
TOP
RAMEll
S ti. P\c. OriMlll ...._..,L V•.
... 60L P~Ca..e..
Lunch Meat .......• 99' Chicken Franks ••• 79'
I lb. P-c~a.t.er Fam..
Cheese Balls •••••.• ' 1" Gallo Salami .•..•.•• '321
Httk1-• 7 cc A.an.eel '\. ar 11 =.Chub
·"'Imported Ham ..... ·s1os
4 OIL pecbp=-'Huirfwa bnncf ol~
YUBAll
COFFEE
1 lb. Cor.-All Grinch
~79<= ~$129 ~~ 2501$319
Bright Eyes=. ...• 37'
I 2 ' , OIL Aatorted V a ,.W,Ltft
H ·· p h s11' aw a nan one ....
6 ~It· 12 oonre °"""
Sunny Delight ••.•.• 89'
6' ounce C1trua Punc-h
Macaroni Ulll ••••••• 25• Sauce ... • ..•••. .79'
18 oonc.: Aw:t Variellfti from Kraft
Seven Up z UTtl •••••• s 125
Choicr of rrcW.r OI' diel
Instant Coffee •••• s429
8 0&. Yuban.
Soft lmperial .•.•....• 85'
2· II OUnc"t CVP' c,l ma"-enM
Gorton's Clams •••• age
6' ounc.~ol~or M1nc.d
Dill Slices •..••••.. .79c
16 ounce H~nt Hamburi~r
PUIUT BU 11 ER lmEl'S CODllES Preserves ~ .• 75' lJlXCWISER CHEER DETERGENT
.... ..
...
~ j..
. . .
=smmr $109 .,, ..
s.tHlt1y
c.le ,.,, ... ..... . ..... •• 95° 10 ounce,.,. Kl'me
Apple Juice •.••..... ' 149
6' oun«> Spee. Farm 37~ 1hz. s301 ·· .....
''""''". ~~ ... 111
I So n.YOffW ....... nn. ~-' ·. -~
IUSHll•S .............. 19• RllOES u.. ........... 31!
..... -----------ftJfJtst.f'T6'£fM£M° , .. _......._..._ ··--~ .. ..-....-y ............. ~ ..................... •a• •••••••• ........... : .... ••·
11 .......... ,_ u.-•m ................... a1•
.......... llC, ........ "-'
111112• ········-······,····-.,e·
Liquor Dept.
HAll'S BEER g:r.
................................
WE
WBCOMf
FOOOSTAMI StO•as
7 ·-~ ....... -0.-,,,...... MA-llAlll•ll'I"
~ .. -............ -.. --........... _ ••.
Sugar
Rises
-Bf~~~
lhiaar price• aoared ctu t lng May to their
h'Kbest in about five years, an Associated
Palen marketbaaltet sur·
ve:t shows. Tbe increases wi ped olit-savings on other
i~ma at tbe super·
market and tbe AP 1111'-
•eJ sbowed ~bills went ap bait a pereent
lutmantb.
Tbe survey Is based on
a random list of food
and non-food items. drawn up by the AP ear-
lf in 19'13. Prices of each
item have been checked
at one supermarket in each ol 13 cities oo or
about the first of every
monlb since Ma rch 1,
1973 '
THE BIG -and bad -news during May con·
cerned sugar. The price
of a five-pound sack or
s ugar went up at the
checklist store in 12
cities. Only in Boston
did the price stay t.he
same.
The average increase
in tbe price of sugar last
month was 16 percent;
the average rise since
the first of the year was
52 percent. In most of
the cities checked by the
AP, a five-pound sack or
sugar costs more than
$2.
The last time the AP
found sugar prices thjs
high was in 1974 and ear·
ly 1975. Then, as now,
the reason was a decline
in production and there
ar e Indications tha t
today's altuatioo may be
wone. The U.S. Department of Aar1cullure aaya
YtOrld production of IUI·
V drOpped L 1 percent
from 1973 to 1974. Productioo started lft.
cre aalng a1ain the
followinl year and rose steadily through 1977. Production during the
1978 crop year dropped
by 2.4 percent. however,
and estimates for the
1Jr79 crop year -which
began Jut SepL 1 and
runs through this August
-indicate an additional
decline of 5.5 percenL
THE AP s urve y
showed that when aqar
was lnc:luded in market·
basket totals, the bW at
the cbeck.Jjg st.ore went
qp in eight cities during
May, declln'ed kn four
cities and stayed t he
same ln one -Detroit.
On an overall buts, tbe
~verage marletbaakel
bUl WU ball a percent
ht•her at the start of
June than It was a
month earlier.
Wbm auaar wu re-mo•ed from tbe totall, however. tbe AP ..,...,
allowed tb• market·
buket 11111 went clown la•t montb at tbe •
cbeckllat store la 10
dU. .-roee ID OD)y
tbrff, for aa o••ralt
averqe decreaM of 1.2
pereeat. Oa tbe brllbt side
tbere were scattered :=~=-~ addltioia, the ••1 ln-
c r • • • • ID tile AP manetllm'lt wu ooly ball tlie ... ~ tbe April
boolt. . ............ ~.
c•ldllt w-e: chopped eb-. nmter cut port cbop1. frosea or••I• Jldee eancmtrat., eOt· r... ~ ~ . .,. ter, 11.-...A medium
wlllt• ••••· crea•J ................ ,, dt~raeat. fablic Ml· , ............ ···.::. .... iWta''tatlrW "~·--... ~
. Per a ••HJ.~~·· Wall 1a_.. r • ... .... .,, , ... ,,
.... 'illil -· • ...,
ftl SL= tined. A = olW..._,.
ll letUIH and
,.. ~blH wUI =''' rt &M bNrt.f ..... and rCMiDCI ........... ......_k'• aapedal l••UJ ...... eolft• ~·, ..... Oa"""1. J••1...., ... .....,. u Amirk• eta.le fOf' outd~or barbecues . Aside from lt• ftne
Dencatessen Items
bCHOPPED
HAM VDY lEf suao
bLADY LEE
FRANKS
Tutl!CEY Oil~
129
12 oz. PtCG
.59 120Z PICC
" AMERICAN CHEESE FOOD
60N1 \*CU-~ ~ .. ..a:.5.77
J,~EESE .... 1oz ~ .75
\Ol ""t. .69
r CHEESE BALL 2 29 b -~lllC)lUAu.A 1'111 00((; •
b 500.~ Ll~UICA 101 ~"1.19
b ~~ t10l~1 .99
L H~L KO~lOl 00((; 1.69
!~ ... 01~1.69
HoUsehoid It Pet
.;
TOILET
TISSUE VIUA. 4 PACK
.69
• 281 Sf ""c..
.;
CRYSTAL WHITE99 DETERGENT • UOUIO 48 OZ. BTl ..
PAPER TOW&LS
WA.A
.49 ISSFIQ.l
b~~ .... woz ""'1.59
LkLEENEX TISSUE ~~ ...... 'nn-.65
L~~.~-1.15
l~.~-~·L·· •. nwat.41
· A~f~ .... or "'-5.19
l~~~-~or -.68
l~'S.~CT _,.2,49
..
}'LADY LEE
6PEAS .36
11 OZ. CAH
.;
LADY LEE 49 ~T~~ll~ SY> oz. BOX
Oil AU GaATIN
P B~EO CHICKEN 73 0 ~\o.io-~ \Cll CM.
r CHIU CON CARNE 1 Q5 b DI...,_~~ • t$0l CM •
P APPIAN WAY PIZZA 1 43 0 ll<IC• OUJI -11 Ol ll)l •
P MACARONt & CHEESE 29
0 ~·~--'"'°' 8Cll·
J,~.~LES noi -.19
b ~~SPREAD ''°' •· 92
P AUNT JEMIMA SYRUP 87 b ltOlet\.
I' SEASONED SALT 1 58 0 v. ... , •Ol Ill\ •
P UPTON TEA 0 MI-
FRUIT MIX
..-SIOI'•
101 ..-2.52
Jt oz"c._,.. 69
L LAWRY'S 8.8.0. SAUCE 85 -n ''°'-"· . . . . . . '°" oi •n .
r PANCAJCE MIX 1 Q2 b •m OIOClr.l • COWl.lft » 111 IOll •
b~~ .... 11oro.99
! ~~--~-~ '7ttCll °"' 1.59
A~~ •n _, 79
b~O .SAUCE ,,oz U*.27
canned • PackaQed
b~.l!,DRINKS .§.I
P KRAFT DRESSING 99 o (Jl(MrrC~-•• ttor m.
J, HU~S 1:'?.~~~ -ar ow.36
L~!,;~~ ,,,,°'<Ne 1.09
PTREESWEET JUICE 89 0 -°"""'14\n ... Ol CAii •
J, ~ 1.~~ ... . tOOl l'l .99
PVEG-AU VEGETABLE'S 37 OLMtFot -o ttar CM.
i~EY"S SYRUP "o.i CM. 79
J,PIUSBURY ~NG 1 21 ~~ ..... OlCMt •
L~~~--..... 79
J,~-~-•Ol C#l.87
b~NA-~~ ·'°' oa.49
Uquor
l~~l!.~-11\2.25
AOOlONY CHABUS WIE ~ "°'° -~,,,.. "'1.99
A SEACRAM"S 7 CROWN rt=~ ''""' .... 10.99
b~~n 8.39
TOP SIRLOIN 278 STEAK 90NfLfSS 80'ClE.O ~ LOIN LB
DTRA TlilOC CUT
T-BONE
STEAK
IOMlEO 9(£.F Ulfll
ElCT'RA TlCX CUT
Fresh Meat
BONELESS TIP STEAK
2ss
L8.
.. 3.28
. 1112.38
... 2.48
~CHUO<~--· ta 1.38
~ ~N Rf8 0.oP_S . 111 1.68
PORK LOIN CHOPS
Dairy & R ozen
.;
TOTINO"S
PIZZA ~TI()llf ClASSIC
Ill 1.88
&Al 1.98
229
200Z .-re;
b MINUTE MAID 119 ORANGE JUICE ~ CXlf«:VfTIAT1: 16 oz ""'
L ~.~~°'°"·83
b~~N ~or~1 .36
b~~-~~,_..74
L~~~~ MOlMG1.79
L!: ~,~ .. "°' -..89
A~~.~or.:1.99
l~~ ... IOfN:.73
b~~n~1 .Q9
PORTERHOUSE
STEAK
80N»D l&F lClltt
EXTRA n«lC CUT
LARGE END
RIB STEAK IOM:IB> 9Efl'
MPTMOCCUT
LARGE ENO Rt8 ROAST
~·u
AMNC CHICKEN -..--~ .. "°"~ ...
90NEl.ESS TUfnCEY .,. ... _. ~1-_ ..
ROASTING CHICKEN
-""''"""°'~'~
SMOKB> SAUSAGE
~-· HIU.SMAE SAUSAGE ...,. ____
ROYAL APR ... ICO,._:r,.S
llQ4 #II> SIWUT
268
LB
198 ..
ta 1.88
... 49
ta 1.58
111 .18
Ill 1.98
Ill 1.79
111 2.19
.69
I OZ. fllCC
.14 lA04
.49 ll.
.69 ....
.59 La.
Health • aeautv Aids
l:'~ .. ,., .lQI CM.99
l~°!'..~~-....... tn.3.49
L~~~~-... , •• 3.49
...
r: ~ .
r
,f
• ' . • •
. •
j
t ' l
' 1
' i
1
. • .)
.... ..
'
.. •
~ llBCJCA ol fine
calslae wu always in
Europe. but that bas
ebanlfJCl." be said. "We
bere on our conUnent
have proven for the past
foiar abibitJom that we
are ;::rtent and very eom ve."
Just bow competitive
can be seen from the
1976 results, when Loos
alao was on the team.
The Americans tled for
third with France wbUe
T•s rovaao•I
np.......U tbe Unlted Stat• .. tbe llOt food
eompetitke. wbie• iD· vol•ea preparta1 and
aenLDc 100 po~ttoas
eaeb d I• diu. ln
two days.
Loos. bon in IDS ln
K l el in Northern
Germany. sot m. •tart
behind an apron in the
early 1laOI when an un·
cle wbo cooked for a
German lte••etp line
convinced him lt was a
creat ~euloo. After an appren-
Ucesblp and work ln
numeroua Ge'rman
reatauranta, be traveled • • • around the world before When you're uatn1 an
immtgrattac in 1959. He ice cream acoop for
got bis nnt job at the several different Hrv·
Waldorf Astoria in New ·ings be sure to dip the
York, where be was "a scoop into cold water
jack of all trades," fill. after each use. That pre·
inginforothercbefa. vents the ice cream
But be always wanted from sticting to it.
Clean up at a savings!
LOXYDOL
LAUNDRY
DETERCENT !DOWNY
FABRIC
SOFTENER
CASCADE FOR p DISHWASHERS b~"t.~: .. 1.99
650Z ....... 2.53
!BOUNCE
FABRIC
SOFTENER
«Ing sa.e. 3 11 &IOZ. ..... • 960Z. ..••. 3.08 eocount. .. 2.67
COMET !CLEANSER
21 oz. •...••• 57
p1VORY b BATH BARS U~ ..... 78
TV has me programmed.
I know exactly
when to
tune
out.
.......
REPRESENTING AMllHCA: Chef Klaus Loos ls ooe ol four chefs go-
ing to the euttn.-ry Olympics this fall in Frankfurt. He is shown in
his kitchen at tbe Holid•Y. lnn. Fisherman·s Wharf. San Francisco.
.
Pl'elMCI for tlmeT Opt
for an omelet. With • eooklDI tllDe ot Jult for· ty HC'C'Wh.1t·1. ftMb ln
:f:oLs isavuvo OIOl.&T
~ ift.1eepoon1 or
water ~utee~1111-oc;;._.• Hit
Break e11• Into a
bowl. Add water', salt and pewer. (Uae water
lutead ol milk, becauae
milk tou1b.en1 e11a wbeo they're cooied
over bilb beat.> Beat ea-licbtlY with • wb.J.sk or fort, just enough to
blend yolb and w6ites.
Heat tbe omelet pan
over hich beat unW a
drop ol water 1iu.les and
bounces wbea it bit.I the
surface ol the pan. Add
lh teaspoon butter, and
swirl it around in pan
until it melta and starts
to foam.
Quickly pour the egg
mixture into pan. Bot·
·tom of omelet should
start to aet lmmediat.ely.
Use a spatula to pull
cooked portions t.oward
~nt.er. Till pan so un·
cooked egg on top runs
i nto bottom of pan .
Repeat all around pan.
until omt'let top is bar e·
ly m<M.t. Remove pan
. • fricD ..-: Add toppfla&>
OD JUlt OGe""b~I~ ftf 1
omeW.UMa..,....i.>, fold UDfllled baU ef
otneletovw a.Ded bait. 9'. l 8 '1 G 0 B I T B .,,
l'IUJNG8 1 Uenare~blll"t,,
dlenta for llUt ~1 filllnp. UM eaeh ~ ,
or combine several to salt your tute. n ·a l1kf ...
plua topplo11: You
can't go wrona. ~ , meuunnc, UM about l
cup fllllDc for each iD·
dlvklual omelet.
•Dlcedbam •Crumbled, crisp
bacon •Shredded cheese
<Swiss. Cbeddar. Muenster, mouarella,
etc.> ' •Creamed ctucken • -creamed spinach
•S au teed
mush.rooms ! ·
•Sauteed onions r •Cooked. cut.up '·
vegetables (uparagus, broccoli 1.ucchfili >
FLAVORED OMELET BA1TERS
0 melet batters can
vary too. Try the follow-.
i ng additions to the
basic batter.
FIN E·RERB OMELET
1 teaspoon chopped
par s ley, 1 t easpo on
chopped chives, ip teas -
poon larraJZOO.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
NEW
I •
Fantasy
Ha•-d \Vor~
NSW YOU CAP> -A 1MI' 110. P8t Wolf· laler Md a..,...., well·
...,... Jolt that .... •· Jo1'9d. • alto llad a
••llilia f anta11 -• fa.ntuy ba\Md ln dlm
U1bt. ion mualc and
warm ,. tantall1ln1
amella:
AN9tM&rant -•man. IDttm•. All her own.
•I. WOLftNO&a•a
reclr. for auntval iD· cha •4 llard work • tn•dtJ ..... ,....,
1ooct luck. Hv lllw. J~.~.::0••1 , • IC Mdlome
money aav;d; 11M ln·
vest.cl iD ber lliter. Ma.
Wolfln1er•1 law1er
huaMDd '* over tu day·t.MkJ CG9U ol llv·
ln• ao lbe could quit her Job u an 9duu\loaal couwa..t.
Tbe1 rented a 1hop
U.at b8d bouled a used
cloddal etore. ••a real
bole." M•. Wolfln1•r aaya. Sbe and ber Sliter
and ...... butbanda did
mo.t ol tbe reoovatkln
-
'DYlditions... ~ .... ;..._ ~:.:;.1..i •• Start Qt YOUr UUUU:r IUUlt;e
AememMr ,...,.. Dey
_,..,. 1 ...
A pet'fect meal
fOt' .. ddlnge,
gntduatlon, or Juat •nr evetydeJ mu.1.
J7IO LCOASTNWY .. C.... .. .,._ P'MOM967 ......
J4'el UYMOMI WAY. a TCMlO ... a TOaO. f'MOMI H1·MU
atltt 1MCH &YD.• ...... ~YON llACH. na. MMIH
Also AMhefm, Orange, Rench<> MlreQe, La Habra, Sin Ole9o.
Nortt\ HoUywOoct, Woodland Hiiis
c~ c
It'• a faataq lhared
b' tbouaanda of
Amertcam and a dream
tbat la ell)eelally COD·
ta1loua in New York.
Thia dtJ aimmen wttb
rea~uneta -every Im·
a1tnadle sort ol eatery,
from pretenti ou s
eourmet palaces to tiny
eccentric nel&hbofbOOd cafea. In tbe 12· by 30-foot u&.o..-..-• '-o:':ci the sisten dueled __ ...;P...;;.'A..;.;T_;WOLfl;.;.,.;;;,.~NQ:..;;..:::.=ER:...:...l.:(Rl=QHT);:.;..:Jc....:W1:.:..:'"1:..;,..::..:H...:81:.:..:S::...;i:....=EA::..:....:JON:..=.:;:.:.N::...:Y...:ROK.::..=..:.:.:OSN:....::..:..:...:Y _________________ _..1...,__ ______ __;::-
EACH YEA•, about
3,000 New Yorkers try to
make it with their own
restaurant. Last year,
Ms. Wolllnger was one
of them. At 33, she eave
up evet)'tbing lo eamble
. on her dream.
The NIUlt is a small
storefront cafe, a simple
neighborhood place on
llanbattan'a West Side.
It's called A Piece or
Cake. But starting a
restaurant, says Ms.
Wolfinger wasn't :
.. Everyone told us
how hard it was going lo
be, but you can't un-
derstand how mocb
work it is until you've
done il Running a s mall
business takes up your
whole life."
In New York City,
most new restaurants -
about 65 percent -rail
within a year. Ms . Wolr.
inger has made A Piece
of Cake an exception.
witb a battery of New
York aeencies that re-
g ulate and license
restaurants. Sometimes,
they say. it seemed as if
the city wanted to keep
new folks away from the
business.
''I'd go to the building
people for a permit and
they'd say I didn't need
one. Then I'd go to the
health department and
they'd say I bad to get
the building permit
firs t.'" Ms. Wolfinger
says. "Some nights I
was so frustrated that I
came home literally in
tears."
"WE COULD have
done it for half the
money if it hadn't been for the city," Ms .
Rokosny says. "It rost
us $15,000. If we hadn't
had to deal with the
bureaucracy, we could
have done it for about
$7,000 ...
AFTER A year o f Ms. Wolfinger rented
70·hour work weeks two the site in February.
robberies, count'tess · Fighting City Hall ate
quiches and bottomless up a full month. Then
vats of homemade soup, the Wolflngers and
the cafe ls just begin· Roko,snys began r e ·
ning to make it. It's novating at a pace of 16
breaking even -on the to 18 hours a day. A
verge of profit. Piece of Cake opened on
Ms. Wolfinger bas May 1, 1979.
learned more than she At first the menu of· cares to recall about fe r ed only pas tries,
running a restaurant cakes, assorted coffees.
and not a llWe about lo Sept.ember, because
making dreams come their patrons asked for
true. more. the siste rs ex·
•'I think everybody panded tbf> menu, ad·
who has a fantas y ding pate. quiche, soup
should do it," she says. and salad.
"I have a lilwyer friend ~ s. W o If in g e r
who quit his job for a behe~es ~ key to her
year to play the piano in s urvival 1s that s he
Greenwich Villaae. I serves a neighborhood
think that's great . t h a t h a s f e w
"It doesn't count lo re s taurants . H er
have a fantasy. You've neighbors can either
got lo try it. When I'm 87 hike 10 blocks for an in·
and aiWoa 1n my rocker, terestiog meal or pop
I'll Qever wonder if t around the corner to A
could have ba4'1sy own Piece of Cake.
restaurant. I'll know." .. WREN WE WERE
Recipes
Wanted.
renovating, lots of peo-
p 1 e from the
nelebborhood came by.
When they beard it was
1oln1 to be a cafe, they
y.tere dellpted. One guy
who worb nearby com·
es for lunch every day,"
Ma. Wolfloger says.
The caf e -which la
open every day from
noon unW about 11 p.m.
-seat.a just 19 people.
Ms . Wolfinger works days; Ma. Rokoany
takes over at 8 p.m.
They have no
employees.
One nidit last June,
when Ma~IRokosny was
alone 1n the cafe, she
was robbed by an armed
man. The man returned two weeks later ... That's
the bard part for me," she says now. "I don't
like to be here alone
anymore."
IT'S BEEN hard for
Ms. Wolftqer lo adjust
lo the cafe'1 demand.a on
her time: "You think
tbat when you're in busi·
nen for ,ounelf, you'll
make rour own boun.
That'• baloney. You
can't jult tack up a note
and ao lo the park 00 •
Dice day. People count
on you. II we close ear-
ly, later aomeooe LI sure
lo say they came by and
Jrere dil.lppolnaed."
But the 1lsten are
&lad tbey did it. They'd
do lt aaaln, tbouf b
they'd do thine• d f •
ferent11: Tbe)''d know
bow to cut some ex-
pentlve bureaucratic
red tape; tbeJ'd have
more cMb to f.U back
on ; they'd take In
.,.,,... IO tbeJ eoWd
30-Slice
Bread
Mn. Wright's
·~-·~·2:;i ......-..-....,
i p Round St-k
t=;;i-•2•• ---------.... -..
lklnl•• Franks
S<otth
Ivy ~:884
Chunk ~ ... na
~ ~ .. aac
Ho ...........
Bacon
... , Uwer
:!:';'" '""' 98 c ~ ...
•NlftlUlll
Grouncl Beef
~~ •ac As 'I'' -.. !'. • ..
~~ .• •191
-~~~~ .... ·191
Baity OU
16-ot. 99c Iott le
~toothpaste
w-..y ~:.:. 79c
~Bowl Cleaner ~ 49c ~ ..... -.,c .. fO<OfO\ .-.
DAIRY AND DELI
a..c ......
Yogurt
Z$ ~ 29c
-Cottage Cheese s149 '-.. ~ ...•. ai.t
FROZEN FOOD
8~1--rFroaen .... ... eon.
•'-'-4 32-oa. 99c ~ .. ,.
~ Ice Cream ,,~ s239 ._..l_tlt •f -
BAKERY BUYS!
Hom9style
BuHertop
~W:::; 24-ea. 69C .... Leof
• Grain Breads 79•
·-fttf!y 14.ol \,Otl
_. Mrl. Wrklht's 2 "vs s1 ~.,, ....... ~ ...
2
Fresh and
Juicy.
Lip Smoclcing
FloVOf!
Red Plums
'111a..G~
Honeydew Melon
littaf 0.-."'1 -
liter aom.
each
.59c
11:45c
Crisp Celery _49c IAl~-han
Bananas
c
Fresh Carrots 2 ~45c AOO 5o.1r,,. I ~
Romaine Lettuce M0139c VoW -k""
Ficus Benjamina 8-=-'9" L....ir"-
FOOO DAILY PtlOT C'•
... Clean Up Y 01ir Grocery Store Spending · ·
8J DCJ90iWY WSNC& bHlo produdl -de· eau, OU wW flad that M medl more C'OOffll· a fPl'A1 boUle lfJOQ pr6-that worb 9' well u the TOILET BOWLS can and rt.DIJDC. .
• .,_...,_.....,_ \el'IJM. ••n•••t.~ "l1ert la•redleDtl" ttat.d by nduetq the fer. "blue Uquld" window be cleaned with either On •luminum •ll4Lric
'W• buy mor• ~·• ......-. dlalw1M waeb makt uP • muda u • ••OWi& ol • .._. -for cleanen con.aiatl or 1 chlorine bleacb or door frame. and lbowtr
et U.. R!l*'ll\U'ket. 1ad aoap.fUl•4 1t,Hl perctat ot tM pnduct. eumple. It you want to PO& PAINTED aur-part .SeoboJ, 1 part am-vinegar, but never mix door ttames t11e white
fact. ft.., l)le8d • wool ,... -JOU cua do TIM tnk&l .. lMrt l.ll&'N· m1a 1 ~!)' to hue facet wbere you are con· monia aod 1 part water'. the two. To dillofoct the vtaeaar to remove eot· ...... ~ or _.. ol ow aJ.__ -bo&IHbold dint" la water. oo bud. ctrnett aboUt removtna <The ammonia mav be toilet bowl and whiten Ll, roelon and bard water· .I ......... .::a.11o-_ au•b ··-1 b I r --n-I --•-.n.. -•-• ...u1.. ,, ·-.. ='---1-l'.. chUllGC Job, W en 1ou m x 1our or , _ _. c •.uu•I '"e Puaa .. , ... a 1Uoo1 omitted.) Mix ln a 1pray add about l cup of soap bulld·up. PollJb
__. UUWI For example, aood all own elHaer, you can Jobe. mb 2 iabl•poons eleaaer, use the mtld lop container for eaay chlorine bleach and let lt aluminum wlth soap· t~ and otber pw'l)CIMdeuenean bt UH cbtap water from liquid detersent, 2 llquld delerieat diJpemiDI. soak for 30 mJputes or flllechteelwoolpada. o l made ttom ordloU"Y de· tbe fauat lutead. table1poon.1 a1Dmonla, t b a t y o u u • e Showers, tuba and longer. then brush clean To clean arout in Ule
• •• ••1 to tr m ter1enta few Juat a ftac· · and lquartofwater. for huct di1bwPbln,. 1lnlts that have rust beforefiusblnl. showers or countertops,
pennarket apencnna la Uoa ol the COil Of lb.• AN Uca.LZNT all· Th11 mixture can be Apply lt full 1trealtb 1lain1 and deposit. of To remove nast type mix 1 part chlorine tan a Uni took at products that come purpoM dnnel' COftllata uted ln place of Uquld, with a damp cloth or bard water mJnerall or stains and bard water bleach wltb 2 parts ~o~ood...::p~'::~ p1cka1ed ln Hroaol of 1 cup laundry de· powdered and aerotol aponae. Jlinae with a soap curd are easily rings in toilets. add 1 water. Brush on, let
Ja s n 11 w • ca 0 d 0 c•n1. t • r I• n t • ~ c u p cleanera fdr wasbtac dean, damp cloth. c:leanett with a mixture cup vinegar and let tt stand for 15 minutes,
lthoua? Or can we aub-U JOU read lbe label bouaeho&d ammonia and woodwork. walll, floors. A low COit cleaner for of equal parts of white stand for about 30 then rinse off -no
tute lower coet prob-_o_n_cl_ee11ane __ ,._1n_a_eroe_o_1_1_1_a1_aon_w_a_ter_. _Tbls __ c_an_l_t _ce_be_dispeosed ___ fro_m __ w_ln_d_o_wa_an_d_m_lr_r_o_rs_v_in_e_car_aod __ w_ate_r. ___ m_in_u_tes_bef_ore_b_rus_hin_:g:__s_cru_b_blng __ needed __ . __
farbllbercost?
t' For examtle, some r•-m· •pend a tot of •oney ror household N••nlnC products. Often ~aper aubltitutea will ~ean just aa well -or
•tter.
{~WITH JUST a f ew
Bake
Cake .
;Looking for a d e-
1.Rlous, easy way lo use up liWe dabs of this and
tbat on your kitchen
s ta ell? Put your im·
8Jination and cake mix-
es to work and mix up a
g;eat dessert idea. You
won't even have to dirty
a bowl or pan because
this easy-lo-make cake
roixes in its own pan.
Pan can be used in a
microwave. To get your
creative baking started.
we've listed several sug.
gestions below:
PEPPERMINT-FUDGE
CAKE
Prepare 1 package
(13.S ounces) chocolate
fudge cake mix a s
directed on package ex-
cept stir in 2 tablespoons
ausbed peppermint
~dy ..
t;BOCOLATE·ALMON D CAKE
Prepare 1 package
(13.5 ounces) devils food
cake milt as directed on
package except stir in 2
tables poons chopped
almonds and ~ teaapoon
almond extract.
CBE&&Y·LE•ON CAD
Prepare 1 paekqe < 11
oancee> lemon cake mix
..., u directed oo package
except stir bl 2 tabJes·
J1llDODS cbopped. drained
IOMaacbino cherries.
--'NANA.sPICE CAKE Prepare 1 package
(13.5 OWtces) spice cake
mix as directed on
packag e except
decrease water lo 'h
cu p ; s tir i n v. c up
mashed ripe banana.
CHOCOLATE ·
COVE RED PEANUT
CAKE
Prepare I package < 11
ounces> white cake mix
aa directed oo package
except stir in v. cup
c.bopped chocolate ·
covered peanuts.
BANANA CAKE
Prepare 1 package < 11
opnces) yellow cake mix
• directed on package ekcept decrease water
ti lh cup; stir in li4 cup
mashed ripe banana and
~ t easpoon ground
nlatmeg.
: PEANUTBV1TER
: CAKE
i!repare 1 package
(~.s ounces> chocolate
f dge cake mix as
ted on package ex-
p stir in 2 tablespoons ~anut butter.
: CHOCOLATE·
! COVERED
: aAISIN CAKE
:Prepare l package
(13.S ounces) devils food
cfke mix u directed on ptckqe except stir in li4
C1IP raistns. chopped.
L&•ON-MINCEMEAT
: CAKE 1Prel>are 1 package 01 •cea> l~ cue mix
.. clirected en pacbge
4eept stir in If• cup
emeat.
FnE-SPICE CAKE
Prepare 1 package
C 5 ounces) spice cake
tx as di rected on k.,. atept diuolve
4 teaspoom freeze.
cdlet iD the water
ore lttniq Into cake
Ralphs lowest price of the year Gn ·fryers •••
llmft One tt.,,, end OM Coupon ~ CuetOf'*
Coupon Ertecthr• JUM 12 thtu June 1a, 1HO
SUPER COUPON
r .,
USDA Whole
Grade A 00 Fresh
Fryers
Limit 3 Per Cu1tomer
:~44
"' ...ii
Calif. Grown Foster Farms
Thighs &
Drunstlclls
,
"'
.,
USDA Cut-Up
Fresh
Grade A@
Fryers
;49
~
Fresh Calif. Grown
Foster Farms
Best of Fryer
. ·CMn
lllcN-A111 rtN a... .53 .. Coupon
Budd lg
Chipped
Meat .. pun:"8M °' one '**• _. ....._ pnc.
Umlt One lhlm ...i One CCMlpaft Pw CllNomer
C04olpOn Effectiwe .lune 12 lfW'v JUM ti, 1tt0
SUPER COUPON___,
Frozen-Concentrate
From Florida
Ralphs
Orange
Juice 12oz.75 can
•
8Flavora
Ralphs OJcr Fashioned
Ice Cream
,
"'
Ralphs ptiMn
Hamburger or
Hot Dog
Buns
pkg $1
of 83 toe
Ko.her Dills or
Heinz
Hmnburger
Diii Sllctis
...
,j
..,. r
~"--------------",. ~~--------------~,. ~"--------------~
I( ltdleft ,. ,..,.
Ralphs
Potato
Salad
Lkntt One ltitm snd One Coupon Per c ... tomer
Coupon Eftecth• .lune 12 ttvu June 11, 1HO
SUPER COUPONtrJd!f/Jl!JQY
America'• Favorite
Tide
Detergent
KoehefBfff
K noctcwunt or
Shotar
Kosher
Medium Size
Sweet Juicy
Nectarines
Deticiowty
Oifterent
California
Citrus
Golden Premium Meats f"11he1111an's Cove Pantry Fillen
Fo.t•r Farm-CaMI. Grown
Combo Pack
Wil90fl'e Ceftified..W-Ad4Md
Boneless Ham
F<*M F•IN·C.Ul Ofown
Fresh Whole Legs
USDA Choic:9-large Me91J End
Beef Rib Roast
U.8.0.A. Cholc:.Frnh
Beef Brisket
':~ .99 Froi.n-Arm A Cl911W
King Crab
J)e' 1SI FrwhFl-.C
1b. Dover Sole
F,_., Fiftet-hdf~ '::~ .85 Red Snapper
Ff'Qllrl Fillet ':.' 1" Turbot
J)e' 22• lb.
per
lb.
per
lb.
per
lb.
~ lb.
299 c~re Larve sa.
