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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-08-11 - Orange Coast Pilot- Papal WW Asks Booze_ Fortified ..... rPardon, Ur.ges With B· I Ct•rh - Love for World Fo.-Aleoholism? --·------·-----~ ------_,. ---_ .... ---~--...,... ... W--P•• .._, __ ._· ---------· ~Insults ra e ' I~ • FRIDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 11, 1978 VOL Tt. NO. ID. 4 HCTIOltS, e PAOU Pll•'J'• a t Spa'! In ace nty l ' I' Coast· Police .n· Called Liars Hopefuls Debate 'Issues' I i By RAYMOND ESTRADA .IR. °' ................ _ Calling Huntington Beach police clai~ "lies," Mayor Ron Shenkman defended Monday's City Council action that allowed a local health spa owner to re- tain his bus~ license. Huntingtoc\ Beach Police As- sociation President Dave Gam- mell charged Thursday the Papal, Will . Alim Pardo"' lfrges Love VATICAN CITY CAP> -First lady RosalyM Carter arrived in Rome today to bead the U.S. delegation to Pope Paul Vi 's funeral and called the late pon· tiff a "wise and beloved symbol of the goodness of mankind." The Vatican, meanwhile, made public a handwritten spiritual testament in wblcb Pope Paul asked "pardon from all those to whom I may not have done 1ood" and said of · the world that one should "study it, love it and serve it." Mrs. Caner stepped off an Air Force plane at Rome's Ciam· pino Airport, made a brief state- ment, then got .into a waitin1 car 1 for t,ll,e trip to the U.S. Embassy residence where officials said she would remain until the funeral Saturdq. Two otber members ot the of· ficial U.S. deleeation -New York Gov. Huah Carey and Rep. Robert N. Giaimo. D.Conn. - Oew laere with bet. Sen. Edward <lee POPS. P11e .U> council's action may be "invlt· ing all the pimps and prostitutes in Orange County into the city.,, .• Police Chief· Earle Robitaille claims the Golden West Health Spa, 9891 Yorktown Ave., is a front for "illegal and immoral activities." Shenkman noted that althouah there have been five arrests for al· leged solicitation of prostitution at the spa in the past two years, none of the charges have been proved lncourt. "To revoke this man's busi· ness license would be a convic- tion," Shenkman contended. The mayor noted that the aJ. leged solicitations in the five arrests of the spa employees "were initiated by police" un- dercover officer 41ent to infiltrate the business, _ ''I don't condone prositution but violent crimes are on the in- crease . Where are the priorities?" Shenkman ex-plained. "I will never approve another massage parlor in the city ... I never have," Shenkman said. There are about eilbt such busi· nesses in Huntington Beach. But police group leader Gam- m e 11 asserted Thursday Shenkman "all but aaid be was in favor of le•aliJed prostitu· <See SPA, Pase .U> . . '. Women Aeeepted CANTERBUJlY, En1Jand CAP> -Anglican _,lsbops have voted overwttelmin1ly to accept the ordination or women priests b)' the U.S. Episcopal CbW'Ch and three member churches in Canada, New Zealand and Hons Kon1. TM vote wu 316 to ~. wttb 17 at.tenuona. .. . .. •..... IS THIS A KEY CHAIN (LEJ'T) OR A DANGEROUS WEAPON LIKE IRA88 KNUCKLES? 'Watch Cat' Device Could Do Double Duty for Thonanda of Calf~ 'Charin' Wards Off Evil Git'• Head Key Ring May Be Declared lll,egaJ, FR~O CAP) -Thous4nda of CalifOmia women are carry- ing around a pointy eared aluminum cat's bead as a tey ring cltann and for protection despite tbe threat th1t the de- vice could be considered an il· legal weapon. . As one "Wateb Cat" owner said: "When I bouabt it, t thouibt tl wu loterestlni. After that. I reallied what tt eould be , used for.•• Sbe then boqbt them for her daqhters for protection. The charm bas two pointed ears and two lar1e boles for the eyes, which have become the basis ror the illegal weapons designation, says its deslper. Arlen Walbert. When llJ'asped throuth the eye boles witb the fist clenched, the flat bottom ot the cat's bead resta a1alnlt tbe palm of the County Supervisor Thomas Riley suspects his election rival might be using Grecian Formula in a futile attempt to bide the pass- ing years. The rival, Tom Rogers, sus- pects that Riley has sold out to the special interests who have poured dollars into bis campaign in record breaking amounts. Jn another race for county supervisor, David Baker hints that his campaign foe might be a female Johnny-come-lately who changed her party affiliation when she moved to Orange County in order to gain a political base. And Baker's adversary, Har- riett Wieder. says she's shocked with what she says is bis de· cision to run "a dirty cam- paign." Those were some of the highlights of a Thursday night candidates• debate at the Orange County Chapter or the California League of Cities meeting in Anaheim. Riley was smarting under Rogers• criticism Of bis cam- paign spending habits when, in (See RILEY. Page AZ) Co ast We a th er Night and momiJll low cloudiness, otherwise fair through Saturday. Lows toni1ht lo 60&. Hl1hs Saturday ln lower 70s at beaches to lower 80s in· land. INSIDE TOD~ W A ditfnnt t.OOrld lk1 OttlJI 2' mile• from tM 0rClftQC Coad. For a loolc ai IMae'1 doing on Catalina lalculd att ltortd oftd pltoeol on Page Cl . .... 1 µ OA11.Y PILOT S Frtdrt, AUQUll 1t, 117f IA!glon11alre•, Dbea.e ,.,.... P.,,e AJ Cause Found For Ailment? WEAPON ••• · and tbls ts t be only object around with which to def end berselt ... be says. "It seema to me that lt appro~es tblu.rdit,y to prevent her r,. ualJll the OD· ly weapon available to her." i\nd the diatrlet. attorn•Y Ba)s he can•t imagine a jury convict· ing a wQman on an tnegal weapons charge for ua1ng Lbe charm as a weapon ln sell de· ATLANTA I AP) Rcseurch~~ havu fsol LN ~P pu rent Le.rto1t'n•lre• · dHeill>~ baN~rta hocn wattt wsrd to air condition a botel at lndlana Unlv~nnty, whl'te 11 Pel"IO.m huve cootraetect lbo duc-•se.J,he nutionul Center for Oh.ea e 0,.,. trol ~dtd toct.y The or1ablsm abo hu been detc<"led ln water trom a Mari)y creek on lbe 8Joornlttetoe\. Ind . cnmpus, 11tld Dr David f'rastt or the CDC . They Guess; SoDoea He CANAL F1JLTON. Ohio <API Jam Myers re· ceiv~d an estimated water b ill of S18.Sl from the village ,water department, so he s ent back a n ''estimated" ch~k. .. tf they can gl)ess". t can guess too." said the Good year aeroJp ace worker. He sent the water de· partment a SlS check and a not€ saying he was sub· milting "an estimated payment for an estimated bill. .. Waler department of· f1c1 a)s Said they wdl apply the SlS towards Myers' bill and collect the remaining : 43~Slnext mgn1tt,_ _ Youth Killed As Motorbike Rams Into Car John David Culver, 14, of Hun- tington Beach died Thursday night when his motorcycle s lammed into a moving auto while being pursued by police for speeding, officials said. The vouth. or 1423 Alabama St.. crashed into a compact sta- tion wagon al the intersection of Acacia Avenue and 7th Street at 6:25 p.m. Police Officer John Berens said two officers attempted to halt the teen-ager near Lake Park for alleged speeding viola- tions Berens said the youth, who was not wearing a helmet, :.truck a compact station wagon. driven by Denise Francis. 22, or Huntington Beach. and was pro- nounced dead at the scene by para med1cs. Miss Francis, of 207 9th St., was treated for minor injuries al Pacifica Hospital and rele8$ed, p01ice said. Berens said the youth had sped lhrough a stop slgn at the 7th and Acacia intersection when the crash occuned. Funeral services for the youth are pending. ·•aut whether th• or•anll'm l• transmltk'd Crom the creek to tht• t'oolln1 tower water or vice Vt'r1u or both urt• cotont1ed from a third 10Uret1, J Just ean't IHt y." he added. .We auld Improved te1Un1 Ml'thods ullowed 1ch:ntl1ta to d~· tect lhl' buctertum In tht water q nd !luld It wu .. major breakthroqb ln t11blma the dis· ease Legton.nufres' dlseuse 1alned n»lional altenuon when it killed 21 ~noos and slctcened more thun 100 afte r an American Legion convenllon in Phaladelphia two years ago In lndillfla, 21 persons have contracted the dieease and lhree have died lo 14 months. All but two of the victims stayed at the Memorial Union Hotel on the Bloomington campus. University oCficials said today the hotel wiU remain open while v.orkers tried to rid Lbe cooling tower of the bacteria, a process expected to take three days. Since the disease outbreak was reported in May, slate and federal health olficlals have said there was no reason to suspect the hotel was the source of the illness. Further test.a are being made on Bloomington water samples and on environmental samples rrom other places where Legion· naites' disease outbreaks have been reported, .. and further in· vestigation of ways to control airborne infection may be fruit- ful." Fraser S<lid. . But be declln~ to say that changes should be made in big t>utldtngs · air-conditioning systems "until w e underst~nd more." "If we start making recom- m e ndations be fore we un· d~rstand the epidemiology of the disease. our recommendations wUJ only be based on guesses " be said. ' Uttk State, But Big Mile PROVIDENCE, R.I. <AP> Rhode Island's only measured mile, located on lnteratate 95, turned out to be 5, 775 feet when transportation officials, spurred by motorist complaints, took out their calibrators. As elementary school students learn. a mile should be 5,280 feet. "We're a small state with big miles," joked transportation de- partment spokesman Paul Kelly. More seriously,· he said that when a "measured mUe" sign was knocked down a few months ago, maintenance workers replaced it by relyine on their truck's odometer. tense. • The attorney eeoeral's opinion Isn't c•mtng one ·•watch Cat" owner to hesitate in using the cbarltl f6r seU defense if need be. "l f.eel you should use any tneau at )'GUI' dispoe8l U anyoqe is attacking you. I would~~t think it ~ any more dance~ than a khlf e or a pistol.•· s• says. PRESIDENT WIPES TEAR DURING MASS FOR POP£ TODAY IN WASHINOTOH•~--­ He Attendt!d Whh State 8ecret9!J V•nce (left), Houee Speaker end Ml'9. O'NeHt 'I .. -- Wit:bert says be de:siped the charm l\AJ years ago as a etft ~ a cat-loving friend So maay others saw and liked it that be began mass producing them eigbt.rnontbs ago_ Image Cbanges But KJ:ishnas Stil l Colkct ~ , SAN Dl~GO (AP>° -"'Police say Hare Krishna memb~rs ~t~ _shaved heads and in flowing robes are still solic1tmg money in pubJic but now wear normal haircuts and street clothes. . In recent ~onths ~~i~e have warned that a city ordmance reqwres sohcatmg money to file quarterly reports and obtain permits. A spokesman for the 50-member t emple said '_I'hursday that be "found we get a better response" m r egular street attire. · He gave n9 indication how inuch was being col· lected _by the religious groups. . F .._P flfll!AJ POPE ••• "I didn't design it as a weapon .·• sayt1 Wi e b e rt. "Otherwise 1 would have de· veloped it out or st eel aod sharpened the points.'' pointing to the car charm's ears Kennedy. D~Mass .. a fourth The 32-year-oJd Wieben a4- member of th~. group, wu not vertises bis des igns as ·a t!Xpected to anive until Satur· windshield Ice scraper. nail day· gToomer , letter opener. can "This is a sad occasion. sad opener or hair tifl. lt -retails ror because we have lost a wise and ss. beloved symbol of the goodness The "Watch Cat'' was being of mankind." she told reporters. sold in the San Joaquin Valley "Pope Paul's concern for the and Southern California when poor and b1I deep sense of social the first hint or controversy sur- justice have left the world a bet-faced. Wlebert says the adverse ter place. We are all richer for publicity caused sales to declJne. bis bavtng lived. although he admits the publicity "As a man of great spirituali· resulted in some sales to women ty -Jimmy called him a who wanted the charm as a spiritual beacaft -be -will be weapon despite the legal com-miued. not only by American plicatlona. ----:----::--....... --------------..J~ Catholics but by all Americans Sales picked up after the at· -----. -• .... -.....=-::i----...@db~~S>r)<i.oY..tr._" _ . lOTney 1eneral's op\nlon and ,..,... Page A J In answer to queanons. M'rs. oow nationwnte marteting is- .Carter said her mother-in-law.. pla.nned. Wle~rt says RILEY CHAR GES Lillian, hvlped beT and the presl- • • • dent ''feel Che ,.-esenee of the pope'' after she retDrned trom her a\ldi~e wfth Pope PaW on July 23, one of the last. forelen an aside, he speculated about the coloring of his foe's hair. Meanwhile, Rogers ·was boil· ing the campaign in the Stb $upervisorial District down to a single issue, Riley'~paign treasury. Baker was ~ry· g to indicate to the city ma and coun- cilmen in the ience that Mrs. Wieder does the politically expe- dient to advance her own ambi· tion.s. Meanwhile, Mrs. Wieder was intoning that Baker is bringing dirty tactics ,into play in the 2nd Supervisorial District cam-paip. Above all, the four candidates tried to show that, if elected county supervisors, the~ will work in harmony with city of· ficials within their districts. Baker urged the city people to t alk with those who had served on the Huntington Beach City Council with Mrs. Wieder. Those discussions, Baker said, wm show that when he was a county supervisor from 1962 through 197f bis r ecord of cooperation with the cities was unsurpassed. Mrs. Wieder said her ex- perience as a councilwoman and mayor gives her a unique insight into city problems and needs. Rogers hammered at his pet them e, donors to Riley cam· paigns past and present. The challenger to incumbent Riley criticized the supervisor for accepting hefty donations rrom developers and then al. legedly voting in favor of their projects. Except for his aside that ralsed the Grecian Formula is· sue, Riley all but ignored the at- tack on his voting record. His sole retort to Rogers' at- tack was. "He <Rogers> exag. gerates and handles the truth very lightly." Riley defined "the true cam- paign issues" u the cost and size of government and land use. Other issues cited by Riley in· eluded a/fordable housing, im- ple m entatlon of Proposition 13 and government credibility. U.S., China Discuss Oil WASIDNGTON CAP:» -. Four U.S. oil oompanies fnd Chinese officials are attempting to negotiate agreements for shar-ing development of China's vast oil reserves, the State Depart· ment conli.rmed today. visitors before h1I death. SPA The Vatican announced today , • • .. that Paul's body wW remain on view to the public in St. Peter's Basilica another day, until a few hours before the funeral. Five days of public viewing had been scheduled to end at 8 o'clock tonight, and the coffin was to have been sealed for the funeral and burial Saturday evening. ln the 13-page testament. com- posed in three sections between 1965 and 1973. the pontiff also left most of his possessions to the Holy See and uked that his funeral be kept "pious and sim- ple." In the first section, written before the end of the Second Vatican Council, Paul recom- mended that the church listen to "some words of ours which we tit· tered for her seriously and with love." He made sooe general recom- mendations on tbf: re.atlooshtp of the Roman Catholic Church with other Christians and with the world. "A bout ecumenism:· The work of comioi closer with separated brothers should be continued with great comprehension, with great P.atience, with great love; but without deviating from tM true Catholic doctrine," he tion. •• Shenkman d isputed that charge by saying he does not want extensive police time used "to find out what goes on behmd closed doors between a man and a woman." But Gammell disagreed say- ing. ''The consenting adult theory has notbmg to do with il. .. The police group leader sa1d tough enforcement by vice of· • flcers would prevent organized crime from creeping into the city. Gammell said the Police' As· socialion executive board will meet Monday to discuss buying newspaper advertisements to protest the council's action. Mayor Shenkman said the counciJ will probably reconsider t~E a ctior at the At;~. 21 meeting beca use Counci1a:a11 Don MacAlUster wu absent. Mon- day's votewas3to3. Shenkman said tbe council • would have reconddered th~ deadlocked vote Monday but Council member Ruth Bailey said she would not be abfeto attend. Whale Faees Harpoon Westminster Willy's Wallowing Weakening Penn~ou, Exxon, UnJon OiJ and Phillips Petroleum a~ talk- ing with the Chinese, who have both offshore and onshore re- serves and are ln the mldat of an oll development boom. While it is not known whether the anangements would bring Chlneae oil to the United States, a U.S. oU expert said any signifi- cant increase in world produc· lion could make more oil availa- ISle to this country. wrote. "About the world : One should not believe that tt is good . . . to adopt its thlnldng, habits, and tastes; but one should study jt, love it and serve it.'· The pope's appeal for pardon came in two pages added to the testament In 1972, and be added three lines in July 1973 stressing again be wanted simple funeraf Mrs. Bailey was joined by councilmen Ron Pattinson. a former Huntington Beach police omcer. and Bob Mandie in vot· ing to revoke Golden West Health Spa owner Fernando An· dong's business Jjcense Monday. Mayor Pro Tem Richard Siebert and Councilman John Thomas voted with Sbukman in opposing the revocation. 8y ARTHUR R. VINSEL GI .. Oailly ...... $111ff Wally the Whale appears to be truly an endangered species to- day and within a month be may sink into the s unset over Westminster's Sunset Ford auto agency. City Council members will rule then on whether to renew a permit that allows the 29-foot. long silver advertising balloon to wallow in the skies over the dealership. The s ilve r ca use celebre tethered 90 feet over the lot bas been characterized as a Westminster landmark. DAILY PILOT However, 10me folks object to The grinning gaa bag went up it. ' when trees along the San Diego "l think this thing is tacky," is .. Freeway near the auto agency the way citizen John McKeever grew so tall they obscured the d escribed Willy at Tuesday 's Sunset Ford sign. Westminster City Council meet· Planning Commissioner ing. Huseth pointed out that, while it The council voted 2 to 2 on the was a previous CalTrans policy permit renewal, the same way to do no trimming, that bas the city Planning Commission changed and work crews are bad done previously. currently trimming in the area. The plaMera • vote constituted They may just cut Willy the denial, since a clear majority Whale's life span, too. was needed one way or the other. However, councilmen ap· proved a second motion Tuesday to reconsider Willy's eventual fate at the lint ineetlog al which all five memben are present. Councilman CoMer Collacott was absent because of illness and other members or the panel will be away on vacation durtna Aupst. Meanwhile, it ia beln1 hinted around town that, ii Willy the Whale isn't reeled in for cood, a lawsuit may be flied and the 11 other car dealers ln town may send up trial balloons. Weatminat.er, whose ehamber of commerce 1ang a10 el'nbraced the concept of malntalninc a dtantned Olde English lma1e. would then resemble Lon&>n In World War JI wh~ Brtttsh •kt~ were flll•d with barra1e balloons to watd oft Nul aircraft. ''Fletcher Jona Cbevl'Olet bu aaked fOC' OM. but lt wouldn't n1ce11artly be a Wbale.•1 a.,a Westmluter Pl8n11la1 Com- ~ mtulooer llanlb HuHth. Wier -Meany Status 'Low' WASHINGTON <AP) -Rela· tiona between AFL·Cl0 Presi- dent George Me8QY aod Preai· dent Carter are at an all-time low according to publJahed re- porta. Carter was "absolute})' livid" at Meany because of tbe labor leader's continued attacks on the White Hou se, th e Washington Post r eported in tocla)''S editions. The Poet quoted a bitb·level White Bouse official as taJinl he bad "seldom seen him (the pre1ident> so mad.'' Tbe un· named offtcJa1 was quoted as sayin1 Carter's anier stemmed from Meany's attacks on the ad· mlnlatrallon ln tbe face of White HouH effort& to accommodate tbe labor leader. Hua«b •• &Ob lAnCPre. • n•n.n SL ... Do--Ponuac dealer, atiO wanu a --~ DU& w .. minJature bilmp now co even up the comoeutJon. ....... -..~UlaLff•na.$!!'.t_l~neral 111.a m1na•er 01 ~ t"o ·• ctdH tbe balloon may come do•n vaa.fpta.rlly. rites. Andong denied that bis spa is a front for any type of iUe.zaJ ac· tivity. Tnith or Consequences? Sometimes the truth hurts! We have lost an occaStOnal safe by not teffing a customer wnat he wanted to hear. We mfght paint out that a customer would be better off to pay a little more fO< our rubber padding than buy a cheaper, mushy P8d that Htels like ~ are walking on baf loont. The "balloon'' D8d hurts the carpet backing. causes stretching, and ruins seams. Aleo this paddfng often flattens out after a wn;ie. Additionally, we might tell YoU that some carpet fibera are more ptlciicaf than others. A fiber that works in one texture. might "bomb" in another. Feet free to calf for advice. All of our sales people have had extensive experience in the service end of thta bUalness -and after all -the most Important thing we can offer la cons~entty good eervicel j . VOL 71, NO. 223, .. SECTIONS, 4 PAOES Co11rt Tackles '13'-~·U nfetteFed SAN FRANCISCO (AP> - Cblef JusUco Roae Elisabeth Bird opened lbe California Supreme Oowt •a bearing today on tbe Propoeillon Y property tax relief iniUat:ive by saytna the JU1tlces will not be lntimJdated by threat.a. Sbe aald she was answerine an earlier motion by Kern County wbJch asked that four justi~ up for re-election in November not participate in the decision on the measure which cuts proper- tr taxes by about $7 billion an- JlUally Tbe motion had been de- nied ~ardedBome - M '" Bird said the ''Juatl~ have been threatened with recall or defeat at the polls and even with anonymous threats of pb¥.&ic.al violence atainst themselves or their famines 1f' they fail to vote in a certain way ... " She didn't say which way. The jurist did not say how the threats bad been transmitted, or how many there were. CEarller story, Page AS> She said each of the justices had taken an oath of office which demanded they follow the Jaw and are guided by one prin· Planners SuppOrt "' Mesa·_Protesters clple -holdina the rule of la~. "AU the threats in the world will nol deter us from the impor- tant task before us," she declared;-~is-why the mo- tioA-. . was denied ... The four "Ibo face voter con• firmatioo ln November are Bird. the cQurt's first woman; Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 's two other appointeee, Frank Newman and Wiley Manuel, and a Ronald Reagan appointee. Frank Richardson. Attomey Williaft'l .,A, .~Qr.Ji~ <See BELIEF, P•P A2) . Candidates EXc~nge Criticism.) J .._ --..... -,._,__ · ~ • ---countr Su""'v~....:IhomJl~ By MICHAEL PASKEVJCH would be negative impacts on BUey suspects 1its etect1on11vaJ °' .. DeMy ,.... ...., their neighborhood if Colin Ash· might be using Grecian Formula Homeowners protesting coun-linJl is allowed to move his Santa inaCutileattempttohid'ethepass- ty:approved plans to put a home Ana facility to a 12-unit apart-lng years. · for mentally retarded adults on ment complex and adjacent The rival, Tom Rogers, sus- Costa Mesa's east side hav~ won home at 320 E. 20th St., Costa peels that Riley has sold out to some support of their position Mesa. the special interests who have from city planning com -The county Planning Com-poureddollarsintohiscampaign missioners. mission approved the move in record breaking amounts. Although the dispute. centers despite protests from residents. In another race for county on a small pocket or county land. who have reacted by filing an supervisor, David Bilker hints and therefore is beyond city con-appeal or the action with the that bis campaign foe might be a trol, city Planning Com -Orange County Board of female Johnny-come-lately who missioner Clarence "Chic" Supervisors. ·cnanged her party affiliation Clarke said the homeowners It is now up to supervisors to when abe moved to Orange came before the city com-decide if they want to re-hear Co.unty in order to gain a mission seeking help. the case when the appeal comes political base. Some of the homeowners are before them ln about a month. And Baker's adversary. Har- worried about what they believe (See RETARDED, Page AZ> riett Wieder, says she's shocked with what she says is his de- Hrmtington Mayor Claims Police Lie clsioa to ru1' ... dirt.1 calP-paign:• Those were some of the higbliahts of a Thursday night candidates' debate at the Orange County Chapter or·tbe • California Leaaue of Cities meeting in Anaheim. By RAYMOND ESTRADA JL °' .. o.llY ...... SUff Calling Huntington Beach police claims .. lies," Mayor. Ron Shenkman defended Monday's City Council action that allowed a local health spa owner to re- tain bis business license. Huntington Beach Police As- sociation President Dave Gam- mell charged T.hursday tlie council's action may be "invit- ing all the pimps and prostitutes in Orange County into the city.•• Police Chier Earle Robitaille claims the Golden West Health Spa, 9891 Yorktown Ave .• is a front for "illegal and immoral activities ... · Sbf:nkman noted that althou~h there have been five arrests for al- leged solicitation of prostitution at the spa in the past two years, none of the charses have been proved in eourt. "To revoke this man's busi· oess license wouJd be a convic tion," Shenkman contended. The mayor noted that the al- leged solicitations in the five arrests of the spa employees "were lnitiated by police" un- dercover officer sent to infiltrate the business. "I don'tcoodone prositution but violent crimes are on the in- ·c r e a s e . W b e re a r e the CostaMesam AUlingGirl Riley was smarting under priorities?" Shenkman ex-Rogers>-criticlsm of bis cam· plained. paign spending habits when. in an •slde, he speculated about the coloring of his foe's hair. "I will never approve another massage parlor in the city . . . I never have," Shenkman said. There are about eight such busi· neases in Huntington Beach. But police group leadet Gam· mell asserted Thursday Shenkman "all but said he was in favor of legalized prostitu· lion." Part of Fun Wne Closing In Newport By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of -o.ily ...... StMt Bill Olson, owner or the arcade and games concessiQn at the Balooa l''Un Zone, said today he wlll sen off bis equipment and close down at the end of sum· Meanwhile, Rogers was boil- ing t.be campaign in the 5th Super\risorial District down to a single issue, Riley's campaign treasury. Baker was trying to indicate to the city mayors and coun- cilmen in the audience that Mrs. Wieder does the politically expe. dlent to advance her own ambi- tions. Meanwhile, Mrs. Wieder was intoning that Baker ls bringing dirty tactics into play in the 2nd Supervisorial District cam· paign. Above all, the four candidates tried to show that, if elected county supervisors, they will work in harmony with city of· ficials within their districts. Baker urged the city people to talk with those who had served on the Huntington Beach City Council with Mrs. Wieder. Those diacUS3ion1, Baker said. will show that when he was a county supenisor from 1962 through 197• bts record of cooperattoo wltb the cities was UDSU11>-.eci. ' • (lee aQ..& , P•1e ~) T .. ay's(;leslllg N.Y. S&eeb .... WI • .._ .... TEARS FOR POPE -Tears were shed by President Carter in Washington today and by an unidentified nun in Rome Thursday for Pope Paul VI. President Carter wiped away a tear during a Pontifical Requiem Mass at St. Matthew's Cathedral. With the President were Secretary of State Cyrus Vance and House Speaker and Mrs. Thomas O'Neill. The nun wiped tears from her eyes as she got a last glimpse of the Pope lying in state inside St. Peter's Basilica. Funeral services for the pope will be conducted Saturday. Pope's Will Published Asia 'Pardon From All' and 'Love to Workl' VATICAN CITY <AP) -First lady Rosalynn Carter arrived in Rome today to head the U.S. delegatidn to Pope Paul Vl's funeral anac'alled the late pon- tiff a ·:wise and be1oved symbol or the goodness or mankind." The Vatican. meanwhile, made public a handwritten spiritual testament in which Pope Paul asked "pardon from all those to whom I may not have done good" and said of the world that one should ''study it, love it and serve it." Mrs. Carter stepped off an Air Force plane at Rome's Ciam- pino Airport, made a brief state- ment. then got into a waiting car for the trip to the U.S. Embassy residence where officials said she would remain until the funeral Saturday. CTV cove~age of the fpneral begins at 9 a.m. on channels 2, 4 and 5) Two other members of the of· ficial U.S. delegation -New York uov. Hugh Carey and Rep. Robert N. Giaimo. D-Conn. - new here with.her. Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass .. a fourth member of the gro1.1p. was not expected to arrive Wltil Satur- day. "This is a sad oceasion. sad because we have lost a wise and beloved symbol of the goodness of mankind," she told reporters. "Pope Paul's concern for the poor and bis deep sense or social justice have left the world a bet- ter place. We are all richer for his having lived. "As a man of great spirituall- Mesa to Spend 855,000· For Service Study Costa Mesa will spend $5:5,000 to weed out any unproductive workers in th .. city's Public Service Department'. City Council approval of the productivity study came after City Manager Fred Sorsabal said a previom study has cut the annual budget for Leisure Servtce. by S200.000. lioraabal estimated that a re- vamp of )Jubllc services. which includes s tree ts , iraffic engtneerin1 and sanitation projects, would save the city $134.000peryear. "If we have people who are not preducina, w~ must do aometblna about it,•• said Sonabal. ' The con•11ltln1 flrm of Kepner, WolbHt and ArUcb, Inc. will tonduet tbestudy. Because of Ute pasHae ot Prop()litkla 13, tbe Clty COuncil has directed Sorsabal to reduce city atalfinl from 513 employees to 475 within 18 months. Tbe IUOM)' lM the 1tud1 of publle eervtces wW come from tbe cl'1'1 $t;3 inlllJon reserve fuel ty -Jimmy called him a spiritual beacon -he will be missed, not only by American Catholics but by all Americans and by peoplethe worldover." In answer to questions, Mrs . Carter said her motber-in·law, Lillian, helped her and the presi- dent "feel the prese nce of the pope•• after she returned from her· audience with Pope Paul on July 23, one or the last foreign visitors before bis death. The Vatican announced today that Paul's body will remain on view to the public in St. Peter's Basilica another day. until a few hours before the funeral. Five days or public viewing had been scheduled to end at 8 o'clock tonight. and the coffin was to (See POPE, Page A!> Coast \leather Night and morning low cloudiness, otherwise fair through Saturday. Lows t<>-night in 60s. Highs Saturday in lower 70s at beaches to lower 80s tn-• land. INSIDE T8DA ~ A d.fffemd world Uct only 26 mtlu from t"8 Orange Coaat. For a look at what 'a dotng on Catalino I al.and aee lto'rie• and phot03 °" Page Cl. . . ( 'figlat Se~uritg Mesa Delays Lawsuit Vote Costa Mesa isn't interested in st ate bailout aid in the wa.ke or Propositlon 13. but council mem bers have delayed action on City Attorney Robert Cam- pagna 's plea to join a lawsuit protesting the state's handling of the situation. "I tb,ink we certainly have lo take a. stand.·· said Campagna, calling the state's legis lative response to Propoeltlon 13 "one or the more confusing pieces of le1islation I've ever had the mis- fortune tot.ry and interpret.·· C it y l n g t h e· n u m e r o us "strings" attached to SB 154. Ca mp ag na a s ked c o unc il permisslon to Join a suit already filed by Orange, Garden Grove. Fullerton and Anaheim. Campagna slid the state "1s fl a unting the power or tht purse." and that Costa Mesa should fight back against ever~ increasing state control over local governments. Although the council rejected a n y state a id . Mayor Ed McFarlaijd questioned the trme Bettors Get PapcdHi nu ROME IAP) -Italy 's government lotte ry report- ed record sales this week with bettors favor ing num- bers they believed were rela ted to the death of P ope Paul Vl. Many put their money on the numbers 21 or 40 because he died at 2140 - 9 :40 p.m . -Sunday. Other favorite numbers were 6. the date of hia death. and 85. which special books for lottery bettors say is the number related to the death of popes. Some lottery offices in Rome and other cities said they had sold out their week ly allotme nts of tickets by today. The win· n i ng numbe r s will be drawn Saturday. f' ..... P-AJ Three unidentified US. marshals shield conv icted loan shark Gary Bowdach IUie back of whose head is visible at center> as he continues his t estimony berore the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on In- vestigations. Widening Of Del Mar ·Postponed It m ay be quite a while before Cost a Mesa get s around lo widening Del Mar Avenue, but r esidents or the area would just and expense involved in joining POPE the lawsuit. "I feel t.'e should take a wait • • • a nd see attit ude .·· s a Id havt! been sealed for the funeral McFarland. and burial Saturday evening. Councilwom an Arlene Schafer In the l3-page testam~nt. com· Truck Traffic Eyed In Shopping Centei:' ft m ay be Joe A 1 be rt son· s oppose an in1t1al plan calling for -.upe r markcl but the city of removal of street parking on Newport B<'ach has the problem Iris. First and J asmine avenues, <:au::.ed by deli very truck::. • the th_r ee residenl~a l s t reets Memt>ers of the city's Traffic bord~nng. the s~oppmg center. Affairs Committee this week The idea tS to_g1ve trucks room opened what promises to be a to m.aneuver tn and out of the lcn,;thy stogy of truck tr affi c parking lot ~nd get the~ off -~ ......... ~ ... ~vtng-the "CoTOna ·-de! Mm·--ollfer ~sfieets·"'fot ~entfy used s h opping ce nt e r In which to avoid ~ast ~ast Highway. . Albertson's is located. In a n mt~rview today, _Hum The study was prom pted by me l explained th at d e liver y Councilman Paul Hummel, who tr~cks l)OW turn oCf E ast Coast Hves about a block from the Highway on_ Golden~od. Avenue l where there is a traffic hght. ce.~le~on't want to sound like They .foll o~ a r o ute o n another Paul Ryckoff with the G~ldenrod to First ,. th.en along no-left-turn-on-my -st reet busi-First to the c~nter that 1s loca.ted ness." Hummel laughed. "But between Iris a nd J a s mine we do have a problem und I avenues. think something needs to be Hummel said he appreciates worked out... the reasons the trucks use the Cor ona del Ma r merchants residential routes. but he said were on hand at the meeting to the increasing numbers of them and the hazards they pose on the fi',....Page A J RETARDED Clarke said a letter from the city Planning Commission to Sth Distr ict Supe r visor Thomas Rile y s uggests that county s upervisors either ··re-open the hear ing or take more lime on it. .. Clarke and city P lanning Com- mission Chairman Donn Hall °'b~ltt•vc tha t a lack of com-~ u n 1 cati o n b e twee n the ho m eown e r s and As hling touch ed off the cont roversy. T he homeowners met with the cit y commission and care faclli- 1 Y represcnUfll vc Mark As hli ng t•arhcr this week. The resulting IPtter was mailed t o Riley Thursd:ly. Clarke smd tht> homt'owner!> ~ven 't asked the city to annex tP<! small county pocket m an ef· fort to block Asbling's plans. P la nning Director Cha rles Robe rts today said the feller mailed to Rlley asks supervisors to consider a one-ye ar tria l period and a review if the de· c1sion on the home ror mentally retarded adults is upheld. In addition the planning com- m 1ssion correspondenc e sug- gests that only 24, rather than 36 m entally retarded people be al· lowed to occupy the complex. Roberts said this request is based on concerns that three pe rsons would b e occupying each of the units. The average "number or occupants per dwell· ing in the area is currently 1.9 persons, said Roberts. By allowing only 24 occupants, the home would be "closer to the uver age for the neighborhood." the letter states. add ing that ·'the purpose of group homes is defeated in neighborhoods where they are not accepted.·· ORANOECOMT DAILY PILOT narrow streets a re alarming local residents. With merchants opposing re· moval Qf street parking and Hummel speflking for r esidents opposed to truck s on the ir str eets. TAC members say they will continue to study the prob- lem to see if a solution can be found. Capt. Lou Heeres. a TAC member as commander or the police departme nt's traffic division, said city st aff m embers will put together a draft report or alternatives for discussion al the next TAC meeting in two weeks. "At that time. we'll let the concerned folks have a look at it and give us their comments," he said. Vandals Hit New House In Newport Newport Beach police are in· vestigating the vanda lism of a new home being built on Lido Isle by public relations ex· ecutive Gil Ferguson. According to police, vandals broke into the home at 115 Via Waziers Thursday night The vandals plugged all the sinks then left wate r faucets r unning. The flood was dis· covered by a car etaker. P o lice s aid t he home 's carpets. which had just been in· stalled, were damaged . According to investigators. tht> hom e has been victimized by other m alicious mischief at - tacks. In addition. the new home was attacked in court when the Lido Isle Community As sociation filed a suit last May, claiming the root didn't meet community de3~Jn standards. The s uit even· tuaUy was setUed out of court. Boats Rifled In Newport Newport Beach pollce ar e probing the thefts of marint> e quipme nt from t wo boats docked at a West Coast Highway boat repair business. Tbe thefts we r e r e ported Thursday by employees of the Boat Speciallata, 2439 W. Coast Highway. Listed as missing was a $550 marine radio from the boJ l owned J>y Phil B1rreU ol Buena Park and Sl,356 worth ot tools, m a r lne e quipme nt a nd a tapedeck from a boMl owned by Louis Frledmt.11 ot .Montebello. Bomb Injures S WALLA WALLA, Wash. (APJ -A homemade pipe bomb · plodtd. IU'ld i!'Ju 1ua • lOCfiY~e il waa I cfelUH.Ct at the WAJhlnaton State Peniten· tlary, ol'Ocl&Ls 1ald F,....PageAJ RELIEF ... as soon the city forget the plan completely. The City Council has decided to bold orf plans for a 53-foot widening project on the north side of Del Mar for an Indefinite o pe ned the attac k a gains t period. Proposition 13 on behalf of school De l Mar is 8 two-lane. 60-fool- districts and certain school or; wide roadway. but plans that ficials. one day may lead to makin• ~I He urged that if the court de-Ma r a 106-foot-wide a rterial cides to make Proposition 13 in-highway are still on city booka. valid, the ruling should be "pro-A nunber of residents ap- s p e c ti ve." as o pposed t o peared before the City Cooneil retroac.tive.. . . Monday night to note that the Norns said bis clients suggest widening of Del Mar was initial· that "the decision be effective for ly part of a plan to make the the 1979-~ fiscal year b«aus.e roadw~ ~ link with. the qty of ~e-lerishrtw·e--~tttt ~tded--Trvlne thrriugh Newport Beach. stop-gap funding ... We believe De l Mar crosses through coun· 1t is extremely diffic_ult to reve.rse t y territory and a portion or the complete macbmery for im-Ne wport Beach. Hom eowners plementing Proposition 13 at th1s noted that Newport Beach re - late d ate, and we expect the court fused to take part in any ex- to take a number of months for a t e ns ion of thP roadway into decision." Irvine . The court asked Norris if ruling Therefore. the homeowners against Proposition 13 would not claimed, the need to widen Del invalidate the implementing laws Mar is now a thing or the past . which have been passed by the ·One resident said the widening Legislature. would only help Newport Beach He pointed to previous de-residents have easier access to cisions by the court which bad the Costa Mesa Freeway. ruled laws invalid but bad al· .. · .. 0<>-unc1 l members said the lowed enabling legislation to con-s itua t ion may cha nge in the tinue in force. Norris said that by future and the city s hould keep issuing a prospective ruling, the· the widening plan in a holding cour t wo uld be giving the pattern. Legislature plenty of lime to The south side of Del Mar "respond tothecourt's rulingand would not be affected if the city time to develop a new plan f9r tax goes ahead wt th the widening. reform. If the Legislature failed However. si><. homes on the north tocome upwttha planitwouldal-s ide would h a ve 23 feet or lowtimeforanotherinitiative." roadway frontage taken for Norris said opponents to right-of-way. Proposition 13 are not opposed to One possible plan would have lower property taxes nor tbe use the city buying all of the six prop. of a n initiative to accomplish erties on the north side or Del property tax r~lief. He said the ob-M a r In Cost a Mes a at an JCCtion is that the new law goes estimated cost of $600.000. much further than tax relief io Be fore Newport balked at the that it makes "sweeping changes proposed extension of Del Mar in the Constitution." 1 n t o I r vine. l h e county The lawsuits come from 22 purchased some other homes in school districts. the city of San anticipation of the widening Francisco, and Alameda Coun-project. ty . T hey a re s upported bv several public employee groups. whose Jobs and s alaries relied heavily on property tax rev- t!nues before Proposition 13. The court handed those groups a setback when it refused to block the initiative from taking effect July 1. But it agreed to hear the suits. rather than refer- ring them to a lower court. The written arguments delved into complex issues -whether the J arvis measure embt'aces more than one subject. cripples local government. treats dif· f e r e n\ prope rty owne ~s equitably. or viola tes public employees' pension contracts. But lawyers for both sides also · were mindful of the voters' man· da~. • Litt/,e State, BulBigMile PROVIDENCE. R.l. <AP) Rhode Island's only measured mtle. located on Interstate 95. turned out lo be 5, 775 feet when trans Portation officials, spurred by motorist complaints, took out their c allbrators. As elementary school students learn. a mile should be 5,280 feet . said the city's anger is directed posed an three sections betwe'n at the slate Legislature. not the 1965 and 1973. the pontiff a1$o vote rs who passed Proposition left most of bis possessions to 13. the Holy See and asked that his The complex state formula for funer aS be kept "pious a nd sim· a id to cities would have granted pie." Costa MesaSl.025.901. In the fi rst section. wri~n However. City Manager Fred before the end of the Second Sorsaba l noted tbat the city. Vatican Council. Paul recorn- because it had a reserve fund of mended that the church listen lo $4.3 million. would be penalized ··~me words of ours which we ut· ror its frugality. tered for her .l)eriously and with After all tbe penallles and love .. strings were unwound. the state's He made some gener al recom· $1 million-plus offer would b&l"t!· ~mendatlons on the relattonshtp duced toS24.099. of tht> Roman Catholic Church Council members agreed that w1lh other Chn stians and with it would be hardly worth it .to a the world. lake_ t.be. st.ate up. OD bs... baiJOl.ll. ~ -.-About ~ntmr."1'1\e-Wo rk Junds . . . or coming .closer with separated -A m aJor concern of the council brothers should be continued is on-: provision that wo_uld force with great compre hension. with the _city to cancel pay increases gr eat patience. with great love. for its e~ployees. , . but without deviating from the Acceptmg state aid ~ould .b~nd t rue Catholic d octrine ... he the city to the stales ~ec1S1o_n wrote. not to grant any pay raises this "About the world: One should year. not believe that 1t 1s good . . to This would have wiped out ap. adopt its thinking. habits. and prov.e d p a y r a ises tota ling tastes; but one should study 1t. $355.000 for the c ity·s 513 \ove 1tand serve it." e mployees, said Sorsabal. The pope's a ppeal for pardon Campagna note d t h at a came in two pages added to the number of public employel' testament in 1972. and he added groups have fil ed suit against three lines an J uly 1973 stressing the s tate because of the pay again he wanted simple funeral freeze. rites. • fi',....Pa~A I Mrs. Wieder said h er ex- perience as a councilwom an and m ayor gives her a unique insight into city problems and needs. Rogers hammered at his pet the me. donors to Riley cam· paigns -past and present. The challenger to incumbent Riley criticized the supervisor fot accepting hefty donations from developers and then al- legedly voting in favor of their projects. Except for his aside that raised the Grecian Formula is- sue. Riley all but ignored the at- tack on his voting record. His sole retort lo Rogers' at- tack was. "He (Rogers> exa~: gerates and handles the truth very lightly." Riley defined "the true cam· paign issues" as the cost and size of government and land use. • • Other issues cited by Riley m- cl uded affordable housing. im· plemental1on of Proposition 13 a nd government credibility. Saying that the people's cries for property tax relief "fell on deaf ears" in the Legislature, Attorne y Ge ne ral E v e Ile Younger warned tbe court that decl a ring the Initiative un- constitutional would be "tanta- mount to holding that the people of this state have no way to enact tax reform through the in- 1ti11tive process ... ~: Truth or Consequences? • ~PopAJ TARNISHED not collecting information a11d taking part in Improper overt actions. Turner pointed out that a ma. jor portion or the intelligence agency's work is devoted to re. search. That research ts being ex· pa nded t o provide national leaders with Information about business and economic cllmat.es that be expects to help in seltlha national policy. Nonetheless, he made it clear that monitorm& Ruulan arms build up ls a major preoec.upa. tlon w\th the CIA. The CIA Dlrectot' faulted former aienta who have taken their qum-els wtth ~ CIA le> lbt publle. T urne r said those forllier ac•nts have bre•Cbed contftc· tual 11reementa by •e:r::' ut ol. tum atioUt c.'11\ ~· · • The d1Qa&1.e~d0n• aomes In tM ror m of~• QI cOiinMnel amont aaent.a in other cc:HU1Lri• lb11t deal wttb tM CIA1 * ,. Sometimes the truth hurts! We have lost an occastonal sale by not telling a customer what he wanted to hear. We might Point out that a customer would be better off to pay a littte more for our rubber padding than buy a cheaper. mushy pad that feels like you are walking on balloons. The .. balloon" pad hurts the carpet backing, causes stretchlnp, ~nd ruins seams. A lso thi& padding often flattens out after a While. Additionally. we might tell you that some carpet fibers are more Pf'&Ctlcal than others. A fiber that works in one texture, might "bomb" In another. Feel free to call for advice. All of our sales people have had extensive experience In the service end of this business -and aftet all -the moat lmpartant thing we can offer Is consistently gOOd servicer DEN'S :iiiiilllatiiia:·custom drsperiss Un9i1U111 • wood floor · • ,HON! 6~4"6·"483 -6~23SS· j ·I I .. Frld!X, ~uet 11, 1978 DAil Y PILOT ,43 Uneniployed Teachers' Pay Halt Asked ' A Superior Court lawsuit fU«l Tlaunday by Oraa1e County Scboot 8uperlntend nt Robert Petel'IQD Neb \0 den)' pa)lment : of ane11tploy1nent benents to • school diltrid employea who · lost •wnmer Jobi.., a rautt ot : ProPG91Uon u. · Jud•e Robert Greto wu ' ad-4 lo llliue a eourt order that would have immediate effttt on all auch IC'boot employees In Oran1e OMmty wbo •tt 1fttin1 unemployment btne(iu He ref~ to make an Im media~ deeislon, but 1r1nted b motion fOf' intervenliOn ln the lawsuit that wu fllt"d by aevtrol school mp&oy unton.1 op~ to Petenon ·, ctlon Pet•raon, llUn1 both aa u _pubU~ official and 11 llXJ>ly~r. n1mes Martin R. Glick, director of the atate Employ~ Develop· ment Department <EDD I as d( .. fe1ldont . llt asks thut Glick be ordered lo n·co1n1ie that teachers llnd other 2'chool per.sonneJ laid off for the aummt!r cannot legally claim unemployment benefits und any payments made to them a re l'Q ually Illegal. The lawsun tndlcates that 68,000 ~chool employees are out o f work this summer in California because or layoffs predpltated by the passaae of PropositlOn 13. Lawyers ar1uiFl1 the Issue before Judge Green said the laid-off school locce in Ora.nae County is estimated at about s.ooo. Nearly 2.000 of the 5,000 have tiled unemployment in· surance claims. they sa[d. Lawyers for the school e mployee organizations ad· milted to the lawsuit by Judge Green arcued that the federal government ahoulct also be al· lowed to intervene since a federal directive led to the state paying wiemployment benefits. Lawyers for the intervenors said the denial of unemployment bene rtts lo laid·ofl school personnel would innlc:t great hardship on employees who had been counting on summer work to make.md.s meet. Teachers eligible for un· employment benefits receive $100 per week. Non-teacblng school pel'SOODel receive $70 per week. They are being represented in the Peterson lawsuit by the California School Employees As· aociation, the United Teachers of Los Angeles, the Service Employees International Union. Local 99, <AFL-CIO) and the California Tea~hers Association. _)Waddill Trial Set McMillan to Presitk; Long Case Eyed By TOM BARLEY OI .. OM" ~-Staff Lawyers for Dr. William Bax· ter Waddill Jr. have abandoned their motion for a change or venue for his second murder trial and agreed to face trial Jan. 22 in Orange County Superior Court. "I think we'll get a fair shake in Orange County." defense at· torney Malbour Watson said to· day. "And I feel even happier about it in the light or the judge who was chosen today." Judge Byron K. McMillan. the outgoing presiding judge. will be on the bench for the second trial and will handle pretrial motions Nov . 27. They will include a motion for dismissal, the argument that Dr Waddill has been placed in jeopardy by being tried a second time and a motion for dis missal on the grounds that there ls no proof that the infant he is ac· cused of killing was a human be· ing. W addiU, 42. or Huntington Harbour, is accused of strangling a newborn baby lo death in the nursery at Westminster Com· munity Hospital shortly arter hls attempt to abort. the child by in· jection of a saline solution railed. It is alleged that he strangled the infant in her crib after claim· ing that she had suffered massive brain damage by immersion in the saline and would be little more than a human vegetable if she lived. The jury in his first trial before Judge James K . Turner deadlocked at 7.5 for acquittal after 11 days or deliberation and 16 weeksoftrial testimony. Watson predicted today that the second trial will take even longer. , _ _ _________ ··at ·~~5124 ~~~~ _ _ Y b Kill d "We mtend to go much more out e fully into this issue or what is life and what is death in terms of a ments before they go to the jury room." Both be and Waddill confidently predicted acquittal in the second trial in which defense attorney Charles Weedman will again be working with Watson. ·'Of course. I thought that in the first trial." Waddill said. "But looking at the defense that my lawyers are planning for me this time, I know the jury will come back with a verdict of not guilty." School Vandalism Toll Set at $1,100 School officials estimated to· day the cost of replacing broken windows at Eastbluff Elemen: tarr School in Newport Beactt wil exceed Sl.100. A.doz.en windowsJ.nJ.he.scbOO.L __ _ 'Charm' Wards Off Evil ~:;;:;!~:r fetus that survives an abortion at· tempt," Watson said. "We want the second jury to be absolutely sure of our argu· 2627 Vista del Oro, were found broken Thursday morning by custodian Donald Needham. Needham told police the scboot was vandalized in a similar. although not as extensive. at· lack three weeks ago. Uu.'s Head K ey Ring May Be Decim-ed Illegal FRESNO <AP) -Thousands of California women are carry- ing around a pointy eared aluminum cat's head as a key ring charm and for protection despite lbe threat that the de- vice could be considered al' il legal weapon. As one .. Watch Cat" owner -said: "When J bought it, I thought it was interesting. After that. I realized what It could be used foe." She then bought them for ber daughters for protection. : The charm bas two polnted • ears and two large holes fol' the eyes, which have become \he basis for the Ulegal weapons designation, says its designer, Arlen Weibert.. • When gratiped lhrough the eye ; holes with the fl.st clenched, the : flat bottom of the cat 's head • rests against the palm or the hand and the ears form two pointed protrusions from the knuckles. When carried in this manner, Wiebert not.es the great slmilari· ty between his key ring charm and the habit many women have or carrying their keys prot.rud· ing through their fingers for pro- tection. which is not illegal. But law enforcement officials in San Diego County contend there is a similarity between the ··watch Cat" and brass knuckl es, and declared Wiebert 's invention an illegal weapon. The state attorney general later held that lf used as a weapon, the "Watch Cat'' is con· " &idered in the same category as ~ brass knuckles or a sawed-Off : shotgun. : Fresno County District Al • torney William Smith says the : atlorney general's ruling means : that it is legal to purchase and : carry the "Watch Cat" as a key : ring charm • But the moment it is used as a weapon, It becomes illegal. .. Let's say a woman is being attacked with the Intent of rape and t his is the only obJcct around with which to defend herself." he says "It seems to me that it approaches absurdity to prevent her from using the on· ly weapon available to her ." And the district attorney says he can't imagine a jury conVtct· ing a woma n on an illegal weapons charge for using the charm as a weapon in self de· fense. The attorney general's opinion isn't causing one "Watcb Cat" owner to hesitate in using the charm for self defense lf need be. ·'I feel you should use any means at your disposal if anyone is a ttacking you. l wouldn't think it is any more dangerou~ than a knife or a pistol," she says. Wiebert. says he designed the charm 1 'h years ago as a gift for a cat-loving friend. So many others saw and liked It that he began mass producing them eight months ago. · • 1 dido 't d esign it as a weapon ," says Wiebert. "Otherwise I would have de· veloped it out of steel and sharpened the points." pointing to the car charm·~ ears. The 32-year-old Wiebert ad· vertises his designs as a windshield ice scraper . nail groomer. lettet opener. can opener or hair lift. It retails fQr SS. The "Watch Cat u was being sold in the San Joaquin Valley and Southern California when the first hint of controversy sur· faced. Wiebert says the adverse publicity caused sales to decline. i.1~thol!gh he admits \he publicity resulted in somt sdcs to women who wanted the charm as a weapon despite the legal com· plications. Sales picked.up after the al· torney general's opinion and now nationwide marketing is planned, Wiebert says. Lawyer Tells Peers To P11nish Def eels Orange County lawyers were urged Thursday night to punish manufacturers who put defec· live and dangerous products on the market by seeking the max· imum amount possible in punitive damages. Santa Ana attorney Art Hews told the Orange County Trial Lawyers Association that many such offenders consider it cheaper lo buy Insurance or pay damages than it is to make their product safe. He particularly condemned the Ford Motor Company and what he said is the firm's refusal to make the Pinto auto safe despite a series of accidents in which occupants of the vehicle have been burned and kUled. He ws, who fought one such laws uit for badly burned Richard Grimshaw. 19, of Orange. won a jury award of $128.5 million in punitive damages for his client and then saw the trial judge cut the damages lo $3.S million. He commented Thursday night that the decision by Superior Court Judge Leonard Goldstein was in error. And he predicted that the Fourth Dis· tri<'l Court of Appeals will re· verse the judge's decision. lLoose Change Buys Hews accused Ford of putting on the market "the most dis· astrous car ever built" in terms or a gas tank situated in a loca· lion that almost inevitably means an explosion and fitt ii the car should be struck from the rear. . ~Goodies on Coast . : Loose cban1e -more than : you would lma,ine -la spent · buytns Orange Coast postcards, : rented skate• and E9vts : souvenlrs. Stories in Sunday's ~ Dally Pilot will tell wby ~ ' ~ POSTAL PBIDE -How are t acenes chosen for .local I poetcardlt Wblch la the most (popular teller? Whlob one ~caused a civic ruckus? Stall ~Writer Jerry Herten1tcln bas 'checked out t.b9 dim•tore racks ~and lntervlewed tourlsta for ~some lns1-bt.s. ' ~ '\111' aot.UNG ALONG - (SUND A rs BEST) MAMAS AND PAPAS -Dads are dom, fine when they take on the burden ot chlld reartn1. ac· cording lo an Associated Press report. Another dispatch reveals a writer's contenUon that all pre- s id enu bave been ••mama·a boys." Grimshaw was burned dver 90 percent ol his body when the Pinto tn wblch he was a passen1er wu at.ruck and U · ploded ailt yean ago. He bas un· dergone so operaUons in six years. The driver or the car, Mn. Lllllbell Gr•y, ,52, of Anaheim, died at the wheel ol the blasma car. Hews said studies canted out by Ford mado It clear that lt would have cost the compaft1 only $40 per car to make the • Pinto ab1ohrtely sale and pro. teet the JU tank from l11JD&d. "But they telt it would be cheaper to pay the dam.,.. •soul.ht ln lawsuit.a flied by tbt r vtctbnt." Hewa "Id. -"~helt motlvt 11 atrlcuz dollars Md cen and they doil t John David Culver. 14. of Hun· tington Beach died Thursday night whe n his motorcycle slammed Into a moving auto while being pursued by police for speeding. officials said. The youth. or 1423 Alabama St., crashed into a compact sta· tion wagon at the intersection of Acacia Avenue and 7th Street at 6:25 p.m. Police Officer John Berens said two officers attempted to halt the teen-ager near Lake Park for alleged speeding viola· lions. • · Be rens said the yossth. who was not wearing a beJmet. struck a compact station wagon. driven by Denise Francis. 22. of Huntington Beach. and was pro- nounce<i _dead at the scene by parameaics. M lss Francis. of 207 9th St.. was treated for minor injuries at Pacifica Hospital and released. police said. Berens said the youth had sped through a stop sign at the 7th an<l -Acacia int~rsection when the crash occurrea. Funeral services for the youth are ,pendin{Z. Colorite ALL·WEATHER R!INFORCED • Nyton-ttf'HOfd reinforced • eons eos1y YIOf round •Won't burst Undtr PftllUf • • Uncondtrlonalty Cousin 'Forgiven' By Anemia Victim PITI'SBURGH CAP) -David Shimp. who turned away the pleas of a dying cousin for donations or life-prolonging bon~ mar· row. was forgiven by the sick man shortly before the CQu.sin was killed by a brain hemorrbaae. Robert. McFall. a 39-year-0ld unmarried asbestos wort~r. died Thursday in Mercy Hospital. where he was ~ing treated for aplastic anemia. a disorder that bad threatened to kill him within the year. ., . "I FEEL r:.IKE I COULD throw up right now, .• Shimp was quoted in the PittSburgh Post,Guette today. ·•1 feel terrible about Robert dying. but be asked me for something that I couldn't give. •'I don'l thiok I'll go lo the funeral." be added. "r'll stay home and say m~ priiyers ." McFALL HAD ASKED SmMP for a bone marrow transplant that might have given him longer to live, but Shimp repeatedlv turned him down. Shimp's decision was delcared legal by an Al· legheny County court. . Aplast1c anemia as a rare <11sor<1er m wrucb the bone marrow does hot produce enough red blood cells ~d platelets. The best treatment fdr,the•malady is a bone marrow transplant. according to doctors treating McFall. They estimated he-would have had a 50 to 60 percent chance or survival with the operation. :;. Aloe Vera <{ff:, Thll lobted sunbUm remeot ·, rr.okes on e~i:ellen .. contolfloilr ptont fQI • • ~·\ • • sun or S'\OOe • ~~-;.,>o-. 4 Pot Size : .-.;,__~]:--'149Volue Ir,,,~ 99c _.Sale Prtce This deoll 5'!0049 lrt'e is" IOool let use neo1 PCJllOS Of 1n COl'IOlnetS. Cht'Ole from Q(O~. reel. t»-colOf. carol. pl:lk ()(White. 4·• POf Size Reg.89' sate Price 49~ DE~:E°'S::'FORceo Sall Price 7S' • 314" sae $19 99 Reg. •29.~9 • B o COSTA~~ MESA VICTOMtA ~­ • z o,.1~·--1 ~ .. FOUNTAIN VALLEY ~ Skateboal'4ln1 and~ 1ood·old hoUenkaUaa Set· I look in two ! You/Yow l&GineJ etor*. OM 1 IOOk• It ...... Mardi •. tM ,---=:ia-'111-:::--= •GtlMr~ lllllO a~ -aod 1,.....1iawe-~ ...... i.--ron ELVIS MONBYlllAK.EB - Nearly a 1ear after bl1 death Elvia PrelieY coounuet to be a bla moneymaker for LhOH Who have car!tallMd. on hJ1 ml•· fortune. AD ""6elattd ~ua ...,_..,.._ ~JUJ. feoetl ol lMoaM "TIM Klftl' laij ...,.. pr«tt~ the pubUc a IDQ. ba v• tbe 1Uahtesl int;;t in-' tq·tbttr ~ =· *" ~-· IPH!lnue" • ,_ . ...-. .. yldljtarilltf•••• .. , • ) , DAILY PILOT . ·u· .Ja•t ··'-.::~·····-- Fridey, August 11 , 1971 Q ..... ~ Te•~~''·' Marp•lae Will the Fun Stop? aAl.80.\ llLtJBS: Balboa baa chanted a lot over the )lean. MOit people would probably a1ree fOf' the better. Mucb of the bor\ky·tonk ol yesteryear ha.a vanl1hed from lbe place. Tbci Rendovoua Ballroom ta 1one, replaced by J vast conatomera&e ol monolithic condomlnluma. On the other band, lb Balboa Pavlllon. refurbllhed under lbe hometown bAd of arcllit~ Bill Fteker. la more splendid tban ever .. a landmartt with twlnklln• lilbll outllnlnt lta cupola and root. THE FUN ZONE HASNT chan1ed much since Al An· deraon founded lbe place In tbe 19208. The sl1ns are still In tbe ta.a stY&e. Tbe ferriJ wheel •till 1pln1 with lta U•bta and the tneny·So-round amusee youngsters or yet another 1ener1tJon; even lr the painted horses mignt be a touch fded tMse days. Located OD a piece of prime ~ayfront property, tbe de· ml.se of the PW> 1.one has long been predicted. In lbe early 1960s. the End for lbe Zone was seen as Imminent. It was tbe creature ol ~ aae; a dinosaur in the entertain- ment field that bad outlived it.s time in tbe clamor for .. tbe highest and best use" of every scrap of real estate in our region. Now some new owners have obtained the Fun Zone property and maybe, just maybe, once again the end of the I I . e ,,· :_ . ' .rL.J --..,.. Fun Zone By Mark Le111en /or Mariners Saving & Loan old amusement landmark is just a few more flicks of the calendar pages away. T WO NICE GUYS STILL bold forth down there run· ning the 7.one. Bill Kennedy handles the rides and always seemed to me to be in love with bis ferrla wheel. Bill Olson operates the penny arcade concession where, or course, the games and machines cost a bit more than a penny in tbi• day and age. r Both Kennedy and Olson ~e little shop people sur- rounding the Fun Zone have been most ·anxious to know what the fate or the place wiU be. The new owners have been particularly tight-lipped J.n tbls area. When one of our reportorial operatives began probing into the future or the property, it became patently obvious that the new ownership fears that the populace would be struck by a great wave of nostalgia and protest any planned demise of the historic .Qalboa amusement corner. OBVIOUSLY ANGERED by questions, one or the new owners told our starr person, "If you print anything at all about the Fun 7.one. we'll kick everybody out as orthe first of the month." . Why, that almost sounds like a threat. So I have a message for that new owner: Read the above. He's a Little Big Marine SAN DIEGO <AP> -The Marine Corps says one of lts smallest men is the world's pullup champion. In less than 15 minutes, Pfc. Jose Hernandez of Cashion, Ariz., chinned himself 115 times -46 more than the previous bigb at the San Dieao Recruit Depot. The 5-foot·l , 104 pound Hernandez, wbo rinisbed high sebool three monUls ago, said in bis IJ'QnitQred effort ha "only wanted to do about 80 pullups. But when I reached 80, I still felt pretty good so I just kept go- tn*." .. T9 €ut M ag Grow $16.3 Billion Bill to Senate WASIUNGTON <AP> -The S16.3 billion tax cut upproved by Lbe lloUJe la on Its way to the Senate. where the figure Is likely to erow -perhaps to $20 billion. Jgnori!'J President Carter's call months ago for a ~ billion tax cut and his last-minute $18.1 billion compromise errort. the House on Thursday adopted. 362-49, the • V measure written by its Ways Indeed, most of the prtsldent's und Means Committee. tax recommendatlona failed to * * * survive House scrutiny, includ 11\a his proposed curbs on the '°" called three-martini h1ncb and a capital 1ai.Ds tax increase. 'Experts' Estimate Tax Cuts ui·s ALSO UNLIKELY to prevail in the Senate, where Sen. Russell B. Long, D-La., the Finance Committee ebalrman. bu said aS16.3 billion reduc- ..11.olLWun't eno\l&b. He w1Jnts to add about $4 billlon to offset in· nation and next year's Social WASHINGTON CAP> -Here Security tax increase. is what congressional tax "ex-Long, who shepherds tax bills perts" estimate federal income through the Senate, generally tax cuts would be under the bill bas his way on such legislation. now on its way to the Senate His panel begins hearings on tbe after House approval Thursday. tax cut bill Aug. 21. Also shown are estimates for The House-passed bill would the two major alternative tax-provide Income lax savings of cutting proposals the House re· $62 for a typical family of four jected. with $10,000 income, .$77 for a In addition, Social Security Sl5.000 family, and $146 for a tax increases scheduled bv law $20,000 family . for next year are shown. FOR SINGLE TAXPAYERS This table is computed for in corresponding brackets, tbe typical taxpayers with deductj,. saviogswouldbeSl5.S1land$105. ble personal expenses of 23 per-In passing the committee bill, cent or their income. the House dealt Carter a blow by In this comparison: defeating, 225·193, his com- -"Inc" is basic annual promise which would have cul s a 1 a r Y • "".ages o r s e 1 f · taxes an additional Sl.8 billion empl.