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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-08-17 - Orange Coast Pilot... ~ Yanks· 1 I t ,France? ·Coast Couple Terrorists Dold Agree to Split -7 Hostage in 8(. $5 Million Otieago Embassy . o .rton • ll·l .............. JAMES EARL RAY LISTENS TO ATTORNEY "'ARK LANE GrUled on Houae Committee' Wltn••• St•nd · 's T~stimon --- Attacked in Profie WASHINGTON <AP> -The House Assassinations Commit· 1 tee tried today to shake one dls· crepancy after another ln James Bari Ray's bllarre account of his travels wUb mystery man Raoul, triaering a storm of pro. 1 tat from Ra.Y's attorney wbicb delayed the heartna time and -again;. ,J bJatrStaes. D-obl , r picked up on a theme cut abort Wednesday when Ray was ex- cused .tfter complaintn1 of J weariness be said be auffm=d from mistreatment by prison of· flcaala. t At oge point in his attack on Ray's .Ubl .. stokes dramatically produced a document -a cban1e ol addr., caJ'd for Dr. Martin Luther Kine Jr.'• 1 hometown -~r Ray dented t that.a. Md m.d _,.a urd. By ~ Rar'a.awn lid•'"'°"' &OIUI qo. • ••ct) a doCuaaent "would l>e I damalbil .. lo his atory If, ., • l ltokff cltnaollRl'ited, lt existed. , Stolt• uaillW lby'a ltate- ' 91ftt to ........... u.. bla mfoUd •nel:.INMr flail>' kten· tHl•d aceompllc• "" never baltdlect Ult .IHf r1fle which later pto¥ed to bt the weapon Uied to kill Dr. M arUn Luther Ktn1 Jr. on~ 4, 1988 Ila, d...., lie boulbt &be •••Poll tor Raoul earller ln • B1rmlnlham. AJ.a., for what be tb9ug.1rt wa~ a, gun-ruqnjng scheme. Ray said be and Raoul had worked topt.bel' for months, from Canada to Mexico. ih various amulllhle deals. Stokes notecl that· Ray told the committee's ataa iD an earlier interview that! Raoul had tn fact bamuw1he.30!Glrlfle. that ht! h11d. But aal a. had beell con· fused WWl tbe si.ff tntervie~ him })ecause RaQP) bfd ln fact- (lee &A Y. Pqe .U> Land in Paris SAN DlEGO fAP> - "Everything is perfect." says Bobbie Lea Bennett after undergoing sex- change surgery. reported· ly the first by a ban· dicapped person. Politician Ends His Career Political activist Loran Norton was found guilty of multiple per- jury and perjury-related charges by an Oran1e County Superior Court jury late Wednesday afternoon. PARIS CAP) -Three New Mexican adventurers who made the first Atlantic crossing by balloon floated across the French countryside today toward a triumphant welcome in Paris, but they appeared ready to drift on even farther to set •till more records. Paris air traffic control re- -Pair Decide To Divide $5Million By TOM BARLEY· OIU. o.111' ~Slaft Lawyers in an Orangt> County Superior Court divorce trial af. feeling the disposition of $5 . . y-propert;y -beta ey anes ~San Juan Capistrano couple appeat today to be close to seWement. The neaotiations that appear to be near success came after a month of trial before Judge J.E.T .. "Ned" Rutter who bas discussed the expected settle- ment with lawyers for James Huiah and bis former wife, Marie. Part of the settlement calls for Hulsh to pay his wife's leeal feea of Sl00,000. Mrs. H\Jiah bas been ;fl)>t•M'-i.d by trial Jawyu f'elvln Belli of Sa-n FrinclSCO wbo h8$ been pald $250 an hour by bet for hia courtroom aervicea. <See DIVORCE, 'P11e AZ) ported the silver balloon Double Eagle n at 13,000 feet over the town of Evreux. 80 miles from Paris. It crossed the French coast at Le Havre. Viewed from a helicopter. the BULLETIN The former Robert Ben- nett. 31. was altered in the operation Monday at the Un iv ersity of Texas medical branch in Galveston. In eight weeks. she said by telephone Wednesday, she plans to return home to San Diego. A rare bone disease con- fines her to a wheelchair. The six·man, six-woman jury deliberated almost three full days before decidin1 Norton lied to the county Grand Jury in ear- ly 1977 when the jury WU in· vestigating political eorruptioo. Norton's conviction didn't PARIS <AP> -Three American balloonists set down today In 1 field near tbe town of Evreux, west of Paris, to end their historic journey as tile first to cross tbe Atlantic by balloon. • stem from the Grand Jury ~ dictment that followed his two appearances before the jury ia IF/. D February 1977. ,,.. Orna;n Trays The indictment was quashed 11 -s tory balloon coas ted in a court bearing late last year, gracefully through a cloudless ,4, IF/.ronu but the charges were reinstated sky over a checkerboard of ,Ill ,,.. ~ .. -e at a subsequent municipal court bearing. farmlands, nudged along by a {;nme Those charges accused Norton 17-mph wind. S••~o f l i h h t if'ed h had The men were clearly visible ' ~ 0 Y ng w en e est 1 e not used $5,000 given him by in the red-and.yellow gondola. PROVIDENCE, R.I. CAPl -former political fmancier Gene bundled ln coats against the bit-A woman who says she prayed Conrad in bis 1976 campaign for ing cold but apparently relaxed. at the wrong grave for 17 years the slate Senate. , In a brief radio conversation because she thought her The ~barges also accused wj th iQ\ll'filills_ts at~L:.::e-MH~a...,vr':";e<-=--1hMUH1Sftbe••nPWld1--<w•n--buried-tlher:helN!eHisis-s.v---J~~ll-Cl~~~~--IU1t-C:me..__ ___ ~ airport. one-Of t.betrlo.silli( •jf tng-the-Roman Cattroltc bishop Hnte-pf>f~a-1 al-ly, G-. .. -~..-- weatber_condiUon,$ $.lay favora-of Providence. a cbutth and a Newmeyer, to lie to llaejury. ble we will try to go as far as A d to thos cb th · possible to establish the max-cemetery. 0 e araea. e Jury in Superior Court Judge Walter imum of records." Beatrice Daigle of Woonsocket Charamza'a court said, guilty 00 Larry Newman, 31, Ben flied the $250,000 damage suit ln all counts. Abruzzo, 48, and Maxie An· SupertorCourthereWednesday. Th~ vk1!ct all but en~a derson, 44, all from Albuquer· "h th i k b lit' al ail th t N rt.on 1 que, have already set time 'and ., e claims at a m sta e Y po ic a o • , St. John the Baptist Cemetery in (See NORTON, Pa•e AZ> distance records for balloon Bellingham, Mass., caused her Olgbt. 1 d · I • The Double Eagle 0 complet-"frequent1y an continuous y' to place flowers qn the wrong ed the AUanUc crossine at 10 gr.ave and pray at the wrong :b!~:;,~~r8:0~~. P~:'po~P:J: ~~!d~~~~~~~:o:i~P,Ose of her reaching the southweat coast of The Church ol the Preclol&s Irehand 121 hours and 18 mln\lleS Blood tn Woonsocket sold Mrs. after lbe 112-foot·l»lb. beliunt. Daigle the plot ln the cemetery fllled baa took ott Friday nlehfl in 1961 fot $7$. The mistake was from Presque, 1J.l8\ Maille, nev dlacovere A ril t6, wlu~n (Sk~~ wCJr era opene l e trave to get them freed. We cH't t.a1k about it now '' Autbortttes said four men and four Womett '""t bein1 held ln· tttally ta the 10tb floor otflc:ea or the consulate. ' Poll~ Cclrdoned off Mlchlpn A venue 11 scort) of penons llned up for a P@mpell e1tblbJt at the Art lnatltut~ of ChicaSo aero11 UM nrea. Varloua Cro1t.lan netlonalilt tro.uPI bave demonttrated from ltme co time demandlnll tbat lM <set naaoa. •••• AJ) because Mrs. Dalale wanU!d to. move tbe remains lo another plot,..the suit said. The suit aald Mrs. Dalale •till suffers "ee·vere emoUonal traumo and distress" beeauae ol the mistake. Her husband was burted ln a nearby srave at the cemetery. Pm Summoned MOSCOW CAP> ~ U S. cor-ns~ Crall a. Wllttney and Harold O. Piper bne beeri tummocaed to appear Friday before • Soviet court tba~ hU twlee Ol'dtl'ed I.hem to pub&b retractlonl In eonn~lon with a c&YU ....... 1ult. Wbllney Hid loc4'-.r. · Ceas' Weat•er Low cloudines1 11i1ht n4 momm. bou:n-wlth mostly aunny afternoon Friday. Lowa tonl&bt 58 to 64 . Highs Friday 68 at beaches to 18 to 84 Inland. , AZ DAILY PILOT . s ThurMtay, Augu•t 11. 1911 . Bill PrQposes End -~~ 21,370Hear RochSinBer GOid Drops Dollar Spurs Of Property T~es LENOX. Maas. <AP> -Ap- pe1rln1 at tbe summer 1rounds of the Boston Symphony Orebettra. rock slnaer J1cklon Browne attracted the bluest crowd ever to bear a popular m~Jc concert at Tanalewooa. l\farket Spree 'REPEAL PROPERTY TAX' Assembly Speaker McCarthy A•wt,..._ 'CUT INCOME.TAXES' AHemblym•n Kapiloff Official paid attendance at NEW YORK <APl' -The SACl\Alf\EN'l'O fAP) -In an Bro,,ne'a Tueada)' evenln1'1 stock market went on a ~ outbreak Of eleotlon·rear till· show wu 21,370, eeUpstnc by 120 spree today. e~courated by iooCl cutttn1 fever, the A•HJnbly hu the attendance at a 1969 Jef. news about tbe dollar. and Mpproved a S700 mlll\Oh lmome fer100 AJrplane appearan~~' cra1bed throueh a psyctl()loctcal tax cut and a f"°poMd ballot Hid James Kiley. Ttlnalewooo barrier aUOO. me a au re e Im In If t l n I operaUons mana.cer. The Dow Jones a\'eta1e of 900 homeowner property tuea. Overall attendance. includtnc lndustnall rose 10.39 in the first The income tax measure, thoae enterine 011 tree puses two hours to904.97. financed from tM rtate surplus, and people who "Jumped the Advances beld a 4-1 lead over would cut taxes by $15 f~ swle fence... may have rea~hed declines on the New Yorli: Stock persons and Sl.50 for coUJ>l,es, 25,000, ottidals said E~hanae ln heavy trading. ond &ive some additional breaks '<!bl~. meanwhile. fell about $5 totheelderly. -~~ anounce. The property tax measure The good news came from would abolish the remaining Sl.8 F,... Page A I Washington, where President billion of homeowner property Carter asked aides Wednesday laxes. give renters a $261 tax TERROR to look for a way to ball the cul. and eliminate the business • • • dollar's fall, and overseas. Inventory tax -finandne all where the dollar responded to those chaoaes by re-imposing S3 region known as Croatia be Car-ter':t statement with a blllion of the $4 billion ln busi· m ad e ind e Pendent from healthy gain. ness property taxes cut by y 1 · The dollar has been declining Proposition 13. ugos avia. t d'l f i h The mea s ures breezed The most widely publicized in· sea 1 Y on ore gn exc ange 'd t ed · 1976 wbe markets in recent months money market is in a "holding pattern" pending indications or what action Carter might take. The dollar edged up by almost one percent in 24 hours in Tokyo to close at 18S.'7S Japanese yen. up from 183.ns yen at Wednes- day's close and the postwar record low close of l82.85 yen set Tuesday Gold was fixed in London this morning at S210.45. compared to S215.75 Wednesday. ln Zurich, Europe's biaeest bullion market. the metal was quoted late in the morning at $210.625. compared to $215.875 at Wednesday's cl06e. W..-Pflfl'! .4 I BALLOON. • through the lowe r house Cl en occWT in • n b ...1 f b Wednesday night. on votes of 73-0 five members of a Croatian ex· e cause~ ears a out the Canadian border. fortbeincometaxbi11,AB3802by tremist band hi jacked a America's larJ{e trade deficit Officials of the Paris Airport A 1 s em bly man Lawrence Chicago-bound airliner from and general economJc condition. Authority were preparmg rorthe Kapiloff. D-San Diego. and 61-16 New York. which hopscotched The CWTency dropped to record balloon to land at Le Bourget for the property tax plan. But the its way to Paris where they lows thiS' week against the Swiss Airport north of Paris. where latter, sponsored ,.by Assembly eventually surrendered. franc. West German mark and Charles Lindbergh landed the Speaker Leo Mc\..arthy, D·San A New Yori< City policeman Japaneseyen. Splrit of St. Louis on May 21. Francisco, may face a roadblock was kllled when a bomb the The Dow bas passed the 900· 1927. after the first solo flight in the Senate. group left in a locker at Grand level several times in recent across the AUantic Ocean. But To reach the November ballot. Central Terminal exploded. All weeks but bas been unable to they said no landing request had f'ro91 Page AJ it must clear the upper house five are serving prison terms. maintai11 the momentum. lo been received. Friday, and the Senate must ap. close over900. It was the 18th attempt to prove SB 2243 by Sen. Alan On Monday, two dynamite The Dow's last 900-plus close cro96 the Atlantic by balloon, NORTON CONVICTED. • • be g a n as a leading county spokesman for The John Birch Society when h e was a Santa Ana police lieutenant in the ear· ly 1960's !\lorton·s politiccil fortunes car· raed him into close contact and associ<1tion with Dr Louis Celia 's former political con- fed er ation and. in 1975, into county Supervisor Laurence Schmit's office as an executive atd(• It was alter leaving Schmit that Norton decided to strike out on a politiccil career of his own JS the Republican nominee for ~tate Sen<1tor in central Orange County Fro.. Pflfle Al DIVORCE •.. The couple was divorced in November after 17 years of mar· riage A custody agreement for the couple's four chiidren. ages 5 to 15. was worked out before the trial began. It w as learned late Wedrtesday that the settlement involved a proposed equal s plit of the cstrmaled $5 million m com· munity property_ Judge Rutter has scheduled a h earing for Aug. 22 al which lim e the settle ment will be ratified or the trial ordered re· sum ed. Lawyers for both sides de· cided lo try and reach a settle· ment in the belief that Judge Rutter might order the real prop· erty to be sold and the resulting proceeds divided between the couple. They said such a sale would have made community property immediately taxable and would have resulted in a substantial loss for both sides. Testimony in the trial re· vealed that the Huishs and his brother and sister-in-Jaw are partners in the 18 corporations that own recreation complexes throughout Orange County. Los An~eles County, in San Dieg~ Co unty an d in northe rn California. Jf the settlement is a pproved, Mrs. Huish will receive two such facilities in Pomona, 18 acres of commercial development in that city, a cabin in Springville, --_\llfil'! .Jrul ~J!OO....,dQWn.. P.a)'..:.. ment on a borne being bullt an Provo. Utah. Huish will retain the couple's San Juan Capistrano home and his one half interest in the re· maining recreatlonal complexes and property. The other half wlll be retained by his brother and sister-in-law. DAILY PILOT During his two-week trial, Norton insisted he was among the former Cella allies singled out for prosecution by the Dis· trict Allomey's Office. H e a lso insis t e d th at Newmeyer lied and attempted to entrap him during the investiga· lion leading to the criminal charges ftled against him. After the guilty ~rdlct was handed down WednesdHy , one Juror. Paul Bender of Garden Grove. said the jury did not put much stock in Newmeyer's testimony against his former benefactor However , Bender said, the tape recorded conversations between the one.time friends ·'were given grec.1t credibility.·' Norton accepted the jury's verdict calmly even though it m ay m('an he could be sent lo s tate prison for from one to three years. He is to be sen- tenced Oct. 4. "Yes, we will appeal lhe verdict," Norton said as he walked from the cour '>Om. "J believe the jury overlooked physical evidence that showed Gary CNewmeyer> was lying." In keeping with his outward easy going personality, Norton s mi le d and a pproached the foreman of the jury that had convicted him. ·'Thank you for your con- s ider ation." he said. "I know you did what you think waa right .ind I thank you for that." "We ll," the jury foreman replied, "I'm sorry it didn't work out better for you. But we did, we did what we saw as our duty." Vegas Hotel Fetes Hughes LAS V'EGAS CAP> -The Desert Inn Hotel and Casino Sieroty, extending the Aue. 15 bombs were planted in mid· was July 26. Wl1. and the 16th from west to east. d eadline for the rassage of Manhattan and a letlJ!r attached Analysts said an apparent rise The last previous attempt. and ballot measures unti Friday. to one device said it was lbe in interest rates instituted by the the closest to being successful . SB 2243 was before the Senate work of "Croatian Freedom Federal Reserve Wednesday was made two weeks ago by today. with a vole expected. Fighters.·· One bomb did not det· was the first step in dollar's Britons Donald Cameron and McCarthy said Wednesday he ona teandtheotherwasunarmed. slide, and the market, usually Christopher Davey, who ditched counted majority support in the wiry of Interest rate rises. 111 miles from the French coast. Senate but not yet the needed The letter warned or future ex· responded with a rally late Seven persons died in previous two-thirds vote. plosions. saying "This is the Wednesday and today. attempts. To its Assembly supporters. be tinning. Our d eci&ion is West Germany. fearful a weak On Wednesday morning, the McCarthy's mea1ure. ACA 2, kamikaze." dollar will price its exports out three broke the recoTd for time was a fuHillmenl of the voters' or world markets. praised the aloft of 107 hours, 31 minutes set mandate June 6 in approvine The letter also said ... We're C~rter fdmini,stration'a interest by Ed Yost of Sioux FaJls, S.D .. Proposition 13. a S7 billion telling the world about Steve in shor\ng \ts currency. in an unsuccessful trans-Atlantic property tctx cut spawned by the Bilan4zjca." a Croatian sup· Dealers c1.nJtl9ned, however. attempt ln 1976. By this mom- so -called t axpayers' revolt posedly· to be extradited from that Ute lon&·lerm future of the tng, they had traveled more than among homeowners. To its oppo. Germ any t 0 y u 0 g 0 s l a vi a dollar ls still far from bright. 3,000 miles. eclipsing y ost ·5 dis· nents il was the opposite. "wbere be will be killed... A Frankfurt trader said the t d f 2 740 ·1 ''Homeowners and re nters ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ainicieiri~~irio~i·~im~iies~~~ thought they were getting a fair 1 deal from Proposition 13." McCarthy said. "They·re not getting one." Countered As sembly Republican leader Paul Priolo of Malibu, who supported Proposi· tion 13: "You 're trying to prove the people of this state were wrong. The people of this stute are nol going lo stand for the leading opponents of Proposition 13 tampering with 13." State Chamber of Commerce s pokesman Jim Kennedy called the measure "Jaws III for busl· ness" <md "a massive tax shift" tha t would hurt the bus iness climate. But Assemblyman Louis Papan, D-Daly City. asked how any Republicans could "look a homeowner in the face" after voting against the measure . Six of the 23 Republicans .joined 55 or the 57 Democrats in voting aye. Several or the Republicans were from farm areas, which would gel a break from provisions giving farm land and machinery more favorable tax treatment. Kapiloff's income tax bill, like McCarthy's measure. was hustled from the Ways and Means Committee to the As· sembly noor on the same day, after the house waived rules that require delays between commit- tees and the noor. I llOWTOTAKE A SHOWS. "IT'S A soft" Just keep a Sony Betamax SL-8600 back home. Set paid tribute to Howard Hughes The bill would raise the In· with the d edic a tion of a come tax credit from $25 to-$100 the optional timer. select the channel you want to record and take off knowing Betamax will record up memorial plaque that will make for individuals and from $50 to the image of the Jate miUionaire $200 for couples. give each more conspicuous in the resort's homeowner a once-per-lifetime lobby than he ever was when he tax exemption of the first lived on the .nint~ floor. $100,000 in capital gains from the The ded1c!lt1on Wedne~day sale of a house. and give a re· marked the first formal tribute tirement income tax credit to ~'!Shes'_ Las_~e.iJl:LlePCJ..~ly-. SlJlce hls death in Apdl..1976~ -- Hughes move<1 tnto th~ pent· Kapiloff, who faces a difficult house of the Desert Inn m late re·elecllon campaign called the 1966 and bought the hotel in bill "a modest propos~l to return Ma rch 1967 as his first Las some of our &iant surplus to the Vegas resort property. people from whence it came." F,....P.,,eAJ RAY QUIZZED ••• been with him in Birmingham when they purchased another rl· Oe for smugglina. that rif1e was exchanaed a day later for the .30·08 after Raoul left Bir· mingham, Rayaa1d. .. Al first. at \he -etaff In- terview. J -l.bou,cllC ,.. .. ex· cbanaed the same day, and Raoul would have been there," Rsy said. Ra)''• memory w11 attacked over and over. Why had Raoul never been found? Wbo could have seen them together? Why couldn't Ray furnlsh rnort deacrlptlve information about Raoul, such as bis real name? Ray had no hard answers. "Pouibly a barmaid ln Bir· mln~ham. Possibly a ••ltreu tn Jlm 1 Grm in Mernpb,1.a•' had seen blm Jn Raoul'• company, be aatd. But be couldn't be IUH. And h• menlloned no one tn Mon· treat, where be all•Ced he bad met tbeman. "Mr. Ray, I IQ to JOU, Udl commtttee bu reviewed every FBI docunrnt relative to thll case, every other investiaative document, and nowhere ls there a reference to a man named Raoul." Stokes said. To that, 1\ay replied only tbat perhape not all docu.mentl bad ~en-f-Ound-tn-Ule matter . Stoltee :-"lt we ~•n 't find Raoul. we can't help you very much, can we?" Ray: "I thiAk the only thine that could help me lt a Judie ... Q. "Don't you tbif>k lf we had more information about Raoul, we mleht t>e abl~ to locate blm?'' A : "U 1 had gone to trial In 1868, be moet likely would have te1Uned qalnst me anyhow." The proceed.lnaa were lnter- ruptGd and delayed over and over when Ray•• a.ttomey, Mark Lane, a Sonlllme l)Ottulator ol eon1plr.cy tlMoriei ln the Kini and John F. Kenned)' aa•ualn•· tlona, 5.:ected to tb• coune ot tbe q~ . LaH npea lJ ~mplained of not hann• ttanampg Rd other dOcuiDtQta retat.d "'° &IN l.nterroe.uon. to three hours with our new L-750 video tape. Then, you can watch it when you get back. so•before you visit your local travel agent, visit your local Sony dealer. WHY AA&O. FOR VIDEO? • Free Movie and/or Blank Cassettes • Free DupUca ng seMCe • Continuing Discounts on Blank Cassette$ • Strong Extended Warranty on Labor (Ask Us) 1Y AU. ADI ur TO YOUI mT ...0 Wf: -Ate......, HOW-IX'rU WCIAU _... OUl.llMOOatM• SAU For The Very Best De~I Yoe owettto r••""-.. cllecl -prices. .,. ••• Yotl t.rt MUtet~·Vl$A 8\l<SQ•t fltymeo" ·. -~ • • I i I I ,.j • -~ ;..: .... ·' ·' :! •• I :J 1 1 > ;; ' ' ' : ' 7 • I I • Orange Coast VOL. 71, NO. 229, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CA LIFORNIA Double Eagle II Makes History Today's Clos lac N.Y. St-ks THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1978 NIC TEN CENTS U.S. Balloonists Land' in France . . . Dollar Spurs -Market NEW YORK IAPI -The st~lr: market went on a buying spree today. entouraged by eood news about the . do11ar, and barely crashed throueh a psycbok>gicaJ barrier at 900. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials rose 12.21 in the first two houn but fel1 back to a 5.54 point gain lo 900.12 at the close. ··- Atlantic Crossing A First PARIS IAPI -Tbt'ee American adventurers. the first balloonists to conquer the Ailit.n- tic. set their giant silver craft down today in a wheatfield near the French town of Miserey, 55 west or Paris. completin& a hil· toric journey that had defeated other men for more than a C1!:n· \ury. Advances held a 2·1 lead over decline!> on the New York Stock Exchange in heavy trading. FLOATING ABOVE THE CLOUDS, BALLOON DOUBLE EAGLE 11 PASSES HIGH OVER SOUTHERN ENGLAND ON WAY TO FRANCE The trio -Larry Newman. 31, Ben Abruzzo, 48. and Maxie An· derson. 44, all of Albuquerque. N. ,., . -put their balloon Double Eagle ti down at 7:50 p.m . IOC?al time. <10:50 a.m . PDT l, on a beautiful, cloudless evening, just before dusk. Gold, meanwhile, fell about S6 an ounce. Three American Balloonlata Achieve Their Goal of Becoming the Flrat to Croaa Atlantic Ocean by Balloon The good news came from Was hington. wh ere President Carter asked aides Wednesday to look for a way to halt the dollar's fall. and overseas, where the dollar Tesponded to Carter 's statement with a. healthy gain. f Related story. 861 The dollar has been declining steadily on foreign e xchange marke ts in recent months becau se of fear s about Americu's large trade deficit and general economic condition. The eurrenC'y dropped to record Jows this week against the Swiss franc. West German mark and Japanese yen. The Dow has passed the 90(). level several limes in recent _ weeks but bas been Mnable to main1.aln the momeotum. to closf' over 900. The Dow'a last 900-plus close was July 26. 1977. Analyata aakl en Mf PlilC.t (jse ln interest T'lltt!ll tnst uted by the Federal Reserve Wedoeadily was the first step in dollar's slide, and the murket, usually wary of interes t rate rises. r esponded with a rally late Wednesday and today. West Germany, fearful a wenk dollar will price its exports out of world markets, praised the 'Carter administration's interest CStt ~1..\RKET, Page ;\Z) Bad Wiring Blame d for Fire in Mesa A fire authorities said a p- parently was sparked by faulty electrica,l wiring caused about S7 .000 damage to the garage of a Mesa Verde home early today, Costa ft1esa firemen said. There were no injuries and the ·home occupied by Gladys Thompson, 3185 Gil>r<l!~Ave .. was not affected ~he "blaze. Costa !\.1esa t>i'ttalion chief Jack Perkins ,i{aid the 3 a.m. blaze was doused in about eight minutes by the 14 firemen who responded. Damage to the structure was set at $5,000, to the car and con· tents inside, $2,000, said chief """Perkins;;t .. Tiro Escape Injury • in Boat Fire Harbor Patrolmen said John Pacciorini of Corona del Mar and Robert Belser of Hllntington Beach must ha..,e been enjoying a luck.)' day Wedne&day. The two men "escaped injury when their runabout caugbl fire ju.st arter l p.m . in NewJ)Ort Harpor. . Patrolmen say &hey were un- usually luctY because tbe NU 20-gallon fuel tank didn't ipite in-~--lhe blaze b~e out the boJt was ttuistng 'past the Hat"bor Patrol headquarters. The 16-foot -Wat. Yard Bird, belorlgs to the Boat Specialist Inc., a b6at .repair business localed at 2439 W . Coast Highway. PatrOJ.pu~.11 said &a!i that col- lected in the bilge during fueling was ignited by a spark frqm the engine, sending both men over the side, into the water. Officers extinguished the blaze before the fuel tank ignited and estimated $1,SOO damage to the v-essel. Honors Set For Stewart Cal Stewart, the retiring Newport Beach director of Parks, Beaches and Recreation will be honored at a dinner Aug. 30 at the Irvine Coast Country Club. Stewart. who has been · the city's PB and R director for 17 years, is curr:ently on vacation. His retirement becomes effec- tive Sept. I. Deadline for reservations for the dinner is Aug. 25 through Ron Whitley, acting PB and R director. The cost will be $12.50 per person. 'Others Keep Jobs' Board OKs Accused Embezzler $800,000 Protests Dismissal A Newport Beach woman who sta!1ds accused of embezzling an es.t1mated $9,000 while workina: for Orange County's welfare of- fice is protesting her recent dis- missal as Wllawful. Mrs. 'Rhonda Kay Patton, 30, baa begun administrative pro. cedures desigttt.d to compel Cllief Deputy Weliare Director Richard Ruiz to reinstate her to ·the job she lost this week. .\Dd. abe .bu pointed out in her • defense that ientor county of- fictals -accused of much more serious criminal charges were not removed from their posts prior to conviction. Named in a declaration pre- par ed by defense attorney William Dougherty are rormer county supervisor Robert Bat· tin, rormer county assessor and congressman Andrew Hinshaw and former chief deputy as· sessor Jack Vallerga. All were convicted. of criminal charges. Dou"herty also notes that county Supervisors Ralph Diedrich and Philip Anthony stand accused of criminal cha"rges contained in grand jury indictments. Neither supervisor has been fired, she points out. "It seems to me that I am be- ing treated less fairly than some of the mOre important persons being employed by the County of Orange," Mrs. Patton said. "During the time that some of these people were involved in criminal trials the county permitted them to keep their jobs and draw salaries." And she asked: "Maybe 1 am miss~ng something but can you please explain lo me why these persons keep their jobs until they get a full court hearing while I am (ired immediately and must seek a job e\•en though I haven't been tried yet?" Ruli said Mrs. Patton's dis- missal IS not technically related to the criminal charges filed against her. Ruiz explained that she was fired for falsifying department records. He said the violation bas been proved to his satisfac- tion and that Mrs. Patton's dis- miss a l was Inevitable and ·-lj\Wlul. • The ttimloal charges against Mrs. Patton allege that tthe con· verted welfare checks addressed to lndigeat applicanu to her own u.se and that she used a post of- fice box 1n Cypresa to divert the chec=ks to her. Vegas Hotel Fetes Hughes LAS VEGAS IAPl -The Desert Inn Hotel and Casino paid tribute lo How&rd Hughes with the dedication of a memorial plaque that will make the image of the late millionaire more conspicoous in the iesort.'s lobby than he ever was when he lived on the ninth floor. The dedication Wednesday marked the first forma l tribute to Hughes' Las Vegas legacy since his death in April. 1976. •tugbes moved into the pent· house of the Desert Inn in late 1966 and bought the hotel In l't1arch 1967 as his first Las Vegas resort property. Risks Cit e d WASmNGTON CAPl -Presi· dent Carter said this afternoon at a news conference that raUure in the upcoming Camp David summit among Israel. Egypt and the United States "could re- sult in a new conflict in the Mid- dle East." Merit Hike Coast Community College Dis- trict trustees agreed Wednesday to spend an estimated 5800.000 next year on merit raises ror employees. Although the state Legislature has said it won't give apportion- ment (unds to government a r o u ps that grant r aises . tratees said they believe this resirlction 1appUes only to reg- ular 1tep raises and cost-of-living incre .. ses. Mertt raiae& are given to both teach ing and non-teachlaa staff on the b8llis of a variet1 of fac-tors. incluatng additional educa. tional or profeuional tratnina:. The mooey for the raises will come from district resenres, re- ducing them from $4 million to $.1.2 million. a spokesman said. However.. trustees voted to continue a suspension of sab· batical leaves for 1978·79. They have estimated th e cost of replacement salaries at $300,000. But they said they'll re..-iew this policy on Sef. 1. when the final budget wit be approved, and that the ultimate sabbatical decision will depend on the exact amount or state funds rece ived. In other action. trustees gave final approval. to a f ive· year lease agreement with the Newport·Mesa Unified School District. The college district is leasing Bay View School in San· ta Ana Heights for some $80.000 per year as classroom space for Coastline Community College. Trustees also approved a mo. tion to sublease Bay View to other organizations at limes when it isn't ne e ded by Coastline. Burglar Grets • 2Handbags Spectators waiting at a nearby highway rushed to the balloon to coneralulate the three. The balloonists unfurled an American flag from their gon- dola when they crossed the French coast and lowered a French tricolor as they complet· ed the flight, which ended by un· ofricial estimate 137 hours. 18 minutes after they went aloft from Marine on FTiday. The three airmen scurr'1ed to secure their craft against stronl' ground gusts whipping the field, four miles from Miserev The balloonists apparently had to land in ~aylighl for safety reasons. Eyewitnesses said the balloon had visibly deflated, a)> pearing more like a tapered. creased silver exclamation point than a sphere. The Double Eagle t i had crossed the French coast at Le Havre. V\ewt>d from a helicopter, t he t J -stor y-high balloon bad coasted gracefully through a cloudless sky over a checkerboard of tarmlitnds , nudged along by a 17-mph wind. The men were clearly visible in the red·and·)'ellow gondola. bundled in coaL<t against the bit- ing cold but apparently relaxed. Jn e1 brief radio conversation with journu.lists al Ll' Havrlf' airport. one of the trio said. ··tf wee1ther conditions stay favora- ble we will try to go as far as possible lO establish the max· imum of ret'Orr1c; " The Double Eagle II complel· ed the Atlantic crossing at 10 p.m . Wednesday !2 p.m. PDTl, Shannon Airport reportt>d. reaching the southwest coast oC Ireland 121 hours and l& minutes tSee BALLOON, Page AZl JUUE, JENNIE 'DOING WELL' "You know, I saw all those babies. and Jennie is just M> muC'h more 1i v1Ply lh11n the others:· gushed former presi· dent Richard Nixon after view· ing his granddaughter at San f]lemente General Hospital. ........ roves Tax ......,..,...;U::UUJ.¥1~ A Newport Beach police are hunting the cat burglar who took two purses containing more than •5'4. iOO in valuables rrom a hot.el room occ~pied by a sleeping Jl'nn1e Eisenhower. who weighed nine pounds. four ounces at birth Tuesday. and her mother , Juli~ Nixon Eisenhower. were reportedly dO- i~g well today. They are expect· ed to go home'&turd~y. ---···-. .,.,,, ... VJ~ or Neri Berlman:vof . ~ -~ .,... ..... .,... . SACRAMENTO CAPI -In an outbreik Of election-year tax- cutting fever, the Assembly has approved a 1700 million income tax cut and a rro~ed ballot measure e lminatin& homeowner property taxes. The income tax measure, .=::;...financed-lrom-the-statHilrplutr- "ould cut tu.es-bf SJ.Slor smal• penons and SUO for Cottple.a, and 1lvci some lddltional brea.b to the elderly. The ~rty tax measure wou:ld a b \be remalnln& $1..8 blllion of homeowner propertf taxe11 live renters a m'1 tu cut, ana ellminate lbe ~lness inventory tax -r1nanctn1 all those dla.aaes by re·lmpoalna SS bUUon of t.ht 14 billion In bust~ ne11 pr9periy t1•es cut by ProPoSllioO JJ. · • latter. si;fOnsored by Auembly Speaker Leo McCarthy, D.San Fraaci!co. may face a roadblock in the Senate. To reach the November bal1ot, it must cl~ar the upper house Friday, and lhe Senate must ap- prove SB 22.f.3 by Sen.-Alan Siero&y,.--exteoding t.M-Aug..--U~ d~adllne for t he pasi-age of 'ballot measures until Friday. · ... SB 2243 was before the Senate today, wjlh a vote expected. M~ald Wednesday he counted m rit)I suppQrt in the Senate but yet the needed twO-thlrds vote. To lta Assembly 1upporten, McCartb1'• meuur~1 ACA 21 wa1 • tulllllment of tne votera mandate. J 'une I tn approvlnt Propo1ltiott 13, a $7 blllloa propel'tf tax cut spawned by the IO·t•Jled ta.xpayer1' revolt hmona bomeownera. To lb oppo- nenta tf. w• tbe~t. Skokie. Ill'., told police. tbe purses contained jewelry and cash. Coast He said the handbags were on a dresser In the bot.el room on the ground noor of the Newport Weather Center Marriott Hotel when bis Low cloudiness nithl family retired Monday night and and mornin.t hours wil b the11-were ~Tuesday morn-mostl)' sunny aft.IU"noon i_~Oiiee.said the;c<hl>Mef;<;m;;:a7~h:;;a;;v•:;--::l=~till· .artaws·ton1.11u:sa-l<r" -64 . Hlgb& Friday 68 at aotten into the room via tt slid· beaches to 78 to 84. inland. tng glass door that was left open . COLLEGE GETS HE4l..'ffl CUNIC Oettin1 sick Just won't be the same UU. year on Ute Orange Coast Colle&e campus ln Colla '"Mes•. IN!flDE TOD.tY Al OrUPIQt Cowlt~ becomta more rnetropoUtan, men are lokmg IO --l><lgs. S.• f'""1lril>Q . -c I. ...... ,.....,_ -~ ---·--ii -M •• .. • •• .. Tbe mtaa11rc1 breeted tbrouah t he lower house W<dnffdOS<DiCM. on.....,..,,... l0<the-1UbW ,Al!-bf Atatmbl\:(n Lawrence Keptlllr, ii Dltao • ...i.n.w l°'°lllel'~IUolea e..llllo "Hom"wnet 1 ••d rentert lbo-lllef·tmt ptlln1 • lllr •••f h'oa Pr0,01tt (on "l:J." <llee TU c.'tll'. Po" JUI ··-That's because the colleae's health aervtce. formerly bQu&ed ln tta)len. h.a1 a sbill) aew 12,000-tQua.rti,•foot home. To rind out a~Um to Paa• Alo. =~ ~ :.r. .. ·H 'Rll'Ul. = :::'' Y TAX' _...., '~ l • • __ .. .., ... .-.---.,.. _,, ..... -.-."" - 'CUT lllCOME TAXES' A•••ltlbtJman K•ptloff · I .. • ,\ -~-~ ~--~--,. ______ ; ____ _ -• ~· --.. t -•• - / , DAILY PILOT NI Probe rs Zero In Of} Ray WASHINGTON <AP) James Earl Ray dfflared tod~ that ll he bad been ln Dt Martlri Luther Kina'• clt,y of AU..,ta ahortly ~ore the l'lvU rtcbta leeder wu alala. ·'I 'II hast take N?tpon.siblUt,y for the Klq tue t\ re on lelevlalon ... Ray then was presented wt\b ey•wilfteaa and documentary evidence that be wu lndeed la tbe Gecqia eapllal juat U.,. or four days before both men wowid up ln Memphis, where King wu lbot April 4. lMa ln l'eSpoaH to the Pf'eMnl.a· lion, Ra)' •uaceated Lbat the evidence "mi1ht be a mistake . . or IOll\e kind of a forced document." Ray's ftnioD ls that be wu followlna a mystery man, ··Raoul ," ln a smuc1lin1 scheme. But the committee pursued the suspicion that be bad stalked Klq. Rep. Louia Stokes. D-Obio. elicited Ray's acknowledtiment that he had passed through Selma, A.la., -where Kina had been -after Jeavlnf Los Angeles in mld-March o 19a, and went to Atlanta, as well, later in the month. But Ray insisted that after mffting Raoul in Atlanta, they headed for Birmingham on March 28 to buy guns for smug- gling. Stokes: "Did you return to Atlanta after leaving Birm- ingham?" Ray: "I did not." Stokes: "Do you want to chanse anything at aJI about that statement?·· Ray: "No . . . Reeardl~ of how many documents you have up there J know J didn 'l return t.o Atlanta, and il I did, well, 111 just take responsibility for the King case here on television." Stokes tben introduced a laun- dry slip showing Ray's alias, Eric S. Galt, dated April 1 in Atlanta. And he quoted a state- ment by an Atlanta rooming house operator, Jimmy D. Garner, who said he saw Ray on the premises March 31. The exchange brought a healed protest from Ray's attorney, Mark Lane, who disrupted the proceedings throughout the day with charges of trickery by tbe committee. Once, Lane was threatened with ejection. Man Accm e d O/Taking Punch at Cop A Costa Mesa man who al- legedly took a punch at a police officer early today and then had lo be subdued with the help of two citizens has been booked on a c harge of assault. against a police officer. investigators said today In custody is 22-year-old Michael Paul Arnold, of 2277 Harbor Blvd. He is being held in lieu of $2,500 bail. plus an addi- tional $.515 for an outstanding traffic warrant, police said. Costa Mesa police officer Douglas Pritchard arrived at the apartment complex about 3 J m. today following a report of a family disturbance Police said Arnold became violent and refused to accom- pany officer Pritchard to police headquarters a fter he was served notice or the outstanding warrant. ~rnold allegedly swung at Pritchard. and during a brief scuffle. two unidentified men came to the aid of the patrolman. Officer Pritchard was uninjured. The two citizens remain un- identified. "They merely walked back into their apartments and went about their business " not- ed police Sgt. Sam Cordeko. · DAILY PILOT Mesa n I nju red Medics prepare to take Robert Knaak. 41, to Mesa Memorial Hospital after he lost control of his car on Newport Boulevard near Santa Isabel Avenue about 9:30 this morning and smashed into a parked vehicle. He suf- fered facial cuts and possible head injuries and was being held for observation at the hospital. Knaak moved to Costa Mesa from San Gabriel just last week. Police to Attend Rites for Trainee SERVICES "FRIDAY Trainee Roberts From P ageAJ BALLOON. • after the 112-foot-high, helium- filled bag took off Friday night from Presque Isle, Maine, near the Canadian border Officials of the Paris Airport Authority were preparing for the balloon to Ja nd at Le Bourget Airport north of Paris, where Charles Lindbergh landed the Spirit or St. Louis on May 21. 1927, after the first solo fiight across the Atlantic Ocean. But they said no landing request had been received. 1t was the 18th attempt to cross the Atlantic by balloon, and the 16th from west to east. The last previous attempt, and the closest. to being successfuJ. was made two weeks ago by Britons Donald Cameron a nd Christopher Davey, who ditched 117 miles from the French coast. Seven persons died in previous attempts. On WedJ\csday morning, the three broke lbe record for time aloft of 107 hours. 37 minutes set Ed. Y ·t of Sioux Falls, S.O .• 1mUMC • attempt ln 1976. By this morn· lng, they had \raveled more than 3,000 miles, eeUpsing Yost's dis - tance record of 2,740 miles. Shannon atr controller Gerald 0 1Connor sald the three men thoueht the~ were still half an . hour from land when told they had reached ll'eland. He said there were "quite a few shouts of Jubllation"~when tbey spqtted the lights of Loutsburgb throtigh a break in the clouds. f',..,,.P a,,eAJ MARKET ••• A contingent of uniformed Newport Beach policemen is ex- pected Friday at fun e r a l services for officer trainee Gordon Roberts, 27, who died Tuesday of motorcycle accident injuries. He was due to join their ranks next month after graduation from the Los Angeles Police Department Academy. where he enrolled after discharge from the U.S. Navy. A m e m orial service is scheduled at 10 a.m. at Pacific View Memorial Park Chapel in Corona del Mar. followed by private burial rites. A resident of Fountain Valley, Mr. Roberts was fatally injured early Monday when his pen;o.111.1 motorcycle collided with a parked car on Daisy A venue not far from his home. Minutes arter he was pro· nounced dead at Fountain Valley Community Hospital. Roberts' vital organs were re· moved for donation lo recip- ients. His heart was flown to Sta.n- ford University Medical Center via Lear Jet in care of a surgical team for transplant into a critically ill male patient. Spokesmen for the Regional Organ Procurement Agency based at UCLA said Wednesday Roberts had asked hJs wtfe. Vic- toria. to see to it in the event or hts death. H e is survived by Mrs . Roberts, who is carrying their second child; a d a ughter. Kristina, 5; his parents. Gordon Roberts and Nina MorreUi, and two sisters, Bobbi Rahminian and Karen Wellendorf. Thee:_1amily suggests friends may contribute in his name to the Ne wport Be<.ich Police Department Memorial Fund. FroaPageAJ TAX CUT ••• McCarthy said. "They're not getting one." Countered Assembly Republican leader Paul Priolo or Malibu, who s upported Proposi· lion 13: "You 're trying to prove the people of this stat~ were wrong. The people of this state State Chamber of Commerce spokesman Jim Kennedy called the mequre "Jawa III for busi- ness'' and "a massive tax shift" that would hurt the business climate. But A11embt1man Ll>uls Papan, I)..~ City. aaked how any Republicans could "loot a homeowner ln the face" after vo~l.ng a.tah"9t the meaaure . . f ln ahorini ill currency. Dealen cautioned, however. that tbe lonJ·term rut\lJ't ol the doUar 11 atll1 tar from brl•ht. 81x of the 23 Republicans joined 55 ol the 57 Democrata tn votlnc aye. Several of the Republicans were from farm areas, which would iet a break from provl•lona alvlna farm land and machinery more favorable tqx treatment. 1 A hanldurt tr.Set Hid the money market 11 ln a "boldln& pattern" pendlna tndtuuo~ or wbat actloo cari.r m~t lake. The dollar ed1ed up by almost one percent ln ~ hours In 1'okyo t.o cloa~ ot 18.~ 475 JapMese yen. ) KapUoft'a income tax }>Ill, like McCarthy's meuurt, w11 bustled from the Waya and Moans Commlt.t•• \0 the At· aembJy noor Oft the Hme day, fter the house waived rules that require delays between commJt· teca and the noor. Co a s t al Choices ~riticized The appointment of three of 10 members of a Newport Beacb committee to work on the city's coastal plan appears beaded for controversy. The city's Local Coastal Plan· nin1 Advisory committee is to devise the plannin1 document which \l(ill eventualty enable the city to re1ain control of its coastal zone property from U\e coastal commiuion. Seven of the committee's members are to be selected by the seven city councilmen. The other three were to have been appointed by each of the three citizen advisory committ~es that deal with tranaportatlon, com- munity development and en- vironmental quality. The controversy ls centered on a new inove by councilmen to make those three selections themselves, rather than allow- ing committee members to make them. Monday. councilmen were to have made each of their appoint- ments. but lbe selection process was delay1!d until Aug. 28. Part of the reason for the de- lay was the dispute over the ap- parent shift in the appointment procedures for tbose three ap- poi ntments from the existing citizen commiUees. Councilwoman Jackie Heather, who opposed lbe plan . to have councilmen select from the citizen commiU.ees, said the point .of setting up the appoint· me nts for the coastal planning committee was to remove com-· millee members from council influence as much as possible. "We already have seven ap· pointmenl8 to the coastal com- mittee. What's being proposed would mean the council would control all the appointments," she said. The change in appointment procedure was suggested by Councilman Paul Hummel who noted that councilmen choose from two nominees when mak- ing appointments to city boards and commissions. Three of Kind Triple fVudi,ty l mJeatigated The 2l·y6ar-old West Newl>!)rt wom11n told poli~ she was a UW.e surprlsed when she bicycled past a naked man who was standing between two cars on Seashore Drive early Wedne$day. THEN WREN SHE spotted a second nude. Jeanine aeainst a telephone pole. she said she became ctp- prebenal.ye. . !Jut. wf¥n a lbird starker came running out into -the street. wavirur his clothes ln his hands. s he eot. downrl•bt panicky. The woman, a waitress who was on her way home Crom work,.called police. 01''1CKU MIGHT HAVE been e little skeptical a.bOut. ber story except that a check of the neigbborlJood at 40tb Street and Seaaho~ Drive, where the triple nakedness occurred, t\lflled up one other witness who spotted the trio of nudes. Offacen say ~ey are investtaating. Ne~ort to Alter Building Stan,dards? A small group of Corona del Mat reaidenU, aided by Coun- cilman Paul Hummel, have auc· ceedec\ in gettin1 the city to con- sider new building standards in their neighborhood. At .Monday's council meettna Hummel. bUmelf a Corona del Mar resident, •ot hia colleapes to agree to study the portions of the neighborhood that are zoned R-1. Hummel Uves ln an R -2 zoned part-Of Corona del Mar. His action was prompted by a letter sent to the council from the Friends of Inspiration Point.. one of whom, Gi!orge Hall. lives next door to a home under con. struction that Hummel says iJ. lustrat.es the problem. "The thing's Just massive." Hummel safd <1f the house being built on Ocean Boulevard. The councilman said that. in spite Of the exlalin« building controls applied to1he area,~­ idents he's talked to are fearful it's become ~·too densified." Under city and coastal com- mission standards, the single lumlly Iota can be built to t.5 llme1 the area of each lot minus setback.I The height limit ln all the realdenUal areas of old Corona del Mar ls 24 feet. Hummel says he thinks those llmita ou1bl to be restricted even further because the build· in1s th.at bavt gone up rffenlly in tbe area south or Sea View Avenue that la R· l are qulte large. Hummel. a former member o( the city's Planning Commluion. said bia philosophy on any ion· ing problem 18 to consider what the area would be Uke if every lot was built to the maximum. "It would be a jungle." he said. \ The first step ln the city's study will be for the planning commission lo look at the prob- lem . Another aspect of the building standards that Hummel and the Friends want studied is the con- version of single family homes on oversized lots to two units. ~ ROW TO TAKE A .. AND NOT .......... YOUB FAVOIUTE SllOW8. "IT'S A soNt' Just keep a Sony Betamax SL-8600 back home. Set the optional timer, select the channel you want to record and take off knowing Beta max will record up to three hours with our new L-750 video tape. Then, you can watch it when you get back. So before you visit your local travel agent, visit your local Sony dealer. WHY AA&D FOR VIDEO? • Free Movie and/or Blank Cassettes • Free Duplicating Service • Continuing Discounts on Blank cassettes , · ·~ervloe Right Here-At The St6re ... • Certificates For Use of Black & White and COior cameras. • low-<:ompetitive Pricing. .. TBS CRA 8ACTE& aDd penoilaliUel ol &bmlts and Cordova flaured te> mah tbetr mHllnc enU~t.emna and ftl1ertalnll\8. .........u men an iac.ellllent. artk.alate and ~. N9theP ~«dova nor Sdmlb tnon bow to avold 1ivtn1 • dlreet answer. And neM.bet man beeitates to take an UhPoJ)ularltaDd. even wbea lttuarta. Cordova and Scbmlts come from dlff erent cll.recUons. AnEa CLIMBING to political hel1bts as a Republican spokesman for the far rlgbt in the mld-1960's and early li70's. Scbmiu is on tbe comeback trail., Cordova is trying to stay oo tbe poUUcal joarnef be began ln 1976 wben be was elected to lbe state assembly In a shock.log Democratic vict.oey ln a solid Republican dis-trict. Schmitz in the debate pictured himself as a man who, if anything, was ahead of bis Umes wben be was an of. ficeholder. a pioneer forerunner ln the taxpayer revolt that was to come in 1978. CO&OOVA DEPICTED himself as a man not burdened with ph,ilosopbieal hangups, as a leplator con- cerned with the art of doing rather than the art ol polllles. As each man searched for the upper hand, Scbmitr \ashed out at Cordova for being a Democrat.. Cordova :.corned Schmitz' membership in the John Birch Society. Schmitz said he will win in November. But Cordova re- fused to play the underdog's role. BACK AND FORTH the two candidates went. eacb boping to score points. if not a knockout blow. Schmitz proved to be the most adept at irabblng microphone time. 1n their first 20 minutes of talk time. Schmitz was on the air about 13 minutes to CordoYa's seven Cordova proved to be the most adept at off microphone mugging. WMn Schmlu reached for an answer, Cordova's mouth slackened and his eyes rolled skyward in an obvious display or astoru.shment at bis foe's "errant" ways. BUT COllDOV A betrayed his wit by launching bis catchy one-liners with a dead serious face. givtng bia bum or a t.ingeol orneriness ratbertban wtt. In contrast to Cordova 's ....