Pork & Beans 1~ .31 Nectarines
2'' AMOfted Flnore-10oLe.n 39 Carnation Liquid Slender •
Tropicat T•• TreM
Large Mangoes
199 Peclftc t•
Mushroom Slices ~·.61 s..--..o. AaYOfed
Honeydew Melons
149
llbbJ' .. $"1 oz. c-
Tomato Juice
S FrelhflaY~I
SNCl • 79 Zucchini Squash
Root 8"r. Diet Co4a or
Shasta Cola 2 ltr 89 ,,...... Urge
btt.' • Steak MusiYooms
:~ .49
.. ch .49
~ .39
':. .39
per 161 lb.
u.s.o.A. c~e..t Chucit
Round Bone Roast
From Enge.nd-4 Yarieti.
per 119 Farmer's Wife Cheese lb.
"-1pt19 ~:: 188 Salad Oil
ft.Ill WIAP -~ Growft-5 lb. cetto bev 79 3:.~-151 White Grapefruit ucfl •
U.S.D.A. Chok:e-8wf Chudc-ltoneteM Schirmer'•
Shoulder Clod Roast ~ 221 Beef Thuringer 9 Ol. pq. 115 Household Meeds
U.S.D.A. Cho6c..a..1 Chudl·BoMIMe
Should• Steak ~ A~ F1Hon-Y09U'f
Fronn-OourrMt 8rend-8oMtffe
231 Natwal 'N Kosher
Kr8fM'tlll ..... 8nnd
per 211 Cream Cheese
~=-.49
With Ammonis
Ajax Cleaner
• OZ. 85 UUndryAld
Chicken Breast lb.
............. ., .... Moa.2 89 Super Bread aoa• '°'. .. ............,.
Powder Donuta ~ .88 I
~ ...... .,,OI
·Bren Mutnna
" cate D11m11 .. C ........ Rolle
~.89
~.79
pag .• Spray 'n Wash
foeMrfatlM
Chicken Franks 1 fb. 85 pag. •
Vacuum·AleOftad ~2.5 Uter
AlrpotJug
Van de KMtP.. 12 oz. c-
Macaroni a CheeM 1
:.:: .43 KAIN WBlll Beer
AllV_..._
PUllWBIP .. Wine ....... Pw. Mind Y1; tllMee « 45 Cut Com 1;.:.
8'9Valey Jo OL 99 PUmWllf. ·120LCIM
Sliced Peechee p11g. • Light Beer .
... Lee "9C9t • ..., lnuMt
Coffee Cake
... ....... ,,,._ ... 111 Triple Sec
.................... -........ ..,...., ................. ......_ ___ .. _ ... _=·-· .. --
leCel •••• ,. '""' ......... .... ........ .. _... .. ,..... ....... . ...... ......... ... ......... , ... _
nor.
bd.
1foz.
can
~
•
ftMI WUP. -o...t Grown-5 lb. c-'lo bev 89 Red Grapefruit Heh •
12s IUmWUP. -Dried.I oz. pt!g.
Apricots •.c:• 141
12• .......... ·1'• lb.poll Prunee NCft 1••
511 Semper Floral
freehC ... ...._.. buncfl.99 Daisies
bunctt 1••
w.dnttday, June t t, HMO FOOD
Savory SambBls
Variable t"Wrt• an o.eoltt.t":~ar .............
llMlia, ••••nla , ••· •eata. TUlfaiMI and nw lfawaU uve edapt.
ed <Wtlw tD tMlft 0WD coollla1 meUtoda, 10
Heh , .... la uaiQ-.e
No matter laow •tt·
fereeL. tboqh, cum
ol all UUoaa are ff<Om· paaJed by a d'eH•ht.M
array ol Mmbala <CODdl· mnta).
Bananaa. wllh their mellow 1weetne11,
ahnost aJwaya are ln· chaded few their tantaU1-
ln1 tofttrut to t.be hot
CUl'l')' tPlee..
0Tm8AMML8 -both ...... and HVO.r)'
-may lnclude chopped
appl~1 ~~· $utney, ahreaaea coconut and salted nutt. P'w' a apec.
taculu party, serve
heaptna bowl• ol curry
and rice, surrounded by
a colorful assortment ot
samba.ls.
Lamb Curry with
Bananas puts the moat popular b( the tradl·
Uonal accompanlml'n\I
rl1bt Into the curry
i\lell. Addinl haacloua. ripe banana pieces· to
U\e sauce stws ll a ralnt
sweetness tl\at pt'rfM'tly
complemf'ftts the <'Urry
s pices and lamb. It's an
unusual dish. rancy
enou1b to serve to
guests. yet easy and
ecorromiul for ramily
· dining.
A SIDE DISH ls Fruit·
ed Banana Curry. Tart
and pink from rresb
rhubarb, the curry
teams with banana
chunks, fresh pineapple
. and raisins. Serve it
with a curried dish in
place of tbe usual frult-
ed chutney. Or, enjoy
the fruit curry as an ac-
companiment to roast
pork. chicken, duck or
ham.
LAMB CURRY
wmtBANANAS
2 tablespoons oil
l 'h pounds lamb, cut
into 1-inch cubes
1 cup chopped onion
1 cup diced celery
2 tablespoons flour
2 tablespoons curry
powder
1111 teaspoon ground
ginger
•/4 teaspoon salt
2 cups dlickeo broth
1 cup water
2 red apples, cored.
cut in chunks ~
3 medium bananas,
cut into 1-inch chunks
2 cups bot, cooked
race
In a large saucepot or
Dutch oven, beat oil
over medium-high heat;
brown lamb on au sides.
Remove from skillet;
reserve. Saute onion and
ce lery until soft;
s prinkle with flour.
curry powder, ginger
a nd salt ; cook 3
mioutes. Stir in chicken
broth and water: bring
to a boil, reduce heat.
Retiurn lamb to
saucepot. Simmer, un·
covered, 40 minutes or
until meat is tender. Stir
in apples, cook 5
minutes. Add bananas,
heat through. Serve over
hot rice. Yield: 6 serv-
ings.
FRUITED
BANANA CURR\'
3 cups diced rresb
pineapple
Picture
Pretty
A refreshing rainbow
or colors and tastes com-
es together in this de-
ll cl oua, warm-weather
dessert. The light cake,
made from white angel
food cake mix, 's s plit
into four layers. Colorful
fruit &her~ are spread
between la)'era for a
deuert tbat'a aa pleaa-
lng to look at u to taste.
S HERBET RIBBON ANGEL
1 package CU
ounces> white angel food
cake mix
1 pint lime sherbet,
softened
1 pint lemon
sherbet, IOfteoed t plnt raspberry aberblt. IOft4llMld
Powdered .....
8.te Md eool eako
mis •• directed OD ,.ea.a. rr.. can ta paa. llemo•• fro HD
e.U from pu; split to m• • IQwl.. (To .,ut, IDB INI el au wttla
WGDI• Jjt!lll; -,.... IODI • .....,... kalfe.)
htMda..,. .........
•'" l ,..t 1berbet. .. • ..... foil _.,,..... ... ,,....,..
~.-...... •ltlt
~~usar . 11
2 &ab1411poona bOney
l taa.i..PoQn water
t.upoon curry
powder
'4 ..._poon 1round stnaer 1 C\qll 111*· rreah rhubarb
"' ~ dart ralaln1 a benanu, allced
J t.abl poona loaat
ed tOtenut
In a med ium
11 ucepan, com bint'
plneapple, boaey, water,
curry ~owder and 1~n1tr, brinl to I boll.
reduce heat ud 1Jmmer
unlll pineapple la
tend tr, about 20 to U mtnut" Add rhubarb
and ralelna. cook 3
minutea. Remo" rrom heat, let cool, 1Urrln1
occ11tonally. Sllr ln
ban1q,a. SprlnkJe with
to11led coconut. Serve
with him poultry or
pork. Yi Id: 8 servln1s
(4 CUpl).
....
I
Take a trip to
India with Lamb
Curry, a dish
accented with
bananas.
.....
SHOULDER
STIAKS
HAM
HOCKS
,_,.,
SIZZUAN
;.:g1 $) l•
lA
deli.
I LEllLOIOHTREEOllA. DE -ix s224 FRUIT DRINKS =~:~:::a I ... °' 7gc
-... 32-0Z. DRESSING ~:.:.,us I •WU sl.09
• C..H.a.•~DILU·DIUCHIP$•0f!KC>St4ER s 111 VINEGAR :r~·-09 ! ''°' 51 c • PICKLES ......... · ..... · ··· ..... ..oz. SWANSON CHICKEM = • ~ 73c l ·liiDUs.:...... . ..... 12.()Z. 55c CAT FOOD ~::,:-.Al ! -.. ~ 57c
ISiif"SCRUB. . "'" 73c l=rNs ::=::: .. ,. -· $l3l
•
CCWTOO.U•A&IORTD•FOltllATHf'OOM s 1 s• DOG FOOD ::!:n • ... •• SS.58 TOIUT TISSUE .......... MIOlL CUP O N•LE .. .:u • ,~ 49'
.... 9C0TT90FTN'~•ocxOflsOfl0£COfl•rto•,Of!eA~,,c KRAFT DINllR ~~~':°"'.c!Sf I •6-0l 93c -;;: !!!:.I I nssuE . . ... "'°'' DRUXE GRAHAMS ·--! ... , 78< I MAXI-PADS ...... .. >KT.
5236 BOX COOKIES ~=~s I ~ 54c
I iil1il-P ADS ................. "JKT,
5 177 !· ~~fs~:F~~::-. 09 ·~r $1 83
I •PllAL•SOFT•llOWL 79c GRAPE JELLY I s119 'llARIARINE . ; ..... '.'""' CDFF~J!.i,AMER 1 : :u3
r ftAllll..... ~ : • .. ....... CLEANER :-o..~r:: I .,~ 1.33 -=:~~~=~r-,;.":="~ CLEANER "llllUl·~ I s139 fYW'f"KIOt .... •lf\ \,Atf\ft) '°"""~ )1-01 •
.. fO=~~'!~· ~ E::i~. GARBAGE BAGS ~-l-t >M:t Sl.89
,: :.?i ~·69 ll&s:::.=.=-~ $l291
eta CIU ~~~-'1.19
...
s1o•LB
LITTUCE
•4JICY ·~MtAOS
33c EA
PEACHES
79c LB.
.All ........
LIVER
SAUSAGE
ANY SIZE PIECE 79c LB.
l~ •OTM-#IUCl • SWUT \
49c te ~----
MA.NGOs---ft·· .. 3~ CANTALOUPES ,.,,..,-c•··-•ooo·oo.oe-0t .. c~9C ,._ ........ _ .... ~~!~...... •• 99c 29c GRAPEFRUIT ....... t•
~f~YfJIBNS •••"•o.r ......••. $1 1.9
IJn•r & fi'in<' SpPci1Ji.:s
t0000 .. AU Ua-t.I I •Cl~' l()liM l~
IYIUQY ~ IUDIAnDlll , • ..,.. .. , ........ U 14•0lllCaal I :
lQ4HIL•OllOSl1 .... ISI" . '-• .... Oii-'
A~D • SJ39 CllMll ...
SPll ., ... _.._.,.. s1.11 It ::::::-. .. .. .. I · IMOl.
Clll SOOA ==--r .. -...... • .... aor. 51' L I:':' F od p . mtAL WAD '° a'" .. &-' ow r rozen o nces
mat WAD~ ~$1.19 5c1o0RUNFNFEIR8~~~!5~:N.O::_cs~ •"'•-lAllS $81~:
l.STA10 llDS. $'HSI MACAaON6 1Ctf WJH)MATOU II'"°'
_ ClmI .-MT . . ....... ..or. .i--_ CHIQEN ALA KING ~w~~~: ! , ~L s 14 •
TIS 1110 '° 8 w ... 9 .... --. SlJI TETRAZZINI :=~~..... . . . •H>L : 1 ::
111 lu l• ICl:CBJU .... f .. -. s1.19 CHICKEN =:zlMlllll,~• • . .. ..... tM>Z. $ 2 ., .7 •• . I '1JI WHIR BREAD .... a. ........ 9 ... ~ Jfl~ 1 ~· ... ~ 1
8
.............. ........... FIVE AllYE DllNI INOWCllOI'.. • .. ,1.aL 99 4 7 •=• .u:~---I-·-····· .... nn -·NGE JUl"'E 1 •1 2• lflll IE 1El--tMN&Cll9 q_15 •""" ~ -.UTUMIO..... ••• • ~
"°mu .. u.oz
0
FEATU~ING .
D&All ANN LAHDSU: MJ ......... II
.~ ......... , ......... 'tbow , ......... ..., .... ~ ...... .._ I bmd _,... __..,Ida ••.rw"'-_.
m7 .................. to t.llle floor. I Clem....., a
rematda. ........ It wu Jlllt tuck -W at Up-l*Md ... Afterwal'dl lbe aUd I ..W aot laewe Alll W wtn. (Well, I dkln't. > JIM II not an Am .... She ll flvt lnc:be9
aborter ..S weiab1 at ieut IS..,._. a.a thu t. • .,... uP wttll bnKhen and la • fin•
au.leta.
I a't ean U lane la~. but 1 wonder
ti WI ii eome tiad al •oob Mil tum-oa or ll
•••• --·· lib type wbD tak• IPld&I d • llabtAaM :-.amaJt. I a 't want my tuwr. home to .,. a batU• . IJ'OIUll4. Shall I talk Ul1I out wUb Jane, or let her • ihlDk rm IOIDe4.h.lq I a1n not! -HAJ\ASsED
ETtheBED?
I IRED OF
WAITING
INA
DOCTOR'S
OFFICE?
:DOCTORS'
:HOUSECAJI
:SERVICE
(714) 851-1895
Something Special
feminine fashions
250 E. 17th St.
Costa Mesa
645-57 I
~IKlmw-.... ,INTO SUMMER
ALE
OFF
•Tumbleweeds
ot the West
•Coco
• Char1otte Russe
• Patchworks
•Sir James
and More!
Wlldneedly. June , 1. 1990 OAll y PILOT c I I
dwe ... cealdM• UWendllfk.
DEAR ANN L.ANOEftS: I wu •peeially
lnterested ln the letter from tbe WOOlU wboH
d1u1bter wanted a ttadltlollal wflCldtq -white
1own. 18-foot veU, bridesmaids, mwslc. cbam-
pa1ne recepUoo and a lavilb diDDer. Sbe •ai4.
"Of course, it would be expeoalve, but we can
well afford it." The problem wu her buaband.
He bata to spend the money -especially oo
"abowtn& off" and feeding people.
You alded with lhe mother and daughter
and au~aeated that someone ask "Mr .
Gotrodt.s • ii be ever bad seen a Brinb moCley
wagon at a funeral.
Your answer was typical. Ann Landers. Ob·
viou.sly you have not heard about the man who
bad h1a entire fortune converted to traveler's
checks so be could take it with him. -A SPY
IN CALIFORNIA
DEAR SPY: T'wenty·three akldoo! Tbe first
time I heard t.llat old yarn I kicked the 1lata oat
o( my cndJe. Tballks for the memories.
Dl:AJl ANN LANDERS: A nu. beck you
nprrued )'OW' .ten cia 0 py r1pg ... J am •
N(Of'IDld bomolau.J. and I blow tba miMrJ of
1ueb a Ule. 'nwlkl to lllD•. a ton al prayw and
th• free.~ Ood I am over ~ do not .,,. with JOU that bomolauall
1bould be allowed to teach ICbool. U tbelr own
Uvet are to meeMd up, I don't believe they are
qualifted to W()ri( with cbildreD.
But .t>at I really wanted to II)' LI Ul1t: I
Jumped for Joy when I rud)'our c.lolln• Une: "I
eland by my 1latementa. All of tbem."
Today. too many people have no convictiooa •.~.:l anythln1. It's teriiflc to have IOmeooe a ft.nil ln a world where there ii an awful lot
of altUnc. -HAPPY IN KALAJIAZOO
DEA& JlAL: Tb..U I« ..._ kW ....a
-esped•lly 1nenu .aaeie we......,... tl;aae eoHlcler tllle fad Uaat aaay
~rwn·•• alao Ila" llftS Ula& are meaed a p, yet &lleJ rela&.e well &o dtBdrm ucl are n ·
celleat &.eac~ra. RomOMSUIJIJ ii 90l ~ta,.._. So. a1ata I aay, I stud bf my s&a&.e-
meac.-eJJ of diem.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: You ~ally threw
the book I lD fact the wboLe damned library I at
the woman who thought her mother should pay
for the gaa when she drove her around to do
chores. You undoubtedly made a few friends
a mong the mother crowd, but I'll bet plenty of
daughters hated your anawer.
I also wonder bow many mothers mailed
that column to lbetr daughters. 1bere'a ootbing
W oinen Alcoholics Helped By
Live-in Tr~atntent Progrant
Almost half or the estimated 200,000
alcoholics in Orange County are women includ·
ing housewives, working women. students, "and
often a pillar of the community," according to a
.['-_u_o_r_o_s_e_o_p_e __ )
TBUKSDA Y. IUNE IZ
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (Mar. 2l·Apr. 19>: You get surprise
of pleasant variety -through call, letter or vis-
it. Leo, Aquarius persons could play significant
roles. Emphasis on clash of ideas, stimulation.
short trip, gains by maintaining an independent
stance.
TAURUS (Apr. 20-May 20): Payments, col-
lections are emphasized. Keep recent reaolu-
tiocu concerning savings, cutting down on un-
oecesaary expenses. What appeared to be a lost
cauae will be revived, found to be alive-and-
kicklng.
G£111NJ Oby 21-June 20)~ C\N:umatances
fall into place -for you. You are favored by
tim1q and elemeot"Of luck. Expand borbona,
take tnittative, contact persons wbo can aid ln
achievtnc goal. Express in unique manner.
Refute to be limJted. You are on the way.
CANCE& <June 21.July 22): You get what
you need, but not tbroulh orthodox procedures.
Me am bypau usual cont.act.a.. check behind
scenes. call oo "bidden resources." Review. re·
viH, dismantle for purpoee of building on a
more aolid atructure. Aquarius, Scorplo natives
figure prominently.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): EmphuLI oa ex-
change of inlormation, Ideas -relationship ia
on a new, flJ'lD baae. Lunar posltioo highlights
desires, hopes, wishes, pet monetary theories.
Superior 1.s on "your side" -you'll have proof
oflL
VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Home improve-
ment, greater family harmony ia part of lunar
cycle lndicatioo. Taurus, Scorpio natives play
key roles. Empbasl.s on reputation, challenge,
advancement. special notices and a social affair
for purpose of letting you know how much peo-
ple think of you. LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 22>: Good Moon
aspect colncldea now with communication,
learning, teachlng, spreading meaaages,
evaluating long-range projects. Define terms,
go for braaa ring, refuse to be limited by those
of little faith. Pisces. Vlrgo person.a figure pro-
minently.
SCORPIO <Oct. 23·Nov. 21): Emphasis on
diet, storing food, getting fam.illar with basic,
essential material. Time. motion, costs, Invest-
ments, challenging the "champ" -these com·
mand huge portion of your personal scenano
Your position is strong -know It. realize
money wU1 be forthcoming.
SAGITfARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21 ): Get
together wtth Scorplo native: the two or you. at
tbls time, could atrUce pay dirt. In matters of
speculation, stick with the numbers 8 and 9 You
will flnlab task. gain added recognition -and
you could fall madly ln love.
CAPRICORN cDec. 22-Jan. 19): You get
chance to test product, to Inaugurate program
featurtna 1nnovaUona -Imprint style, get new
deal lD connection with job and dependents.
Leo, Aquariu.a naUvea figure promloently.
Avoid WUna heavy objects. You can &et to heart
of matters. Act accordingly.
AQlJAIUVS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Emotiooal
retponael tend to dominate -know It. 1trive to
provide "apace" for 101Lc. Cy~le features
cban1•. variety, •Pffial n?lationahlp. Young
person (OClfides in you, becomes valuable ally.
One wbo doel have your best interests at heart will=:-(Feb. 19-Mar. 20): You 1et "more
room." Period of coaflnement baa run ill
coune. RestrtcUoaa, thought to be obstacles,
are tnmtormed lnto 1tepplng-stones. Property
and other type appralaala result lD aurprtsea -ot pleaaam variety.
spokesman for New DlrectJoos. a recovery
home for women alcoholics in Costa Mesa re·
ported
"U alcohohs m remalna \Dltrealed. 35 out of
36 alcoholtcs die of the di&eue," saJd Munel
Zmk . New DlrectJons president.
New Directions, a project of the Junior
League of Newport Harbor, provides 30 days or
live·in treatment for up to 16 women at a time,
said Ms. Zink.
included in the program are vocational and
employment opportunity gwdance. as.&erllon
and self~t.eem training, exercise and recrea-
tion, group "rap" session . occupational therapy
and a strong involvement wtth Alcoholtcs
Anonymous.
Ms. ZinJc said some residents wort at their
regular jobs and return to the center in the
evening.
She sa.id four beds cunently att available
"lo Orange County women wbo are ready to re-~tabllsh a meaningful, happy and productive
life." M.s. Zink claimedtbenumbeJ'ofwomenwbo
return to prior alcoholic de~ aft.er leavtna
New Dlrec:tiona "ls low." "Ahhouib residents are expeeted to pay ror
tbelr ata.y, no woman la turned away for tact ol
funds," she said. • • Arrancemeota can be made
for extended payment."
AJ\yooe desiring further lnformaUoo can
call the center at 548·5546.
Cake For Dad
Flowers for dad on Father's Day!
Not Ultely.
But a Salt Lake City firm thin.k.s families
will chip ln for decorated caJce. topped wtth a
king's crown.
Called Telecake, the delivery service offers
gift cakes via a network or bakeries throughout
the U.S. and Canada.
The firm will deliver for Father's Day and
other 0ttasions through a toll·f~ telephone
number. <8001 453 -5710
Les Petites Fleurs
Installs New Officers
Bonnie Margolis has been installed pres•·
dent al the Les Petites F1eurs. the Laguna
Niguel Auxiliary of the Children's Home Socle·
ty, replacing outgoing president Lisa Buchntr
The group's annual 1nstallatJon dinntr was
held Thursday at El Adobe Restaurant LO San
Juan Capistrano
Also inata.lled were Barbara Goffman. first
vice president: lrcne P\erce. s~d vi~ ptesi·
dent; Vicki Lat.ere third vice p~tdent : Olde
~uelz. recording secretary: Lynne Mc Lei.sh.
correspondmg secretary. Judy Richardson.
treasurer: and Mn;. Buchner. parlJamentariao.
Ute pourtni oa the pUt wtt11 tt.. Mlp ol • •• ..,.
pert." You do kDoW bow to make tiolt!M. ~
~rcup.
I bavt a bunch t.be .om. wllo ..,.. WM
exbauated ftom baullnl 1* motbef ~ I'"
been there, and I bow tM f..u.nc. Do"" UH
any ldea bow many motben • .......,, co. ..... • ten and nellbbon lmPQM oa a penoe wtlD ...
a car! Well. I do, and lt'1 a PldD ba tbl aow.-a~
ttemltlea. You wW never print my letter. but I feel~
lot better for havinl got&eD Wa off my cbelt.
You're not alway• right, Ann. but you're always
there. 'lbanb, Toots. -GLENDALE. CAL.
DEA.a CAL.: 8ol'l'y, la lflle ti U. W..U.
l 'mMl ...... 1frwa•J .......... ._ Y•
tH laaft ..... pion. HFFIM .., ... •nus.
1t1ten apleetJ ... loa• ti_.... ....... .. YH've ... y pt Giie aocMr. AIA•lal .._,, a
cleeftll penGll, en• llleeita llae ..._ M • bl& of
a heM:ta. she'• eadUed &o apedal &reatmetd. 8o
daen. Now I've l&art.ed It ail OYtt a&ala.
8 LESSONS $15.00
COSTA MESA TENNIS CLUB
557-0211
Jn FOUNTAIN VALLEY
16835 BrooldM.l"t Street
PhoM l7141962·33 I 2
..
ded\3 day JUOZ 15th ...
thz. original ~-9
thi claesic windbnu»uz.r,
mad<z. m cmglend or thz.
nnz.et all cotton p:Jp)in
wtth authrzntic tartan
linaj the om j8<XLt
hz.'1 f1o.e to 'Ml.Br.
eveilabkz m m~ml,
ra.ry, british tan
andnzd.
Vlall Calendar
Fiesta Fund-raiser
A Bombe Chest, valued at $1,500, is among items to be auctioned
off at the second annual End of the Season Fiesta sponsored by the
•· Friends of South Coast Repertory Guilds. Admiring chest are
· · Barbara Chammas (left) and Mim Helfrich. The benefit for the
theater will begin at 6:30 p.m. June 21 at the theater in Costa Mesa.
., Wine and Opera
(
..
Selecting wine for the Harbor Ridge Home Tour to be held by the
Lyric Opera Association of Orange County are ( rrom left l
Stephanie Robe rtson, Irwin Orton. Helen Lyons. J elean
Montgomery and Lorraine Lippold. SpQnsored by Irvine Pacific.
proceeds from the $10-per-person tour June 18 will benefit the Lyric
Opera's fall production of "La Boheme., For information. call
645-6.100.
( Singles
Calendar )
GREAT OUTDOORS SINGLES HAPPENING
will have an outdoor roller skating excursion in
San Clemente at 6:30 p.m . Friday, June 13. For
carpool information, call Bob at 556·7026. A
house party will be held in San Juan Capistrano
at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, June 14. Call Carol at
492-2897 for information. Also, the group will
take a train from Santa Ana to San Clemente
Cor a beach party Sunday afternoon. For in·
formation, call Bob at 556-7026.
ORANGE COAST SINGLES will have a general
meeting and pool party a t 8 p.m. Friday, June
13, in Costa Mesa. For information. call Ann at
751-0291.
SELF CENTER will have a Single Experience
discussion on "Getting What you Want .. at 7:30
p.m . Friday, June 131 in the city of Orange. For
information, call Jarror Bruce at 997-9600.
BACHELORS 'N' BACHELORETI'ES singles
group will have a beginner's round-dance class
and square-dance workshop at 7:30 p.m . Thurs ·
day, June 12. in Tustin. For information. call
99'7·4518.
AllT OF UVING CENTER offers a program
deslgned to help singles develop communica·
lions skills, share Ideas and feelings, make
close friendships and stress the positive aspects
or singles lifestyles at 7:30 p.m. Friday, June 13,
in the city of Orange. For information. call Ruth
at 524-9406.
PEOPLE SAMPLER, a workshop designed to
help single adults find people with similar in·
terests, will be presented at 8 p.m. Friday, June
13, in Costa Mesa. The. event is sponsored by
Coutline Community College. For information,
call 963-0811ext.256.
SINGLES GOURMET DJNING CLUB will
spomor an ltall~er Friday. June 13, In Newport Beach. la a club membership
lee and charge for e dinner. For information.
call 63J·SJ.3S.
.. r&ITIV AL D•L SOL'' •• tb• tb••• of luaea.../faaldon a.ow to be prweatect by the
N•wport leleb CbrllUaa WoaMa'I Clul> oe
WtdMlday, Jue 11, 1t tbe Airport.er Ian,
Jn ............... : ..o.cme.
NAnru'l.CBILDataTll wUJ bt ~ ln a fhe lillldDar Monday, .JUN 11, at a p.111. at l..alUDA Beaell Pederal Sa~ • Lou, aeo
Ocean Ave., La1una Beach. Jnformatlon:
'9C·SS..
TBB LBO.U.·A8PECT8 OF Dn'OSCE w\U be
tbe topic ol a free seminar 1bunda)'. J ..... 12, at Newport's Daon Center, 1300 Dove St ..
Newport Be~h. The seminar la bolted by the IAw
Offices of Gammil and kutuda. ID!onnaUoo:
955-0101.
SAN CLE!llENTE'S Chapter of the NaUooal Aa·
socJaticJO of Retired Federal Employees will
host lts annual luncheon Tuesday, June 17, in
the San Clemente Community Hall [nforma·
lion : 496'°'21118.
NEWPORT llAJlBOR TOASTMIBl'&ESS CLUB
will meet at 11 :30 a.m. Monday, June 16, in the
community room of Newport Balboa Savings
and Loan in Westcllff ·Plaza. Information:
631-1094.
"BE TERlllFIC" is the theme or an experimen-
tal workshop In better social efCectiveness to be
held Saturaday, June 14, at 9 a .m. al Golden
West College in Huntington Beach. Information:
892-7711.
HUNTINGTON BEACH'S Chapter of the
American Association of ReUred Persons, Inc ..
will meet at 1 p.m . Wednesday, June 18, at
Murdy Park Center, 7000 Norma Drive. Hunt-
ington Beach. Information wlU be given on free
dog licenses. blood pressure testing and upcom-
ing events and guided tours. Information:
962-1929.
MAKE TODAY COUNT, a counseling group for
people with life-threateninc diseases and their
families. will meet Wednesday, June lB. at 7:30
p.m . at S,t. Joseph Hospital ln Orange. Inform&·
lion: 532-4263.
A SELF-FSl'EEM SEMINAR for families will
be held at 7:30 p.m. Friday. June 13, at tbe
Tustin-based Counseling Associates for Human
Development. Information: 832-1020.
"ST A YIN' AUVE," a health sem.inar hosted by
Elaine Willis. will be held Wednesday. June 18.
at the Balboa Bay Club in Newport Beach In-
formation: 975-0700.
THE MVASTHENIA GRAVIS FOUNDATION.
Orange County Auxiliary. will hold a luncheon
Friday. June 13, at Mercury Savings and Loan
Association, 7812 Edinger Ave .. Huntington
Beach. Information: 524·7686.
Club Calendar runs each W~adoJI m the Dotly
P1lot and contain.s notices of wonu"ll's and service
club meehngs and wents opeon to t~ public for the
/ollowtng week.
Send notrces to Club Calendar. Dotly Pilot. P 0
Bor 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 9'1676. Incl~ YQUT norM
and phone number. Notices muat be m our hanth
three weeks rn odvan« of on ewnt.
To ~6t a pu:ture, wnte or coll the Feature
Department, 6424321, beh«en 2 07ld S p.m. Photo re-
quests are honored on a ~a~ ba.nl.
AflllOl.llC!ng a
Summer~ ForTeensl
ORANGE-COOMY -
3 lown f, Covnuy. Orctnge
(7141 547-8228
PllllUC NOftCE
•ML MOWltea~
, 7 S~°:TUllfn: Main:
All --~ •u. .. t:: .. Jntollie ....... llM1ia1 Aet of 1"8
wlllk:la ..... tl llllcal "° MYertlM • • aaf )re· ,....._ UaUtaU., or
~beled.... C!llGf .......... HX, • ....... , Clltsin. w an ...... ..., to malle any mc1s..-...... llmtta-
~ ordlaatm•a.tk>D."
llADY, WI.LING & AILI
Te•_, ....ec. .. r• 1-f C4llt
lln'eC I t .... Of' e ..... + ...... bc ....... IN••••-twobe•a-.
md H IOMUS IOOM 1291.000.
MIW'POn MACH 0. • ......._ C ; •• _ .............. ,,......, .... , .....
' ,,... .... ,,,. will DOl lmowtaalY aeeept uy
8dveHl1l•1 for real
...... wldda la ID 'rioia·
tbloltbelaw.
cWu loc ............. ,... .ct oc...
+ ...,--.-s210.ooo
COLE OF NEWPORT REALTORS
2515 I. CNSt Hwy .. C.w .. M..
... .
675-551 I
• an ........... ............... = r -=;;, 1-ow-c..·-.-.· .. -....,.-·1 s.~se..tooo lllhlr· SUper abarp 2 bedroom -. DAILY PILOT II I on R-2 &ot with approved nu one is really bot! I,., ........... plwfor3bedroomnar Sharp 2 Bdrm condo
.. _. .. , il'sa_.. uniLSl.95,000. close to pool. walk to ·--· -_,,. everythln1. Assumable
.......................
Gu 4 IOOZ .......................
~THE RE AL
~~ £STATERS
1B'llX ... Te ... el" ..... Altllt ._., ow... a
Bdrm ... two 2 Bdrma.
Beam-Ull• eellla1•. wood1 atmosphere.
0.--wllleUTJ.
BES!' EASTSIDE
INVESTMENT
OC1AM 1'12 .. s
Dehae duple&. 3li:Z bdrm
loan. definitely won't
last. 54()-3666
•
-·Whelan
RealEstate
RCTc1ylorCo
\; I g Ii ~J
\llliLa. F\replaee each un-~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
IX9UISITI HOMI IM .. CAMYOM Elegant Deane "Vers ailles".
Immaculate. Magnificent 180'" view of
ll~hts. ocean. bay & golf course.
Lighted paddle tennis court & room
for pool. 4 Bdrms. 4 baths. 3-car
garage. $698.500. Small 7% assumable
loan. Call for appointment to see any
time .
WESLEY M. TA noa co ....... .
2111 S-Joa•h ... .._.
NEWPORT cena. ..... 644-49 I 0
JUST FtNISHB>!
Beautiful 4 bedroom single story in
Baycres t area has just been
refurbished inside a nd out. 3 baths.
maids quarters. several French doors .
fresh paint, new carpetin~ -it's
beautiful! it's beige! and it's vacant!
High assumable loan. asking $275,000.
U~l()UI: ti()Ml:i
REALTORS. 675-6000
2443 Eut Cout Hlghway. CMona ct.I Me
WE HAVE 3 3 OF THE BEST USTINGS IN TOWN
PIMIMSULA rotMT
Newly decorated 4 bdrm. family
home. Ocean view ! $325.000.