~y~~~~ income. and would have directed the re- -8111 ts what the cut .would ductions more to those with In· be...n.ext _yJ?ar under the. bill the~m.es..beJow SlS.000-. __ _ House passed ·and sent lO' the· Al tlle"Wliite Rouse, presiden· Senat~; .. . tial press'secretary Jody Powell -Plan is what tbe cut issued a terse. one-sentence would have been next .year .un· comment: "If you make. $50,000 der the Carter administration-or more, the House vote is backed plan sponsored by some great ... D~mocrats. The House rejected House Speaker Thomas P . this. O 'N · 11 D M d . "GOP" · h h ea . · ass .. es pate -is w at t e cut straned relations with the White wou!d have been, when ful~ ef· House, made the final plea for fect1ve, under a . Repubhcan-the administration measure, sponsored alternative that would terming it more equitable than ha.ve phased. In ~n average one· the committee version and say. third reduction in personal tax ing carter would sign it. rates over three years. The House rejected this. -"NA" means figures were not available. Figures also were not available for those earning above $40,000 in income. -"SS" is what the Social Security tax increase will be for a one-earner family next year un- der currentlaw. SINGLaf'EUON lllC SI •Ill .... " OOf' SS Sl,000 SI so SHA so n S,000 SI 21 Sf 119 •• ooo SI " NA I" •.ooo SI 11 HA U9 • 10,000 SI IS • ~I • u.soo SI ll HA •H 10 15,000 SI 11 S4 .. , u 17,SOO SI ,, NA m u 20,000 " IOS 100 I, 170 ISS 2,.,000 SI 160 100 1,SfS Jll 30.000 SI ,,) 100 ?.OSI lll JSAOO SI ,., 100 7.Sll Jll 40,000 SI 321 100 J,092 Jll MA•1uso coun.a 111< SI 9111 ...... Got" II SJ.000 SI '°' NA so f'l s.ooo " 0 NA 0 ' 6AOO SI JI HA ,. s •.ooo SI " NA "' • 10,000 SI J9 NA 311 • n,soo SI 14 NA 4411 10 IS,000 SI • HA '24 n 17,SOO SI ts NA 75f w 20.000 SI " HA '17 HS AT THE SAME T I ME , however, he said the administra- tion had been tardy in bringing in its compromise, saying, "If it had been brought in four or five months ago, it would have sailed through Congress." In adopting the Ways and Means Committee version, the House further Ignored Carter by voling to retain a Republican- backed addition that would take inflation Into account beginning in 1980 when taxing capital gains. The amendment would have no imme diate e ffect, but ull!m ately, according to est1 mates. could cost the Treasury $4 billion a year. It would cut capital gains receipts in half. Those gajns are the profits from sales or stocks. real estate or other assets held at least a year. Seek Neae Rag Trial Rev. James Lawson. left. Memphis. Tenn .. Rev. Jesse Jackson, ce~ter. Chicago. and Dr. Alvin Poussaint. Harvard Medical School. are pushing for a new trial for James Earl Ray, following an interview Thursday at .Brush)! Mountain Prison. in Petros. Tenn. Ruy pleaded guil~y m 1969 to the slaying of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. m exchange for a 99-year prison term instead of the death penalty. Three days later he tried to recant the plea denying he killed King. . 4 Fog!t~yes N~h~d _ In Family Slaying CASA GRAN\lE. Ariz. <AP> -State police and sheriff's deputies ca~tured oue ~scaped killer .and two accomplices today and a fourth fugitive was killed when thell' van crashed through a police roadblock, authorities said. Officers using helic~pters combed the desert 17 miles sou~~west of Casa Grande m southern Arizona in search of a firth fug1t1ve. ~uthorities said. the .five men were wanted for the murder of a Marine se.rgeant, his wife and son and the kidnapping of his 15· year-old ruece. There was no immediate word on the girl's fate . T HE AKZONA DEPARTMENT of Public Safety said Randy Greenawalt, 28. a convicted murderer from Thornton. Colo .. and brothers Rick and Raymond Tison. were captured after the van barreled through tbe police barricade. . FBJ agent J.im Cassidy said a third Tison brother. Donald, was killed, possi.bly lD an exchange of gunfire at the roadblock. Gary Tison. 43, the other escapee and father or tbe captured brothers, ran from tbe scene after the van crashed. and authorities sealed of! the area and began a search for him. . THE CAPl'URE CAME ONE DAY after an attempted break· m at a U.S. Border Patrol armory near Gila Bend . Authorities said th~ getaway van matched the one the fugitives were believed to be using. Tison and Randy Greenawalt. 28. both serving life terma for murder, escaped from the state prison July 30. and Tison 's sons were charged with engineering the escape. ON StJNDAY, TISON, GREENAWALT and Tison·s three sons wer~ charged with murder and kidnapping in the shotgun deaths of Marine Sgt. John F. Lyons, 24. of Omaha. Neb .. his wife and son. Authorities said the killings apparently occurred after Lyons stopped in the.desert to aid what tie thought were stranded travelers. Their bodies were found Aug . 6. \, ll.000 SI Itel NA 1..231 m 30.000 SI "' NA 1,616 m U.000 SI , .. HA 1.~ m 40.000 SI ~5 NA 2,51' Jl;) BUV ·ONE DINNER RT l'AMILYOl'l'OUlt lltC st •111 ...... GOf' H ~000 SI so $NA so S2 ~ SI 0 NA 0 ' ~ SI 0 NA 0 M SI ,. ff A IOI • 10.AIOO " u 2'0 221 • n ,JOO SI 10S NA ,,. 10 ISAOO " 77 22' ,,. 12 11,lOOO SI 1U NA •sa 14 20,000 " I .. 2211 1'2 us U,000 $1 m -1,tal m lD,000 S1 * •U 1,451 m 31,GOO ,, 318 HA 1,l7S m 40,000 $1 ... 6S4 t,Jl6 m South Gets More Storms REBULRR PRICE AND GETIHE 9EGDND ONE FDR JUIJ •1.00 Thal'• the 1pecl•I coupon offer being made by Spirea Reat•urants, MacArthur a l S.D. Fwy., In tmne •nd 3125 Harbor Blvd., In Costa M•H. '1 •1 .CM ., " ,. ., ft ... ft ,, 76 .. " • 7t ,. u 7S JI ,OS ,, n ' During August, except on Mondays. these coupons enable you to buy one dinner at the regular price and the second dinner for just S1.00 more. It's our way of saying "Thanks" for being our customer. Tht onlY req11111"*'1s art tllal you bong tnls COIJl!Oll wttn you Mid Cloth diflners musl be tilt wne The SECOfjO DINNER FOR S't oo ollef 1$ good ontv at SIW• Aeslauf1n11. M~ •I s 0 Fwy . In lr.ene and 31~ ~ Blvd • 111 CCIN Mau •ncf tndt AuQU$1 $1. 1978 Oll8f good lily dlV t.ctPI Mon4ty • Coupo11 &pectila must be ea1en on tllt p111111Sts and t<t MMC1 I '"'"1 :i p m IO 10 p m. All °"* ntef1ll Items are •I regullt ~--------~ ,•-•mcoupon••• .. ~ 1 liver & Onions 1 I *2.45 ::s •1.QO I I ...... .... .... <1lilllJ/IJ1 I or .. lad, vegetable, I potatoorrtcwpllat, I roll etld butter I Tiii Ollly l9QIMllllllllJ art llllC ¥0ll Ol1ll9 11111 ~ Wiii! ,.. lllCI Wit OIWl1 lllUll DI Ille NIM The SECONO DIHHEll '°" I .. ~ .. - -mcoupon1 •••• ~ 1 Breaded Veal 1 I '2.45 ~= $1.00 I HfVed wltl'l aoup « aalad, vegetable, potatoorrk:e pilaf, roll and butter The Ofllr ... ~IS "1 11111 YQll DMq 11'1' C'OUPQll '""' you lflt °'411 ... 11111$1lie1111 MIN n. UCOHO DlllHEA FOA St 00 .. ., .. good OlllY " Slim fllsWllll'S. ~ .n S 0 fwy, Ill~~ Ind 3t~ llirt>Of 8MI , 111 Coll.IM ... incl ' •• ,• SACRAllSNTO CAP> - Juelaea could not at" probation or a auapeaded aenlenct to persona eoev1cttcl or forclbfo rape ~ a bW paued by lM " 1t1te AaemblY. Tbe bill. SB l'1t by Sen. Oeorae De\lluneJlan, R -Long S.acti. requ.lnl a prison term for anyoneooavt~otlbectlme .. TRB tal•E of forcible r~1 ~ beyond a reasona- ble aoUbt. b a tenible crime." aald Aaaembl,yman John Knox. D·Rlcbmond, wbo said he had ne•er before voted ror man datory f:M:OalUes. "T t.hinl lf someone feels con- stulned to commit a crime like .. tha.t, they ouaht to 10 to the "-JOinl,'' Kno" Mid. • ASSEMBLY Kenneth Maddy. It-Fresno, the blll's Assembly sponsor, said one-third or the 389 persons convicted of forcible ra11e in 1977 were given proba· lloi\. The Assembly voted 11 ·0 Thursday for the bill, which re- turns lo the Senate for action on Assembly amendments. 'Peanuts' Suit Cliarges Firms In Ywlatiom LOS ANGELES CAP> Charlie Brown and his pals have gone to court lo stop four Southern California firms from allegedly making unauthorized use of names and likenesses from Charles Schulz's comic strip ·'Peanuts." United Features Syndicate. based in New York, asked in four suits filed in U.S. District Court Thursday that the firms be ordered to pay $50,000 for each instance of copyright viola- tion and be enjoined from further use .of "Peanuts'' characters. ACCUSED OF selling un- a uthorized dee ab and T-shirts de· picting .. Pei:nuts" characters were Shirley and Harvey Klein of VaU~y Skateboards in Sepulveda, Wilham L. Marsh of Creative • Concepts in Chatsworth anrf Terry Andreen of the Hobby Lob- by Shirt Shoppe in Marina del Rey. Charlie Brown's TV & Ap· pliance of Garden Grove was ac- cused or using the names Charlie Brown, Lucy and Snoopy In advertising and of using their likenesses on company vehicles. ... MUSIC CAMP EVACUEES WAIT TO GO HOME About 200 Left When Blaze Threatened Site North Fire Rages, B~Resort's OK . CAZADERO CAP> -Wildfire that scorched some 8,200 acres of Umber and brush, destroyed at least six homes and spread within two miles of this Jogging town continued to burn out of control today but officials said the immediate threat to the community had passed.' Elsewhere in Northern. California. 85 percent of the state fire crews were out in the field battling more than l!iO fires many sparked by lightning, that havP ' charred nearly 18,000 acres in the past few days. In western Washington. firefighters bad most blazes un- der control today as a hot, dry week gave way to cooler tem· peratures with fog and drizzle. Damages from Washington fires s o far this week exceeded $700,000. FIKE BURNED TO within two miles of Cazadero, but a dramatic wind shift Thursmty turned the fire's path away from this Russian River town. Spokesman Greg Scott of the California Department of Forestry said today officials believed they could avoid evacuating the area. although plans were still In effect in case the fire should tum. "I'm not packed and I'm not packing until the siren blows." said one longtime resident. Wan- da Laton. Cazadero has about 300 year.round residents and scores or vacationers. The blaze, which began about noon Wednesday, was believed t~ ha.vc been touched off by hghtnmg. although fire officiaJ s say it may have been triggered by a spark from a lawn mower. BY MIDDAY THURSDAY, fanned by high winds. it had turned the sky rusty with smoke and could be seen as far away as San Francisco. 60 miles to the south. Late Wednesday and Thurs- day about 150 children and 40 counselors were evacuated from a music camp. and dozens of people from ranches in the area packed up what they could and voluntarily moved to a Red Cross shelter in Guernevllle .. Officials say at least six and possibly as many as nine remote cabins were destroyed. VISIT SEA CLIFF VILLAGE FOR SUMMER FUN CAUPOIUUA-S EDOCATIONAL 8HOP""G CENTER 'V INTERNATIONAL MUSICALE AT .. SEACllFF VILLAGE ~ SHOPPING CENTER ~ e LIVE ENTERTAINMENT CONTINUOUSLY ''°"' 11:00 a.m. to B:OO p.m. Saturday, August 12 ............ ~ ...... • See performing artists In colorful native costumes representing more than eight "'different countries. Refreshments available from many of the country's representatives. LOS ANGELES CAP> -Some state Supreme Court justices have been threatened wlth physical violence becaU&e of the way they de- cide Issues. Chief Justice Rose Bird Hid Thursday, ~uatlng poUUcal pressure movements with extor· tlonlst demands. .. As you may be aware, there is a small group of extremists in this state whose zeal for pollticlzinl the bench to ensure Ideological domina- tion has emboldened them to believe that the chief Justicesbip can be boughl by the expenditure of Sl million in a media-bUu election cam- pal1n." she told the Association of · Trial Lawyers of America, "Others believe that they can in· fiuence the votes or those of us on the Supr~me Court by threatenin1 us with r~all or defeat at the polls lf we decide contrary to their views on a particular issue. Still_ others have gone so far as to threaten ourselves and our famllles with physical harm," she said. ~tNl#ed SACRAMENTO CAP> -Gov. Ed- mund Brown Jr. has declined to en- dorse Assembly Speaker Leo McCarthy's plan to scrap property taxes on homes, saying something that complex would be hard to enact. Instead, the Democratic governor. usually a close ally of McCarthy, took a hands-off stance· on tbe San Francisco Democrat's plan Thursday and stopped Just short of opposing it. RIVERSIDE CAP> -A small earthquake rattled windows and dish- es from Pasadena to Riverside, but no injuries were reported, officials said. _ _ • • Lt NOW Joins : I lt r&iliill~ r~~:un to • HERB • '-AM•.,....,e•., • FRIEDLASDER : : IS MAKING ii Pardon Patty : GREAT DEALS : LOS ANGELF..5 <AP> -The local .: FREE ! chapter oC the National Organization • 50 GALS • for V.:omen will join a grassroots cam-• OF GAS • palgn seekina a presidential pardon,.. ..... -...... _"'-··-·~·.., for Patricia Hearst, tJ()_W ~ator + or OU. ('ll,\~Gt:s • GloriaAllredsays. . :• .. ,_.......,.~ .. _,..,,. Ms. Allred said Tbunday that 't.be it ..... , .. ,._ •· • chapter passed a resolution support. • e HO ~ e • ing the imprisoned newspaper • "'•••ttt._ • heiress and wtll appeal to President • 117 rm ...._ ...,,, • Carter for clemency. · it* * • * * * * * * * * * • ·MISS REAasr IS serving a seven-: MG· TRIUMPH • year prison lerm for a 1976 bank rob-• e JAGUAR e • bery conviction. The r.-obbery toot • FIAT·IANCIA • pJace 10 months after terrorists • 1r.•a.uis1-......._ • dragged her rrom li~t-S-~r'keter·,._ ~* :;·;;-: * ~ • apartment. ·• • The lm Angeles ef'ort will coin· ,.. • TOYOTA e " id 'th a.lgns .. t..ed In llli . •••<..rMGf9o....... • f: e wa camp UG.11 noaa • c. ..... G....... UJ<Mlf • Thursday's· tremor, centered ne;lr Fontana, measured 4.4 on the Richter scale, said Caltech Seismology Laboratory spokeswoman Anne Blanchard. The Ric~ter scale is a measure of ground mollon caused by a quake. and San Franclaco, where the Com· •* • * * * • * * • * *.: mittee to Release Patty Hearst is • ·conducting letter·writlng drives it MOTORHOME • aimed at the President. Ms. Allred it SALES & REST ALS: said. • RESERVE SOW • ,,...., ".,..,. LOS ANGELES CAP> -Occidental Petroleum will continue to fight for permission to drill oil wells In Pacific Palisades despite the City Council's failure to override Mayor Tom Bradley's veto of the project, the company's chairman of the board said. "Occidental intends to keep up the fight for this worthwhile project, which is opposed by a small group of nearby residents arguing that the slant-drillina . . . would provoke MEANWHILE, U.S. SEN. S.I. • 531-1111Ext.500 41 Hayakawa has joined the campaign .... • • • * * * • * * ._ to free Patricia Hearst with a letter • LEASING e • to President Carter that suggests her • ~.:~=--• guilty verdict was an attempt to :--531-7111 t;xt. tiOU • make •ense of a saga "much 1oo far· * * * * * * * * * * • ..._ fetched for a reader of· fictJon to r---------believe." A YCM Daily Piiot Hayakawa is the second bigb-can t>e ranking official to call for a pardon Recycled. for Miss Hearst. U . Gov. Mervyn occ ~ Dymally also has urged Carter to i:=.,o:..- pardon her. 556-6981 • . \ 1 .4• 1£1.-~t~~ ~1 .. Robert N. W-.d/Publlsher T,_,_.t l(eevll/Ed.ltor Orange Coast Da11v Ptlot .11!1... U'.-..a r--'!!IJ.e '"-·AUD• u. 1rra ~. 1<rwlbfch/Ed1tor1.1 Peoe Editor E eon om y at Stake t In LNG Question Thf' Calif om Public UtiUU~s Commission hus all but &iven its final okay to a Polnl Conception alte for u liq umed natura' .... terminal. If o few more hurdJes can be cleured. we wUI huvt' an alternative ource of nutu.ral aas b)' the mld-1880'a _. just bo~ly in Ume to meet a aws shortage that could de· vuatateoureeoeomy in Southern Cullfornia. It didn't come ea y. Perauadin.s both the PUC u.nd touah·mlnded stat ener&Y boss Tom Quinn to alve tMlr blesslnas to the proj ct meant the gas company had to Pl"()ve ~ need ond provide ample safety from ex· ploslons. The need w n't hard to prove. The figures ..Row clearly Ulat ~·u be running oul of gas two year(' from now. The threat to business and industry was lnescapu- ble The PUC understood this early in the game. The sale· ty question.has been another matter. The LNG process requires gas to be chilled to 260 degrees. thus reducing its wlume by 600 percent. It Is loaded in this state into tankers. off-loaded at terminals, ulli'1'\&tely processed back to its origin~ stale, and dis· trlbuted like ordinary natural gas. 1 In its condensed form. LNG is not particularly dangerous. But if its thermos-like storage tank suffers a majpr rupture, it can rise in gaseous form and create the potential for an explosion of major proportion. Environmentalists and other'$· have dwelt on this danger. Only last week. the General' Account office warned that the federal government has done nothing to offset the potential for catastrophic explosions of LNG. The GAO also said terminals should be built only in re- mote areas. lf the federal government bas been lax in this area. others have not. As one gas industry official pointed out. ··unless we can prove the safety factor. we would never be able to borrow the vast amounts of money needed to build a terminal in Southern California.•· It should a lso be noted that the Point Conception site meets the GAO's criterion: it is a remote tip of land in a virtually untnl'labited part of Santa-Barbara County. Jn the end, Calif orni'1 bas t0-balance the distant odds of explosion against the very real specter of a wrecked economy. . The answer has to be. build the terminal. Time is running out. ~bbing Confidence Apparently the American people are beginning to get .the message that the Carter Administration is wallowing about in a sea of vacillation in its handling of both foreign and domestic affairs. At least that's the way the latest poll goes. A survey by the Associated Press now shows that Carter's job ratin~ has now ebbed below that given to Richard Nixon when the public looks back upan his White House years. More than one-third of those who voted for Mr. Carter an 1976 say they don't want him lo run again in two years. Even Democrats polled were uncertain if they wanted the incumbent to once again become their standard bearer. About the only briYJll spot for Mr. Carter in the poll was that the public's .ust in hi~ has moved up a few more hches. Plblic trust is marvelous but it m ay not be too valua- ble at election time i( the people don't think the candidate can get the job done. Kojac Shows the Way So now the National Parent Teacher Association has come out with its television show ratings and nominated that detective drama "Kojac" as the worst atrocity on the air. This must come as a terrible blow for the writer who has his lead actor running around on the screen sucking on lollipops. Having now dispatched its rankings on the rankest dramas. maybe the PTA critics can get around to giving us the word on the most ghastly commercials. • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Deity Pilot. Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment ts Invited. Address The Dal~ Piiot, P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) &42-4321. Boyd I Bikini,, ByL.M.BOYD Ancient wall decoratlooa that date back to old Rome indicate the bikini bathing suit was worn many cen· turies ago. But the firat bikini ol modern limes was modeled in 1948 by a dancer named Micheline Bernard. What was noteworthy about the event was that af· terwards she received more than 50,000 fan l~rs. Western Union back ln 190( pat pool rooms off llmill to its meuengers, and insofar as I know, no tele&ram bu been delivered to a pool room atncethen. Dear Gloomy Gus I tboupt aft.e.r Prop. 13 Lt wa1 Ume to let my tax dollara Reat lo Peace, But Golden West' COUec• ls now of· rertna a S35 clu1 ln funeral Ooftr arranie- mect datp. -1.uar\al ' In Wyoming, slr, it's Weaal lo take a picture of a rabbit during January, February, March or April, unless you have a license. Most dangerous place for a child to ride in a car is on somebody's lap. Q. "When woodpecters ~ peck on wood, it's to pt the bugs under the bark. But why do woodpeckers aometisnea hamlaer away at drainpipes or other metal ob- jects? '' A. To wam male wood· peckers to stay out of the ter- ritory. That minlature wind swirl· tbat you call a dust devll is known to the Navajoe u a • "mother·in·law." AID asked what the "D'' ln • 'D·Day" stands for. Departure. I --------lllltl!llll!lm----~-..------------------- w ASHJNGTON -A fine Ulan named Ric.bud D. Obelllbain, wbo had a Cood chance to be elected tbe next Republican 1enator from Vlriini,1, , was killed tn the cruh of a ~ plane lut week, and thal. cot me to tfLloJdlW bow fren1ied, even 1chl1opbrenlc, the life of pollti· clan• 6u become. No 11ne man would a~mlt to the echedule demands most pols endure in this faet-movtna. hi&b·atruni time for politic•. Reasonable men are at the dinner ta· ble with their loved ooe or loved ones when elected officials are being propelled through foul weather enroute to tyrannical fWld·raisers or meet· tngs termed '"politically crucial." "ND SO Obenshain. the dogged candidate, was 1olng home to Richmond from a farmers' picnic. where he bad campaigned, wbea the two· engine plane crashed and burned. · Obenshain, only 42, was knowfl as a respected and experiePced conservative who built the Virginia GOP into a formidable power in that state. It seems when "name" people are killed in air crasbes they are always in ~mall pla.des. Think of the personalities -.rho-died-this way -Knute Rockne, Will · Rogers, Mike Todd, llocky lttar- c i an o, Tony Lima, Walter Reuther .. W h~n hip-rollers are in a hurry or must gel to places not served by commereial carriers, they call for chartered planes and helicopters. The record for small, private pJanes isn't as good as it ls for the airlines. Last year, some 4,476 tpeople died in genet;al avia~n acci· dents in the U.S. Some 75 were killed in '77 tn atrllne craabes, but if the Canary Island disaster is added, the number comes to 654. ... . rau1 Harvey Jn reeent yean, ml1bap1 in· volvlnc amall pJanu bave taken their' toll ol r\alhln1 ~U­ cian1. The moet dtamallet crab killed Qo.e Democratic ~ Hale a.... and Coqreuman Nick Jle•lch ln Aluka In W12. California C9Jll(e11man Jf!rQ Pettis was killed wben he cralhed bis own plane In lt75. In Aucuat or 1976, The Missouri Democratic nominee fP.r U.S. Senate, Jerry Litton. tit& wife and two cblldre.n were tllled while flying to a celebration of ht. victbtt 1n the primary. Last year. the Pennsylvania secretary of 'Transportation, William H. Sherlock. and ~lchard Frame, a prominent • state senator. died In ·a similar craab. Go back to 1962. and the record shows a Montana 1ov· emori Donalcl G. Nutt.er. killed in a p ane cruh. . NO POUTICAL family bas suffered from the odds of air trav.l Uke tli,, Kennedya. The lai. Prelideot'a older brother ud. lilt« lrere killed ln ~lane crashes. So were both of Etttel ltenpedy's parents and her brothet u -wen. Sen. Edward Kennedy waa. severely Injured when a two.engine plane be was riding en crashed in June. ~. Two other pasaengers died in that accident, and Senator Blrcft Bayh and Mrs. Bayb ~~re ill· jurec1. I f have traveled ln prtva~ planes many times, usually wi politicians. Once. my ban went clamm~ whet\ we wer forced to land on a strip of II· Unola sod. During my two yealJ of tracking abd flytne with Nelson Rockefeller. there wer~ moments When colons twitdJed in unison bec4use this stron&- m Ind ed man bas a way Ol persuading bis pilots to try one more time for that seemingly closed field. l can also remember Sen.. Jacob Javits nervously telling • pilot as be groped for a sbot at • smatl·town runway: .. I don 't have to make that Sulhvaft County meet.in& tonight.•· POLITICIANS -hc).ld 1>0Wel\ and dispense privilege. but un· like anclent rulers. they are not protected by God or pivine Right. Quite the opposite. Their schedules force them into travel situations where s8.f ety margins are atretcbed. and they beco~ more mortal than mortals. • It isn't always that single or twin-engine pJane which soa" into peril 1n the na me of representative democracyl There have been many careen- ing automobile rides in which the politician-passenger grits bi~ teeth and utters invocations to the Deity that the damned fool driver doesn't· hurtle into a -tetbal bead-on or -a loommg telephone pole. Politicians give up those niJbts by hearth and home beeause a fire burns in them. They charge on. even when most people would stay back. They feel thy 'llUSt show command and bravado, les t voted perceive them as stick-in-the: muds. They know about the othe~ polttlclans killed. shot at by th~ demented. or even wasted iq health by impossible schedules, but like ancient gladiators, or toothless prize.fighters. they struggle into the arena again. R ight Battery Makes Electric Cars Go • ! • ( • There is an electric car in your future. Our government's Energy Department is investing $60 million in loan guarantees to ex- pedite development of the elec- tric automobile. Five companies in four states will race one another to be fio>t with the beat. The objective is to be road testing 10,000 electric vehicles in a variety of climates within eight years. The electric car is not new. Ford and Edison combined their talents to build the first one more than 60 years ago. Others have tried ittlce. Tbe mo1t recent -Sebring· Vanguard -marketed 2,100 so- Sydney Harris called "Citicars." then gave up. THE ELECl'RIC car -to become efficiently functional - awaits development of a better, smaller, lighter, stronger bat- tery and a more efCicient elec- tric motor. We are almost there. Our U.S. Postal ~rvice has been operating a fleet of 390 electric vans for five years. Electric cars DO save energy. They DO require less main- tenance. But in cold weather some of them do run out of Juice. Ford ls hoping to improve its high.temperature sodium sul- phur battery. General Motors ls betting its moaey oo a new zinc-nickel ox- ide battery. It promtaes to aCore twice the energy in half the space and wefCbs 80 percent less than conventional batteries. GM '8 CHAl&MAN, Tom Murphy, 1ays, ''l th1Dk we are ~ .. on the thresbold of developing a battery than can do the job." The Wall Street Journal, un· derstandably seeking to an· ticipate the future from an in- vestor's point of view, believes that electric cars in showrooms are 10 years awa, and U.at tbey will not dominate tb~ market; that traditiolsal a~t.Omobiles will remain better performers and better sellers. If this prognosis is vaJid, the electric car -at least at first - will be a more likely "second car" candidate. ,The cai: ln which the housewife goes shop- ping and the one her commuting husband parks at the train sta· tion. More than 90 percent of all passenger car trips are under 21 miles. TENTATIVE government standards for electric vehicles now under development require a ran&e d 31 m(les and accelera4 lion from zero to 31 miles aq hour in 15 seconds. : If -with this "governmenC push" -the electric car earl replace 10 percent of all c~ within 20 years. it would sav-l our eountry from 100 million t1 1SO million barrels of oil a year. Al 'any hour. of course,~· breakthrougb could be an nounced which would accelera . the Umetable and multiply th potential. IF YOU owned an efficien electric car today you would Inconvenienced by too fe dealers and too few competent pair men. But wben one realizes bo prompUy service stations wer able to adapt themselves to th demand f0r lefld·free fuel, on realizes bow flexible we can when we want to be. Extrem ists (and Spee d ers) Set Society's Pace Driving from Milwaukee to Chicago, a dist&QCe of nearly 90 miles of lntehstat.e highway, J dldd't see ll tingle vehicle that seemed to be' obeying the federal apeed limit of 55 miles an hour. The prevailing speed was 10 miles an hour beyond that - with some of the huge overland truck• coin& even f uter. If you tried lo slick to 5.5, someone w o u 1 d nudge up beblnd yov and force you over to tbe slow lane -which wa1 a1ao ex· ceecllq tbe lhnlt, but by leas. '1tould whl% by you alarmingly; tail·gaters would press you, or dart around to fill the apace you were leaving for the car ahead. TBEBE WAS NO way to play the game bf. the rules. You were forced. willY·nllly, to become part or the operation, even acatnat your better Jud1ment or the capactues of whatever car you were handling. In a real sense, traffic wu driving you. not the other way arpund. It is easier to understand gang action, or mob actton, or any kind of msurrectlon. when you observe what happeps in such situations. It is always the ex· tremista who ~ the pattern and the pace. not the moderates. 1b moderates may be in the majori ty -as I believe lhe maJori~ motorists are -but when th action starts. the moderat~ stampeded by a minority o hotheads. Extremist movements a1 always go further than the should. because the moder are made to feel that the1 cowardly or compromisina somebow "disloyal" if they fal to accept the ultimate cbaUq to authority -just al lb motorist is made to feel a less slowpoke lf be cruises al at or below the legal limit. &1£ W@M[( ®@rrwn@@ ···o.c o ~· f'-n wnte to Pal ~ Pol auW ail ,.., ..,, ,.,.., ,,.. .....,., ortd CllCtlOn pl,..., to --..... i:flH lft C""Wud Qllld ~~CIU ~....,tof.Qt .At Vour~ OroAQf .._ ~ Piiot. P 0 . 80i% J.,, Coao #e,., CA • IW "9GftW lftf.,.. 0:S ~ """ f)e CIUINNd, '*C ......, ..,,,.. "' "'"'" "°' Ind~ 1Ac """"''• /Wl 90-.. oddtna Giid ~'houri' phone Ml"'bff cmMOl ()e~ ft&acolanM QJlPtOr•dai· l''·~~··· f ••'ftleCPs x•-8•.,.. -.. DJ:AR PAT : ~)' boyfriend and I entered the Make • Friend a Sider" a~tak• contest last ear. and,we bclf.h. won ski sJoves as prbes. The pro- tem b Uiat nelt.ber or us ever recelved the 1k>ves. tye~ thou&h we contacted the cont.i's sponsor ~ veral mootba aao. • T . M., Cost a Mesa Da'ftltl:q!llSe, •arteclll clltedOr ror strta· -mtrtes America. aa,a lae ...,...ed yov prhea ••4 bee. •alled becaaae be toataded &Jae clove •Hafectarer .... Y04IJ' leUel' of IBqalry WH r~ "'vecl. lqeale aa,ya M wOt follow ap °" your ••p&aiM l•nedlately Hd see &o It U.at yoar prbes are aa&led wl&JI ao funber delay. •••• , A...,ie Ket1 •• ..,..._. D.EAR PAT: I know that strip flooring sliould be laid so that the wood does not run in the same direction as the subfloor. ls this also tcue of "Parquet floors ? ~ · R .G., Fountain Valley .L.. yes. 'lbe lllort blockl of wood Oould ,be placed •L an angle to Uae nbfloor or to the old flnlsb floor. Be sure &o follow tbe maaafac:turer's dlrectlou 1Qr Lbe pankul1r brand or puquet blocka you ~hoose. D~rf119 Aid ti ... Olln-N ._ . DEAR READERS : Approxim"Mely 14.5 'million Americans have heanng impairfueots. In addit10~. C~ornians spen_d $24. million· annuany pn hunng aids. • _ _ .:... .. To answer qµestions on hearing problems, the slate Department of Cons umer Affatrs 11as ' published a 16-page, easy-lo-read pamphlet " ··Hearirl$l Loss: A Gulde to Hearing Aids" ... The booklet outlines new federal regulations which require that a consumer recejve a medical f.Xa~inat~on .before purchasing a bearing aid .• ~earing wd dtspensers cannot sell hearing aids to tndividuals unless the consumer presents a signed written statement from a licensed physician. in: (Jicaling that the Individual has been medically evaluated In the previous six months and ma}' be ~onsidered a candidate for a hearing aid, or tr Ule J'ndividual signs a prescribed waiver from indicat· \ng that he or she has been advised a medical exam is in his or her best interest. Those under 18 years old cannot waive the medical exam . The pamphlet stresses the importance of gel· tmg a proper medical evaluation before purchas· mg a h~aring aid and explains how to seek medical advice. Tips on purchasing and caring for an aid a lso are Included, along with compJamt sodrces for consumers having problems with dealers, a udiologists, or doctors. For a tree copy. send a self-addressed, legal· size envelope to: Hearing Loss, P.O. Box 310, Sacramento, Calif. 95802. ... Michael A. Gratiam . ~ & Associates, Inc. One of the largest wholesalers to the trade. now offering to the pu~lic. . AUCTION · .·, liquidation of surplus gold. silver. jewelry, coins. diamonds. antiques, etc. "Antique Jewelry a Specialty" Auction will be held at . . . . .• Sat. Aug. 12 • Prtvilw 2...tPM • Auction Stam .tPM MOVIE WOR~D 8920 Orangethorpe Buena Park. ca 90620 (714) 623-1520 (213) 921·1702 , - Fric"1,Auguet 11, 1978 DAILY PILOT A 7 Former CIA Director Richard Helms says he. doubts. it will ever be known 1f Lee Harvey Oswald h ad ties with the Soviet KGB or anyone else when he assassinated President John F. K ennedy. Tents Preferred lOo/~ Reject New Tijuana Homa TIJUANA. Me~lco <AP> -The new concerete homes built for them by Mexico's federal government. are being rejected by almost. 10 percent of the people moved out of the dry Tta Juana River bottom. An estimated 2,000 have returned to their old squatter neighborhoods, opting for tents or quickly bo~ed· up shacks. ... LIVED HERE for years - nothina ever happened." said Pran- cisco Soliz Preciado, 46. ''There are 11 neighborhoods ln all that were bulldozed by the soldiers. They said It was because the river was dangerous." T he evacuation of almost 25,000 people was carried out last wioter after officials said waler behind "'Rodnguez Dam was perilously high. The new homes are still being built on Ot ay Mesa. but hundreds of families are there in 9nly tents. MARIA CARMEN DE Mata , leader among 35 women who have re· jected the new quarters. pointed to the roundalion or her one·bedrool!l house. "I have 12 children ... she said. "How can we tit In this hoU!e? The house will cost us 80,000 pesos ($3,500 in American money). I haven't paid a cent yet. and I won't. We're poor." TSE GOVERNMENT HAS tried for years to keep squatters out or the rive r bottom near the U.S. border. Said Soltz Preciado: "I think the eovetnment Wlilflts us out so the land can be sold to some rich people." There was no public comment from ofrlclals. . Your A Daily Pilot can be ,_ Recycled. Orange Coast College 1$ the olficJB/ recyclrng center for Costa Mesa . 556-5981 Particular People Select JOHNSON I SOM Homa of the ··oolden Touch" "Johnson a Son 111m1d to bend over b1ckw1rda to get •• what I wanted"~ SUE REPELLA' " Or&ft9t, Calif. ANOTHER SATtStF1ED CUSTOMER .JOHNSON a SON ! i1-. -, I 2626 Harbor Blv~. •Costa Mesa • 540-5630 .CLEARANCE s795oo "'o"' Choice PIANO * GRAND PIANOS F~OM ff 495• to 155,800 Most Major Brands 26 Brand Names NEW Schafer & Sons Plano or Organ s795 PLUS TAX YOUR I CHOICE. OYER 5000 UNITS ALL CLEARLY SALE PRICED OR Think Rent ~25~!~ fus cartage ~ New Schafer & Sons Piano or O_rgan YOUR CHOICE No obligation tQ Purchase * s795oo ~ 0 ur Cho;011 ORGAN Upright Pianos From 149P 10 15,188" MOST MAJOR BRANDS • 26 BRAND NAMES -<· THE WORLD'S LARGEST SELECTION 700 UPRITE OVER PIAJIOS In Stock NEW . AND USED l j ,,. I! . \. Aa DAtL Y PILC)T Frldtv. Auauet 11, 1f71 San Diegan Nears Snipe Title I Tho Snipe Clua national champi0'1ahip regat- ta wlndl up at Alam1to1 Bay Yacht Club today with Mark Reynoldl of San Dle10 apparenUy a ahoo·ln for the HelnzerUn1 Trophy. symbolic or the national title. ~ SNIPERS WIND UP DAY'S WORK AT ALAMITOS BAY YACHT CLUB UgM Winn Continue to P1119ue Natton•I Ch•lftPk>nahlp :----~---~-----~----~------~ .. . .. Weekend (:alftldar ~--------------~ ~­~- ' !,. ., ;,· ,. ~ ·Etchells Sailors Vie For Crown Off Coast l'J By ALMON LOCKABEY DMtyPl ......... Wn. ~ ~ • Etcbells-22 gailors from the United tstates and two foreiga countries are f,:sc~uled to start colilJ)etilion Satur· } day in the fourth world championship c--.-~~~~that°W'BS cfe. ~..signed for -but didn't quite make - ;\be Olympic sailing roster. :~ 11\e Newport Harbor Yacht Club ~·WiD be host to the skippers and crews <In the first world championship re- , gaUa to be held here since the Star World's in 1958. The regatta will con· tinue in the o cean west of the Newport Pier with s ix _race_J scheduled -one each day througb . Aug. 18. Tuesday, however. will be a lay-day, giving crews a chance to get some much-needed rest and to retune their craft. A SKIPPERS MEETING was held today at 9:30 a.m. and the first r ace will get under way Saturday. On hand to defend his title -won in Japan in 1!117 -is Frank Tolhurst -0f Sydney, Australia, sailing for the Pittwater Fleet. He beads a list or 14 Aussie crews wbo will be seeking tht> title. , AT THE 80V'l'R Shore Yacht Club women sailors will taJce the helms of the Pacific Handicap Racing Fleet yachts in the annual Ladles Day Regatta. The Voyagers Yacht Club will test the seamanslnp of-offsbwe ra-cerrtn its annual Seamanship Race in which skippers and crews have to perform various seamanship drills during the course or the race. The Seamanship Race is'Saturday. The Capistrano Bay Yacht Club to the southeast will celebrate the an· niversary ol the club's founding with a race ror PHRF yachts today and ~aturday. · AND ABOUT THIS time today th& Snipe Class should be winding up Its nationa l championship regatta at the Alamitos Bay Yacht Club in Long Beach. Yachting activity in other areas of the Southern California Yacht As· sociation: NEWPORT-BALBOA NEWPORT HARBOR YACHT CLUB -World Championship, Etcbells-22 Class, today througb~ug. Reynold& won the fourth race of the series Thursday to maintain bl.a three penalty polnta - 31.7 Point& ahead of bla nearest rival, Dou1 De Souza ol the Mis&ion Bay Yacht Club. De Souza 1ot hi• early saW.na experience at the Balboa Yacht Club. WINDS IMPaOVED FOR the slnale race Thursday and the forecast waa ror a normal we1terly ror today's final two races. The cbJmpionshlp is decided on the best five of six races which includes the final race or the elimination series for the Crolby Trophy. Leadln& the consolation OJ&ht 1or the Wells • Trophy was Jay Buller of the Mission Bay Yacht Club with U .4 points to 30.4 for.the runner-up Fred Abels of Sea curr. N.Y. TRUJlSDAY'S RACE : 1, MARK Reynolds. SDYC; 2. Doug De Souza, MBYC; 3, J e rry Thompsoo, ABYC : 4, Dave Chapin, Springfield, W .; s. Dan Krebs, MBYC. Standings-after four raees~ 1, Mark Reynolds, 3: 2. Doua Oe Soma. 34.7: 3. Jeff Lenhart. MBYC. 35.0: 4. Dan Krebs, MBYC; 5, Dave Chapin, Springfield, Ill. SO. Standings Wells Serles : 1: Jay Butler, MB~C. 11.4: 2. Fred Abels, Sea Cliff. N.Y. 30.4: Mike Bartell, ABYC. 34.7; 4, Michel Zabal. Cincinnati, Ohio, 43.7: Dick Crookston. Lansing, Mich .. 4-4 • s.,,,.,n..,.. Tffk• co .. fal lfftlfkr ... IOAY Nltftt -"'°"""'low <IOudlMt•, $«0ft0 high 3.17 p,m. S.O othffWI• telr --selurdey. S.Cond low 10:S4 p.m. 1.4 u,..._., IATUaOAY J:OOun. J.l •.•1 a.m. 2.l 4.37 p,m. S.J U:Ola.m, 0.t CoHtal t~-wlll ,._ SUMOAY Mtwoo11 63 .,_, n . 1nl•"4I tom-First hlOfl t :Uo.m. 3.4 "1'•'-•lll r ... '"-07-"lrsll-ll:04a.m. 2.4 ... n. .............. wlMllo.,, S.C-111911 S:41 p.m. $.1 Sun rl-6:11 a.m.. wb 7 44 p.m. Moonnws1:1:1p.m.,M1Sl2:2'p.m. Patd Polltlcal Advertisement • ESTATE JEWELRY • CHINA • RUGS • SILVER • FINE PORCELAINS • BRONZES • FURNITIJRE • OILS, Etc • 1~ Million Dollars Worth Fri., Set. & Sun. August I I , 12 & · 13 8:00 pm ln..-ctlon Fri., Sat. & Sm. 2.s,.&1-1,. . -- Don't miss this important sale! Fine crystal, cruna seu, European furniture, bronzes. rugs, oils and •'many ethu ..4tenv. --· ~ · -~ · ... -· ...:.. • Lou o f diamend soliteiftt-"8nd dusten. Ftnl'merfs and tadles watd}es rings, earrings, bracelets, necklaces, etc., set with diamonds. emeralds, rubies, sapphires. Several important la.rge emeralds and sapphires. TEAMS: &lnkAmerfcwd M-i:h1r09 l'oreonel check · Ceeh · S-11ttendlld twme C-" be wTengect. ProtHff'( motlecf for COt11"9fl"1nce of ult1 to: nevvport· galleries, It~. 2452 West Coast Highway. Newport Beach. CA (714) 645-2200 CONSIGNMENTS ACCEPTED 'Tll 5 P.M. FRIDAY A~I Lovone · ~uctloneer •. Tbe only other foreign countJ'y with an entry is Canada with Joe Standley of Toronto. 19. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=~;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;::;;;;;::;;;;;::;;;;;::;;;;;::;;;;;:: __ __..~-----------------~-~---BAH IA CORINTHIAN YACHT Nine of the U.S. aspirants are from the host Newport Harbor Club which m>w bas one of the largest E·22 fleets on the West Coast. OTHEB U.S. SKIPPERS are from Marblehead, Mass ; Long Island Sound, N.Y.; Detroit; Puget Sound, and San Francisco. Pre vious world titlists in olass besides Tolhurst were James R. Bartholemew, Western Long Island Sound. 1975, and Robert Danforth and David Curtis. Marblehead, 1978. CUrtls is back for another try this 1ear with Robert Mccann and Rob- bie Haines of San Diego as crew. Local skippers in ·the lineup are Seymour Beek, Phil Ramser, George Twist, Don Edler, Ted Munroe. Tim Rogan, Robert Searles , Dennis Durgan and Dick Deaver GENERAL CHAIRMAN of the' event is Jim Somers and John McCray is race committee chairman. That is the week to come. But Newport Harbor will be busy with other yacht events tbls weekend. First off, tbe Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club will send a group of l.ldo· 14 sailors out for s ome moonlight saillna toQl&ht ln the an· nual -Luna del Lido resatta. On Saturday the Balboa Yacht tlub will at.age the fifth race of ita popular 66 Series for offshore raelnl boats ol the lntematlonaJ Oft'.abore Rule and Midget Ocean Ractna As· soclatioo penuaslons. CLUB -Luna del Lido Regatta CLido-14) today; ''L " Boat lnvtta· tional. SWlday. BALBOA YACHT CLUB -66 Series No. 5, Saturday. CA PISfRANO BAY YACHT CLUB -Annive rs ary Regatta, today, Saturday. SOUTH SHORE YACHT CLUB - Ladies Day Regatta <PHRF> Salur· day. VOYAGERS YACHT CLUB - Seamanship race <PHRFl Sat\U'day. LIDO ISLE YACHT CLUB -YRU Stu Carpenter Memorial Regatta, Saturday, Sunday. SAN DIEGO MISSION BAY YACHT CLUB - District Team Race Championship <Laser) Saturday, Sunday. _._ OCEANSIDE YACHT CLUB -Midsummer Series <Sabot> Satur- day. LOS ANGELBs.WNG BEACH LONG BEACH YACHT CLUB - lnvitaUonal Regatta (all classes> Sunday. MNTA MONICA BAY CALIFORNIA YACHT CLUB - One-design Invitational, Saturday, Sund a.>» DEL REY YACHT CLUB -Tan· nenburg Series No. 4 <Sunda~>. KING HARBOR YACHT CLUB - Cal-40 Invitational, Saturday, Sun· day. PACIFIC MARINERS YACHT CLUB -STein Serles No. s Saturday. ' PALOS VERDES YACHT CLUB - Sabot Regatta, Saturday. --~~~~----®18~~""a:a~. AMLING'S ~ Newport Nuraei-y and Garden Center . .. . ' • ll•eP.111 Ven .. S .. !r.,bor Diedrich Has 'Last La-u.gh' a, 0. C. IWSTING ................. OraQIO County Supervl or Ralph Diedrich mQ have bad the l t laucb In ibe &real putiq Uckel nap. Dledrt~h .Mid~ battled Sheriff Brad Oa&a-ON" am~ tidn!t;-wtlttlr Dieclrleb claliaed he ahouldn 't have to P•J alQH Ille •• oa ometaJ bullMa at lhe Ume. A Ju.Ste "*d otberwiM and. to ............ ~. Dkdridl left the ~~ anb to (lnd be bad been tlck•ted ap1n. But Ile m-.v bave sotten hla revenae. WIMn be flnaU:)i re&umed to bls oMce. 'Dlectrleb found• f\and ao.Uett.atlon letter from tbe Committee to Re-elect Brad Gates. Before ~ the letter to Gates. Dtedt"leb IGri aaoa die bottom: .. Dear Brad. I planned to contribute S15 to your campal11n but cpn't afford It now. Rulph." • • • HAaaJE'IT WIEDEa, who'• runmn1& ror tl\e countY lJoorOOT Supervfsors In the second dlt lrlct. has announced formaUon of her cumpalan executive commlUee. CampaJ1n mana1er wlll be Shirley Welton who ls worldn1 for polltical con· auttanta Howard Adler and Jim Corey while on leave from Assemblyman Chet Wray'a omce AddlUonul Wieder campaieners are Betty Hartnett. Peter Horton, Cheryl Ru11ell, Marle n e Fox, Evelyn Mayberry, Lu Ryder, Gene Tunks. RulhaMe Bingham, Jerry and Connie Maraolin. Haydee Tillotson. Catherane Kentner. John Sotrdahl. Mike McCoy. Fred Roth, Wally Ryder and Or. Robert Smith. Additional campaign leaders include Paul Hutt.on. Irv Wieder. Don Frank, Ruthelyn Plummer. John Stevenson. Hun lineton Beach Mayor Ron Shenkman. Jerry Bame, Shirley Com· moms. Carney Hollander, Stan Smolln. Mr. and Mrs. Roger West, P.at Arnold, Don and Judy Ellis, Otto and Linda Lacayo, Paul Erskine. Ruthanne Bingham. Sean Boylen. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Nicolas, Frank M arshott, and Austin and Juanita Daigle. ( L. M. 80\'D ) INFORMS In the DAILY PILOT POTTERY MANUFACTURER OPEN TO THE 'PUBLIC LIMITED TIME OML Y ~, ...... , .. .... SZJ NOW'l870 UNIQUE DESIGNS -• _:_·we m.ade a fine · 279'2 Cu± a Caplatr.o. LGgl9CI M&t-1 Uelt .'I" l ~ h o i c e , • ·_A J. u d_g, e \ McMilTan commented. l "We usually hold our ' election in October but , we held it earlier this : yPar to give our new ~ presiding judge a little ; more time to ac-duties o~ pres iding f climatize himself to the judge.·· : ~ September 9 Charros Plan ': Kickoff Meet II -• A .. kickoff"' meeting for the Irvine-Mesa Charros. a 4-H group with projects in a variety of farm, marine and food fields, will be held Sept. 9. The meeting. open to youngsters 9 to 19 years old from Irvine, Newport Beach, Costa Mesa. San- ta Ana Heights, Fountain Valley and Corona del Mar, will be held at 2426 22nd St .. Newport Beach at 3 p.m. Registration will be available at that time and homemade Ice cream will be served. Information · can be obtained by calling Jane Farwell at 646·4725 days. f'leld Trip• Offered The Gifted Children's Association of Orange County sponsors monthly field trips for its m ember families. Among this month's offerings are visits to Swensen's Ice Cream Factory and Orange County Aiprport. Membership is open to all interested persons. with information obtainable from Tom or Lorraine I Bostick at 897-1529. Boul .. P..el Jfol'eS The Fair Housing Council of Orange County. a non-profit corporation that promotes equal hous· ing opport.unities and provides landlord-tenant in· formation, hllS moved. The council is located at 1525 E . 17th St., Suite E, Santa Ana. The phone number is 835-0160 ...... Pleak Sl8tefl All the Polish on the Orange Coast and those • who wish they were are invited to the Poliih Na· tional Alliance•s Last Great Picnic in the Park Aug. 20 at tbe Long Beach Police Picnic : Grounds. · The festive event off Carson Street and Dovey Drive runs from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. and features a variety of homemade Polish dishes and two polka , bands. Call 714-531-6751 for further information . ............... coupon ... ..,. .......... ) s.wSOt ~ off regular $2.75 adnllulon with coupon Offer exptrm Augmttt».1978 0 00 Yoa've seen It on tv, now eee it for yoanielf1 World'• Largest Watenllde a. o~n ~from 9:00 am to 10:00 P.tn Adjacent to the Santa Ana fwy. (1-5) at Ball Road <n•> 776 41680 ' Call 642-5678. Put a few words to work for ou. ..._. l7141 49Wt~ 1 __ _ Off 405 llrwy. At A.wy Te C-.. c,,, ............ ~ BUI new demms, new textures Fridly,August 11. UJ78 We have the largest selection of Burpee Seeds in the are.i. DAIL v PtLOT A• FaJI color$. Now in bud. For garden, containers, and beautifur cut flowers. .C9 1'01' 9m!!1 REG . IUD .89 I BlG, LUXURIOUS INDOOR PtANTS~ BOSTON FERN OH BUTTERFLY NEPHTHYTIS Lush and green, two popular favorites. n::.~:.95 gtp) .. PHONE 546-5525 Jag Fall Collection presented by a special representative in South Coast Plaza, Saturday. Informal modeling from 11 :30 to 3 :30. Soft blazers over easy shirts. Pleat-top pants that narrow at the ankle. Cotton denim and corduroy. And snappy wool tweeds in the rich colors of autumn. Pants, shirts, skirts, vests, and jac~ts 36.00 to 80.00. Contemporary ..COiiections And see Jag for men ata 1 South Coast Plaza. 2' Fashion Square Santa· Ana South Coast Plaza Costa Mesa ,, ' ·. •' AJ• ~Y"1.0T ' Deatlu .Elsewhere SAL I SBURY. .Rhodesia <AP> D.G. "Tom my" Lewis, 89, possibly the last man shot down by Germany's World War I ace Man· fred von Richthofen. the famed "Red Baron," died Thursday in a hos pital. On April 20, 1918. flying a Sopwith Camel which bore the name "Rhodes ia,·· Lewis was on his first dawn patrol with six others when they ran in- to Von Richthofen's s quadron called "The Flying Circus." Deatlt No••~~• PU8UC NOTICt.: •ICTITIOU) l"'llfU) NAMll ITATIM .. n , .. ...-... .--1 ...... ....,... ... u .. ¥•111(Al0111 (0Ml'ANV, 1•4' f•M•I• l•rr •l•. l-•t11n• It•<"· Clotttln<•• .,., ' Ille-I' -IOI\. 1440 T"""'9 Tttrot•, '-...,.... .. .ell Calltornl• n.tl '"'• "'"-' I\ ,_._ .. ., ...... .....,_, lll•c,..roP Wlwi.n Tll" .... --r...i .. 111 ... C-ly Cieri. Of Or.,... ~'t ... AlllU.I P, 1'1* ...... PW>•"-OrMQll CM~ Dolly ~ .... A"l)\ltl II It. U. 5ecit I. 1'71 PUBLIC NOTICE ,,_10 Published Or-c:.o.t\I D•••Y PllOI, July 21 •nd A.,gust 4, 11, II, 1971 ,,,..,. fllCTITt°"' •WI Na" ,. ... nATeMa"' , ... tel ...... --,, ..... ~· .... ,., LATIN AMllll,AN ""0MOTl~6. tot N lto.ewey "'"'· ,.,.._...,..,Ce! ......... t't)Ot Ou er ~ ... , tU• \ Neko"'• 0r1 ... Sell.eM., Get.._••2tot '"'' ~· •• ~t.O l)f ....... .... _, o.c. ... o,.... T111, ,.,...,._ -lli.o •1111 IM c;. .... ,. , .. o of o. ..... c-•Y ... ~···..,. """" flw11.-0r..., c:o..t Delly f'llllt, A~.te.U.S. l,lf7' PUBUC NOTICE fllCTITlOUS Mll'NH$ MAMa JTATaMIN't Tiit loll-1"9 ~'Ions are dolne ..... .,,,. .. ~ THE OAK llllDOE CO , lt'2 Anoltelm Aw .. Co6ta ~-CA '1W O.rold EdW•rd Twardoonli1. ttft Anallolm Aw., CoslO Mew. CA '1•27 IC yl• l.H Scllnelder. 1201 E. Falrllovon. •te. S...I• .-..... CA '1101 Tiiis &<nlMu h <OftdUCl•d by a oonorol portNnhlp. G«Old E. TwerdOwslF,I Tiiis stoi.mtnl WH 111.0 wllll , ... Couftt't Clor1l al Or-County on JI.Ill' "· lt71. "'7111 Publllllod Or-C:O.st Dolly Pl~. July 21, 21, ...... 4, II, tt7' PUBLIC NOTICE f!tt11Q PubllslleCI Or-C:O.sl Oooly Piiot, July 11, 2t. "14 4, 11. "" PUBUC NOTICE -~~~~~~~~~ •ICTITl<MIS aUSINIU NAME STATaMUIT Tiie 1011-1no perwn• are C10l119 bu\IMSS~ ENTERPIUSE LIMITED IV. 1'01 - -9.,ranc• Sire.I, lrvlM, Callfornl• PUBLIC NOTICE mu I: nt•rpris~ Co"slru<toon, Int , JIOI &.trr•nco Slrnt. Irvine, Celltornoa '211S FICTITIOUS IUSINl!S$ NAME ST ATE MINT The lollowlOQ periOn Is do•nQ bu••· .,.,, ., SELECTED IMPORTS, 1 tl ?'1111 Street, Newoort Buell. C•lllorn1a T Ill• Dusineu I• t.lnq conducted by • Llmotecl Port!lof'\l'ilp -------------1'7..0 GENERAL PARTNER ENTERPRISE CONSTRUC· TIOHINC. PUBLIC NOTICE $TA TEMIUCT Ofl AUNOONMl.NT OflUSEOI' fllCTITIOUS •USllfU.S NAME Tllo loliowlftg ~Ms •l>ondoned ""llW Of ttw llctltloul ~ ........ PHOTO-TECH CO. 110•1 Wtstlolle Or<le. H.,,.Un91on lk•<ll, CMUornla..e Tiie Fl<tlt~ a..suwu 11<1me re• l~r.cl lo -WOl filed In Or-CounlY on August I, 191S. Ed•••d H. H.orri•on, 110" WHlla-• Orclt, H.,,.lf1191on 8e•Cfl, Tllo,.,., M.trtln Schulle, 113 ~II Street, Newport Beach, C~lllornla 92..o Thi\ buS°""U •• Condll<ted by •n j,,.. dMduel T 11c>rnos M. $cllulle Tiiis SIOt-• •• , llled wltll Ille C<>unty Cletk of Or•nvo County on A1191nt I, 1'11 ,,_u Publltlled Oronoo C:O.SI O..lly PllOt. LloYcl Ross Tllos tt•t-1 fifed wllh Ille County Clerk of OrenGe County on July 2S. '"'-"'""•n• McDONALD lyJa-T.~ A~ys.tuw 11$$1 Me<Artllllr lt¥d S4tl .. OS ll"WIM, Col1Mntia'171S ,....,. Augu\I 4, 11, 11, 2S, tt7' Pul>Hslled Or-'91 Coo" 0..lly Piiot, -----------~--7I July :It -Allgllst4, 11, II, 1'71 m•-71 PUBLIC NOTICE C.llfornl• ,-.. fllCTITIOUS auSJNEH PUBLIC NOTICE Tiiis llullneu wu tond110.0 by on NAMESTATIMENT •ICTlne>US•CllO•E.U 1nOlvklu:•.t...d" Herroson Tiie follOWlnQ Pffton Is OOlno !Mnl-NAM«ITATaMaNT Tiiis sto1-..... fil.0 •1111 tllt neu,,:sESA CENTER BARBER & TIM lollOwlflll PffSC)nS ... dolnqt-·------------- ASCN County Clerlt of Ora~ County on STYl.E SHOP, 7Sl B. Ent 11th StrMt, butl=-:t~~ CHARTERS lnlt '"''"-GEORGE A ASCH. rulffnl of August I , 1'71. Co\ta Mtte. C.Htomo•ni.17 . ' FulltrlOI\, Co P•~ ••av on A119uul F-41MS RuOOlpfl LlatnH. 10711 C.tall11a Blvd., Suite IOI. Tustin. Calilor"I• '· 1'71. MHonl< s.rvlces Mono.iv. Pvbll•-Or0f'9t coast O..lly PllOI, Awnue, G¥dtn Gn>~. C.lllortli• '2* Autldt u . 1t1' at 1PM 8t """ 8••• Aug111t II, II, 25, Se1>4, 1. 1'71 Tiiis bullnns IS ConcluC1tcl by en ;,,.. K••llle. Inc., • c.llfonlt• <°'"4'•· Mortu•ry Survived by flh w1i.1 ~7' dlvloue1 lion, 117>1 lnrlM Bl..ct., Suite IOI, ~rl)atet, "°" Earl ol Fullerton, Co.. Rudolph Ll ..... H Tustin, c.ilfornle'2MO br...,.n Henry o4 O.Oc090, llllnols and PUBLIC NOTICE Tllh stMement w•s 111.0 wllll tne Tiiis tMniMSS Is~ &yo <or· Rolpll of Clll<ooo. I lllnol•. AllO 3 County Clorl< of Or•n<Je Collnty o" oorotlOn. 11randclllldren and one 11re•t· --------------• AUQust I, 1'7'. KELPle, INC. 9f'Mdclllld. fllCTITIOUS IUMN•U ,. .... ,. G«eld A. WOif, ,.ALME" NAMll STATIMENT PubllsMd Ot'onGI Coo•t 0..lly PllOI, S.Cretory KENNETH N. PAl.MER. pas .. d Tll• followl119 person• are doln9 August 4, 11, ti, 25, 1'71 Tiiis naNmonl WM lllecl wltll IM ......... on AU9U1I •• 191' al ., , .... of buSIMU as. ,....,.. Col>nty Cltnl of°'-'°""'" on J uly • •oe. Reslci.nt of Coll• Mna, Co. OE A BLUM EN LADEN, 7S.I 21, 1'7'. '!>urvlwd bY Ills wife fttMI Palmer, COntK 0r1 ... Old WOl'ld, •Sl, Hllftt· PUBUC NOTICE HILl"AllDWOU' -son David Pei.....-, 1111 mother 1 nor lftQton e..cll, C.lltomle 9U47 A.....,•• ww Palmer, two ~n Tom onct Allen Richard c . K•n•or. 1uoo1--------------1m1 •rvlllelMW., Pelmer, two sisters Betty Phyllis ond M•onollo, • 94, Westml nster, "=r::.::::::s w .. ttl Jeannie si-. J Ol'-llllOreft, Rkll, C.lllornla 92tll Tutltl, cat,.....,... Glady, S. K.....,,, IS300 ~le. Tiie follOwfnO ..,_ I• OOlftO blltl- 1 Cllrl• M>O A~. ClloOtl wrvlcn Fri-•t•. WtttmlMw, Colltomla '2M3 neu M : 0.y, AYQust 11, at lPM We>tmln\ter Tiil\ bU\lneu It c-lff by e JIEWIL"Y OUTLET. 711 West ~ Pllb41shM Or .... C-1 Delly "liot. J11ly 2' ond ""91aU, ti. 11. 1'11 2121-71 :~:;;l•I Parll Mortuary. lntwnent QOMral port!'lfnllip. 11lll 1~ '::-~ 'f6~, O.nord Rl<llord C. K_., St Apt 101 Von NuTt. CA tMOS 1------------- • Tiiis '~' •• filed wltll tho This .;...i,;.., I\ c-.Clod by .,. I,.. PUBLIC NOTICE _ county Cl-ol Or-C-IY Oft ctl'ridUol .... ,..,,..-----------.... 1auoU\11. 1m. · ...,.11 .\in ewn.tem IAL.nABGBOM fiUHlli.I. HOMI 646-2424 Costa Mesa 673-9450 ---18.L llOAOWA Y MOtn'UdY 110 Sroactway Costa Mesa 642-1)150 ---SMlftl.nmtl.IA.AMI MOUUAllY WD~CHAPIL 427 17th St Costa Mesa 64s-.888 ---PlllCI 1101MllS SMmf'S MOITVA.IY 627 Main St. Huntington Beach 536-6539 ---~MOl~H 976 So Coast Hwy ~una Beach 9"4·1635 1533 N El C.mino Real San Oemente 41)2.0100 ---,_PAMLY C~OMALN•AL NOMI 7801 Bola Ave Westmi1*tt BQ3..3525 -PACINCYllW PWIOllAI PAlllC CemetttY Mottu.ry Chlpef 3500 Plclfic v.w onve I NOWPOf1 e.adl e44"2700 -~· WCllnMl8 ~~ ~ ... 1 i a., Juan Osotttrano 49&-1718 PllbllsMd Or Coost 0.11 Piiot Tiiis tlO'-l -llltd wltfl ltlt AuO;ffl •• 11, II~ tm y ' c-ty Cltnl ol Ot'Oft09 Cou<oty °"July ,.,,_,..11,1m. "'""'" ""*'411Nd Or-Coa&t 0.llf PllOI, PUBLIC N011CE Jul, t I, tt. Mio. •. ti. ,.,. PUBLIC NOTICE ~ Nona n>caaotTOtt$ $UN•IOltCOU"TO• TtK$T•Te~Nt• •Ott,..._COUWTY Ofl04IAMGE NO. A-tU92 OBITUARIES I FOR THE RECORD PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE WMMONI CAM NUMaa"»«>-M MOT1UI 'f'w lll9w .._ -Tiii -1_,_......,...,.. ...... ... ............... ,...__. .............................. ...... A'f'ISOl "'*°'llallil ._,.._. ... at , ............... ""'* ... ... ......... _ ... w.,......... ........ ....... w. .. ..._... ... .... . I TO TI4E DEFENDANT: A dvll tomtt1.int ,_...., 111 .. by IN plell\Utl ... lf!Jt YOU CS..foGC-·I o. It '°" wll/l to dl'fllftd t"h •-•. you""'"· willlln JOdoy• •tter 11111 t11m- ,,...., ·~ seNed ... yol.I. 11 .. ""''" ttl<) ~rt • wnlteft lllffdl"9 In re~ to tllo c°"'e>tOll\t. llf o Jusllc. Cour1, you nwst tile wltll U. c°"" a wrltton plead- 1119 or ceuw.,.. orot !>MadlnQ to i. .,.. l••ff In U. doc-•11. Un•~• you 00 so, your clef..,.! wltt br .,.tered ""°" <ti>' !>4kotlOI\ ot the pt .. ntltt, ond tflls court mu Ofttor o judgment -•n~ you tor tN relief dlnwlndtd In tllo COITlj)lall\t, wlllell <-.-.11 In 99ml,......,.t Of Wetff, telllng Of _, or Pt--'Y Of" on.r rollefr_.._,lnthoe>""'Cllolftt. b II \IW w1t1t w _.ti.~ .. .. ... _, .. tllh ~ • .,........., .... ~ .. tllet--~ ,...._..,H_.,,_,._fl .... .._. Doi..t: ~s.1tn WIUJAMa.suOMN, Clw1t 8yl>l$My TMOMAl W . .URTON, a._. ,., w..t4dNf Ortw Wtel12 *-'9Mdl. cat21M1 h4: C7Mltoa-an A-..., .. ,~ • fJ• -·~:..-·-$ <~I'll. .. .....,., ..... lnc1uo.s UOlS-C:Oft\lllOl"°"t• ''dt1endent" ln- <1-S cros~. slft9\llar In· (l\ldff Hie llhlrel ... n>H<ullfte •ft· Cl ... S ..-.,. --·A wr1tttn P'Mdl1'9. ln<1\ldlf'lll • -· -..,,. ror, .ic., mu!lt lie In 0-. form required by tM C.I~ i:t~ of Court. Your Ol'i91Ntl DIMdlf'lll ~ 1111 Iii.ct In tllt1 <-1 wlU• -111"'9 teft -proof 11\ot • <09¥ ~ wes MrW<! on e«ll 1>4•1ntlff's ottomt't M>O °" eact> platn· tiff not r~ by 81\0ltomey '"" 11..,. ..,,.." o """'"°"' Is C!Hmed wr~ on • -1Y nwv verr "*c-ncl•"9 on Ille ,...._llOd ol service. For uampl~. ""CCP 413. IOllW°OYQlll4U.«I. Pu«>ll\llod 0rlll'l9t c.o.st Dolly Pilot, July 21, 21-A<ll-4, II, 1'71 114,.,. PUBUC NOTICE JOU-711 P\IBUC NOTICE NOTlct IS Hl"EIY GIVEN INI .. ...,., 11, lnl, 1'le Oty C-ll of C!Mto ~ Clllftmlo., ~IN """" ....... Wlll<ll l11<IWIKI ,,.. .,. "9Pflel ....... ~-"'-~ .... .,.... ........ ,_., A eo<nl!MIO "'°"' ~ ,....,... tt111 1Wi1M It ..,.., .... w ~k ~'*' .. _ U.. lleuf\ .. ·~ I.IOI ..,. s·• ""'·· ........., ..,..,... FrlNy In ...... Ult, City HeM, 11 l'.W Drt.,., c:.. .. Me~. c;ot1111nt1a. ~od -II 0 .., ... •-t ~'-.. --~~ .. ,..., .. "-»wlllt lllNll '° ... ._.. ,.,.,. ,. ... .-... a.....,n. • : I·-Mt ,.,.,. ...... OtW =: ............... ~ .. c;.w. ............................ + '.....,.,, '..-."° ~·le $Mtty ............................... + JAS).-0 '~ "'*lie Wtfb .. • ..... . .. + 1,AA.t'° ,,C ,UO ""''""' ..,...._' . ............... . . • ..-.uo 1,A06,l)O t'~1~.:n~, · ".'.:'.··:·:: .... ~ ~ s:~:= ,, ou..;OTAl. ... • .' ·::·::· • • • • • SIM: OITAIL P'Oll 111 ..... -..UI ,..A .. IHO ,• CA,.ITALIM~IMINT1 •. ,,,...~~· ....... -................................... "" ... •,,, ~-.nnDr .. tt-•ro.St...e ............................... :• ~~ ~,. -.cr-OIMlf .......................... ~·· ... ~ sue.TOTAL.... • •••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~ OTHI" r.c:r::.:.=.i;:;;.;;:: ... ....... . ... .. ... ... .. • .. . ~, .................................. ~········ .. ··· ....... . S\la..TOTAL •••• , •••• ••••••••••••••••·••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• t TOTAL •••••• •••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••·••······•••• 11\.A ~. ,..._., ~°""' P a, lllDzoOlll._,,._,.._."',.. ... ' ' NATION Fnday.Augustt1. tara * OAJLY Pll.OT A J J DIE FAMILY CIRCUS. Dy 811 Kf'~nt· Law's Effect Unknown • AUTO • HOMEOWNERS • YACHT INSURANCE RABBITT tMSUUMCI A91MCY m'fl•THI H•llOI AHA SIMCI 1917 Impact of Ne.,r.o Retiremenl Ridea Aimit,ed Caatll•ate lrfied Refused 1l7 Ad Draws Protest - DECATUR. Ga. CAP) -Nick Belluso. the Georgia gubernatorial candidate wbo sougbt to hypnotize voters through television commercials into voting ror him. said he is complaining to the Federal Communications Commission about re· f~al of stations lo run the ad. It would be the second Georgia case to eome before the commission in recent days. STATE SEN. JULIAN BOND, a black, com- plained to the FCC over the use of the word "nig- ger" by gubernatorial candidate J. B. Stoner in broadcast oolitical ads. but the FCC rej~ted it. BelIUSO sat~ a formai .. cori.p;~~ -,..O~g prepared against Atlanta televis ion stations WTCG-TV and WXlA-TV and Columbus station WTVM-TV. He said the document would claim that he was discriminated against because bis commercial was rejected. He said this was in violation of the Communications Act of 1934. IN TIJESDAY'S PRIM.\RY elections. Belluso came in fifth in a field of six Democratic can· didates. Gov. George Busbee polled more than 70 percent of the vote and will face Republican Rodney Cook in November in his quest for a second four-year term Belluso said the stations either fe~red lawsuits from VJewen> "who reacted to the commercial" or it was "a political conspiracy to deny me air time. "In either case. I've be'?n victimized. denied my rights as a political candidate and I was sub- ject to a censorship which I believe was uncalled for." The commercial was run by Augusta station WATU·TV. In it a person dressed in a robe and Arab headdress said : "Do not be afraid. I am placing the name of Nick Belluso in your sub- conscious mind. You will remember this. You will vote on election day. You will vote Nick Belluso for governor." BJ WA.l .TEa a . MEABS .-..-... cwu 41 'r WASHINGTON -lt cowd be JUtt u ripple. or the be&lnnlnc of » re volutlonary chan1e in Am4'rlcan work and reUrement pntlerns Either wa,y. the course la !let bufore the experiment beaan~ wtth next yeur's ban on muncJatory retirement ot aae 65. Bc.etnnlna Jan. 1, and with few l'xeeptlona. no one can be told to tf't1rc t>t~fore they reach the aae of 70 lt's likely that before loni. Cong rewi wtll remove that ate barrier. too, aa it has done ln lhe case of fedend employees. CONGRESS PASSED THE re- tirement bill wtth scant opposi- t100, and President Carter said u.., he signed it that 1t was a time for celebration.. Now a critical economist sua· geslb that they moved too quick· ly . with too little knowledge of what will happen under the new law "It ha~ a P"tential impact larger than 16 commonly an- ticipated and more complex than is usually supposed." says Robert M . Macdonald of Dartmouth College. "lt will af. feet individuals, organizations and acli vi tics unevenly. reduc- ing efficiency and redistributing rights and rewards within the society . . . Not enough is known about retirement behavior to predict with confidence what the magnitudl• or full range or these l'rfects will be." THERE .\RE ABOUT as many forecasts as then! are .,,~ • Chemist Wins Scholarship Leon F Christensen, a research chemist for ICN Pharmaceuticals, Inc in Irvine four years. has been awarded the Utah Power a nd Light/GraduateSchool of Management Scholarshipor$600. Christensen is study- ing for his Mas ter or Business Administration a t Brigham Young University in Provo. Utah. Honor Earne d Nancy Todhunte r. daughter of Mr and Mrs John Todhunter of Huntington Beach. has bee n nam e d to the dean 's list at Lake Forest College in lllnois fOf' the 1977-78 school year. She received her B.A. In June. 2nd Annual CLASSIC CAR SHOW& AUCTION AUGUST 11·12·13 wo.: :!tous )isnes1'ludjotel CONVENTION CENTER .. ANAHEIM, CAUFORNIA 1150 w. Cerrito• Ave.• Anaheim. Calif. 92803 •Hotel Retefv•tlont 714-n8·6800 AUCTION • SATURDAY & SUNDAY-11:00 A.M. v•ewlng Friday 3 to 8:30 P.M. -Coors Open 9 A.M. Every Oay OVER 3 MILLION DOLLARS OF FA•ULOUI ANTIQUE CLASSIC & SPECIAL INTEREST CARS MORE THAN 300 FINE MOTOR CARS YOU'LL FIND THEM ALL IN THIS FANTASTIC ANNUAL OLD CAR l!VENT • • analysts on the number of peo- ple likely to keep WOfklnt. or re- turn to the work foree, because of the new law. The Labor Department bas forecast a f\nt.year increase of about 200,000 In the work force. with smaller numbers of people optina to at.ay on the job In sub- sequent yean. But Macdonald, In a study pubUthed by the American En· terprlse Institute for Public Polley Research. argues that all the estimates are suspect because they are based on the old system. when 65 was the almost universal reUrement rule. .. CURRENT R E11R BMENT patterns, after all. refiect at- titudes and norms shaped over the years by a particular set of social institutions which focus sharply on age 65 as the normal retirement age and provide a powerful stimulus for retire- ment al or before that age." Those attitudes and patterns are likely to change under the new rules. There are other factors, too. notably the easing or the earn- iRgs limit on Social Security re- cipients. It )las been $3.000 a year. but it is to go up gradually to $6,000 in 1982. INFLATION ALSO MAV lead people to keep working 'under the new law. Most pensions are fixed: the cost or living ls not. In an AP-NBC News poll, 36 per· cent or those questioned said they didn't think their retire- ment lncome would be enouab to OUr 21at YMr live on. The same number said lt • 548-5 5 54 • would be just enough to cover llvtns costs. Only 23 percent 19'4 M.AltlOl ILVO. COSTA MHA tbouaht tbat pensiona. Social ~==~~;:;;~~~~~~~~~~~~ Security anct tbetr other Ye· i sources would &ive them enouab to llve comfortably in retire· ment. In the same poll. 43 percent sud that the new law would ----- make lt more Ukely they wlU work past· age 85. Macdonald contends that the law was enacted with unseemly haste. for political reasons and apparently on the usumpUon that it would not lead to drastic changes in the job market . "The remarkable ract about the change in retirernen& prac· tlces is the lack of preparation Cor it.·· he says. T H ERE ARE LAWS I N 37 states protecting the employ- ment rights of older wor kers. a nd in 15. there is no age ceiling on that protection. · But the r e has been no systematic analysis of what bas happened under those laws. Macdonald argues there should have been. .. ~_._ t: t.: • .r • •t!',.l'f, "l"H :t; Jl'I,\' 12. 8LAC'K .\ 'llU • HITt: •llh Ul'"l'"f"l 1\t: 81.AC'k -VHI .. TAC!Ht:.- C'O\t:ICl"'llC; TtlF. TlP Of tll!' ~t~•: -'"II \l\O\t. Hilo '\tO( TH • UU. "C,RUllC:uo-·. Ht: HAI) 4 '"'"" TAC. •ITH ..._,OOfY:· Bl'T THI!'-'l\Y H4\t. Rt:~ " H t:°"c tVt:O. NOTIME U MIT · SO QUESTIONS .\SKED. PLE.\SE S.\ VE nos INFORM.\TION. YOU M.\ y M.\KE' .\N E.\SV 115Ult 111.cl ALSO M.\KE SOMEONE VERY H.\PPY• PHONE 49t-8'138 ··At the very least." be writes. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~! "the etrort to sift that ex· ..;;.. perience would have muted the claim that Congress has reek· lessly committed the naUon to a course of action whose effects are poorly understood. ·on balance probably lnjurious. and almost certainly lrreversible." IM .. IUl 11 .99 _..,.12.99 1111t 13.99 OUXll~l ' ·--' ·ftt:ll· .. .. 12" ::! SOUD-ITATE SPORTABLE $ ~. Feetur• "New Vista• 200 V~ tuner provides excellent reception. One-set VHF fine tuning. Fast warm. up picture tube. Duti-function VHF/ UHF ~na. AC120. RCA Co~orTrak 25'' diagon., ' , RCA Slanll ,.~ SeMOrll electronic remote eon trot-for chalrslde tuning . convenience. • 1r :_COLOR TV RCA's Xtended Life Chassis. Low power conaumptlon, costs less to operate on average than a 100- watt bulb. liUper AccuColor black matrix piciure tube. Ctedit terms available. FB443. 13" :.:!. COLOR TV Brightest smalt.acr.een RCA TV. Operates at an average of only 69 watts. 100•1. solld-atate Xtended Ufe Chassis. Black matrix Aocullne plciure tube. Automatic Chroma- Controt. EC337. 1r ::, COLORTRAI• FeMuntt 100% aofld·atate Xtendld Ufe chatall. tilngi.kltOb etec:tron- lc tuning lets you Mlect all 12 VHF and up to 8 UHF obannefa with one convenient knob. Super AocuFllter picture tube. Simulated )IWllnut woodgrain cabinet. FB493. . F•turea 1~ tolld·atate Xt•nded Life C"-8. Signal Sensor II etec- tronlc remote control. Auto. Color Control. Super AccuFllter picture tube. '\•dlterranean styling. OB728R. \ RCA XL-1·00 19" dtegona1 RCA XL-100 13" -.... RCA ColorTrak 19'' d•asJonal RCA ColorTrak 25" ...... ' ,1 INSIDE: •Sports ~ •Ann Landers • lullnns •Stocks 'ttdlf, AUG'* 11. 1111 CWLYPll.OT Fire equipment stands ready at the San Juan Capistrano station. The Volt•nteers , ,. They.all agree on one thing: once firefighting gets in your. blood it's _dilli~lt to pvrge .. By JUDITH OLSON Oft• Delly ...... a.tt Pat McGregor has learned to sleep with his socks on. Jack Stubbs puts bis clothes in just the right order for easy dressing when he goes to bed at night. • Tim McGowen knows he can't ever plan on ~ a whole night's rest. Once he had four calls • between sunset and sunrise. McGregor, McGowen and;S\tll>bs are paid- calJ firemen, or the new br~ of voipnteers. They receive S6 a call and do their work as a labor of love. \ They are all employed in other occupations and p'll out fires in their spare time. Some are plumbers, some are janitors. others are am· • bulance drivt;rs or policemen. One designs floats for tbe Rose Parade and plans home in· teriors. Many have aspirations to become full-time paid firemen. Others are happy to spend most of their off hours at the station waiting for <'alls and grooming the equipment. I ~.a25• )'BBi' veteran, L'eonard Goodwin. ' They all agree on one thing: Once firefight- ing gets in your blood it's difficult to purge. PAID-CALL FIREMEN, or PCFs. account for most or the fire force in Orange County. The ratio of full-lime to volunteer is 1 to 15 so the number of part-time men is significant. Many Oranjte County residents are unawal'e that the volunteer fire department still exists. In such communities as San Juan Capistrano and Capistrano Be'ach, however. the volunteers are crucial to the safety of the citizens. Some people in the field, such as Battalion chief Richard Pilkington, think that paid-call departments are the wave of the future. ·'There is a tremendous cost saving," he said. ''A large number of firefighters are availa- ble and there is community involvement." With a large pool of trained men there also would be a significant number of people trained in safety and emergency procedures, he added. Serving as a pald·call fireman is a way of life for those ~o are deeply committed. They (See VOLUNTEER, Page 82> ' Above. fireman Stuart Baker with Cinders, detJBrtment mascot. . .. Left, Chief Jean Lacouague. praetlces with an IV. ). . .. ·-.. .. · . . .. .. • OAal.Y PLOT ,,,ct.y, ~-11. 