-Cat.or·Uke seriousness. Schmitz frequently smiled and chuckled. Cordova. wbo has-an hnmeme neryday vocabulary, dazzled tbe audience but may have not helped tta un- derstanding when he used such ~rds as eschew, centrist and Id~~-._. :":'.. ~ SC&ifQ n PELL dOwn on quesdons abOut the boulng' crisis <"What housing crisis?") and bis legislative record as a tax reformer (••Property tax is tbe purview of local government''>. Throughout the debate, Scbmita clung to bis endorse- ment by tax reform evanaelist Howard Jarvis and lnvtted those interested to visit his campaign headquarters where a plaque received from Jarvis In 1967 bangs on a wall. Just as tenaciously, Cordova grasped his legislaUve record as an assemblyman in the post-Jarvis era and bis votes in favor of limiting state and local government spending. WHEN THE DEBATE ended, Schmitz auppott.en claimed thetr man to be the winner. Cordon backers said their candidat:ewas the winner. . The answer obviously ls in the eye of the beboldtt. On balance, though, Cordova seemed to have an edge in substance while Schmitz held a margin in style. HA VJNG FELT each other out ln their initial en- counter. Schmitz and Cordova's upcoming encounters are likely to be even more lively. .. And when the traveling road show comes your way, you 're likely w find lt both interesting and entertalnlnl - a sound exercise in the democraUc process. San £1emeate Backers Qualify Recall P etitiolU {' Ga8 Rift Precetkd Temblor LOS AN0£LES CAP> -A bunt olbieb·Pl'UIUH 1a1 set att emerceney equipment at an ex- ploratory well in the Santa Barbare tbannel just four days before a dama•in1 earthquake roekecl the oearby coastal area. aay1 • IOVft'nment 1eolotilt. Tbe U.S. Geolo&ical Survey Hid Wednesday the problem al the Texaco well Aug. 9 ls befn& studied f« a possible connecUon with the Sunday afternoon temblor.· Tbe USGS scientlsta are trying lo, determine "whether the eal'Ulquake could bave camed the preuure or whether the pres· sure could have caused the earthquake. We want to know If there 11 a cause-and-effect rela· tionship." said Russell G . Wayland. who is directing the study. Wayland said in an interview there is no evidence yet for either conclusion. The earthquake, which caused uiore than Sl2 million in damage in Santa Barbara County. was centered in the d1annel about eight miles west-northwest of the well. tbe USGS said in Washington. The scientists will also try to determine if pressures in the well. which is being plugged with concrete, could force gas or oil up through the sea noor, the USGS said. Wayland said similar prob· lems occur periodically in oil drilling operations. The Santa Barbara incident is receiving al· tenlioo. he said. because it'i in an area that's criss-crossed with earthquake faults. Speaker Curb Adopted in l.ag11na Beach ' T!u!d!y. Auguat 17. 197&' Perju.,, O.argn Divorce Jury Declares Property Norton (;uiltf SplitEred Dllltr ............. 'WE WILL APPEAL' Polldcal Figure Norton Final Rites Slated Friday For Athlete PolltlcaJ act.Mst Loran Nonoo 8~~:!.,~ was found fU}lty ol multiple per-Lawyers ln an Orange CO&mb' jury and perjury.related Saperior Court dlvoree trial at. cbaries by an Oran1e County f ectln1 the dlaPotJUon of $5 Superior Court jury late million ln eommunity propertJ Wednesdayaftemoon. held by an estranaed San Juan . Tbe al.x-man, au-woman Jury Capistrano couple appear today deliberated almoet tbree full to be clole tD seUlement. days before deeldlnl Norton iied Tbe negotiations tbat appear to the C<U1t.J Grand Jury in ear· to be near succeu came after a I)' 1977 wben the jury was in· month of trial before Judge vettigating political con'\lption. J.E.T ... Ned" Rutter wbo bas Norton's coovleUon didn't discussed the expected settle- stem from tbe Grand Jury ln· ment wttb lawyers for James dlctment that followed his two Huish and bls former wife. appear~ before the jury in Marie. February um. Part of the settlement calls for The indJctment was quashed Hl.llsb to pay his wtfe'11e1al fees in a court bearing late last year. of $100,000. Mrs. Huiah bas been but tbe charges were reinstated represented by trlat lawyer at a subsequent munlclpal court Melvin Belli ol San Francisto hearing. who bas been paid $250 an hour Th06e charges accused Norton by her for bis courtroom of lyina when he t.estlfted be bad services. oot used ss.ooo aiven him by The couple were divorced in former polltlcal ftnancler Gene November after 17 years of mar· Conrad I.ft bis 1978 campal.,-i for rlage. A CUS(ody agreement for the state Senate. the couple's four cbildren, aaes 5 The charges also accused to 15, was worked out before the Norton ol encouraging bis one-trial began. time political a lly. Gary It was learned late Wednesday u the · that tbe settlement involved a New~eyer, to e to Jury. proposed equal split of the And to those charges. the Jury estimated SS million in com- in Superior Court Judge Walter munlty property. Charamza's court said, pilty on Judge Rutter bas scheduled a all counts. bearing for Aug. 22 at which The verdict all bu\ ended a time the settlement will be political trail that Norton, 51. ratified or the trial ordered re- beg an as a leading county sumed. spokesman for The Jobn Blrcb Lawyers for both sides de- Soc:iety when be was a . Santa cided to try and reach a settle· Flags in Fotlntain Valley Ana police lieutenant in the ear· ment in the belief that Judge continued to fly at balf·staff ly 1960's. Rutter migbt order the real prop. today tor star quarterback Doug erty to be sold and the resulting Thompson. as a small group of Norton's political fortunes car-proceeds divided between the family and close friends said ried him Into close contact and couple. their private goodbyes. association with Dr. Louis Cella 's former political con-They said such a sale would Visitation fortbe invited group federation and, in 1975• into have made community property was held at noon at Peek Family county Supervhior Laurence immediately taxable and would Colonial Funeral Horne in Scbmit's office 88 an executive have resulted ln a substantial Westminster for the 17·year-old aide. loss for both sides. Fountain Valley High School football player who was killed It was aft.er leaving Schmit Testimony In tbe trial re· Monday ln a traffic accident. that Norton decided to strike out vealed that the Huiaba and bis on a political career of his own brother and sister·ln·law are His teammate, Fountain as the Republican nomiaee for partners in the 18 corpontions Valley High School tailback state Senator in central Orange that own recn!ation complexes W i 11 i e G ill en s, 18 • w b o County. througbout Orange County. Los L a gun a Be a ch c it y apparently dozed off at the Angeles County, in San D\eco councilmen have approved an wheel near Blythe. resulting in During his two-week trial. County and in northern informal rule prohibiting the rollover accident, was Norton insisted be was among California. members of city commissions injured. the former ~Ua allies siDgled If the settlement is approved, and committees from spe" .. '"" f b b ital out for prosecution by the Dis-Mrs. H·.t-'-.....:.n -eive t ... o s··-.. GAU.., He is nQw out o t e osp -tra· ct Au--· om -. wau • ~ .... \Ma• before governmental agencies lb eel ._aa;y 1 ~-facillti·-1n Pomona. •• ac-of in agony over e trag y as. _. ..,, ...... onbebalfoflbecity. they drove to Arizona State He also loslsted that commen:ialdevelopmentlnthat - A rule drafted by Councilman University where both won Newmeyer lied and attempted to city. a cabin lo Springville. Kelly Boyd states committee football scholarships. Gittens entrap bim durin1 the lnvestlga-Utah, and a S25.000 down pay. meJJ\bers must seek City reportedly will attend Friday's tlon leading to the criminal ment on a home being built ln Countil approval to speak befo{e funeral. charges filed qalnst bi..aC • --;. . Pr~Uta.IL :. • . other government agencies, or --------------------------------------clearl1 identity themselves as speaking as an individual. The issue arose several months ago when several council members chastised a former board of a·djustment chairman for addressing the County Board of Supervisors. Michael Schley. who was later fired by tbe City Council, allegedly criticized several supervisors in a speech before that county •body . and co1Dplalnts of his action reached Ctty Council ears. But opposition to a policy attached to the proposed rule came from Councilwoman Sally Bellerue, who said the whole wue "«ets down to good old freedom of speech." Sbe said many Lagunans who serve on commissions and committees are also active ln other groups, such as the Laguna Greenbelt. Inc .. the Sierra Club and other vocal organizations. "They have a right to speak on behalf of these groups as long as they identify themselves as sd'eh." abe said. H1mtington Rapist ~ent To State Pen Newport boolcieae Sele Priced 23900 Drop front untt wtth drawers . .. • .. Sele priced 3'P Door l>ooN=-e •••• SM Priced 2fl9DO Walls for all! Drexel wall systems to fit every spa~e and please every taste Repeat OOfselves? Never• W1tn so rnd!Ylduahstrc a selectlOn o1 Dre)(el • wan systems. each storage scheme is exactly suited to your space kmttations . . and your taste Our design stall wiN ShOw you cr15Plystyled contem· porary cases. exocte teak-fintShed pieces bngtlt with Chl001Ser1e. units rich 1n baroque curves and panelkng F\Jncttooal I~ ate equally var- ~~--11><--=-­silver drawetS. lV aoa stereo spaces and display cases with ~ghted shelves Walls fOf all we S8tf. and -!hanks 10 Drexel -never the samerwice• ~door boOlcc:l 111 eL •••••••••••••. Siie Prtcied 229DO Orawet and dDOr bOokceM with lnlertor """' end Ofille doOrt •••••••• -• Siie Prtced 5'500 ,....,.,~,, ... llAUSNING BACK to my own school dat)'I. I'm ctr· tal1al1 l\ld tbey wenn 'l •PolYins SecUon .. 11 to our ltu· denlbOdJ. . Hea:JUlt UllU what &.bey mlOt hue done to the kkl wlM> U. 0 KJdl Me" note onto Mr. K1U.'1 eoat- tall b&S in eiP&ia 11• seneral science. Not only waa tbal mlaereant WlhY of verbal abule. but he was callln& for some ptt.ysleal -dlKomfort for Ute teacber, too. Tben we bad oae element~ IChool teaeber wbo wu known bdliDd blr back a.a "Old CberrY NOH." Tbat '• verbal abule lf there ever was SectJon '41i2. Plenty of atudenta would have been 1uUty of baWn1 ber by that bideoua nickname from beb.lnd buabea or even --------Parent Committino Verbal Cf'imto IJpon Teocltn by serawUn1 on tbe ·blackboard somethlna like: "Old Cherry Nose Strikes A1aln. THEN .IUST CONSIDER the blab acbool football coaches wbo labor with youths of our region. These people are teachers, too. Wben one of these teachers start.I losing on the gridiron. verbal abuse ii rampant. The hapless coach oatches it from playen, atudents. principal, other tea chers, the waterboy. alumni and booster club members. Why, YoU've even beard this kind of verbal a'"'8e heaped upon tbe teacber·coacb fro111 the arandstandf on Friday m,bta. It cosnea in open 1bout.ln1. Sometimes lo choruses or tn unlsoo. IF VEUAL ABl18E of a teacher is a crime, the verbiage heaped upon our high school coaches ls clearly a misdemeanor of the masses; an enormous wave of public crlmtnallty. Clearly, if all the violators are tracked down and brought before t~ bac-of Justice, tbe-DA'a offlce ii really going to be NY. Safeway Ordered To Honor Pricing W ASIUNGTON <AP> -Safeway St0rea Inc., the natloo'I No. l food retailer. is llllder federal order not to cbar1e more than at.a ad· vertised price for sale ttem1. In a consent asreement that became final Wednesday, the Federal Trade Commlaalon concluded a tbree·year-old caae against the 30·state supermarket ebaln. The Sept. 15, 1175, com· plaint alleged that a "slsnUlcant number" of Safeway 1tore1 were falling to mark down itema advertlled aa betnl onaale. WITH CONSUMEas THUS CllA&GED the reolar prlc•, tbe ITC said, the chain wu en1ag.in1 lo an "unfair act and s>ractlce." The FTC ordered Safeway not to advert.lie any item f« •ale at a certain price unless each item ii marked wttb the aale price or a lower price. KlulnCmRa Life Snp}!911 ... 1 • Battle Rag~ . . , ...... ~ ...... 4 ,_. Iowa boy wbo bad bell 18 a coma 11Dce bil fe&ber allecedl.J .. aulted blm WU N • ••••d from a l1f1-1upport ,,.._ today after bll Mart CUSll ... doct.ora uld. Court W.. till -··•· meanftile, °"" die flM ol two ~ eomatole ~ allo aUeced fteUD9 of dl•s~c=. .. Dtil . • tbe body of 2· Y•iPdd .....,_ Sdltl ... WU , ........ early tblt IDOl'lllnl I to J>1', •• c. Woo&en , UM Pai CountJ metleal exa•lner. WocMlw ..W dlle _, •• lteart W etopped ....... ia:• .. .. llaUbew'• ,...., ....... ... h11 been elaar.=,. wit.la fint. .searee eesua1 • eomee· Uoo wWl the u.Jwt•. TIM Mr'& deatb could lead to __.... char.-.,alnlt tbe fatMr. MATIUEW BAD Mell k-• life.support systems stace be was bospltallzed June 28. Wooters said bis heart laad stopped "more than a dozen times" Wednesday . but each time doctors were able to re· establish a heartbeat until the "irreversible cardiac arrest." In a courtroom in Dedham, Mu1., the parents of another boy were flghtln1 over whether to keep their son on a respirator. The father wants him removed; the mother wanta the system to stay on. School Opens In· Memphis, Sans Pickets ''I'd U11e the plus pullt4.'' Ntvllle ...,._, 41, told Norfolk Probate• .Judie Jeremlab Sullivan• a beula& WI week. "A veptable • . • I can't lift wltb aMlal blm Ub &bat." L01Jl8 STONE, U , of ~ ....... bu been lD a coma alnce July 2 wben hia father acci*°tally sbot bJm ID tbe heart with a BB .... dcstnc an ar1ument wttb · 9't• wife, police aald.. Two we,U later, Myma Stone filed. for divorce. Loula ii 1helr on!ytebl)d. Doetora elatm Loul1 11 cllnleatly .dead. But Sulllv•n ruled Wednea4ay tbat all c~a f«.bniD death bad not ~met. .-umvao noted there waa _..1su.t nerve cell acUvtty in lbe bef's brain -~· Preaure oo the abooting scar causes tbe "1 &e blrD • bead. raise bis s•* and -1end bl.I a.nm -~Jl.benoted. Dr ..... Broqbam, chief of neare1ar1ery at Be1ton'1 Cam91 llolpMal. testiAed that tbe boy'~ braill is not d•d. arth••O tt bas 1111fered k"· r ............. . LOUlaWM..,,-• ... ..,_ par~*""--~ ltllil parents quarrel. At tbe -· bla father w• MWllna a,_. action alr rifle, w&tcb •· cbaraed ~ seven feet aw• from tbe bo1 · Hla f atber baa not beea cbar1ed. Norfols Dlltrlct At· torney Willlam Dei.i...t ·~ ne determination has been reached as to criminal .responsit>Wty !Dr the sbootlnc. A Denvet girl baa been iD critical condition in a coma few MEMPIDS, Tenn. <AP> -The eight daya after allegedly belq city's 117,000 public school stu· beaten because of a bedwetting dents and their teachers began habit. the fall semester today without The eourt·appolnted attomey disruption as striking policemen for 2·year·old Gaynell Mann and firemen kept their picket filed a motion in Denver lines away from the schools. Juvenile Court Wednesday uk· . . . .... carter Vint• «:IA Presiclent Carter visited tb• Central lntelliaence Agency in McLean, Va .. Wedoesday, uccompatnled by CIA Director Adm. Stansfield ~~r CJ>artlally obseund l and ~ ational Security AdviMr ~w Briezlnskl. Kidded about his black eye he was s porting beneath the ban· dage, Brzezinski said Uie shiDer resulted from surgical removal of a molt. "As far as we have been able ing that life-support equipment TllE 9QIM «»••l'ITBE ill inveeUcaUDa a c:oaspiracy to determine there are no keeplogberallvebesbutoff. theoeybl .. ~• 'e'ldllma. pic&ets," Sam Jacobs, chief of "U sbe'a clinically dead. abe Fonl told~ 8t a~: .. I still "'1b"•~·the s~urlty for the 175 schools in baa the rigtit to die," sald at· Warren Cc I ti•'• ...el•kms· TM-ballc: ecae..,idiii were ibe Mem~bls City Sdlool• torney Mllor-ner. "l"<>f!:!feel that~~OtwaN.emtttattlae-a'lilto*-1,t • ....... , syatem, said. "We're o(f to r tier life ~&e 'utti~ so Fifteen YtlS9 lifter P.Dlldl raq oat-·ln''DealeJ' l'llft. the normal school day." the police can have a strong House eommlu. 18 iD•wt111rHn1 an often.repeated ~J4bat murder case somewhere down there •• a eoii d acy •• Kennedy and t.Mt tblfoe ._ llOl'e CITY SANITATION 11orke~ the road." than one pmnan. ..... . . "" also reported.to 'Wrk tbia mom· -====~~::!:!!:~:&::::i:::;:;::::A=:::!:~l:!~!::===:::;:;'.;:=:::;:;;:.;;:;:~~;==;:!:=. ing. *" • • '· • Lorene Osborne. president of the 5.SOO·member Memphis Education Association. had said tb.at t.eacbel"I would not cross picket lines. The police union sent pickets to severa l schools Tuesday when teachers were to be&ln preparing for the new achool term. The teachers wait· ed until the pickets withdrew betore reporting for duty. HOWEVER, THE president of tbe 80,000·member Memphis Labor Council, composed of' more than 100 Memphis·area un· iou. won unanimous endorse· ment for a general strike in sup- port of the striking police and flrefl1hters. Council president Tommy PoweU said his group would meet aghln Friday before calllng any strike. City attorney Cllff Pierce- asked Chancery Court We<lnes· day to find the two striking un· ions in cont.empt for refusinlr to obey back·t.o-work orders. \ , . .., I .. .. . . Snow W.~ing Canceled Storm Dumpa a Foot on Yellomltone, Moves Eaat .-~--............ ,...---moll!---·---. mlcl-MlulMIPPI Veile\' todeY. - "'.,,.,. AINfillo Atl.i!W ... tlMOre lll""iftgNm ..... ...... ..... M¥1Ue -~.I&. ~ ..... _, o::i::._., llDDll ---•• wer1111111 _,. IHued toclAY fer .. ,...,_ """'"" .... ty llldt• tewhl11 ... 11M& c.u1.,..,. ... . ' DAILY PILOT CALIFORNIA THE VNION o aDERED ITS MBMB£a8 lo wallr <>fl U» job when stores from Bakersfield lo the .Me~ican border open for buslM:a Sunday. The i.trike was called shortly af\er"union membe~ r~· Jected the company's Latest offer by a 'J~ musin. lt would be the first time that all nlne l0C1tb of the uniQn struck simultaneously. ln 1969. the 25.000·m~mber Local 770 in Los An_geles struck for 19 dHys, and five locals walked out m 1959. The strike thnlat took on added clout when !.pokesmcn for union butchers and Teamster wa rehousemen and drivers announced Wednesday their unions' members would be urged not to cross µiclcet lines. 'El"'1t' for a Dag While thousands paid homage t o Elvis Presley al Graceland ~Iansion m :\tern · phis .. oh 'the first anniversary of his death. Bop Street. an aru sts · orgamzatlon. post· ed Its own tribute in downtown San Fran- cisco Wednesday. By s ubstituting a "V." for an "L," Ellis Street became Elvis Street for a day. . -.... Thut9day, Auguat 17 1978 DAIL V PILOT A5 Spending Curb ~9nght . \ Tentative Accord Reached; Panel Votes TOday SACRAMENTO CAP> -Members or a tWO· house conference committee were to vote today on .t proposed ballot measure to limit government spending • . The measure. ;, proposed-conslltuhonal amendmenL was tenlaUvel.y approved by tbe com· mittee Wedne~day Approval would send lt Im· mediately to both houses for final action BUT I T WOULDN 'T GO ON THE November ballot unless SB 2243 by Sen Alan Sieroly. D-Los Angeles. is passed to extend \he deadline for the passage of ballot measures from Aug. 15 to tomorrow Thal bill was before the Senate today. with a vote expected. The next possible date for ballot measures would be June 1980. 1 The spending measure is ~A 61 by Sen. ~obn Garamendi. D·Mokelumne Hill. It would hmit state and local government spending to a percen- tage or the personal income of all Californians . Such spending is currently 8 2 percent of ptrsonal income. Garameodrs measure wouJ~ tower it by one-tenth of l percent each year until 1t reached i percent · IRONICALLY. THE FORMULA RESEMBLES one proposed by Republican Gov. Ronald Reagan and rejected by the voters in 1973. The amendment would use fiscal year 1977·78. before Proposition 13. as a base for slate govern· ments. Local governments could use either 1977 -78 or 1978-79 as the bast year EXEMPTED WOULD BE EXPENDITURES for emergencies. for bon~ed indebtedness and court or federaJ government mandates. Nor would tht state's SS bilJion to help local governments deal with Proposition 13 be included in calculntions The Unilt would re.rnaln in rorce onl)' until 1984 . unless the vote~ approved an extenston. • Among the six conamlttff members, the con-l servatives criticized the measure as too liberal, .•• and the liberals did the opposite Bike Approved Senate Kills Salary Bill ') • SACRAMENTO CAPl -A post-Proposition 13 attempt t-0 delay a 10 percene-tegislative pay in· crease rOI' seven months has been soundly re1ected ,, by the state Senate. ; By a 17·20 vote. the upper house killed a con· stitutional amendment late Wednesday that would have given lawmakers tbe authority to suspend .t pay bike scheduled for December. At least 27 votes were needed for passage. A COMP ANION BILL TIED TO APPROVAL or the amendment by voters in November would havl' delayed the cost-or-living raises unlit J uly l , 1979 It was not taken up for a vote. Legistat.ors pow make ~.232. The pay raise: ~ tbear first in two years, will l>oosl lawmakers salaries to $25.S.SS. 1 Senators and Assembly members also receive such side benefits as 5'0 in expense money each day the Legislature 1s in session and a free car to drive. WITHOUT TEAMSTERS TO DELI VER foodstuffs from central warehouses. ~hortages could begin showina up on s upermarket shelves. Involved in the strike would be l.100 stores owned by 15 supermarket chuins . Albert~ons. Alphu Beta. Arden-Mayfair. Boys . Cerllfled Grocers. Hughes, A .M Lewis. Lucky Stores. 1\1 a rket Basket. Ralphs. Safeway. Smit.h's Food King, Stater Bros .. Thrift mart and Vons. b b d BOTH TUE AMENDMENT. SCA 71, and the LA O~~e Fie m e implementing bill, SB 2244. were introduced by . ..ce ..... e 0 Sen. John DunJap, D-Napa, who said legislaton> . . II II• 1 • • should not get <i pay increase if other public · employees did not Products lnc. involving overseas marketing rights Public employet' ~a!aries were frozen for the LOS ANGELES <AP) -Firefighters ex· for u sea water purification syste m. 1978-79 fiscal year when Gov. Edmund Brown Jr tinguis hed a blaze in the local Democratic ra~ty The verd!ct. returned Wednesday was Car short vetoed a proposed cost-of-living increase as part of headquarters today, minutes after a man claiming of ll~e $50 rruU1on the ~ant~ B.ar~ar~·based AJax post-Proposition 13 cuts be made ln state spending. to ·represent the J ewis h Defense League lnlernuUona! was see_kmg ~ its. s uit. which ac-"Obviously, this puts everybody in a difficult Windfall?· telephoned The A:\~ociate~ Press to cla im cused Uruversal of anttt rust v1olauons. pos ition." Dunlap said of the amendment. <eSJ>On~bilityforthef1rebombma. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-=-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Custol'l'Wr Disappears · No one was in the building at the time of the fire. f'«)rman Fehle,. an arson investiga~or for t.he Los .Angeles City .fire Department. said t.hc f1rt' ·'was st.arted with a tla m· LOS ANGELES <AP) -What would you do tr caused an estimated STATE mable liquid. The fire c J vour monthly bank statement showed an error or $17.000 damage to the S927 .000 and it was in your favor? . second-ffoor office-c.ind Police believe Arne Ramon Ristol spent it. its contents Ristol. 52. a self-employed bookkeeper who m l'-la B C li ves w1lh his wlfe. Annemarie. io Ii modest home 4 lffo~ r Ire ._ rer• ur with three dogs, is being sought J>Y Los Angeles 'fWENTXNlN~ PAL~1S IAP> -F?ur. mort' police on an arrest wa rrant chargmg felony grand fireftghters-mcluding ihn.-e women-havt been theft. . injured while battling u more than 6.100-acre brush R A y RISTOL said his parents left bo~e lasl -b'aze. lha~ of~cials s,ay they hope to completely Thursday and asked him to come sta}' lD !Mir .. J:OJ)\~e%~'4~J~i~ Wednesday brought "to scvt·n ·heu5ffis father "said be ;ould -. th; total nuqiber of firefighters hurt in the steep. be gone f<>( a wblte," Ristol, 8 ulmost inaccessible t~~rain ?f t.hc Joshua Tree Na· 27-year-old aradU.ate student al.er. ~41..MQJPmlent. off1c1 als s~d. Ca.i-S\.aW-Ful~.-said ~.P..,..,•al Crltl~ Wednesday. He didn't-say;vhy · · l or where. He just.asked me to LOS ANGELES tAP >-Attorney Gene~a stay here and feed the dogs." Evelle Y()Wlger ac«pled Wedhesday CJ Junior League OU.OS Angeles proposal to deb~te GOv Ed T HE BANKING EBROR mund ~rown. and Brown's campmgn ~anuger was made In ljlte May wben a ~mmediately called it a "sweetheart offer. •tST°'-clerk at Unlted California Bank C...iruetion 'Goe• Oe' wrote the wrong account number for a $927,000 de· pmslt by an unnamed real estate company, police SACRAMENTO <AP) -State Transport~tion spokesman Willy Wilson said. The error was not Director Adriana Gianturcc;> ~as told the ~1ghl_y deteclt..'<I until the company recenUy asked \he critic~l ~tlle Hoover Commss1on that the state ll> bank whul happened to its deposit. p.re•sUij~qrward with bi&bway construction. "He began withdrawing the money abo\;lt the : M .. ~~rantitrco, accus6d ol being unli-free~ay . middle or June and it was all go~e by .the en~ of_ t~W~~Wedn~.at.. 1jnde1; akrage or quesb~r:is July." Wilson said of th~ elder R15':0l. 'The bank fro1'). members of tl'W watch<log <&gency. S~e said h ad no way of knowing what was gomg on because the st.ate bas afJproved about $455 ~lllion in new it b~lanced out on the computer" highway cons~ion in the UYll-78 f1Scal year POLICE SAID RISTOL'S account showed AJ~ ~tDarud 8J.J ftllUon . . _ llplj,_,....,~--~~ Sl 100 al the beginning of August. SAN DlEGO <AP> -A federal court J_ury b~s ' Police declined to say whether ®y other peo-pwarded Ajax International Co~. $1.l million 1~ ple were being soug'1t in the case. <Jain ages In a conlraet dispute with Universal Oil =ms":: THE STUBBORM TILE, • LASTS & LASTS! • ~tTRACTIVE QESIGNt • COLORS HIT IT Off W1TH ANY OEC0Rt3 C 1~134'0· 12"112" ft. WnhNnltw 15191 ...,. ~ SantaMo -m w. 179" 547-7711 .. • • I ... Oranae<:oas10011vPJ101 Editorial P!!IJ.e ........................................................ R~ N. w..d/Pubflwr Thoma• K•vll/Edltot S.rta.,.• Kr•H>lch/Edft.orlM ~ £d•t« Supenisors ~eep In Money Search Orang County aupervlson ,.m be re~chtna lnto t•\•ery nook and cranny of counw aovernment at they uttempt to bnt nc~ tbe 1978-79 county budaet under new Unancinl rulf"S. And 1l b unlikely thnt muslvf' cuta C~D be found in J t one or two areu to make the bud1et tusk euler. ln tt'ad. supervbon wlll ~ savtna u few dollurs 1n many urcus to com up with balanced flnancea. ExamD!l'S of poalble UWe cuts Include closln1 of three tr 1.Sf\ transfer stations to the pubUc on S~turclQYS to :,uve S700 a w ln employee overtime. or w;kinl cities to pay ror U'nlninl their own paramedics. If they cun find ~·nough ol these small au.ms, aupervtsors cun bal•nce the budget without jolting repercussions. Supervisors also should consider the so.culled job-sbarlnt proposal being presented by the county commission on the Status of Women. Under tb'1t pro(>OSal. employees could opt to share one job. its salary and benefits. ln nn effort to uvold widespreud lay-off of workers. · Supervisors' task would be simpler if there were large and obvious areas of county government waste to be trimmed. However. that isn't the case. and budget hearints next month will be the time for supervisors. county administrators and public to exercise creative economies. ' Who Can Afford It? Figures compiled recently by the marketing research department of First American Title and Trust in Santa Ana show that the average selling price of a new single· family home in Orange County is $133.677. That's an astounding figure, especially when the county•s median family income is $16,200. Sum 1t up and it means most people who live here couldn •t afford to live here if they were buying their first homes on today's market. There are indications, however, that COll]ltY home builders may soon be seUing their sights on more af· fordable housing markets. For one thing, First American researchers found that new homes at those very high prices are not selling us fast as they were a year ago. They point out, for example, that last year 2.5 new homes were being sold each week. This year new sales have slowed down to 1.6 per week. The researchers also found there is a much greater inventory or newly completed but unsold houses on the market. In June last year the number of new houses un- sold but completed was less than 50. This year the number stands at 758. Slower sales and more inventory of high-priced houses is likelv to force those who build them to concen· trate their efforts on attacking the lower·price home market. That will be good for Orange COuntians if it can be shown that profits can be made on something less tbun houses priced at $100.000 and more. Plenty of Brokers Speaking of home sales. no matter which way the market goes there'll be plenty of people available to do the selling. The state Department of Real Estate says California will have a staggering 400,000 licensed brokers by the end or the year. That's one for every 80 persons in the state and dou· ble tbe total 10 years ago, notes the Newport Harbor Costa Mesa Board of Realtors. or course a large number of these brokers drift in and out of the real estate market, and many of them work only part time. There stlll are enough left over to assure a vast number of sales-hungry folks will help you buy or sell that $125,000 house that most of us leel is worth about $50,000. . The figures also might serve as a warning to those who think picking up a broker's license is an easy way to turn a dollar or two. The fact is, only the strongest and hardest·working brokers survive these days. • Op1n1ons expressed In the space above are those of the Dally Pilot. Other views expressed on this page.,. those of their authors end artist&. Reader comment Is Invited. Addrea The Dally Piiot. P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone{714) 642-4321. Boyd/HomelWl,ds By L.M. BOYD The U.S. Cenaus Bureau long bas used the term "bead of household'' in its statistical reports. But it won't anymore, not after 1980. Who's head of tbe bouaebold these days ii all too often debatable. Tbe ceuua foUc will ast.-instead: ". . .in whose name the bome 1-owned or rented?" back to that pref erred pa.atlme ol man: fiibtlnl. Those etiquette experis who claim to know conteod tbat manners always bel1n with what you wear. Un.· dentandable. Wbo'd abow up at a Slema Club meellna tp a leopard Min coat? Claim ts now that tbe avera1e American UHS a computer. whether aware ol Jack Anderson Gener&l,-Man Yo11r Clomputer W ASHJNGTON -Tbe star wan that are foq.bt on our mov· le acreena may not b9 to' futurl1tlc as tbey teem. The wan to coine. in the oplnton of a o m e 1trate1hts. may be Just about as fan. ta1tJc as the script writen have portrayed them. These 1trate1ists are con· vlnced that the next war could be won or lost. not on the bat· Ueflelds, but on complex, wbif. ring and flashln& computer panels. Yet tbe military brass, though eeared for supenonlc warfare, cootlnue to base tbelr strategy on p11t wars. 'Ibey seet to apply old 101\ltkJI» to new attuatlons. Around tbe world. tbe aeoerats and admirals have deployed our forces aa though they were pre- partna to flcbt World War II, tbe Korean War and the Vlet.nam Waraealn. BUT SOME planners are look· tng behind tbe great missile. air and sea armadas at the com- puter systems that will control them. 1bese autboriUes believe th at the military brass. enamoured of their growing atockplles of sophisticated weaponry, are ignoring the vulnerability of computers to al· tack by enemy fortes or ter-J"C)rtsts. A recent report by computer expert Dommtc Paul Baron, pre· pared for the London·based Art Hoppe Foretan Alfaln Re1earch lnatltute. aamlnes the problem of computer eeeurlt)'. lSaron ·a conelaalon: "If at a U01e of lntemaUonal tension, a relatively small number ol Jcey computers in a modem industrial state CO\lld be put out ot action by terrortat. commando or sabotqe attacks, auch a .tate wouJd be desperate- ly vulnerable when faced wtth an ulUmatum from a hostile forelp power. "Enemy missiles. forces. sbJps and submarines could not be monJtored; reserve forces could not be moblllsed: ele«rtc power coW.d oot be depended up- on: money coWcl not be paid for wagea and transport and com· munlcatlona would b e paralyzed." IT SllOtJLD be borne in mind, says Baron, that a war effort would not depend only upon the heavily guarded mWtary com· puter centers. Virtually every system that keeps Western clvlllzatlon Ucktng is run by computers. Financial instltu· lions, for example, "would grind to a bait almost overnight if their computers ceased function· ing." The United States. moreover. has been far too eaier to supply the Soviet Uoton with sophisticated computer technolop and training. Baron beHeves. "Computer companies in the West fall over each other in their enthusiasm to compete ror the fawn of the Soviet buy· lng agencies." writes Baron. "The Western businessman's sbeer naivete ln dealing wtth tbe • utute Soviet nqotiator1 ta quite depreatna," Tbe ontt0 1lded exc;bance. Baron beUevea. bas liYen ~ Ruatlans '"a 1l1able quantity of personnel f\ally aequaJnted wtUl the cb1ractecl1Uu of our 1y1t.ems . • . No Ode tn the West bat a~ like the la-depth knowleclae ot Soviet computer 1y1t.ems ~ the Sovteta have about our ... sy1tem1. Tbe damaae already done ls prob- ably incalculable." AS A &ESVLT or the teebnoloO give-away. tbe free world has .. made lt tbat inucb euler for (tbe Soviets> to train their experts to devise metboda of exploiting our own computer ractllties. ·• With their well- trained cadre. he warns. Soviet aeents could. in time of •ar. take over our computer aystems and bend them to °" KremUn'a wlll. nus computer squad. lays Baron .. would compa:ise a tecbtJolOlical ••ftftb column." B~ultlmate fear ts. the lrt& . prc:JllPeCl tbat a iutb· less ban of terrorists may crack computer aecurlty and make off with a nuclear weapon. Technically trained tet1'0rists. says Baron~ could use "ever cheoptr and sophisticated micro.processors ... to perfeCt systems to neutrallie elaborate electronic protective devteee atound aensitlve lnstallatlom in order to steal a nuclear weapon." Even untrained terrorists would have Utt.le trouble ebtain· int expert help. Baron DC>Us. in· asmuch aa ''data.processing ls a cQmmonly taught subject in American priaons." G\INS roa oauGs: Federar a1ent1 have Mceumulated ominous evidence tbat 1mug- gUn1 on the Mexican l>order has become a two.way a&reet. In an unholy alliance. Mexican smug- 1ltng rtnp abip illicit drUIJ and aliens into the United States while d.naa traCCicken and otheT operaton nm illegal suns and amm~on south or the border. Seer& lnteWeence reports and tnternal documents of the Drug Enforcement Administration. the Customs Service aad the Treasury Department's Bureau of Alcohol. Tobacco and Ftreanni reveal that the JUn running has become a "serious problem" since the Mexican 1overnment enacted strict 1un· control laws a decade a10. DEA Intelligence analysts have compUed a secret list or over 700 penom1, business fronts and or1anizations 1uapected or Mexican 1un running . They round tbat more than 100 of them were Involved ln illegal drug operations in the Unl\ed States. THE DEA analysts cheeked qie Callfomla sales of a Finnish· made semi-automatic rine. the Valmet. and concluded : "Roughly 45 percent of all Valmet sales ... were to persons wbo are identifiable as drug traffickers. allen smug- glers. convicted felons. militant~ or lllegat ~ens." T~ other two ag~ncles dis· agree. however. Customs and tbe Alcohol. Tobacco and Firearm& Bureau claimed that tbe smuated guns usually wind up in the bands of ordinary Mex- icans who have traditionally borne arms ror self·protection. President Sparkle Bites 1the Bullet The rolls indicate tbe public baa been bini confidence in Mr. Carter. So the other day be tasued a new official pbotosrapb of himMlf. Ill a brilliant anal)'aia. As· soelated Press compared the new official pbotogn:pb to bi• old of· flclal pbotb· graph and re- poned: "The Presi- dent bas reduced his dlsplay c:A ~ per teeth from ten ln tbe first picture to seven in the second." AP also noted that Mr. Carter's first omcial photo- graph. released when be toot Of. flee. "'was dodor'ed by an artist. but the new Dicture, wb1eh bas not been touched up, •bowl .... 1ln1 akin. pouebes-under tbe eyes, and at leaat four neck wrin~les.'' Tbll ls certalnlY a maJor stei> toward rettortna publlc con· fidence. But does lt 10 far enoqti ! I say that aeven teeth are still far too many. Seven teeth, ~ alJ, are 1Ull two more than are diaplayed on the c6ver of Mad maeaslne by Alfred E. (0 Wbat. Me Worry?"> Newnan.. SEVEN TEETH obvlou1ly repreaent a compromise. reached at the bllbelt levels in the WIUte House. betweeo ten teeth and no teeth at all. AP says that Mr. Carter con· f erred with hla wife. Mn. Carter. bis pre11 1ecretary. Jody Powell, and b1a newly· hired exl*'t OD tmaie buJldiq, Gerald ftaflboon. Won flDall)' Sydney Barria biUng the bullet, as it were, and making tbe ded.sioa. It Is sutprtsln1 that Mr. Ralabooo, wbo bu a res>Utatioa for brtUlance in Illa field, went alone with any teeth wbataoever. For the fact of the matter is that in all the official portraits of all 38 preceding Presidents there is not one. ain1le, solitary tooth to be seen. TBEaE IS a very good reucn for this. The times you are most ~elf to ellCOUDler .an Official p6rtrait of your President are •hen you are waltlng in line at the post office ror a couple of hours. when you are being draft. ed for Jury duty. or when you are seated in the anteroom of - • OODY Sl-IOP the In~Revenue Senice's Audit Di . These a e clearly not the times for )'OUr Prealdent to ba amUlag amugbt down upon you. No wonder the country doesn't think Mr. Carter knows what be'sdom,. PE~Y. I would pre- fer Jl=portralt in wblch Mr. Cartier .. • brow YIU creased with t and wony or even one In which bJa eyes .and mouth were• agape In horror. While tbls wwld perbaps not help rest.ob qfldence in bis Admlniltr~ It would at least make me leel It• empathized with me and "the palnful ex· perience that dealing wltli tbe ... _ 1overnment invariably entails. But a smile! Would you accept a dollar bill with a sm lUng Oeorie Wasbiqton on Its race? Or would you treasure an in- auaural souvenir ash tray wttb a grlnnlna Dick Nixon swearing to uphold tbe Canatltution? SE~TEiilfi! I may cast a write-in ·'f'Ote lb WM for Alf~ E. N~ or. better yet. Leon Splnb. Wttb Africa. the Middle East. th~ enero crpis. tbe economy "and the polls. •bat on earth does Mr. Carter thlnJt be has to smile about! ln taimela. bawever. maybe be lan'UmUlngatall. Maybebe's. 'Just t>artng bis teeth. • &nerica's Glut ~of Fine Musicians, It '1 widely known that ,y, .. "'. 81:9~..fl-~A~ same or a 10 mes a~~~------~...:.-........ .._..--..... ~~~'.:l"'ft~~-, -----=-.,_. . -be a two-edaed sword for natlve he could ever do was conduct the and even ~ncertmasten. were inv1tlably foreign-born; and hardly a bandfu.l of ou.r leadlng opera singers were of native ort.cln. Ott concealed It. war .-•81'1· "uesf asks why that particular month wH so called. The wlnt.e~ wu ove.r. The first tbawa came. Jt was time to 'I~ Gloomy Gus If you ~ all of Jerry Brown s weakneuea and ·~ tocether wllb Ev Y"DIH'I weatne11e1 and 1t.rullbs. u.ere•1 one =·lcmrDOI' betWMD J.J.M. -..;.... After Jaratdine Samden wrote that book e:ntltle4 "The Love Boat." tbe American Broadeaatlng Company Jumped on lt to tum out one of tbe bllbelt·rated .,.. TV ahOWI of the. MUOD.. AACl .....:. wbal doel OM: JuQlul eulhor -1et far 1...-:--u.1t fdfa --notldnl ellef Juat *11000 a Wfft, Pretty nlft)t. Ar•ammt eonttnuea over which four llquida are belt for quenchlq the thtrat. No, beer Isn't lilted. Seteatilta ••Y they are, ln order: water, dub eoda, tea aDd d!tt cola. Q. "What'• 'eb•rr)' ple time' in dttUI UniO!" A. An emeraency. • musicians. With many of the Ballet Rwtse orchestra in tta finest instrumentallsta, alngers. declln[ng years. ffis talent de· and conductors fleei'n1 to served far more. America, we audclenly bad a glut Our national inferiority com- ol muslcaJ talent. For the next plex ln most of the aru wu IO years. EuroPean performers largely Justified in the dlm past. of vast reputaUOtt 11nd ex" We wen~ a culturally ortent· ~ce domtnated 1t1e-mnfl9!!lt::"_ -N-na.Uon; amr d.lGnOl tue world. . U.• tlm• or patien.cQ. to ttiin ou.r 1ount people auldoualy or as AND TROUGH be bad WOb serlou1ly as the"'European many honors here, lt WH u1tem1, Our loP conductors, Mfflsary tor a ywnc American like Van CUbum tO walk oft With a Ruaslan ,n .. before be waa admitted to the cbarmed elrcle Of pt1nlltlc: at.an. ODera •lna .. incl ballet claMen (.it (Otted to tlwate their .,._. to foretan nnantl in ordet to 1aln an Mlldttton or an audllGce. ~ n1;9.1D Ute worst ..... ol~OHoltbe'8dal ftll\ to~ ..... •• lll'l· ed mualolao, ~ ··<~ ......... -~ ........... aad tb• molt. TB.E FLOOD of r~ • Mneratiqn uo .be~ao lo..dtanae....... an that. w~ bee-am• lfie ben~ciaries of the-rineat tredi· t\ons In musiciansbJp and the other arts; but at tl\t! s.m• Ume, tbia very glut Impeded the ·careers ol our o.n Yount. peo- ple, wbo found the compf:tltlbn too intense. Only the absolutely S'-per, such as Leonard Bern· stein and Lortn Maaiel, made It to the Vf!r/ pinnacle ot mus~al dlrectorshlp. There Is no lack of talent here: Indeed, much of it aoet •· 1>e11•n•. AmonJ "the areatest wui. Ol • ¥fW'aJ ~ls tbe uGUQIO>:mtnt or under· emplo)rment ct aD.)'OOt wbo can IMk a ereatave contrtbut10f1 "8\ WDe to balance out ao lbaay;·ot 'tbe dtstructtve ele· m.nta tn our t0eiet~. 1 \ MORE OPINION In the t'li'lt pt1ff, we haVt not approvtd a holpttaJ -tent.alive or otberwtse. We do not bave that p_gwer . We c a n only reeonu:ntnd ap~v.i or denJaJ The na&.e Department of Health m akes the clecls\on. In the second place, no application bas bee n made . All that h as h oppened h an lnfortnal statement by kaiser that, lf tbey are up::= a botpttal at a reuonable . tbe1 will apply for per tobulldone. Th~ Thurs., 'F.rlday and s lturday 0 1tly '179" -...-.011•1t .. ~ .,.,.. . ' 8 011at1ece1tt action •• tndi .. h1cF .. \'" t1nnd a ff.lllt .O . operated boapltal t Oran1• County. That l• aen ral POUcl. AD:/ appllcaU mu1t RM Judted-on It• ow merltl an! lD tfle lfabt of 1ta rcaulaUQDI. fte reuou behl o~r policy ~WN a look at •hole problem ol btattb c COit.a. 'thundly,August t7. 1978 • Deserves Special Attention tn•UJ'..•nce plana, bospitala are ,_mburled ror their full coeta. Such a ayatem the Wall Street Journal bu called. "a compact with the devll" since it rewards inefflctency. IT IS NO WONDE& that there has been a ruab to build bolpital b e d• alnce the co1t of overbulldina can be paued on to the consumer. The Cert.iflcat.e of care for a stat.eel monthly fee. Thts is in contras t to the traditional method of charring for each servtce rendered. competition. The Oran1e County Health Planning Council bas expressed 113 determination to carry out this intent. DAIL y PILOT A' P~la o Need procram was dealaned to introduce aome m easure or control in thls field. However alone it can accomplish Ut6le. It almply enfranchJses existing hoapltala and keeps out more efflclent compeUton. The growth of H .M.O. 's nationwide h as been &low largelY. due to public lndlfCerence and deterdlined o pposltlon by tbe medical esl4bllahment. However . we are foJtunate in having on our doorstep the tareest and moet auccessful H.M.O. -Kaiser Permanente. It has consistently shown that it can deliver bJgb quallty D)edlcal care at twenty five to 30 percent less than the coat under the f ee·for-servlce system. Any talk of our having "two s eta of rules" ls a bsurd. We do not make the rules. We only apr>ly those set down by the State Department of Health. Ow- job Is to protect tbe rights of the consumers of health care. The American Medical Association and the hospitals spend millions of dollars lobbying for their own interests. Jt is Ions past tJ me (or someone to speak up for the public. JAMES D. HENLEY Recognl1lna this weakness. Con1ress adopted the policy of encoura1lng the lntroduction of alternative health care systems under the general name of Health Maintenance Org a nizatio n s . The d istinguishing Ceature of the H.M.O.'s ls that they contract to furnish comprehensive health KAISER la ready to move into Orange County. lt is beyond q uestion that such a move wlll mean subst a ntial savings to consumers here. It ls the intent of t he Certificate of Need program to &{:lve mon~y for consumers. not t o protect existing hospitals f r om • Lettn1 /Tom reodn1 an wlcorM. TM right to cond~•• ldten lo lit apact or eliminot• Ubd ii rntnied. Letter• of 300 words or lat ~ bt Oillftt pr#e-rmce. AU wacn ...-m· cu. lignat11rt aftd maWfto addml .. Flreftles. heltt If you aak me, bell n41M• may be 10UMdd °"re· they're Htwm18 dgart." quitlt if Rf /jcint ~ii apparnl. Ponrw IDill not bl-,,..~ THE 211d Bl& EV•T of SUIUIElt '78 5348 . QUEEN .. SOFA BED M aortna ..., .._..., uni .., "lV hNdr9it Know Everywhere for the finest in Eufopean . contemporary : Cothing for GUYS & GALS iS ple~sed to announce the start of their . ~ MENS -SIMMER SALE on Friday! August 18th at 1 '0:00 A.M. SAYl•S of 50% •d · M•E • Selected SUITS• SPORTS JACIETJ • SHIRTS· PANTS • SHOES · ETC. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Gals! If you missed the st.t of Ille I st II& SALE EVENT· OF THE SUMMER AT THE WOMENS STORE. LAST WEEK, THRE ARE STILL PLENTY .OF GREAT BUYS FOR 1 YOU ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• DONT Miss OUT OH THIS II& SALE ••• THERE MA y MOT BE A 3rd EVENT THIS SUMMER! 40>... ... .. • • .. ... U DAILY ALOT QUEENIE "Sifned:Youra truly, a 1)9nel ot experts'.' NEW YORK !AP > -Frederick S. Jane, 52. a former vice president of Planned Parenthood Federation of America Inc. and a lead inc authority on family planning, died Wednes- day. SHARON, Conn. (AP) -Andre• Carnduff Rilcble, 71, form e r · director of the Yale Art Gallery, died Saturday. After World War II be was honored by France and the Netherlands fol' recovering European art < work that had been loot- ed by the Nazis. < • i t , • & ~ , ) ('. i i t , . ; . SAN FRA NCISCO (AP > -Melvin C. 1Jry, 62, a lawyer and civic leader who retired last month as director of the San Fra ncis co Red e v e lopm e nt Agency's Verba Buena project, died Tuesday at his home in Suburban . • Belvedere. Ury headed Deatlt Notice• IB.L llOADWA Y MOaTUAIY 110 Broadway .COSta Mesa 642-9150 ~TUntlU,.UMI MOaTUAIY WH~CHAnL 427 E. 17th St Costa Mesa 64M888 fllBCI lloTHIAS 5M1M'S MOaTUAIY 827 Malo St. "'1untlogton Beach 53H539 SltS IL MOITUAIY 978 So. Coast Hwy. Laguna eeach 4'9+1635 1533 N. El Camino Reel San aemente 492-0100 the lt&f drive for pass11e of Calllomia's first fair housing initiative. VATICAN.CITY <AP> -CardJ111l Paal Ya Pin, 77, archbishop of Nanldq, Cbina, died In a Rome clinic today, the Vatican announced. His death cut to 111 the number of prospective voters for the Aug. 25 .conclave that will select a new pope. SAN DIEGO (AP> - Edwin B. Eichler, of R a ncho Santa Fe , schoolmate -01 Ronald R e agan , died in a hospital after a piece of m e at lodged in bis throa t at a Del Mar restaurant. Eichler, 68, a native of Dixon, Ill .. founded the Milk Pails r estaurants in Illinois. th e Anvil Club, a Chicago restaurant, an the Fin and Feather Farms bunting and fishing preserve in Illinois Awards Received Three Oranae Coast students have won awards at Western Slate University College of Law of Orange County Lois Jeffrey of Laguna Beach ls roul'th-year winner. Susan McGann of Lagun~ Niguel captured the 'Wall Street Journal Award fol' receiving-the be$t grade in corporations during 1977-78 and Nancy Ferruzzo of Fountain Valley won the Massachusetts Mutual Life lnaurance Awar4 f•o r b e I n g-t .fl e outstandin tu ent in fril:;l;!'J!!!Eit:XEatf!~~--·~~""r; u - PAClflC Y.w t • I O'NA& PAii Cemetet'Y Mortuary Chlpel 3500 Pllclflo View Dnve ~Beech e.+2700 MrCOIMICI MOl'NAlllS ~~ ~~Is Sllll Juen Capistrano 486-1770 Music Cl888 A course tn classical or1an plQ'incj' dwined for penoe9-Wtlh-Jlt-feut fo\lr yeata -of piano study, .mt lte taQlbt on• Tburaday momln,. atj Oran1e Co.at Colle.e, Costa Me1a. · Information on tbe clasa, taa•bt bJ Dr. Jutln CotYar. ts avaUa· ble by calllna •-$135. WASHINGTON (AP> -N•••r mtnd Po&la 1bowln1 moat Americans think Jimmy Carter Is f\unbllnt the prttld~ and wilh he wocaldn'l. nan 1aln. ' Jimmy aUU h11 Iota of frlendl. · Oood fritndl. Very close frtenda. And be doe1n't mlnd telllna you about them. CA a TD 11.U IVCH a bablt of callln1 public ornclala hll friends that ma1aalne reporter Sara lt11enld beaan counUn1. be found more than 60 instances which Carter used pbraaes such as 'I aooct friend.'' -· or .. a very cloee fri e nd " to describe public of. flciala. Word of the artl· cle aeems to have reached Carter. It was menUoned in a White House summary of ma1azlne articles. and waa aum · marized alao in a widely read aossip column. But It didn't slow down Carter. Much. In an lnterview with visiting magazine editors Carter spok' of bls warm feeli,ngs for Sen. Edward M. Kennedy. l).Mass. MOST DEMOCRATS WOULD like to see KenMd.Y evict Carter from the White House, ii current polls are ac· curate. But Jimmy'Said of Teddy: "He is a great person and a good, close friend or mine." Then Carter. possibly remember~ ing tbe magazine article. added: "I say that with a little bit of caution. Because I don't want to exaggerate the number of close friends I have." There's trouble in the White House press room. Two reporters are suing for Ubel over ~n article written by a third. The suits were brought In, of au l>laces, small claims court. Where each plaintiff cannot claim more than S750 worth of damage to his re- putation. IT BEGAN WHEN Carl P . Leubsdorf of the Baltimore Sun wrote about a group of reporters for little-known publications who attend the dally White House news brief-ings. Leubsdorf said a series of the brief- . ~ inta "lave turned Into ne•t·circua.tt. malnly by the questions and poslur· lQ& of a handful of people whO have often a~med. to be more interested in maklnc Ideological points than in ob-\alninr news." Amona those mentioned were Jobn M. Szoetak. a Polish-American re- porter who writes for about 60 f oreian·language papera in the Uni~ ed States. Ca.nada add En•land. AAcl Carl H. Knuemann of Washington Briefs News Service. LEUMDORF SAID BOTH were among tboee present· at a briefing where the que stioning w a s particularly absurd. and said Szostak "often asks obscure questions about ethnic subjects." Both ,ued for the maximum $750. Szostak said in court papers. "This article has damaged my professional credablllty <sic> by being made out as a fool and idiot for askins obscure questions ahout ethnic subjects." Szostak misspelled the word' "credibility." Trials are set' for next month. Szostak.aays he has little hope of win· niog, but believes the suit will cause enough ·trouble for Leubsdorf that .. he'll lbink twice before he does it again."