IAYFAONT
WP have several fine homel'i
with pier & slip
B. TORO HORSE COUMTltY
4 Bdrms .. 3 baths: r anch s tyle.
mini-estate in oran~e 2ro\·es. 5249.500.
BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR
1.11 f'."y·.111o· (J•·•· r.i !I o/') 011,1
it+ EXTRA PARKING! ~tosm.0001 D&UDDW'LEX i-----...-••.acialsa.d 1006 ..... ._ .__ "° • bi& wide kit. which ~DWI.IX -,-• •...,... providea a \ota1 of 6 car
$175,900! .:=O• off·atreet parklo& If o. bdrm + bachelor! ~~!!!!!!!~!!!~~~ needed, 3 Bdrm + 3 1~ Bdrm w/ocean vu. steps
9700 cross. l bk>ck to to beach. Take over big
Wiil«. Owner f10anciog '°8n at low inteTest at the
lZ'lG.-3 years! Call fast. LIOOISLAND new reduced price or 7S:H1'00 4 Br, 3 be, 2 frplcs., den. S317 c:nn (>'fNlll'l•ll~MIOelNICI• diDrm.,2storiea:at.reet . -·
[)deboJt
&.Becx::h ~Estate
THEIWFfs
.......................
So. loyfr'Ollt D .... x
Channijlg Balboa duplex
oCfering 2 + den owners
unit w/large sundeck &
lowe.r3 Bdrm rental unit.
Priced at $998,000. For
more Info call Carol
Hoff. agt. Pacesetter
.......,,JuM11,1llO *
Of'T'IOMTOIUY
'50.000 do1m. Owner will
C&JT)' paper on beautiful
· ~,, HERITAGE
. HfALTORS
SW'fS-4 Located on prestigious
Haul St. Five houses
from the water . F'all
asleep with souad ol surf.
Whitewater vu. bwlt on
the cyn. As fea\W'ed ln March Home Mag. Call nm Rhone 631·12166..
5 Bdrm Spyglau home. --------1525,000, 12~ Int. on ________ ,
REALTORS
balance. Call 640-5S36
BUILDER OR HOME BUYER
2br home on great comer
R·2 lot. Lowest pn ce in o&d CdM Agt. 759.1243
Havuomething you want Selling anything wtth a
to ~ll" Cla.<i!>1f1ed ads do Dull} Pilot Cl~s1f1ed .\d
I\ well -Call NOW. 1s a !>1mple mJlter ...
642 5678. Jlbl call 642-5678.
IAYROMT-OOVER SHOa:S
Owne r will h e lp f ina nce this
~orgeous 5 bedroom home. E ach
room is exceptionally large -Pier
& slip will handle a large boat.
$960,000 FEE.
IN NEWPORT CENTER -rs 644~060
11£
llDlll ILlllS CD.
OVER 55 YEARS OF SERVICE
~ftlft.D
Situated In Rapidly Appre-c1attne Area Of
Westside Co.,ta Mt>sa AdJart>nt To ~<'\j,
Rf'<ff'velopment Area & Park Loveh Rtta<
Houu With Sttluded Red Bnrk Pat>O .,.,oulc1
Mak~ G~at Owner's Homt' Ott\« T11.o
Rental Units WouJd Hf'lp With Pa.vmf'1"1l5 &
Taxes. F.XCELLENT FINANCING
AVA ILABLE. Call Now Redurt'd To
1165.000
TIDIAC DUPLEX
COl.Oti&A DB. MAa
Great l..oC"ahon O"f'rlookm2 Grass~ Park flptwtt'll fW'1onla & ('a mat ion ()\.\llf"r·~ l 'n1t
Varant & f<t'ady To MOH Into S27S.OOO
® __ ...... ,_ ..
759-9100
#2 COl"flOI ... Piasa
H411wportC......
OAK GLEN
Distinctive new 2
bedroom. 2'7 ba con·
donuruwns. StOS,990.
2518 Elden Ave, C.M.
64.2-6734
EASTStDE
20HALOT
-r-.o tnd1V1dual houses on
an R 2 lot. Each has a
M>parate )'ard Both new·
ly painted 1ns1de & out.
and highly upgraded
Tem!1c location. Owners
will carry 2nd TD. For
more lllfo call, 54-0-1151
.. , s ~ HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
SYCAMORE
GLEH
IRAMDMEW
fabulous. large 3 b<I. 21;
ba Quality townhome
condos Only 4 available,
from Sll4.990. 2430 Santa
Ana Ave 642~.
SELL Kile it.ems with a
Dally ~ Cluaified Ad.
Future Hei1oom
[{11111 $i~~~.__J1C11S __ 61_w_~_1_o_TY __
Price reduced '30.000.
The p opular
CARMELITA Condo
wttb 4 bedrooms It baths. Wade greenbelt. Assuma·
ble loan. Priced oow
Realty,6310094 ·---------------
WalaftOlllHw s BR, 4 Ba, cuatom
waterfront home
w /17xH' pvt dock.
Prlc e--d Sl .295,000.
Bllllder w /trade for Palm Springs Eatale.
For daa11a oa W. home
and appt to aee. eall ~ Hoff, --'· 631.(IOIM.
ftinc. On17.
C..DISPIRATI
WHAT-
OM. y $63,5001
Qean. lbarp. 1 Br + den
condo. with an UIWJUI·
ble Jou at ooly 10.5%
and prtced as low as
163,.SOO. Call DOW m.5370 At LS TATE
REALTORS
•IRAMD MEW* S190.ooo.
2HOUSES ~61~·~·n~oo~!!!!!!!!!!!M.L~
XlDt locatioa. Prine. ooly
Under $280,000. Owner wW carry. SCl-0425 Agt. --------
°'"*' waata out. 3 + , _______ _
Plldo. So. ol Cout Hwy. 2 b.u to beech. Assume
lit TD. Owner will help
finallce. $132,IOO. Call
Ir vine Grove .
Le n de" of you r
rho1ce -2 Bdrm. 2
Ba Sequoia model.
Lovely mml itarden
& patio . G r eat
location 1n <"Ondo
w t tennis rou rt :o;.
Owner w/carry 1st.
SllS.00" mao
OlfH Ill 9 • II S f'!1lf 1t> W "'1Cf •
~] ' THE REAL
ESTATE RS
macnab I lrvlne
realtg
Real Estate
2UNITS
on Diamond In North
Bay area. Lovely 3 Bdrm
home + 2 bdrm apt.
$398,000.
&..lredrhl
&Assoc. 675-llll
.... , ......... 1007 •••••••••••••••••••••••
~o a 1mro .............................. ~-,eo1 ~ esto1e
IEACH CONDO I 0 .,-o DOWN.
ca.a..-119 2 bd,.. cottdo, wallll119
dht.ce to tt. beoda. Mice pool & hmb
u.rtt. C1111r SU.too.
-CDM CUSTOM w /gr..t ...... o.1y SZtf,000 • fM 1-.cL L..p ...._,
UC .... co.d. F..aly "*' ........
dlala9 roo•, prl•ate coartyard
•ti f ,.,.,. S.. to belne.
-MEAi LAKI -O.ty 1117.500.
C._ 0 JZlloryc.._J ....... Z ................. .....,,...., ...... .
decor. p I, Jo W. ,._ ••I , I pool &.,..
2744 E. COAST HWY.
COROt4A DEL MAR
759-1616
PAIK .. UAI
T£CJE
I I I I'
0 0 8 0 R
I J' I I
S \. E F A T
7577
tt,~~
IACKIAY
1r
' '· t
ff
µ
I. .
3 Bdrm, ahake roor, '
hardwood floors, re-2
modeled kltch. J•t a I
beautiful bome·ready to ·· move Into. Priced at s suo.ooo. s
FUUB IUAlTY
54..0114 2
Newon Market " MESAVERDE ~
48r. l lhBa. seller moUvat.ed, sacrifice at e
$111.000. VA. F'HA or ? -
t.enm. Agl. BiU 851-1666.
BY OWNER: $75,000
Modest house on large
build.able lot. Westside. le
ZDt473-m3 1i
No qualifying. sharp 3 !
bdrm. 2ba, nr South
Coast Plaz.a. Ass lrg VA.
Lo dwn. $108,000. Owner. -
642·$583.
Central toe. Lovel)' 38r
1 ~ ba Qui el s treet.
S99,950 / A~t. Betty •
957 8400. 642-mz
I Assume Costa Mesa 7 Home 3 bdrm. l ba. Nice.
Sl.3..SOOdown pay S700 per •
rm. Agent Rich, $43-3315 t
or~~
uttle 15 Big!! Cluslfied
ads are really s mall "peope to people" sales -
calls with big readership
and big results! To place
)'OUI' classified ad. call
today 642-S678.
I'
The NOW Coat!
9338
S&ZfSl-20
,,,, 1ff ,.,_;_ 11TMT' ...
-. .. . -··:
with Dally Piiot
PENNY PINCHER ADS
Stlll only $2
;. 3 llnea for 2 days only
· $1 a day, 34c a line.
A,dvertt1e one or more
ltfma valued up to $100.
Each addtttonal line is
only 6f>c for the two days.
Sorry, no commercial ad•
allowed.
Charge Your Penny Pincher Ad
or use your
BankAmertcard or Master Card
§VoW.: .§VeW...
More value for your DIME
in the famoua Dally Piiot
DIME-A-LINE ADS
AdnrUH Item• up to 110 In nh1• In
Dlm•·A.U"41 act• every a.tuns., In ttte
Dally "IOt. lttnt your ad with cHh IO any ot our three conyenlent ottlcea or mall your copy
wtth • checll or money order tot the coH•ct
amovm. Sorry, no llveatocll. oroovce or
plan'• afld ftO commerdal ad• are allowed.
Ead'I ttam tnU&t be priciad with no Item over MO.
~M 9da IMY be pieced at ttte Cotta
Me .. off~ ufltll 3 p.m. fl'noay. v"tll "°°"Friday
at 'h• uoun• .. acfl or Hul'tlngeon Bead1 onlcea.
THE BIGGEST
GARAGE SALE ON THE
ORANGE COAST
IS IN THE
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIEDS
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........... .. ....................... .
• •-••••••• •• • • •• • • • • •• • L....a.....;. I .... ... ............__ VL..L.. , ..... , • lillll•iilll•illll-•• Ntw O*ftef' traMf.,red, ~ -"" -,,_,. -
... a,.;t IHctl I 069 •
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Be ho•. Wiii ur.pt t• W '" OOUN'BY UVlNO 111111 AMYOMI?? t11bttr•1moto1Mme 4Ir,2'-.1)1• taf1*, tle1aally apaclou.a a . 2Ba. ~ wlklt.
an G0,000 eqwly, Zoned ~ ....... .... 2\\ .._... C..SO lit "1· ~for )'OUI'
lor. more ..tta. ..... TUll11.l~ROCk wttb Ca· CDW1. C.n bf fOUrl I
SHOl1' OM CASH?
U../opt. AU moothl)'
p)"llllU •~bed to dow1'
pyml 2 BR Z"'" Ba. -.11•1
;~ . ,,
tYt; "' ; ., ~ :'Ofl<J
~view. ldieet for cou-only fllt.eoo 110.eoM.
I*' or bachetof. Prp&c. LACAllRE R £ALT roa»n b9th ud prdmn _INC_. ____ _ =-bdrm! t5Hl02 ... ..,.... lffdt t06' ________ _., ...................... .
BAY WINDOW AND OUl'ITAMDIMe PfUVATEPORClf 'l\wU#oCll Olen. Lowest lmmaeulate 4 Bdrm.
IV
.........................
.,. to bellek. Jra 1 nn. 2·
8')' ..... o. R·2 eo· loL
bulldable. SS"K 7101
'mhOft. N-MlO
Thia loveb 2 bedroom prkiedSbdrm. J ba. 3car p•t!o home In Wood·
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I home wtth 2•'1 batha haa ,.,.,.. Vacant. atueo. brklee. Cl09t to awim "'-ll club a.ad lAIDDia court. •cheerful kitchen. din· .......... 12SA.ft.IPll. Yeaturu: troptcal
WESTCLIFF
Adull 1 bdrm Co11d
w1pool $88.SOO. C1I
6T.MitO
Eutl>hdl .. bd. llbr.a!'>'t..
3be. 2 1lol')'. rrmootJeG-
W1th plans for• ft ad··
dltion. 1230..000. l.Mal.f
Ho6d. '176.000 AMIUM •
ble loan at II .%. ~9641
or75e-9551.
~·-lovely a B drm
homt + bacb quart•n wtUI aeparale kllchtn
eetnnce. ht i~•t •re
dClaltaM••· ....... i .... o. ... ,,...
f'our 2 Br l btith units In
Colt• Mt'H Bhl.frs
'AIKl.IKI SITTING
J BR l1w tM. adult rnndo
"1th pool and J acu.u1
S72K
MISAYMDI
Asawne 10'\ VA i.o.n.
wtUa 6ow down. owe 2nd.
WORLD REAL ESTATE
~7'1150-7181
0 .... ..,...
A4vtrtl»tN m1y pl1re
\heir ~ bl' ltlephon.
8 00am \o$JOpm
Mond1y llm• ~'rlday
8 lo n()(tn S.1urd1y
C'OSTA Mt:SA Of'l'ICE
3311 w 0•)'
142 at1I
H\JNTlSCTON Bt:ACll um it.a<-11 Bhd ~1%10
LAGUNA BEACH
1017 N Coot Hwy
....,_.~ .. ~
Nott'nf COOl\ITY d\&I (('ft ~1220
CVltwm' MAIC.-s
O.ldliM ror ~,. • ll1llt
11 $ )0 p "' lllt do before p.,bllr111011.
eat't'Jll (M Su11de) • WOflda11 Ed111on> ,.bu
dud!IM 11 S.1urd•)'. 11
llOOfl
CU.IW9 ......."°"' Y.ll RORS AdH rl1u•"
•hOuld t~k their u<h
J•1I~ & ''"IKl'I uro,.
Imm 1·t1 IM It' I~ T II t.
DAii 'I' 1'11.IYT J""'"''' lli>t11l1t) lor th, f1n1
lnrorrtc't 11uert1on Of'll)'
CA1'Ct:l I ,,TIO'i~
Wh~n ~1ll11\1t an •d ~ 11.1~ lo m•kC" a rt•t•ord of
I ht K I l. L 'II l' M IH H
i1¥tn you by your .1'1
tall.r u rt"«"1pl of '""r
t111t tU .. hon Th" ~ill
n u m b •· r m u .. l t, •·
pr r•rnl~d h) tht
ld\'f'rll.>er In fA'~ o( a
di.\IUI~
CA'Ct 11 \TIO'll Oil COR llr..cTlO~ 01' "'t:v. AO liF.t (I Rt
RU~"'l~C Every effort 11 m .. J~ 10
kill M COTT'1" I d ~I.,. .. d
that hat ~" ""'' ,..d bu! •t ,.,,,..,. 1u•ran1 ....
10 do !oil Ul1111 \ht• 11d h"•
1~arcd 1n Liu JIBIH r
DIM f:·A '-" ~ AO-. Tlie1e ~· .,., •tr11·tly
tHll Ill tdv&l><'e by mail
M •\ eny on• or 01u
off\cH NO ptlOM onkn
OucSluw: 3 p m 'nd1y Cot\• Mft• Ofnl'f' • 12
n oon a• all br•n,.h
of fie ...
Ttn: OAll.Y r1LOT
rt'H'rVr> lht rll!hl to
cla•Alf)' fdll. t'eneof ~ r ,. ( II • e II n )'
adv~rll>t'mt-nl . 1nd 10
chantt H1 rllta •
re1ulatlon1 1011\hool prior
~ire
QAHF" ....... ........,,
I' O Bo~ 1:.llO Cutt•"'"'• 1211131
A flctltlovt •wt1t1•U
.......... -'"filed
wfttl Itta ~ a.ti ••
.. ,Id fOf ..... ye9'• •ft., wtllc:ll .. _ 09M\ftlllftt
"" .. fie-~ ....... P11~1t-1 .. ry
Olll J If lhere are
Cll&f'fH C-" 1911 Le0-1
Deperltflefl\ e l lhe
OAll\' PllOT fot
•11fe1Mette11 a11d ...... ..,..._.
~ bl.alt
Now You
Can
Sell
More
wlt91 DaW, Plto& Pl!NN'Y NCHER ADS8dl..aya.
S line• tor 2 do•
only ll • d•y. Mc • lint , Advert lst onf or
more Item• nl~
up lo 1100. £1ch
•ddltlonql lint I#
only GOt> for lhi: lwo
day• llivr rr, no rommt•rrlll u<h
11 t1ov.4•d Ctaurgl'
''ou r Pt•nm Pln~ht'r
t\tJ o r uu-,our
H11nk Anwrlcurd
Vita or Mn'1 •r\'tml
'°' .ott 111form•\\Ofl aft1Uopla« )Giit ad ull
Int room. balcony and ... l d 1 un•ll ocean view.---------•luum. su ne I •11 nt1calST P1rtl1l oce•n vie
malt• Wa 000 of th
lowest priced unit• I
The Crest. Dramatic
slor)' 11vinl rm. over
look.llll • .,.eenbe It. Ve
rmUvated 1eller. Onl
JUSTUSY9 a.a~h HouM 2 bdrm. 2
ator>. Oor1•ou1 h161\
P9ll<>. walk \.o beach. ooo&t. iennl•. lncrs &and.
,,et,000. Cati Ninfa
Jarvta IG.e850.
.. _ -SPAMllM MAC••• wiodows and parquet ---1 tloon. ANwmt* loan. UNGO REAi. EST ATE. &a I bome l\aa ever· Slll0.000. -.au ~I Mama Model,
I lm(_a .. • IMO I 040 .......................
'The Colony : 4 Br + . A •c
Assume S80.00G-l0'i'~
$1.51.000. Pb . 7S8-()805
Sh&tl> 3bdrm. 2ba. xln
ne1&hborhood. rlOlle t
~ & park. i;:d .ii>
i.ume at 91.•; SJ 10.soo
B~ owner. 842 4-08ll
•SPLASH• Sparldmg pool. outdoor
bar & cabana. 3 large
bdrms. 2 hill ba Roman
tub In mtster balh with
hls & hers showers Wood
b u rnin g antique
Cirepla~ In llrn'll rm.
Plush pile rarpet thru
oot. Over S.WOOln rustom
Ille . Beau td ull~
landsraped. IQ"" main
tenance 'ord. Maturt•
tnot trees· & much mlK'h
more Oril) ~.000. Call
\'1Jl41ge Rt-JI Estate
963· l;A)7. --------
•VACAMT•
•19942 Lexington SU>GK
·t~ f'I) mouth $96.90!1
•15all R1<.'t.' S94.900
\.'A Terms lmmed oc
cupanc)
Owner I Bro«e r
963-4.561
....C:IDRIGHT
SUper 2 bdrm pool home
with large inrlosed patio Onl~ 2"' mLI~ from t he
:.urf f'ull price onl~
:.i<l.800.
P.i.rk Place lnr ij4;?.i46l
2-IU<S TO SURF
~lt.:ST SELL Doo,rnto.,.n
II R :J ·Rd l Ba
ASK·Sl44.900. Own~rt
Agt. 960-6944 ·-------
wtUa UMd roor. pool1,
._,, beech • )'OUT own
bac:a y ard. too •• Bdnm.'
fa!NIY wtUI r~ .. " a p-elt a11umable loan. ... •.•.•
l ' ' ,, .~ ...
\I 'I! 1::, I ClJ,P /\( ,11ty
-• I I 1 1 . ' .
don osen
l3\.3Ul
TRANSFEREES MEWLYWIDS?
SINGLES?
I ',.I
!{1 'i I' , ,:'';) ' , tit\ ',
I I\ I
----'
WESTCLIFP Condo
bdrm Adullb no ~b
M.500. Call e'JJ.4640.
......... v ...
3 Br + loft. beaut. nlc'1t Ill~ " mount. view.
Guard 11te commun.
Sl80K Auume. Very
O'V)tl\ated brin1 orrer Pau1ck Teoore. 831 ·1286
RE MAX. nu. could ~ the dream
home you ·ve b een
~for. 2 bdrm. 2 _____ _..; __ ,ti. Cardllf llodel lD the PllmM~ Your chance of a lifetime
for such an Ideal location on quiet end or Udo. ,.
Bdrm home oa super
wide lot. A fabulous
b&rgaln ! tm.000.
Yt' a I n u t Sq u 1 re Terrace. A larl• bript
TownhouM on lrttn~lt. lutlfamlly area that
Pool. M..IOO. 2 Br. 2ba. opeoa oaio your own ~i.a.oo privae paUo. P1ua the ---------1 leC\lrlty ol a private en·
•CANYON ~..,.•oil
fllU&e. 6IOO lq ft, • t.o 6
Bdrml. ~"'I bti\hs. Poo4
and 1pa. SU00.000 . THI ~S try court. l\'l'\!1"!'¢~:·,. ,:'\,' 1Br. lBa , many up ~. owners are tn
tenor dt'll11tners X Int
location Slll.~00 l..ow
down or ai.s umc low int.
rate loan f'or :iµ1>t call
544-1434. Bkr
Two lt«Y. 4bd. Jb». Tur
ti~ Rock ll 1i;:hlandi.
Dll.000 Agt &l2 6100
TMWllows
S&':S.000 dwn. $593 mo.
ql&AW)'lnll. puC.. )OU
top Irvine $100,000 +.
homt, With 12~'~ V
k>M.~
**SOLAI
ElllGY!!
Keala U'9 spar1Ll1n1 poot
and apa ID Uu:. lovel) '
bedroom ho~ in th,
pr~atlg1ou~ f<ACQL't:T
a.oB NEW LISTING.
so HtJRR\'! Askin~
SJTS,000
Woodbrtdge
RHhlJ
............ 1041
1HE STAINES CO.
673-7161
QenyUflall .....
•.I I I • l)f I' • ii J
• '. '; '' :1111
HarW View H0tM 's
lowel>t priced ··ree ..
home. Popular 3 Bdrm Monaco. "Vanilla·• c.-on
dll1on. Decorate the wa~
~ou want : $189.000.
<.;reallve fin. Bkr
540-TS.W.
to New C"5tom homes
behind Iron gates w /an
exclu sive Newport
Buch address. l"' mllfot
to Westclltr shopping .
our Irvine Ave • San~
SI 64 900U Isabel from $265.000. BY OWNER: Buutifully
'..! .. Open Uam to 8pm daily decorated Bluffs "Q''
•••••••••••••••••••••••
l.sty 3 BK. fam. nn · or by 1ppt.. IOCll or plan 3 Bdrm. sunken
frpl · 2 ba ·spa. redwood ~14 famil>· rm. new lut.chen. ~. britfst bar Sbait. ~~~~~~~~~ root TOl.ally upgraded ~ :..: C\$OOl wallpaper. frpk . ~tLSSlON REALTY lmaiac cond. Open
49'.qfJl ~ SHOltlS hou6e Sat & Sund•>
..V•SR l·H5th. 423 Vl1ta Trucha. OCl'.:A~FRO!''T uahl. airy. v\ew. pro-~ Princonly.
,1 • .,. mndul Jr l>Pe Ce551onall)· decorated 4 mrrL"' 1,,, rt>mmunit). 2 Bdrm. 3 Ba home .,.1th BIG ('A.'IYON home for ~ ~ 1 '1r , .. ,·unl). sub· pool .i.nd )""' l ro·all\f 'llt' b)' owner ~ )Q rt f1nanc1n" ... , JllJbl l· o Ill 1 rt lf:ttl11R llK 1;111 4!19 .;1315 "' owv t· on a r l(• M45 1»1 rnvate comer lot w11 h
Out 01 th~ ordinary ,,<'.,., 46• pool w s:rnna
SparlOU.'> .. ood .md &lass HARIOR RIDGE doit run & dramatic en ~ Gen~rou.s use 2 Br 2 Ua d<eeorat.or ~ ov. n tr) renlunni:: Spanish tilt
llle ~tuh1 level living tn home with a fantaatac l h r o u I! h o u t
wooded area Prtv1t view overlook1nR re-Prolesslonally decorat ---------1 551·3000
d~lt.s. treu. f'lex1bl ~''OI' and < 1ty lll(hts ed ~.000. Owaer w1l
financing. $268,000 ~.000 arrange flnan<'lng 11 * IRAHD tolEW •
2HOUSIS X.lnl location Pnnr •>n
I~ l'nd1·r S21;0.000 u .... nt•r ..-.111 <Jrr)
~l~A,n
nu t'll•).t"'"""
Near new LtnC'Oln Md.1 Ill
Woodbndl!t' i::., tat es 3
Be. 21 2 bath.s "any up
gra des Sl6!1.00 0
S""'ftfl). Smith & ht.I')('
8 i3 tell:.~ r. 7 3 llJJ!}
~~3 IEST AROUt'O
1-Jit hanllnR S1.:a ll:t\t•n J ltd.rm. I bath hll!Tk" \'<'w _____ .. ___ ,,
sncTACULAl bath. Creshh dt-C'oraterl
W7.900 Cali r 1r runh..r
dt'Ull.!i . Century 21
~rt<A.>ntt•r 6U>-.>J..'17
1044 .......................
.. TOCBW
2 Stary. 4 bdrma. 3 bal.M.
familY rm w/frpk:, clOM
to scboola. lftopl>Ull &
pub. S12JUOO
~--;;.: ,',rfl
I I •• .. 1 • '
'•'• 1 /1100
VlfW
f:Jrgant front ro"' homt'
111 exclusive In 11\t' Tt'f'
ract' 3 bdrm•. Cami))
rm. billiard rm. oool. a
null.ion dollar \ allK' '°" S2~0 p~r mo Im
mrdlale occupan('y
A Div1.,1nn ul
II a rhor lnH"lm~-nt Cn
What 1 Wonderlu I World I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~
Laguna V1llaiz~ R E needed. Call 714·759·191:S
•97 11s1 UDO ISLAMD 0r 640-t963 ror appoint
--1-5-T .,.1 ... ._ S Newty ~rorat.-ci l Bdrm mtnt
--3 a. on f'~· •1 mple lan<I . -----So.~ Id \&Cant & read• for 1m HEWftOITllACH
JBr Condo '\ocated i.n ex· mt:tJ1 .. • • mo\t• 1n with ;! fi r home . do.,e to
duswe OCTU~ complex C' rt-at 1 \ 1• r 1 n " n c 1 n ll ~ach. zoned R ·2 Uwnl'r
o( Tablt'rodc !'ev.• lov<"I) :>• a1lablt' ~ 50'1 "1 I I • arr\ S9S. 900.
plu!>h apricot C'oloretJ f(.itwrt ~1lhken bJl·l.266
r arp,t1n11 St>w ofH!n PEHIMSULA "'~3vt' drapt-n~ <ho'f\er hd.lo U\'\tallE'd c:team bath Du1>le:>. l'Omvtetel) re turbashed one bl<lck to
in 'hO"'er Ground in beach Yoo ~n thf' ll\11<1
l l~o putting gre,n. Gttat riruanc1ng 520$.000
hue~ pool. p\"t bcti "'
trance. lndr~ mat. ~re~-gar agf'. f'lC' Other ~ Co~
amrnillt'S too n~merous a
to mrotJOn. Offered at an
759-fZll mcttdlbl) low pntt of
Sltl0.000 Sot lused land
Ml.IX ft'eS are SISZ 86j~~~~~~~~~I
rx·r mQ This includes all SE,\ VIE W by ow~ Pf'OPC.'l't~ luite<. • total Hampton & New ~d· mamtenance Ownt'r has ford Jbr ~br XI 1 UI\ 11n•blem~ & mu5t · or · n cla<•·~·~11·Q"' IJ~ 8·1 80 Or ~It-~ Assume loan
proflt'r1' "·II™' remo"ed ol4 .'31 1122. ____ _
lrum 1·i;arkl't Pl'<J~I!
tek>pht.11WO\lner at 17UI
fii3 "Ki'~
REALTORS
SUVfEW
Large au1u1wble l~l TD .
owner may earn :?nd TD Sharp "Hampton·· J
8drm 2i.2 bat.b.s. rormal
dining. largf master
l>U1te Patio a nd Jow
ma intenanc.-e landscap
1ng $3.4:>,0-00 includl'~
land.
1.UllTT
REAL TY IEGISTllt
642·5200
of Sh<>1>pln1. r l&ht a l
)OW' Hn1ert1ps every
day ! Da l l y Pllol
a-if.ell Ads. To place
\ ~ ad. call 642-S678 and
la I ClMlllf'ied M ·Vl-.or
When you call Clas1U1ed u.q.. MicJ-4 I OSJ
to place an ad. you're u !••• .. •••••••• .. ••••••••
TUOO~ TWMHMf
Soanng 'aulll"f C't:1lln::·
2 Br • den. $106.000 ,,,
!\UJMble loan in N~wport
Btach Call Tim Rhonc
631-12"
JA.5MlNE CREEK. Open
houseFrk11y lOtill2 PM.
Uecoralor's OW1'I home.
Si>e<"tacular! Ocean &
mtn. view On ly one
halpYoU-
R&'Mt>X 1ured or a frlendly JUST ELEGANTLY
welcome and help In' REDECORAT ED 3Br. wordlnl your ad for best 2 ~ B • T w n h s ~ . n r
response. Call Now! PIJOl.IO<'n/stores 11 sports
KUl71 factJ To see t'all ·OWN' -------
REALTORS ahawtq. •10 Atoll Or
Sm1th·Me> ef' 640·S3S1
c s • 0 0 ll
I AL l 1
MO'ISMI
L H A T U " M A 0 It H ti It , A
HLOAZLITL A M I Y I D S L H It
ICLICKClAlMO T C t I H H M T 0 I I T T T I H Q Q T M t H U It M
A S 0 I J Z A A l A l M S 0
M A 0 T W l It IC U 0 iJ W , V It
It a A ll It It A S A H l It A L T II
tUMMf AMlOHllTTAML
Tl Tl tL aSlHOlUIU" I Tl
-.182.5 1f SA PLS Iv
m11dy1ew.
~~IMO
Th11 2 bdrm. + dt>n
Garden Home 1s ne~ I>
palntf'd Inside & out.
Superb!) decor ated
Larie master bdrm
Walk to ~ach. pool. C'luti
~· & pri\ at<' tl'nni~
l'OWU. Take over lo.,. in
\C'f't'5t loan . M8S .000 .,.'-z-Ml .... ,':Jm
$96.2'13 830-$050
t11•.-dt ~ f ett. Spe~tacula r ocean
views. 3 Bdrms. lam rm.
3 ba. Pool 1lse lot.
Mt.5.000. Open Sat June
14, l ·Spm 32 132 Sea a.land Or 4W7-444Joann
at P1Uerson/Parka R.E
VBY UNUSUAL Bk.r. By Owner Lullurlous ~--------
rondo. 1500 sq n. 2 lul JASMINE ClllU
Ba. all ameo1t\es. f'ul Ide.all~· s ituated llM> de~
tee:\llity A.ucune mort qev. Oecorator·l> dt-·
No qua.lit)lnJ. f-urn n light {'all now ro r
un fu rn Mu i.t ~''" rW'thtt details Centur~ 631 08li6 2 1 ~ e w po r l C l' n t e r
tHO-~i J ,\S ~11 N Jo: (. 111'.t· ....
Plan fl A 11nnw loc11t10n <n1111 ~ountain vll"w
'r old. Decorators o" hom~. S pecta c ula r·
S m llh·Meyer Bkr
640-~7
TMllWffS
DramaUc 2 Bdrm. 2 ba
for m a l din r
\ownhome. ··E1e1ant" .....
HASflNGS• CO.
640-$.S&O
oc:aMROMT .............. ".
SPICT ACULAR
'?Ottiff ... 5 IDRM
Onh 3 yra new with
v1ulled wood beame<t
celllnas. 1ourinet ·
kitchen. b1lcony aame rm • 5X'1' •P• In maater bath PLUS much more:
Now offered •t only 1428.000. OwMr (maDt'·
1n&avail. CALL -...1211
Large faml')' home 1'0fl ---------decok for mnrvelou.<1 vie".
ln&. "3.5.000. ()wnt'f' wlll
finance. eau lor detail'
HOlUSWOOO -..er '7M67'
SEU. ktlt lWlm with a
DllJ.y Pilot ci.alfied Ad . ---
0c .. View Condo ~
s~ ~e-.port Cn.'•t ' Udrm 3 balh cl)ftd11 New·
I> painted. privow d~\:k .
loQds o( ator•ac 1p:ict>
Owl\ert motlvat~. OC
rerect •l 1175.960. f or alt llPP tolM. c1U &40-l l5t
· . HfRITAr,f
l'I /\I I I,,,.,
IOIO .......................
••11.-TeWI .•
COLDW&f.. IAMlll It 1•tl
e x p er l e n c e.d R c a I E a t o t e salespeople for their new location ln
south Laguna Beach that w1U o~
June 15th. rr you arc lnteretttd tn
movln1 up to the largest dlversined
Real Estate Q>mpany lll *Ji:-can Earnle Rlce at C'114l
112,000.A.Mh Ckaile &O 1~. l•J<'riU~ hr.
tntlc111c ~: l•t1 rri111,•11n
11t1TOt .. 1 f'I •' ~ 1 1lruom
cond" wit h •1•n\na.
vrtvat• 1)1\111, \11\\ Off
lush lrt .. h\\ ••1 \o'ul1
'"Mt'ul1l)'. ~,.: & apa. BKll. ean MU mo
&oday I« a confidential~. ,_t.