111• Exploter scouts John Isch and Hugh Gf81ft with firema~ Craig Kinoshita. •• • Vol11nteers <From Pa1e BU are at the station during their time off talking to their friends in the unit. abootinC pool, watebing televuuon or cleaning the equipment. --'Ptare b-1cod-nat~-nd !dddiatt.-riv.ab,_:. bet ween departments and a lot of unspoken feel - ing for one another. • The men socialize after wort in comfortable groups. They play cards together, take fishing trips and drink beer. They live together, work together and play together. Many of the men are there because of a commitment to their community. ·'A lot are devoted to San Juan Capistrano.'• said Frank Guerrero, a member of the San Juan unit. "We Ute helping people. We like what the fire department stands for. It's the old s pirit of community servtce ... SOME DEPARTMENTS have their third generation of volunteers from the same family. s uch as Mike and Russell Rice, whose father, Bob. still serves with the San Juan Capistrano department. While the volunteer fire department is no longer the social center it used to be in smaU towns, there is a family feehng about the work. The San Juan Capistrano unit. for example, has a picnic for families each year, and most groups have dinners at wbich officers are in· stalJed. Wives participate by bein& interested in what their husbands are doing and by con.sent· mg to. ~hedule vacations and social engage- ments around the ever-present beeper or siren. Leonard Goodwin, a 25-year veteran in San Juan Capistrano, said his wife bas become so used lo listening to his monitor that sbe feels un- comfortable when it's not on. Goodwin observed that there bas been a change since the early days because many of the volunteers are now single. "It used to be that all the wives knew each other," he said, "But there are so many young people now who 4 aren't married." THE lllVALllY is still there between com- panies, however, and the fierce pride and loyal- ly .them.en.feel mww UieJ.r_outfi~. . _ _ • Doheny volunteers, who serve the diverse area of Capistrano Beach. are convinced that Uaeir unit Is the best. "We·ve proved it. Our rec- brd ls the best,·· one member commented. "We consider us the best and so does the county. We have interest, enthusiasm and abill· ty." said Jack Stubbs, the designer. With a wink be added. "We haven't lost a vacant lot yet." "We're our own worst critics after a call." noted Pat McGregor. · The Doheny station may have the best bis· torical record of any of the volunteer com- 1)anies. There are scrapbooks of photographs and news clippings from the beginning and the men would like to have any other photographs of fires in the area that citizens might have. THE MEN IN the Doheny station also bave a terrific sense of humor. One senses that there is always a practical joke hidden away in the station just waitinl to be played. One year they made an emergency run to the .-esiaurant where a rival company was hav- ing its lnst.allatioo banquet. All of the men wore rubber masks and-it was the most grotesque- loolting group of firemen who ever showed up on a truck. Wbat makes grown men spend many of their waking hours al a fire station. when they already work full-time at other jobs and have family responsiblllties besides? "We don't know," Pat McGregor conceded. "It's the excitement or the job, it's being with the guys ln the department. "Someone once said that if we weren't firemen we'd be chasing some fire engine up the street." A•• ........ ANN LANDERS J HOROSCOPE ( lloroseope ) SATURDAY, AUGUST command attention. u scoaP10 <Oct. 23. BJ SYDNEY OMAJlR Nov. 21>: Brtq esaen- ARIES <March 21 · tials lnto toeu1: I~ -ap- Money As .A Gift A u 19> Lo pralsal, accountlna -pr : ni-ranae take stock. Emotional view enables you to get tn at ground floor. You relationship la slron8 - can make marvelous and so. Is business com- contact. Know it, dress mltment. Capricorn. well, be attractive. Cancer Individuals TAURUS CAprll 20· figure g:mtnenUy - May 20>: One wbo and so tbenumber played key role ln your 8· SAGrtTAlllUS <Nov. life could make reap. DEAR ANN : I sin· cerely hope you'll print my letter because I respect your opinion and I really need it. I ju.st received a birth· day gift from my parents which was, pre· dictably, money. This Is what they give us I brothers and me> for EVERY occasion - weddings, birthdays, even Crhistmas. To me, a gt.ft of money means, "We don't really know what you want. and we don't care enough to find out." They obviously feel ob- 1 i gated to give us something, but it doesn't mean anything when they had hand over cash . . . at least rot to me. Am I being un - gracious? -N.B. DEAR N.B .: Probably. Bat tbe larger problem ls lack of com- _mJlDlcatloa. IJ!St: How cTose at'l'-joa (o' (be giver? I can Wnk of no closer relallonsblp than parents. So-wby have- n't you told tbem bow you feel? For many, ~y ls the most pr1ctlciat lift of all. U ellmlaatet tbe poulbllUy of wrong sizes, wnmc eolon, or just plllD somethblg you don't want, need or like. Some people would rather have a gift of money becaose tbey can then bay 10methlng tbey want <or need> but can- not afford. True, a gift selected with care and tboagbt ls a warm compliment, but some people pal prac· Ucallty ahead of seatl· meat. Re90lve tbil prob- le m by dlscussln« u with your parents. Tell them bow yoa feel If after tbe talk they agree &o do It your way and you wtnd up receiving wblte elephants, you have no right to com· plain. DEAR ANN LANDERS: No lectures on morality, please. I'm .. not askin& you whether pearance. Tbls could be 22-Dec. 21 >: Enlarge or not J should continue "old flame" night! Ac· horizons -see beyond to sleep with this man. 1 cent on economic, emo· the immedJate. Finish have already decided tionaJ responses _ and what you st.art. Lunar that he is better than survival. cycle promotes in· nothing. Now to the GEMINI <May 21• itlative.goodtlmlnaand problem: June 20l : Ue low. Go jud1meot. · The guy's toenails are slow. Be positive oflecal CA PJUCORN C Dec. like. razor blades. I get steps. Be nexible. but 22-Jan. Un : What occurs up some mornings an~ know where to draw the behind scenes could be feel like I've been line. more important \ban stabbed. I have men-CANCER <June 21· usual. Aries, Libra Uoned this to him a few July 22>: Accent on con-figure prominently. You times, but be does centration of efforts. ftnisb key project. nothing about it. I need Employment. health, .,.AQUARIUS <Jan . help. -CLAWED·A-special services are 20-Feb. 18>: Accent on PLENTY spotlighted. Aquarius, fulfillment, cementing DEAR CLAWED: Bay Taurus persona figure of ft1endsf\lp, 'gratlflca- Klng Kong a pair of prominently -and so lion of knowing that peo- toenaU sduors. Be ex· does lbe number 4. pied<> care and you had tra generous and offer to LEO <July 23 -Aug. a hand in it. FolJow trim tbem for bim. u be 22>: Accent on crealivi-through on hunch. Your ref ans. Insist that be ty. birth or viable con-instincts now serve as sleep wlill bis IOCka Oii cept, change. travel and reliable guide. -or move &o uotber a variety of stimulallna PI SC ES < Feb. 19 · bed. sensatiom. M arcb 2Ch: One .. in D li:"'A R A N N VlllGO <Aug. 23-Sept. charge" is impressed by LA N DER s : M y 22>: Home, economic your versatility. quick· neighbor has a heart of security,' long-range ness to learn and adapt gold but she also bas an p lannin.g where res-talents to current situa- abrupt. abrasive man· 1dence 1i1~s concern!!d-_t_io_n_. _______ _ .. e.\· -'th'llt m'3keS" her .tbe.s.P '4QlPhas1ied. _. __ . see m u n c 0 u l n, she T a u r ':' s • . LI bra a n d never asks _it's always Scorpio r1gure prom. a command -"Get' me inenlly-?nd so does lbis .• ''Hand me that .. the number 6. . l . LIBRA ISept. 23-0ct I can to erate b~r la~k or 221: Denne terms. Avoid re:deto~edftr~~:e: s~lf-deceplion .. Don't 15-year-old son sign papers makmg you . · re11pans1ble for another's Last rugbt he showed debts. Make inquiries. a .... &: Crafts up. at ~ front door and Check references. Short N ~ said. Mom wants you trips. significant calls -Slllw & Sell tsouggarlv .• ~ her a cup of claims of relatives See ert onglnals I replied. "I'd be hap· ---------every Sat & Sun py lo, but don't you RUffEll'S at ~unttngton Center think it would be nice if Outside The Broadway you said please?" The UPHOLSTERY "~~'::.t°!:~ boy looked at me like I Wlllll Y• W• Blvd. & Edinger at was crazy. .. .., the San 01ego Fwy. My husband heard the 1'22....;....._ Artistsca11~2 exchange and later told eo.t.MIN-Ml-eJff toexh1b11. me it was not my place ~===========:!_ _____ _:.:..:.==- to try to teach the neighbor kid manners. Right or wrong? - JUST ME DEAR .JUST: I'm not at all sare yoa CAN teacb the kid an)'illlng. Children Imitate the day-to-day langa1ge they bear at bome. But I see notlling wrong wttlt letting the lad know that there ls a beUer way &o ask for &blngs. Good Mystery; Nipping Journalism $15.00 Value NOWS3.98 per dozen DEATH OF AN EXPERT WITNESS, by P.O. James. Cbarlea Serllmer's Sons. SI.I$. 3%2 'Pages. The reviewer • a Dally POo& Raff writ.er. By PHWP R08MAIUN The "expert witness" in tbiasmartl)' wnuen novel of classic English deteetive fiction is-lt is no secret -Dr. Lorrimer, senior' biologist at a government forensic science laboratory, where police evidence is analyzed, ID the village of East Anglia. No secret, because tt is a wonder Ulat tills bum-fodder Lorrimer hadn't been dooe in before Phyllis J ames murders him in this, ber seventh, book. Lorrimer is a dung~worm of a man, without compassion, almost without love -there is a splenic affair in an unused chapel, a hollow soul banging away in a hollow house of God. Enoush evidence is presented qainst the Yic· tim, that you are left almost \DlCarina about the evidence agaimt the murderer. Yrs. James had to kill Lorrimer or ber reader would bave leaped to ~JNaae and done it for ber. Jf mr a man needed IDlllnl . . . Tbe author does it wttb peat pod bumor, too. Lonimer ls conked with a WOIDden mallet he is examininl that was used in anotber murder. One good wback here certatnlJ de- served the other. On page 70, thank the Lord. Enter as unusual a det«ttve as ever If aced 1 and be does that, be araces tb1I ~ery bum.an tale of violence in a close-bit, isolated com· munlty) Ote fonn: Commander Adam Dal&Uesb of -wbere else-Scotland Yant ne tharader has none of tbe usual off· center cbatac:driltlc. of Aetkln deteetives. He doesil't UM dru.81, be doela't pl8J the violin, be doesn't, even, Mduicetbe tallies. He doel do his job, wttb efllclent, atral.irt· ahead •loatDI· And, YoU ta.n't help tMat JJte-a mu wbo ' ( In Review ) bunts murderers, yet is against capital punish· ment, wrltel poetry, and takes the time to list.en to, smell even, the night rain. Tb.ii '8 a book or fine sensitivity. When the killer ls UTeSted, there are pallce forms to be filled, to explain "lon1ing and loneliness, terror anct..despair, all the human muddle, neatly docli"'mented on one and a ball sheets of officlal paper." Tb1s book ls on the best-eeller tables of' Pickwick and Brentanos and other book dealers. Let the reader beware: Mrs. James, a grandmother, baa no grandmotberly refine· ments about murder. Her profeutonal back· ground is in the criminal department of the British Home.Offtce. Her prose la aa cold. as congealed, as the sticky steady dripping of a dead man's eye. • • ••• LETl'Ell TO A CHILD NEVD BORN, by Orlua l'allact. Traulated bJ .lolua Slaepley. Aad1or l're9l/Doablecla1, eolkover, $3.51, 115 pa1e.. Thousands upon thousands of pages have . been written about the cholce--or lack of choice -of a woman to live new Ute, to run the risk of havlna her own Ule swallowed in the tiny tooth· leu bowliq jawa of new-born responsibility. In OJl11 1lS pqes, the Italian Journalist Oriana Fallad 1~s about the civil war or chlldblrth all that any woman -or any man - need ever ~now. Oriclnally published U:i ., barcteeftl', Ulla eoftcover makes it accessible to a wider M!ence. SM does tt Without hyateria, wttbout ra,e, without ophdoaatedness. . "Letter" Is a brilliant, nipping piece of journalism. told in the fashion of an epistolary novel. about a woman's Joy, defiance, defeat. resignation and eventual affirmation she ex- periences while e~g the birth of her child. It begins "Last night I knew you existed: a dfop of life escaped from nothingness," and trom there tbrouab Is as enveloplng as the womb to which this letter is postmarked. An unmarried woman, acrvtsed to end Ute life growtn1 inside her, and to wbom "It gives ... no pleasure to bring you into the world.·· decides to bear the child out of "tbe same ar- rogance that was imposed on me, and on my mother, my grandmother, my grandma\ber's mother: all the way back to the first human born of another human being, whether be Wtect it or not." Arrogance after a time fades, and fear of losln1 a career, Identity, even soul, noat in her mind like the unformed embryo ln ber uterus. Determination becomes a dull weiaht in her gut, becomes dread, becomes guilt. At end, when the cblfd ls gone, she hallucinates a trial: she ls in a.cage, and on the other side are seven benches. There are her male doctor, her woman doctor. her boss. her friend, the father, her parents. The voice of the unborn child. Tbey swirl ln her delirium; in· nocence and guilt, everything and nothing. Something Is vindicated ln this searing. hurtingly honest book: life, but not thb cblld's life, not this mother'• We. Alona the way ls an unslrident feminist ac- count of woman's Ute that woman never made. It is superlative and lnalibUUl . It truly b one of the boob tbat ouabt to be read by everybody -pro-abortionlatl, rilbt·to- lifen, everybody intereated in Ute. ~~--~~~~~~--~~~~---~~--~~~~~- Sale Slaop .. ly.-••••nill« Last v ... 1 l We are offering this outst.anding value so you can enjoy &esh Sowers every week! Offer hmtted only to dally stock on hand. Rogft'. Fbtla. ~774 s-~ .. M.wAnW ·~llffcfl ........ Eliminate D~utest Some state euprvme courts (l.e • Lee Marvin case In California) now rule that both of you are eligible for alimony and division of as1et1 (Income, property and pension) should you decide to split. Protect yourMlves. Avotd mlsunder· ,standing. An attomey developed a contract apeclflcally for unmamed couplea llvlng together to protect you both. Called ''The UnM1rrlag1 Contract:• this binding, non· nuptial eoreement defines personal and property rights, delineates what belongs to whom, and 1pell1 out contribution• ot each pereon to the household. It also defines which property la considered separate. -------------- I s ' • / l f Business Friday, Auguat 11, 1978 DAIL V PILOt 83 Big-hearted Man Finds W,y to Help Needy Dy JOHNC\IN IFf. .............. 8111 W.Alkt•r'1 h~ut al"av' wtll b\• b•ttaer than hus w..11lt't and that '·')I a I-UC 8111 hn t poor "You 'l h Ip roplt> '4'1thout ht'lplna you~tl • • hl' sa~ !l "Th11t ·,, a>y motto " EtJ(hl ,t>.in aco. '*hen 8111 wus i-t'lhn~ hit> insurenC'l' m ort• t hun t m1lhon dollar ... v.·orth .. )'t"llf -a 1ood mend dlt'd. ll'U\ln hchlnd thf u.~unl confu Ion of rfrurd6 for h" fomll> lo worft thruu11h S OMEBODY. HE tho uaht hould muke ..c career or hel'p1na s urv1vor d utt"rm1nf lbetr beneflL'I. 11't-ldl' possenfd tum. and so on Jtn 28, 1971, ht• founded S 0 S . m ha:. hom eto'A1\ of Att)ens. 1\:xws W a Iker puzzled f or m onth-. over how t o msrltet h lis 1dt'.1 before otftt1nt totrttln bank and avings und loin p er sonnel They, be decidec, wer e as 10· volved us anyone in the family affairs or their coomun1les. More than 900 bst1lutions now offer the service ree On learn- ing of a death in b e community. the local tnsUludtn's S.O.S. ad- visers contact b e d eceased's survivors, who ,eneraUy can use the belp. THE DIMENSONS OF the idea h ave gro•n. t oo. The W alker s now o·r er a ··pre· or ganizational " S.r'vice in which r ecordkeeping maerals are sup- plied to newlyYeds . A pre· retirement progt.tm 1s in the works. Wotk1n~ frcim 11 LH·t flllt'd m.1nu,1I . mid w11ng i.k1lb lf'urned 11l S 0 S tr ,1111111~ '•·m111ttr,, 11d \ 11tt·r' ddt:rmuw Sc"11·1J I St•1•ur1 I). an~ur .mt't'. ~lt.'nMon .ind otht.>r bt•nt-flts, r.om1• of lh1•n1 unk11ow11 h> tht•ir cllt'nt<. "W l' fU'ld thou undb of dollurb '>t•opk didn't know tlH'Y lwd." !>llV\ th•lt•n Walkt•r, ..i tnm, out wttrdl> . 1•rt-11l' homt• t•t•onom1cti arJd who5t> orgmu1111.: at,.hty l'Omph.•ml'nl\ hn hui.hund'i. '.s lc•s in~tmcl' IN TllF. M.\NU \I., .tn• tht• nt1m1•11 und uddre!>M'" of 11h1r~:­ to \Hitt-for t·op1l's of birth, m11r· riJgt'. d1vur<•t• <ind dl•ta th 't•rt1flci.1ll·~ and ddalli. or 'ell'r..in:-. n11lroud . kat hcr~ re t1n•mt•nt nnd union benefits So ~rmed, M1.1nan Kueck. ad· \ ISl"r ut the Flf'St Bank or Com- m e r c t• • Columbia , Mo , got thousands of dollars 1n Social Secun· ty benefits for a widower 's children . H e t h o ught no benefits wer e uvailable. In cuNNtFP' another instance a widow wor· Tied about r epaying $17,000 in loans by her deceased husband. The S.O.S. adviser found the loans were covered by credit in· surance the widow might never have l earned about. The S.O.S. spirit is boundless. Asked by an adviser in Florida, her coun- t erparts at Peoples N ataonal Bunk in Tylt•r . Texns. went lo th'· bcdsldt.' or un Jutomobile ac· cidt'nl victim. lll'r husbund had dil'd in the cru1>h DlSTRt;SSED AND seriously 1nJurl'd, lhe victim was further Ul)lH'l by the l oss Of her t•yt•gl t'l6st'8, :.o the adviser ob· tulnl.'d the presc11pllon from a f'lor1da doctor und had a pair mudc locally Stranded m a town far from hom t-, the woman would have hud few v1s1ts except tor ,the S O.S. people. M arjorie Jones urd Louise Davis. When she was able to travel. they al so took her to the airport. Grateful beyond words. the re· c1p1ent or Lh1s S 0 S. hospitality c xpres!>ed herself with beautiful bouquets ttt Christmastime for every desk m the Peoples Bank. T he spirit is contagious. "EVERYONE BENEFITS from s.o.s.:· says Walker. a h eart y, husky, happy f ellow whose enthusiasm awakens him around 2 a.m ... Everyone." he re· p eats. Banks, advisers. reci· pi~nts. The Walkers benefit from ex· elusive territorial contracts with the banks and savings associa· lions. renewuble autom atically after three year s. with the ree based on the 1nst1tulion ·s tradm~ urea. Almost invt1riably the instilu· tions receive their payoff in good will and new accounts. One recipient. a widow. returned the expression of goodw11l with a -~COAST COMPUTER CENTER' Manage ~our Stock Portfolio usng • APPLE JI UNKEDTO THE DOW JONES COMPU'Tt:R Tax Revision Telefile Lists Quarter's Loss for lnfarnation Phone 646-0537 STOaHOUH TUtS.. THRU NL IJ.I SAT. AND SUM. IU COAST COMPUTER CENTER 17th & T ... Costa Mesa IW...,_. ~I SlS.00 Valle NOW53.98 per dozen We are ofiring this outstanding value so you can ttjoy fresh flowers every week! Offer limitd only to daily stock on hand. I Rqer's Florist • 640-6774 ..,,.n JoM11.1 af MacArthur• Nf'Wporl Britch 9dm·6f>m Telefile Computer Corp. I rvine has reported that unaudited sales for the third quarter ended June 30 increased 15 percent over the year earlier period. Sales.wer e $4,045.752, compared with $3,515,894 for the third quarter of fiscal 1977. Pretax incom e for the third quarter dropped to $797, compared with $582,337 in lhe corresponding quarter or fiscal 1977. In addition. the company r e· vised its estimated t ax benefit resulting from prior quarters' losses, which resulted in a reduction to the year-to-date tax benefit in the third quarter or $270,000. THESE ITEMS RESULTED in a net loss in the third quarter or $269,543, compared with in· com e before extr aordinary item or $320,292 in the like period last year. Consolidated unaudited r esults for the first nine m onths showed a 22 per cent increase in sal es over the corresponding period in fiscal 1977. Nine· month sales were $8.603,312 in the curr.ent year, compared with $7,026,544 in fiscal 1977. Pretax results for the period showed a $1,169,018 loss. compared with pretax profit or $549,016 for the corresponding nine-month period a year earlier . After provision for income taxes in both years and for an extraordinar y income item during 1977. the latest nine-month net loss was $912,941 com· pared with net income of $509.016 in the previous year . Would .,000to$30Q,QOO ftomTheAssOciates make1noney br your business? Floor's Driller 'Hired' Fluor Corp .. Irvine. has announced that the W estern Offshore No. IX. owned and operated by Fluor Drilling Services Inc., one of its subsidiaries. h as been contracted by Lagoven S .A .• an affiliate of Petroleos de Venezuel a. -- We believe in the growth of American business, and we're willing to lend our money to prove it. Are you ready to grow? Associates is ready to help. Give us a call today. Busl~Plan Jack Dixon Assooates Financial Servtces Co. of Cahfoma. Inc. 600 South Eueltd Anaheim. California 714-635-9120 ~ CM!! S5 <XXlnl.ISt be~ by .. ~()I real 8f1d per9Ql\ci prcpetty A Gulf+ Woatom Company ..................... .. .. . - ' The contract is for two years Wlth options. The Western Offshore No. IX, one of th e world's l a rgest and newest drilling ships, is being mobillied in California and will st art drilling offshore approx· imately Oct. 1. The rirst well to be drilled will be located off east ern Venezuela approximately 50 miles from the mouth or the Orinoco River. , The program. off the Venezue l an coast. represents the openin1t of a major '1'ea by tb t country in Its search for petroleum reserves. Grant Given THOUSAND OAKS CAP>. -Tbc Natlonal Sdcnce Foundation has awarded a te0.000 irant to the Rockwell llltema- Uooal Science Center for a. apeclal project to draw more Hl1paotc1 a12d American lQdlans into tclenee a.nd eorineerinl careen. • Texas·isize deposit -Sl million. MORE TYPICAL IS the ex· perience or the Bank of V irginia, a statewide UlStitution that in five years traced 7.300 new ac- counts. valued at $30 million. to its program. This year 1t expects to gain $15 million. S.O.S. -for Special Organiza· lion Services Inc. -is now available m JO slates. State Mutual Hopes to Buy Bay Area Firm Stale Mutual Savings and Loan A ssoci ation , Newpor t B each. has offered to acquire P acific Coast Holdings Inc., San Francisco. by merger. Clyde H . Charlton. president or Pacific Coast Holdings. said the offer. tf approved. would r e· suit in the paym ent of $20 a share. or approximately $22.5 million. in cash for the outstand· ing common stock. A $9 MILLION installment note has been accepted by Charlton for management stock. a sep arate class of ~tock. sub· ject to approval of the definitive merger agreement by common shareholders . . .. The ofler is subject to ap· prov al by directors of each com· pany. shareholders or Pacific Coast Holdings and necessary r egulatory approvals. St ate Mutual is tbe principal subsidiary of Far West Finan· cial Corp .• Newport Beach. "Our goal for this time next year." Bill says. "is to have 1.500 mem bers and be active in every state." "HELEN AND I ar e dedicated to helping people," said Bill at tht! annual convention in DalJas eurher thlS year. tr attained, It will be justified. "Most people know how to get one benefit or tbe other but we know it a ll." 8111 c l a ims. perhaps immodestly. But tber e i s more to the growth : 1t 1s lhe S.O S. spint. "Very few people 10 a 1tret1me have the opportunity to help so many We feel humble." / Points Tallied Any of the scores of S.0 .S. ad· visers at the convent1on might have expressed them selves in the same words. &l"WI..,.... Among those testifying this week be fore " Senute Agriculture subcommittee on nutrition was Ellen Haus of the Community Nutrition Institute. The puncl h<i~ been hearing testimony on food labeling. Over The Counter MASOU~ 12"' IJ PebSI II 1:~ 14 PcG•A ,..... ~::ur 131/t 14 Pen•Ent I~ 17 Pete•HH Yt 1 P.irolll 20V. 21 Pettibon IR IW. Pl..SAvl 4 ~ Pl.,.ceSS 40llt 41:V. Pl"""" ~ 14 .. PlonHlll '-I ... Pie.ti,.. ~ 411t "-Pd , ..... 1 Pot.111 3tllt 41 Pr09rp l.4'11. I~ P1>SwNC 7714 17'14 Pune.n 13 14 PutOC.p 70"-~ ()\;ell~ 17'1<. ll .... A•oe<1Pr ,..,,. 11\lt ll•llell 20 .... n A•ychm 20'.'> 2I \lo A•ymnd 7=7~ =~i~ :"" ~:V. AOl>OMy 14\.'> U\.'> ==on I~ 1~:: Au$Stov 37\lo ll\lo ~1,~ 22 72\.'> ScrlDOH t.r"" ~ Se<Pe< "'-I~ SelsOell' ~ >1 S11emstr ·~~ SNwml 11'14. 13\r. SolldSIS ~:t_1 :;:_: SC.IWlr II .... 11 Ill<, l1 ]7"'1 llp•aadDo~ w• g NEW vo:l:S1~1~°'ff..H~ollowlt19 tlst • • .,., "'°"'' llu ~, ,.,. • Count"' JI°" l3 \IO<k\ enCI w11rr_,U tll4tt ..... -uo 1•.;, ,.,., lhe mo1t --Ille ~t be..., °" ~ 1~: i:;cr~~...,. ...._.dieu of YCMume '° •2 No w-<urll~ lredlfl9 -'1 ere Incl· lJ )S UdeCI Nlfl -pet~eqit <"""-ll<~ llW m.... 21 dltter1tnce ~ the previ-<kK•"9 1!"" 1~:: Did prou -~I~ bid prlee. ~21~ Na~ ~~ ~ ~ :J8>1t 40 1 ICl"l!Kull 171<. • 4'1• Uo 31 S ~ "° 7 8•ylyCp 1'''> t J Up 21 1 11 11'1> 1 An•ren J • .,, Uo 20.0 1~ ,...., • Po>!ws 1'9 • "' Uo •• t P,.t ~ ! ~:r~:"' ::.:: : ~ 8g :t : I~~ : ~~~ l.. : ~ 8~ :t~ S s.... • JemW,,._ UV, + 1\\ Up tJ .I I'll! t 10 0.CecSy 7•,. • •• Uo u.s 1s•;. •• 11 l(enton JS•. • '"' Up 111 IS"-IS\\ U CtyNICp ••'-' 1 Up 11.J 11;\I, 131,, 1l UnivVoh •'I.. + '-Uo 11.1 23"-;n-. u Pac•S'r' 10''• • 1 uo 10_. 1..., J'.t,, IS ArctueEn ll<. • ~ Uo fO,/ 1~ .... 1• S~ldllfll l'• • .. UD tO I J'" :µ.. 11 C.m·Or &' / • "' Uo 10 • l~ '"' 11 CiuarN•I 11'" • 1\o Uo 10 • l2•n J:l ... 1• APIOMU •>oo + ,,_ Up '0) 26 -%,,. 20 HomstdF IC>l<o • I Uo 10 J 61n 6'11. 71 NBkCO.I • • .. Uo 10 J 6"' 1'"' 27 A1le<I\ 1\o • '" Up 10 0 34'1't JS•17 23 1m0<oCi )'> • "• Uo 10 o 1• NtwPLI> 8"• • ""' Uo 10 o 1S fellrnSv 11 ,. ,,., VD t I DOWNS Xl14 34 """I~ '"" ,,,. \~~~~ NA.ftDAQ Suntneary ~ Namr SldHhn 8rynMwr AAPPtttt\ Acom~ln\ AomAm wnD11S11 AllblfenL Coc;inllrn TdCllem CompHOn EsAlr ~ Trn.mat A Hom~ T"CCOtE lnlrc[)yn APITr~ Clrc1~F UldMM L1ncLll' Ma•cus SloenTec Un1mf!CI WH<»I\ Sc.anOI 1Cn19'1t1n Lost ChQ \I.. ) 1·. -I.. "'• -t 1•, i • ._ Pct Off )6 . Off ••• Ofl •13 Oii I] 0 Ott 11 ) 011 11 I 011 10.0 Ott 10 o Oii 10 o ~ 4"'1 l 74 1~ • lSV.. l6V. NEW YORK !&Pl -Mofl ec11¥P over ~ •~ 111. ll>e-<ounll!f' stocks ~l..S by lllASD 6 73\lo 24\r. N•mf' lfo4umf' 8id Alk..S ChQ. I 1'"'1 26 CentyTel Ul)OO IV. 8''> + ln 8 1':V. 11~ R•nkD . .. 338.300 S'"' W• .. .. • t:: :: g:,e:;., . ~~s 1~~ .. s ·~~ •.'i~ :~ 14..., 1S...., Temp•• 160,IOO JO"'-l•'> 12 1~ 1..-.i Fleqlllls llS.600 14\. u~ • ~ 13 21"' 11\11 Toy RU\ . 111.800 .,,.,, 12"' -'"' t• ~ 11'9 Midi AU 123,100 1~ 1 t •• • IS '°""' 11 .... Fl"l!rfll .. 120,200 li11o 1S4• + "' 1' SS:V. S6-\0I. NOOl~tl . 117.100 3"~ )ol•a -\lo 11 ~1()'14. 18 I~ 11..., AtfV•nc"4 .. .. .. .. . . .. .. "17 1' 11'14. 19V. Oecll.,.d ................. . ••s 10 27'4 29 Uncher>Qf'd ........... , . , 1.S'IS 71 tli, 1014> Totel IU~ .... .. .. .. .. . 1,SOI 11 ""°' 11'tt Ne• h lQf\$ • • .. .. • • ... • .. 218 1l 64 1"' New _, .. . .. .. . . .. .. . .. .. . 10 74 ,._ ,,... Tot•• WI~ u .t.u.llOO 7S \ ... -.. 6 •• ••. , -'> 1"• ., .. t I ,.,., "· ,,, -.... ,, , '. 41. ,.. 11w -'l_., . -... l.\.:. -•• S1't 11) ..... -,. t1 -"'' 8~ -,,.. .. l -.,. 'I -.... l -'• l"• -S.•• &• .. -•. , 0 11 '\. Off 'I Off • ' Ott Is Ofl '' Ott •• Otf 'l Otf • J Ott 8 J Otl 81 0 11 , • Oii 11 Otl 11 Otl I I Ott IS Ott I • MUTUAL FUNDS ~iE,':ll.r.& ~~II I~~ 1l:: = ·:: ISNY. /~! ~~ ~~ '1,t~ M~~~:~ L~.:. 11 00 ~ •• ~11 ~: =t 511~":~ ~"':'!Ill E Y~K Pl NIM t 1' I0.'7 MMM I 00 NL Inv lndlC I 43 NL C•P•I 14 1S 15.:16 hF•• • 71> NL A\\O f. I 01 NL ~ ... WIOllOwl IA NYVn If lS .. 11 ()pin 11.ll 14,Sl lftV ~ 10 ll 10.91 Equ18 • 91 IO.J3 Pro F'und 1 !II NL '""'" 'J9 Nl Wlons, iUllPl':ci~ CG Fund ta" 94 11.13 T•Frr 12.n NL 1nvut0t~ ~: Mun• • 20 t.1' P•otnc IO 11 NL OcHll & 34 NL tlle Nelton.I Astoel· CGlncm 111 117 US Gwt t'2 NL IDS 8d UI S• AdASI 100 NL Pru SIP 1014 It.It Stein Roe F6\ •lion of 5ecurlllfl C'1!A~M l"oooo ~LL Flt~~~ NL :g~ ~.' s.'sr6:3' M~:v:~ ~ ~ ·~~ p~:~: F~· 13.93 ~:~·i :rn ~t p,:·~r~H 1;·-..r~ ~r~~ 1'00 NL Bond .. ,. NL Mull uo 10.00 MONY F u s 10 1 Equll 13.17 14.39 Sloe• 13.n NL these WCUtHIM Cenl5"T 11.3'1ll3' cat>tt ••• 10.SO Proo 3.84 4 11 MSB Fd 15'1 N Georg 1• IO IS ... 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I BESPECl'FULL Y SUBMIT TSE Porter-Givens Perception: The delay and expense involved in any aclion soar in perpendicular proportion to the number of ap- prov als essential to take that action. Richard A. Givens is the former New York regional director of the Federal Trade Commisaion aad a member or tbe New York·based law ftrm of &tein, Hays, Sklar & Herzberg. The Porter·Givens Perception was inspired by the California tax rebellion and the resulting uproar over whether Proposition 13 heralds an actual clll in federal government waste and a fundamental change in the direc· tlon of more efficient. leaner fede r a l r eg · ulalory agencies. Some or th e dangers confronting: Money's Worth < 11 As long as the beads of the agencies can, in effect. judge their own performance. change will W difficult. It is the meat, not the fat. that may be cut. <2> When important services are ~ut back. pressure for restoring them will become intense and in some cases. almost. impossible to resist. (3) If property taxes are not pusbed back up. other taxes -most likely state. fed eral and even local income taxes -will rise to fill the gap. <4> The taxpayer will be bit in the pocketbook either way. And the older and more wastefully entrenched the bureaucracy is, tbe better it.s defense will be. Every layer will be round to be absolutely necessary for a vital reason, untouchable and sacrosanct. • What ls the the way out? "Call on outsiders who have • no 'Stake in l:be-1tystem to cecommend &be~hang~... ~ Givens. , J USI' AS X·BA VS CAN REVEAL bone structure from outside the body. a chart could be drawn to show what goes on inside a bureaucracy before a simple task can be completed. The chart would examine the inside of the agency from the user's point of view. At every "layer." members would have to report how much time they spend in preparing or reviewing a memo for permission to submit a memo to a hi&her authority. for permission to submit still another memo lo still another higher authority, etc .• etc. There is simply no justification for so many steps. so many delays, so many expenses, piled one on top or the other. This is the way the mammoth bureaucracy can be slashed. Market Com:rnences Anotlwr Try at 900 NEW YORK <AP> -The stock market pushed ahead today after wavering back and forth ror much of the week. The Dow Jones average o( 30 industriaJ stocks was up 5.46 points to 890.94. !t bad been down by more than 2 points early in the day but slowly added upward momen· tum around midday. Advances led the declines aJDOll8 New Yortc Stock Exchange-listed issues. SIO«"lala Tlw Spo1llgltl DoK'lonn:I N'rGgiP• N•w YOAIAPI Fln.1 Oow·,,__..,...._. STOCICS " NEW YORK IAPI-Sa..._ 4 p.m. ll"lce ODeft Hklll I.ow 0oR Cho ~wne'v~St~!'-E ll~~t11Kt1 . .2.ve. 30 Ind ... 01 IK70 •.20 9'0 .... s.£ ,.. ~" _,. .. ~,.,...._ ~· 20 Tr., ~ 7ft.S1 74J.4l 2A7.J7+ 1.12 ~~"&,~~1.~ •I mor.,:.~n '~· .. ... i~ ~J: :·ck =jB~:~ ~:~; ~;!; Teuco Inc....... ....100 U\lt + 11'1 lndu• ...................... 2.m ,a Meed Corp ••••• , •5',toO i:J\4 + sv. Tr•n .. • •. •. .... ....... 1.at.4C)O LTV Corp........ 410,toO 12\'t • '-Ulllt .. •• .......... •• • 412,000 ~~~:::::. ~= J;~ ! ·~ ~u_s_•_•_._ .. _._ .. _ .. _._ .. _ .. _._ .. _ .. _._ .. __ ,_.•_1s_.aoo_ OlrYller . . . • • . • • Ml.200 n-. + ""' McGnw Hin..... Ju,.ao ui. -'Ill Fires-. . . . . JOt,200 n-. -"" S..rsRo.I> •••. •. 301,JOO 24lll + "" Am TT .. •• •••• m .400 61 -II> UAL In<......... a..700 Jt'lll + ,._ ll•m.CS. In •. • 2n ,ooo t ll. + -.. E1111on • • .. ••• • 2'2,000 .._.., + V. Citicorp • . • • .. • • W ,lllO 2'-'--"° Whal St ... k• Did NEW YC>ftlC (API NEW Y°"IC (API NY Slotk WI~ ~roe llMI •••.. •• ••••• 33.550.000 Pr•"'°"' <My • • • • • •• • .. • • • 19,760,000 Week •OO •••• . • ........... JJ.tl0,000 Monti\ •90 ... ............. .• 21.370.000 Y•er e90 • . . • . • ... • • • ... . • 16.110.000 T-yHrs -. .. .. . . . . . .. IJ,930,000 J..., I lo date • • .. .. . • • •• 4,354,917. ISJ ••11 lo Ut• • ••• ••••• •• •• 3,231,060,000 197t lo CS.u • ••• ........... J.Jl.S.,IS.123 W..AT AIUX 0 10 NEW YOlllK IAPI P..+t J't"-Y ~' 747 331 251 UI 'OS -,. .. 2 .. ( ' I • ~~·~-~11-.1m --~~~-------------~SP-orts as .Freeway Series:· An Im.possible DreaDI? alos Within l 1/2 lfter 16-nm Burst OAKLAND <AP > -Give ltcher Frank Tan ana of tbe alifornla Anaeb a nve-run lead nd be's unbeatable. Ta nana woo bis lSlh game of h e year b y ddutlog tbe a kland A's 1~~ Thursday, giv- ng up five nms on 11 hits an even inrunas. ··Frank was so surprised with he-·bil lead that-he dJdn 't lnow 0..Tt'Te•I .. , Cll•••el s •• 7:39 bat to do," bald Manager Jim 'r e gosl ol tbe Angels, who a iled on Tom Griffin to fUlisb p. .. WITH TOE BIG lead , all I as trying to do was get people t." Tanana said. The Angels collected 18 hits, a eason bi.ch. off four Oakland itcbera. Starter Matt Keough, Corona del Mar High product. ave up five runs before leav- . g in the second inning, but be as more fortunate than relief an Dave Heaverlo, who did ot retire any of the four bal- ers he faced. The Angels scored five runs in he fourth inning when they sent l batters to the plate. They o~'ded . the bfl,ses againsl Mike orris and Lyma n Bos tock uickly unloaded them with a riple off Heaverlo. BOSTOCK DROVE in four runs and Don Baylor drove in three. "It's good to see we are hitting again," Fregosi said. While he was happy with the Angels' hit- ting, they were unhappy about getting hit by Oakland pitchers. Catcher Brian Downing was hit by Norris in the third inning and then again by rookie Craig Minetto in the ninth. Arter be was bit the second time, Down- ing broke his bat on home plate, sta rted toward the mound but was restrained by teammates. GRIFflN KEPI' the feud go- lng when be buued a fastball over the bead of Mitchell Page, the A's leadlng bitter and their first batter in the ninth inning. Plate umpire Larry Barnett warned Griffan, and there was no further trouble. Willie Horton drove in three runs for Oakland. raising bis career total to 1,000. He had a home run and a double, but he made two errors which gave the Angels three runs. double pJaya. He speared a line drive by Joe Rudi In the first ln- nln1 and stepped on second baae to comP,lete a double play, and then did lbe same thlo1 after catcbiJll a Une drive by Dave Cballt in the fourth. Tonight the Angels a re in Seattte to open a four-game serle.s... which iriclude• a doubleheader on Saturday. Nolan Ryan C5-10) takes the mound tooi&bt against Mariners' right-bander Bryon McLaughlin t()..3). CALlllOltNIA ....... L.eftdr9.wc Cl S 4 I 0 ~Cl -4J 2 I e.t.oc11 rl s 2 J 4 IMYIOf ID • 1 J J AllCll 11 • 2 2 1 0-Wlndll l 11 2 Oownlft9< t O 21 Humphrey c o O o o C'Mtku SI 0 0 Grich 2b • 1 l 2 I OAKLAND Eciwue11 2b ~ 'o 110 ~ W-•rcl 2b 1 1 0 0 AIReft If S I 1 0 Wetlll rl 1 I 0 0 Hortonlf 2123 Ne•m.., lb I O O o Mlnettoo O o o o Pege If S I J 0 T.Ouncen lb 4 o 2 2 011-)tl 1 0 I 0 ~n 1010 Armnr1 l 0 0 0 Atverino lb 2 o o o Plcctoto u 3 o 1 o EUl•nc JO I 0 8urkt cf • O O O Totets 40 16 ta u Tolels 40 s IJ s tetltornte 2l0 500 Jl2-16 o.1c1 ... e1 001 022 OOI>-s E Horton 2 OP-o.ktand 4.. LOB-C.tlfornle 11, Oakland 11 28-8eyl0< 2. ~In, T Ouf>. ctn, Hor1on. Oowntno. 18 Bostock. HA-Ho<1°" Ill, Ruell 111. SB-~o. Ollone. S-Orlcl\. SF -Good..il\ '" H 1114Elll II SO • CAL.ll"ORNIA h n•na (W, IHJ 1 11 S S l ~llfln 2 2 O o o OAKLAND Keo11911 (L.,1-9) lh l S 2 O MNorrl\ 1•• 4 J 1 o HH•erto o • 2 o o M l,,.lto • 1 • 2 • I HBP-~-· (by ktouQftl, Oowntno (by M.Nwrls), Downing lb\t M'lhel1ol. WP-h-•a. PB-umptlrey. T-a:os. A-i.13i. /. -~-......... VIDA BLUE LEAVES AFTefl.SUBREMDERING SEVEN RUNS. First Place Dodgers Putting It Together BJ BOWARD L HANDY Of ti• Deily Pltlt .... LOS ANGELES -As youn1 Bob Welch prepared to walk to the mound Thursday night at Dodger Stadium. one of bis teammates su11ested that Las Angeles might break out or lt.s slump. that the Dodgers ~ight even score 10 runs. "I cou1dn 't believe it." said Welch. "and to think the guy was wrong but in the ri1ht way." The Dodgen thundered 16 bits orr San Francisco ace Vida Blue and two successors for a rousing 12·2 victory that left Los Angeles in a tie for fi rst place with the Giants lo the National League West. REGGIE SMITH led the Dodgers' biggest attack lo near- ly two months with a home ruo and three singles to account for five runs. Ron Cey slugged his 14th homer of the season and Steve Garvey had a bases- loaded triple, a double and a single. Smith's home run bit the back wa ll in the Dodger bullpen in the bottom of the first inning with Bill North on base. It was estimated to be '435' feet to the spot where it hit the wall. Was this the longest drive he has had in the majors? ·'I hit one completely out or the pa rk at the old Kansas City Park," Smith said in recalling an earlier blow. "But this was definitely one of my best. \'ott don't get very many In a season where you can put everything behind it. "I SAW 11DS ONE come off the bat and my band! and body were working together with my eyes. That's when you know everything fs working together." Vida Blue was seeking his 17th DodpnSlflte • M._•UKmtl TonJQllt <il-UHMAnQIMes 1:2Sp.m, s.t&wd.,, Gt-set Ult...,..., • SS p,m • Suftdey GfMlletl.os~ 12.Up.m victory of the season for the Giants but Instead was touched for seven of the Dodger runs in 3% innings. Did Smith see any tell-ta le sips of something be· ing wrong? ··1 really couldn·t." Smith said. "J only saw four pitches he threw and I was swinging at three or them ... Welch. a 21.year-old rookie, improved bis record to 4-0 with the victory. A confident speak- ing young man. he posted bis second win of the year over the · Giants. "We beat them~ with the bat tonight," he said. "Someone said we were going to score 10 runs before the game but 1 don41t know who it was. I'm glad it happened. "I knew I was coming out a fter I reached the dugout in the eighth inning Che was leadinj! 12-2 at the time>. l thought they might take me out earlier with s uch a big lead because we badn 't used the bullpen for awhile." MANAGER TOM LASORDA wasn 't cognizant or the fact Welch bad a chance to help in tying a club record of six straight complete aames. "Is that right?" Lasorda said when asked about the record. "I didn't know it but we wanted to get Charlie <Hough> some work and I don't believe it would have made any difference." "We have a chance to de- termine OW' own fate and I enjoy that very much. We couldn't ask for a better situation than to be playing this series at home." * DODOelll.,,.. -._. ...... ftHl leas Hie ---~ _...,. ....... ~· ~ CWl ol-~~., ...... ltwill tie T-fll'Y .... CO.I eo-illSt Ille~· ... llC~I 111 .. J. In Ille --flnelt SwtMy, 0.. One bright note for the A's w as the defensive work of second baseman Mike Edwards. who selan Americaa League rec- ord by making two unassisted SAN FRANCISCO'S DARRELL EVANS COMES UP SHORT AS HE TRIES TO STOP JOE FERGUSON'S SINGLE TO ·LEFT FIELD. See DODGERS, Page 86 l..eads Golf Classir Barber Challenges The Young Turks .. SUTTON, Mass. CAP) -At the age of 47, a nd a millionaire in 20 years on the pro eolf tour. Miller Barber still enjoys the challenge, refusing to give in to the PGA's "Young Turks." ·•I still have the desire to play." Barber said Thursday alter filing a (ive·under-par 66 to share the lead with Be n Crenshaw in the opening round of the $225,000 Pleasant Valley Classic. "I still like to beat the young guys," he added. "I also feel I know more about the game than ever. I'll bang it up only when I lose that competitive desire." BARBER, WHO has earned more than $1.4 million since · oining the pro tour In 1959, carded an eagle and tour birdies with only one bogey while sport- inl tape at the base of bis left finger. He went out in 5-under 31 and came back in par 35. "I played extremely well. for lJGll BEUEYES 'CK CIL4NGING MANHASSET, N.Y.-Laura augb, .mo bas never won atnce olning the ladies eolt tour six ean aeo.t. thinks ber luck may banee aner sboot1n1 a thfee. nder-par 70 1bursday lo the 00,000 classic at North Hills unlr)' Club here. "I bHen't shot aay really low da lh1I year;· nya the pret. y 23·year-old bloMe, known as ucb for bet Joob u her aamey 'Today's round lndlcat.. that 'm back In the O'OOVe ... SA.ndra Pait It'd wttb a t7 ifte.r lrdiq MVtll blrd1es ud ooly ne bc>l•J o.a u.. e,411·Jud our.e. Sudwlell9' benreen and 8auO ...... 8aUJ Ut· le •ltb 1 ea aod Katby oatle.alt wtUi a•· me," said Barber, who won the Phoenix Open earlier this year fo r h is 11th tour vict or y. "You've got to drive the ball well on this course and that's the strong part of my game. "I 'm hitting the ball as for as I ever have. At least, I don 't think I'm gelling any shorter. I'm not getting a ny longer, either ... CRENSHAW, 26, made his pro debut on a sponsor's invitation here in 1973. He has gone on to win more than $675,000, but he's bidding for bis first 1977 victory. Ba rber and Crenshaw held a o ne-stroke lead over Mark Hayes and defending champion Ray Floyd heading into the second round today of the 72- hole tournament, worth $45,000 to the winner. Bunched at 68, two strokes off the pace, were Bruce Lietzke, Bill Rogers, Bob Shearer and Rex Caldwell. Another stroke back were Andy Bean, the tour's 1977 leading money winner with $253.558. John Lister, Don Bies Alan Tapie, Geor1e Burns, Fred Marti, Crail Stadler and Tim Simpson. John Mahaffey, the newly crowned PGA champion, bad a 71 as 52 p18.)'ers scored par or better in the ftrat round. First-round leade rs in the $225,000 . Pleasant Valley Golf Classic Thursday at the par 71, 7, 119 yard coune: •.er-~ ··°'*'. ~ .. .... 11~ 0.. Mof'9M ~ "· F..-,. ~ A MCNlclW ::-= M. He'tft ~7 O. ll"IWen ..... ,.. ~ T.~ ~ L &AltLll.e ~ i.. ttnc• 114t-11 a. i.tetn ........ L.Wtdllll\t ~ ..,llN,..,. ~ o. ,., ~ ... Q..... ...... "· CWt ,,....,. A....,. ........ "· .... ua--19 T ........ ~ L.Gr~ ~ G.•llnlt ........ M.M<Qltll ~ "·*"' .......... ........ ~ C.St..... ......... !(.,......... ..,...... O.elM ~ IC.~ • .,..._,. J,Ltttw ........ 0.0f'ellefll ~ t ~= :::;: ~.==. = u ....... MILLER BARBER CHIPS AWAY AT PLUIANT VALLEY. • Fraeas in Plaillfl Shortstop Denies He Struck Writer PHILADELPHIA CAPl -A baseball writer allegedly was struck in the face Thursday night during an argument with the Philadelphia Phillies' Larry Bow a over a column critical of the National League All-star shortstop. Ray W. Kelly, 37, a baseball reporter for the Courier-Post in Camden, N.J., for 14 years, suf- fered a slight bruise on the right cheekbone. Bowa later denied that he struck the writer. But ~urter·Post. .said It was considering taking legal ac- tion a1ainst the shortstop. THE PHILADELPHIA chapter chairman of the Na- tional Baseball Writers Assocla· lion protested tbe incident. Kelly said be did not see who bit blm, but Ray Dldlnaer, a Philadelphia Bulletin columnist, said Bowa's <>Pen band bruahed the wrtter while the sbortatop was strugglina to cet free of Ron Reed, a M teammate who bad restrained Bowa. BOWA SAID, "I did not touch a human beinl, and I'm wUlJnt to swear oo a million bibles to a courtroom fllled with anybody you want." On Wednesday nlaht, while the Phillies were 1t1U ln St. Louts, Bowa told KellY, who wu lft. tervlewlng utlllty player Jim llorrlson, that writers bad to be out or the drelllnJ room two boura belore 1ame Um•. The clul> na.lel Ht a 80-mlnute limit. Kelly 1akl tte uked Bowa who made up tbe lwo-bour rule, and that lM shortstop replied, ••J did.·· Kelly Nld be t.ben told Bowa to "PQll 11." TBS .., ... , .. m:llWW\oP, accordinc to Kelly, la\alebtd Into a •-* ol obacenlUte. cbartln1 that all writers we re negati ve a nd should get out of the clubhouse. The writer said be ignored the diatribe and continued with his interview. Kelly's column Thursday said. Bow a 's behavior "was ugly. childish, immature and had no place in baseball." Kelly. who was in the dugout Thursday night. said he was lured to the clubhouse by a groundskeeper who' informed him he bad a telephone call in tbe locker room. "Ray Didinger and myself wa lked up to the clubhouse and Bowa was waiting by the door," Kelly said. Kelly quoted Bowa as greeting him with a long strio1 of ob- scenities and offering the writer the first punch. Reed, a Phillles' reliever, then grabbed Bowa. who stru11led to break away. Durtn1 the strug- gle. Kelly was struck in the face. , ( J .. DAILY PILOT P'rlday Auguat 11, 1978 A eap.uJe Report From the Wortd of Sport• Promoters Threate n Suit H Miamian Seeks Blackout t'rnm AP DbpaklM't NEW ORLEANS Promote rs of the All ·Spinks htoaYyWtitehl titJe r11rht are lhreetenln& to I UC • Miami la wyer who h as vuwed to rtght 20CHnlle televiaion bhackout of the bll bout "The next tlmt> that Florida dude opt'ns his mouth about uruna the blockout I'm 101n1 to sue him." said Don ·Hubba rd, prt>sident or Louisiana Sports Inc "Thttl F1or1du dude" Is Ellis Rubin, who has battled prev1ouslY u,&atn~t TV blackouts or the Super Bowl He an· nounced last wttk he m1ght sue to prevent a bla~kout or the AU-Spinks bout ··He has not Ciled a s uit He'sJust running bis mouth I welcome him to rile a SUit," sa\d Sherman Copelin. a partner in Lowsian• Sports lnc .• the &roup promoting the Sept. lSfight. Copelin said the promoters have put Rubin "on notice that 1f he continues. we are going to m e suit against him because we do feel that 1l is having a negative impact on the gate." No figures have been released on how many tickets have been sold for t he fight. "Anybody sitting back waiting for Rubin to win his suit before they purchase tickets is missing the boat," Copelin said. ··Most definitely ther e will be a blackout." Hubbard said. ..The entire stale of Louisiana and the 200-l'I"ile radius of New Orleans will be blacked out." * Cham pion Leon Spinks says he never drank anything but water dunng his last fi ght with Muhammad Ali. Spinks said: "The only bottle that was there was the bottle with the water in it. Thars it." BASEBALL /MOTORCYCLES Becker's Bike Back Danny Beeker will return to speedway motorcycle r acing at. the Orange County Fairground& m Costa Mesa tonight (8 ) aft.er• four week layoff caused bj bl'.oken leg and cbipl)ed bone. Beclr:er suffered the inj July 14 when be was phm against the wall at Costa Mesa on the front straightaway. He is re- 1>0rtedly cbafirtg at the bit to &et back into action. Bobby Schwartz e xpects to compete despite a broken thumb suffered in a spill recently. B lily Gray is out of action rortbe duration ol the season after a SUS· pension for using tllegal ruel ad· ditives. ~. !' S1mshine Plays Lazers Tonighi T he California Sunshine. a lialf-game out of first place flt the Western Division of the Am erican Soccer League _. five points ahead of the Sou~ California Lazers. tangle wtdi' the Lazers tonight at Oran«< Coast College. -1 -----Qtt0te oldie Da11-----. -~~ ...... It starts at 7: 30. The Laz~ who have won their last arx straiizbt and 12 of their last 14 to become cha mpionship conteod· ers. rely on the scoring of Sid Wa llace, while the Sunshine's <\ndy Chapman and Poli Garcia a re the host's aces. English distance star Brendan Foster, after fmishmg second to Henry Rono in the S,000-meter race at the Commonwealth Games in Edmonton, Alberta : "Who will beat tbe gifted Kenyan? REGGIE SMITH SLIDES SAFELY INTO THIRD BASE AFTER VIDA'BLUE'S WILD PITCH. -Sometime. someone will beat Rono But I can'.1 say when. I can't say who. I can't say how." T riria I Who was the Giant catcher in the Juan Marichal-John Roseboro incident in 1965? 2 Who was the leading hitter for the world champion Ba lt1more0n olesof 1970? E~ hi Spert• BASEBALL -San Diego's Gene Tenace drove in five runs with a three-r un hom er and a two-run double as Cin· cinnati fell. 15·3 ... Yankees southpaw Ron Guidry al- lowed Mil wa uke<> three hits In a 9-0 win ... Dick Ruthven pitched his fifth straight vic- to r y. t r i p l e d b o rn e the tying run and scored the win- ner as the t'tu.ladetphia Phillies beat Pittsburgh, 3·1 ... Lee May rapped a two-out single to give Baltimore a 3·2 victory over Kansas Cit y ... A cast has been removed from the right thumb o f Kansas Cit y thi rd base m a n George Brett and he's expected to be back m action 10 tnree to t1ve days ... Minnesota Manager Gene Maach was MJtETENAa released today from a hospital aft.er a staph infection or the right foot . . . The Atlanta Braves are seeking permission to play Sunday games at night during the bot· test months of the 1979 season. FOOTBALL -Many of the teammates of running back LydeU Mitchell of the Baltimore Colts have defended him following reports that he ftled a grievance aga inst the club for alleged racial bias in contract negotiations. Lydell re~ains. a holdout . . . The Los Angeles Rams have waived light end Lon BoyeU and defensive end Tim Ten..- nigkelt to reduce their roster to 73 . . . Cmcinnati Bengals linebacker Bo Harris underwent surgery today for re- moval of foreign particles from his left knee ... Bengals linebacker Chris Devlin has ended his two-week retire- ment from pro football. OTHER SPORTS -Alan Willey's two second half goals lifted Minnesota to a 3-1 North American Soccer Lea~ue playoff victory over Tulsa Thursday before 34,648 to give the Kicks ,a berth against the defending champion Cosmos . . . Bazzy Trumpet breezed to a six-length triumph in the San Diego Rotary Club Purse at Del Mar . . . An England man purchased a bay colt, Bold Bidder, for $700,000 at the Fasig-Tipton Yearling sales ... Oscar Muniz scored a seventh round knockout over Francisco Ponce in a bantamweight bout in Los Angeles. Radio, Teleftn- RADJO: Tonight -Horse Racing -Del Mar Feature Race. 5:35. KIEV (870); Baseball -Angels at Seattle. 7:30, KMPC <710); San Francisco at Dodgers, 7:30, KABC C790). TV: Tonight -Angels at Seattle, 7:30, Channel 5. A••~ to Trim a I. Dick Bertell 2 Merv Rettenmund 1 3221 -E'l'Olll Page B S DODGERS. • • Swtt ... I IMI f~ ... "TIW c.otftl" -....C. (,.• I • • s.<i Francisco narter Ykla e1 ... fell in 10 11'1• same fate as Olller SOUtlllMIWS at Doc1Qe< Sl6dlum ll'tll season. The OOOQers l'lave now won 1S e11alns1 lout' ~ o199ln11 1ett1e1 et "°"" •nd ere tl·IS owreu . SAN l'llANCISCO LOSANOELES Mltdto<k 2b Andrew• lo Wl'lllfleldlf Ctar1t rf Evens lO Dwyer cf Ivie 111 Herndon cf w 1111amsp Tamraqt! Pf! R Mt!tiger u HIH c Btuep Mlntop H Cruz lb all r 11111 • 1 2 I 0000 •OOO • I 1 I I 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 • 0 I 0 3000 0000 10 00 3000 • 0 I 0 I 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 nrlllll Lopes 211 s o 1 O T.Martlne12b I I 0 0 Nor11'1 Cf t 3 1 0 Monoa y cf 1 1 o o R.Smltl'I r1 S 3 • S Lacy rf o o o O Cey lb ] 3 11 G.,wy lb s O 3 3 0 Baker II • o o 1 O.vallllo ti O O O O F•r9uS<1n c • o 1 o Grote c 1 o 1 O Rus....,11 u l o 1 o 6 Hern•ndti u I 0 O O WelOI O l I I 0 Mot• ph 1 0 0 0 HOU9hP O O O O Totals 32 2 s 1 Totalt J9 12 i. 11 San Fr•n<~ 100 010 000-i Lot AnQelft 300 403 20x-1' E-Cterll, Evans, Anelrew1 1. OP San Fr11n clsco 2, LM Anveles 10. 28-Gervey. 3B--O«vey HR-Cler~ (1tl, A.Smith 1221, Cey (141, Medlodo 1111. S-Weldl. Blue (L, 16-51 Minion Wlllle ms IP M It ER 88 SC SAN l'HNCISCO Joi'> 9 1 7 l 1 ,..... ' J l 1 0 3 J717J LOS ANGELES Welcl'I (W,H)) • s 2 , 2 ' Hou9l't I O O O 1 1 WP-Welch PB-Hiii. T 2·21. A-.S0,4"0. Laguna Skier Seeks Record Mike Bemis of Laguna Beach wi II compete in t he Catalina Island open water ski race Sun- day, riding behind a 30·foot boat piloted by Scott Campbell of Newport Beach. 'Be mis is a veteran or ocean racing and won his class in 1973 behind a Jet boat with a t ime of 1: 17.0. He placed second in day cruiser class in 1974 and will com· pete in the men's open division this season. ''We have a boat that is capable of equaling or breaking the record if I can hold on all the way," he says. "I would prefer a low bang- ing fog because the water is smoother." On Aug. 20, he will compete in an international speed skiing jamboree in Long Beach, at- tempting to ski the quartermile both barefooted and on a ski over the measured course. He hopes to come close to the world record in each division. 4.dam_~.Guitks Pitchers Dodger Staff Red Hot By HOWARD L. HANDY OI .. o.lty "let Staff LOS ANGELES -There are those who say-the San Francisco Giants have the best pitching staff in the National League and that this is the big thing that has k e pt the m in th e Western Division pennant race. But over the year s, ther e hasn't been a better staff or one that has been m ore consistent than that of the Los Angeles Dodgers. Ever since the team moved west 20 years ago, pitching has been a strong point with the Do d g ers. F rom the Carl £rskines. Sandy Koufaxes, Don Drysdales and Don Suttons. the Dodgers have had outstanding success in this department. OTHERS HAVE come and gone including some outstanding relie f specialists such as Ron Pe rranoski. Larry Sherry, Phil Reagan. Jim Brewer and Mike Mars hall among others. One man who has had a hand in the success of the staff for the past 10 years has been pitching coach Red Adams, himself a long.time pitching star including his d ays in the old Pacific Coast League with the Hollywood Stars and Los Angeles Angels. Red · plays down his role with the team but Ma na ger Tom Lasorda appreciates his value. ··A good pitching coach is very valuable and Red does a tremen- dous job for us.'' Lasorda says. ··As a former pitcher myself. it / RED ADAMS helps me to know when to take a pitcher out of a gam e and I'm the one who does this. "BUT I DON'T have the op- port u nity to work with the pitche rs. Red 1s a hell of a pitc hi ng coach a nd he's very capable and knowledgeable. He also has great rapport with the staff." Whal does Adams feel his mam Job is with the Dodgers-> ''I'm trying to be their eyes," he says. "If they could sit on the side and watch themselves, they wouldn't need me. P11nches Thrown 'The only thing I try to do ~ to figure out and analyze each pitch er from an individual standpoint. They get into slumps j ust like the hitters and I like lo have a picture in my mind or wh at each one does right and what he does wrong. "THEN I TALK with thesp and make sure they agree witb me so I can watch and tell them if they get into a rut. l learn from them just like they le~ from me. I hope." How does Adams look a t rookie pitching pros pect &>b We lch? · • "He's a brilliant youne pitcher." Adams says. ··A pro- spective star. He has the basic qualities to be an outstanding pitcher. He has a live fast ball and a good curve and bas excep- tional makeup and disposition. "An injury will be the only thing to stop this guy from being a hell of a pitcher for a long time. I really like his disposition and makeup and he is a hard thrower." Lasorda agrees. "He has a lot of talent and real good equisf- ment. Above all, he has a great ma keup." Adams doesn't place a ~ of emphasis on the importance of a pitching coach. ··The most important thing lies in the guys themselves," he says ... Then the scouting depart· menl has to find them and AJ Campanis has to acquire them before we can work with them ..... TORONTO CAP> -Fra"lcisco Bar- rios and Ralph Garr of the Chicago White Sox squared ore in a fight after the team 's 7-3 loss \.O Toronto Blue J ays Thursday night, apparently con- tinuing an earlier feud. Ri ch Hinton separ ated t hem and other players stepped in to restrain them . Neither player was injured. Bar- rios. a pitcher. and Ga rr, an out- fielder , started fighting after a shout· ing match In the clubhouse. Pitcher The two had begun a fight aboard a plane heading to Seattle last month. Manager Bob Lemon was fired a few days later and the fight was thought to be the cause for dismissal. Lemon now mana ges the N e w Yorlr: 1Yankees. Team Tennis Results ~~~-:;; .. T_a_k_e __ a_R_o_l_le-i _3_5 __ o_n_y_o_u_r_ SM Die19 •• , ...... 21 Women -K. Reio ISO) def ,,.._,llolu 7.5, Reld-~rlll'lt !SDI *l.t4ar~n6-2. ¥..--LAwr 1501 dlf. Me"'" M ; L•-<IM 1501 dlf, MNi.r. w111111,,....w. F~~,~;4'. next adventure • • • in a FREE leather case. Now, for a limited time, Rolle1 will send you a genuine 1eather belt case FREE when you buy a compact Rollei 35S or 35T. From ll138 deliver super -sharp slides and pri nts with SLR-quality. Come 1n and see a Aolle135. today $15.00 Value NOWS3e98 per dozen Rollei's 35's: rugged. light· weight 35mm came~as that HARBOR o service onenteo $.lore, with compe1111ve prices 3181 mA8T COAllT HIGHWAY CORONA DllL MAA. CAo (7141) 8?3-487 0 • , . , VILAS D!NTI FO! -Second-seeded Guillermo Vilas of Argentina returns to . Phil Dent of Australia ln the third round of ............. the U.S. Open Clay Court tennis cham· pionsbips. Vilas won, 6· l , 6-0 to qualify for • the quarterfinals. J. Pae-JfJ BaslcetllaU JlrWD Schedule Sei OS ANGELE.5 -For the first time in its basketball history, UCLA will play 18 conference c ames, aceonling to the 1gra..79 tc!hedulereleued today. The Bruins play their first-ever P:acific-10 Conference game on '. .. Edison Girls ~eed Physical All girls trying out for teams at ~ison HiJb School are reminded t pbysicaJ examinations will held Tuesday. Aug. 22 for all rta withcardl now available at the reception desk of the school through Aug. 18. 1'ppointments wlU be made between 3:30 and 7. , 'Practice for volleyball. tennis and cl'068 country will begin Sept. l with m andatory meeUhgs or teams prior to that time. Tennis 'players will meet Aug. 18 at 1: 'f'olleyball Aug. 30 at 9 a .m.; and ttt>ss CO\Dltry at a time to be an- .ftounced. Volleyball Tourney MALIBU -P e pperdine \)niversity will host a four-team :.vomen 's volleyball classic Sept. 22·23 to determine the strongest ~uad in the country with the iversity of Hawaii, UCLA and ah State completing the field. , The tournament will consist of ~wo full matches <three games out of live> each night, with the elassic championship following consolation match Saturday. Dec. 27 when they face the Stan- ford Cardinals on the road. The following evening they play the Callfomia Bears. UCLA, which enters 1978-79 having won the last 12 league crowns, meets the conference's two newest members, Arizona and Arir.ona State, on Jan. 18 and 20. on their home courts. The Bruias host the two schools in Pauley Pavilion in February. In all. coach Gary Cun- ningham's Bruins have 18 home games or\ their 1978-79 schedule, including the opener against the People's Republic of China Nov. 10. Two weeks later <Nov. 2'>. they open the regular season against Boise State and face De Paultbefollowinanipt. As bas been the custom tbe last seven yean, the schedule once again includes a home-and-home series with Notre Dame.· The Fighting Irish, who reached the NCAA'a semiflnab last season, visit Pauley Pavilion Dee. 9. The Bruins face the. Irish in South RendFeb.lL Nert. 10-Pea&IW&~kof OINI -.2•---SIMllp.m. Nn.25-0.Pwllp.m. o.c.t-S..UOllf'elp.m. o.c.t -Nolno.- OK. 16-S..Dle90SllltllP.m. Oec.21-~lp..m. DK.tJ-.....,.Coltel91p.m. Dec. 27-AtSUnlord OK. 21-AtCllfftomle J..i.•-ONooft~l,.m. Jen.,_"'-"'•·"'-Jen.1-0regan lp..l'I\. Jen. IJ-VSCetl..olA ..... SC»or1SA1"9N Jen. 11-AtAtl- Jen. 20-AIArl-Stett Jen U -WllSll!natonSlelelp.m. Jan. 27-WesHngtonlp.m. Feb. 1-AtOnoon Fell.3-MC>nQonS..W Fell.•-USClp.m. Feb.11-AtNo4AO- FtG. U -Art-Slettlp.m. Fel>.17-Art- F ell. 22 -Al Wes/llftlton Fell. l•-AIWethllllltonSUlte Mer.1-Cellfoml4tlp.m. Mer.1-~lp.m. GARY CUNNINGHAM AIA to Open In San Diego Athletes in Action •ill open their 1978-79 basketbalf season Aug. 29 at the Jack-in-the-Box Classic in San Diego against a group of National Basketball Assn. all-stars. The game ls scheduled for the San Diego Sports Arena with a starting Ume of 7:30 p.m. Among the NBA squad are Phoenix Suns players Paul Westphal and Alvan Adams. AIA 's nine-man squad consists or Ralph Drollinger . Tim Hall. Brad Hoffman, Irvin Klffin. Ernest Wansley, Dave Baxter. Marvil) Delph, Derrick J ackson and Eugene Parker. Tickets are $6, S4 and $2.50 and can be purchased at the AIA of· lice, located at 1451 E. Irvine Blvd. <No.12> in Tustin. Baseball Standings "&AS SAVERS11 MBCURY EPHYR +PLUS+ ............ BIKE .. ..., .. 10111 AMERICAN LEAGUE West Division W L 62 49 63 53 60 56 53 57 47 64 46 66 Pct.GB .559 .543 l lh .517 41h .482 81!.a 423 15 '411 16~ Kansas City A•gel1 Oakland Texas Minnesota Cb le ago Seattle 42 73 .36:5 22 East Divlaloa Boston New York Milwaukee Detroit Baltimore Cleveland Toronto 71 41 .6.14 64 49 .566 71h 61 49 .555 9 61 50 .550 91h 61 52 .540 lO'h 52 59 .468 181h 44 69 .389 27~ • ,...,...,. . ..,.. .......... OllllMll5 floiteft6.°"'9NlldJ (IJIMiflllsl ,.,....,,Qlee9e2 eettl-1,k-Otrt HewYortlt,Ml..,.._O Oftlt ...... tcMWl.cr ~·--...... t"'9RJ.IOI MSMttle C~W>. Mllw,... CL "°*'91191 t-SI et 9ol1M tTI• M l,11 Ntw VOf'll CHllflter Ml et .. lllll'lort CO. MenlM•Ml,11 IC-Qty (.._.,.. t,._t•> et T-te (M99N Wl,11 Te ... CAlllmMW ... let~ CWeHl1-tV, fl oet191t 1114"'**91 11-11 et Cfllute ,..,..,. •ll,fl ~1~W--~Mlet~ M'ftGI t~l6eMJed!MIMl,fl NATIONAL LEAGUE wesi pjvlslon Dodgers San Francisco Clncinnatt San Diego ALlanta Houston W L Pct. GB 67 48 .583 67 48 .583 66 48 .579 "" 58 57 .504 9 53 60 .469 13 52 60 .464 131,ia East Divlalon Philadelphia 61 50 .550 Chicago 58 M .518 3'1ia Montreal 54 61 .470 9 Pittsburgh 51 59 .464 9'h New York 48 68 .421 14~ St. Louis 45 69 .395 17'1ia ,........,.I~ ~ tt, S.. ,.,_IKO t Piii~ a. Pllt1llllt'Vll t 5-11 Otelt 11, Clnclnnell J ()Illy ..... ICMCklt.cr T•r1a-s "" .. ,_... CHetlcttl "''el~,.....,. IW),11 Oltutle llAmp So Ill .. MolltrMI lOflfnlltY 1w1,11 It. L9lllt CMtttttw1 .. i1 .c M9w Vorti ,..,.._ "111,n PlttMwlll ,......., ... , • ~ CIM'dl ...,,, II Atleftte (McWlltlel'nl 441 • ..._... ClllcNrll 11-101, fl C111ctnnet1 Cllonll•m •·ti •I S.11 Ol•t• IOw<llllltlOHl,11 Orange County'• Oldest l.lncofn·Mtnwry Dealershlp • Dozens To Choose From 'J •, t, •1 II .. i -.. . .. .. . . . . . .. . . . ' DAILY l'ILOT •7 One Digit Can Be Devastating . lli#ocent Man No Yo-yo l'rotl AP Oltpatcllet INDIANAPOLIS ..... Ron Ingram was at the end of hia rope when ten.nia star Manuel Orantes called to ask the time of bis match at the U .s. Open Clay Courts champfon1lalps. "He said, 'tlme please.· I loo~ed at my watch and aakl 9:15. The voice said. ·morning or eve- nt.na?' andlsaid 'eveo.lna. • andhuneup. That brief excbanae between lnaram and Orantes feSulted in In1ram a.tn ca,Jled a o-o and a prankster by tourname1¥ official.a, a Oood of telepbone calla from strangers aceuainl Jilin ot. ll'Yina to sabot.ap tbe. tennla matches and a lack of sleep for bis wile and son. .... lf'*I; ..... . { .. t ~~. ~.· \. • , . f the tlUe woo by her sister , Cbria, four consecutive times. But she's trying not to let the scent of vic- tory 10 to her bead. .... ............... Jol\e-..... l'elel • ..._ M , W I \Illa 91f. o.it, .. ,, M ; C:--1 *11. l"lllOI, M1 ~.i..~bnle def. Teroc1Y, 1.5, .. 2; H'-1-eUef. L.ewlt~-~ Orent.1 -· ~<. w, '"'; 8ereuUltl Clef. l'nl1e, S.7, M. M ; dttf. o .. rry, S.7,'4,M. __. ...... -..-...... Newtoerry ..... 5'1111, .. t .... I; Olli.rt dll, Dll\lell, W , M ; J. ~..t ltef. Z.leQenf11M. •1, .. I, M . OeftMlel .... LAtlWn, 7-S, J.S, Flf 11 I•• A•ea11ea Wtcla Ew DUBUN, Ohio -Slxth-teeded Yeter Flemiq had little trouble gettlne put Greg Halder 6-1, 8-2 in sineles play ThW'Sday of a proleaslonal tennis tournament Eliot Teltacher defeated Van Wlnitaky 7-6, 4-6, 6· 1 in another match. Orantes. the defending Clay Courts champion. was 45 minutes late ror J\is scheduled -ELMORE T&Yft'J• lEAS~NG match at the Indianapolis Rae-U K II quet Club Tuesday QlOrning. CILICA-S, COIOLLA'S.1'1lUCIS Orantes said it was because he MANun OttAN"TH 4WD LAMDCIUISmS was told be would play at night. Tournament S director Stan Malless law said the mixup was ..=:. I 1629 '::! • cau.sed by a typographical error in the players' in· formation packet. The phone number had one in· ~ ~ ::=-:=.-~--. , .. ......, .._..,... •"7.11 WMMI "' • correct digit. ELMORE And, instead of getting tournament informa- 15300 -.......... ~ .. 49iQRS lion. the callers got Ingram's home. ~ .... The situation worsened for the 31-year-old 17141 "4-H22. l7t411Jt-24U. lllJI lff.A1S radio station sales r epresentative w.ben bis ASll roa HOWAID •~ number was published in a local newspaper article ~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~·~D~A~IL~Y~l~IH~IT~A~U~AUO~~·;;;;;;;;;;~;;;~ about the foulup. _ ·'I am new to th~ area and know nothing about tennis or the event." Ingram said. "I don't ap- preciate being labeled as a yo-yo or a prankster." J anle Malless. wife of the twmament director and the event's publlclty di.red.or. bad said it was "some yo-yo out there bavina a ball." who caused f.be problem tor Orantes. C.•-n llaUla r .. i Flllel INDIANAPOLIS -Top-seeded Jimmy Con- nors .def~ated No. ~seed .Jaime Fillol lo straight sets Thursday. leading the top four seeds into the men's quarterfinals in the 68th 'U.S. Open Clay Court tennis championships. ~ Connors survived a Fillol rally in the first set to score a 7-S triumph and then bad to <:qple back from a 3-0 deficit to take the secona set M . Fillol was down S-2 ,in the opening set before tying lt. . Connors, who won here in 19'14 and 1976 and finished second last year. broke Fiijol to take a 6·5 advantage and held service to win the set. J eanne Evert m oved one step closer to taking ~·No NONSENSE" LEASIM& an.id New 1971 HONDA llXmf) 1119 ttolllllAccor* ~ ... OOl ........ /ltlllF'tA rdD. .••l ·l~~··· .... fat · 0.0. · M..4" ~ • 14.t•IO ~ • M.190 .. ~ ... , 02 ··---'-&On--CIWdl Ol'IM 7 DAYS A wm.9:00 AM to t:OO PM ( 7141 540-9640 - U•IYERSllY Sales mtd Senlce LEAS• Racing Results -:::===2'==50 = .... ==-~""4.=---Costa~ ..... --Mo;_··_'40 __ LOS ALAMITOS '1lllllef~......., "'"' rec-smoken Mowllon '"-"'•'' D.60, 11 . .0. •.20; Trelln ITruswrel 1.20. J . .cl; ~ Cet IR011111tl 2.AO; $2 tMCQ (M l pekl 237 • .0. Se<oftd r...-Jet Te HMWft N 77 <cn.eerl SAQ, SM. UO; OllMft Of Ille S .... 1....,.,1 •.JD. J.AO; Heidi Ho CHI !Hartl MO. Tlllrd rece-Lolle Teltnt l(er001el 1.411. t .IO, 2 • .0; S.ny Ctme H-l~rl 4M, S . .O; Collrrt '~ (UllMml 100. Fowrtll rec-Im A Tom Boy CMyletl 2'J.Jll, 10.90, SAl1 Tlll'(I AM> IMllCllelll t.JD, S.:ID; Cllenle 8uc.!wl CC.l"do&el a.A; IS euct. C2~1 peld w .so. Flflll r~ A Mllf'1e CLIJlh,tml S.40, 2.IO, I.AO; Moolt In SI• I.,_,,.., I 1 . .0, •.40; SM SM Three IAOll!lfll uo. Slatlt rec e-Sweel f'l91thr ITru1urtl S..00, IM, J.00; f'lckte llen lllplleml s.oo, J .'°; Con Promlso IMYlfl) •.20/ U eaecle UNI peld4t.OO. Sewnlh r--oillldlp ICerdeul •.40. 2.IO, 2.AO; ~ ... IUllNml , ... t.AO; Goltl JftM l\lewgllnl uo E'911111,_ s.n.ntlle Go l ... NI •.«I, 2-'0, UOi #11P9jo CcardOUI UO, 2.20; MIGMy I Am CUllNml MO; S2 tlUlde CUI .-tel tUO. Hlflllt rece-Pop N ltocket ITrHsvrel SAO. UO, UO; Cellfornl• Sewn 1,..,_I UO, 2.20; Zip 'N Go IHertl s.oo; " uecle ,.., P•ld t7.50. A~-7.17•. DEL MAR c, ... .,..,_..., First r--0-k RllllY IDlu l 7-'0, UO. UO; Olden Polley IMtnel l.20, U O; SwlllllM Speclel IR&lol uo. St<Clfld r~ w.iltper CPI~ cey> 1.20, :s.11. t .'°; Vt .. r l&lt CMcMer..-1 J.oo. 2.ao; Sc rv1111r IM<C.rt'Olll t.a; Dellr OOllble CMI peldsuo. Tlllrcl rKe-f'leet of Ajl UkC:.· '°"' '"°· uo. 1AO; ~ u-IDlell SAi, UO; ~ F-(~ ceyl 3 00; Ueucte ''"" pelcl 120.00. F-'h r--.Anlt'-~ CC-petl 11.20, uo. 4 . .0; uvllll Affelr ITorol •.oo. J.•O; MeUI Angel C~IUO. Flftl\ r~t Otte ~I u.eo. uo. 4.AO; Oii A.,... CP1nur1 UO, t.IO; AJ'-ler IT-.. 1 UO; si ue<1e CUI peld ffl2.50. Sl•tlt r--"eclflc ._,, 1¥9NI u '°· 7.00, ...o. 1(1119 Stewfl (Plft-< •'1' 1 •.oo, J .I O; Et s w,reme lklteierl 1.40. SevenUI ,..,...._TlmtO.lltM IMoreMI "-AO. 1 .JO. UO; Het Loot IT ..... rt1I 14.AO, 1.'110; RMftl To Go IO>t-IUI; SJ•U<W IWI""' ..,. oo. El(IMll ~ T,,..... Cl'tft-ceyl t•.20, 1.00, SAO; Tut-IMcC.