· Jody Powell. the temporarily re- formed chain-smoker. says he's still off cigarettes. "I'm doing okay on the cigareties, l"OWliLL but not on tbe weight." the pre· side ntial press secret ary told a small group of re· porters. patting a stomach tha~ was not noticeably larger than.. when h e quit three weeks ago. Powell said be even made it through last weekend without a cigar. He initially weaned hlmself from cigarettes to cigars. which he doesn't inhale. but not on the weight." the preslden· tial press secret ary told a small group of reporters. patting a stomach that was not noticeably larger than when be quit three weeks ago. Powell said he even made it through last weekend without a cigar . He initially weaned himself from cigarettes to cigars, which he doesn't inhale. f;aBoa PLAIN PAPER , COPIERS The moat advanced copiers in the- f I e 1 d ~day! Whatever vour eopylng, needs. there·• a Canon "'achlne to do the job -~. cieanty and at the loweet coetl These ccPiers use the pfaJn paper, and theV're $n0ineered with the kind of advanced technofooy that 's made Canon famous worldwide for superior reliability and pertonnanoe, Let us help )'OU find the Clnon copier that's right for voul . . . . AMY PAPER COPIERS The total concept in any f)8P8r col)ler that handles most any copy requirement wfth efficiency and convenience. tf'at lets YoU copy onto any bond papet. labels. transparencies. &'1d .even both sjdes of the paper. Low COSj and reliability make the oce an extraordinary copy machine and a superior' P8f'fotmer-for ~ any office! 0m111amR )o,.;,( A great place for kid•. ON/OFF EASY Nowtnttte. new Center Driw or{ off ramp on the 405 rreewev tor direct easy aicc.-to Huntington Center end Old Wond VllllGft. and Loan Association P.O. Box 1348 1700 Adams Avenue Costa Mesa. Ca. 92626 • (714) 754· 1801 .. • • t • . . .. , . After c.ocktails or wine. enjoy our famous country dinner. It's only $4. 95 for all you can eat. (Even less for small children.) You get soup and salad. fried chicken plus a S«IJ1ftl delicious entree that changes daily, garden vegetables, mashed potatoes and gravy, lots of hot com bread and honey butter. All served family style. VISA and Master Charge accepted. Dinner: Mon.-Tbun. 5-9, Fri. 5-10, Sat. 4.10. Sun. 12-9. DAILY PILOT A• Tbe Bia Yellow lloMahl eo.taMeeaie open for IUDCh ~~Friday. 11:30-2:00 p.m.. Die BlgYellowRoase Bestaurarat · 1639 East Imperial Highway, Brea• 3010 Harbor Blvd .• Costa Mesa ,. Bring this GifM3ertiflcate-in 10 Orange-COast Savini· CS::~~§:::z.5 , and receive your FREE SAFE OEPOSlf BOX. Remember, you must open a savings account et Orange Coast savings. We'll be ha~ to transfer your account from another savirigs and loan or tiank for you. Just bring in the passbook or certificate of the account you wish transferred. If you are already an Orange Coast Savings • account holder. you may also receive a FREE SAFE DEPOSIT BOX by making an additional deposit to your account. t "' ' .. ~ ' ; • f . .. I AJ• IW&.Y PU..OT s By JACKIE HYMAN Of .. DlllY ...... , .... In the 1977·78 school year, Orange Coast CoUeae students paid 10,826 visits to the campus student health center for medical aid and 2,600 (or mental health counseuna. They were treated In trallers. And even that was a vast improvement over the situation ln 1972. , when the students themselves requested that a SS per semester health fee be lnatituted to f'Und treatment. "PRIOR TO THAT, there waa a nurse and a first·aid kit," said Kale McDonough, R.N., director of student health service for occ. But OCC's 28.000 students don't have to be treated in trailers any more. Beainning this summer. they can come for aid to a 12,000.square·foot, cllnlc funded by $1.12 million from the U.S. DepartDilent of Commerce under the Economic Develop. ment Act. and operated by stu. clent health r~ fund1. • "The kids come in here and you can see their eyes widen as they walk down the corridor," said Miss McDonough. "Then they start to Jitrln." lion with rooms for private and group sessions, five examlnine rooms. X·ray facWUes. a central laboratory. an emergency room, a room for students to Ue down when they don't feel well. and an extra·wide corridor attesUnc to the fact that the tiew Student l{ealth Center bas been de· signaled as a reeelvln1 station In case or a major Orange Coun· ty disaster. "I'm still in shock. I go and pinch myself," said Miss McDonough, who noted that that project was f l,Ulded only u month after a req\ieat and pl&QS were aub~itted. and eompl~ied wltbin a year. . ORANGE COAST COLI.£GE FINALLY HAS IT8 OWN HEAL TH CENTER BUILDING $1 .12 Miiion Structure Replace• Trellera for Medlcel Care AND IT'S NO wonder. The clinic includes a counseling sec· She said tbe federf! funds were designated to provide employment for construction workers while estubllshlng needed buildinas In the com· munit;)' . . BU'# A MEDICAL center la ' useleb without personnel. Fortunately. Ma . McDonough has what she calls "an outstand· Ing medical staff.·' ~~~~~~~~~~~- Mysterioru Water Halts NB Project A 14·home construction pro- Ject in The Bluffs has been held up because of the mysterious groundwater that has been pl<1guing the neighborhood. Newport Beach councilmen spent $26,000 this year trying to find out how much water was in the ground under the housing tract on the east side of the Up· per Bay. The results of that study given to them last month were reported to be in error. RATHER THAN approve plan~ for the 14 homes to be built near Vista Entrltda ~nd near Vista Cauda:, councilmen this week halted action while their consultant tried to find tbeir er· ror in his groundwater study. That study, prepared by the James Montgomery consulting firm . origtnaUy stated that of the 250 acre.reel of water that nows under the tract each day. 200 acre feet came frol'll an un· -;pcciried source on the east side •)f Eastbluff Drive, one of the bound aries of Tt)e Bluffs MONDAY, COU~CILMEN vere told thut rather than 200 1cre feel, that off.site amount of vuter is more like 38 acre-feet. City officials said the revised -;eport should be ready for coun· "ii consideration Aug. 28, when lolstein Industries, developer of he 14 proposed homes, will once .1f?am ask for council approval of Jevelopment plans Principal Named Dr. Pat Carpenter of Newport Beach has been appointed assis· , ant principal or La Habra Wgb School by Jhe Fullerton Union High School District Board of rrustees. She will assume the i><>sition lmmed!ately. .,..., ............. ..,..,.,....,.. WIDE OPEN SPACES AND PLENTY OF ROOM CHARACTERIZE CENTRAL WORt(iAR£A Personnel Include Gell Bruckman, Joan Donahey and Irene Joaephaon • Traffic ·ordin&nce Near . Newport, Beach Council RevUes MetUure I After nearly five months or nls, as they have all along. cast trying, Newport Beach coun-. the dissenting votes. Mayor Pro cilmen appear to be near com· Tem Ray Williams and Coun· pletion of their so-called traffic cilman Evelyn Hart. both propo- phasing drdinance nents or the meaaw-e. were . Monday night. councilmen absent. agreed to some revisions of the • ln addition, councilmen set the proposed measure which will next August meeting for adop. limit the amount or future buUd· lion of a set of administrative ing to improvements in the procedures for operatina the city's traffic system. somewhat complex ordinance. COUNCILMEN VOTED 3·2 to introduce the measure and set its second reading Aug. 28. If ap· proved then, it would go into ef· fect30days later. Jackie Heather and Don Mein· The ordinance was proposed in April by Mayor Paul Ryckoff. COUNCILMEN immediately enacted the measure -based on an initiative petition beina circulated at the time -as a council policy and since then have been struggling to make the policy Into a law. The stumbling blocks have com e in deciding how traffic congestion is to be measured so that city officials will have a means of deciding whether a proposed building project makes the congestion worse. Dan Emory. spokesman for the Lecal Environmental Analysis Fund <LEAFl, the eroup that authored the in· itlatlve that touched off the ac· lion in April. told councilmen he was satisfied wlth·the ordinance and procedures as written. ( Pilot Logbook J Newport Beach Rallying Cry: Charge -• J It includes 22 physicians who work part·time for a total of 54 hours a week. Three fuU·Ume and four part·lime nunes. an X- ray tecbnidarr. a lab technician and a mental health team are also available at varloua times during the center's 8 a.m. to 10 p.m . weekday hours. and 8 u.m . to lp.m. Saturday opening. Because there's no Jnfirmary and no scheduled surgery. Miss McDonough said, the center also makes \!Se of some UC Irvine Medical Center personnel who can belp stud ents arrange follow·up treatment and surgery when necessary. CURRENTLY. SHI; SAID, the center's main staff needs are for volunteer receptionists and clerical workers, "people who like people." They can obtain.In- form aUon by calling 556·5808. The center will be open to the public at a special reception from 1 to 4 p.m. Sept 8. Miss McDonough said, to give the community a look at the facility. She noted that she considers the health center just that. 3 facility devoted to health, rather than a "sick center" like a hospital. Much of the staff's work,.ls.-de.:. voted to preventive mettici~ and health education. Miss McDonough said. "THE NURSE interviews everyone who comes in and we try lo get an overview or the whole person," she said. "We see a lot of fledglings from the nest and they're really spinning wheels." Counseling is provided to try to help students balance their schedules and set priorities so they don't overwork, she said. If a student is ill, the staff en· cour~ges him or her to take the time off to get well. The center will notify faculty members and discuss ways the student can keep up with classwork. .. Also. we try to help them pay attention lo what their bodies a r e t e lling the m ." Miss ~cDonough said. STUDENTS SOMETIMES don't know such basic things as to take aspirin and fluids for a cold. or not to take a friend's medication. she said. A common problem is to see a student who's taken just enough of someone else's antibiotics to mas k his symptoms but not P.nougb to cure his illness, Miss 'McDonough said. A frequent • problem showing up at present is scabies, a skin mite infestation s pread by close contact. As for venereal dlsease. many more students seek treat· ment than actually have it, she said. . "I think awareness is high," s h e lsaid. 'I PINCH MYSELF' Kate McDonough, A. N. NB Wants 'Bail-out' State Aid . Newport Beach city officials, unlike their neighbors in Costa Mesa, have applied ror $1.S million in state "ball·out money," City M~ger Robert Wynn said the city's appUcatlon was ~-=nl TueBday aft.er cot1ncilmen lrtformally agreed with the plan at thev at.udy ~sion Monday. TH£ VS£ Of' ~be money com· es with three stringi;. Wynn told c0uncilmen tbal < 1 > the state will not Wlow the city to have re- serves of more than 5 percent of the total budget ; C2) the city must maintain current levels bf police and fire protection aod < 3) the city must not grant employees cost-of·living wace increases. The Costa Mesa City Council decided against use of state money because of those restric· tiops~ '. fn tM ~ discussion Mon· day. Mayor Paul Ryckoff sug. gested holding a public bearing oa.fha SU~~~ those strle~ but~ llttlf'.'SQPJ>Ort and the idea was dropped. ACCORDING TO a report pre· pared by Wynn, the city will lose $4.2 million in property tax in· come because of Proposition 13. Councilmen already have cut $2.8 million from the proposed $26.2 million budget. Wynn said tbat with the state money. he does not foresee the necessity for further budget reductions. 3 Mesa Cops TakeHonori In 'Olympics' An tichlblt of artworks created by Newport Beach city emplo)'MI Will be on 415play at CltJ Hall Aue. 22 tbrol.l&b Sept. 2t.1 rrtie Ublblt Will be open to the public from a a.m. to S p.m. I - .. I f i I ' . r . ·. f .. f lhJrldly, Auguet 17, 1178 DALYPILGT AJJ . ge Powem Boat Ban Eyed w~EN (AP> -HopJn1 to baa boeta pe.rmanenl.l1 oo a · N vada t nfutt. Defenden of Wildlttt, a conservation or1anlaaUon. ~-arped tn U.S. Dlltrtct Cowt bore ~~t ~ boaten aod water.akiera uuturb ~waterfowl Attomey Jeffrey H. Howard. cow\H I for Detenden, aouabt Wtdn day to proyo um ldlb·•Pffd boatera already Md cut lhe nestlnl potentlal for ducks ta Ruby Lake Nattonal WUdUfo bfup. BOWA&O CITED 1overnment document.a declartn, that an averaae of 4.000 canvusback and redhead ducb are produced amnually on the refuee. Bu' ln lt75. Howard tald, only 2.000 redhead and canvuback ducks were raised on the retuae. ond only 3,000 ln 1978. Power boat.a were operatins on the refu&tt tn both yean. Defenden already has won a tem· porary restralnlnl order proh1bltln1 the 1overhment from permitttn1 boats to operate on the ref\Jge with motors of mcwe lhan 10 bonepower. THE GOVE~MENT BAS proposed a plan wb.ICh would ban motorboatlng on the northem bait of the refuge. The aoutbem half is zoned, wttb horsepower, aeuonaJ ands~ restrictions imposed on portions on the various mnes. U.S. Flab and WUdli~ Service dJ.rec. tor Lynn Greenwalt teaWiecl tbe pro- posals permtttin1 blab-speed Pleuure boatina and water 1kiln1 after Aua. 1 "should have little impact on waterfowl production" because most ducks have ftnlshed ~lng by that date. RUBY LAKE NATIONAL WildUie Refuge ls a hlgb·altltude manb on tile Nevada desert. It hosts nestio1 can- vasbacks and redhead.a. two species whole populations are declining over a broad portion of their range. E11.autlv• Ottlo.a: 7812 Edinger Ave .. Huntington Beach, CA 929-47 SOuther(I c.1i1oml11 Regional OlllCH: 8965 Valley View St . Buena Pork. CA 90620 201156 AvetonBlvct .Oataon.CA9074~ Qt 22821 Lake Foret! Or .. (Lalea For"O· El Toro, CA 92930 • 1001 6. lmperllt Hwy .. La Habra. CA90&31 4 I 40 long 8"ch Blvd .. Long BHch. CA 90807 .=a 1005 INlne Blvd .. Tuaun. CA 92880 l(NO(• 23S N. Cllrue Ave • Weal COY!na. CA 91793 Loo g for great values this weekend? Start here! ... = Save 28"~ Save $4. Save·2~ Save $4. •' ., ..... . · . . . . , -. •' . . . ... Fashion-right looks with Calcutta pants for women. Elastic waistband for a comfortable fit. Sif.es 10-20. Voile top with sweetheart tie-neck. Print design poly· ester/cotton. S,M,L .... .9.88 WOMEN'S SPORTSWE~R f . 7ss REG.$11 SPECIAL LITILE GIRLS' SUMMER TOPS 144 EACH Knit tops in assorted stripes, solids. 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"+ ~wage Plant C u hl bl1t WN'n oppoaana VH~WI Of two homtuwnt'r arou till~C\llt\'~ bourd membt-"3 ,·ott'd 8 \, to b ck aw•y from • four polot objtttlon nl~ with lh county &Mrd of upervlson by the l.u N\tu l Community As1'ocl lion . 11' otela the Boppers V U ~ Parkway and the a1en· oy'• 1neiecs failure to notltY tbe uauai. ktiuel Community A:I.· IOCllllon ol plans to build tbe rucutty at \ho alte. TBt! PaoP08BD plent .. part ol a MS mtlllon wattewater •Ylt•m plaMed to eerre a 55 aquare·mlle rea ln IOUlbeaat Oranse County, lncludin1 El Toro. South L11una. Laeuna Ni~uol &Dd Lacuna Hilla. wbich Includes J,ell~ World. Approved by the county Plan· nlnc Commiuion. the raclllty's construction was appealed to the .,, ............ lng11d '.\.lcConuld. 10 . St<.•fono Aldrich. 10. .ind Uav1d ~l~Oonald. I. tfrom left> u~<.· tht• C1rm(;>\ River t o gt•t to Gari.ind the fool path for the toads. Rangers put up the warning signs to alert pedestrians that this is the season for baby toads. -1{cg 1ona l P ,1rk in C.1rml'I Vi.!Uey. lt><.iving ~aguna PoliCe Skeptical ' ~ Security Guards for New Homes Questioned By STEVE l\11TCHELL : Of tM O.tlly Pl ... Staff ( A sugge&tion that contractors '11rl' full·time s~cunty guards in LJgun a Reach to protect homes C.nder construction in the urson-pl a~ued Arch Beach Heights Community was '1Ylt!l with skep- ~cis m by po11re this week. ~ The hillside community has ()een the target of 10 arsons in Qle past three and one half lflonths. and n~arly all of the 6omes torched or partial!) ~urned were in the frdming !!\age of construction .. · LAURA WANTZ, who Uves in Art>h Beach Heiehts, asked city councllmen Tuesday night whal. the city is doing to prevent future ar.:;ons in the area. f lo mes in Arch Beach Heights .ire on long, narrow lots. and the distance between dwellings is often less than five feet 3,000Watts Neighbors fear another arson might result in a death. or damage to already e xisting homes. THE WOMAN suggested CU11 lime securi~y guards be hired by the builders of 28 hOl:nes in the community al· a ""safeguard against furtheridon attempts. Btlt Police Lt. Al Olson said Wednesday he sees problems with the woman's suggestion. "The concept is good," the police officer said, "but there a re problems with hiring securi· ty guards. If you're going to make 28 builders hire guards up there, they're just going to go walking around wltb weapons spooking each other Someone might get hurt." OLSON SAID HE will meet with an iniormul neighborhood Saddleback Board OKs Radio Station announcemt:nl somettnte In mid· September. THE BOABD MVST now ol· .t locate the money to sbow the If HEW come~ tbr~b for f~dual .iove.rnm-eni that SaddJ~ Oeaeon=s eoa- trustees want ilre blaler adlO--stnrc:ttm!t;-a t,aoofeet tranimit· tatton -locllted lt -Ue coll~e.. ter on O Netti Ran~ll.. 'bear Lombardi said. or pass by the Ortega Hfahw~ will begin im· chance forever. . n:aediate))'. Part of tbe allouUon ~m match part of a ~.ooo H:~:; Educauoo and Welfare < grant now pending. Warren Oe,.con. KSBR 'a proaum. m auteer. said Tbe HEW 1rant b the nail Prosramming will stress news and public a(falrs covera1e, Deacon aald. Music proarams will feat.we Jau and 1oft rock, tailored principally for U.teners between ages ZS and 45. -The st•tlon will broadca&t 19 group Tuesday to discuss possi· ble protection measures that could be instituted. "What we really need up there is more eyes and ears." tbe Jieutenant said, hinting at a neighborhood watch &J>l>roacb. He said lighting ln the area ta also important, not.in& that most of the arsons were set in the ~ dawn hours. ' "We'll encourage peoiite who II ve next to a construction proj. ect to aim their floodlights next door," he said. OLSON SAID BE has also as· signed a full·time investlaator to the arson probe, and said be iJl looking into extra patrols for the lightly-packed community The arsons are also belng ln· vestigated by the state Fire MarshaJ's Arson and Bomb Jn. vestigation Unit in Sacramento. which oversees all intentJ.onall)' set blazes ln California. He told councilmen that the department received some in· formation Tuesday on tbe siate probe, but would not elabdrate "for obvious reasons.•• . ' county Board of Supervtaon 1n a J\lly 30 letter a\lned by Latuna Nicuel plaQorn1 chairai•n William Dennison. But the Leisure Wol'ld plu~ nine eommlttee. representing Lellure World'• 20.000 residenta. ftled a letter Aue. 1 uraing the county Board of Supervisors to deny the Laguna Nisuel auocla· tion's appeal. THE LEJSUaE WO!LDEBS a aid the f adli~ la an •tntesra& and vital element" ln the water and 1ewage agency's treatment system. The letter noted the project meets Jltate and recterfl poUutJon control demands, wllJ COf'sUVe enern and wilt cost an esU01at- ed SU0,000 more for every month tt ¥ delay~. . Saddleback AreJ Coordlaatin1 Councll PresidtJ>t Bill Tellman. a Laguna Niguel ref>iclent and member of Laguna Niguel Com· municy Aaaoclalion, warned that the coordinatlnc council would look bad no matter what ,action it took Monday. , ··A reverse decision would be knlflna Lasuna Niguel io the back. and the county will decide ' •• ,,, J"iJi,,-',' I LOCAL I CALIFORNIA we can't make up our J1l)Qd$;" M$aid. : . MUST BOARD ME:MB~~. intticated they believe the pJl sttould and will be• built n Laguna Nlauel and tbat t e coordlnalinl council aboutd tWn do what Lt can to make UviDe conditions better ill tbe sur- rounding area. ; The coordinating council 4x· ecutive board waa criticiztd e'rller by its review comndttee for fully supporting the Laguna N\auel association'• four-point stand. · ' •• Arnholt Smith. Trial Starts • ti •I •• SAN DIEGO IAP)-FinancJer C. Arnholt Smith bad "hellish" debts and bad to borrow even more money to ·pay Interest on the mUllons ol dollars in loans that eventually led to tbe collapse of bis financial empire. a prosecutor says. • Smith Is on trial today ln Superior Court on eight eounts of state in· come tax evasion and grand theft. stemming from the col- lapse of his U.S. National Bank and the sale of the· San Diego Padres baseball team in 19'73. IF CONVICTED, THE 79- year·old San Diego businessman faces four years in prison on In bis opening statement Wednesday. deputy District Al· torney Steven B. Davis con- tended that Smith systematical- ly looted bis mammoth holdings by manipulating stock and PJ'O- perty between U.S. N atlonal and the Myriad companies be owned. Smith acquired U.S. National in 1933 and built it into the na- lion 's eighth largest bank with assets of about $932 million before tl was declared Insolvent by the comptroller of the curren· cy in 1973. LATER. IT WAS sold to Crocker National Bank tor $89 million after the U.S. Attorney's Office determined that at leust $45 million and perhaps another $98 million which U.S. National b ad lent to Smith-controlled firms was uncollectable and that the bank was doomed to failure. At that time. U.S. National's demise. was. tbe ldrgest baqk failure in U.S. history. Using charts to explain Smith's complicated financial dealinp. Davis told the jury of seven women and five men he would take them on a four·to-six month journey in which they would bear testimony from as many as 100 witnesses. DAVIS ALLl!':GED THAT Smith JockeyH stock and prop. erty .,.... tbe bank and bis $0 related ..companies to ea#;l $26.3 1d11tion in unreported. lft~ come in Jl71, l973 and 1974. Smith's boldtnp Included tbe natlon's largest taxicab network. the t11oa industry's third 1argeet packing house. ao airline, tbe Padres and agriculture, mining and real estate interests. ''The evidence will show that Smith bad substantial income wbicb waa·not declared," Davis told the jury and Judge Robert W. Conyers. RE EXPLAINED THAT Smith appropriated U.S. Na· tlonal stock from bis other com· panie1 and used it as his own. The prosecutor contended that Smith failed to pay taxes on bis propeity and eafl'ed money °" a frauduleut sale. Be said. "Smith sold property he clalmed be owned . . .the other company disbursed cash, but never got the money." ln 1975. Smith, who was close lo former President Nixon and former Cbtet Justice Earl War· ren. entered no contest pleas to four counts of felony bank fraud in federaJ court and was fined and granted probation. ..... ,,.,.... SD BUSINESSMAN C. Arnholt Smith lflAC Giees Support CburCfi ·~ease Due In lnduStrial Park? Church services may be conducted in Mission Viejo·s industrial park as soon as October If Orange County planning commissioner.> approve a recommendation by Municipal Advisory Cowicil mem· bers. MAC members have recommended approval of a conditional use permit for the !lrst Cbwcb -<11 Christ Sclklntlst t.e ~au s~ at 23854 VB ran11~ut1te-!'' r-,-,~. THE PERMIT would allow the dlotcll•to toe ate-temporarllly in aQ. area not nonn~dty u9ed by churches, · · •· U ~ounty planning com· missioners approve the permit. it would set a precedent -al least temporarily -ror churches to locate in low rent. industrial space in Mission Viejo. MAC members recommendt.!<l authorizing the church not more than a five-year use permit to occupy the space. CBVRCU *>A.ilO Chairman Robert Sheets td!d c;ouncJl mem· bers his t()ngregatton began looking: for new space after school officials raised the r~nt on Cordillera Elementary School. "We had been renting tbe space for $240 a mc>nth, then it wes raised to $540 the rttst of the year." Sheets said. "After ProposHlon 13 passed they raised it to $988, but have since lowered it to $750 a month." ' SHEETS SAiii tbe congrega· lion bad met at Cordillera School for five years. "We intend to ~e this tthe in- dustrial park ~pace> as a cbul'ch. blble ~ and reading room,' .. SbeeU..said. "We plan no social actlvi~ there and our services ar~ Su•day and Wednesday eWnibg." Planners Get :. . irvine 00~·: Permit Plea A /ublic bearing on a J?to· pose conditional use perlDK to allow development of 253 Turt.le Rock condominiums i & scheduled ror tonight's meetin~ of the Irvine Planning Con:i· mission. The commission meets at 7;30 p.m. in city council chambers it city ball. 17200 Jambore~ Blvd. --~ .. ----.. ' . 'TH a-; UUN.U.U L. Bren-Corn- pan~ of Huntington Beac\) seeks approval to build the two-story condominiums on <1bout 20 acres n e a r t h e S a n d C a n y o,n Reservoir. along the future ex· tension of Sand Canyon Road.:· The plan conforms to existing zoning, according to Planning Director Eddie Peabody, and has a density of nearly 13 UDits to the acre. ..;rbe deveh>pment would in· cfude two half·acre recreational areas each contain.Ing a swim· ~nc pool. a spa and restrooms. INDIVIDUAL condominiu,ns would be from 1,090 to 1.f38 square feet in size, according to floor plans. with two or th(~ ·bedrooms. • ·Peabody recommends ap - proval ol the development. s1ab· Ject to revlew of landsc4pe ~ns~ • ' • ,ln ano~hei-matt•r. COJD· miUioners are scMckaled to-in· spect site plans for a c&m- mercial cent.er, Trabuco Plaza. to be built _.l Yale Avenue and Trabuco Roa<f. in tbe NorthwOOd houstng development. ' SAN .DIEGO (AP> -TMee young · men believed to !be martnes found their bands lal1 1fter cllmblng tbroatb the '(in . dow or a beach apartment pc· tupied by three young women, A flower pot tnocktd one !Jjun out. l-lts l:Qmpanlor\3 fied. one-on foot end the dlher with un ;13. year-old womal ln her car. : A• Uacy drove throu'Jh Oc.an1td• on Tuesday \he hoat~e J_umped from tbe cac at a atopllehL Her car was IO'fftd abandoned later. Poll~ found the first man atlll tep of a lon1. arduous pro· cedure colle1e officials have 1one tlirouch to win the new bro dcaatin1 tr.quency froro the Federal Commwucations Com· m1~slon CFCC>. .. D .\CON SAID Ht xpe<:t.' HEW to muke the arunt • ward hour • seven days a week. The bro,1dc1111t slanal wUl rooch about 500.000 pt0plt from ~!)Attn to un !'ll"ml'nle Pct..-r Pagllu found thut the roof of hit cumper wu$ too hi1h to Rt. in hli 11ara1e stull ut his apurtmenl complex in Fresno. dazed h\ th opertq,ut In Paciflc Otac" andclHftbed for hb buddtes. NOft of wemen w& moleaud. Lb aid. but one war. robbed of $20. • f . ' • I ~ I; t t ; .. .. .. l l • -• • • • . :~ . ·. . ::. ., .:: :oll . •' •• • , • ' l • • •• , . ' . ' . ... . ~· ~·--·--·· .. -~ ..... ...~ ....... , .. . . .. ~ .. ..: . . . . . . . . . . ' . ... . . . • • ~.Al.l;iat17. 1971 ---- ~ . ~Joo"l!f~j; " .. ..., ............... W•IU!al • rl# r-i::t.;:..: ~· .-.. ~-~.,, . ·u 11111 "•=-to • ,..,... -·'!'!"'°...... . d..... .._ .... ., Etdl1ll • wwW cU.,.,...tdp lillJ <ft Newport lie .... In "!'!ell 1 4l'1m1t1e fl•I•-J•O•ldtd Iha ~cb-..... """'"' ·- llM f.llllllill« wllll IU aood "'*"· HJa llAlih• .... Nl-M. """""' .. tUlard. , , f Noel 8ro6tt of Mtlbo~tnt , " .. ~------to .... ·~ """" • 111111 -bl the •l•Mllnll lftor 11 ... 11 ~ ... tbrawbll oul -GI Ille Ullo pl-for a k..,..tlapolats. """ ----b'--blck to llot •-_,.. w llot tint • ~-for JOillll ID lht ~ ,, .. ti-~:-;Z:-a:t1!:. i:: f..:t:! dl:•m•Ue ""' loir -!'P Do"'1 C\lrUI " ........ .,. ·-·· ""° ••r.= 111 , ..... -lo dui TWiil • a c1o1,.r"" lid<· llmt W~ Ill -G( II lo M ' kaota -~·---11 .. b' -111Un~~lht~--· .. · .. (lipper "" d ·-'l'wllt -..,, ... lb•• • -loaatll. W...:~.!.. .. ~m'l~IYn>eontUIUeu l,_"l~ ......... ~ .... atl• ;;;~~'!In~ t • ••t..., .. ..;. .-r:t::. • • • -Didi Deaver ol Ille :•: IOlr7..,,_ (API ...:: . • Y-tlub wtao ,_ • . 'Jtlll--b.-hlm , trd In lhe poiau -ml>ll!lelll!!ll • aod Rtclt --........ : o4 .. blebeld altlpper. ~ .... --li•P~V'I,•-\ . .,..,..:.,._.lhe-!Mot .,. , Aa• of fl =Ol'Jl\lt in W'6eb a 1ktpper•,1!Day 1., ...... ; i •*-n••inlbo-. 1.0ri..... • ,... __ eomlU-to • .2l mlleel .ile.d "Qi t.W~1ker-celyt-rat!lioto10. other 11·flief '"'el>' ft& _,ANCE beii" tllree • .J'iaJoaofl.Ol~les • ef}four b.,11, C~r'rle 8 wo1Uld up :-· a••MCB•D •• --esdsy's race with •11. 7 Poiu11 ·:· " D ·~• fiY• aftet"'throwlnaout. lotltplaeeftliiab.in . atlles b•ltlnd were lheflrstraee.~avtn•b.lmaconslltent Cbeetmat~ 41f Marina 2-3·2. . ~ ..,.,. ·,.. 1 .-Del Rey. CJ,llf .. An· H -~ k 1'. __. · <• If -'ttel pattoa 1' N.ew owmu ,.,..are 1ay~ ~mse a .U 'l9E ISCIATl'A ....... -to tbe llA two~.111-IMl tbe lltlt wtJI bo up IW pll>o ..,, ..,, oae of tbe CteWI rrom ·either 11..-bWl:ead. MIN. or Newport Beadl wD the Auula holdin1 an out.aide c)lance. Curtis Wu the lt'll UaDiplon in tbe neet and bu .considerable more ·u . pt,ltPce ln the elaaa. Defendin• ~ .. ~=~~~~ ,.,. Wtlb -of 15-l ·II. put. t.lnl him l'f"lty mucb out of Ille tun· nlnc. . , nur Ii l'INl8QM'"' 1. Geor&• Twla!, NIJ\'j:; i, 'll••ld. Curtis, Marblehead : 3. Rick Howard. Marblehead ; 4, John Ftaaer, Sydner; 4. Eustace Vynne, SeatUe; 8;Tlm lfoCan, NHYC; 7, Carl Sutter. SHIU.; 8' -Sballuek. West ~LOlll l1land Son11d, 9, RleU.rd Hackett..San Francisco; 10. R•ell Slade, 11,ydney. · STANDINGS. • of & . n ... -1. David ·Curttt, 2'.J; I. lll<k Ho-..!. 39.t; 3, Dlelc Dieawr, Cl; 4, .Noel Brooke, "9; 5, 'l1m Hogan, 53.1; 8, Carl Sutter, Seatde. St: 1.·Peter Ood· frey,·M-. 111.7; a. RldWd Hackett. San l'rucluJ>, a; 9, Ted Munrpe, NHYC. 72; 10. George Twist, 78. · Zealand, Sorcery of second place, in •tan<l}ni:i,by win· c-a 11 for n I a a 8 d nine the.first race. H~ ~out a R a c a m u, f I 1 n 0 f 17th flnlih in tbe second race, leaving Australia. . f • b1m with a •lxth and a dllrd. tor 16.4 . · The l!IOO-mlle around·• points. BB8T a OF t -1. Dave C\&rtis, tbe·state eoune took Deattr, of course. throwa out bia U.7: 2, RJet.HowVd.. llA; 3, DI.ck longer than e:rpected _11th place ~· a~ blm to Deaver, 19 ; 4, Tim Hoaan. 24.7 s. because of lower thari _ls~aWfora~~ll~·; N~l~e .. ~. . 11ormal trade winds, --·• •1 • • • • • ·' ,;' ~e in~~thone of our,s1mple interest · auto. li>ans. I "'' .• .l(' ;.,,. ! '·Flexible payment plans! No prepayment '"j~" :rpenalty"ln fact, with our new Sirnplifier5M ;, . ~ ' >.Simple interest loan plan, the faster you pay us back, the less interest you pay! Apply today for your loan or one of our ,, r;nulti·purpose credit accounts . "''f-· ~ .. _ . ~ih~~':"'" bl":'• at ~ • Eagl' . library Use • .. . e 'n ' .. . . ... , ·: -. . .. ~r Topic ·'·! • • . ',. ,• t., · ·.J"ffE ~BANK OF CAIJFORNIA are usually bowlln1 \!j "fs La BeaCb.1·" • r · · J "" !bore" •"' l8J ng "Lll!rlry &lrvival" is '' _.,..,_wn -• '":f JI:~' -· Ibo Utle al I lline·-k trJ>Okesmao, ref1 to • . • '" a I tbe area around the · · ' e au tbat will be taqht island of Hawaii, lbe Yac:btamen ud landhdlbln aOt. .W Aft u at Oranie coat Collese. southernmost island of opportuntty to view tbe· Sa,le, the •eout Gaud:'• Coe.ta Mesa. • lbe state. . famed trainln8 bull'" -It -1-i::,= Tbe elm will 10<• on .,-The boats. which set at tbe Conclulloa .ol tile ~ID Sall uae of C!ard catalo&s, peted in four prevtou Ellie is aecompm tie ~ ablpa clown nterence materials. In- r · .. ., .. " -' ., < . . ' 'OUl lut Saturday. com-Anoeiallon'1 T.allid;pl:=noftbePadne. perlodtial Indexes and · Mees d u..CUpper-Cup tl)e ·co•_'9;om s.D ft'rifteo md II.......,., f()r•atiod" t. available series arrive ~,l.flnt~Jl'Jlda:r.,. . ,. ,1. ;· ,.,_u;;·,; .. ;m'""r;;:.'_.._;,;:.r,.:.o._;t"";,,·,-l---------+------------'--------------On · ..Sa1le·Y.ill,.._ a, parade af.UllJir•J ,, ~ • , ·,,, tu'OWld Loni ach Har.borrstari1n& at a p.m~ '111•'·' .,11ti•J'f'llW1·1·' -.,~ 1 loo E par.ade will start at Queen's G'1e <Long Beaeb 'oi!e~!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•••••••••!!!!!!!••••••l!!l•llll mer ~a;~·::=,.::~ -u:a-.=··. . : .,.Ju .... -"-~ ~ • -• ....nhn..,d ..... ;l~d ... ,.-,,.. . .n.l!!M* ... 'b.::O .. a.ie: ··"~ 1 :'tNlRO~~M"GRAMERCV COLLECTION EXCLUSIVELY OURS' l..ldJ1l.&"'l(IJ.Ce TBS "'8UC • 1NYITED to IO aboard and ~,,.T · ' • • lllapec\ Ille 11:11118 lilulUy tlir""lh Wednesday at Neorly 16o aa1Uo1 .Pler"A.-il.1-Man. yacbta are expeeted to Ea&le la-tbe onl7 ~iletlvily ~mmtuioned s lart tbe Dana Point aqual'H'iaer la tM U.S.: It.,.. IMilt by Blom and ..,.. Yacht Club'a popular Vou eldlwd tn R8mbe&.~ in 19318 and -~an Clemente Island ~tenlcl Hant VeueL' lt.wa·...d for training race to San Dieso Se~. G•man naval cadets. ., • . . :~ f . 4 After WorW Wlr U tbl Hotsl V111eJ was part ·.· Lut y~ the lla·~ --~· ·rop..--• ii.o4'.wu pl1Ced In com· L'abor Day racfJ atu-aOt· ~ · iliion by tlte OOUt Giard: i •alnlng vessefJ,n . ed fi~. e.nf.l'llll whlF.~·1 · .-.,,..,~· •, .:. ~, • • ~~':.™ai~~~"l\~ l1~·m .n•.lm!J-~~""1-·reet o(.aa11 I llq~ di ~t~( _,tj .f'ill Odl"IO ta provt~. a s a o por a nif r f .i.e " , Id ' ·finiJbes ioff Pdtnt. ~ 1 ~e o ·:U:,"'· . A· sa. to -~ unparalleled· ~where .1the' Silver <Ji:te Mttb~t · tbt. ~l · ~~c~d,!,:,m':;entW ·Yacht-club talD8 over~ TblimesRlm:.'INeWLob,Joa Conn e . ·for the flnl~h and the This IS ute'firit Ume the' Eag1; baa been on the ··post-race activities. West CoaJt in 1' yeara. lt..madetlrie trlp from New ·. Entry forms may be London. tbrouab t.be Panama Caal and . tbe obtained at the 'Dana Cout to Bfttlsb Columbia1Wbere she jointd~otber ~Point Yac~ Club. 2H07 sqUare-rtatn wbieb bad rllHd aefwa tbe Paelftc :Dana Drave, Dana .froi:q HoOolulu.Ontbetrlp~WP.U.eouttt-·1..i... ... :t .:Point, telep~.on~ visi\edotber,w.rtai90b aa~-Su ~! •;,. "496·2900. • , .clli;o. ,,,_ -.._ · , .. i. · • " • ~--'=----~_.;;:...,.;. ·~·========~ ..... -"'""';.:...;~ ........... ~~ ..... Ctolllc tradmono111ne·1 with OGIYed IOld ~ tJrotpe and $599. tM 'ook and. feel Of 8'egonoe ln•O __, de1lg;t1C1 eofa and 1· 1o1cr• ........ of -an <Mlglnol IOK -pr!ftl Of -fatHtcl.ol ••2t. yow chotce. lite coordinated Ptulh "*'91 hand.fyhd btg wing l 'loWll mt .V cllalr II Ille petteel cornpaftlOn pleee. Dotlgned wlttl your lalle "'299. lfl mind, !hit qua Illy collectton • -at atlot<lalllo prlcea ' Wlftg C:ll<llr t' • aftd only at RI Fumlture lhowroom-1tOC81. ~ "' .. •• •• • ,; ~I ' • , .. .... .. ·~ i:. ""' I t... I • I ~ • • . I . I I ;l .. • • I ~I · I I COMI -10 RI fURNITUll•H -IN I Wllllltll ITATH ·--. lllCJI" 7 DAYI A Wiii< • WUKDA'tl tO UNTL t • UTUMA.Y 'ft UJflL I• ~y tM1 .... I NII.,_• tf12W. Uncotn •1'1'-1231 HUNnHCll'*IUCM• "431.._.. ..... ....,, ~-=•S115!.!Mlrbcw IMI.• ~791 LA HAIM•t711W.Whtnler'••...,. • ~-Ydl1M Undli IMI. • Sa.I011 SANTA~• 17" I. •a• Mt-la1 WE911MNIT1R • tl01,1 llMoft 8W. (714) -1171 I I r; ''"1116WIOllt..._ flt ll'!~ffot~E<"*"OI ......... . ) . -· ' • ,.. • , -........ ,,._.,.,.,_ ....... -..-"' ... ~·-"' -~-.... - J ~, • J • .. ··l • . --; :=· / . ... ' , . .. • .. • ·:·1 ···t =:~1 ~ . . .. I :: :: .• ... .. ' ~.~11. ,..,. ·~ ~ITICS I ORANGE COUNTY • 0 County ERA Vote Split;s 'Oli ·~arty Line$ 87 O.C. 11\11'11NG .-............... OY an1e CQant7 •a two . DemocrldG ~..,.'voted la favor Gf m OM ••adllne for nUftutlODO Ute Equal R~ ~ but ate two J\epubllcaa Co'11re11m1n op· po1ed U..meaure Mart Hannaford , who re-pr...U Wett Oru1• County, and Jerrt Pattel'IOD of Santa Ana 1lQllPOfted eUelldlnt the de- ad ltne. wblcb tbe Houae •P· proved m.181. Nay we. were eut by Robert Badham ot Newport Beacb and Chari W\Ulmof Oranae. ••• Dicked 111' a formal eliti'Mmeat from .tlle~c OOUl\tY 1'lremen'a . All&••LYMAN DBNNIS II an1en, D-Hunt.lqton Beads. w1U speak on ...... alive P'*'8 of newborn baby care Au1. • at a 1ymposlum.IOODIOl'ed b1 tbe National FouDcJaUoo Mareb Gf Dimes. The event, .. Pareat-lnfant Llfe ~ Nurturina FamlUea of tbe Newborn:• wUf tUe pqe. at tbe South Coast Piasa llcML ' ••• V.S. OON08£88MAN Mart H•nnlfqrct. D·Lon1· Buch. who repretenta pa.rt ot West OtaQae County. will aponsor a RetJ.re. ment Pair Aue. • from 9 a. m. to 3 'P.m . at Lons Beach., City Coll•••· Th• meetlbc wtll be ln the col- lece center bulldlng, also re- ferred to u the atudent Wllon. and WW feature workaht>ps OD financial planning, poll· reUrement Income. bealth and nutrltlon. medical care and other tcpica ol lntereat to re- Urees. Optional box lwiches can be purchased for &2.se. Pre- re1istrlltl04 ls available by call- "No beart·rendJns s tory sobbed to a 11!ft.P•tbeti~ ~ wtU set Che ra~.orr on proba· tion." be 1akl, addln1. '"the act of violent. forcible rape does not lend ltMlf to Judlela. lenience muqueradlng as discretion." Tbe blll. SB 1479. was selaeduJed for Senate action tb1s week. ••• For more information. tall 547·8008. ••• aEPUBUCA.N nominees 1or ortlce and Orant~ County otnce candidates have been tnvit~ to a .. Meet Your Cand1date" pen. cnke breakfast Sept. 9 sponsored by the RepubUcJn Central Com· mlttee of Oraqe County. The event Ytill begin at 8:30 a. m. and last until noon at Hart Park In Orange. Information can be obtained by callina Grant Ostapeck at 547-8008. TWO OONGSB8811EN seek· ln1 re·electlois and two cballel\len -ln otber districts -will be 'honored Au,. 30 at a • • • DAVE IAKD~'• rwin.bta for tM MeOad et Oranae Colmty aupeniloria,l aeat, bas ing <213) 498-3381. Four Hundred Club Receptloo at ••1t DAY AT the Races" is BADllAJI WILL tUe off Au,. the Soutb Coast Plua Hotel in planned in bQnor of Jim McGuy. 211 from Marine Corpe Air StaUon • • • Costa Mesa. the Democratic candidate ln the LIADI ua GROUP NllllSOft'sft .... El Toro and land on tbe aircraft Tb 1 •l 40th Congressional Dlstrlct. • carrier u.s.S. CoftatellaUoa off e ree 6 p.m. recepuon. the coast C1f San Dlqo as part of A 8 SE M 8 LYM A N ll 0 N sponsqred by the Republican The S20-per-person event in· Newport Resident an effort to famlllarbe b1mselt Cordova, D-El Toro, didn't C~ntraJ O>mmittee of Orange eludes AmTrak transportation with vuioul aspeeta of tbe na· mlncbel words ln lauding tbe M · C0ounty, wlll bDonor Badbam. at 9:15 p.m. Sept. 9 from Santa tion's military defenses. sem y•s approval of legislation annemeyer. an Lundgren. Ana station round trip to tbe Del Heads UCI Panel On a more sedate note. he co-authored. It requires who ls cballenglnJ Hannaford. Mar Race Track. . prison sentences ror rapista who and Don Goedeke, ~·s running Badbarn plans a luncheon commit tbeir crJmes through ttgain$t •Jerry Patterson. D· Information can be obtained ~peeeb Aq. 24 lo the Newport force or threats of violence. SAnta Ana. by caWna 536-7505. HarborExchan1eClub,meeUn1~------------------------------------------~----------------------~ at the Bahia Corinthian Yacbt Richard A. Reese of Newport Beach. vtce president for plannin1 at tbe Irvine Co .• bas been elected president of tbe UC Irvine FOllnda· tion for the 1971-79 academic year. Club in Newport Beach . ••• He succeeds David Seely of Corona del Mar, who served from um BADBAM WILL Join As· semblyman BUI Dannemeyer, R-Fullerton, on a coclrtall cruise aboard the Pavilion Queen AUi. 27. Dannemeyer ls ~ tor Congress ln Nortb Oran1e lo 1978 The UCI Foundation. throuCh its affiliate groups, tries to in· volve the community with the ~ campus llnd to attract private ~ support for university pro- "' grams. It is the primary source ·; of glft solicitation for the un· .. iveralty and serves aa a de- ;! posllory for tbe acceptance ol ~ gifta and endowmenta to UCI. tional terms as directors-at· larae are Louise Turner. Laguna Beach; Jobn Rau, Orange; Lynn Osen, Santa Ana; John Lawson, Laauna Nliuel; Uoyd Ankeny, Patrick Cadl/an, Mary Roosevelt an Simpson, Newport Be~cb; Sanford Brickner and Ehlert, Irvine, and Don Christeson, Paul Marx and Selly of Corona deJ Mar. County. , Tlcketa for the 7 p.m. cruise from the Balboa Pavilion COit $4 and can be obtalped by earun, Kathy Real at RepubUean M· so~iates, 835·1055, extension 4356. ; ELECrED VICE presidents of ~ the foundation were Paige ,. Simpson, Newport Beach, La ....._ •d d ~ finance; Ben Ehlert, Irvine, in· W ..,., .. a-ee ~ vestments, and Robert Hilchey, ~ administration, James Capretz. ;e development. and Paul Marx. ! legal matters. all of Corona del Mar. ... Other officers are Simpson, ·. treasurer Leland Oliver. ~ secretary. and Eugene Clair, ex .. , ecutlve dlrertor and assistant secretary, Irvine. State Funds Asked . For Floo4 Pi-oject , • NEWLY ELECTED directors· at-large are Cheryl Biles and ' Richard Fontaine or Tustin and ~ Capretz and James Gianulias or ~ CoronadelMar. Orange County Supervisors want the state, not local taxpayers. to pay the county's estimated $70 million share of tbe long-delayed San· ta Ana River fiood control project. Supervisors have asked the· County Supervisors Association of California lo sponsor legislation that would require the state to pay local costs for federal fiood con· trot projects. officials said. George Osborne,. director of The corps ls to revise cost ~c lJome E'Ound the county Env1ron~ental estimates and review proposals ·· Those elected lo serve addi· . r I Management Agency, said state for bulld.lng a new dam at Men· , laws in tbe put provided total tone ln San Bernardino County ~ reim busement for such projects. raising Prado Dam near Corona f For -.ii/fWe•-J-n BU~ ~ISLA~~N passed tn a1"l channel work downstream. ; l'Fi.WAIOUlfU.I 1973 luruted the reunbursement .. After 15,000 years .. one of to: between 7Sand 90 percent ~ Orange County's earliest resi· He said figures prepared in dents bas round a new home. 1975 showed the county would " He's a mastodon that expired have to spend an estimated $70 •. in Costa Mesa sometime before million to provide sucb things as ~ it~was incorporated and was ex-land, easements and rights-Of· . ... Airport rallies Traffic Hikes • bu med accidentally by de· way for the U.S. Army Corps of ~ velopers. The beast's remains Engineers project. Orange County Airport of-~ wHe given a home by the Under tbe existing state ficials report 1.3 mllllon • • Natural History Foundation of formula, be said, the county passengers arrived at or depart- , Orange County at Bay View would be reimbursed tor · only ed from the airport during the :.. Elementary School in Santa Ana SS4 million. first seven months of 1978. ~ Heights. AND BECAUSE OF the fman-The 1.3 million fiaure reflects ~ But the museum bas closed. ct al crunch brought on by an 11.7 percent Increase over the " and the mastodon and other Pl'opositioo 13, be said, the coun-flnlt seven months of ·1977. ~ fosslla, lDcl~ed whale ty flood control dlstrict would be PassengertalliesforJulystood· ~ vertebrae and k pieces, will bard pressed to raise the ~ at 221,163, up from 203,377 ln.July. i; be temporarily housed ln Santa mainder. urn. . f An• Colleae's Teumann l'he U.S. Offl~ of Manage-The county report also shows .# Planetarium museum bellnnlna ment and Budget recently gave commercial flights totaled 17,0C11 ~ Sept. 19. tbe Anny corps a preliminary from January through July, up -; A celebration is planned for go-ahead on the $740 million 2.9 percent from tbe 16,514 Sept. 26 and a related lecture fiood control project. Initial de· fiigbts recorded during the com· " series scheduled for tbe fall. sign wW take at feast two years, parable period ln 1977. ~~--------~--------------------------~----------------~-------------~ ----------------------------------------------------------------------~ .. .· -· .. .. ,,. .• ~ .~ " Save on this velour sport shirt now-and we'll monogram It free. _.__Th.;... e luxurlous look and feel of polyester/ cotton VilOUr In a sporfififrl o unusual elegance. Collar and placket styling with breast pocket. Personalized wf th your choice of monogram. 'Back . to Sclloo .. AM/FM RADIO/CASSETTE ·:. RECORDER CUT 37% CTR-45 by ReaH1t1ce Our Triple-Playe is great for home dorm or on·the-gol Enjoy AM /FM. play pre -recorded tapes, record off-the-air or live with built-in mike. Needs 12V DC ot4 .. C .. betteries. 14-830 .. -.. -.. ST-Y~.l-IStlt~Y-~------.-.lct-=-· .. ~. -i'fff-DIC-~dlt~JC-tOC-k-.R-AblO--·· 88 Reg. 3995 ' Chronomatic•-11& by Realistic SAVE 30o/o Don ·1 be late! Awake to rriusic. news or alarm. 3-hour CHARGE n . sleep switch. 5-minute snooze bar and 24-hour (MOST STORES) wakeup alarm. Lighted dial, phone jack. 12.1110 · AM NOBILE 2-WAY CB RADIO · Alll/FM/CB PORTABLE RADIO Drive sefe ly w•ih a CBI Noise blanker .• LiD dispfay. mt9. har~are. more. 21·1522 TAC-424 by Reeflatk 99~~. 169" SAVE 41°/Q • .bf R .. ~latlc .31!~ SAVE 29°/o 40 channels, sq uelch . IC audk>. AC cord. Needs 4 •·c-bat· t.erle8. 12."8 =·5995 1 80 pre • p/ogrammed funcllo"s. slores '60 strokes. 61-tfO .• ' ' . l· I \ ~ Al YOUR SERVlCE , ....................... .. ... f DEAR PAT : I'~• reacl llllJ\1 UIMI about dlf e Wl)'I '° tem .-bite rinll Huttd by wet 11 on tabl tope. I have • dart mahoaany -'aable u..t blld IU4:b a ~ rettnll). I a pre ad JtOme ~ Jell¥ on tM marred areu and didn't \web U. for two Cla.ft. I then wiped off the ltll1. rubbed a 1'.U. alMl ;r.to -..o more white rin11. 1 ~ht YoUr ,.eden mlOt Uh to know about thb. T .... --..._ ·-K .K .. Irvine ·-..... -"" .. AMidlier ··~· • .... "'°"' la &o •Ako a .-ale •f claareue ••U. ... ••••ralle tall aNb io •lter~.aaa.M areu ot dnk ._. ftlih., ,...... la web. 11WI allO MIP• •Ile 1~1D acratd!H lavb&Me. ....... l' ... a.t ..... · D&AB PAT: I know Medicare medical ln· sunnce helps pay for servtces of docton and sup. pliers . but l don '\ know wbo or what a supplier is. P.Y .• Costa Mesa • . i\ APPUer la 1 peraoa or or1ulu&.1oa. .&.hr tlta• • dOdor or t.ealUa cue fadltt1, &Mt hlntlllaea eqalpme11t or aervlcu HYue4 •1 llffhare medlul lunance. ••r Ha•ple, ••'-alaace flnu. ladepeadeat laMn&ortes, and ortaalaaU.U . _.,& ,_ _. aell me41kal eq._ent are CIOlllNered ~ ::.ipplten. -~ :·: ••rt1re Prealw AU 1Jp1 ~ ~ DEAR PAT: I know that MedJcare premiums .#.increased on iu1y l, bul I don't understand tf both ·:.parts of Medicate -the hospital part as well as :::the other -now cost more. I've heard that some : -:people dao't have to pay for the bospllal coveraae. ; but othen do. -~ · •• N. E., Fountain Valley :•: A• ti lab 1, Ute premium for Medicare Part B :::tnreasecl 51 cents per montll -ap lo U.Zt. :.Medlcaft Part B befps pay for pbyslelu servlea, ~•&patient bospl&af care, outpa&leat P•Y•lcal :~llerapy and speeela patbology services, bome ·!·heal&ll care aad otller laeaW. .emces and •upr"" : :•that ue DO& ~vered by Me4kare boeplta la. .. suranee. _; Metleare Part~ (lite bospl&al part) ls "fne"&o ·:-dM>1e1' • ...., =lldal~ari&y AdmtaWn· '.~lion ,....dC 11. e"'91'. ·~·la ava8aW, 'ft, ·' 80111e 11• etMI' penou wbt pay a moa&lll1 ;te; -:-ml•m aad &bt la ...., .. St, from_. &o tu pet :·.:mont~ :~ For bolla partl of Medicare, enrollees man P87 :-In a.utloa lo any monWy premtams -~ .. ~·c1edactlb&es before Medlcare will laelp pay for ·:·services. .. · ·:.A~ DUdpll•e \'•..,_ ""· ~· DEAR PAT: Every so often I read that a stat~ ·; board 01' agency baa taken "dlaclplinary action" ·, against a buainesa or lndividt,aal. What does tbla tn· ':•volve7 ;: S.A., LafUDa Beach ~· A1"~'1 a'tdon'' ta tlte ~alty malt- :-lq from u a4*11lbtra&l.e Mulq '' a 1&ate res· .:::!;Z..!:'1'4' bureaa or eo•~~' ::,, .. o1..ltJL-.. ~ -. to eoau.e to .,acdee, be& &.be ll~ ea•dlld · :ts rewiewd perlodkally. :: s.., .... of • Ueeue ......._ Ute Ueeuee ;:fro•· ..., pnfeutoeal aetlo. ror a ~,.cllle4 ·.perW olUme u4 tennlaa&ea all&omaUHll)' at tlle ead of Ille ......,.. Uceae reweatloll .. perm•· • ·nett&. However, Ute former lleeuee may pedtloa : :u.e •Ce91:1 fer ntmtatemell& fl u.e Ueeue, uaaJ- :: ly 80& eooMr tkaa one year from &lie date of • • ftHe&tloe. "Got o f)rof>Um? TMn wntt to Pot Dvnn Pot unU cw red t.-. ~tung tht an1wtre end octaon uou need lo IOlt» 1Mqu1t1t1 in gouemmtnl and bu!aneu Mall JIOMr qiw•tWna lo Pat L>unn Al Ynur Sl'rvu:e, Orange COOll Ocdl11 Pilot, P 0 Bor l!i6t>. Cosio Mtto. CA IHM. At rDC11U1 '-Utr• a. poutbll wtll be cm.tWred. Mt ~ irtqt.IM•• or letlfr• not 1nclud1ng IM "°"1n'f lwM ttome. adctreat and butmf., hotwl' phoM nu•kr~ be con'1dtrfd Thtl columnopptartdcn· a,~ilolurda~" ,, ......... •9fffNlll c ...... DEAR PAT· l ordered some f>aaflball card.I fOl' my IOO ln early Apr11 trom Renata Galasso. Inc. of New York City. My aon reallr wanted a ntce aet of these cards a nd I chose thls company becaUH 1t advertlaed lt'a a member of the Better Bu1lnete Bureau. I wrote in June about my min· tns order. but no answer came. My check wu eaabed moatbs aao. and I'm still waltlna. My son'a tr1 lld .. b•vtna the aam e problem with tbia com· pany. WIU you check Into it for me? N.R., Oranee No explanaUon waa offered by die ftrm for &M •lay, es~ Uta& the cards may have beea "Iott la Ute mall. • A.Dodier ael wW be mailed lo you Im· ·••tel). 1.1 ... t .. .U. €Id Elfttrlc! 81U DEAR PAT· Is it true that usl~ a li1hl· colored paint on walls can reduce ones electric bill? J W .