)l)lll& HO.II D
Bthlif\ll dbl .. lrlple Wlla '8 l'J Toro area. , ...... ...........
972-8421
PA•••OOI
Oii )wt own .P"' • bole
t'CU"M wtm .. Ylew ol
mouataloa fro01 thla
24 .. 0' 2 Br. 2 ba ,
~home Jac..ut
.,._ laJO od laaal. 2
stora&• 1pacea. easy
ure l~•P'Jll. Ste~ away from clubbouae.
pool. lem\ll uu " ls\ tee S64,500 terms . <714)
'13Ml5t0
UDO AREA for S331 per mo. Live b~ water. Immaculate 2 BH
2 Ba. mob lie home
967~. Aat. 646-~
~ fOf' Sale '200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• MT.~ASISKIYOU
area. your own •·North
40". Mini-ranch h as
s pectaculer views &
sec:h&ak>n on which to
raiae food, horses, cows. sheep. klda or grand
kids. Be self auf!iclenl!
call Pat Murdoch, C/O
Vistas Unllmtted Rily
114-780-9359
6 DB.UXE Ut41TS
PRIME EASTSIDE, CM
2 Bdrms each.
ntESTARNESCO.
673-7761
LOW OM-LOW INT.
Comer lol duplex. Very
lb'# down will allow )'OU
toauu.me 9"4% loan and
seller finance balance.
Great l"ftllal area. Only
993.500. Call Now 919-5370
A 'iLSTATE.
REALTORS
KIOSJN"otl EuWde · $54.5, gar. &
pat io. Fenced yd .
6'2·2510or~.
Turtlerodt Brdmr. 4
bdrm. 2 ba. Luae or
IHH op\lon. 11'15/mo.
Aaent !141~.
___ ....._.;_,,---1 DELUXE l>UPLEX·
J744 .......................
f)aJ1y rum 1 BR. om
car 2nd Bdrm I I Ba. adlt
condo Sunny deck o
stttam. Carport. teM1s.
pool. AC. SS.SO mo. yr!)
lie. 552.3440
blktooo. aar. 2Ba.1ar ---.------.., at1all now. Summer rtn
tal wkly. Alao aval
(213
Beyf root UUle Isl Boa slip. 2 bdrm. 3 story 2 bdrm. Avail. 7·5 . ~· S22JOO/mo. Yrh per mo. lnclda water. l
car garage. 229 Cost
Meu SL 116l-0701
Verullln Pent-.Oue.
ocean ~. 2 bdml. :2
ba .. flr'eplaee , i'\ilJ
secunty " ame•ities.
S800 per mo. Wkdys
S44-0814, Wtnds • b es
!IM-1120
•••-•••••••••••••••••• Duplex new l bdrm. 48r,2Ba.very lg.aJlonl w/f1replaee: Als o Executive Bach . Pad 2
floor. t>eauuful new di• bdrm. both have gar. bdrm. 2 ba. Hlgbris~.
decor. frplc. pvt. or fenced ytd. 1345 each Waterfront. Newly d•·
beach &i bay. Avail now. m-&136.642·9'66. corated. Sublerranean
Otlldren OK. 925 mo ---------1 parking, pool. all l~
U>l2 West Balboa. Jeff 3 bdnn. 2 ba. Upper. 4· amenities. 64S-0701. ·
'7»3771. P\ex. Near O.C c. enc ---------
2Br.2ba
R W. Wilson Stf'fft
631·~
garage. No pets. $480. • •• •Nr Hoag. 2 BR 2 ~.
1040 C . Valenc ia adlls, no pets. $430
631·3888:~
Room with Kitchen pliv.
Adults on!}-. Near Sbop-
peng Center . Aft ftpm
wlr.d)s. 96 2-7520 or
wtmds.
Rm in 2bd apt, n7S
Old Town ff 8
SJ6. 73.SO .. MADB-S WALK ---------
14 2 Ir 3 br apts from Sw:a;cr R..tda 4200
....,Cl\ ""-I I d ••••••••••••••••••••••• _._. r~p c , ar"e y . , b h L 7 palJO, gar, nr ffunlulgton 60 to c g rm s.125. 2 br. 1 ba apt, lndr) Harbour children OK. ~+)ard. Sl~ps 6+,
rm. pool, bum clngs. 161562 Jib Circle. apt I. ram1hes only. Weekly: adults.nopets. ~6fl07 J une $490, J uly SS40.
TSLM(lml 642·1 ----------Augu s t $575. 7101
--------4 Ofhae poolstde •lr• IRe Sea:.hore. NB 645-8410
&fro L9'QI Roca.I 2bf', 2ba. Bit.as, dshwhr. N.__. • blk t bu h Clean. q!Ae{ 2 bet 1 ba l', miles beach Adlts. "'-....... :· 'l 0 c ·
No tJdaf9ets. S350tmo no pets. 539 5 m o . lovely2 BR S37Stweek.
CalJJeff631·1266 53M:m. JI.Ille. $250/wk. ~
•t
Ro.a' to ahr. lrg hn
haiiit7lrpk. micro. nice.
ty tuna. H.B. Rita -......
YNQ.> Pnf. ·female. ndl
f.-le to ahr Back Ba>
COl9. USO. Avl. 7·1
~
......................
Profeaaloaal Window clnnln• by Joe Daniela.
71~
WAU.WASIDNG
wmdow cleulng·screeas
Ken . \114) --~
Prof window & house
claninl 31 hr aerv1ce. U
YT' exp. 548-1M9
Get GREEN cull
for WHITE depba.nts
with. C1as&if'"Nd ~d
Cal I 64:·$678
SSH
rouND: SUJ'fboard PrQf .. ....S Tberapeutk
Call a~r 89m. coiron., m.auae. U.c'd. NB.
def Mar Mt.egg. A4Jll( onh-. St"w . $41--3111
Found rtMM'IDOUS black
Shep/Lab mix. Male
Cblt ch•ln with d1ac
phone . Vlclnit)'
Rou•aewel Terrace
~Bch.
d7·Z139
5350 .......................
DeJaV11
Pfo(easloaal Escorts
wnh a femtniM touch
642-1572
1
ACCOUNTS
1£CEIVA91.E
PollUoo t~lli~I big
school df ploina and some
experience In a ma our ac-
turtn1 accounting en vironment. Type 45.
wpm and O\)erate an ad
der/calculator by touch.
ACCOUNTING
CLERK
An entry level ·posttlon
eldst.s for an individual perfann clerical duties
and cost accounting. R
quires high schoo
dipk>ma. Some colleg
accounllog deslrabJe
Must be able to operat
an adder /calculator.
We offer competlliv salaries and an uceUen
benefits package. Fo
rmre information pie
roolact: PERSONNEL
·1• . --c-.3180 lledhll1 Avenue OJfC..a ...... C,\ 908216 Equa.l~M/F
zmNo. ~way •
'200. Cdkfwell Ball)-er ·--F "'-Bldt-. Sant.a Ana .,_..,,.._.-._ 1·~ .1'4, .Jllr. _.. o~ for bllsy medical offtce.
_.., #JI Pref expr with in· ~~FR~E~E~P~A~RKl~-~N~G~~ surance and medicaJ :; forms. 4~1380
.l
Advertiain1·Eam up to:
~.19 Hour · !bat yard worller." rn. Lln-m 20th· St, Npt Bcb. u ,. -
Pacific Tides Manne. n~ '81SOHHft ~ Need full " p /ti~ peo-ple to assist me in my business. No expet. nec.ess.
rat 979-1179
** RLECLERKS
Excellent tralalag op-portuo1ty for career
minded Uxllviduals • ex-
perience in dealing wilh
the public a plm.
We olrer a cood •tarti41 WU')'. e,cellent com-
119ny paid beoeClts In·
eluding attra~lve work
apperel. Apply ln penoo
bdweep iAM and 4PM
0
CITIZENS BANK
Of COSTA MfSA
21TO-Haft« Blvd.
CREW Members" c""
Mana1er needed
Matwe women or men
Xlnt P•1 + beneflts
!MS-8444
Insurance Secretary. penonal tines. some U · MAJDS Wanted. 1661 s
• ' ' ' I
l' 1l
ijj
' j
I i I I ,
I I
I
perd51red. Sata_ry Ol>ftl.. C.oast Hwy. Laguna B<:h. OBI.~ c.&11494 4892 --------
INSURANCE ·office de· ma girl ror 1eaeral o1 ·
flee work Including
bceuial pbooes, ma.
tk. T)1IUlg 6 2 yurs ol ·
ficea:perience reqaared.
C.all SJS..1511 bmm I •
4:.30. ~ ......
P/Ume. Bask toowk!idge ot elec. 6 plumbing.
Newport 8ch. QJ.a555
ICUICCURN
12.tw'shift
House Supervt.sor
3-Upm shift.
IMJl.VN
•tj•· . ,.,.
!11.:•
"'~ \ t>-1
,-..
Qitical Care Exp. ~ ~
ferred. WW lrai.D for~ Soecialty. Full Ume. -JA.,.. ;1 Misaioa Viejo. "-><
•
'
P•ck•I•"'• fem•l e . J.SJhi to at.art. Merit raiMI. 1m Mlal'Ovla,
NB.
r-Pecsonnel
PERSONNEL
SECRETARY
Major res'4kntlal home
Wider located ln Irvine,
\a seeking experienced
Penonnel Sectttar'Y to
assist with varied dut&e. in our busy corporate
personnel department.
The Ideal cmdfd•te must ~ a minimum ot 1
y eer peraonn•I secretarial experience,
a nd food working
knowledge of a com· 'PUleriied personnel re·
cord keeplna 1ptem.
9ualilled lndhldual
must have exceu.t tyJ>-
ln& skills, be highly or·
gamzed and have the
ability to cocnmumcate
errec\lvely with all
levela. Tbb la ao ex·
celleat crowth opportuai·
lY ollerillf u out.stand· ' in& compena•tlon/· beoellts packqe. If you
meet stated require·
me.Dtl please M!ld your ~ li>cludlng HS.I')'
:1l1at«Y to: Cena Me:r.o or
-apPly ln pen.on at:
~•os•
HOMIS Sult•Z5'7
• -Bullnets Center°" trvtoe. CA mu
A1finnaUve Actlon EmploJet
PJ.ASTICS. vacuum (oniUI. uper Pftf'd, ....... '42-4800
~\alht:r 1; l 1:1:
ReaJ Ettate
~MANAGER. Sales
• reop for Apple Computers
ol So. Cal For lnttt"iew
caU Cecilla •t 173-a.3
~·-• '" 11•t=tw11111• 71M """ii&Miif ":"""' .. ..-.
PEOPLE
llE
-CUSl•YPUT .............
CAt•A PelO"'
fOll uneo .. Mn •rr
At least 2 yean experience preferred.
E.xNllmt compuy beDeflta. Salary
commensurate with experience. ~Of~ penoo to Paul Ward or Seth
cus.-.-~ ,. ..•
The Clas1Uled Advertiliog
Department of the DallY Pilot has an
immediate OPeftlng on a telephone
1alea desk. Mut be able to type
approx. 45 wpm, good phone voice.
Salary plus comml11lon. Sales
bacQround very beneficial. Excellent
company benerita include medical,
dental, credit union. etc. For
lntervtew, please call: ~. ext.
277
PAIT nME EVINIMGS
Become a trained sales counselor
<over 21) with the Jim Long & Associa~ Agency to supenri.ae and
chaperone DAILY PILOT carrier
boys and girls on a OD4HJO.<Jl'le basis.
evenings 6 to 9PM. We need
concerned, innovative persons who
are lookjpg for a lucrative part-time
position. $t hour to start: $100. week
potential. Call 642·4321, ext. 250
between 2 and 6PM. Ask for Lori.
MOTOI ROVTE Immediate opportunity for part-time
earnings. Motor route available in the
Laguna area. Delivery afternoons
Monday through Friday. Mornings
Saturday and Sunday. No monthly
door collections. Earnings about S450
per month gross. Reliable
transportation required. Call 642-4321.
Foster Ouellet ror details.
DRIVEltS
SATURDAY Ir SUMDAY
M~MIMGS
OeJiver Daily Pilot bundles to car·
riers. Requires van or large wagon
and a good driving record. Phone
642-4321 Ext. 211, ask for Harry
Seeley, Equal Opportunity Employer.
IMMEDIATE OPENING
MOTOR ROUTI
The Daily Pilot needs a dependable
Adult Delivery Person for the Park
Newport Area. Must have dependable
motor transportation and be available
afternoons M·F : Mornings Sat & Sun.
Approx. $250.00 gross per mo. for just
a little over an hour of your day. For
details call Mike or Foster at 642-4321.
TRAVB.AGENT Mlnimwn 2 yn •cmcy expr. Call Millie. S'TS.1311
SCIAMillS
ANSWERS Bureau -Eject -
Brood -· Featal -TROUBLE
Temper 1$ what gets
moat of us into
TROUBLE. Pride IS wnat keepa \IS there.
SURFBOARD FOR SALE W\ncla1I 10· S30 or best
dr.H8U930
. . . • . :-• • . . : .
• t • • • • • • ; . . . • ; .. .
7
• I
16' Pru>dle Cat. yellow. ---------1 cat box & trlr. gd cond. 6»8~. 963-1421. S1750.
492-6172
16' llOBIE & trlr. hke l gottaseUmy 17 'traller
GENOA 6"2 oz. Luf llgt
<Mft. Foot Lgth 22ft. Xlnt
new. T. Sunrise. S2000 MOVING!
Eves968-7421 547·3182
oond. $300. 67l ·S340 14' Sall boat/flsh1Dg boal. 17' Camp!ngTraUer.
lltah.Poww 9040 fun for the s ummer. BESTOFFER
....... •••••••••••••••• must sell. make offer. Ccuch, dinette. kttcheo.
1971 SCARAa 64:i·5'01 eves. 979· closets & cupboards
Twin 30's, 130 hours. da}'I clean & <'Omfortable.
loaded. Pri. ply. Best Of. 11' Custom Clber&lass S47·3l82 fer! Call 546-1200 (Mon -llbo LASER .... ...._.___. __ p~ f'ri. d ays); 731·8218 sa at, type _ __...._..., ~
cevenings & weekends). ~deslpMZS.~ &Acauorin 9400 A~l.I J -·················· ..,:::" 1or erry. 14' HOBIE CAT. Includes
43• Gran Mariner fully tn.ller. Sl.500. Fine CODd. SBYICE DEPT.
COHHELL
C HEVROLET
'~'>' 1111 '•" I' . ·
' • ~I \ \I~' \
S46-l 200
WANTED!
Late model To)'otas aod
Volvo s. C all us
TODAY!!!
,, ........ .... c.... .... ..
"-646-fJOl w 140.tO 7
eqwpped. beautifully "'4m ()peel Days A Week
Mon.·Fri. 1:3().S:JO PORSCHES maintained. ready t u· Olympic Finn US680 Salw'days 8:00-5:00 ~~se or ~ve ~~~· race ructy, tnr: cover: ..... ~.
P may .,. avlLYllU... 8l0. 548-7992, 537-8200. 2929 HarbOr e1va.
1
WANTED ui,c,% Fiaucinl PGlll· · 'Colt.a Mesa
b4e. -.oeo. Jack cwtey SABOi' 5,."--ttl• 534·1605 evensn1• • Eqlllpped,125 ._. I Allow us lh• opportunity
wHllt•d•. 142· U21 f7'5.0IS5I S SAVI SAVI S ~ ~~ _!.hey~c~ \Ue'ttava, -..11111t-··-s ... U-IDUI ..... ..,_, -==~~-----IOolwnbla 32' S.5 meter '"''"•--· .,...., Check with Us
19' o.lfteld Electric Ba)' •loop w/trlr . SllSOO. lm~.JJO::farta Toda,y!
Boat. Top. urtalnt, s.G-S684 wkdys, Rosalind AUTOSUPPLV ,1.111 ..... ~-~-,c1Q·~
mus.le. Mr· Ll.ke new. CraWford. 101 N. Manchester:_...
11bbe¥fer. OalJtft..Ol06 16' Hobie Cal-1974. ad Anaheim 17&-nwi
17 FT. GLASTltOM rond Blue sails & trlr.
Has 8S horsepower ~_!7-~~.675·4016 ..._fws.le
Ev1nrude engine with
)es.s than so hours. full loclh. su,.1
canvas. heavy dut) Docks 9070
trailer with hitch & •••••••••••••••••••••••
rigaed for fishing or ski SUPS AVAILABLE
Ing <Includes a set of Sailboauonly. Oelaoey'1
walenltlsl. Has 1980 RsUuranl area. up
license & is "spotless!" rt'. Restroom. shower. &
Calllordetails. 1 c e ma c h 1 n e 1 n cl .
991·7572 77 .. 1076 673-lfKX>. ask for Dave
19511 Chris, 21 '. Xlnt for Slip available for 40' lo 60'
bay cruu;lng. VerY good Yacht, S9.50 per U..
cond. Bes l offer. Wiil Ardell Marina. 642·5~
~ for power raft or 48' slip avail. In llunt·
· · · · 84&7414. ington Har bour Cal/
Debbie 213/592·5645
•••••••••••••••••••••••
IMPORTANT
NC1I'JCETO
READERS AND
ADVERTISERS
The price of lt•ms advertised by vehlcl
dealers in the vehicle
dauWed advertUln
CDIWDDI does not inelude
any applicable taxes.
Ucense, transfer fees
finance Cbal'I"· feee I air pollution control de
vice certmcallons or de·
aler documentary pre·
paration charaes unle11s
otherwt1e specified b 'SO skiing, fishing boat. 16'
70 HP 0 /8, bst offer.
213-435-1121 Ext 37S. dy!.,
714-G-3499 eves.
FOR SALE 40· moonng theadvertiser
Newport Beach with 20· -
power boat UH Manne •.wt•c"=' .. _ .. •1 /
18' DUF'FI ELD ELEC-Ave. westi.1de of Balboa •Cl TRJC BAY BOAT. XLNT Island. ~48 ~;;;;;.·:;~c;l:~;;;.•o:s
_<X>ND ___ . 673-__ 2253 _____ 1 30' SLIP, on canal in cond. $1900.
19' lllllar
Pail
Fcf'YOW'Car!
JOHMSOM a SOM
U.Collt Mercwy
2128Hu:bor Blvd. o.t.a Me.a &4().5630
w •• .,
om ........ For V our O<JOd
VW. Poncheor Audi c .. acevasOH
VW·PORSCHE·AUDI 44.5 E. Coast Hiway
at Bayalde Drive
Newport Beach 673-0900
2'' Lyman200HP1/B Newport.. $175 mo. Power 661.-0 Good cond.. Sl6,000 bo at re commended. :-.6S-:-:Cl:-u-11-ic:-::M-:-u-s-t--:Con::--v-ert-.~ .. _'111111
Ba~tde Marine Sales 559-7499 Yellow w /Whi\e lop. bl.It
9701
673-9S7_o ___ WANTED: Shp. Newport Ullt, M~ Urea. 12.000
18' Cahfornian. loaded Beach for TT' Sloop. Will mile DeW ena.. $10.
$5900 COD.Sider use of boat firm.Phl·acsMdysor ---------
961H213 851-9066Eves: 7S9·1282 1·34>1331eves. t705
lJ'TRHfULL w /~llP Te• 11 ut .. ioft
n»t«. console& trailer. ••-•••••••••••••••••••
___ 63_1._169_3 ___ c ... ., .. Sdlt/ ..... 9120 Is Your Profession
HOME REPAIRS? .......................
Camper shell for Chev~
shorlbed. de.luxe model.
near new. S350. 979-0368
Did you know you can
pl.ae .. classif'ted ad ln
the Daily Plklt Service
J)lrect.or)' for a whole tW•lmcllikff 9'40
1951 Riley. •Int cond RNA&.
Mtt 6 PM, pleue call CLURAMCIJll
___ 7_14-_;;.,~;.......206:__;.,.5__ _ All · 79 A If a Romeos
MlJSfGO NOW' '5lllGTD .
BeautlfuUy restored
Pvt. party: '9?·8897
'Sl Bentley MKlV.
ll&.000
Call 494·2168. 644-9990
BEACH IMroRTS
K4ll Dove Street
NEWPORT liEACH
752-0900
moath for as lltUe as ••--•••••••••••••••• S:U7 per day? For more "19 Pucb Mo-Ped. As Is! '46 Ford Woodie. restored. ~.call 122$. S13.000.
19'73SPVOER
lMMAC. $4200 FIRM.
83'J.59'1S EVENINGS
60-5178 Call548-181.S '21Mode1 Atowruedan.4 AUa Romeo, '74 GTV
Qa-ff'ed Ads .,.,,.,. one-dr, re1t.ol'ed: Sl0.000 Great conct. 88M . U900
SD.L klle lUltDI wtt.b a ........ ·~. m-6Ull flrm.MS-9517 .
DlllJ PUatct ... mec1 Ad. 4 WllMI Drtws 9550 icCONVERTlBLE ....................... ..~
"19 Ford Brooco Ran1•r. J.~eves XJnL CDDd. •.ooo. eau ----~,,;;__9712 Jf:l'J, t :»Spm. M0-91JT2.
na. 9160 .......................
10 To)«&. lonl bed SB.5
Pickup, sesoo. MS-5632
afl2PM
'71 Cbe'v)' ~4.oft. Many mna. 11"-lt 1acJ1.flce. aeoonrm.Ma.a
IUYOR
LEASE MOW!
FOllTHlllST dlALIM e1u•1co.-c0t•1M.-
•USTODAYI No ........ ,._ •• ca
YliAUY .. O.TS --~~Pkwy.
...... 4'Mt4t
ToPlecerour .. ,...Result"
... •let DlNctor1
Id .••• call Now
MJ.1671
MW
BOON. Beach Blvd.
LA HABRA
'7S Cvcc. auto. air. xtras. •~ 9757 39K m1 , $.279S /oCfer . _.......,. 493-<841 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'70 Rover. 3SOOS. Red
9730 wlblk. hhr. ant.er. Runs
••••••••••••••• •••••••• xlnt.. Sl.500. 494·9876.
1974 Jaguar XJ6L Xlnt S.. 9760 cond. New trans. air.
"Tl Dodge Dart/Swtncer
--a~ PS. slant 6 eng, new _, radials, AM IFM. air. new battery. runs great
a...~cuz~·--S82S/besl ofr. 642-'300. 130 . 19th .• e c. a«hitter ~3. 24 hrs.
Qisla Mesa. Ca. 92621 Mlrcsy 9950
(714)642-1944 •••••••••••••••••••••••
(S 11.1. No. of SA Fwy )
l714)5JZ-5l3l
Su.olUy by Appt.
am·fm. cass stereo. S8900 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Hm 673 ·66110. Wk . 1980 Sill ,.c ... -111; ~ TURIOs •••••••••••••••••••••••
9915
ORANGE COUNTY'S
NEWEST
LINCOLN·M ERCURY
DEALERSHJP ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•l '72 Coupe OeVille. ~ood 9718 RE.ADYFOR c ond Run s ~ood. RAYFUDEIOE
UNCOLN·M ER CU RY
16-IB Auto Center Dr. DI SU. m rf. caas. auto .••••••••••••••••••••••• DBJVERY MOW~ Sll001bestofr~2:848 like new. One owner &IOO&'Sl·9025 & 838·i631 •WE'llE DliLIMG•
BEACH IMPORTS '78 BMW 2002. air, stel"e(>,
40K mi. solid. $6300.
Phone 646-7634.
miracle
mazda
848 Dove Strttt
.-..Jo::WPORT BEACH
752-0900
llm 5301 4 apd. SUnrooi.
air. cus tape. $8900 ..... 2150 ...,._. .. cl Triwllph 97 6 7
c..e. ...... 645-5700 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'79 BMW 32'0t. auto. xtnt l1J73 RX2. oew t't>g, clutch.
cood. k>aded MO-IJS97 ball. w1r1ng . m or' m-1960.~6 PM • 1800/besloffer 494 5788
·n Tnumph Sp1lf1re
CU5toCn patnt. new ures
hrdtp $4500. 673 ~ l ----
73 TRti. dnt rood. ) .-llo~
BMW 3 OSI 19 7 htn 9740 \tnt'O. H track. oH·r
• • $ · ••••••••••••••••••••••• dn\l'. man~ xtra'> \lu:.t
11 Sdn de Vile. air. tape
declc . llhr uphol. $2000.
Call :;48.2551. 63 l ·3465
1978 fleet wood Brough am
D'Eleiance Hard lo
ftnd. outstanding i.hape
Only JLOOO m1 All op
uom. Rl.1SO 644· 7230 aft
5PM
ifi Cad Eldorado. ong
oWrier. lt"thr. fuc-1 mJ.
Aram1d t1r£''>. loaded
S3SOO 496 5087
SDl''wy.Lake Foresl exit
lRVINE
830-7000
'76 Comet. 4dr. ticyl.
clt'an. low m1leagt:.
S2.295 ~929.
43,000mi. Xlnt . cond. '72DIES£L VAN :.t.>ll SJi50 Bt>fore S Many extras. Orig. Loaded. Sll 500 '68 Sedan Deville Gold owuer. $8,000/080. Call Lo/nu. m-0252 i97~34 ~102. after 5. S4S-7474 Cad. new urcs. & pa ml.
~ Mert'ury Zephyr Z· 7
wtth VII. a uto. trani. .•
pv.T. steenng & brake.,.
air rood.. AM IF'M stereo
ca~te. wire wheel rov·
l'f'S. new tlres & super
dean! Pn. pty. $3995.
Can take over lease. Call
95l 60711 <evening~ &
... -eekends1 Ad Sitler •89. at 642·4300 -----VollswacJeft 9770 runs hk' new Make of.
24brw. '80 Mef'Ce<le-. ~LC. dk ••••••••••••••••••••••• fer ~·2280
iuay. pa)om100 mt. 2300 --------------'76 Marquis. Xlnt cond. 79 IMW 6llCSI nu. M0.000 l'P 833 206t1 Ha\'ln~ trouble wlhnR CGl'IDr'O 9917 Sl.liOO 833-8830. ext. 694.
Silverwtth black leather. or~l·t1218 )'OW' car~ Tn le>. Paid ••••••••••••••••••••••• or64.'>-5i95 eve1>
Eucv\.lve Car. for or not! .Mk for Frank '70 Ca ma ro, Z28. 10000 ~-----.. -9-5_2_
IOI Md.ARBUK. '98 200. 4 dr. dnt on it u---~ T A.. °""'· show car 631·22$4 . .._..-"JI -Y 850N.BeacbBlvd. cond.Q995.PP ,....,u,.,or om i-.in. 956-2991. •••••••••••••••••••••••
15111. No. of SA Fwy. I 642 245.5 JIM MARI MO 1.974 MuslanK n. PS. PB. LaKabra m ,5333 '70 ...:.,,-wht .... , ..
1111
. OU(S '67 Cama ro. CL EAN! AC. auto trans. almost _....... .,... V W AGEM smooth auto 327. reblt new bres. vm top. rally
'TS Bavaria, n1palnt alr. S16.000. Lie. 16111XT 11711 IEACH ll. VD. last >T Musi seU ! SUOO. wheels. 71.000 mi. S2300 ed CODd. 13.950. 7:12-'llOS ttwtW• l.och 497 ·SB. or best o rr e r . XI n t
9153-7* ~4~ mectwucal cond. Needs · "7UllOSLC.sUver. blk tnt . 14 ZOOO '79 Camaro. 6<'yl. mint. minor body work. CaU
7JIMW Sl8.00lk>Cfer.T52·1'G AMtFM stereo. air. 642·91..36
10 CS CC>UPI 11 Merttdes. """",.... 3 ... 7 I VW IUS aimg finlMI • rust proof -------Aut.o lect W1l'OOf _....,.~ ~ Lo mi. p p 968.4820 Clt>an Classic Car. '65
load.ed ! ··s'o.ooo. !1~. ~~t C'Ond. nu pauit. TJ:<"Ond first::OO..of.B _9fi3..Ql63________ Mu :.1an1<: Convertible, -
"ftawlesa .. C004MPE>. -x.lnt cond. 433-4054 dys TWo otbera lO cl>ooae "71~21DC£. 11\n "15 VW Can~ M.Ult 7»: IJK males. Must see -.68-:"l-tus-t~-g-fastb;;-;;:·
fromt .. cM.n. sruf. &o ml.111.500 caad. I0..000 as.l Pvt. pty. 929. _._ or &UlllDIB + SUOO. D.D. 7 1 4 I I 4 f . 3 % 7 I o r call tQ-8470 auto. p tS. runs & 1..,.,..s
CREVIER rw ....... .... ..... Ari• ICQOd. Sl.950. 897-4012 _,...,,_ __, ________ ....J "71 C.maro. T -top. i.h r -----
'13Convtttible. bl&&. doth a.eats. nu lire-.. '1>5 Mustang Coo v .
G I Sf 6 llOMIWl'Y
SANTA AMA
Ut18 :BICE. every option 10 ad e d . 1 6 K m 1 • \mrnca s f4vorite fam,.
S115.900 or trade tor c.u:~ HOOO /OBO . Li sa h fun car. Restored.
eeonomy car ~118'1 or ----------1 IM6-20&0.146-l34l SSJW Call Now! Mu!lt
_7»_lll508 __ . ____ . __ TRAD£ •I l V W ---------~1111 today. 675·2417 or ~plus cul\ forlCll""'lllt tt20 891~ 11Dallp6dtup. • ..................... .
835-3171
TIC UUWAft DIWINO lllACl9C WANTED : 'B· '77
S& Us FIRST 6 6 :"It u s t a n g V 8 •
Gl-4893 l a.utcmal.le. dean. Sl495.
We have a &ood aelect Ion 673-0473
~ 9115 Mercedel*D.pvtpty. ....................... ·~
"79, 9 mo nu, loaded I Gbla pkg + AMIFM '87~SE:
cass with 4 spkrs. ll s.&900.
steering, wire whls Ca11494·2966,6«·9990
center consle. 5.0 lite
eng, grt ml, hurry mus
sell. AFAP. dys :973-1
280 C. 1974 . auto. AC.
AM /FM. new tires.
Min g. S7 .000 080. eva:131·Zl.88. _________ , 644.(1158
"12 Capri. Xlnl trans Porta -----
doll car. 11000/best orr MG •74J 8e-3lll87 or 1191-4122 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Gf:T Rt:AOY
'73 Capri. auto, 4 ol FOR SU M~H.H
68.000 mi, onR ownr, xlnt 'i6 ~tG M 1dl{l'l. runs
'"10 VW Squ.a.~back. Auto
rebuilt en11ne New
brakes. startf'r a.nd tn·
jed«s. AM/P.M stc"'°
caaette. Clean In aod
out. 11995 FIRM. CAii
979-1686 art 4_J()pm or
Ad Saller • 110 6'2·4300
a.h.rs
I IUY NOILIMS
Sldlordtec1Fo.11r cans wanted. f'ree t.o
631·8'1 CASH 673-3465 cood. $2200 ~94J7 well.~ iS9 0060 'V"5
Dal.-'720 ap.t -,,46 "12 VW ,Ca.hf ~u.g. Eng
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• xlnt. New patnl. &nlr.
'TT 2llOZ 2+2. 4·spd. elc-•
smf. AMtf'M C&.a..'1 .• A 1C.
53Kmi. $8500. 661·7074
·n uoz. suck. air,
All/nl. ..., ur.. XJllt
coed. .... PllMO llH
Jt71 Dllll9 u.ck ......
mot.ar ........... .
Call Oii.ad eft 1--7.
l.17111rDAY
1970 Opt-I GT
Extra clean v.h1tt' pacnt
~ pan c;tr1p 1n~ Nt'.,.
t1rc·'· ma11s Cassette
de<'k ~ i\)1 F" Taking
bt-.t offt>r Sll 5!~53
I '80 PEUGEOT
SOS DIESELS
HERE NOW!!!
'11 l!Dtwcbe tl4·1 liter.
..-ma.M.UllM.Od ... ,,.,fllr, -.owe
'TT~ ..... ..,. -mt. alr. art, All/I'll ......... -~
Xlnl s tereo. S29001bst ''r 836-3670. S56·°"30
'69 Bug. nu paint &
brakes. good m'ch
tond f'~t cass . mui.l
:.o>ll' Sl:n5 080 496-9538
'Tl Portd•• Carrer~ '10 Volvo HSS. Tf,000
of NEW & USE D
UlevroJets I
COMHEll
CHf'IROLH
• '11.irl•1r 111 "°"'' \ \H_.., \
546-1200
"71 2 dr Cheveltc. lK.1100
ml. ldt\Or\ \l', \f,
Si'.lr75 661 JRZ,I
'73 No\ J nt'~ tr Jn".
am1fm1cac; Xlnt l '1111d
l1m. 080 Srot I bl!°> 1\156
9955 .......................
'79 Olds Toronado Osl,
13K ml SI0.000. Lie 983XHT. 752 7903
'660lda Cull ass.
All ona.· Make offer
541-48l3 -------Take over payment.& only
~• at Sl17 Beauurul ·n
l>lds Cutlaaa Supreme
Hrou1<:h am . 19 MPG .
1!12 ll021
Musl Sell 1989 El l' amino Piftto 9957
3 27 au\ 0. bu(' k l' t ~ ....................... .
chromies. Id MP(; S1700 '12 Pinto Wag. Air. 4 spd.