• ron> •.«1, UO; eeca er, But CToro1 . .... Nlntlt rec e -l"tettlmolle IMcHer9 .. 1 '·'°· J.00, t .IO; OICI GllMd l\lelenl\lel.ll UO. UO; Ftrtt Tlctrtt !Meriel J.00; U •..CU l._JI petCl'2AO. Att~14,6s. SKI MART'S 2ND ANNUAL SCOTT AUGUST 11, 12, 13 SALE OVER 1/• MILLION ~ DOLLARS OF SKI GOODSf ~~ U'~ HEXCEL · l ..... -CW&. Y PILOT Friday, Auguet 11, 197' SJJOl'(I on Telenlion Network Baseball Wan 8yllOWA&DSMJTll MlUor leque_ ........ b::'et>.tl. rktina the crat ol a ~ Muon, ii matlnc • pttei. f01t mon a · PolU.N and more dollan from tbe televWon networb. Tbe current al Ua NBC and ABC doeaa nm out wtll t1ae end ot next wuon bat bllMball. ltrik· ina wblle Uaa lM ~ la Mt. bat alNaQ lwDebed ==-· A.nnecf wttb ........ ln- CftUed --.raDH ud i10er' • ratt1)11. battbatl -wovld like notblq bettes'Ulan lo aet all three netWOl'b involved and edd more prime time uposure in lhe bar8•1D.. ~BC.-M'ftJltDAY aftelnooa aame ls •~eragiq a 7.4 ratin1- tbat A BC "nry dcflnJtely want.a to cont.lnUtl with tho Monday n1aht 1ame.•• ABC oftltllll are playlnt tt close to tbe vett. uylri1 It would not be Pl'OJ*' to talk about auch u tblnl whito n 1otlation• ur• un· derway. BUT A BELIABLE network 1ource-aay1 lb•' If Fred SUverman bad atayed at ABC,tbe • network would have dro.,..S bueball. Silverman ll JM>W presl· denl of NBC and bu ltept bis vlewa on baseball to hlmlelf of late. Villante, Bllked lf lt ls Polll- ble there will be oo prime time network baseball ln 1980. 1ald: 4t'• a possibtUty-but it aht'~ nabappen." Saturday afternoon telecasts. IUOh al PJOhlblUon qa.l.mt Carry· ln1 baci telec~ to home city of away tam. . . . not lnterested in Thunday nlaht or Sunday af\er- noon 11me1. CBS-VWANTE says CBS ls juat an lntereltedobserver attbis point but others say baseball of· fered CBS a Thursday night pactap but CBS declined .... mlpt consider picklq up a Sun· day aftemoan deal at bargain rate but, in all llkel~ CBS will not teaevtaebueball:in 1980. Baaeball'11tn1ngest cards are, of course, the World Series. playoffs and AO!atar Game. But ~one ol tbe ~elwork.S feel it is worth carrying prime time SPORTS TELEVISION I BASEB+Ll ,, Baseball Leaders SA~E!!! ~v.. II WET §UI J With Knee ~s s749s r e fl e c t1n1 percentage of TV )tomes - and 29 ab.a.re -pereentqe of set.a In use -tJlia eeason. That is up from 8.7 and rr last year at this time, an increase of games for thtee years just to get one s hot at the crown jewels. And at least t\t'o or them doubt the wisdom of car- r i o g prime time for a shot at the bigjies SuperBowlfi~~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiii~­ Reinatch about 10 percent. ABC's Monday night game is upfrom a 12.6rating and 23 &bare to 12.8 and 24. an in· crease of about two percent. Here's a rundown or where the networks stand at present: once every two years. A rematch of Super Bowl Xn between the DaUas COwboys and the Denver Broncos highlight this weekend's exhibition slate. But 'all is not rosy for the Na· tional Pastime Baseball, during the regular season. bas not been a success in prime time. Despite ABC's increased ratings on Mon· ~ay nlghts, baseball still drawt a considerably smaller aodhmce than footti811 Ana-Monday btght rema~e of.the two nights the network consistently losea to en- tertainrc, tt programming on the other networks. ABC -Definitely against any three-network situ~tion which would reduce their covering the World Series, playoffs and All- star Game to ona. every three years . . . . unllkllry to continue Monday night package as is .... may consider some Monday night games and some Sunday after. ALL OF ~WHICH makes for some difficult negotiating. The National Football League ex- tracted a remarkable four-year deal with the three networks last year for an estimated S65S million. Baseball cannot even dream of approaching that figure • and will.do well to keep from los· . ing primetiineexpe>s'W-e. The game will be played at the mile-high city or Denver and will be televised ·Saturday at noon onCbannel2. NflL • ........_Sc ...... T ...... Green S.y •I W11$1\lngta<1 s.tir&ty ·1100n games. ---· -Baseball:faced"Nith extensive local deals and ratings that are considerably less. than football, has its work cut out for it. It's not tbat football is a bettef sport than baseball. ~t.'.s juat that, as Qne net work observer summed up the TV sports audience, "in the mid· die of July, everyone's at the beach." g.11as at o.w.r 1"-t, a..nn.1 2) -• • This has prompted speculation i.bat ABC is considering dropping Monday night baseball. Tom Villante. baseball's executive director of broadcasting, insists NBC -Basically content with status quo but would be very un· happy with three-network situa- tion . . . . would consider pie ting up Monday night.package if ABC drops it, thus enabling them to re- turn to exclusivity, although Silverman may veto ideas . . . . looking to cut back restrictions on. * * * * * * A B C A nswers t he Bell NEW YORK <AP) -The ill-fated United States Boxing Championships Tournament shook ABC, but the network bas rolled with the punch and ls still very much involved in the fight game. ABC bas telecast 11 boxing shows this year, includin1 the Larry Holmes-Ken Nortoq heavyweight championship fight Jiane 9, and has shelled out more tban $5 million to televise the llubammad All-Leon Spinb rematetl Sept. 15 from ti. Superdome ln New Orleans. BUT 'IBERE'S NO doubt that the Don King-promoted tournament bad hangover effects. The tournament was dropped by ABC April 16, 1977, amid charges of kickbacks and phony records. Carlos Zarate, th~ World !loxing Councll bantamwei1bt champion from Mexico. fodgbt Emilio Hernan4ez of Ven~1aela on--tbe Bolmes-Nortqn card but the fight * * * s., ..... 11:15 a.m. C4) -BASEBALL - The Pittsburgh Pirates meet the Phillies in Philadelphia. Noon C2> -NFL FOOTBALL - The Dallas Cowboys meet the Denver Broncos in a rematch of Super Bowl XII. <JU -THIS WEEK IN BASEBALL 2 p.m. <4> -AAU JR. OLYMPICS -Cover8'e focuses on boxing, gym- nastics and track and field in acUon at Lincoln, Neb. 3 :30 p.m . (7) -NFL GREAT TEAMS, GREAT YEAU -A look back at the 1967 Green Bay Packers. 4:30 p .m . <7> -GREATEST SPORTS LEGENDS -A tribute to tennis great Rod Laver wbo rem· inisces with host Tom Seaver. 5 p.m. (7) -WIDE WORLD OF SP08TS -Coverage of the AAU swimming and diving cbam· pionsbips The diving was t,:ped at Mission Viejo 8 p.m. <S> -ANGELS BA8B8ALL -Tbe Angels meet the Mariners ln a game played at th: "K{nidome in Seattle. 11 p.m. (11) -NFL FOO'l'll.'.LL - The Loe Anaeles JlJms me-et the San Diego Charters -$D exhibition game at the Collaeum. Taped earlier in tboevenlQ8. . ' .. was not shown by ABC. "It was clear that the record we had been given for Zarate's opponent was erroneous and cast doubt on credentials as a championship oppo. nent,.. said Jim Spence, an ABC senior vice president, who ordered the fight taped and then. after a con· sultation with lloone Arledge, the network boss of news and sports. de· cided not to show it. Zarate won in four rounds. ..I DON'T KNOW if it's a hugover from the tournament," Spence said of ABC's apparent sensitivity to criticism about mismatches or fights that might appear to be mismatches. "It's an obligation we have. •'It certainly made us more cautious than before," said Spence. "But some of the concern we have now,_ we bad before the tournament." • ABC appointed an independent ln· vestigator to look into the tourna- ment scandal. He found no conduct that would warrant criminal prosecu- tion but. that the tournament should not be continued as it was structured. The public appears satisfied, or perhaps it never really cared. * •.. * s-.... 1J A.M <28> -TENNIS -Final round matches ln the 'Wendy's Tennis Classic at Dublin, Ohio. Noon (4) -TENNIS -Cllff Drysdale vs. Bjorn Borg ln a W<::r tournament of champions mat9h taped in Las Vegas. , 1 p.m. (2) -TENNIS -Coverage of the men•s singles final in the U.S. Clay Court championships at In· dianapolls. (4) -AAU JR. OLYM· PICS -Boxln}, gymnastics and track and field are featured. <11) - PAO SOCX:ER -Live coverage ol an NASL pl~off game. 1 :.30 'p .• m. <S> -,AN'G-ELS BASEMIL -The ~ take on the Mariners in Seattle. 3 p.m. (11) -NFL IOC)IQMLL - The San Diego Chargers meet the Rams in an exblbltioft game played Saturday night at tbe Collle\UD. 3 : ~ 9 -~-· _m . < 4 ) -G 0 L F mGBQGBTS -A review of the cur· rent PGA tour. lncludlDa tbe PGA cbam.piOnsbip. St. Louis., O!lcaoc> Miami •I'""-Orle.ns C~.tBuffalo hltlmore •t TanllN 80 0.trolt., CJftCl-1 New 'l'Ol'ltJetsat New York Giant•· Atl•ntaatPI~ Ml~•tlC-Clty SHttle at SM F-.nc:lsc.o N .. Enoianct at OHiand S... Oliegoat ._, 7 p.m ......,, PllllHeloN.I at Howton YOU GET MORE THAN 'tOUR MONEYS WORTH ATTOVOTA. ONE EXAMPLE ...... THE SR-5 LONG More buying powec That's what you get for ~r dollar when you buy a Toyota \>YOtas are well- equipped with standardfeatures like fully-transistorized lgrttion. electric fuel pump. power assist ted front disc brakes. end more Men comfort The comfort l'.)f·a ca~ not a truck. Standasct in every SA-5 Sport Truck. Plush car(>et· Ing, bud<et seats. AM/PM radio, and tinted.glass all add up to momc:otlfort than you expect or atruck. Men room. A cargo area CNer $eY9r1 feet long and an 1100.fb. paylQad prtMdes mom ttlafl ample room and ratings for most loads More fuel economy. The Toyota SR-5 Sport Trucks come standard with ~~overdrive t.ransmis.- sP, Yo 'help deliver more rni1es per •' i...gal!OO. In 1978 EPA t~tS. ttle SA-5 ' .. \'sport Trud<s were rated at28mpg hig~ 21 mpg city. These Cali- fornia EPA ratings are estimates. Your mileage will vary depending on your driving habits and your truck's condition and equipment. Mcnpc:M9C T<¥>(a trucks are mJSded b't the laJgeSt ~mldard displacement engine in their tjas.g. that produces m0re tot'q~ tflarl 8rf>/ other standard engine in Its class. BED SPORT TRUCK. More confldlnce. That's what we build fMJfY ~ R::>r more peaple discoYer why we can ~ ·u you can find a better built truck than • T~a ... bt'.ti it..'" And dlOfdEtld m:>m peopl&ae txt,1ng~ finding ou' that TOJOtas are built better than they thpught possible. More d*-&wen diffeltnt TOy'Ota truck models are ava1f.. able. Long beds. Sport trucJ<s. Nd a cab chassis. More tn.d<s ro c00ose fn:rn ttal 8nJ olher ~turer's line n our Class. Mdfttpiapletotll'ntca. The 'b,4ota dealer~ is com. pnsed t;i (1"3( 1,CXX> 98lvlce depart· ments.'When a TO'IQCa doeS need seMc8 ~can get the finest . • • • I • \ . ~ l~~tDE: •Intermission •Circus Reports ,. •Out 'n AboUt •Pop M•lc Review CJ ' Catalina Dead: Slow DOwn Island tours, snorkeling, fishing .entertain visitors who can't sit still l 91111r ... ...._ 'Y TROii ~ a.tween atore and th• small beaeb areu lJ 1 pier. •'Fllb.insSpokenHere"isprinledooontign j I l : l. f ! 1 l I I I . I I I • • .. ...., ._.... the wall where visitors percb to watcb otber vii· an4 Gukm means it. Q\delll tbe tey ~tor Catalina. Aton lt8ll by. "That'• one ol tbe belt tbiftCs to Ew.,la Oaamber of Oom"*'Ce people wlll do hue '' 1a;y1 Sheryl Waaner, adlatant tell 1ou. 1U you•re 'oot1na f« t1CUon. CatallDa manaser ol tbe Chamber of ColiuDerft, wW =nl 1Gll. ntere !mt isn't llQ1 here. Mo.t Ve Wcked ln bed by about 10 p.m.. BB• TINY Ol'ftCB pe1 cbel at the foot of aDd Uaat'a tbe way we like it." Pleasure Pier. It.a windowa dfer a vtew of the W8Y ftlSN DO aev~al thousand people ettb ewamer d'1 travel the 31 -1lea t4 the iaJ.ud b1 boat. plane and helicopter J"5t to "spend a few la:y houn in cramped Avalon. the main popal1Uoa eenter1 Kat.by Rich Uva on the island and worts in the •ialtor informaUon cent.er on main beach. Her explanation: ''Most people find that by the Ume they eet here, they're in kind ol a 'twiU1bt sone. • Bul once they get into town. they start to re las. "You almost have to slow down here." And slow down you do. After an hour of walkinc in the ooe-aquare- mUe of Avalon, you've seen about all there la to see. 1'llB PfEll WHERE many tours start, the main street. Scenic Terrace Drive on one end, Culno WtY on the other and Crescent Avenue alon8 the four blocks of "downtown." Strolling along those blocu is like walkina into• time-capsule of 1930's Hollywood. Swimwear shops. a cramped drugstore, an eatery or two and plenty of souvenir counters occupy stucco fronted stores whose pastel· .col· ora-are faded hy suo and salt wa~. ' "" I wall, beaches. a small harbor fUD ol boats and to the well, the famlllar Casino. Built ~ly-with 1amblilll in nllnd. the grand structure now houses a museum of Indlan artifacts found on the island <*"daily durtn1 summer>, an art gallery, a theater <movies dur· ing the day) and ballroom where Big Bands havebeenplayinglhissummer. The GJerµ1 MUler Orcbestra, directed by Jimmy Henderson, Is scheduled Sunday with Tracy Wells and '"nlat Blg Baud." the Jimmy Dorsey Orchestra and Freddy Martin in follow- ins weeks. NIGm'UFE IN CATAUNA is limited to a few bistros. Rock at Ute Chi Cbi f!ld Waikiki and jazz at the Hurricane. A gwtarlst.singer holds out at the El Galion, which serves fresh. local seafood. Students at John Davidson Sin1~r Summer Camp perform in Avalon Bowl at 2 and 4:30 p.m . Friday, Saturday and Sunday. Food is expensive because all must be. shipped by ber1e from the malnlamf Fishing is a good bet along .Catalina •1 shores. • Joe Guion operates Joe's Rent-a-Boat.on the Unlesa you have your own boat or plane, or IQlow so· meone who doee, 1ou'll bave to use commercial transport to cross the 26 miles to Catalina. Fortunately that are a lot of ways to get from Oraqe Cout to the lsle. Prom Oraqe County Airport, Trans Catalina Airlines rues Gnunman Mallard seaplanes several times per day. apluhlnl down near Pebble Beacb, a mlle from A•aloa. TBB AW.INE REPOllTS near-capacity hooJrln11. about 3,IOO pC'::/.en per moatb, because vacationers • like the quiet •a charms. 'lbe 11.ne also departs from Looi Beldl 1Dt4tnaaUooal aJid San Pedro Airport. An alrllle lpokespenon said many wbo IUffer bad cues of mal de mer on a bOat golna OY• choose to fly back. D.,.mtrea are from 19300 Ike Jones R09d, near the tower Oft the west aide ot the ~-ReMrvatJons at '161-1'00. 0 TBE&B'8 BEEN excellent flabina thls ftar," h)'I the robust Gtdoa. wbo's beeQ In buaineu on the island for $0 ye.,.. "k""1 broadbiU swordfish have been caught Just lately. It's a real dellcacy. •• he'Sllid. Some ol the teltaurants buy sport fishermen's catches to serve customers. Yellowtail. mostly 1S·20 pounds, but oc· casionti)y~~pounder.~re be1Q hauled tn and barracuda. bonita and white sea 'bass are being booked. IF YOU DON'T GO for bi& catches or you want to keep a youngster occupied, Guion will sell you a drop line for pier fllhi.Qg fOf' 75 cents. "Greatest baby~ter e.ver invented," be said. winking. He rent.a and sells tackle as well. He.'ll also rent you a boat: Paddleboards rent for $2 Per hour. $4 for a rowboat or ~for ::i sporty model power boat. Rates are lower for all day use. Tbe protected waters of the ocean off Avalon attract many fish, scuba di~l'S and snorklers. Up the pier from Joe Guion's place ls Catalina Divers Supply where Ma11i Koehler holds forth. A FEW DOLLARS will cover renting fins. mask and snorkle with which anyone can look o~er and attempt to <!atcfi the d<rcUe fish that· swtm through Avalon Bay's rocky J>ut· skirts. ''Give the underwater park a try," Maggi sugge8t.s to scuba divers. Located just off .. £uino Point. thia .area-is onb' abQut_ 60-feet· deep. but contains two shipwrecks. a kelp forest. underwater cliffs and pinnacles. a fish habitat and-an airplane. The plane ls an old movie prop, ''left over from an old Barnaby Jones fif.!,s;:!e·" she said. The area rs often used for un<terwater scenes. To rent scuba gear, divers must have valid certificates. Air refills are available. IF YOtJ 00 BY boat, Avalon Bay bas moor· ings for about S6 per night. Don't dump wastes, there's a ssoorane. Other water activltles include: -Tours in the glass·bottom boat At about $3.25 per adults. Sl.50 for children s to 11. About 40 minutes. -A coastal cruise of about 45 minutes where you may see seals frolic. Fare $3 for adults. Children S to 11, Sl.50. -FLYING FISH SOAR at night in spotlight.a shining from the flying fish trip boat. A one hour crulse after dart. throu&b Sep· tember. Tab 11 S3 adults. $1.50 children. G~ barnacles from all that sea ac· tlvtty? Plenty to see inland on the followfna. tours: -Scenic Terrace Drive. about an hour's trip to the bouae of the late cbewin1-gum •atnate WUUam Wrigley. former owner of mucb oldie island. Adult.a $3.50, children Sl.50. -CASINO TOUR. a 4S;mim1te walk through tbe land.mark at SZ.50 per adult. $1.50 tor children. . -Skyline Drive tour. about two b(Mlrs of wtndlng over rough interior roads of Catalina. a peek at preserved landlt and several rare forms of plantlif e. Fare. adulu $4.50, cbUdren sz.:;o. Land tours leave from Island. Plaza in cen· tral Ava.Jon. <It's impossible to miaS.) Sea tours leave from tile Pleaaure Pier. Times are posted since they may vary. BUT THERE'S MORJ: t.o Catalina than just Avalon. although day-visitors won't have enough time to Joolc it all over. / Catalina is pinched at one point into a nar· row isthmus less than half a mile wide. It forms two bays, the northern one is called Two Harbors. a favored yacht anchorage. Across the isthmus is Catalina Harbor. opening to the rough weather of the Pacific. Not mulh to do there. say the natives. that's why it 111 so pleasant. INLAND .. CATAUNA is very rugged ter· rain. Bicycles are forbidden past gates Just out ()f A valoa not for unfriendly reasons, explained Rose Ellen Potter of the Cat.aliaa Conservancy. but because most roada are loose sravel or sand. 7ry the underwaterrpark,, suggests diving {lnthusiast Maggi Koehler. Below a sp_0rtsfisherman sells 'his catch to islanq resident~ "We asked a pretty good cyclist to check out those roads one time to tell us whether bicycles would be all right." she said ''He came back mopping his brow at the curves and slipping-sliding surface. We decided to keep 1t closed.·· Not that you car. 't hike or cycle through the interior. she says, but you'll have to get <:. con· servancy permit at 206 Metropole Ave. The Conservancy. which took possession of 66 square miles of the island's total of 76 square miles in 19'15, keeps tight controls on use <and abuse> of the island. ONLY THREE campgrounds are available for overnight stays: Black Jack in the intenor ; (See CATAIJNA. Page C4> I • (2 DAILY PtLOT Daring Doesn't ................ ~.........,h a, '£Yl.~~sEIN / "I've beea lc#tn1 for ICllMlllt.t L could ~ -~ tbll Uamt u. ... wU&. WCMkl bppen to t.bem." Elvin Bale said, atandaftl next to bis so-called rocket car. Tb re •u only oae other penon ln the malD arena. No .. WU volunteerlftl. -Sale seta _ilbol rl'Oll' lhe1>1ue and WhJli ef)a· traption Dillllb. oftec three t1mel in one daJ. I ALL B& oa an,yoGe foolhardy moaata to t.ry il hH to do ii wttbst1nd 11 G forces, buneb bla i.ho-.tlden IO they and not bil neck IUDPOl't the wei1bt ol tbe bead and be wWiDI to aall Oft!' 100 feel tbroulh the air to a aafet.y net in which land Ina LI no easy t.ulr. tiale does the number in tbe grand ftnale of Ringling Brotbera and Barnum le Bailey Cireus at the Anaheim Convention Center throqb ~ay. • He also wa1b on a gyro._... u it aplnl 40 •above the fioorr And he Cltchee himself by tJt-heels OD a flytq trapue wttb no safety net ~i·m ~daredevil," Bale admitted. f/i.._ • A I ! · THE &OCKET CA& (actually it's ltJirauDcl was hls Idea. He constn.tcted the &}aiat "Wbirllng Wheel of Death." because "I ~ 10 think ol tbinas that are a bit dlff ere'2t. . ~bte ~armers try to please otber performers ·~n like to entertain the public." · • Andeotmalnbed~. _ _ . On-e· part of the glarif wheel act always tirlngs gasps from the audience -Bale's near fall while blindfolded. It's show bb. "I nearly did fall once,•• 1We said. But be w• able to grab the aide of the aplna1ng rfDi. '1Tbe audience loYed It." · • SO BALE TOLD wife Jeaneete Williams, "tlie audience ls blood-thirsty, I'll pnd.lee the fall." And now the near tumble to bard concrete is part ol the carefully planned routine. "It's all tlmlng," sild the Britlab-bom performer. And while the "fall'"off the wheel may be pretend, what be does on the trapeze isn't. It takes as Bale says, "a hell of a lot ot guts.·· Bale, now 32, practiced the stunnin.1 maneuver two years before performing. it before an audience. The act got him bis first Job with RBB&.B 10 yean ago. ' <See DA&BD~ Pace Cl) By Dl88JEWBJm.Ba Cllf .. OMIY ...... _.. Clowna bave always lntimidated cne. As a cblld. ttwy teared the Uvln1 kumquats out of me. You can Im= my dilemma when us eel lo join the Rlnlllnl Brctben and Bara.am • Balley Clrem' lauah eonttnaent. Wben lntroclDeed to Boss Clown S&eve ClllDI CreaM-pa lnt>, I was told tbe merrymakers were still 1ettln1 made up. COuld I walt20minutes? .. DON'T WANT TO put you out or anythlJll. I'll catch you next year," I wanted to aay, recalling the hives I always got play· lnl in nute recitals. But my kids were out there waltinl to see mommy be a clown, and I couldn't cblcken out that easily. Soon Marty came out and began putdng on my makeup. "So, tell me, have you always wanted to be a c&own?" "To tell you the truth. no," I answered. Pe laugbed anll explained that it was dif- fieult to do aDot.ber penM>n'• face. ''ALL THE UNE8 match the wrlak1es and lines in OW' faces," .he said as be carefully palitt~ black around the white browa and mo®' smoothed on with delicate flnlers. A fttJe red around the wldte @cl a bta red lip. r,anae ablrt, alant green bow tie. blue 4 plat , suspendered pants with match\ng two- ton jacket, a big red nose aud frlaht wig. Steve placed a bat on m1 bead to "tone Star Show • 1 'Old F mthful,' Due ~eteor showers happen dozens of times a year, but the one this weekend promises to be especially bright, said Stave Lattanzio, director of the Orange Coast College planetarium. "This will be the best shower of. the yearbecause the moon's position won't be bothering us," he explained. "What we'll be seeing is more than the usual share of rocks and flying gravel in the atmosphere in orbit around the sun." Lattanzio quickly added that this debris is traveling so fast that it burns up from friction and "we see the light that's left behind." For maximum viewing, he recom· mends going to where lt is as dark as possl· ble away from city lights, preferably after midnight ~en the front side of tbe earth will be in best position. Binoculars are helpful for a closer look. To find th' constellations Perseus and Cassiopeia.. look very hi&h in the sky, difectly overJlead slightly to the north. The shower will last for a few days but should be most \risible Saturday night. ·~ down the Ulr" and volla ! , a Bozo la born • By then t bad decided these clowns weren 'l ball bad after all. That left me free to ponder the people-packed Anaheim Convention Center. BUT NOl l'O& lonl. It was time fbr me lo do my ftnt routtnt. They broke me In easy. I walked out with a group and, OD alpal, dropped a banner. I never did 1ee wbat &he alto said. Probably "Thia Clown ls a Jerk." Then the leader and I cased the Joiat to find my cb.i)dren. 5pott1ne them, l multered up all the buffoon in me and ran up to them. Slr-ymr-old Lori 1hoo1ht I was~· JW, 2, bad another reactJon. Her eyes bulaed out in tem:JI' aa sbe let out a blood-curdJ.in& scream. aEMOVING MY nose and reassuring, "It's Mommy," didn't seem to appease ber a8 · she cried to Grandma, "I want to to home.'' Next duty: Distract the crowd as the circus folk set up for the wild animal act. The clown "band," with a maraca-playing interloper, marched into the ring. In the center, a clown was proudly displaying some balloons. Just then this creepy UtUe clown ran up and started breaking the balloons. A scuffle foil owed and the little clown punched the bil one. I THAT WAS OU& cue to all fall down. Un- fortunately1 I forgot. My pratfall came after eve)'yone eJ.Se was fiat on their backs. If I bad doabt•· about my comical ,..~, .. ·.·-:.·::.: • CIRCUS REPORTS " capabilities. my next routine clinched them. My "buddy" held a wedge of watermelon. rubbing his tummy as he got ready to chomp down. Tugging at his sleeve. I belled tor a bite. Disgustedly be rolled his eyes to the sky and handed me the ~it. • I opened wide and at the same time squeezed. my hidden squirt bottle. THE WATER WAS s upposed to bit somebody 1n the face. mald.ne him mad and , everyone else laugh. The wa~ did bit the guy ln the front row. On the shoe. Two more tries did not improve my aim. No one was wet bul me. "Don't worry. you weT•reallycute." my "buddY' con*oled Thank God It's over . f thought to myself as we beaded back to clown alley. Just then an out-of·breath clown ran up to me. "Some guy just ran off with your wallet! I tried to catch him but~ . . " DE EXTENDED WS leg, displaying 2-by- 2.foot shoes. <I could imagine how they slowed him down.> Thieves plague circus folk. But the cloW1ls were upset that it happened lo me. a guest. ''Son of a bitch.'' the Boss Clown's wife swore. Somehow, bearing that from a 4-foot·9 lad~ with orange hair, a blue nose and giant feeT and seeing frowns under the painted smiles of the similarly attired laugh brigade. the loss of my wallet dtdn 't bother me a bit. WOULD I DO it again? Hey c.lowns, I'll practice sqwrtin1 a botile if you'll give me another crack at it next year. CATALINA SEAPLANES. ORANGE COUNTY AIRPORT ~~T~ANSCATAUNA AIRLINES Red Ill to Palllartno ·Nm to c.c-ol 1' OMI' W.Slde f 714t752·1600 c 213t420·2"4 I ... ... .... . . . OUT 'N' ABOUT Frldmy, August 11. 1978 OAIL Y PILOT C3 4 Guys From Texas Round Up Barbecue Fans Barbecue cootery, wh~r on the backyard t>•lio, al ptcnlc 1rounds or In a ""taurant, au1 p"Sts lood eat.tni and casual tun. So we were h1tppy to flnd a pl1C4 lbe other nlshl w~re that suc~atlon was fUUy reallied Thia much-lo·recommend-1t dlnln1 establishment a relatively recent arrival In our mids\ -Is the oddly-named 4 Guys From Texa1. a barbecue 1pet-ialty house located on Briatol Street In Sant1t Ana. just over the border from Costa Mesa. Not too aurpriain1ly. there's a dedded!Y. western cut to 4 Guys Barbec.'ued meat, alter all, Is aa synonymous with the American Weal as cowboys and Indians. Out .N About Norman Stanley The word "barbecue" (just for the record > is derived from the Spanish word "barbacoa." meanmg "a frame made or sticks," on which meat was set for roas ting . I ' The meat Itself can lake the form of a whole animal, large or small, such as an ox or a pig, a fowl or a fish. lt can also be cuts or any or these. The approach at 4 Guys, let it be known. Is strictly open-pit western barbecue. And the houte a~laltles are barbecued beef and spare rib•. pork. beef. ham, chicken and hamburgers. WlUl a d\olce of two dinl.nl areas, this time of year you may prefer aeattna on the complete- ly acret!Jled, bealed·ir-neceaaary. outdoor patio. But from aoveral vantaae point.a ln tbe inside dlnlna room, where decor and atmosphere come off 1omethlns like a mountain lod1e. you can 1e_, tbe meat 1lowly turnina above oran1e or oakwood nr ln tbe pita. THE aESTAUaANT 18 the brain-child of a truly lnumaUonal restaura~. German-born Hont QUeal. 5topl on the road from Hambur1 to Santa Ana lnclude Zurlcb1s Ennltace, the Heeler ln Rome, top-notch hotels ill Acapulco. Bermuda and Jamaica, lbe Ambassador Hotel in Loa Anselea and the Newport Beach Yacht Club. Horst's decision to ron~e continental cuialne ln favor or open-pit barbecue~ was prompted by a desire to establish his own operation with a down-to-earth specialty. As for the offbeat moniker. Horst says two of his three financial backers are actually rrom Texas so he and the other guy -for purposes of a catchy, western-sounding name -duly declared themselves natives or the Lone Star stale too. The first plus to surface during our dinner was the quality of the meat. Tbe tender and meaty beef ribs. for example, readily confirmed llorst's declaration that he buys only steer ribs. Along with the quality, however. quan- tity. flavor and price have to rate as equally im· Portent conaideraUons. The portions seemed gargantuan to me so I advise worklng up a heavy-duty appetite In advance or ordering anything caa we dld> along lines or the dinner "feast." Thla $5.95 combination plate netted the works. ao to speak: bai:becued beef and spare ribs, pork, beef, ham and chicken. But a sizable meal didn't atop there. Our table was further laden with tbe dishes that accompany all en- trees: French fries, cole slaw, bread, fruit, barbecued beans and a com cobette. Tbe ultimate suecess of any barbecued d9eat depends in large measure. naturally, on the merit of the sauce. Horst has a triumph on several counts. The quantity of sauce used in cooking the meat, as weU as that applied to the finished product. seems just right here: it's neither too lit· tie nor, as happens in so many barbecue opera· tions. too much. ALSO, ITS SUPERB flavoT lingered long after the meal, a pleasant sensation that can be prolonged even further by purchasing a bottle to take home. To cite but a few or the mouth-watering and reasonably-priced entrees I all served wtth the aforementioned side dishes> there's the barbecued chicken and spare ribs or beef ribs combo plates, $3.65 each; barbecued pork, ham or one-half chicken, S2.9S each; barbecued spare ribs. rour for $3.95 or six for SS.35. 4 Guys From Texas. located at 2510 S. Bristol, between Warner and Segerstrom, ta open seven days a week from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. Telephone: 979·4941. * *. TQERE ARE PEOPLE out there, I'm told, seeking at least an hour or two of relief fro~ today's ubiquitous disco. And the Airporter Inn, I'm intonned, feels It has come up with a han· dy-dandy alternative. To aet us up for a few quiet and soft mo- ments, the Inn has just Introduced nightly cocktail dancing, Tuesday through Friday from 5 to 8 p.m . The setting Is the relaxed and low- key Cabaret lounge adjacent to the Mediterra- nean dining room. The group providing the dance tunes old and new -top 40. standards. ballads~ soft rock. -is the Charmers. BACKING PERT AND soothing vocalist . Doris Tamburri are Gregg McQuade, who ex- hibits his multiple talents on the organ, piano, synthesizer and string machine, drummer David Haney and Gary Wilson. bass guitar. The Airporter Inn. open dally for breakfast, lunch and dinner. is located at 18700 MacArthur Blvd .. directly opposite Orange County Airport, Telephone: 833-2770. DAREDEVIL COUNTS ON TIMING. • • <i'rom Page CZ> And although the daredevil la_k~ some physical abuse in the ''Luman cannonball" act, he calls the trapeze number most dangerous. He \apes his ankles and the back of bis heels with four to five layers of adhesive to ease the pressure on his already calloused heels. He wears a specially designl!d corset beneath his white uniform for the rocket shot. .. WREN I FIRST started the blast off, I was blacking out and had back pains," Bale said. "A specialist told me if I kept doing the act without some support I would weaken my spine and break my back. I searched hospital supply stores to fllld something to keep my bones together and finally had the corset made." Even so, Bale takes a lot of abuse when be lands in the safety net 104 feel from the spot where hydraulic pressure, 1,400 pounds per square inch, has propelled him into the air. • -Monday thru Thursday Specblla (Friday, Saturday. Sunday 'til 6 p.m.) except llohoays Red Snapper ............... 4.45 Mahl Mahl ................. 4.75 Grtlled Sea eaaa ............ 4. 75 Fllet of Sole ................ 4.95 Top Sirloin Steak ........... 4.95 Lobster Tall ................ 6.95 Steak & Lobster ............ 7 .95 Plus Fresh Fish. Other Seafood and Steaks IAWI aear-oi 16278PAClflCCOASTHWY •HUNTINGT~ 8CH •(2131592-1321 l901 E. COAST HWY • CORONA DEL MAR • (714) 675-0900 a -Friday & &maday Night Spedal 2 Prime JtilJ Dlnners-$13.951 The flight takes only two seconds and Bale says, "People don't realize the second I leave the capsule J:tn alr~ady .slowin1 down." "It's been said I'm going 90 mph but actual- ly it's more like 50 or 55," said Bale, a lean 155 pounds, S-feet-8. He counts the first time be tried the car and when he performed bis trapeze act 100 feet above a crowd in Quebec as his "scariest" mo- ments. Opening night at Anaheim Aug. 3 was a bit unnerving. Earlier that day a toothed-safety device built on the car to catch the launcher in case of malfunction was tom up when it failed to work. A LAUNalED DUMMY hit the edge of the safety net at the oOler end of the arena and was tom to pieces, according to Bale. He's been doing the act since without the safety but admits he Is "going to have to figure something out soon.'' CIRCUS BALES OF FUN -The Bale fami- ly. Elvin, wife Jeanette Williams who has Oelty ...... SUff ...... ~ Jeopard -horses act and daughter Carolyn "Pinky" Bale, 10. with Onyx. AND SOCIETY FOR THE PRESERVATION OF BIO BANDS TWO COMPL~TE SHOWS S.turdsy end Sund.y NEW YORK STEAK DINNER Futurfng CAESAR SALAD and PEAR SWISS For ....... u .......... . cfiirpor.ter qnn Wotel Proudly Introduces COCKTAIL DANCING IN THI CAIARET Served With Your Choice Of Soup or Salad. Potato or Rice, Fresh Vegetables and home-style San Franciscan Bread •• • • • • • .S69S Offer Good ThfU August 17. 1978 I JACI KNAPP IS IACI AT THE PIANO lil MIGHTI. Y I 1617 WESTCLIFF DR. (Between Dover & lrvlf'le) NEWPORT BEACH Closed Sunday• Call For Our Daily Luncheon Specials Reservations Suggested 645-5222 • *1 MllCArthur Blvd, • Newport IMCh • 540-2471 • OM.YPILOT ,r1dmy, Augt.alt 11 , 1171 '"'~°"" SUNDAY BRUNCH ...... 11:00 ··"'· "Claule Q .. ,eh." Room for More Jazz "00.bl# Wo/lf.." "Bgg1 8cudleuu." "Crab ""'~ .. Oltd.,. "*'°' "Cllar141• Dile._. Mu.d OCC's Stan Kenton Clinic Opens Sonday Gnu .. ~ coas· ..a.y a. ...... °'" o.llJ' 1o.a CROWN HOUSE RESTAURANT' ... CQMTtnn'. LAOUMA MOUl1. llolCO-............. Althouah the aMual Stan Ken· ton aummer Jan cUnlc at Oran1• Coast Collete officially bof ln1 Sur1daY nlaht there are all l enrollment openings, ac· cord Int toa clinic apokesperson. The Kenton on:hestra opens the cUnic with an 8:30 p.m. con· cert Sunday al t h e OCC Auditorium on the Costa Mesa campt.11, 2701 Falrvtew Road. DAILY CLASSES are scheduled Monday tbroueb Fri· day, Aug. 18 from 8 a.m. to 6 p m in the Fine Arts building on campus. Faculty will be com- posed of jazz music teachers from throughout the-nation and 19 members of the Kenton or- chestra. STAN KENTON TO SPEND WEEK ATOCC IVY HOUSE RESTAURANT mittedifttley show a wrttten rec- ommendation from band diree- tors. College, military or pro- fessional musicians over 18 need not submit a recommendation. of the Ftne Arts buildine. ln-formatioo556-5629. Among courses offered are concepts of jau. rehearsal techniques and jazz theory. There will also be instruction in vocal jazz, improvisation and jazz piano. STUDENT TUITION is SlOO for the week. Tuition for music educators is $85. The clinic will close with a 7:30 p.m. coocert Aug. 18 featur· ing junior high, high school. col- lege and adult musicians. The Kenton orchestra wilJ conclude the festivities with a 45·minute mini-concert. Students l3 years or older with ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~! a minimum of one year study on .;;: their Instruments will be ad- Monday registration is availa- ble by going to the music office Ticketa for Sunday's concert are SS and $3 for the Aug. 18 performance. ~All Y-OlJR~-­ FAVORITE ·coMIC STRIPS WCoed On Stage STOCKTON ...:.._ Peggy We lton of Fountain Valley ls among the · Uni v ersity of the P~cific's 19·member company that is staging dramas in the California Mother Lode this Jwn· mer at the historic Fallon House Theatre in COiumbia State Park. ~.- 64Z·43ZI DAILY PILOT llA llA IEI 1~~1 NOW Pf.AYINQ TUesdllY tllru Sunday Tues. "Special" -$11.00 wed., Tl'IU"·· Sun. -Sl•.oo Fri. -S16.00 S.t. -11 7 .00 lncludH Dinner, Show, Tax 6 • CoffM ..., ..... c.-w •ant .. ... •• '.. ..,..no Plluan'$- AT FUNTASTIC STAR OF STAGE A ICREEN MARTHA RAYE ·-. "YANKEES' A WINNER ... Tom Titus Diiiy Pilot . "DAMN YANKEES' SUCCEEDS AS FINE ENTERTAINMENT". Karl Wray Anaheim &lletln --·--'~a .... NOWll'LAYINQ yanli•••// TuetdlY• tnN sunaavs _...,:-... .. Tuea .. W.CS., Tl'lurs.. $Un. EVe. • •14.00 =-=-------Fri •• •ia.oo. Slit.. •11.00 STAIUUNQ Sun. ~undl MAU,_ AOutts. •11.00 CMdfWI -aa.oo BRIAN AVERY lneludal Dinner. sttow. Tu • COffM Al 1,0C HA"OY 1 HOTEL WAY, ANAHEIM· CAcra.FromDilntylendl I',... Page CJ CATALINA •• Little Harbor 011 the western side of the coast and Little Fisherman near Two Harbors. The first two charge S3 permit fees for adults, chilck:en A tents and _group rates ol about S2. llttle Fisherman is privately owned with slightly higher adult fees, children at Sl:SO pernl~~~ Hi · permits are free. For the less ruaged, there are about two dozen hotels In Avalon, renting for $20 to S60 per night. double occupancy. CONDOMINIUMS RENT at prices starting from about $325 per week. The chamber's Wagner said summer is the big season for 1,600 or so islanders who live there year round but reliable transportation by boat, plane and helicopter has prompted a three-year effort to stretch the season. If you've gotten the Idea that doing prac- tically anything on Catalina ls fairly expensive. you're right, explains Ms. Wagner. but re- member that Islanders have to make it pay while the sun shines. "Tourism is all there is here,'• she says, "You have to li'Ve all yeaf on what you make during the summer . "And don't forget, It costs an islander as much to ~Y food as it does toarists ... THE SEASON RAS stretched Into Sep- tember and October. s he said, but they hope more people will check out the island during winter and early spring, times when it becomes quiet and homey with lots of community ac- tivity. • Finding out anything you want to know about the island is easy, she says," just dial area code213, lben five-ten-fift.een·twenty." That number, (213) 510-1520, reaches her of· rice and all calls will be referred to the correct agency or service. "We call It the 'one call does it all" number." Tim §AJLM(Q)N JlUVJER * E: X;P E 0 .('lfl( O l'f WNCtl DINNER COCKTAILS DANCING AJ'l"lleMl•lla...,.WfC:m• c.r..o of •rsta aw__. HDtlligl•.._. 146-Htl (JACK ANDEISON) REVEALS In the DAILY PILOT Fust, you'll enjoy a marvelous soup du jour or aispy tossed green salad Then we proudly serve you a generous · portion of suCculent Prime Rib, the king of beef, plus a piping hot &aked potato with all the trimmings, fresh sour· dough bread and buttes: For the finishing touch, it's coffee or tea and a tantalizing dessert.~ this for only $5.95. llondaJ-....._ I to 7:00 Pll. liind&J 4 to 8:00 Pll. ~BrOWns Cl .. and the MUSIC I TRAVEL P-------------.. I ~ Chinese CUisine 1 I /?Jr' ORJENTALCOCKTAILLOUNGE I B Featuring Tropical DrinJls I I AMBOI SPICW.FOITHI I I ?EIR&CE MOM'IHOISAU.UST I I ff. ,~ ~~-=-. I I D.._.,_,.._. ..... I I.I ..,...,......., I Ii] "-.. ,.,. -..., ....... orllt ..... I .. ......., Clllld9! • .......... -- -I . -~~--.--~ ... I \ -·--OO!ll.-1 ""''"'_..... I Oorft'--• I ~ · ~ ""'cJ.:... "'=-ldd I I .. . Good""""-"',, •m I a_!S3 EAST lTrH .. COSTA MESA 64S.SMQ. llll ---------------- .... H.Jahesl Quality Native Mexican Foods OpenT Daya AU SPORTS EVENTS GIANT 7 FOOT TV SCREEN Mon.-Tiu. I 1:30 o.m. to 10 p.m. Fri. & Sot. 11 :~ o.m. to 11 p.m. COCKT Al LS ~illdoy 4 p.m. to 10 p.m. 9093 E. ADAMS. HUNTINGTON BEACH 962-791 l , · 1 .. . . fNTERMISSION Real Cantonese f aod ... ht,. ... t•k• home STAG CHIESE CASINO 111 !lat Pt., Newpitrt ~ ORlole ).f5'G ..._ .. Mt•l-t .,.,._Wla, .. • u.tU I :00 e.-. ·-·-, .. .....-..... .. . .. . . ,. . ,. Fridlly, August 11. 1978 New Group Sets 4 Plays . Newport Barbor Theater Taha Plunge After 1tlcklnt1 a toe tentatively in the water l11t aeaaon, the Newport Harbor Community Theater la ready tor the bic plun1e with a full achedul of four pri>ductlons planned for the 19'78·79 aeuon. · Cordio as the bulldin1 superintendent, Lee Childress as the woman across the hall, and Sue Todd and Bruce Mcindoe as two other apart- ment hunters . DAILY PILOT C5 -................ .,, The newest non-profeaalonal eroclucina group on tho Orante Coast will start orf the year by. exhu.minc a cluslc melodrama that has been chUUn1 audiences both on and off Broadway this year. Entitled "Count Dracula," 1t'a Ted Tiller' a:;xtatlon of the original story by Bram Stoker, will aniveJua lnJ,irne-lor Halloween on Oct. 20. "6 Rms Riv Vu" will open Sept. 8 for three weekends in the little theater at Mission Viejo High School with an 8 p.m. curtain. The Sad- dleback group bas expanded its schedule from two weekends to three this year. f ~ 411rd eM'enu t t SERVED DAILY UNTIL 7-00 P. M. t tEXCO'T 8ATUIU)AY} t A. MllUMI' Tl "-1rllttA and !>C,AMl (,HICl([N t 4 Poll•t• DIM~·~ C"Oftll><na11on ol ma11r1a1.x1 cll·~•en .na lht.mp ••l'TIP"'" 54.95 t II TLM,URA ..,r MOOD DINNER t e..uetlly .n"mp and htet ot •ole Oil>C)ed in • baller 11ne1 deep-lr1ed t to • golden perte~t•on S..1 'l'i t C YAKI NIKlJ Thin sll<"es ot bHf t prooared 111111h onion S'ly i,,,.., t .in<i so" n cond•menl$ SJ.9'i 0 "TCAK HRIYAKI t Cho1ce11 bMf ~n·hc ..... 11·1 tlfo1led t 10 please ye1• .. c11crtmona11ng taste S4.95 t "irainiftt1i t f find Us on the North Side of t f Fashion Island, Newport Center t t Reservations honored: 644·4811 a,. SPECIAL ARRANGEMENTS FOR YOUR PARTIES ~--· -·N·d··· ·-• COUPO~ ............................ • • :ww~l? 'Tl-!~~T: i U'T 4Ul:4~T . ............................... NOW PLAYING SOllpS • Salads Dell SmdwldleS Desserts • le~«ages w1.&1eer ADDED A TIRACTION Al tf• Hol)-wood A .. a 1plll1rt 0,.. .._.Sat 11 CUL to I ...... 20!~eo2FF 3i:J'i£• Good Thru Aug. 31. 1978 1000 Mortt. lrhtat Stn.t MIWPOllT llACH 911o0114 PUBLICK NOTICE Now Appearing 1N THE LOUNGE lice Griffin Thursday 7:00 PM-Midnight Friday & Saturday 8:00 PM-12:30 AM ~ :ftoamURANT Costa Mesa 2300 Harbor Blvd., 540-8535 . Another timely ahow wlll be Charles Dickens' "Scroote." bowing in on Dec. 1. The Oran~f:'°'ty premiere of Jules Feiffer's com-..ed)' '• M~' auivea bh. 216,-while tbaseasoa. wlU wind up in March with the Gilbert and Sullivan musical ''HMS Pinafore." The productions will be staged in the lntermissioQ Tom Titus Newport Beach Theater Arts Center, 2501 Cliff Drive, where the group presented "A Ma1dor All Seasons" last season. Season tickets are available. and those desiring further-informa- tion should write to the group at Box 157, Balboa Island 92662. or call 646·1535. • TWO DIRECTORS WITH South Coast theater groups who have beconfe virtually synonymous with their respective organizations will "trade theaters" for the opening produc- tions of the 1978-79 season. • BJ?n Jutzi. who's one of the driving forces with the Saddle back Valley Community -Theater. -8ftd Jee~Applegett. ditto -with the San Clemente Community Theater. will be directing at each other's stamping grounds in September. Mlss Applegett will put on "6 Rms Riv Vu" at Sadclleback. while Jutzi will stage Orange County's first look at Mission Viejo playwright J ack Sharkey's "Saving Grace·· in San Clemente. THE LEADING ROLES of the married Cbut not to each other) folks who share an evening in an empty apartment in ''6 Rms" will be played by Noreen Farley and Benny Goodman. Miss Farley excelled in SJiddleback's "Busybody" last season, while Goodman played the captive priest in "Don't Drink the Water" for the same group. Rounding out the cast are Dick Vara and Linda Aldrich as their respective spouses, Joe GENUINE CHINESE MANDARIN DISHES Specializing In Chinese A Lo C.Orte Dishes 202J H.tMr lfyd. LUNCH•OINNER DAILY Food To Take Out 11.30 A.M. to 10 P.M. COSTAMISA 642-7162 e.631-9911 ~~~~ you to eTl]oy a superlative gourmet ex- perience. where crystal chandelier s. velvet seats and lush greenery provide an elegant and intimate setting for a superb /we-course feast. Service from6:30 p.m. Tuesday thru Sunday Enjoy Sunday Brunch from 11 :00 a m. In Our Outdoor Gartkn Court I~ Resenxulons augg~•ted _A ~.... 2640 E. Co••t Hlghw•y =~ r1 ons1e1etM,..rNMt~1 , , ~.. Coron• del M•r 840-7092 ~ SADDLEBACK PLAZA El Toro At Rockfleld El Toro ~1-5880 2:U Walt Dl1nef1 "HOT LEAD AND COLO FEET" ,. ... """'~ ~ ... ,..... ... AT SAN CLEMENTE, Jutzi bas cast Christina Nicholls in tbe tiUe .role oL "Saving Grace,·· with John Greensladeasberboss. Others in the cast of the comedy are Richard Gunst. re- turning t.o communitf theater after a lengthy absence; MargieScbwab, andBobStevens. "Saving Gr~ce" will open Sept. 14-for a four-weekend, 12-performance run at the Cabrillo Playhouse. 202 Avenida Cabrillo. San Clemente. • CALLBOARD -Auditions for tbe Neil Simon comedy "God's Favorite·· have been an· nounced by Sondra Evans, who will 4irect the show for the Garden Grove Community"Tbeater . . . tryouts are scheduled for Sunday from 2 to 6 p.m. and Monday from 7 t.o 10 p.m. at Lake School. 19801 Orangewood Ave. . . . the show will open in October . . . Global Flavor Seacliff Village Shopping Center in Hqnt- ington Beach will take on a global flavor Satur· day when International Musicale ls presented there rrom 11 a.m. t.o 8 p.m . Among events scheduled are Ba,y~an danc- ers backed by a German band: Swedish Dance Club of Los Angeles: Flamenco dancers and guitarists; a folk dancing group. Greek Island· en ; ~.Greek BC>ttzouki &aod -and--Balld Folklorico. Calllomia Dance from a Seaclif( Village -dance studio will initiate the festiviUes. The group will represent the United States and do the latest in disco dancing. The shopping center is on Yorktown Avenue between Main and Goldenwest streets . YOUR DAILY PILOT CAN BE RECYCLED! Or•nge CoHt College e>per•te• the offlel•I recycling center for Coeta Men. '----------------------------------- 'Kotter' C'onaing Known as the wise-cracking· high school teacher Gabe Kotter on the ABC hit series; Gabriel Kaplan will perform at Knott·s Berry Farm Aug. 15-20 as a stand-up comic, which was his first job in show business. Tues day through Thursday and Sunday s hows will be at 7:30 and 9:30 p.m. On F ri· day a nd Saturday. he will add a 10:30 p.m: show. JOHN ftAYOUA "GllASI" IPGI .. POUL PLAY-ll'GI INCSACAll WALT DISNEY PRODUCTIONS' amf fl.@'ND IB ~~ · .... ,. • ,. • ·. I f CAILV PILOT Friday. Augutt 11. 1918 ·Rock Albums Fade, Talents Don't Legend. of Beat/a, Herulrix Maintained 91 MICllA~L PASICEVIQI ... ii ............... Th• coven are tadt'd and tattef'ed: lht ,... rda Inside virtually totaled by Innumerable laya on a lurntabl~ that featured a tone arm • welJbted down b.)' .i short 1tack ol pennJea. But wbo would d iiN think ol dwnpln• thole i luatcs by°'' Beatles and Jlml Hendrix? EVEN TODAY. TUE anfluence ol two ot rock'• moat aianltlcant contributors baa .dlmlnlahed OGl1 aUablly. The lanpad of the material, 80CDe ol It more than a decade old, baa yet to be challented to any aubatandal . delree by toct_,·, rock Idols · Wbldt brlnp us to a brief look at a pair ol new double-set albums tt\at. in difterent faablona and with mixed results. maintain the le1enda -• 'Tbe Essential Jlml Hendrix," Wan er en.. (2RS 224~) and ~ IOUQdt.rack from "Set. Pepper's Lonely Heart.I Club Band," RSO (J\S.Z.UOO>. In the el&ht years lhat have passed since Hendrix's untimely death. there has been a stream of re-released material, lnclud1na two albums lhal lamentably cashed in through the use of studio clones playing back up to un· completed Hendrix tapes. WHILE mE "ESSENTIAL" HendrU pro- vides only a alimpse of his unparalleled aultar talents, it ls authentic and well-organised, trac- ing bis career from the "Purple Hue" era to tunes on bis flnal studio album, "War Heroes" in 1972. The major hits ure here, ot course, but supervisor Alan Douglas deserves credit for bis well-thought inclusion of lesser known ballads like "Drift.ine" and the poignant .. Castles Made OfSand.'' As an added bonus. particularly to YoUDI guitarists• seeking technical information on Jimi's awesome use of distortion and fuu tone effects, Don Menn of Guitar Player Magazine supplies in-depth liner notes. In brief. a worthy testimony to rock's greatest-siJl.lle artist; b-ar 1none. ) .. SGT. PEPPE&" BKPLOYS the services ~f Peter Frampton, the Bee ~ Steve Martin 1..nd a&nybody who's onybody these days in cover versions o/ 17 vlntaae Bealle aonaa datlna back lo 1987. On thu plu11 aide. former BeaUea' producer <.:eorae Murtln doesn't stny far trom the ar· ran41ment.a und Intent of the ortatnals. But that 1 obout 1.18 ftAr aa lt 1oea unle11 one con· a1lder1 u new aieneration of younaer fana whose collccllona urti minua any work by Len· non/McCartney Frampton'• vocal Umltatlons, lntelHaenUy dlafulled on hit own albums, are obvloua on a cautious "Lons And Wtndin1 Road.•· THI: BB8 OSE8 and Earth Wtnd and JPtre ldlaco "Got To Get You In To My Llfe'') tare somewhat better but onJy Aerotrnith's snarlin1 "Come Together" add.a any real eneru to thl1 commercial venture. Fttting1y, Aerosmlth's cameo role 1n the film as the evil music counterparts of Frampton and the Bee Gees, ls one ol the movie's few pleasurable momenta. l found myself rooUna lor them against the forces ot nuff. NOW LET'S HEAR IT FOR" JAZZ PIGS''! Some of the Orunge Coast's tlnesl mual · clans 1alhered under this stranae loao Tuesday night for u pair of ecstatically received <and un· publicized> sets ut the Golden Bear in Hunt· ington Beach. Not much Juz in evidence but the Pigs tore the place apart witb classic rockers, Including, to prove a point about 1reat music never dylna. Jlml Hendrix's "Llttle Wing" and "Fire" and some early Cream. SPACE AND MEMORY excludes listing the individual porkers who took part., but think of. local musicians who played with Honk, The Funky· Kings or are now associated with Storyville, Local Talent and Kenny Loggin's band and many or their identities should become clear. A joyous reunion, timed perfectly to go with a 25th birthday celebration for co-owner Cbuck Babiracki. It should be noted that his gifts did not include an air conditioner tor the Bear which doubles as a sauna during summer rpontbs. ··E881NTIAL' ARTllTRY "'-RV!D Rock'• •Qreetett' Jlmf Hendrix . LONG BEACH/CATALINA CRUISES 00 THIS wtEl<I 11Mt11 • '32-4121 • (7f4) 521·7111 Call U2-H71. Put• , .. word• lo work for ou. lnth• DAILY PILOT NOW PLAYING TOGETHER AT EDWARDS .,. ~ n.Art qCnlt• ~ rt *• I ~~:" 4' .... ,, Ulna ~ . ,.{: J " Aaa.rJ . ''· ~ ... 1"9 ........... •• ~ I• ........ te ' •M•llH ~~ YOUR DAILY PILOT CAN BE RECYCLED' Qange Coast College Ol)erates me official center for Costa Mesa 556-5981 IHI Ci8Uilll lllJNlllMl -·All~I # ' A BUHJ HfYNOlDS·lAWRfNCl GORDON Prtrdltion BUlff RlYNOlDS ~ IOIW Ala Stmlf JAN-MreHAil ~NCOO • SAllY RHO · BRIAN KHIH · ROBlRl KlDN r laatiw Prlta lAWIWCI GORDON· hf~ WAll 111 a WAlIIR S. HlRNOON J j~ ..., ~ ---• llll lllY .,..~ ILll lllllAN ..w 1.m ·-.:~o , After httdl~. Erk• got to know some pretty Interesting people.- lndudlng htt5eif. w0 man ,..'-_ ... ,,.,.,_ ~MAZLml(Y'S AN UNMARR.lf.D WOMAN llll ClAYIURGH Al.AN BATES MICHAl.l MUIPffY Wff GOaMAN _.., ___ '°""_ ,,... ___ ..,_ llMlUIMC\' -.... <Olll ,... ..................... (_..,. .. .__ ... __ _ CINEMA CENTER HARIOUT ADAMS. COSTA MESA MES.+. VERDECENTER 979-4141,J POP MUSIC REVIEW ••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••• :• • • CLong BeacJi • ·=· :i GvicCLigJit Oper/J :: :: PRESENTS: $Jl1Nb :: •• tltrJ'tC •• •• lJl.O •• ~ :: OJl.·fiJ~fc AUG 18 • :: \ •. ~llUP' SEPT 10 •• ee LIVE ON STAGE ee •• • • ee FOUR GREAT WEEKENDS.... ee ••Ticket Office: •• •• •• •• s1a E. Fourth St. Long Beach•• •• Tickets:$2.00-$7.60 ::- perform1nce1 at JORDAN THEATRE ee 6500 Atl1nt1c Awe. Long Be1ch :: FR I. & SAT. EVES at8:30 P.m. .. SUN. MAT. at 2:00 p,m. .. • :: ·~·•OR PHONE: 432-7926 e •e . ............ ··.~· ••••••••••• • .,_ ·-"94-1514 ---·---......... ..................... ...... .... n r CM llOf wax.-_ _....., __ mAW91CM-.. ..,._ ...s ... .... -Olll '71 ... .., ..... -........ 91&Y ... ......... JOltM TIAYOLTA ......... ... n-111-11 V.T,.__.,I ....... 1-N ... MUI CltMP Dl'llCllWI • NUIDB If DIATN ... 9IOIW. ----"°' LIAO a CG&A 1111' iet ... llUIRflllDAYfltt _...,.. ..... y .... llOOfla ... .... °" '° 9'1' -.... 1 1 I .. i \ ' ,, l • l I ' I ·I I f f I I I --····"·~· .. · ..... Fridlly, Auguat 11. 1978 DAILY PILOT Cl weekend with tile. three est hits of the s1•· er. ·. UA .CINEMA Orange 634-3911 Daily : 1 :~5 • 3:20 • 5:25 • 7:30 • 9:35 BREA PLAZA Brea 529 -5339 Dally: 12:10 • 2:15 • 4:20 • 6:25 • ·8:30 • 10:35 PACIFIC'S LA MIRADA La Mirada 994-2400 Dally: 12:30 • 2:30 • 4:30 • 6:30 • 8:45 • 10:45 UA CINEMA Westminster 893-0546 Dally: 1 :15 • 3:20 • 5:25 • 7:30 • 9:35 ORANGE MALL Orange 637-0340 Call Theatre For Showtlmes FASHION SQUARE La Habra. 691-0633 Gall Theatre For Showtlmes UA TWIN "8" Cerritos 924-5514 Dally: 1 :10 • 3:15 • 5:25 • 7:30 • 9:45 U4 CllE"1A Costa Mesa 540-0594 •1 Dally: 12:45 • 2:50 • 4:55 • 7:00 • 9:10 •2 Dally: 1 :00 • 3:15 • 5:15 • 7:3~ • 9:40 EDWARDS' SIDDLEBACK El Toro 581-5880 Dally: 1 :45 • 4:00 • 6:15 • 8:30 • 10:30 BROOKHURST LOGE Anaheim 772-6446 _ iilfH COAST '-~ laguna Beach 4~1514 MOIPICn . ........ ILYD. DRlfE·IN · Santa Ana 531-127~ . ,• UA CINEMA Cerritos 924-7726 Dally: 10:30 • 12:45 • 3:00 .• 5:15 • 7:30 • 9:45 UA MOVIES Brea 990-4022 Dally: 12:30 • 2:30 • 4:30 • 6:30 • 8:30 • 10:30 -SOUTH COAST PLAZA Costa Mesa 546-2711 Dally: 12:45 • 2:35 • 4:30 • 6:25 • 8:20 • 10:15 FASHION SQUARE. La Habra 691-0633 call Theatre For Showttmes CllEDOME Orange 634-2553 PACIFIC'S LA MIRADA La Mirada 994-2400 STADIUM DRIVE·IN Orange 639-8770 ·EDWARDS SADDLEBA(J( El Toro 581-5880 OQily: 2:00 • 4:00 • 6:00 • 8:00 • 10:00 UA MOVIES Brea 990-4022 Dally: 1:00. 3:15. 5:30. 8:00. 10:1 5 UA CINEMA . Cerritos 924-n26 Dally: 11 :15 • 1 :45 • 4:1 5 • 6:45 • 9:15 CINEMA WEST Westminster 892-4493 Dally: 1 :45 • 4:00 • 6:15 • 8:30 • 10 :45 UA CINEMA Costa Mesa 540-0594 Dally: 1:00 • 3:15 • 5:20 • 7:40 • 10:00 CllEDOME Orange 634-2553 STADIUM DRIVE·ll Orange 639·8770 I::. 'r.H'&.~ I .. . . -: I \ I t t . l . .. • . • • ' . .... • DNLY,.LOT Bllsketry Techniques To Be Shown UNO a ON&. OVE& TWO -Indian basket weavtna l«hnique9 wlll be demonstrated by two Southland artllta al Lapna Beach Museum or Art on Monday. Au1. 14. Gtnc~ Lut.era or Tt .-buto ~. a member ot the Creative Arts Co1alttlon. and Marian Walklqatlck or the Juaneo lndlan Council and Art.I CoaUUon, will create le\ll~W'al works rrom natual materials and yarna from 12~ to 4;30 p.m. at the muat1Um 301 cu.n Drive Dt:llONSftAftON DUE -Oranae Coast Colle1e instructor Frank Tawiello will preside at the easel when the Arthts Association of ffun, t.i.naton Beach North meets at 7:30 p.m . Thurs- day. A\11. 17 at the Murdy Park ReereaUon Center. Golden West and Norma Drive. SAN QZMENTE 880W -More lban 100 local and national artists and craftsmen are preparing for the annual Art-craft Fair and Fall ExhiblUon. sponsored by the San Clement.e Art.s an<1 Crafts Cub. Tbe event is scbeduled from 10 a.m. lo 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Aug. 19 and 20 at. .... eopunuruty center, Avenlda del Mar and SeVibe. Galleries I Exhibits ACRYLIC PAINTINGS -Country scenes and landscapes by Robert Dowswell through Aug. 28 at 100 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. Hours 9 a.m. to 4 p.m . Mondays throueb Thursdays, 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Fridays. BLUM ON STELLA -Irvina Blum, pioneer Callfomia art gallery director, speaks on meet· lng ~nd friendship with Prant Stella, 7-:00 p.-m. today, NeWIJQri Barbor A.rt Mg,,eum, 850 San Clemente. Drive, Newport Beach. Museum members. $1, non-members $2. "Stella Since 1970" continues at museum through Aug. 20. WATE&~LORS EXHIBIT -Work of midwest artiat Kathleen Cocuzza Aug. 19-20 at Van Gores Fine Art& Sl\ldlo Gallery ln the Village Faire, Laiuna Beach. Wine, cheese re· ceptlon for tbe artist, noon to 5 p.m. Aug. 20. .,EMERGENCY, ETC," -"Emergency - Circumstances Calling for lmmediat,. Action," is the full tiUe of exhibit by five Cal State Long Beach artists at the Mills House Art Gallery. 12732 Main St., Garden Grove. Gallery open noon to 4 p.m. Thursdays through Mondays. SCULPl'l1RE IN LA -Forty-one pieces of bronze, stone, wood and tert'a cotta sculptores from Indian. Southeast Asia and Indonesia at Los Angeles County Museum of Art Tuesday through Oct. 15. Exhibit in the Atrium of the Ahmanson Gallery. Admission to the museum at 5905 Wilshire Blvd., is $1.50 adults, 50 cents students with ID and youth 17 years and under, children under s free. VISit Bogey over 200 other Great Stars at Wodd femc>U8 • I Tbe Blggat Gathering ' of Stan In the Wodll. Ri1'erlloat Bo'1 Bob LeBeau, his banjo and iazz band will add more life to the 18th annual Character Boat Parade, Sunday. Aug. 20 in Newport Harbor. Decorated schooners. yachts. tugs, work boats and montereys will com- pete for prizes at 2 p.m. Entry blanks may be obtained from the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce. 1470 Jamboree Road, or area yacht clubs. THE RETURN OF THE HEART-WARMING MOVIE. It's time to start feeling, and cryJng and laughing again. Ml!T1IO OOl.l)IWVN MAVER.,._. A BRYAN l'ORBES f'llm TAltJM O'NEAL CHRISTOPHER ANTHONY NANETTE • PWMMER ·HOPKINS ·'NEWMAN l~NAL ~VET Q 7-~~.J! ft()· ............ _""'° (------·--.. •·••«iv .... Wt1ttrn."'°""""' •eel Olttelecl by BRYAN P'ORB£S ·-""FRANCIS LA I ............. .,.. ...... ~ edwanls BRISTOL CINEMA lllSTOl AT MAc.uTHUlt 540.7444 'Foul Play' Most Often Succeedil B~~!!~~ "FOUL PLAY" combines the 19305 screwball comedies with a Hitchcock thriller a11d succeeds most or the time. There Is somethine for everybody - slapstick, murder. terrorism. car chases. oddball characters, a modicum of romabce. · Most of all. there is Goldie Hawn. who de· livers a brilllantly sustained performance as the blonde in jeopardy. Chevy Chase relies on some of bis TV man· nerisms. but his debut as a leading man shows promise. Colin · Higgins, whose rever-ence .f~r Hitchcock was displayed in "Silver Streak," wrote this one and directed as well. He knows bow to keep lhe action going. Rated PG. prob- ably because of language, suggestiveness and scarer.all mild. (A Quick Look at the MOvles) "Ha AvaN CAN WAIT .. P<Henll W1rren Bt11ty's .. 1,1on of '"' lltrHll•• II Is. plKicl pl;tCt of d•Y· lea v•eo«-... 1r11 ""'l'f ~ tlolrd • .,_....,ltt Concorde. Ml._ t.ktnly ~ed ~from• Clf' c••'"· Jot Pltnclltlon <Btattv> ii •I· lowed to return to "rtll. ll!"lf 11 • powerful mllllonaltt. ll1tn u quuterblck for Ille L.o• An;tlH Rams. Sue" p1on1no coutd ,,.~ prcw..i • lleevenly dlMSllf'. but m.rtelH do llappen. Th• B••llY·El•tnt Mey script and BffllY·Buck Henry dlrec:· lion •rt pertec11y IUMCI to the fin· INy. Tiiey hid • 9000 ~11..-n lo follow: tilt 1'41 "Her• Comt1 Mr Jon:l1n" wrltttn b'( Sl-v Bue""'"" The 'upporllno cul " fin•. espe~lally ,,,.ton, Jl<k Wtrdtn " tllt 100111111 trainer. 1n~ C111rtu Grodin and Oy1n Gannon '" murcltr plott..-s RetlCI PO, but !"-lllm '' 11 cte•n es a..ttv·, ·~·· w1s re11ndw .. TN a 8UDOY HOLLY STOllY"" tll• 'urprl11 hll of the summer HHOn, I 0-ftlle. per~tlve l>lo-9'19ft'f Of Ille roelc ·n• roll ploNer WhoM SOlf'l"ll CMter eftClld lft J 1'5' pl-crlSIL The script llY tt>e late Robert Ollll•r II ne1111e< condesc.encllno nor hyped; II sl11"4)1y IAtlls how I LubbO<k, Tuu. boy rnarllQICI to l sctncl tilt 111loh1t of 1 new m11slc l11dustrv wltl'IOUI losl119 his lnteorlty. Steve R~'s direction "-the stort movlno, -Ho1ty'1 ~ Is re·crt1ted with eacltem..,t Ind lldellty -It's 111 llvt. no pl1ybKk1. The 111m·1 1n1jor force Is Gery Buwv. • rtm1r1<1ble ton.l>lftlllon ot telC!' Ind musorllft. Don Str-Ind c,,;rltS Mlrtfn Smilll •re ICIHI 11 other m~ fJI the Cnckets Rel· tel PG. wlltl ontv • ,_ upltlfvH to sully QUlllllClllon 1u flfl'\llV film. ·.,. Y SCH R twy .. bl:ORGE EDWARDS ..,_._.PHIL B01Cl(~..,GEORGE EDWARDS L-~f LSlml DII1 Ult "Harper va11ey P.T.A." ...,..,Jf.ANNIE C. RILEY .... -.. TOM f. HALL -.. GEORGE IDNARD$.o... .. RICHARD BENNETT All ~f(Osl'nlOuclDls Ille -r. ~ OUe ~~~"'!"9..: Olfllllll ............ ':'r"' ...... -- GALLERIES MOVIE REVIEWS . A week ago they were strangers. An hour ago they were lo\U"S. ·!' ~Now they are ta1Jeb. c1nEDDmE6S CREEn 634 2553 camPLE>. MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY "SGT. PEPPER'S LONELY HEARTS CLUB BANO .. i PGr "THE BUDDY HOLLY STORY" "THE SWARM" (PG) 'WHO'LL STOP THE RAIN?" 'WHERE'S POPPA?" (R) "THE CHEAP DETECTIVE" <PG> "MURDER BY DEATH" "HEAVEN CAN WAIT" (PG) "FOUL PLAY" (PG) STRDIUm 5 scReen Kat.UI ..... 6]~ 7860 DRIVE-In "FOUL PLAr (PG) "FUN WITH DICK & JANE" ··coNVOY" "EAT MY OUST" (PG) StaC11um "THE DRIVER" (R) "THUNDER ANO LIGHTNING .. "BUDDY HOLLY STORV" (PG) "THANK GOO IT'S FRIDAY" "HEAVEN CAN WAIT' "AMERICAN HOTWAX"(PG) ALL DllllVE·INS 0"1:N 6:J0,.M.MIGNT'LY CltllCI U1101r 1 Z ~ree Unteu e Kiddie "'IYtrounCI lliT wa11 Yiu lllllR IT Wll 1111 n 11111:11 18 TIE MDVIII. ___ u_~-·-~-L-~---tm_,,..08_lMl_~_tm_= ____ ..,.TODAY AT 3:80 • •=• .. tbna llODAY, AUCUn 14 -OKAY, EVERYBODY our OF THE 1 LAYGROUN IN PARADISE 6:00 8:00 10:00 I ' WATER AND INTO THE 1HFA1RE. ARAHEIM CORVERTIOR CERTER There le 9uepeMe and action, credlWe All C01DnmED • MMCEIT NW people pou care about. • mowle 8lled f wtth Utonlahment. wtth John ww1ama• mU81c, and a dlmu that le ahoddng. • -Gene Shmllt. NBC·'TV ·-.... l • • • • ... • . . ' . .. •. . •• j • I . , .. ... I \ . . . . . . Frfdlly, August t t , 1978 DAILY PILOT C9 Great Film About Pop Rock Yet to Be Made a, USA aomNBON lb NOftmber lllT Susan Lydon, wr1Un1 about tho mo~ "Pravllece" l.n Rolliftc Stone. uld: "Tbe snat ttlm about the pop ICeDI ls ltil1 to be ma... ~ That wu ll yean qo. But wtt.b the pr8ent mea ~ "'l'o8" movin and 11\1 CODllnued &n· noyuee Ill tbe r1Potf lllat ls ·-s.i. Pepper'• Lon-ty Hearta Cub Band, .. I &.bid tht atate-J¥Dl lllll" tna. ftll8 YEA& ALONE .-e'Ve been deJuaed Nllw wil.b ~ roek themes. A doser l'ftMll uu to be s:routY untrue. ""-_ '-s.tUrdaY Niaht Feftl'" bad mu.sic bJ the nee G-. Olher-than tbat. It wu a veblele for JobQ Tr .... and a story about the lower mid· ,,;Ile cl•dilico1eene CStudio5' It waaQ't)._ nQreaM•• Wll a middle of tbe road ll.'50s ~ tbat mana1ed to push a lll50a car· loon to IUCeeSI. It was aaain helped by screen "idol"Tta~ Tbe lblrd entry from the Stlgwood Or1anlzatioo Cwould that it was the last> was .. ~gt. Pepper." The less said about that the bet, ter ;J 1'hen there were: .. A-merican Hot Wu" -an lnoffenalve bio,...aphy of Alan Freed: ''FM" -In and out ot the theaters fut but the aoundt.rack aold: "The Buddy Holly Story" -with a aood performance by Gary Buaer; "TGIF" -a cartoon·llke "Grand Hotel • <Ramada Inn la more like it> about an ~venin1 in a dbco which served ma.lnly a.a a ahowcue roe Donna Summer's "Last Dance" 11n1le. IN aETll08PECI', It all makes me feel kindlier towards Barbra Streisand's "A Star Is Born." And we have more to loot rorwant to. •'The Wit" -which probably bas little to do with rock but at.an Dlana Roes and Michael Jackson and la sure to have a soundtrack LP -will be out in time for Halloween. "The Role." with Bette Micller playmg Janis Joplin. will be out in time for Christmas. Look. the record industry is a SS billioo·a· year business. Someone obviously filw'ed out that records sell Don't laugh, it takes time in Hollywood for them to "gel" it. So, all these new-old-style Hollywood record moguls wbo always wanted the alamor "Uvlnin the street , "LOW llaDl 11 A• IRIR! . EXll&Bll 11 •DEFENSE II DRY IS Ml VU; (--· PIEllT 11 LAlm IS Ml Vlll1E." -- t "IT IS WU AID C11AZY ••• LEAVES OIE REUIG W Al AllmUI ~ FIE ... I Pl.Ela WHO AT FIRST FEELS A UTILE LEFT OUT Of :p, .. IUT WHO,• TIE EID, CAl'T RESIST JO••• ALL THE~-- "EIOUlllllGLll1--.. TO llAIE 'AmlAL _. w.lllMW. ._.... . ----·---llllMLJNlll. . ....... L11191111'1 .................. r.==:--~-·-.... . ........ .-........... ..... Si-' ··-·· ......... _,_. __ ... ............. ~---- of movies. wtrlch tbe recmd lnduatry witb all its money and associated fame never blld. set a good Idea for a record. 'l'bm it's nothin& to 1lmply build a film around It. And that'a what you uaually cet. Nothing. Ob, aome of theee lilma are entertalnint. rm sure. But I object to diem beiQc Jumped tocet.ber in thls media hype ol •'rock" tUms. [· ROCK TALK ] 'nlere were better rock movies made in tbe JBllOs, even the 19!50s. than the stuff panhig for rock movies now. - All those Alan Freed movies < .. Rock Around Tbe Clock," "Don't Knock the Rock"> wtthacaies d the kids danctnc oa tbe tabletops when the parents were out and performa~es by LitUe Richard. Jercy Lee Lev.tis. Chuck Berry· and D;Jore were underground classics for those who really loved rock 'n roll. · Actually ''Privilege," as I recall, starred John Paul Jones and Jean Sbrimpton and was about a rock star manipulated by cbureh and state, and wasn't bad at all. Jag. tier's performance in "Performance" . atlll smacks ol reality. David Essa in "That'll Be The Day" and "Stardust'' effectively chroalcled the rise and fall ol a British pop "'ar. And two Manhattan theaters are currently showing ••Roet On!'' film festivals that make an interestiae (to say nothing ol entertalnlng) contrast to tbe snsent hype ot "rock" m.ms. Real rock fans who can 80 '° Ua4lle theaters see real rock movies and bear real rock music piped in between the shows. None ot the aceom· panying Hollywood ballyhoo, hype and . ripoff. Maybe other theaters around the country are atready do&ng Ul1s too. or wilt tonSkter It. as re· lallation. I S'l1LL 'l10NK THE best movie about the pop scene was "Ezpresso Bongo," starring Laurence Harvey and Cliff Richard. It's a hilarious satire on the London mu&c business scene of the late 1950s, and ii it's ever on your TV late ~t night, try to catch iL • . ' I CJ• DAILY PILOT Friday. August 11, 1971 Television TONIGHTS LATEST LISTINGS 1~111 \, &VENNO ... , ...... • 1.-rcna.1 Dr •aa11att ,. ..... ....,... ••t!Ofl .._ ... ~ .,..,.........,.. ...... _ 00111c11a11c1 • WU. WILD...., ................ a "'ad '"""'.. •llO ....... IOk• 1..000 .,_. ...... ~ -~ * • * ··ei.p OI Foaltl ' Ptttl) V1Ylen La1911. ..._~._.., ..,,_I\. OI pa 00-• .... boad IO aNrw c:IOM ~ wNlie twlMllll>Q to .,..,..,._ () lw•) • mm-re Oii IAN FM...aeoo All cMa -d9cldee thel I ... ...., IO Ollf 'Wt'8I lie and ... ...,._, ,.., tor ,._ Old S19l91io .... ll . . , • h t ..,,... ..... ~. IOrOed 10 '*'Ofk tOQel"-' llQlll IOI the attentl()(I~ ol • csanoer (2 hra 1 • ID WMHIHGTON Wff)(IH~ 1:*1. aJ) OPIAATION PITTIOOAT 81Ma Vou My Sub" TM ')ee TIQ« ,_. C41<1a111 qround1no unless Com· mander Sharman c11n C0tM up •fflh a Wf/l'f to avoid lftlpeGtlon (Al IDG WAU.ITM£T WEEK H08 ())~ HUU< Oevtd 8-OOMUltl a ,....,en doctO<" In the hOc-o1 curing ,.... atnie- "°''(RI • OVPIEASY OD c.-i Oft age mid .,,..,...~ ...... son en..__. on SOCli.11 Seourny, lnlO{matlOft on foatar Gra~dP•••"ll ~ a SwMy around -.c. 'allgi<ln and hOfM •CAI Prieate E9efuJ 0 801' Of! AOCKFOAD . The Bio Rlp-011" Rocllf0td'11nYnttoatlOn ol • mytteriool ~ Cfash ~· him to the wile tSulanne Somefsl ol the VIC1m and a INhl<>n model (.Ifft Ctayt>utghl (A) 8 9 ABCMOYIE • • "Ttwae On A Date" c 1978) JuM Allyaon. Ray 8olger'. FOUi couples wno are wlnnefs on • game show embark on a HNeNn hOHday With thew c04 l«*N1tlou$ chaperone (R) Rand y Herman s tars as Jerry Sparrow. a young private detective. and Cathy Hicks plays his neighbor in the movie .. Sparl'ow," airing tonight al 10 on CBS. Channel 2. • MERV OAIFRN G~ta; Jerome Stocco • J«ry van Oyke. Stella Parton. Jlldt Wheeler. Ed • ..a::w. ' Guele" F<MI' 09nturiell aftw ttle au.a. nation di.. ~ ,,_, theOOMt of Georgia. -ta of ltlw QV11r.11ioft end ,,... natural ,,..ary ol the -.. e sl\ded ()) CMNlWS <II WON.DHlWS TONOHT ~-~.MOCSOH o.