• Costa Mesa As weD as making a room appear lar1er, a U11lt-colored paint does help reduce your electric bW benuse more Ugbt ls renected back into the room .., lesa ls requJred from artlftelal Ugbdng. For example, Up& blue walls renect 75 percent of die UP* back Into the room, but a medium shade refJeda only about 40 percent. White ceWnp form a partletllarly good renectlng surface. ... . . . . . . Thurldlly. Auguat 17. 1179 bNL V PfLOT .4 J 5 SanJQSe SAN JOSE CAP> Loe a I aovernment 'a most influential man hu been ousted from bis PoSt as city manager - al move lbat ~uld slpal Jewels bV I~ ts •ttelllfta for dlamoncn end OtmStonet from private i~hrlcJ111l• arid _.._ C_..,ul •ICIMlnlllon llnd ~•.-tlon by our ....... Hlghett swlc:es Plfd. Cell 5«).t098 10.f dlfly, Sat"'*' 1CM. Sund1y cloeed. M6' toi BettY Gilice or fu1nk VW\def'Wall lewels by tosePh 8outtt Coeet Plan • 3333 Bnstol. cc.ta ~ • 54().IC)8ll a new era of growth for ______ .._..._ _____ ..;,.. ______ _ tht.s ctty that made a re---~.~---H-A-v--v·a--8_.. ....... ..___,,__ putation as a boem ''I io;;· a 4-3 vote of the WAITTE N A OK? City Council on Tuesday A publiaber'a editorial repNHDtatlve will be i ht Ted Tedes 4 lntervtewlnt local a&d.bors ln a ~ for Rniahed l•i•rell .,. .. ,.._ n g • co. 7• manuacrl.,.• suitable for book -·"Mcation bJ Carltcn ~ was removed from the ,_ o!'.r .._Id~ Former Secretary of office he'd held tor six ~~·.ib~a:D"a:~1;.:'l:e1,. ftctkln Agriculture Orville years, and given 24 and non-fiction, poetry. drama. reliliOD. y, F r e e m a n a n d hours to vacate his etc. another passenger fourth floor City Hall HewlUbetnSantaAnalnlateSeptember. li hu · · ed suite Ir you have completed a book·Jenith manuscript (or were 5 g Y tnJUr · ftearly so> on any subject, and would Uke • when a sniper fired a The immediate re-professional apprabal <without COil « obltptlon>. shot at a commuter a sons 1 for Tedes co ·s please wrtte lmmediatel)' deaeribln& your work. State train in New York ouster were unclear. but wbicbpartoftbeday(a.m.orp.m.>youwouldprefer City. sources said be was ap-ror an appointment and kindly mention your Dhone ---------pare ntly caught in a number. You will receive a confinnaUoo by mail ror a power struggle against deflnite time and place. W Councilma Alf d Authors with completed manuscri..t• unable to ee8 On n re o ., .... Garza Jr. wbo is seeking appear may send them directly to the address below lo become San Jose's ror a free reading and evaJuaUoo. Authors whose Richa rd C. Phillips and Joseph M. Thomas. both of Newport Beach, r eceived bache lors degr ees from Tulane University. first Chicano mayor. literary worb are sUll ln progTesa may also write. In bis mayoral bid. Alan F. Pater G a r z a bas a I i g n e d 195 South Beverly Drive himself pollUcaUy with Beverly Hills. California 90212 proponents of growth. Tel. (213) 271-3350 '--"--------------------------,._J 94.3 FM ''NI 0 ,.~···· Presents the · -Gift Checkbook SICUllTY 1mS 1. One,,_ fnd--YAWIS I J.H PlllOIM4MCI DYMO-'ftM CORP. 1 One IWto Lulle .. Oil °*"" uP To I Ola. ol Oii lllduOld YALUISl.00 THI MAD HACKll t.One.._l .. ora ~Hlllowl YALUllll.00 HAITT.Y. 1. ON Ill Ho<M COiar or MW T.V ....... Qill YALUIUl.IO WMAllHOUSI t ON Hell Oii lllafllowe YALUI SJ.00 A s5orVALUE • West•inster • B .. tlagt0tt Beada • Fotattala Valletf Entertainment • Service & Goods Merchandise • Dinners FOR ONLY For w.-. w T• Ordlr- CAU. 898-088 f . NO DISOOUNT TICKETS-NO 2 FOR ONES NO GIMMICKS -EACH VOUCHER G000 FOR THESE ITEMS LISTiO BELOW -With purcta.e of your gift chec:kbook. MOl&l T.Y. IAUS a •YICI 1 One In Honie°*' t v. ..-.Cllll 2. ON~' T.V ._. ....,_ YAWISlt.11 NM AUTOMOJlft 1. ON MlllOf MGllWT...._ YALUISIUO s249511 . -· . . . . . . . . . .. .. ~ . .,, . .. .. -...... .............. 'nMldllr. A..-17, , .. L\UI01I. N.C. <AP> -NMitr 1.1 MIMelt ..... of ........... IOW bf ntaU11'1 t. HOrtlt CaroUna laet ,..,, Mil Mir aboet , .. •illoli et .... ._.., w.. ... uWd·aa UM toMeeo ltflte. ,... ............... tell• ~~=~~ dM •tale will o.=:tell...-. -. •.., .. ,= •bo uultd CUM bJ U.. ~ in aua,e u.u Md..,..~ pro. nu. s i n 1 et GI a a y 1 118tnn.lllGIN0° n • e.U.CS. Knl1ht ls facin1 a lllMl k'• b&a tr' 111. 175 million suit that La• tlll<ne••• t«OIU to ltop c b a r 1 e s a h e t.be trilde .,. u~ttt b.v ta.. breached a con.tr ct lec•.lity ot 1D01t aa1eia btre aad by she bad with Arista tbe dlfftcultr of tueln1 the ct1arettee onee .._ 1tt to hllh· Records Inc. when t.u •tMel where .... ale la llleaaf. she signed with CBS Tile Ullelt lndultry bu last J'une. The suit flourished because of almple also names CBS a eco•omlea -Nortb CarolJna, defendant. wblda IDWll~ u percent of · IT DOaN'T TASS •aDJ ~ le1al uleii ~-a prClftt when cb at t.bol9 prle., or •• ':t11e u .et t carton, are r"old In plaete lllst New York Clly, when tM tax ii D cent.a a paek. or Penn11IYani1, Wbere It II 1t eentl, or Florida, where lt 1117 cent.I. "Anybocb''d be toelilb not to do It at tboM prieti1," aald a ctcarette deal•r, one ot b...,... aJOaa tbe main Noftb.Soutb routes. He uked not to be named tor fear of ~ srowlnf interest In 1mU1~ by the FB and offtciala here ind ID Northern states. "IP YOlJ'BE !»A YING $7 or S7 .50 a carton ln New York and see \hem here for $3.50, you'll get a year's supply and maybe call Un· J•t • tourilt operation bui Is often nm by ortanbed crime flaun!a. Ledalation before Con1re11 woulcl make the lntentate traffic a federal offen.e. giving the FBI Jurlldlctlon tn tbe trade. Another proposal would repJaee state ct1arette tuff wt~ a unllorm federal tax, wttb a rebate to the states to eompenaate for lost tax revenues. IN NBW YOU. meanwhile. the State Assembly bu passed a bW to reduce tbe state tu by one cent aad eltrnfnte tile eilbt·ceat New · York City tU on ct1arett.ee. Tbe meume wblch Is stalled tn tbe state Senate, la tnt.endecl to reduce the smuaJinl. Tbe tnde bu meant an eltlmat. ed $400 mWieD bl mt dluette ta revenues for atatea other than North Carolina and, some fear, baa 1tven or1anbed crime a foothold In ie,ttJmate buslnesses. The cilarettes are resold at cits· counted prices on city J>lack markets or are sold through le1it1mate retailers with fake state tu stamp1. "WE TlllNK THAT ~arly it's big bualneu. Tourists are Just a small part of it," says Mllt Lopus, secretary of revenue ln Pen· n.aylvania, where three 1an1land· style slaytnp have been ll~ed to clgarette smuall.ng ln two years. ''It ranges from or1anized crime to individuals who just come down on their own and brinl back a truckload. But we are seelna now NATION that. tndlvtcs.I WI c kuiJ .. bebll carved out here," be added. Bulk cle:,.a;"• sales are lelal lrere, • u NOl'tb ~ taxes are paid and the tiil st.amp affixed. and moat en~ !ltadl will sell unUmit.ed a~. no questions asked. One lnveat11ator note~ "There's no secret about It .. One dealer said It'd cost '2.000 to ftll' ear, and he'd throw in a blanket to cover it up." FOS BIG OPE&ATOU, a full truck mtaht carry 80,000 ea.rt.om and, in J>ennsylvanie or New York. a smunter could resell them with a 50-eenl discount and stW clear Sl.30 ol' more a carton: "You're just dealln1 •ith fan· tasUc sums of mQney.'' said J . Phil Carlton, N-0rth Carolina secretary of crime control and public safety and the msn in charge of the state's enti· smua&line eftorts. "A Sllt.orlO· profit transaction is not un~\ .. ,. -.. Bog it. I I I \ . , . Syppfe. slouchy bogs, all leather If you please, leather and fabric If you prefer. Pracflc<i Qnd beautlful ... obvioosfy right with the new fabric-soft leathers you'll wear thjs ton. Ndl~ Is > forgotten. deep, roomy, pliant and fuU of suprlses. llke sunglass PoCkets. long snOutder straps and r:nore. By Timmy Woods. Left to right: 11Duffle" combines leather and ~ or leather and corduroy with drawstrtng ppenng and sunglass pocket S29-$35. 11Soft slice" Is top stitched with zipper opening, in contrasting leather $56. . "'Saddlebag" double zips In corduroy and JeQtner ,,djustobJe strops $42. "'Pouchy.pouch" wtth or without sabll taili comes in a rainbow of colors in suede or leathet 'WHh zipper pull-out pocket $4S472 Designer Timmy Woods will personally appear In our south coast plaza stare, Saturday. August 19th between 11 and 4. She wttl be available at that time for consultatlom. boulevard shoes 112 -south coast plaza only ,,. • •• '· : t -. I T .,--- ' It'• Been a Wild ·and Crazy Season f o.r Angel Star • in1 a beard durint the All·IW break. After salvac· tn• only a IJ)llt In bia next four dedalonl. Ryan• 1haved. Addiu to UM roller coaster aped of the season waa anlncfdentln wlUcb Ryan~ asked to be ltaded to a team tn b.11 home ltateof Texas. In some circlet. that branded him as a malcontept wurdly. atleaat, Ryan bas weathered tbe storm well. His tape player in the corner of the clubhouse still blues eountry music non-stop, and he stlllofters his loose, slow-drawl brand ot Texas hUlll<JI' to anyone wbowtll llaten. hMJTJ nm. iJN•oow. t ·ve ~wn weU1lric:e tH All.._..,., .rtt.iaOM ucepUoft: and my m1aln 1oal~ttoW61to1Mlpt.beCaliloiftl1An1eliwlntbe Am~LeafteWestUtle.'' To brMk lllls ibiqotbad ld, Ryan tried srow· "J told Mr. Bavasl <General Maoa~r Buziie aavHi> that U they felt like they could elp their ballclub by traCtlnc me to Texas, I'd a prove the deal." uya Ryan. •'I've thoulhtabout plfYing closer to home for quite a while. My f amlly bo a bome in Teua and we spend the wintera there." "You aee that clove?" Ryan asted a reporter who picked up his pitcher's mitt. "That's special. Toughest leather anywhere. l raised th.at cow myself. Fed It ~pecial, so the bJde woutd be tougb. And thesteab were the bestyouevertasted." RYAN CONTINVED to spin the story about how he was going to break in the mitt extra carefully, not even use lt in a game until 1979. His skeptical HIS llEOORD IS a disappointin8 6·ll but out· See BYAN, Pa1e B? ..... ,..,..... BOB WE.CH PITCHED HIS FIFTH STRAIGHT VICTORY. 37,535 Disappoinled It's Aase's Tt1rn To Face Boston Tonight the California Angels will almost certainly break their record for attendance in a tbree- ga me home series, and the club is also on a collision course to break jts attendance record for a season. A total ·of 37,535 came out Wednesday night, but those pull- ing for the Angels went home disappointed as an error plagued ninth inning cost California a 4-2 loss to the Boston Red Sox. . breaking 1977 pace, and they have already attracted enough tor this to rank as the third highest home attendance year in club history, even ii the season ended today. "Everybody likes to play in front of a big crowd," said a downcast Manager Jim Fregosi after the loss. "I just wish we AllOemesM ICMPC m•1 Although the Angels now drop Tot11g111 eosto11t1c.11tom1a 1:up.m. a full game behind divisional ~~~;.y ::m::::::g::=: m~::~ ·1eader Kansas City, another healthy crowd in excess of 85,000 would have glven them more to is expected tonight.\All the club cheer about tonight." needs to break ·its~ee-ga~e . ':. Tonight the Red Sox bid series record set 12.-)'ears ~go is •'f, farewell to Anaheim Stadium for 22, 773. . · : : .: : 1978 as lbey toss Jim Wright • • • • •1• ·; 17-2> against the Angels' Don THE ANGEIS are no~ '13S,448 t •Aase (8·7> in the series finale . fans ahead or the lr;.recotd·' 1 • N I R l k d t • o an yan was oc e in a , ., • .. ;, . 2·2 duel with Boston's Luis Tiant• b " d but he walked George Scott to a~ e. .. a.'... . lead off the ninth, and then the infield fell apart. THE FIRST ERROR was r~t~~~~~~~~'~'-~ \• •I .,1_J . •·. ,I committed by Ryan himself as ··~1.!J):f'f'i-~··-t;~~d • 1 ~ .. , • ,,: he booted a sacrifice bunt by ·• " . • • •, . ' • • :\ · Butch Hobson, putting runners tDOdgers' Drive to ~•~o.:.:_tp·-. · ... ::t~~:~!~~~~~:~u\~ 1 -; . but Ryan tried to double Hobson ~ off first and the throw was PHU.ADELPHIA <AP> -The mgbl as the Dodgers defeated high and NQlth •~ ~ble to get missed by Bobby Grich. who os Ange l.es Dodgers were the Philadelphia Phillies, 5-2, on it." . ~--~, was covering. That allowed Scott truggllnJr in June The bullpen a grand slam home run by Reg-The ~rs. t the-'Pbillies to score and Hobson was awarded was a llttlesbaky gie Smith. It boosted ·Los for the second ''&ht night on third when the ball dribbled into ·1 So th~ went to Atb1.tquerque Angeles into first place by one the bitting or ·Smith. His 27th tbeBostondugout. .Df the triple A• P"ciflc Coast ganfe over the Sao Francisco hortter of ... ~~e season was bis 'Jerry Remy followed with a Leape.and rec"1led a Toµnp\er Giartts W))o,Jost 1-0.tp Montreal. third car~grand slam, a l)igh suicide squeeze bunt to get .wbo a year earijer h,ad just Te· •Smlu-;s ~ ints continued his drive ove'r the center field fence Hobson home, and first baseman ceived his delree from Eastern torrid Jlltt~ of late. In· his last off Phillies' starter and loser Po~ntb:x~og~ls~~hbirledd errth0er 0throf thwe ., NOLAN RYAN MichJgan CoUege. six games the switch hitter is 13 Jim Kaat, 6·5. Bob Welch, whose fondest inning. hope waa that he might join Los h ff T .. tglat JOE FERGUSON and Bi11 THREE CONSECUTIVE bunts by the power-laden Boston Red Sox might seem unusual. but Manager Don Zimmer says That Atelal Fee~g Angeles in Septem~r when the Russell had singled, and after a clubs can ·boost rosters to 40 . <1Mn111el IL at. 4::18 sacrifice by Welch. Davey Lopes players, reported on June 20 was intentionally walked loading for 26 wtlh six homers and 14 the bases. THE l·FOOT-3 rigbthander from Ferndale, Mich., has been tbe c atalyat as the Dodgers fought back into the National League West race Be llas won fivP. without a loss. The liftb came Wednesday New Career For McGinnis? DENVER <AP) -George McGinnis, who became a scapegoat in Philadelphia because ol his lackluster playoff performances' the past two seasons, hopes to forge a new career ln Denver where, be says. be will have "a chance to be Georce McGinnis again." Aft.er nearly three mont.bl or- ~e1otlatloOI between the two 'Natlonal Basketball Association teams. McGlnni1 officially \)fcame a membtt ot the Denver ~ugaets Weclneaday. To get him, the N•aettt shipped 6· toot• lol"wara Bobby Jones, a defenalve a~lallat, and 6·5 •;&uard Ralph Slmpaon to the •.1eeta. McGinnls, a w. 23$·pound Jtorward, baa an.ta••d 23.5 • polots and U .2 rebounds tn : seven J.ll'O aeuons. He ls ~· IHI to ftll the role of the power• forward wblcb Denver has been lacktnc. "I'm not a savior. but I think J ean belp thll team,•• said llcGlnnil as be was lntroduced at a PNM eoaference. McGiM.lt, who left Indiana Vnivent11 after bl• sophom<>~ aeuon, llarrtd for four seasons p:ltb the Indiana Pacers of the old AmerlUA: Basketball A•· 1oclatlon. lie almost al~le· llaode41J wldDDed tbe Nugeta in tbe OA 'Weiten DtYtalon flftal pl&jdf.net In ms. 1eor- tD1 .0 pObia, .r IH*DI J3 l'e• bounds and baOcfiq"oat ..... a.. tn tbe eene. flnale. RBI. "I walktd Lopes," Phillies' But despite Smith's heroics Man ager Danny Ozark ex· and blazing bat, the spotlight fell plained, "because if Lopes on Welch. singles, it means two runs. I "I TmNK l made some good pitches in crucial situations and sometimes they bit the ball right on the button and my players were there," Welch said. "I was very fortunate." One of those fortunate times came in the third with the Dodgers leading ... o. Ted Si%emore J~ off with a single. Rich J{ebner then lined one toward rilbt that first baseman St~ve Garvey speared and turned into a dquble play. The next ~ritical moment for Welcb was in the fourth. the Phillies loaded the .bases with one out on three siqles -the last a pop fiy by Gree Luzinski. tbatabouldbavebeen ~auabt. BEBNEll, WHO started the game 28 for 53 (.528) In the last 12 •ames, fouled out to Garvey. Mtke Schmidt hit a blah drive to rigbt center that Bill North cautht for a aacrlflce fly, 1.f clh·lae scoring. "l tboulbt Schmidt's ball was trouble," Welch recalled. "He hlt the ball 8004, but it was too thought Kaat could 1hrow1 a ground ball to North and may~ we could get a double play." North foiled the strategy by striking out and bringi,ng up the ever dangerous Smith. Tonight the Dodgers send Bert Hooton< 12-8) against the Phillies· Randy Lerch. 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S) .f~ 4 I S 1 t &rvsstw " 2 o I o t "'" , ttttt *~•w t ooooa T-t:06.,,_.,,ML See ANGELS, Page 82 Laura Baugh reacts after missing a putt on the second green during Wednesday's Pro-Am tourney at the· Dearborn Country Club prior to today's first round of the Ladies Prof essionul Golf Assn. event Lit the club. Malavasi Makes Dehu1L Rams Tang~ With SeahawlaJ Tonight SEATI'LE <AP> -Something bas to give tonight when the un- beaten Seattle Seabawks lace the winless Los Angeles RaDll in a N atlooal Football League pre. season game in the Kingdome. In victories over San Diego and San Francisco, the Seahawks' young defense has yet to allow a touchdown. Tbe Chargers managed three field aoals, the 49era just two. THE RAMS. on the otber hand. who will be playing under new bead Coach Ray Malavasi for tbe first time, bave scoted a total of Just seven polnta in con· secutive bses to New England and San O)eao. -Are· t.be tblrd-year Seahawks really that aood? Are the veteran Rama who have won dlvialonal cbamplonahlpa five consecutive years really that bad? Observers contend that Seat- lle 's defense, worst in the NFL last season when it allowed 218.6 points a game, -m have its hands full against the Rams. And Los Angeles-ts bent"l>n 1et· Ung back on the winning tract in the wake of the sudden f1rln& ot Coach George Allen Sunday, MALAVASI, The Rama' de· fenaive eoordlnaior the putfive years, waa named by team owner CarTOll Rosenbloom to succeed Allen. M alavasl is said to . be quite popular with the R~um• players, a situation which apparently wasn't the case with Allen. Jim Zorn, Seattle's No. 1 quarterback who sat out last week's 20·6 victory over Salt Fl'ancisco while baclrup Steve Myer tossed two touchdown passes and ran for a third score. will start against the Rams: Coach Jack Patera says Zorn might play tbe entire game. • PAT llAD~N will open itl quarterback for Los Angeles. , Patera has juggled his st~ tng lineup for tonlaht's e~. John Yamo will be at cent~~ ) place of Art Kuebn, Davfd Simi l at fullback for Don Testermao I and-itetel" CTonan 11t-middle linebacker for Terry Beeaon . * * * Jackson Goe&;· J 1 To Patriots ~ l ,. . ·· .. .. A Capeute ~ From .._ Wortd ot ~ Pa&torini on Pina, Needles ••• but He'll Play Saturday f'r.•~P.,._.lc.._ 'HOUSTON -Routon Oiler coaebet may • b&avl' worried about !Mlr lnJured qua11etbaek. 4 but D•n Putortnt wu the one on pint and nHdles Oa at teammate·• advice, Pattorinl undtrwent ac"o11ncture treatments Wednesday for a palnM let m\11· cle 11\Jury ~ SUltatned in Mondiay nlJht'a Natk>nal Yoot· ball Lea~ ublblllon same with Phlladelpbla. Pastorinl's status h as been ques· tlonable. but af\er the lreatment.s were comrleted, he waUted out ol an airport bole room nnd said he wlll be ready to play uaalnst the Dallas Cowboys Satur· dlly night "J know I'll be ready," Pastorin! said. r euch1n1 down t o lift a n acupunctUtt chart off a hotel bed. .. , couldn't do this before the treat· ment." be said. Dr. Richard Vennie flew lo Houston ~•AtTCNt*• from Kansaa City 1\aesday nlpt aft.er Pastorini agreed to the treatment rec· ommended by punter Jerrel Wilaon. wbo formerly played with the Kansu City Chiefs. Vennie started at Pastorinl's sboulden and continued to the feet. "This won't hurt," be told the quart~rback. "You speak with forked tongue," Pastortni answered. After the needle treatment, Pastorini said be could sit without discomfort r..pe% lt'ltlMlrta.,• lt'h• ltij.., l!I DEARBORN, Mich. -Nancy Lopez withdrew . this morning from the SlS0,000 Detroit women's professional golf tournament with a sore arm. The 21-year-old sensation from Roswell, N.M., confined herself to cbippin& and puttine durin& a celebrity Pro-Am exhibition Wednesday. "A doctor wanted to give me cortisone," she said Wednesday, "but I didn't want that. I'm a real chicken and I get scared when something hurts on my body." J-AU..t•r G•.ae Sn fer £A LOS ANGELES -The major leaeue 1111 baseball AU-star Game will be played at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles in 1980. The selection was announced Wednesday by major league team owners, during their summer meetings at St. Louis. The Los Angeles Dodgers were the host team for the mid-season game once before, in 1959 when it was played at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. No specific date for the game bas been established, and no ticket orders will be accepted until a later date, a Dodgers spokesman said. .,_,e •I tlte D .. Philadelphia Eagles' linebacker BW Bergey, accused of taking cheap shots at quarterback Dan Pastorlnl of Houston: "Needless to say, I disagree. l'm not a madman. J'm not a craey person. My mind is at ease." u..,11ere •• s,,.ri .... 1111 Montreal's Woodle Fryman pitched a one-hitter and Larry Parrlalt supplied the only run with a. run-scoring triple in the fourth Inning as the Ex· pos edged San Francisco, 1-0 . . . Dave PHker rapped two home runs to lead the Pittsburgh Pirates to a 13·2 rout over the Cincinnati Reds . . . George Brett's three-run homer ln the seventh inning capped a four-run outburst by Kansas City and triggered the Royals to an 11·7 victory over Minnesota and a split of their doubleheader after dropping a 5· l decision . . . Badcy Dent hit bis fourth homer of the year, a leadoft shot in the seventh inning,. to snap a 3-3 tie and trigger the New rork Yankees to a 5·3 win over the Oakland A's ... Claudell Washlncton sln&led, doubled. tripled and scored three times as the Chicago White Sox beat the Texas Rangers, 6-2 . . . Paw MoUtor•s two· run bloop single capped a three-run seventh to rally Milwaukee to a 3-2 win over the Toronto Blue J ays ... Leon WOOOIUHMAN Roberts drove in rive runs with a two. run homer and a three-run shot to give Seattle a 7.5 triumph over Baltimore. The PAC·lO Conference will likely go to a m three-man officiating format this year in basketball following the endorsement of the con· cept by the PAC-10 Council. It's not definite, however. because officials must first decide whether the conrerence has enough Officials to fill the expanded teams .. Former Crenshaw <Los Angeles> High star Maurice Dackett, 20, was sentended to five years to life ln prison for the slaying of the wife of a Santa Monica aerospace ex- ecutive. EiJ The Baltimore Colts have traded offensive tackle Frank Myers to the Minnesota Vikings for an Wldiscl06ed draft choice . . . The Detroit Lions placed two veterans-defensive end Larry Hand, who bas played ·14 years, and offensive lineman Jim Yarbroap, a 10.year pro, on the waive· injured list. The moves could mean the end to the long NFL careers ot both players . . . The New York Jets ob· tained rookie defensive tackle Andre Anclenoa from the Rams for a low-round seleetion in next year's NFL draft . . . The Kansas City Chiefs announced they have traded veteran running back Jolaa Bnekblitoa to the Detroit Lions for kick-return specialist F.ddle Pa)1on. Cuba's A.lbeno JH9*oreu 1bocted a near· m upacit,y crowd in Zurich whellbe fini•bed.U. in an 800-meter race won by American James RoblnllOIL Juantorena led early, but finished in 1:47.06 to Robinson's 1:45.92 .•• A aupertor court Jud&e says he ...UI deeide shortly whether to tsaue an ln.jwioiton that would force the l\mateur At.blellc Union to reinstate biJh Jumper DwlPt SUNtes• amateur statua. stones main- tains the AAU's sanction was an •1Ueeal restraint of trade.'' • Scorina the' decisive eoal lo tbe ~round of a shootout, Fram Befteabaaer pve the defend· lng American Soccer Leaaue champion Cosmos a dramatic 1-0 victory over the Minnesota Klcka and a berth in the Natlonal Conference final round . . . Geor1e Nutdaoff scored in sudden-death overtime to al'Ve Fon Lauderdale a 2-1 victory over Detroit and a berth In the American Conference finals • •• ..,r...._ aAOIO: !onl1ht -Ba~eball -Dodier•. It. PbUadelpb.la. •.ao , KABC (190), Bolton at A~. 7.80, KMPC '710>. Football -Rema at SeaUl-. '1:I01 Kv.c 1 (S70). • • TV: TOC\libt -BuebaO -· Doditn at Pldl ..... a. •:ao. Cbaon.l u. Football -Rama at Seatue. l:IO llD4 ll f'felayed). CbaNJeJ lL ,.,.... P.,,e 8J ANGEIS ••• -· be'd do lt a1u.ln lf he bad the cban~. "Wbtn 10\& aot auy1 like Tanana IPd Ryan out there. you Jual try to move runnen around th b es any wa7 you can," Zimmer 1ald. "A1alnlt a ~cber we'r• not bltUt\I real wel I try to bjve them bUnt as muc u r cun." By contrast. Bolton'• firat two run• co~ on u horner by Jlm Rte.. bis Z9ti of the aeaaon. "He bit 1 76-mUe-an·hour cban14!Qp," Zimmer said. "It '9oked like a fastball. but it waa a cbangeup." AYAN STRUCK OUT seven of the first 10 batters be faced and finished with 13 strikeouts. but all be had to show for it after nine lnninas was another defeat. bis 11th against just six wins. On the brighter side. Lyman Bostock continued his torrid pace by ripping a single and double ln bis first two trips to the plate. which gave him nin' hits in his previous 10 at-bats. Bostock's third-Inning double chased home Ken Landreaux and Dave Chalk. ln the eighth Bostock contributed a diving catch to bail Ryan out of a jam. BUT ALL of Bostock's hustle couldn't make up for those three ninth-inning miscues. The Angels' game total of four errors represents a season high. lt won't be the last meeting of the year for these teams. howe ver, because the Angels must travel to Boston Aug. 25-27 at the conclusion of the current bomestand. They coUld meet aaatn in the American League playoffs. too. but it's a bit early to think about that. -By Dave Callalnpam aosTON ,Mrll• 811rl"°"U 4 0 I 0 Re"''I' 2b 1 I 0 I Rice It • I 2 Z FISll c 4 0 I 0 l.YMcf' 3000 H-ltclh 30 00 YestrurnJlllPll 1 o o o fYllMrf 4 0 0 0 G.Scott lb 2 I 0 0 HotisOfllll 2 I 0 0 CAUPOltMIA -... , ... ~ct a110 ~fofCIJb l 0 0 o 8ostodt rl 3 0 l l Bel'tor lb ' 0 0 0 Ruell If 4 O O O Goodwll\Clll • 0 0 0 OownlnQ C 4 0 I 0 aw.fkH 412 0 Grldl 1t1 2 o O o Felrty pit I 0 0 0 Tot•ls 30 • • J Total' 31 2 • '1 8olt0fl 000 lOO 002-4 C.lllornle 002 000 OOl>-2 E-R•mY. l.vnn. hylof' 1, ~kll. Ry911, OP- aoston 1. 1.0&-6ostoot t, C.llfon1I• 7. Jll- 8ostocll. HR-Rice l2'). Sii-Rice. Remy. s-Grkll, '--ford, Hobloo\, Rem\'. If' M a &ll USO aosTON Tlent IW,,.5) 9 • 2 2 2 5 CAUf'OMflA l'lv•n 11..6-111 9 • • 7 a IJ HBP-l.and•••11• (by Tlenll. T-J :O• . A-31,$35. * ANG&I. MOTES -........ ltfell wr~uecl Ille Yenllffl' It• G4li*y es Amerle6n ~ .._ '" slrllt~ fltywi's l:Htritlwut ~ lltts 1111 •-1Dtal lo 1'7, Willie Gllldrv Ml ttt . Rr•11-IM c1u0 i..ci In ~ QMnK w1111 10, w!Pt. ,,.,,,no 1111i.-c1 '"'" .....-. Wiil .. Oii "" CllsM!MO "st wt1'1 • pUllect Nmstrlflll -cl• ... The AnQelS lleve _, 10 Of their lest IS ;emu end ~· ol the PMI el;llt .ci AJ\ellefm s1ee1111"' ••• Sine. .Mm .,,...... beume ,.,,.,.., Ille club IJ 41.J> .•• ROOl!le pl1cl .. r 0.ft ..._. WH 1'91HMCI trom Cenll!Wle Hoscl/tel W....ldey •It.,. ~lllQ llme 111 tractlol\ .. trN""9nl fClf' t>eck muscle spasms. +4e IS HPt<W et the ~ lodey. but llh ..,•llebltl1y Is still unt•r1eln •.. S•t11r4ey It Moel Slllrt Nloht. V011ft11't•n tllr0<19h eoe U Wltll • peld edmlulool to llle OIW"9 wllll Ill• &ettlrnore Orioln will recelwe e11 An;ets' l«W'lf l'9Pllc• ... Tiie Anvef• nNd Ollly •-more wins lo_, lhelr 1'n tol•I et laome. I.est .,.., "" .,..,, --~lit "" 81t A. ™• seeson !My're '7·2'4. F,.._PageBJ RYAN ••• listeners started to walk away when Ryan began explaining the mixture of spedal cow feed. .. It's been frustrallng," Ryan said. rcturning to reality. "But the older you get the better pre. pared you are to handle situations like this. It would have been a lot dilferent, I'm sure, five years ago." Ryan's hope is that this season will follow the trend of others, in which the hard-throwing pitcher has almost always finished with a flourish. FULLY RECOVERED from the pulled hamstring muscle, Ryan says he's healthy enough to duplicate hi8 bestoffinlsbes. "The arm feels pretty good. ll do~n 't feel Uke it did eight or 10 years ago. There's a certain amount of wear and tear on it," Ryan admits ... But 1 feel like 111 don't sustain en injury 1.should be able to pitch three or four more years. which is all I want to pitch." That means he would be rellr· ing at a_ge 34 or 35, and even it Ryan never has another wtnnlna season he will have establls.bed himself as a Hall ot Fame-cun· dldale. TRB l'OU8 NO·Bl'l'l'EU are Ryan•a mos& dlt&matk achieve· meots, but he also has 2,623 ltfeUnre strikeouts. Only two pttcbera ever got more than 3,000 -Walter Johnson. Wilb $,509, and Bob Gibeoo, with3,117. Ryan holds the major lea,ue slncte-season record of 383 1trlkeo"ta· Qnd in four otber seaao~ he complied attlkell"t totals qt 361, 84~. m and 127. Re owns ftve of' the etlht bl1be1t one· yearslrikeouttotallever. Ryan b.u also atruck Ou\ '10 or more batten In a 11me. a record 115 times, well ahead of runner·'-P Sandy Xoutu•1 11. "l don't put 1 lot of value la 1tatlatlca. l would like to lft J.OIO ilrikeoutt, pltdl .,flftla ......... ucl win 20 •amee ••· •• 11'!8 1111. •·But rtlbt MW. rm ,_ tblntlna aboQt. \.be r11t ot tJal.t year." ' BASEBAL.L/FOOtBALL l YMAN BOSTOCK GETS BACK IN TIME UNO£A llOSTON'S GEORGE SCOTT . College Grid OutlO.k .. Sooner Injuries A Major Correem NORMAN. Okla. CAP> -Oklahoma University coaches are trusttnc that. besides contempt. familiarity also breeds wlnnlq football teams. Members of the schoors 1978 team will be amona friends. or at least old acquaintances. when they meet their f'arst opponent, Standford, on Sept. 9. OF LAST YEAR'S team, 43 lettermen are return}.u, 15 of them starters. Amon& the missing are flashy left balfbaCk Elvis Peacocks and defensive All-American Zac Henderson. Offensive coordinator Galen Hall said bia "new" bacld'lekl will revolve around returning quarterback 1boma1 Lott. with batfback · David Overstreet replacing Peaeock, and fullback Kenny King and baJlback Billy Sims returning. But all is not rosy. "I'm really concerned about injuries.·· head Coach Barry Switzer said. "They almost wiped us out last year. We may have been lu~y to finish 10.1. considerina all the people we had injured at one time or another." IN ADDITION to a regular-season loss ' to Texas, the Sooners were beaten 31-6 by Arkansas in the Orange Bowl. Swlher's concern over Injuries ap· parent}y is Warran~ Since Ute first 1978 .... v SWtn&• injury already has occurred. Veteran center Paul Tabor is ex~ted to be out six or aeno weeks ot the season with a broken hand. Switzer said this loss would leave the team with "no experience" in the center spot and may cause coaches to cancel plans to redsbirt sophomore Billy Bechtold so that he can take over t.he post. Defensively, injuries also will present a problem. according to new defeos.ive coordinator Rex Norris. "WE'VE GOT All-Americans Reggie Kinlaw, Daryl Hunt and George Cumby coming back," Norris said. "So we will have some obvious stren&tbs, but we have to get over our injury problem." Last year, Kinlaw lends Barry Burget and Grea Sellmyer and free safety Bud Hebert were held back by major injuries. Kinlaw seems to have overcome bis recurrinc_ mee ~ and Norris said that this spring "be is looking the best I ban enr seen him." But Hebert, especially, still is a cause for coneern. "WE'VE GOT TO HAVE some defensive backs come .through," Norris said. "We bave to have someone come through at free safety." Swltter insists the team will be quick and experienced, but said be doubts there will be the .. quality depth" of some of the past squads . He also said the rough schedule will start early .since a..reoo - siders Stanford "the toughest opening team we've bad {o face since Notre Dame in 1968." OllteE••.,e Pat Stewart ha.s resigned as varsity basketball coach at Irvine High School and ac· cepted the position of bead coach for the Dutch N<.t- tional team in the European Professional League. Stars T11mble To Breakers SAN DIEG6-Tbe lowly Sal1I Diego Brea,kers, mired in last. place in. the lnternatiQJial Volleyball Assn. 's Western Divlsion. broke a record 11· game losing streak Wednesday night as they defeated the Orange County Stars. 3·2, before 2,312 at Serra Higb School. The game scores were 12· 7. 12·10. 10..12, 9-12. ~. The Stars. 19-13, played list· lessly throughout the match. possibly looking ahead to their confrontation with first place Santa 8'.u1>ara next Tuesday. The win was the first. for the Breaters over the Stan as the)' lost their four previous matches. Tbe Stars will be able to get some revenge a1ainst the Breakers when they conclude their series for the year Friday night (7:30) at Fountain Valley High School. The Stars have only five games remaining until the playoffs. Pll.SM' ••. Baseball Standings .... s SAVERS" .MERCURY _.zEP-H¥R AMERICAN LEAGUE West Dlvlsloa Kansas City Angels Texas Oakland Minnesota Chicago Seattle W L Pd. GB 65 S3 .SSl 66 56 .541 1 $ 58 .504 5~ 61 62 .496 6~ S3 67 .442 13 48 70 .407 17 45 76 .372 21 \.\ EutDl'¥Woe Boston 75 u .630 New York 68 Sl .571 7 Mtlnutee 66-sz .1Slrl Detroit 65 52 .558 9 Baltimore 6' 55 .538 11 Cleveland S3 65 .449 211,A, Toronto 46 73 .387 29 W 'I llf'•---eos!IDl\4,......., Ml~H,IC-CHy1·11 Mlnir•lllMW. ""°'* 1-.t o111r111u.~o · Cfil<*6. Tea.a H ... YOf'll f1 a..tW J S.•ttlt 1, 8eltlmwt' T_,., ....... ..... <WritH 1,u.-... ~•11,-i r-to 1a.ncv Ml et #lhfful" ~Tr.wn ,.,, anetlnd II'~ 1"41 et o.fttt IS!Mlfl ,,...,, .. ~1 OtY IGlw• IOotl tt Ml-... IS.- •N.11 Cllkeoo lkrlMC •m •t Te .. CM1r..-... w1, II On•r.-.~ NA110NA.L LEAGUE Wesl Dtvlslon Dod1en San Francfsco Cincinnati San Diego Houston Atlanta W L Pd. GB 70 so .583 68 51 .S75 1 88 52 .567 2 61 59 .508 9 56 62 .475 l3 55 64 .'62 14~ EaA DIYtaioa Philadelphia 63 S3 .5"J Chicago 61 57 .517 3 Montreal S8 :-l4GJ ___ ._~----- -Pilbb 54 ea . .-a New York 49 70 .•12 ~~ St. Louis 49 1l ·* 1$ .. I .,...._.. ~,. ..... ...._., H-~ 4, St. LOii!\ t . Sell ONllll t. ....., Yer11 t AtlMte t, Qll(.ltlel Pl~ U. Onc11111M1 l lloll0flt'"41, Siii "-~. ,..,...,..._. ~ (~ IMI tt ............ Cl,lilRll 1-1)." Cl11C11111tll ISH\'tf' 11,IU et ClllC ... t•. •911!K11141WOI "_._ CltlCMrd t•teMl~ ... et Pl~ 11(.'-"1-4 .... 0. tlObiMefl .. 51, I.~ S•fl Frtl\CIHO (Halle .. , .. , •t Meftlf™ I GrlllUMy Moel, II ''" C>l .. o IP•"" "''' it Ne• Ye,. 19:'1:.t-r-=: t• .. .._. 1·10 et ,.. u. (OeflnJMJ,11 Orange Ccx.tnty'1 Oldest Liflcoln-Mercury Dulerahlp l E . \ ' • • • ' t GOLFJ TENNIS I AQUATICS W'AGAPlay •maieun' Tour .Nearing an End TM ctliftll•• W..._. Am.UW Goll AaaoelaUon 1unnnw 9-' II,... • .., _.....*'"'to tbt M·hOlt louma· ment ol $31lw ~ Wll tae ~ at Sin Vlcentct eountrr a•..., Saeaodkto l!lllt. 15-11. OalJ two ..,..ta remain on t'• rerular 1ta1on ached_.. Mo9d11 et Loi Co;oc. CouDUJ ClQb and Au1. • at SlltleOt. ln ~to'-_.b&e b \MT ol c. playett m• pley ln at.._ lb ~ta liad dne ol tlM ~ ttiam· plOQI 1oU&ewUl M-.U.SW. ..... Ute aQJert' bo&rcl vota thee lalotM•••8elil. Mart w .... t:>arNU...., _. K•1 u...nta au• q .. ~..,._ wtlliMi'l mu.il..-.,~ameata but must cet a •Plciel -.mtWr f•YOr.Opeftktpet•. lfrom \M or.... I Coaat area. Marty ( l"L'W &' J Mor1•fttlll of San .....,..... Cleaa..U -... the ao•TlllDurn bell and ii CUl'ftDll7 ln ._,, .. , T l2tb p118 CD tbe prize list. He ftnl•hed Ual.rd ln the touraame .. t at Carlton Oab Um week- 8Cema11111 te .. •••11 .... a..1 .... McLean St.eveuon will serve u honorary chairman of tbe 197'1 Soutt.em California PGA bole-in-one contest which will be conducted at PGA courses throu&bout Southern Callfornta over the Labor Day weekend. Finalists will compete at Dodier Stadium Sept. 13 before a Dodger 1a.me. The men's. women's and Junior winners from each of the participating cluM will be eUgi· ble for the ftnals. Proceeds of the event will 10 to \he American Heart AssoclaUon. the Chlldrens Hospital. junior golf associations of SoCal and the SCPGA benevolent and relief fund. ~AreeCemw BIG CANYON -Medal Play Tournament: A Fllght-1. Lee Schaumer, 68; B Flight-L Marge Smith, 72. • Match vs. Par Tournament: A Flight-1. Virginia Forbes, plus four; B Fllgbt-1. Margaret Duffy, plus two; C Fllgbt-1. Clair Wisdom, Sally Wrl&ht. plus one. aAN<JIO SAN JOAQUIN -Partner's Better Ball Tournament <Low Net>-1. Tom Kirby, Dennis Sylvester, 1~1 : 2. Euaene Keenan. Perry Jehanm. 138~ 3. Norton Krueger, Ed Frost, 139; 4. Mark Darlington, Bob' Crawford, 140. Low Gross-1. Mike Petela. Don MWer.160. MISSION VIEJO -Dates of the men's club Invita- tional tournament have been set for Sept. 28·30. l&VINE COAST -The second annual Del'by is set Wednesday over nine holes. The women's club member- guest tourney will be played Sept. 14-l.S and the men's in- vitational, Sept. 28-30. LAGUNA BEACH -Low Net tournament at Hunt· ington Seacliff Country Club: A Fligbt-1. Frank Hansen. 76-9-67 ; U t•Ugtil-1. Fred Stark, 80-16-64; C Flltbt-1. Robert Young, 87-~7; D Flight-1. <tie) L. H. Pint. 97-24-73 and William Buckley, 98-2.S-73; E FUght-1. ltie) Wilbert Lowrey, 103·31-72 and Albert Ward, 104·32-72. NEWPORT BEACB -Better Ball o( Foursome: 1. Ron Knox. Ron Wild, Barney McClure; Frank Yann, Steve Schrader, Don Sam is Low -Orosa, Low Net Tournament: cGrossl-1. Jack SUnson,M. (Net)-1. PaulSbaner,45- Faltermeier In Tourney ~· . . rA•JDJnation Flom AP Dtlpa'dMt MAHWAH. N.J .-JrvJne's Olorla P'altermeler mtued a ahot at quarterfln.all action at the U.S. NaUonal 2l·yeara·and· uod•r cbamplon1blp1 at Ramapo Colle1e by a 11lm martin Wednesday as Sherry Aeker of Kalamazoo rallied to eUmtnat.e Faltermeier. Acker blew a le,ad in the final aet, but recorded another aervJee break in the ninth 1ame •n route to a 6-3, 5-7, 6-4 victory. Wednesday's rea\llta: ... ._...., v .......... cio-y, .... """" llelt. St • ~M. W; Oris~.~ ~ ..... 0-... Wl"'8t ....,,....,.. ....... Mkll. ~ ..... ; ~._....... lburon,.dtf • ..,...,_ ..,., Mi.nl, ~ M ; Mei'tl' O.m, S... JMe, ..... Qlp ........ ~ ...... t ... ,; ......., ....,_, Uttle f'Oc:l, clef. l'rlb luetwllnt. SNrt .. Ill .. N.J., 1 .. S,.1,W ; ~._.IO,~. H.Y .. def Urr-1 OCllttrlM. Fort Y~, '-J, ....... ..._ ler11«e Jer'CIM. King ol ~. Wf. ~ M<GellVm, ~ ..... M ; .. rlMre Hell· cwl•I, Ar~ Wf. AMiii Luc.¥, ..,..._ .. ,, M ; Key Meo.Ml. !lft'eWpOf't, def. Colel1e 8ef>o llett. LlneolftWeOd. Ill~ .. ,, .. ,;~~. Mleml, ... trecey t-. U• V89M, ....... 2.. M , :WS-~ Mleml, -*f, OorlN llllllltl, llYt, N. Y .. •·3, 2 ... •·I; F•ll<le lllltnlO , wethertfltld, Co11n .. def. Mer., Joll11Jo11, Secremento; Shet'ry Actier, 1<010-.00, def. OWN .,....,_.., ,,..,..., .. ,, S,.7, M ; Sllitllo Mcln.rne.,, A-. N.V ....... Jllll• P'llkoff, SMrl'Nlft~~ .... a...or. Adftlaees STOWE, Vt.-Jlmmy Connors downe d Ian Fletcher of Australia at the Stowe Grand Prix Tennis Tournemar1t Wednesday, 6-3, 2-6, 6-2, but not before the feisty Australian put a scare lnt.othetourney's top seed. Ellot TeltscMr, PelH Verdel, ..... ICll'll Worwltlt, Austrelle • ._., M ; ._ &.1111. S.. ~ dtf. llemle Mmlfl, Selllll Afrlco, W , M , .. ,: CllH Rlcftey def. Joflll Jo.,,.., Aulcrello, .... , .. , M ;.....,. l'~ng ... Geof'Ol .. erclie, LOllQ &ekl\ 6-2, .. 2. ......,...£11elcfl TORONTO -Defending cbam.pioo Jeff Borowiak of the United States admitted Wednes· day that skill had nothing to do with his second-round men's singles victory overflfth·seeded John Alexander of Australia at the Canadian Open tennis cham· pionships. "It was luck, pure luck." Borowiak said following his 5-7, 6·4, 7 ·S victory over Alexander at the wind-blown center court at York University Tennis Cen- tre. Miii! Hein' Gllnl'*'dt, Swltnrloftd. def. Adrleno PaMtto, llolY, M , .. 2; Poul ICronlt. Austrollo, oet. 0Moftuel ~enles, S,..ln, •·> ... 4. Goll" Oowd•,-11, Rllocle•lo, ..... JOH Hl9ueru, SOoln, .. i. ).1, .. t; IC)l41....__,, S-, clef. S«on Sftlltfl. H , ~Ml --DI-Onlar def. Louro Ou~. M , .. , ; Mltnt ~. V~ def. htsy N...-. 2 ... .. ,. , .. ; lMley Hl.lnl. Aultt .. le, ,,.,, Mldwle TYIW, 9'11*. 14,6-1: \/ ...... RUll<l, 11...,.,..., •· S-. 1-, M, "'' ReolM MerW-e. a.cflos..-i.,-*f.P41mT...,. dlfl ... 1, ..... 2. Oranges Test Apples !"'. W7T Teams Meet at Forum Tonight INGLEWOOD-A thin thread of hope is all that exists for the Anaheim Oranges when they meet the two-time defending World Team Tennis champion New York Apples in the second match of their playoff series at the Forum here tonight at 8. and was the MVP in the 1975 Wl'T playoffs. Playing singles for the Apples 1S JoAnne Russell. Her biggest claim to fame bas been the women's doubles title at Wimbledon in 1977 when she teamed with Helen Cawley. COMPETES tN POLO Kevin Aobertaon Area Stan Vie / llu'ldly, Auguet t7. 1971 _World Meet Lures Aquatic Standoot8 Spedal to Ute Dally Pilot WEST BERLIN-The World Aquatic Championships 1et un· derway Friday in what is easily the most prestigious swimming. diving and water polo events of 1978. Among the world's aquatics athletes .are nine who hall from the Orange Coast area, in addition to three coaches ln the lo.day event. A berth in t.he 1980 Olympics ln Moscow is a reward to the top six finishers in water polo ac- tion. where Coach Monte Nitzkowski of Huntington Beach guides the American team. AMONG THE AME&ICAN water polo squad are former Newport Harbor lligh star Kevin Robertson. ex-UC Irvine standout Gary Figuerop ·and ex-Newport Harbor star Eric Lindroth. Assisting swim coach George Haines ts Mark Schubert of Mis· sion Viejo and among the stars are world re<:Ord bolder Jesse Vassallo, Ed Ryder. Jennifer Hooker and Margaret Browne. Each is a member of the Mis- s ion Viejo Nadadores and qualified for the World Games with either a first or second at the AAU Outdoor Nationals re· cently. Vassallo's world record time of 4: 23.39 in the · 400-meter in- dividual medley is the most significant mark. He was also a winner in the 200-meter in- dividual medley <2 :05.90> and the 200-meter backstroke <2:03.57). RYDER AND VASSALLO enter as America's 1·2 entry in the 1.soo with clockinss of 15:24.84 and l.S:2S.S6, an event marked by the absence of former Mission Viejo High star Brian Goodell. the Montreal Olympics champion and world record bolder in the 400 and l,!SOO. Goodell miaaed out with disap· pointing swims at the AAU Na- tionals. where a throat infection limited bis efforts. Ryder is also listed to compete in the 400 free. while Browne en· ters the women's 200-rneter backstroke <2:17.11> and Hooker is a member ol tlie women's 400 free relay team. MISSION VIEJO Nadadores diving coach Ron O'Brien bas bis two proteges entei;_ed-Greg Louganis and Jenni Chahdler. Louganis. the silver medalist at Montreal, won the 10-meter platform diving championship at the AAU outdoor champiousbips at Mission Viejo ~enUy wtth remarkable ease. And Chandler was an easy winn.er in tbe three-meter springboard. =:ying her for a shot in these c iomhips. DAILY Pl\.OT ~tos, ·Del Mar Reslllts Loa Atemttoa Preseason Slate For Laken Set INGLEWOOD-The Gos Angeles Laken will be ln acGon at the Forum only once ln pre- sea son action, forming the second balf of a doubleheecler when they meet the Portl-.nct Trail Blazers. 'l1le first game la between Golden State and Siat- tle. Here's the Lalters· pre-seaaon schedule: Sepe. 24 ""*"• lat F,...I. 1 ._"'· Sepe.a. ~(.t.......,l,••.m· '"'-21 s.n.«•~1.•-· . 5-.tt o.......,..uc._,,,.,_ Oct.1 ~ .............. , •• , ...... . Oct.' ~{et s.etae~ .... ... Oct. .. ~CM o..ten~.1-.m. • , . . . • The Apples bad little trouble with the Oranges in the opening match of the best-Of·three series when the two met Tuesday in New York, winning 29·16. RAY RUFFELS completes the starting lineup for the Apples. He ls a doubles specialist and teamed with King last year as the top mixed doubles combine ln the WTT. The Largest Marine Sale Ever Held In Southern Callfornlalll The Apples feature Vitas Gerulaitis and Billie Jean King and in the first outing New York dropped only the mixed doubles competition. KING WAS A MEMBER o( both previous championship teams and was the MVP in the circuit in 1974. Her overall credentials show more cha mpionships than any other woman player in the history of the game. Gerulaitia is new to the New Yorlc WTT scene this year after tbree seasons Ip Pittsburgh and one in In· diana. BUt he bas been a main cog in the success of the team this year. At 23, be has many years in front of him The Oranges sent Mark Cox out \n men·~ singles in the first match and he was no match for Gerulaitis. Either be or player-coach Cliff Drysdale will face the Apples in singles tonight. They combine talents in men's doubles. Francoise Durr has shouldered the majority of the women's play since Rosie Casals was injured and left the team. Durr played ln singles, women's doubles and mixed doubles in New York Tuesday. She teamed w\lh Anand Amritraj for the lone vic- tory. for the Oranges in mixed doubles. JUST CHECK THESE PAICESlll maumw Z·SPAR ~ STANDARD HORIZON-you've ltffrd tlle name! Ute,.lty the beet aelllng 25 wett. t• channel VHF In hiet()fY. II you want performance at a PflCe, lhll la It. or 3 dB anl9nna. . . . . . . . . • • . . • Liit Price •524.00 llOll'1PKCfALPRtea ••• 1341.00COM~ SIG Ng SIGNET-the mo9t popular marine lnatrument9 ~'and now MOii haa tl'leflt. loge, wind IPMd. Wind point. '"'' apeed, ~.,.... ooc tl'leM •• We're blowing thent ltfl out at #hof...,. et nation Knot·Log 0-12 Li.t Price 14HS.OO MOM'1 aNCfAL PRfCl! ••••••• OMLY tau.- V.H.F.'s, Depth Sounders, R.O.F.'s, Auto Pilots, Winches, Hardware, Outboards~ Inflatables, Line, Chemicals & Paints. NAMES LIKE; S.B.E~, Standard, Barient, Gemtronics, Schaefer, Benmar. Ronstan, Lowrance, Campways, Honda. Johnson, Kenyon, Samson, Pearce Simpson, Barlow, Oanfortil, Hummingbird, and MANY, MANY OTHERSlll "°\ ; ... ... ..,.. ~--·""""' OMHOa eoutnY. '~ •Ill'_.(; -~ . 4 I ~ ~ . ' t I t ' t .. IWLVN.OT Albaear9 ftablna ti up ... doft de.111 ~ t.be entlN 9"th co-. ~-= blaalq tbe tnCOIWat•c1 •' water t~a tww. Peal£ Clt)'I fbr U.. upn .......... of Ftsb rman'1 La.., tn SQ ..._.== three alb* per rod. nu. oe ...._ "'9 aver:g dJ'Olll to._ tMn OM ....... are al ~ lD U.. ane m die Mil 1Jtualloft la Wl'J IOQd. Albiel and bhaeftn t•a aboU1 be ftlfu. ble weU 1aao S.Umbtt witb a fDC>d -...e. that there wW bt 10m "'1 ~ -...1n. yellowft.D WO. and yeDowt&U an1t1n1 durtft1 a.be latt:er put Of Aquat. Gar1 t!ren, owner of the dthau 1portf11ber Wonderl\11\, ha.a eruoyed some •ood alhce>H flsttlq on Polnt Loma-n•rallnl beta.er than 10 aJbles per trtp. Larry V...U, OWMr aJ\d aktpper of the Iman, bu also bff8 very l~ oo his lrlpis to tbo outside. Da&l.oeker aportflabiq fieet "as beeJl • Into some fair to IOOd ftslril"l1, reporta manaaer Robbie. but he also added._ wtaen t.be temperature c!rops. the !Isla eount falla oft. Jlmm1 Schaffe!' ~~ aatnc tbe outer lalands. wblle t.be rest of 01ve1•1 neet 1-atkktq pretty close to the beach with •ood catcbes ot bus and mackerel bein1 made. Art's landln& ls also runnin1 a nWJtber ol party boats out to the flshln8 grounds dally and coming in wltb some 1ood mised catches. At Dana Wharf. skippers are bead- ing boats out to tbe islands. kelp beds and a few times a week outside for albacore. Warm water between the islands wW probably keep albles out ol reach of Newport sportflsben this season, but other big 1ame fish could move ln. are•tlWD 11t 14-mlle •••• Accordtng to reports by the Balboa An· gllng Club, broadbill fishing is currentl,J better than marlin fishing. To date. five marlin have been weiabed in at tbe club and that ties the number of 1wordftsb to be bolsted to the scale. Most of the action is taking place around the 14·mile Bank, where three broadbill were hooked at one Ume last weekend within stcht of each other. Water temps in the 72-75 degree ran1e are what ts responsible for making the broad· bill fishing so good. Stick boats~ havina a very good year. In fact it could end up befng one for the record booa. This warm water will brina marlin into range for Newport boats very soon and with the good bait supply under kelp pattles we can look towar~ a very good splkebW ~ar. ...... litllres ,. ••• , ... I'..-' Fresh waler fishing for native and stocked trout is very good alone the ~ eastern and western Sierra. Roadside lakes and streams are under tteavy angling pres· sure. but those who are willln& to bllte in a couple of miles are 1ettln1 some good fishing. Most of our Southland lakes have stopped stocking .trout lor the summer due tO hot water. Irvine Lake ls sUll produdnJ some• 1 Umtta for analers fishing aeep boles, but • most of the action bas turned to catfish .and bass. Pressure at nearby lakes has fallen off • 4W"tnf Jwesdays, but on the weekends most renta boats 10 out. Btg Bear Lake ls fair for trout. in the 3" Pouncf ranee taken by anglers trolllnC Luhr . Jensen Needlefish and Krocodiles with weighted lines over water depths of 30 feet. Baae ~very acUve, tiong with bhleall and sunfish, Mong the shoreline, a~ to u~ reports by Leonanl's North S11ore Landing 8t Bil Bear. The w~"problemiMls • not taken over as of last weekend and fiabinl ts. co!Wdered very good for th1a time of the year. Steelbead and salmon 8l'8 movtni qp rivers in Northern California and lisbln& should peak in mid September tbroUlh Oe· tober. A pretty good shad season is underway on the Sacramento River right now, but will tail off later this month. •eer BftU911.8t•rt• ,s..., Hot weather bas kept the deer harvest down th1s aea!On. but the outlook for the re· mainlng month is very good. 'lbls writer will be trying his lack around King City after Labor Day in hopes of baulnl a trophy blacktail and boar at Laauna R~reaUon Ran~h. FJre condlUons are extremely bad all over Calllorn)a wltb many fire closure. • already in force. Those who have applied for deer permits in Zone D areas. should an· ticipate a fire closure to affect tbe hunttni. It ls advisable to contact the Departm~t of Fish and Game to change your locaUoo to bunt this aeason under new relUlaUons. Deer are veey scattered in areas open in .,_ _ __.