"' bsl air Call n0l'r 12 .:ood cond. Sl200/besL
noon 1 .i 11 &i2 833.\
&42·9331 ------71 !>into. 2 ht er eng .. good
<"Ml<l. 29mp~. $1000 Eves
1:11 6219
-----
--------
CM,.... HJJ '1S O ht• w. LoatJa, ....................... ,...,..,,,.....,,del&. . t
tllOO"-' -.a
T111At blk/blk, s ... SllOO/belt~
..... -......... ___ .;;;...;...;..;._.:,_._1
DO ft' NOWI
'4Z.M11
........ -I "M VOLVO. Alt. &UllrQOI, ........ --
' ~.
I
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
.,._..,.&.\U&• ................
'l'IM Holttl•l\Oll Beach City C•JADCU tlat Hl•M feH for
beecll ...,.tdq, 8du.lt recreaUon V.rta. 1b4<dlq perllllt• and ""''e. aacl urtaJn Ubrary ~ to mue ends meet on
·~ •• oillllon budaet. • • e-eraJ fund portion "' ~ bud&et, wblch deals with ...
day-to.day operatln1 co.ta, l1
llatH al 1U1bU~ more tban • mUUon, up about 10 penent
from lNt year.
User feet approved Tuelday
n11ht are •lped to reduce def· lclta.
In one ol the most dl.lcuued
measures, the officials ra!Jed
the feet fOI' day parkina at the
city beach from $Z to $2.50.
C~r~es Police Violations
The lntreaM wu criUcl&ed by
former ~commialionef' Staaley ~ said city res-
idents abouldn't be cbaretd for
partm..
Ceclf Wheat, operator of a
be~cb coocesaloa, also attacked
the increase. He said the biper
fees would send people to
cheaper partdn& available at the
sWTOUDdin& atate beaches and
\
·Sex Abuse Suspect
•
~1Files Huge Claim.
Leotis Lee Heat~ who will
stand trial July 14 for allegedly
imprisoning and sexually abus·
i))g an 18-year-old male
btlchbiller, has filed a S25
tl).illion claim against the City or
Fountain Valley. asserting that
his civil rights have been
violated.
The claim was routinely de·
nied by Fountain Valley City
Council Tuesday night, permit·
Si•ilar Weapon
' ..
Ballistics Testing
May l..ink Murders
Police investigators ha ve
scheduled ballistics tests to de· term~ If there is any possible
connfftloa. In tb11 murder or
U>ree penona in Westminster
mid the slaying or a Garden
Grove police officer.
AU roar penons were killed by
a aimllar weapon, according to pc>lice. ...
~Venting
Starts Soon
., HARRJSBURG. Pa. CAP>
Radioactive krypton gas from
the crippled Three Mile lsland
nuclear plant will be· released in· to. :the atmosphere starting this
month, a plant officlal says.
• Bbb Arnold, vice president at
¥etropolitan Edison Co., the
P,lant operator, made the an-
nouncement Tuesday after the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission
indl~aled It would approve a
controversial venting plan on
Thursday.
The NRC staff had urged ap·
proval of the venting plan and
said It would pose no health
threat. The staff said radioac·
t.lvity in the air could be kept
down by releuing the gas slowly
during favorable weather coodl·
tiona.
Loophole Clo8ed
LOS ANGELES CAP>
i..ndlordl can no longer restrict
Oftupancy to two persons to
e~b bedroom in Los Anaeles
r"tal units after a unanimous
~e by the City Council .
The suspect in the slaying of
Garden Grove Police Officer
Don.aid Reed ~t Saµuday ii U ·
soclated witb a motorcycle club
as an two Westminster murder
victims, offlcer.l 51.id.
The weapon found near the
scene of tbe Garden Grove
abooting waa reported to be a
. 22-caliber pistol. Westminster
police say a similar weapon was
used to kill the three persona
who were discovered in a res-
idence at 6152 Navajo Road
Sunday night.
The two male victims were
identified as Richard Rizzooe.
36. and Thom as Bernard
Monahan. 28. A woman who also
was round murdered remains
uhidentified.
A possible connection between
the two incidents has nelllM!r
been proved nor disproved, ac-
cording to Westminster Police
Sgt. Dick Grodt.
Police say they have
established no motives in the
Westminster slaying in which
the two male victims were found
lying race down.
Autopsies showed the three
died from gunshot wounds in the
head and body.
Meanwhile, Gordon Lee Mink
was scheduled to face arraign-
ment today in West Orange
County Municipal Court on
charges connected with the
Garden Grove slaying.
Garden Grove polioe say the
district attorney has issued a
complaint of murder and a
number of other felony counts
aga!Mt the 32-year-0ld auapect.
Four other persons were
wounded in the shooting.
ling a formal lawsuit to be filed
in the matter within six mooths.
In a letter to the city. Healer's
attorney. John N. Flood. said his
client is seeking dam ages
because of the "illegal and uo·
reasonable and prejudicial coo-
duct ol Fountain Valley police
officers ... "
The attorney accused the
police department of "giving
false and extremely prejudicial
information" to the press and to
neighbors. He said the police
falsely ~lated or Inferred that
Heater was the "freeway killer"
and was extremely dangerous.
The c laim alleges that
Heater's basic Constitutional
rights have been violated.
Heat.er. 48. was aaested May
8 al his Fountain Valley home.
a fter a hltchhl.ker from Covina
told poUce that Heat.er picked
him Up at a freeway ramp, im·
prlaooed him in the Fountain
Valley home and subjected him
to various sexually abuses.
Aft« his arrest, Heater's 1976
coavietioo on similar charges
WU P\,lbllcJad, aJoog with bis
len•thy record of arresta on
other aa char1ea.
Heat.er bas been placed in
Orange County Jail in lieu of
$2SO,OOO ball aod bas been or·
dered to stand trial July 14
before Orange County Superior
Court Judge James Turner.
0
Rabies Clinic
Saturday in HB
A rabies clinic will be held
Saturday from 2 to 4 p.m. at
Edison Community Center, 21377
Magnolia Ave .. Huntington
Beach.
Rabies s hots and distemper
vaccinations will be avaHable
for S3 each. The ree for both vac-
cinations is $S.
The clinic is sponsored by the
AolmaJ Assistance League, a
non-profit huma ne society
formed in 1973 to serve Orange
County pet owners.
Rescue Rapped
WASHINGTON <AP> -Tbe
House on Tuesday commended
U .S. military personnel who
participated in tbe failed at·
tempt to rescue the American
hostages ln Iran.
~Rapping O.t ~f Rhyme
Liz Taylor, Rod McKuen Exchange Slaps
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 11, 1980 TWENTY-FIVE CENTS
would result in a reduction in
business. .
The Council tield the line on
youth •P9rtl acUvtlies but ralaed
rate• for' adults.
Cbat'&es for a •lo-pitch softball
and five-man basketball teams
went from $200 to S22:s:;:r team. Charges tor three·m basket·
ball and chureb voU baU and
church softball will 10 from SSS
to S.O per team. ·
The Council ablo approved a
new 20-cent ~ for checking out
phonograph records and
cassettes at the library.
At the sa.me time, a request by
Councilman Don MacAlllater fo
impose a charge on library
cards was turned down.
Officials reported that the new
increases would brlnj{· about
ssoo.ooo ln additional revenue to
the city.
The building permit and plan
check fees for a $150,000 new
home would climb from $389 to
$511.
Formal approval of the budget
is scheduled June 23. The new
fees will not take effect until
then .
~-..... -IT'S HAAO TO TELL THE STARS FROM THE SH£U.FISH ON LOCATION IN LAGUNA
Beach Below Treuure 1"8nd TraU. Partl In South Laguna Become• Movie Set
Wrangling
Holds Up
Draft Vote
W A.SHINGTON <AP> -AIUr
meet.Ing t.broaCh the Digbt. tbe
~nate was snarled today in
round-the-clock parliamentary
wraniling Udt bk>cked a vcte on
r e newing peacetime draft
regist.ratJon.
Every major test vote pointed
toward eventual approval ot a
House-passed program requir·
ing an estimated 4 million young
men to register this summer.
But oppooents fought efforts to
bring it to a resolution, and
when the 24 -hour mark of
m arathon filibuster passed at 10
a.m .. there was no lodkaUoo
when a final vote would come.
In theory. the Senate could
stay in Session around the dock
until 3:23 p.m. Saturday -100
hours since de1>ale JlmitJog
cloture was invoked -before a
vote could be forced on the is·
sue.
The registration plan calls for
spending Sl.3.3 million to reetmr
19-and 3>-year-old men al local
post olftces. probably tn mid·
July. Two weeks would be set
aside for regjstraUoo -one for
persons born in U160 and one for
persons born in 1•1.
Failure to register is a felony
that carries a maximum penalty
of five years ln prbon and a <See nun. Pa•e A.Z>
Principals
Appointed
In Huntington
A £aan Man
Stars V se Laguna Site
BJ Sl'EVE •ITCHELL
Of .. o.r """...., Actor James Caa.n stood
barttbeated Oft tbe beech wtth
bis arms croued, peerina out d
a pair d sunglaues as diredor
Michael Mann sprinted from
rock to rock looking for a place
to shoot.
Actress Tuesday Weld , wear,
ing a white sun dress. played in
a Udepool with her young son. Patrick. occasionally glancing
over as Mano continued has
search for the next shot
About 75 cast and crew mem·
bers stood around the rocks
below Treasure Island Trailer
Park in South Laguna, sunning
themselves or grumbling over
Mano's painstaking search or
lhe bdepools.
"By the time he finds what he
wants. it's going to be dark."
groused one crewmember as he
lit a cigarette
"We won't be back in LA unt.JI
9."
The ftlm crew arnved in the
usually quiet South La«una
trailer community early Tues·
day mormng, but couldn't began
shooting until about noon when
the sun bnlte through the low
clouds.
About a doun Treasure Island
residents stood atop the bluffs
overloolrini the mm crew and
watched as cameramen filmed
one segment of "Thief," a Unit·
ed Artists production that I.I ex·
pected to appear in the theaters
next May.
Actor Jim Belushi. the brother
of "Aa.imal House's" John
Beluahi, was ln the surfline wtth
a YOWi actraa named Patty Ross. As cameras rolled, the couple
rolled over and over ln the
water, until director llano
shouted "Cut."
"Ob, it's aotne to be one ot
THOSE kinds d movies," one
Treasure Island res ident
clucked.
After tbe shot. the cameras
were taken down, and llann
beau bl.I 45-mln.ut.e 1e1rcb for
DINEJ1'E SOLD
wnB SUCCESS
"Daily PUot duaifted ads_...
• banquet ol val-. •• , IOld IQ)' dinette Mt wtUI cooct ~ tn tbe clUllfted
Mellon."
that'• tbe ~ ·~ '
1tol')' ol "• htmtala Valley mu no.,.._ dde 8CI •UM DallJ PUot:
lhe next scene on the rocks Just
south ol tbe old pier at Treasure
Island .
Caan appears in the film as a
thief recently released from
prison and Tuesday Weld
portrays the thief's love interest.
The rotund Belushi is Caan's
electronics man for exotic break·ins and million dollar-
capers.
While most of the film is being
shot in Chicago. the segment in
South Laguna takes place in
Cahfomaa as the thief takes a
break from his bectic crime
schedule .
And Tuesday at appeared
everyone but Mann was taking a
break from filming.
"Oh. Geez, now a bunch of
sunbathers are starting to sit
over on that beach," one crew
member says, pointing to a
small bay just north of the rocks
where Mann 1s s till gazing
through his lens .
"They don't let the pQblic
down here. do they?" one fllm
CSee STA.Jl.S, Page AZ>
Slayiogs Probed
STOCKTON <AP) -Two San
Francisco Bay Area men whose
bodies were round s hot and
chained together in the
Stanislaus River south of Man·
t~a may have been killed in a
drua-related execution. The
bodies or 26·year-old Michael
Hernande:& of Alameda and 4'-
yeu-okl Louie Reyes Junior of
Oakland were found Saturday.
Cea.st
Weather
Ni.ht and morning low
cloucla with mostly sunny
• fternooa Thursday.
Hllba in the ~·eos at
the beac:bes to mid or up-
per 70. lAland areas. Lows
toolabt 55 to eo.
m819ET8•.4'1
J
S<..':1' A.I I lat .. ......
A.a armed poup .. • a&I diapot tn ... ...,. Jru Mu. • ~k.t11"'QPellM , ........ Md allo 1ttacked H lrlA•Eurc>pe
railwa)' &t8doa. Tebran redio '".W &oday.
PolC"e IN"Wld UM at:t.HWI-.. did Dot ceptun t.!Mm. UM
WMdead Mid. :n.. WM • WtalJoo wbo wu rra~bal ud • ._ .. ol cHuMM& .. UM lnddntl &aw 'Nllde,y.,a&
Salm• la ~ ... • ,.._ ...,. Ir~ ud 1'\u'key WMn
.. ~ baw be.a •et.Ive ln recent monlba. l"ln 1t the oU •·
pot wu lllll racin~~ t.bl bf'oedeatt wd. 1"-lnddeftl a few houn after lreo·a rft'OluUoaarJ
a.ad r , ,\yalollah Rubollah ~. wamed at~ .. teraal
at.rile and said h.la rectme a:Ulhl .. ~ ..... the &llamk
bardlloen eoatl'Ollin1 Parliament ball t.belr polltkaJ war with
Pl'Mldeat AbolbaaNn Bani-Sadr c..1.,...,.. o" a .... ,,.., Pf••
WASHINGTON CAP> -Houae and S.nate bud1et
ne10Uaton reached a1reement today on a com&M"OCD1ae ltll
bud1et that trtma future 1pmcttn1 fOC' defeDM aad retle>nl S300
millioo for dome1Uc Pl"Olrama. •
The House waa expected to vote oa the new compromise
Thursday. with Lbe J>rGlped that the loot d!apute over the
bud1et could be ended by tbe weekend. ..
,,.,... •. "W•• •• P•••••a. 1..1u
LOS ANGELES <AP> -Nolet on I tm lewd-conduct arrest ot Peoples Temple founckr Rev. Jim Jooee, wens found 1n alaiD
eonireuman Leo Ryan'• brtelcue, and may be linked to the
.fonntown muucre. t.be Loa A.qeles Tlmee reported today.
A dty attonM1_'! _!DvestiCaUon to be releued today auc1eets
tb•t Ryan's lmow~e ol Jonte' arr.t ml1bt ba~ been a fac·
tor lD the cult leader a deellioD to order a mua murder·aulcide ol 900fol.lowers11 mootba qo ln the Guyana Juntte. ·
.. But Jacqueline Speier. an aide to Ryan who survived the
.Jonestown attack, aaJd •be doubt.a that Ryan broutht the arttSt up la b1a meetinp with Jones. • :1 ·,· Gel4' Tradr• •• Ah11f _..
LONDON <AP> -Gold hovered around $600 an ounce oo world bu.Woo market.a today, while the dollar at.aged a mild re· covery.
Gold closed in Hong Kong at $S7'9.:i0.
Loodoo's five bullion houses fixed thia mom.ing 's price at
S595 an ~ 1 down from $603.50 Tuesday. But it traded later at $601.50 ln LODOOO and $595.00 in New York.
SU vier was UtUe changed ln London at $15. 7S an ounce, after
losing nearly $2 Tuesday to close at $15.96. Silver traded ln New York at$1S.40, down Scent.a.
Mob Violence
Interrupts
Ftlm Classic
SAN FRANCISCO <AP>
"Due to mob violence, Lbere wtU
be no movies till further notice."
That hand·lettered notice to
patrons was posted Tuesday
night al the Richelieu Ci.oema
here after about two doien left·
isl demonstrators rorced Lbeir
way into the theater to protest
the showing oC D.W. Griffith's
classic. "Birth ol a NaUoo."
Tbere were no injuries to the
175 watching the movte. but boOi
theater projectors were serious·
ly dama~ed and the interior ol
the building was splattered with
spray paint and eggs.
Randy Beuc us. theater
manager. swd the demonstrators
appeared about 7 p .m . and
~gan pasaing out leaflet.a ideoU· rymg themselves aa members ol
the International Committee
Againat Racism. The leaflets blasted the theater for showing
"Birth ol a Nation," which some
say i.s sympathetic to the Ku
Klux Klan.
Aft.er picketing for an hour,
they pushed their way inside.
yanked the theater telephone off
the wall. vandalized the interior
or the theater and smashed the
projection room's plate· glass
window and projectors,
authorities said.
Fro• Pogt-·'I
SLAPS •••
gram, aaya Martin, but Mias
Taylor announced : "I'm goinc to read my poem now-or not at
all."
The colwnni.st said Reynolda
then set Miss Taylor off by re·
markinc. "Good, ahe'a not toini to do lL"
Bul lnatead or attacking
Reyooldl, abe struck McKueo
with her open band and be
slapped her back, the columniat said.
Fro• Pap .-11
DRAFf ...
Sl0.000 fi.ne.
A court challenge or the pro-
gram seems virtually assured
following a 5140 vote late Tues-
day blocking women from reg-
istering along with men. The
American Cavil Liberties Uruon
has vowed to me suit to test the
constitutionality o( any r1!g1stra-
t ion system that excludes
women.
Registration opJ><>neots led
by Sen. Mart Hatf'Leld, R-Ore.,
forced repeated roll call votes to
stall final action. Hatfield
sometimes voted againal his
proposals, merely to give
himself the parliamentary nght
to request that the whole vote be
reconsidered
Th.rough the night, as some
senators napped in their offices
and others s lept at home .
Republicans held control ol the
Senate floor and kept debate go-
ing.
As dawn broke over the
Capitol, GOP leader Howard
Baker. R·Tenn., Lold the almost·
empty chamber Lbat Lbe United
States ls "slipping steadily" in
terms of manpower and equip-
ment compared with the Soviet
Uoloo. He said a big increase in
defense spending will be re·
quired.
Baker and several others who
support tbe plan helped reg-
istration foes prolong debate,
saying the minority had a right
to carry on Its right as long as
Senate rules permit.
The Senate voted Tuesday to
lmpoee debate·llmlUng cloture
aod curtail the dlacuaalon -now
six days old -to an addiUooaJ
100 hOW'a.
·'I know ol no other laaue the
Senate will take up that wUJ be
of more importance,'' Hatlleld
said in vowtna to try to Pteep the
Senate WOl"kinl on reclatraUoa
the full 100 hours.
Senate Democratic Leader
Robert C. Byrd aceuaed Hatlldd
of wa1ing • "post·cloture
fllJl>uster" and W'led the Senate
to move onto otber bualneu.
Lllwsuit
Or .... County Superior c.ou.rt
J.act1e Oretll Sean hu Mt a
June M heartna on a lawtwt
wbtcb IMb to flu further police
ud cCIUlt aetkia a1ahU1l penoM &avol¥M la pyramJd adMIMI.
AltorMJ Juoa Llndeu, tn a tlaH actkln auJt fUed oa behall
of two peraon1 teken into
cuatod,y for lbelr lnYOlvemeat lo
the t•t·rlcb·qultk 1cbeme1.
aaked Judie Stan TUelday loC'
a temporary rettraJnta1 Of'du.
Sbe denied that request but Ht
lhe beartna tn Juct1• Edward
W alllo '1 court to Ii ve bo&h Lan·
de11 and a repreMet.aUYe ol the
Dlatrlct Attorney's Otrice a
chance to arcue the cue.
Tbe lawsuit clalma lnvask>a ol prlvdcy, baraasment and ID·
frin1ement on free speech and
free assembly by law enforce-
ment agencies aeeklng to ead pyramid parUes.
The two clients repreHDted by
Landess are Patricia Mer·
riweatber ol Miaakm Viejo and
Richard Criaploo ol Anaheim.
Landess said the main thrust
of bis cue la that the laws pro-
hJbltlnc endless chains are un--consUtut.ionally v11ue.
He said be la tryln1 to prevent
the District Attorney's Office
from filing complalnta against
those already arrested or cited
by police for thelr involvement
in PY rarnkt parties.
Landess said be would ~ an
Injunction at the June 24 hearing
agalMt enforcement of the laws
prohibiting pyramid schemes.
Criaplno WU arrested in April
in Garden Grove at a pyramid
party while Mias Merriweather
was taken into custody In
Mission Vae10 where she was at·
tending a pyramid meeting.
Fro• Pa~AI
STARS .••
ofhc1al asked ··That's all we
need lS a lot oC people standing a round the set.··
But by late afternoon. even lhc
dozen or so elderly Treasure
Island residents appeared ready
to walk back to their mob1lt>
homes for dinner. "They gomK lo do anytlung else out here?
one older gentleman asked as a
property man rushed by. "Who
knows?" the crewman said.
"Th•~ was suppo6ed to take only
a day."
1930s Menu
Draws 3,000
WHITTNG, Ind CAP> -
For four brier hours. the
1930s came alive again
and a crowd or some 3,000
waited hours in a driule
to eat seafood at price&
most folks would expe<:t to paytorba.JL
To mar1' the 70lh an·
nlversary of Phil Smidt &
Son restaurant, manager
Michael Probst dug up Lbe
oldest menu he could find
and orrered the rare at the
same prices: f'rog legs,
us ually $10.95, went for
Sl.50; lake perch, normal·
Jy $10, was $1.25.
• • J like to do things spedaJ," said ProbsL ··1
thought it would be a great
way to thank people."
Skeleton Found
EUREKA <AP> -A human
skeleton baa been found under a downtown sidewalk ln the city's
Old Town area, authorities aald.
Eureka police said the skeletal
Temains were discovered by
David Meyers of Arcata. a
landscaper. Meyers had re·
moved a portion of the
downtown sidewalk to plant a
lrei!.
DAILY PILOT Probers Criticize
Ford Transmissions
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
Tran1portatlon Department
notified the Ford Moc.or Co. that
• three-year lnve,1tJ1at1oo bu ahown truamlMlOD 1Uppap de-
fect.a ln 11 m1lUoo automobiles,
1overDJDmt 80W'ce9 rePGIWd to-
day. n.. '°"'"'• who uked tblt the)' not be ldeDtJfted, uJ4 auch
a flDdlDs mually nau.lt.1 tn a
formal recall wbieb, ..,.. tt or-dend, would be the ....... iD •u&omod" bil&or1. Tiie dehct I• la tbe
uwm:' sl• tnWm ot 119-1171
Ford ~•-.•r can. caUIUla tbem lllp from part to ....
¥UH wt"oat WaHIDf, tbe
IOUl'ftl ........
ft• TrauportaUon Depart.
.... , .... llO OOlllmeM -ttie,... ·~---IONJtUttM~ proeWID .. UMJau .. bieil
completed. It said It mllbt bave
•n announcement thls week «
next week.
The NaUonal HlJbway Tnttlc
Safety AdminlttraUoa. IA arm
of tbe Tramportat10G Depart-
ment, told the eeaiter'"fOI' Auto
Saf etr lut month It beUeved •
had been kllJed in aceldentl
eauaed by Ford trantmltllon
1Uppap. NHTSA bu beea iD-
vHtlP&iae tbe traumllllou
thretJMn.
The center uted for a federal
cowt ardw tut IDClftda to twee
NHTIA to ...U U.. ftDdf.nt of u ''blldal ~·· ot a
defect. In tM auat. u.e e.w,
el1lm4it NHTIA toUd tlaat hid
traHm111foea were 11 to U
Um• more liUl1. to JUI• fro.
f,• r t to r • Y • r • • t II a• wmwklDi ot ~ • .....,..
tun ....
Fizing It.
Workmen shore up sides of ditch being dug for new sewer
line at Lake Street and Pacific Coast Highway in Hunt·
mgton Beach. Cave·ln last 1bunday slowed wort on the
county sanitatioo di.strict project designed to upgrade
and add capacity to lines leading to sewer treatment
facilities near Santa Ana ruver.
Diver Recovering;
Lifeguards Thanked
AVALON (AP> -David
Av a ro of La Canada Is look.ing
rorward to attendfog his tugh
i;c hool graduation Thursday
Lei\s than a week ago. he had
lost his sight and his memory
3Agencies
Ask Valley
ForFundin~
Representatives or three
social service orpniuUom ap-
pealed to U.. l'aetala V.U., Ci·
ty Councll ror ~ chutac a
public bearing oo the city's
1980·81 bud1et Tuesday night.
The council delayed final ac-
tion on the budget unlll rt.s June
24 meeting
Two of the organizations pro-
vide counseling and ot!ler as-
sistance to juveniJea with family
problems and to youths who
have been arrested for crtmmaJ
act1vitJes
Teen Help Youth Services
· Bureau requested an allocalioo
or s10.ooo for the comint flKal
year. The Youth Service Pro-
gram, Inc. appealed ror SIO,SOO.
Both organ.Uatioos malnlaln ol·
rices in tbe Fountain Valley
Civic Center complex.
Ben Romano, who 1s active in
a locaJ senior citizens eroup,
asked the council to designate
funds for a ~nter for use by
local seruors Currently, older
residents have Umited use of
raciUties at Lbe Fount.am Valley
Recreation Center In Mlle Square Park.
None ol the three groupe has
been designated to receave fWlds
m the city's Sl0.4 mJWon budiet,
as presently proposed.
and came cl05t' to losmg b1~ Llfe.
The 17-year old scuba diver
owe1> his renewed health to the
quack work of ureguardi!s and the
patien t care o f a diving
med1c1ne lt.>am . doctor~ ~aid
Tuesday
Wha.Je t.aktng part m a dJver's
tralna.ng claM off Sant.a Catalina
Island last t'nday, Avaro was m
a fret ascent from about 38 f~t
below lhe surface when hi.! left
lung burst from an apparent 1m·
balance ol pressure.
Los Angeles County l.lfeguard
paramed.Jcs rushed the youth by
boat to a re c ompressaon
chamber on Catahna Island -
one ol Just three double·lodt re-compressioa cbamben on the
West c.out. The others U'e at
Seattle and San Diego Navy
Base.
Tbe d.IVUlg accident affected
the youth as u he had suffered a
'>lroke By the lime he reached
the ocean surfa~ he wa& bhnd
and ~1005, said Dr. Jen
Sipsey, who supervises tht> div·
ang medicine team at Los
Angeles County USC Medical
Center.
The potentially fatal alr bub-
ble bad moved from bis lung in·
to hia bloodstream and toward
the brain -cuttinl off the blood
now to the portion o( Lbe brain
controlling vaaaoo and cert.am
thought processes, Sipsey said.
A sheriff's hellcopt8 new to
County·USC to pfck up Dr.
Sipsey and physician's asslatant
Lee Slajer. For the next 24 hours
they joined the patJent inside tbe
rttompressioo chamber.
''.He wu t.aten to what would
be the equivalent o( 165 feet UD·
der the aea in order to di.uolve
the air bubble Lbreateniq bU
life," said Sipaey.
Com.went •1 l'lllL SNEIDSaMA.N : Ol .. Qlllf.......... :
Fountain Valley Sebool Dll·
trtct truatee. wt.U tooaider ......
UoAal reeommeodaUoal ~lng the ecatrovental moclifted
day lehedule before Mov*lna ~
formal pollcy on the prolJ'am at
Lbeir June 19 meettni.
The tn.tee. met for two hours
Monday night with a J.2..mernber
committee of parents, te~
and admini.ltraton who were
asked to provide advice on
whet.her the di.strict 1bould con-
tinue to dlalDW student. early
ooe day each week.
Thia aborteoed d1y ls desiped
to give teechen Ume for lea.on
plannJ.nc and other work.
Some puents have criticized
this schedule, claimlnc it re·
duces a student's classroom
tune and creates ctitlef care prob.
le ms on the early dismissal day a.
The committee last week is-
sued a report recommending
that the dlstrict continue to pro-
vide teachers wit.b a two-hour
planning seaalon onee weekly.
but that additional guidellnes be
imposed on these sessions.
The committee drew on hun·
dreds ol written comments Crom
pa rents and teachers ln the dis·
trkt. Some trustees bave object-
ed that the committee relied too
heavily on opinions, rather lhao
s pecific evidence that the
s hortened day benerits or
detracts from a student's educa·
tion.
Tbe trustees wUI receive addi·
Uonal recommendations from
Superintendent Glenn Hardy
prior to their June 19 meeting.
Trustee Sheila Meyers said
she doesn 't believe lhe
shortened day schedule will be
dropped completely. She said
the board more likely will adopt
a policy setting more stringent
guidelines on how the planning
sessions are to be used.
Boys' Club
Fund-raiser
Set Saturday
The Boys' Club of Fountain
Valley will conduct its fourth an·
nual fund·ralsing auction and
dinner on Saturday, June 14 at
the Registry Hotel. 18800
MacArthur Blvd .• Irvine.
l'be event will begin with a
cocktaU period and ailent. auc·
tion from 8:30 to 8 :30 p.m. All
displayed items will have a bid·
dmg sheet upon which bidders
wall hst their names and their
bad offers
Omner wtll be served at 8:30 p.m., rollowed by a VOice· aUC·
lion at 9: 15 p.m. Various goods
and servlces at a wide ranse o(
values have been donated by
area busanesses.
Tickets may be purchased at
the door. A $2S ticket covers din·
ner and cocktails during tbe
silent auct.ioo. A $50 Ucket cov-
ers dinner, cocktalls during Lbe
silent auction and a $50 credit
toward the purchaae ol uy auc-
tion item.
Riot Cops Land
PORT VILA , New Hebrides
CAP> -Flfty.five French riot
police were flown lnto the
poltUcally tense capital ol the
New Hebrides today following
the death of a leading political
figure l.n a shootout earlier in the
day on the lsland ol Tanna.
FATHERS DAYSAYl•S
10% •FALL K•n SH•IS
OFFSHore
c
HOBIE
TENNIS
SPICIAL
FREE
STRINGS
wmtPUICHASI
OF.-WRAMI
~
•
1
TWENTY-FIVE CEN'.l'S
·Advisers List
.
~---aaaooa .. wrN ; ............... v.ere bu4d on conaultanll' aoal
of red~ airport nolH by 7.5
det'lbtl1 over the aame tlme penod .
.. S•.-al• at John Wayne ll....rt ..W be 1ur4ld to ac· ._.mod• a mulmum of 1.1
•UUon Jt•H•n1era O'n SS awer.,. dally ~mmerelal Jet ftlpta by tM )'eat JO()O, airport ,_.utt..au bave NCOmmended ~eft Alll1on, of VTN tomd.ted lnc .• told t.be coun· b Airport Commission Tuesday
faJ1ht the recommended fieures
Tbe eitpanaion straten out·
Uned In lhe reco1Droen.daUoo ls mean( fo nearly trlple the
num~r of pauen,era presenUy
utlng the airport and 1i1ntncant·
ly lncre ... the number of dally
m1hts while almultaneoualy re·
ducing oolae. Allison said.
The lrvtne nnn Is preparln• a
• • • • 4
.,,..,.,.....
LATE ACTOR HIGHLY HONORED BUT GRAVE UNMARKED
Annlvenllry of John Weyne'• Deeth ObMrved
Duke's Honors Comimw
By STEVE MARBLE °'~.._ ...... Tbe view of the ocean wu obscured by early fog and the blllaide cemetery was deMrted today In Newport
Beach.
One B1Tangement of flowers tucked in a basket next to
the fiagpole wu the only indication that today mark.s the
first anniversary or John Wayne's death
The flowers, a park caretaker noted. were probably
Left by a !rlend or a fan of the movie great.
Bur THE DAY is ex peeled to be Little different from
others at Pacific View Memonal Park. where Wayne Iles
in an Wlmarked grave somewhere an the rolhng hills.
"We·ve received a few calls but nothing is planned.'' a
cemetery spokesperson sia1d "We haven't heard from the
family in a long lime."
NEWPORT CITY LEADERS, who ordered flags flown
al half staff last year when the movie star died at age 72.
said nothing special is planned to mark the anniversary.
The John Wayne Tennis Club has no fanfare planned
either.
But the town and the nation has far from forgotten the
sliver screen cowboy.
One year after his deuth. the movie hero has been
awarded the nation's highest civilian honor. has an airport
in Orange County named after him and soon will be the
subject or a television film biography
Books have also been wntten about "The Duke" and a
sold .medal Inscribed "John Wayne. America" was or·
dered stru~k by the Congress this year.
CEMETERY OFFICIALS SAID many fans and
curioaity·&eekers poured Into the park last summer looking
for their hero's grave. They were disappointed when tokl
the location of the grave site Is a secret.
Only family members and a few park omclala know
exactly where Wayne ls burled.
"It just seems better that way," remarked one
cemetery spokeswoman. "You never know what could
happen. People do stran1e things."
She said people who show up at the park with nowen
or other tokens of remembrance for Wayne are directed to
the nagpole and atked to leave them there.
"'l'llE FAMILY HAS been seen here aeveral Umea but
they know where to go and never stop by the office or
bring It to anyone's aUention that they're even here."
Wayne'a-fulliNl was kept In that same low·key tradi· tion. It waa a prlvalli 6 a .m . service. Only family memben
attended. Wayne's rrtend and bUAineu usociate Ken Willia aald.
"That'• the way Duke wanted It. He wanted a Uvin1
memorial only. His tradition."
HE 8lJGGE8T THAT other rrtenm or the movie 1t.ar In
Newport Beach probably weni remembertn1 Wayne In "a
qw.tway:•
"We looited throu1h the old newspaper cllpplnp INt
nl1bt and JU1t tald 'Thank God for John We)'M. • He wu a nabllbtna lntluence ln thl1 country and there are no other
men on the horlzon that I see witb hl• kind of 1t.ablllty and
tnfluenee. ''
1'Mi Venting Starts Soon
Indicated It would approve a
controvental venllDI Plan • Thul'lday ......