-t: To 8e Announced. • MACNEIL I L£HAER REPOft'T .. aNCW.. "No Way To Aun A Govemment'' Ttle need lof CIVIi Ml\lloe rafofln and wtlat affect c:Nnge might tlave on the mlliOna of Arnencanl WI><> ellher WOik for Ille govwnment, Of f\a"9 tiled to make the ~·••19111 WOftt tor them, 111e examined. Cl) TO TtU. ~ 'nVfH 9 MERYGAFRN G~s. Hem1ION G1ngold. Jon Peters. Kay Ballard. ()) JOKEA"8 WILD 1:30 8 AUATAR AHVTHING GOES 7:001 C8S NEWS ...CNEWI 1JAMOW8 8 WOAU>NEW8 TONGNT a BOWl.NJFOt OOUAA8 • THE GOLDEN ERA Of! SILENCE II WLD KlNGOOM 'Chimp AnllOS" Wiid ~ dOl'lltllkal lrtr1p tvltlw St. lOUls Zoo toe' the llmOUS '*"°' """"' chlmO show and e ~ k>o* M its f'llOlllt ~ etar attrac- tion a a.asEMU. Ola111WILbti ... e KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles e t<NBC(NBC) Los Angeles e KTLA (Ind) Los Angeles e KABC-TV (ABC) Los Angeles Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Diego O ~TV (Ind.) Los Angeles 0 KCST (ABC) San Diego • KTTV (Ind) Los Angeles • KCOP· TV (Ind ) Los Angeles • KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles e KOCE· TV (PBS) Honttng1on Beach 'Police Tapes' Study Lawmen By WILLIAM GILLEN NEW YORK <AP> -"Police Tapes," an in· dependently produced documentary or the working lives of policemen in a poor Bronx neighborhood, made its broadcasting debut 19 months ago on WNET, the public television station for the New York metropolitan area. The 90-minute, black·and·white program by filmmakers Alan and Susan Raymond gained favor able critical attention and received a 1977 Peabody Award for public service. In an unusual "crossover .. from public t elevision to a commercial network, ABC News Closeup bas purchased the mm for showing as part of its own series of documentaries. The pro-~ram , which will air Thursday Aug. 17 at 10 p.m. on KCET, Channel 28, has been condensed to fit the hourlong Closeup format. .. POLICE TAPES" COMPLEMENTS the network's June 28 documentary on youth crime, ··The View from Behind the Gun," which looked at lawbreakers and their environment. The net.work calls the program a graphic portrayal of actual police wort and advises parents that its content may not be s uitable for children. The Raymonds, who also made the well·known public television documentary "The American Family" about the Loud family of California. shot their grittily realistic film from April to June 1976 in a police precinct in the Bronx with the city's highest crime rate. THE FINAL PRODUCI' WAS distilled from 40 hours of film the Raymonds shot ln the 44th Precinct staUon house, in the corridors of public bouslng projects and on the littered streets. ~r eacb incident, the policeman who bandied the case summarizes what finally happened to the person be arrested. A young man oo welfare trying to rmd some housing for the night for bis wile and mother ap- pean at the ser1eant's desk in the station house to seek some help. He s ums up the program's mesaa1e: ". • .it 'a Just a messed-up story." Like a prophet ln a Greek tragedy, Chief Tony Bouza, city police commander for the Bronx, in· terprets the reality of the policeman's life. He articulates tbe abock that sometimes turns lnto numbness ol coping with the brutality and lrra· lionallty of Ufe in the '4th Precinct. BOUZA AL80 MUSES ON bis own mi&sion, as the cblef commander ol a para·mllitary force: "To the degree that I succeed in ketplna lt (t.be precinct) cool, am I deflectio.~ America'• at- tention from this cancer? Maybe I d be better off faUlng, and confronUn1 Amertca .•. We are manufacturing crtminala •.. becauae we don't want to face tbe problem." The meuage of "Pollce Tapes" la as vaUd to- day u tt wu in Janu~, 1977. 1bc '4th Preetncta of all our clttes aren t aolna to 10 away by tbemaelves. CalifOlnia Angela ve S•t· tie M.,.,_. 8 0 HOL.LYWOOO 80UAAE8 I JOKER'S WILD 21T~ Ho.1: Clett Roberts. ()) ntE MUPPETS G..-t: Peter Sellen. 1:00 8 Cl) WONDER WOMAN Enroute to a mlnile tll81 In the cs-t. Diana Prince Is kidnapped by relldants of a "ghast towo.''(R) II BLACK SHEEP SOUAOAON "Hotshot" A devlout WW II air ace (frank Converse) P<elenda-to help ,,,. Black Sheep while' actually using them to 1op Pawy·a • VICIOrieS (R) D ®) TABITHA . Paul Goes To New VOl'k" Tabitha euggests a <:ally gou1p columnist as a replacement for lalk·llhow tl09I Paul Thurston. (R) G MOVIE • • ·~ "The Outsider .. (1982) Tony Curtia, J.,.,_ Ftanol9c:ul Pima lndlan Ira HemHton Hll)'IS ,,...,. '" rallllng the flag oo two Jlma. (2 hrs.) al MOYIE • •'"' "Ten Seconds To Hell" C 1959) Jeff Chandler, Jack Ptlance. Two ID~· TliEATRE .. Pol dark" Rosa and DameRa -mote dlStant ttlln eYer. Rev. Whl"*<>tth at191T19ts to WMI ~­ na·s aHecllons; CarOlme end Owlgtlt tufl• a tr~ lose. (Part tO of 13) m WOAU> "Blecl< Btllannlea" A bl** per1C>9C11ve of oontempo- rarr Bm1$11 Ide. feetut1no angry t>laclc Btltona wno advocate mltllanoy as a response to racism. opprns1on and pot~e brutality. 1()lOO 8 Cl) SPARROW An eothuSWlhC but ifle•· ·pefleneed Pflvate eye (Randy Herman) Is put on the case of n mlSSll\Q blrd. O OONCY "Heart Of The Mattef'' Oumcy tnes to P<Otect his boH (John S. Ragin) wflOM t>Otehed aut~y compllealH • murder Investigation. (A) 0 HEWS Q) FOCUS ON BRITAIN "900 veara Of Tiie Tower Of London" fli) GAEAT PERfOAMAHCe8 "The Planeta" by Gustav Hoi.t 111 perfonned by the Phlladetph1a Otclleatr•. Togetlaer Again Van Johnson and June Allyson, who made several movies together earlier in t~eir careers, cuddle for an episode of an upcom- ing "Love Boat ." They play a married cou- ple m the show, which will a ir around Thanksiving. Bull Hurts Stunt Man AOOURA CAP> -A stunt man worldn1 on a "Happy Daya " televlalon series episode was pinned by a bull against a car afle.r "try. Ing to get the bull to act more like a bull," a fire department 1pote1man said. Jimmy MaderlJ, 34, of Los Anecles was taken to Weatlate Community Hos pital for examlno· Uon of poulble tnju.rtes. He was part or th• crew fHm1n1 the "Happy Dnys" season opentr. • Call 142-5871. Put a •••word• to work for ou. ' TUBE TOPPERS KTfV 0) 6:00 -.. Ship of Fools ... Vi· vi e n Le ig h . Lee Ma rvin. Simone Signoret und Oscar Werner head an all· sta r cast in this 1965 movie drama. KOCE 19 7 :00 -No Way to Run a Government. This documentary studies prospective reforms in the civil service operation. NBC 8 1:00 -Midnight Special. Wolfman Jack gathers some of the top rock music names -including Olivia Newton.John. Elton John. Rod Stewart and Debby Boone -for this edition. conducted by Eug4tne OnMndy 61) MOVI& * •• ·~ ·0N01hlng Sacred" C 1937) FredllO Mateh. Car· Ole Lombard A letrllinaHy· II girt ,__ two ~ of plMlute as pert of • publicity stunt. It nr.. fO mon) 1o:3011 NEWS 11:00 D CIHtl NEW8 8 LOVE. AMINCAN STYLE ''Love And 1'tl9 8edlelot Pllfty" Sally llnalty gets her boyfriend to propose. "Love And The fount.,. Of YOU1h" ~ triet to att r aci a younget girl. Cl MOVIE ** •'h "A Time To L.o-4 And A Time To Ole'' C f958) John Gavin. Ulo Putwr. The lrautn11 end deYMta- tion of -encour-o- t'OIMflOe ---of • need tot OOll lp9tli0Mtllp. (2 lwl.) .TMEOODCOUPLE Feflx turns to Osc. tor help after ~ he can no tonger "oommtlll~ uw" with hil da&qlter. tD AMERICA 2NGHT Gu.I: Olclt Martin. fD DD<CAVETT -au.I: Eva Le ~ . ~!!) 11: \Cl W MACNEIL I LEHRE1' REPORT 11::30 8 ()) C88 LATE'MOYIE •• '•Cold s-f' (19741 Charles Bron11on, Liv Ullmann. A man convinces an o6d frletld to llelc> him smuggle Illegal dNge In Illa lillhlng boat 0 TONIGHT Host: Johnny Carson. ~ta: Cf\atlle Callas. F•rrah Fawoett·M•Jor•. Buddy Ric:fl. 8 TWIUGHT ZONE "The Mirror" A guerilla leader 14100MCS• In <Mlf • tl'lrowlftg the regime of the CClmlPt ~' of hill country. D ttl &ARETTA "When 0\181 Come Down" Sarena Mtl out to bring .i murdeter to juauoe bv beoOming the mat1' I tt'lad • CM (Al • ..oGAH'S HEA0£8 The Luttw•H• tliQh com· mand notlliM IOi'* that he flu volunteered lor combel. e OETIUAAT Smwt musi take a CON· TROl peyroll to CONTROL agents l>etllnd tile Iron Cunain &:» CAPTIONa> WORLD NEWS TONIGHT ~NG 12:00 9 TW1UBHT ZONE Orllllno crotS<Ountry. • gtrt keeos MeirlO the same hr~ef 00 the roed ahNd e HOT CITY 8l8CO Tile Hol City Oenoera pet· tonn to the ~ ol lf'8 ~ ""'* In the "°'1d of dlaclo. • HONmilOONERS Alloe trtes to ""prlN Ralph wtth • r.oec:or .. acs epattment, but a m• placed otove lll•rt• • ~Uindlng 12:30 8 MOVIE * * "The Man From A'S>~ ( 1964) Jean-P&YI Belmotl· do, f rancolle Oor1Mc. A g<CIUP c>rstt8(f9 Chartcfel'I -Cl'I '°'lost ~In the~ (I lw .• SS min I ti) MCM£ • • • "Celt Me Mister" ( 195 t) Betty Grable, Dari Dailey. A soldier goes AWOL to try to win back his entenalner wife. (2 hrs I 12:318 MOVIE e • °" "Yuma" ( 19701 Qlnl Wiiker. Barry SuHlvan. A dedicated lawman attemc>ts to tame a Wiid -•ern town. (I hr., 30 mini @ MOVIE • • "The V•mp11ea" ( 19961 GordOn Scott. Oian-- na Mlria. Goliath and htll tnenesa try to etop a man- lier NI hH Changed aotne met1 lnlO tOboll Ct hr.30m1nl 1:00 0 MIDNIGHT SPECIAL Host Wolfman Jeck Gua11t Oliv•a l\law1on· JOM. ~. Elton JOM and Klkt OM. EleolrlC LIQtlt Orer-1ra. Rod St-art Crystal Gayle Debby Boone. Pteyer Leo ~ Manlrad Mann. fh,. Emot10n1. Cal Stevens. Artdv Gibb. Johnny .W.s Cl MAVIWCK "I.Mt Stop Ot>llvlon .. I SOAP ,AC:TORV 1:30 TAU<A80UT WfTH TAUMAH JA()QUf.8 "Abottlon And The Poor'' • HtOHHOPE8 (I) LOYE. AMEAICAN 8TYL£ "UMt And Tile Old4'Uh· lotl8d father" Ab alla permiMk)n to SC*ld a weekend with her boyfriend ~-MOYIE ** "Outbedt" (1971} Donald PteuaflCIJt. A city. brad KhOOltNC:'-llrug• glee 8g9lnsl ·-hutnanlty In the prtmitlft Auatra!W\ outt>adl. 12 hrs I tD MOVIE • "Attack Of The Rot>011" ( t9661 EdOle Consran11119, FrancoiM BtlOn Peopie wtth type ·o· blood are conltolled by an lflterna· 1tone1 syndicate 12 lvs.I Cl) LOVE, AMEAICAH STYLE "L0\19 And Tiie Ooc10f'I Honeymoon" K8V1n hndS that bemg married ~o a 2:1111d0c<t= b9 lr1111ra1tno 2:21 NEWS 2:30 =.BJWAAD8 • ·~ "L.o-4InPawn"'11153) Bemerd Bnlden. Batbata Kelly The comte;a1 llOI'/ of a wileM'OP9WflS'-hl.-. beNS Is ~·.cs (' tw .• 2Smon I 8) OETIMART 5maf't Wies to oonoeat hot occupatton lrom Illa VISl1- i retatives. 3:00 • NEWS 3:36 MOVIE • *'" "Jac;ll Sl&de" I 19531 Mark S1everi11 D0<otny M810ne A gunman. once a rnpectab6a ala.ti. bt!Mka the ._ he onoe upheld ( 1 hr. SO mm I 3:961 NEWS 4:00 MOVIE • • 'The Lono Knife" C t958) Sheldon Lawrence. Julia Arrel A ~ nurM beoomea inVOlvell .. th murder alter ta6ung on a pal18nt who tS the VICllm of an eat0t1l0n oano 11 111 • 30mtn I a MOY1E •• "Hungry Hlff" (1947) Jean Slmmona. .. ..,_.. Lockwood. The mother and.,... -of. Vlc:tc>B- "' lrl9fl !amity dlMioal• "*' ton~ through oam- blltlO and dt"llll (2 In I a> MOVIE • • • "Walk East Oii Beacon' 119s21 o-oe Murphy. F1ntay Curne Alter a Klanlllt ta threat· ""8d. an MC>IOnaoe unit,. 11111 .. ligatad by tne F 8 I, (2 hrl I .... \ 11 l{I>.\ 'I t.e:>FNHG 7:00 I SUMMER 8i!WE6111' HOHCIKONG l~!C WQMARA&LTO REAL fJl) YOGA FOR HIAL. TH Cl) J08 8EAACH 7:30 8 CAME,AA THREE "Let (hem Eat Pata" Pasta In Its many fotrna wtll ~~(Al ., 0000 GLoeETAOTTEAS I PACE.IETTEAS 9 8UPEAFAl9a • MOV1I •• ~''Beyond Momb..e" 119571 Comel Wiide. Don- na Reed A man .,,._ In AlrlOll In~ ol the ltlba respona1bte tor "•• t>rOl"4w'a c!Mth. t 1 llf , 30 m111 1 1:00 fJ {I) "°80NIC STOOGES e M0'¥1e * • "Starne>ede" C 19401 Rod Camaron. Gata StOfnl M ooen r11ng9 - IMIOli\I --• ~ dam ttww...,. ltie -·• setllen and hometMda. 't tv.30-.J G MOVIE • • • "S•on Of Tile Pagen" C 19561 Jell ai- dle#. Jlldl Paienca. A ROf'l\M warnor cs.teata AUiia s f\ofdea. (2 hrs • mYISA . Memo<-Ot The Ancee-. •o•ll The Solomo., ~ .. a.ii Vlo4a ,_.. t"8 mu$IO and •1 o4 a cw. lure ...tllcf\ Ill dytng OU1 t:30 fJ Cl) 8P&D BOOOY u 0 LAFf:.M. YMPIC8 -~EASY Freddie· Gets Ready NBC Lining Up 11iree Season 'Premiere Weeks' By .SAY SHARBVTI' LOS ANGELES <AP> -NBC. Fred Silverman presiding, seems in a new.season frenzy. It has a Sept. 6-11 "Sneak Preview Week," a Sept. 11-17 "Warm·Up Week," then begins a "Premiere Week" on Sept. 18. Its pre·premiere list has "King Kong," four new TV films. seven specials including "Canine HaU of Fame", advance peeps at 13 new or return. Ing series and a medicine drama, "The Critical List." All this m ay be an evil bid to obscure the fact that ABC, which Ford helped make first in ratings, starts its new season Sept. 11, leading into it with a repeat or the hit "Roob" Sept. 51 6, 7, 8 and 10. EYING NBC AS THE mongoose does the cobra, ABC says it is possible some of Its series will get new time slots or evenings. But it declines for "competitive reasons" lo reveal anything now. And not unW the next two weeks. it says, will it come up with a nigbUy program roster to put against NBC's razzle-dazzle sneak preview and warm·up weeks. However, ABC is sticking to its previously an- nounced plans to show the Ali-5pinks tiff on Sept. 15, and air, two nights later, an opening three-hour version of its star-warring "GaJactica" series. THAT EPIC WILL BE facing rampant Em· my.awarding on CBS, and a 25th annjversary Walt Disney show and "King Kong: Part 1" on NBC. CBS' new season starts Sept. 18. It also is in the prelims. but not as extensively as NBC and possibly ABC. However, it, too, may suddenly de· cide to joln the early. cosUy fight for viewers. having a pre-season display oo Sept. 9, a Saturday. NBC's pre.season blast of new series starts Sept. 6 with Joe Nama th·s "Waverly Wonders:· "Who's Watching the Kids" set in Las Vegas and previously called "Legs", and "The Eddie Capra Mysteries,.. which once made do as plain old "Capra." The next night: J ack Albertson's "Grandpa Goes to Washington" and a non-fiction medical series, ••Li£eline." A l<iste of Dick Clark's new music show arr1Yes Sept. 8, ditto a preview of a Saturday kid show. THAT ONE IS "THE Bay City Rollers Meet the S aturday Superstars." If you miss Joe Namath, or Scott Baio or "Kids" on Sept. 6, they'll be on this show, too. This is called on·air promo- tion. I think. "Sword of Justice" helps slice the night or Sept. 10. Then, on Sept. 13. comH the last rookie, "W.E.B.," about a 29-year-old lady network ex- ecutive who has worked in TV almost 10 years. Jones Plays Haley LOS ANGELES fAPI -James Earl Jones will play author Alex Haley in the concluding episode or ABC's "Roots: The Next Generations." He will portray Haley in his long search ror his roots that ends in the African village of J~­ fure where bis distant ancestor Kunta Kinte was captured by slave traders In 1767 Jones has had a long and close friendship with HaJey and was his personal choice for the •Ole. Right now, though, it says its pre·season roster of new entertainments Just has an Aug. 27 Paul Anka speciaJ, a Sept. 6 "Dr. Strange" based on a ------------------- comic·book character, and previews of three new series. "Flying Htgb, .. a stewardess series, la the first out of any network's starting gate CBS airs the show's two-hour pilot on Monday, Aug, 28. Its re· gular Friday fiigb~ begin Sept. 22. CBS' 011IER EARLY arrivals: ''American Girls," a Saturday series getting its start Wednes- day, Sept. 6, and "Paper Chase," a Tuesday series PUB LICK NOTICE N1w Appearing IN THE LOUNGE l Touvdlc TuesdaY thru Saturday 9:00 PM-1 :30 AM ' . .. . . . . . " COMICS I CROSSWORD r.tARMADUltE by lrM AftdtnOn IOOMElt "SJr, would you make certain I've deliv- ered the paper before you send Marma- duke to fetch it?" UNKY WINKER BEAN PAPA ® INSISTSC> ~ I START AT T~~TToM AND WORK MY WAY up .. GERIATRIX ...------~ I ~e Wl"Tl-4 ~' HSAVEN ~ flOr ~THe~, THSIZE. W'U. WHa2e ~ ~NO 1NS::L.ATION IN ~ GON&t HEA\leN l 1'"7-----< ~:~ VlnfM ..... -.... >Niu (4UIUf JUDGE PARKER " . '==.':cr••N ._..., . . . . . . . . . . ', . .... I I I tiy Wm. F. Brown and Mtl Cisson "IJV'ti ~ exACTlt 2JGUT. ~ Ir( AWtee A~P t\?H'1 ®~ Atllwtf 12 by Hirold Le Doux . . . . P~ANUTS STA'/ M, 006!'THIS IS A PAA'ATE FOOL! DAILY PILOT €1 J by Chatles M. Schutr IF ~OU WT TO COOL OFF, GO FIND 't'OUR OWN POOL! by Roger Bradfield I I (-S/611-HERE'S ti i ~~00R6 r fAliM6 A SWEDl9t I ~ ... f TIDAT'S caassnu PUIZLI ACl'OSS deriSion 1 GIOWI 44 Bulky bo111 5 Tates 1t1P1 45 Grlll 1111k 9 Vegetable 46 Open·M dishes busines9es 14 Propet func· 49 BW.1d lion bnnget 2 IS WOm-oul: WOfds lntonnal 53 Oscar 16 Rhodes: 5' Meal opener Ptlian1hfo· SS c.te doco- p151 l'ltor 17Alfl 54~ 18 Abounding 67 Lessen In ..... 58 ban"• Mn. grllOS Helmer 19 Elevll• !i9 ~ 20 Fighting teem 22 Alghted al Drew sap 23 lnflequenl 61 Are hep 24 Hodcey Siar DOWN Gonfie I Obtain fOf· 25 Ill Wilt ciblv 2B Co!Tldl lite 2 Stff 32 feminine 3 Dilmounled '*"' 4 Limit 33 CoiMll* 5 Aim 34 He9ltille 8 Spine word 1 Chinese fla· : ~ ontlf lemllV 37 tn thk place 8 Filthy pl.ice 38 Actrea 9 Writ• ~ f'" Sottlern ibtv 39 tnvoicel 10 HeYing !ell 40 Thidltl flt 41 Menna bWdl I 1 Lib ctiemo (J Shouted In clll UNtTED Feature Syndicate Thuf'llSI y Puzzle Solved lo IA 1111 I' I IT IO OD• 0 A FIT la ~ltl , .. ll •• " ,,_ I y 0 111 It 111 IP lo ,~ 1 IT .. O H• l I NIO hltll 1• r o-r E A C " 0 OIY -n• lo •s 11 u T- la ~ ,afr I II l 0 I I ill E1N E $ A l 111 II I 11 0 A T• 010 l ' . ( A• 0 • I I' .. [ 0 ., A 0 c. 11 IT I l T l I I f T 0 II S f II TIA I l 0 f I P Oltc 0 Ii -· 0 fl••. OT- H A II 0 II A I l I I T A l J t 0 V A l I I T l EI' S l 0 1',1 S A T I I I• A S El 'i'ii"ii T II I 0 f IC T 5 D'i°ll ---- 12 tnfonned 37 Fool 13 Cutter 39 Encum- 21 Intertwine bfanoes 22 Canctv on a 40 Student Slick: tn(Of 42 Newfound. mal land aitpo<t 14 Oaoces 43 Len1 a hand 2S boy 45 Spur 281.JniQue 46 Mop 'l1 Cfimblno 47 Glazed vine items 2& Golf necessi. 48 Inter bel C9 Mioernl 29Cbns'( J)Of Holway 50 SV"'bol 31~ 51 Pit1111s1 P~ desne lflf 33 Prilon S2 Deduce rooms 54 05ins· 36 Oelntuds father 11ar. . • .. I •• • • s• • In Southc111 ~omia. a really .,,.cial time has come al&lg to lease or buy the Jaguar you ~ave always wanted . : . ''ULTIMATE LUXURY" GOOD SELECT~ON NOW IN STOCK! . . .•W·AYAl.LAILE IN COSTA MESA ~ FOR IMMEllAR DELIVERY!: STcmHOUU: MOM.RI. 9:JI A.M. TO 10 P.M..SAT, t:lO A.M. TO I P.M. & SUM. 10 ~.TO a·p~. WE HAYE A QCRHJ SmcmMOF~ IM~OITS. IM;STGCll- If you've ever considered the advantages of buying a Peugeot Diesel, there's no time like the present. Because now when you buy a Peu9eot Diesel during our 50th Anniversary cele- bration, you get the added advantage of selecting our $486* automatic transmis- sion, ~olutely free..At any participating PeugeotDealer.t Drive a Peugeot Diesel and experience Peucreot. Fifty years of biesel leader- s~p co~es with every car we sell. And now the automatic , transmission comes free. THE BMW 530i "The Best Luxur.y Sports Sedan In Its Class." , WE OFFER: A $300,000 Service Department. . FactOJY authori2'd facilities and body shop. t ~ ·\ OUTSTANDING SELECTION OFTHE FAIULOU 530I & OTHER FINE BMW MODELS MOW' IM STO lt74 IMW JOl2 . lt71 IMW IJOl4t 4 speed transmission. air ·e Q u 1 pm en t i n c I u des conditioning . & stereo· stereo. air conditioning & eauette. C373t:Pflr -: ~~t. ---- lt7' IMW 2002 lt74 IMW ~~ 4 speed transmission. 4 apeed transm1S81on and-• u n r o-o t a-n d a t r stereo. ( 115MC8). conditioning. (669POM). lt7SINW',JOI 4 speed. stereo. silver with blue interior I only 12.500 original miles I (895NRRl. ' ' The 4iffereiice betWeed a ,. ~ ,,ercedes·Benz ~ase and any · 'Ottier is the r.tercldeS.·Blnz. The -car you lease does-make quite a difference. After all, you don't drive the lease, you drive the car. And 'hen you lease a Mercedes·Benz you drive some· .thing special indeed. • Whichever Mercedes·Benz model you ChOQle, you drive one of the world's mo'St respected aufomo· biles. A car with legendary engi· neering, meticulous craftsmanship, outstanding performance .and safety. Something elS&: you•n dfive the car you lease for two, three or even four years. Most cars look out ol date all too quickly. But when you · lease a Mercedes-Benz, you drive a car with classic lines and timeles,.- ness that is never out of date. We have several leasing plans to. offer you. One is certain to make it . mdte convenient for you to drive a Mercede"Benz than you might h~e thought possi· ® ble. Call us today .for the \ surprising facts; .,, ' Ask about our many convenient teasing plans. , " I I . I I ' Joe Mae Phersoll . PRICES GOOD THAU 8/14(18 43 AUTO CBmR Di IMIE 768-5888 . ~CHECK RAY FLADEIOE'S PRICES RRSll 1 . ·. -0..YN.OT ..... ·-....1 .. htcM .•.•... 1000-2999 The Bluest Marketplace on the Oranae Coast Employment & .... ................. 3000-469' ....... tnvem.nt& f1noMW .......... 5000-SO.t DAILY PllOI CLASSIFIED ADS Prtpatotlon ..••. 7000.7199 Merchandise . . . .. 8000-8099 Booh & Marine AnnouncetMnta. Pwaonala. t.11 & Jound ...... 505().,.,., Serva• a ~ 6000-60tt You Can ~II It, Find It, ( 842 •5678 ] Trade It With a Want Ad One Call Service Fast Credit Approval Equipment ......•• 9000-9099 Automobiles & other fronJPOrtotion .... 9100-9999 M1111tflwS. ~M1u11•'-'S. I' m,_S. ....... ._... ..._..,_,.We ..._..,_W. Hwet'°"W. ~....._.,_.We ....... ,._s. ............................................................................................................................................................................................................... ••w• ltu •••r• 1002 ••w:4 1002 •wnl 1002 G1H1rat 1002 :•a•r• 1002 'Ge•r• 100 G1Mrel 1002 'G....... IOOJ ...................... •••••·•··············· .•.••...•.............. ......•••.•..•......... •..•..............•...• •.....••••............. ............••...••... . ...............•..........•....•.....•....... 119tA .. NAVIN Guest quarters or in-laws suite is part ol th.is immaeulate 5 Bdrm, 3 bath home. French dOOl"S open to a '-. secluded sundeck. Large family room & walk-in wine cellar 8(e only some of the numerous "Uniq~" custom features of this fin e Newport Heights home. Only $188,500. U,._,l()UI: li()Ml:S REAL TORS"'. 676·6000 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona del Mar dlso in Mesa Verde. ell 546 ·5990 . TAllntl . ICITIA .......... Cool off in yow" backyard heated &r filtered 1wim· ming pool. Thll home is a charnUDI 3 bedroom. den & 2 bath with a •pacious built·m country ktt.cben. Localed a few ... Wocb..!rom ,..lt.Y JaUt & tXke trails. Priced under SJ00,000. CALL 'Dl-3191. t;:SELECT .T'PROPERTIES ~HERITAGE REALTORS SOPHISTICA 11D, YU HOMEY MOYMM Fonml dia1nc room. llv· inl room fl dea. 5 BR on a fantasUc pool..ued lot iD 11 .. Verde. $1216,500. IHVIST your time, paint & brush. Make, this 3 BR, 2 BA home into a jewel. Eastslde Costa Mesa. ~.1so TWOHOUHS!- Try these 2 ~on one lot, Balboa Island for a doubly good investment.. rno.ooo. FO~ESTE OLSON ~ ... . . ...... ~COATS & WALLACE ----c:P RlAL ESTATE . INC. i :.,,oil• ,,~,.Ill 1u.~•·11Pn ~!H\IN t. IHI ~lllll H ('(JA'il lllHI\ <;INCi 1%! LllSUll OlllMTID -Fashionable Corona del Mar location. with security gate, offering 2 Bdrm + den. patio home. Close to tennis, pool, jacuzzi, lawn bowl.in& and clubhouse for only $225,000. C411164CM 16 I 't A/flHA 1MIYHS -$65,000 is low for this 3 Bdrm 2 bath home with forced air beat and fireplace, bltos and fen ced rear yard. Close to all shopping. Brand new on the market this week. e.I 54M 141 Ser11111q Co,,t.t M t.·<>a·lrvtrl L' tfunt1 n gton Bc;1ch·N ewport B cilc h NIU VllDI • REDUCED TO $89.000 Attractive 4 bdrm., 2 ba. home in immac. condition. XJnt loc. IACK MY Fine 4 bdrm., 2'h batllfamily home on quiet cul de sac. Oversized pool, playhouse, extra storage. $169,000. IAYROMT Several fine bayfront homes • ---..:~Jb-il~ &.sU25 BILL GRUNDY. REALTOR l·l l Buy-.1d1· Dr·v• t-. B t>/'J 61ol MOVINGm Need housing info.? Call toll free l-800-S2S.a920 Ext. GU74orGU40 VA ..,_ DoWll P.,_.t• •Mo llcrow Fffl• $99 Maves You In! Two-Three-Four Bedrooms. ALL LOCATIONS. These homes also av alUtble to non-Vets through gov· eminent low down pro· gams. . 540-3666 Wllelc-i11 No obligation. A seJ"Vace -=======~ ol AlfUlated Independent REAL ESTATE Broken. 'For chic person wanting a place to retreat to. for conversation, recrea· : tion. peace &t quiet. en- -iertairung, availability or. what have you. It bas ••c....-c:o-4 IDRM · everything In this 3 -------- ' 'Bdrm2\.t8acondolnthe -------• $89,900 Bluffs + a good price at EASTSIDI Spacious 4 br. 3 ba patio 'fl53,000. OPEN FRI. VA Terms. great 4 Bdrm home located in one of TilRU MON. l·S. Go Viii· 2batbfamllybomemex· our most desirable ta del Oro to Umbrosa to ceUent location. Priced areas. Freshly painted & 26.11 Vista Raquela to sett at only $82,500. newly carpet.eel t.bruout ::Lil" :e:; JI.\ Call...._ ~"\ :J1~ .':,",::;, ~~ "~-~lf!!-!!-~--~~~~1!!1!!!~!~!1 one.6'6-'l'711 $64, 900 I.AIL Y auFFS Reat &iiate ~ Walker ~~ l r.e nas AND GUSS H you like that woodsy feeling. you'll lov e this 3 bdrm. condo an conveniently located Village Walk. Beautifully decorated_. with high beamed ceHings. A great. wide greenbelt location, just around the corner from the fabulous Aquatic Center. All you have to do is move in -it's that niee. $75.500. Open this weekend. 673-4400 HARBOR W!STCUFF CHAIMB-1 .. t,tOO Impressive slate walk entrance to a beautiful newly decorated 4 BR & FR home. Quality cptng. drapes & wallpapers. Near schools. park & shopping. A perfe·ct home for children. Sharp! Sharp! Owner leaving state. WUU'Y M.· TAYLott CO .. HAL.Y<>'f ZI 11 S.. JC11 .. tn ... loed HEWPOU CEMTEI. M.a. 644-4910 MIWUmM6! ONMIUM.1·5 2007 SUDllFT Irvine Terrace. Profess. decor .. -huge garden· room for pool -new kitchen-plus 3 bdrms. & den, 2"'2 baths. frplc & Del Plso t1 le entry. $!49,900 HEW LISTING! orEH SAT fSUN. I ·5 34 lolboo Cons Beautiful waterfront "YOUR OWN VIEW" OUTSTANDING-~500 S.F. 4 BD. formal dining, F.R. home<+ hideaway sewing rm>. on lge 12.000 S.F. cul de sac lot. Big beautiful roofed paUo. overlooking "Rogers" type landscaped yard w/b\Ock fence. Separate rruit & veg garden. Be sure YoU see this lovely home' Call for appt 646-4380 Ruth Laurie Bkr. home with boat slip&•-------- sandy t> e a c h • i n COST A MESA BALBOA COVES~ 4 $69;950 · , bdrms + family rm. 3'il 1be tree lined street sets baths, 2 frplcs, 2 patios. -aM-u1. b S327,SOO tncl_udlng land! a _. ....... e atmospnere WA TE:RNOMT for this 3 bedroom home Immaculate, pro!esa de· that bu a huge stone fireplace, dining room. & coratedhome.2bdrms& much, much more• den + ~g rm. large Owner ill anxious & will qtt.any tile m ball & den, hel fin Do 't 't h uge patio & deck . eap r1 ance. n wa1 , $350,000 including land & CALL556-2660. boat slip! C: SELECT OCEAHFttOMT I PROPERTIES Dupleii:, 3 & l·bdrm units,•-------- each with frplc . Dbl llG CAMYOH garage, corner lot. Elegant El Dorado $340,000 lnclucl Lns land! townhouse in choice loca · OCIAHFltOMT uon. 3 bd.rm. 2~ ba. Choice oceanfront close to pool, Jacuzzi & duplex. on the sand ! tennis courts. Sunken IJv Huge up!ltalrs bdrm. tge rm • wet bar. Security kitchen. On large R·2 lot. gata. 79-1501 $3'75,000! Liriga lh.Alf:mn RIALISTATI Sa.lea~le tired of II big office~ Openinl for one real estate saJespenon 1n small office. Samt- location 25 yrs. Call Gene. 846·3928. evo m.«'7. I L achenmyer EMERALD BAY Spec...._. 'ritw .._. of ._ ..-,, o•et'fooldmJ Ea m lld hy. Tllh It • ,..._, .... ., ..... for tlloM ................ pf"l•ate cota: .. 111ty. Hos dan roo•, .. ,_ ... .W, ........... SAt5.000. Oc._riew Colollial, EzMrCIN .hy -Tiiis ..,.,.. .............. ~ ......... room ho.-wffll opeta be.9 ~ -I C4lhlli:la tmMh. TN1 It tW pirf.ct ftmly ...... Priced to"' todtlf. $355,000. Fo•r IMdroOM pl•• dH •IHI cOHtry di... s.pett. t•ly .._. wftti ~ ceilllgl.,..._......,._.,,,.~ lllylcJlih. ......... --~,... -OCH9 ..... .. ....... .._ .,.., ._, ....... lwli ... far. M00,000 • LAGUNA BEACH RolU!NJ C7ftt1 hilt 9ICl c-,• •lews frOM HM• ....ty dKorat.d tine ....__, two botll lto.e i• LOCJ•• leocll. Prl•ete Hfll•g, deck a.r' pe-..0~ perfut for Hfdoor HlerioiailtCJ. A 9-w few tllle dl~ fallly. SI 54, too. · Spec ..................... froM ..... 1pecloH lo• •al ... e•uce -ltl·lenl ndwood IMNH. Tffff a.1•N••· 2¥• betll1, co•pletely •p9rede4 . ••cl la l••ac.lete coaclltl••· M•y extras, hlcldl6lg ........ c ......... ... stedy ......... .olClic ... Mlllt --&. • $Zt&,OOO. • lewllM OCMll 9ICl Cmtyall ............ from tWs ....ty cwsl:wled ..-,.Wt ltoae. Slt••ted I• • prettl9loH 111tgllb art.ood. s.... MllrJ.,... ...... c1mg roa.. ..t ._,, ttree IM*11 a r:: ...... ... bdlllow. s.. to lfJlll:I $2tl.SOO. 644-7020 2123 SAM JOAQUIH HIU.S ROAD NEWPORT llACH llratty In( 646 3928 6/V)179 SPAHISH YILl.A wtth a SO year hls1«y and a view of San Luis Rey MiulDll. HJab at.op a 1entle 1lopl111 to acre parcel la thla maeaive 4000 sq ft borne. Over 400 newb planted avocados ao you can combine busa· lleS6 too• Maybe a trade will work. but you have to see Una site 3 f'l'lcs . arched windows and doorways. contolil'ed ceilings, hardwood floors and asking ~.ooo. Ct114lM490 WALLACI & CO. 11A&:roas c.ta111&1 1'tl.~To ... o•1 Vs1t tbe ~Pf;CJALJST at thl' Condominium Jn. ronnat.ion Center Servmg aJI of Orange Co TOUCHSTONE RLTY 1.8582 Beacb Blvd lt8 ~·•a.ou1 llACH MMAWAY Quaint 3 bdnm .• 2"4l bath bome Ideally located t b6ock from the beach: newly carpeted fl each bdrm. bas tts own ter· race Just reduced to 11m.ooo. lq ,v.~ 'i5tit:7J..7300 $$REUTION$$ Beautiful 3 bdrm. & family rm.1 frpk,. I· story; lov.,y appoint· ment1; in prestigious JASMINE CRE~K Secunt.y gate. Price-now --------1·-------·1only1239.500. GREAT NEWS! NR. NEW TRIPLEX Costa Mesa: rents p jeded at Sl 105 per mo sim.soo COLLEGE PARK 3 Br. ba home-to Seal Bea ~.900 Ute & Brite M ESA VERDE-Move in fresh 3 BR. FR. 2 BA- Cozy fplc . parlt-l1ke yard. btg trees Move tn now. Only S79.500. Prices Tn lfi? Save JSS--Tree ebaded, cmy 3"BR. I~ BA. brick 2 Bl $&1,500 Only s years old. witl'l t i,, baths, jughJy UJ>&rnded condo. a1r-cond .• lush C..1'pe\s Ir mirTored wardrobe doors. Mission Viejo area. Call ror de- tails. fPlc. Move in now 155.000 ,_,,,_....,,,_...."'""""''-"~~ This 3 bdrm MonUcello RON'T IOW townhome comes com-Keep one eye on Back plete w tnew crpt & drps Bay ar one eye on your ln neutral tones, wood appreclaUoo In this nice •VETS* OOOWN-OCWSING . Homes In all areas of 08.ANGEOOUNTY TWO UMm lcAoa lay rrop. 4 Bdrm. + bachelor. lteatton C;:I Walker t; lt:r. COLLEGE PARK hom i1 Costa Mesa. LO '8),950. VA. FHA or u sumeloan. FHA. VA OK EXEC s•,yg HILL TOP Hideaway In ft private Seav 1ew . BEACH ~ 3 BR, FR, Den. .. .,butters & electric 3 bdrm "Trina" Bluff Q• arare door Opener. ~19-1501 VITAGT. · c.I 541.0100 Frplc .• bullt-tns; 1teps to ·---*·'•7•5-•7•0•6•0••-- beach. #85,000 Including•·-------- RealEatate JIR-CUSTOM SUNSHINE HOME. Costa Mesa. VA/FHA or assume loan. '68.200. 2 fplc 's. View to ocean & valley. Hurry. won't dea location. Two w l m int pooh le IGbboUH. JUJl llated. ~Tlll C;:I Walker ~ lee land! ~ Walkr.r C let! OCEAMJtlON'T ,. .................. .,.. ................. a Bdrm. + den home on Real Estate --------:ndS f\. lot; frpl., built· --------tns, patio, beamed ceU· Sell thlnt1 fut rib Dally CUSTOM HOME tngs. S37S.OOO ·Real Eatate PUot Want Adi. OM HUGI LOT m.3813 642-22S3 Eves .:..-T"jjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijl-1 Dellnble Back Bay ~a ' ot Newport Beach. Walk associated .. 1 n r. .. ~' macnab I lrVlne ~ryrro1:'t:b I Ule ently u )'OU now f88 ty \ b r u t b I 1 de Ii I b U u 1.1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii llP' "~RS Rf 111 '<JPS ' I 4 V\i 811 '' I I ' If f FIMEI ttOMES DOVlll SMOllS IEAUTIIUL & WAITING FOil YOUl Architect's home -high ceilings to a BREA11lTAKING VIEW! 4 BRs, formal dining, brkfst rm + country kitchen, study off master BR suite & lg. f amity rm. 3-car garage w /bonus space. Unbelievable at $399,000 leasehold. OPEN SAT & SUN l~ P.M. 1020 SANTIAGO DR. CN-11) CUSTOM IAYRONT Elegant, beautifully built 5 BR on .the Bay. Brt. garden entry to '2-story ent1'Y. French doon in livinl rm & family rm to 11·· brk terrace +, pier " slip. Magnificent formal dinln1 t"m + study w/prlvate entrance. $5.'S0,000 leasehold. <N-12> 'fllWI Tall lron gates enter to beautiful PoOl & courtyard of this marvelous s BR custom home.. Lg. family ~ "/ltud·up bar " fp~ -fOl'llJjl dlolo1 -1ourmet kitchen ·-elaborate McUrlty system. View Of Bar •-Npt Center from most rooma. '400.00G leuehold <N·13) ~ AUNE 1'2-8235 • I apadow s bdrm bome. TIME TO IUY Xtra Ice paneled rmly UNT ...... EAT nn W(«JZY stooe frplc. MO AIN Ria n Lovell jacuui in bnck Otf highway 38 near Bar -"-Oil f-'" rm. Brick Part. 5 acre lot hi&b on --N'Y blll bl m.. Nelpbors Areplace l.n Hv rm ror water and electric close lelsure living & formal enough. Year round entertaining. Access for u •· t recreational vehicle. vaca on "' permanen home adjacent. Asking Just listed. 646-7711 $16,500. T.erms available. (~i~$13Jit1Jj 400LU-••• fOR!\\ Real Dltate c.MA_... Find what you wani ln • • • • Delly Pilot Claaalfledi. DICUTIYE ESTATE .. + TIHMIS" Pure charm is the only way to <ieacribe this UP· graded beauty · 4 bdrm, 3 ba, lge fmly rm w/frplc, frm1 din rm. ls brand new on the market. Personal tennis crts for tbJs group ol homes. 759-~1 c::I Walkr.r t; I er. $70,000 Abeohrtel).' true! Lovely tree lined street. Fruit trees and flowers sur· round lbi• b rand new custom bwlt 3 bedrm It family rm' home. Oc· ~cy date early Sep- t ember . A true BARGAIN BUNTERS DELIGHT! Full price only '70,000. Hurry, call to see 752-1700. ~N '" 9• 11~ ll)N IOBt Nf(f• So. C•f RHlty 546-5605 Wt! UOOISU NEW LISTING. lovely 4 --------1 Bdrm. ralbily bome with •-;-;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiii ___ , sparldlnt pool on huge I• lot. Enjoy Indoor /out· lbmcllo S. Jo 1.. door livln1 in thiuingle lelt..,l s t ory b ome o n the J LOWilJ View Condos strada. Call for details -------•1 A 2 Bdrm Sao Mateo 1BNSAMYOHl7 model, overloqk.l.n1 the Po0L offered a\ SllUIOO. Real 1!1tate Jtat st.e.ps to Eastbluff 13 Vleio I.JVEO""TRES•VT> cowt 1b1a Eaatem feel· End Uult on the olf PETE ~ ' THE REAL EST_JHERS •NOWSEWNG:' Ing, hOmey atmotpbere t"OUne, 2 Bdrm. den. San R Huntington Pacific We assist you to sell you with Inviting conversa-Joaquin Model. pegged Beach house. This Is a own home. T<YfAL FEE. Uon area and living room wood floors. oak panel· M2·5200 limited offering of uni· 1195tJald in escrow. Ca ll faclng spacious green-lng, fireplace. Offered at ~~~~~~~~ que cooperative apart· us ay. belt. 3 Bdrm. 2 Cull baths $126.500. = menu, located on the ~222A upstairs. Ratt Q model I 4 Sol90 THE sand. A N EVER Retlltr Free tto..s Abu)I atSW.000. or a 2 Bdrm add denim· KINGS PLACE :EJ~RrNN~v~~ R.E.Mvlaol)'Service !tttr~_R>IJM :J~u~·:.;. s;-th~a[~~ 3 BR . t·R. pool & PORTUNJTY. You owe UDO ISi.i DIAMOND ~~!lll~fl-111 ... ~~ IOlf course mow>talns ai Juc1ai1 Be11uttrully r•· it to yourself to In· 3 81'. 3 ba. exceptional = , . · night Ugh~. OfCered al d('co1 utcd thru·out & vestigete this r eal find. construction & decor . 2 Sll.Sl.500 10.000 usl-d bncks sur· Prices Jrom $87.500 to Levela. Clubhouse. ten· --------ofie4 DAILY round lhc pool complet· fZ&l,000. 711 Octan Ave., nis crta, ba)' swimmlnf · H CANYON See •-tat 35 Montanea 1 n g u n 11bao11u t 1tidl Y <PCH) HunllD&to" f32S,OOO. Call me Ir let• _..... gorseous yurd nc '1 Beach. Ca. Sa)ee cillice tee it toe~-Alt G. !l_i;oadmore home 'or lltte lr1 bltn BQQ & firl'pit. cloledoa~. Tbomas, 17S·l251 ; ~.000. Own/Alt Many xtra(eAttures. Broker S3MOe3 982-.,.,.orm-0370. JACOBS . ~~~~~ REALTY Want Ad Results 642·5678 Classified Ads 642·5678 to sell! Clusllled ada de 'II~~~ PllMI SOUTH IAY .. OMT, l+LIOA I~ Steined glass windows, wood & ~gged noon in this elfceptlonal 4 bedroom, WA bath home. Private muter IUite with fireplace • wet bar overlooking the water & boata. $550, ~-~we1L~eo.~·~"'~·===::J~~~~~~..:_~e1~a~e~e1~0~ priced from $72,970 to $79,980 lt'fmi "'~nurt". r *4fJlt• lt•nni• l(lrlJl'il • rooh I l I ..._~,--• ...L. ....... "°" s. ..a-~ •• 'ff$• Ha.. ... For~-Ho.atH for s• HOCllHt Fors. 1-nday August 11 :978 DAILY PILOT 03 ~ ..._. -~ . . . ...... ················ -------------------------........ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••.•••• ••••••••••••••••••••••· ••••··•••••·•••••• • .• ......, Fors. •aat:• 1 .. 1 c.w .. ..._. toJJ C..Mhe 1024 c.t.W... 1024 O...Polftt 1026 ~~~.!~.~~ ~!~!.~~~~ .............................. ~~!.':c:~~ ...... # ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• flllALTAt&LS ACM+HTAn CUSTOM 4 BR HOM Rcocn '°' ...... Wmntl court. pool. Poulbte "'* for i.a~b homt" a.~,._ SLASH9 t t 00.0001 llk)"ftorle a Wnn . J bath home • 1u••l •Pl --111111-----•1 SM1"d pier. lee la.ad. 0.111\11' app'\ now · MAURY STA0t'P£R SF.A UON RKALTY 3IO\ t:. Cal Hwy. CdM IOH ....................... IT~ U13 N ~H~ Laauna MESA YERDE POOL HOME Priddully cared ror 3 bedroom. den &i frpk Nuw lc1lchen. carpet. wallp•per 41 paint Owner 1rn.iuuii' Mu11t Mil now' Submit •II of ,,,... 00·7221 ~21 IUUTIPUL WHfTIWATa 1-------ln'IM I 044 L..,._ ••It 1041 a..,.. •oc• I 041 lltCE TO IEACH ••••••• •• •• •• ••• ••. •••• •••••••••••••• ••••••••• •••••••• •••••• •• ••••••• VIEWS 4 ~K. dl.nini rm, fam rm. Jt'n A\r ltltchen. 011k cablllt!lb w 1cer»mll' tile thruout. patio. lovely Vlt'W dt.'Ck off mHter BR $UM.!l00 Th<' fuhinf RtiallOr.i ~ l66d Fouilt• Yal.y I 034 ••••••••••••••••••••••• from this cute 2 BdrT caodo 1 m1Je lo be11ch Xln1 area, JU..I n.11ht for that cuuple 1;taruni uut • • Mil PROPIRTllS 6754890 XWln•Ht....t Ullf•lf"'JJty , .. •Bdrm. 2~Ba . fam rm. formal dln rm. end unit . LnSalle twnhse Only 1~ down Owner will carry a 2nd Alie> h1tvt' "lnt financial parka~ ror lnvest.or Priced right tor qi.Ocie sale at $109,000 Broker cooperation Ca ll 4 bdrm. 31iit ba. 1700 16.( ~~/bkr. 805...S5·0777, pool. tennis. 173.900 lnMe 1044 -------~ Bkr aet • •••• •• •• ••• • ••• ••• • •• • OWHElt..p()OL IUYllS CHOICE • BR. or 3 BR & den in pnme localloo 2°"' ba. well manicured yard Laundry o ff lht' lamlly /kllchen area w/brealcfast bar Call for further detaa Is ~ 11,.._lt 1n\ll\ 11?3 M.iin St H~llllttlft ~~· ~ l l\l...1(1\ll' , 7223 Mlllll St Hunt1nrt111 Bexh 9% a.&allma ble loan MOVE Smull down. 5 bdrm. J ba. lrg Country k1l , atrium Walk to school&, FAST park & shopping. Owner moving will consider lease w /Option or con Vacant 3 bedroom in tract $117.SOO. 5SJ ·464S or Culverdale' Low down! (213)373498 VA terms' Comerlot' IST--E-PS--T-O_T_H_E_L_A_JC_E REDCARPET754·1202 From lhts beaut hght and iUJ')' condo m pre st1gious Woodbridge Arborlake. 2 lrg bdrm & bas • waj nut paneled den/library. 2 redw'Ood · decks & beaut decorated wtall upgrades $126.900 See it during open hou:se Sat /Sun 12 s ;,t 24 Lakeview . or Cdll 5SHi561 or 640· l440 No Agts please $10,000 DOWN No quah!y1ng• Owner will fmance' l''antast1e 3 bedroom Uni verslty Park home with green· belt vtsla ! Call now ' RED CARPET7:>4-1202 Deerfield townhouse, Plan J. 3 br 2111 ba. fam rm, highly upgraded, Ciniahed patio $82.900. By Owner ~-4924 Woodbridge Sycamore 2 sty sgl family tiome. 4 BR. 2'h ba, highly up. graded, Try $12.000 down. 68 Blue Jay, open house Sat/Sun S59·0633 Owner desperate Beaut S&S twnhse. comp! UP· graded. pools & tennis crts. Must sell. 559.7090 IY .OWHB_-POOL 9'1 assumable loan Small down. 5 bdrm. J ba, lrg COWltry kit. Walle w schools, parlt & shop· ping SJ 17.500 551-4645 or <2131 373-4898 Location Convenience and DESIGN. Located on major greenbelt over· looking adult pool. Con· veruenUy close lo ever )'thing. Designed for the family who likes to enU!r· lain. 4 Bdrm.s .. LARGE mast. bdrm. swte. 21'11 ba .ram rm .. 573 C.otPUSk~IRVI~ ABSOLUTll Y BEAUTIFUL Hav ~ you heard about Dave Boti enhardt 'l) new c reatton " Craftsmanship 1s ~v1dent an every part of thi& new home Stained glass. ceramtc tile. and oak are blended mto a symphony of elegance. Separate dining rm. family rm. gourmet kitchen. 2 fireplaces. lge master suite. unusual custom features anrt " great private view Ctll for .......... , 0,... .._..No. HIS, s.t/S.. 1649 lb rWr4 c..,_ Or. IRmdo l.etll-t l...-9"ttl MAY 0 C'OI\ POKA, roN 380 GlENNEYRE lAGUNA BEACH c (714)484·2148 THREE PROPERTIES IH THREE ARCH IAY K -c• J I 9 two ta.droa. --wHtt •-ty rOOM ..t ocw ¥NW. O• a tM..tfM IGnJe lot with prf¥ate tlricll paffo ..S iWCllwe nocodo tn.s. . -SZOS.000. -ee.tfM fow ~ hw wHfl...,... botttt, dett Md clNtMJ rooa Pet'hct for weltff lo•en wittl a pool, iaaml md OCHll •6-w . . . SJ40,000. -C•tfCMn cowtew.porory .-.dwood 9d Jllau tao.. iitli!J!l_td br ~Ric~ Art•'!· PMOr"CIMk oc.-• .._ 1tw ilt P' 1st'90W co•..-ity ---Sl49.000. 499-4551 OCIAH& IW~v•ws art> yours from th!~ elegant 2 bedroom. '.I bath & den unit. Pool and Jacuua. Lush ground:. overlook Dana Po1n1 Marin<1 Pe rfect foi weekend or year ·round lmng. $12S,000 C:J Coldwell Bonker OAILV PILOT OttMt-t..t••• ~~.~~ ....... ,~~.~].~ ........ ~.~~ ....... ~.·.·.~··... ~ .... ., .... ............. ,······:·~. W ... l 1htr IOtlW........... 1091 T_.. lotO .....U.tte.1t1--·~:0•0 • ...................... . . ............................................. ···················~··· .... s. • I 00 ....... 1400 ....... o...tt, 2400 ! ... !!.':"Wt ......... w. ........ We ••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• , .. y............ . ...................... ······················· ...................... . ................ ICOMOMY SPICIAL ~.._.. t04I ~...... IOI Mla-t IHdt 106' ................ . .......................... ; .....•..........•. SIMtDOWM I bt t~. t•1&nd"7 ...... Yatw W.-~ I br 1 ba. rm. ~ eoct. peUo. qlllet l'.Nltaed ~ A"'"'10M CAI LOV•S ........... on ~ acn wlU> apack>ul 2 8 r d b I w I d e NltA>m b\dlt SBr. 2 ba. Trall.orama. Tuul~ family rm. Oraaoic Pa r k • s 1 4 . 1 o () = See to believe. CFB$7S7..fll) j j Realty ,;...,, Ill&.•. Lean op ••I .. ~!L0 t • 1" •cl • bdrmi. 1t\lllly, t'fltar u. .... .,. nelah-.-. <'lo.• to ....-. a.ooUI rm• fam ·---;..;.:..----t lu~ ss-.ooo ru 040J, nn., /Mcclnd btidr rrpk. Stll•r ha1 l>oulbl oYl of lown Ci m1at aell Owner bull<Mr hu completely remodeled Uu1 1•harm1na 3 8t houae. reaturtna 20xlT fam rm & brll'k frplc. S car 1ara1e w/load.s ol cablnets. front & ,....,. ptllo. RV •ccesa, quiet eomer lot. prlcttd below VA 1pprahu1I in the M0.000'1. All t~rm1 Real Estate By People Ml care DOM-r DllAM __. 4 ba. View ol btl canyon TOO &.0..-l htlud. .... ,.,, ... a....utw North L-au •M••....., a61• 1Ta ParUlw.lJb Cir .aaowa by~ Ollrw lot. t tlJ. 4 BR. •15.000 otller' ........ ••••••••••••••••••••••• .......... Spadoue M:dO Vlklns. -~r_l_2Ba. eaqul1lt• brick .-.... ISMOUSI C·2 PIOf'an won. C.o.yoci v._,., on· App. ~ ac. 4 bd. 2 m lovely area. ~ l1GS.900.<L&l880-81>. ba. T & G, farm ac . 3200 sq ft. tamal)t ma: dtaln& rm . ...,..blv•tmenu _. clea6iA& ovea. w.t l'brlftlon.Uoncontact: -.cm bu. alr ~d . lotded IUc-brd A l'\ill•r kll. Xtra cpbrds re modeled + 2 TAI£ ME HOME! .:=1 Lndscpd. rock fp. e1pts. Lots of wood, lerS.· 1100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ERA NOW! REAL ESTATt Call Charles Bea res <714 > 898-0466 ---~;;,;;;;;__ _ __. -~ S....Uaul at om~: MHOtO alU,ooo C•IJ to.ta1 Home: t4040&4 Btn 24dO WaablnJton Included wtth thtl 20x$5 lvl entry. Dbl gar. 2 fp & BBQ. deck NOR1NS REA(TY BEAUTlP'ULL RE&rollBI>. ocean v._ Sc>aniah Mansion Con verted to 3 units with ex• ~l reo\aJ income \ mile to Daaa Poio fltarlJ)a. SJ.95,000 ' --SPARKLING SEAS EMERALD TEES Ne desigMr duplex on Clemente Golf Cours with pa110ramlc oce view. Ideal home plus ln come. Sl~OOO - nt-Zl1J I , 411 ,, __. •4"" L97'1 . fully up1raded. VikiD&. lmmac tbruout. Pres tage area. w /2 porches. olfc u 111111 , " ... .,.,..._. 10" s.a..• 1076 Akan sldinl. •too air, E . Anabelm Loe $139.000. space. fncd yd Tbe bellt ot WfftcllH. ••••••••••• .. •••••••• .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• tile root, prie«t at 16.000 <I>Oe836-37-84> w I auto sprnklr Neally poomed a Bdrm BLUl'''8 4Bdrm. bonua PANORAMIC uadermarkelAt2UOOio LAkl YflWl-a. bome with bHutUul rm. 2Y.tBa. end urut on OceanVlewHomes 5 •Park Lake Ei.inore. s.euaroraUyourmoblle New 4 bd. 2 ba. gd constructlon Mlfll•-..a.. 1067 1ard NHr lhrlnen 1reenbelt by pool. 4 haxury c111tom bomea Un t,bere or move to home needl. low down. cstm home Rock $295.000 . ....... ;~•••••••••• •cbool. ibopplna. elc. ueuoo. Ait.a.u.&331 available w /beneflts of Y1.!,'}.!_0 w n I and . 1ood flnaoctoa. Bau re· fp. hand tile kit. l~Ml ._ _______ •I ~.meat only. ea.u •·•~"-a-. Sa.nctemenlecoaetalUv. ..-.-.-98>. poe alao avail. Park lo· antiaues. Rdwd Forest Vtew. lrg r Mt-Wl ww-,. in&. Homes Include wet· --......._.-------I formalion.NoobllaaUon. .~ cor e l t I I ............ ,.. Live on t e Bay for bars. 1reenbouse WI&-..-W•letlc... panel g. Lge ram. n r 0 • v • BR. famUy rm. d11un1 175.000 custom mobile a, dowa. Nutooe food c•n· 1917 Maalaon. 24 x56, MOBILE rm w /wet b aT entry w/gd access rm, •ir cond . new cablll\a, 2 br 2 ba. 1100 sq ten• much more. YOU completely f\1rnlthed. Fan. lake view aJJ 3 b d . 2 b a . carpets. drapes. ne• fl . 11 covered patio. MUST SEE! Priced from come.r lot. Desirable 5 HOME SJOIE lvls. $175.000. w I beau l P ~ t. DJW •. cove.reel JIAtJo .l~~~!!~~~~~l 'arden yard. Lido Park SZ21,000.AUoffenwlllbe •Park. <NC'11»31). docks. mdrn kit. lltllMl'O\la beaut. frwt 1: , on Udo p,nillsuta Priv. ~ Full braku ARTISI'IC 1083N. SCateColleae t.rees. uklQa -.soo. Br· IYOWMIR be.acb. cooperaUoa. 498-0200 or MOBIL~HOMES Aa•Mtm DlAMATIC! 1am rm w/fp, llv IQl•)'OUrofter.UT·llOO IMf Monteio. •Br. DR. 673--4'122 831·912Z <Tl4lts'7.aoo5 540-1388 ___ ,_,_6-_4_l_O_o. __ 2 sty lvg rm. 3 bd. rm w/fp. newly FR. p,.5!00. Ne*IY de· By Owner. Pri"° red•"'ed OCEANSIDE Maltlw ..._Store 2 b a • T & G remod'd, 1175,000 ('IMf~ \lO_N v'<E JOI) L--. ... ~~.---.. '•• dllllleYlew ~ Lake MINion Vie- jo, 3 BR + den or 4 BR, l:\(j BA. aU upgrades. Cul·de·HC st, walk to elem. acbool. Open to all o«eraexcept VA. SIS.900. -..CZ corated. Auumable .... -EXCITING w /rdwd I d .. Y ... ••-- 1 loan ---u4 no.ooo. One or Bluffs COMMUNlTY • e A•• um ab I es . re . • n r Y. SA'-Ml.,.•wi ._. l. best "K" plana. z.sty, 4 ot PresidenUaJ Heights posseesLom. buy rentals. storage & wd rms. Roomy furn 5 bd, $11,000DOWM br, 2 ba. Sl.29.900. La with all the benefits of SI IOPwtal..t reouowo. Forlnto Bale. 2 dks. wood 2 ba w/dock in •BYOWNER•BEACH bright ktchn w1eatln1 San Clemente living. At the beach. an C7t4tl ..... ltl mdrn kit. Good prestig. Sheltet' la Juat JOO steps away. area, pantry & bit-Ins. ONLY 1 LEFT or these beautifully landacaped --------v a c, 0 t term Cove. Formal din 3Br, 2Ba. rrplc. 2 ear aar Lovely Uv rm w/din.ing luxury townhomes. NOW secluded adult park· h 1 rm. beaut kit •. baa Carmel·Wte tetUng area. frpl. upgraded is the lime to buy. 1orgeou.s dbl wtde tm All COMDmoM• O me· P en t Y ex onapvtn.inlJdoSands carpeis & decor 493-2780oror831·9310 Kl.nptonetopoftbelloe. RoomydblwtdeMadiaon xtras. $89,500. game rm . ~ P.500 64s-1262 throuout. Back palio 2Br. 2Ba. fam rm & in btJl pa.rt. Must see to lndscpd acre, new overlook.I pool & areen· THIY DOtirT much more-If you want apprec. $33,500. (7J· SPICTACULAI' drp t l ft IACHll.01 PAD belt. Front paUo creates IUILD THIM to Uve ln this lap of lux· 719U) • s · c rp s • O • Uvewherethe action Is. attractive entry <both ury wttb a paupers purse ,....."-Store App Yl ac lot. J lots of wood, good N"Lft)' 2 BR,2t,.\ BA condo. have easy care for care-like thia anymore! On tbisb It. <KT1.al11,.). Mll-8895 bd. 3 ba. drrtwd loc $189.500. Poot Jacuui. Walk to Cree living>. Walk to the edre or the ucl CtlfonloPoclflc Ip. c pls. dtps . MA.SSIVl:t beach. Reduced to neaahborhood shops. bus. RMera Beach comm .. a Mobile Home Sales ""' blk to beach, adult dock. e~er liting. 3 bd. 2 ba. rock fp •uoo. schools & churches. home u. charming as 2706Harbor.&e208 park. Fleetwood 121to. D/W. ~sp .. bltns. w / m rbl hearth. HIWPORT CINTEtl Leav~ area. must sell. your sweetest dreams. 540.5937 ~U\ + encl. porch. 2 mdrn kit., T & G. c at h . c e i 1lng8 . UA.LTY 640. I 112 _Pri_·n_ .... Y_· su_._M_79 ___ , SUnahme ir lact kitchen --------• __ P_.P_._536-_7_683;.._ ___ , o p e n l a v r m . l e a d e d d l .. -& <:Unlng rm. Bric.k·Wall v Ac ANT D 0 OCa.._ ..... ,.0 .... T .-vlTOFIMO beart.b ~ book·lined Uv· A A LOWPAURIMT $149.000. · windows. form dtn lii.l ... n. " Harbor View Homes, ing rm. Spac BR's & 197Sffomett.el.2x5&, btns Esceptional l2a60 Da.LIX pbaae Ill. Tennis. pool. BA's. s Bl.ks to beach. •Park. central Oranae Broad moor. n i eel y DIUGHTFUL! f md · pde n c I k i l. 2Bdnn, lBa each unit, jacuzzi are available for can County. Rent Sl20 mo. lndscpt, fwy close. only New 3 bet 2 ba. T n SC • S145.000. atlil~Jn.lAdry.or!, ur our exclusive use wath 'iiiiiiiii!i!!'S~i) Corner lot. $16.UO. $la,500.189·201'1l & G. different SICUl»m! ..,.,e wd burn c 1 ls 'pro·resstonstt:r op· 11 tLY'l2:5B> MoWle "-Store H 3 bdr 3 b kitchen' BBQ. 6708-67~:;.; graded Pop u I a r ~~!I· ARTISTIC _..._ flOQr~ Qln. rQCk Cp. uge • 8 • w. Ocntmt. $:9M.OOO. ZS% Portoflno model. 2·Sly, 3 MOBILE HOMES 3 ,dks. lndry rm. ail'd condk. tbrlt fl?,. 2: dn. Shown by appt only. br, fam rm. formal dln· 1n41~.~ 540-1368 '5 Goldenwest 24"55. 1m· storage rm: wood m rn a w/t1 e. Contact R.S. Patlison. lngrmwtaddt'lattached mac 2 br 2 t>.. dlx..San kit, super view . lndscpd. woodsey. All· guest/game room W/eX· ~,....,...'"!'T: ....... -.:.~~~ EXCITING Juan adult park nr trees. good ram 2 st.rg shed it . 642·3SS. Prine only ~~.b~15S2~~JO&:~~t'e ,,~~~=.~-==-• • ~1~-~~~.soo. ~8o7m.500e.'" woods. Sp1o0s9s.5001ble. 2 units. Pl. Agt. 640-4105 or see Pri 1 ed KIDS & PITS ., IY OWNlll your local reallor ce 8 ash by owner ~ oC a mile from the Wl&.CHa LIFT INCHAMTlMG Laguna Niguel POOL HOME broker cooperat10; anltious to sell! ~29 beach. run in the sun Hydtaulic, lncluded with IMPRESSIVE. RUSTIC MOllLl- 3 br 2 ba. all remodeled, _0pen __ this_· _w_e_ek_e_n_d_. __ 1 ~~~em ~is2t=·a •8~~~t~. 3Br, 2Ba. too many xtras the immac 1973 Homelte 4 bd, 2 ba. lrg lot. YA.WY °' Realty • S12.000 down. SILSO pr Prime Penin local.Jon. l private adult condo in to mention. in moll 20x52 2Br. 2Ba, close to fncd-yard. 2 brk IMCNANTMIMT CASTA D& SOL H:~!~·~ b:~·:t~ryi~~ me from ocean by ownr. prime tocatien. Newly ~~~~u{~1 ~:11r0ar':::~~ ~~~~i~~:1°1 e f p. 1 an ms tr . 2 bd. z ba. mason M -..."'ICH I y 3Bdnn. aupervlew. n eceaaary. 754·6519. 2 bdrm dng rm Sll.5.000 renovated. Open house swh11lng pool. jacuzzi, MaWa. .__Store Ro ugh wood . exter. xlnt crpts & ~ A S89.900.Ph581·9565 Prin M2-5446.963-8613 Sunday 12·5 or call saunas. enclosed roller plenty cpbtd d Excltin& can only begin cipalsonly. --------1 <W-2415. S74.900 .. '56-4500 rp s . porch t d ribe this I Reduced Sl.0000 Beaut s CUSTOM s .. atlng rink. minutes --------' s pa c E'. huge w/view of valley & ~~ncexclusi·v· uanreqau.~ br San V~larde. prof. HOUSl+GUESTUMIT New lols·ocean view from Fashion Island & ---------' l s t 1 d BR:3~ BA w/l~urio~ landscaped, new noor-Vf!r1 quiet Balboa loc:a-Lath & Plaster 4 bdrm custom homes. Balers the Pavillion & only Skyline: abundant park· c 0 e s. n ry rm. trees. good cond muter suite. Many lni. $1.29,500. 8»2011. tlon. Owner financing home in Baycrest. Lrg RE $33.500. <DL8246-7> Ing; adults. pet-park. walk to bay. l 't'.? $25.000 . A u s t 0 m d e w /lmmed. posseaslon lot. sprinklered front & · · 661-6404 Calfol'Wa Pacific rent 1110 Incl. 1u & yrs new. $125.000. osll ....., ..,,.. .. · Mt__. •octt I 069 all ...... 642-33l8 back, copper plumb. 2 --------Id lalls' aec>ooo -,...... av ·~ '"''A's , laundry room. OCEANVIEW MobUeHomeSaJes water; 4 yr o dbl. 1• 1• REALTY P ... ~ .... .:..a:ua ....................... ·" .. 210& u---.. s·· 208 .....,., ooo ·~9 -~ w 1s• .. -"'"" IYOWHll Bayfront mobile home. country k1l·fam rm com· Broadmoor. 3Bdrm. 2Ba ..... .,.,,, ""' -... · .... • °"" · u• ()pen I& airy w /nice biU Nwprt Hat 1 Lido ble Trlr Prk. Furn bo. best buy In family +paneled fam rm hme. ___ 54_0._5_t _l7___ SL NB. l I I So. S.. Hwy t 73. &.-. Aa, 0 .,..,._, v\ewa, tiled enlfY. Up· lot 2 bdr2 :. f' ~er 135,000.875-88319 area. 645-1588 for appt. Prof decor & landacpd. MUSTSB.L Viking Mobile Home. 92J52 graded eart.ht.ooe cpta, 2 'bo • am rm Ba OwnertAl\Sl.65.000Fee SHl,900. By owner. Prin • ...,., , ~-acrou trm all shopping. BR, d-w--Uo •-brick + nus rm. $!19,500. )'front condo+ 45' sU&: ·--------I -•v ....,.'1533 .,,,, ..-u<:er, 20¥4ot, Cully o..An ,.,1• I b 714/~J7-.... I, "" ,,,_ • .... k -..~ n.-Su d Sec rd I ...... .,. ........ · up ... aded 2Br. 2Ba. -n· """"" w,~ enc ca ana. • ~· P lanters. Like t .....,.,.,...,""'"' nay. · gua • poo •au --'-------,.. '"" be d t -see? ..• Sl06,950. DOVERSHOR""' latate, furn. Lse '950 • DUPLEX FANTASTlC lotonoc:ean· tral Orange County 5 ... !_~t Weillcora11e,d, ----- CA> mo a I $250 ooo r t blulC ed ood •Park. ONLY ... 2.995 A ... -. se umtun· SUPa Owri>'/Bkrmustaell4Br. -~ e ' · i,.,BUttobeach.1134.500. rond bl +hr w Aex· witbtlmad.<A·~l . rum.M00.646-41.51 C rcMI Pr.,.rti, 2000 "'".J1U•COUISIVIEW 3Ba, p-6 lndscpd. •·de· v•.,._ pan a e ouse. S· - -1600 _. "" ... sumable loan Sl30.000 ARTISTIC ~---~ rlOft"Y ........ ••••••••••••••• Charmine 4' super loc:. coraled w/Jacuul ft $10,000 KR p rtl Su MOBILE HOMES __ .,..,....._! ....................... IZUMSTS Sl.ngleslytownbome w/3 pool. Bltn microwave. Ta··-~J.!>pe9381 es. Agt e 19'78 Doublewlde Som·•·-------•I BR b Do ...., .. ....,. C714J957-8005 ~1368 me--. fully upgraded r CA ••a -70,000 + den. Has ever· many ot er~xtras WN ""'" •• YVl 1 ' •Al - ,. ... ung. Won't lut long ...-.. . n un aya Aa~ SU .... 2 to 6 " ....,..W_IT_"',....., 611 .,. .... ;_ ..,.,.. 500 <:& d Prof. lnds"'pd. Frwy ,... -· · Ei"""t : BR. four I BR at ... SlOt.SOO. J.2.5. 1531 ·abland Dr. Qljet cul de sac, 3 BR 2 ~~~~~~~~~I ""'",20 ..... 6 Vh._"c--..a •EXCITING• close . <257·9423) only :ro -""" ;1poothl1. inSuper aharp C'. ........ a,•u._. ...... ,. ~or833·1.316 BA. 180 det 1011 C'Ourse -.-. --.--$32.990. eommerciaJ lots. cm Y come of~. ~ .,_ ..... ,ii:: • view. new cpls, drns. IA.LIO"'Tlll-·U r-u-L... ........ L.J.1l .. u~5a-.-2822-24-26 Newport Better hu""' on tbls. Frontlug on emerald•--------• .,. .,. ... .,. Panoramic ocean view, -,-._, -..-.._..... ••1 If d 1· paint. SH0.000 balartce. Near 10th St. beach. exclusive neighborhood uns Mad.Ison 2Br. 2Ba. ('114)848-8895 Blvd., each lot is 2S'x90'. ~e11>:~ .... atmost gone: green go coursewtw1 e WATaFIONT at 11100 mo .. no credit &immertwlnter rentals. FANTASTIC ho•"' Onl. ---------•One lot with bwldlnf . ...._ _, ocean. sunset view 28r,2s•,....,,3levelcon· needed. 9S'1-l998 Prine. New paint lnsld•. ....e. Y 20xl6 living rm In st.ore or office. 1325.000. S .. A •666 be1ond. Elegant Ca ..,., -•~ " Sl.8'1.000. Oai:den Paradise for _. ____ ~~-1200 ,.. .......... ....-••• Cod custnm 4 BR. 2~. do. Newsboy model at _VU"Jf--"-·-------• sm.ooo. UPPrl'lll•,.....trtiliil11M1&. two, etdoY ~beat for ..-_--r-.---..,....,,...._ 8 A . 0 w o e r a o x . the Cove. Lease w /opt.Ion to buy. 3 CALL RON POUL TON less.121,000. u•••••0 •••••••••••••• ,....,.. ........ .-1 ious .... sm.soo. 71f7'9:;e.~1. BR, 2~ ba condo. A 4tU700 4''"°917 1:4-Paclflc 10 ACRES tlfllelc*lll 496-%4 I l 4tJ.t4t4::::::::::::~~ Newport Creal. For de· S. ...._ Mobile Home Sales 4'5-5UO 110.SOlu _t..11t_'-.6G-081--•----• c ...... ._ I07I 2708Harbor,St.e20I :.:~~~e,~;1~~~~~~~;1-br=======-WAUlTOllACH OCl.AMFIOMT ••••n••••••••••••••••• ___ 1_4_0._H_J_7 ___ upper boules, many out O>ast Hwy, Npt. Beach 2 • 4brduplexwrpool. MOITMYllW $107,500 3 BR. 2 BA, asking BYOWNER lMO ,...-..-bldp. Needa aome help. wtretail store + apt. or Prime Eutalde Cll IHAL [<,Tt\Tf 0191te•• ...... 1.~ 3 Bdrm. 2 bath. seller SZH.000. Owner will ... ~ MUST SACRIFICE-....... ru.,·_.~ .... ~~-. Good tenm. owner ill~ ofc. Assume 7% loan. Pride of ownerslllp ...,,.. a _..., led. ""•b lt' C II fi 675 .eaftl\ '·-~ b 2 .. _ lot ..,, ' uvc ... ....., -aom.is. .._ 000. •• ""'"" ...... $127.500. Good term• zt0151Wtt9a.w •uuuva .... m · a ll\IDCe. -.vwv -.-.ee• r, .... c:or · 28r.2S..Uteintertor,aU FARGO -,_ . .....,...._ avall.CaJl541-l'l90nas. Prlme view. neat l MS-el6l HOLLIS WOOD To many xtraa Q>o men· UPIUded. Priced for (714)17&-'717 Ce•d1 ....... s/fow1t• bel 3 bdrma REALTOR 67s-8676 --------1 Uon. Mual see. SllUOO. quick sale. ·saa.ooo. ORS22-2CllO .._....,._.. 1700 ~ c!in.J1y + dlJlin;. Superior Quality Cstm VllWt VllWI Open hse. 496-23ll. <TT~CA>. --------·I••••••••••••••••••••••• ~:Ja'i~~ls ~~ ~.C::·:d~~ :8Ja~ t'J~~~e~:ms .. 2 ,:~:~~E Molll. 848": Store IUILDIMG sm '§!5:tio~~r c':~~:~C:.~ 3 Bdrm .. 2Y.t bath + hqe attic atorage. baths. formal dining, w/llMllllllohplt ble, natural earth tones. townhouse ; 1ecured ~~~~~~~~!I Hrdwd firs~ 2 frplc's. patio & sundeck . Equititely decorated LOVB.YHOMI llt..;;;;Mt,500 Quiet. conv. loc By community. Tennla, -Very priv country yard 1168.500. Dnve by 2003 .. _ d 19'12 12x60 2Br. lBa owner. SJC 496-21'17 or pool, aauna etc. Some oo IO x. 150' lot. Assum Y.lata Caudal <Tbe ..,me w/Wi e open feel· Champion cathedral '168-6443 ocean view• Private IA<* IAY 8\AJS ~e. frive-by li:!&U:n£81\lo!ff! 1:::er'bf:i>' ~j'·8ap:. celllnc..Jovely adlt ~~u~dre;0~0 b~~!~1~0 __ P_E_N_H_O_U_S_E_S_A_T ~MASUE~~:;rUYO:N R:Eu:~:TV::-~':ll";;'!Jaouul, ~It .ea.~::.~-; ,oor.;;;Jtl :.:w:~f;!~ -n\~i;:.-;r• ::·a' re I n e a r ~:r.• ~q~~;f~~~it lliOl nE CatH AI:..Au PecBroma,Ag\84$-1531 • 675·5'30 * fmd! --,-.-..... -MIL-Y _____ , Fallbn>otalrport. neceas•rv to usum: ell· ·-~··WJB Winter/YrlyRentala MIWPOITSHOIES 36.Ti t:. <.·~t 11"'· "d.'l ... .,, --1 .... ·~~~~~~~~~I t " " Sha l I Id SU iatlntloan. Beaui. ! BR. waN.CltHwy,La ... •nal· mmac. 2Br, den, 2ba · rp s ng e w e IDIVIDE l~ ba t.rt·level. a car ~---~ beacbbouaeSl.03,000.By Amerlcao S •Parlt. 3311 pr.,tp•--•---A -·-SEAVIEW own«/Aat.64$-3009 WTIUYl rnovelft$13,000. (64-3084) vie:.;~~i.w1great lmmed~o~ ~.00e~. Newport Hetabts. 2 Mal.attto.e store Palmyra 175. Oranae. •3 bdrm. library. lam l'MFAUJNGlNLOVE bdrm. older home on ____ 848 __ 1885.._;, ___ 1 5 acres tn Murrtetta at 9'13·1083 dya; '168·8788 formal dinlnf, Uvln View home wltb tennis wltb tbla r omantic large lot with private 4ir&:mr-;'3i:iO!io' _..,.1., ... ~ ~peracre. eveeJWknda. Byownr rooms. 2 Crpl's, 2\.\ ba, clubandpoolelubmem· Sm~!~~bl'vve~•~ .. !dnldt ~ard. 3rd Bdrm. or ' NI.--~~ w.·••• "'Cl&CO B 0 R l G t l b benbipsl Only tnStmo. mRNVU. vuv"'" ._,. rm. wttb baU> al--"-c--ce 1118712ll40, 1Br, lBa -• Y wnet. ee ate coun ry c u area · n•"'CARP.,_7,..., •• -Iii• .... a wee'-and It's ta bed .,. ood -··-s Cet·a.-...1 W •'""'" SC V u •1u-• ne1•"'borh ~ .,.. '".._. ..,.. • c to aarage. Owner tr.-..L-•-IOIO ... ~w , areal = -·-ou-eat ......... . . iew, ..... -.. • .,. _____ .;.._;_.:..;.._;_t tearin• me apart-come will fto - -'---•L.... ,._ .. '9'9 _._4_ I t b b t IMftlXIS 2·1 BR 117.500 H BR ... land aooo t-l BR. NB. $129.500 Aaeot 873-~ llAUT1MlT, USTOU» Ocean view Spuusb Mamlon coovenect to a umta with ucalleot reo· taJ income. Ha.If • mile to Dana Point Ilario•. SllllS.000 SP~SIAS •••uotm New deaiper diq>Ju on coU courae wuh ptnOram1c view. ldeal ~ witb tncome. IW.000 MOIUNS UAL rt 49<MOl7 Reduud Ull,500-t•-------•l tee tbi. beauWul c.rea· ..--=af'1l~~CH •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• ~uuu. (813:Z)The _ ... -TijJ e ev& or <o c . a I 83l.ml9aa ..UC•Tesa&. Uoo.tWVlaWazlen-.--.... ..-..-. -Ouyiae.70tS ~~~~~~~~ =~ties. uu.ooo IYOW... ha tbe Blllfla, Slt1,to0. 4 'Udo lale .. I'm afraid t UALTY 67S.164Z z•TOWMHOMI fAMl&.YPAlll 11 •~Dr~ .,.._E_W_O_U_P_L_.E_.X ___ N_P_T 3 Bdrm 2 ba'"' ,._...__ Bil. pl~1 a ba. fam ml.irt buy It and. asro sq $41,000 Dbl wide Barrtn-on MllW lll'S. 2 BR ea. AaoN End ..it Oft El m;;· ldtdt' pvt pauos, areen· ft la too larta f« one C 11 I mUy bom ~· Loaded with oaks D ... /. I II VL\G aolf ~rse. Partially bell, cul·de-1ac, UP· peraoo-help·releue ROLLOUTTHI s:ac1::. a2bt:~,~~~ naew. Par:· :ent I~~~ :lBAbomewtthy~!:n C:l. 1100 u:LIY~sSMin. sa furniahed. wm bel D'llded. Great Joe:. Call me-8'0' Lt for P9'l,OOO. IAP...111.! ' Adult'• <>ab' Town.home. Down p&Jment IOw. C.lt private lab, secluded ..................... .. nuae. •11'91 l« appl to eee. 7»0331. It'• the *t ~ tn N.B. You'll have 8 barrel o1 Lovely pvt brtc:k patio. to d a 'I S 3 O • 9 0 o . uea. Term,t. a yr old deluxe larae · WlUc:oope.ralew/•tb• Charles Qulntatd, tunealertainlnt ln lhlt Community po,ol <•BXXU> FARGO 3&drm. 28a duplea. Choice 4 bdrm .• 2 ba .. btn. Realtot81N250 deluxe three bedroom w/&aYDa. All lo ·~•c· ......,..._SW. (714)ma1 Frplc, balcon1es. l car :':'c!;:,~~!~·P~W!: -.. -.... ·---·-··-·····-··-. 8)'0wov.On••br2baor =:r: 4£i:A~~ g;~=· aunounded ..... ORm.GUO aar.•719'. ~ qulchalel M,500 • !: can be 1 ap&a, upec.aln 2 Built·in au BBQ and wet FOR DETAIL.SCALI.. LOV& Y HOMI .._ ,,_,,ny 2000 ~· / br 1 ba, down.ltaln. l br 1 bar lo lighted patio area 644-7211 lhrleUe Ud5 tx,pendo, OMI ACll ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• 9IO OLD 3 BR. 2 be •• ram. rm, 81Jlo.~~· · t' :f·=~::c:i:p11: are but a few hlnta-197\\ 2Br, l.Ba, perfttt ·~ Plau for tUMITSCM EnJo1inl ~ edGn.ble "111. II•. f~ Pillo. •· ~· $ don tn come see the Hal! On.I¥ cond. air cood Ii much ll unb. -.-\·2 8R bm + a unit.a. m duem oa Balboe lalaM. ~etculdeuc.11~.000 -:-;""',.' ... ~ Owoerwill~c:,. P= *·*·Ctt11si.1t20. ~~~--DIYILOPmtS-otw m temdJd. Xlnt. 2•b1U. to bMt'b tr 0.1. 2 ,..~ .. 71711trl • • • r· '1in. only. °"" A '-'U ._IL --r• ......-.___ ... __. loc: • .uo.ooo equity. SP BR. 2 l>Ub. Dutcll door 4'~ B . · · · Salio.a.~1.tu.-e ,. A •10&5 ----. •s.ooo. GRUBB• EL-frool .it: a aa.1 e.u. Lalt...... 1011 tuinessmen molW.Seuhonl,conMf DI •cE P8JCJ1) UNDER IUCT. kll ..... ID be.a1411\a.1. LIS. Bob GDlrdner ,.,. uol& W/IU1¥J!J deell • • II 110 .. cir• dofft" o1n.... ...... «-USO. Park ..-~ °""*" .,,._. fa.t Hie Ir OUwabll.Dtu0,000. llNllOO. ror-a .. .-•. ~lot. ..... ••• ............. .. ~ • ""'.... .... . ..~ Omd .... -v --------.;-"""''--,...,.'IQ,....... bautuu 111tdn o ,_tn_frGl& __ oi_aar .......... .;::;.;..·--_.._,_.. \WJ -A IMo'ert WALLACIACO, Balboa Pen1nft1' 3-plu :~·~.:~ = Iii a..._.. E'c If Uou 8"1f 1t111 View lililM IQlliiit Tl all P.M.t =--8':~ BA. llAl.ftllll Cellt •II ~ down. btl. an coo· rDIM .._..,, (N-W> g"'p.:':.t: ~r:. t;;"::r,;;.':"= =:~ <MHOUSEFROMTHE ---------I 7Jt..MM ~ A1t. 975-ltOO. AJIU'O..C. ..... well. J.,.a, to Brod Pro/e..Scm Codi. S.C 'nlllAvettaMatalnc. :,::~.ooo .•. 000 ..,.._6 _ 1 ~~~~~~~~ .......... C.Ud moo to fll.10110 1#4 0 ~ ,... Coa: l1Jl1Sl-C'rt'1 F'lctW0111 Bu{ntu -Lii C.\,lat 'ti/de• I rm nilrd.,-acmlyN. Nom• Slot•mnt 4lld •C••• I076 lflL on Ooa.tt Rwy • • hotlt' " ,.,,,~ /or Tat•*' ••N ....................... ...,: I Br bm nc&t lo bc:b. /otir ~-tottb a AICWITHlllACM -.-W 6 of th~ DAIL.Y lroadmffr 9Hvlew UllitH&e RSEl"GATE ~BM.TOI Pit.Of cm 1wW Mlflh ...... tmm old. a&d ..... WEIT· C'ODdomlnlum. 4t""6U bol1' cau ,,., L£GAL ... COftUDIWl)'. Pool. Rare11:•••UablJ, °"at D8PA"TMrNr ~r jeCijid.' ... Notredit ~ ,fHJJJ Ezl . 131 /or ~w':e~~y RJ:t!:RY Ju.rtAfr ~-•11 " ~me. mo.ia 111at -.cm : "!!:Mar.nab 1r~1ne .~T • f I ~ .m..bltlu. avafl Sepl t. winter leaae. 815·2151. 210 Emerald. New .!nlland S\Jlt a lllMfroom 111 '!!:Macnab · Irvine AOOXJdst t OCIAM VllW ~Vee a IM1• bdnnt •• 2 bathe, .-..........:.;.--...,,.-,.,.1""!t--·,-,-10-7-i trplc., 2 cu 1•ra1e. -Good vltw from both ....................... ltvela.15251(CJath llMe MIW Br•lMI o .. TonbouH 2 Bdrma., a beU., 2 ur lt1'e o.doa. a BdraJI, ,......, tlOOIDOftth. 2~.!ucl1masa . . ' 2 BR, 2 e.. W/encl. car. $325. No pets. 1912 Wallace SS1·2HS or 137-95 Large I Bdrm. bllns, encl prqe. l-12'7·3479 Bachelor. ftseaklr ci~n ODly. $150/IDO lndu utJJ -..u.51 2 BR 2 8& apt, adult.I. avail. Sept. I. SUS m~iuve meuaae UTtLlTIES PAID! StJ&FU~D' GOOD AREA RUNIJ , *81AND NEW* - llMMFS MIWIST l4'f COMMUMITY • .. IDITASE FOINT .; • j An •et rommuntty de-: siped wttll you In mind· featunna 81pac1oua floor Olaoa. F\irnlabed or u.n·, lurnl•bed J 2 • 3 bedroom apt.I. AvallabJ-_, tor occupa.oey JWM 20th .. D ;· .• : i) ~' ~"' ! (. ~ P..,i I :· •• J~"' ii 1~1 _:I!~"'~ I • '4 -· . ~·· ':r'""• c ~~ ---.... ,.~._ a---.a • 11 -1--.. II • L••c111 .. 1 " ,,_.. .. Ts<._,+; ............. /I~ 1-_, •:••......---......w•www •v• -----_. -I -w··.....-·-,, ~ ... ............... ....................... ......•................ ....................... ..•.................... . ......................................................................................... . 161>..IACl'lerv. Qarpet ~ha dlleoo· """°*bMwortloom, l lhlrabml'a 01rdenln1. OCXStudent.1 Tant.ruck. ~Landact~r CultomW1llpaoerto1 PATCHPLASTElllNO REPAIR & R.EROOP'. All ftlP'CHA.JlOSSlO u...d •'«k·ballt. hi· -.wv.,.G..,...., Cleila-up•mllbl.Mhn. Trub, tree lrtm, Ron Top work. Fair price. AllworttuaZ~ .• L All '>'PU · Fret! l)'pU ·thi nctea -_.._l.A.. k)w 6 phab. lave 5"t N~.Dl.atM mcw,JlcMM•Jm Ml-,,.tU.az:M Refa . ........n4-yoreve. 87M1SI est1Jmta.CallS40-CS t'OCUhlket·COmpo·tar . ..._ tit OJ• Call at.... MNJll. ...,.... 0 • rd-.. • e r v I e e . CSEAPllT baullnl In 1Mdec1ptq. Tree trim· 11ouMp1Jnttn1. lftt.. Ex· A P 1111 Free est. Ml·SW> ••• • IJfJ i Ro11ert Spr-aa..-carpet ....................... ~-Pree tlL Call '°*"-rr. etta. CHEAP! mlJla. Clean-up. 8 yrs ter. ll'roee est. Jobn Beck ........................ Tiie -................. ..,_,,...in•m.i.na ltttn....,.• JuuaQtlme.11'1·.. IG-21115•"5-1.llO up. rree est. Noboru. 8Sl.m1orMS-Zl61 HOllESAVERS. Plumb· ...................... . tSPeM-.y• U.....,.., Uc.Ima .....,, • • m.aa••H8U •• HeaUn•· n-ee est. ~"...,,etitr.Neworre-Drt•w111•Paft1D.t lcK ,~ I 114'T. rtbck, yant-11ra1e .. Interior. exterior. Sl5br Hoae&tAreUable model. l"rte aUmatet. •Repairt •Stalcoatlo C1••JC•s.• ELllCl'RlCIAK·Priced ....................... cleanlnc t11rdenin1). •-"•• r RetidenUal It comm 'l · 53M98'1 af'l s •Lie. NI, CM S.-1 ....... :.~ ............ rttbt·tr.. .. umate on ~ac;d.~~dwU'!?_P Reu.rat4!f.$46-0ll6 ....................... properties. Richard ..nice. BofA. MIC OK. tt . ... ..-. .... ......,1 ,._..U•• ...... tai•I a.,.. lljobe v-. ... _ H. Brlckwork. Small joba. Maraball. ~6..o425 or f79.81115orl47.o313 Ceramlc tll•, floora, _._ _______ • ___ , .. 11.i bl~• p1t1oa. U..::ma •ia..alt UcinHtc.131·125'1 · lllm1d111' I Newport, Cotta Mesa• S31..ao82 Any ~r,blnf. water dulnboardi.. tubs. > t 111 lervlu • 'd ' ......... •••••••••••••• lrvtne.6'1$.3175eves. n.... -... _ ... rm eocl sbow*s. Free estimate . ....................... aDLIJc . ll11rt1 .......... s,..11 WutaREALLYCLEAN 1.Synpalntlngv-. Cnty ....... ....... . TYPINO/"•-&lDd C*C.. ·-••••• .. ••••••••••• •• .. ••••••••••• .. •••••• HOUSE? Call Glnl)lam Block Slumpetoae Walla. topqua.tlt.yStLic•~: ceramic Ule. Reat.,_Z.a3'1 __ s_. ----- • ~--·-....................... T·"YLO• _,c• co. 5'' ahua.lnum aeaedlble11 Girt. Free est. ~5123 Bridt, Stone Planters. 839-1888 Pete a:.aeee n-... Serrice ,,.,.__ .. _ _._ -u ar941 Ul " .. ~."' -1·-'"-w/bak on rea.Lle68ooded,Bob, DRAINSQ.EARED.Flat •••••••••0 ••• .. ••••••• 'I ........ ~~&ome.Or· Uc=i:"'-A=tll'7 ~7~bltonjob. Walla.eelllnp.Roon" 17J.OlltotW.-. '4olfonall•allpaper.U rate. Sta.50. Melns,Ellpertsbapiq,tblnnin1 ~11111 fw lmcb. rar ..-.lee, , The~.542-13'2 wlDdowacleaned. ........,,..,.,.,... H:n:.:-=• The 924.50. No 1lmmlcb. • ttum p remoot. ---·-.......... ewtm m.tnact. m-,.., ... * 1.1 I I' • 646-61'5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Roacerman, m.2812. Landscape ereations. CU,... ~ tR AQ .................. ••••• " ., Interior -·1.J.I• Careful ~ml 1dae Jobe'. Call~ or Cllll.lilf• Clau-u • HauUn ....................... 'lbell~.Alltypeaof PETERSPAINTING _.......g. PBBRY'SPLUllBING •---------,._,.... ..... •• _ ............ Laodtcfplna. Imm~: 0.1 Rudyman. Paint· c lean1a1 incl. hy· Expr'd. Reu R•tes. ~t.y~k ·~ complete plumb•nl n.. Sentce-aU t:ypet + R . .I. ffufhmn 6Soft. ..-ndq.. Id-_, lftl, urpenby, rooftna. drocarpetclean. ~2.393 Free Eet. Call Gene .,..ce. est. · aervtcee. Drain ., sewer removal; palm trees any ·CU.tom Jlemodell•I • ..._...ludclttJom. m11onry. Any home FINICKY FOXES 1 ~ Fine lot/Ext" acoustic c I e 1o1 n a . Fr"~ bt.