~_Jone A currentlL_due to excellent feed and water corial1Ions tha prev aftir list yeai'S h eavy rainfall. It is anticipated that the fall bunt will also find bucks scattered, but in prime shape. 8emin8r sn-: Duck and aoose bun· sc heduled for the ten amdom to 1et the Airport.er Inn S.turda,y sea•o• off to an early Aua. 26, at 8 a.m. Con· start an Invited to at· ducting the seminar ii t ~ 4 t b e -an n__u a J outdoor columnist-Dtek W-aterfowltra Seminar Westermann and a Marlin Eyed The Balboa An· sUn1 Club la bostlna the Harry Davia Marlin tournanMDt Sept. 2-4. All fish c•Qllat will be re· leafed ~ poktta ae a part of tliill 10 ......... llsMD1 co1lt"t' ~tld prior '° a fttb-oU foi' u,. Nau.I II..,. Anl)er cron· _._,,.Noftmber in tbt~ICejt. ~t:: wlutl'I WlU co SW1M all of tbe o1lillr ,.._.. wtn. nrn. ~ y ··--· panel made up of Joe Plana, Bob ZeUenaa. Ron Leubke, Herb Lon· berfer and Diet Hixon, •I well -known waterfowl bunt.era. ........ , ~ .. ' Dove Hunte~'s Dilenuna: - It's Lii~ SWatting Gnats '1'_~~N Dove ~Tia'f:"eomptt· tni 1a •. -...... auma ooat•. Comlq llllio'WMer at aDOBd •t dm. a.. e&&allv•. urd' to nail ...... ~ wbiltM la m.M. ftt1 .. mJiallY beribefoi'e tlt•1 •N lffh. It malln tile Moo41n1 =: • ~n try to ... , tM wtt.b • IWDd Cll l\t aw btb'9 U>e1 kJeti lmo tllih ' ear aDd ltrelk out ol r~. en Um to one. Lbe bunter I alla to te0te. DOVE 8&\SON open1 Sept. 1. The birds are lbe cnoet popular upland 1ame on the bunter·a ta lendar. Ourln• tbe tealOD, aome aoo.ooo Calllornla wlna 1hot1 wUl tum out to tlarvest 1otne five rnlWon cloves. Departmeftt ol Game studies abow tbia tae will barely put a dent In the vast dove popufaUon lhat thrives in all of the state's $8co-.tOU.. 11tou&b many dov~ cboole to ran1e over a permanent ter- ritory where the food supply ls abundant. clouds of these birds ln fiocb migrate south this time of year to winter in Mexico and aa far asCentralAmerlca. FEEDING PN ALL sralns and a variety of weed seeds. dovlt an OM of the few apecies tUt baa lntteued ln b'emen· doU numben beeauae of man ad bl9 ,..wt ol fannlha and prdenlna aiad bome b\&ltcUna. Dove WUl MSt aaywbere then la food. Tbey put to1etbet ~ CCllllllruded nesta under tb• ea.-of~ branches of tr .. lad in rpc>JWth on UM liOund· They wualfy pro. due• ab Umes Ulelr number eacb 7ear. Jf ti» dove were not harvested br bunters. scientists say. the dove populatlon 'WOQld be qulck· ly reduced to an endan1ered level by dlaease and competttlon for food. EXCEPT PO& BAWKS, bum· mtnabfrds and st1me ducks. dove are the swiftest ftiers in the sky. AU of tbe dove famll)'. the mournina. rin1 necked and white wine can do acrobatics with their exceptionally lon1 wtnp and broad tails that steer them Into tricky maneuvers de- signed to mm the shooter miss. Once dove are alarmed. lt is nothing to see them launch Into power dives. stalls. twist Into sudden turns and make abrupt st.ops in mid air. On the takeoff. they can accelerate to 60 miles pn hour in a matter of seconds. Tbelr alrbome antics make the dove a bundle of feathered frustraUon. yet the finest of ta· ble fare once the bunter cen take tnou1b for the pot. ROM WllE&E THEY roott ueb alabt In trees. or ln plowed fields, the floca take off at sun· rile to ftnd feed. They sit down In a stubble field of recently barve1ted 1raln. peck tbelr craws fUll. dust bath, then take an aftemoon nap. At dusk. the blrds.ny to water before calling it a day, usually ln a new l'006t If they are m(. grattna. Bt1NTING IS BEST early In the day around the 1ratn fields or where pakhes or weeds have dropped their seeds. Hunters usually line water holes at dusk. ......,.,.,~""" Still, each bunter will average t>Mi'_.a:&" only 15 dD\l'es hunting five days of the aeuon and expend aome Mil~•"Jllllll 10 rounds at sbelb for each bird downed. Wben the Ured gunner eoob -----these blrds at home. after driv· tns some 250 miles and welkin& and crawline in the dirt another lS miles, the mess of doves will conslat of some four pounds of meat and bones for all the lrou· ble. . AP ....... .............. Fresh Alltaeore Uuntington Beach resident Chris Hutton shows off bis first albacore catch. caught while fashing aboard the sport.fisher Iman. owned by Newport Beach's Larry Vaughn. Skipper Cami Garnier bad the Iman 80 miles out to intercept the albacore. Grouse Feast Costs Plenty ,. . LONDON <APl -A wilct ~ dined on heather b1&b in the Scottish bUls tn ~ early 'mom- inc. Seven hours later It wasrtbe roasted cen· terplece of a $35 dinner lo London on ·'The Glorious 12th;' Britain·s openlne day of erouse season. Posh restaurants tradlUonally compete to be tbe first to have a red grouse fron: Scotland or nortbem England on the table and they usher in the early birds on silver trays. A 12· YEAR.OLD OREGON YOUNGSTER SEARCHES FOR AN ELUSIVE RAZOR CLAM. It '5 an expensive propogltioo for a fowl so small. Bagging even one can cost the sportsman nearly Sl.000 If be is a member ofa .. shoot:· Clam,.digging in the Nort~t THAT PRICE PROVIDES men hired as "beaters•• to stomp ~ugh the heather and scare the birds into rugbt. · loflders.. to t.e~p .~ .. ,Parr , s hotgun rilled with shells 8Dd band lt lO the bunter You've Gotta Be Quick af\fl' a~· dop to retrie~~~ falleq.eLeGti&r\s~ • to wartl uu the cldU and plcDJf bampe~ '1tth delicacies and fine wines. Not included ls the cost of the sbotl\IDS. wttb a handmade pair fetching up to $23,640 in London. Shells are also extra. ASTORIA. Or:e. CAP> -Tbe razor clam Of the north Oregon and southern Washington coasts is an attractive little fellow, even though he's not a thinl of beauty. When the tide rolls out, tbere-s a virtual traffic Jam on the beaches as inveterate clam dlg- gers head for the water's edge, clutching clam guns and shovels. . So popular ls tbe delicious razor clam that over a million are taken each year from CJatsop Beach, the 18-mlle stretch of sand that extends southwards from the mouth of the Columbia River where Lewis and Clark first reached the Pacific. NO UCENSE is needed, just somelhfnl to move tbe sand to get to the clams tbat dwell Just below the surface. Limits are a generous 24 a day and the season on tbe north coast runa from Sept. 1 to July 14. The most popular sand mover ii a long-bladed shovel. Also used ls the clam gun -a metal tube with a handle and a bole in the otherwise closed top. The razor clam, one of a number or clam varieties, lives in shalJow water along the ocean's edge. The clam beds in deeper water. beyond the low tide mark, are inaccessible to diagers and provide a safe breeding ground. Egp are fertlliied in the water and the resulting juveniles take up re· sidence in a spot of sand for the reat of their Jives. . WREN THE TIDE 1oes out, lt ex po sea wet sand where eagle-eyed clatnmers watch for the telltale dimple left when the clam pulls its neck back Into its shell after feedlng on algae. One or two days a month the tide reaches its lowest polnt, ex- posing otherwise unreachable stretches of beacb. That's when the clam digging fraternity ar-rives in force -tradlng dirty looks with the surf.fishing fraternity using the same beaches. Tbe tazor c1am Cslliqua patuJa to biologists> ls regarded as a wily beast even though lhe only place he ever goes is up and down. Despite the vertical nature of bis Deep Sea Fish Report In the past week. broadblll tne\led--in~U.miJe Banlr in bla numbers where three fish were booked by sportsmen and the commercial neet harpooned some 200 fisb. As of today, the 1wordf-.shlng bec•me scratchy once more. Marlin are still absent except tot tbe occasional "bllntt strike -With Wtndrall decktnc the first marlin ol the year for Paclflc An1lers wblle talttns in tbe marlin ii.a to bait a broadblll. oc.MM• -"' .... : ti ......... tt ......... 11$ ... ' ........... • llMICNrtl; .. ,... ""'" . ....... -........ :•~ ...... , ....... • c--. .... ti ....... ,,...,.. -'"" ......... -,,. .....,.., ,,. ............ 1.-.,.. fhll; ~A -CA-fJ ....,.l M~, ac.-c.-. • .... --.:• ~."....,. ......... -.-.-.1 •~· calMll .... . MesicoSlow Tbt Bent ROd tacltlo •tore In Tult1n rePQC19 th8t ltorlnY wUU..r .at Cabo SU Lue• baa lbal don --Mthft1 -nat•• lile be is an able disaer and often outdlp the bunter. PEERING INTENTLY at their feet. clam diggers prowl the wet sand and shallow water. often tapping the sand. When a dimple or small hole appears, they attack. If a shovel ls used. tbe blad_e ls thrust into the sand between dimple and ocean and worked back and forth. The hunter then plunges bis band under the shovel ln an attempt to snatch the furiously dlg1ln1 clam. The ocean side Is attacked because that is where tbe raaor clam orients the dull side of bl8 aptly.named shell. SPEED 18 ESSENTIAL, not only because of the razor's dig· ging talent. but al.so to elude the ever -present waves burled up by the Pacific. It ls not uncommon At least four chefs used helicopters to ny from the Gleneagles Hotel In Pertshire to the moors where they bagged their birds and lhen flew back to their kitchen. The Cafe Royal in London ananged to bave Its fi"t 20 grouse delivered trom Scotland by a British Airways pJane. CAR.LO AMUOSINI, the ca/e's grill room manager. met tbe OigJJ~ at Heatbrow Airport and drOve the binlsr restlnJE on~rUng sijver tra~. t<> centralLondollmaRol&a ce. He was areeted at the urann~ front door by a bagptper in kilt and socks. To the tune of a ScoWSh reel. head cber Roger Banfield carried lhe fowl to the kitchen. plucked them bimself and "cooked them to perfedion. ·• · The Cafe Royal's flnt Scottish 8"f()USe of the season bad been presented In the dining room with a flourish. accompanJed by dart gravy. smoked salmon. watercress salad. braised celery. ne• car· rots, bread sauce, fried PQ.tatoes. fresh raspberries and heavy cream. coffee and a spot of whisky. The set·price meal cost S30.65 and did oot in· elude the normal service charRe of 15 percent for wine. Grouseseasoncontinuesuntill>ecember. to dig intenUy for a clam. only to G !>:1t~~~~:i behind by a cbllly. arrett Dominates Diggers armed with clam guns have We somewhat easier. The Newport Harbor Anglers Club recently rf>· When they spot a telltale dlmple. cbgnlzed members who caught exceptional fish the eight·inch tube ls drtven into during the 1977 season at an awards banquet. ac· the sand around tbe hole to its cording to club secretary Shirley Michelmore. 20·lnch depth, a thumb Is -Ka~ Gan-ett swept tbe albacore category by pressed over the vent bole on top boating a 27·pound long nn on 12·pound test line. a and clam and sand are sucked out 26·pound albacore on ZO.pound test line and on six· togetber-ltallaoeswell. pound test line •be decked another albttore that ~mce a cJam cannot survive Upped the scales at 20 PC>Uads. after belni unearthed, all must. Otbermembersreeeivtniawardswere: be ke -!!{_ar_dle&a ol __ •IJe_, __ ,.tc•..,""-GM-.~ • ......_ __, ~--.__..._ ,, .......... .,l?ll?lrt• THE BIG ,... .aus 'ound J .... ....,.., • .....,.. .,...... ~Oer"rM."*'• .,,,_,_ "....,.._ are I' ... H«tctl.,..,.,.. .. I ,.,...... ••ll VOl'.....,..lftllr'IWI li$1*111Cb lurkinl wheff: the dillinl ls the .IMll!IAet11v."41owY11 ",.._, H•1lfdlc•.11Mt111r-,.__.. toughest -out in the surf. Since "•' u 1c ...... ...,,... 23....-..,,.,owmt.*'flft._ se.-- di11ln1 a few yards from the water'• edfe ii eaaier and more producUve lo terms of numben. Jun~ are-ail that a1tuauall,y found there. The shell ol a youngster ls about three inches by an tncb and a ball. Moel prised are the aduJta wbo run slx tncbes and more, Averqe ls tbtft to ftve tncbea and all are dellcloua. breaded and hied . Trout Plant Schedule ..,,,. BUSINESS PUBUC NMICE .. . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . .. Ar Wllr'fllll9 DAILY PILOT U ; ~~ Solar Cells Need Work For Homes -4 By The A.uodated Preu Solar ceUa -colorful chlpe or sUicon that p0wer spaceships and sateWtes -ar~ beiDI de- veloped for more earthly uses, such u home power plants 10\l can mount on the roof. The cells, known aa pbotovoltaics, have a remarka· ble quality: U you set them tn sunshine, they automatl~ally produce electricity. . . .. t, " ( • ? ' . :t .. • ~ # • • )' . ~ THEY BURN NO fuel, pro- duce no 1mo1 and leave no wute. They require almost nc> malntenance and they'ra sup-• Posed to last 20 ye an. .. Better, they don't send y<Ml a ~ utlllty bill every month. ' But of course they wort only when the sun shines. , Sun·soakinl Jear baa already ' begun to adorn rooftops around the country as homes and busl· nesses install solar collectOrs to supply bot water and beat. . SOLAJl CELLS, however, are ~ a different concept: they pro-"' duce electricity, not beat. And ~ th~y·re sUll a very 'xpenslve , way to make electricity. " Many solar egglneers, clting ~ dramatic cost reductions in re--· ~ cent years, expect photovoltaics ~ wlll be economically attractive .. to homeowners within a decade ~ or so. .. •COMPETITIVE, FAVORABLE' FOR FUTURE HOMES? Peter Jaffe, Soler Cell Teat F1eld Technldan at JPL "I'm fairly confident pecple wlll be putting these tblngs on ; their roofs eventually," said N .... <SeeSOMR, Pa1e Ba> •. Coastal Firms Report .. ' .. . . Orange Councy lllustrated, Inc., publisher or Orange County Illustrated, Orange County Busi- ness and Orange County Illustrated Dining Guide. has moved its corporate headquarters Crom Newport Beach to Airport Buslness Center ln Irvine. Address of the 17-year old firm is 17961 Sky Park Circle. Aaeelatlea B.ilds OlllH San Diego Federal Savlngs and Loan Associa· tion has begun construction or a 9.900-square-foot regional headquarters building at 5 Corporate Pli1%a. Newport Beach. It will open next spring. It will be the assoclatioo's fourth office in Orange eounty. The $1.7 blWon institution has 56 office locations throughout Call(ornia. Air P.....,,ers l•erefUe Golden West Airlines, eommuter air carrier based in Newport Beach. bas announced that 52,502 passengers were carried during July, an in- crease of 18.86 percent over the July 1977 board· ings. The airline boarded 353.181 passengers through July. The year·to-date traffic ls increasing at 24. 9 percent over last year's figure. • . M-•gemettt Anet• m. ·~ Pacific investment Management Co., began the ·~ third quarter with $212 million assests under : management. up 35 percent from Sl.57.S mlWon on ·• March 31, the company has rePorted. It ls a sub· ': sldlary of Pacific Mutual. Newport Beach. Assets : under management have increased 88 percent • since December 1977. Pacific investment Management manages in· • vestments in common stocks, long· and abort-term marketable debt instruments, private placements. • mortgage loans and real estate ownership. It pro- vides port.folio f agement services primarily to • pension and prof ·Sharing funds. • ~ C'ftlter c.-preied Saffell & McAdam, Inc .. Irvine. bas completed ; the ta.2 mWioa Lquna Hills Commerce. Center at : 23400 A~ de la Carlotta. -: The center. a Hon Development project, conslsta •. of one·st.oey structures tot.alllng 632,000 square feet : of commercial and retail space. : { ~ . . AgetlCll Opnu I• '"""e Saber Communications lntematJonal, public al-• fairs and public relations agency, has opened its ·: headquarters at 2081 Business Center Drive, Irvine. !' The agency's major areas of activity will in-: elude energy. natural resources. tourism. ~ aerospace. enviomment, resort development and ,. promotion. governmental affairs and civil engineer-~· Ing and construction. • :· .. Security Pacific Bank ·' . .... . . presents a ·: "Financial Management Series ~'. for the Small Business!' { .. "' . A t.en•week seminar for ownen and managers of small businesses. Security Pacific Bank will be offering a series of ten evening courses ~ttt the locations listed) designed ro explain in clear, simple language what financial management is and how it can greatly improve your profitability. Subjects will include: Financial Statement A.iialys11 • Profit Plannlq 6\ Cash Budgeting Cott-PrO~\blunle Analysis CapiW Budsednl I Sourcet of €aptai ~e course fee of $140 is generally ta.x.oeductiblc and includes texts, materials and ~king. Enrollment is lffi!ited thouah, so register soon. For re~n infrifmation and brochure. ~ (213) 613-5636. Loe.don• CulverCltY How1rd John90n) MO(or ~ S990 Green Valley Ore~ LooaBuch Dates Tuetd.lys Sept. 12-Nov. 14 • SecuritY Pacific Benlc ~esdays l<>l.PlneMe. -~--Sepc.13-Nov. IS / Irvine. Newport Beach Cotona del Mar Hlah School ~ys 2101 &stbluA' Or. Sept. IZ·NOY. 14 Santa Ana Security Plclflc Bank 8QO N. Motn S<. Wednttdavs "'· Sept. l).Nq.o. 's ,;r Counc Hours• 7-9aJO P.M. • t ·~ I .. CWLVPIU)T Business Conference Speakers Se/,ected Economt•t Or. Raymond Jallow and Los Anaele• Timta P\lbUsh,er Oils ChRndler will be lil pt'11kers a t the 16th annual eeonomlc Outk>ok (.."onfe~n« at lht.' Anaheim Conventkin Center Sept. Zl. The con!ettnct' ils l ponSOrt"d by lht Oran1e County Chamber o f Commerce in cooperation"" with lb~ Small Busln~ss Ad· mlnl11tratlon. the ~pa rtmenL!I or Commerce 11nd Enerty. and the fed t r a l Envi ronme ntal Prote ction Aa«"ncy . Forty.two Orun1e County oraanizutlont 11rt! cooperttting ~pon$0rs or the t.'Onference 8AN11'8 ECONOMIST Dr. ftarmond Jellow NEWSPAP£11 PUBLISHER Otle Chendlef Fed Faces Crossroads Credit,..tightening Policies Cordd Backfire By atET CURRIER .. __ The .Federal Reaerve's re- eular Thursday afternoon re· ports on the money supply will &el especially close scrutiny in the next several weeks from analyaU who believe the central bank '1 monetary policy ls at a crosalloads. After G. Willi a m Miller became Its chairman early this year. the Fed pwibed interest rates steadily hlgher in its effort to restrain inflation by control· lint the growth of the money sup-ply. THEN. BEGINNING last month. it seemed to back oft while awaiting evidence or the impact o( its credit-tightening strategy. ( Nf:WSA/llALYSIS) Jeffrey Nic ho ls. chief eeonomlst at New York's Araus Research Corp .. pointed out,tbat the figures on monetary growth in the coming weeks are likely to give &he Fed a signal whether more upward preuure on in· terest rates is needed. And that, in turn, will do much to determine wbetber the slowdown in bu5loess activity that many economists foresee develops as a minor decline in growth, or something worse. fear a "Credit crunch" or who are stmpl y unh a ppy that mortgages are goin&: at 9.,.., per. cent or more these days. If monetary growth should ac· celerate again, however, the Fed could face a real dilemma: Tighten t"redit some more and rlsk a serious squeeze on the economy. or l et monetary growth keep tunning at a pace it considers un acceptable. NICHOLS SAID there are rea· sons for hoping that monetary growth will in fact ease orr: an easing or the pace of the economy. tor one, and the pro. spect that high interest rates will have their intended effect. of reducing demand for credit. JALLOW, SENIOR vice presl· dent. chief econombt and direc- tor or t.bc ~e~cb a nd plannin1 d ivision ot United Ca1lforni» Bunk., Los Angelfls, is con· sldered <1n uuthority on mon e tary and econ o m ic forecasting. SOLAR CEIJS STUDIED •••••• FOREIGN-EXCHANGE traders will be watching closely too. The dollar's rece nt slide against some leading overseas currendes, Ntebols argued, is not sO much the result of any economic runda mentals, but rather "a vote of no confidence" in the way the United States is dealing with its economic pro. blems. notably inflation. William Gibson, the resident 1 Fed-watcher at the brokerage firm of Smith Barney, Harris Upham & Co., is one of a number of analysts who took the position early this month that in· terest rates were at or near :. peak. "He follows with particular at- tention changes In international finance. monetary t rends and fiscal policies and their impact on business and induslr)'," said Dale L. Dykema. conference chairman. Chandler , publisher .and chief executive officer of the Times, is iilso vice chairman or the Times Mirror Co., which is involved in book, newspaper and magatine publishing, news print, forest products, television broadcast· ing, cable communication systems, educational and artists supplies. and directory printing. J .<\.LLOW H.4.S WRITTEN numerous publicntions, includ· ing his bank 's annual economic forecast. He is often called upon l o comm e nt on cur r ent c:conomic and monetary de· velopments (;Ind is frequently q uo ted in n a tional ne ws ma~azines. Ticket information for the con· ference may be obtalned by con- tacting the chamber office at 534.2900 ( L M. 80'\D ) (Colltlmeedfrom Page 851 W . Patapo(( or Southern Ca lltornla Edison's r esearch and development branch. "The ·wt.en· i& more dJfficult to determine. It's hard to put. a timetable on technology, but certainly I would say by the J990s ... PATA.POFF SAID the ut.ility is studying the Impact on its oper a tions s hould sol.ar cells s pread across Southern California rooftops. Thousands of power-producing homeowneTS might not need the utility at all on sunny after· noons. But when night tails or clouds pass overhead, electricity from the solar cells would stop and Edison might s uddenly have to kick in extra generators to tuke up the slack. Solar cells wer e invented about 25 years ago and de- veloped as a power supp!y for space exploration. They're us ua lly pa per-thin. c ircula r waters two to tour Inches .across and colored deep blue, purple or red. For land-based uses. they are mounted under glass in flat arrays. SOLAR CELLS run nuviga. tional buoys on the ocean , power remote radio·relay sta - tions and supply electricity to a few U.S. Forest Service stations and watchtowers. Tbe Forest Service is experimenUng with solar-powered (ans to ventilate campground outhouses. Prices are coming down. Two decades ago, enough s pace· bound solar cells to cenerate one watt cost more than $200,000. A single Ugbl bulb needs about 60 watts. But continued research and the fi rst hints of mass produc· lion have dropped, .the price to about $12 a watt. A U.S. Energy Department program hopes to gel the cost down to 50 cents by 1986. THAT, SAY SOLAR e n- thusiasts, would be competitive with electric-company power from coal· nuclear -or oil-fired plants. At any or the fed eral programs al the Jet Propulsion Laboratory a t Pa-S adena and at Sandia Laboratories in Albuquerque. N.At ., are aimed at la rge.scale power plants. But JPL project manager Robert Forney said individuals looking for personal energy in- dependence a re not being ig· nored. "IF THOSE KINDS or prodUC· lion cost numbers can be ac- complished., it looks like it wouJd GIZPOLINAK W orker8i Return To Paper Mill DOE SN ·r MAKE ANY SENSE DOES IT? Neither does permrtling your savings 10 succumb 10 skyrocketing ln!lat100 in a low-yield aavings accoonl Anaheim Home Loans o11ers an Intelligent artem111tive. Let them be your touchstone to a secure & simple lrwct1tment IUIUUt PORTLAND. Ore. IAPl -Operations were getting under way at the Newberg pla nt or Publishers Paper Co . as striking workers there ended a three-week walkout. The members of· the Associated Pulp and Paper Workers ratified a contract al the Newberg plant by a substantial margin, a union spokesman said. Publishers Paper is a Times J\llrrorsubsidiary. INTEREST SECURED! with ST£ADY, SAFE. TRUST DEEDS ABOUf 12,800 WORKERS remained on strike at 25 West Coast paper mills. Three of the strikes involved the United Papermaken; International Union and the rest in· volve the AWPPW . Crown-Zelle rbach Corp. a nnounced that negotiations i.n the strike at Zellerbach's Waune mill might be resumed after a meetlng in Kelso, Wash. 774-0601 Anaheim Home Loans 1666 South Brookh\ll'St St., 8u1t.e 0, Anabe1m THE FIRST PUBLIC SALE OF SITES FOR DAILY PILOT SOME INFORMATION ABOUT SNAKEBITE } INDMDUAL CUSlOM HOMES IN PRESTIGIOUS .... ANAHEIM Hll I S .AU v .............. bit• wounds fint 1tppear as be competitive and Forney said. "And confidel'lt we can cents a watt. favorable." we're very a chieve 50 "But lhen the next question is. t"an you bring the other costs - the ba lance-of-system costs down. That ls receiving a great deal or attention now." Forney said a household power plant involves much. more than just an array of solar cells that take sunllgh~ in and put eJet"trtctty out. ''THE ELECTRICITY," he said. "has to be handed over lo a power conditioning unit." Solar cells generate direct current. such as that produced by batteries. The power condi- tioning unit would convert that to alternatintg current needed to run most home appliances. "'T)len, if I want to operate my house at night when l can't get anything out of my array, I'm going to need some batteries for storage or 1'11'.l going to have to hook into the utility company:· Forney said. · The Fed's efforts a re com· plicated by time lags. It takes time to gather data and de- termine what is happening with the money s upply, and more time before any actions the Fed decides upon take effect. Thus. Nichols said, it was late May before the money supply, which had been rising sharply for most ol the spring, began to cool down. ALTHOUGH IT showed some wide short·term swings from late May through late July. be s a id, the net change was re· latively small for that period. If it continues to grow only moderately. the Fed might possibly have gained at least a temporary standoff in its anti· inflation batUe. And that would presumably allow It to hold back on any further credit-tigbtening, which would pleas~ those who Over The Counter HA5D UllHlcp ''The Fed has been muc h more cautious about tightening lately,'' Gibson observed. Millt>r recenUy has emphasized the Im· portance or avoiding a re- cession, in contrast to the stress he placed last spring on subdu· ing inflation. The pressure, or course, con· tinues tor the Fed to do both. Said Nichols: '"It's a tightrope siluatton - where leaning even a little too much either way could have serious consequences ... Project Fought COLUMBUS, Ohio CAP I Me mbers or Geauga County 's Amish community have asked Gov. James A. Rhodes to help block plans for Z1 miles or nuclear power transmission lines across their property. Members or the Committee to Preserve Our Com· munity on Wednesday presented pet it Ions to RhQdes ·office bearing the namesof775Amlsh citizens. Vp•andD- MUTUAL FUNDS A h . Rid e ta"" sma ll while whe11l 1 na e1m .QE s 1"es ~:::~~~~·fl:.~~~~ •1-~----ll.,.----------------~-"""'-------~--~~--·I ma.v progresa th,~ush Yol0\'f1t<lfangei"O ea: ONLY lWENlY·FOUR VIEW-ORIENTED b loe •• , .... , •"'cle. I .. HOME SITES WILL BE SOLD BY ;~r~. ·r~~ '.b:.~l::: sensatk>n. There m11y be SEAi FD BID shock. 11 Wt?alc. threMCfy pulse. and ookl chnn"'f ~·"-1!.l•atlon with ON TUESDAY. SEPTEMBER f?, 1978 • ,';.~'l:'iI.mage ...... c.11used by well.meaning person~ v.ftoH idte:mpt.s The mlolmum bill '!)rice for the lowest al l'lnt aid may • .....it In Priced home site Is $85,000. , • .. • .. " ~'' d • • • lnctatont. -and tumtquiecr- Persons wishing to obtain bidding and ··•~"..,."'° ""''"' .,. ""' llMI Ii pericld. The dHm•e registration Information may do so by · ••rt ~·· .xe...i lhe bll• telephoning TI-IE REAL ESTATE.GROUP, 11ae11. Oet to• ......, ,.. (7141) 9"°'-9303. ""'•""' .... .,,. w1 · YOU O'R YOUR Obtain the HUD lll'Operty Report from developer and read n before signing 1nyt11lng. HUD neither approves the mel1ta'Of the offering nor the value, tt any, of tile property. Q..._ DOC:l'OR CAN PHONE us •h•n you n•ed • prttcrlptton. Pick u.p your prescription It --..,.,,, ...... w111 · delJ•er promptly wlll>oul _.....,._A ltt•t IDIAY Ptople entrti•t wa with their pr•crlJl(lant. Ma1 "' __ ,...., ,__, ....... CY (1Acit ANDERSON l 1-vuu In Ifie DAI LY Pl LOT ·l'?i!''2,. --1- I f i ' j I ' ...... -.... _...,~ -~ -.. --,. • # .. -....... ____ ..., .... _._ ---· • ~-~~·~,,...-~~.~~""~;;.;.;;.;.;;..o.;;..;,.;.._~---~ 'it ., -"--··~--·-·· -.....--···.-· ..... A., .,.. ......... - ' ' .......... --...... ~ .. -....... ' • STOCKS I BUStNESS Thu day'& Clo ing Price NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS 'I.. ..... •1 ~ (looP l"O ~. Auguat 17. 1978 VN OA.IL V PILOT 87 Coin Collectors G8ther a Mint By SYLVIA PORT£& In Chlc•so rettntly. u c:oUection of 1.s.30 coins. one or lhc most Important ln tht.6 nation. was a uclloned off piece by piece for sz.ts million. more than the experts ' expecta· tlons . A S5 gold piece. 182S·over·l824. went for Sl40,000 Even thouah only two such cotns are known to exist, the prlct> was called "way over the estimated value ... Tbls is the latest manifestation of the boom in coins not meant for spending. a long with the upsurge ln books not m eant for reading. pamtinas and sculptures not n~ssarily for viewing . A 19" St.CENT PIECE, rrunted in honor o( Pr~tdent Kcmnedy the year after he was assassinuled. is worth S2 A UMO quarter from the Phi1adelpb1a mint. ;11\ silver and never CU'culated -commands S9. up from $7 50 Just thret.' years aao. - A 1950 Jerferson nickel. mmted In Denver in limited quantities. will brio& Sl 1 An uncirculated 1909 J>t•nny V 0 B I Victor 0 . Brenner sen es I will getS12 50. But how d06 lhe amateur learn the value or C'<ISually coll<'ctt!d coins'? The chances are the "colle<'t1on" ls only un "<ic· cumulation." says George Parola. spokesman for the numismatic division or Deak·Perera . New York·ba5ed dealers in internationa l curren· cies . But lo make sure: Money's Worth ( 11 Take the collec- tion lo two or three respected dealers. ask each the value of the entire collttUon. oot JUSt best pieces. Dealers will charge for a formal. written appraisal I Deak-Perera. for instance. cbarg~ a fee or 1 percent ol the toh d value. with a minimum fff or S25 1 The appraisal is refunded 1( the collection is soAd through that dea ler I 2 l Do not make an in vent.or)' of the coins to present to a dealer for appra isal. The dealer wants to see the coins <3> UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCES TRY to clean tht• coin A poor cleaning job c-an stash a com·s valuE- 141 If you are told you have expensive coins. do not keep them at hom e : put them in a safe deposit box Some advice for beginners 111 Don't try lo collect every type or com Spec1aln:e Read extensively Get the ad.vtce of specialists c21 Buy the best examples you can hnd Over the lonF run. the better coins are likely to climb the most in value. 131 Don 't succumb to fads In recent years. foreign governmenls have been selling virtually worthless coins an f:mcy packaging for as much as S30. The pnces tben haVI' rallen back to the $5 ran~e 14) DON'T INVEST FOR THE short·tt>rm Collt•ctioni- art' to bt' designed for long-term investments ( 51 Beware or coins that appear grossly undcrpnct>d They almost surely ar e JUSt gyps. • 161 Don't buy or sell through unknown m:.11 ord<'r ~otn dealers: patronize only reputable farms 1 i > Don't hoard on the basis or rumors Treasury Sl silver certificates were redeemed an 1968 for as much .i~ Sl 85 Today. they cannot be redeemed abovf' the fact' value 181 Beware or overgraded coins Unless the true cond1· lion of I.he co,ns is described. you a re heading for trouble. <91 Note that the .. a lue of coins does not depend on agl'. face value. or original price Value 1s b;1sed on rarity condition. de mbnd. date. mint mark and aut~ntk1ty Dow Index P~lws ' Above 900 Level NEW YORK <AP> -The stock rnartet. after jumpio1 st~ongly ahead evty today. settled back later but ma.Jn lamed a comfortable gain. The Dow Jones average of 30 industnal stocks. ahe1ac by more than 12 points earlieT in the day, was ups 5oC to 900. t;. as advancing issues outnumbered losers by 2.1 on the N~ York Stock Exchange. Reports or new.found strength in the dollar oo foreign exchange markets proved to be all the stock marlte1 needed today to .start a raJly, but traders looking to cash In on the rally Wtte responsible for the retrenchment in the afternoon. ...... --"" .... ,. ' . . ' .. P..,,lonnA rf'rag.-• M1tof Sfo~fu Did NEW YO~lt IAPI ~AL(S IAPI HY S.' wi.. o.uo.ooo .u.1a.ooo Jt,1'0.000 ll.ito,000 21,CMO,m 11.n1.1 •.-.m i.•.1 io.000 J.OS.010,00S _,., ••E• o•o Nt W YOflle IAPI -.--..__,.. .... . , ...... . . ,. . .. DAILY PILOT Thur..oey, Auguet 11, 1171 WORLD/ ENTERTAINM~NT ·Marriage Minister Marks 'Midsumqier Madness' LONDON <AP> -"Wbo tn bll naht mind would want cl'vU aer· vanta mucldna around with mar rlaaes !" med one m m~r or Parliament "Wily not a minister for tho mlddle as d! A minlsler for divorct' ! A minister for dHlM" Hked a London newspaper. call tn1 tt "mldsummtt madneu " TBB CAtJSE OF of the ~roar '-" a plan under conslderatJon by Britain's Labor 1overnmtnl to appoint a mlnlster tor marrta1e a lready dubbed by some newapapen u ''Mr Cupid " Tbe proposal waa mude by u Hom~ omee commtttH that re· com mendod lb uppointmont of a Junior mlnl1ter to coordinate tho work of 1roupe r ponalble for marrta1• 1uldanct and re· 1earch lnto why famUlel break up in 8rltaln, wb r one mar· ri•lt' ln thrff enda In dlvorc~. The Home Oftlce pays out nearly 11 mllllon u year in 1ranta to ftve man1a1e counsel ln1 or1anlaatlon1, and tht.1 Depart~t of Health and Social Security HY• welfare bent'flts By Bil Keane "Ooddy likes to go on the benches best." Producer Signs Two Top Stars 81.,.H~~G.~ Producer Ross Hunter's bunt for two top stars to headline his third NBC telemovie, "The Best Pla<'e To Be." may be over. He's virtually <'linched as his peachy pairing Audrey Hepbum and Anthony Quinn . . . Lynda Caner's proof of being a "Wonder Woma n" in real life with her smash stand al Caesars Palace in Las Vegas has earned her a firm bid for a gig at the London Palladium. no less. And my Nevada spy tells me further that Lynda's closing night at the Sahara Tahoe earned her. by actual stop-watch, a record 61h-minute standing ovation at the Dunes in Vegas. My New York spy r eports that Dlane Keaton has taken a lE'af from versatile b.f. Wunn Beatty and has formed a company to produce her starring movies ··sugar-throat'' George Burns is mulling the firm offer of a lucrative concert tour of Australia. Really, George is as good a singer today as he was 50 years ago. But Gracie Allen married him anyway . . My football spy tips that as soon as frontman Jack Heller latches <in NFL franchise or buys a •usseu. pAld to atn.ale·porent homes coat atbout ll.5 billion annually, thouf h lt says 1ome of those ben<l ltl would be paid to the re· clptenta even lf their homes weren't 1plit ••A MINISTER reaponalble for coordlnat· ln1 and developln1 all the state help available can only be a bl~1aln1." tald the London Dally Mirror, wb.lch backed the plan. Also amona thole welcoming the Idea was Dr. Jacobus Domi· nlan, a psychiatrist who beads ready, aim ••• water the rnarrtaie research center at London's Middlesex Hospital. He said marital breakdowns and divorce are beeomtna "an acute aoclal Problem" in tbll country or~ mlllJon. "ln 1Wll, there were 625,000 one-parent f amiliea and about 1.25 mll1lon children," be said. "There is a private price ln· terms of human suffertn1 within the famllY, and a pubUc price In support for wives and children who need to be taken into care." MRS. HELGE RUBINSTEIN, watersgelltly yet thoroughly A pulutlng epray la bet· Rain bird plstol atyle noz-ter than a full bore of lie Is adfustable to cover water for lawn and gar- the area dealred. With dens. Full or partial adJuatment. #PS-5. Reg. team for a move into the L.A. Coliseum, he'll bring Bob Waterfield oulla retirement as his new team's general manager No scam. Bob's the boy Heller wants and his Iranian and European moneymen <tre most agreeable even though they're not familiar with his football prowess. But they sure were i(npressed when told he was once married to Jane Russell. ~ =tlve ahut·off. #T1·C . 2.19 141 9.99 711 Reportedly irked by film start delays, Al Paclno's bowed outta his starring role in Marty -· Bregman'& "Born on the Fourth of July." Pacino's now pinned to topline Norm Jewison's "And Justice for All" pie to pop in Oc· tober ... New Two You : St.eve McQueen & Barbara Mentor, who just happens to look very much like Steve's ex , Ali MacGraw ... My London spy reports that British actor Oliver Tho..-as, obviously mlfred at be· M<QUHN ing paid a mere 16Gs for hls ti· tie role opposite Joan Collins in "The Stud," turned down twice that amount offered to reprise his role in the sequel, "Stud JI." . . . Also in Blighty. Marianne Faithfull, so faithful to Mick Jagger in happier years, is gearing to hit the con· cert trail for the first time in 10 years, touring Europe with a five-piece combo -all men, of course. Dyan Cannon need no longer be coyly secretive about the name of the new man in her life who may yet lead her to the altar for the first time since Cuy Grant said "I do." He's actor Armand Dl Santo, whose most recent role was in Sylvester Stallone's "Paradise Alley." ... Morgan Paull bought an extra flight ticket for sweetie Car~~1 Sebefold to accompany him to West Berlin IUCfllioo of biSc oostarrln1 rol• wltb Richard Barton In the "Sgt. Steiner" pie. And for honorable reason, he'll tie the knot in Berlin with the Gennan-bom beauty on Sept. 9 . • . Hustler mag honcho Larry Flyn& will move permanenUy to Hollywood, soon as he gets outta the hospital. Not t.o be near Bagb Hefner, but near tf> his new editorial offices in Century City. . tropu"'bliciiiOUll now iS Oie fal?nba so-many ol our Brltlsb·born thesps have had anonymous pboned. telegramed and cabled death tbreab, the FBl's gott.en into the act and has..a4Ytsed .sever.al of them in Hollywood to move away from theiF pads and go into hiding tor a whUe . . . My studio spy ventures tbe fuess: ll.Bldlard Dreyruu con- tinues to refuse a reprise of bis Oscar-winntna "Goodbye Girl" role in the sequel, isn't Nell Simon prepared to grab Da tln Koffman as Manlt1 Masoa•s new costar? · New Two You: Thrush Chris Costello <the late Lou'• daughter) &c psy~hlc Keuy Kingston, dtnlna at Ah Fon1'1. Kenny, or course. refused to open his fortune cookie . . • SUit Steady As They Go: Cncllce aer,ea &c lbrallha Moaau. munchln• Mouaaaka at the AlexUion . . . Baala IWlltr bas Jl••1 Caaa as an intertm house ~ett at bl• Phlf boY Manse. Can t think of a bd.ter place to uaua1e madtal estraoaement blues . • . My New York spy reports that ' ....... llJellael ._eU. no 1urprbe, ii now plannlri1 a te· quel to '"Chorus lJn~" wltb hll prioclpals plckine up where th~ left. off, ttith rebeanal narts ror the !fUS\cal wilhip the musical. SANT6. ANA Son Oitgo Frwy. a treat tor what you grow Vlgoro All Purpoee Fer- tillzer 11 the answer for better flowers, tree• and shrub•. 201b. bag. Reg. 4.19 2•• al ... AJ!lllD VIGGAO satin finish tor walls Glidden Spree! Satin Latex Wall Paint DOM on emootlll)' and 1 .. vea a lonci lasting good looking flnl1h. Reg. 9.99 I~ dlcllondra digs illls Vlgoro Ferllllzer for dfchoqdra lawn• la pac;tced with power yet It WO!'l't t>urn. 25 lb. beg cover• 2500 eq. tt. 5•• chairman of the LoMon Mar· rlage Guidahce Council. said, "We are absolutely delighted ... But the Rt. Rev. William Westwood, Anglican bishop of Edmonton. said the plan ··mts me wittl terror." he said there is "far too much interference nowadays in the way people run their own lives." An angry member of Parlia· ment, Norman Tebbit of the op· position Conservatives, acreed t hat government ministers should not "muck around" in marital maUers. lN THE UNITED Sllltes. where more than one out of three mamaces ~nd in divorce. there ls rlO p«>st ~ulvalent to the one proposed here. Pttisldent Carter had planned a White House conference on families. but that has bffn put off untd sometime m the 1980s. The Daily Telegraph. which supports the Conservative Par· ty. commeflU:d i "Aa a 8erious proPQlal, it beloags to the sterile bureaucratic: world in which there is a political aoluUon to e\terything." you scream, I scream for homemade lea cream Big 4-quart capecity Ice cream maker ... prOYfdet a lot of cool dellghta for a sum- mers day! Easy operating electric freezer. Bright Kelly green polypro- py1ene. Recipe book Included. #F007 A double your cover lawns water coverage of all Sllapes It's the Ralnbird double shut-off ·y· connector to allow you to use 2 hoses from one outlet. #Y ·26C. Reg. 3.99 2•• dalstoft undeslrables Vlgoro Garden Dus. controls Insects In your vegetable garden. 10 oz. squeeze container. Reg. 2.19 14• VIGGAO Your choice ol rec· tangular #R300C, crrcte #C300C. square #S300C or !Win circle #T300C Reg. 2.15 each, 1~ spray away the pests Vlgoro 50"/o Malathion gives you general protection from destruc- tlve lneects. 1 pt. size #MP 2•• VIGGAO the cover up for dirty tricks Glldden Spred Lustre Alkyd s.mi-GIOM dries lo a~ Sheen, ,..Im greate, steam and fOod depoalta. Reg. 111.95 11~ INSIDE: •Erma Bombeck •Comics • •Television • E ntertalnment Thunlcll\'.Augutt 17. 187t DAILY PILOT Fea in • • • CJ Randy Hild with men's bag: It 'took some adapting.· Claergl Romo A Friend In Need We have a new addition to our family. He's a young friend of my son who had no place to live and has been flopping here and there or sleeping in his car for over a year. Because we're in the throes of moving and haven't much room. he's staying with us tern· porarUy and sleeping on the floor until he can figure out what else to do. He drives an old car with an unpred1ctable engine and the other morning when he couldn't get bis car started again, I drove him to work and picked him up at lunch time because he had urgent business to conduct. He only recently teamed his father died - five years ago. It seems no one ever bothered to tell him. Men's Handbags \ Ranging in cost from $25 to $200, they are bought by men in all walks of life, construction workerS and lawyers. By JUDrtH OLSON Of U. Delly ........... A few years ago a man carrylne anything ··esembling a purse was suspect. even lalllbed at. But tOOay in Orange County, men's bags, or clutches are becoming a much more com~on site. "They're practical." said Ron Perez. manager of The Brass Boot. South Coast Plaza. "Men 's clothes just don't have pockets anymore." Many stores in the coast area carry a run line of mens' bags. ranging from S25 to $200. They are bought by men in every walk or life. from construction workers lo doctors and lawyers, Perez said. The way was paved by professional m en who usually wear suits. according to Randy Hild. a salesman at Alex Sebastian, Costa Mesa. ··Affluent men tend to carry them. They·i::~ Mens bags hang from rack in South Coast Plaza shoe store. not worried about what people wlU think." he said. Hild started carrying a bag several years ago when be received one as a gift from a Euro· pean friend. He admitted he "wasn't quite ready to carry something" and that it "took some adapting. ' "There was a definite adjustment. It was the idea of having to deal with a bag." But now he bas wom out four or fi ve and would be lost without one. , Bags are convenient for wallets, telephone books. C!ar keys. pens, pendls. cigarettes. lighters and checkbooks. Hild said. and are more necessary now that European style clothing is popular with its slim lines. Hild said a bulging wallet car.a ruin the line of the finest suit if It is sturred in a coat or pants pocket. Though bags also are safer. this aspect usually isn't the motivating force for buying one. Hild, a typical user. noted that "safety has never crossed my mind. It's more the conve· nience." He said he has been guilty of setting his bag down when he's shopping. though. and has been fortunate that no one has ever picked it up. The clutch gets fewer second glances now than it did five years ago . which Hild attributes to the fact that "everyone understands them now." Many women buy bags for their husbands with the hopes that they will use them. -oerez noted. and many men often walk out of a store themselves with one when they bad never con· sidered it before. ''When a man comes in here with keys, his wallet. and his cigarettes all in his lap I say. 'Why not get a bag?' They may have never thought of themselves with a bag but they end up with one." Not every man likes the idea of having something to carry. however. and some people still feel there is definitely something strange about a man who carries a clutch. One man. visiting Orange County from Washington. D. C. asserted that "there is something mentally wrong with men who carry bags." A restaurant manager said be probably would never use one because he carries a brief- case most places he ~oes. And. a counselor for the California Youth Authority smiled when asked if he would ever consider buying one. ''I'd probably set it down and leave it somewhere." he said. "Besides. l don't like to carry anything." \ S • • WllllDllDg Against The Tide '/ sense little of organized evangelism being suc- cessful here.' By JUDITH OLSON OI tlle D•lly "ilet Staff Orange County is home for some of the big· gest "superchllrches" in the country-Calvary Chapel. Melodyland and Garden Grove Com· munity-but it is still one of the least religious areas ortbe U.S. A 1971 study by Proressor J . Russell Hale or Lutheran Theological Seminary in Gettysburg. Pa .. which identified the unchurched in Orange County pointed out this fact• The study was widely used by churches and seminaries and caught the attention of another Lutheran. The Rev. Edward Rauff, who decided to do a follow-up study He was interested in the people who. in the the past rew years. have "swum against the tide" to join a church. And that's why I drove this 17·year·old man·child to the Social Security Office. He's ap· plying for dependent benefits from his dad, who divorced his mom when he was just a baby. Glassware, left by Todd Phillip and David Bellantone, .. I am revisiting Orange County to talk with folks who have done what is clearly not fashionable-become active in a congregation, sometimes after years of being on the outside." Rauer said during an interview midway in his study. It's the only way he can afrord to go to col· lege. two pieces by Nancy Freeman, pnd right, by Steven Co"6ia. The young man's mother moved from California about a year ago and left him to his own resources. The handsome athlete was sure be could handle-'L And-l\e did -wot>ltiftg-00 JObs and gotng-to high school. lie graduated with his class this June. He's rather proud of that. Don't get me wrong; this visitor to our home is not perfect. Like the rest of us. be makes mistakes and doesn't do everything he's supposed to. But he's resourceful and I think he could sell almost anyone anything -though he might lack th~ maturity to complet~ tbe -iransactton. H~ is usually broke But if he borrows from you, you'.ll a-et it bitck as soon as be gets bis paycheck from the small compan)' where he works tbll·thrrc Like the othe~ kids in t he house. he sometimes forgets things and likes home· cooked meals and doesn't like my caramel peean yogurt. When be comes home each even- in1. he wants to talk to the adults ln the famUy about bis dreams and goals. As a child all he knew or his absent fJther wu from family picture. he'd seen and his name. So. on that warm summer day alttlna ln the Social Security Office where one becomes a number as you walk tbrou1h the door, he sat pa· tlently -rorf eitlng hi& lunch hour. When the turn was ht. and the p•perwork done, he asked the clerk ii he could see the death certificate sent by hit mother to the of· t\ce. The questtona nowed. "What did be die of? How old waa bet Where dJd M work? What dld he do? Cant aee tt" Can !see lt?" A million kid queauons. But the last one -the one that remained (Stt ROMO •. P•P'3> Table Er aft _,.......,.,.,,.. .... ,. If ' ..... .. .. . .. ,,_ ... ._ .... ",. ......... ,, ' .. "Crafts have come or age. Their orficlal conting out party was at he White House on ~m. · Elena Canavier, crafts coordinator for the NaUonal En· dowment for the Arts, made this statement about a special com· petition sponSOJed by the NEA at the behest or 'First Lady Rosalynn Carter. · • For the tra«:fitfOnat Senate Waves Luncheon, Mrs. Carte~ thought she w~uld'• lQce to do something special. Slnc~ she was interested in crafts she lnvUed American craftsmen to particlpalt in th~ event by deslgmng settings for the table. -A-cmnvrttttu throughout the country for potters and glassblowers. who didn't know the purpose of the event. · The winning deslgq_s are on dis· play at the United Nations Center. 2428 N . Grand Ave .. Suite H. Santa Ana. Six of the 30 ct,aftsmen ate fl'Qm Cautornla. The exhibit. loaned by the Los Angeles Craft and Folk Art Museum, wlll be on di1play daHy except Sunday rrom 10 3.m. to t p;m .. through Aug. 28. Seth Duberstein 's porcelain plates. .. • Rauff, on sabbatical from his job as director f"tnr-~~~~~~~ Lutheran Council in the USA. also visited the five other counties included in the Hale study. One of the main reasons people are Joining churches here. Rauff said. is "the impression that has been made by Christian people on the unchurched." Nonbelievers have seen that "a Christian <See CHURCH, Page Q) The Rev. Edward Rauff .,.....,_ll!Jt~--........... - -.... --................. ,_ --. ...... - -........ ~ .......... .... .... , ' . ' . . . . . . . . . . . . . ,, . . . . . ,. . . . . Q DAILY PILOT Thurwdey. Augutt 17, lfTI OM/Off T-.Otnt9t'Onve forMWMIY~ tr0m San Oleo<> Fwv ~rect to Huntington oene.,- and Otd Wartd VIUtga Let Kids ·Have New Dog OEAR ANN LAND RS: O\l.r UUle Scotch l.rrter "8lr ---------Hury" <we named btm liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii un er Slr Harr)' Lauder> • was run over lalt we~k LARGE-SIZES .. ,.~-~ --· 'Nflltl INITIWUI ,__._ £1Jallr's BAii-SiZE• ..... U4 .......... Cllfl tllSA ............. .... , •• ni .. -11aa ...... c.... a.MIM.WAMl ............ ..,._!Qrd e MHMr O..r99 He dled in &be 1nm of our 11-year old 11 we WU~ n&lhln~im lO lhe 1nlmal bol Lal. The chil cun't aet over their 1rter Our nlne year ·old ateepa wtlb Hany'a eollar and leasb under hLa plUow Tbe dot'• toya are now cberiahed keeptakes the rubber ban. the plastic booe, l))e beat up raa doll. We wMlk around with lean ln our eyes. Tbe man who ran over Harry I• heartsick. It was not bis fault . The doc s hould not have been ('Wlnin& loose - even lhou&b ll happened ln h'on\ ~ OW' house and someone was wllb hlm at the time. The question la lhis: Tbe man ,.iants to buy us another Scotch ter· rter. My husband says "Yes." The kids are all for il. But I can't bear the thought of risking another sorrow such as this one. What do you say. Ann? -MUNCIE MAMA -::===:;;:::::;::::;::::;;::::; DEAR MAMA: I say • yes. Life Is fU1ed with &Your ca°:'!,/'lot. risks. Tbose wllo are Recycled afraid (o make an emo· o cc ..,.,.tes tlonal investment may ~":. aot lose' anytldag, bat 556-5961 Uaey miss a lot. .__ __________ ......_ __ _ .4• .. ~-llden Lol&al 8lr H&rTJ w11 pa .. hll W ...-Y041 nl· ca It U11e ple1Hr• •~ 1ave yo•, •••Id you line pnferrf'CI aot to ltave lud lllmT Of eotine aot! DEAR ANN : The apartment we live ln haa no garaae hcilltles . Some nl1tbta ... e must park tour blocb from our bulldlna. Two homeowners on our block have gara1es and driveways. Last night I parked ln front or one of their homes. Mrs. X came out and said. "Sorry. you'll have to move. Thia apace is re· served for our friends.·' I moved. Does abe have first dibs because she's a homeowner? -. MIFFED DEA& MIFFED: Sllie may owa lilel' lllome bat allle doesn't owa tlae street. Yo• laave •• ••ell rtP& to pull la froat ol laer IM»me as site does. IMPORTANT CON· FJDENTIAL to all who Save 25%-50% and more on selected swimwear, skJrts, tops, dresses. shorts. blouses and pants ... plus extra-euper savings on jewelry and accessories ... an from our regular stock And, as always, our famous Bidtique Bargajn Tabtelll Storti Friday, 9:30 A.M. . Come earty for the best selection!! ,,,,,,-'::2lll&ll!ii::::~ B rl n g your Visa. BankAmericard. Master Charge ex cash .•. and have a good time! 3467 Via La.-~wpwt leaclll-673-4110 ....... w.-.- ·----75fl, tAttttilJrlL<!{l/(~ ----..... Ano\ you'll always walk off with top honors in Major in the Oouics ••• by Sf>AlDIN(J. ~Oftdwtlit9 26.95 Sizes AA·Ntoh B -6~to10 C-8to8 fashion. Leading the cheers, on campus and off. r------------1 1 I wrot~ about UctUn1 cbtldun for "fun": Tiekllo1 I• not funny to the victim In fact, tt cun lt-ud to hysterics Jnd convulAlona. Do not permtt 1nyone to tell you Lt'• harmless or that klda like It. The ex· preuton "tickled to deatb" comes from Chinese literature when Uclrllna waa used aa a metbod of torture. ••• Chureh <From PapCI) tacnt~ c n cope • lltlle better and have asked why.' be cap1cilnud. A 1wttch lo cburch membenbJp also haJ>-: pcna wtum lhert la a peflOftll erbJs. Rauft found. and people huve to "face tbe ultimate concern." Altendanctt ot Marrl•I• Encounter also ts a "t1ltnlflcunt force" for re entertna the cburcb. A fourth f~lor In Oranse County la the m11netl1m o f "ve ry dynamic pastoral leadenblp." "Jndivtdual prleau und mlnilten have ex· erted great infiucnce," R11ufhald. People also tend to Mmtiate wttb a cbutth alter partlclpatlng ln some IOl't of community activity like a softball lea1ue, he added. "I sense Utue or otaanl%ed evanaellam be· ing successful here." In bia interviews Rauff also asked new church memben what beneflta they received from their aftWatlon . ••Tbelr answers were loving fellowship, a sense of community and belonging, a sense of peace and inner security and a sense of being obedient to tbe reality ot God," be said. Most of the participants ln the study were ln their 305 and 40I, tradltiona! ages for reaffilla· tion to take place. TboQP Orange County is traditionally not a churcb-ortent.ed area it is not much different from the whole west coast, Rauff said. This area was chosen tor the two studies t>ec~e "it was metropolitan and leisure-Oriented." ( Boroseope By SYDNEY OMARR Friday, August 18 1 AIUES <Mar. 2l·Apr. 19): Subdued at· mospbere could prevail. Special organi%ation, hospital might be a part or scenario. Be dis· creel, heed inner voice, learn to like yourself. TAUllUS <Apr. 20-May 20): Friends may make unreasonable demands. Know when to draw line. Bring priorities into focus. Rela· tionship is serious. U you refuse to acknowledge il, you'll be in for rude awa kening . GEMINI <May 2l·J~e 20): Look beyond what appeari to be inevitable. Your de9t:tny ts in your own bands. Favorable, dramatic event will prove this to be true. CANCER <June 21·July 22): You get direct answer to inquiry. Green light is flashed for creative approach. Leo, Aquarius figure promlnenUy. Yougettobeartofmatters. LEO <July 23·Aug. 22>: Emotional issues s hould be viewed in proper perspective. Hunch pays off -if you h ave courage to follow through on it. Check legal document. VUlGO <Aug. ZJ.Sept. 22): Lle low -wail for "other side" to make a move. You do best now as a counter·puncher. Accent on confronta- tion, publicity. LJBllA <Sept. 23·0ct. 22>: Study Virgo message for valid hint. Be specific about needs. Persons wbo seem to oppose you could do an about-face. Cycle is Oh upgrade. . SCORPIO <Oct. 23.Nov. 21): Good Moon aspect coincides now with creativity and love. Gemini, Pisces, Virgo figure prominently. Meaningful encounter dominates. NolhJng ls halfway -lf you don't want to get Involved. stay away. SAGnTABl\JS <Nov. 22·Dec. 21>: Home. bulc needs, financial security -these are em· pbasiud. Taurus, Libra, Scorpio -and lbe number 6 -ftiure prominently. Be diplomatic. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22·Jan. 19>: If not selective, you buy a pig in a poke. tr careful. you reap dividends. Neighbors. relatives may try to Nib you. Hold tight; don't scatter forces. AQVABIVS <Jan. 20·Feb. 18): Spotlight on money. Obtain valid hint from Capricorn message. Check valuables. Don't give up something for nothing. Power, investments, in· tensified relationships -these command atten· tion. PlSCF.S <Feb. 19·Mar. 20>: Take initiative. Waiting for others would be a mistake. Know It ; act accordingly. Aries. Libra -and number 9 -figure prominently. You'll be on tar1et. at ri bl place at right lim_e_. __ Prices tor oedspreada •tart at $130 twin size and $210 king size. 90" dfaperlea start at $70 per pair. From trieae prlc" SUBTRACT 20% DURING THE SALE PERIOD ANN LANDERS I HOROSCOPE GRAND OPENING SALE We ha.te °"8 of Southern Calif~' s nicest displays of fine furnistii 9 ... oll in room settings. We f eot\l'e Hinedoo. Boker ond ThomoM1e in w becuifiJ. new· showroom. 0. e.q:>e1ienced decorators <H ready to ossist you, at no erx1ro duge. in fimsNng 'fOAI home 01 office. Metteer's fine Funshngs of Moheim hos been MW'iing Oonge ~fa 2S yeoH. Now come in md visit Ot1 new. Newport Becxh. $howroom. •' WING (}fAIRS in~ ReQ. $550 ~ $395 ~ ii just one of it. morrv opeRnq specials you·1 find ltwoughout the store. DICK METl'EER Fine Fumillhings & Interior Design 1727 Westdff Drive. Newcort Beoch • b40.1678 ap.. q.&J(). ~ i1 CJ. ao.d ~ INTRODUCTORY OFFER! SPECIMEN ALOE VERA ................ ··:.se··· 20 ..... 50% OFF Rt\j 1 .. SI 1.95 s5•s COME IN TODAY! Offer good thru Wed.. Aug.st 23rd llWIE VERll CEN'l'ER ~~ 171D-A Brookhunat, Fountain ValleJ o...Nll bkldl *""" a/IOMlao"' tM....,.... ...... Nl-2711 (MlattoOuy~~ Super soft brown leather sandal on carved wood . C.Omfy padded inside. For kicks, pair it with ~ants or soft skirts. -----------Lots of fashion snap at a nifty price. 19.99 @!Th{]r:A\~ §Eb[§[M~ ' Masltt Chlra\ • VjN , , • • SOUTH COAST PLAZA ~ ~ soum BRISTOL. TA MESA \ FAMA BOMBECK I SINGLES Remembrance of Ionia State Fair la clearul18 out one o( the boy&· cto els the O\ber day I WU ~llf'd •tnllelfSI by • COC'Onut wllh un Indian t•cu patntf'd <ltl It This w followed by an avalancb\o which in duded •n JUaatur dr~ssl'd up lllre ~ frdnd pu rude marahall • .a human ak\lll wllh 111 r.-vtn perebed on lop that said, "H v~ a t;1wld l>ay." 1t snow a nd w11tt'r papt-rwel1bt 1howin1& the Nt'w York akyhnt• In whtch lht' v. ll'r h Yd '-'vupo'ruled. a bet•r stein tha t playe-d "Wh it e Christmus" when you lifte d the lid'-and ,, funk ) tig ht th at fhckt-rt-d on und off ,ind :-.u id . ··ut U p Las Vt>~as " As I siftf'd through the rest b.ickscratcbers. totem polPS. key rin&s ~nd a blowfis h <that brouJthl me into m y first <.'o nt ac t with acupuncture> I tnt'd to imagine how many man hours went into uc· quiring. transporting. und m aintaining a ll or these souvenirs. The n l saw it· the Ro bin Hood bat ••lb a I lber from the lcmta St~u-Y tr It was 10 years uo The I• mil,y was tn route- tu a cam,plna trlp wht.'n w~ wert> attracted hy th~ Ionia Statt' Jo'alr Att "~ startt"Cl U> leave the 1rouo<h. my son said, "Could I buy this hut wh~rt.· they sew your nam eon lt'"' I s hrugged . ··wh y not"" My husband said. ··You don't n~ lt." I said it was onJ y Sl 39. My husband said It was logic like mine that drove the European nations into bankruptcy and besides the )c Id would forget about the dumb hat in 10 minutes. The ktd cried all night long keeping everyone awake. I a woke the next m orn ang with enough wrinkles to plant crops 'The kld:s wtr~ surly and my buaband bud a n ut lire <I told him be'd bt1 punlt.hed for hl8 cheap· ness > Finally, he aave In .ind said, "Okay , we'll go back ~nd g et thtt hut " The first ottlcer cited us tor an Ulegal lef\ turn Into the Falr&rounds. The next omcer ut the gale sald t.b.e fuir wasn't open unUl noon and s ug. gested we turn around and go out the same way we had come in. Jn turn· jng the trailer. my husband scraped a tree that punctured our water tank in the trailer and t:venturally cost $53 to weld. We were forced to go into a nearby tra iler camp, pay the fees, wait unliJ 12. pay admittance for the ramily to the grounds, have lunch and get the hat. The other l'lllllnl to make I fast ptaway to MmUan . ' Tahiti, Rio de Janeiro, Tiie Cdlbean or St Tropez? Remember, Ahything Goes is baving their 25°/o off Summer •• • Romo kids complained that s ince he got the hat , they should get the cane --------------------with the bird on the end Sale WlnStocll DlllF 9oJft ... 11 .. w .......... ......... ,7 .. 7160 <From Page CI> unverbalized -communicated itself in the wet eyes o ( the gray-haired clerk. ··Who was he?" 1'hen the woman, reassurinr the blond. blue-eyed child man his father had died of a common cause for a person his age <heart at· tack I. told him where bis dad bad lived, how old he-was, and what he did for a living. He seemed relieved. And then the pro· blem came: because the teenager will be 18 this month. he doesn't qualify for benefits unless be goes to college full-time. Bul because his mother lives in another state, the local college he wants to attend m ay not accept him -unless he pays out-0f·state tuition. even though he's IJVed in Cahfomia all bis life. If he has to pay the extra tuition. the Social Security benefits won't be enough for hlm to hve on even it be works part-time. He says he's not sure he bas the st amina to work f'ight hours a day and go to school full-time too. Then. in a ' moment of TeOection, be reassures those who care about him he'll worlt it out <And indeed be did. Just yesterday, be was formally accepted as a full-time, resident student at Orange Coast College.) It's really too bad h is dad never had a chance to know him J think be would have been proud ( ) SINGLE AGAI N: "Sensuality a nd the Single Man" is the topic of a program lead by Va lerie Croy. at 8 p.m. Friday, Aug. 18, at the Ma rriott Hotel Newport Beach. SS per person. Phone 639·1SS6 for information. ORANGE COAST SINGLES: Bingo at the home of Dorothy Cox in Costa Mesa at 7:30 p.m . Saturday, Aug. 19. BYOB and bring a white elephant gift. Call Dorothy al 646-6834 for direc· lions BALBOA SID CLUB: A general meeting is scheduled to start at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 22. at the Newporter Inn. Bike 'n Beach day will begin at 9:30 a .m . Saturday, Aug. 26. in the Monte Carlo parking lot of the Newporter Inn. Bring food and drink for the 1$-mile bike trip a nd beach party. Call Seber lee Madison at 846-5687 for information. PARENTS WITHOUT PARTNERS: PWP Orange Coast Chapter 26 invites all s ingle parents to th~ mid·month dance at 9 p.m. F ri· day. Aug. 18, at the Costa Mesa Country Club, Co$ta Mesa. Live band. F Al.Bl.AKE SAIL AND RACQUET CLUB: An oraani28tionaJ meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m . Monday, Aug. 21, at 2597 Orange Avenue, .Anl.. A?,..~fl~ M .. epp. Plan~ed are parties. ~ports events iDa speak~ m t.ba. oe.xLfew months. Call Granl Hess at 646-6781, for in· formation. ------------ 30\ Morine Aunue. No. I lolboa l1fond, California '2662 that chirped when you waved it around the car. 1744111111 Sf. The Sl.39 bat cost a total of SU2. T .. 711..UIO 272 M. c_,_ Dr. , .... ~Ju..tZf They misspelled his name ( Does your daughter need confidence? C4ll DcwatOat ................ .. •4Dd1• !i Sclloal a ... ;1 11 r We unw r a p a first-time-ever sale. 1.50 o ff every B ali b ra in stock '\ .~ ,.:· ) I W.Allg. 17tlt-AlllJ.2Mll •TOP QUALITY FASHION JUNIOR-AflD·COITEM PORARY • UP TO socr, AND MORE OFF ~.August 17, 1978 DAILY PILOT Q PUBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE "CTIT10UI SUSIN-.U l'ICTITlOUS SUMNaf>S MAMIE ITATU"•MT "AMII STATH~•llT PVBUC NOTICE TIM loll~ pen.on Is dOI~ bMll· Tiit lollo•l"9 pert.oft& ••• ffl"9 -.. · l>u"n•u .,. SOOUllfTAPAltTNERStflP,~ TRI COVNTleS F ltAMINO. Htrllor a1¥0., •JIO. Coste Meu. llJ0·8 Wetl C.11tr•I, S.111• Anoe. celHOf'fll•,... C..lllornle "211M e.ttv L. Olel'tdw ~ NltfltM•k !. c ,,_,~. inc .. • C.lltoml• lrvtne, Cltlfftmle m 1; • <OlllOf'••lofl. 3120-8 WHI c.Mret . ..._ Tiiis llWllWU I• CendUCIH by • I• AM. c.tlfoml• "I/CW ""'''-' ~ Tll15 l>wJlftetl Is c--Cly • c .. a.ttY L. OIMldlw por •I Ion. This .. ..._ -fllecl wllll .... s c INVESTORS, INC Co<lnty CllR of Or-.e C:-ly on 51\lrl..., A. H•rctv Alo9V•• 14, ~ Se<,_,,/T_ f llll •i.~• •~ fllecl wotll .. County Clfftl Of Or.,.._ COilnty en AllQllSI 14, 1'11. ....... JD60.18 Publl~ 0r"'9t ~Dally f'ltet. A1'9<1SI 0 , 1•, 31 Nld !oeotembe< 1, "" "'91'11 PultflflleO 0r-. c:o.st Delly ... tot. 2'1t.1I July 21 •nd AlllWt ~. 10, 17, 1'71 ----------U.11 PUBU C NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE P UBU C NOTICE ,. I CTI nous •USI lf1l SS ~ STATaMt:lfT T lie IOllOWl"9 perW>n• •rt OOlr'IQ l>usiMU at: PICflftOVI 9USINllSS --1-U-.. -.-.-.. -~--.-T-0-,.-.,..-.-H £ W POltT HOME LOAN. 11 ltAMll ITA~HT STAT• Of' CAUl'OtlMIA l'09' Cotp0rete "'GA Or , '"-1 Beecll, TM folio.tnt ...,. .. , are dolne CA t1* llusineUM: 'fMll~...:,C:U"4• N•wPOf't Home &.oan, Inc .. • SCOTT'S JAN I TORIAL NOTICll OP H l!A9'ING Off C.llfornlt ~etl41Ft, 11 ~•It SERVICE, dlO c..n-Or., Sulla nt .... TITIO. l'Olt NOllATll Ofl WILL PIN• Or.,~ 8eMll, CA~ "-Pon9Ndl.CA~ AMO L~ TtSTAM•NYA9'Y, Thi• l:MlneH ~ Qlftduc1eO Cly • c«· Scott A*'1 ~. 100 W. 1'09' AUTH09'1lATIOlt TO AO· por•llon. C:ohH'llblM, .... Senta A .... CA "2101 MI .. I' T I!. u .. 0 •• TH II '""""'"HMllll.OMl, Inc. ~·-Mttlt ScMenlloff, 200 W. INO.,.llNoetfT AOMINIST9'ATI<* C«tlUo .... ~ c.olumaltw.•H6.~....._.CA'2707 01' •sTATUACT. This •w.,.,,.,.. •• llteo wfllt tlle Tiiis IHISl...U 1' <Oftdu<.S .,., • Estel• Of RUSSELL o. ROOUET. CoulltY C"'11 Of 0r-. ~ly on 9tfler•I~ •h RUSSELLO. ROOUET, all• '"'9.U,1'11. _ J-~ T ~~ Tllltl""'"*'1'W•flled*lltlttle ~!!tL OC AVE ltOOVET, Pl.ll>lls/lfdClrMQec-tO.llyPlkM, CAMlllty C&enl GI Or ..... c-ty OftJufy HOT ICE IS HEREllY GIVEN tNt "411. 11, :IA, )I, Sfpl.1, 1'71 ll. lfJe. ......" RICK L. ltOOUET 1>as fllecl llereln • 40l.._7- Pt1ClllSflecl 0r-,. __ .... 1 Piiot !*Ilion for Probele Of Wiii •ftCI 1.-_._ ~· .... ., • wence Of L.entrs T~ry to,.,. Aut. a. 10. 17, 2A, 1m 2920-1' Petlti-end tor euOlorlr.etloro to eel· PUBUC NOTICE PUBU C NOTICE l'lllnlslet' ""*' .... ~ndeftl eel· l'lllnlslt•tlon of I!,._ Act, ~-· PICTITIOUS •ustNIU lo whlth IS m•dt ~or further NAMaSTAT9M•NT parlltultrs, end that the llm• end Th• foll-ine persoM ••• 001119 PICTlllout aus1 .. 111 piece Of hMl'lng"" -11u been... buMMU .,. MAMa$TATllMSMT lor S.Pltmllet' s. 1'11. et 10:00. m .. In GENERAL. PAPER STOAE. 1•1 T ... fo1towl119 per_. ere dolfl9 1t1e <OVrtrOMI QI ~ Ho. J of ~ llllld., ~ Mne, CA m:n bvilntll n : wld court, et 100 Clvk Cellter Orlw Hugh llert Cordes. 2.a27 Clar. TROPICAL TRADERS ., .. WUI, In IM Cllv of S•111e Aft•, l,,.tonOrl"9,~Hllll.CAfi.5J MecArllWr 91vd., He'WPO<"I i!l .. cll, CAlltornl•. Senelr• ,,_ Cor-. 1.n Cl.,· Ctllforlll•'2MO O•IH AUOUSC ff,.,.,, lltGton 0•1119, uoune Hiiis, CA"'" S.ndrt UlollM 0-Y. I02 Summit llrlWAM a. tt JOHN, Tiiis llUllMu Is ~ by •n 111' Oflve L80IN llH<h, Ctlltornla '1JUI Counly CleR dlvlchNI. Aflred #l(.Cl¥'f Cl~y. I02 Summit THOMAS C. SLACK .SO. H. 9er1 Cordes cw1 .... L..-lleiK1', Ctlltornla ms1 •LACK • CURTIS Tiii• s~ 'W8S llled •Ith Ille Tiiis -lneu Is c.OWCled Cly • tl91 Oeve S'1Wt C.O-ty Ci.B of 0r.,. eo..ntv on July ..,,.,., pM'tntnlllp. s.item If, 1m . Sendra Clancy M-..-r1 ._,., ca t2MI """" Tnl1 SU~ "'" flied •ltll t!lt Tel: 1St~ll PubllsMci er.,. Cont o.llY Piiot. County Clefk of Or ... County on JYly Atw.." ter: ~ AUCJ. 11, H. 31, ~. 1, 1'71 12, lt11. PU4>111Md Or ..... Coet1 0.lly Piiot. ....,.., ........ , "· 11.u. 1'11 ----------- P\ibl1$11ed Orenot Coast 0.11~ Pll«, A11Q11St 10, f1, lA, JI, sept. 1, 1'1t JQJ0..11 PUBUC NOTICE P VBU C NOTICE l'IC'TJTIOUS e &ntlillSS NAM9STATEM•NT The 1011-1119 penons ere lf01119 lluslnes• es: RESIOEHTIAL CAPITAL LTO., 100t2 G•rfleld Ave .. H1111ll119to11 llucll, CA '26* Plllllp H. ~. 11$1 SMiier Drive, Colt. Mele, CA f162' 0.le Slmlwo, tCJll Sem..ila Ttr· rec•, ~dtl #Jtlr, CA '262S Thia CIUSlllHS Is COllCNCled Oy e llmllect~p. PlllllpH.Mc"-~-P.wtNr Tl\lt 1~ 'Wft flled •1111 IN C-ty Clnol Or ..... Cowity en July JI, 1971. PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE ..,. -----------..-PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTl110Ui 9U$1NEU NAMll STAT.MI NT • Tiie tollolllHftlJ _... 11 dOlft9 -..... NU ts: ICE RN'S SAi LS. 62l Hemll\oft t.lJ Cost• MtM, CA '2t71 JO<Mne ,..,,._, •n H-11""' CAl,CMtaMlw.CA'2tt1 • Tho• tiusl-K CMduclltd ltV 9' t... dlviduel. • JCllltM.......,_ Tl•l5 •i.-•• fl ... Wllll ... County Clet1! d ~ c-.t-; Olll91V l1.1'71. ..... 11 Pullll"'9d OreftOll CAIMI Oeltv ., .... Allf. S. 10, 11, :M, 1n '911·1' PUBUC NOTICE --...-PICT1110US S\nlNUt NAME STATllMa'lrT , Th• foll-1119 pertott• •r• '91ft9 llUslftHI M : MHA .. THUR PLACE lllf'N· TUR£, 1"'2 Hele A-. trvl,_, CA n1u R•rt P. WM'l'lllll(llon, t•"2 Het• Awenw, Irvine, CA '2'14 8elty L HUiton, Truslfe .,...... Oecl•etlon °' '""" o.led July '· "" ffhbll\lled trf 14Wald F -llelfy l . HU1111<1 •• Truston, 11111 ••vine eiwo .. Sit. IOI. Tustin, CA t2i6IO Tiil\ butlnus Is conducted ty • 98N<•l~p. It_, P Wtm1lnolon Tl11S stet-.t w~ filed wltlt tl>e Coulltv Clef'tl d Ortin91 County Oii July JI. 1'71. .....,. PUl>l"toecl 0r81'1Qt Coal O.lly Pltot, •ue. >. 10, 11. i., •m • ·~~--~~----~~ PUBLIC NOTICE ---------l'ICT0'10U$ •USINl!SS "AMS$TA~tlMT Tf\e foll-lftlJ CM•Mlft• .,. _,..,. blislMSS •• • I -.. . .............. . ...._ .. ,...,.. ··~ ........ ,,. .. '\ .. .. c I I 0 r f f 41 I • L • • ' ~ . ,. . . . .. . .. .. . . . . . ... . ... ' . . . . . C4 OM. Y PILOT Television EVDINO uel oac• DUIOUT ..... 'U l.ol~ ....... -" , .. , ... ...... ... ,, • .=a. A ..... _....._. ..._.,~IDY '°' .............. ........ •~wuwmT .. ,.,.,.....Of'"'-~ ~ ............. ............ """° ..... 110'-' 'r11nee'a ,,..., ............. ~ • •IWtlOPUM MY:WO ... e ............ e ~··~~ "*' .. ..,... • Nl"COttCt r1!'9 •OIMu.t ~"""" nw... ..... I Nil IDftQ 8"d ---~..._..IO ... 10"' ~ llbrmry.,...... tor !tie Mltdic&ppM CR) .v.A ~ro si... WMfl LOllll" ~ ••II ConnOf and Ann WOOdWWd !Qo:· at IN It..._ *' City ot .... conoen-1ratlng on IN llteltytM of tlle~and!N~ rlvlllty ~ Siena'• -.,,.__.. <l)<mNIWa GI WOALD NEW8 wr-.JACKaON Or. Jerome~ Md c-Nunez di.c-. gang• and juvenlla ~ • 80UTH8Y NOR'fl'.Wf "'Yortc" Grandma Walton <Ellen Corby) cuddles her great-grandson, John Curtis. on u rebroadcast of The Waltons tonight at 8 on CBS, Channel 2, as she rejoins the show after overcoming an illness. a crlminlll arct11tect anct hit • CfW9y tao HOT li°~LB4MR -._, ..oca'9WILD AEPORT NPl PM _.ION • THI MAL AYINCA fOOT'MU. "Thi Good Guy& Of Hllto-L09 Angelet RalM VI. ry'' How .... the unit.ad e..rtte ~ States wllfrlg to go to • 21 TONIGHT oefend "-dont? au...; Proelucer-reporter .s-ScHMlflglr. DMlel Ao .. ann. AllHHndro P. Moynll1an, Rk:hard ....,._ • progt111n whlcfl Plpet. Critic: Anthony tralnl ~and bet· t--. tandarl to be on the Job ([I TO TIU ll4E TRUTH GIMPY~ r•1== 7:aoi :"8~WOMD r...c:aCOl#llllorl OF~ e.NOtCW- UAMCUJ8 WOALD..:WS TONOHT "Hernmert-r The 9'ory 1M <>oo Pooo ..,...,-°' the~ Md Often A ,... 11111 purportlno to a 80WUNQ '°" OOUNll ~ ~ ~ 8flOW • Pf'llhlltOric C191- .,,. ltle llllfl wtt0 hunt him. IUN In can.csa·a 0.- ., THEF.aJ. r.:100,000 ~THAT ;i=:.--- The F.8.1. la pitted agalnlt • NEWLVWB>GMIE "8*1 Dllgo ftlerl Pteyoft Match" a.. •• ~f;h••··· 8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles e KTlA (Ind.) Los Angeles e KA8C-1V (ABC) Los Angeles (I) KFMB (CBS) San Diego G KHJ. TV (Ind.) Los Angeles 9 KCST (ABC) San Diego I KTTV (Ind.) Los Angeles KCOP·lV (Ind.) Los Angeles • KOET· lV (PBS) Los Angeles e KOCE·lV (PBS) Huntington Beach '8.'CIO 8 CJ) THE WALTONa Grandma Walton QOM ttwough • •rytng adjult· _, period .... Ille return• hOml alt« • long *'-1.(A) • QtlP8 ''Cteah DIM" Jon and f>onch tufter wounded agoe when ltMllr out-of· 1119P9 YOll9ytlell teem 11 bee1an by a gi111' tMm. (RI • MOYIE • • • "Stell• Oallu" (1937) 8attJwa ~. Johft eoe., A WOltlM ._ rlloel .-ttnlfto tor .._ lrM ot ,_ ...... (2 fire.) ft,:OC-IM*. ''Hon!Ndl And Maderne r · HoflhllCk lalla few an older woman.<"> .MCW9 ••• """"""°" Of Lit." C 1868) LAllwl Turner. Jorwl o.M. TWo WOft'l9I' and Otelr ctaugflter1 there ~and"'°'*' but ,..,., ~ toe.i llac>P'· NIM.(2hrl.) ewov. • • * "Tomblrow 11 "~ ( 1Mll ca.uo.tte Colbert. °''°" w..... ,. "°"*' .. NUnlted wtth her hulbetld .-ty )'Mt9 alter Ille .... him OMd. C2 fin.I • ,,. ONGINAL8: WOtlWH .. Alff "Georgia O'K..n." T1141 nNtiettl birthcMly of "* "'*' figure In Americ:al Aft .. Q9abraled wlttl • flltned look at tier ... and WOf1I from her llorne In N9W Mnloo and from New Yclf1l'a ~of MoClem Art. • MAGIC Ml!THOO Of OLPMfTING .. ~Landscape" a:.• WHAT'S HAPNNINGI "A•J And The Older Women" Ra.I lies about hil age In cwellr to "-'e a .,_,tiful but older woman, (R) • OYIREA6'1 Joum&llat L.oMI Thofnal dlto ••• .. long and active carer. when to Mii )'GUI' hOrne; library Mrvlcel tOt IN hllnelkllCJped. (R) 1:00. ([I HAWAII flYM> ;M &ltllt ..ttO hllteCI "" tamlly dies. IMYlng I ba9te .. ~to heW Illa MIMYcn nuder Mell Oltlet. (Rl e..a.. MOCKEINAM "A Title On TM OOof Md A Carpet On The Floor'' Rdl6a .. mystified "'*' tie la oflered a lucfatMI J>C*- tlon with a lerge m.tlga- tlW flml f0t no ~t teMOn.(R) 8 IAANEY MIU.EA Thi t2th prednc1 detec- tives .,.. taced with an unusual --"' c.e and • robber who dr_.. like a ~.(A) . • PIMONT0""80N ''&e6actld ~ 1963 -teH" EdwenfR. Murrow conductS lntonnal Inter. vlewa with "°"""' J-Jon.. anCI Broadway acton ~ Cronyn MCI • TUBE TOPPERS KTTV m 7:30 -Rams Football. Tonight's pre-season game is between the Rams and th Seattle Seahawks. It will be repeated at 11 . KCET@ 9:00 -Person to Person. Novelist James Jones and Broadway stars Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy are Edward R. Murrow's hosts. ABC fl 10:00 -ABC News Closeup. The award-winhlng documentary special .. Police Tapes" follows a team of cops around the tough South Bronx. Jeallca Ttttay. ... ~ ATWOU'TMP "The World Serfet 0t Jazz.. Singer 8111y Eckltlne. pl1n11t Earl "Falha" Hlri. and tr\IM- pater Oluy 0 11111pl• . ~together. t:tO. COMEDY 8"aAf. "Mother, Jugo• AnCI Speed.. A team of petamedlcl ...,,, thet ttle ambulance company th9y wort tor II &boot to loM 1t1 ~atlng llcafl•. • THE FAMILY, THE MfDIA. AND THE 70'8 LynM Uttman moderatet a ClllWlllon t .. lurlng C8rolyn See. authOr of "Mothers. Daughter•." and Cerol EVM McKeand. exacutMt ltory lclltor of the A8C aariel. "Famlfy," 10:00. ([I MRNA8V JOHii Bamlby im.tlglt• ttle ~ of • young nun -. pec1eCI of removtnQ IN ... ~ l)'ltem from her tarmln&llY 11 ...... CR) G OPERATION: MMAWAY ''TOf> Young To lOYI" A ~~andlw ~nae..._, lier ~ r-.. to i.t them U'r.wa QOl&IP ''The Po11ce Tapea" The probtaml of ttle """ .,,. clnct poOc• ottlcar1 wtlO patrol the crlrncMldden South 8fonX ., .. are oet&lled. I LET'8 MAKE A DEAL EVENNi AT POPI Mime rendl11ons ot ~ clan•' deydreams are per· formed by Claude Klpnla anCI "" compeny of -· 10 the rnualc of Modt'I'• "Elne Kleine Nadltmusllc." • NlWSCHEQ( 10:ao •• NIW8 JOttNCAOE CompoHr·phllosopher Cage 11 profiled, along with a looll at 1111 C0111tltllltlona. ldW and in-itiol ... u:009 e e ([I 0 HEWI UNI.. AMENCAN 8TYl.E "ear.foot In The Pattc" Paul aor-to ~out at ir""..ov. * * ''°' "'JN lady Tak• A Flyer" (19581 Lina Turner. Jeff Chandlar. A pilot's wife. Cllacouragecl -'"' ,,., home .nuat1on. t•• on on • fllll'lt to fftgland. C2 hrl.) • NFL PAE IUION FOOTML.L Loe Arigalel Rams "'· Seattle 8MMwttl (Rsptay) • flNlll#OOO WT Gueits: autllcw/tcilntllt Dr. Olgood. alnger/dancer e...y .,.. and Mr. and Mrs TomC... • DtCK CAVETT • ~NII Sll'non. CAI • MACIB. I La.R MPORT 11:aGe(I) w•A•t•H "Crtlla" TM .-07711' pet· IOIWlll flee c:rittcal lflor't· aoaa ..._.. lhllt alPPfY iw-are cut. CRI tt::IO. TONIQHT Ho.I: Johnny Canon. au.ea: Ela Kalllln. Corm Stwent, 8otlby Kelton.. • 1WU1HT ZOHI! "Number 12 Loollt Mt lllca Y°"" 8111 STAMKYa HUfCH "PllWI" Stanlly la put under heavy preuura when two polloemen .,. ll&llt by • man .-ing rewnge on St8nky. (RI • QETIMARY "Slrllte While Thi AOlflC la TONIGHT'S LATEST USflN~S ~·• MU beoOITlll the t"9d at the Guiel OI Sur· vMno CQNTAOl Agenll -~WORl.D HIWI TONIGHT ~NG ,t:OO. 1WIUGHT Z<>Nf A fbrgo .... star Of Iha 30'1 ~ her olCI moviel to re- ~ -lpirtt ol tier r..0..V..00..EM BoutinO tt111 he II hMd of hit llOuelflold. Aaton Mt• that he can bttno • dlnnet ~tone~ . 12:ol. Cl) Cle LATI MOYll • • • "Sornett11no Of Value" C 19571 Roclr Hudlcwt. Sidney Poll• TWO ctilcll1oo0 tNrldl find 1f11m1etve1 choo1tn9 oppo11te 11dM when armed conftlct ervc>tt tJ:ao. ~ • •• "Nana" (195411\nne Sten. PhllllCI Hc*NI. A ~tltul young llnglng ,,., ,.,.. In ~ with • young lllutenanf with dll- MtrOU1o ,.,it1. ( t hr .. SS min.~ • MO'llf • • • "Imitation' Of Liie" c 19341 CUludet•• COlbett. W.,,.., Wiiiiam. Two wom- en go Into buslne11 together hoping to ~ IUC· ctlltul and happy with their Cl&Ughtera. (2 hfl I 11:17. 9 LIGEM> OI' THI ll.ACKHANO During the Mid<* Ao19 ..... Hallan flll'lllly attemp1lng to dominate Slclly orlglnet• the lechniquel of oroa- ne.d crime. (Par1 t ot 51 1•8 TOMOMOW au.t: Jacllle Cooper. dis- a..ing 1111 '°'YMI e&rMr inltlOW~. G MAVEAICK "The Oevll'• Hecit!Ke" CPart 11 ,:JOI NEWS tl46 NIWS ~1= • e e ""'Blancha Fury• c1t4t> s.._. at.ngw, ..,...,. Hobaon. A young pei11911 ~to be the ultClolng of ttwea men ano. llltlmattily, c..... her own dlatructlon. (2 "" ' 1 .-oHHOPU 2:05 MOVIE **''°'"The YoungStr~ er" ( 1957-JamH MacArthllf. Kim Hunter. When • 1h1t--~-old boy Q91• Into trouble with II l.heetre inaneger. his -.. ptOduoer lather CIOMn't beli9wl that It ... In Milt• defenN. (1 "' .. .-0 min.) 2:211 NEWS . z:ao MOYIE * * ·'The Incredible Peril lncldenl'' ( , ... , ~ ·--· orctt '~""*-(l "' • 55 mlt>.) • MOYIE • * "ThrlHI Secret•" ( 1MIJ Pttrfcla NM!. ~ Aomaft. TilrM ~.,. united by tragecly Wfllff 111a1r huab•nd• .,. lnVOIY«t. In • ~ Cflllllt, (2 hrlj e GITIMAAT ~~"'*"In SINnl" KAO. bl&Cllmtl" the WOftd bV ttw•tsning IO ~.m11111e. "'°°INIWI a:A1 8TWVI IDWANlt 4:00 MCMI * • ''CottaOf To \.et" tt94JI ~ Sim. JOrWt Miiia. A ~ ~ gett caught In e wl«) of mystery _, wto1ance. ca '" r ·=-·Niwa 4:JO MOVE .... ~S.Raldw" C1940I Hanfy WICOxon. CerOle Landis. A ~ spy Olag\lilll l\lmMll Al en lmpor1er on 1 tramp at..,_ Cl IW .. 30 min.I • MOW! • '"' "'Bator.. 1 Hano·• t 19'01 8ot11 Karloff, Bruce BeMatl. seatchltlg l()f • youth MMTI, I IQefft"f ln!IC'I• hl!Mllf' wlttt lhl blood of 1 tclllet', (I hr .. 30 "*'·' Frida•'• ......... ,,, .. ~FNNG rnao e • • "Father .. A BacNICW'' c 19501 W9larft Holden. Coee.> Gray A man wtlO hM lathered five Chitelfan es cominced by a yOU"O g1r1 that he "'°"*'" ., be • bechelof (2 tn.,20mln.) AFTERNOON t2:00 D • • 'h .. .._.Bent For Leather" ( 19601 Audie Muf'phy.FeliclaFerr.After a man II belllft and robbed, the &h9rilf .,,...._ h«n. ct.Nr1g tha\ ..... • wanted man. 11 hr .. 30 rmn.I a•O e• "AevenQellMll Oe1t1ny" c 1971) Chris Rc>Oln1on. lltsa Ingram. Upolt returning from Viet· n91t. • veteran uncovers • rn~etY llWONlnQ Iris wile and two "*'· p hr,. 30 min.) I:*>•**"' "Youno Oilllnger" I 1965l Nick Aclama. Rober1 Conrad. John Ollllnger'a first ncepe begins the tale of hll life. wtllch ... anded by• bullet. C 1 tw .• 30 men.) Behan Double ·It's Too .WUd .in Uganda _1 I Tries the Tube HOLLYWOOD <AP> -Fans of Brendan Behan, lhe late Irish writer, may be startled tonight al 9:30 on Channel 7, if they watch ABC's comedy pilot, "Mother, Juggs & Speed." and see the actor cast as a lawyer in the show. Shay Duffin ls the guy, Not only does he re- semble the heavy-set, rollicking Behan, be also hails from Dublin, where he used to tip a few with the noted author of "The Borstal Boy" and "The Hostage." And he drew critics' cheers in 1972 playing his pal ln "Behan," a one-man off-Broadway show be wrote and still performs. He says he'll be talkin& soon with Canadian investors about a movie version. DUFFIN, WHO JUST nNISBED a role in a new movie, "Butch and Sundance: The Early Years." came to acting a bit like bow one beads home from a Dublin pub -in a roundabout way He initially made his way in this world -.a an upholsterer. He worked bis way to Canada, but then became a performer when he learned "people there would pay for what I did for free at bome." He put the learning to use when be joined an acting troupe in Canada. the Emerald Playen, and appeared in classic Irish dramas. Durtnc Ulla period, his "Behan" play began taking shape. It started in 1964, shortly after Behan's death, he s aid, when he auditioned in Vancouver for a part in "The Hostage." "The director said, 'My God, you fripten bell out of me. you look so much like Behan,'" the ac· tor recalled. "So be bad me come in the theater dressed like Behan, pint in hand. .. l'D STAND NEAR THE stage and shout at the actors, 'But that's not the <censored> way I wrote It!' And the actor would say, 'Well, lf you want to do your own dirty work, come on up."' And up be came, pint of stout ln bancl, to re-i.-audiences jn the Behan mannet,witb IOJ)IS, jokes and a few amiable obicenltles: It promoted ftve years of Beban rese~b and tben bis play. Duffin. wbo saJd be 1alned flrstband knowledle of Behan when they'd take certain spirits at the SUnday bike races in Dublln, now banp his bfoCue &P4 hat lll_tbe fUlf town of Redondo Beach. Calif. Doesn't an Irishman feel odd llvina ln such a place? "No, even to cUa dltdies I'd want to Uve bere, •• be replied in b1a fine tenor voice. "I loft Uae IUD· sblae and J lo~ &be aeL '' MarlinPerldns Won't Take Cameras There By CYNTHIA STEVENS NEW YORK <•P> -Exotic wildlife has lured Marlin Perkins to the world's most remote regions to film documentaries for "Mutual of Omaha's Wild Kingdom." But Perkins says not even the rarest of animal treasures could induce him to re· turn lo Uganda while ldf Amin is in power. Uganda is off limits, the 73-year-old TV host said, because reptiles and mammals apparently fare as poorly as humans under the notorious die· tator-presldent. "Wild Kingdom," a syndicated weekly pro- gram about animals in their native habitat, begins its 17th season in September on a network or 22S stations. Air limes vary from city to city. PERKINS, IN A TELEPHONE interview from his St. Louis home, s aid bis sources reported that Amin and cronies got "roaring drunk" al a big bash recently and shot crocodiles in a park from a lodge overlooking the Nile River. They also killed an elephant named Lucy who used to beg handouts from lod1e IUeUs on tbe southside porch, he said. "OC course, wbat hap. pens to people is worse." Perkins said in reference to reported executions in Uganda. Perkins insisted be did not intend to return to what "used lo be a beaull!ul country'' as long as Amin is in power. To11elaing llp China. however, is another story. Perkins said .,...,..,.... he has been seeking permisa.lon to go there !or years. Actress Natalie Wobd receives the finishing touches from a makeup man before filming the love scene from the TV version of "From Here to Eternity." Obviomly. the new movie · will explore areas untouched in the 1953 Oscar•winning picture. "WE'VE MADE APPUCATION lo film the giant pandas," be said. "For four or five years they the Chinese dldJl't even answer our letters. We've tried political angles -nothing works." Over the years, "Wild Kingdom" bas covered subjects ranging from the cheetahs of Tanzania's Ser e ngeti Plains to the sandblll cranes in Nebraska. "We tell the true biological story." Perkins Hep • '~ __ , said. urt1 ID ~.... 1n nr•trauorr. be ex.eia1~ t.ow be and1our • other people in scuba gear swam wtt.b U sbarlts off the Eniwetok Atoll in the South Paclftc. The scleP· T I • • M • tists were equipped with poles that could kill tl\e e eVISIOD OVIe fish in case of trouble. but it WU not necessary, ~e said. LOS ANGELES <AP> -Katharine Hepburn is starrlnf ln -rbe Corn Is Green" for CBS in~ role of the Englishwoman who struttles to educate Weltb coal mhlera. The ft1m ls now in production ln Wales and En1land. where MJ.u Hepburn ts belnc directed by Georp Olkor tor the 10th Um. alnee 1932. CURRENT THEATRICAL 'FILMS about sharks are "liorror"itlmO--sotet1 for ntertaln· ment that "are not doing anything bio\Qciul or zoological for sharks,·• Perkins sa(d. Perkins. who's been bitten three tlmel by poisonous snakes and often ls se~ neck·to-aeek . .. ~ MARLIN PERKINS WITH A FURRY FRIEND Uganda Even Too Wiid for 'Wiid Kingdom' with wild beasts. said experience has enabled him "to read the attitude of an animal by looking at it. "Just because an animal bas the abilit? to at· tack, it doesn't mean he's going lo do it.· be ex· plained\ Through the TV show. Perkins has publicized animals threatened with extinction around the globe. Off camera. bis pet project ls wolves, which much to the zoologist's chagrin, recently were re- mqved from the country's endangered s~ci~ PElltKINS ARGUED TllA"T wolves-ve "'the highest social organization of any North American animal. They male for li!e: they are not lustful as most people think they are: they kill only to eat." COMtCS I CROSSWORD MARMADUKE by lrld Aftdtnon "Do you mind?" FUNKY WtNKERBEAN MW.<.> BA8ES, ~~ ru BE 1E MAIN Ml ()l 1£ REl..D I MCff. 'PBE'U.. eE 00 HMb ~ AND"M <AE CM ~ 10f£TH£R A& A 1EAM. GERIATfUX IOOM!R .. Git.. 9-(fW. [ UloN'f l(MIM' ~ ~L. NAN~~. MISSPIACH I~ VOtA" COlA'IN ~il\. GONG WITM ~Na r by Tom Batiuk by Jeff MacNtlly ~GORDO JUDGE PARKER OH, oeAA ••· 1 oAve MY 00<1 HER M!OICtNE . BUT t FO~<JOT TO SHAKE T~l BOTTLE ~JAST ' by Melt DON'T wortzv AM.AT IT. MY ~Tl.JC 60&'5- WIT.,_. A PL.UM~ WM~ TM~ ~Me WAY .... DOOLEY'S WORLD DR. SMOCK MRS. F1Ne eSCAPE:P?! OUT OF A FUU.. eC>PY-CAS.,..?! MOTLEY'S CREW l J ? t { ! 1 ~~/ i-~ ~ II YE!AH ••• SO.Me HOW SHf! 801" A HACKSAW ei-.APe INSIP!! 1"HA"r THING .' PEANUTS WELL: DIDN'T I TELL '(OU 6Vt'5 n8E'o 6EA~TVIEW? WE'RE Atmm V ABCNE TtlE Cl.0005 ... AAVE lfOJ NOTICED ? & DAILY PILOT €5 by Charles M. Schull by Roger Bradfietd by George Lemont SHE! cu-r A HA.,..CH oo-r OF 1"H8 eo.,..,..oM by Templeton and Forman by Gus Arriola TIDAT'S CIOSSRID RllLI by Harold Le Doux " .. " ... -~,..... ACROSS 1 WeM·made 6 Money holrdet' 11 Elect uM 14 Ex1J61te 15 WO!Shlp 16Ldc-not 17 Engl4h lake coontv 19 Fresh watef ll$h 20 lndlilge luly 21 Ovetng~ 119'llUS 22 U S.A.·Can coons 24 COS1 per unit 26 Iron and steel 'll lnfluent11I nallOnl JO Be tv.swe 32 Humble 33 Nega1ive contraction 34 Chem. cllsa 37 Shoemlk· e(s form 38 8allnce J9 The IOUth Of frlnCI 40 Toronto's 41 Fry ight1y ~Symbol 43 Poi1icll ~ 46 ftbric:s 46 On the same llde UNITED F .. ture Syndicate 48 Amer. IU thof <t9 Gain know!· eci9e 50 AdnellC pon 52 RMSC>nlblt !i6 Tavern !17 Business firm al OeceHe in fun 61 Arnet lndt -62 lllllfil parts 63 Abstrtct beong 64 Instruments &6 Boole! tnerustation DOWN 1 Does car penlry WOik 2 Great Bai· flllf llllnd 3 8-idered 4 Loen charge 6 FDR's pt11y 6 "Myn and --s~ Wednesday's Puule Solved: ILlnl11ln l 9 .w n 11i•1g lal•ld 1 ""OVlll 0 1 0 C al,ll f l II I A I • l I I l' l11lfla t l s f I • ••ll1lol -( l l I I e 11- I r . ' I I , I " [ TlA I l •• l ~ I V • a L I L Ila D I •I I , l C I I I •v I I • l I ; I e 1 a ". Oil L l . " ",. II I 0 ill ID I AID l 11 ., r , l ··-~ ' . • , _l A I '0 • l t I ~ l a D ll IA T ii) ! !. !, . ( II' I 1111'fl'!..!c!!. ' . •• "". D ;'a & I ---- 10 Most 41 t.fge gaff ftushed sail 11 8ftllll 42 Silvtrv 12 Otsolav metal 13 BNf down 44 E8f1em title on 45 An.-nal 's 18 Farm CIOC) dwelhng Zl local pet· 46 Resembling son. Suffix 47 Noted Bol· 25 Metric Unit shevik 26 Heavy tress 48 Waste prod· 'l1 Wooden ucr pole: Sp. 50 a- 2B Scot pon 51 Coc>tect 29 .A.I'd regions 53 Radames' JO Snow -)9loved lT'RtPOM S.bllrlt;1;a- l3 Tangy carol ~AMngulf 56Noun end· 36 Cont.MllrS in; 38 Stnled • debt ii Pav dil1 39 Aaitll: 59 Fool , ......__,. ................... ,,.. .. . . .. ... I l! s I I • v ( ' , t " t c c I I 0 t ' f ll I L f . ,. . . . . . "' . . . . . . -. . .. . .. . . .. r 0 DAILY PILOT Thur'ldey, Augu.t 17 1111 'Greasepaint' Readied ............ ......... S rn ger Pl'gg)' Let: hi.t~ bl"t.'n hospatuhzed "1th virul mOul•ntJ an l' Santa ~fon1rJ Hospital. where she 1i-. listt.'<i Ill foir cond1- l1on Shl· '' .1~ forced to C<.illtt•I ~·n i ght club engagem ent Th third time, •• they uy. 11 1t charm und Kont Jobnaon wlll b4' trylna lo prove lhut uda1e twice Mxt month as ht.< dlreeta hll third production for the Westminster Community Theater his thtrd •ta.ting or the m1.11lcal "The Roar of the Grc.>aaepalnl. th• Smell of thv Crowd " Johnaon be1an hla unocl1Hlon with Weatmlnstu ln l9'7S with "Stop thQ World. l Wunl to Get Off" Oda third production ot th t one allo 1 and returned turl11.1r thl1 y~ur lo direct the Ora.nae County prt-mft'rt' "f u new musical. "Two by Two " HI.a flrtst "Rour of lhe Gre1&1ep1Alnt" was done .. t La1unu Beuch In UJ67. his second ut Golden Wt:: l College ln 197S · t•or b.ls hit.est mount.in& of "Creuseplllnt." the Co ta Mesu director hlH Clu.rk Bw-ton llS the .ir lslocratic Sir und Duvad Chundle r us the downtrodden Cocky Other princlpuls Include Lori Towler as the Kid. Connie Caruthers us the Negro and Paula Brudy a11 th(• Girl CHORUS MEMBERS ARE Elaine Bauer. Vickie Coleman. Carol Albright. Paula Brady. Lynda Towler. Patty Dominguez. Sue Brennan. Sall.Y Stevenson. Rosemarie Cox. Alison Just. J<J!'lS Murphy, Denise Johni;on. Pat Burson and Trisha Bunon. Peggy Kramer is musical director ror the Bergman Back 'Home' away for inte rrogation on " !>Uspect· ed tax evasion case" Intermission Tom Titus t WPstminster show, while Eluine Btluer is choreo- graphing and Carolyn Dennison is stage manaaet •·Greasepaint" wlll get the 1978·79 season off und roaring on Sel)l. 8 and will play fJve weeken• through Oct. 7, wfth performances on Fridays and Saturdays. Curtain time will be 8:30 at the theater. 7272 Maple St .. Westminster. wtlh reservutions be· ing ta ken al 893-86216, • THE JURY IS STILL out on the fate of "Pacific Overtures" at Orange Coast College und the prospect of future summer musicals there. "We're not certain whether we've reached that magic break-even point or not." says Jean Thof!lpson. OCC's associate dean of commi.lnity services. "We upped our ticket prices this year from $2 to $3 per seut. and our receipt.a Jumped by better than 50 percent over last year. Our con· cession sales were up too.·· More thun 3.200 pcoplt· turnl'<i out for the five performances of "Overturc·s." u new muslcul be· ing staged non·professionully for the first lime anywhere. The collegt• hutJ been given un ul· tlmatum by the board or trustecf: e ither muke expenses or forget about any ruture summer m usicals. in the light of the passage of Proposition 13. . Unttt•d Art1Sl'i r•lPulrf'" corn UNI...,., ..... .,. STOCKHOLM CAP > -Swedis h film director Ingmar Bergman re- s umed rl'hcur sals at the Royal Dramatic Tbeuter here Tuesday for " play interrupted 21,-i years a go when police grabbed him on stage over a tax,cootroversy. The director subs equently bad a ner vous breakd own and exile d himsetr soon uflc rwurds. suylng harassment by tax authorities made it impossible for him to work in Sweden. ''COMMUNITY R ESPONSE W.\S funtustic considering thl• fuel thul W(' presented u new und unfamiliar musicul. und thut we raised our ticket l~ .... ---•lllililiilllilll Rehearsals for "Dance or Death" <'a me to an abrupt hall in January, 1976, when police took Bergman Tax authorilies late r freed Bergman or all evasion charges bul he remained abroad until this week. prices.·· Mrs. Thompson remarked. "Had we pro- duced a popular. wcll·known musical. I'm certain we would have atlructcd larger crowds " The college bourd has yet to m ake u decision on the continuation of the summer mus<11. which Is now a 23-year trudltlon at OCC EL TORO SedchbKk Sa1·5llO FOUNTAIN VALLEY Edwarda 83tt-1500 COSTA MESA So. Coeat Plue 546-2711 ANAHE• Century 21 n2-no2 ANAHEIM DI an.;tl50 OR ANOE UA City Centre 134·3911 Onnge Mall 137-o340 BREA 8,.a Plu.. 529-5339 WESTMINSTEA Cfnem11w .. t139-7581 Hilarious .......,..,.._. .tto.-.,.'.., 111\ .. ,,, .... ,..,.,, \1.,cJ ,, .. •u ......... Reo·' Pf\llbtn KA8C T\' Re• Reed N ., o ..... ., Ne.-, .... • tt0-«l2t ._!H 1110•61' 1'60 IUIT ~ e IAUY r•D HOOPUINI ~ MC ClAIM e C1'9 Ol&mSM WAaLOIDS Of ATLAHT1S IHI MUS U NIVERSAL STUDIOS TOUR .11,MCA ·"•"' • • ..,,._. •; rr,-~11"'' ..__ __ ..JM~ & THI m Of TIOll ll'OI .. New and shiniag...speaks to anyonewhohasa feeling for the amaument of maslc." .......... ~ ... PEIER FRAMPTON THE BEEGEES ''SGT. PEPPDl'S .LONElN HEARTS CLUB BAND'' NOW PLAYING .:...i e20 lDWHDS Cl•MA Orarige ~-2~~3 Cosl.l Mesa 546·3102 Olll¥t JO•J O •600 I I)• 10 JO fOUteTlll fllUY OAIVE·ll Founiain Valley %'12C81 Jusl &dwn flOU thoMflN ~2 "° KllU M:CIPlU .. , ...... llT MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY "SGT. PEPPER'S LONELY HEARTS CLUB BAND" (PG) "fHE BUDDY HOLLY STORY" "THE SWARM'' (PG) 'WHO'LL STOP THE RAIN?" 'WHERE'S POPPA?" CR>. "THE CHEAP DETECTIVE" f PG) "MURDER BY DEATH" "HEAVEN CAN WAIT" (PG) ... "FOUL Pl.A Y" (PG) ''FUN WITH DICK & JANE" "CONVOY" "EAT MY DUST" (PQ) "THE DRIVER" (R) "SPEED TRAP" ''BUDDY HOLLY STORY" (PG) "THANK GOO IT'S FRIDAY" "HEAVEN CAN WAIT" "AMERICAN HOT WAX" CPO) ,,....,,, .. h ... ,, 979.9150 U...••" Wtlltl 12t'.lo10 ran IUN£WA'I' • TOMMY Uf .,... IYU Of LAUU MAU 111 JOHH TIA VOL TA GUASICPGI WDAYs-.lll lo7'J .. 9'.Jf UY/iuM-l111-J:Je.,6:J .. 1:41olt --... Tn ~EA YEN CAHWAIT'0 IPCil u'r1~t~~·~1:11ot:1s .,.n,..... ITAa WAIS~ IUll ALJIHA INCIDIHTINI ION ICNOl1t & UMN VAUHT!Nt HOT LIAO A COLD PllT 101 "us fllMY HIOAY101 IUIY...,....... WLT nno MOC»ll(NI "u• ODI 10 ltU.., JOllNI ...... ,., ...• "" . '"" . 1MI INOm .,_. 11am • M• a.ana MIAYIN CAN WAlfCNI ""' ... Ir.AN NOf WAJl!NI £NTERTAINMENT /INTERMISSION NO~ PLAYING IO'lfAllOt U'"DACK llYoro(ll~ lllOOUll'll' llll An•-11u1 111 6""6 -1'~••"1 .--:>e:'"'"''CC~O'• jDDDOLaY81'Wl901 (I •····-··"' -·~···· liil. ~~~m~!_ ~ .. E •. 1.~AT ~~~T~_!4EAR YOU ·=~.:~~.~-·H··:~. ~~~~~~ ll)W...0$C:ltllMA CINllt ••OOX '""'°',.... '"' llJ•' r0\11rt1 °~ • • JASHtOfrif SQVAl"f 1.•> .... JtJriJ~· ~l' *"'Ill IH1L/ll ••tlllll /Hit.HI edwants CUDA M41!1(19Al~ COSTA ..U.. .... J1•1 [ J I I - ll s I ( I I - I • c I - v c . I ( I I I I , t • l c I I 0 l ' ( () I I.. f • \ f J l . . . "' . . . " .......... ,. , ' Movie Actor ReMeals Amazing New Weight l:oss Breakthr.ough! -0. ... ~ llJ.W.llnJ ep.a.t.....,.. Wrialr) A ... ('97 Im() -W"1 .. '-wifht bM .... 41et I UZM"' .... who ii -• tdeDUlt • .... ... .. .... • cots. ......... ......., •DDUCb. be ii u 8Ctior. HAI u.. ii hank Downu.,. • Yoo 1MJ hew -n bim in MOM\ hit morit "Coma." lie .....,.. lte1lJ the aaimenuce ... wbo wu bndalb~ . .... Odober d\D'inc tbe lhootiq of the film, he ....... 226 pounda. Im .... meaancl 49 inet. and he •• a prime candidate for a heart attack. Ilia Wood ._la and arteriee were cloged with fat. H1I choi..t.ol lnel w• way too hifh and hia blood p,_,.. .... ~ l6M20. nii. docton .... he ... a •alkiDi time bomb read,J to ap&ode. Re ,.... • "" 1-1 llC*ibili~ of dJoppiq °"" ... at an7 tnoment. All that ia hard to fietieve when you .. him now. 'Jbday he loob alim and healthy. Hia weiJht ii down to 180 poonda and be ii ltill loaiq. He IDOYU with an _, IJl'llC9. The doctora can hardly btUew u ~ Hit cholesterol &evel ii normal ... bia blood prellUl'9 ii a perfect 1.2W80. At tbe time "Coma" wu ID.Ide. be couldn't walk half a mile witboat ,.uing out of breath. Now be can run m aDee without stopping! Im waist meuul"el only 36 incbee and be bu the happy problem or needina • new wardrobe. . I went with Frank to the West Cout pt'emiere ot "Coma" and it wu a atrange experience. It waa bard to beline that tbe man titting betide me and tbe man on tbe ICt'een were one and the aame. After tbe moTie, we went to Chuen'., the fa,m. oua Beverly Hilla restaurant. It wu there over cof. f• that I becan UU. intemew. ./ Que1itioD: •i.ee1 to on. 'IWl me aboa& m of tlae ofMI' ....,_of your new c11e&.• A.uwer. "Well, .Jobp. UU. diet bu one more IUl'- prile inpedient. I learned about tb1a ape· cial food from nadina a book written by tbe late Adele Davia. At you know, she wu a bigbly Ntpected world ramoua nutritioniat. She said that all tick people, all people with high blood cholesterol and all ovenrelsh& people need tbit ape· cial food. .. Queltioru "Wb.y1 What la this apeclal food any· ,,..,.,.. Answer: "It ia a natural eoun:e of organic iodine, calcium, potaaaium and variol18 trace minerala. nm ia a food subetance that increaaee the amount of caloriee your body burns • day, thereby allowini you to eat more without weight gain." " ... On this di,et you can lose weight so fast your friends will think you have gi,ven up eating alt.ogether. Of course, I am prejudiced but I think this is the fastest di,et on earth. 'Thu can start 11UUJ$uring tlie difference in . ' lhncllr. Aug&llt 17. 1971 --~ur waist/,ilJJ! within24 hours ... " -· ~--· • I I .. ,, ;lf ""l . ~ . .. Question· "0.JL. Frank. tell me about thia 'eecnt' diet of youJ'e and your ••• book. What°• it all ahoat. ...., • .,r Answer: "Well, John, the diet ia not eec:ret any· more. I have delcribed it completely in the book. At JOU know, the book ii enti· tled "Tbe BolJpood Ew l'WIJ Diet" and it ia all about the Wtest ft1 in the world to !Ole weight and bep it oft• Q..uon: "Tlaaf• -~ ttde. ..., do j'OU cal.lit 'Tbe BoUJwood ~ Die&1" Amwer: •&ecau.ee in Hollywood, if you an an actor or an ldrets, beina crrerwjpt can be a downright emergency. Out hen it actually COltl mone7 to be Cati rm not kidding! Many ti.met the c:uti.ng director will M1 -'Lole weicht or io. tbe putr" Qoeetion: •1 cu .. '/OGr poln&. Bai .... &boat the diet Mi9eln Bow la It dlfllaent from an.y~dlet?" Amwer. "First o( all. thia ii • ""'· '91'7 ra.t diet. It literally buma otr Cal by U. hoar. On uu. diet. you c:an -•ilht. Wt 10Qr friends will think JOU haft liven ap e& inc altoptber. Of COW'M, J am pnijudiced bat I t.bink thi• ia the faatell ctitt on earth. You can actual)J .wt meaurina the difference in )'OUr wailtli.ne widdn M boan." Q1Mtir111: "Bow aacll ...,W haft JOU bi& .0 ... tbar1" A.mwwi "8o m 1 haw IOlt 66 poadl ... I J.119 onb been on the diet anu ud ...uJf • ~ -WOwt Thate pretty amutn,S Forslve me far ukinf tblt qu.don .,.m. but lltluleT'" Answer. "You bet. My whole diet plan ia we. lt'a probably much aaf'er than the way you eet rilbt now. Never again will I tab a chance with my health. Believe me I bani learned from penenal experience that it ii~ not worth it. Anyw.,, it ii not ....,,. You can )Dee welcht faat with my diet. plus pt healthier every day JOU ltay OD IL. Qaeetion: "1bne reaDJ tot me cariou now. An dm9 8D;J lllON ·~ill um new dWof~ Auw.: "Yee, there are, but J don't want t.o give them all aw., in UU. inteniew. Natur- a.Uy, I want people to &O out and buy the book." ~ .,.. enoqh. Bat how about pm, ..., ....-. IOlde dMe u to what to apeot when they read the bookr Amwer. ·oi. 1.1 r .. alreM,y aa1c1, t.hia it • VMY Wt workina. no-bunpr diet. But tbit it not only a weilbt loet diet. It t. • health diet allo. Not only that -tbia it a high enerv diet. It tu.ma body rat into body fuel. Alter about three or four dtya on t.hia diet, 10\lr enero will begin to in· creue quitil a bil It will im:reue ewry d8,y till about the 10th or 11th day when it an. t.o le"1 ott. At ltlllt that'11bl way it bu worbd for me and IOmt of Dl1 CIOle ,,.._ I now haft about twice • much e1111111 11 I did bea>rt I went on t.be diet. Another nice tbiq it that on thia diet, you ldoal1J Joie weight automatlcaU.y. Yoo don't haft to think about it all the time. Ball tbe time I don't enD re· JD1tD11er that fm OD a diet until I lt.ep OD ...... a.& wW UiM .... .,, aU. &Mt itJa.eo lfmP,le. IU1..., to WJow enn «,. ·~ oat a lol. YOb don't count calortt1 or .....-w~or~ei.... ,... cm)J thiqlllother t.o..., trMk otte liwllRilnN1PtllOlt.....,-..,:' Cltialht• "It .... llUJOQ'ft......, ... ., wtMa1ea1N .. fDOd. ....... ... • .., ot .... book?' A:uwa; 9l'be book will be anllailt bl about ll\ltll cSa,I. ft will be IOld bJ mail bJ a Ntw Jw7 puNltblftl eoDptDJ lllJed Tbe Millburn Book ~tin. i-.oa Wn .... fiO pm ft In .al &be b1dMDNt ud Fa flantnc a MtioRide 9ar to ...... u. .. and thik M8J'erll "'hldrJ ............ ....., Canon .,. • MmY OrilJJL no Dont 0 11781Wlbun9aet~ Th1I Is a publlclty p}loto of Frank DoWlllnl taken before be wen& on &be Hol- lywood Emergency Diet. At the time th.la picture wu taken Frank wetabecl DI pound. an.cl his wallt meaamecl u he eay• "a 1hutly 0 inches.,. Well. that waa the end of my interview with funk Downing which took plece two weeb qo. Since then I have rea~ the book and gone on the diet m1191! Frankly, I am amazed. I never dreamed loe- ina weight could be eo fut and eaay. So far rve been lo.ing at the rate or one and one-half pound.a per day and rm never hun8l'J. AA• matter of fact, anytime I plan to go out for sup~ I have to remember oot to tab an,y of Frank'a no-hungel' food eec:ret or et.e I won't be able fO eat. There are many tuJ priw in the boot which were not covered in the intervie,.. Here are a r.,, or them: 0 ••• • A beauty aecnt uMCl by many Hollywood atan that c:an mile 70u look and feel up to lG-16 yean younpr in only rou.r daya. (Thia doee not involft exerct.e or c:osme- tb. Frank bu written an entire chapter about tbit tiechnique. The title of the c:bapter ii "The Greatieet Beauty Secret • A timple exercile that doea for you.r face what a aood ,mile doee for your lipre. • A "wonder food" that worb lib powdered beat and mabl your inner furnace break down bodJ fat. • ~ NUODI why you 16ould neftr count calories. • A epteial W tow atnlJhttt.&tl.t. JV11 a. wieb' while 70Q tleep. • Bow to look a11m )efON J"OU .. allm. • A 5-tecond enrdle that pta rld of a dou· bl• chin. • How to le& nabue sift ,Oil a nataral r. lift while you aleep. • 8ii Cooda that Pft JOU IP lmodonal JltL • A cUtaln law '°" mua obey lw ..., pound Jft tUe '111IC1W want t.o bep it oft power drinb that will atop htlD&"l' for hours. • Why you can loee more weight on tbia diet than if you ran 70 milee per week! • A timple aecret that mabe it poeaibll for you to stay on this or &111 diet for lite and never be uncomfortable with it. • The seven beat at&Y·JOUDI health eec:Nta u.aed by Hollywood atars. • How Hollywood atan atop the qina pro- c:ea • How to command 7our bypothaluaue gland to atop aendina hunpr a:ipala. There'a a lot more. All in all, I think tlu. ii tba molt •masin1 diet boot I haw 8"l' read. It CIOlltainl many eecrete I never even dreamed es:i.lt.ed.. Prank . . ~§1.,. mast have done an enormoaa amount ct~ t.o come up with 111 many ~ -.. If JOG hne a wiaht problem, I a&ronal7 mp JOU to pt a COp)" of tbia book U IOOn U pombJe. Jlicllt DOW it ia atailable on1.J by mail. S..'1 bow, JOG CD ...... t.be book and try oat the cliM without.., rilk a aU: .Go abHd.tl( order tba book mail. Jteest it ae .,. and chic\ It oat. Then ii you u.Uiili.ppJ ~ it, •nd it brick and the pOliaber will Ntunl JHr • tlifiii ~ft~ llJd wltb&Nt q......._.._. 11'~JW..-JH11 lll:ls .. JOU Clbeck or moD1J order-bf ao daJL llJW ell w.. tbe pGbliaber pnm1-e and....,.... -to .... lttor at leut th&& amountcttt... n. if JOG clecllde to retun tba book. hit will llDll beck 1"1' me ' I cblck QI' mDDIJ order with DO qa.tJou ..U.S. 'lb ~ wrltil JOGI' lllJM and ..wr.. ud &bl .,... "lloll1wood lmer.-., Diet" oo a pilca ot p..-and •nd it with '1~ to: The Millburn Book Corporation Dlpt. I D , P.O. Boa 1018 · US Mlllbum Aw • lllUbun. Nw..., 070'1 Yow book will be llDt pnmpd.J bJ -..a aian. If JOU haw fal q.._. JVU .. till (IOU '"-am. Chicb liid...., oN.'1-.W lie ilMI..,. ab1t to 1'I MUiian Book O.,.AIL (Jt 111 II& e ""w. to .n CMb.) ' ) l! s I 4 I I I • c c l ' I L I ... ,. ~ . . . . . . . ----PUBUC NOTICE "~':NU~ , ...... ....,.. __ .,~ ...... -.. . UAIC IU"OIH, ... 'it 1 .. 11 ,...,, , ... ,.,,. t.lliwN• ••11 H•t ... '1'•111 *' Cer .. 1 .. 11 .... '-....... 0--. c.tl..., ........ , Tll" ........ la~ ... •Y M 111 '1"'4Nel ~~ ""' .. ...._ -..... *'"' , ... c-•• CleA .. o..,... c-•• ... .............. """'' ~I\-Or ... CM.i 0..1v ~111'1. A .... IUUI_.....,._, ;.;:~ ?VBLIC NOTICE ..._ tt0TIC9 OP llfflWTIOll TO calA.,.. Y.~n ·~••n , ....... t•UC.C.I lolOTICI I\ M<"t•Y e1wn It llW C•••11t" •I J AMl' ALlll AN DI" W IGC.S Jr •• ~AT•ICIA JOA N l JlllOOt. .. llZAll•• .....i..v.a ,_,.O T"AOINO CO--~AN Y O••l•o. ,.,.,._ •1n1"'" _.., ... I• llM ..... ..-rt ..... c.. .. -~ •tttl, ,_, ••• Qt-\lele • t.O-ftl• -• -wnv -11 -" .. ,,_ ., 0--.... t• •" t•• le '"'•II ... ,,,. .. , Af • f1\llll\lrelltll. 1'M-~---.,.,...,. ..._ '' HI \ ,,_.... LH A....... -I\ t-tv of '-M AJ'91m, ~-CM ........ e ,.,. ~ '" _,, ,,. !oecw•y lft..,nl will .. <,_ed " 111 '9"H .. ....... -. _ .................. .,, ........ 1. 1....,._ ... , -- ...... Intl-flt ·--tq .. I .. -Ill, ,..,,.., .... -........... ~ .. O.l>lor ,o __ IW-'Y -~ •• •ts• folewl)Ot1 lll'M., c. ......... ,_,,., cK Or ...... ~ .. Gel ......... end llW$1M\\ It.-• •• atZAll"I IAZAAll ANO fllAOlltG OOM~ANY T ,_. •'-"Id ..Cwlly lr-1- wfll CM c011.--lM ., • elttr tN -... y el~. ,.,... .......... . \m•ll •...i-~ Admlf!ODl'•kln, O+. .. ,., Olf1ce. , ... N Golden """· 8urlMlnk CellloflW• tllGI 111 1~1-menll Dy u S ,, .. _,, a.n~. So 111< •• k-lo nw S.Cweel p.,. ty, •11 ~· nemtt end...._ ... """ llY II• Otblor lor l"9 ...... -' l .. llN>I,.,.. ._.. OAT E 0 "-61 IO, "11 Sec:-p.,-,, ~lltS<.11 ..... ACI"'""~" ellOll .J ...... ( "'< ....... s-t Ml\ot Dou. E....,..IM, SMALL IUSINIU ADMIMtSTaATIOM ........... -----.~.,-..... L ..... A"°t. 0..- IK..., -Dl. 411 "'1t1 »•LA Puo1ts-Or-Coe~ Delly Pilot, AUQVSI 11, "71 _,...,. PUBLIC NOTICE O•D4NANC1[ NO. -AM INTllllM OllDIMAMCE 0, THI CITY COUNCIL Of' TME CITY OF COSTA MISA, CAU,OaMIA, fiXTEMOIMO TMI IPPICT 01' OllDIN AN CE MD . 7 1 ·2 4 CONClllNINO A MCMlATOttlUM OM TMI ISSUANCE 01" a UILDlllO PlllMITS Ott "I VISID UMID IM TMI 011.NlllAL Aa&A MnlJU M U.Kl lt STlllln AND PAULAalMO AVINIJI, ,llOM m TO t.GI Pl llT WIEST 0, TMI cun••u•• OP a•ISTOL STREIT, De e&.ARIMO SAID OllOI NANCI! TO a l AM • IJllGINC'I' CMtOINAMCI MD SllT· TINO l'OllTN TME RI ASOIU TIU! Ill FottE. THE CITV COOHCIL OF THE CITY OF COSTA MESA DOES MERE8'1' OllOAIH AS FOi.LOWS SlCTIOM I: TI.-City C-H of lN City of C:OU. Mew '""" -dK .. rn tr..t OrdlMnt• No ~14 wn ~ •s .,. u•-r Int.Im..,.._. 1o ei. •-tor ,,.. c°'"'*'UOll -~ o4 • SC>t<lll< Pt ... tu "" ---.... . bel-n IHI<., 5oirwt end PWl ... lno ""''"" from J7S to 1,m ._. we1ll ol ,.,. ct111.,11ne of ~ SU.: tti.r ,.,. "'°"''°"of• Pree-PWI ol street ............ II ~.-y .., .,. ..... pl-1.wtlarl ol Yid ~ ..... ; •ncl WWII eddltlOllel llfnell~ -,,_. COll\i.rllllon .... ~ of 4 P,.dse Pl.., of st...t .. ....,_ -· 111 ... etore, ~ u.ls •at-Ion of Ordl.,•t><• No 7t-t4, wttf\ modHk• ''°"· l>U"'*'1 lo CalttorNe ~ ""'"' Code ~ for Ille ...,.,., llHllll, Nff!V, ..id wetfln ef tlW l't 1)11011< ~ AtcorelillQly, tlW,........ V"llM'CY • Oroln•n<;•l•edoc*d~: SI CT ION J : All di •lc;u1441I II - holllteCI In the genHet - -80er St•MI .,_, P.ularlno A- lrom 375 to 1,QJ IHt wet of ltoe c.... terllne ot 8rlstol st.-. uce91tl119 lhe•etrom ctrteln tenttary, all es • peen on • mep •ttec-,..relo muk•CI E•hllllt "A" •M tty 11111 •PKlll' rete.-fllC•medi9•~...,..... T ... City ~ff Is.__,, dlredef Mii IO IHut -permlta of -11.lftd tor construction wllllln ,,.. elllf'•m•n· ,._., •fff lor tile CIWetlen Of tnll Ordln•n<•, "'°"ldlel 1Nit 8ftY ecip!IC• Hon tor City action Wflktl .._ llMll llleel with IN City, or"'"''' lswed W ,,,. c lty wl!llln lhe selcl -.,...... -ettecllve .S.le of ~ Ho. ,._,. \11•11 not t>e de11leC1, •njolMCI, or olllerw lu P•tv•nl•d from belnt pur--9, cw comp!-M>iely by .... '°" of llleW OrcllMft<ft NYl"9 -., edoPIM. 5'«Jo protect may be -unect or C°""'"1'ed It oU...Wla •P p<ov ... II~ Ille City SIECTf°" J; The rN-.S In suppcwt ol Ille nec:estty Of Ulls U'99ft(y '"" 1er1m Ont.-.,...,~. A Sl>Ktlk Pl4ll CW-n.etl --•doPleCI for this oentr .. •rH. The Pll~ of I.Md $CJoKltk Pl.., Is lo r• '°'"' flfHaolt. ..... u.11y l\e1-lrettl< ~ -"kll COOlicl ,_It lrOrl IM _.....,, of ..... 1up1 .. t•mlly Uftlh witll ,,.. .,..Y ecc"" Mlllo dlreclty from • heevlly lreoled Prlmuy Hl~y. The ~ o4 • Precls.e ,..... ell 'ttrHt .. ........, 11 net .. Hry tor the l~lon .. H1CI S11t<ltk Piii!\ Acldll'-1 time I• required for tlte con1lder•llon ol •ll•rnlltlve -.-,b end n.-1ng arr-mft!H lor INt strHt prlO< lo 11te ~tklrl of• P'l'eclse Pten ol •llvn· m""t lor llW befteftt of Ille ••H allKt· ed by tl\111 rnorMorlwn end ITle ~''"' llHllll, tafety, end _lf.,e ot Ille pullll<. SlCTION 4: Tf\h Ordl11at><e sr..U teh effect end be In full l«C• end •I· 1ec1 1m---:;t,zcm .... .n.r 1u IN>MQe. end I,_ el(plretton of lltlMn CUI _,,. ..... IU ~. sr..11 IMI pwbl..,_ one. In IN 0r...- COHI Deity Piiot, e ~ of • oenerat clrculetlon. '''"'" a11C1 llUOllslleCI lfl .. Oty of Coste A!Wu, •ovetlltor '""" ... --.... -"'"of tlW Oty ~II~ for MCI eoe1n11 .. -· n. ~ of 1111• ~ Wit be eftectl ... tor • llt•lod ol ... 14) ........ .,... Mop. ''°"· ,,.. Oty a.tt It~ to tlte "'" fl• Mbm'W,,. ~ ... 1M11 In IN Ctste.._..~ .... Cl*. .. ~ssto AMO A~D t111a~l"il ... ,cK ....... 1911. l_..Y.M(~ ........... ATTEST~tyetOat.4,,_. .. ,_ ... ......., CltyC!eftl•h CltyofC......_. STATE Of'CAUfllOftNIA l COUNTVCWCMtAN04E I u. CITY 0, CXliSTAMOA ) I EILl'EN P. ,..INNEY, Cltyctenl -••~ Olrtl et CM Qty e-.tll ol the Qty ef C.-141 ,.... ,,..., <"11fy .......... ~ Ordl-HG. .,... -..,..... 1 eftel CMlicllnd lldAM., -'""el • ...,1er INMlng ef Miki City Coull<ll Mid Oii l.M nl\ Oloy of AUii*. t'11, e1141 ,.......,..,._. .......... ...... .. , ....,.., _... Of MIC! C-11 ......... "".,. ~ "71, by t .. flll'°"""O rot! Ult ... : AYES: COUNCILMl!MllltS: M<1'.n-.Redtl,Hwme,k~ • NOii! COUNCILMIMtlRS: .. _ A•HNT. CC)UNCILMllMllHs ifMl!WW4 IN WITNGI WHIRllOI', t ._, ....... ... ,.,,, ................. .. ........ °"' .. a.. ...... . ............. l,.._P,~ ~°"'---­°"" .... °""---. ,....:.:-°'~== .... ........ -.... ·-·-·--..... Thur.clay. A"Pi* 17, 1171 6 4 2· • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E D • The Blggeat Marketplact on th• Oran1e · Coaat DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell tt, Find It, Ttade It With a Want Ad [642-5878] One Celt Service Faat Credit Approval ......... ~AL HOUStNO OPPORTU NITY P ''rtw't Motke: All real-..~ lldv•rtlMd In this newspQer la sub Ject to t.be Federal Fair llou11of Act of lHI which mak• It UleaaJ to adv•rtlH "•n)' pre· fereoee, UmllaUon. or dillcri aunation baled on "*le, coiot. rell&IOD. sex. or naUooal onain. or an lnlenbon to make any aucb preference. bm1ta· lie& or dlaeri mioaUon." 1bia Dllftptper will not lmowtnaly accept any adverU1ln1 for real _... wbieh la ln vlola· tiaaolU..law. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IALIOA ISLAND Sharp duplex, 2 BR. 2 ba units, steps to North Bayfront. Reduced to $!J60,000. MESA VERDE 5 BRfamilY home. Move· in cond. Good schools & close to everything. $1.218,SOO. EASTSIDE COSTA MESA Sharp 3 BR. 2 ba home. Newport schools. On a quaint well maintained street. Owner will con· sider 2nd T.D. $95,750. a.ft. Balboa Island Really "'l) '"'"-''*-"' "~',-\ 673-8700 • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 G1Mr.. IOOl G1Mrlll 1002 GtMral GIMrlll 1002 G1MHll 1002 ....................... ....................... ............•.......... . .............•.....•............. , .......•... ~COATS & WALLACE ~REAL ESTATl . INC. ·, 1 lJ1 ·11 l Y ll~Nlll l'OMPAN~ H~vl'H; 1111 '>lll1lll ll)lbl ;'\RI .~ \INll J'll.l Ill.OW SI0.000 -Yes, a sharp, clean, quality home with professional landscaping. Too many xtras to mention, priced at only $'77,900. Hurry on this one! C41114Ml41. IU._... A Ai IM l'UTUll-Consider a new 3 Bdrm beach home for only $82,000. Wouldn't your family like to be living at the beach now? Wouldn't you feel good having your children in a fine school district? Can you get a long with 3 Bdrms? If yes, uH 64CMl61 . SPrvtnq C0'-1.l M esa-lrv tn(' H1111l111qt on Bt·.id' N e w port Be<1c l1 3•.CUSTOM $70,000 ~ fR€'T Abeolutety true! Lovely > IG€ tree lined street. Fruit HOM€~ trees and flowers sur- round this brand new -INVESTMENTS. custom built 3 bedrm & family rm bome. Oc· cupancy date early Sep- t ember . A tr ue BARGAIN HUNTERS DELIGHT! Full price only $70,000. HWT)', call t.o Me 752· 1700. oPfN llf 9 ·II\ IUN 10~1 flrCt' [e1m1 TOO MUCH TOGITHBHESS? See this one w /separate gueat bonus rm over garage w /full bath & private entrance. Fresh paint & new crpl in this lv!y rondo which has in addition 2 spacious bdrms + 11,'J ba. central vacuum & gar den ldtcben. Only $68,900! 545-9'91 NEWUSTI~! 22UHfTS Extra !harp! Only 6 yrs old. Tenants vay ut, 2 BBQ, rec rm, pool. 9x gross. Excellent area. $550,000 13 UNITS All 2 bdrm. solar pool. Owner will carry con- tract w /$75,000 down $37S,OOO 16UHfTS Pride of ownership. All l br units. Owner will carry 2nd w/20% dn. $400,000 30HALOT Eastside Costa Mesa. 3 sep houses on com er lot. Super location $186,000. 20HALOT F.astside Costa Mesa. 2 sep houses on R·2 lot . $129,SOO 4'-r€HIG€ · HOM€~ 3333W. COA.ST HWY. NEWPORT BEACH 645-6646 Beautiful waterfront l•--------bome with boat slip & aandy beach. in BAL BOA COVES; .C bdrms. + family rm., 31,'J baths. 2 frplcs .• 2 patios. S327.SOO Including land! ..... .., ..... ...... •675-7060 * ST'B'S TO SAND CHET PURCELL After ·many years in Real Estate Ma nagement, most recently as Manager of the Bluffs Community Association, Chet bas gone into reel est.ate sales with Harbor Realty. Chet's unique background enables h im t.o offer professional experienced assistance to families wishing to live in The Bluffs and other desirable areas. Whether you plan to buy or selt, why not "Let his experience work for you"? You can save yourself lots of time 811d money dealing w1th an expert -so give Chet a call. You'll be glad you did. 673--4400 llG CAHYOH C.C. -$265,000 New Exclusive! Deane Homes Dover model! Grandstand view of Big Cyn golf course & Newport Center! 2 Lge bedrooms. family room. formal dining & 2 lovely baths. 2 Minutes walk to Clubhouse. Won 't last so better hurry! 2111 S-J~ Hila load Lingo Rul&ian NEWPORT ILUFFS l••octts ..._ M•n• T. ,._ 9lill .. Wiit ...... ':Ir. ........ c-. ... woed ...... ~ -•!,~.., tNI¢#. er.. to CJ ., ...... M nc...., ... fl $116,000. ILUFFS CONDO EttioY .... prf•ecy .... ..... '-die 1f11 g WT~ ttrh cJw1i11g llllHs ca.do. .................. two .... -..... ........ .......... wflll""" .......... ,..... ...J9111M1rbe ... c...._..to_..tlll1 • spedal ......... s 157,500 • EASTILUFF Cntuulwcl two etory EosMiff 11w .- • ..,... 'flew of-· ............... ladl lef. line .............. ~ ...... ._,,... .............. :y .... ..... I fs01 ...._ _... fl Sl7t,IOO. , . MEW IN ILUFFS 1;' ~, "'" .... , .... two .ct - • ''.'t ~ .......... ...ty ..... gre•• ••· HlcJliily ~oded wflll 1llaHet L Mluioll floors . .,..... pa•.tlllC). hloy tlte water •~W..ttP­••hlln Wco.y. $161,900. .... •• , .. ILUFFS VIEW CONDO Watda the ... fr'OWI tWs ...... ii 4 .,_. row llarH b•droo• Trl11a Hd ••it onrtooW.ri ... lad& lay. Proft11hn., deco...,ecl alld nlHJreded wltl1 fabric wallconrhMJS, redwood paHlllMJ alHI hnporhd tin. A •.ry __..... Mfftllg priced ail Slll,SOO. llG HOME-COSTA MESA 2123 644-7020 f . SAM JOACi)UIN HW.S IOAD NEWPORT IEACH Immaculate remodeled home. Beam ceilings, skylight, mirrors & wood. Steps to beach, park, pool & tennis. 3 bdr m · 2 ba. Beach lifestyle w /total luxury at only $139,000. 6'6-7711 WESUY H. TAYLOR co .• UALToas SELLING? MEWro.T CIMTllt. H.I. 644-49 I 0 GAlDIH HOME Our aggressive sales OHLY $19,900 fpr't'.e bas succeeded in ~ Walker & Lee T....,_Ha.,ett Guest quarters or In· laws suite ia part or this Immaculate 5 Bdrm, 3 Real bath bome. French doors _____ Es_ta_t.e __ _ Xlnt price. Xlnt loca~l·--------1---------1 depleting a large part o · Xlnt cond. Close to ever· TWO UHfTS. PUERTO V ALLIRT A • our inventory of resale yplace you want to be & 4 Bdrll\· + )lacbelor. Incredible oceanfront bomes; why don't you p r i v a c y . T h I s Prplc .• butlt-lns; steps to hacienda: J bdrms. gfve t.bem the opportuni· sophisticated 3 bdrm. 2 beach. Sl.65,000 Including +servant·s. Lots of red ty to help you get a fair & OPPOITUHITIES UHUMITEDAT UDOIEALTY lntetview appointments llre now being taken ror ules associate4s. by the moat exciting office in Newport Beach. 9om· pare tbe.e amenities: * Prime location on Via l..ido opea to a secluded aun. deck. Large family room & walk·in wine seller are only some of the numerous "Unique" custom features or this fine Newport Heights bome. Only $188,SOO. UDO IA YFROMT ba home is a a teal! land! brick. tile & wood shut· reasonable price ror your 75&-l!iOl OCEAHAtOHT ters +miles & miles of p roperty? 26 Pro· * Newly expanded & re· decorated office UMlqtlE HOMES 675-6000 $35,000 C::3 Walker 1: lee Sounds great doesn't il ! Well it ia ror a 1 bedroom, Sunny brook mob ii e , ___ R_eaJ __ Es_ta_Le __ _ home. I~ right on _the People who are seeking water Wltb a great "'.'ew an apartment look first or boating activity. in Classified. Will your ( R 3 s 3 9 2 1 O > C ALL ad be ther e? To place 751-3191. your ad, call 642·5618 MESSY MANSION C: SEL ECT Spacious 4 BR fixer In T'PRQPERTIES Newport Beach! Large IXICUTIYE lot! Remodel & profit! can't last! Hurry! Call ESTATE oo.-0303 "+ TIMMIS" FOREST E OLSON "' ........ . WTSIDE QUALITY BUILT Pure charm la the only way to describe this up· graded beauty· 4 bdrm, 3 ba, J&e fmlY rm w /frplc. frml din rm. Is brand new on tht! market. Personal tennis crts for thi• group of homH. 7Si-1501 c:J Walker t~ Ltrn Real Flit.ate 3 Bdrm 2 bath. large family room. used brick ---------1 fittplue. shake roof. newly piainted in/out. New carpet. Hurry I •ooo. Call $40-1151 • .: ;.6-HERITAGE . . REALTORS " 8~1AY! te.PI PIOIATll Reduced thousands, ex· ecutive Mtate, steps to ocean! Breathtaking view. Low price wiU 1ur · prise you! Hurry! Call today for details. 645-0.103 F-OQE'ST E OLSON . .. ... ··~-...... What a Wooderlw World of Shopping, rtght al your flo1ertlpa every· day! Dall y Pilot Clasaiffed Ads. To place JOU!' .ct, call Mz.5618 and let a Cluslfied Ad·VilOt help you. PENNY PINCHER ADS ONLYR Sell any item or com· blnallon of items for f75 or lesa with a Penny Pincher Ad. 3 Unes for 2 consecutive dJiys. Each addltiooal line Is 60" for the 2 days. Char1e it' Norommerc1al ads. For more Information and to place your ad call 3 Bdrm. +den home on white aand beaches. fessloonal llcenHeS with a :.>xas ft. lot; frpJ., built· $1211,000. Ma,y exchanae ~ear .;i~uco":.fcuterit~ * ~time secretary •Computer ins, patio, beamed ceil· 673-4400 ce. e pe orm ! ! · ings. $375,ooo HARBOR • Microfish * Outstanding trarning program 673-3663 642·2253 Eves associated n P '~ F Q .. , t·: I\· • o P; Jti J' '/¥ ~ I t •I t ' "',,, ' A Dtv1s1on of llurbor lnve~lmt•nl Co IACklAY BAY& BEACH 4 NEWPORT CTR. DR. * Excellent commtSsion sdledule Call ror appotntment BARBARA HUTCIDNGS VATBMS! IUUTIFUL TOwt4HOUSE! IEAUTY ------c 7H11 /i; T h is upgraded 3 IEALESTATE DO REALTY Lvly 3 bdrm, 1.,... ba over· looking IUAh 1reen lawns le pool. The f rice? Only '84,5001 Cal today for appt as this won 'l laal. S45-IM81 bedroom, 2 bath Santa Salespeople Uttd of a big Ana Heights home has a ottlce? Opening for one 67J.-7300 fireplace & dining room. real estate salesperson The lot is large & has RV ln small office. Sam access. Seller motivated. location 2S yrs. Call Gene ~~~~~~~~~ so make an offer on this 6fi6.3828 67S-4577 eves one today. Only $84,900. CALL 556-2660. • SEt:ECT-Real Estate -------f PROPERTIES ~ Walker 1; Lee $61,900 NOTICE • Near ocean In Hunl· bow Daily Pilot Class· Lachenmyer · Rc.1ltur •VETS* ODOWN·OCWSl"N'"G __ _ Hornes ln all aft&S of ORANGE COUNTY VETA&T. Ca1541.0IOO lngton Beach . Sharp 2 BR, Just 1.5 mi. to beach. lfied •ds display their l~~~~~~~~~I~ to arH or m ore ex· messages with legibility penllve properties. w.. and impact? Our ads. we ,,.._,,...,.. -are proud to say. rl!ally Dooim ........... -. l.~t resulla. Phone __ ..,_•_M._T_oa_s_1 642.-!8'78. - s~~cilµ-~£~s · Tltat lntrig•lng Word Gom• with a Chuck/• -----..... ~ QAt L POI.WI • ._...... .....,.. °' .... ,_ ~ _.. ... '-IO..,,..,_.,....._. OWNEI WILL LEASE OPTION DYMAMIC a DIAMA11C ••ndteSJH,toO DH.,.. fl!!'"' J-..... ._ .. & forwll .._ .... II~ lalfu••~ ............ y.N. ......... J •• c,.-...... ..-.. ..... , ....... ......... .......... ff-• 2633 W.Cout Hwy. Newport 9-d\ 6Sl•1400 l I' s I l I • I ..... c c I • I L I .. I ~:.~~ ••••••• ~~.~.~ ••••••• ~.~.~ ••••••• ~.~.~: •••••• ~.~.~....... _Thurldey ___ ._,._ug_u_._,_,_1._1_e_1e ________ o;...At_L __ Y_Pl;...;,;:;;LO;;.;.T__;D::.;:~~ ...... ' too .... ,.. 100~ ....... 1002 .... ,.. tOOZ ...... IOOJ ........ For,.. ..... " ,_. s. Ho.wt Fors. ••.·.··.·.· •· ·.·.• ·•·•·•· ·•·•· ·•·•·•· ·-.·.·.··.·.·.··.i·.·.-· .. ~i1•!1iii1•1.• ··--·• ••••~· • ••. "•••• ••• •••• • • • ••••• ••. •••••••••••• ••••••• •••• •••• •• •••• •• •• •• •••• •• • •••••••••••, •• •• ••• • • •• •. Hott.ea l'ol-SGlrt a -••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• EAST Ctfis"-o~ 1011Cep.tr-•Mtt1011 C:....W... IOZ4 IW.....,.•leoclt 1040 BLUFF ....................... ....................... • •••••••••••••••••.•.• ; ...,. 13' •• w.auT urwan8J ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8"UIUllfll, nl.ftf"• a...s ... ., 1.1 . COSTA MESA No ooed to 4br.2bll, D/'W. fpl.1 mi to rYf'raftMlll Otf£11· Mft ~wf'rllOlm·2Pm. qi uallfy lor a mortga~ bch, $79,900. Owner ~U"HURN. ng VIEW! •·Br. fam·rm oan. $15.000 lo usume 980-QlO, 842-8850 The rmest condominium in Newport U~l()U~ ~.00::.,.~: ~~.: ~~ L1·ngo =-~:~~·.:,~c:.::~ BlCYCLETOBEACH Bea1cb on f e land. Prlvat. brick ac.boola, abopploa. ten· tor1eous trplc, huie well 3 br 2 ba, beaut. decorat enc Oiied Pnl n entry from street. n 11 . The per 1 e ct kept yd. m.soo. Prin oo· H . bookcues, skylitei. Sweeplna 83' deck with deUabttul view oel1bborbood. the RIAl.&mt ly.357-3580 +other ntras: New ol all J-•r: activity from living perfettbome.Comuee! MISA VBDI ~!i::~e::'.v~u~I: room, .tc .•• dlnina room" muter . •·cK I •y cu~oM HOME Wmt Nr eolf eoune, larger l laodacaptnc. incl. rru>t Suite (Wltb at sown French fireplace). I ' A ,_ •• sty fuxury home,' BR, 3 trets. Xlnt oei&hborhood Sp1ctous. lu:curtous. rtcbJy appolnted UNDER $200,000 I 2111.REDLANDS sut«EN UYIMG IOOM BA. den $169,000. By " schools. $104,500 wlth ~ch windows & French doors Dell1httut 3·Br. 2-Ba -J•-Wocil .. ., ._,._.,_.fa owner.540-7196 96M0730pnHseSal/Sun Imported hand painted eeramlc tiles hocneonqulet.cul·de·Hc *• ~••tM tine"'*'°•.._. wttlt • NIWIEAUl-.S! Fttnch wallpapers. cream carpetlna :t' f:·?.~P~n s':~ "-••+• of •2'nta •c• he 11....,. 0n1y, left o1these1 new Decorated in uqwsile Lute by one of 111 r l t t t • . o w n er Sfftlllt1d • • ~· .._. It ,... f9r custom bomes, on a quiet NISTHH UMrrs 5 units + '-P&ex, rtew cooatnacllon. Desirable Huntiqton Beach loca. Uoa. All rented. Fan· ~c investment Newpcrt's finest designers. Waltlna SICYl.All LANI _ Redecorated, matJvat.ed. IV ecceM ..t • ,.-o..., 0c.. cut-de-uc. Each wt• d•stance to sboppln~, encl. 2 car reta~caped and really ready! • JACK HOW.ELL •l•w• tllro•9lt t • ,1 ... te tile ~ms2 f ~ath:, we~ garage, privMle maid I quarten. For bdrm, a~ bath Baycrest beauty. ~"'' "S10('1.ms water ••• $144,900. more. c::.ecalt. .:'for the disertm1naUna buy~r 1317 Sinitestorywithpool.$199,SOO. 644-1156 493-1112 yoursetr what lovely lillt11B Bayside Dr. h o m es t h e y a r e "4ISA VIUI. REDlJCED TO $89,000 Attractive • bdrm.. 2 ba. home in immac. coochtion. Xlnt loc IACI IAY Fi~e 4 bdrm .. 2'h bath family home on quiet cul de sac. Oversized pool playb~. extra storage. $169,000. · PETE R IAYFllOMT Several fine bayfront homes with pier & slips BACK BAY VIEW property! VA CRV in at $129,000! Owner will sell for Sl.2S.OOO RED CARPET 754-1202 IRAHDHEW DUPLEXES ate C....,ON IAl•AtM -3 bdrm townhome, quiet corner location, perfect home for entertaining, with fotr, tfllnls. pool and jacuul Just 159.~. , CUL 01 SAC -Quiet Eastslde Jocatlm. 4 bdrms, encl. cabana, clean, ~omfy and close to schools, stores, etc .• $107 .soo. • IAl.L Y aUFFS -3 bdrm E Plan on a :-Vide greenbelt! Incredible condition, immaculate decor and a reasonable investment-$179,SOO. CLA~C -Mesa Verde Pacesetter, 4 b~r , beaut. pool and jacuzzi, prtv cy and sgle story. Immaculate at $119,500. U,_.l()UI: t1()Ml:i REALTORS' THE NICEST PEOPLE SELLING THE NEA rESr HOMES CORONA DEL MAR, 675-«>00 MESA VERDE, 646~990 • CALL US I ST TIME IUYERS! Cowtry livin' at its best & a view too! 4 BR, 2"'1 BA. accented ln warm eartht.ooes. Listed at alt terms, better hurry oo this one! 540.3666 tlfflelc-.11 REAL ESTATE PRIME LUTSIDE SELL YOUR OWN HOME . =~~'81M or S895 FEE-Assiat ln ads C.-.. Mw I 022 C.... .. Mtr I 02Z fin. aalee, escrow etc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Back Bay area condo. $7500 DOWN REALTY FREE ••••••••••••••••••••••• 381', 3ba+deo. Up&rd'd. HOMES CAMEO Pool le 1 j B 3 BR. 2 ea. new cpts, &MALlll ........ 5 ~Ill! 1.....,_0ME . nos. ac. y ..c~ R.E.AdviaoryService "'.__._ ~+ "'-OWnet"$82.000.631-0'118or ........ paint, Glenmar 5»-2224 Shady & ffcluded floral aoutb of 8a)'1ide. A rare nMOeJ home. Min rrom beach ---------1 patio froot entry. Black a 0 d s u r pr l s i 0 1 I y I'll carry balance at $'700 -...0 ,...... I 007 slate noon. Bia ocean spacious 3 bdrm + den. 2 Beaut 4 Br. 2 Ba, new mo. No credit needed ••••••••••••••••••••••• view living room hosts story home PLUS a plu s ~ cpt. lllahog 96'7-1988princooJy. Xlnt. foe., nr. J:riv. bay massive at.one fireplace. room~ver-vacant ren-panel g, sprnklr, con· .,, • .s! n-1 S . li beach· 3 BR r I Spaclou,e ramlly room tal. rlDanclD· 0 p--crete dr .• elec gar drop-..-. ....,.,a e pec1a st~. • • en, rp ·• and open kitchen combo. vided at subltanti:t s~; or. tB9$0. w/S7* dn. 3.4 or S bdrm models 1111~ilJ~L 3Spac. bedrma. Covered inpto~era..ooo Men del Mar. 2811 ~1ome w /pools ------::.-..;......;..;.;,,,:_1 ::!:~~?'~= C.for.-.... Uirenm Ave. OwnrJagt. Pmni~ponPropert.I c.-c111M9-1022 to sell fut! Call DOW, 644-7211 751·31!96. es ••••••••••••••••••••••• 673-8550 2 OM! LOT BUOY Youa OWN FtXEI UPPER OPfN •11 9 •" s ruN rollf N!C'1 • IACX YD SP• Brin T L.C to•'-•-Lee R2 lot. or 11th St ,,. 1aome • . umo·· '" . sboppinl area. 2 small In this btll 3Br, 2~Ba + =!t~: ~~M~ ~ ·. i unita. suo.ooo. ram rm bome. 1 ~ Yf1> BR home PLUS income j, ,.._ .: ,,c.M llEALn oid. by owner. $129.!JOO from the sep. l BR rear I-===~~=:!::!!!!!!!~ a. J I D9lex 13).1430 840-833-9Sll dys, 840-3896 apt. Lots or special IYOWNER Lowest price ln CdM. 1----------1 evestwknds. reatures to show you. Im mac 4Br. 2Ba, 2 ZBd~~· lBa in front. IACX IAY OpeaunWsold. Please call 640-5112 aet . !ryl_~. hme In ea meo Studio 10 rear. $135,000. The Back Bay Villa1e By owner •.ooo. ~ Jii.8hlanda. Ocean & ca-By owner. 640-1804. coodo-3 Br. 2 Ba, 2 sty mi to bch, l800sq ft, 3 BH LUXURIOU.S nyonviewon '4 acre. Pvt CodaMeM 1024 eod unit, 1~ yrs old. +. Huge used brick & LAVISH! bcb access. Opn Sat/Suo, •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• Very desirable area. patios, off living rm, din· LaxurylnCameoSbores. 1-epm or by app't. 709 $115,750. Call 640·5112 ing rm .. playrm & matr Large secluded front Cameo Hi&hlaods Dr. ql. suite, customized kitch. patio, rountaio & pool! $247,500.},!eel~d> NINE UNITS MESA VBDE ~= & in xlnt Spacious oceanvlew liv-vi...--'-2 STOllY ~r':.'f ~i~i~Y ;:::: --------COSTA MESA 4 br, ramlly rm. 3 ba Hunt Bch Condo, by Chef's kitchen has every HAllOlt VIEW One28Rbm +&units +~wood tub spa in owner. 2 story 2 bdrm 1 convenience. La•i•h 4 Bdnm., ramily rm.. C4J HEW secluded yard. Only ba. or pool $53.000 master wing. De11 or massive lot; crisp & , .. , ....... ODEUD Sll2.SOO. David Bourke. _8C7_-4'5_1 _____ _ _,.... Se · •. 1 nd bri&ht! Area's best "" -Ritt 546-9850 ,..._.~ _ ... y. wmg"' au ry value. $210,0000rorfer XlntLocatlon ' ·WWW%• broole,mb.ltnlncsl~eeos poosyatletma·. HASTINGS & CO. $130,000 F.quity NEAR O.C.C. 4 Br. Newly ltcria• I 04Z ~ R"'•. """RS &'Al\ ICIUU\ ..,~•e Pri -" 000 _ __.._,_.. .. ,tc .. -. can't ••••••••••••••••••••••• rantaslic storage too. .c.IU#•v -~ .,.... ce-. ·-~~ ... '"'" Private beaches-and GttUU & B.US do better foe this pnce. DIC DUPl.U much more! For private lcabfi••er •.500. Bkr. 754-62162. Askinaoo.I)' $1S9.000. previewcall613-8550. •lyOWNER Hl-2900 SCO'nlEALn OPfN 1119·11 HUN row NICI• 3 Br, 2~ ba condo, ram & t~~~~~~~~~ $67,SOO 536-7533 m -EREAL i STATE RS ____ __J din rms, proress decor 1- tb ruout. Many xtras.1--------• 3 Bedroom. patio. quiet.,...... 1044 Call 833-1689oc 774-QOO HEW CUSTOM tree tined street. Won't ••••••••••••-••••••••• 142-5200 3 U-g. BR 'a lo ea. unit. ________ _,Upstairs has 3 BA's. All COSTA MESA Very special country English. Three large bedrooms. two baths, three huge bric k fireplaces , tavern kitchen with all the modern appllanc~s . Brick courtyard. Ex- ceUent financma. Priced right at $1.S9,*· -R-T"""'--C--"'====::;;.. COLIOFHIWroltT v~ .... 3 br, 2 ba, frplc, lllVIHI TBtlACI Reoeg't lease $1052 yr till 2006. 2Br deo 2ba HOM1 last! Call&&s-9161 Builder says. sell this WHAT'S YOU. be a u t if u I 2 s tor y P'LIASUIE? REALTORS patios, well decorated. 675-5511 Guest house. $153,000. By --------1 have bltn.s, carpeting, Peoplewboneed People drapes, etc. & only' 1419Santanel.la $1S9,500 A411. 87~17 /644-9915 F.aatside home. Chorce of Bike to the lake rrom That's what the $164,500 each building. SER~~~rJ~oRY JACOBS REALTY la&lJabout! 675-6670 ~:sweu Banker ~SllX:N11A4. ercoi<.ER.AGE ~ YOU Al.WATS WAMTID ite new home in Old Corona , one block from the ocean. ms, 3 fireplaces, top of the ppliances. country kitchen, . rate dining room. Fully lao'dscaped & a hundred other quality features. $398,000. A COLDWIU 1AMD1 CO. 644·9060 2111 IAIUOAQUltUlllJ.S AD. IN NEWPOflT CUfTa ~ll macnab/ Irvine !" 11181ty NEWPORT CONDO One of a kind 2 bdrm. + den, features living rm. with wet bar formal dining, oversized mstr'. bdrm. suite & much more! Owner transf. & wants fast sale! $122,500 ·Paula Bailey 642-8235 <N-139) 642-823S 644-6200 901 Dover Drive Harbor View C.nt~ Irvine at Campus Valley Center 752-1414 IT'S SO EASY TO PLACE A CLASSIFla AD •You may use the handy order form printed below to furnish us with copy for your ad. •Please ~ote th~t the. bott~":' .~~ion o~ t~' ,COUC>Qn may be clipped and affi>Ced to your .envelope, saving you the Cime to write-our correct addreae. w. pey the poaUigat e u you need ~ore room for your message, just print or type it on another Sheet of paper and mail at. •You may place your ad by phone, if you wish. Just dial (714) 642-5678. ••• llletllllll 11111 I llCllll.,11 1111~111111 llllllllw lllcCIClllCll 11·r 11111 1111 tll USE THIS HANDY ORDER BLANK. WE PAY POSTAGE! 4 WORDS MAICI OHl UHl--fitO .AD USS lMAM J LNS $7.21 Sll.71 PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL 0 Charge: BankAmerlcard # ................ Exp. Date ....... . Master Charge # ••.............. Exp. Date ..••.... Publish tor •••.• , ...... .days, begtnntno--.••.... :-: .... ~ Cl8ssif1cat1on ...... -....... "'· ............................... ' . Nan18 ....... . " ............................ ' ................. . •• ,.. 10,.._COtf ""' ~ OM word II\ -"' _..,. ~. lnclllW rClllf ..._..,.,._.~_.'SM l:l:.~J:t:t. ..... .:-oe Y'D'lf " ... wnn-. Mit llAlOeatralf~----ol IWl Y Pit.OT Bo• -W. 1111t1 ,......,...,..... Address .........••............•...........•.........•...•.. a City . . • • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • • • • . • . . . . • • Phone • • • • • • • . . . . . • . . • • eox SERVM:E ORDERED ,,, .,,, ... ,,. '' ,, ,,, , .... , .. , ~ BUSINESS REPl.VMAll owner. 640-7030. Her New Wardrobe! 7346 ~~13~ carpet 4t tile, RV access. your cozy 2 Bdrm, 2 bath hurry oo Ul1s one! Call Townbome In Wood 546-5880 1~~~~~~~~~I bridge. Feeling lazy? I-Stroll to the pool close by -#-~~HERITAGE 1--------•I Want solitude? Take a sunbath on your secluded . • REALTORS THE V.A Appraisal is $109,000 00 this vacant 3 bedroom and ramify room bome! $69,500 Big 4 Bdrm home w/bardwood floors. Ra.iMd brick plantu. in enclosed bonus rm . VA/FRA&erma. 754-7100 8AS7M Q R<ull•u"'"' LS us belp )'OU lnvest in·~~~~~~~~~ your dream home! Call I· REDCARPET754-1202 OOPS. OWMll .....-....... DllOPnD NICI! ~ f'IO'IRTY Mesa Verde estate. Extt 4 Bed.rm home secluded transferred. Now : oo .3 acres. surrounded s by towering eucalyptus 185,300. Agt: Beth , trees, riding trails to 964-:Mll. 835-0ZU. pager .beach. For country liv• _~_u_. _____ _ redwood deck . This home bu all the rioe qualities of an S&S bui It home. HURRY ON THIS ONE!-.soc>. Cmll fer o.tals 644-7ZI I tunUROCK #Z VllW·SIJ9,900! lag, don't miss this uni· que buy! Priced at $13S,OOO. 963-8767 Turtlerock Broadmoor plan 2 hosts lovely foothill view. AJI Ule en try . Wood pan eled fireplace. Formal dlomg room. Floral atrium hosts ,waterfall " pond. Large wood walled fama 5-er ,_.., HOl9 ly room. Very bright & 3 edrms, with huge low open kitchen, Gorgeous maintenance patio & decorator master wing. pool, rrplc, "bonus or. H 0 M E F U L L flee". Easy acceu to I N S U L A T E O • OPfN ,,, 9 ... ~ llJN ro ~I N<I . frwy & beach. $125,000 P r o f t' s s 1 o n a I I y EBBTIDE REALTY landsca ped -m ur h 494-9'56 more! Call now752-J700 RB>UCED HAILllTIHG ."':"'"19•11 S/IJNl08/Nt(I• 4Br.2ba,rormaldintng, I• I ~1~~£~~~ s=:;~v~~ }. , llV!ltt ---------1 reduced to: $185,300. ~~~~~~~~-~ SA All: Beth. 964·2431, . Heritage Park 2 br 2.,., be VE 83S-02U, pager #951S · upgraded, landscaped: Noquallly-DramaUc. nu 2 draped. $76,500. 551·0685 ~18 000 sty, 3Br, 2,,... ba. Nr bch, Woodbridge Brighton 2 8K dn Sl.29.950. 646-1035 BR + den. 2"'1 ba. sWi. 'I deck, upgraded thruouL, EA TSIDE new 2 0..,olaat 1026 A/C,Sl28$0.551-0685 bedroom coodo units oo •••••• •• •• ••• • • •• • • • • •• the next block are 4Br, central air , Xw .. •nfMt..t .,,SOC)! You can aet tbi.s sprioklers, lrg cov patio, UM....uty Pn [9llllll one ror only $119,*! cau new ext paint. 33691 Big 4Bdrm, 2~Ba. (mu rm. Add 1 1omai1t1c touch wrth Noll'! ~. 681-3351 ageol. form.al din rm. end unat . .m11.1ep1etty 5 ei_lo.ws._ RED_CARPET75'-1202 Toro _ lOlJ LaSalle twnhse. 'Only looSt lulflts crate a d1111tn 10% down. Owner wdl S10111I effect hsy tmbf<lldert .. 3Br, 2Ba, fresh paint, va· ••••••••••••••••••••••• carry a 2nd. Also have quick to sew-decoi1te 1 sofa°' ~t. lrg cov peUo, Mesa $6,500 DOWN Jtlnt rinancial package aurs room with ttus pa11. Pat de1 Mar. ror investor. PricH right tt1n 7346 transfm. lS·inc~ al.500 557-8470 Auume e.Jdstlog loan of f,~dl safe at 1109.000 flows ( ,.... .....d ) $75,000 and this 1600 ft pi inc ""1"1 ""' en · MESA VERDE 4 Br 2 Ba, home la~· 4 Bdrms. er cooperation. Call f~.50~: 11t':n ~~.J: Unt COftd.. *·*· <>Pen 2 baths, &ie dining area.. ~· 80S-4M-0777. mad-.AudUQI. S..« Sat/SUD lU.. 2972 Andros briaht cbeerfuJ kltchen, 1---·------ S.1 ld0tlble Em111re styles Allca lMlat t,.....,.._ ·-Ip eol'll~I' lot. llVU)' OWl•.:f!OOt ""' Illus • f1$1110111bft .est to top Needlecraft Dept. 105 --------•! enclosed. Cov'd paLlo. 9% asumable loan them offf Wlt1I scllool. Plrtle1 Dal~Pllot l .... Jletll:a new aerlnklers & Small down. s bdrm, 3 llldtnpstoloollforwll'CI to, sllt'll lal ON CW.. Sta.. "" landlcapm, front& t .. r. ba, lr1 Country kit, ic,.. •111 or tfl of tlleftl. c... T-'. T UIOll Prt.t ..., =~l~~a::rtJf:: = painted. New atrium Walk to schoota. stnpt.$, prints. toltcf colors. ..._. n,, hl1enl ......,, m,900. , ate brown plush part & sbopplna, Owner Prlflted P•1190S6: Clllld's VALUE ~. 1978 NEEDLE lefM!a~.lltr ~· all oew mini movln1 will consider Sim 2. 4. 6, I Sift g t.-ClAfT Clt»lot Clloost horn ·A rare opportual· lease w /option or t'Olt· 1 118 ,.,.SS 4l-itldl fet1nt, 225 dtslfM, 3 i. .-., AU .l ... 772f b' at "1.soolr fWJ prltt_ U'ad lil.17,500. »1...-U OI' ~SUI,_ ._1,.._ cmts. Kmt. Cioctlet. S.0-15-t~~~~~~~~ OwttertBr • Ul·HOO. 12D>~ W .. tw -* ..... t. lllJCifts 'I' an...ilb .. $UI -~---· -----1---------..... ...._ ..._ """sa..oth ......... fi.M ~~: :;s;:~':: I' M ,_.._.. 1040 From~ ~ut'ti:':i ~ =.·~·~::::.$1~ ~ar $97.SOO. Owner ....................... and airy coodo ln pre- --........ C:.WMlllS.-...... Sl.• belp Tlnuee. P11n OCIAMVllW 1t11iou1 Woodbridge Pattern Defil ... 2 Cftdlll a..,.. ........ sue ODb'. Call owaer (« appt 2 Story a bedrm, 3 bath. Arborlake. 2 lrg bdrm Is OlllY PlkM •r!F. .......... 1111 •75.10 S.... trvm lbe btacb. baa., walnut paneled m Wiii 1• St. .. fM, ..... ............ MESA ygRDE ~~an view den/llbtal')', 2 redwood IT 11111 NII ... • !19a1111 W ......... JI SHOWPLACE of aurf and sand and CS.C.U 6 btaut decorated -...... snu !!!!!-~ ...... I , ...... --~,-'"" c. ....... A"'wn model •• , ....... .-......... -., ' ._ tr.a.t _ '' '' -'-· ' ' Dr'asmtk ltaln IHdlna S. It dl&rin• open ~ LOOI( tlCH. YOUNG. SMMT ...,.c:..dlltW..... =•nlete't.banmott toblcleawayma1w1ulle Sat/Suo 12-5 u 2• ho.dMtl ~ lOft llltlltt.WW ..... • bmes,$1~18CIO·BY wtthrvmaotlcttreplac:e Lakeview, or call :' 1 y~.!:..: .,... fllW ..._. _..,. ...... owur. S.l·tl•. 1917 Private ba.lcony ofi 55101 or M0-1440. Mo _:r'f., ':r. ~= i..... ...... W...... JO BUearlc. masts llltte wtt.h Vfft o1 ,._. p4eue 111Ea '·:a.:f"-OG F ~-... ,...... &be bliat Padflc. Pr1ced -------r...... ,_ .... w.· ,. frr:'~nr::: .. ~ ta:,•:ti•::rp: 0es:J:~~c10.u Mlt. ,,....a ••it n ....... Jlt ~~~to• lbrytCall Ill'"'-ntMlttaTwtle Qldllt.... ..... ... n ..... .n. ,_.... Ojf D~ a. •• •• ,... .... ~ "... '-"·" .~ MMd.klno1 ,. .. 1Xr'°N'I('• ._. • • taau,, dla· --.. JI Wofll ............ 1Sf /S':Bi&~ [Wldlll ~-•al ... -· :a•e-•~ MAI.TY :i:::i .. ' .. ... J ( l! s j ( I t - I •• { 6 ( l 6 v ( )I p lL u - L I? Cl re h g. • v u S< tr Cl Ca E 8 -Co N nJ 67 41 ' ~ t'C 20' ..i Sl • ~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . '1 1'lurldlf, ........ 11. "" ~ ..._..,_.. MlllltNwt '*-'lfflltt• H1•nfw1M d H1•nU.fwYbiP ....................... ,-..s. I Ill •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ·············~····· S.Qi•• 117' .......... .__... ........ ..._ ...... JMO t'-:a,.tlNclt Jl6t c.MMIM n 1114 ....................... ... ................................................................. .. MOVITMlllACH •EXCmNG• .._...._.. ... .,._ .. 11qn.111ceet baacbtront DUPLEX ,..._,,.,. , Ultlm&t• REZFOAT.~ -dfnct h'om the de: Welt NtwPort taome. 5 bltb. lml fled ,.;d, H 111'ws.t H1,.111For~ e--.. .._..._Wt ii7k:············;M4 ....................... • ........................................... . ........ -......... ~~ ..... !~~=~ ..... 116' ·~ p'ltedl 116t PA'llO HOI • .............. -.. -·••••••••••-• lD~M*CGmJDWU• 1'1b..~ WUT eoadoml•h1m. KIDS• PlfS ~i:,. <n4)l»t70t Bdrm, I hat.ha +dorcn cptt. *1Jt, imJ ~OK. ...,... av.Uablt, now'' ~ or a mllo from the loft. Yrb U.. SUOO/m~ no .-. . ..,. fllsyer Pt. '"'· um-,_.. .... two 4 {."'9 .... I .t ... MtllllllDlnt l~ II Tll lllll IUt.D. beach, fun ln I.be tun. a ... to lllld 915N8'71 tslO/mo MM41f BDntA USN&Y *· ... too -,,.y atrM L\STSIDE CM. 4 H · ...;.._ __ . ----- ........ 111•~. A a1 ........ ..,.... ~ ....... ,... ..,. ,,. .. t. -\ .S Dock available, new 2 ~ custom hom ' 4 • 5 bdrma. a • • baths, formal dlnlnj and breakfllt nook, 3 car 1araau. larae closeta, pantry, 3 rtreptacee. laq• decu on the water. Upg,.... t.hru-out. Owner/Bldr. For RltALTORS to •HtlOD ••• mo1t llchnfft OD • dOllble SUOl\lmlabed! Jbr. l ba, lrplc, famltJon· mDaUlar ... w "••Uf1tl 5• ramU,r ..... •·• Lot. Att. UUUU.Paldl ly.Nr ...... tdlaolt. Patk ln Ca1Uorol~, ...... AJtJI' -.~orStMCJl Mn lot.a oew .W. =-=• :'lcJ8J•~:.!; 2 br + 4 br du,Ja w /pool. On~.. 3 Bll + ram rm. IDie ID lr1 .... ~~ .. ~-~ 1kaUni rink mlnutea Prime Euttfde CM · ~ P'ee llv nn. bltn kid. tra Cl.'l''::t~~~ ~ ~ . ...-Olllm.tm. J&SF. UVllN WOODIRIDGI 1ar sruoo. i Bdrm. 1 V3 'ta end UDlL By owner s:ilMlN _.._. ----from Fllhloo' 11.land 6 Pride of ownerablp. ~awta.bleu.afC)r -1 .. -....,--0...---.,.._--• the Pavllllo.o • only SU1,&00. Good term• We .. ...,. -rec vablcle ._boat. Va· J aR ~ loo fll &Lua, '33,500. (DIW-T> avail.Call141·1790evea. ...... ....... _ caal,MG.•llOt mut ,.,\ teat. Ooly c•tw•,_. PIOtoSllO ICIOS~O.a. ~onaw.n ::OS~~Sts:=, on 2c·:.i~.Lf.~Y be ,....,... &..we a BR, i ba, as 540.1937 1plit. Owner will carry ON B~ Decorator mo. ....... MWIM 1-.11u lit al •~% lotereat. ~kt.ory.4bdrm £ada J Br, s ba, w/fp. C4fl•YYILLA&I $11 ,0to/offer. A1t . rib VIEW in best loca· New qig, rr-.i::, tn Btfl d ... I -ldt tt7f •-tka'1.400montbly. 6out.lA'8yard. ,no i..ter."~pWety '1P' HSWPoltTUACH ON LIDO ISLE . pe_t_1_. __ $0S/mo. Call IJ'llded C.uuti) OWNER FINANCE Be au t If u 11 y f u l J y ~· · Mobile Hom s..... 4-Plex • 2 bouaH on 2 furnl1hed 2 bedroom 910tmo. 3 br. 2 ba, crpt.a. drpa, .. .._ !t t: ~::::~ :,O~ty Wllerfroot Homa frplc, eod. back ~ No 000. All f'IM"IOO at· 1400 peb. $'30. M.S-2274. •EXCITJNG• · 'er. den. 2 ba. '*·dbl a...r,u.... LohfwW. noo c::d:!!.t,2008~.•ar· gfji:.~~ •· 19'75 Madison 2Br. 28a. ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo. TU;;fY. STMJ..15 zoxu livln1 rm in OMCIU.srn 38drm. eme 1ar. 111 t'Dcd Garden Paradise for RllDtlaatoll Beacb ......_ U.faal•d )'I'd, Prefer fa~U1-Avail - two. ...ioY the beat for rr.ooo sq. ft. lot near ·-•••• .. ••••••••••• ~·E!: ~· ~~.·000..:._, Liii-Paclflca Hoa pita I, s • rurtl J20 · • -.,... •~ PainlaSbop.Cntr•ctvlc -. ................. 3~ Bdrm, 2Ba, yard. Mobile Home Sales Center. Sl.35.000. Garden Grove. Large cute! Frplc, gar. No 2705=.St•M DaridBourt.elU&.r 3Bdrm, 2.Ba, rrplc. eov peta.'52S.64Ulm. Mo. tl7 5*t8C50 patio. wlk to 1cbl1. 3 BR CONDO, POOi. 00 Approx 112Lota Rivenlde Sf,50/mo. 53M827. pet.I, ass. Avail Sept 1. l~~~~~~~~IS...AM IOIO Acrwegthr~ 1200 area. Sl• I* ac. 5112 •HOMEFINDERS• 548-«all I-•••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••• • •• • • •••• ••• • • •• • • aat. _,;,.;,.__,;,.,;,,;;_ ____ _ , .. _.. __ IMOIU o1 cl 2 Br. 1 ba S345/mo. -~"" IUILD MOW 1000. Vacaa es auklrm ok, 1ara1e. Call Level area recenUy de· All areaa. All prices. ...... ....... ..., .. 7800 veloped property. XI.Ill M lot in Hemet. Plana 11-eareaJuata few . _...,_,; _. · ror country Uvtna. won· for4tunltaaptcompjex. $3401brKJdptlltilpd derrul potential for City says condo con-SUISc.otUiefcd)'l'd Poillt l226 leue only. " Ctl .......... ., .. , ... -• !.~ HERITAGE REALTORS 4 IDIMS 167,IH SI0,000 TUa11.BOCI ~..... I 052 ....... . ..................... . DOWN Quiet cul de U~i 3 BR 2 BA. 180 diet IOU taune vlew, new cpta. frP1. paint. $140,000 balance. at SUOO mo.. no credit needed. 957·1998 PrhH:. only. SaalJ end wUt w ll &&mel view ln tbe oriainal Bll.d'fa. French doors, wood Doon, new carpet. ~. 4 Bdrlnll w/kitdleD eal· lAI aru. used brick trplc: ln xlDt north Santa Ana area. Priced under re· cent..,u.lea fw Fut Ac· Uoa. mobUe home or home. veralon OK. $195.000. $2502Brkiilapark utll Terma. Owner/Act. Brian. $SJ_.. FARGO 1·'1»12'7J days. 721-5373 ....,.1_1__. Braut ~ated lrg 4 bdrm, 2~ ba, w /spec- tacular view. Top qual crpts. drpa, lancbcapmg. 1 yr old f.uak borne. Bes lrviae loc Owner/All 752·2867 aft 6 Open Sal/SUn 1..S NON ALLERGENIC .. home, inslde and oot. 4 Bdnns., 2\Aa ba. Plan 3 in Tllrtleroctr. On a large, well cared for corner lot. Laguna Niguel Realty • c.1644-7211 ~r~.·, I '~ t ' ... •'\ ',I 1 l , i1 ' t ', t714 l 676-5717 eves. -OR 522-2080 --------•••••••••••••••••••••••i.-.."'--.;.._-~--- For lie, lovely s BR, 2 ba BR. l Ba,-~ no th mt•........ home, den, frplc. pat. yrd wrk. brt atlo OMIACll Five acre wltb view. kel'1 req'd. 9125/mo + w/bbQ. '316.1 or •!PNU= pla.DI ror year round. Aaklnc util. Forappt; 87J.-0191 11912-hOI ... aMMiUB.C.C. -19Uaita. --$16,500.Tennuvailabie ...... ,1 I 111• 3207 •T-. Build your dream ho TOIAL 00wu ...,._lt\fl.-.... -Devaoras-4'0tU-~RlllAl1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• where you can atep ou "" _...,_... wtllofttllhwl ti. •:= MUS 12258-J/utllpd/Dplx Super 38r, t =· Yg'!:"e P01· :i~ Broadmoor Seavlew Duplex. lhousefrCanala. Chapn•cl"Off 3Ul acres in beautiful f" .... :Jf:~~~~~;~ ~'?~i~l~ customhomeaitesinlbis home. Smoeokl. 38drm. 5 yrs old. 1500 sq ft ea. Ownel' ;ltht); the price Olivenhein$6lli0,000. ~ •HOMl!:FINDERS• -..-·.°""'---... entire area. Priced 288· commwlity. Pool, WW sell both or one l~ ol UU. 1pack>ul Sand· _..._, at. .. $187,000. = ~ ~_!~~ !-!..~.>-$150,000 each. pointe home. 4 bcinm. WALLACI Ir CO. Mc mt• Detert. Cifllh 90 leCldt 12 II • ,_ 4fS.1220 496-2411 c y. Owner lo ~";rry --& dlnlnc . family rm. l.IALTOIS C.tlla-..._. 2400 ....................... F ••V !..34 4tJ..94t4 130.5050 baJ 714-M>-7771 $ 12, 000 ftreplace. Lota al extru. 72t..St66 ••••••••••••••••••••••• z bd. 1 ba w /encloeed car. ••••••••••••••••• .. ••• ance. · now SlOS.000. BK R . ________ 111· TtnY trlr on beach In lre yrd w/fruit treea. l.JJvel)' paUo bonle. 2 BR, WALK 111.0Q( IACIC IAY! DOUIU S*lm Enaeaada. renc.d yrd closetobcbM50.~ atta~b g~r. pool, apa, TOIEACH Gnatfamil)'a.omelocat· "" etc $t50./q11lck ule C.-dllMw 3222 tenniafacil,clOMto fwy, F ...... ... •• ...a 1-,_.. ol N-rt' SBdrm,heatedpool,2Ba. IO•JO .. CllS a-,:....C availSeptlS.Adhaooly. all'llous exec twn......, 3 """ m ......., ---1 All upll'da. ladoor BBQ. "' -· -••••••••••••••••••••••• aas.m.tn• bl1 bdrms, 2 frplca. 3Ba, bmt area. 4 Bdrma., 2 111 carry at $1150/mo. No fOll tulDIVIStOM ~ Ca.ty Newly decorated 3Br. 2Ba ~w~~f7'°jac~~i ~~~~an~ ~-~. . 957-19a Xlntlnvestmenlforcona· Ptap1rtr ZSOO exec home. panoramic IW"4•leeclt l240 ......,. call to .__ 000 .-... ......, cleaUou.a buyer• near •o•••••••••••••••••••• o c n v le w . Co r 011 a ••••••••••••-••••••••• 1pedoua uercile area. aee. -· · major town. Exrin:ln, .a."_.._ Hl&hlanda. Pvt bcb, $995 OPEN HOUSE Decorated Ute dream llST IUYI H 1 t I "" -..... ,~- home 2 BA. TOWNHOME area. •• a u .... •a·s1r1! mo.v .. ,....., New~-ant2bedroom •5.,.,,..~111115"'-.lnv~ for0ft\y$114,900lll Newport Hal1bt 1 , 2 Wllerfro.ttfw w/paved roads $120000 --r ~ '~'-""rv 11a: M .... desirablelocation. bdrm. older bome on S48 000 c!rt6SOOO Termi ' 2.88 acres net, ac.roaa $475.2Br.lddspetayrd +.den ($S75l. Cedar & ---------1 VAl.LEYIEALJY large lot rib private ~a':"rir~c~•·b~°':,;~e~: ' ' FARGO. SaataAna/TulUJSComm Frplc.S57~ ~ bom~. 5 Blocks reat yanl. 3rd Bdnn. oc .. -000 Call us about tbi1 ln•>..,.,5717 Holpltal. Subdivided l. •HOMEFINDERS• U> Jeacb. Private 2-car UCIPE ............. ..... ...... tb t -· •--.. Bd Ad tt' .,,,.. b' garace. Fully main· 511-tSOO ._._.,rm ...... ..,. • • spac......, c rm u 1 OR522·2080 S6a°!'botheacb. S6r.7ft5 eaQcUJ·c°! D L X J e. r . 2 ~ Ba . lained yard. Adults. No t = comm. pools ~~f:~ ~ f R€HIG€ ()nlypvt b~pma~~. LoCov~ .. G••.ot.'T ~ .. _,_!! Serious U:: DELUXE Frnt dplx. eis peta. S25 18th SL m4> !Bn ~!!ports"*..,.... 1055 .._.,,_,;.._ .. .,.... _ _ HOM€~ Ml"' .... ~CH q1a·n·~v~ •• ..:. ~!~!old. S525 mo. 980-ml • -. noL~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..--~· _._...... munlt.1poolw/sauna.,(U ",,,,_..... _. ... -,,.........., 1---------A~lpri~Baceol .......... $9,000DOWllJ llAl.TY 671-1642 SIDW.CoutHwy,NB buttnctlveaetting1ur· 1+~ Acre w/bou.se • .._.,.,......,Lhl lnnchewcustom'°meJ "''~-" '4M646 roundenbytalltrees. 10f1eou5 view 1.n Kur· 714-7UJ. _ S50mo.)'tly.28R2Bt tr!~ba,walk•beadt, -Mm prideudserv Bnmd new 2sty 4 BR, 3 D U P L E X 0 N FOR DETAILS CALL rteta Valley. 2 BR bouae. twabme. dbl gar W/OJID.t view of o~e:i~ m~oy new owner ia&o a bette Ba. den. boous room, 2 PENINSULA in quiet 300 644-7211 out bldp family fnit or· -.... of,.__.. b~I· l blk rr bcb. other amenl • '800. lile.B'alnWooclbridge. wetbars. 1'11 carry at block. Completely re· ~ b d o 1 $65 ooo -~,. &ls patios FP 2131333-3846 SHOO mo. No cr edil modeled inside & out. 3 ~~~ .. HU~~Y! ' · ,,.rty 2550 7»0'117 ' ' ., _ ___,;, _____ _ needed. 957-1998. Prine. BR & 1 BR w/2 patios, & ~~3 :b!.~~i.2~~ikuf_; FARGO ••0 ••••••••••••••••••• 2 bd, +. 2 ba. C'Ol9m pool only. 2 car encl 1ar. $16S,OOO. ocean. poola • tennis. <714 )677.5891 CHOICE Super 3 BR Carmel. &aauna, $500. IG·'14930C' Owner would Ulle to close OR S22 0$30 Harbor View Home. $875 (213) 860-51188 . rc?d hill :.;,:._· ~ MllUaa Yfeto I 067 in January 1179. Fln.anc· Sll4.SOO . PROPERTIES Per mo . p o s s i b le ~~~~~~~~~!••••••••••••••••••••••• !:!( available. 675-CMt CAYWOOD S..... a..,... I Ol6 lease/opt.ion, $163,.500 4 ~-2 ba, fam rm, frml ~ ._. I 048 s.s:":·~~~~le for llr. Dore ::vo:~ o~: ·~:·;:;;;:;:~·;i::;· c',,.:~ 1600 u ,fc~ ~~:-'pro-2 bdrm~::.6:4~~:,3crpls. ~.ni!e ~.~~no . 552-7500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• famllybemeonquiet cul· llACH.POOL m Vla Wuiers-Vacant Coodo.2BR.2Ba.den. •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• pertles. Ready to build. shutters. nice $475. M003brpetgarn-plc NEW HOMES in Laguna de-au w/room for ex· lrHOTTUI Immediate possessiQn Pttcedbelowmarket! tm>w/t.erms. lll·Wl "2.53Brk.idagarFee Beach. Joseph Heun. pamklo. Access to tennis Sparldinc 3 Br, 211¥. A· new. 31510 aq It-Charles '99-45hot48S-4306 CAM&YVILLA&I .U 1'4 acres. FanlasUc U504Brk.idsS57..oGt Bkr/8Jdr.Call'94-8818. Ir M.V. recreation frame•/frplc, cUshwbr. Quintard, Realtor since Wttl llMhf IOtl HIWPOITllACH view&utiliUestoproper· c.taMesa 3224 •HOMEnNDERS• ---------1 center. Needs TLC but etc. Only $1.3t,900. 1M6. Trade for Iota or sell ••••••-••••••••••••••••• -~ 1 1 1..... ty line. $7650 w /urms. •••••,••••••••••••••••• min f _, 000 Pb en-8250 u•n"' com men: a ""'• u 2~ acres. Hone pro-SHARP 3 BR 1 Ba. ms AvaJI Sept 10. 2 story, k'aatrrealslarter. M •Realt.Jl42-8850 or • · EXTR LARGE 4 Br. 2~ 2822-U-28 Newport perty in the beautiful mo..Call546-51180aatfor 3Bdrm.2Ba,Jrgramrm. SSOOODOWH YAlJ.EY REALTY WAMTID: laland Retreat. Prime Ba.lDPoPulararea.Hu Blvd..eacblotil~'dO'. lhriaaaas. $6800 Larry &pie. au pa~t. crpta, Coat.emporary 2 br 2 ba. 1Hnra. IDc8tion Lacuna Invest-Iota ol Potential. Only One lot witb buildl.nl, w/terme. dahwsbr. Family pleue. ~~· Lease op-1 ___ 11_1_-t_s_o_o__ FUSSY •v • ._ mmta. Inc. 494~ t99.900. Bkr, 154-G62. store or office. =.ooo. u 20 acres. Nr abopl " 968-71.l.9. ---------1 BeducedSlO.OOO. 5BRSan for thia profeaalooall.7. Call~ acboola.$1M6peracre. MISA YBDI 1 bdrm, fncd yd, gaidner. Velarde ot tastefully decorated °"'9r IHI..... u DUPLEX. Outstand· 4 BR. 2 ba, 2 at.ory. ~r· nr dwntown H. s: $275 ADU&.TSOMLY landlcpd.":.