TM"Nke ltaff bed urftd ap. ·
provat of the veat.t.ns pfur and
Hid it would poH no health
threat. Th• atarr aaJd radloac·
tlvlty ln tho aJr could be kept
down by releulna the 111 slowly
durl111 favorable •eat.her coodl· Uon1.
master plan to 1\ll.M 1rowth of
lbe county a1rport t.hrouJb lbe
year JOOO. f'1nal dedalon.a on all
a1peeta ol the muter plan wW
be inede by the Oran1e County
Board ol SllperviJOrt. .
Under the conault.anta' pro-
poaal, air carriers would be
forced to implement certain
nolae redUtCtioD pollclea. such u
buytna new. quieter jet.a. before
ru1bt.1 could be tnereued. .
The VTN recommendations
map out a 10.yur schedule for
meeUnc the 7.5 deci~l nolH re·
ducUon 1oal, If noi.ae pro1rama
be1ln lo Ul82. B
Tbe recommendation package
ausaau that supervlaon fend
end off dally ruitit increases Wl·
til 1988, when. under VTN's pro-
posed nobe reduction program.
nolae will have been cut by five
decibels.
Presently 2 .3 million
passengers use John Wayne
Airport. Avera1e dally ffiibll by
commercial Jett are Limited by
supervbon' order toAO per day.
ln eddWon. 237 acres ol land In Newport Beach, Costa Mesa
and Santa Ana Heights are con-
sidered "incompatible" with the nearby airport.
The VTN plan would shriink
that incompatible area to 30
acres. whlch means none of the
Newport Beach and Costa Mesa
land would remain within the 65
communlty noise equivalent
level. .
The 65 CNEL rating. roughly equivalent to a decibel noise
measurement ia considered too
high for commercial, residential
and Industrial uses
Allison told airport com·
missioners and an audience of
about 35 persons that the recom· mendatlons were preliminary and may change as a result or
(See AIRPORT. Page A2>
Council Vote in I_.imbo
County Recount Uncovering New Totals
The Registrar of Voters office
is still unable to cive the official
results of the June 3 Irvine City
Council election In which the
three Incumbents were ap·
parently re-elected.
Shirley Deaton, elections of·
fleer for the reglatrar of voters.
said the final vote total for the
council election will be available
later this week. She said about
4.500 damaged ballots remain to
be coWlted. Not all a re from
Irvine. however.
On June 4, the registrar's of.
rice said all Irvine precincts had
reported and 49.123 votes were
cast. According to that total, It
appeared that Incumbent coun·
ell members David Sills. Bill
Vardouli8 and Mary Ann Galdo
had won the race for three coun·
cit seats. Candidate Dave Baker
finished fourth, 204 votes behind
Mrs. Gaido.
Early this week. however. the
restatrar'a otnce released a new vow total f« lrvlne, 6,418 votes more than the total releued Im·
medlateJy after the June 3 elec-
tion.
Mn. Deaton said &he new vote
total aroee from a ~
ballot recount. Appareatly.
some 5,418 votea for Irvine coun-
cil hopelula hadn't been counted.
Councllwoman Galdo saw her
victory margin over Baker allp
from about 204 before the re-
count tD 63 after the recount.
But the recount tolals were not
final. according lo the reg-
* * * Irvine Seeks
Own Counting
Of Ballots •
Delays by the county
Rfglatrar of Voters office in
nnallzing the June 3 Irvine City
Council election results bas led
Councilman Larry Agran to pro·
pose that the city clerk COWll
local ballots in the future.
Agran asked the city clerk
Tuesday night tD look into the
matt.er. His request came during
a City Council meeting.
In November of 1978, the
Irvine City Council decided to
hold Joell elections in consolid•·
lion with county elections.
Under this a1reemenl Irvine's
municipal ballota are printed
and counted by the county.
Pool Noise
Drowned Out
Next time lrvlne police get a
report of a loud wln1dlna abat·
terln1 tbe midnJ•bt calm on
Te•clMn Avenue, they may dls·
patch otncen on tiptoe so as not
to add tD the din.
Reapondini to a report of a
loud pool party in t.be 11000 block
of tbat at.reet about mld.nJiht
TueldQ, polJce aa1d they found
• lone parapJetjc soatln1 hit
sore Um• le bit Jecual.
The IWP9d •• told to keep It. down to a low, bubblln1 auriJe.
Debate Likely
To Be 3-Way
SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
John B. Andenoo 1111 he wtll
1Jadly accept Pnlldent Clrter'•
condlUon for debaUn1 blm thla
fill, llld ba Mtttbutet the e.h1ef
eneutl••'• rev.nil of a ~· lat ,.._ .. to "tM bot breath ol
pablie~."
An obvloualy. elet.ad Andtnon
said ~ar he II oonvtlM.'ed hit
111me will be oa notaab bl1lotl
in November u u IACJepeacMnt
to makt him a eredlbl•
cballen1er to Carter aad
AepubUcan Ronald ~aian.
1slrar·s office. Remaining to be
counted was 7 .500 ballots coun-
t v wide. 3.000 of which were
handed an as absentee ballots on eleeUon day.
Th~ 3.000 ballots were count·
ed Tuesday About 430 vol~ for
lrvme council hopefuls appeared on the ballots The new votes
dt>creased Mri; Ga1do's lead
over Baker to 60 votes
Raker sa111 that hf> h;u:n 't dt>
c1ded yet 1f he will usk for a re
count when the registrar's offact•
finalizes the resulti. later this
week
Mrs Gaido is vacalaoning und
wR<: •m::iva1lahlP fnr 1·nmmt>nt
::Mil'f --., U e l'HM
CLINT WORTHINGTON IS GREETED SY THE GANG AT THE BANK THIS MORNING
lmne Benk Employ" Beata the Mall Again on Blcycte Ride from Phoenix
Deputies Aim
To Nab More
Coke Pushers
Oranee County Sher1ff"s an
vestigators said today tbey are
seeking warrants against addi-
tional persons sought In connec-
tion with an alleged cocaine
smuggUng operation that was
broken up Monday night an San·
ta Ana.
Five persons. including two
men from the Laguna Beach
area. were arrested by un·
dercover aherUrs loveaUgators
and agents of the federal Drug
Enformcent Administration.
who claim they seized three and
one-half kllo1rams of nearly
pure cocaine during a meet.in&
with the alleged dealers at a
mot.el.
Thoae arrested were Daniel
Arlen Wisner. 35. 917 Balboa
Ave., lAIJuna Beach; Thomas
James Taylor, 28. 22382 lat
Street. South La1una; Ro~rt
Ray Pion, also known aa Robert
Ray Pyne, 38, Lancaster. Gary
Martin Henson. 29, Kauai.
Hawall, and Patrick Duaan. 38.
also of Kauai.
Sherifta U . Wyatt Hart said <Ike COCAINE, Pate .U>
DINE11'E SOLD
JJ'ITH SUCCESS
•'Dilly Piiot eluainw eds are
a banquet of value..
"l aold my dlneUe let with IOOd IUftae tn t.be claulned
Mellon."
That'• the 1dverttatnc aucc ...
1tory of lb• Fountain Valley mao who plfced tbla ad In tM
DaJl)' PUot:
Olnett.e NC w1r0rml<'•
tble" 4 ROid <'hulr1
lUtlt lOIX"
If you want Y®T ad to alt yott
down to a 1ood value, call
8'2·98'?9.
Beats the Mall
Cyclist Overcomes Setbacks
By RICHARD GREE~
01 -°"'"' -Sutt Clmton Worthington pedaled
his 10-speed bl(•yc le into the
parking lot of the Bank of lrvtne
this morrung. thus wmning has
race from Phoenix agains t MX
letteN>
The 21-year-old man said flat
tares. a broken chaan and an en counter Wllh a c•oyote were all
worth al
"It's great to prove the post
office's slowness:· he said "I
would do 1t agam ..
Worthington dropped S IX let
ters in Phoenix mailboxes Mon
day evening. lie then hopped on
his bicycle and rode off for
Irvine, determined to arrive in
town before hl11 letters
Bank employees confirmed
this momlnc that the letters hadn't arrived. Tfiey said the
mail lJln't delivered unlil 10 a.m
Worthln1ton arrived al the
bank al 9:45.
He says he ~ unhappy with In
creasln1 poetal rates and the
posslbJe end of Saturday mall
deliveries.
For almUar reasons he raced a
New Settlements
Irk Egyptians
B1TMAaMc11&ed Preu
Et)'Pt ICC\ded larael today of
lntentJonall.y "creaUn1 IQOl'e ob-
1tacles in tbe way of a Juat and
comprehenalve peace" ln lbe
Middle Eut by It.a determlna·
tlon to build more HtUementa ln
occupied ~rrltort". An J'optlan Forelp Nlnllt.ry
apolreaman rud 1 formal atate·
ment to reporters In Cairo
crlllchlna laraeJI Prime
Mlnlaitr Menacbem 8t1ln for
1aytn1 In an lntervlaw wlt.h A BC
New1 on Tutlday lhill larael
would build 10 more MUMIMGtl
ln the W l Bank
lelter from San fo'rancasco to
Irvine and won by a fu ll day
an May of 1979 That trap took
ham 3 duys
Blcychng at night on the des·
e rt between Phoenix and Southern Cahfomaa 1i. scary. he
said
"It's dark on those roads." he
said. "All you see are trucks. A
coyote jumped In front of me
and scared the heck out of me " An employee of the Bank of
Irvine. Worthington said he has
occa11on to observe the shortcomangs of the U.S. Postal
Service because he h~mdles loan
payments that often are late
because of what he says ls slow
mail service.
Coast
Weather
Night and morning low
Clouds with moally sunny
afternoon Thur11day.
Hl1h1 In the upper 60s al
the ~aches to mid or up·
per 70. Inland areas. Lows
tonlaht 55 to eo.
INSIDE TODA~
PBS pruentt "Gu•u
Who'• Pregnonl?" A criUc '°"' thr TV ahoto u dud -but "fft/omtoth#, thotlgh.tftd ,
poiMtaldnQfl' r«NMClwd and
th.orOUQhl11 fronk." PoOf BIO.
l•tlex
•
or...,. Count.1 Su.,.rtor Court
Juda• ONU.a Sean bu Mt 1
June 34 Marina on a lawsuit
which ..U to b1r further po&..ce
•Ad court attlon a1alolt penoaa
lnvolv.ci IA pyramid 1cbt1M1.
Atlome)' Juon Ludel1. In a ~laa1 action ault flied on behalf
of two peraona t1ken Into
custody ror their Involvement tn
the J•t·rlch·qutclt 1cbtmH,
aske Juda• Seal'I Tuetdl,)' for
a temporary restralnln• order.
Slapstick
She denied that request tMlt Mt
the beartn& tn Juc:t11 £dward
Wallin'• court t.o &lve both Lan-
deas and a repreHfttaUve ol lhe
Dlatrlct Attorney'• Office a
chance to areue tbe case.
The laws uit claims invasion of privacy, harassment and in-
fringement on free speech and
free assembly by law enf0tte·
ment agencies seeking to end
pyramid parties. Taylor, McKuen Trade Blows
The two cUeota represented by
Landess are Patricia Mer·
r iweather of Mission Viejo and
Richard Crispino or Anaheim.
NEW YORK (AP> -Ell&abeth
faylor and poet Rod McKuen
traded slaps backstage during a
celebrity-studded Gala for the
Pe rforming Arts al Wolf Trap
.I' Theater Park in Virginia, the
r New York Post said.
Act.or Burt Reynolds triggered
l e incident June 3 but didn't get
apped, columnist J ack Martin
rot.e Tuesday.
None of those Involved was
mediately available for com-
m ent on the columnist's ac-
count.
Miss Taylor had interrupted
shooting of a film in England to
attend the gala, and t.o the au-
dience, s he and McKuen ap-
peared t.o be <m good terms. At
one polnt, in f~ct. abe gave the
Study Raps
Transmission
In Fords
WASIDNGTON <AP) -The
T r a nsporta tion Department
notified the fo'ord Motor Co. that
a three-year investigation has
shown traru1misslon slippage de·
rects in 16 milhon automobiles,
government sources reported to-
day.
The sources, who asked that
they not be Identified , said such
a finding usually results in a
formal recall which, were It or·
'dered, would be the lar1esl in
automotive history.
The d e f ect Is in the
transmission system of 1969·1979
Ford passenger cars, cau.sin,r
the m to shp from park to re·
ve rse without warning, the
sources reported.
The Transportation Depart·
ment had no comment on the re·
port, except lo say that the legal
process in the case has not been
completed. It said It might have
c1n announcement this week or
next week
The National Highway Trame
·Safety Administration. an arm
or the Transportation Depart·
menl, told the center for Auto
Safety laal month It beheved 88
had been killed in accidents
·caused by Ford transmission
slippage. NHTSA has been in·
vesllgaUng the transmissions
three years.
The center asked ror a federal
court order last month to force
NHTSA to make the flndlng of
an "Initial determination" of a
defect. Jn the s uit, the center
claimed NHTSA found that Ford
transmiasions were 12 to 14
• times more likely to jump from
-. p a r k to r e v e r s e t h a n
transmiJl&ions of other manufac-
:-turera.
: Pay Hikes Backed
SACRAMENTO (AP> -
California's trial judges would
~get pay raises of more than
$4,000 .a year. under a bUI ap·
proved Tuesday by the Senate
Judiciary Committee.
ORANOI COAST
DAILY PILOT
, ... °'-C-1 °"''' --. .... --~ ,, ( ....... -""_..,._ .. ..,...._.,, , .. 0.-C.M\t _I,,,...'-" ........ :!'t:.:-..::1~-·:.:::· :::.·.=="(.:.': ~·!:;.. ,•:;,:,;.:, ~C."~ ,....,"'"" ___ 14 , ... __
_ ........ ,..... .... -""" ... 14, .... ~ 0 ... ,,.., caa. ....... C.-llef•• .,,.,. ·-.. -~---
-· c.rto9
v........._._c;...., ___
,,_,._ ..... ,_ ......... ..............
-~
OMow c....-~..,..ct:.-=:... ..:.--=-.. ~:.ii ...............
T1l191f11111 (114)~
poet a luss on the Ups.
Trouble a.rose, however . when,
with the hour growing late, s inger Johnny Cash took up u
half h o ur in s t ead o r
his allotted 10 mmutes. Martin
tiald.
McKuen was next on the pro-
gram, says Martin. but Miss
Taylor announced: "I'm going
to read my poem now-or not at
all."
The columnist said Reynolds
then set Miss Taylor off by re·
marking, "Good, she's not gomg
to do it."
But ins tead of attacking
Reynolds. she struck McKuen
with h er open hand and he
slapped her back. the columnist
said.
Fro• Page 1\ I
AIRPORT. • •
public comment before the
master plan's final version is re·
leased in July.
"The 7.5 number is not a hard
and fast magical number. It's
just a trade orr bet ween noise
and service." Allison said.
Reaction from at least two
county s upervisors was &w1rt
Supervisor T homas Riley,
whose district includes the
airport, supported VTN's noise
reduction program and its goal
or knocking down the noise level
by 7.5 decibels.
He said that the county should
strictly enforce the proposed
nolse program from the begin-
ning.
In addition. Rlley agreed with
consultants that no daily light
should be added to the present
limit of 40 until the 1988 noise re·
duction goal of five decibels ts
reached.
Howeve r . Board Chairman
Ralph Clark took issue with a
couple 'or the consultants' rec
ommendaUons .
He asked that the noise reduc·
lion goal be changed to sev.en
decibles rather than 7 5 and urged
that lights be added before the
1988 bench mark noted by VTN. "The surrounding commuruty
should still receive the bulk or
the benefits of any noise redUC·
lion, but the airline and travel
ing public should also receive
immediate re wa rds." Clark
wrote an a letter to airport or.
f1c1als.
Landess said the main thrust or hls case ls that the laws pro-
hibiting endless chains are un·
constltutlonally va1ue.
He said he ta t.ryln1 to prevent
the District Attorney's Office
from filing complaints against
those already arrested or cited
by police for their involvement
In pyramid parties.
Landess said he would seek an
Injunction at the June 24 hearing
against enforce ment of the laws
proh1b1tmg pyramid schemes.
Crispino wu arrested in April
in Garden Grove al a pyramid
'party wh.ile Mias Merriweather
was taken into custody 'in Mission Vte'o where she wu at-
tending a pyramid meeting.
LB ~reeway
Repairs Set
Next Month
Portions of the Laguna Can·
yon Freeway, between the San
Diego and Santa Ana freeways.
will be closed orr and on for the
next month as work crews re-
surface the highway and adja-
cent ramps.
CalTrans officials said work
has already begun on the mile
long stretch between the two
freeways, and the resurfing
could be completed by early
July
During construction, it will be
necessary to close some 1¥tes
and ramps, but CalTrana of-
ficials say the lanes will remain
open during peak traffic hours.
Blair Paving, Inc. of Yorba
Linda is the contract.or for the
$250,000 project.
Skeleton Found
EUREKA CAP> -A human
&keleton has been found under a
downtown sidewalk in the city's
Old Town area. authorities said.
Eureka police said the skeletal
Temains were discove red by
David Meyers of Arcata. a
landscaper. Meyers had r e-
moved a portion o r the
downtown sidewalk to plant a
tree
~--JVST BREA.KING-----....
Lat~ .um. from today'• world and nataonal MUW c:Motlopme'nU.
Attackers Wipe Out
Depot With Grenade
By The A.aaocla&ed Presa
An armed group blew up an oil depot In western Iran with a
rocket-propelled grenade and alao attacked an Iran-Europe
railway staUoo, Tehran radio reported today.
Police pursued the attackers but did not capture them. the
broadcast said. There was no indlcatlon who was responsible
and no menUon or casualties In the Incidents late Tuesday at
Salmaa in Azerbaijan. a region near Iraq and Turkey where
aaboteun have been active in recent months. Fire at the oil de·
pot wu sW.1 raglna today, the broadcast said.
The lncldent occurred a few houn after Iran'• revoluUooary
leader, Ayatollah Ruhollab Khomelnl, warned a1aJnst Internal
1trtre and said hll regime might sell-destruct unleu the lalamlc
hardllnen controlllna Parliament hall their pollUcal war wtth
President Abolbusen Bani-Sadr.
S•og lt'arnhag Hal•t-d
EL MONTE <AP> -The Alr Quality Maoqemct Dlltrlct
forecut t.mbealthlul alr quality Tbunclay for aenatUve peoplo
and Pollution Standard Index raUna• ol 138 LD tbe Su F.-audo
Valley, Santa Clarita Vall•y and tlM San Gabriel-Pomona
valle.Y• and JM in the Rtvemde·San Bemardlno ......
Good air _quallty wu ex.pecMd lft the nit ol tbe IOUtb eout
alr bu1n. A PSI ratln1 of 42 wu for9C81t fOf' UM ooeatal, lAl&Dd
Ora;g Coumy, Bil Bear wt bllb and low deMrt areu. _
'71 wu exl*Wd tn the lfpnta1.,... Md a Pll raUaa Of
12 wu forecut (or t.be metropollten .,.. aDd lle~SlalDore
ANA.
c.-1 ...... •« ............ . ..
WAIRlNOTON (AP) -HMH and h•1t• '*'= ... OUMcn reu111c1 .,.. ..... toctar •a eomproudll = ..... tftml,........ ... ... .., ....... J ..... -................ n. HOme •• ..,...... t.o vot. on Ute MW oomprOIDIM nunc11r. wttaa· die ,,._... that u.. 1oa1 dAlpule °"" taa. ................ ~ u..-.-tod.
0-. ...... _.., -Mtllc .....
ACTREU TUUOAY WELD R.EFTl CHATS WITH llOV1!-MAKINO COl.LEAOUE PATTY ROSS
After • 0Dlp In the Sult, A Tow ... ag Off ~twaan Takn on South Laguna Strand
1·,..,., Pa~ 1l I
COCAINE ... A Caail Man
that two or three persons sttll
a re sought In the lnveatigaUon or
what he described u a major
Orange County-based cocaine
sales operation. The drug activi·
ty was primarily centered lo
Laguna Beach and Costa Mciu.
llart swd.
Stars Use Laguna Site
The seized cocaine in its Wlcut
form was valued at $700,000,
Hart said. If sold In its cut form
on the street the drug would be
worth about S87S,000, he.~dded.
Investigators also seized about
1,000 tablets or the hypnotic
Quualude and about thr~e
pounds of hJgh grade Hawaiian
marijuana. Hart said.
Confidential law enforcement
sources said today that both
Taylor and Henson were
believed to be involved In drug
~ales activities in the Orange
Coast area.
Each or the five persons ar·
rested was booked into Orange
County Jail on ~u~p1<:1on or sales
of a conlrnllcd &ubslance BaJI
was set at $10.000 each.
BJ 8TEVE IUTCllELL
Of• o.ltf ...... IUlf
Actor Jamea Caan stood
barechest.ed on the beach with
bia arms croued. peering out of
• palr ol auoglanea as dirtttor
Mlcbael Mann spr inted from
rock to rock look1ng for a place
to shoot.
Actreaa Tuesday Weld. wear-
ing a white sun dress. played an
a lldepool with her young. !IOf'I,
Patrick, occasionally glancmg
over aa lfann continued his
1earcb for the next shot.
About 75 cut and crew me m·
be ra at.ood around the rocks
below Treasure Island Trruler
Park ln South Laguna. 11unnmg
themselves or ~rum bling ovl·r
Mann's painstaking sear ch of
the t1<1epools.
.. By the time h~ find~ wh;it ht·
v. ant.., 1t ·~ going tn be dark ·
grou~ed one crewmember ill> h•'
lJt a cigarette
Horses Reprieved
At Crystal Cove
As one of hit. fmal acts u Wile
parks dtreetor. Russell Cabtll
gave Irvine Equestrian Center
horseownera a reprieve that will
allow them to keep their animals
in lhe new Crystal Cov~ St.ate
P<iik ror at least 18 months.
CahlU, who announced Tues·
day he will resign h1a stat.e post
at the end of the week. said the
eques trian center should stay
open until planning for the new
park Is completed. (Related
photo Page A 10.)
The state director was to meet
with members of the Irvine
Coast Equestnan Planning Com
mlttee last Friday. to discuss
the panel's concern that they
would be forced to close by Dec.
31.
But Cahill canceled the meet·
ml(.
The state parka department
has arsued that the equestrian
center ts not compatible with the
new Crystal C-ove £late Park.
and ordered the racllity, located
between Corona del Uar and
Laauna Beach, dllmanUed by
the end of the year
But last month. a pt>l1tion con
ta1n1ng more than S ,000
signatures was pn::.ented t o
Cahill by As semblywom1tn
Ma rian Bergeson I R·Newport
Beach> c1ttng the pubhc ust-of
the equestrian center and the
need to keep 1t. A spokes woman for Mrs .
B e rgeson sa id the a s -
semblywoman is "very pleased
with his < Cah11l 's > decision ··
"Mrs Bergeson saw no reason
to move anyone out of the park
::irea until the st.ale dttides what
it· s golng to do with the park."
aide Julie Froeberg said
Rebecca Nelson . a
spo kes woman for the 400·
me mber equestnan committee.
aaid the reprieve will give the
center time to prove horses are
•·an Integral part or the park
plan."
The 25-acre stable and riding
fa c ility was leased to the
operators by the Irvine Com·
pany pnor to state purchase of
the park land.
"We won't be back in LA witil 9."
The film crew arrived in the
usually quie\ South Laizuna
trailer community early Tue~·
d ay monung. but couldn't begin
s hoollng until about noon when
the sWl broke through the low
clouda.
About a dozen Trea11ure Island
residents stood atop the bluffs
overlooklng the mm crew and
watched as cameramen filmed
one segment or "Thief." a Unit·
ed Arttsts production that is ex·
peeled to appear in the theater>
next May
Actor Jim Relush1. the broth1•r
of "Animal House'!." John
liclusht , wa:. in the surfline with
a young actrei.s named Pally
Ro~s
A .. ra ml'r3'i rol11·d. lhf' couple
rullt•fl 11v1•r .ind rnl'r in the
"att:r until direc tor Mann
:.hout1'<1 "Cut "
· Oh . 11·~ J?<1mg to be one of
T llOSE kind .. of movies." onl'
Trea.,urc hland r esident
clucked.
Arter the ~hot, the cameras
were take n down, and Mann
begun tus 45·mlnute search for
the next scene on the rocks just
~uth of the old pier at Treasure
l s land
('JJn appecJr'> in the film 31) J
th1d recently released from
prt'>on and Tuesday W1•ld
portrayi. the thief'~ love intere~t
The rotund Belu&h1 is Caan·-.
e lect ronics m a n for exotic
brt•ak 1n:. and m 11l1on dollar
capers.
While most of the film is bem){
shot In Chicago. the segment in
South Laguna takes place in
California as the thief takes a
break from hii. hectic crime
.,cheduJe '
And Tuesday It appeared
everyone but Mann was taking"
break from filming .
"Oh, \.eez. now a bunch of
s unbathers itre starting to &1t
over on that beach," one crew
m e mb<>r says, pointing to a
small bay just north of the rocks
whe re Mann Is still gazing
through h.ts lens
"They don't let the public
down here. do they!" one film
offici al asked "That's all we
need 1s a lot of people standing
around the set."
FATHERS DAYSAYINIS
10% OFF ALL K•ll SHIRTS
OFFSHore
__ .._,. ____ _
HOBIE
TENNIS
SPECIAL
FREE
STRINGS
wmt PUICHASI
OPMIWRIAMI
fJJ
J ·-
BJ IOJIN NEEDHAM oe-o.ity~Sutf
La1uaa Beach City Council
member s approved a $9.25
~Ullon budget for the city Tues-
-~ night, but held back ap-'piDval of controversial prorno-
b funds for the Chamber of
CS.Omerce.
. ~ Tbe council also delayed W'ltil
ih June 17 meeting any de·
et.ions on how to spend $271,000
tii federal reve nue sharing
fUllds.
Tbe 1980-81 budget is up more
~•n $500,000 from last year's
$1. 7 million budget, with the
bulk ol the increase acCO\Dlted · ....
Suit Seeks
P.Y,.arnid
~1f:«,id Balt
-: t Or~ County Superior Court
Jud.. Oretta Sears has set a .,,.... at ~arilll on a lawsuit ~h.Meb t.o bar further police
~ eourt W!tioo agatnat persons ia~tD'pJrblid a.themes. l-l:Aa'&llllbtLudels, in a
..... -llUlt fUed Oft beball •1--hfo I persona taken into
dast.ody .f09" 1heir involvement in 116i 11et..,r6ob1ulck sebemes,
_.ed ...., Sean Tuelday for
tem"'1U'Y restraining order.
-~ llmlea that request but set tt.e beal1al ln Judie Edward
Wallin'& eourt to ci"ve both Lan-a.a; ,.S a representative of the btrlct Attorney's ·Office a
itaenee to arcue the case.
-vacy, harassment and in-C lawsuit claims invasion of
rtnsement on free speech and lcte auembly by law enforce-ment qencles seeking to end ~_y"ramld parties.
:The two clients represented by
liandess are Patricia Mer-
riweather of Mission Viejo and
Richard Crispino of Anaheim.
.Landess said the main thrust
<f bis case is that the laws pro-
lllbiting endless chains are Wl·
conatitutionally vague.
, He said be is trying to prevent the 1>istrict Attorney's Office
fllin& complaints against
alre.dy arrested or cited
potiee for their involvement
lla pyramid parties.
.. ,· 1.aodeu said be would seek an .,9ftdion at the.Jane 24 hearing
asatnst.eafonement of the laws
lJl"Obibiting py!'amid schemes.
-~-truplno was arrested in April
Garden Grove at a pynmid
ft?Y while Miss Merriweather s taken into custody in
stoo Viejo where she was at-#ftcpq a pyramid meeUng.
• f , ...
ror in s.100.000 in sewer bond
payments that are due.
In response to Indications by
the council members that they
would like to continue the year-
ol d community patrol plan,
$7 ,000 was left In the spending
package to fund this program.
This will continue police foot
patrols In the high crime areas.
The city treasurer also re-
ceived an increase in salary
from $30 a month to $150 to
match what City Council mem-
bers are paid.
City Treasurer Fran
Engelhardt argued ror an even
greater increase, saying there is
"just no way the backlog of
work can be done in the time l
am paid for now ...
·'There are continual ongoing
problems that need to be
handled." Mrs. Engelhardt said.
"We can't get away with not do-
ing them because it can leave
the city open to lawsuits."
Mayor Wayne Baglin didn't
agree. "We are all elected of-
ficials and we went into the elec-
tion with our eyes open," Baglin
said.
.. At no time during the elec-
tion was there any mentloo of
approving pay increases ror
ourselves. We knew what the
compenaaJ.jon was when we de·
cided to nui."
The budget also includes a 6
percent increase in park and
recreatioo fees that is expected
to generate 96,400.
The bi~ fees will go into ef-
fect in September and will in-
clude recreational classes.
festival parking lot fees. park
use permits for weddings and
use of Irvine Bowl Park.
Community assistance fund·
ing was set at $U,500, with the
Museum of Art, Ballet Pacifica,
the Historical Society and the
School of Art receiving the lion's
share.
The Museum of Art received
the highest amount at $3,000,
while the rest all received 12,000.
In all 14 local organizations re-
ceived some assistance.
The council cut $18,000
originally proposed by City
Manager Ken Frank to hire a
personnel consUltant to prepare
<See BUDGET, Page A%)
Summer Reading
Aides Sought
Teen-age volunteers are being
sought to assist in a summer
reading program which begins
Friday at the Dana Point Niguel
Library.
Volunteers, who must have
finished sixth grade or be at
least 12 years old, may contact
Lynne Anderson, children's
librarian, at 496-5517.
Dai.., ...... _ .. , ___
ACTRESS TUESDAY WELD (LEFTl CHATS WITH MOVIE-MAKINO COLLEAGUE PATTY ROSS
After• Dtp In the Surf, A Towellnt Oft a.tw..n T•k•• on South l.agun• Strand
Wrangling
Holds Up
Draft Vote
WASlilNGTON <AP> -After
m~lln& t.brouth ~ night. the Senate Wat SDUled today in
rouod-lbe-cloek parliamentary
wran&llnl that blocked a vote on renewing peacetime draft
reglstraUoo.
Every major test vote pointed
toward eventual-approval-ol -a
House-passed pro8ram requir-
ing an estimated 4 mUlion young
men to register this summer.
But opponents fought efforts to
bring lt to a resolution, and
when the 24 -bour mark of
marathon filibuster passed at 10
a.m., there was no indication
when a fmal vote would come.
In theory, the Senate could
stay in Session around the clock
until 3:23 p.m. Saturday -100
hours since debate limiting
cloture was invoked -before a
vote could be forced on the is·
sue. The registration plan calls for
spending $13.3 million to register
19-and 20-year-0ld men at local
post offices. probably in mid·
July. Two weeks would be set
· aside for registration -one for
persons born in 1960 and one for
persons born in 1961.
Failure to register is a felony
that carries a maximum penally
of five years in pri.lon and a
$10,000 fine.
A court challenge of the pro-
uam seems virtually assured
(See D&U'T, Page A%>
A ~aaa Maa
Stars Use Laguna Site
By STEVE MITCllELL Cit .. ...., .........
Actor lames Caan st.ood
barecbested on the beach with
his arms crossed. peering out ol
a pair oL sunglaues u dJrec!tor
Michael Mano sprlnt.ed from
rock to roek loMIDI for a place
to shoot.
Actress TUesda1 Weld, wear-ing a white sun dresa, played m
a tidepool with her young llOD,
Patriclc. occasionally glancing
over as 'Minh continued 111s-
search for the next shot.
About 75 cast and crew mem-
bers stood around the rocks
below Treasure Island Trailer
Park in South Laguna. sunning
themselves or grumbllnl over
Mann's pa1ii'Making search of
the tuiepool8.
··By the tlme he finds what he
wants. it's going to be dark, ..
groused one crewmember as he
lit a cigarette.
"We won't be back in LA W'ltil
9."
The film crew arrived in the
usually quiet South La-una
trailer community early Tues·
day morrung. but couldn't begin
shooting until about noon when
the sun bl"oke t.broU&b the low
c .....
About a dolen Treasure Island
resldeots stood atop tbe bluffs
overlooking the fl.Im crew and
watched as cameramen fllmed
one seo:nmt o( •-n6ef." a Uait·
ed Alt&ts ~ that is G •
pected to appear ID the tbeaten
next May.
A~ Jim Beluslai. ~ bralher
of "Animal Houstrs" Jobn Belushi. was in the surfUne witb
a yoWJg actftSS llUned Patty Ross.
As cameras rolled. the couple
rolled over and over in the
water. until director Mann
shouted "Cut."
"Oh. it's going to be one of
THOSE kinds of movies, .. one
Treasure Is land resident
clucked.
After the shot. the cameras
were taken down. and Mann
began his 45-minute search for
the next scene on the rocks just
south ol the oJd pier at Treasure
Island.