•78111.41M-2129 • AddlUou. Call Vloc-e -....orS4MSn. Prof. landarape main· malnt. or remodelinl 2yacUa apta bomea~~n Patntini. Extr/Intr. Ex· patnttn1 n-. est. Low elt:lmata. It hr aeoice T...._. : Limlldf6Amoc ID-HIN Uc:naudltBonded. tmanct, lKI. cleanup 6 proj.J. Waicb.631·2233 treeesi.....au · ~'d. honest, a,1t. reas. rat.es. Uc 380:M2. Call m.:1111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ;:.._ ~ laauU01. LlablULy in-•'d-....t""r..._fe Paul me2'1 ----·~~-a. -1.. '-'UO>&v. lllttltOI' C&.11*»· llemocltlln1 odd.iuons, sured Is Uc'd Comm/ Small jobe, 25 yrs up. " "'!"""" .._,,,. • ~ ~. <tf_.. Ft' teuc.. or tutcnng. tiybyJ-:0... :=r~·=i new ~ABi~ ~¥J. r.;:~~· Call ~!1.~.~!!!.! ........... ~~. ~~=~ig ':,~!','~°::u.!'. ;;;:~;::.-;:;~;;:· ~~.~wed. Carpeoter, handyman 'lbolo~ Larry's Lawn Care. Plx All. n-ee estimate.. ~-:!.~:SC:~ me.as..~a.bn. par. Freeest.675-8336 =f~:C:,~.i.d waah W'dwrk , 5 l'ne m . CaJl after $, Qlltom rem-.u-• It nu ~1* Jolin Beck. 6'5-Zlfn or Int• M&-1070 n...-1 ... 1-Un Ext •. lnt ........ ,.__._ •----------- -llll ·--........ .... . ~.. ... ..... .. .-.-... .,,...... .. -,.......-llflll191.... • •••••••••••••••••••••• '"'"·--• caa.t.P'reeecrt.Nl-21N9 •VDYLOWPRICES• _._ Low at.el Refe Free ....................... .., OnG•""'-'-•Matnt L.M.S.-Roto. Sod or at~.-Neatpot.des&texturd ie•••••••n••••••••••••• People wbo live lD ctua ' SeUwttb EASE! II ate your a hopplDI .. ._....... · SelhrithE.ASE! Seeded L • w r:i 1 . · • fl&IST. ltJ.14Jt Horizon Rootiaa. Quality tn1M9 oeed a ~ood win· · lt'u BREEZE eu1er by ua1n« t.be Daily Gecqe ~aou lt'u BREEZE Sprinkler•, Planttn•. SELL idle it.ems wttb a wort. reuonable rates. dow ~anet'l A Clear • ClaulnedAdaMM671 PUotaa..uteaMa. WurtAds C.ll642·56'11 ClualfiedAdaMZ·56'18 Xlntrefs.815-7633. DallyPUotClaaal.ftedAd. Want.AdHelp? 6Q.5671 m..a View' Co.63Hl21'1 ,:t,_lwata....... Afutwc•u.r... Sa .,._,. 4200 Office._... 4400 l1Jl1paaa 0vu. SOOS Mol~'" T,_. so~s LOltla,aa.d 5300 !!;;!.~!9! ......... !?.~~ ~!!':'~.'!' ..... !!?.~ , ..................... t ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... upr wrr ........ • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...... 3144 ... .,.,..._.. 116' Ocean Froal w/pvt beach ....................... •n•• .. ••••-•u••• .... LOST: Bllt M poodle. n DllLA"S Malu,... dtU1ent fe~l ._ .................... ••••••••••H•nneuu• in Lalun• alps 6 as low ~YAIOMTOFflCES TRAVB.AGEMCY Pvt. Partynda $50,000_Znd yn old. 8/3. vie Spr· OCC&TSHOP ~eneul office exper ·a BR. 1+ ba, lrg liv rm, BAYFRONTDELUXE ut500wll' • fl~ ~New ft· FIAJ4Ctl5E T.D. aec:Uftld by pnme ingdale" Golden West. llADIM&S wants~ct~:j din rm. sunny llilcbeo. s br z ha, 2 car gar, bit· nern Del Sol Realty fac:: .. ~~~ vlew1aq li 1be new way lo own a ~~t propetty. A&t HB. PtacallMZ-765t. 'ha cardll ESP eenae of humor. wb~ :'lqlndryrm,A/C,new Ina, frpl, p1Uo, $700. 497.1744 patlo•·parltini & travel agency. Travel LOST : Blk /T&n readt~dally.'u11'. neverlGlesthiap,haa crpg, freshly painted. 673-93 ~ Bch 2 bdrm._ Janitortal included. 2808 N«wft. start)ou.rown. SI 5 000 .,_ .... TD Doberman male re-IPll. For •ppt. 494-9171 no dome9lic problems Ill nrrl1 Incl. Pool/rec ........ ...,.. ' ... e Lafayette Ave., N.B. Exp. not required. ~--'1n'--~":el-wHBarcl.m':9,.:.di1von.1owu 1$ wt1Hn1 to dete1ate -. s:n> mo. MCMI067 s bdrm. z ha, upstairs. Yl'· sio ~ St. N~ Bay Is ~1003 Complete support 6 tooi ':::.°", =-000w-2nduaT Dw U30 N. Cit. Hwy. Lia reep. Cali 962-LS39 •ft ly lease. $485. Avail Sept. 0 c ea n · P all 0 I G a r term servire provided. _.. a ..... · · Bch. 4 · 31> w /dee.alls .IDal Sbe 1 BR Lakeside t,673-1305Pll $200./Wkly879-0957 JHE EfACIENJ CaJI Mr. Cb1rles, Payable Interest' only LOST : •Sealpt Siamese Penooal Ii Maril.el pro-· · CCllldo. Air cond.. & rec 71~ 10%. All due in 3 Y~· cat. F. Vic Go&deowest • blems an.alysp K'lPNO-Woman seeks pos1tJon •& facU. 1125. 8"-9548 2 bdrm, 2 ba, Weskliff, no . Seo&red .~ tux bome-tp ·~ Edinger, -tf_B. !tewarct. •i•uviuoy S:Ji..Q334. rompDto-. etc .. ra Sr. drlht, ·11crpet'S, ~-Vacalt8•8flh 4250 ··rERNITlvr Cocttails. ~ Beach MilsJoo rn:jo. Prine au m.4318. &....-~ • Cit. Rels.646-927'l L...-.._. 3141 M.S-6764 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AL 11~ vie on Pacific Coaal Ol\ly please. $81·2600 & Man. atttacttve boneet ........ w~ ...... ••••••••••••••••• sot.mil.AKE TAHOE Mo. to mo. rent incl: Hwy. Ideal location for 586-0367 Found: Male Corgi. 1 or 2 ~ yean aa ~ -~ --7100 OCEANFRONT 2 Br. Ith Ba, Townhouse KEYS TOWNHOUSES Rec e Pt · s er v ·• disco. '48 licensed, years, very ruce do&. ror pretty lady. Wnt.e ••••••••••••••• ... ••••• DELUXE =-~ult. oopetg. $265. on WATER. Studio. 1,2 & penoaallz.ed phone COY· kitdlen racil .. 3000 aq It, ... ,_ ,_ .... , 645-1.508 CJaaaifted. No 320 Daily i--------· ~-z~m $420, uUI. ~Walk to Beach! :.~::tY ~=;~~ ::!_~·~-, ~m.;,;!a~ ~e" =~~: r:.•~t'~ F~:!.°!~~~b. ~::.t~ o. Box ueo. ~ua~"' Gara•e.' Fireplace, AEK. TV. Newport. $120,000ormakeoffer. ..~.-a.--Today to work WHITEWATER vu. cpl, • THE EXECUTIVE U&-Alt• ..... RR ••••••••••••••••••••••• 645-150I • Seek -It-pl in 60's ror ·---drps 2 b b dlt.s S&ove.,Dwsb! private dock. private SUITEMG-5'70 ~-+•a.en•• SIGG . -~d•t.el. Ad m 3 onvariouurcountm&lll 'A 1 '.....'dAr, 1 Yal, a .... _. ~Fee beach, tennis, Indoor & 14M40I ••••••••••••••••••••••• Found.DahnaUan. male. ~Dail)'' Pilot PQ Bo• ice. bookke~ang a u11n· v · uu • ''°· r y. _,. _,,...,.,._ ls Cl lo .. ~ --·-... I to -""""""' poo · 06e CclM OFFICES Approx z yrs, baa sbota. CM -• ............ ora c ose 49M'195 BIG CANYON EAST. 2 casinos. (415)961·ZS60 Furniture strippln1 ' Appears purebred. -your home. Fi1ure 1 BR. Walk to bch schools 8R t.ownhome. 2 ba, 2 lrfGht Clt11ry Mew franchise estab 2 yrs In 645-1.508 Successful O.C. busl· Clerks to Sr-Accoun· 11 shops ~+ bt /last & fplc 's, 2-car gar w /auto Exec home, 4 PR, Irvine SUITEs. So. of Coaat great Costa Mesa loca· b tants needed tbruout T..: lo R It opener, A/C & more. Terrace, CdM. Avail Hwy. Available Now! tion. For Sale at far PENNY FOUND: Young M Eng n~sma~ ur ane , OranieCo. ::.muom 0 ea y. Avail 9/1, no children, no 9124-10124. 6'73·1.52S SEE to appreciate. $395. below cost. $7000 firm. Springer Soan Vic est semltive, mterested in Robert Half's -------. -pets.644-0509 .__._._ .... ..__ ~•oo Cal1Unda675-2311 548-7622 PINCHER Hwy,-CdM. 8i&. Can't 1neetln1 attractave. Accountem----_,, .. ~ keep' 1 644-2264 slender •om an, 30·40. r-1f~n~ ~:i~· l:a~~1~11l TH E N E W P 0 R T •••••••• .. •••••••••• .. • CdM dlx suites, uUl pd, CARRIAGE SODA POP ADS · · · Enclose photo. Reply to :-r!w:r~~=nk shops. UUl pd. S380/mo MARIN~ beaRl n:wly •IESB.ICT1YE• A/C, ample ptug, from STORES. Help ruD·DOW ~;~~~~·~e9~bs-: ~o.":o:1~ c'!.~~ ln11teCityof0ran&e 4SN-854l decora 2rf8 • 2 ad+ Oa.lnartU1ble $165.Nolsereq.675-8900 operating. Last 3 co. ONLY $1 ""-....... tiaCM "---rsto M-•ea.-714/135-4103 den, wate ront. san Y roommote. 64.5-7464 owned stores now avail. .-...... ~ "'""" .. ,. --.,,._,., a..z-... 3150 be•ch, lovely garden. •SHARE A HOME• !500 aq ft Dllt, near OC Fast growing Sl00-S200K Buffy. CM Lieenae ........ ••••••••••••••• Boat slip avail. No c:.tcPowut Alrport,add'lofclswbae grossnextl2mo.$40,000 SeU •DY item ar com· #001963 REWARD ~OrangeCounty IAttU Payable-Major de LAGUMA*LS children, no pets . avall548-0067 F.P.aspackage.894-6662 blnatlooorltenu for$7S 6'2-8153 "lt'npleuurelo veloper lo Newport ™4 Lhttlgbf1mn! ..--aR.a. H M·F or less witb a PenDy Lo b · & -· •• Beach~ COD81r'UC· New adult deluxe epts S.Cle•• 3176 ShareahOmeouptment *rs""""' -c * . Ptncbet Ad. 3 liMS for 2 st S/1/7S, et&e serve,,-. lion acco\i.nts payable f\an Is unturn. Billiards. 1'.-... Cibn.s lJHuMJTm lOoo-3000 IQ. ft.. Attr•ct. Need s em i ·a ct i v e consecutive days. Each aprieot prt poodle, Baker 73l-07IS 731-4'116 proce9IQf to WGl'k in new pool. jacuni. sand ....................... ~l· new cq>td ofc's. Many panner/i.ovestor, male addition.al line &5 &Or for •Fairview. REWARD! Hin mo116Jed!leotllieque offices IAPlllhioa laland wlleJball. 2 Br, ocean view, walk lo tilt-~~~· wtndowt, shower. Avatl. or female, ror fast grow. lhe2dliya.Charcen• :s..,.1!'-tenl eves for ;our next party. uu..~ (Rboeda). ALICIA YIU.AGE bch, lge i>Ofth, led )'I'd. o.>~~ w/1ar. Decor. blinds. mg, very profitable con· Nocommettlaladl. ~., Ph Jiil• 673·3212 or--------- 2SZ11Stockport ms. mo.498-ST15 8SMJ.34Since1m ~ p/aq. ft. Mr Hix· structioo related mfg. Lost Blk cat wtrecl eoUar az.msmscn APT.M.AMAaa 5111-&Sl or 581-6130 son. MS-3323 (8am·5pm) BusiDess located in Costa For more Information A....i-A -. S Ba..-,., 10 Unit a ... t.W.. ea.ta Otnceopen9-7daily Forevervtewofocun,nr Roommate. Balbo1 Mesa.ReplytoBoxt3l7, andt.oplaceyouradcall nr ~-· , .. .,... ,. 11Senlcn53'0 lleaa. L:;e-;;:' prop. beach. 2 br 2 ba, adults. Island. $142 Mo. incl. uUI. 1200 IQ fl office apace, c/o Daily Pilot. P.O Box B.I. 675-8883 ·-;;;;;••••••••••••••• Prefer -·d cpl., no ~..__. 315z S325.492-5689 3BR.2ha.673-8632 PCR, Npt Bcb. Good ,._ M Ca 642 56J8 -...-._,....... ,__ Robbi 1560, ~ta . esa, . • Lost White/red terrier Ni~Cyc~Muaage daildnn.ITWUO •• ••••••••• •••• • •• •• • • ••" _..tioo e S48-0757 -i F . ts Sbow Boo TIEACHA~ M/F 2Br hse, L•1una, · • -m x. 11 yrs, vac ..: m 2 bdrm, 2 ba new apt Beaut 3 Bdrm, 1th ba non-smoker, Sl7S + th Smalloffices,ocean Approx. 3000 sq ft art Newport Blvd. Is 17th Specia13-Pr·Sl0 MTIST..f'IODUCTIOM = ~fe'!.°Q!~ dup.'\v!'"~~i ~artin 494·0323. ~· iaUery, showrooms & MS-W0&63l·S8l4. f:e!'~!:: !,"r!:cb~:ie~l':~~!:.~ ~UZ7 ~Madrid sep1rate olllce. 494S Lost: Fem Blk/Wblte KM086ffunt8each ttons. prlntiog pro· Profelll·onal business AB.&e..l.ft.R Warner Ave, HB. Call SCRA.M-l.ETS Cock•poo. Vlc West-_...,,_ .. _ ...... -de-ttrwport.._. 3869 or-.._ b ~ Z13/6M-7432 ott~er Vig. Reward. Modulllallc.fl ..--a..__.._, ••••••••••••••••••••••• -f!l8D seeks S arinl situa· CA.I~ l / ll07 9:347 alp. SUit aueeD a + · c.,11hmo 3171 tioo W/femakl, your apt vv~·' KING w te IUClllEDS . > z:· ... Be au,,. c b. rm . lmmed 'V!"DI ruU or PAIK tGWPOIT ·---............ or eondo. ~II Clay (213) Mr. O.C Mr9or+ ~ .SS~/ r ~-wnu F 0 u n t7 G e r m a n ialllllltmcie. Wllat more part-time. Creative en- Ba ch e Io r s, 1 or 2 3bdcondo,splillevel. 264·4640 dys (714) Approx1200aqftavaila· 29%ctowD.Aet.75[.r~.· Rotteo -Sola.r-Shepherd/Collie mix. can,fOUaUor?Partlet, vlroemut. Call .lark Bedrooms & Townhouses 2 car gar S(OO. 41KJ.2680 eves ble. Contact Louise Dahl Mound-Parole _ Vic: Bea.ch " Hell. HB. d I o n er , d • n c 1 n I . .831-71.ZUor appt. c:.w.!::I:r~~ total 811.QSNI Roommate to abr house, CORPO~T,.!.!EALTY la~ 5020 POLLUTED Male. Very smart! ~~ ... ~av-•·~-C. AS•mas "t""-• ..-pool bch HB .,,.,._ w--Have YoU beard about 147 31188 uu.. ~-11&1 .r~creallon program, Soliltle••• 3116 ,nr · ....................... the environmentalist . elusive Nrriee by dis· fot day abift. l :JGem. IOdal program. 7 pools, 8 ••••••••••••••••••••• •• 963-7892 Im> IM...... 4450 Flnander needed for uni· cocbal.lf Yf'a cao drink Found : Y n g Germ . enet ladJes wbo rea1i1e 4llm-S&artina sar. A.sit Lamis courta. Al Fubion 1 bdrm apt, sns. /mo Rtll•bie fem to ahr condo ....................... que buslneu, WW repay u many 11 you want.~ Shepherd, tt colortog. tbe i.mp)ltance ol com· for Mr. Clifford. Po&i~ lalud, lamboree •San ut.Opaid, In San Juan Capistrano. E!S!DE C .11. Shopa. In% of profib. 6'1-7356 you never 1 et 1eotle, 1ood w/klda. DetibleeompAQy. llaJe• tiantavalllateAua.Call Joequi.DBllla Hoed. -.2'96 • Sl&eet .a offu. bobby, wholesale, orM&-rus POLLtn'ED. $.16.2395 hmalec:UebteleKalplne lo.525'. (1141644-ltoO . ,_ ... PT~ 648-r.M9 A.Hoc. Katella Ave.----... ---------------• .... ••~wl•• · · · ......, .. I.om SOZS Found: Fem. t11er AyhetmS7Ml32 ~"""Aen Nice 2Br ()pla Q118tain, 4 wU... P 3 1.a JfOO =~~~rar~: ,.....LOCATION ....................... ltnpped cat, flea collar. , lllC1"IOMIC frplr, W/b. 1areae. _ ................ Refe.75MIOI 8'ore ,~ ...... E. lTtb lit, 2Qd. lrd T.D.'• ........ ,..... IJOO Friendly. vrc CM . . -......._ 1400 AS•--s ......_ oo peg, nr Udo 'IH&UCITJNO 8&, CM . UU aq ft. cndllnoproblem. • .... -.. ••••••••••••• ~ s.cw-llledlcal cm.. iD 11iaDoa .... ~ LM.cr.dlt PALMMllAAPTI r mM ab.an ntl\1 at_ 1141MM110,M&-1* 731-4271 Loltor Foaad a pet! Call •••••••• .. •-•••••••••• VilUo la ..-ioc uper'd llsf.-mo.•.ao:a MIMUT.!!,.TOMPT • ~'rl'~.K-l~lo:ui. 'if,,.;, , I W....., 4IOO Arraqedby Animal Aulatance ~i..:~r:icro~: U7 HHmblera wortJna BocWor tUltt '41 block ,_,. 1•·-lvm11 ....................... CoatHomeLoam lalUeU7.ml.nof... Mlll'O'la FVf1D.381'7 aft Cllll~~fortbe o:i.m::! ~=:!:i tram bMdt.. All u&.11 pd. t""""~}!H t 000 rq ft . New DOY"*'uwo"'DC'"offf FOUND: Blk Germon 5 intellil-t ._ dlecreet dexterity req'd. Xlnt Pllo ........ .... ..._ 201 It Mm_.. .. UfJ MaJa 0t female '"' ,...,. I .:., _ _...__...~· ....... HB lft.. ""''""'"" "° Sb b d r I ... • .... n .. -.. .. ..... ·-ct. 1' · M ~ "'1P• >v ... -.... llt.1Dd6ant etfc er ' ema e. nr J'ouDd Dacbahund bm Wl1 to meet oew alntle benefits. New .........;.... =~ .!.~iy ~ t:{, ~J ii ... f)r rl~ ...,._W'°=-"'lft ~~ dulertal P · · --• Homeowner ac.nt Cal Omla 6 lllnMIQf.a, II, ll1uioo Viejo• area: peopje.1'52·5'11. On).)' depeQ.d~ble bard _,. .0 IWI ac. ... Ill N ll't I ,_.. ._ arrtQltd faat. C.M. 5'5-aJG 'J91.7'10lllO-IUS ...._ lndividu.ala call ~a.nor ' • Hi;d ' •P'I •1tl.<» ., 1' ~=l~ei;: BorTOW SJ.GOO, $100,000 IAlt&blp.Rlalcpaptrem> Perm. wort IVail only. lq dupla1 .uner. llr, ,,..,,...,,..,.., M'9l•, no111mqhr wut IB Hunt. JlchlG-llM flexible terma, pHt 11')'/bm/bllt, wb Up on Found: Fem. allrt halt • Cllll~511·31DO • fl'l>l. dlh..,,,, w 10. ..... £A"oo _..,. ·~ wtf.lt t•m.I•. ' CNdlt no fl'Oblem. can tall. NUM-Swnmer Vic. !«!I.-:.,~:~. ~~ 'J:4=' • • •• ....,., pr. Chamiel v6tw,..,. ""' .. wtt ,(JMWft.IOM Otft, Mf1,8haplO'xtO' U1noolttiption. llna Wooctl Reward QI-,,...._ • 'd p tl I !OOCll. _..17 .. 191 ....................... ----1m P1•Nid.l• Ave. lrl'DIJNO J'IN. SVCS · ~ ...................... 4 ..,xper . re1 e ous --Kf.w~•w/IJI(~ ,_,,_ ... In tMt•, I bdrm ......... 7W,_.lllO(bkr) MM1T3 .. el . lch11llla N.B. boeel. 8"-1700 ext PartNewportaub-a.....2 ••••un '"'" httuo w'ma •· !Alt· a..tt.te Collie. 114 m 11-1 53101.11•"-7001 5J.l.1Uet. EOE. a., a be, fantMUe vi.w. .,...,. ... llS/1ilt• OM. 11 o mo. •lcall&ao a.u...,oto• INT'llllJl:8TONLY blk ·eolla.r • nea collar'. .............................................. AUTOManvE aeuonebte. lot I. _., MH'78 ..,..... •PMe· All uUl RllA.LDl'ARLOANS Eve• uo.oat, dar1 Wrt.~~--• nc ... 1: 15,...._TE _ _..,._ ..,._ AmtlNlldlw lnq In~ 1 d ·· ~,..mo.ITMtlt. ~ b> princy of 111'7"'111 1.115lo _........_.,._.. ftlliiAl9 'IA --- BCR DPLX JBr, 2e1, ::ii'·:", .. ,,.,,,, c,~ 'l!!'~~·r•n ~ S ':! .... w.w 4600 'C,':: ....... ,..[.()8'1' ---: 8'.uneN---ma-1e_c_•-tt, -~.ra~11c· UCB4SE 11uat ba"!!'::n"c1rtv1n1 bk • ..,., .,.. cpl.I, no MA~)' ::1'& ari,::r::, :::;; ~,. to ,r.,. ....................... =:x:a. vie lltb • Balboa on SCH~' record • a o m e feta. f.$00 mo. rrly ,._ 11 TV.,_,,,,.., ' U9"•· Jll~• 6'0·1041, YOQI Pe1n1le Heda Peu. Rftard. m.-RJ:LAXINGllASSAQ& VV. mechanical knowledge . .. _. Pool. JuUQt, 1M .-.p. IVlllMr·Nll Multio1pt. Wlllr.1,wto .._.,W..e.4 1030 crm.J&a BobJam.·LlcMuaeur O"F•RS as eo ao baun a week. room. D•UY • WftklY... Pit/Ibo. Clot• ll•H Heffl. ................ LOlt· Goldn retrt ... r OutcallN,48'-Slll ~ Some flu1b1hty in V::.' .. ft;.~ -::.:.~o ,....llWUo.,~ ... ~ 4110 ..... SaotllHl ~MUD ..... a.cl T.D. 11.:1._. )'l'I old, IS u.: PREONA.NTT Certna. ....a..:t....... tchech•Mq c.tact Mr: Meda.-. mo. S..101 ....... ~ ....................... =.-. = ~': :~m .. t!'°"tal;=.mo.Balloon soldenbmco&orw,... eoaftdeotialCOUDM'Hnc• ,ytCAIVll tlUlla. <n4*5-0177. .. 1tn'11t t•nl• for ..... aft10a.m. •aid T.D. tK lilt ei.teo=-ibl)t ln.hartd. nl.nl. AbottioD. edop-.cr..bOounenallable IOI' t IOTCI B&M:B API' 1 Wnn a l room Mch. •pt, bHc11, ...,,.,., W• • eecunt. mo. Call Stlp Vie. HWJfl'ftaalla. tion6bepiq. •llatlltalafl'Orided. be, ...._ •. °'*!'""5~verrUlln1 fvtf!, TH h"'H ll. 011 ~/ UIOl LqBebODIJl • ..,ard. APCARE 511 . .JIG •Small cla11u for • ._,~~ ...... -"'-.,,,. ---:...°"• V\crus/8tacb.UH111 ,,."" e -llll 1 _ .... 6 _1 ...,_......lnltrucdoa. ._ ---• .,..,, f'nD ~-IUD• Need ~·000 ea. for --"" •-e>Qooeeown &18*.-da) ~llTBEACK ~--+udl. cw> '41m11, rmwtum.~11ua!o•.,..., .w ...,, H.a .... :; ..................... ._ • ..... taom.. ~-~~~ai:a1~ o..lt4••• •llltllt~• 6406'4~ -en , Dr. orner lfn .,_.,. ·n a.a "1 &.1 lo&. aoa pro. ··-· • ._.&JV, _., ,.. .. .._ .. ., •Pl.lclmmt-111P to M ,r--------Cl.Jlmo, GDUmn, rtfe. M ·-_ 1 -n. t lw .... 8'. p-,, l»l7lt after' 1 ...._..,.._ s.ftllallOrufeCo. ..........,.. Alll'OMOIWS -. C rad t.oda1'• MMltl. Oflel..... 4400 ................. Pll.•1 r · • 11 •Tm . W•T•W ;!.--:;=-. ~'~ b:i "=.:~.,.ar: ....................... o!~~-nc. •m11 •1• ua~ '=':t~oli: *~ ~.t:ftt ~,.~-· .......... .,..., 1'eb. nqul;;z-,,...,_ l:ICr KUT* af.llCll. Call I• ftr de-._ .. ,............ ' . ~ftll'l'C* , :.lfrtlr a.• 1 a1Wlw11atd111. fJl!ilt llUU t.a111.•-lllhll· c" \ Loet: lml -lk l'em Pb,::~l'Gwr,,.;; UMOOl 4'Mill42 •4llJISi • • 0 --~, ......... ~ I rn ~. '"""' &Mella We are loOkla1.foT. e . •. • a-a P¥t bltlt oe bt1 11-le--'rirl .._~ fiiaMAllAM Ul"W wit& a.. (loUar ....... VIJmOllOVdPARLOR a.ll'atat.etlelMol $unwtl.b•l·•~ wl\11t• to• ' 1,,,_,.,._.,..... ___ _.. 1t.&a&.1•AW1 Iii ...... ' alnce 8/t/11. Nr ,,...., .... ..,.,...,,.., WCaalllDOCI.,....... ~ - cit. for I tan wk ij\e .........,...._,Al!Uml, II lllTA"wi... BHcia/Ad•••· BB. vllll. no Plll'thMe,... S.1-Qaplrtrtilao,.ii. ._ eedJcm ol ... ~'!'-' ; UJ.1211 •ft ~ea':t~ Pullr 11 .-.TAa...11.; ~l=e~u;:u•U A~o daace A rap Mlw_la' 7111 ~~ Al 8iaft.. hna abldlo """ ... , .. ,.111 ,. U•.... ,.... ..... .._..... ' •-• _................ ..._....,a.,..... ii lMJ•llll•N ~Pf\==· -. OWW ,..._..,.1 , ........ Ce. '· U>ftcAT,lf•'q.lD DAMCIOf... Vlftl(j1111WQ&ColiclL ~ ....... ~':11 ~~~~v l:rr,l" ..... ~.. 11J·IJll11ft 1 j ••~":!':L ~1·'·MNt7l •''MNll =:t:C·,~a!f': .:':~a~!::lf!~. :~:.:iJ.~ ~"~:!i ...... 111111-.......... ,. 5 -.~ •• 4Jll ~--........... ...,........ i•Ja. ' . II 'fil&"Wll ( ll•ta•lre~••~. t.t 111 ,. .......... .-;..... '/ti Rid TH -~•'Cl ,itW.lllli..,'ll>'a ._.,. ... • -...6w=c ..-. 1••ll•l •••• 1 1••• ·-....... --...:.--.-:: :. __ .... __ .w: .•. · ;.:i,.':':';:~,~~\~·= ~' ' Sl-i~ i ... lE--.::E : •• 1•1 ••--_ u , -: 1711111 ~ ._..=,.. ... !....,"" ~=un ••~ ~~--, i _.,=• _ ~---· .... jliil: ~~ .. I t':j •• • 5 1.Ml*t ... ~~ ·~ ...d ..... w . Oelill i!£ I! I 1J ' ~-•: ~·····~'-... '~-... ~ ~·,_• ........ -----,~ -n-.A I '~ 1 ............ -.. ~ ...... ".-.: I ............. T......... -""" -~ ------... ,...... ·~ =·= I '~---~ ~ ~--'& I ........ Ill '-. ..... 1--, .. ... ], :='•· llf, J-.;• IB.m.jD_ ... I ... W :-.... • ..... ........_ '"' ·-----·111-----I .. ,, _ _,. _ l....... '." 811L ........ _ ---··-._.. 1---_,.. ..... -·· ,------"Ii --------' ""f"' • I f • • • . • • • • • • i t t ' I . . ... ..... ~~ .. -.?! ... ~~= ..... ?!~ ~~.~,~ ..... ?!!! ~~!'!'!.~ ..... ?!!~ !~~~ ..... ?!.oo Fri • A utt 11, 1911 . DAILY... • ...._ CAlllllR Coll•c ot·Flnuc• Co. •• ~W..e.d 7100 HefpW..ted 710C>HlfpW..ted JIM MIWACco.TI Grtilloppotf/~--lde DENTAL/ORTUO Ania· EnJoy a cballan1et ................................. ,. ............................ ~ • ..a.J'.t -• "'-HOSTBllS collector. S.lal')' com· taftt .. p /time. Zxpr'd, Brokera1e aecret•r)' lbalek:r· 455. tor . a .. -... -11te . ..-. :r~w-•a. me111urate w /eap. R.D.Aoec.,..utofc, &m' ......... ,~"" &Lt-•--u•-.. · ............ of . .. .,. .... 9 .. Spedalbooua I :Id Jtvtne.90'm ,._._co. ~ ..... ... wora, DMllrl9 Dllllf( OPERAJORS oraia HOl Dev• 4. Via Oporto, ~ a,-av ln p u . Ha~ NaneyfD.GU IJft ln. R/prlv. ba on f'"URIA DMft N. a . aW.Jt. a.o.s: NB. na!:;1 eo. ~ .. a, D11U1 Aalat. Good .. bay. 67MOl'7 8/P. CHEP wan...S Sl.aG pso Nc:wtb1'11tinAvt.SA por Salary opep ~ Hometeeper -lltt. f7l.tm aftw w/btMftta lD Newport TAUMTHUMT Do >' o u w • n l MNK Jpm. Clfc....... 0rcqi9, alaatn. adtl1 $4.00·$5.$0/hr! Ex· Trllra Omalaton-hUUOna .. ., COMPUTER DJ:NTAL R&CPT, W/~· actaw~for.'1111~ ecu&he Home Care llllii ~ Ill.LY ... W caah a per. foe poell1on GI office 1bow ud vtdeo ~. Servicee can UH Stella-lhfMt'a .................. la hu; rh. Jlalt ~: manaserfonlarsebuay Smallfee. ble •mployee1. Call .,.. ..... ~. c.t.a ..... otnce. )av. 111111& bl 11 oeat ln •P-OPERATOR al>odorpraetic.laS.d· 'ltl·J.JU ,_._es __ .-----· ~==~===:!J • -' 1.-• baak peanDC9. Hiriaia:IOPM dleback Valla1 area. VldeoCaltlniServtce lllluranee Steelcase is the largest manulacturer of metal office furniture. We have immediate openings on our 2nd ahift due to increased volume. We offer job security,, profit sharing, an xlnt retirement plan, free dental and other fine benefits. Apply in person at 1123 E. Warner Ave, Tustin. Clnt.enectlon of Warner & Nwpt Frwy> AUTOMOl'IVm ="'"· l:•~l lkul·P'rt. 1100 P.C.H.. •19 ...._...__~ '9tuu1U... OMCl .. A "--.... wortdq '. l'>-.ll. ~et.'-' ml No. of P'ut111·tb11nuf poaitlon Dllltal.U.'t .• esp., Wecl• ~crcntSety _, SICllTAIY •-, • --=.,._ !.. ~ _ ..... --· l'f.lklil. beb1nd ava • • or en ex· Fri. La1una Ni1uel Pwwonne. lAdJnill SlOK -. To ---t·t w/n•w _.. •----C!t-"NGo. eerleoc41d Computer .----"' OffOnUMl'n Al 911CAM ._ OperJi« lo wort lo NCR -"· Seey /Reeept lo "50 uJea 6 cUeou. Salary + 132 .... 10 SALIS'PDSON .... --.1 0...iDI WOCIMI> wanted, tennln.ala. we offer ex· Dental Au'• cbalnide M~~ to$22K bonua + beneflll. --...__ -"-J ~ .... h u-· .. ,_ .. · lrvtllie ~ Aaency TS2..Q82 ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! --eer,..._w -~A~ rv area, ....... pr r. C!e~ ,.orauil condl· 4'-' •11. oo s.t. Salary aat'1tbColt.allesa -a ctome.cie iu_, t! aa.aMeaa ..,.... lluat have owo car. Uona aad employee open.CK.~ Qalt.eZ:M 842-1470 IMSUIAMCI Macbln1at.A=ice. deellllfa~Cowrt,y. llr.IMr-.a .... ~· Of ~•---a -...rty and Casualty For at-el fa rtcatlon. MOTB.MAIDS rr.. ..... Jlaa. &a· __. o,, ~ 11/F .._, IWloMel nee ---..-• • .,...... "' li\ill •part tme. No exp ceUeet eo•P•• e&.•ICAL SAMTAAMA-TUSTIM ........... Experienced Une cook e~·latltanvet AEccount Ex-~P.!>'1·~. advance· oec.Salfccobmef.App. ~its. AU nallea PAIT'ftMI CO u MU .... I T y Cllana.•$5118 wanted for bu ay .... · xpr. nee. ~ "' ._ lY ID penon only ca.ta ~~_::"~d~l~I. '::i=~C-t=: n.n• HosmAi. Datalcbalnldeua't downtown La1una ~f,fn!tl:~·~ Uuh .. I Optralor Meulnn12i05Hart.cwBJ. c..-.Clfn. n.ti.. ._.exp. req. CaU M lOAM·IPll dailr· Mon· lOOlN.TulUnAve 4\Aldaysprwk. =~!;.T:ferfu<t~: Irvme ~tJoo. Fred S. Jl'UU or p/tlme. lluat _C_.M_. ------p 0 __.., m. GliOEO£ Prl. Co. wll train &uuA.a.a 714fm.3MS S..U82 Jamea . Jnsurance have worked with MOVJIDRAS .i_;. ~~~·.,2!:' 1 penoaable, deoend.able, Equal()ppEmpjyrM/F ~orNlna. Brohn. 494·1087 or fiberllua. 9' hr. HUnt-N E E D E D B 'i ....;-;;;..;;.;;;...:""°":::.=:..=.:.._=..:·..::-==;:.·~11uut1 Salon in C.11 . matm'e tndivicfual ln an •DIMTAL Expert~ clerka. dell 1sa.ollllO ask ror Mawtne lneton Bcb ... 7.9310, ff o LL y woo D e...::..~:..85~ ::::1:~.:~ =~ CoosttucUon auperinten· PeriodonUat needs A meaf"cutten. JIN U Bndley. EOE -$3M780 ' CASTING COMPANY .._5 .. ~.Ute typlnf, fU. dent, exper. necessary. pft,lmeuattoworkf~t dally •• Mr . Payne. Joterlor dealoer wltb MAC .. MIST rvac~~~RE~lt~ ~1 a! !!!.......... ~-Boats inf. Sta.rt $2.85 pr hr. Ad· Hunt. BeSeacb, Colla Mesa "x ~· Expert ·• oret5d.1 =-~=:. ~· sales experience. Apply N.B. co. needs. Class A .._ .. 00 per daJ u a"· 6 ·-_, ,,.. ,_.. S.ecr• vancement within 90 area. veral projects r..,y cer req d. !i • • · JU. G&n'ett F\lmiture. Machlnlat for Bridgeport _.. " VWn.w l...tlPcnedcbel 6 STCXXROOJIHELPER daya, Apply A\11. 10-11, under way. Please c~l open.H.B.8'2-6831 hdor'!rtri'nHs. 2215 HaJ'bor Bl, CM. Mill" H.ardiqe Lathe. ~ .. ~lee. (714) ,.,....:.~ "J\an mJ!e. ~~ Pamllladcy wttb martne rrom tAM-WM at 319«; for Interview. Reta req d. DENTAL ~--Olnlde Wed in an air condl· 146-G2'7S aa.e to&el'aoce prec:laloo _, __ ...... __ ...... _~ ... ___ _ , __ ........ -. •• "-ll 'or ln· tuma Is kit packln1 AllportLoopDr, CM. m.337SorM0-12.84 Ftr. Sal~. Frln.g~ tioDed. a ~ area J I .n, Expel' req'd T~ Necetlio senora aola ...noa -ua.aJwa ..... ,, G d mron/JuJt;eu ..___ E.O.E. ""'"·ll05·1 _A_._,_,_to de c"::: .. tervtew· ut for Sales neceaa~ry. oo op· c-tncffollSec'r beneftta, area. can •IPll mua c maklog P/U le If'•~ Irvin --· .. ......_.............. -· llaf. ' por&un1ty for a aeU Cert-' Oraoie County home 847·~. amall parts under a me ,..........,. e for Ron Adama. cloy cuarto a cambio de 11.1u1er. "'-mien.cope lat or 2nd area. WW train. ldeal for doe clia4 de trabajo Ex QUALITY CRUISING ADP builder needs elrl for Dental Aul. Reciatered. sbift, t.oppey +company bouaewtves, atudeots 6 MA<;i 2 Operator, will celente barrio. Liam; SAILBOATS conatruc~;!Tlr!w/very Ftwell eatabllsbed prac· benefits. Gaiser Tool cpls. Must have own train legal acty. Non cualquler momenlo 7Sl IMS3301S Susan SA aruraoN goodtyping &work ticelaxlntbcha.rea.Non Company, 1701 E. tranap A pbone. Cell amoker. Top ulary. 642-9521& • . . • 1'"""11 habit• _for correspon· Smoker. ad working Carne1le Ave. Santa betwn 3·6pm, (7U) Ml-1400 I •clti1,.rFfC'g SERVICES dence. contract docu-cond Salar1 open Ana.~. m.7015. ,_ll_a_l_cb_w_a_n_ted_.-H-a-rbo-r NURSERY WORKERS Pash. Iale in•e1t1nent ments A filing, Prior ~ SS.SO hr apply ln per'BI Adm firm. Xlnt Bx home builder A!Xper pre· Factory Help tor Dlut.ica Jantt.orial pogitioaa avail. Inn Motel. 1800 W. attiSU Barran Rd In Cl.81CAL It matW'ityop:::;d. d:t N= Cent.er llnan· fd. Resume octly. Cit.a· DentalAaat.Ptr,no comJ>aoy, 2nd' abHt Ptr ~t work. Paya BaJboaB1.Nll.6"1S..:M63 ca ~ . ." ··--.... R. MMU23. ~ lnd~u~errro'; ~~~-~r~d!.i:!tinn131 ~.nee. 3:»-Upm.App&y.mw. C:-ac ::O· av1eto. ~i MAILCLIRI MUISUAIDES .. _. ·-clerical positions. Ac -ITl,U'IO' • &-82lll80 -5134 J.8thSt,C.ll. 9All PM reaa. cw---i.-·-·man> 7-3. 3-11. Good aal for ft.QB Bookkeeper, pt·tlme, couotlo& backaround. Consultant to abow FEMALE Packa1era. ·lO .9'19-36S2.. .. ~ exper'd " certified. 7All·11All or 9All·12 tome tn>lnJ Is fiUog, typtna aktlla and 10 key fasb.ioo Jewelry. P[time. ~·-Jewelry aalesglrl. fl'1ll time ror pubtisbing Traineeuccept.ed. lleea noon dally, Moo-Fri. Co. duties incl; verlfyio1 all aper. helpful. bt ahlft Xtra lncome for back t.o lo wfst -...i....-•-de· =· r ~ e ~~!f~ Salary +commission. company u, Newport Verde Conv ff09p, 1161 will train lntere.stlng biU1n1s. making out (8am-5pm), 2nd shift school or Cbrlstmaa ex· .;-le~:: .... ~ of 673-5G58. • area.Ages~.64MSS1 CentttSl,C.11. aervlce promot(on •t.atemeot.a. paying all (Spm 1 -... > 11 bl ---uun:u ... ._. Ave.N.B. ---m fol' oew car de· bllla. N.B. area. S46-«l20 ·Ex:...,.lmle lava k11ine penHs. Call Paradise pre c Is ion e 1 e.c . _FO_RTY ______ Jobanow Ptr start $3.50 MAIMTEM~E OFFICE HELP-For H.B . • ,.._ now. ce n wor g Jewelry Director tromechanlcal equip· CADOT~ model&'newbomemaln: Xlnt opportunity In Drupt.ore, lt bookkeep- aler.NolYPln&,ftlingex. IOOICllPIMG cond• & ~omyany SllB-9366 meat. Must. bave pre· SoulhCoutPlau teoaoce. (7l4) 993.7310 general malat.enance at ing,over25. Mn.UatCb ~b~'}v~J!·~ needed-meture detail benefits. -vlous PCB fayout exper. Poa a van ware err f10.1<m • beaut. Ztt\ •. ~ tonY•les· 84N!S61 withl.n 90 days. Apply minded people to fill Contact6C4-4360ext2S3 CookCJ!-fftrf-&4-6Yrsdeslgn/draftlaa waitress. bus Ir kttcben. cent hosp. Nr Leisure _.....:.:..:..;:_..-----.-f M· poaiUooa ~ tn the Ac --exper. Cell ~lentlfic App&yatrest.aurantAM KENNEL HELP-Wkend World. Some elec 6 OFFICE~"-~ A~ 1~1~i~°i19A · counting Dept. of rut-Mature man. own car. 2 DriHln1 Control•. live-in, some wkday plumbing exper. re-SALES/Mn. .. ~ ~ Cll rport IJ'OWlnl Newport Beach Clerical In ramily. H11ve other 557·9051 ask for Don Ge_,al Offke wor~. Call for appt. qwred. Good starting ApplY ln person. • · Ad Agency. 10 key by help. Gd driving rec. Swaoaon. Muat esQ«>y phone con· 540-4234. wage & benef°rts. Apply J. Herbert Hall $ZOOA WEB touch, typing & bkkp'g CLERK Neat appear. Local rel•. tact, work Ing . in person, Beverly JEWELERS Nat'l jewelry co. looking aper a oecesaity. Great call bet3-5pm64.5-18.12. -U!t.i.a W/cuatomers & detail ~~ :t, Pltire Manor Convalescent 3333Briatol. C.M. r~.~~-::~~raor:~~ :~a::m:~e c-::\ ~~~ TYPIST Cook, exp breilldt. •PP· ~ =~~~tv=:~ Jerry~ t.ele. =-45~ ~ ~~~~da. OFFICE-SCTY /RF.CP'J{ IJ'OIZDd up. For appt. can Brech at 644·86SO or U you are a highly or-ty ln person. Jolly Ro~. lledro ti41dl, beahb insurance. Apply Kitchen Helper or Dis-for R.E. Developer, iood &CWJSS. '1SU17l &anlzed penon with ex-rrvtne im E. Oyer . Poc•wug 8am·12am. Mon-Fri. hwaaber Blue Beet MAIMT'84AMCl/Ut• w /figures. Pt-tlaie cell~nt telephone com-~wn9-11&3-5 .,. Barden'• Pest Control, m.3333.fte 3p lrJAHITOltCOUPU 8:30-12:30.642-1121 BABYSITl'ER. teacher's Bootkeeper, full charge, munlcations, good typing OOOK. For p rr. Exper'd Manuf. of electro-mech't 696 Randolph. C. M. r m. App I y t n person . 2 ainall girls our home. fullUme. Balboa Island skills. able ~ handle a pref. Apply ln pe™>n. :O:*~~~af:"re M&-SS70 TB.BtHOMI Newport Dunea. t 131 Office Del•ery Own transp. Non 673-3657 varietyofduties,wecan TbeGrinderRest.HOOW Board layouts from o.er.JOffice Sl.S0-7.00lr. BadtBayDr.Newport loy smoker. Mon·Frt Sep .. ..._.._. __ •--k use you in our Credit CstHy NB6'2·S88l __ ..,_mau·-. Will also do , __ __. •---r•"' ....... n. K-ORANGERADIOS F/time. Neat appear. June.982·54.53 ~"' c .... • mature Department. Light _...., ..... "".._,..-........ _,, --p old MamtenanceMan.retlree Valid. Calif. driven Ut'. •enlhusiutic. P/f incl. shorthand helpful. , COOi< ~final detail It lng, F(f. lO·key gre· ot,.o.& program ok. F /llme. Muldoon's 18 or older. Apply 1\1 ~~,-~needs ed,_9-13, 5 wknd.s.549-3768aft6PM. Growth potential. Apply wanted for Italian ~ «!!'!~··-Wrte ~"~.; Gd pay. all ~Ndass -~•2 t.elp~ee Pr~ Restaurant,640-4110 person t.o Mr. FuenteS, ....,. •a1or m<mllt'. ..__.., ,,.._.. Pri in...,..,_ ,...eracom..,.. ..... vea .. · .........,_, ..... .,...,_. •v· Robert Bein, WllUain Aft2pm ~~"l'u unaa•asl .....,.. vate ..-~: restaurant, dlab-up & 1-.. wage, xint ......__1 it ,,..,_. ""-'"" m1n ~ ect. No exp nee. u.a..au-UllST ......... ...,,,. country club. Must have prep. Full time. lmmed. ~&adealrableo:;ee VfUI .. t .... sy, . g Houaewlves.st.udeols, r'e· --Frost & Assoc .• l40l Babysitter, ba~ bay area eaperience. For appt. U.S. DIVERS opening, ~l for in· to~ loCaUon. eau Scien· /Bua SCreeo1Jl8 co. D tired welcome. Top brly F /time. N.B.-C.M. area. Quail St. N.B. ~ f/3montboldbabyboy.S callM4-540t 3323W.Warner terview. Ufic Drilling ControJa ume.54()..5658 waae + caab bonuses 548-S567. Opening for clean cu\ days wk perm Cell aft 6 CARPENTERS-hi&b p Santa Ana, CA 92702 COOK trainee. learn Con· 557 ·9051 aa k for Don GIRL FRIDAY. ~ time paid dally. Day le Even· COID'1e&ls. capable, CODIJ· 6.11·2894 duction.SaoJosewagS: (714)540-8010 tlnental Culinary Swamoo. Job for combination lo,labift.aavall.ApplylO MANUFACTUlUNG rientklmmant.okeel>lrg ,...,._. S3 h a.Deal practice & real AM to 5:30 PM wkdys at CODdo premises cfea~. STHLCJ>.51 IOI,,.._., BILL YATES I VW-PORSCHE ; '. 837-4800 49 J.4) I I -Ban"fta I RS 'Dotme1 laviap • Loan bas apenbtp tn tt 's C4lsta Mesa branch for Ml & put tlme tellers .. lluat be able to work Saturdays. Excellent working conditions and benefits. For fUrther In· formaUon contact Mr. Woidoectt, 842-7422 EOE to Sl6.00. (G) 42&-3232 Equal()pportunlty ._.me. ·50 per r to Dlttarya.r.. estate tnvestmeota. Io· 7902 Westmlnst.er Ave. Pm/fulltimelnclwlmcl.S after7Pll. £aiployerll/F start. Phone 4~6·5-441 Full time pol!tioa, W/ ie.r.tiQ Job w/flexiblll· Weatminat.er Suite #B TRAINEES lebolidaya.'99-2050 .. betwn 9am·nooo oilly • provide tra1.n1Dt Cor l.nex· ty. Off fee on the bay upstain N~==ppnn CLERICAL COSMETICS. Aloe Vera. perienced. Good com-frOftt. Prefer Hltled •---------*"° •ctt•u OrderiYtoca.reforelderty w/esceptiooal t.elepbODe non sutgtcal face lift. PAQY bellefiU-. call Mn. rmn'l..twoman.6'7S-68'70 LAB AIDE We ere uekin1 Jo· gentleman, approx V'Olce/penonalltyforfull onnnRTUNITIES uJea "distributonbips ~1!!!!0" for appl. l!!..u••As To worlt Ip medical dividuala fw rant ahift 7:»10:30.Uf dally. Call ume position with quail· f'"nl -.vall. Call Laverna, -·-,. ~ laboratory. exper'd ln pmitiona la our Produc· Mrs. Davta,642-16218. ty carpet mill. Must be A major life insurance 546-7066 DOCUM_... "'U 6 p/Ume. All are... fiblebotomy 6 , back bOn Department. We •lU Parts person. martoe l b company headQuartered ~• Unlfonna furn. ,\&es 21 bo ....... eel train the l'igbt aft · --'-& .. --'-are . ..-. agccur• el, fafvle some in Newport Beach ts COIMltrHefD C~OLc•-1( or over. Retired Calla rM_,,, !.~ ure.pt. dlvlduals in micro-w".Cc;;1H:n'y N .. B ~: en~ra 0 ce ex· aeeldag individuals wit.b mch"b ~'" .,... I N Ari••-.or ap · electronJcs andtor the ' · perience. Lite typlng, dills and general oflice ~~,!~'::u•d:;~. e~; Take cbar1e of docu· ~.':~. ~Jv!~~~ <n4l640-0140 mask imk.lal Industry. PART-TIMI ~e~~: ~/~~~Ed~: experience in one or housewives µ> work Im· ~ ~ =a~ Protedioa Senice, 1226 Beach We will also ~Ider ex· QJunter woman to write alrable but not required. 1bore of the following med. F/time work avail. blueprint arcbhea. W. 5th St, Santa Ana. ln· . MOTOR ROUl'E perleocedapplicants. contract a In rentlH .. • Baniingta.LllS Exlltt Oft1y CITIDH'SIAMK OFCOSTAMISA 2'10H.artlor BJvd Caltbetwoeo.9-Uldloo-areas: Call betwn 2·4pm (714) operatebhwerintmacll. tervwhnl&-121111-4MOD· Dally Pilot route In Comprehensive t'Om · center.Somewknds.Ap: 1.Ylorapptm-noo SGT-0'8S. Gen'hlfcw~ ...[ri, 1•CUM .Be•ch It South paa,y benefits including CplyM. lS30 Newport Bl~; l•-------•I • TWX-Model 35· COUNTER LADY Don l Growing electronics Handyman experienced La1una. Mternoont. m.-Jot medical and1feo·r--------- CASH CAID A•toMatlc Sei.d· Sales/ cleanup. io AM· =~ts~J~~n~C::ra~t lite malnieoaoce, Ptr'. Monday through Friday tal. Catt" or apply in PART TIME COMES TO ~:d~:,!.,•·70wprrt 3PM7S2-T764546-3781 µ¥J1phere. F.qualOppot. ~ r.';' =· ~~; person: U52 Campus WEB·EHDS C ..._ 1 •fOR.,.l .&..f Count.er help 10 PM . 6 AM Employer. call ffotela month gross profit. S.'50 ~~~=la~: Every Sunday and Every ~ ""' ·T~MC)wpw WmcbellaDoouts2S3E. DICC ,,_.DetkCllrtl Cub deposit required. portunlty Employe r ot.berSaturdayandSun-. ~ef:'n~'fh~s~:: 17thSt.CM 1rv1ne 54Mn1 ~;r~i:= ~·111~:;:~~~~k Y~~~ MtF/H. ~Ping=.~~· ~rn!i:; m11rketing concept. •lldlpcJ/Acctg CUSTODIAN DOMESTIC College students or re-Name, Addre6s, Phone Piiot to carriers. Ml$t Protected territories -30 hrs week. ReUree AIDE-IJve ln tiree desirable. Contact Number and Make of TRANS MASK have v11n or large station M/F. xlat renumeration. •Math Aptthlde prer. Mesa Verde Area. for full time working Mt. Mazzola at540-2300. Car. Good for student or + good driving record. -------~. Ol'Omldf ri bflooropportu.o.IC ty 8'7·11896, Mon-Fri, 9AM· parents. w /2 school "-'-'· retired person. CORP. Call 642·4321. ask for CM !r1M200. Apply In Penoooel (>I· flee. tAM·3PM. llon-Frt, Slite205. E.O.E. ror ne 8 t person. all K h w ~ Harry Seeley or DotT Ba ks ~ • eyp•11c or "•Y _s_P_M_·-------1 children ln Hunt lkh. Drfftl'•orttr Legal .Secretary. Williams. ~ n ecretary T• Qistom •all boat yard nets Enel apll'lf, driver's lie. L,. minimum 3 yrs Calif. ex· lmmedopenlqlorseey hard la Must love cbildren. Cal191 ....... 0lf',... perience In domesticl~~~~~~~~~IPex •• to bank manager. Good CAS .. atJoodt We have Immediate ~p1.am'b:::er.: Salaryopeo.847·3664uk .............. 'or law. Newport Beach law MATERIAL CONTROL Answering serviot aecnUrlal lkilla req'd. F/time. Exper. pref'd. openlnp. Uyouqua~. PSquared8oauS4H873 rorBart. ~-;:n•11.c.IMr. rarm.Goodbenefita.Call EXPEDITOR Entry operatorfull&P(f.C&H Prefer bankiaf ex-per. D•1• A nlfbta. New· :::~=~ln~di:l·--------iDraperlee at540-2100. Debbie,640-0130 level poslUocr. Min. 1 yr ~l ·• ~>~~ Cor appt. ~e!Tis~l700. can Uon to excellent com· Data Processing OrE aperyl roomd work'r11· leanen Tues·Frl LepJ Secretary, exper'd. office procedure re-Person to wrk Retail pany benefits. Please xper ence or w. 8·3PM. Call' Jaolce•i 2AUC>meygen'lpracofc. qlired. AbWty to work Pharmacy 11 AM-8PIC Pa~ic CltY ak WS BAYS TDO ... YOU! Cashier, dependable E'ves/Wlmda. AWty Gift Shop Orange Co. Airport WANT ACTION? Classifed Ada 6G58'11 contact: train. 6'2-180 Raaedy Ann'•· 6'5-1800 Sao Clem. area. Send re-w/figure$ & detatled in· Some wk n d w r k • mp sume, refs. sat ~ulre· fo.amwst.callforappt. Knowle dge of co•~ Penoonel Department PACIFIC MUTUAL 700Newport Ote.ter Dr. Newport Beach, CA 92660 m•~ •DRIVER• OUSECLEANERS & menta t.o CJasalfi~ ad 54().7&39EOE metlcs /pharmacit ODl'DIJOR Mature, over 18. Good JANITORS Jr you want no. 299 cto Dall,)' Pilot. MAT u RE w o M AN helpful. Health Ins cov: f'"Ulft drivlftg rec:o.rd. Deliver more out of life we netd PO Box 1560, Costa p /time to we lcome erage I/full lime em'&):' g::blc suKllea in )'OU1561..:M19 Mesa,Ca92S211. newcomers & contact Apply in person MesS" We are loe>ltid for a pro-ge Co. ll Ume.1Homecle8i1Un• help. F\all LEGAL SECRETARY merchants. flexible hrs. Verde Pharmacr_ 2971 fenlonal .I& bl1bly Me4/Dentai plan. sz.aa e Need car, lite typing. Harbor Blvd. CM ~ceJtt motivated fn41vtdual to hr + incentive. Call Ume poe. Will accept IA1una HJlla. Recent 547..ao95 'l\lun&Sun process critical com· MarkaU51·21118 candidatea with or exp. necenary, pre· · • • puter output In an,._ _______ •I wttbouttrana. Topwagea ferably proba~. Xlnt Medical, exper, front of· PIZZAHBl ........ d·~~ OS/MV't. HASP. IBM•· st0-15'25 tnXa&•S!Hsklllareq'd. fice;busyOB/GYNpriac· S.·'1183 .~. 370 environment. Posl· DllYllS Call Mrs. Wlnslow for tic e, mu at hand le .... Uon requlrea 3 day work Men or...,... 25 ,,. or lllaUM~·teeoera needed. appt. &'17·1080 peaboard " insurance Plrsa Helpen ·Straw Ha!\ EQ.ual~ly week in various 1.2 bout older. Kaow the coaat M.cure. Top'-Car a.ec. well. Apply in person or Pim, El Toro, Im~ £mplo)'erM/F lhifta. Previouldatapro-dUea. Net $ll0a week or 6G-1403or64.s-'3438 UQUOI STOU call.6'5-588S. 35i5 Placen· oPeDlaO avail. full le p( 1 ________ ,1 ceulnf experience/ more. Orao1• Coast t..11'1111~--Ptrd)ta. lfature.exper. ua.Stel208.NB. tlme; apply 24401 educat on preferred. Y.ilow Cab. naoo ML ....,_._ Appl,ylnpenon. Rockfield Blvd ··- CLEllS Company benefit• ln· Herrmann, Foufttaln (A.IA.> No exper nee. asW.lSllbSt.CM. MIDTICH / elude t!IUon refund• a Valley. (No of Slater WUI train. Blllb1u1l. Callr license Ex ,....,..._,,_ ,. wdldeftnedcateerpath tHltwn N'ewbope It 11* lo apealt Spuisb. LI v e 1 n N • n nJ. pertenCedinallphUesor Rubber hose product.; ln EDP. Euclid) ~~~" I~_jlotel. bouMUeper5 .1--~ .'~ !..!.! 0call' inedic.al laborat.ol')' pro· 1rv1ne .. ~·l Must ~ _.1700 \:llU ..... o ut ......,D • -cedure. Call Margaret co. l..,."lta lncludln1 a... applJ at P9noft. Eled.rollk8 INJ:.O.&. a.ft'7P M5-p forappt.MO-Ol40 bac nays. can for; -~ M.Dsavtclndt HOU--•S l.01' ATJ'ENDENT. must •appt..:540-7638. E.O.E. ,, 1\all 6 put t.1DMa Bit be 11. h1l A pt·tlme, llllmoDVieJo PuncbPrela()perator:' lllolCl&L 8AYY1ew ilaoor co~ ay be uf ll a. MOTOR ROUTI Must be exper. Top Pl)',.'! PACIFI MU1UI. TOONewDOltO.IAer DI' Nnpart•act.. CA_, me>...- !.. c~ .. ·e · 110 ot'°''-i..'"' MT or84$-2212 ~ ~ Pi~ot.J:!:tO: Call751-0502. • ... ~ .. uno, OI a •H•. Lu.tie Man, 1Pm.e:pm, 5 VleJO, Monday thru Frl· ... -------•; .._roB 4a,a a wlr. Apply lD cla1 afterooons. Satur· •-.....,.1-1··: penoa, Canale Poodt, da,y and Suoda1 mom· • -_.__..~ . 17S'15McqanLo. H.B. (bp. Must ba~e dcpen· Faclltles ·~ dabte car. S50 ~a1b dep09it r4H1uJred. can l.:Qer . ..-DMCltd for ICMSl1 Mk for C1rcul•· ,_..at· t~ Job abop timl. Leav. YoUI' Name, .......-.~11.-be ab&e Addrell. Pbooe Numbar tD do ..,_,. na mill. ud 1llah ol Car. Good etl•• and r'elated fO( student or ...Ured MACllMIST .......,.~ .. ..... .... OWD la-' toob ..... ..o-------tr':S~~;::.·,:= WI MI ID MI w~...-;.=;;__;....;::......_;..;;.;.;.;. ........ 711 w. .... Mell Clilla ...................... k N.,_._. .. ~ ... ..... _ .... .......... 111 ... ....,.., 111!1'........... ....... .... aai ..... 1-=::.;:::::--.. ...... ~.-.il .... '.,. w ••• .:l:;:i:::::i:=== .... i11=-===:::;::::~:;:~~~~~~~~~==~~;;;~~!=::l~~~~~~~~;;;!~~::;:~::;: tt1,, ........ ' 179. .. ! • • ~ I I -I I • I l • ' I • I . 'j. • SEE YOUR ,,,. ' •· . AD 'INPRINT IN24HOURS • Place your 'l>JllY Pilot classified ad before: $:30 p.m.1lifld it will run in the next day's issue. The Daily Pilot is the enly afternoon Orange County newspapet to, ofter you this · 24-bour seivice. .· .,., Honda CJ360T. 900 ml, like new. 1595. ltvs,833-2575 19f1 Indian Chief, recen engine ,.-ork. lots ~ chrome, needs mlac. nuts /bolts & Put together. Best offer. 96&8797 . ., '73 CZ2:i0cc. 3 spd SSSO; Honda mi.Di.tndl 70 w I carrier, Ute nu $175. 8"7·5432 . 300 Husky automatic im. 21" front whl, Kernits shocks, desert tank, tuned abaust, qdden ' times, no race time. $2'Z75. '7S2-J400ht820 Wagon, auto., AJNPM. Be (CM2EBT·12505) air, early! WE STILL H~VEHOMDA ACCORDS AVAILABLE AT THE OLD LOW PRICE t llRR • WE PAY toP DOLLAI\ FOR TOP USED CARS FOREIGN, DOMESTIC or CLASSICS U your car ii atra.elean MeUSfint. IAURIUICS 21Z5Barbar BlVd. Colt.a... 1'19-2500 WEIUY USED CARS CAU. GARTiJ- UMd Car lier 540-5630 2628 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA WllUY UBCAISf Wa'ie tbe.Dew ~ dealenblp in the lrvtne Auto Center. We need "°""med car! JOI MACPIBSOM CHIYIOLIT 21 Auto Oeater Ddv• IRVJNE 761-7222 WANTED! Late model To1otH, Vol.OS. Picbpl • Vau. ~ .. todl,Jt •DlfflA• * Ll'ffLL. * SAVE A LOT SHOPfsCOllPA'llE 8ARWICI< OJ\T\UN liJI ll:'.,49; J~,·'J loedlfer. UIOO, good Int.. barcl' Ir. soft tops. acme bod7 ftrt. suoo. 151-4112 75 8210, ' •pd. All /FM IUY.OILIAU... :a-:~ ~t=: YOUI lf71 .. W #500714-7521 HOWi " "DMIZJ41Pd. map. EseeQel!t_..,.lon of fill SUOOml. $1750. P.P. modell ... la atoe:k! •21155 ~ '1'1 sz. auto. loaded. 3,000 ml. 11 ~ mo war· IODYSltOr ranty. aakln1 sa•oo -MOW ONM 831·1'MS t-------~ W8 I 91J 'Tl J10Z. dnt eoad. AJC1 SIUC110M Of :::-· Xtra ..... IMWllS+llS We ma1 bave 10UI' aezt 2m>Z. '78. CC?pper. _4-IP; c:ublouriDftD&Gr')'.CaU A/C. lo mi s. x~. •tocf.11• llint. S195.. 754-77S2. Ql-2040 495-4949 ~ Datsun no. c spd. Pll. dltru. 14.000 nu. CREVIER immac. ! Lk o ew. maoo & "12 Datsun Truck. blown 'tf • MOAOWAY heed paket $550. Call SANTA MtA ..... 835'3171 r...;;;..;...;.;.~9"~""~-= ....... - '"'UU...TalMIMllCllllA04M '11912. dnt cood. 8.000 •USIDIMW.• ml, 5 apd. AM t Fll "n·llOIMlpd. <INONJU> stereo. A tC alvr /blue '753.<Sa<.230RYF> .::_~111 ·1411 eves '75530lAuto. <tUIM1V>. 1--------'71200ZAl~/R(SGPRZ> "llal; S/R<lilJ.RCS> '77 321> SIR (51'1SXO > a...O.S•lllfa OIMIMCOUM'IY"S G '76 2IOZ . A tC . a uto. stereo. sharp, '6500. Evesl.11-1735 I 1 '7SQvic. drt bhae. 4 apd, blk lnt. -.&195 miracle mazda '72 ~E. run power, A/C. dnt cond, $7200 Aft 6 88W987 !'8190SL. Recently reconditioned. Ph 6'15-e649 eves. '76 Civic. &lat ~d. 1',000 ml'a. Nu lllch. 2150 ......_ .. d. _...,._;.m_oo._8'1N'107 ___ • _ _, c.... w... 645-5700 S&.'• '7U8011l.IS. 78Nl ~ "'1~9l !Ot1ltl)Gdld 75 480 SL<-Mal Red '1114808l(-1394)81ue '71 4IO 81. !Clt41Ml WtM1e '77 480 8l (S.. 01MJ Ortw HOUSE OF IMPORTS, INC. ATlHIOLD -"IC'$ IHT 1H£mJC•Jml! • -AM/~ F EE ,J!!l!2 TOURCHOICI · fUtV .. PICK YOUR PAYMENT! IF YOU DON'T BUY YOUR NEW DATSUN FROM f71i•lllfillJJIJlli •!;] f i lJ: I YOU MAY BE PAYING TOO MUCH!! CHECK YOUR CLOSEST DEALER LISTED HEllE. GET THEIR PRICE IN WRITING. THEN COME SEE TH£ VOLUME DISCOUNT DATSUN DEALER AlHAMBIA DATSUN ANAHEIM DAJSUM AICW DAlSUM, lllC. WALLY ltall IATSU.. .. IALIWltt DATSUll FINANCING INCLUDES TAX & LIC. SEE EXAMPUS l ftOW •FINANCING WITH MAJOR BANK ON APPROVED CREDIT. '78 B 210 2 DR. s99~! for 48 months. Cash price $3364. Deferred Payment Price is $4795.68 includifll tax, Uc. & finance charges APR. 14.35% (Stk.8991) (Ser.HLB210984846) '78mSXCPE. 1 138~! for 48 months cash , prices is $4652. Deferred Payment price Is $6629.28 including tax, Uc. & Finance charges.. APR. 14.35% (Stk.8721) (Ser.HLS10159869) • 77 0PEL ~ Alilo.. -cond .• <Mio."'"" top (416'tYJ) '2995 ... _.e t I '78 510 2 DR. s119~ for 48 months. Cash price $4038, Deferred Payment Price is $5757.12 Including tax, Uc. & finance Charges. APR. 14.35% (SU<.8905) (Se{.H~l001375A) For 48 months. Cash Price is $3781. Deferred Payment Price is · $5388 Including tax. Lic. & ft· nance charges. APR. 14.35% (Stk. 8846)(Ser. WPlf 10106651) '1& IATSUI 711 '75TOYOTA .... 41Mt.SON. Mio.AM•-.......... (4611l1JISI '2995 Co.IOUA WON. S S41M11 Miff M . .... _,. 1667 .... 1 '2795 . FOOTHILL DATSUN. INC. MOON DATSUN TRl·VlllEY IATSUlt INC. LON& BUCH IAJSOM OOWltlOWM L.A. MOTOIS IMPEllAl DATSUN. MIC. NCWPoaf DATSUN QUALITY DATSUN IMPal$ P~ADW DATSUN Al ORANGE COllllY IEADQIARIER OVER 125 llEW 1178 s ~Readylor-- lellwery . •• , PRICES SIAll Al j • ••• DAIL V PtlOT I ······-·· WE MEED Youa TRADE! · 1 . Mtot.t.,orw Mtot,1 ... eere..1 Mtot.1.,0..w Alllol.1.,arW ••••••....••.•..•..............• , ........................................................ . Mere.••.... 9740 MM '744 ,__., 9750 9710 ' ....._ Mew tlOO ....._ Mew tlOO Aaltet, Mew tlOO ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••H••••••••H•••H•• •• .. ••••,.•••• .. ••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1975 Mii 210C '71 llGB, wire wllll. new Prl1Une of Huntlnstoa •• tllE Tar1a. i'fOl'Y SPORTS PECIALS FAMTAsnc- RECONDITIONED -USED SPORTS CARS -,,, .... , 114- 8NutlfUI ~ with b'ack tn~. R & H. Lio. T .. , .... , eubblrn4Q "=undv exterior •llh black v i nyl interior , 5·•P••d trans. & 1ler•o radio Lie. t448LJU 1'74 MT IJ4 ... Racing red with AM·FM stereo. mag wheels .. Loe* doctors car. Uc. t442LVW. Stereo. ctuiae control. top, &ood cond, $2000. Beach la oCfertn1 lacqUler "/blk latv., Appear. rwr. window• " door 873-$116. Pl.int. metal Rnlthlnt • Grp. 8·1U1pen1lon. 0 c k I -A f IQ e MGB Suoer cherry. red fender nartn1 to Poncbe AM /Fii •t•eo. "500. automobile. Buy or coavertJble. 12,000 mi's, owoen.5315-11& m.all.Gl.a5e0 leae.(~. overdrive, "850. P .P . 1971POISCHI '111 .~·xill&nD· ood 6G8830 9 I I SC ntna COltd, very creu. We have a I ae.leetioa $5300. i.-.3110 ol otMr ftae llBZI ln our Th1a one 11 loaded! l ! -------~m!!l~~~IJVLJ.,! _ q.I 9746 MoCha brown exterior " W PORSCHE ··mr ........................ low ml.lea. Pri. pty. Call asoo. I I "16 IZUSU. tmmac. 20,000 63WJ.20. P.P. 1-4M-1"3 ~ A~~~vy parts. 105 112. rblt enable. red '64 Oabrlokt eaa•ert. mat W/blk. tape.-$SIOO. sell. J.000/btl ofr lt7lMll210C '89 Waton. new ti.rel. gd ~.49M8. ,_m.-______ _ Automatic. pwr. 1teer· tram. SZSOIOC:.~tofr. .12 3SSS cpe, beaut. 'GOMrrynd ~ cood. •extra low 548-7416, •n 5pm, ttD • . (9Z9P'VO>. restored, lndla red, IM-ntl $7495 P11191ot 9741 :!!l~ tll00or1-------HOW.UCM•wolwt ....................... -------77POaSC .. Dove•Qball81.8. 74.....,,504 ·es tu. reblt en1/b0dy. TUUOCAltlllA (Near MacArthur. DtlSIL S.AM low mi. allO)"I, All/Fii, Black. Blauplmkt 1i.eo Jambone•Brlltol). W11baircond. •AM/FM mint cood. "500/offer. II air condltlo1lla1. NEWPORT BEACH useUe (ZM.RDK) 5l8-4Dl (IDN5t) '3950 •3u 116 c ·ss1t1 · •-.10-9-1•_En_1-.ti.rea--.pn-t_x1n_t._1 -.-HAllOUIYW .... _____ ,_. ______ .... ______ ,. '67 2SOS lmmac cond .. Also, T7 Dem<» at low AM/FM can 67K mi. '4195 •3995 tt7HfAT ,,._ l'fOrY with t1r1 tnrn. mag wheela, low mileage 1harp1e. t220e. 14995 lt71 fllAT ....... Gas miser Mint con- dll1on (723FPM). 1 1295 1'76 MT 124 ..... Duhlng red with black viny( h1m. Thla car 1oaoeo with every extra and only 25,000 miles. Lie. t468NZB. '5495 au to . 7 4 . 000 m 1 , prices. , (213>429-llllOorKMIOlJ. 18711~~,H.B. white/camel. $3.9so. IEACH IMPOITS '7&912E UJ.ooo.•------- 84.>4640. 771-UlB Mii DOVE STREET Escellent condiUon, UJJ <Near VacAithur Blvd: • 640-8250. tiiG 9742 &Jamboree Road> ...... •••••••-!•••••••• ........ ••••••••••••••• NEWPORT BEACH "12 914 Appearance Grp. 1l5T IMU¥'I OUI '76 MG Mld&et. Lo ml. 75z.ot00 A/C. AM /FM atereo ..... c~' AM/FM, x.lnt cood. Pb cass. air dam. rear OF,....y•.a.•11 $48-1174 ,_.. 9750 renector. cover, s now ,.,.. .,... ... ______ ..... ______ ...., _____ .... 1-------•• .. ••••••••••••••••••• ttrea. $1!!00. 842-0593 Good lnveakllT ta atoclt. '53 MGTD. red. x.lnt ratrn 'H J56C 8m1)' wb6Jie &be7 lut! lt77RAT IHS... Dark blue with tan trim, air conditioned. 5 •P••d. luggage reek, stereo. Lie. 140.TBB. '5195 lt71 fllAT )( 1/9 4 si>eed. stereo. mag wheels. A real cutie. Lie. t733NIZ. 13995 1'71 MT 119 4 speed, mags. Red with dart< brown In- terior. 33.000 miles. (733NIZ). '3995 wire whls, xtra prta, r-SCHE '71 911 Tarsa. 1Uver/blk .-ACl.I ., """ <213> -~ ... u.. va ftereo. immac 87$-4599 ........ _ ... --..a.•• ·r •·-· _.._._ Ori&inal leatber interior. _,.,~~ MGI 9744 5000mllaoanew~e. 77' l:M yellow/tan. allo11. 2150Hartlol'BIVIL ..... •••••••••••••••••• Must see to appreclate. Blaupunkt AM /Fii I COSTA •ESA 1977 MGBa·Cholce of Won'tlastlonaat... tnck,snrf.alr.bn,1711. '45"6700 three. All have low miles Hl\UOUI VW '1»-0089 ... 9756 Ir some with ateffO la 187lleau.Bea•~ ~!;;.,H.B. "139l4 POl'SCbe. 45,000 ml. --•••••••••••••--•• 1=H.r:;~~v:.o~:a <imTKE'> Nice. $la>. Call644-IJl5. "11t£AlEI ltt1t.S.k ~ DICK MILLER MOTORS Mesa.979-2500. 73914 17 5 pd 1970914.4-cyl. ~ ROY '62 MOB Midget. new top. XLNT "c:o~s>g.~:10g or ~ 6pm. 842-992S. CAltVI• 120 West Wm 111er eniJ.neneedawork. szoo. bst. IK5-C782. GHU86 aft · ltOU.S·IOfCl 5.-..&.-•--557 2132 673-9537 SPM 1981 Porsche coavertlble. ...,.e:e._" ------Ul'ITiil--All8----·llll!lll-----• Mtos.Mew tlOOAlltol.Mew 9100 ~~Ura. bit on ::::'~ t---Cl_OM_D _5UN_~___.:fS___,_ , • SlMt Sbad01lf llHI>. • ur.1'1.«X>ml·a. ibf,.by 1 -----1iildlllllllilr "lbtllL --· • EULi ID SAYS: ''WE WANT YOUR BUSINESS. BUYNOWAND BEAT THEJ'RICE INCREASE:' P.P.-.L · • ~-.n•••••!?~J 1tr2SAA t SOii.,. • 4 apeed-tnma .... 'fftY : demi. (505EQJ). ' $3291 t Alic>, new '76 Sub le '788 l --price.:~...... t llACH """"ITS : .. oovssr.asn · (Near MacArthur Blvd. \ .lsJamboreeBoad>. f• NEWPORT BEACH 7u.ot00 ~ ......•...• !?~~ '74 white Subaru, 2 dr ~ sedan. gd cood.. Sl.IOO. JI 6'1S..Q283 aft 6 I ~ 1'74SUIMU • W•&OM ~ <711KBY) i $2299 : P-HILLONG.. i-~~ fOID ! 43 Auto Celdel' '". • S.D. P'wy.·lrvine J 7.._$111 . I ... - \ 4x4 4x4 4x4 ., ....... '"' 4114 1 .. ,.,, ................ W...cll (210lltl .,, -'"' ...... (011111) .,. .. Qua ..... (OIMIMI '6995 '7295 '4495 '44,5 549,5 52195 '4895 54695 '3995 TR UCKS -TRUCKS ...... ~·--191Mlll "71 ............... llAD!lll "71._. ~ T ._.,. • ... m.a?WI> .,. ... ~ ...... ,, .. ,, .. "" ....... , ..... ,,,..,'() 'J4,_.c.tlr.._ 1rm•1 w ........ ~, ..,~ ....... _,2) '4695 s3595 '4695 '4495 '2991 '3795 '2295 '4295 ,, 6'95 Offer Offer '3695 '995 '2991 VANS-VANS-VANS .. .,, ............ ~ '8491 '6595 '5495 "ft,....,.. •• crrtllMI s5495 --4 .... ,. .. ,mNQlfl '4995 ·'7J .... Cl6•·~ '71 ....... ,. ..... --.,.,.. ..... ,_""""' '2995 '2995 13495 '3115 '4595 '4695 '24 • • r ~-:,;......, ...... ...... ..t1l1111ii .. ntir-...... _!Ill ........ ,... .... _,~ ... . 176iQCI' ........ Pop orange. Fiil a llMk ~ llr cond .• power ateerll\O & l)OlllW9r ~ (381NVTl. '4774 '76 CHIV MOMZA The pflffect ~ for that 80ft or~ QOI~ back to IChOOI. Automatic. air oond. l PQw.r tteering. (M8ATN). '2882 '711'0DT-lllD snwr with nwoon 1ntertor. One of the last yen of the futl ll:m bltda. (078LXH). '5335 '76 fOID PINTO MPG W890f'. Perfect tor the femtlY tult IW'tl~oul Automatic with tldlo a .... (704N . '2332 . . '76t•C-MOMAKM C:O.. Lodclna tor a mid lli9 epe,, try dtMnCI a Monarct'I. Thi• one hu llr c:ond •• Pow« 1teerlng, pc>wef' brakM & MNFM rlldlo. (015PKEJ • 53773 . 176 TOYOTA COIOLLA Spo~ 5 speed with air cond. that..blOWI cold & a fine eoundtng AM/FM radio wllh 8 t'9Ck tape. (292PQE). '3636 177 CHIV MOMTI ~ Thia gem t. * oond., AMl,M:it;;t;Mt la t>tand new LandeU top. (843SLR). S.4774 '76 I.IMC ....... Truly a 1UUY euto with ..-IOllt power ... ,. & 1 00-: 1ftOOf' rool. TNI tlM euto hit •• of lhe OOl'ftlon of bllr18 tn Yf1ll own·lllrinQ room. (lelfl\DC); 194~9 •71 t mtC CO.AR DJ With full _. IMINmentlllton, ttlt ....... AM/FM -.Oleiroond. (101MIN). t •• CUstom Factory made Cad. Pick.US> truck. xlnt cond. 33,.500 Ortg. ml. New paint. Stainleu lieel bed. S7QOO. or Beat ofter. 752-03&& WANTED: 1919 • 1171 Cadillac Sevllle. Call --- '7• MONTE CARLO Landau, auto. A/C. PB/PS, AM /FM, 8 track. Sharp, ruoa 1tron1. 831-1503 '56 Belair. ods-work. Rmaood. $350. ~.Ron. '&6Bel_Alr, e.unaaood. 8'().3078 . LOOK • l'se the Dally Pilot "Fut Result"' servit'~ directory. Your eervice is our specla1ty. C.11642·~8 ext. 322 •CIUSSll FIESTAS .......... •• ~~ ........ ·~ PllTOS ••••••••••• '• (on con In stocl) aoArs-r FRIDAY e ~ATUaDAY •SUNDAY AUGUST 11th, 121h. & 131h 1 ECONOMY CARS 14 FOii PINTO • . . . . . . . . . s 1999 i Ooer-4 .... .._ ....... --11$3K801 10 VW WESTPHALIA CAMPER .... s 2999 y_.,---·--""-'~1 1& DATSUN FlO WAGON .•.. ~ .•.•.. 52999 ,,,...,,,_ ........ NEW....._,~. • ----76 TOYOTA COROLLA WAGON ...••• s2999 .;. °"'1o""O ....,.._, IUUW'OL 76 CHEVY CHEVETTE ......•......• s7999 .. _.,.., ___ tlMONILJ 78 MAZDA GLC 2 DR ••............. S3&6& •-11-·--1•000,,,.lea l~T .. YI 76 VW DASHEI ~ ..............•.• s3818 '76 DODGE DART •••..••.....•.•... s 3818 Aulo<n•llC ,.... M & blM-. M -& -"'"' 33,000 ""'°" (T3"1'91(t '11 DATSUN 8210 .............•.. s3999 Wttl\ ... 0:-llow .... IM 116381'111 1NTERMEDIA TE CARS J6 FORD MAVERICK 4 Dl ••........ s3444 .-..1-IC ----~l -C2111HKlJ '1& PONTIAC GRAND LE MANS ...... s4222 --·· .... --.-----·-----~, 17 FORD MUSTAll ..••. ~ ..•..... S466& "' --_...,, _ _,-!.,__~· 76 DODGE CHARGER SE •.•.....•... s4777 """" ... .,,, _,, ..... ~ 77 CHEVY CAPRICE CLASSIC •••••••• s5222 A-llC -~&w-. .. -. __ ,_,IOO It .... 76 MERCURY COUGAR XR7 •..••••• s 5555 HM -vtt ... I ltlle NEW1 11111'\!Aj. '11 CHEVY CAMARO •••.••••...•.• s5777 u ... NEW -"""°"" (9121J91~ i1 FMl TD SQUIRrwB"DR ...... t5UI 3-18 Llll•--iontf917N>Yl '11 BUICK REGAL COUPE •••.•....• s5999 W~h meny,....., .,. .... , ~ 18 CHM MAUBU CLASSIC .•.•...• s5999 ""-'lll!C PM llt.l _____ _..1771UM'n LUXURY CARS 7 4 PEUGEOT 504 SEDAN •••••••••• s4222 .. _ ......... _....._ ............ ,,"U"Tl '75 BUICI ESTATE WAGON •••••••••• S4&&& l-• ............... (ttW£E). .. '14 COlllUIDITAL MAii iV •......• S6444 -.C•on-••,......~l'lllll"Gl ' '1& CAllLLAC COUPE DEVIU.E •.•.•• s7991 ,....__,....,,,,_,..~l . '15 BMW lOSi •••.........•....... $1999 Looi.• -l\lflt-l'llWI •NCH) 17 Llll:OUI VEISAILLES .......... s9999 U.. HEW COldlloll lllNN (lllOT'IO) :?J ~C!RJ!!,.£0jl.f J!!'J.Y ...... s9999 SPORTSC~RS '1& FIAT 124 SPIEi ....... ; ...... s5222 ._.-• ....... n• '118 ClllVEllBl ............. s5555 • ...,_ , __ ...,..,,llZDt '11 SmlU BUT ................ s• ........... -uoo ...... ....,. .... --..A '11 DAlSIM 2IOZ .....••..•...... s 7999 ,w.....,,..,. ,,.....,.. a.a.cw-~ ORANGE COUNTY'S NIWIST UNCOLN·MERCURY Dea1erahtp ls now OPEN liYR.ADUOE LINCOLN·MERCURY 16-18 Auto C.enter Dr. SDPwJ·Lake Forest exit IRVINE 1)0.7000 Find what you want la Daily Pilot Classifieds. ....... u .. d MUSTANG66elaseic ooov. P JS. A/C, 289 V8 $2375.5'6-3642 '66 Mustang 289, oeeduomework. lllOO. 547-3182 CLASSIC '67 Mustang VS, perfect cood. cherry 1nt, rare value. $1950. 613-8256 4Mto1.UHCI A1.Uo..,1t1c. ·pwr 1t .. 1r110. pwr. , 2MllCIDIS llRQ ~ r$rJ4 wlndowe. ttr -· & '°"'· '°"' "lllM (1121FVo~ om Y ,7 7CHIYY CAMAIO lll s 6695 =-~--au·=~ '7 8 CHIYY COllYlmS a lo -ffont -.OOng a PAOf CAii! MAKE OFFER '76~~~-20.0001t1••·S4895 Liiie HEW...._,., 1337\H(VI «*LT '75 Cutluss Salon. 1mmac cond. loaded $U50/ orr 586-8602 '77 Cutluss Salon. Beige. pwr windows. br ks. sleerlo1 . vinyl lop. stereo. tape deck. T·bar rooe. 15.950. 644-4040 or 640-8064 1976 PONTIAC TUNS AM Tb1s s par)ling ·silver beauty is equipped wllb all of the regatar-'l'ram Am toys plus an 8 track stereo & new ll r es (S.1'7621). 5" ..... UYIT! 1977 PONTIAC FllHllD ALAN ·MAGNON PONTIAC 2410 HADOR IL AT FAIR COSTA MESA 549-4300 A 11 or the qua I 1 t Y 1974 Gran Ville convert. Firebird features plus xlntcond. 5'500. the economy ot a 6 cyl 1l4·734·5L91 engin~. Automatic. a1r 1-------- cood. & power steering. 'ii6 GTO. I owner. perf oC course. ( 108SLO) cond. $1.100 or be11t of(er Dri••l...aUYIT! 499-42JlS. ----'------ COHNILL CHIVIOLET 2828 Harbor Blvd COSTA MESA 546-1100 U you want your advertis· ing message lo r each more people at lower cost. Classlfied 1s the way to go• Call Now' 642-~ DRIVE HOME co•••L CHEVIOUT 2821 Harbor Blvd COSTA MESA 546-IZOO '73 Vega GT. All /FM 8· trk. ta Firm. S4i-420& •7.f Wagon. FM dt i'lC map. clean $1200 ~1 Ciusifted Ads. ycur ooe-stos> sboppi.ac center . USE THE DAILY PILOT "FAST RESULT" SER-VICE DllECTOIY For Result Service Call 642:5671 bt.J2Z ANY NEW 1978808CAT '78 Z·Z·ZEPHYR '78 MONARCH '78 BOBCAT OVER FACTORY INVOICE. WAO.t1,4..wt11._.....,, ... ,11 l"1 ..... -1 ............. _Lie......,, 135 1971 PONTIAC WIYILU -....... -...r-II •11 $...,.-·Ml-..... -. ........... u.. ... , • .j • . I -:: I ··. Frld!y.Aupu.t 11. 1978 ~as possibly the LARGEST '.NEW BUI€If . ~TORY in ·; SOl!_Tf!EJlN GALIF:ORNIA. You don't ne~_ ~o wait until Sep- ~--· ~ .-temher-_at. Bauer Buick for the best price of .. t)ie year. The sale goes on!! TODAY'S CARS AT ~OW YEAR .END PRICES! • Opeti '1910 PM. Moti.&t. Ya... Open EW!ry S"""-i Til 5 PM. · 3 blocks Sollll of die Sa Diego F1Wwt1)' Al an ..,toortlrSale· Tox&..._not .. Pd. Pho10 fora.tratil~ only ~W:.&'& --. . NOT Priced at $6,000 or $7 ,000 .BIJT ONLY 8 5483 From Suggested Retail Price '"~''"' .,.. .. ,,,.. ;.,, ... ;... _.""' .. - ' ~ of ng et· lSS ras • c y I • en g r n.e . 4 speed transmrSSion. ltJgg,lge ractc, radio, heater and W/S/w tiree. f4428Eo. '74 TOYOTA COWi • cyl . • speed transmraalon. power brakes. vinyl top. air 4 cy1 .. automatic transmlstlon, condltionrng, radio 4 heater. radio and heater. C180454J. (106292}. s1595 ~ '76 DODGE S~WA90N '78 CHRYSLER UIAIONseAN V8 . automatic trans .. heater. VB . automatic trena .• •fr P<>wer steering l P<>wer braJcea. cond1tion1ng. oower •teerlng, 12 P8SSOOgermodet (016875). powe, ~. Vfnyt fop, rldlO, helter a wti/W tt,..;,.ueai.~ s5195 '78 CHRYSLER U IAloN WA450tif V8. IUfomattc trens;; IPht owr. Mat. s>wr. wfndows, P'#r. steering, owr. brakea. AM/FM atereo w/taoe. cru11e controt, air conditioning. w/e/w tlre1 t heltw C"81TXRJ. . ' ' , t VATICAN CITY <AP> -rtra ltMly ~ Cuti r arrived ln Rom• todQ to bead the U.S. 4ht•1•lkla to ~pe 21ul V1 'a f\lneral and called the late,.. Uff a •'wbe and ~loved aymbol ol the llOOdnea ol manklad. •• rb. YaUun. J'Qeanwblle. made public a bandwrftteo fpirtlual testament in wblcb Pope Paul Mked "pardon fi'OID all those to whom I may not Shen Douglas ~ I Strike ' f ?-Ta1ks Set f • Negotiations are scheduled ~ next Wednesday in an attempt to avert a strike against Douglas Aircraft Company and McDon· nell Pouglas AstronaUUcs Com- pany in HWltington Beach. A total of almost 3,000 scien· • tists and engineers who voted three years ago to let the • Teamsters Union represent them are threatening to walk out. :.,7 The aircraft and aerospace firm which operates six Southland plants bas never of. ficially recognized the Teamsters as its engineers and scientists' bargaining agency. J • • . '· ~ f ' '1Last and final," is the way the firm described in its recent offer of an eilht percent pay raise in tbe first year of a three- year contract. ••intolerable," is the way Teamaten Local 911 ln Lona \ Beach describes the Dou1laa of. fer t \ -l Company spokesman Walt Cleveland, based at the north Huntington Beach plant, said to- dQ Ma meetlng_is set for 1.t»m. aext Wednesday 10 t:Ol"'AiJreter.' Teamster officials are asking a 10 percent pay raise the first 1. year of the contract and cost-Of. , living increases the next two t years. l There is also some acrimony f between company and union , because of Douglas' alleged re- ' fusal to recognize the • Teamsters' representation of ' scientists and engineers. ~ 1 They voted almost solidly in ' J.975 to be represented by the > Teamsters and 78 percent of the . union members voted against · the firm's eight percent pay bike offer. Teams ters Local 911 secretary-treasurer A. Dotson Bennett, chairman of the Douglas employees' strike com· m lttee, says it appears a · walkout is almost inevitable. A total of 988 persons in pro- f ea a ions cove-re11-by the Teamsten were employed at the • Huntington Beach plant as ol the , end of July. , Cleveland said today it is un· : blown bow many of tbe 988 are ; dues-paytnc union members. b He alao pointed out 9S3 are ~ enpployeea of McDonnell DoQJu Astronautics Company, whfle 85 are employed by McDllMmell Doualas AutomaUoo Com~ but~ bere. ll•ve done 1ood" and aald of the Wotld tU1 one 1bould "1tudy It. loH It and 1erve it." Mn. Cal'tef' lt4!lpped off an Air °Poree plane-al Rome•a Clam· plno Atrpcrt, made a brief state- ment, tben 1ot into a waltlq car, for tlae trip to the U.S. Embuay reanttve-wberv 'lJffldala-aeid she would remain until the haneral Saturday. Two other mem'?'" of the of\ John David Culver, 14, of Hun· tington Beach died Thursday night when bis motorcycle slammed into a movin1 auto while being pursued by police for speediJli, officials said. The youth, of 1423 Alabama St., craahed into a eompact sta· tion wagon at the intersection of Acacia Avenue and 7th Strfft at 6:2Sp.m . Police Offieer John ·Berehs said two officers attempted to ball the teen-ager near Lake Park for alleged speeding viola· lions. Berens said the youth, who was not wearint a helmet, struck a compact station wagon. driven by Denise Francis, 22, of Huntiogtoll Beach, and was pro- nounced dead at the scene by paramedics. Miss Francis, of 207 9tb St., was treated for minor injuries at Pacifica Hospital and released, Police 1akL Berens said the youth had sped ~ a atop sign at tbe 7th and Acacia intersection when the cruh occun'ed. ~ces for tbe youtb ar • \ . ncial U.S. deleiatton -New York Gov. Hugh Carey and Rep. Robert N. Glaimo, D·Conn. -new bere wttb her. Sen. Edward K~P1ledy. D-M.an ... -a tnurtb member ot the 1roup, was not expected to arrive unW Satur· day. -' ''l'bia.Js a....aad. occqion sad because _.., have lOlt a wise and beloved aymbol of tbt goodness of mukiad," she tokl rePorten. FRESNO CAP> -Thousands of California women are Clln'J· i ng around a pointy eared aluminum cat's bead as a key ring charm and for protection despite the threat tbat the de- vice could be considered an U· legal weapon. As on~ "Watch Cat" owner said : "'When I bought it, I thought it was interesting. Aft.er that1 I realized what it could be u.sea fcr." She then bought Uae.o for ber daughters for protec~. The charm bas two Pointed ears and two laree holes for the eyes,. wblcb ba\le become tbe basis for the tllegal weaPons designation, says ltl destaner. Arlen Weibert. When grasped throu1h the eye boles with tbe fist clenched, tbe flat bottom of the cat's held reall 11alnlt tbe palm of tbe band and the ears form tyo pointed protnlllou from tbe lmuckl•. WlaeO -earrled In ........... Wlebitt notea tM snat aliDilari· ty betwem ldl h1 rlnl daum apd UM la# m_, women have of cg:tWf HY• "**1· ina t tbeir ftqen · fOr pro. tectloo, Ii not Weaal· But law ~ellMDt omctals in San Dleao Couty eootead A.f&era ... N.Y. Steeb FRIDAY, AUGUST 11, 1978 :TEN CENTS ''Pope PJul's concern / for tbe poor and bis deep sense of social JWIUce bav-e left tbe world a bet· ter place. We are all rtcber for b1a bavtna·llved. •• A:1 a man of areat spli'ituall· ty -Jimmy called him a aplrltual beacon -be will be missed, not only by American CatbOilcs but by atrAmen~ans and b)' ~tbeworldover." , In answer to questions, Mrs. Carter said bit lDOtber·in·law, Lillian, 1-etped ber and the presi· dent "feel the presence of the •• after abe returned from l:raudience wttb Pope Paul on July 23, one ol the lut fo?eip vlsiton before bia death. Tbe Vatican announced today that Paul's bodY will remain on view ~bli& ln-&.-P-eteri Baslltea aootber day. unW a few hours before tbe funeral. Five f €alls Spa lnaocent Of ·Raps -. - there is a similarity between the HWatcb Cat .. and brass knuckles, an.d declared Wie.bert's invention an illegal weapon; The state attorney general later held that if used as a weaPon, the "Watch Cat" is con- sidered in the same category as brass knuckles or a sawed-off shotllJD. Frftsno County District At· ton.ey Williain Smith san the attorJaey 1eaeral's ruling ,means that lt ts legal to purchase and carry the ''Watch Cat" as a key ring charm. liut tbe moment it ls used as a weapoo, it becomes llleaal. , "Let's say a woman ls being attacked With tbe intent of rape a~d t~a ls the only object aroun<l with which to defend benelt ... be aays. "It seems to me that It a~aches absurdity to tttevent her frbm usma tbe 00· ly weapon a,ailable to ber." And t.be district attoraey says be can't imqine a Jury convict· Ing a woman on an Ule1al wupona ebarp for taai.u the charm u a weapon la self cle-f~e. Tbe attorney aeneral's oplnloo Isn't causlnl one "Witeb Cat" <See·WB.\PON, P~ AZ> By &ADIOND BSTllADA n.. ' Of .............. Callln1 Ha&Uington Beach Police claim& ''ties," Mayor Ron Shenkman defended Monday's City Council action that allowed a local bealtll spa owner to re- tain bis business llcense. Huntlngtoo Beach Police As· sociation President Dave Gam· mell ebarged Thursday the council'' action may be "invit· log all tbe pimps and proatitutes in Orange County into the city." Police Qlief Earle Roblta1lle claims the Golden West Health Spa, 9891 Yorktown Ave .• is a front for ''illegal and immoral activities." Shenkman noted that aJtbowdl there bave been five arrests for al· le1ed solidtaticm of prostitution at tbe spa In the put two 1ears, nene ol tJa6 eUrpl bave been proved in court. "To revoke this man's bust· nen -181d be a eoofte. ~ ... ~ ... leed UI ~ five ane1a. fll the spa employees ~·were tnttlated by police" UD• dereover CJ8ker sent to lnfUtrate tbe business . .. I donttcoadone prosltution but violent crimes are on tbe ln· cr.e...ase.. Wb.ue AL tile prlorltin! .. S,benklDan ex· plained. "I will never approve another massase parlor in tbe city . . . I never have.•• Shenkman said. There are a)Jout eigb~ sucb busi· nesses m HunUngton Beach. But police group leader Gam· mell asserted Thursday Shenkman "all but said be was in favor of Jeaali1ed prostitu· tion." Shenkman disputed that charae by saytna be does not want extensive police time used "to find out what goes on bebind closed doors between a man and a womaa." But Gammell d.isqreed say. lint. ••The consenttn1 adult tbeory bas ootbin1 to do wUb it ... The police ll'OUP leader said tough enfon:em111t by vice of. Ileen would prevent oraanlled crime from creepiq into tbe city. Gammell said tbe P.ollce As· sod'aUon executi~e board will meet MCll!lday &o discuss buying newapaper advertisements to protest die council'• action. M a1ol' Sbenkman Hld the council will probably reconsider tbe action at the Aue. 21 meetinl because Councilman Don II 1cAllilter wa abaent. Moa· day's vatewadtOJ. 81aeftllman aald tbe council would bave reconddered tbe deadlocked vote Monday but Council member Ruth Bailey aald lbe......_bifti9toaltend. Mrt. Balley _::_WU Joined by councilmen Ron PattlmdD, a former Hiii•"...., ... ell ~ om,er. -.. )litJMllc .. vot· Inf to re•oke o•lden West llealtla .... __.. P•riialido AD· -··· t I Ill ..... MOOClay. M •r•r Pre Tem Rlclaard Slebirt liii QMilMllm~llobn 'l'lllolUI -...-... Slienkma ID "J:J:.~td. .,,. .. a rr.t1ir..., \fPI ti ill .. 81 ae-u.-;. 