Caan appears in the film as a
thief recently released from
prison and Tues day Weld
<See STAa8, Page A%)
Horses Reprieved
At Crystal Cove
with his <Cabill's> decision."
t·:,n ·appbtg Oat of Rhyme
"Mrs. Bergeson saw no reason
to move anyooe out of the park
area until the state "decides what
it'a loinl to do with tbe park,"
aide Julie Proeber& said. R e be c c a N•e I a o o , a
spokeswoman for the 400·
member equestrian eommittee.
said ti.e reprieve will live the
center time ·to prow horses are .••• lntelra1 pa.rt of the park
plan."
Liz Taywr, Rod McKuen Exchange Slaps
The 25-acre stable and riding
facility waa leased to the
ope.,aton by the Irvine Com·
panJ prior to state pum.e of
the park laqd.
Jh1B SUCCESS
Deputies
Woking
For Trio
Orange County Sheriff's in·
vestigators said today they are
seeking warrants against addi·
lional persons sought in coonec·
lion with an alleged cocaine
smuggling operation that was
broken up Monday night in San-
ta Ana.
Five persons, including two
men rrom the Laguna Beach
area, were arrested by un·
dercover sheriff's investigators
and agents or the federal Drug
Enformcent Administration .
who claim they seized three and
one-half kilograms of nearly
pure cocaine during a meeting
with the a lleged dealers al a
motel.
Those arrested were Daniel
Arlen Wisner. 35. 917 Balboa
Av e .. Laguna Beach: Thomas
James Taylor. 28. 22362 1st
Street. South Laguna; Robert
Ray Pion. also known as Robert
Ray Pyne, 38, Lancaster: Gary
Martin Henson . 29, Kauai.
Hawaii, and Patrick Dugan, 36,
also of Kauai. Sheriff's U . Wyatt Hart said
that two or three persons still
are sought in the investigation of
what he described as a major
Orange County-based cocaine
sales operation. The drug activi-
ty was primarily centered in
Laguna Beach and Costa Mesa.
Hart said.
Tbe set.zed cocaine in its uncut
form was valued at $700,000.
Hart said. If sold in its cut form
oa &be lltl"ed. the drug would be
worth about 91'15,000. he added.
Investigators also seized about
1,000 tablets of the hypnotic •
Quualude a nd about three
pou• ol high grade Hawaiian
m~--.Hartsaid. -dewtlaJ Jaw enforcement
sources said today that both
Taylor and Henson were
believed to be involved in drug
sales activities in the Orange
Coast arew.
Each of the rive persons ar-
rested was booked into Orani.te
<Seoe COCAINE, Page AZ>
LB Freeway
Repairs Set
Next Month
Portions of the Laguna Can·
.Yon Freeway. between the San
Diego and Santa Ana freeways,
will be closed off and on for the
next month as work crews re·
surface the highway a nd ad.ia·
cent ramps .
CalTrans officials said work
has already begun on the mile
long stretch between the two
freeways , and the res urfing
could be completed by early
July.
During construction, it will be
necessary to close some lanes
and ramps. but CalTrans of-
ficials say the lanes will rem.ain
open durtna peak traffic hours.
Blait Paving, Inc. of Yorba
Linda la ~ contractor for the
$2$0,000 project. ·
Coast
Weather
. Nlabt and morning low clouds with mostly sunny
afternoon Tbursda)'.
Hilhs in the upper 80s at
tbe beacbel to mid or up-
per '10l lnland areas, Lows
tonl&bt 51 W to.
INSl .. Te•A~
41 AM.Y l'l.OI LC ........ ...,, .. ,
BUDGET ••• . '°'~--k llWtll .................. .,,, ............ Ci~cn M•W.'' .,,.. ca cw Mil to liw
tlt1 Cb .. nMr of Commerce
moo•.J to fund • tourlat ptOCDO-tlte ....... c ....... ,.,,.
tMMl&l,...,..
• Tt.e Olalnber orlltaalb uked for •.ooo. but the a..-lllled In UM ~ cttJ ...,_ la --PolloWtn• • 1pUt •ote. the councU aaMd to ma.h a ftnal
dedaton fune 1T
How to 1ptnd 1211 ,000 •n federal revenue •har1n1 money
wall al10 be decided Uttn.
Propoied nptndltu.ree h'oaa the
revenue .aw1nf f\IDdl an the
purchase ol new polloe, tire and
municipal aervlt'fl vehlcle11
Also lncluded ii coo1trud1on
• of an emer1ency aeoeu roed to
Arch Beach Hel,ht.a and eertaJ
photographs or the city to help
determine potential land1Ud1 areas.
Anaheim Man
Held in SC
On Sex Charge . .
: ~a Clemente poUce, armed
1 wltb a felony warrant, arree.t.ed
an Anaheim man Tuesday,
ch .. 8 him with perform1n1 ...t an UMlaJ tex act oo a ts-year.
old boy.
Ponce said Michael Robert
Dlttrlch...L 22. '!' Anaheim, wu ar-
rested Tuesaay after a two-day
investigation by San Clemente
Police into the Incident, which
allegedly took place ln a
doorway ln the SOO block of
Avenlda Del Mar tut Sunday.
omcers said the youn1ster ap-
parently left a party near the
municipal pier al about 2:20
a.m . Sunday, and began walking
home.
He was allegedly offered a
ride by Dittncb and when he re·
fused, the suspect followed him.
The youth waa pulled into an
alcove where a neighbor heard a
scuffle out.side his house.
The witness grabbed a
baseball bat and arrived
downstairs to see the sex crime
taking place. police said.
The suspect jumped the fence
and escaped, despite a search by
police or the area shortly after
the crime.
Detectives later received a
description of the suspect from
partygoers, and based on In·
.. ·formation provided, questioned
Oillric at his home earlier thla
week.
The 15-year-old and the wtt·
ness later Identified Dittrich
during a police lineup, officers
said, and he was arrested and
jailed with bail set at $10,000.
He was lo be arraigned in
South Orange County M unlcipal
Court today OD charges or
sodomy by force.
· 1bieves Take
Equipment
Worth $3,000
Burglars who police said
seemed to know what they were
looking ror looted an Irvine con-
struction shed of UIOrted heavy
power tools valued al $3,000, il
was discovered Tuesday.
Steve Heinzen, 1eneral
man ager of Orange County
Stnping Service, 16862 Cooatruc·
tion Way, told investigators the
loss included chain aawa, rock
drills, a generator and other
gear.
The items were stored in a
shed that waa broken Into with a
pry device such u a crowbar,
police aaid.
The heavy tools were ap·
parentJy passed over a high wire
fence surrounding the north
Irvin• C!Ol\StrucUoo yard which
is near Tustin Marine Corpe Air
Station <helicopter> to a waiting
accomplice.
DAI LY PILOT
Quiet Tribute
~Duke's Horwn Continue
By STEVE MITCHELL Of_.,....,.... .....
The view of the ocean wu obecured by early fo1 and
the hlllaide cemetery wu deserted today lo Newport
Beach.
One arrangement of nowera tucked in a basket next to
the flagpole was the only lndlcaUon that today mark• the
first anniversary of John Wayne'• death.
The flowers, a park caretaker noted, were probably
left by a friend or a fan of the movie great.
BUT THE DAY Is expected to be Utile different from
others at Pacific View Memorial Park, where Wayne lies
in an tmmarked Jr ave somewhere ln the rollln1 hllla. "We've received a rew calls but not.hi.ng Is planned." a
cemetery aPokesperson said. "We haven't heard rrom the
family ln a long ume."
NEWPORT CITY LEADERS, who ordered flags flown
at haU stair last year when the movie star died al age 72,
said nothing special ls planned to mark the anniversary.
The John Wayne Tennis Club has no ranfare planned
either.
But the town and the Jlalaon ha!> far rrom forgotten the
silver screen cowboy.
One year after has death, the movie hero haa been
awarded the nation's highest t'lv111an honor. has an airport
in Orange C-Owaty named after him and soon wall be the
subject of a television film biography.
Books have also been written about "The Duke" and a
gold medal inscribed "John Wayne. Amen ca" was or·
dered struck by the Congress this year .
CEMETERY OFFICIALS SAID many fans and
curiosity-seekers J>OUred Into the park lul summer looking
for their hero's grave. They were disappointed when to&ct
the locaUon of the arave site Is a secret.
Only family members and a rew park officials know
exacUy where Wayne Is burled
"It just seems better that way," remarked one
cemetery spokeswoman "You never know what could
happen. People do str'ange things."
She said people who show up at the park with flowers
or other tokens of remembrance ror Wayne are directed to
the flagpole and asked to leave them there.
"TUE FAMILY HAS been seen here several tJmea but
they know where to go and never stop by the office or
bring it to anyone's attention that they're even here."
Wayne'• funeral was kept an that same low-key tradl·
lion. It wu a private 6 a .m. service. Only family members
attended.
Wayne's friend and business associate Ken WUU1 said,
"That's the way Duke wanted it. He wanted a living
memorial only. His tradition."
HE SUGGEST THAT other friends of the movie star tn
Newport Beach probably were remembering Wayne in "a
quiet way." •
"We looked through the old newspaper clipplnss last
night and just said 'Thank God for John Wayne.· He wu a
stabilizing Influence in this country and there are no other
men oo the horizon that I see with his klnd of stablllty and
influence."
Mrs. Wade's
Funeral Set
In Laguna
Mn. Robert Wade, a resident
or La1UDa Beach for the put 20
years, died &mday after a Ion&
illness. She wu 74.
A memorial aervice for Mrs.
Wade will be held Frtday at 3
p.m . at the rtnt Presbyterian
Church t.n La8\lh Beach at the
comer ol Forelt Avenue and 2nd
Street. Mn. Wade bad been ac-
tive tn many church actlvtties.
Mn. Wade ud her h1.&1band
Robert, wbo died ln 1978, lived
for 18 yean ln thelr home ln the
1000 block of Madlloo Place.
Mrs. Wade lJ survived by her
four children, Ann Haven ol Seal
Beach, Ruth Ca1tro of
Rtnnide, llar1ant Bladel of
Overland, Ohio, •nd Robert
Wede ot Sen Dl .. o. Mn. Wade alto is survived by
flvt anadehlJdren. The familY
bu IUICllted memorial don•·
tlon1 to the American Heart
Fund.
f'ro• Pa,,.-A I
DRAFT •.•
following a 51-40 vote late Tues·
day blocking women from rec·
1sterlng alone with men. The-
American Civil Llbert1ea Unioa
has vowed to fUe suit to test tbe
conatllutJonallty of any reitstra·
lion system that excludes
women.
Re1l1tratlon opponents led
by Sen. Marte Hatlield, R-Ore.~
forced repeated roll call votea to
stall final action. Hatfield
sometimes voted a1ainat bJ1
propoaala, merely to 1lve
himself the parliamentary ritht
to request that the whole vote be
reconaldered.
Throuch the nl1bt, u eome
senators napped ln tbelr cmc.
and others 1lept at home,
RepubUcana held control ol the
Senate floor and k*Pt debat.e ec>-
lna.
A1 dawn broke O••r tbe
CapltolL.. GOP leader Howard
Baktr, K·Tma.1 told tM allDOlt-
empty chamber that the Ualted
Stat.I II "lllpplq tteadity .. In
term• ot manpower Md equt~
mtnt eotQpand with the so.Mt
Union. Ha uJd a 114 lncre••Ja def eDH tpaDdiDI will be , ••
qulred. • au..s ...... a1.-w11io
• 1upport tM plan 11•1'" n1·
l•U'•Uoe ,.,.. proloe. ...... •
.. , ........ -~ Ud • rlOt to HITJ OD ha U ... M a.nateralel •. ,.... ................ .,.
lmpoM deb9te~ ........
UNI cwtall U. dl9I -llOW
llll d.,. Old -to -........... 100 bouri.
4
~.,. .. t1W'1 love ln...._
Tbi8 rilaaDd ltlmhl lt Cau'1 (}II •lectroale1r•••' for •••tlo• ~H•k·* ud. ,.aw.. dollar!' um. ... 11 tbe mm ii '*81
lbot bt OdeafO, the ae1ment lo
South La8UDI talc•• place in O~e County 1upervlaor1
CalllornJa • tbl tbMf talcel a awa an 18-mootb coatrac:t break from hi• beetle crtme for a perlDaMllt boat yard in
schedule. Dana Point Harbor Tueaday to
NewCHP
Offices Set
In San Juan
CODltnlc:tJon ot new Calllonu.
Hl1bway Patrol area bead·
quart.en in Su Juan Cal>UUaDo
ll Hpected to be8in th1a f aJJ. followtn1 state approval of
COllltnaetlOD COit.i.
TM tm.eao ~ wtl.l tn-
elude a f.JOO.aquare·foot ome.
build.tq wttb 18 room1 at 12151
Camino C.pUtruo, a J.&-aere
1lt.e to be lbaNd wttb a Ca!Trana
me!D ...... fecill\f DOW UDdil' eoutnacticl8.
Tbe blebwar pMnl'1 42-iaan
aoutb count;y fOfte wtU nma1n
at the aame 1lle for the thne be-
tn1. noted Dlck Va Cott ot u.
unit. but the ~will be de·
•18ned to aeeom Le project~
ed 1rowtb in u. area.
Tbe fadlity wt11 be of eemeat
block · con1trucUon and full1
landscaped. Complet.loa ta U·
peeted in tbelprins ot 1911.
Anchor Marine Rep•lr Com·
pany.
Anchor Karine won the IS.SOO
pact without bavtnc to compete
wltb other firm1, an opUon
supervisors can exercise In
harbor or airport contract mat-
ters.
The comp.any also la Ubly to
receive a 30-year lease following
the 18-month trial period.
Awarding the contract to a
firm other than Anchor Marine
would mean the public might
lack a repair facility durin8 the
year's time it lakes to •tabliah
one, Supervisor Ralph Clark
said.
Anchor Marine has had an ln· tet'eat ln the 3.62-acre site tn Dana
Point Harbor since 1.fr72 aod pre-
aenUy nm.a a boat repalr yard there.
The company first prepared
plan• for a permanent yard in
1972, but ran out of money after
environmental and other re·
quired document.a were stalled
by the 1tate Coastal Com·
mlllloo.
But Ancboc' Marine came In
low bidder once again ln 1978
wben 1upervt.son repeated the
call for a permanent 1ard.
SubtequmUy. au recaWnd cSoou.
meat.I wen approved.
The firm eaUmata that 1~
1972 lt ha lnvelted aoo.ooo ..
the temporary faeiUUeal
It Ii that Jon1·term lnve1tmeat
and the apparent ••UlfacUoa ot
the boatln1 public that led
supervlaors to approve the COJD·
pany's packa1e without con-
sidering other o"lfers, Supervisor
Thomas RUey said.
Under terms of the pending
30-year leue, Anchor Manne
would pay the county $15,000 per
year. or a percentage of gtOfiS
receipt.I.
f'ro• Pn.-. l I
SLAPS .•.
aram. aaya Martin, but Miss
Taylor announced: "I'm going
to read my poem now-or not at
all."
The columnist said Reynolds
then set Miss Taylor off by re-
m arklng, ''Good, she's not going
to do it."
But instead of attacking
Reynolds, she struck McKuen
with her open hand and he
slapped her back, the columnist
said. Tbe 5,000.aquare-foot cw amt
area beadquanen II located at
23281 DeJ Laco. La1un• Hll.la.
. Van Cott u.id tbt bi&hway
patrol offlclal1 antJclpa{e Im·
proved service since tbe new
I aclUty wt11 be located near the
Saa Dle10 Freeway, "In fuJI
view wttb ac~a to faclllties
readily available."
Dana Man Vnlwrt
In Tanker Mishap
Fro• Pa~Af
COCAINE ...
County Jail oo suspicion of sales
or a controlled substance Bail
was set at $10,000 each.
Hart said the arrests
culminated a lhree ·month In-
vestigation lnto cocaine traffick·
ing In the county.
·'There has been a dramatJc
increase In air and marine
s muggling into Orange County,''
Hart said.
The cocaine, h• added, is
believed to uve bee ••aaled into Hawaii for ultimate dis-
tribution ID Orange County from
South America. •
• The cocaine, Hart Hid, wa
•bout M Pll'eet1t pa~
A Dana Point man escaped
aerloua injury this mornln&
when the lubricaUna oil tanker
truck be w.as driving overt.urned
and plunged upside down into a
ditch on San Juan Creek Road In
·Hitchhiker Sought
FORT WAYNE. Ind CAP> -
A hitchhiker who may have been
looking for a ride near the Mar·
rlott Inn when Vernon E . Jordan
Jr. wu gunned down could p~
vide blalgbt into the ahootlJla of
the civil right.a leader, a city de-
tective says. Police today a.re
seeking a IJ(Jlaible wttneu to the
May 29 sniper attack using a
composite sketch of a man seen
bitchhUdn& near tbe motel al the
tJme al tbe lbootinl·
San Juan Capistrano.
Jose Balliatero was treated at
San Clemente General Hospital
and released after the truck
crashed about 7 :30 a.m . when be
was turning onto the road from
the s outhbound San Diego
f''reeway offramp.
Authorities did not have ' the
driver's age this morning.
Some 2,000 gallons of the
. 7,000-galloo load or lube 011
spilled into the creek bed and a
defueler tanker was draining the
rest from the trailer rig this
morning following the accident.
Orange County firemen dug
and built a dam-like bern around
tbe apW to C'OOtaia it.
Firemen dispatched a fire
engrne, paramedic van, water
tanker. rescue aquad unit to the scene.
°""' ....................... .....
FIRa.N a.AMeU ova TAM(ER Af'ftR HALTING LEAKING LUIE OIL SPILL
DrtY• ,,_. ~ Clawted Out of C.b After Caplatrano C..aah
FATHERS DAYSAYl•S
10% •F ALL K•n SHIRTS •
OFFSHOrE
HOBIE
TENNIS
SPECIAL
FREE
STRINGS
wmtPUaCHASI
IP
'
,
.}
J'
I
OftANGE COUNTY, CAltfOANIA C TWENTY·FIVE CENTS
97 Da-n aaoou IaWIN .. ..., ........
S•M••I• ~t Jolua Wayne ~ ••••11H• ,..nc1 to ac· ce-•t• • mmmum o1 a.1 11Ut1oa rp,IHDCera on 65 lYer.,. dall1 f'Ommerclal Jet
llillatl -tM year .ao. airport Maault•tl have recom1nended. S~ AIUaon, of VT.N Cou ... lne., told t.be coun-ty Alr'pcift Oommlatoa Tuesday
eu1bt \be recommended fisures
were baMd on conaultanta • 1oat or reducina airport nolM by 7.$
declbela over the aame time ~nod.
The e.xpan.aioo 1trate1~oulUned lo the l1ICO m la meant to near~ f:y'p,e he
number ol puaencen preaenUy
using the airport and •llnificant-
ly Increase the number of daily
nt1bta wbl.le -1multaneoualy re-
ducins noise, Allison said.
The Irvine fl.rm ls preparinic a
. ·~· .......... LATE ACTOR HIGHLY HONORED BUT GRAVE UNMARKED
. Anniversary of John Wayne'• Death ObHrved .
Quiet Tribute
Duke's Honors Continue
By STEVE MARBLE
OI -DeltY "let S-The view of the ocean was obscured by early fog and
the hlllslde cemetery was deserted today in Newport
Beaclt.
One arrangement or nowers tucked in a basket next to
the Oagpole was the only indication that today marks the
first anniversary of John Wayne's dealh.
The flowers, a park caretaker noted. were probably
left by a friend or a fan of the movie great.
Bur mE DAY Is expected to be little different from
others at Pacific View Memorial Park. where Wayne lies
in an unmarked grave somewhere in the rolling hills.
"We've received a few calls but nothing is planned." a
cemetery spokesperson said. "We haven't heard from the
family In a Jong time.''
NEWPORT CITY LEADERS, who ordered flags flown
at half staff last year when the movie star died at age 72,
said nothing special is planned to mark the anniversary.
The John Wayne Tennis Club has no fanfare planned
either. But the town and the nation has far from forgotten the
silver screen cowboy.
One year after his death, the movie hero has been
awarded the nation's highest civilian honor. bas an airport
in Orange County named after him and soon will be the
subject of a television film biogTaphy.
Books have also been written about .. The Duke .. and a
cold medaJ inscribed "John Wayne. America .. was or·
dered struck by the Congress this year.
CEMETERY OFFICIALS SAID many fans and
cudosily-seekers poured into the park last summer looking
for their hero's grave. They were disappointed when told
the location of the grave site is a secret.
Only family members and a few park officials know
exactly where Wayne is buried.
"It juat seems better that way," remarked one
cemetery spokeswoman. "You never know what could
hapJ>en. People do strange things."
She said people who show up at the park with flowers
or other tokens of remembrance for Wayne are directed to
the flagpole and asked to leave them there.
'1'HE PAMJL Y HAS been seen here several times but
they . know where to go and never stop by the office or
bripl it to anyone's attention that they're even here."
,. Wayne's funeraJ was kept in that same low-key tradi-
,tioo. It wu a private 6 a.m. service. Only family members
attended.
Wayne's rrtend and business associate Ken Willig aaid,
"Tbat'a the way Duke wanted it. He wanted a living
memorial only. His lradltion."
BE 8VOOEST THAT other friends of the movie star in N~'Beach probably were rememberinl Wayne in "a .......
)''1• looked throu1b the old newspaper cUpplnp lut
mot tlDd Just aaid 'Thank. God tor John Wayne.' He wu a .ciblll*laa influence lo this country and there are no otber
mft QD tbe horizon that I see with hla kind of stability and
lnft~.··
indicated it would approve .•
controvenlal venttn• plan oe
Tbunday.
Tbe NllC staff bad ar.-ap-
proval ol the vtntlnl 1 pfa and
.... lt would poee .., bealtb
threat. The staff uld radloac· tMty ht ~ air could be'1tept
dov·n U" r~lcu,l.1• 11.n rnll &lowly
dur.11:: '\IM~i L: , wUI•. r co11d1·
Oona.
master plan to auide 1rowtb· of
the county airport lhrou&h the
year 20QI). rtnal decisiom on all
aspects ol the muter plan will
be made by the Orange County
Board ol Supervlaon. .
Under the consultant.a' pro-
posal, air carriers would be
forced to implement certain
noise reduction policies, such as
buylne new, qu.leter jets, before·
nt1hts could be increased. . -
The VTN recommendations
map out a 10-year schedule for meettq lbe 7.5 decibel nolae re-
duction 1oaJ. if noise profra.ms
be1ln in 1982. 8
The recommendation package
su11esta that supervisors fend
end off daily rupt lncreases un-
UJ 1988, when, under VTN 's pro-
posed noise reduction program.
noise will have been cut by five
decibels.
Presently 2 .3 million
passengers use John Wayne .
Airport. Average daily fil&hta by
commercial jets are llmfted by
supervtaon · order lO 40 per day.
lo addition, zn acres of land
in Newport Beach, Costa Mesa
and Santa Ana Heights are con-sidered .. incompatible" with the
nearby airport.
The VTN plan would shrink
that incompatible area to 30
acres. which means none of the
Newport Beach and Costa Mesa
land would rema/ the 6S
community noise equivalent level.
The 65 CNEL rating, roughly
equivalent to a decibel noise
.measurement is considered too
high for commercial, residential and industrial uses.
Allison told airport com-missioners and an audience or
about 35 persons that the recom-mendations were preliminary
and may change as a result or
(See AJRPQRT, Page AZ>
k Staff,
Add On $1.6 Mi11ion
Benefits,
Wages
Hiked
By JERRY CLAUSEN
Of<tll9 o.Hy ...... Staff
Despite the lay-off of nearly
170 employees next fiscal year,
the Newport -Mesa Unified
School District will pay out an
estimated $1.6 million more in
salaries than was budgeted this
fiscal year .
District trustees learned that
fact Tuesday afternoon as they began poring over the proposed
1980-81 budget.
Administrators also pointed
out that fringe benefit payments
will COit an addlticaal '1 million
next fiscal year, mostly because
gf an increase In health in-
surance premiums. '
Teachers were annted an 8
percent ralae lalt montb
retroactive for tbe flacal year
and are to receive an addltiooal 8 percent next year.
Non-teaching employees also
received 8 percent retroactively this year. Administrators have
written an anticipated 8 percent
more in salaries for those
e mployees into next year 's
bud,et, but salary negotiations are JUSl getting under way.
The proposed budget under study projects total expendittlres
of abo"t $46.2 millioo_oexl ?seal year. down about lll00,000 rom
last year's budgeted $47 million.
Revenue losses next year re-
s u 1 t from declining student
enrollment. used as the basis for
allocating state funds to local
districts, and a reapportionment
system ordered by the courts to
level out money going to both
rich and poor districts.
Newport·Mesa previously was
considered one of the .. richest ..
school districts in the state.
Trustees. led by board Presi·
dent Kenneth Wayman, have or-
dered district administrators to
cut back this year and are now
reviewing the results of those
cutting actions.
So far. the board has taken on-
ly one major cut in addition tu
layin1 off 98 teachers and 70
other employees.
A recent.decision to clilarge for
s tudent busing to and from
school ls expected lo cut di.alricl
spending in that category in
half.
Jordan Takes Over
WASHINGTON <AP> -
Hamllton Joritan. the While House chief of staff who
en1ineered President Carter's
1 tunnln1 1978 campai1n
triumph, soon will leave the
White House to direct Carter's
re·electkJo effort, accordini lO
report.a publlsb.ed today.
DINE'11'E SOLD
WITH SUCCESS
"Dally Pilot clualfled ads are
a banquet ot values.
"I sold my dlnette set with
1ood aucceu In lhe claullled section."
That'• the advertialn1 auccesa
it.or)' ot the Fountain Valley
man no ,&aHCI thla ad tn the
DaU1 PUot:
Dlnette set wtformlc•
tble " .. IOld Ch•ln
X ll lt-JUI lCJC
•
IM!ly l"tNt -lly LH ... , ...
CLINT WORTHINGTON IS GREETED BY THE GANG AT THE BANK THIS MOANING
lrvtne B•nk EmployH 8eat9 the Mell Again on 8k:ycle Ride from Phoenix
Lawsuit Aims
To Prohibit
Pyramid Bust
Orange County Superior Court
Judge Oretta Sears has set a
June 24 hearing on a lawsuit
which seeks to bar further police
and court action against persons
involved in pyramid schemes
Attorney Jason Landess. in a
class action suit filed on behalf
o f two persons taken into
custody for their involvement in
the get-rich-quic k schemes.
asked Judge Sears Tuesday for
a temporary restraining order.
She denied that request but set
the heanne In Judge Edward
Wallin's court to give both Lan·
deas and a representative of the
District Attorney's Oltlce a
chance lO araue the case.
The lawsuit claims invasion of privacy, harassme nt and in-
frin1ement on free a~h and
free assembly by law enforce·
ment agencies seeking to end
pyramid parties.
The two clients represented by
Landess are Patricia Mer-
riweather of Mwion Viejo and
Richard Crisplno of Anaheim.
Landess said the main thrust
of bll cue ll that the laws pro-
hlbitlnl endleu cbalns are un-con1Ut.utlonally vape.
He aald he ia tryina to prevent
the Dlltrict Attorney's Office
from ft1ina complaints aaatnat
thote already arrated or clted
by poll~ ror their Involvement
In pyramid part.Les.
Landess aald he would leek an
injunction at the June 24 hMrlnl
•1•lnlt enforcement of tbe laws
prohlbltlnc pyramid 1ehemt1.
Crilplno w• arrested in
in Garden O'°" at a py1'am.td
party while Miu Merriweather
'"-'' taken Into cuatody In Mlttl<ln Vtt"1 whert' she waa at·
tendln1 a pyramid meeUn1.
Beats the Mail
Cyclist Overcomes Setbacks
By RICHARD GREEN
Of .. O.Uy l'llet SIMt
Clinton Worthington pedaled
ha s lO·speed bicycle into the
parking I~ of the Bank of Irvine
this morning. thus winning tus
race from Phoenix against sax
letters.
The 2l·year-old man said Oat
tires. a broken cham and an en·
counter with a coyote were all
worth it. ··1t·s great to prove the post
<>ffice's slowness, .. he said. "I
would do it again."
Worthington dropped six let-
ters in Phoenix mailboxes Mon·
day evening. He then hopped on
his bicycle and rode off for
Irvine. determined to arrive in
town before hia letters.
Bank employees confirmed
this morning that the letters
badn 't arrived. They said the
mail 1.an't delivered untU 10 a.m.
Worthinaton arrived at the
bank at 9:'5.
He says be is unhappy with ln-
creaslne postal rates and the
poasibJe end of Saturday mail
deliveries.
For similar reasons be raced a
New Settlements
Irk Egyptiam
BJ TM A.uocla&ed Preee
E1ypt accused Israel today ot
lntenUooally "creaUn• more ob-
stacles ln the way of a Juat and
.comprehenalve peace" In the
Middle Eut by Ill determina-
doo to build more settlements in
occupied tenitortes.
An EOPtlan Foret1n Mlnlltry
·~•man re.cl a formal state-
ment \0 report•re In C1lro
crltlchln1 taraell Prime
Miollter M~ Belin for uytftc tri a &nterVI WWI ABC
Newa on TUeeday that ltrMl
would bUild 10 more HtU.mentil
lo the W•t Ba.
letter from San Francisco to
Irvine and won by a fuJI day
m May of 1979. That trip took
ham 3 days
Bicycling at night on the des·
ert bet wee n Phoenix and Southern California is scary. he
said "It's dark on those roads ... he
said ··All you see are trucks. A
coyote jumped in front of me
and scared the heck out of me.'· An employee or the Bank of
Irvine. Worthington said he has
occasion to obser ve the shortcomings or the U.S. Postal
Service because be bandies loan
payment.s that often are late
because or what he says is slow
mall service.
Coast
Weather
Nllht and morning low
clouds with mostly sunny
afternoon Thursday .
Highs in the upper 60s at
the beaches to mid or up-
per 70s inland areas. Lows
tonight 55 to 60.
INSIDE TODA~
PBS prOHU "Gueu
Who '• Pre{1nollt?" A critic
toll• the TV lholD ti dull -
but "=We, lhoughtful. pottut raNGrclwd and
thoroughl11 Jronlc.'' Page BIO. .... .,.
11..APND MokU!N
UzTeytor
lAOtSI IM Heat.tr, wbo wtD
stand t.rtal July 14 for allesedlY
lmpriloninl and sexually abm-
l n 1 an U -year-old male
hltchhlker, baa tned a $2$
mllUon claim a1alnat. the Ctty ol
f'ountaln Valley, asserliq 'that
hie civil rlgbta have been
violated.
The clalm was routinely de·
nled by Fountain Valley Ctly
Council Tuesday nlaht. penn.lt-
tlnc a formal law.wt to be ftled
in the matter wilhin ab mcntbs.
Slapstick
In a lettB to the city, Heater's
attorney, John N. Flood, nJd bl.a
client is seekin1 dama1es
because ol the "Ulecal and un-
reasonable and prejudicial COD·
duct ol FounWn Valley police
officers ... "
The attorney accused tbe
police department or "giving
false and extremely prejudicial
informaUoo" to the press and to
nel1hbors. He said the police
falaely stated or inferred that
Heater was the "freeway killer"
and was extremely dangerous.
Taylor, McKuen Trade Bl~
NEW YORK <AP> -Elizabeth faylor and poet Rod McKuen
traded slaps backstage during a
celebrity-studded Gala for the
Performing Arts at Woll Trap
Theater Park in Virginia, the
New York Post said. Actor Burt Reynolds t.rtggered
the incident June 3 but didn't get
slapped, columnist Jack Martin
wrote Tuesday. si, None of those involved was
• ~mmediately available for com·
ment on the columnist's ac-
count.
Miss TiJ.ylor had interrupted
shooting· or a film tn En1land to
attend the gala, and to the au·
dience, she and McKuen ap·
peared to be on good terms. Al
one peint. in r~ct. she gave the
pcM?t a kl5S on lhe lips.
Trouble arose, however. when,
with the hour growing late.
singer Johnny Cash took up a
half hour in s tead or
his allotted 10 minutes, Martin
said. McKuen was next on the pro-
gram, says Martin. but Miss
Taylor announced: "I'm going
to read my poem now-or not al
all ."
The columnist said Reynolds
then set Miss Taylor off by re-
marking, "Good. she's not going
to do it."
But instead of attacking
Reynolds, s he struck McKuen
with her open hand and he
slapped her back, the columnist
said.
The claim alleges that
Heater's basic Constitutional
rights have been violated.
Heater, 48, was arrested May
8 al his Fountain Valley home,
after a hitchhiker from Covina
told police that Heater picked
him up at a freeway ramp im·
prisoned him In the FoU.:.tain
Valley home and subjected him
to various sexually abuses.
After his arrest. Heater's 1976
con viction on similar charges
was publiclz.ed, albng with bis
le ngthy record of arrests on
other sex charges.
MCNally Schednles
Final Cradnation
Heater has been placed In
Orange County Jail in lieu of
S2SO.OOO bail and has been or·
dered to stand trial July 14
before Orange County Superior
Court Judge James Turner.
Study Raps
Transmission
In Fords Costa Mesa's old McNaUy High Schoo\ will graduate its
last class Thursday when 70
seniors receive diplomas.
Next year , the continuation
school will have a new location
overlooking Upper Newport Bay
and a new name -Back Bay
Fr••• Page "'I
AIRPORT .••
public comment before the
master plan's final version is re-
leased in July.
"The 7.5 number is not a hard
~nd fast magical number. It's
Just a trade o(f between noise
and service," Allison said.
Reaction from at least two
county supervisors was s wift.
Supervisor Thomas Riley
whose distract includes th~
airport, supported VTN's noise
reducti<>r:t program and its goal
of knockmg down the noise level
by 7.5 decibels.
He said that the county should
st~lctly enforce the proposed
n?tse program from the begin·
mng.
In addition, 'Riley agreed with
consultants that no daily flight
should be added to the present
limit of 40 until the 1988 noise re-
duction goal or five decibels is
reached.
However, Boar.d Chairman
Ralph Clark took Issue with a
couple of the consultants' rec·
om mendations. He asked that the noise !"educ-
tion goal be changed to sev"en
decibles rather than 7 .5 and urged
that flights be added before the
1988 bench mark noted by VTN "The surrounding commwiaty
should still receive the bulk of
the benefits o( any noise reduc·
lion. but the airline and travel·
ing public should also receive
lm mediate rewards," Clark
wrote in a letter to airport of·
flcials.
c
DAILY PILOT
T,.. °'-c:-1 0.. .. l'lllC. _,, _,, It ~---.......... ..--....... °'-(.Mtl .............. c-,..,., ... ='!:1:"~~-=-·~ l••c.lt/,-~nl•tft Y•lt••• lt•tfte L .. Vft• _ .. ,_ .. ~ ............... 1--. ..
....... .-s.i ...... ·--l'• , ... __ ;:·.·i:i::r.i~ e=:~:--~ o .._.._ .., ___ ..._.._
-··~ Yt(tl"r .. -t-0.-•---._ ..... ......
High School.
Newport-Mesa Unified School
District trustees approved the
name change Tuesday night.
The school. which houses only
students over 16 years of age
who have experienced dif·
ficulties in regular com·
prebeosive high schools, will re-
locate this summer at the
former Monte Vlsta Elementary
School campus. The elementary school. locat·
ed at· M<lllte Vista Street and
Irvine Avenue in eo;ia Mesa,
was closed down fast year
because of declining enrollment.
McNally students have beer.
housed in portable buildings
since 1966 on the old Clara
McNally Elementary School
campus at 19th Street and
Newport Boulevard.
Thal seven-acre campus,
named after a teacher who once
taught there. has been sold to
Pacific Federal Savings.
McNally's student body voted
lo name their school Back Bay
High in recent homeroom poll·
ing efforts, said Marge Conry,
secretary to McNally principal
J ack Coleman.
She urged the board to ap-
prove the new name. noling that
a s tigma ls attached to the
McNally continuation school
name.
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
Transportation De partment
notified the Ford Mot.or Co. that
a three-year investigation has
show~ transmission slippage de·
lects m 16. million automobiles.
government sources reported to-
day.
The sources, who asked that
they not be identified, said such
a finding usually resulta in a
formal recall wbicb. were it or-
dered. would be the largest in automotive history.
The defect is in the
transmiaaioo system of 196!H979
Ford passenger cars. causing
them to slip from park to re·
ver se without warning. the
sources reported.
The Transportation Depart·
ment had no comment on the re·
port, ex~ept to say that the legal
process in the case has not been
rompleted. It said it might have
.m announcement this week or
next week.
The National Highway Traffic
Safety Administration, an arm
of the Tranaportation Depart·
ment. told the center for Auto
Safety hut month it believed 88
had been ltilled In accidents
caused by Ford transmission
slippage. NHTSA bas been in·
vestigat1ng the transmissions
I hree years.
JVST BREAKING-----...
Lot~ rtenu from todofl'• world and raohonal MW tJewlopmenu.
Attackers Wipe Out
Depot With Grenade
By The ANoelated Preti
An armed group blew up an oil depot in western Iran with a
rocket-propelled grenade and also attacked an Iran-Europe
railway elation, Tehran radio reported today.
Police punued the attackers but did not capture them the
broadcast .aald. There wu no indication who was responiible
and no mention of cuualtles in the locldentl late Tuesday at
SaJmu in Azerbaijan, a region near Iraq and Turtey where
saboteun have been actJve lo recent monlba. Fire at tbe oil de-
pot wu still raging today. the broadcast said
The incident occurred a few hours after iran'a revolutionll')'
leader, Ayatollah Rubollah Khomeini. warned agalnst lDtemal
strife and sald hJs re1ime ~aht aelf-deltrud unless the lllamlc
hardliners controlling Parliament baJt their political war wttb
President Abolhasaen Banl·Sadr.
S.Ofl ~ar1d1tg Ha,,.~d
EL MONTt (AP> -The Air Quality Manaaemeat Dlttrtct
forecast unbealtbf ul alr n.~ty Tbunday for MDllUH people and Pollution Stanard I rat1no of la In tM SU r.....-
Vallalley, Santa Clarita Valley anCt t.be San Gabttel·Pomcea \' e}'I and 154 ln the 1Uven1de.SU 8emardUao.,..
Good air _quality waa apec:Nd ID the Nit of the ioutb coat alt bum. A PSI ratlq ol 42 wu foncul fat lbe coestal lDlaDd
Oranc• County, Btf Bear and ~ and low delert ., .. , •
PSI 1S wu a~ IQ tbe .8analq area ud a PSI ratlnf Of
Ill wu toreeul for the meVopollta ana and H•met·Ebl.non
area.
,..,.,.... o" ••••• ""•• .
• WASHINGTON (AP) -HClUH and S.aate lMa~
=-=~ .,.....-t0da1 oe a eom...,...... ,..==qtwdllweud,...... ..
,,.. llouM ... .. .. -tbt ... ~ ?!'.!~· .................. tMt .......... O¥W tM -.-could ....... b; a...--.. .
.
~
, ; .. '
• .,,i-l4i~Alt<l'-" :f • , : : t
OMty ...... ..._.,, ..... #ltc ...
ACTRESS TUESDAY WELD (L.EfTl CHATS WITH MOVIE-MAKINO COUEAOUE PATTY AOS8
Alter • Olp In tfte Surf. A Tow81ng Off Between Tekee on South Laguna Str•nd
Equestrian
Horse Owners
Get Break
As one of bis final acts as state
parks direct.or. Ruuell Cah.lll gave Irvine Equestrian Cent«
horseowners a reprieve that will
~llow them to keep their arumals
in the new Crystal Cove State
Park for at !ea.st 18 months.
CahiJJ, who announced Tues-
day he wtll resign his slate post
at the end of the week. said the
equestnan center should stay
open untJI plannlJ1 g for t~ new
park ts completed (Related
photo Page AlO. >
!he state direct.or was to mttl
with members of the Irvine
Coast F.questrian Planning Com·
mittee last Friday. to discuss
the panel's concern that they
would be forced to close by "--31 ~.
. But Cahill canceled the m~t·
ing. The state parks department
has argued that the equestnan
center is not compatible with the
new Crystal Cove State Park.
and ordered the facility, located
between c.otona del Mar and
Laguna Beach. dismantled by
th~ end of the year.
I Hlltlalt...,ab, a~eoo·
ta I atn1 more tlaao s.ooo
signatures was presented to
Cahill by Asllemblywoman
Marian Berge5on ( R-Newport
Beach> citing the public use o(
the equestnan center and lbe
need to keep it.
A spokeswom a n for Mrs .
Bergeson sai d the as ·
semblywoman ls "very pleased
with his <Cahill's ) dedalon."
"Mrs. Berseson saw no reason
to move anyone out of the part
3rea unUl the state decides what
it's going to do with the park,"
aide Julie Froeber«i said.
Rebec ca N e lson . a s pokeswoman for the 400·
member equestrian committee.
said the reprieve will give tbe
center time lo prove hones are
"an integral part of the park
plan."
The ~acre st.able and riding
facility was leased to the
operators by the Irvine Com·
pany prior to state purchase of
...
~ £aan Man
Stars V se Laguna Site
By STEVE MITCHELL °' ... o.ltr -SCMf Actor James Ca an stood
barechested on the beach with
bis~ croeaed. peering out of
a pall" of sunglasses as direct.or
Mtcbael Mann sprinted from
rock to rock Joolung for a place
to shoot.
Actress Tuesday Weld, wear-
ing a white sun dress, played m a Udepool with her young soo
Patrick, occasionally glanclni
over as Mann continued his
search for the oext shot.
About 7S cast and crew mem·
bers stood around the rocks
below Treasure Island Trailer
Pa rk in South Laguna, s unning
themselves •or grumbling over
Mann's pains taking search of
lhe lldepools.
··By the ume he finds what he:
wants. it"s going to be d<Jrk ."'
groused one crewmember as h<!
ht a cigarette.
··we won't be back in LA unttl
9 ..
The fil m crew arrived tn the
us ually quiet South La~una
trailer community early Tues·
day monung. but couldn't begm
shooting until about noon when
the sWl broke through tbe low
clouds. About a doz.ea Treasure Island
resjpentS stood at.op tbe bluffs
overloolnng the mm crew and
watched as cameramen filmed
one segment of .. Thiel." a Urut·
ed ArtistS product.Jon that is ex·
pected to appear U\ the theaters
next May.
Act.or Jim Belushi. the brother
of "'Animal House's" John
Belustu. was in lhe surflme wtth
a young actress na med Patty
Ross. As cameras rolled. the couple rolled over and over in the
water, until director Mann
shouted "Cut."
"Oh. it's going to be one of
THOSE kinds of movies." one
T r e a s u r e I s I a n d r e's I d e n t
clucked.
After the shot. the cameras
were taken down, and Mann
began tus U-minute search for
the next ~ on the rock.a just
south of the old pier at Treasure
Island.
Caan appears in the film as a
thief recently rele ased from
prison and Tuesday Weld
portrays the thief's love interest.
The rotund Belushi is Caan's
e lectronics man ror exotic
break-ins and million dollar
capers.
While most or the film 1s being
shot in Clucago, the segment tn
South Laguna lakes place in
California as the thief takes a
break from his hectic crime
schedule.
And Tuesday it appeared
everyone but Mano was taking a
break from fi.lming.
"Ob, Geez, now a bunch of
sunbathers are starting to sit
over on that beach," one crew
member says. pointinc to a
small bay just north of the rocks
whe re Mann is still gazing
through his lens.
'"They don't let the public
down here, do they~" one film
offic ial asked ... That's all we
need 1s a lot of people standing
around Ute l>l't."
Deputies Aim
To Nab More
Coke Pushers
Orange County Sheriff's in·
vest1gat.ors said today they are
seeking warrants against addi·
taonal persons sought in connec-
tion with an alleged cocaine
sm uggltag operation that was
broken up Monday night t.n San·
!d Ana.
Five persons, including two
men from the Laguna Beach
ar ea , were arrested ~Y un·
dercover sheriff's invest?gat.ors
and agents of the federal Drug
Enformcent Administration,
who claim they seized three and
one-hair kilograms or nearly
pure cocaine during a meeting
with the alleged dealers at a
rnotel.
Those arrested were Daniel
Arlen Wisner , 3S, 917 Balboa
Ave., LagWla Beach; Thomas
James Taylor, 28. 22362 1st
Street •. South Laguna: Robert
Ray Pion. also known as Robert
Ray Pyne, 38. Lancaster: Gary
M arti!l Henson, 29. Kauai.
Hawa11. and Patrick Dugan 36 also of Kauai. ' '
the park land. ========--==--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
FATHERS DAYSAYl•S
10% •FALL KNIT SHIRTS
OFFSHOl'E
COIOMAD&MAI
Jiii & COAST HWY.
67~tlOG
HOBIE
TENNIS
SPECIAL
FREE
STRINGS .
WITMPUICHASI
OPMIWRAMI
~
~SAGflONS
f.
•
81 IYLYIA POITD A. .. _..... II.aft IOand, men of the Utloo'I ""'° mllUon eommuten -etSMtelally =dlat.aee driYef'I -Ila" bNe ~to cu ud vaa aDd uy., lDi M Daefl MIO perffDt OD outll)'I. u OOltl are ectU&Ut divided, the eo mU.•;daJ -15.000 mU..•JMr -~ar commuter cu halve apeGMt, frvm
28.1 cmta • mUe to H .4 centl, bl eddla1 ·• 11ncJe
pUNDllf. With two more rtden. outlay• ea.a be IWved ,..mll!' ______ ,... •e•ln to 7.2 ~.
But uaually lt
doe1n't work tbta
lo1tcal way4 A
passeager who doesn't
have full·tim. uae of the
car ls unlikely to be
wl1Hn1 , to pay $90 a
moat.b to tbe auto owner for a two-hour dally r1de wlt.b three otber people.
EN'l'E& 1'llE .. PA.SSENGEB ftVC&" -tbe convert·
ed cargo van with seats, wihdows and other creature com·
forta added. A croup of u neighbors or coworkers, or the
flnna Chat empJoy them. can buy or le ... theM pl"'5b
SJ.2.000 veb.iclee; and flcuring insurance, interest pay·
menta, fuel and malnle'1ance. these vans can be run U,000
mlles·a-year for three years (or about 51 cent.a a mile.
'11\at's almost twice the cost ol an Intermediate-size
sedan for \hat dL&t.ance. But diVide the Sl ceota by ts and
each rider owes juat 3.4 cents a mile, only 142.50 a month,
less than half tbe per.passenger co.t ln a four·rtder car pool.
There are smaller vans, but the larger lhe urut and the
greater the distance traveled. the bi&her the aavlnga.
Ph.11, you mu.st carry at least eipt penoos to qualify
for such added J>()Sslble incentives as investment tax
credits. use of special traffic lanes In ruab hours,
privileged parking places and fuel allocation priority
certificate,,. ~
ON TOP OF THOSE individual inducements. van
poolers have the patriotic satisfaction or helping to solve
the energy crunch, reducing poUuUon. cutUDg vehicle C'On·
gestion and easing the parking pinch.
A good deal? For many people. it as. So why, after two
fuel import· squeezes, and ·a ·near-doubUog of car cost.I
smce urn. are there only about 9,000 van pools running?
There are these roadbloc:u -onJy now bectnning to
be overcome.
Fedttal foot-dragging and bureaucratic in.fighting.
state-level confusioo and romplex1ty in vehicle and driver
hcen.smg, insurance induatry reluctance and concealed op.
posatioo from auto-related and public· transit bus interests.
THE ESSENCE OF van pooling ia lhat at removes 15
<'ars from the road for every truclc added. So Detroit tor
Akroo. Houston. Pittsburgh) can hardly be expected to
embrace the concept.
Chrysler bluntly states it is "the only automobile com-
pany acuvety promotJng van pooling in the U.S." But one
LS better than none and CbrysJer is pudling bard.
As for federal and state covemmeats. they've spent
less than $75 million -out ol an available SI billion '
annually for transportation -on van pooling, but SSS
mlllioo has ~ s pent in tbe pa.st two years and ouUays
a.re slated to grow.
WME INSUSANCE COMPANIES still classify van
pools u "commoo carrien," forcing poolers to pay pre·
miums as bigb as $2,500 a year. But a few companies are
mtrodudn« special policies at more normal SS00-$700 a
year rates
Internal Revenue Service so far bas failed to iuue
clearcut l"Ulinp oa Investment tu credita for commuter vans,~ me ol lb! vans by COl1)0l'atklu durlnc
the day tor oCber purpoaos. •
lRS abo C'OlltiDuett to waffle oa wbetber the "free •
rides" most van pools allow driven. and free 'WeSenctJ use, is lu·free or is iocome. But I.be IRS is euln1 and one
official feels it "will come around."
ALSO. SOME It STATES still have not passed laws en·
courqi.oc van pools, and the Natiooal Committee oo
Unlfonn Traffic Laws & Ordinances rates tbe laws in
some ataaes as "less than ideal." But there is a uekat
trend" to fewer restrictions oo van pools.
1be Department of Energy is tbu.s far unsure about
how individuals should obtain fuel priority certificates for
van pools. but recently added the pools to vehicles enUUed
to priority.
With these roadblocks removed. there could be as
many u :;oo,ooo van pools in operation within a decade,
enough to band.le 6,000,000 to 7,500.000 riders, 10 percent of
au commuters.
••Sales llMl•adea'' is tbe title for an Oraace Coalt
Colle1e seminar scheduled for 7 p.m . today in fine
arts hall 119 oo the campus, 2701 Fairview Road. Costa
Mesa. Registration for the free session will be at the
classroom site. Information 551-5880.
The board "' directors ol llercvJ SaYlllP ....... A1tedaUoe, Huntington Beach. bas voted a regular
quarterly dividend of 12~ cents per share to atockholden
ol reccrd July l .
Gold, Metal Quotations •1 ..... Aseedated PftU SeJeeted wocld cold prices today:
I I 'r : IDOl'1llnc flstna 1:585.00. olf $9.00; aftemooO
flxlnt t:M.00, off sa.oo.
Putl: aftemooa f1xiq $.W.56. off S0.9'. ~: ftliDI t-W7.M. olf $11.00. '• z.tm: 9801 .00 btd. up $1.00; t80S.OO asked. •
New Y.tl: Ra.nd.y •Harman mid-mornina S*.00. off
•. 00.
New Y .. : ED&elhard aellln1 price mld-momln• .-.oo. on sa.oo. New Ya: Encelbard fabricated told mJd·rn<>rnlne t111.•.ott•.a
* * '* NEW YORK CAP> -Hmd1 ll Banurl &ilftf '11.100
up90.S>. ~ ID1W' *18.CllD. up '9-9' fUrkated ail
f:M,l05.up ....
* * N&W YORK (AP> -Soot nonferrOUI metal price1 to.
dij:
Suitor Suited
Richard Thomas is the suitor who will go
to any length to capture the girl in "Get· ting Married." a rebroadcast on "The CBS
Wednesday Night Movies" at 9, Channel 2.
~ 1W oon81 Md ..........
eye encl B J try lo helP •
10'lllQ l(oreM wtlo .. trying
to evold COi,... lptieli, Into
t"9 9lf""I • TIE llNCY HLI.
SHOW
• OY8'EMY aue.t: no\lllllel·pi8ywrlgnl
lrWWI Shew. (CC) (R)
• MAOMB. I LEHMA
REPORT
7:JO 8 HOeOOY'S TAU<ING
Hos\S PNllp M(;t(eon end
Aeron HMa eJIDl<>te • ptO-
grern Of eex ~!of
I~ G OUlftNE38 GAME
leeterboerd IMP hog.
·--UIC> "-· plenge pushuC>S, alllgalor -tllng. 8 HOUYWOOO
80UARE8 0 OJ FACE THE MUSIC
.. AU. IN THE FAMtl. Y
Atdlte retlc>n8ltnl htS thett
of aome neila tram tile
plant.
OaaalW'I Lui i•g•
8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles e KTLA llnd ) Los Angeles
8 AABC·TV (ABC) Los Angeles
(I) KFMB (CBS) San 01990 8 KHJ.. TV (Ind ) Los Angeles
@) KCST {ABC) San 01ego
• KTTV (Ind) Los Angeles e KCOP· TV (Ind I Los Angeles e KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles ClJ KOCE·TV (PSS) Huntmg1on Beach
• GOOOTWM
~-lobe oomlnO up ,_ tor the
e-unllll • IM good
--""'Into ..... • MACHB..11..SRR
REPORT
• OAEAT
P£AFOAMAHCO
"T rellblczers Ot Modem
Oenat" Oocumen1wy 1004·
ege. pllOt~ end oon-
teml)«8ry dencel's help
•llustrete the hislO(y of
Nnertc:an modem dance "°"' ls80ore Duncen 10
llAWlfle Otelwn (A)
(I) P.M. MAGAZINE
" ...,, to the temoua Com-
edy Store nlghtCIUC> 1n Loe
Angelee. e IOo« et the
sport ot wheelchair
blla8'l>ell
8:00 9 CAPTAIN AMENCA
C.0IM'I Amenal tall• on
en ondulllrleket whO ''
tlWWtenmo 10 deatroy en
Alnettcetl c:tty unleee he
-1.4 mltllofl In gold ~ \PW1 21(AI D REAL PEOf'l.E
Reportw on • oatnertno of
mystles. ..... ~
cont•I. rnlfll CW10n C>oet
raoea. lUI dendng and
lv<n<11.1<'8 ttlel ·~
Ne•ndenllel Men •••
1 .. tur-ed (CC) (A)
D MOVIE • * "'l.aay Frw111enstetn"
( 1972) Joseph Cotten.
M1clley liatglty The
Inf .-nous doc;1cY. deug/1-
,., !Inds henllllf ~I up
in the rwufta °' enother
n ...... .
!!.:::-:. .. ..... ,.. ............. ... ------.................
~-........ liiona' .. ,., , .... .-.. ~ ...,., , .... ~ llllle
~---T-.i
fl#Ohf. l¥9tp
~, ...... -.. ........ ~~ ,.,,.. ..........
Didi"*"' • ~.llA.IMMZINR ,. ..............
ltftd dlemond ONttet: ... ..,,... ...... c.oe. .... .., ..
r...Wtlonlnd the bit
~·· clott*lt 111111-,_
• flilOYll
••• ~_.. W.._.,. A '
ceu .. ·• '1Hbl J.,,... o.n. ...... Wood.
··~ Holt: a.. AoM1a. c:.ve.
Mol1oft l'9POfta on Vie *""*'-" ---tor euto ~ 9ICI IN
eftectl Of plieltt """.,.,. .. Sou"'9m c.lfofnle.
Cl) THf MXTIM l:30. THfOOO~
0.C.wtne•~~
MnCl-dollt bee with .... 11 •
.,..~ MiQflbol In ....
erm ~ rn.ICfl. end
the llld PIM oft with OOld
caeh.
• OMAT
PfN"ONAANC8
•tr~ Of Modern o.nce·· OCIGumentery loot·
•· ptleltOC1f1ICltle end con. I~~ help tlluetr••• the history °' Amencen modem da'Q
lrOfl'I IUdor• Ounawl to
Merttle 0.81\em (RI GD GUOIWHO'S
~AHUPOATE
Se ver•• ••P••ll who
llPt)eWed If\ lite 1177
-0-wlnning csoa-. ,.,,, ~ ,._ -
menta ol !he currtnt ...._
age pregnency cr••ls,
lnCIUdlno • eYf'ft'Y Of Ille
llCtlYltlee end llttltvdee Of
government. •chools,
medle. reaeerch and
perw>ta.
(I) KEEWI l'eOPl.£
t:OO • CJ) C8I MOVll
• • • .. Getting Mentecr
( 1t78 I Rlc:tlerG Thotilm. a-Annt1rOnO D Off"MNT-ST"'AOKE8 ........ _
Wiik lllld Amold...,,, lhet
Mr OfummOnd 19 tn ""-
Clal trouble lllld epply !of
$30 m111on lft ..nere (CCI
(A)
8 0 CKAAUF8
AHOE1..8
A pertv !of the Angelt on
Chlltlle's ,_ yectit Is
lnlerrue>led by m«O.W·
lee and re¥Olul-
llghUng -gold bullon stored 1*11w dedc. IRl
KOOP. 1:00 -••lebel Without A
Cauae" TblS 1JU movte wu the Jut for
Jam• Dean to bta brilllal2t but •hort act1D• career. Natalie Wood alao ttan.
KCET • 8 : 30 -Great
Performance1 -• 'Tratlblazera of
Modem Dance" Hlstory of American
modern dance is illustrated wltb
documentary footage, photographs •l\d
contemporary dancers.
KOCE 8 9:30 -.. To Say I Am"
Special focuses oo children unable to
talk aod the technology that allows them
to communicate.
• M.LYCIMHAM
al~ • ....v .....
Oueel lloet: Aon Ety.
eu.ta: u.. Ooftoven.. Erin
Or91, ,.,.,.. Hen8'ey.
Lynn Swenn. Joanne
C...idy. Aotlel1 Eaaon. t:IO. THE FACTS 0# LR
Blelr end .. N'frl blcOln9
Involved Mttl e gtoup Of
girts whO ..,.. mwttue-
1\L
I NEWlYW&>OA.-
OUDl WHO'I
~:AH UPOt\Tl
Severe! e11pertt who
eppewec1 1n the 1tn
~~
,.,,, oftllf their -"*"-o4 the c:urr....t .....
ege pregnency cr11•• •
Including • ~ Of "'-
ectMllel end ~ 01
government. 1clloo••.
medl•. reMerch end
peren\I G TOIAYIAM
" IP'ICllel toa.ino on ~ Oren wf'O 1te unable to
tell end on the '8Cl'll IOIOgy '
that ellows them l o
communicale.
10:00 D cx.-cv
Ouincy ~ tllet ...
tMn·eg.a OOdCfilld mey
heY8~~1or
l1'e euto eoc6del1I wtlld'I
llllled her~ (R)
el!IHEWS
•O VIOAI o.n ....,_ '° ~ ----.._, ~ • -wtlO WWlb '°kill her In Ofder to pin control Of
I~=~· ICUP"S SHOW
tC):.:30 • NlW9
GUUIWHO'S
l'MONANI' FOU.OW.uP 11:il01·.(I)0 N1W1 NEW\. YWE> OAlll:
MOVll
'*'*IA "A!Nterdem Meir''
( 1te7) Wiiiem Mellowe,
c.tn.rtne Yon Sc:tl8ll
.™EOOOOOUflU
~ oet• o.e. In lroubM
'""" ..... lnternel ,....,_ SeMce ~he. c*'8d In
on • tnlnOf metter.
• ™EllNNY~
SHOW
Benny ernoenonatea one
Of our populer ac><>rt•
oommwitator•
• A MATTUt Of'
DeOHrTY
~en.tyne Huftt• -Geun
Pt-U ., _,, on !tie
imc>eet Of .,,. &.opr-
COur1's lendmWtc-~
1n me Brown caae
• HEAFSTOYOUA
Hf.AL.TH .. ,...,. .. '1:30 . 00v0Uft T\JAN
JOHN DARLlfl.llG
GIMM9~ ,,._ 8ovt0fl, a....... ......
~ ..............
l ~,..-.MC-..,.,.,...,. ...... ............. we Gel\........,._. ..
"'"' ....... '° ..... "'· .... •cm-.wrr-
A KACI MMMr ol • .------· ··--........... KAO&. ··~MC ....
11:t0. 9 LOW IOAT
"Oft Diie'' Jofwl ......
Towell f~: "TIW ... ~... snw-
~. IAW--Pllgll'; •A T....,. ~ Jld)ln
Smltfl. Dennie ec.. '"' _.......,_
t2:00. Cl) 8l.ACK IHEIP
~ ....,.,, l4IMI fNfll b9lrig
,,.,.,.,.,," etathlde,
ec:l*"9S to efay wtth hit
--~ZONE A tlnlld-. b•nk clerk
llCIQUlree the ~ to ,__,
other people'•~
• UllS8IOH:
IMfl088llK..E
lhe IMF 1..-n Mt9 out to
lnflltrate • '°" ~ t9ll'Wy
• 8EANAAO ~·Dennis Pnoe jolrl8 Berl'MWd
lnthia thaw
12::IO 8 MOVIE *•'It "lJnlei!Mul Wlf9" I 1968) Steor>en Audren.
Mlel*~.
• MOVIE •*'It "The Gal Who Toott
Tile Wett" (l~tl Y11onne 12:00 Ill •*'It "Once Upon A
De C.00. Soon Bredy Mor•" (19581 O.. ~.
,-00 8 lOMOAAOW O.C. Menln.
Guuts 1nvut•get1ve m • •• '"Tonllle Flat"•
reportet A nthony (19421 Spencet Trecy'.
Summln: ector Rober'1 Hedy L.wnwr. • ii9 BAAETTA ID * * * * ''EMt Ot
Tiie OM!N>!ld coot 1r'co Eden"(ll>5Sl"-Dwl.
Of a genQSler prompta Julie H•m• ..
Berette to ewinge the 3.00 D * * • NA""'f All
deeth ol,.,,. OWf\ tether. (RI Boele" ( 19561 .Hrll Ctlen-G MAVEAO< Oler, Geotge Nader.
ere1 •aC>ll._ hlmeeH .. 1:30 a •• *'It ".lotWI And
• hlgl'i-fl•• g.wnC>ler In. ....,,,. ( 1909) Oultin Hoff.
W•wn I~ -<I tNin, Mle Ferrow.
by Armstrong & Batluk
IHEY'VE. 0fEN OJT 10G£T E.VEN WITH L.6 ~VER SINCE
iHA'l GAME. Ul6T YEAA ~f:N JOHNSPIKEOTHEIR~
~. .I ...,
'Guess Who's Pregnant?' Frank, Dull
B~sTougla
Reb Brown ts a former Marine turned
superhero on the special, "Captain
America," tD be rebroadcast in two parts,
tonight from 8 to 9 and Jwie 11 at the same
time on Channel 2, CBS.
'Today' Host
Has Big Week
NEW YORK (AP> -A raise, a two-year coo·
tract and a wedding add up to a big week for "To-
day'' bolt Jane Pauley.
Mias Pauley, who ia getting married Saturday
to "~bury" cartoonist Garry Trudeau, bas
beeD ~ to a new contract u co-bolt with Tom
Brokaw of tbe rnorninl NBC televialoo abow, the
Daily Newa said today. She also will continue u
network correapGDdent and llMbor of tbe Saturday
Dllht news and received a "hefty raiae," the News t: 1a1d. When she joined "Today" in ms, ber salary wu reported at $200,000.
'1T TOPI 'STAR WARS'!" ........... --
By PETER J. BOYER
LOS ANGELES c AP) -I suppo6e that Public
TV, impervious as it is to the ratings numbers
compUed by A.C. Nielsen. is the perfe<:t television
forum for the documentary. Documentaries can be
dry going, anQ on JWS, the sound of viewers stam·
peding to other statllhs rings rather sofUy.
A gTe4lt many documentaries that would never
make it tb the air on a commercial network find
life. lf not wide audience, on PBS. Even the
notorious "Death of a Princess" would oot have
met the entertainment standards of a commercial
network, and its high rating oo PBS owed more to
the accident of controversy-stirred publicity than
to dramatic value.
FORGIVE ME, BUT I FIND a Rreat many or
Public TV's documentaries -serlous·mlnded and
dripping ot import as they may be -just too dull
to bear. Still. I can't begf'Udle them their time on
~~fc'!~c Broadcasting [ J
I suspect such am· TV REVIEW
bivale nce will greet
tonight's PBS documen· ---------tary offering, "Guess
Who's Pregnant? An Update.'' CChannel 50. 8 :30
p.m .; Owmel 28, 9:30 p.m.) .
Public service it.aelf, this. an update ol an
original 19'T1 documentary that painted a dark pie·
ture or the teen-age pree:,:J~em. It ts in· formative, thougbtlul, p raearcbed
and thorouahlY frank .•. andob, aodull.
HOWEVEa, BRACED BY THE advice that its
purpose ia not entertainment. but inlormatloo, you
might find the viewing well wortbwbile.
Partly because it ts on Public TV, "Guess
Who's Prepant" eschews the "Shock 'em" slant
EVERY THURSDAY· FRIDAY· SATURDAY
...r21-Jww21
Nell Simon's •••
••THE GINGERBREAD LADY"
Dtrectec:I by Loulst van Vlenen
Tidc.U:...., Mud••• •. ~ D.00
euttTAIN -t;IO ft.M.
NEWPORT THEATRa MTI 'CDTIR
2I01 Clff Dltwe 0.-0. ..... 6 ........ R-ln-ftG
one would expect from a network treatment of tbe
s1•bject for a coldly mformatJve approach Num-
bers talce place over -,hots ol steamy can in dnve-
10 lots
And the numbers are scary. In tm. the
documentary found that one in 10 Amencan tttn·
age girls become pregnant every year. That figure
still stands. with one disturbtng difference: In the
age-range 10-19. <expanding the survey to gul.;
aged 1()..12) another 300.000 girls become pregnant
each year.
OF GlllLS AGE 14 TODA\', the documentary
Jaclyn Smith,
HU3band Split
LOS ANGELF.S <AP> -Actress Jaclyn Smith.
the last of TV's original
"Charlie's Angels ... bas
separated from actor-husband
Dennis Cole.
A statement issued ~.,
by Mi.as Smith's publlcl..st. Jerry
Pam, said the separation was
amicable and no divorce wu
planned. Cole, wbo married the
actress in 11118, moved out ol the
couple's Beverly Hills home
and was staying wttb friends.
said P.am. The two have no cbUd.reo. •
Miss Smith bas been 11Dder a doct.or'a care
since she suffered wbipla.sb last week in a car ac-
cident here. Pam ta.Id she was "ln great pain and
is hopin& she will not have to be put in traction."
hnds. "four an 10 wfll be pregnant by age 20."
Youngsters are engaging 10 sex at ever
younger ages, ooe in five American kids b.n\Qg
had sex by the age ol 15. • ··What's so temble about teen-age prepan-
cy?" 1t 1~ asked.
The ttonomic burden on society and the moral
question aside. says Dr. Mary Calderone, ''The
younger the teen-age girl. the higher the health
proble~ for both her and her baby."
Dr. Calderone. of the U.S. Sex Information and
Education Council. says flatly, ''There la ·no
reason that can possibly stand up for a preenancy
in someone under 18, 1n a social sense or a
medical-health sense." .
THE DOCUMENTARY'S PREFERENCE for
statistics and a cold eye does not mean tt doeao't
take a porot or view. Ou the 'contrary, government.
parents. schools, t he media and teen-agers
themselves are roundly assailed. . ··cuess Who's Pregnant II'' tackles a beil;YY·
duty social problem, and is bold enough to ask
questions and suggest answers. It's not much fun.
but its pomt is well made -ii not well taken.
Alas, the families and teen-agers for whoa> Jt
is intended will be watcblog reruns of "Charlie's
Angels."