'Love' days of public viewina bad been scheduled to end at 8 o'clock toal1bt, and the coffin was to have been sealed for the fUneral and burial Saturday evenlne. In the-U-~ testament, com· ~ in tbree sections between 1985 and 1973, tbe ponbff also left most ol bis possessions to tbe. Hob' See .and M)ed that his funeral be kept "pious and Sim· pie." · .,.., ............. CHARGES POLICE LIE Mayor Shenkman Valley Staff CJainuAUle lntimUlating Pa•m Valley City Couocil members bave received com· PlalDta from workers that tbe ci· tr penGllllel direetor lntimidat· ed employees at a recent meet· inl to air grievances. Fountain Valley Municipal Employees' Association Presi· ""'llmt-.Jlob Wn,hl ~ Director Sally Hartman's attendance at a July 26 general workers' meeting stifled dis· wssion. Mayor Marv Adler last month set up a city department bead committee to study the cause of alleged low morale among municipal workers. Wri1ht said the July 26 meet· ing was called to discuss whether the committee "was sincere and could be trusted." Mn. Hartman walked into the meeting with· former Ad· ministrative Alde Sue Tsuda. Mn. Tsuda was laid off due to Proposition }31.budget cuts. July 28 was Mrs. Tsuda's last day on tbe job. •'Sally <Hartman> bas no more business anviling herself into our meeting than on'e ol us would walking into a City Coun· cil executive session," Wriaht said. But Mrs. Hartman defended <See STAFF, P&1e AZ> Coast . Nlcbt and ~ low c.loud1nela, otbenriae fair throu1h Saturday. Lows ton~1bt fn IOs. Riabs Saturday in lower 10s at beacbes to lower 80s I•· Jud. ' M DA!!..Y PILOT H/F frtd!J. A\RYfl 11. 1111 Waddill Trial Set McMillan to Pre1ide; Long Ca8e Eyed f T11T1Wr: lJIA Role Tamislwd By GABY GRANVILLE Ot .. C)Mty .......... BY TOM &\RL•Y -... ,.., ........ Lawyera for Dr. WlUlam Bu· ter W'4dlll Jr. bave abaJMtOned thelr m~ for 1 chaqe of ven for hl1 MCC*l nuarder Uial and a1reed to f•c trial Jan 12 'n Oranl~:lounty S\lperlorCourt "It. we'll aet a falrahak in Oran a• CCMlnty,.. del•OH at- torney llalbour WatloD aaW to. d~. "And I fecil eva bappl abOut ll ial the Uslll o1 LM J\MIP who wu choeeo today." tustd M tllJtnl wu a 1uun1n .,._ '"'· Waddill. u . of Hu.nttnc.toll llarbOW', la accuaedofltran1DA1 8 newbarn babJ to death ln tbe nunny at W•t1Gln1ter Com· munlty Holpltal 1hortly after h\I attempt to abort the chlld by ln-Jt.~llon ot aaallneaolutlon falled. It la aUe1ed Ulat be atraqled lb Infant ln h• crib after claim· lnl lb•tlbe badaulf red maalv• bratn dam..-by lrnmenl<X\ lD the 1111.ne and would be Uttle more than a human vegetable It lbe Hved. and what la ~ In terms ol a fetus th uurvlvet an abortion at· tempt." Wut10n11ld. ··we want tbo aecond jury to be ablolutelY Jute ol our U'IU· ment1befOrethey10 to tbe Jury room." Both he and Waddill confidently predicted acqutttal In the second trial in whlcb d~eoae attorney Cbarlea Weedman wW agaln be worklnc with Wataoo. Four Board Rivals Deba~e Hot Issues CtA Director Stansfield Turner said Tbunday the spy network he beads la reealn.lna public conftdence by "openina up the intelllgence process ol our country a little blt." Turner admitted at a press conference in Anaheim that the CIA image baa been tarnished b7 secretiveness and reported abuses. Judae By!Ul " .. McMillan. tbe outaolaa ~ dl~ juq•. wm be on the bench for the Mcoad trial and wW handle pretrial snOCJons Nov . 81. They wlll lncl&IM a motlon fer dismissal, tbe araumenl that Dr. Waddill bas been placed in jeopardy by being tried• second lime and 1 motion fot dbmlu-.1 on the arounds that thfe is 06 proof tbl;'l the inf ant be is ac- Teachers' Jobs Saved • In Budget Trustees or t:tunhngton Beach's Ocean View School rn. trict, the largest in Orang~ Cowity. have outfoxed Proposa- Uon 13 to a degTee wjth, adoptton of a revised $21.3 million budget. The financial package for 1978-79 wtll save 1hree ~uarten of a million dollars originally represented in a bard-won 5.S percent teacher pay rai.se. All the teachers' jobs were saved, however, and with a number of faculty. retirements planned before Proposition 13 and layoff of some part-time teaching aides. The district is also experienc· Ing a shrinking enrollment which has forced closure of one campus, leaving it with 24 schools and a UtUe more than 12.000 students. CyckChase In Huntingtan Ends in Arrest Two men and a woman were arrested on motorcycle theft charges aft.er police pursued one of the men in a wild, high-speed chase through downtown Hunt- ington Beach Thursday night. Gregory Allen Young, 20, of 1109 Georgia St., Huntington Beach. reportedly led police on Tbe jury in bis first trial before Judie James K . Turnft de1dlocked at 14 for acquittal afler 11 days ol deliberation and 16 weeksoltrial testimony. Wat.son predicted toduy that the second trial will take even longer. "at least24 weeks. "We intend to go much more fully into this i.slue of what ii life GOW ZOOMS; DOlL4R DROPS LONDON <AP) -The price of gold set records on both the Lon- don and Zurich bullion markets today, while the dollar hit record lows against the West-German mart and the Swtas franc for tbe second day in succession. The price of eold jumped to S210-210.7S an ounce lo Zurich and $210.50 in London. then Lorf. don's five major bulllon dealers pulled it back to $209.85 at their morning...sesaion fJxing the rate for trading. The Zurich price slipped back to $209.75. Add Vitamim To Liquor For AWoholic? LA JOLLA <AP> -Adding vitamin B-1 to booze might pre- vent a rare and incurable form of alcoholism that last year cost Americans an estimated $70 million to treat. Those are the findings of a study published in the New England Journal of Medicine by two UC San Diego researchers. Dr. Michael H. Criqui, a pro- fessor of community medicine. and medical student Brandon S. Centerall say that fortifying beer, wine and liquor with the The researchers admit that vitamin, called thiamine, could curb hospital costs for people wilb Wernicke-Korsakoff syn- drome. The illness is a severe form of a wild ride from Pacific Coast alcoholism that can devastate Highway and Beacb Boulevard memory and cause permanent throu h the downtown area and brai,.~age. The syrulrt:1~~1 eventuWiy to 20Se"l1Ubltn""bme-1111.:u. -~ but r 1 --.,... __...MlN where he was arrested, said Lt. or treated with masslve oral or James Walker. intravenous doses of B-1. Young rep~rtedly reached , "The only way to help," Cri· speeds of 88 miles per hour while qui said in an interview Tburs- driving bis motdreycle ~ day. "is to prevent it." residential areas, Walker saad. r ..... r.,,eAJ Police lost sight of the suspect near the end of the chase but neighbors pointed out where he had driven his motorcycle. wcAPON Police searched the Dublin D • • • Lane address and s aid they found seven motorcycles with no license plates whicb officers belie ve to be stolen. Police dalm they also found two lar1e marijuMlta plants. Young was arrested on charges or reckless driving, re- sisting arrest, grand tbeft, and possession of stolen property and cultivation of marijuana. Also artested were William Burton Young, 44, unknown if re- lated to Gregory Young, and Ctlristine Marie Bart, 29, both of the Dublin IJane address. The man and woman were booked into Huotlnlton Beach Jail on charges of grand theft., possession of stolen property and cultivatioo of marijuana. All three suspects were re- leased on 1$.000 bail each. M/f' DAILY PILOT owner to hesitate in using the charm for ielf defense if need be. • •t feel you should use any means at your disposal if anyone is attacking you. I wouldn't think it is any more dangerous than a knife or a pistol," sbe says. Wiebert says be designed the charm 1~ years ago 8-a 1ttt for a cat·loving friend. So many others saw and liked it that he began mass producing them eigbl monthS ago. "I didn't design lt as a weapon," says Wiebert. "Otherwise I would have de- veloped it out of steel and sharpened the points," poioting to tbe car charm's ean. The 32-year-old Wiebert ad· vertlHI bi• desi1ns as a wlnd1bield ice scraper, oall groomer, letter e>peoer, can opener ar hair Wt. It r«alla for $5. ··or coutH. t lboUlht that ln the first trial." Waddill aald. "But lookinl at the defense that my lawyers Me plannin& ror me this tlme. I know the Jury will com~ back with a verdict of not aullty. ,,....P-AJ STAFF ••• her presence at the.meeting. She contended that all "mla· cellaoeous" clU employees were invited and that included herself and Mrs. Tsuda. "She made an absolute specta-cle of herself just by being present," Wright said. · Mrs. Hartman came under fire from City Council members last month when it waa leiifiied that City Manager James Neal reiavested city-operated ~ ment plan funds so that she coul~ get a aeeood trust deed oo a liouse. City worlters brought tbe trust deed matter to the attenUon of the city councll. which. for that and other reasons, acrtpped Neal's automatically renewable -1wo:yev contract and replaced it with a day·to-day aRreement beginning Jan. 1. Mayor Adler said the prob- lems between the city workers and Mrs. Hartman are "in-house matters." City council members have not set a date to review the find· ings of the department bead committee now studying the al· leged morale problems in city ball. Blllltington Suicide Try Victim 'Fair' A Huntington Beach man who . leaped from a San Diego Freeway ·overcrossing at McFadden Avenue Wednesday in an unsuccessful suicide at- tempt is listed in fair condition to- day. The victim, 22, is hospitalized at UC Irvine Medical Center where he underwent extensive surgery Thursday. He sustained a fractured pelvis and arm in the plunge from the bridge structure ~mto a ~liter divider. although he was not struck by any freeway tral· fie. "I jumped because 1 don't love myself anymore · ..•. " the despondent young man told police and paramedics at the scene. Boy Critical After Crash A Westminster toddler was in very critical condition today at Tustin Community Hospital. The boy, Cbrlstopber Wood. 3, suf· fered bead injuries in an Irvine auto accident. His mother, 21-year·old Virsinia Wood, is recovettng at tbe same hoepttal of a brOken Jaw and fractured ribs. The 17-ye4U'-Old driver of their car has not been identified b~ police, who are investigating the cause of the crash which involved a heavy·duty com· merclal van. He was not serious· 1Y injured. The collision was on Jeffrey Road near Walnut Avenue. Buffalo Butts, Kill& Farmer WEST ALl!:XANDRIA, Ohio CAP) -A farm. ... WU butted to death by a l,DOO-DCNIDCI butfalo be boqht to breed with his c.a. tie, 1hertn'1 deputies here re- ported. Irvin Zimmerman, 81, clltd after the animal, Wbleb eataped from a field Wedneaday, knocked blm down and r• peatedly butteid him. Nea,tibon and Zimmerman'• •lie cbaaed the bUffa\o away, but tb~ farmer di• •t • local ho1pltal Tbundey. Sberlff'a deputl• lblit the bUlf alo. CouQty Supervisor Thomas Riley .suspeeta bla elecUon rtva1 might be dling Grecian Formula In a futile attempt to bldetbe pass· tn&yean. The TtvaJ, Tom Ro1en; ~· pects that Ril~y bas sold out to the spectal interests who bave Poured dollars lDto bis campailn in record breaking amounts. In another race foa: county supervbor. David Baker hints that his campaign foe might be a female Johnny-come-lately who changed her party afflliatlon when she moved to Orange County ia order to gain a polltlcal base. And Baker's adversary, Har- riett Wieder, says she's shocked wlth what she says ls his de- cision to run "a dirty cam- paign." Those were some of the lafgbli1bta ol a Thursday nliht candidates• debate a~ _tbe Strike Still Continuing At -Douglas Orange CoW"lty Chapter or Ute California League of Cities meetln• In Anaheim. Riley was smartiDI under Rogen' eriticilm ol bis cam· .4>at&n spending hablta when, ln an aside. be speculated about the coloring of bis foe's balr. MeanWbile. Roprt waa boll· lng the ...campal1n In the 5th ~pervisorial District down to a single issue, Riley'• campaign treasury. Baker was trying to indicate to the clty mayors and coun- cilmen in the audience that Mn. Wieder does tbe politically expe- dient to advance ber own ambi- tions. Meanwhile. Mrs. Wieder was intoning that Baker ls bringing dirty tactics into play ln the 2nd Supervisorial District cam· paicn. Above llll. the toar-eandklates tried to abow tbat. If elected county supervisors. they will work in harmony with city ol· ficlals within their districts. Baker urged the city people to talk with those who bad served on the Huntington Beach City Council witb Mrs. Wieder. Those discussions, Baker said. will stJQw tbat when h(! was a county wpervisor from 1'63 throueh 1974 his record of No neaotiatlons have yet been · coo~ration with the cities was set ln ~ effort to end a strike by · unsurpassed. plant maintenance electricians Mrs. Wieder said her ex· a t M c Don n e 11 D o u g l as perience as a councilwoman and Astronautics Company in Hunt-mayor gives her a unique lnslgbt ingtoo Beach and other plants. into city problems and needs. The aerospace firm is without Rogers hammered at bis pet 33 electricians represented by theme, donors to RUey cam- 'he International Brotherhood ol paigna -past and present. Electrical Workers. but Tbe challenger to Incumbent supervisors are replacing Riley criticized the supervisor them. for accepting hefty donations The walkout of electricians from developers and then al- who now make an average of legedly voting ln favor of their S9 72 per hour actually involves projects. on'ly 170 members among six. Except for bis aside that Southland Douglas Aircraft raised the Grecian Formula is· plants. sue. Ril4:Y all but ignored tbe al· Company spokesmen say it tactoobiavot.ingrecord. bas a minimal -if any -effect on the massive aircraft com- pany's production efforts. Betwrs Get Papal, Hims ROME <APl -Italy's government lOUery report- ed record ·sates thia week with bettors favoring num- bers they believed were related to the death of Pope Paul VI. Many put their money on the numbers 21. or 40 because he died at 2140 - 9:40 p.m. -Sunday. Other favorite numbers were 6. the date of bis death, and 85. which special books for lottery bettors say Js the number related to the deatbotpopes. Some lottery offices in Rome and other cities said they bad sold out their weekly allotments of tickets by today. The wkl· nlng numbers wlll be drawn Saturday. His sole retort to Rogers' at- tack was. ''He cRogers> exaJ{-gerates and handles the trutb very Ugbtly:· Riley defined "the U"Ue cam- paign issues" as the cost and size of government and land use. Other issues cited by Riley In- cluded affordable housing, im· plementation of Proposition 13 aod government credibility. Utt/,e State, But Big Mik PROVIDENCE. R.I. <AP> - Rhode Island's only measured mlle. located on Interstate 95, turaed out to be 5,775 feet when traosport4tion officials, spurred by motorist complaints, took out their calibrators. As elementary sehool students learn. a mile should be S,280 ·feet. "We're a small state with big miles," joked transportation de- partment spokesman Paul Kelly. nwe used t.o be almost totally secretive but 1ioce Vietnam and Watergate we've been propelled into the headlines ... Turner sud. "Now. we fe.l II we are 1olng to keep t.be confidence of the American publle we're 1oinl t.o have-to be more open." - The former/. Navy Admiral said CIA actl\ltlles are now be- ing controlled by what be called "a surrogate mechanism." The first element of that me.cbantsm be sllid "is a very active President and vice presi- dent whQ are oveneelng our ac- tivities. "Secondly. a presidential m. telli gence oversight board to whom anyone can report if Turner is doing somethina wrong. "Thin!ly. two committees or the Congress that regularly con+ duct an oversight and thorough review of what we're doing.·· He said those three elements are assurances Uiat tbe ClA is not collecting Information and taking part in Improper overt actions. Turner pointed out that a ma· jor portion of the intelligence agericy·s-work ts·devoted to re- search. That research Is being ex· panded to provide national leaders with lnlormation about business and economic climates that he expects to help in setting national policy. NonetheJeaa. he made it clear that monitorini Russian arms build up Is a major preoccupa- tion with tbe CIA. The CIA Director faulted former agents who have taken their quarrels with the CIA to the public. Turner said those for.mer agents have breached contrac- tua I agreements by speaking out of turn about CIA activities. The damage done comes in lbe form of a Joss of confidence - among agents in other countries that deal wtth the ClA. He said former employees who violate a contra~tual agreement not to discuu con- fidential matters for 15 yea.rs should be sued and will be sued for breach of contract. "We have to prove to other countries that we deal with and those whose lives may be in danger that this country intends to honor its obligations and responsibilities in tbe in· teHigence field," Turner said. He admitted that morale in bis agency "might be low in im and 78." "What we're aiming for is the highest morale lo further years and makine a sacrifice now to assure that will be the case." Given as an example of a sacrifice that mlgbt be straining morale now was the laying ofl or 820 CIA employees. Turner's vtslt to Orange Coun· ty was included In a mini-tour of California that included stops here. in Sacramento and in San Diego. Truth or Consequences? Sometimes the truth hurts! We have lost an occasional sale by not telling a customer what he wanted to hear. we might point out that a customer would be better off to pay a llttte more for our rubber padding than buy a cheaper. mushy pad that feels like y()u are walking on blltoona. The "balloon·· pad hurts the carpet backing. cauMS stretching. and ruins seams. Also this padding often flattens out after a while. Additionally, we might tetl you that some carpet fibers are more practical than others. A fiber that works In one texture. might "bomb" In another. Feet he to call for advice. AU of our ealn peoole ~ r had •xtenalve experience IA the service end Of this bu11ness -and after au -the most Important thing we can offer is conailtenttv good Mf'Vloef .. j . ' \ • . t I • Cou1·t TBckles· 'l3' Un-fettered . SAN J'RANCISCO <AP> - Chlef J.tice Rose Ella•belb • Bird opened tbe C4illfornJa ~s-.,..eme ·Cowt '• beerl~ today oa die Propolllion lS property tax reu., init1alive tty sayLna the " jutices will not be intimidated lty threata. Sbe sald &be was answering an earlier ll'Uion by Kern County which aaed that rour Justices up (or re-election in November not participate in the decision on • lite measure wblch cuts proper· t 't,. laXQS by about $7 billion an- f nually. The motion had been de· aled. Miu Bird aald t.be .. JuaUcel have ~ threet•ecl with recall or dettai-at the-polls al11Ct'6\len W-itb-~nymMa. ~r•ata. ()f phys ical violence a1alnst themselves or their famlUes if they fail to vote in a certain way ... " She didn't say wblch way. The jurist did not say how the threats bad been transmitted, or how many there were. (Earlier story, Page M > She said each or tbe justices ba d taken an o~th of orflce which demanded they follow the law and are guided by one prin- ciple -boldin1 the rule of law ··All the threats ln the world will noldeter u& from tU imPor· tant tas k before us ." she declared. "That ls wby the mo- tion. . . was denied." The four who face voter con· firmation in November are Bird, the court's first woman; Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.'s two other appointees. Frank Newman and Wiley Manuel. and a Rol'ald Reagan appointee. Funk Richardson. Attorney Willlam A. Norris <See REUEF. Pa19 Al) Dft~ted ia C reek Candidates Legionnaire Illness Exchange Bacteria Isolated Criticism, _ ATLA N TA (AP > - Researchers have isolated ap.. : parent Legionnaires· disease l~ bacteria from water used to air condition a hotel at Indiana University, where 21 persons have contracted the disease, the national Center for Disease Con- trol said today. The organism also has been detected in water from a nearby creek on the Bloomington, Ind .. campus, said Dr. David Fraser of the CDC "But whether the organism is transmitted from the creek to the cooling tower water or vice _ versa or both a re colonized from a third source, ' just can't l say." he added : He said improve d testing '" methods allowed scientists to de- . tect the bacterium in the water l and said it was a major 1 breaktbrouah in fi&hlin& the dla· l ease two of the victims stayed al the Memorial Union Hotel on the Bloomington camous. University officials said today the hotel will remain open while workers tried to rid the cooling tower of the bacteria, a process expected to take three days. Since the disease outbreak was reported in May, slate and federal health officials have said there was no reason to suspect the hotel was the source of the illness. Further tests are being made on Bloomington water samples and on environmental samples from other places where Legion- naires' disease outbreaks have been reported. "and further in- vestigation of ways to control airborne infection may be fruit· ful," Fraser said. But be declined to say that ~hang~ be made in blg buildings' air-conditioning systems '<wltil we undenstand more." Legionnaires• disease gained national attention when it killed t 29 persons and slekened more than 100 after an American "If we start making recom· f Legion c o nvention in mendations before we un- t Philadelphia two years ago. dersland the epidemiology of the ~ In Indiana, 21 persons have disease, our rt~commendations 1 contracted the disease and three will only be based on guesses," I ;:::n•h;:s~~:nts 1 Injured in Accident A broadside collision between two cars al an Irvine intensec· tion Thursday injured five peo- ple, one of them seriously. police said Police said a car driven by Larry R. Stovall II. 28, of 14672 Golden Glen St .• Irvine, collided with a car driven by Trevor R. King, us, of Pacific Palisades, at Walnut and Yale avenues A passenger in King's vehicle, •· Sherry A. Adrig, 13, of ,3552 Pecan St., Irvine, was knocked unconscious by the impact. ~e was reported · in serious condi· tion today at Tustin Community Hospital. Another passenger, Vicky L. Olsen, 14, of 10 Deerwood West, Irvine, complained of pains in her back and bead, and was hospitalized for observation. A third passenger, 14-year-old Lucinda Belaus, 14942 Burnham Circle, Irvine, was treated ror cuts and released. Stovall was alone in hls car, police said. Neither driver. accordin& to police, was seriously injured. County Supervisor Thomas Riley suspects bls el~tion rival ' might be using Grecian Formula in a futile attempt tobidetbepass· ingyears. The rival, Tom Rogers. SUS· pects that Riley has sold out to the special interests who have poured dollars into bis campaip in record breaking amounts. In another race for county supervisor, David Baker hints that his campaign foe might be a female Johnny-come-lately who changed her party affiliation when she moved to O.s:ange County in order to .rain a political base. And Baker's adversary. Har· riett Wieder. says she's shocked with what she says is h1a de- cision to run "a dirty cam· paian." Those were some of the bigb.l.igbts oC a Thursday ~ candfdates' debate at the Orange County Chapter or· the CaUfornl•~=e of CltJes meettnc In . Riley was amartln• .under Rogers' cnticlsm of bis cam· palan spending habits when. in an aside, be S1>8Culated about the coloring of his foe's b"air. Meanwhile, Rogers was boll- ing the campaign in the 5th Supervisorial District down to a single issue. Riley's campaign treasury. Baker was tryina to indicate to th~ city mayors and COUil· cilmen in the audience that Mrs. Wieder does the politically expe- dient to advance her own ambi· lions. Meanwhile, Mrs. Wieder was intoning that Baker is bringing dirty-tactics into play in the 2nd Supervisorial District cam- paign. Above all, the four candidates tried to show that. if elected county supervisors, they will work in barDl001 with city ~­ ficials within their districts. Baker urged the city people to talk with those wbo bad s~ on the Buntlnaton Beach City CouDcU with Mt'B. Wieder. Thoee ililcllallobs, Baker sai1f. will show that when be was a county supervisor from 1962 throuib 197• his record of cooperation witb the clUes was unsurpassed. C8ee RILEY. P11e AJ) "".,,,_ ___ _ Tod ay's Cleslag , N. Y . S&eelut , •• APWll¢1 I I TEARS FOR POPE -Tears were -shed by President Carter in Washington today and by an unidentified nun in Rome Thursday for Pope Paul VI. President Carter wiped awav a tear during a Pontifical Requiem Mass at St. Matthew's Cathedral. With the President were Secretary of State Cyrus -Vance and House Speaker and Mrs. Thomas. O'Neijl. The nun wiped tears from her eyes as she got a last glimpse olthe Pope lying in state ins ide St. Peter's Basilica. Funeral services for the pope will be conducted Saturday. P.ope's Legaey 'Pardo"' Love' rhke~ in Will CIA Chief Says 'Image Tarnished' VATICAN CITY CAPS -First lady Rosalynn Carter arrived in Rome today to head the U.S. delegation to Pope Paul VJ's funeral and called the late pon- tiff a "wise and beloved symbol of the goodness of mankind." The Vatican. meanwhile, made public a handwritten spiritual testament In which Pope Paul asked ·'pardon from all those to whom I may not have done good" and said or the world that one should "study it, love it aod serve it." Mra. carter stepped off an Air Force plane at Rome's Ciam- pino Airport. made a brief state· ment. then got into a waiting car for the trip to the U.S. Embassy residence where officials said she would remain until the funeral Saturday. • Two other members of the of· ficlal U.S. delegation -New York Gov. Hugh Carey and Rep. Robert N. Giaimo, D-Conn. - new here with her. Sen. Edward Keanedy, D-Mass., a fourth member of the group, was not ex~cted to arrive tJhtll Satur· day. "This is a sad occasion, sad • because we have lost a wise and beloved symbol of the goodness of mankind." she told reporters. "Pope Paul's concern for the poor and his deep sense of social justice have left the world a bet· ter place. We are all richer for bis having lived. "As a man of great spirituali- ty -Jimmy called him a spiritual beacon -he will be missed. not oniy by American Catholics but by all Americans and by people the world over." In answer to questions. Mrs. Carter said her mother·in·law. Lillian. helped her and the presi· dent "feel the presence of the pope" alter she returned from her audience with Pope Paul on July 23, one of the last forelgn visitors before his death. The Vatican announced today that Paul's body will remain on view to the public ht St. Peter's Basilica another day, until a few hours before the funeral. Five days of public viewing had been schedul~ to end at 8 o'clock tonight, and the coffin was to have been sealed for the funeral and burial Saturday evening. • reimplantatlon By GARY GRANVILLE OftM Dally PIM( '>taff C IA Director Stansfield Turner said Thursday the spy network he beads is regaining public confidence by "opening up the intelligence process of our country a little bit.·· Turner aclmjtted at a press conference in Anaheim that the CIA image has been tarnished by secretiveness and reported abuses. "We used to be almost totally secretive but since Vietnam and Watergate we've been propelled into the head.lines," Turner said. "Now. we feel if we are going lo keep the confidence of the American public we're going to have to be more open." <See TARNISHED. Page A2) Co ast We ather Nisht and morning low cloudiness, otherwise fair through Saturday. Lows toni&bt in 60s. Highs Saturday in lower 70s at beaches to lower 80s in· land • I NSIDE T9DA Y A dt//emat work! ,_, Oftl1t 21 mfltt from t'9e OTangt' C00tt. fi'ar o IOOlc ot tohot'• • dotng on Coto!ino lllond u• •ton.a· and plloeoa cm POiie Cl . I I • I i l A,S DAl\.Y.._OT , .... 11.1m IJ~-EspetUn senate Probes Missing Funds WASHINGTON CAP> -A -4m. .... lldmlaa.tr.Uv• Utlll•nl .. S.. Herman Talmadae. D· Ga., wltbdnw nearly SU.GOO fl'om tbe Sea.ate by submtttlnl lmproper mcpeoae claim• under th• senator'• name , the W aablnl\GD Star tatd today. Tb• newspaper aatd Dani l lllnebew, DOW a member of t.bo laternattooal Trade Com· mlaa\on. acknowleclled lbat be clalmed the rund• from the Senate lo llT3 and tf7' wblle oo Talmadp"I ltd and dePo&iled them '" an 11ccoun\ In » WHhl~bank. 8.at tht Star 11ld Mtnebew do· nled \hit he hid pocketed th• money. aald the account wu not ln hb name and alffrtod lh.t IM bad •c:ted on ln&tructtona from Talmadat. ·•1 belleve the money wellt to memben ol t.bt Talmadae r•ml· ty . but J 'm not 1ure where au the money went," Mlnchew wH quoted ••YlDI By &AYMOND EST&ADA II.. Ot•oell• ........... Calling Huntington Beach police claims "lies,•• Mayor Ron Shenkman defended Monday's City Cowicil action that allowed a local health spa owner to re- tain his business llceme. Huntington Beach Police AB· sociation President Dave Ga!Di mell cbarsed Thursday the counctl'a action may be .. lnvl\- tng all the pimps and t>rostltules in Orante Co&mty lnto the city.'• Police Cblef Earle Robltallrt claims the Golden V(eat ~ealtb Spa, 9891 Yorktown Ave .. is _. front for "ffiesal and immoral activities." Marine 'Guilty' Talmadge denied that Minchew ert.e«l on hil orden and aaid be IOl none of lhe money. bat did aay ln a statement to the Star that the matter wu under tnvuUgatJon by tbe Justice De~artment and tbe Senate Ettilcs Coihmlttee. R e decllned rurther comment. 'figllt Se~uritg Shenkman noted that allbowlb there have been five arrests for aJ.. leged solicitation of prostltutio6 al the spa ln lbe pm-two~ none of the char1es ~ve beeO proved ln court. In Assault A Camp Pendleton Marine who 8dmitted lo court that be abducted a Hoa1 Hospital Newport Beach. nurse at knlfe- polnt bas pleaded 1uilty to criminal charges in Orange County Superior Court. Judge H. warren Knight or· dered Thomas Jack.son Patton. 28, sent to the state's Chino prison ror a 90-day dlaposlic study before he sentences him Oct. 5. Jackson pleaded guilty to charges of assault with a deadly weapon and false imprisonment. Charges of kidnapping were dr41>ped. . --Patton was arrested Apdl 20 shortly after be tried to force bis 25-year-old victim to drive him from the parking structure at Hoag Hospital to Long Beach. The nurse testified that Patt.on was biding in her car when she went to pick up the vehicle. She stopped the Cfl" shortly before reaching the exit, leaped from tbe vehicle and ran for help. Tbe department and the com· mittee have been looking lnto Talmadge's financhtl affairs for several months. Meanwhile, t be Atlanta Constitution reported today that Talmadee was reimbursed S7.000 by tbe Senate for slx months or Atlanta office expenses even though he received free office space and supplies from the General Services Administra· Uoo. The amount is 10 limes greater than many other senators, the Atlanta newspaper said. Talmadge, in a statement from his Washington office lo· day. said, "This is not news. It was reported back in July in the Wash~n newspapers and in t.lfe Atlantifpapers.-· . He added: "Any discrepancies that occurred apparently were errors.of judgment on the part of my staff," and that when the Senate Ethics Committee in· vesligation and audit are com· plele. "I will take whatever ac· lion is necessary to correct my records and Improve my offiee procedures ... l Aleoholic Aid f Vitamin B-1 Preventative? LA JOLI.A <AP) -Adding vitamin B-1 to booze might pre- • vent a rare and incurable form of a lcoholism that last year cost Americana an estimated $70 million to treat. Those are the findings of a study published in the New England Journal of Medicine by two UC San Diego researchers. Dr. Michael H. Criqui, a pro- fessor of community medicine. and medical student Brandon S. Centerall say that fortifying beer. wine and liquor with the The researchers admit that vitamin, called thiamine, could curb hospital costs for people with Wernicke-Korsakoff syn- drome. The illness is a severe form of alcoholism that can devastate memory and cause permanent brain damage. The syndrome is incurable but can be prevented or treated with massive oral or intravenous doses of B-1. Flag Football Signups Set Slgnups for youth na1 football will be held Sept. 16 and 20 in Irvine. The Irvine Community Services Department will sponsor leagues for boys in third through eighth grades and girls in fifth and sixth grades. A fee of $10 includes a football jersey. Signups will be 10 a .m. to 2 p.m. Sept. 16 and 3:30 to 6 p.m. Sept. 20 at Harvard Community Athletic Park. Information ls available by callin~ 754-3839. DAILY PILOT "The only way to help," Crl· qui said in an interview Thurs· day. "is to prevent it." While rarely fatal, Wemlcke· Korsakoff syndrome frequently results in costly, long-term hospitalization. It occurs in alcoholics primarily because their main diet consists of a lcohol, which is low in thiamine. When they do ingest thiamine, the researchers say, it is poorly absorbed by the body f',....PageAJ TARNISHED The former Navy Admiral said CIA activities are now be· ing controlled by what he called "a surrogate mechanism ... The first element of that mechahlSm he said "is a very active President and vice presl· dent wbo are overseeing our ac- tivities. "Secondly. a presidential in· telligence oversight board to whom anyone can report if Turner is doing som ething wrong. "Thirdly. two committees of the Congress that regularl)' con- duct an oversight and thorough review of what we're doing." He said those three elements are assurances that the CIA is not collecting information and taking part in Improper overt actions. Turner pointed out that a ma· jor portion of the intelligence agency's work is devoted to re- search. That research is being ex· panded to provide national leaders with inf ormallon about business and economic climates that be expects to belp in setting natioJlal policy. Nonetheless, be made it clear that monitoring Russian arms build up is a major preoccupa· lion with the CIA. The CIA Director faulted former agents who have taken thelr quarrels with the CIA to the public. Turner said those former agents have breached c:ontr~­ tual agreementa by apealtlnl :>ut. of turn about CIA adlvitles. The damage done comes lo the form of a lpaa of confidence amODI agent.I in other countries that deal with the CIA. Van~d ID Irvine LOt Three unidentified U.S. marshals shield convicted loan shark Gary Bowdacb Cthe back of whose bead is visible at center l as he continu~s his testimony before the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on In· vestigations. "To revoke this man's bull· ness llcenst1 would be a convi~­ Uon ," Shenkman contended. • The mayor noted that the al. leged sollcitatlona in the ft~ arrests of the spa employees "were initiated by police" u*- dercover officer sent to lnftltraCe Douglas Strike Looms the bualnesa. ! "I don 'tcondone prositutlon bqt violent crimes are on lbe tit· crease . Where .aze the priorities?" Shenkman e~­ plained. Ttdks Planned Wednesday With Engineers N egotlations are scheduled next Wednesday in an attempt to avert a strike against Douglas Aircraft Company and McDon· nell Douglas Astronautics Com- pany in Huntington Beach. A total of almost 3,000 scien· lists and en&ineers wbo Y.Qt~ _ three year s ago to let the Teamsters Union reprtsent them are threatening tb walk out. The aircraft and aerospace From Page AJ RELIEF •.. opened the attack against Proposition 13 on eehalf of school districts and certain school of. ficials. He urged that if the court de- cides to make Proposition 13 in· vutid, the ruling should be "pro- s pective.·• as opposed to retroactive. Norris said his clients suggest that the decision be effective for the 1979-80 fiscal year because ·'the legislature bas provided stop-gap fWlding ... We believe il is extremely difficult to reverse the complete machinery for im- plementing Proposition 13 at this late date. and we expect the court lo take a number of months for a decision." The court asfed Norris ii ruling against Proposition 13 would not invalidate the implementing laws which have been passed by the Legislature. He pointed to previous de· cislons by the court which had ruled laws invalid but bad al- lowed enabling legislation to con· tinue in force. Norris said that by issuing a prospective ruling, the court would be giving the Legislature plenty of time to .. respond to the court's ruling and ti me to develop a new plan for1ax reform If the Legislature failed to come up with a plan it would al· low lime for another initiative.·· Carter-Meany Status 'Low' WASHINGTON <AP) -Rela- tions between AFL-ClO Presi- dent George Meany and Presi- dent Carter are at an all-time low according to published re· ports. Carter was "absolutely livid" at Meany because of the labor leader's continued attacks on the Whit e House . the Washington Post reported in today's editions. The Post quoted a high-level White House official as saying he had "seldom seen him (the president> so mad." The un· named official was quoted as aaylng Carter's anger stemmed from Meany's attacks on the ad- ministrafion ln the face of White House effort& to accommodate the labor leader. Mud Olympic · SeaionSet firm which operates six Southland plants has never of- ficial I y recognized the Teamsters as its engineers and scientist.a' bargaining agency. "Last and final." is the way tbe firm described in its recent offer of an eight percent pay raise in the first year or a three· vear contract. "Intolerable." is the way Teamsters Local 911 in Lon~ Beach describes the Douglas of· fer Company spokes man Wall Cleveland, based at the north Huntington Beach plant, said lo· day a meeting is set for 1 p.m. next Wednesday in Los Angeles . Teamster officials are asking a 10 percent pay raise the first year of the contract and cost-of- li v inJt increases the next l wo vearR. There Is also some acrimony betwee n company and union because of Douglas' alleged re- fusal to r ecog nize the Teamsters' representation of scientists and enazineers. Bettors Get Paptd Hints ROME <AP> -Italy 's government lottery report· ed record sales this week with bettors favoring num- bers they believed were related to the death or Pope Paul Yl. Many put~eir money on the numbers 21 or 40 because he died al 2140 - 9:40 p.m. -Sunday. Other favorite numbers wer~ 6, the date or his death, and 85, which special books for lottery bettors say is the number related to the death o!popea. Some lottery office.! in ·Rome and other cities said they had sold out their weekly allotments or tickets by today. The win- ning numbers will be drawn Saturday. They voted almost solidly In 1975 to be represented by tbe Teamster& and 78 percent of the union memben voted against the firm's eight percent pay hike offer. Teamsters Local 911 secretary.treasurer A. Dotson Be'rfl1ftt. -c-haTr1n-an of the Douglas employees' strike com· mittee, says it appears a walkout is almost inevitable. A total of 988 persons In pro- f es· s ions covered by th e Teamsters were employed at the Huntington Beach plant as of the end of July. Cleveland said today it is un· known how many of the 988 are dues·payi.ng union members. He also pointed out 953 are e mployees of Mc Donnel I Douglas Astronautics Company. while 35 are employed by McDonnell Douglas Automation Company but based here. "l will never approve another massage parlor in the city . . ,I oever have,.'' Shenkman said. There are about eight such busi· nesses in Huntington Beach. But police group leader Gam- mell asserted Thut'sday Shenkman "all but said he was in favor o( legafized ·pfjitlCU· tion." Shenkman disputed that charge by saying be does not want extensive police time used "to find out whal 1oes on behind closed doors between a man and a woman." But Gammell disagreed say. ing , "Tae consenting adult theory has nothing to do with it. .. The police group leader said tough enforcement by vice of. ricers would prevent organized crime from creeping into the city. f',....PageAJ RILEY CHARGES. • • Mrs. Wieder said her ex- perience as a councilwoman and mayor gives her a unique insight into city problems and needs. Rogers hammered at his pet theme. donors to Riley cam· paigns -past and present. The challenger to incumbent Riley criticized the supervisor for accepting hefty donations from developers and then al- legedly voting in. favor or their projects. Except for his aside that raised the Grecian Formula is- sue, Riley all but ignored the at- tack on his voting record. His sole retort to Rogers' at- tack was. "He CRogers) exa~.­ gerates and handles the truth very lightly." R Hey de!lned "the true cam· paign issues" as the cost and size of government and land use. •tUY .... , Other issues cited by Riley in· eluded affordable housing, im- plementation of Proposition 13 and government credibility. Truth or Consequences? Sometimes the truth hurts! We have lost an occasional ... sale by not telling a customer what he wanted to hear. We might point out that a customer would be better off to pay a little mqre for our rubber padding than buy a cheaper. mushy pad that feels like you are walking on balloons. The "balleon" pad hurts the carpet baeklng, causea etretchlng. and ruins seams. Also this padding often flattena out after a While. Additionally. we might tell you that eome carpet fibetl are l more practical than others. A fiber that works In one texture. r might "bOmb'' in another. Feet free to call for. advice. All of our aalel peopte haYe had exten&Ne eXPet'l•noe In the eervice end of thll bullneee -and after all -the moet Important thlno we can offer II cona~ently good MtVloel . • I • i Image Changes But Kmhnas Still Collect SAN DIEGO CAP> -Police sa_y Hare Krishna members with shaved heads and in fiowing robes are still soliciting money in public but now wear normal haircuts and street clothes. In recent months J>Olice have warned that a city ordinance requires soliciting money to file quarterly rePorts and obtain permits. A spokesman for the SO-member temple said Thursday that he .. found we get a better response'' in regular street attire. He gave no indication how much was being col· lected by the religious groups. Baby Death Trial ., JJ7 aJaill Drops Plea For Venue Cllimge BJ TOM BAU.BY Clf•DIMW.,.. ..... Lawyen for Dr. WWiam 'Bax· ter Waddill Jr. have abandoned their motion for a change ofvenue tor his second murder trial and agreed to face trial Jan. 22 in Orange County Superior Court. "I think we'llget a fair sbakeln Orange County," defense at- torney Malbour Watson said to· '1ay. "And 1 feel even happier about it in the light of the judge who was chosen today." Judge Byron K. McMillan, the outgoing presiding judee. will be (>n the bench for the second trial and will handle pretrial motions Nov.27. They wUl lneludti a motion for dismissal. the arfQnieot that Dr. Waddill bas been placed in jeopardy by belnl tried a second time and a motioh tor dismissal on the grounds that there is no proof that the infant be is ac- cused of kWlng was a1human be· ing. Waddill, 42, of Huntington Harboqi',,\s accused of strangling a newborn baby to death iD the nursery at Westminster Com· munity Hospital shortly after his attempt to abort the cbUd by ln· jection ol a saline solution failed. It is alleged that he stranaled <See WADDILL. Pase U) Visbeek Park Plan Aired in .Clemente A first glimpse at develop- ment on San Clemente's 2,000- acre Visbeet Ranch was af. lorded the public this week, when developers presented pre- liminary park plans to city park commissioners. Initial plann~fl by the Nu-West Development Corporation calls for 2,700 to 3,.300 homes on Nigbt and mominJ low cloudiness, otherwise fair tbroulh Saturday. Lowa tontalit in 601. Hi1hs Saturday in lower 70. at beaches to lower 80s in· land. ' 1NSUt• n•~ Y A di~ .,o;td IN• ottlt1 2f mile• ~ tlN Otoftgs Cooit. hr o look at WW'• ..,., -CotiMllo ,.,,,. .. Gones _, ~ Oft Pa,e CJ. the sprawllng iniand ranch, which now lies ln pasture land. An environmental impact re· port, a land use concept and a specific development plan will be preaent~ to l.be city plann1n1 staff in September, said Jobn Deida, project manaaer. Preliminary plans for Rancho San Clemente, as the project bas been named, call for clustered development, leaving two-thirds of the pt'OINrt) tn opes, space. "Central to ow plannlnl is our effolt to pve a feelinl of a gnat deal or open space, .. aald lfelda. "TJlls isn't 1oln~ to be any walled community. • Homes planned on the ranch rans• from luxury ranch estates on )$ of oee to two acru to all)tall townbomes or •part&lldll. Belda Mid ab effort will be m.le to provide bocDel selling in a Wold ptjce ranp, tentattvett eitimated betw~ $60,000 tnd SISD.IOO. A ,»rbDlllve ea~ area Of .., t.6St'lierw, wftb no ~eblcular acceu, tm been included m pre.; liminary plannta1. Otber futurea -riDcb developmlDl plana an an eleinentarY. aeboo.I nelebbolti6od lbowiina. a ti'~ •)'st.em Wltb loc*CMlt P*ta and an orelili'd. . Aeeeu to tbe de .. lopme..t Would be• Aimlda Pieo. TEARS FOR POPE -Tears were shed by President Carter in Wasmngton today and by an unidentified riun in Rome Thursday for Pope Paul VI. President Carter wiped away a tear during a Pontifical R:equiem Mass at St. Matthew's Cathedral. With the President were Secretary o( State Cyrus Aftera .. a N.Y. St9ek8 A~Miot 'I Vance and House Speaker and Mrs. Thomas O'Neill. The nun wiped tears from her eyes as she got a last glimpse of the Pope lying in state inside St. Peter's Basilica. Funeral ~ervices for the pope will be eondueted Saturday. Resitknts ~p~~­Plant Plari ~~~~~ An ary La gun a Niguel homeowners uaanimoualy agreed Thursday n11ht to pro- test Aliso Water Management Agency's CAWMA) plans t-0 build a large sewage plant near Crown Valley Parkway. "Wbat it amounts to to me is that they want to build a crum- my sewage ptant in front of my house and 1 don't want it," one furious man said, apparently reflecting the general mood of the people present. The meeting at Crown Valley Elementary School was called ~Y the Laguna Nipel Communi· ty Association. About 190 people were present. The assoeiatlon lost its f1rst battle a1ainat tbe proposed SU llllWon treatment plant in Jub' when the Oranae County Planning Commission overruled the association pro- tests and approved U. A WMA '1 r~uest for a land UM~ The pt'OPOled ~al Pleat <See SEWAGS. P-ae .U> Suspect Held In l.aguna I Burglary Try A Laguna Beach policeman on bis way to work t<Mlay saw a man climbing tbroush the wtn· dow of a restaurant and arrested him on the suapicion of com- mercial burglary. Being transferred t.o Oranee County Jail today on $S,OOO bail be was a transient whose last known address was in Redwood City, police said. They said Lt. Al Olsob spotted a man cllmbilll in an open win· dow at .the Old Brussels restaurant. 2007 Sout) Coast Highway, at about 8 a.m. Tbe window had apparently been left open by a maintenance man who was on the premises. When Olilora entered, he al· legedl1 fcdld ·u.. suapeet sittlna in the d.bdAa ....., aowtina a eigarette and drinldftc a ,Sui~ wlne. " .. ;., Poli• JAld taaey wUI ~ recolllblen4 a pa1ch~trlc eval"aUoe fOI' the 1uapeet, 1'llo ''clld .at appear to M in f\all COil· trol otW. capa'9WU•. • • \, A.ks 'Pardon From All' and 'Love w World' VATICAN CITY (AP> -Ftrst lady Rosalyna Cartu arrived in Rome toda,y to bead the U.S. deleaation to Pope Paul Vi's · funeral and called the late pon. tiff a "wise and beloved symbol of tbe goodness of mankind." Tb~ Vatican, meanwhile, made publie a handwrltten eplrltual testament in which Pope Paul asked "pardon from all thoee to wholl) I may not have done good" and said of the world lb.Ill one should ''study it, love tt and aerve it." Mrs. carter stepped off an Air Poree plane at Rome'• Clam· plno Altpol:,t, made a brief state· ment, then 1ot lnto a waitlng car for tbe trip tc>tbe U.S. Embassy residence wbere officials said she would remain until the fUBeral Saturday. Two other members of the of· ficial U.S. dele&alion -New York Gov. J{ugb Carey and Rep. Robert N. Giaimo, D-Conn. - new here with her. Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., a fourth member of the 1roup, was not eKpected to arrive until Satur· day. -.'This is a sad occasion, sad beeause we have lost a wise and beloved symbol of the goodness of mankind," she told reporters. "Pope Paul's concern for the poor and his deep sense of social justice have left the world a bet· ter place. We are all richer for bis having lived. .. As a man or great spirituall· ty -Jimmy called him a spiritual beacon -be will be missed, not only by American Catholics but by all Americans and bypeopletbeworldover." In answer to questions, Mrs. Carter said her mother-in-law, Lillian, helped Iler and the presi- dent '•feel the presenee of the pope'' after she returned from her audience with Pope Paul on July 23, one ol the last foreign visitors before his death. tll DAIL y PtLOT use I n Rare Cases For Alcoholic? LA· JOu..A fAPl -Addlnt vltamln 8-1 to boo& ml1bt .,,... vent a ratt and incurable form of alcoholism Chat last year coat Amerlcans an estimated 110 m llllon to ttt•t 1'boae IAf'e lM flbdtnal of 8 atudy pubUabeod o tbe Ne• Eocland Journal o1 Medic:loe by t-..o UC Sall DleSQ ,.earchen Or. Mlchac.l H. CriQW. a p-o- feuor ot commu.nlt,y medicine. and medical atudt'nt Brandon S. Centerall say that fortlfyln1 beer. wine and liquor with the TtRJ mearchen admtt thal vttamln. called Uuamine, could curb hospital costs for people with Wemiclte-Korsatott SYn· drome The lllneu ts a severe form or alcoholism thal can devastate F,....P.,,..41 REIJEF •.. O]>ened the attack agai°'st Proposition 13 on behalf of school districts and certain school of· Ciclals. He urged that it the court de· cides to make Proposition 13 In· valid, the ruling should be "pro- s pec ti v e, · · as opposed to retroactive metnOf)' and UUH perm MM brain darnac . Tbe 11adrome ii Incurable but can be Pr9YeJ1ted or tttlted with muslve oral Of" lnt.raveno.. doeet of 8 ·1 "The only way to help," Cris qul ••id ln an lnterv .. w Tbura-day, "II to pt"effnt it." Wblle rarely fatat, Wtmleke Konalmlf syndrome,. trequentl)' result• in co1t1y. lonf·term bosphallut•on. It Qttun an alcoholics prlmarUy beeause thetr main diet conalats of alcohol. wblcb la low in thiamide. Wben they do in1eat thiamine. the researchers say, lt is poorly absorbed by the body. Criqui said that if thiamine fortification had been available in 1977. it could have prevented about 1.200 cases of Wemicke· Korsakoff syndrome. The researchers ad~it that the cost of addlna thlamlne ·- which is almost tasteless in tbe amounts needed -to liquor wotald be hip. But they say it would be incomparable to the cost ottreatt.ng the disease. Thi-amine already 1s used to bolster such foodstuffs as bread and milk and some have object· ed that adding B·l to alcohol would increase its attraction. But "unfortunately." the two researchers noted. "alcohol is the chief source or calories for millions of Americans" and thiamine fortification-could save milllons or taxpayer dollars in hospitalization costs. .War ds Off 'Evil Cat's Head K_ey Ring May Be Declared llkgtil FRESNO <AP> -Thousands of California women are cam· 1ng around a pointy eared aluminum cat's head as a key ring charm and for protection despite the threat that the de· vice could be C"onstdered an ii· legal weapon. As ooo "Watch Cat" owner said: "When I bought it, I tbou1bt it was Interesting. After that.· I realized what it could hP ·used for." She then bought them for her daughters tor protection. l'he claarm has two...pointed _ ears and two large boles for the eyes. which have become the basis· for the illegal we"'pons designation. says its designer. Arlen Weibert. &• . . 4 . • . TamisM d. .. IS)' GA.RY GllANVILLE '. Ol-~Nll ..... CIA Director Stansfield' Turner said Thursday the ~ network he beadl is re••lnlnt ' public confidence by "o~· up the Intelligence process ot-, our country a lltUe btt. ·• ·. Tu mer admitted at a press· coof erence ln Anaheim that c;f A lmace llu been WllUSllleC by secretiveoea and rennii..-n abuses. . ·•we used to be a~ tot.tlllit _ secretive but 1inee Vietaa~ water.ate we·v~ been prope ~~ into tbe headline$,·· Turner sat"'"' ·•Now. *e reel If we are ~ to lteep the confidence ol ~ American public we're goJng have to be more open." The former-Navy Admir~ said CIA activities are now ~ in& controlled by what be calle4 ··a tanogate mechanism." · The ftrst element of that mechanism be said "is a very active President and vice ~ dent who ~ overseeing our ~ tlfltles. '~ ••Seeond)y. a presideutial ~ telllience oversight boal'Jl ~ whom anyone can repdft IS Turner is dolng solDe.tlriq wrong. ''Thirdly. two committees of the Congress that regularly coq- duct an overs.lgbt and tbol'OUO review ot wha\ we 're doing," He said those three elements are assurances that the CIA is not collecting information and taking part in improper overt actions. · Turner potnted out that a mp· }or portlon ot the ttttelligen~ agency's work is devoted to re- Norris said his clients suggest that the decision be effective for the 1979-11> n-sr-al year because "the legislature has provided stop-gap funding .. : We believe it is extremely difficult to reverse the complete machinery for im· plemenling Proposition 13 at this late date. and we expect the court to take a number of months for a decision." The court asked Norris if ruling against Proposition 13 would not invalidate the implementing laws which have been passed by the Legislature. Student Walking Hiked When grasped thr<>ueh the eye holes witb the fist.clenched. the nat .bottom or the cat's -head rests apfusf the palm-of~· band and the ears form two pointed protrusions from the knuckles: ·When carried in this manner. Wtebert notes the great simllarl· ty between bis key ring charm . and the habit many women have of carrying their keys protrud· ing through their fingers for pro- tection. which is not illegal. "Parch. ! That research is being n - pa n ded to provide national leaders with information about business and economic climates that he expects to help in setting He pointed to previous de· cisions by the court which bad ruled laws invalid but had al· lowed enabling legislation to con· tinue in force. Norris said th11l by issuing a prospective ruling, the court would be giving the Legislature plenty of time to .. respond to the court's ruling alld time to develop a new plan for tax reform. U the Leatslature failed to come Up with a plan It would al· low time for another lnitlative. •• Norria said opponents to Pl'o1>0sition 13 are not opposed to lower property taxes nor the use or an initiative to aceompllab property tax relief. He said tbeob- jedion is that the new law goes · much further than tax relier in that it makes "sweeping changes in the Constitution.'· The lawsuits come from 22 school districts, the city of San Franciseo. and Alameda Coun· ty They are supported by several public employee groups, whose jobs and salaries relied heavily on property tax rev· enues before Proposifion 13. The court handed those groups a setback when it refused to block the initiative from taking effect July 1. But it agreed to hear the suits. rather than refer· ring them to a lower court. The written arguments delved mto complex issues -whether the Jarvis measure embraces more than one subject. cripples local government, treats dif· rerenl property owners equitably, or violates public employees' pension contracts. But lawyers for both aides also were mindful of the voters' man· date. Saying that the people's cries for property taK relief "feU on deaf ears" in the LeSSslature. Attorney General Evelle Younger warned the court that declaring the initiative un· constitutional would be "tanta· mount to holding that the people of this state have no way to enact tax reform through the in· itiative proceu." He leads the le1al team defending th~ in· itiative. DAILY PILOT who will walk to school next month and who can ride district school buses was outlined this week by Capistrano Unified School District administrators. following a July 24 decision by the school board to increase walking distances. Geared to sav ing the Capistrano district· $352,264 this year in transportation costs, walking distances were in· creased from 1.5 to two miles for grades four through six, from two to three miles for erade. seven through eight and from three to four miles for grades nine through 12. . Walking distances ror children in kindergarten through third grade were not affected by the budget cuts. Parents interested in arrang- ing for private bus transports- Bettors Get Papai, Hints ROME <AP> -Italy's government lottery report· ed record s~es this week with bettors favoring num· bers they believed were related to the death or Pope Paul VI . Many put their money on the numbers 21 or 40 because be died at 2140 - 9:40 p.m. -Sunday. Other favorite numbers were 6, the dale of his death. and 85, which special books for lottery bettors say Is the number related to the death of popes. Some lottery offices in ·Rome and other cities said they had sold out their weekly allotments of tickets by today. The win- ning numbers will be drawn Saturday. fi',.....PageAJ SEWAGE ••• lion can attend a meeting on Monday, said a district spokesman. The meeting to dis· cuss parent.paid busing will start at 7:30 p.m. at district of· fices, 32972 Calle Perfecto in San Juan Capistrano Changes in previous walking patterns were detailed this week by Sam Chicas. auistant s up erintendent for support services. as follows : f;LEMENTARY SCHOOLS No bus service for grades 4-6 to Barcelona Hills, Castille. 'Crown Valley, R.H. Dana. Del Obispo, Palisades and San Juan SchooL9. In addition. Harold Ambuehl st\ld,nts in grades 4-4 will· not have bus service from Mission Glen, Mission Creek or Mission Park tracts on Ortega Highways in San Juan Capistrano. Fourth through sixth graders living In Thunderbird East homes in Dana Point will also be required to walk to R.R. Dana Elementary School. JUNIOR IDGH SCHOOLS Students in Dana Point and San Juan Capiat.rano <including Sun Hollow and Mission Glen res· idents> wiJl not have ·bus service to Marco Forster Junior High School. Laguna Niguel students who live in the La Veta tract. in homes across from the La,una Niguel Regional Park or of Via Valle will walk to Niguel Hills Junior Hillh. In San -Clemente, Sboreclltrs Junior High students living beyond the intersections or South Ola Vista and Avenida Santa Barbara, South 'El Camino Real and Avenida Mateo and Avenida Presidio and La Esperanza will have no school bus service. In the Palisades area. ShorecliCfs students only in the Harbor Estates. Village and Alto Capistrano developments may ride school buses. WGHSCHOOLS The first Capistrano Valley High School bus stop north or the school will be beyond La Paz Road~ the flrsl stop south at the intersection of Del Obispo Street and Orte1a ffiibway. The first bus stop north of San Clemente High School will be in the Capistrano Beach area of Via CaJifornia. the first stop south near Concordia School. I Details wiU be available later this month for the schQOI dis· trict. a spokesman said. I No bus stops will ~ made along Del Obispo Street at Monarch Bay or Monarch Ter· race for Dana Hills High School students . Additional transportation in· formi-tion is available by calling school district offices. 496·12l5 or 837·5181. ,.,.._P-.,eAJ WLEY ••• ~ mayor gives her a unique insight Into city ~blems and needs. Rogers hammered at his pet theme. donors to Riley cam· paigns -pa.st and present. The challenger to incumbent Riley criticii~ the supervisor for accepting betty dopations from developers and then al· legedly voting in favor of their projects. Except for bis aside that raised the Grecian Formula is· sue. Riley all bu1 ignored the at- tack on bis voting record. His sole retort to Rogers' at· tack was. "He <Rogers> exa~· gerates and bandies the truUl very lightly." Riley defined "the true cam· paign issues" as the cost and size of go~emment and land use. Other issues cited by Riley in· eluded affo~able housing, im· plementation of Proposition 13 and government credibllity. But law enforcement officials in San Dlego County contend there is a similarity between tbt-"Watch Cat" a nd brass knuckles. and declared Wiebert's invention an illegal weapon. The state attorney general later held that if used as a weapQn, the "Watch Cat" is con· sidered in the same category as brass knuckles or a sawed-off shotgun. Fresno County District At· tomey William Smith says tbe attorney general's ruling means U,at it is lea.-l to purchase and carry Ute "Wetcb Cat'' as • key ring cbann. But the moment lt is used as a weapQn. it becomes illegal. "Let's say a woman ls being attacked with the Intent of rape and this ts the only object around with wb1ch to defend herself ... he says. "IL seems to me that it approaches absurdity to prevem her fl'OU) ur.\ng ~ qci. ly weapon available to her ... Sl,130 in Jewelry Stolen in Niguel Jewelry valued by the victim at $7 .130 was taken from a La guna Niguel home by a burglar whose method of entry is unknown. Orange County sheriff's or. ricers said the valuables were taken from the home of housewlle Phyllis Mary Martin. 47. of 2:1172 Timor Bay while she was in Las Vegas. naUonal policy. Nonetbelees, be made it clear that monitoring Russian ams build up ls a major preoccu~· lion with the CIA. ·; The CtA Oiredor faulted formet agents who have taken their quarrels with the CIA to the public. Turner said those formf'r agents have breached contrao· tual agreements by spealtinS out of tum about CIA activities.· The damage done comes in the form of a loss of confidence among agents m other countries - that deaJ wUh the ClA. '} He said fogner employees who violate a contractual a1reemeat not to diseuaa ~ ridential maUen for 15 year, should be sued and will be sue.a for breach of contract r.._PllfleAI WADDILL. 1b.e.lnfanti.io Jl~t "rjh alt.er claim--.r. 1'. .... ~ ""v-" ~ ... 4• ';it' llfg-teftl'CSdcaw ... ~---' brain damage by immemoii-m· -.,. ' the aaline and would be little more tban a human vegetable it s4e lived. s Tbe juey in bis ftrst trial hero.le Judge James K . Turner deadlocked at 7-S for acquitt~ after 11 days or deliberation and 16 weeks of trial testimony. Watson predicted today that ttu! second tMal will take even longer. "alleast24 weeks. · "We intend to go much more fully into th.is Issue of what Is lif~ and what is death ln terms of a fetus that survives an abortion a\· tempt, "Watsonsaid. : Truth-or Co nsequences? Sometimes the truth hurts! We have lost an occasional sale by not telling a cuatomer what he wanted to hear. We might point out that a customer would be better off to pay a little more for our rubber padding than buy • cheai>er. mushy pad that feela like you are walking on ~!loons. The "balloon" pad hurts the carpet backing. ca~ etretcntno. and rulna aeams. Also U.ia padding often ~ens out aft• a whWe. Addttionaltv. we might ten vou that some carpet fibers n more pradicat thin othet'I. A fiber that wort<s In one texture. might 1'bomb" In another. Feel free to call for ldvice. AU of our sales people haw had exteoaiw •Xperlehce in the servtee end of thlf busln.at -and after •" -the moat Important thing we can offer '8 conelstenttv good MrViCJel • < • SAN FRANCISCO tAP> -...._Qlel-JUltlce--'lol_e_ UHl}ftb Btrd opened lh• California Supr.me eo.t'a beertq ~ °" UM Prooo&Won 13 property tu reUef lnIUltive by sa)'inl tbe JUSUces will DOt be tnUmlAatMI by tbreatt. • She said lbe wu aDJJwerina an • earlier motion by Kern County •bldl •eel tbat four justices up for ~leetlon ln November hOt partlclpate in tbe deeiaton on tbe measure wblch cuts proper· ty tues by about *7 blllioo an· nuabv Tbe motion bad been de--pied'.t{. • •au .8l?d Aid the. '' jultice1 have bee8 ~~ WiUl Neall ot defeat at die Volb ud-9"8 wiU• anonymo•• threat• of pbyalcal violence a~ainat themselves or tbelr f am1Uet ll they fall to vote in • certain way ..... She didn't aay wbleb way. The jurist did not aay bow the tb.reata bad tieen transmitted. or bow many there were. (Earller story, pqe A5> She said each of the juatJcea bad taken an oath of olflce wbieb demanded they follow the law and ar• auided by ooe 1>r1n· •rcledB .. e ~lkites I • Planners Sup~r-t EXcluuige -~Mesa-Protesters ----CritieisDL. BJ IOCllAEL PASKEVICH Ol•Delly ......... Homeowners protesting coun· ty-approved plans to pat a home for ment.ally retarded adults on Costa Mesa's easl side have won '50me support of their position from city planning com· missioners. Altboulb the dispute centers on a small pocket of county land. and therefore is beyond city COO· trol, city Planning Com- missioner Clarence "Chic" ·c1arke said the homeowners came before tbe city com· 1 • mission seeking help. Some of the homeowners are worried about what they believe Costa Me&an11 AU/ingGirl would be ne1ative impacts on their neighborhood if Colin Ash· lini ls allowed to move bis Santa Ana facility to a 12·unit apart· ment complex and adjacent home at 320 E. 20th St., Costa Mesa. The county Planning Com- mission approved the move despite protests from residents, who have reacted by filing an appeal of the action with the Orange County Board of Supervisors. It la DOW up to supervisors to decide it they want to re-bear the case when the appeal comes before them bl about a month. ~See &ETASDED. Pace A2) JURLEOR..!OPE =-.Tears were shed by President C~r in W asliiriitontocraY an~ . • by an unidentified nun in Rome Thursday -for Pope Paul VI. President Carter wiped away a tear during a Pontifical Requiem Mass at St. Matthew's Cathedral. With the President were Secretary of State Cyrus T .. aytaCl•lq N.Y.Stee .. AP• 0 I Vance and House Speaker and Mrs. Tllonras -O'Neill. ?be nun wiped tears from her eyes as she got a last glimpse of the Pope lying in state inside St. Peter's Basilica. Funeral services for the pope will be conducted Saturday. Coast Night and JDOl'Dine low cloudineu, otherwtae fair through Saturday. Lowa to-night ln 60s. Hl1hs Saturda~ in lower 70s at beaches to lower 808 in· land. INSIDE Te•A" A tUtfemd ioorld U.a onlM ZB mUe1 {font ilw Oran~ Coait. f'or • look GI '°"°''a ct.mg °" ColoMtso '"°*' ... .CO'rk• _, phQIOt Oft Po/lie Cl. • ,, , I Three wlldentified U.S. marshals shield eonvlcted loan shork Gary Bo\\-"Ciach Cl.be back ot whose heod is visible at center> as h~ continues his testimony before tbe Senate Permanent Subcommittee on In- vestigations. Costa Mesa lan 't int•reated In state bailout ald ln the wake of Proposltlon 13. but eouneU members bave deJatyed action on City Attame)' Robert Cam· pa1na 'a plea to Jolla a lawiuit proteatlne the atate~a handling ot the situation. "l ~~nk we certainly have to take ~ atand ... aald Campapa, ·;Postponed It may be quite a while before Costa Mesa 8eta around to widening Del Mar Avenue, but residents of the area woUJd Just as soon the ctty foraet the plan ,..,.... P.,,e AJ completely. T k T aff • E d The City Council bu decided rue r · 1c ye I RELIEF to hold off plans fot a 53-foot . • • • widening project on the north side of Del Mar for' an Indefinite opened the attack against period. In Sh • t Proposition 13 on behalf of school Del Mar is 8 two-hme. 60-foot· opp1ng--en er districts and certain sehool of; wide roadway, but plan1 that ficlals. one day may lead to makilll n..it It may be Joe Albertson's supermarket but lhe city or · Newport Beach has the problem caused by delivery trucks Members of the city's Tra!Oc Affairs Committee this week opened what promises to be a lengthy stl\dY of truck traffic sel'V1ng the COTona de1 Mar s hopping center In wbicb Albertson's is located. The study was prompted by Councilman Paul Hummel, who lives about a block from the center. "f don't want to sound like another PauJ Ryckorr with .the no-left-turn-on-my-street busi· ness." Hummel laughed. "But we do have a problem and I think something needs to be worked out." Corona del Mar merchants were on band at the meeting to f",....P.,,eAJ oppose an tnillal plan calling for He W"ged that If the court de· Mar a 106-foot-wtde arterial removal or street parking on cides to make Proposition 13 in· highway are still on ctty booU. . valid, the ruling sbould be "pro-A ntamber of rettdents ap· lris, First and Jasmine avenues. spec tlve." as opposed to p .. a-.a ~-the Ci~" Co.men the three r esidenti al streets "' n::u UOC'I'-•"'" ~ bordering the shopping center. retroactive. Monday night to note that the The idea is to give trucks room Norris said his clients suggest widenlng or Del Mar was lnttlal· to maneuver in and out of the that the decision be effective for ly part of a plan to make tbe h rr the 1979-80 fiscal year because roadway a linlt will\ the City of parkiog Jot and Jet t em 0 ·.·1be teaislature has nrQ..vi.ded •-.. ;",. .............. 111.ew~·.,. Be_ath. • etbeMi~ounemly used .. W~beli u • ._ ..... "'"'"61.& >&.i.. to avoid East Coast Highway. stop-gap funding · · · e eve Del Mar crosses rough coun· ln an interview todliy. Hum· it is extremely diffi~ult to reverse ty territory and a portion or mel explained that delivery the complete machinery for im· Newport Beach. Homeowners trucks QOW tum off East Coast plementing Proposition 13 at this noted that Newport Beach re· Highway 00 ·Goldenrod Avenue late date, and we expect the court rused to take part in any ex· where there is a traffic light. to take a number of months for a tension of tbP roadway into They follow a route on decision." Irvine. Goldenrod to First, then along The court asked Norris if ruling Therefore. the homeowners First to the center that is located against Proposition 13 would not claimed. the n~ to widen Del between Iris and Jas mine invalidate the implementing laws Mar Is now a thing of the past. avenues. which have been passed by the One resident sald the widening Hummel said be appreciates Legislature. would only help Newport Beach the reasons the trucks use the He pointed to previous de· residents have easier access to residential routes. but he said cisions by the court which had the Costa Mesa Freeway. the increasing numbers of them ruled laws invalid but bad al· Council members said the and the hazards they pose on the lowed enabling legislation to con· situation may change in the narrow streets are alarming tinue in force. Norris said that by future and the city should keep lpcal residents. . issuing a prospective ruling, the· the widening plan in a holding With merchants opR051ng re· court would be giving the pattern. calJint the atate•s lealslatlve response to Propoeltlon 13 ''one of th• more contuams pieces ot teslt••Uon 1· ever bad the mil· fortune to try ind interpret.·· Cltylna the numerous ••atrlnga" attached to SB !M. Campagna asked council pecmilslon to join a suit already liltd by Orance. Garden Grove. Fullenoo and Aeabelm. C.mDdna aatd the state ··111 flaunt.lni the power or tbti pune. •• and that Costa Mesa should ftibt back e1alnat ever· lnereaalnt atat• control ov.er local sovemmenta. AJt.tioulb t.be COQl'lcU rejected any state aid. ti ayor Ed McFarland qae.t;loped the Ume and expense involved In Jolnlna the lawsu11. "1 feel *e abould take a waJt a nd see ttltude ." sald McFarland. Councilwoman Arlene Schaf er sald the city's tUt•er la directed at the acate LegtaJaturt, not the voten who paned Propo1ttion 13. Tbe comple" ~e toranda for aid to cltJes would have 1ranted Costa Mesa St.O'l5,90t. However, City M@ager Fred Sorsabal noted that tbe city. because tt had a reserve fund of $4.3 million. would be penal.bed for ita frugality. Atter alJ the penalties alld strtn11 ~ uaWO«ald. the AaU'• Sl •llllon·plUS off• M>Wd kh· duced to.$24.099. Councit membert utreed t.hat it would.be hardly worth iHo ii take the siaw up on lta 1>alJout lu.Dds. ---_.... -A major concern.of the council ls. one provision that would force the city to cancel pay Increases for its employees. Acceptj.Qg state aid would bind the city to the state's decision not to grant an~ pay raises Chis year. This would have wiped out ap· proved pay raises totaling $355.000 for tbe city's 513 employees, said Sorsabal. Campagna note d that. a number of public employee groups have filed suit against the state because of the pay freeze. Bettors Get Papal HinU ROME CAPl -Italy's government Iott.er)' report- ed record saJes this week with bettors favoring num- bers they believed "'ere related to the death of Pope Paul VI. Many put their money on the numbers 21 or 40 because he died at 2140 - 9 :40 p.m. -SuDda)'. Other favorite numbers ~ere 6, tbe date of bla death. and BS, which special books tor lottery bettors say is the /number related to the deathotpopee. Some Jo«ery offices in ·Rome and other cities aald they had sold out their weekly allotmeqh or tickets by today. The win· nine numbers wm be dra•n Saturday. , ...... _ ... J POPE ••• have been sealed for tbe funeral and buriaJ Saturday evenlng. 1n the 13-page t.eatament. COil>· posed In three aectiool betwqn 19$5 and 1973, the ~ aJjo left mOlt of bis possessions to the Holy See and asked that his funerat be k48&>' .. pious and shn· pie." In the flnt section. written bef ort-the end of the Second Vatieal) CotlnciJ, Paul reeom-mend_, that the churcb listen lo .. 1101ne wordt-ol ours whida we ut· ltted for her aeriousb' and with Ion." a, made aome 1eneral recocn- mfr'Mlat.Jons 4n the ref.aUonstup of tbt-Roman Catholic Chureh with tlhel-Chrtstians and with tbe worid. ··About ecumenism: The work or eornifta e&oeet--wi&h-eep&rated b.,tben should be continued with great comprehension, with great patience. with 1reat love. but without deviating from the true Catholic doctrine.·· be wrote. "About the world: One 11bould not beUeve that 1t is good . . . to adopt its thinking. habits. and tastes: but ~ne should study 1t. love it and serve it." The pope's appeal for pardon came In two pages added to the testament in 1972, and be added three tines in July 1973 stressing again he wanted simple funeral rites. moval Qf street parltlng and Legislature plenty of time to The south side of Del Mar Hummel spe~ng for residents "respond to the court's ruling and would not be affected tr the city opposed to trucks or\ their tlmetodevelopa new plan for tax goes ahead with the wldenlng. Clarke said a letter from the su·eet.s, TAC members say they reform. If the Legislature tailed However. six homes on the north RETARDED E'rem P11p A I city Plannlnl Commission to Stb will continue to study the prob-to come up with a plan it would al· side would have 23 feet of District Supervisor Thomas Iem to see if a solution can be lowtimeforanotherlnitiati•e.'' roadway frontage taken for Riley suggests that county found . Norris sa1d opponents to right-of-way. supervisors either •'re-open the c 8 pt. Lou Hee res, a TAC Proposition 13 are not oppose(! to One poss I bl~ plan would have hearin& or take more time on member as commander of the lower property taxes nor the ':15e the city buying all or the slx prop. it." police department's traffic of an initlatlve to accomplish erUes on the north side of Del Clarke and city Planning Com-division, said city ataff members propertytaxrflief. Hesaidtheob-Mar ln Costa Mesa at an mission Chairman Donn Hall will put together a ~raft ~eport jection is tha the new law goes estimated cost of $600,000. Rogers hammered at his pet be lieve that a lack or com-of alternatives for d1scuss1on at much further than tax relief in Before Newport balked at the theme. donors to Riley cam· mun1cation between the the next TAC meeting in two thatitmakes"sweepingchanges proposed extension of Del Mar ho meowne r s and As hling weeks. inlheConstituUon." into lrvlne. tbe county paigns-pastandpresent. Mrs. Wieder said her ex· perience as a councilwoman and mayor gives her a unique insight into city problems and needs. touched oct the controversy. .. At that time. we'll let the The lawsuits come from 22 purchased some other homes. in The challenger lo incumbent The homeowners met with the concerned folks have a look at il school districts, the city of San anticipation of the wldenmg Riley criticiied the supervisor r•m. .... ,f;'~!~;•:::';:::~;:·~"''.':t.~""~:!~~ ... :~~ ~ -~~/,,~~-:~i~ · • _:.,:<~" · <p~.i.,nJi-,d~•'IW ,., earlier this week. The resulting 'f:'~er1a1 public employee groups, Li k S rroib-~ev~~-. c"· ~~ tetter was malled to Riley 'T daJ Hit whose Jobs and salaries relied •it ,,,..,,,. legedly voting In favor or their Thursday. ~ 8D 8 heavlly on property tax rev· ~, projects. Clarke said the homeowner:, <!nues before Proposition 13. haven't asked the city to annex New House The cou.rt handed those groups IJut B;g 'A6;le Except for his aside that the small county pocket in an ef. a setback when it refused to •e .Jr.a-., raised the Grecian Formula is· fort to block As~ng's plans. block the initiative from taking PROVIDENCE. R.I. <AP> - sue. RUey all but ignored the at· Planning Director Charles Jn N effect Ju}y 1. But it agreed to Rhode island's only measured tackonbisYOtiJ18record. Roberts today said the letter ewpOrt hear tbe suits, rather than refer· mile locat<d on Interstate 85, Hts !Ole retort lo Rogers' at-ma1led l? Riley uks supervtsors ring them to a lower court. turned out to be 5,715 feet when to _consider a one-year trJal Newport Beach police are In· The written arguments delved traruiportation ofnclals, spurred tack was, "He <Rogers> exafh p~~1od and a review lf the de· veatigating the vandalism of a into complex issues -wbether b toriat complaints, took out gerate& and bandies lhe tru ClSIOn on the home for mentally new home being built on Lido tbe Jarvis measure embraces tl r0alibrators very UgbtJy." retarded adults ia upheld. Isle by public relations ex· more than one subject. cUpples ere · ~n ~ddition the plannlne com· ecutlve Gil Ferguson. local government. treats dlf· As elementary school students Riley defined "the true cam· mission correspondence sua· According to police, vandals (erent property owners learn. 8 mUe should be 5,280 paign issues" as the cost and gests that only 24, rather than 36 broke lnt.o the home at 115 Via equitably or vlolatea public feet slze of government and land use. m~a~~~ed~~beal· ~d~Th~y~-. emp~~~~oo~~~. ~~·-----------=~~~~-----~============~; lowed to occupy the complex. The vandals plugged all the But lawyers for both aides also Roberts said this request is s inks then left water faucets ·were mindful of the voters' man· based on conoerna that three runnlng. The flood was dis· date Other issues cited by Riley in- cluded affordable housing. im· plementatlon of Proposition 13 and government credibUity. persons woul~ be occupying covered by a caretaker. Saying that the people't cries .each of the uruts. The average Police said lhe home's tor property tax relief "ftll Qn num.ber of occu~ant.s per dwell· carpets, which had just been in· deaf ears" In the Lealalature, Ing m the area ts currently 1.9 stalled, were damaged. Attorney General Evelle persons, said Roberts. Accorc:Una to lnveatlaator1, the Voun1er warned the court that B allowing only 24 occupants home has been vlcttmbed by Y uJ be·• l th ' other malicious mischief at· d'eclarln1 the lnltla~lve Uft· the home wo d c oser to ~ conatttuUonal would be "tan~· average for the neighborhood. ta~!~ddition, the new home was mount to holdin1 that the people ·t~e Jetter states, add~ng th~t attacked in court when the Lido of this atute have no way to . the purpose °'hf:,oup om~ JS Isle Community Auociatton enact tax reform throu1h th• Jn. ~!~~~ ~~ ~~~e~?,ods w ere filed a suJt last May, cJaimln1 ltlallve proceta," DAILY PILOT the roof didn't meet communlty deatan standards. The suit even- tualb was settled out of court. Boats Rifled hi Newport P,....P-AJ TARNISHED Truth or Consequeiices? Sometimes the truth hurts! We have lost en occaatonat aale by not tetllng a customer what he wanted to hear. We mfoht pofnt out that a customer would be better off to pay 1 llttte more for our rubber Pl<fdlng than buy a Cheat>ef. muahy Pld that feels =Ike art walking on balloont. The "bltloon .. pact hutta the becking. causes atretchlnil~ and rutn1 ...,. AllO thfaW Ing often flattens out after• *Nie. Addlttonally, we mfoht tell )'OU that some carpet flberl 1te more ~ than otMta. A fiber that wom In one t•xture. might "bomb" In another. Feet free to caJI for acMce. AJI of our Ml• people hive had extenetve expenence In the eervtoe end of thla buefneea -and aft• an -the moet import1nr thing we can Qtrer ii con111tentty QOOd aervtcer ! I r I I ciple -bold n1 the rule of law. TEN CENTS 1.. SAN FRANCISCO <AP) - Chief JutJce Roce Ellaabetb Bird ope••d Ua• Callfornaa r. Supreme COUit'a laiaibii today ·~ GD tbe ProllQsition lJ property t. -, tu rellet lnltlatJve by saylnc the JI la Bird laid the · · Jutleet u-... Nie Una&eneel •Ith recall or defnt at the~ and even witti anonynaotaa tbreat1 of pbystcat yioten -.-.mrt'" tb.mfflves ()r their f amUies ii tltey fall to vote 1a a certain way .• ," Siie dkta't aay ~ way. "All the threats in the ~Id WlU nOt cMtft' • from the hnps-a nl task: tiefore u1. •• she declar.d. "Tbat la Why the mo- tion. . • was denied." justices wUI not be lntimklaled by thruta. The jurist dJd DOt taJ bow the threats bad beea tranamltted. or how maQJ there were. <Earlier story, Page A.5> She uid she wu answerinc an urUer ll'dklo by Kem Oounty wblcb asked that lour juslices up ror re-election ln November oot participate ln the deciaioa on •· the measure which cuts prq»er-She said eacb of the Justices bad taken an oath o( office which demanded they follow the Jaw and are auided by one prin· Tbe four who face voter COD· firmaUon in November are Blrd, the court'• ftnl woma~ Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.'a two oUaer appointees. Frank Newmaa and Wiley Manuel, and a Ronald Reagan appointee, Frank Richardson. I. ty taxes by about S7 blllion an· pually. 11ae motion bad been de- nied. Attorney Wllliam A. Norris <See &EUEF, Page A2> I ~---PRESIDENT WIPES TEAR DURING MASS FOR POPE TODAY IN WASHINGTON H• Attended With 81at• Secretary Vance (left)~u•• Spener and Mrt. O'Neill Baby Deatlt Trial Candidates WadJill Drops'P-1,eti, ~e 'Pardon Fr._ All' Vitamin B-1 To Prevent Pope's Will Asks Venue~-L~ -&i~---. .____._ f ~--=i-' -...1•MA1·~~ County Supervisor Thomas ve or W or U By TOM BARLEY . ;,., -tbe-ben~or the-second trial Biley -~ bi&..electioa rival Ot .. Dlilfr"91""' • aqdwlllbandlepretrialmotions ~htbeusingGrecianFormula VATICANClTY<AP>-Flrst Kennedy, D-Mass., a fourtb LA JOLLA <AP> -Adding Lawyers for Dr. William Bax-Nov 27 ID afutileattempttobid.ethe-pass-lady Rosalynn Carter arrived in member of the group, was not vitamin 8-1 to booze might pre- ter Waddill Jr. have abandoned Tb. ·will ln lud · f ingyears. Rome today to head the U.S. expected to arrive until Satur· vent a rare and incurable form tbeirmotionforachangeohenue · !Y c e 8 motion or The rival, Tom Rogers, sus. dele1-atlon to Pope Paul Vi's day. of alcoholism that last year cost for his second murder trial .and dismt~sal. the argument that ~r. peels that Riley bu sold out to fugeral and called the late pon-"This is a sad occasion, sad Americans an estimated $70 agreed to face trial Jan. 22 in YI add all bas been. placed an the special inte-rests who have tiff a "wise and beloved symbol because we have lost a wise and million to treat. Orange County Superior Court. ~pardy by~ ired cJ .'econd poured dollars into his campaign of the goodness of mankind." beloved symbol or the goodness Those 81'e the rindln1s of a "lthlnkwe'llgetafairshakein tame and a motion or s~s.sat inrecordbreakiflgamounts. The Vatican, meanwhile. of manltind."shetoldreporters. study published in the New Orange County " defense at-on .thfetbgrount thds .tbnlat ttbhereilS no In another race for county made public a handwritten "Pope Paul's concern for the England Journal of Medicine by • proo a e a an e s ac-pervlSO· r David Baker hints tomey Malbour Watson said to-ed kWin b be su • spiritual testament in which poor and bis deep sense or social two UC San Diego researchers. ' day. ''And J feel even happier ~us of g was a uman · that his campaign foe might be a Pope Paul asked "pardon from justice have left lhe world a tset· Dr. Michael H. Criqui, a pro. about it in the light of the judge 10 \. ad dill 42 of Huntington female' Johnny.come-lately "!ho all those to whom I may not ter place. We are all richer for fessor of community medicine, who was chosen today." Harbo ui acciised of strangling changed her party affiliation have done good'' a nd said of his having lived. and medical student Brandon S. Judie Byron K. McMillan, the ur, d th i th when sJie moved t-o Orange the world that one should ''study "'As a man of great spirituali-Centerall say that fortifying outgoing presiding Judge will be a newborn baby to . ea n e County in order to 11ain a it, lbve lt and serve it." ty -Jimmy called him a beer. wine and liquor with the • nursery at Wesbrunster. Com-political base. · it al be h ·11 be munJty Hospital shortly after bis And Baker's adversary, Har-Mrs. Carter stepped off en Air spar u aeon -e wt The 'researchers admit that attempt to abo. rt the child b_ y In· riett Wit ..... ""r, 18.,,. ... A,1 ... A.&...-..a Force· plane at Rome's Ciam-missed, not only by American vitamjn. called thiamine, could Do ..... as Strike i ol salineaoluti failed. ICU• p -~QI plDO Airport, macle 8 Wtef stat;e. Catboliea IJut b,Y ..u Americans curb holpital costs for people .. ·ueaa · Ject on a 00 with wbat she HJI is bis 11e-•••11-ildoa "ttince..-udb7,..Ulewortdover." •ith Wemlcke-Korsakoff ayn. It la .u .. ad U.. Jiie ....,..led el1ton te rua ·•a ~~ eam· tar tM trtp to tbe u:s, EmbaQy In ._..... w ttuestlom, Mrs. drome. the infant In tier crlb after Claim· paign." residence where offtetals said Carter said ber mother·in·law, Tbe illness ls a severe form of inetbatshehadaufferedmassive Those were some of the sbe would remain until the Lilllan,belpedberandtbepresi· alcobolia'11 that can devastate brain damage by tmmenioo ln higbll&btl ot a ~ay DiJdlt fuaeNIU....,.. dent "feel tbe presence of tbt memory and cause permanent ~ • -- Akoholiilm,? 'lhreatened; f".'l"al~s Planned the ............... _.. e••tlWal••' hNte 4t·tlae ~.... ..... "'the"'· pope•• after. returDed from braua 4'1unaae, The syndrome is I;_____~_ ---tbaa .................... If • Omit ~ ~ . .,.tbe .... ua O!'•l#W -,... her ........... with Pope Palll CID tae...-.... but e• be prevented 1 ' lived. Caltforula 1Aa1•e Of Cities Yon QcW. u_.. Carey and Ile(>. July 13, one of the last foretp or treated with aiassive oral _. : Negotiations are scheduled Th<a~urywa~oh!!~ntptriala~> ore meetinJ("'-lnRILAn~lmp. a•> Robert N. Glahoo. D-Conn. -visitors before bis death. intravenomdoeesofB-1. next Wednesday lo an attempt to ~ 6'» ~ •le "6 ~ ic. • • aae ,_ flew bere wttb her. Sen. Edward The Vatican announced today .. The Only way to beJp " en. avert a strike aaainst Douglas that Paul's body will remain on quJ said in an interview Thurs. Mrcraft Company and McDon· view to the public Jn St. Peter's day, "ls to prevent it." neU Douglas Astronautics Com-'Ch . ' w as Olf. Evil Basilica another day, until a ~ew While rarely fatal. Wemicke-pany in Huntington Beach. a1·1~1 a... hours before the funeral. Fin Korsakoff syndrome frequently . A total of almost 3,000 scien-.i .a. ' days of public viewing bad been results in costly, long-term llSlS and engineers who Voted , ~ W~.at.8 o'c'°" ~\tio\j~qn -lt nl'C~"""J-n. ... >''·Fe~.!s7Frs,. .. m;;~:~~s{~i .J~;~Catlc , .-;;;s:"i?~adzYi>-:.~;,...-:-·.;,,. ~-; ·~ ~:-Be.-r~-:;-.D~:~;_:~:, l"':~:-~--:~~-·y ~sea1ei~==~~~ r~;~~ri'~i:i'~~~~~!~T'-~/ t them are threatening to walk 1J ue aey nJn.D' iriay ~ IJW!Ytu and burial Saturday evening. alcohol, which is low in out. •-e e• In the 13-page testament, com· thiamine. When they do ingest The aircraft and aerospa~e posed in three sections between thiamine, the researchers say, it firm which operates sax FRESNO <AP> -Thousands Whengratpedtbrou1btheeye weapon. 1965 and 1973. the pontiff also ispoorlyabsorbedbythebody. Southland plants bas never of· of California women are carry-holes with ttie fist clenched, the Tbe state attorney general left most of his possessions to C i ui .d that if thiamine ficially recognised the ing around a pointy eared na~ bottom ot the cat's bead later held that it used as a theHolySeeandaskedthalbis ~~ S81 Teamsters as its engineers and aluminum cat's head as a key rests aeail18t the palm of the weapon. tbe "Watch Cat" ls COD· funeral tie kept "pious and sim· ~orttfaca~on had been available scientists' bargaining agency. ring charm and for protection hand and the ears form two sidered in the same category as pie." m 1977, at could have prev~nted "Last and final," is the way despite the threat that the de· pointed protru.stons from lhe brass knuckles or a sawed-off about 1,200 cases of Werrucke- the firm described in its recent vice could be considered an iJ. knuckles. shotgun. Korsakotf syndrome. offer of an eight percent pay legal weapon. When carried in this manner. Fresno County District At· V th Kill d The researchers admit that raise in the first year of a three-As one "Watch Cat" owner Wiebert notes the areat similari· torney William Smith says the • OU e the cost of adding thiamine - year contract. said : "Wben I bought it, I ty between bis ltey ring charm attorney general's rullag means which is almost tasteless ln the "Intolerable," is the way thought it was interesting. After and the habit many women have that it ia legal to purchase and .6. _ Motorbike amounts needed -to liquor teamsters Local 911 in Long that, I realised what it could be of carrying their keys ptotrud· carry the ... Watch Cat" as a key ~ would be high. But they say it. 'each describes the Douglas of. used for." She then bought them ing tbroulh their fingers for pro-rinl cbarm. would be incomparable to the fer. for her daughters for protection. tection, Which is not illegal. But the moment it is used as 8 Ba....,:2 Into Car cost of treating the disease. Company spokesman Walt The chann has two pointed But law enfOl'cement officials weapon, it becomes illeaal. --~ Cleveland, based al the north eara and two large boles for the in San Diego County contend "Let's say a woman ls beina But ''unfortunately.'' the two f{untingtoo Beach plant, said to-eyes, which have become the ther• la a aimllarity between the attacked with ~ lnt(mt of rape researchers noted, "alcohol is day a meeting is set for 1 p.m. basis· for the lllegal weapons "Wat ch Cat" and brass and this is the only object the chief source of caloria for oextWednesdayinLosAngeles. designation, says its designer, knucklu, and declared around with which to defend millioM of Americans" and <See DOUGIAS. Pa1e .U> Arlen Weibert. Wlebert's ln-ventlon an ille1al . (~WEAPON, Pa•e AZ) thiam1oe fort.tncatlon could save Buffalo Butts, . WEST ALEXANDRIA, Ohio (AP) -A farmer WU butted to death by a 2.:;oo.pound butf aJo lte boug)lt to breed with hls cat· ~e. sheriff'• depuUea here re- l>Orted. Irvin Zimmerman, St, died after &he animal, wbJcb escaped from a field Wednesday, knocked him down and re-peatedly butted him. Nellhbon and Zimmerman'• wife chased the buffalo away, but the farmer died at a local Jloapital Thu rad a)'. Sheriff'• " deputleashottbobuffalo. .. milllons of taxpayer dollars in hoapilallzaUon costs. Coast Nl&bt 8Dd moming low cloudlness, otherwise fair tbrou•b Saturday. Lows tonlcht In 60s. Hlahs Saturday in lower 70. at beacbes . to lower IOI in· land. I .. (MolL~J Stamp Club Hit I By '13' Backlash a1 WILLIA• .-ciS .......... PaOPOSITION ia hun't attected .Ump prfcee but tta sld tffee\a nearly caused Saddlebaek Valley Pbllattllall to eome unc1~ ntffftlb. About as memben of the s.ddleback stamp Club wert aatb red at tbelr usual meetlna place, Loi Alllol In· tehnecUate School. waJtlnt for tbe custodlu to unkM:t the door. He dktn 't ahow. Rut club oresiden1 Gene Swoqer arrived anried with • letter rrom the d11t.rlct anoounclna lmpo&lUon ol a fee schedule for u1fn1 acbool district fadllUe& To eontlnue t4 m.ee1 al the acbool library. P~kl nt Swonaer told the 1athertna. the dub must now pay SlO and custodial cost.a Tbe club's HwsleU r noles a brief meet=as held on the scbool lf'OWlds and a to find another place to meet w re fees weren't so "uxirbitant." ••• A C&ISl8 OF NOTE bu surfaced among members of the nelabboril\I Capistrano Valley's Uoo Club. Tbe oraanhaUoo'a latest newsletter notes "You may have noticed the increased amount of notices for you to notice. Some of our not.lees have not been notieed. Tb1a lt ver~ noticeable. ''It has been noticed that the responses to"llie nolfces have been noticeably unnoticed." the newsletter continues. ''This notice is to remind you to notice the notices and ··espond lo the notices because we don't want to go un· noticed!" The notice was headlined "Please Notice.·· ••• A NEW CITIZEN'S LOBBY has sprung up in San Juan Capistrano. a community known for its vociferous and often fanatical citizen groups opposipg development of one ~Ort OT another This time the group Is opposing allowing a proposed neighboring development to book into the city's sewer system through tbe group's housing settlement. The group's name? IGNORED AGAIN. The acronym stands for Informing Government Never Or Rarely Ever Does Any Good And Infuriates Neighbors. ••• SADDLEBACK VALLEY'S chamber of commerce director. Sharon Figeira, says the organization's phone is ringing with some sft"ange calls these days. One person called to complain about the bugs un· leashed on unsuspecting valley residents because ·or lhe inordinate rainfall In the spring. The caller was certain a recent round of flu among her neighbors was caused by the insects rather than the nu bug. Mrs. Ftgelra also receives calls on missing persons But the topper for the chamber of commerce director must have been the woman who called screaming that there was a snake in her pool and demanding that someone come out and remove it. ay GAaY GIU.NVJLL&ti ... ...-...... ClA Director Shn•fleld Tatrnor Hid 1bunday tbe •PY notwort ho heads ls re11tntn1 publlc confidence by "opetiln1 up the lnttllllence proceaa or our country a Jlttle bit." 1 Turner admitted at a pren conf erenee in Anaheim that the CIA hnaae hu been tarnished b'I eeere«v~ and nported ubUJea. "We used to be almost totally secretive but since Vietnam and Watergate we've been propelled into lb• headlloea," Turner aaicl. "Now, we feel if we are foina to keep the confidence o the American public we're aoina to f',....P.,,e.41 WADDILL. • Judge James K . Turner deadlocked at '1·5 for acguittal after 11 days of dellberalion and 16 weeksoftrialtestimo~ Watson predicted today that the second trial will take even longer, ·· ut least24 weeks. · "We intend to go much mort! fully into this issue of what is life and what is death in terms of a fetus that survives an abortion al· tempt." Watson said. "We want the second jury to be absQlutely sure of _our aw· ments before they go to thejury room " Both he and Waddill confidently predicted acquittal in the second trial in which defense attorney Charles Weedman will again be working with Watson. ··or course. I thought that in the first trial." Waddill said ... But looking at the defense that my lawyers are planning ror me this time. I know the jury will cotne back with a verdictofnot~uilty." Murder Probed I DECATUR. Ala. f AP l Police are investigating the death of Annie McDougald, a 33. year-old DecaLur woman who was shot three limes in the bead three weeks after a cross was burned into her lawn have to be more open." The former Navy Admit.I said CIA activities are now be· Ins controlled by what he called "a surrofate me~hanl1m." The f rst element of that mechanism he aald "le a very active President and vice presl· dent w.bo are overaeelnt our ac· livltle1. "Secondly. a presldil\Ual in· tema.ence over1l1ht board to whom anyone can report U Turn"' Is dolna somethlna wrong. ''Thirdly, two corqmttteel ol the Congress that reaularly COil· duct an overaIPt and tboTouah review ol what. we're cloiq." He said Lboee dlree elementl are assurances that the CIA la not colleetlng information and tailing part In improper overt actions .• Turner pointed out that a ma· jor portion of the inteUi1ettce aaency's work is devoted to re- search. T~at research is being e x- J)anded to provide naliooaJ leaders with Information about bwsiness and economic climates that he' expects to help in setUng national policy. Nonetheless, he made It clear that monitoring Russian arms _ build up is a major preoccupa- tion with the CIA. The CIA Di r ector faulted former agents who have taken their quarrels with the CTA lo the public. ~rurner said those former agents have breached contrac· tual agreements by speaking out of turn about CIA activtttes- The damage done comes in the form of a loss of confidence among agents lo other countries that deal with the CIA. He said former employees who violate a contractual agreement not to discuss con· fidential matten; for 15 years should be sued and will be sued for breach or contract. f'roaaPageAJ DOUGLAS. • Real StDiagers . ... Mike Croman follows through on a healtt\Y swing while Scott Seymour looks on at Mission Viejo's Casta del Sol Golf Course. Both Laguna Hills youngsters are on a " summer break from school. In the background. the Mis· sion Viejo Com_pany's Finisterra condominiums are ~ nearing completion. The units have a view or the Tue . which is over. tha hiUr ,,,.... Page A J RILEY CHARGES. ftiley was smarting under Rogers' criticism or bis cam. paign spending habits when. in an asidl!'. be speculated about tbe coloririg of bis roe's baii. Meanwblle. Rogers was boil· ing the campaign in the 5th Supervisorial District down lO a single issue. Riley's campaign t.reasury. Baker was trying to indicate to the city mayors and coun· cilmen in the audience that Mrs. Wieder does the politically expe· dient lo advance her own ambi· lions. Meanwhile. Mrs. Wieder was intoning that Baker is bringing dirty tactics into play in the 2nd Supervisorial District <:am· paign. Above all. the four candidates tried to show that. if elected county supervisors. they will work in harmony with city of. ficials within their districts. :· Baker urged the city people to talk wlth those who had ser:ved from developers and then al~ _ ( Student Walking Hiked Teamster officials are ·asking a 10 percent pay raise the ftrSt vear of the contract and cost-of· living increaseJ the next two years. There is also some acrimony between company and union because of Douglas' alle1ed re- fusal to reco1nhe the Teamsters' representation of on the HWltlngtoo Beach City 1 edl · Council with Mn. Wieder. eg Y voting in favor of their. · Those discussions. Baker said. prw=~~pt for bi s aside that· will abow that wben be was a raised the Grecian Formula is· county supervisor trom 1'62 sue. Riley all but Ignored the a&.. through 1974 his record of tackonhisvotingrecord. . cooperation with the cllies was Who wtll walk to school next ln addition. Harold Ambuehl month and who can ride district students in grades 4·6 will not school buses was outlined tl\is have bus service from Mission week by Capistrano Unified Glen, Mission Creek or Mission School. District adminl~t~ators. ~ark tracts on Ortega Highways following a July 24 de~1S1on by m San Juan Capistrano. the ~cbO?l board to mcrease Fourth through sixth graders waUun~ distances. Ii ving in Thunderbird East ·~ ·,tG)!.i~-. ·~ ~--~·--. .......__i.-~,_...~~· "-~·---. Capistrano district ~2.26< Chls ~., reciUi'r~~ WiJX"to ~~: Dan'a· year in transportation costs. Elementary School walking distances were in· · creased from 1.5 lo two mile6 for JUNIOR HIGH SCHOOLS grades four through six, from two to three miles for grades seven through eight and from three to four miles for grades nine through 12. Walking distances for children in kindergarten through third grade were not affected by the budget cuts. Parents interested m arrang· mg for private bus transporta· tion can attend a meeting on Monday, said a district spokesman. The meeting to dis· cuss parent-paid busing will start at 7:30 p.m. at district or. fices. 32972 Calle Perfecto in San Juan Capistrano. Changes in previous walking patterns were detailed this week by Sam Chicas. assistant superintendent for support services, as follows: ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS No bus service for grades 4·6 to Barcelona Hills, Castille. Crown Valley. R.H. Dana, Del Obispo. Palisades and San Juan Schools. DAILY PILOT - Students in Dana Point and San Juan Capistrano <including Sun Hollow and Mission Glen res· idents) will not have bus service to Marco Forster Junior High School. Laguna Niguel students who live in the La Veta tract. in homes across from the Laguna Niguel Regional Park or off Via Valle will walk to Niguel Hills Junior High. In San Clemente, Sborecliffs Junior High students living beyond the intersechons of South Ola Vista and Avenlda Santa Barbara, South El Camino Real and Avenlda Mateo and Avenida Pres idio and La • ,.,..,.. Page A J RELIEF ... Esperanza will have no school bus service. In th e Palisades area. Shor~chffs students only tn the Harbor Estates. Village and Alto Capistrano developments may ride school buses . scientists and engineers. They voted almost solidly in 1975 to be represented by the Teamsters and 78 percent of the union members voted against the firm's eight percent pay hike offer. •' ~' ' JllC'J4_S(:~ ' , H \I ,''t,. ~.,.,41.J Al_ r_a ' 11·1' Ca' ?. ' •- " ...... ,_.1..:... "--1 -• -~ -~ 1 'Se-t:fel'Ar{freJs'iitej:° 'A~' l>dtSotS The first Capistrano Valley Bennett. c hairman of the High School bus stop north of the Douglas employees' strike com· school will be beyond La Paz mittee. says It appears a Road. the first stop south at the walkout is almost inevitable. intersection of Del Obispo Street A total of 988 persons in pro. The first bus stop north of San res s ions cove red by the Clemente High School will be in Teamsters were emratoyed at the the Capistrano Beach area of H 1 Be h of Via California, the first stop unt ngton ac Pant as the south near Concordia School. end of July. <Details will be available later Cleveland said today it is un· h. known how many or the 988 are t 1s month for the school dis· dues-pa"'"'"' union members. trict, a spokesman said .> ""'06 No bus stops will be made He also pointed out 953 are a long Del Obispo Str'eet al employees of McDonnell Monarch Bay or Monarch Ter· Douglas Astronautics Company. race for Dana Hills HiJth School while 35 are employed by student.~. McDonnell Douglas Automation unsurpassed. His sole retort to Rogers· at·· Mrs. Wieder said her ex· tack was. "He fRogers I exa~· perience as a councilwoman and gerates and handles the truth mayor gives her a unique insight very lightly ... Into city problems and needs. Riley defined "the true cam· Rogers hammered at his pet pa1gn issues" as the cost and ~:1.~~~!t.~a~: ... s~~r;:e~:~ ~~·~"-~ The challenger lo incumbent eluded affordable housing. im· Riley criticized Ute supervisor plem~ntation of Proposition 13' for accepting hefty donations andgovernment cTedibillty. .. U.S., China Discuss Oil WASfUNGTON <AP> -Four U.S. oil companies and Chinese officials are attempting t o negotiate agreements for shar· ing development of China's vast oil reserves. the state Depart· ment confirmed today. Pennzoil. Exxon. Union OU and Phillips Petroleum are talk· ing with the Chinese. who h.ave both offshore and onshore re· serves and are in the midst of an oil development boom. While it is not known whether the arrangements would bring Chinese oil to the United States · a U.S. oil expert said any slgntn~ cant Increase In world prod\W'· lion could make more oil avalla-· ble lo this country. Additional transportation in· Company but based here. formation ls available by calling ------------------------------------__..., school district offices. 496-1215 or 837-5181. F,....P.,,eAJ WEAPON ••• Tnith o~ Consequences? Sometimes the truth hUrta! We have lost an occasional sale by not telling a customer what he wanted to hear. We might pOfnt out that a customer would be better off to pay a little more for our rubber padding than buy a cheaper. mushy pad that feel• Uke ~ ere walking on balloons. The "balloon" p.:I hurts the carpet a.eking. causea stretching, and ruins seam& Alto th.ta ~Ing often flattens out after a while. ' Addltlonally. we might tefl you that eome carpet flbef'I are more practical than others. A fiber that works in one texture. might "bomb" in another. Feel tree to call for advice. All of our sales people have had extensive exoerlence In the setVlce end of this business -and after au -the most Important thing we can offer ia conslttenttv good eervtcet 1 s DAILY PILOT tl3 Une1nployed Teachers' Pay Halt Asked . \ A Superior Coult laws.ut fUld bu1d11 -by Ora_..• Cout1 lelaool BuperlDl......_. aoMn Petence 1Mb to dft1 ~,_.. ... ~ ... t MMRu c.o .. clilatlct •mplo1H1 wtllo wn.mw Jobi ... ,... ... of uanu. 4'ud1• Robert Orffn was tredtollauea~~t.Mt ftuld haw. lmmeibete ef'hd on l lllCh lcMoi em~7 .. II • .._,. Q>aDt1 wtao ve•11tr• .. He a a lha.t GUclt be ordered Lo recotnlze that teachers and otbor school personnel laid off ror th.e awnmer cannot le1ally claim unemployment benefits nd nny P.ayment.s made to them ure equaUy llle1al. The lawsuit lndleatea that M,000 ac:hool employees are out of work tbll summer in Caltfoml1 because of layoffs . .. ...,..... STRIKING MEMBERS OF MEMPHIS POLICE ASSOCIATION MAN PICKET LINE EARLY TODAY Shertfra Oeputtea P8trol Streets as 1,100 Police Officer• Walk Off Beats ---·-~ •--... .. ~ ... Marine :~Guilty' ID Assault Woman Shot In Santa Ana; Friend Held Santa Ana police were contin- uing their investigation today into the shooting of a 20.year-old woman Thursday morning. Guadeloupe Talavera, 20, of 4925 W. 16th St., underwent sur· gery for a gun.abot wound in tbe abdomen Tburaday at Riverview Hospital, police said. ' Hospital authorities notified l)Olice of the shooting, officers aaid. Miss Talavera 's boyfriend, t>avid Rendon. 20, also of 492S ll. 16th, was booked into Orance ~unty Jail oo charges or assault With a deadly weapon, police re- ported. ~fficen said, however, they ve not yet ruled out the sibWty that the abootlna was '-eel dental. l Lawyer Tell~ Peers To Punish Defects Orange County lawyen were ur1ed Thursday night to punish manufacturers who put defec· Uve and dangerous product.a on the martet by seeking the max· imum amount possible In punitive damages. Santa Ana attorney Art Hews told the Orange County Trial Lawyers Association that many aucll offenders consider it cheaper to buy insurance or pay damaget Olan it is to make-their product safe. He particularly condemned the Ford Motor Company and what aae said is the firm's refusal to make tbe Pinto auto sale despite a series of acddenta ln which occupants ol tbe vehicle have been burned and ltllled. Hewa, who fought ooe such lawsuit for badly burned Richard Grimshaw. 19, of Orange, won a Jury award of $128.5 million in punitive dam ages for bis client and thea saw the trial judge cut the damages to $3.5 mlllion. He commented Thursday night that the decision by Superior Court Judge Leonard Goldstein wu ln error, And be predJCUd that ttie Fourt.b Dis- trict Court or Appeals wiU re- verse the judge'• decision. Loose Change Buys • ,, Hews a-ccused Ford of putliq on the lbarket ''the most dla· astrous car ever built" Jn ~ of a 1u tank situated in a loca· lion that almost Inevitably means an exploeloo and fUe if the car should be •truck from the rear. Grlmabaw wu burned Ova" 90 percent of bis body wblll lllle Pinto In which be was a pa11en1er wu struct a.cl a· ploded llz years.__ Re bu~ der1one SO operatloM iD alx Goodies on Coast : Looae chance -more t.ban •u would lmqtne -b spent &yiq Orqe tout S*tcarda, rt.ented skates and Elvia *"venln. Stories ln SundQ1s ,aily Pilot will lell why. •POSTAL PUDB -How are Menes cboun for local doltcardat Whkh ll ~ molt fopul1r seller? Wblcb Obe 1ed a civic ruc-us 1 Stalt ter Jerry Herteotteln bu teed out the dlm•ton racb Interviewed tourlall for lf>me inlilbb. I J\111' &OU.ING ALONG ateboardtn1 and.-lood·old nkatiq 1ill a IOOk ln two y_._ . .._,......, OM ~.~= lta ... -,.,... 19 :rollH ~· MAKA.SAND PAPAS -Oadl are doi.Qa fine when they take on the bu.rdfm of ddld N8fiDI, fie· cordln1 to an Aatoclated·'Preu report. ~ clttpatcb revei.la a writer'• contentloa tll•t au P"· tldentl bave be• .. m.aa'a boya." yeJrs. The ~ ol tbt car, Mrs. LUllbeU Ora:Y. sz. ol ADalMthia. died at tho wMel of Ute w..._ ear. precipitated by the passage or Propositiod 13. Lawyers ar1uin1 the Issue before Judae Green said the laid-off acbool force in Orange County is estimated at about &.000. Nearly 2.000 ol the S,000 have filed unemployment ln· surance claims, they said. Lawyers for the s chool employee oreanbations ad- mitted to the lawsuit by Juda«: Green argued that the rederal employment benefits receive aovemment should also be al· SlOO per week. Non-teachl~ lowed to intervene since a • school peraonnel recelve f10 per federal directive led to the state week. paying unemployment benefits. La wyers for the lntervenors said the denial of unemployment benefits to laid-off school personnel would inflict ereat hardship on employees who bad been counting on summer work to make ends meet. Te achers eligible for un· They are beinc represenUd ln the Peterson lawsuit by the Callrornia School Employees As· soclatlon, the United TeacherS of Los Angeles, the Service Employees lntemaUonal Union. Local 99, <AFL-CIO) and the Callfomla Teachers Anoclat.ion. LagoDa· P11ss~ooting? ~~ ~Q FOUNTAIN twv i VAllEY ~~ •tut llOOGfUl.lr • llOUMTAIN ¥AL.UY ..... _,,, .............. N1G1affw1n ... ._ .... l/_11/71 ~' .. " .................... . ..... ~ • • • .. • • . : 4'•.t .. ~~~ .. ~···•1•11 ~ ..... ~ Te•~~''/ Marplll•e Will the Fun Stop? BAI~ aua: Balboa hi chanted a lo\ over the ~an. MOit l*llle would probably •sree for the better. M1at_. of UM hoob.toftk of ye.Uryear baa vanlahed ftom the 1tlac . .n.e Rendavous Ballroom ta eon•. replaced by a vut coq....,eta of mOooUu.tc coodom1Dlutna. On the other baad, the Balboa Pnllloll. refurbished under the hotnttowft band ot archltect BUI Jteker, l• mo~ aplendJd tban ever. a landmark w1th twtnklir\I U1ht1 outl1nln1 lta cupola and root. TllE "1N IONE HA NT cban1ed much since Al An· denon rounded Lhe place in the ll20I. The •tin• are aUU ln t1'e lDOI 1ty&e. TIM ferris wheel ltll1 spins with it.a Ushts -Md the l:Mn'l' IO'rowd amuset Yo'm1stera oL yet uother 1..,.atklft: even If the painted bones milbl be a touch fllded t.beM day9. ., Loca.led oo a piece ol prime bayfroot property, the de· mile of the P'uD Zone bu loot been predicted. In the early 1980I, the End for tbe Zone was seep as imminent. Jt was the creature ol another a1e; a dinoiaur in the entertain· meat field that bad outlived its Ume in the clamor for "the btgbest and best use" of every scrap of real estate ln our re1ion. Now some new owners have obtained the Fun Zone property and maybe, Just maybe. once again the end or the /'~ I "-~. ~ ./ ,I • (.'';/ ·:· ,~.i~ wl ... .. • • ·'' ... • .:~· ·~ "'~),~f • Fun Zone By Mark Leysen for Mariners Saving & Loan old amusement landmark is just a few more nicks or the calendar pages away. TWO NICE GUYS STILL hold forth down there run· niDg tbe Zone. 9iU Kennedy bandies the rides and always seemed to me to be in love with bis ferris wheel. Bill Olson operates tbe penny arcade eoncession where, of course. tbe 1ames and machlDu cost a bit more than a penny in thladayaml~e. . Both Kennedy and Olson and the little shop people sut· roundlng the Fun Zone have been most· anxious to know what the fate of the place will be. The new owners have been particularly tight-Upped in this area. When one of our reportorial operatives began probing into the future of the property, it became patenUy obvious that the new ownership fears that the populace would lSe struck by a great wave of nostalgia and protest any planned demise of the historic Balboa amusement corner. 1•tl"'l(~~~~....£t.Y~ -:. • ·: ~·-· ·~w1 ' owners told our staff person; :.:.ii you-pnnt anYfii{ng·in: a'i~t' about the Fun Zone, we'll kick everybody out as or the first of the month." Why that almost sounds like a threat. So I have a message for that new owner: Read the above. He's a Little Big Marine SAN DIEGO <AP) -The Marine Corps says one of its smalleJt men is the world's pull.up champion. In lea than 15 minutes, Pie. Jose Hernandez of Cashion, Aria., cbimted himself 115 times -46 more than the previous high at the San Die10 Recruit Depot. The 5-foot·l, 104 pound Hernandez, wbo finished high school three months ago, said In bis monitored effort be "only wanted to do about 80 pullups. But when I reached 801 I still felt pretty good so I just kept go- ing. '' Bill to Senate WASHINGTON <AP) -The Sl8.3 bUllon tax cut approved by tbe llouae la on lta wa)' to the Senate. where the fl1ure la U~ely to vow perh•PI to $20 billion. . 11norlna President Carter's call monlhl aao for a S2S blWon tax cut and his last·mlnute $18.1 billion compromise effort, the House on Thursday adopted, 362·49, the measure Wl'itten by its Ways and Means Committee. * * * 'ExPerts' Estimate Tax Cuts WASHINGTON <AP> -Here is what congressional tax ··ex- perts" estimate federal income tax cuts would be under the bill now on its way to the Senate after House approval Thursday. Also shown are estimates for the two major alternative tax· cutting proposals the House re- jected. In addition, Social Security tax increases scheduled bv law for next year are shown. This table is computed for typical taxpayers with deduct;.. ble personal expenses or 23 per· cent or their income. In this comparison: -"Inc" is basic annual s alary, wag~s or self· employment income. -.. BlU " is what the cut would -be next-year-under Ul~ll-tbe. Rouse passed and sent to the Senate. -"Plan" is what the cut would have been next year un· der the Carter administration· backed plan sponsored by some Democrats. The House rejected this. -"GOP" is what the cut would have been. when fully ef- fective. under a Republican· sponsored alternative that would have phased in an average one- third reduction in personal tax r ates over three years. The House rejected this. -"NA" means figures were not available. Figures also were not available for those earning above $40,000 in income. -"SS" is what the Social Security tax increase will be for a one-earner family next year UD· der currentlaw. SINGl.a Pll"SOtt " am ,..... S1 IO SHA JI 21 5' II 16 NA JI 12 NA JI 1S • )I ll NA " 11 56 )I 11 NA SI IDS 100 'I 1.0 100 S1 213 100 G~ JO 12' '" m SOI 6SS 117 "° 1,110 ss' n • s " • 10 f Indeed, most of the president'• tax recommendationa f aUed to survive House scruttny. Inch.cl ing bis l>l'OPOMd curbs on the ao- called thrte.niartln1 lunch aJ\d a capital gainl tax lncreue. HE'S ALSO tJNLIKEL Y to prevail in tbe Senate, where Sen. Russell B. Long, D-La., the Finance Committee chairman. has saJd a$16.3 bllHon reduc:· tion wasn't .enc>Ulb. & wuts to add about S4 bllllon to offset ID· nation and next year's Social Security tax increase. Long, who abepherds tax bU.la tbrou1h the Senate, 1enerally bas bia way on such letislation. His panel begins bearings on the tax cut bill Aus. 21. The Home-passed bill would provide income tax aavlnas of $62 for a typical family of four with $10,000 income, rn for a us.ooo family. aod $146 for a $20,000 family. FOR SINGLE TAXPAYERS in corresponding brackets, tbe savings would beS15. $71 and$105. In passing the committee bill, the House dealt Carter a blow by defeating, 225:193, his com· promise which would have cut taxes an additional $1.8 billion and would have directed the re· ductions more to those with in· · cornea below-$15: 080. -At the White House, presiden· tial press secretary JOcly Powell issued a terse. one-sentence comment: "U you make $50,000 or more. the House vote is great.•· House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill, D-Mass .• despite straned relations with the White House, made the final plea for the administration measure, terming it more equitable than the committee version and say· ing Carter would sign it. AT THE SAME TIME, however, he said the administra· tion bad been tardy tn bringing in its compromise, sayine, "U it had been brought in four or five months ago, it would have sailed through Congress." In adopting the Ways and Means Committee version, the House further ignored Carter by voling to retain a Republican· backed addition that would take inflation into account becinning in 1980 when taxing capital gains. Seek Nete ftag Trial Rev. James Lawson, left. Memphis. Tenn .• Rev.~~ ... Jackson. center. Chicago, and Dr. Atvin Poussaint. Harvard Medical School. are pushing Cor a new trial for James Earl Ray, following an interview Thursday ut Br~h>:--MettnMin Prison. in Petros. Tenn. Ray pleaded guJl~y m 1969 to the slaying of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. m exchange for a 99-year prison term instead of the death penalty. Three days later he tried to recant the plea denying he killed King. . ~_Fugitives ~ahbed ' In Fa.Uily Slaying CASA GRANDE. Ariz. <A'.P> ~ State police and sheriff's deputies captured one escaped killer and two accomplices today and a fourth fugitive was killed when their van crashed through a police roadblock, authorities said. Officers using helicopters combed the desert 17 miles souµiwest or Casa Grande in southern Arizona in search or a fifth fugitive. Authorities said the five men were wanted for the murder of a Marine sergeant, his wife and son and the kidnapping of bis lS· year·old niece. There was no immediate word on the girl's fate. THE AKZONA DEPARTMENT of Public Safety said Randy Greenawat~. 28, a convicted murderer from Thornton. Coto .• and brothers Rick and Raymond Tison. were captured after the van barreled tbroUgb the palice barricade. PBI agent .fun Cassidy said a third Tison brother Donald was killed, pOSslbly in an exchanae of guiltire at the roadbioct. ' Gal')' '!\son. "3, the other estapee and father of the captured. brothels, ran from the scene after the van crashed, and authorities sealed off the area and began a search ror him. . THE CAPIVBE CAME ONE DAY after an attempted break- 111 at a U.S. Border Patrol armory near Gila Bend. Authorities said th~ getaway van matched the one the fugitives were believed to be using. Tison and Randy Greenawalt. 28. both serving life terms for murder, escaped from the state prison July 30. and Tison 's sons were charged witbengineeringtbeescape. llK Sl,000 S,000 •.OOO a.ooo 10.000 12,SOO u.ooo 17..500 20.000 15,000 l0,000 JS.000 <I0,000 JI 247 100 " 329 100 I.MS 2,0SI 2.SSJ l,092 n 14 us m 333 333 333 The amendment would have no immediate e ffect, but ultimately, according to es ti mates, could cost the Treasury $4 billion a year. It ON stJNDAy, TISON, GRE~NAW~LT and Tison's three sons would cut capital gains receipts In wer~ charged with murder and kidnapping in the shotgun deaths of MAe .. llD COUPLa ..... ~ . ~''»'' .'"';-,,,~~\O"J\~-h S,000 SI 0 NA 0 4 •,OOO '1 31 NA 71 S half. Those gains are the Manne Sgt. J~ F. Lrons, 24, of Omaha, Neb .. his wife and son. O[Q~ rrqw,sales of st~~~ real • -~rities said ~e killings arenUy occurred after Lyons stop~ ~~,~l«tterassetslfeauwc-~r.rzr~ '°.:'.'_Y! .... ~~~A.\.>)V'~~:.~~~l',j&~~~ ~le.rs... T.he~,,. ... a year. oowesweref'Ounu u5 .G. ,. , -~ ...... ~>-....~....,~ 1.000 SI 47 NA 1tl , 6 10,000 SI 39 NA 311 a 12,SOO SI 14 NA 468 10 IS,000 SI • NA 614 12 17,500 '1 2S NA 7,SI 14 ' 20,000 SI II NA 912 US 25,000 SI 1.0 NA 1,2• 333 30.000 SI 224 NA 1 .. 1' 333 3S,000 '1 216 NA 2,054 333 ..i,ooo S1 a.s NA 2.~•• 333 l'AMILYOl'FOU" llK SI •m .... GO .. SS '3.000 SI IO $NA $0 '2 S,000 SI 0 NA 0 4 ·-$1 0 NA 0 M a.ooo SI ,. NA IOI • 10,000 SI u ''° 129 • 12,SOO SI IOS NA m 10 IS.000 SI 11 m Sit 1J 11,$000 SI 115 NA 653 14 20,000 S1 ~ t2I m ISS tl,000 " m JOI 1,103 m 30,000 SI JIM 423 I~ m 35.000 ,, -NA 1.175 U3 «1,000 SI .... u. ... Ul Soutfi Gets More Stor.ms BUY ONE DINIER Al REGULAR PRICE AND GEllHI lfDDND ONE FDR 11111. •1.00 Ttwt'• the apecf•I CoupOft oftef Mtng mllde by Splntt Rnteu,.nts, MacArthur at S.D. Fwy., In Im,.. and 3125 ttert»orllhd., In Coete M•••· Ou ring Auguat. e11cept on Mondays, these C'Oupona eneble you to buy one dinner at the regular price and the second dinner for fuat $1.00 more. 11'9 our way of saying "Tha,,ka" for being our customer, · Moat of Nation Sizzla Uruler Cl,ear Skies Te11111e..,.,... -- ...... "° .. ta n .. .. 11 .. " .. J4 II U .. ,. 11 • 11 ... IS n" .JO n• '7 1l .. JS .ot 11 .. .. 14 11 n .. n " ,. .a u ., -» MG .. ,. . .. " . n~ ... •1 .. ,, ... • 1t . " .... a .. . ,. :11 n "' .... • I I 84 IW.YPLOT Friday'• NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS 2 p.m. (EDT) Prices .. , 11 • ....a•11:--•--::t.::i.""--· .... ---. ........ Ollc ........ 11 • ...... ......... ~lltlell ........................ .. { ' STOCKS I BUSINESS Porter£a.., Bureaucracy Aids Interest By SYLVIA POaTD Pertlmoo'1 Law: Wort expands ao as to nu tbe Um available fer lta completion. Tbe Peter Pl'inclple: Everyone ls promoted In bureaucracy to the level of bis incompetence. llurpb,y'1 Law: U anyth.lq can ao wrong. it wW. I RESPECTFULLY SUBlln THE Porter-Givens Perception: 'lbe delay and expense involved in any action soar in perpendicular proportioo to the number of ap-provals essential to take that action. q Richard A. Givens is the former New York relional ' dlrectot: ol the Federal Trade Commission and a member •'' ol the New York-based law ftrm of Boteln, Hays, Sklar " Henbera. ···' The Porter-Givens Perception was lDspi.red by the ,. C§llfomla tax rebellion and the muhlnc UJU'Qat. over 1" I whether Proposition 13 heralds an actual cut ln federal · government waste.and a fundamental chanae In tbe dlrec· 1, tlon of more efficient. leaner federal reg- ulatory agencies. Some of the dangers coafrontlng: <1> As long as tbe ,, ., beads of the agencies 1 "i can, in effect, judge ·, their own performance, change will be difficult. 1t is lbe •• , meat, not the fat, that may be cut. (2) When important services are cut back, pressure • for restoring them will become intense and in some cases, '" almost lmposslble to resist. r (3) If property taxes are not pushed back up, other :~ tues -most likely state, federal and even local income taxes -will rise to fill the gap. . ~ (4) The taxpayer will be hit in the pqctetboolc either ,, way. And tbe older and more wastetully entnntbed the '~ bureaucracy ls, the better its defense will be. Every layer •n will be found to be absolutely necessary for a vital reason. • 1 untouchable and sacrosanct. r GAN A DENY-BE PUT IN TlllS--monslf'ous creation!1 •4 - 0f course, but it will take dedication. determination and • 1 guts to refuse to accept no for an answer from any bureaucraey. ~· .4 As one illustration. con.sider tbe plain Englbb move. '! menl, begun In New York to force the writing of consumer contracts in words consumen can understand. It bas sparked federal proposals to compel simplifying of federal ..., regulations and some agencies have started on the ,'1 simplification route, but tbe incentive for tbe insiders · always is to make the system more complicated, not , simpler. What is the tbe way out? "Call on outsiders wbo have ' • no stake in the system to recommend the changes," says ... Givens. ti JUST AS X·BAYS CAN REVEAL bone structure from•• outside the body, a chart could be drawn to show what ''' goes on Inside a bureaucracy before a simple task can be • completed. The chart would examine the inside of the ~ • agency Crom tbe user's point of view. • At every "layer," members would have to report bow • much time they spend ln preparing or reviewing a memo for permission to submit a memo to a bi&ber authority. for permission to submit still another memo to swt another . , higher authority. etc., etc. There is simply no justlficatioo for so many steps, so many delays, so many expenses, piled one on top of the • other. 1b1a ls the way tbe mammoth bureaucracy can be . slashed. But a bureaucncy can outlast nearly all alt.lets mere- ly by inertia. Has the great tax rebellion of 1978 alirred ··~ people sufflclently to mount an endurina attack? U~--F~nn Wins Solar Test Grant Contracts for a complex solar energy generating system representing an eventual $123 million governmenl invesiment are being negotiated with McDonnell Douglas Astronautics Co. of Huntington Beach and a rival Ci.rm. One or both working together will get the Job, which in· volves what will be the largest solar electricity generating plant in the world, at DaggeU. •. 1 .. ,, . '· •• II\ BO'IU mE HUNTINGTON BEACH firm and Martin Marietta Corp. of Denver, Colo., will be paid more than Sl million each to develop prototype solar energy collecting ·I· devices. 11 ·'Ti's good news to us. There were four comP.anies ln the ' bidding and we've beaten half tbe competition." says 1 McDonnell Douglas Astronautics spokesman Don Hanson. 11 Once the 12-montb design, construction and test period is finished, tbe U.S . 'Q Department of Energy · ''" ( ] will choose between the .,J two firms or retain both , ') ENERGY to build the power plant 1 _ near Barstow. / .. This is an OD·going part of our solar energy · 1 ~ program," Hanson added, s aying that at this staae it ·,, represent.a no major change ln tbe ft.rm 's north Huntiqtoo "' Beach work force. TB.£ oou.wroa system itself will coat up tom million, accordiniJ to current estimates. The complex includes up to 2,000 beliostats, 400- square-Coot mlrrors that tract the aun tbrou&b com· pUteriJatlon. reflectina It.I UCbt onto a buae boiler atop a tower. Heat 1enerated by tbe reflected sun r111 creates steam. which is channeled tbrouP ot!tier systems to ettate electric power ~ha turblne cen.erator. TRB DAGGETI' FACIUl'Y WILL serve u 1 model to establiab tbe feulblllty of wina sunll&bt to cnate elec· tr1cal enera ellewbere ln the world. Department of Eneray eftona wtll be supplemented by three other PQbllC and private enterprlle a.JeDClts. ne,y lnclud& ~ Southern Calllomla ~ C.O., the LoS Aaiete1 Depiartment of w._ and Power 1.Dd tbe Callfornla 1:DerO CommllliOG. Solar enera bu bfftl reMattW 1t the aor\b Hunt· tiaiton Beach plant, which mo Us done pretlm..loary de- •lJD won few the apace ahuWe en!\. \ ' ' " Business CAA. y ... ot .,. Big-hearted Man Finds Way to Help Needy 87.IOllN CVNNIFF u ...... ......,. Dill Walker'• burt al••>• will ~ bia r than bis wallft. and that s1')'s a lot. 8111 ts.n l poor. "You ~aao't help people without helplna yourttlr." be a111 °That '1 my motto " El1ht yeurs a10. when Bill w s ise1Un1 IHe ln uunet - more tbun a million doll n worth a yffr a IOOd fnend ditd. leavina ~b ncf the u.I contuakon or record• for b1 fomUy to wortt throuab SOlllEBODY. HE thou1ht. should make u c~rttr or bela>me survivors dt'te rmlne their btnd1ts. The adea ponessed him. and so on J11.n. 28. 1971. he founded S.O.S In has hometown ol Athens. Textl! . Walker puultd for months &ve~ how to markd bis rdea before offtrin& to train bank and savings and loan personnel. They. he decided. were as m· volved as anyone ln the ramdy aft airs ot their comm unites. More than 900 instltutlons now otter the service rree. On learn- ing or a death in the community, the local institution's S.0 .S. ad- visers contact the deceased's s urvivors. who generaUy can use the help. THE DIMENSIONS OF the id ea have grown. too. The . Walkers now offer a "p~ organizational" service in which recordkeeping materals are sup· plied to ne wlyweds. A pre. retirement program is m the works. WorkJn1 frObl ra ract.flllod manual, and ustna 1kll11 ltorned l S 0 S tralnln1 aem&nars. d· \ llt>ra dclermln<" Sodul Securi· ty. lntsurance. ~nslon ond oth r benertts, tome or lhem unknown to their c11f'nts. "We find thousands of dollars peoplt didn't know they hud ... soya Helen Walker, u trim, out· wardly &eN!n@ home economJcs 1rad wtto.e oraunlzlna ublllty complemenh her huabund'l6 sale• instincts. I N THE MANUAL ure the OBmeS und addreate or phlCtm lo wrll for copies of birth, mar· riaa e. dtvort't ' and death t'ertihcates and details or vt-terans, railroad, teachers re· llrement and uruon benefits. So armed. Marian Kueck, ad- viser at the First Bank of Com· mer ~e. Columbia . M o .• got thousands or dollars 1n Socl al Secun· ty benefits for a widower's children. He thought no benefits were available. In cuNNtf'll' another instance a widow wor· ried about repaying $17,000 in loans by her deceased husband. The S.O.S. adviser found the loans were covered by credit in· s urance the widow might never have learned about. The S.O.S. spirit is boundless. Asked by an adviser in Florida. her coun- terparts at Peoples National Bonk In Tyler. Texas. went to th' bcdlldc or an uutomoblle ac» cldont victim. Her husband had died In the crash. DISTRESSED AND seriously Injured. lbo. victim was fUrtber up a~t by the loss or her eyealaasea. so the adviser ob-tuln~d the prncription from • Florida doctor and had a pair mudc locally. Stranded In a town far from home. the woman would have hud ftw visits except for the S.O.S. people. Marjorie Jones urd Louise Davis. When she was ¥ble to tratvel, they also look her to the airport. GrateruJ beyond words. the re- cipient of this S.O.S. hospitality expressed he rself with beautiful bouquets al Christmastime for every desk in the Peoples Bank. The sp1nt aa contagio~. ••EVERYONE BENEFITS from S.O.S .. " says Walker, a hearty, husky, happy fellow whose enthusiasm awakens him around2a.m. "Everyone.'' here· peats. Banks, advisers. reci· pients. The Walkers benefit from ex· cluslve territorial contracts with the banks and savings associa- tions, renewable automatically after three years. with the tee based on the institution's tradini area. Almost invariably the institu- tions receive their payoff in goodwill and new accounts. One recipient, a widow, returned the expression of goodwiJl with a COAST COMPUTER CENTER Manage Your Stock Portfc;>l io using • APPLE JI l.IMKED TO THE DOW JOMES COMPU1Bl Tax Revision Telefile Lists Quarter's Loss for lnfot motion Phone 646-0537 STOU HOUIS 1UH.. ntlU .... IW SAT. AMO SUM. IJ-6 Telefile Computer Corp. Irvine bas reported that unaudited sales for the third quarter ended June JO increased 15 percent over the year earlier period. COAST COMPUTER CENTER 17• & T..ttn. Costa MeM cw...,.. s.-et Sales were $4,045, 752, compared with $3 515 894 for the third quarter of fiscal 1977. ' ' Pretax income for the third quarter dropped to $797. compared with $582,337 in the corresponding quarter of rascal 1977. In addition, the company re- vised its estimated tax benefit resulting from prior quarters' losses. which resulted in a reduction to the year-lo-date tax benefit In the third quarter or $270,000. 111F.SE ITEMS RESULTED in a net loss in the third quarter of $269,543, compared with in· come before extraordinary item of $320,292 in the like period last year. SlS.00 Value Consolidated unaudited results for the first nine months showed a 22 percent increase in sales over the corresponding period in fiscal 1977. Nine- month sales were $8,603,312 in the current year. compared with $7,0~.544 in fiscal 1977. NOW$3.98 ·~ per dozen We are offering this outstanding value so you can enjoy fresh Dowers every week! Offer limited only to daily stock on hand. Pretax results· for the period showed a $1,169,018 loss, compared with pretax profit or $549,016 for the corresponding nine·month period a year earlier. After provision for income taxes in both years and ror an extraordinary income item during 1977, the latest nine-month net loss was $912.941 com- pared with net income of SS00,016 in the previous year. Roger's Aorist• 640-6774 !-dn Jo.quln •t MacAnhur • N~ 8#.ch 9am-6pm Would '20P.®to~ f1omTheAssOClates make~ for your business? We believe in the growth of American business, and we're willing to lend our money to prove it. Are you ready to grCNI? Associates is ready to help. Give us a call today. Associates Business Loan Plan JackOxon Associates Financial Services Co. of Galifama,. Inc. 600 SOJth EuClid Anaheim. c.aJ'rtomia 714-635-9120 Loin~ $6.CWITUll be secured by II ~ol rell 8'ICI penignel praperly Floor's . Driller 'Hired' Fluor Corp., Irvine. has announced that the Western Offshore No. IX, owned and operated by Fluor Drilling Services Inc., one of its subsidiaries, has been contracted by Lagoven S .A .. a n affiliate o f Petroleos de Venezuela. The contract is tor two years with options. The Western Offshore No. IX, one or the wortd•s largest and newest drllling ships, is being mobilized in Callfomla and will start drilling offshore approx· imatl!lY Oct. 1. Th~ first well to be drilled w1ll be located off eastern Veneiuela approximately 50 miles from the mouth of the Orinoco River. The program, oft the Venezuel an coast . represents the open!na of a major area by that tountry in lt.s search for1- petroleum reserves. Gr .. Given THOUSAND OAKS <APl -The NatlOGal , &:ltnc Fowadadon bu awarded • IB0.000 cra.nt to tho RocheU lntema· tlonal set.nee c.nt... for a a~lal project to draw more HJapanica and American Indiana into aclenc:. ilnd ~ CU'Mn. Texas-size deposit -$1 million. MORE TYPICAL 18 the ex· perlence or the Danit or Vtr,tn!a. a statewtde ln.stllutlon lhat ln five years traced 7.300 new ac· counts, valued at $30 mllllon. to Its prosram. This year it expects t-0 gain $15 milllon. S.O.S. -for Special Organlia· lion Services Inc. -is now available In 30 states. Stat.e Mutual Hopes to Buy Bay.Area Firm State Mutual Savings and Loa n Association. Newpnrt Beach, bas offered to acquire Pacific Coast Holdings Inc., San ·Francisco. by merger. Clyde H. Charlton . president of Pacific Coast Holdings, said the offer. If approved, would re- sult In the payment of $20 a share. or approximately $22.5 million. ln cash ror the outstand· ing common stock. A $9 MILLION installment note has been accepted by Charlton for management stock. a separate class or stock •. sub- ject lo approval or the definitive merger agreement by common shareholders. The ofter is subject lo ap- pr<>v-&I byili~ of each1:0m- pany, shareholders of Pacific Coast Holdings and necessary regulatory approvals. State Mutual is the principal subsidiary of Far West Finan· cial Corp., Newport Beach. • "Our goal for this time next year... Biil says. "ls to have l.SOO members and be actl~ an every state.·· •'HELEN AND I are dedicatea to helping people," said Bill at the annual convention in Dallal earlier this year. If attained. It wm be Justlfied. ··Most people know how to aet one benefit or the other but we know it a ll." BUI claims. perhaps immodesUy. But there is more to the 1rowth; it is the S.O.S. spirit. .. "Very ftw people in a lifetime have the opportunity to help '° many. We feel humble." Any of the scores or S.0 .S. ad- visers at the convention miltlt have expressed themselves lf'I the same words. Points TaUied Among those testifying this week before &J Senate Agriculture subcommittee on nutrition wus Ellen Haas of the Community Nutrition Institute. The panel has been hearing testimony on food labeling. Over The Counter HASDUstincJs u u~ IJ d D if" i~ ps u~~Ho oo!~ 71 n NEW Y°"K (APlll-Tiie IOl-1119 list • ..... IMwt ttll 0-· ,,,. · COU..i.r ,,.,.. :i:i stoclll •fld -r.ms a..t ,,.,.. .,... 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