~ts,pr . spUt-1.enl 3 bedroom, OOPLEX ••••••••••••••••••••••• ingbuyfortbelnveator. nerlot:tlOOmo.Avaala· mo846-2678 . . the he famlly room home, .....,..::-• Only$27,500. ble Sept. 1. Realtor,1 __ • -------Sx.t waller\:' ~~'b!!: ......... leedt I 0'9 wtilda bu hardlY been IALIOA '841MSULA ,_.St 1100 Ctll t7M'26 Mwl 548·7129 bdrm. fncd yd, gmtner, Park a' f .. s t "t v a Is • ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~ ... mdud ~ ownerf Tenlftc S + den + 2'h ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........... Mc. nr dwntwn H.B. ~mo. ~ 11111 aa a ~•nee o Ba. UPper w/bayview. 2 Cout H Npt Be b N6-2811 playbouae • a hops . VIEWFOllVERI plans forclnc a sale. Act +den. + 2 ba lower. MUST SELL w/'tt:taJtfiore +· apt~~r 1131 E. lTthSt,S.A. 2br2~. garage. S350dmo. . Fresh lrapactou& 2 Bed, 2 Brea lb laking view or now! Total approx. 3000 aq. ft. Exceptional dbl wldt ofc. Aasume '1% loan . ..., ..... 2 patios " la un ry. Beaut La Cuesta ~Ufl .. 3 Ba prden apartment is bay· Completely r e· 2Car gar, extra partllng. Parklane. Showa llkt $195,000. Act. 648·3'14 Wlllhd 2900 15'7-GIBl. BR. l ba. fam ~COY d only&950. modeled. 3 Huae. old Aaking$28$,000.1031Ex· new, won't last at Prl bid ....................... Rgadultcoodo.2br2ba, pat..2-cargar.~. 4WAY FIOM ~~o:!f =~· ~i change. For details. Call $24,980. (sauaxxtJ) eo: ~~e:!n be~ CASH IN A PUSH din rm, frpl, car door N.W. H.B. 3 BR, 2 ha. RV 1MI CIOWDS M-nn ..... ..._ Store u 3 lndiv offices or? For your bouae or l>Wlda· opener, sec. 1ate. pool, accelf, cl& to scbll, 1bop Beaatltul peaceful coun-OPrN ru 9 . ,, s IUN IOl!I NICI• .. "895 Hl1hly auecessrul real ble tot. lncl. w /D "refrtg. MSO. cntra. new drps, crp~. try aettio Loads nx •. .,._.,... C...... estate busineu Incl.. SCOn llALTY 754-0297 paint In/out. yd mam· ap poul~Uee orofcom: '40-SJl7 •EXCITING• same loc. 15 yrs. Owner 136-7131 WeLoveKida! taiaed, S4U. Eves; {ortable aa is. La&una willfinance.5411-1290 2BR.S300!! i-982,;.;,.._·_3282~----- Heighta 2 Bed, den, 2 IAYfllOMTS SI IOP .. lwt ._..llM/ .... Gar.Calloow! mac 2 Bdrm Condo. Ba·· .$12UOO. IY OWMElt Witb pier 6 slips I 4 BR '4M600 At t be be a c b • I n (Wts S. 110 ........ ••••••••••••••• &45-4800 Fee Bltins, W /D, petio. Pool. NOi.iMS llALn Nwprt Hgt.s lrg eomet" 3Ya 811. formal dblB den, 2 ~~~~~~~~ beautifully landlcaped ..................................... d New Dix Twnbse aBr. S.WO/mo. 960-4lll 494-1057 lot, 2 bdr 2 ba, famll'Y rm fireplaces. 11 4 R 2Ya •...,.._View"°""' aechtded adult park· Lor\I Beacib, r~ently re· ....................... 2~Ba. pool, jacuzzi, $475 3 bd, 3 ba, dbl car, frplc, --------• + bonua na. '1.19,500. Ba,fonnaldine,famrm. -Pl90UI dbl wide 1977 furblabed. 10 Unlta ...... l.a.d 3106 mo.548-ZSU fncdyrd,6b&bbch,$SSO. OCEAN VIEW JtOOaq ft 845-'*4.0plSdMJw. *:J:n~c:>~=· ~!:t~fin~e::::.1 ~~ ~e~oltheUn~ l .Sqrosa.$210,900.LlrB ••••••••••••••••••••••• washer/dryer lrookupe Nn, Victarla bcb cloM DOVE.a ~ORES l75-8IOO Fuhio6 laland. 4 bdrm, ~·b m!e,,;m ':ant Propertiea 213 :~ New En&land Style 3 Br. 2Ya ba condo. Frplc, 84M67'1, 84oM815 _bJ ___ ,.__--..-_173-$ __ :zz_i ____ • n....--1--m---• .. n-, ---------' ~ud, 4 ba tk cedar tollvemlbiat!°"pothur· 3Becfrooml!! crpt/drps, wash/Ydryl, VWDI" D&T .._ '"'1I '""~ _.. $300KJdal I fdril. $500 mo. l Y lee thia. 3 br, 2 ba. 38a,prollndscpd,6d• famrm. Bonus Ul'1 .. -apaupanpune Tlll'\D$fl,IOO· MS-4800Fee leaae.'42-3443. frplc, dshwbr, tide & E•jM••IYe corated w/jacaut A rm6baover&ar.2uaed tbillll~(KTU07-t). 2 Bedrrn. 1 balb, n . petaok.~.IM-258801 pool. Bila microwave, WANTED brtck frplc'• • wbltt C...,.,... VIWICJ' fadot. Corner Wmt«.aBR.a&.fonnaJ SmallmarriedramUy.To 973.Z971All.Noree. lArle, 4 BR bome bu many other stru ~w11,.,.-C.cht fence. You own Mobl.i.HomtsaJ• loc&Uon.Won'tla1t1CaU din-rm, eso. mo. (211) t;-caUMW490&PJl.toa.,.,._ l144 Ot&U\aDdln1 VUS from S221,500. <:en SUnda11 -...... ,... ..... u~lr~ebClr 2'10IHarbor,&e• '4$-9181 "5-1219aft.e. .. .................... . •TWY room. Wet bu, ~8i:1 Dr. U.. I• ,.,........ 6M-40t0/9'M044 14Mtl7 BALB OA ISLAND 11.315.Ptfurn rreeutll llMTALS = .. ~~~bell.--------!!," ..... rn'Fl: .... s.ca.-• 1076 OWMmDISPllATI ~~~-~:!;u!u.fa ~:1~:= 2BR,2ba. .......... $&5< St 1.000 OOWM -. COmpletely uplf&ded dbl _.. ~ a BR. I Ba. ••.. ·· •151: •BYOWNE&•BKACR a.lJ to Ad IOS, l>alb -·••••••• .. •••••• wtde. lla1aJ Monarch. · maaLb leue. $235Badtd.ll*Fee 3BR,2~ Ba ......... . .. -aoo ....... a). l'UGt. JIN 'UIO, CCII&& Bf Ownu.,Me4o. .&Mi • b.a...do~e onl PANORAMIC BAY • UlllyrcU57.m4 48B,2~Ba ....... _.,, ~~-ieccarpr tfeaa,CA_.. Oat• weat use s.c. -....<-.u> :::_;:,, • .a.~~c ·~· a--.\'l:i.2l;;·iz5ai SI$ ma ..... at.iDIJdo= Vift,elavat.ortobch, all Mlllle ..... tt.N locatioG.lJ•OOlmoGth. #25181'/IJ*lrpaid llIUlon...t.Jo r•• amtntUH • •1 U,000. .._ EXECUTIVE bome. 3 -2 + din/pet/yrd $llUOO &&.S.1la WaatAd ltesultl eo.1111 •ntt •n .. _ - I ~ .;,.,.;;;;~..;..;.._....;._~;;..;..;....;.1 a 'aM'a.dwoad.aWr .. 2 -......... a BA. a car $62548r/td/pt5ST-Ol24 I LlllmMt...... tOll ... ~..... 116' te.ap•t..... 1 ... i,....yud,Sl&ar ::ru...e.-1 view. Jl\&m •ROllEFINDERS• ........ _ ....... -......................... , ........ ·--......... _ •• b ~'M-'ti .-.Al......V "' ...... =..~· a Bit, family ""· exec .__... ..,.t -~I J •1•·..aa .ap&clOua-ho!De...Jl.f ..._...,9 .-.-. TwobedroomwUta.OVer _,vv Coatl J>laaa. $UO. IE --=)'.~ID re-...... ll44 ---6"-~95tl..;.;.... ___ _ MOMdCM MY Perfect 11.Jac• to raile your clilldrm. Your own beach club, t.tiDaia COlnts ad 2' hour MCuritJ guarded pte. ftll ~ home hu 4 ·.bedrooms, 3~ baths with beauutnl •Wlmmbil pOo&. sm.ooo. L4euMA HIUS Grvw\ll area ....................... &.ide 3 BR , 2 ba, dinilll Prtce al....._ Dbl WlcSt CJlllPOdlmlJI 0..-..._!Ul Btfol new Woodbri_~J• rm. fplc, or 1chl., nice llalll .1,1111 ID. Lancet, Dt btacll. l'OC!k ftn.Mct•O~--u-IBdnn. 11• '4 ft. J116, fard.$500.~ •51)11"' ... .ooaft..,a--ac a p • d . tu, toe. po ~. .. • .-1un.tt. momh-to·month. " H ~W::lf'.'fll'ls; '5MGIT1> Ca111aia l'IM3ll. 3Bdrcn, 28• + bonu1. JU. 1 a:Jl +boo• ~ ..... J QUAIL ~! ... ~ ... !!~ =-.3,~T.11.·~:. rm .• 2~ ba., dln. rm., •u.a....i a · .,..., PLACE · LqWU .... ...., Call• v·-:.O.!!:'e.:'a._~· OQlcnlo 1.1•: ar local PIOf•Tm• ..... tnO/mo.. Ulll~ Dft ct&•PAAnt, OCD .__As_;;,.eet_m.-a ___ _ ..,.,;Xlll&eaM,llru--. -.io n 'bctyd. '400/mo +ti-lllillRlil ____ _ Ml ·WU' ._.. .. , ft ea~ 10,..11.nr.MJ lldl.•JllllO.MMtae RAHCllO ~~·--= ~~ . .-!~~ ...... ,br.l ba,ntw SANJOAQlJIN wllill11....... • ph .. t•t, llabOI lmllllculale 2 br 2 bti ..... taf.lltl. •ra. a 81' • b&ock t.o IMada. ....a•c. a,,Ul111. elee c:oado 00 10u CCNne • 111-49..,._ •--1 to Olt •· * o.-r. SSiS/mo. Orut vlt•, next to • .,..,..1111'111w.• -.Dtldle-..17Maee mi i....... A•t. can ~ .... pool • ~Ptt ok~ }OalO l'*ili,lbe...._ -..-,; • tDO. Call ....-r I•· IM. lliMl..._llMe a-.7....._alr.IM, 9"'•.a.,w14M711 •.............. , ~,I ~=r 111•1111 Aftl&l 119t·f . 9011 .. ........ OYM 80 VEARS OF $VtVICE • . -' ... J ( l! s I ( I t I •. { 6 { l e v ( ~ p s iJ L " Cl (( h g: w v u SC tr Cl Ca g Bi Co N m 8'1 u• bt ('() La fb 20· w1 SI ., ~ aa -- ...... ... ----· r·· ...... ..I'! ... • h lllCY!f • . ... -- v f r r ., ' • \ Ca E 8 Co N m 67 41' bt co -20' a.. -- 't.:::'J! ....................... Sclu1l1 • ... .,. ... 7001 ....................... REAL ESTATE LICENSE SCHOOL OFFERS TRANSMASK CORP • ASS ... aa RaCTIOMICS .................. ~ .. 2 Yrs min exper. elec· tronlc direct ional ayat.ema. oil -industry. e.st ~"" Xlnt benefits. Orange Co. alrport area. Call Ray .C.-asb Course available Gilman. 557·I05l. • Mat.eriala provided. =z:J~~ ~Pe~~M!.GJ in *Cbooee own tute-1lay general ortlce work , llnilht luaes A.IP. ll A/R, also good •Place~mt~ to 80%. publicrepoire. 752-0665 commission. A t t e a d a a t r o r Quadriplegic p /tlme moms. Call Mz..4929. If you are ex~ '" any t)ta9 of ttruct\H9t enembty. f~ out now what i. IVJl~ to yout • Dur Employ~nt Off~ It optn eny day tnft wttlt, Monday tfWOUQf\ 8&tutday between • a.m. ll!)d .t o m, We I<* foriiard to ... lnO Ye>y, t _ ...... ._ ...... -----·-- I l: s I .. ( 6 < l 6 v ( > p I iJ L a Cl f< h g. w v tr $4 tr .9 , Ca E & Qij N1 m 61 41 ' 00 co -20' wll SU JDC :!! a. -- -• t • ~?~ ..... ?!. •• ~!!~;.~ ..... !!!~ ~~~~., .. !!~ ~~!!~~ ... ?!~ ~!~!'! ..... ~!! !!!'t.~.~;~ ..... ?!~ ~!!.~~-••. !!!4? ..... ~~ ..... ?!~ ..... ~~ ..... ?!~ LAQl'OalST•t ~Cl Medical Bacttomce a11t. ...... .... ...,, r~IT·T1M• ..., ..... s.IH Restaurant Restaurant 1• • ·:.. • . S.. & WCW. • &ICWICIAM. t!ufy J'l.B. OB/Gyn ofk. M•1...S. Counter woman to write Experienced Accepting .ippUcalions McDonalds in NB hiring INSDrt'TQRS NlGKl'CUSfODlAN lat shift TAM·3:JO PM ExPef oo1f need apply. Fe~ale. Top ~oney. contracts In rental Ideal rocaUon. Top for full and or part·Ume full I& part..,,,e people. f"-1.."I ~7am Full" Part l'erm.-•alni for ag· PleaM socl resume to Mustbavecar.63Hl40. cmter.SOIDewbda.Ap.. comm I& IDcentlve emplo)'ment. Apply no aper nee. ~aytime tlmo Si oo hr CaU 1re.slh aalotenance (laalfied'M~l91, Dally ply, lllO Newport Blvd, Penonalhed urvlre Mon·Thur 9·11AM or avallabl.Jtty dunng scb1 s 14 .; .............. ---· · elect'rician w/manufac· Pilot, P.O. Box lS80. M<Yl'HERS HELPER. It Cll worltln& for realtor 3-5PM. year preferred but not CAMPAIGN. turiol equlpmeol in-Calta Mea.e.Calif. ta26 ha1t1tt1. babr.eltlln.a. PART JI~( wtover 30 )'n ~per. For fAWMIS nee. Apply In person NsW..et ~I,, 19711 CANV~SERS stallathSn' and repairs METll·RiE•DER Ul»m. llon-rt . 644-6418 appt., Albert P uuell l416Vlo0porfo#4 week day arternoons: F\&U ar eart time. a eve~ ~kill•• z.3 yrs. ex pt. liA atLSpm. ' ReattyCo.,83.1Dove" Dr. N.B. 675-2832 McDonaida 700 W. Coast. and .Sat. && Sun. hrs re-Trouble 1bootln1 control PubUc Agency in un· M9VlllXTRAS EVENINGS N.B.&11·5252. ,_~_.B_. ______ _ la+ ... 19 .. 1 ..... •w quired. Call R.M. Grif· panelabeandildUc cltcultryk. erowded ,Soutb Oran1e N E E D E D B y RestaM-~tf's Restaurant USTAUIAMTHB.P_ 1a1 __...... ..... rein alter tpm 5116-0860 Mµat 1 w ne &o wor Co. It soekine a water ~,,.,..,., ,...,.,.,_ -· · overtime. Excellent ~ ,.ader Must be H 0 L 'L Y W 0 0 D AdultS Witb outstandlne. Beal Estate in South Coast Village Cotmt.erwork l&asailtant • • 11 D ••gt• 1 1 •r*Y Gdf benefits and worltlna able lo work ·under ~e· CASTING COMPANY attractive penonalille1 EAaH llG SSS has Immediate openings .rood preparation. Expr .. ~ ·= · ...._ Ai.t ' l'.'OIU .incl. 11 paid adllna,and hee\17" worlt FOR MAJOR FILMS I& who eftjoy working with Tup profess, R.E. people for sandwich makers & pm. Full time. 18 yrs or Im 1~,!F~•, ' New,.,.3 Conva~..:C:~o.i . Oom~J ..,paid )otiid. •ffnowled1e •iof ~ .. coMM~JC1tALS ldds. ~ at 13.~ per wanted. Top profess. food prep. Phone Glen over. Nwpt Bch. 673-2'30 ..__.. -' ..__ · ,,. -. 1 a.. ri . pllM, sJc!l.t pay Wiler meters & telalid G-$190 per ... y . ac· hr. Pbooe &U-4321 Ext. co~mlaslon splll pa). between 3 I& S pm or673-8685.itl 7pm . .,.... arr-~111;1 , \;enter. 555 -pe ot its, liberal \.1catioo eqt4Jment beneficial. cepted. YeuJy fee. <71') 250. between 4:00-5:00 t/)/20. Eaatbluff Shop· S40-IM4 ' · · • •1 · ' . .A•e. N.B. efi(s et(.• Call for Befitnlng salary S88'7 781'1"4 Ext M PM IMAI center. Very aU.ra<'· 1---------1 ::-r;:.. .. , l&G~SECRET~Y af';.'comHope'M°"& w}l)llbefteftts.App"Ui Nd exp man-lo strlna AlkfwJa. Uve olfice. Brin& go6dr--------· Wi~~~~N~'!~m ~ liMll .Huntioaton Bcb . mil D · betwth. 9-UA . J)efM>to rackets 1t exclu5ive ten· Equal()pportunity ~~·~~~denUal RESTAURANT heart ..... abt by non in .. 1111tftc~tlllr•b ·have xJnt typina .. ar-m· l-4PM M,on. rU Fra. to • ,..• MICJllel nia abop Call f()f' in· Emp&oyer anquanes . ....,...._, ~-· •Ue:••tc81Alu•~ mar & secretarial ski!~ complete.Lf~caUon. w....-Dltfrfd ~w .,etween 9-U AM Part ec>nsuJtant. full or RECEPTIONIST1Parl· ~t~~c:'~u!~~ i:i~~~ bsy office. salary bas C AM 17IOOLA PAZ ROAD. 75'Ml88SAak for Beth p/ti~ for rental store. time, typiat. lOAM to An8f1'10M' w beach comm. Full/Part ff Y'GM -..rteetlt.e..x-uponexper.947-604! 161'r!~~ss~~n LAGUNANIGUEL Newspaper auto route Ap11ly, 20~ Newprort 3PM Mon·Fri. S3.~ hr. HW •cc•,·ta.9• :-,. time. PM & nlte shirts. periHu fa •Y o Le.a.al Sec retary . EOE l.9uionViejo •.-.......... _ ·~-m Need. Blvd,CostaMesa. 54G.Z09 The Gardena C&11 for m.m.un 3 Calif ,.-~~ I' ...... -IVll .. ._. • flc•w for ,.,1oy-appt. 17141494-8075 fMff _...._ ... 1 perien~ i~rsdome·s~f ~ MAT u R E w o M A N MOTOR ROUTE resp adult w /reliable Party rental 1&ore needs uc:.-r /Cleric• ..... to.ell wltlt •••ow law.NewportBeachlaw p /lime 1.o welcome rtie Dally Pilot has a car.OverS350m~eam· YOllnlladytoworltTues Auto leasing, acc'4riate Slop br ... flflD. Good benefits. Call newcomers & contact /large route in Mission lngs. The Rttgister. thru Sal morna cleaning _typln1, heavy phones . N~r~OI> ..., OfflwW. ~le,'640--0130 merchants. F1exible !•rs. Viejo. Monday thru ~I· S40-3'M}8 ~arty ren~ equip. :.P~ Advancement. good Mo•'•r~-t•r••t . .,."ALSECRET"'RY Need car: lite typmg. day aftemoooa. Satur-Newspaper l)tllvery. LA 1y. ~.ewport v • bene'fits. Airport area. COOKS & COUNTER PERSONNEL \:Omm. Exper. req'd 673-5821. 5 --W. LICA6 • " :Mf.31195. ~ay and Sunday motft. 'l\!Ql!s in N.B. 3:30AM· ,c.o.ta ... _.. CallJackle. 751-ato. ... __ ,, •• Laguna-n111a. Recent lf'\P•(rost bav• depen-·MM~ rtV\··n.1111t Jt 1· • · ·· Sales. F /P -T to sel&. - tickets,, ovr 18, have own transp, Mon-Fri. Sal or comm. 531·0811 l:OL•& mil 4. ~i(p. ~~easa,W-;..e MtCHANl~1t'.kU£0l.A. d1Un c~r . $50 cuh a''hJ l s4if'!14; "'di A 1' ''f 1 • 9.FXEl'TJONIST .w, .._........, MtablJ .probate. IXln 'tnows allgn~r."ther de 1 f re ulf'ed Call · ,., nswer 01 service Weil groomed, penson.a· t,-. ·· ., ... . 1.nt&\1'&6/H skilluecfd. 1~ a'nila}jle.-21()30 ~l as~fot cire\da· 8'13-2SLS. operator fall I& P/f. Call bte with 1ood typing .......,.... C4J• Mra. Wins I.ow for Pa~afic Coaat itWy, JUI. tiort. Leave your Name. NW'M'i a.idea. F ft. p tr. 83W561 ' · stUla. Pleuant working MCDO appt. &n·f060 · Medical otfice. Gen'I as'· Addreas, Phone Nu.m~r 7-3:30 shift. 3-llpm shin. PIX O,.r•or ~be8:1;fr.~'tl ...... ,.,. .. SALES FtlMmtc•fr and Make ol car. Good ff B Con v a le s c e n l for telepboOe answering A-.~ S Liquor Store clerks. pt· st. Spanish speaklni, for student or r ellred Ho&pital. 847-351.S. ·-.ti-. Exrfl or wlll Barbara at t 714 >955· IAIVW time. Bears Outpost. 6110 Will traio. Lile typing. ..... • '"" ~H ASTltOMA sco. W.CoastHwy.N.B Must be able to WQl'lt penon. miRS~Al;DE train. F" rr. Day"' cA.5HCARDCORP. ..... .,_..,... .... bJ wottdwg at C..t's Jr. I t :OOA.M. to 2 P.M. Hd hlt•tlM• e..1•911-t .._II ,.... ..... ,. .. .... mc•Sll1.,edy We are looting for two women to manaee our finance & insurance depts. The women cbollen wUJ work on a ulary + commission basis + co. car. This op· ~ty requires even· 1ng & weekend wort . Thia is not a clerical posi- tion. We are looking for sales oriented persons . Please call Jean for a confidenUal interview al <n4>543-970Z. 5301 ... _ ac••h Li v e a· n N a n n Y ~esorwknds. 548-T77r ... Trade yo\ir o. Id stuff for Coovalepceqt hospital :,,v.,e=e. s hirts open. ......... ind Jl riv p' Ue ta ........_ Receptionist /Telephone housekeeper for 5 yr old. new 8.0odaes with 8 ...... • • 8 P a n answering for busy In 9 ·1..47 5 .. _""' per wit mm· . call Clauitaed Ads 642-$178 Cla111lned ad. 6'2-!>678 seelta , mature • reap. PIX .~.tor 1 • ...... v persons &o serve in pro-aurance a&ency oc nr aft 7 PM 64S-6099 fehiohal c•'rln'g at· Wall train. /Ume. llpm· Oranie Co. Airport. TYP· Labor Dl.spute Ex.ists mosphere. Pay 'baled on 7am. Cootac:t Maurine, in& '5 wpm mlo & light exp • .Apply in pe"°° The Newporter Inn. 1107 clerical dut.lea. Connie Gardeni ~ GJeoneyre J aaUforte ltd. NB Qulnlen ~-9550 btwn .,., llt ;.r.... T .... dlir • a.gll Sota •r· 2:00 P.M. to 5:00 ,.M. > An e,g\,lal opPC>rlllnitY imp\o~er I . LOAM PltOCISSOI I p~~AGfl: •1 • 'b()Jl'mive sav~fi . "-loil'i Melts expu;Q. IOMP, lnsUflllK~Y· Exper pa'c.ka,&er pro~50r prld·tcl l.YPinl· ,•P\JU or w /l-% yrs ex per. liJ. loan:S Part Mme·,··tn NB . originaUon&processmi: 6'5-0llO Jluat wor~ w e ll --....,.....------..,-1 w/custome{ll & haye the itliiia.AMCI ability to wor.k under Property and Casualty PfeSSure. Xlnt . slartinl Aasl.Jtant Account Ex' saJ & beneflu. ecutlve. Ex pr. nee. State MlltualSaviniJ Minimum 2 .,.. incl tyn. 4001 lhcArthur Blvd J•• ~ Newport Beach . me. Xl9t bebeftta. New Equal Oppor EmpJo¥er lrvine ·~. fred s. -Jamu.1 l1u·1lrt11ce•-. --------• Bro='A· •94.1087 or U1f ATI'ENDENT. must 752 au f~ )i(aurin~ be 18. Full & Pl·ti~e. 8l'adle . ~E , . company benefllt; • JAMITOmAL 5S7--0520or&M·Z2U Exper'dwueronly,part, LYN. ~I)'. NB. Bclc"I& or fulJ·time, top w.ges. fmt olo duUet. 4 day wltl 979-3923 ' 646-3314 9M-6S50 JeMtors/ .la ltr••. ~Yn 21e~!tr::~:.' ;;!~ P/time fc f/~me. lrvm smoker. Top salary. area. WUluaia.·ldeat r 8f8·1400 housewives. stlodents &--------.--• cpls. M1i{St bave own Maid. fulJ Ume or pt..Ume. tranap & phOf\e. Call expupref'd. betwn 3·8pm, (714 > 6'2·3030 83.1-7015. • . BllluNay lnte1Nkawa 1 . ----1"Th1a w .. k · Augun 181 ~8781 • Move up' to· a belier Job at Mo-00 11 oouo1asf 11 you ~ ~ent r1ence ID 9perat1ng any ~Of tf'lla ~~I. 'get In touch with ui now: /: Mt0 •LL • 120" a 41" O.Ytlef ' r.· QlfitE LATHE · 20" Amertcan wtttt acer I CMUNOU • Cruah Model 110 1no lf>AE • ' 3 ~OOfe .. ' a SIP MILLING MACHINE · Yenleel a ttonrontal TURRET ._.TttE•, Jone_p a ._.,,,.,~ I 3 a I 5 ~EAltOAl 'n)•UtEr LA'HE · .... oicNfne a u. H" au..., Ot 12 ft, NNH .Here, you "1d your dependen11 wHI _,, .protected by one or the rno.t outstanding employe benefit programa In lnduptry, Including Compan~ medlcal, ~Plt•l. and d9ntal p~: S>reac:rlpt10n drug plan; emptoye CIC*· ated c:rtdt' unlo•K c:ompany 1tora wlth employi ct\afoes and .. tended pay· , ~nt1 without tntweat; company·s*d t ~ ni. lf*ltanct, compeny.pald ~·, Jnd m~t\ more. I ~ .~ ..... - ( LNUft/l Beach. stt-1700, ~E~ lPM &5 PM . I .··~ ....... A... . PUsS8.P/.... ~OMIST Allshifta.ApplyN~port for ~ainlltoo Dry neeckd by Chiropractor. .. Convalescent Center. Cl~~ , Gd typist. lite bkltpg. 1.S55 91penor Ave, Ne russ ona~ Toa 540-SS5t days. Carl' S Jr. MUISISAtDES Exp. AB Dick 380.ltelt 1n11 ......... t lllonday·Frlday 8:30am-5:00pm OpeniMs' on. AM & P.M Plea,ant -Nor.kine cond: R.t:. Sales ._ ~. Exper prefld. wDI '='ita, pJj) CM/NB taus' y & ... rrnlM~ I ~UMl'AIMV~LLEY SALES· Houseplant knowledgable people . perm, fulJ I& p/Ume for ret1il sales positions. 751-4760. traip 9uaUfied penon· --------IUMIUUI or net. ctaasea atart Sept rv Ublq.e Homes of M,sa 9022 Aclmls lit. Apply, Flagship NnATICl.UI ' Verde ls "phigeed into" ~TOM .Conv. Center, 4H RECEPTIONIST / a relocation rderral llACH FU11h ip Rd. N. B . HOSTESS Mui\ be peo-service lbat bas created SALISLADY ~ ..,... r;.orteoted, call 8"·0668 a d•niand for more "'-'d F/tl P/ti __.... ...:. .., v-ual0ppEmp1"rM/F .,, .. per me, me. or ap..,... • salespeople. We are buty -.... OJ for ladies speci11ty shop. Office position nall,._-..... ----•I and o'eed help ! £x.l•mllilllllillll._ ____ •I W'illtraln.758-9851 •lsuccaaful illvestment•• ne 1 e c d o e manaae1Hbl "'m In Purch I ,. r n e r n w ales /Manage ment lrville lnduatriat ~m . as ng I UlespeopJe may apply. MOnc1 Trainee. Age lMS, learn )lex. l(uat~y wc>rktni J......6 ~a:i:,: =~:,! bowfled DaidatydPUotl Cit.basal· all phases of lumber Is w/nbmbers tt be •c· ProgrfiSlivTed::ational pie) auoclates to work 1 a lsp ay er b.aldin& material retail· curate. Xlnt f~nge fi ........ Ufied 'th c t s d messaies with legibWly lng.Q<tstarthigrate,acb ~ Op__. i. fc ann...,.,...aqua ex-w. · ontac an Y andiaapact? Ourada, we ievemeol bonus in 12 _......ta. ...,..,un~y1 or per'd buyer to handle Orlowski or Jim Wood al .. _proud to s•v, really Jeamlna • adva~cio1. nu,...i. .... 1 .... ,,..,. our coc ....., ......,. -.. ~ months. American Build· r"T_,_.. .. -. _._ &et results. Phone h. .. "-•-11 H d llail resume lo P. . Box rf9P. counea prfnl shop ---------1 :..'t ~~. , r. o~ en. "'t22S, c/o '11ie DJll)t PU~. Ir faclliUM. Manage. -~---· ------1...:_.;.:::.....,....~:__ ____ _ Bd• ~. Coeta Mesa, meat oppor. are avaJI to ~.,**28. riaht. lndiv. Sal open. Rml'AURµn' 'ft'\Cf! }IE'P F H B Xlnl hens• worlrin1 con· COOKS & ~. It ~ee.,: d1. Apply National ""-ov« 25 Mn. Hatch Educatioa. 4401 Birch St, ' N.B. (Near OC Airl>ort> i COUNTER 1_M_·2S11 _______ 1 Eq11al Opport"'nlty • OOke lirl, Prr 4 PM to '1-Emplo .... y.er ______ , J'M lfclo.I"(, can Mon·--------• PERSONNEL Pkt~ Of~. Avia· . , * , " Uon <11•r~ . r·-. APPLY TODAY! .. Sales Personnel W..tM .... Sllllfl ... fwtM9'•illastcull n1. Several ruu " part>-Ume poaltioDS immediately available in our sales ~epartment. Experience desirable, but any sales aptjtude will be coosld~. For an interview please contact our store manaaer at 17141 644-5071 w .......... , ......... . ' ............. E If I I. Se teral hall • pa.rt-thrie ~ • lmme~lately avaltable tn our ulee deoarlment. Experience deskable, but any aala •P'ltud.e wUI be cot11klM!d. For an lntervlew,p&eue Hnt.tct our •tore mu8'tr -.t \ t714f 644-7030 -,. • • ...., • • n .. .,.._ • .. .. .. . . .. . -... \ r c r b • ' \ ' s lJ c. -c. R -8 -00 N t1) 81 - 41' bl 00 Lai tbi 2IO' .. SU IDC ~ a. -- .. OAtlV PILOT Thureday,Augl.9' 17, 1m HlfpW.... 7100 ........ IOIO ..... 1050 ...._. 1060 Mhuls ,.. 1010 ..... ~ __.___... ~ .-........... 1a00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... • •••••••••••••••••••••• -····················· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ... -·... 1013 ......... 7111 w--'' _.. 'd Hot int t e.tdlt twin set ao. h.11 A.ltd• luty ~ '5.1$. WIOA•ft.•1·~1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~..-..................... • .................. ••• .... .-.••••••••••••• Waltr.eu, ex per , f:. • copper one A Ml• a.tll&ed fW.1 Nulro.,.foodalbtl.JO ....,~.,. ~· rttlme. Apply, llH 0: r ~ .. '!f"~::.alt ell ... SiDI Ill -I Jnedli.., opmaa. from7Qetbullwcard. D-U/20 12 ~ ce at.a. au..ctut. 1'tDlr Mane ewor f /u DolpldA. ~ Vla Udo. •-• wtJ1 11QF ·J('Nr old mat· dAJ Smd ODii card for eacb Cli&ar M5Q. Call 54MW IA1 • YY P/WDe. &al*-.. On II. teller. Xlal worklo1 N.& n eu a &•MM.tor.frolt· .,_•"boll~. a• ow.f9..,,_ATedl &al plue one.,.,... We afUwkdaYI :-:~:.-:~ ·-·--· ~,\I,*'.=:.,:"= WAmlSS -IOld. ---,-..,,-. --•11 .. Cll =·-=~·~11 Mu1la DH G .. w . 8lo&1 Supp\J. m , S.-.::\.&&t...~ ~~ roH•I•••· Call Mr rtthne for reu.remat aft!llm. SPD. lvq • dlDhll IUrn. (1trot1 from Onnae strap. me.Uol airllD• Uke ""'· -.o. at-0071 mllat.Cll • ~~ pN, .. B.,,..,.,.., ataner 111·'10 for bomt.CaJIMMlll. IWria. perfec.t coa4. fr5. Dark wOod.. Wroqbt ~~, l.D. requirements. ~._aft_a_PM _____ _ ..;...;;..;.;....;;._.....;...;.""";;..;.;l..;.•.;....;· --•....a ID&«. Poman• w·• ..... S 0.,., f7t.tl1S OC' ev• ltoQ. lt1S MlltMn Dr Y.t '°: 6 theft! P.w a ' mer Alto Suapbooe. S t • llllded ltHMd =OI 1 ~l Federal 8 • L IUIW 111... NB RilCllta«l Arabla Geld. ,....... ___ &ed &Ai eodoM "Cl1are11Uer " com ~.,J.71teul.,.v1, faa 411> • ....... HWa..SOSM/F S•pr. nee. <I• Jn>. 8 _...~ .,.____ ... ,..,. ,._..., Refined, Clautc. !£~•1Hl.~·..!!!>r"!: •0~ pletel" reblt 'ea1.2010 ' frtila 0..... oe • 1teM1. td 11+.Coc:tt1lll. AJPl1 lD ---..-""' •. --Beeutlful mover ,.,_ Glo _ _.... • "" ~ c+Wlil&ka. lDllde 6 oat· p!J.~eo.Nft.Cll person J..e BlarrH• IU wu er. ll = • ~ a.Int VeruUle. tTt·lHO will back • s.rtsn ~r,_..-__ . _____ _ al•e ulary +co•· ,._for fdrtc wtiM 1l .. t11ar1Dt, NB. PM ucrtnce lot ~ prte.. an. lBarb> After IPM. or t.o. Or ltJ two cards ......_ "-d • a.,. llult a.a .. UPllPP 0 ...,. Sl'rl.m.4711. m-&bl. ... a@" a '11'' IM-1072 C81iierr7>. a.ct to back. ~:.;Id' "fOI i•· ~rt .. ni. aala!\ °'" TllUll WAJTR&SSIS ~. ,.. me. • ~:&,~· MOO. IT ' ....... I061 aa ... rl:cf3: n:J::•• Pa rle• -~·u M/F PlftJF/UJDlo,Onll ~. aoo. P.P. ----·······-···· .,5...,.11.IOea. filcle.~~b~: SU.=lltf'YJH la ........... N\nla. ....,.. . 8Mlldful eo.cbtloat Din·~~-(Btal'I), tlttaoll.&Oca. •-s. Sun. •·2. 16812 ~p-_.;.~•"'"a:='•••• WANTED: No. Laauna fbllcor 1•·· &Ider lby •kit Ina rm.ac.~ ntrta.. •me,.~ • 10c;.:::;!!·t!,~ Conltr\aQtion Ctr • .East . .,. •• -' · ~NIWI t t *t Wava.WI Baacb. Older l::Lor roat •H re r •Jrr-.r. bedl. are-. ·•-NOCABD? lnine (Ulllt I>. CASH D&J\i ......... ,!_.~ ... a.U --co.. bu ""'..... mo&ber'"' .YOUlll '° W/lce maker. Avocado. a.-SOI• 1teeper. p , Frlp!aire/t-freeser ~ Dnw ,.,..,. OWD or tend ONLY ~::1l" ... "'.1'il .....i D011tJ0118 nail .._ at at71 care for• MDCI my 7"Jr. :;»J"" otr. '16-lql') -4 •a1aut a.t • Wbee1 dolboUlea''xa"dl • name., addreu. pbone .•---..--.-+-11-.-, -l-090- .._.,_ 10 ' llllmld. hnn f\lll.U.. --.. • ok1 ~ • ...U bebaved a.&ra..-1 SIO. S.1SMO we u mak one Card -r ~ ...,.. •----1..a. E. wurtt. AIJtJJ:t la ,..._ I dauabttr to El lloro ~ tlilfae111ator tq.. Add z:i eacb. r-....... -............. . aaugg PIUNTtNO co. 9larcnl{ -cl ~IU. 11.U ....._ • le • ......,.. school. Your bome or lbt aee to .~ llall*a1 bed, lld,t\dtable. Ju•r 1070 Send tbec* Ol IDOM)' or-F.arly player piano. 65 Sq Me1 produeU.. WllW. C.11. (Coner .... wtHt McD•••ll mlae. 417·1HJ/evH. ao.m._ w/[amp, a11o ::tt box-.... _ .......... derto' note, esceptjonal cue. 1-..a,2:aL•1• for hlUrlno•lld.llll ....... A.ltt n#a Rlllll.rwquirtd. a•ttrw bue. z11.R!!..modern cut ..:or~ ~weU,IOrolla.~. =i:.,. .~1.1~;: SHlwll..U!!.* C••••Y •• H•.. AKI• MU C:...ZS.~::::::-0 1 P.O.BoxUIO ~r:.::Hl Wltrala. * rr1"w ...,.. ........ lut Wla8tJtiata ·-... -........... 9arAt2'°'9..U,bumper · · Coltall..,Ca.DDI Hammond Organ Cm111... '*h UIV COllP'IUV pooltablela\=~lraab PAYCASRfor~ PBOHEllATB •1b•efed·up i.eshe _......,, _____ --41 Ck'owtDIOruoco. mall .... .... . Ml PUBUC"1RHITURE cl~~ If ao&fll JewelrJ, a7 coed. W'lll Telepbooe 1nawerln1 Sl400 SIAMSTllll cn.r co ...a. ..,..,a1 "~'or •••n.. .._ w so plckup-..o5. madilaei •/Warr. m M7-0S77 AtteraOau (« Bridal ,..._forabt,.,•dlt· •~.-.1 Wl6SALISA *,_, .. * CMt.wolfnt.MW151 1Ji __. .l'fd ppniled wtnmote,$149 Hammond 9.3 organ. sa... Colla lleaa .,... trtblDDD.,.., ··--.-• ..-. nu:DAY7:aoP.ll. r awbed velvet eoacb. ,:_, ..._.,_:.,! 0 --er 7»3711. BNfed•""LateY.$1400 S.lln Cllfliw...,._ t1 I •• , .. ~uJ (l)lllenWeklome) _ .. ...,_. --~--=--•;....._ ____ , -~~~·~SS.~ll'D~-~ ·~ .,....... P'/tJ~ pc19iUOD1 ror ex· ES'l'ATr• LO'l'8 .. Pba fttqt "°°"'' 56M3l1 c AR p ET .. ILL MJ.()6'1'1 S I Sii per d •II ulea " STOCX LIQUIDATIONS SU. "6-13'4. CLOSIWUl'SFromti.:IG Spoet' , ..... 10t4" •--'-'.:aco• ... ; r!!,,tcw ·~ c.itllf'Ana .. I ii auli.u. ~NewportBlvdCll ••i:1l•1-IOIO aqyd.~111-.W ...................... . ---•T .... W....... Xlnt c:a.reer oppor. 6 m.8125 -.... BltdMr baoelt dbl1q tbl ... -......... -.... Rmlel urfboard 'ln = ::/"fni::1:: •11.W pecbaeb&DdJen •T ..... a...rclt manaaealent trainee •I' cbrome a bit lethr Naroid camerae ~ ea, Natural m1llk full lath. Uled 3 •limel x.Jn: coJ· IQGCI ~ • orpni.u· ..-~ -.lt1 cH1llt paliUom lD uLiOranb 1e1 cllh. Hatcb top tbl. ~~-~.!.0· ~-~v~~ ~or $l5.MU108 · ' tloaaf lkl1l1. eye for _._ to. area. era ..,.. 1020 AC!'JloD beiee/blk/brwn .--™"--wuuer -tu. cUculationl. Acnncy 6 •Warehouse If y. ..... at a fb'tJ bmllita. ....................... = IOfa. Colar TV. llOVINGSALE. lluataell en-wlckpooltableSZOO. 382~.c:,~~.~u~a~. atleotlon to detail a ·~ a. ..... APlll.YPenonnel Pw&. &C DinlD,! .. ~:. u.ma ~-· make offer 219a,..; dlUlt. P\all beoeftta ln No aper 1"«1· wtll train .....,. .. , t.t to ... lloo-'tblan 10.m·U, 2-4 VJ...U •lll'J Clonw Group. a twtna • ~.!::.~•exec ciea~~ MN'lU t.balooe, Balboa Isle. Fri ~=s:.~~~,j t~.~~b ..... 1:. ---"':'a ..... <lout..... SALE .bl ...... o ......... ~.,.m, ... .,., .............. rodlo ................. s.·-· _K_Jlde_.'-.,. __ Mll __ . __ --1 r;.-~;k.. Apply ln 91p t.y _. Cost.aMeo New• med 3 5. • 10 babldti.mp.50-l55f sDatl5. wtplanelrmowr&start·r-213 -1923-0M9 ______ _ ICllT Y pencmS&arcrwtcil-caUr. _.Office.. TbeCltyPlua,Oranae 1pd1, bcb c~ulaera, llUSTSELLI Walnut con· BooYs Vac-Od eond D> 1oa-.S250.W.tm11 Bau fl.shin& cuide have ~ AR!(JL 3lU Redhill, c .11 . Mo•d•J tairo•tla mopeds, moto croH sole atereo, dbl bed, All&q drop leaf tbl szs: Boaes for movina, all own bus boat Is &bing ~=~f-at~:· =>' Paulariao S ... r4•J• betweH W•;'"•terllall, = c:.~rr =· C~ ~°Jr.i~' Nice boOkCHH $15. poj>ular lllH, lowest aear.~lOI Xlat typiiaa akilll, lt bt· 1:00 .... -4 4:00 F,qualOp.::EmploJet bicfdes,BqJ,.eii.U.CS: 151-TSM&ft.lpm, • 80450.1 =~1:'.:.la=: lY"1mdlo5'no Iott k pa, a o o d phone 'R 'e S' 1/P• p I ..-We .... forw_... -~mRTo .. 9 .,.... Blk steel deslr:, 3~ • 6 •. Kitchen Items: Broiler ly 111.95. Pree delivery ...... !•••••••••••••••• pencnalltyamuat.This Dept. Lmmed openilaa eio-..,_. YAIDM4M _,v, ..... .-v -"'-llabacolcdest,SsS'.9 SlO.EaeeeofpoUlO.lroo <db mlD order> (7141 Amplifier. AM /FM 8 ~~~to'~~ Zt_-~ ~~=I MC~..,B.L Rmta1 cents-bu open· eo,.· It" l~apd1 dis· drwr walnut cbnt. :i~tq lami-115 55WMUAJlto3Pll track and speakers up. Call Donna at 8 .J. exper, but will train. ~ Ina• for 2 men . -bled, DnDG MW ••41m Black Forest Cuckoo Perf cood. SU Pb Stewart AdvertlaiDI Lota of co. beoelita. DC>UeiLAS llecbaD.lcal bowled&e tbw•/Clfr.~ J"reocb Pro•. dresser Dlnin&tableSl.0.4cbnS2. 1JodL WorbpeatGS. -.SW. (n4)~ DeltroDlc Corp 12 ._._MA.UTICSCO helpful, neat bandwrtt· w/mlma' anal bd nite ea. 2 lrallinl hr* G. ea IGO'fG5 W-ard-.--.-. ---- -4......:....__,.._....;..----1 BU.erS&.C.11.~ -·5-.A1 lolM •·• • m. nee. Weekday off. I ·a 1ttll1 ... I025 atn sni. 10.;111 , Woman diamond Hitt .,._ mot 1 it ~1 ,t"tan· re-d SECllETARY P/Ume for -•• will lraln. APl>lf, 1930 _ .... ••--••••• 751.-., weddlna set 11 a tlO .iU'On' wooden atora1e e CODwv. • s . Ortbodontiat WW t.raln. ll&illfl4•1Hd1 NewportBlnl,-Cll COMTIA.CTOIS . Gl.SJT4 pecams=-• ~ new. suo ~ ~ 92647 SALi SICIETARY Meclu•u Panel Saw, 11• steel E&ecantBelaianoakDR ~~t.':s. Seua~echrukenu. "ClrTVSl78.lYTwar Na1 ___, __ ,_produce LaborDiaputeExl.ata ....................... worktables, misc. ~:::Sti~':· &aSenat.eSt.C.11. ....., /FM radlo re· Free de1 "set up. 2052 ... _... II IOOS lumber, plywood, .v•~ card 68ttk tape player. Newport Bl•d. CM ~~L,;i~~ ADequal : .. !!.'.' ............... caNMts•doon. Gaadryr. IOOCI coad $100, 65 pc ta Wards china.1_MZ-_SMO ______ _ Good typlDI ._add OlllJCll'b,ml1yempJoyer l81'12~1<! Cir DICOIA.TC>aS =•~1~1;11 :t: ~e ~n:'75= RCA Color Console. mach. akUl.a Pleasant ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 AndquelluaJcBoxeel wioA ... lr'ftne(Uni Sa · ... AMToa..TIAL tfl»/alr MM'l•afUP• AM/FMstereo•tumta-wod:ill& C'OOCL. 1 girl ore -Slot M.acblnea ! .-.-ta> t. MMTUll SALi · Ster ll n I S II v er by ble. S5!iO Flat:ler stereo Med. Ir dental benefit.I s Sl1TER. afterDooaS for 5 Tow Truck Driven ex· Clocbl &-S,QlQC_.,~2H-Y uv rm. ~Ir anU· Brlgp.str&Uoo 4 cycle Gorham. Melrose pat-AM ' FM 8-trk cass. Day wk. Holidays, vaca yr okl boy or California per'd. Top pay Apply, HUG!: SELECTION -v.-qia to be at orig 3HP reel mower. l.Jb tem. •-pc service for 8 tmtbl Ii Dolby 9500 Som Uom Must be sharp, Sdlool, C.M. 557·'729'7 aft. GlcWTowlna.1000 Irvine Amrtcm ,.~ 10•5 cost. Fri Aug 18. Sal Aua new. lllO. 50-Cmf. + I aervtn1 pieces & ll:630 reel-to-reel ~ rast, able to deal on Sp.m Ave,HB&G-12.52 W.-"a.d -. ~ 19, &an Aua llO. 63 Mon-NWPT BEACH TENNIS ~= ~bes1!,. Ute new.,_~-------- phone Non smokers Tow truck driver nded , Gallrfn -·.••••• .... ••••••••••• teclto <SPYGLASS CLUB. F\lllfamUy llem· ..-. ,_. '''" Warda color TV $2751 =:st~~of~~: sta\Typcst \OSl Exp. only llual live ln ~wed. thruSaL Slameleldttens. '55. ID.LL> Cdll. For further bertblp. llake ofr, firm Panasonic stereo ll8M880 hm. Comtrw Secy . S12K CM 64f..9639 ~ 646-3'09. lnfo CGOlact 75-1600 or l·Zl'l-55113Su Die10 w /turntable & cassette --------• PenoanelAdmiD $20K ~~~i7,lrv. Dogl 1040 758-1888,apptpreferred. tW~ recorder $150. 631-5149, SICHTA.RY Secy/Recept to TRAVEL AGENT, P l ~~~~~~~~1 ..... •••••••••••••••••• GmwS. IOSS sa1~.!el~ca'b~~ .. ~~h ... , .... 1013 ~LOPMonly n...•-n....----t Manuf Engjneer to SZ2K time. commercial-lnt'l --r--.. .....,.... ..-.. ..,.._. _ ................... . ..,... ....... _...mg onen Irvine Personnel Agency exper. GJ.-4000; 751_,, ..._. Amrtcm Golden Retriever pup-••••••••••••••••• .. ••• Drawers and atoraae Ii M.w ~==~f~ eEl7tbc.taMeaa TWOTRA.INEES 08*Astlo9 piest. AKSb~'Field &abowd 1!2'flNGG SALE\ b: ~ • ..-eli0.56'1-8851 Prlf'~:::~old 's 'p:allt ~ • ....._ "-m•'"'t of SUiteZM 14.2-1470 In """uumer services. pe . u.s. worme • ,.,,_. rea araa na. F _.. n-b ••••••••••••••••••••• ..,.. • .... w Auc·=jJ~nooa raiaedwtrLC.XIDtdltp . Frames. kitchen ap. AatiQ oak wrdrbe 11$(). euuer u.seman, ut 9010 caJD P docwDeo· Good telephone voice, 3000 ,CM (213)425-15&1. =· 117 E2Znd, CM Cllifds bed. mattreaa. AQYthi.DllDaoodworkin& tataoo. Word proceulng Stewudeu Dds uve Ul to plevant wortin.I coodi-• SpingerlsWb.ile m wardrobe$15. Elecch7.er cadUon ror al'OWMl $100 eqier' helpful. AD oppor i • Id ..... Salary t&OO '° llOO Auctloneen AKC German Sbepberd $100 ... Via JU&Dila, will do. call 661-Gl aft \Obepertohoat'ldata care orl8mo 4 YT 0 • +benef'lta.catlBarbara 54G-4098 pupe.Sbowbackgratmcl OVlNG! GARAGE KV ,...,.. procegstna co Xlnt co Jdst be Oealble w rers. m4'95S-CASH Top bloodlines. Black SALE Many 1ood buys, ---__;;~~---- benefits Phone Ad-839•5241 4 eromou CASHCARDCORP For Sale. Antq S legged andta.D.838-9308 all Items priced to sell!. Deike. Addlnc Mach. Slinlerlaoddruml. beavy , mlnlstutl~e Services neceslt• senor~ vivir en __ ....__;_ _____ , table/4 cbrs Settee, aid boat. Fri/Sat, 9-SPM Ships, Hatch table, duty, S-pc, l8" & 20·· ust sell' Seara 17 Manqer for appt lote-cau. cuidar mno., 18 " TYPIST King's LQn'scbalrs, and Free AKC registered 20741 Hopetown Lo. HB. Sin1er portable caae. Palate cymbals. Compl .~__offer over S27S grated Data, Costa •: Sea flexible ~eren-other antiques. Must sell, Sblbllu with breeders Clndianapolia/lllapolla) m.-. hardware, bought ror \..olUJ A-.53M391 Meaa.~ oas&»-SMB llq Card II, Due to ex pvtpty ~2017 tenns.957-1188 Sl.600, sell Sl.200 firm. 6 pansloo Stewart Title 81'ATE Sale. Everythb:ag Selhrit.b EASE! mo'a old Black tgray Seq'etary, pleasant wol"k· Stock & deliver, full or oeeda an exper·d typist, Frank Hamilton painUog. AKC reg Lbaao. 4 mos, must go. Sat/&m, M . It's a BREEZE 642~'2 Aft epm. Bob or Ing cond. primary P/TClean&neaLApply toppay.Pdpar~1.Qt.r· premlwnqualitydepict· btrul dhposltion Paid rm1ca.11wy.,So.Lag. ManlfledAdaMM6'TB Jeff 1-------- responslbllltJes, fllln1. at4.1115E l7tbCll.Aaklor b' bollua plan. Tille ex-inl Jerome, Arir.ooa & $290, bit otr over $1.50. 1011101. typmg & ux LarTyorPaul per. llftf'd., but not nee Valley below. undH Must sacrifice. wife al· Gerace Sale, II l ac work Good company TEACHER/Pre-cehl Cert Callilicbale$S&-W4,ext valuea&Sl.200.'9M707 ler&ic. Sbota, papers. funushln1a · dln set. benefits, Cont act S3/hr,r/time 30. ._.__ IOIO Dya. 979·9032. Eves, lamps, desk. fans, bead· M .. -18003 S.. par.. CHE El E ....,,.._. D-07'5. boards, odds & ends. Sal a ... ~... •Y • TEA R/ em xpr. V •LET ••••••••••••••••••••••• Circle. Ste H, Irv S3 50 hr Mlddle·ace A FRGHT DAMAGED Golden Retriever adofa· ~MQla UM. 600 Acacia. 55M67l welcome Coa\a Mesa PAl.l1M6 HOI'POINT SALE. 3308 ble puppies, AKC, abc>Q, -·------SEClllfARY 6C-OUl Over 18, neat an ~p-W Warner or Harbor, M/F.6'1WIC» 8·18 6 8 -19 9 ·5pm -...-.1e••us pearancew/aooddrivmg Sant.aADa.m.2921 ......... _·lOw'-, l"td'nlture. Wiiia macb FUU or~ time secretary •-"" UU"O record s nilbll week, ...,.._ ... bikel, tJpewrlt.9s, bone for Laguna Law Office Reseattb&development $2 '1S per hr Apply CMHPAID coldtwbite. AKC, 2 equip, dotlUDl:..,.much nme It salary nexible. mecbanical backlJ"OUDd wtdys, Ambrosia, sos Wabr/Dryra/Retr11 femalea.$300ea more. aot Poto rueo 2 Expr. pref, but will train w o r k i D I a n e n 30th St Rm. m. Npt wortdnC"' not 957-8133 8Sl.-25 '*8 (rm El C..mloo on 4SN-tan glneering building Bcb. Pit Ball -p, -.. n..-&planade,SC medical ~· Bxper'd Used refrtp, Croet-free. & -•'" nu" --------1 to mecb I enatneertng, Walters, wattreuee. ell· Wuben, dryers. Good bloodline, DO papen Antique furn • misc quality a.uurance etc. perienced preferred. buys. BelllAppliance.ZlO &G-DS1 items. S.Spm, Si'riday OO• SECRETARIES (With Is Without SH) TYPISTS PIX Lani I& abort term u aianmeDta Holiday Is vac ation p a y Hoaplt11lutioD plan av all VOLT •I r~<t• • •I il\I • ,I I I .. I '• .. Campus Drive S41M741 <Across From Oraqe Co Airport F,qual ()ppor Employer •Secretaries* G. Ofc/Bktpr /Recept ~enPayAUPeet Lb Remder'S AaeDc1 ., Blrcb S&. Ste lOt ~Beach SSMUIO IOI' Appt/Ealab '14 Call Susan 581-3830. XJnt Private country club. Adams.HB.536-0811 RaveaaaJttosowt (Pep. LY. 8118. 92llO Larbpur beDef1tl. ll1uioa Viejo P\lll • part Ume Call D ~> darlinc female Toy Westmln. <Betwn Ed· area. Mt-540t!Ol'lDterview as ..,er. $75. Baby x "'-rrler •o rt•bt tnger " McFadden and ---------4---------cchanalnatable,SlO. n: ~ • u ... --.li a.. 9 bard TICHMICIA.MS &3'1·n71 person Baebrkn, all __..., a • uac > Immed. opeainp ,, op-IF YOU abota. 1 11' old. Pd $100, Noearl1 callers! portunltlea ID an baveuervicetooffero air furnace llO,OO sac $50. Call •~-4597 ARAGE SALE SAT establlabed co in the _..atoaell. place an a =·New only *175. a.m.oraftlOpm ~Y I 3IG Beaver St . Orange Co airport area. in the Dally Pilot1---------Toy Yorbl\lre Terrier Irv Tenl trlr, wet suit A pp I I c a n ta t o a-lfied SedioG • 7'00 <AKC> male. s~ moot.be moped, fins, & misc troubleshoot, repair Is fbaneeos7& old. $125 Pb 171-WI Items telt eledrooic sy1tema -=.immiiiiiiiimiiiimll.;•;.;••;.:•;.;••;.;;•;;•;.;••;.;;•;••;";.;••;.:•;.;••;.:•;••il . --------55'7-8051 aak for Busch. • ""to Y• 8041 e Sale-Aus. 18, 19, " •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• 20th tam·4 .30 500 Telephone appt secty Pleasant work, short bra, $9-$5. hr dep on exp FOC' interview call Mr Louis 557·1'121 aft.er DOOO TEl.EPHOME SALES !;:Le Co., in Irvlne, 2 people to won from our office I Complete tralnllla pro s:ram. Salary, + com minion I: boDut. Co. peld Im For lot.eniew. PboDe HM!Oll and Mk fcrADlta Skill Training Men and Women I'm a 5 mo old II mbt Avocado,OldCdM. belile/tenter. I Deed a GARAGE SALE Scuba. loriqbome._... ~ping, backpacking ''Georte" Cotkapoo wbt tQuip., van seat.a, sport- 11. LoveS chlJdrea Dot. ma eoods. "more 1967 tJei.ter 60-ZISl ... ~ Anabe1m Ave., Apt A., · • ¥.3•· CM. Sat!Sun UMPM ~~~laltd= VUdSale,lewelry, Dolla, Slepbeid. my oeolll• are VW parta. TV. Cheat, Today's Army offers training, eel--aaoriQ&-'-rncl a ·bomt. Iliac. Tbun. to Sat. XM &e.17Ur B.18tbSt. C.M. Find out how you ·can be paid o~e~m ... -• heavy equipment • artlllery fWrveyor • administration/clerk •air traffic control • mechanic •truck driving • medical TAU< TO THE ARMY INTERVIEW TEAM IN YOUR AREA. CALL COLLECT FOR YOUR APPOINTMENT (114)55114• I ... S EYOUR AD NPRINT IN HOURS Place y Daily Pilot classifi d ad before 5:30 p.m. nd it will run in the nex day's issue. The Daily Pilot is the only aftem on Orange County ne paper to offer you t 24-hour service. Stop,., by our frtce '1>tfll call 642·567 and a frtenClly ad-vi or will help you place '3 ut ... d. You can charge our ad or use BankA ericard or Master Char e. • •••••••••••••••••••••• Boat ., Trailer Repair FltJertlass Electrical Tune Ups Oil Changing Weldin&. Call Fred •2349 ~=-9030 •• ••• • • •• • • • • •• • • • • • • • • New ~' manilla line 16< ft. A ion redcresl Or brds Olli bracket. used $275. Old Nal'I cash regstr l' 935 I SSS. 646·8582 ;' -.2918. 9040 ....................... ' Bolton Whaler 4Cilp mere, comp. ovl'ttl June 78, trlr. llrt cbl, nav ligb&a, Dew batt. $2'900. 67s.6829 -----25' Flybrid1e Cabin Cruiaer Lo bn, 12 cban VHF. RDF Fatbometer, dual batt system, enc stand·up head Xlnt cond Many xtras . S48·818l Blm s 30pm 586-QWO, aft &pm/all day Sat/Sun. Beaut claaalc launch, lllUll sell this wlcnd, will consider all ohs 673-8268. 97s.<1107 • Boston Whaler urgent· lY nd by OCC crew Con- tact Dave Grant 556-5730 I Dory Runabout. 6HP eq, ~ ... tank, 1ood coDd. aw. 6'1~ • il)'droswlft w /trlr 2 eaa·•. cm.ptt.moo. · l4,S.95e9 551..t9S6. 13 •••• _. .. ~~ p • ~.· .. titc""ll~ lud. ~ ulr PP ......__ teo-ms "It Mint Day CNUer. ~l Ford. 280 V~vo. tandem trailer, AlklDI $111100. Blf. "154-1111 T WANTED new or ln 'Xlnt cood. w/sllp in Ne'WpOtt. btW'D JO' to 30' WW pay yr-ly rent ln ad- vance for slip. l /Q).5826 are1MS'1t mu JO'. •teanopy • «YI/flt • .lint shape, '2500.. rr~- ' Dll Sea1oin& 'F'IG. ~ tJM boet bit ~~·oll• .... . --· .. ,.... , .. --. --· ..... . .... . ... .. . . . . .. -... -. -.... ~ . ,.. ..... HAll.ISOM"S SIAIAYIOATS ~lpa/ 9070 SWCOut lhry, N 8 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• C1l ~ aft AYA• Ull 'V AC' ~tll'PQI\ ~I W SIUPJACK 20, OMC ' outdr1ve, complelely BOATt>Oa( P'OR RENT overhauled U&IY but Ne~port tal•nd Mu functional trail., in 1mum lcn~h zt' Call eluded. Dopendabla 96'7 1101 fortnfo __ _ 2 rac:tlluu currentlf ~rauorull lrvi.ne1, Call ColoradoSprinp, Colo Cbevy V·I •ns. sood St.000 alWARD <:alallna 1)1' rtatun1 boat 4()' Pt'rm.nent 1llp In Grand open1n1 oUrd S5.500 675 .-JO Nwpt. will ne1otl&tf' for taclluy San Francu.co. ll' Focmu.la Thundetblrd temPQrary slip John Qlllf. Much '79 Xlnt cond S»iUO. Jan.t ~7 7102 'WESTERN COLDEN 2 d \y TRIANGLE" Ml·~l.2 ..xt 1 aJ 8·~ - -For further lnfo, contact Trwb 9HO ..._ W..tM Responsible •du.lt, 00111ce Req1a~ Newport slJp 30' Mr. LI.saner ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• boatiunan, lnlerened U\ Islander Finders fee .,.._ aY ..... lee. * tf7' TOYOTA* WI W1U. IUY renlU\I or luslllg well C.llS4b-899I 17t4>H9·444' rtCICUPTaUCk YouRD4TSUH eqwpped recent model Outs>deCa. l.aoo-854-0399 4·apeed . maaa. rear PAIDFORORNOT r.:er boat, 23to2.Sft. for loah. ~ & <Telex) Dale's bwnper, mirror (K14784l TOPDOUAI amily boating & hstuna Sid 9010 IR1NIB·23'18 •S3195• FOITOPCAIS local waters 648·39-38 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AJ.lowina t way &w.~7 home. 16' l.OHP OMC 110. Nu rentalstoL.A. '_IJj)~ 14. sld boat-runaboul 35 int. rebl\ ena &,.(.(.. HP John.son 0 /8 . lrlr, Call anytime. 673-1.846. AMto Serftc.9, ,..., --Ho complete 9600. 675-7028 & Ace"'°"" 9400 0.,:b.~ ~nu 28• P -s --r· h-:-T•~atioR ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..!:::::::=::::::::::::=:=:::::~ ower port 1s 1ng -.,........ Boat. Wood hull, Oy111g •••••••••••••••••••••• • MEED: 4 uaed radia~~· no '61 Ranchero $495. bridge, newly rebuHl C 41n. Sdttt/ more.~ 30,000 ma a to 260 V-8 Automatic. Runs BA RWICK OATSU..,. '1'• 1 11 1' 11'1 , I I'll 831·1375 49J.JJ75 '61 Austin H ea ly Roadster $2SOO ror quick sale. Classic, fun car . 641)-8755 IUY Oil LEASE YOUI 1'711MW MOW! Excellent selection of all mod~ls now lo stock! COMPUTE IOOYSHOf' NOW OPEN 9720 ••••••••••••••••••••••• DATSUNS! '77FIO With S s peed trans. (SlRLJ). '761210 Automatic: with only 17,000miJes. (432PVJ >. 76710WAGOM Only 15,000 original miles. (732SLS>. SADDLHACIC VALLIYIMPOITS 131·2040 49M949 ·n Ja1 XKE. Roadster. lmac: ! Bsl ofr 645-4680 '76 MB 3000. tan. lmmac .• s tereo caas, $1 2 900. 'Q XJCE Roadater . Beaut •1783 cood. must sell ror b&t otr•-------,-7-4-2 nr $3800. 96G-~ eves. .__ Gflila 9715 '78 lllld1et. 30,000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ml 's. Mus t sell now ! '71 Convert, auto Slick, SUOO. Mike, 5311-1827. reblt en&. new brakes. 9744 bestolfer.67J.4683 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .._. 9731 *I 977 MGI• "•••••••••••••••••••••• mags. stereo tape, lug. gage rack, 19.000 miles <203RYQI engine Needs some 1.-9120 r11 15 nma !Dataun.510 good. Great. work truck work. Overall condition ••••••••••••••••••••••• wen >. Ed, 661-6261. aft. Mi-5881847-8655 excellent. Bra nd new 1972 YW · 5:30pm. ---------UCB.LINT * 1973 '73 Mazda RX3. Auto, MGB Super cherry, red DATSUM 240%• AM/FM 8 lrlt. Xlnt cond. convertible. 12,000 mi's, directional finder and IUS "12 Ford Courier, FM 2-way radio. S16000 or A111os for S-. SlSOO. S&.ICTIOM OF IMWIESALES pd . 52 000 Bestolr.~76 overdrive. $4850. P.P . !:. <~/{'ags. · t•11at1 9739 _64U&'I> _______ _ best oiler. Evenings Readyroryournexttnp' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Days644-2652Mlcbal ~9.376 This one has only 64.000 .&"""-/ We may have your next car in our inventory. Call us today! •WON'T LAST LONG ! • •••••••••••••••••••••••,.,._NII 9741 mil (Tl.2GXC> ~~ l~Foni ~Ton CoriJ, has 1117~ zs• Nova We rrice sZ37S a.inlu 9520 St.epslde. 11200/or w I t win 3 5 1 M er c , ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• best offer. 586-0960 crwsera, cstm uphol., f .... ,. .. 8 Mtrs 'S2 Bentley Mark 6, 4 dr cuddy cabin w /head, 1988Harbor. Costa¥• sedan, eood leather. but '77 Datsun. A M I F M VHF I b r , 642 ... 7'1 needs coemetics. lnchJd-st.er~ cass. mags. "'.Ide · very 0 1'$, asl 0 · 1 ina paint •· l"Wll repair trk tires.. cstm paint, f·shore boat. Willing to .... .,. C S t d f U'ade for glass work or Older camper 4·sale. w/o Stroni. reliable runner, A/ . lll un er-a c office furnishings or ., truck. $150. S tove & 111 every day use. S6000 warr. must sell, P.P. Aft Very anxious. 879·2096 rehig. 640-2700 675-4870 6pm; S46-32.8.5 '76 TROJAN is', Bnstol '69 Ford £300, camper •Cad '57. ORJG. Gd cond '80 Chevy ...,T, nds clutch cond, xtras Sl4,750 tofl, nds inter finish. 97M, no dents. PI P & assort misc. Nu tires 558-8534 tl.500. 5'5-6096all 7pm. +714>496-225ebef2pm. SlOO. Call Dana aft --------6:30pm, 646-0367 2'I Foot Cutter 1974. FG. ·m Havasu Camper, 10'. l962 CHEV. Impala --------- Fly Bridge. ~eeps six alr c.-ond. rern tfrzr. self· Sedan. Immaculate con· '72 Datsun PU w /shell Gd L 0 ts 0 r e " t r a ., coot head, slllti 4. SHOO. dit1on, 42.000 original cood. $1675. See Sat. l2·4 71~ 846-4073 miJes. S850. 673·3858 aft 210 E.18th, CM. 6PM Cns Crafl Tn·Cabin 45· amily size Cab-over 'SB Font reblt eng. valve. WE BUY Q.IANCAIS lrftUCKS CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA 546.1200 Yacht • · Da groon · · Camper. se11-cont . xl nt '63 l.lncoln. new tires. rns trans. rear end. Make of custom dbl cedar hull. rood. $1875. 54().6447 good. S:JOO/make ofr. rer. 631-4715 ·--------- absolutely magnificent. -, Call aft 5:30. 548~781. '68 Chevy P U. 52,000 ac slps102heads&shower Dreamer 74 Cabover al . ln d SI"" SIS g~lley, refng, VHF: Camper, fully cont'd. '57 Che~y 4 dr 210, needs tu m1, x t con . -s. auto pilot, depth finder. King bed. $2500. 549-3612. rosmeUcs & &ood home. _83_1_·3225 ______ _ winless. ONAN sw1.m Motoriudllket 9140 SCS.7892 '76 El Camino classic. aU steps, two gas 460 s . ••••••••••••••••••••••• '6SSunbeamTiger260, re· xtras, mst sell, $5000 w1~pprox 35 hrs s ince ady to restore. Call Bret 548-0512 maJ()I" overhaul. $48.000. c....i.. 'Com~, 842.954() ·-'78-""'--v-. ~-T-on_P_U_.-6-cy-I Pri.,,ate parties only J.,..; ......., pleaseS4G-5937 2470Nwpt Blv . C '59 Nash Rambler stn 3 Spd. Tempo camper 8'2·7910 wgn, 70'rc> restored. 2 dr shell. 751-1165, 957·1491. 'Tl 21 Ski Master Day BIO fbslof 642 3945 Cruiser, 460 Ford w /Jel ·78 Pucb Maxi·sport. · r · '72CHEVY LUY. w 1all avail options. lSOmi, bestorrer' '58 Mercedea220SClasslc. Sl.575. Xlntcond. 110,000firm. 847-6797 536-7674 al\. 4pm Comp. restored Mfrl 642·6022 or 653-3797 9,7 25' C 'b o ~J.,~f cond. $4750/bst o r . ·;:; l~TER:'-ATIO.,,\I, l . ar.1 ean ~y 9150 586-<0IS TRAVEL ALL Cruiser, cabin w /r~rng, lo"e seat, sink & stereo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·59 Ford gd Blrans 350Chevy, in/out landem 1975 Honda 250 Enduro· $425. trlr. s urge brakes Low m1les & in excellent 67S.1475 $13,950. Sl3950. 839·2405 condi.lion . $795. 1973 .Cwt.el Drfns 9550 ----Suzuki 125 Enduro-$295. DESP ERATE. MUST Need money for twUon. ••••••••••••••••••••••• V ·8 , automatic transmiss ion. power ~rina. power brakes, AM/FM radio. luggage rack, dual ruel tanks. <957MCE > (11652) WE BUY USED CARS CALL GARTH Used Car Mgr 540-5630 2626 HARBOR BL VO COSTA MESA WEIUY ·uSB> CARS! We 're the new Chevrolet dealership in the Irvine Auto Center We need your used car! 131-2040 495.4949 CREVIER & I Sf 6 HOAOWAV SANTA AMA 835·3171 l THE ULTIMATE OIUVINC lolACWINt •USEDIMWs• '7J.180045pd. <940NRJ > '753.QS!a C230RYFI '75S30i Auto. 1916MTV ). '76200U.spSI R<549PHZl '76S30i; S/RIS81RCSl '77 320S1R <567SXG l Closed 0. Sudcrys lt74 2002 4 s peed , air cond. & stereo cassette . 13'13LPF). 1975 SJOia With air cond .• sunroof & slA!reo. <s&OMML>. 1976 2002 41 speed, sWU"oof & air cond. lse>PQM >. 1977 32()1 -~ro'tl! 13631 .....,.,. a111<1 Gatden GtCMt ... ._.nl) •DATSUNS• a...,. SelectlOft OfAIModlts SALES-LEASING PARTS-SERVICE We Need Clean DataWlS ! COSTA MESA DATSUN •DRIVEA * *LITTLE. •• * SAVE A LOT OP It COMPARE 4 speed, s tereo & cond. l238SPI>. 1977 320i air ·m SlO. Runs, needs some work. $315. Must sell. 548-63311 aft 5. 1975Ml1210 9750 SEDAN. Complete with ••••••••••••••••••••••• sunroof. stereo. cruise '65 l56C control & low miles POISCHI <927NXH) · Buy or.lease· Original leather interior. 1975 Ml1210C Stereo, cruise control. fwr. windows. & door oc k s -A fine auotomobile ! Buy or leas e . 18 26MIT ). 76 MIZ 45058. Complete with sunroof. cruise control. stereo tape, pwr. windows. etc. L o w . low mile s. <502RCP > Buy or lease ....... Vt tftf'OH• N41831-1743Of17141495-1104 SOOO miles on new eDgloe Must see to appreciate Won't last long at ... HAllOUaVW 18'111 Beach Bl., H.B. Call 84.2-4435 <838TKE> 1977 PORSCHE 924COUN With factory mags. Blaupunkt s tereo cassette. uir cond. VERY SHARP ' <787RIV>. SADDLEIACIC VAL.UY IMPORTS lll-2040 491-4949 atioe of HunUniton Beach ii offering lacquer oaint. metal fmishing & fender flaring to Porsche 1973 280C. dark blue, lthr.,_owners __ ._S36-_7888 __ . __ _ sunr'f, immac. S8.900 •POISCHE91415• Call 673-7390675·1328. •l9'74Green 1.8 '64 ~L. on g mt, nu eng, nu convert top. Superb cond. S8500 firm. Mu.st sell. 833-7723. '65 M.B. 220SE. P/S. P/B. air. auto. very gd mech • 19'75Copper Met. 2.0 SS,OOOmiles (846MVO > •1974 Whlte2.0 53,000 miles 1150491 SELL 27 ' Chriscrafl. Willsellbothlogetherfor COSTA MES.A fbrgls, loaded for fish & $995. Ca 11 Pa u I at pleasure, $12.500 842·7982. AMC/JEEP $2999 JOE MACPHERSON CHEVROLET 21 AutoC.enter Drive IRVTNE 4 speed. sunroof & mag wheels. <S83SPN>. 69 Roadster. 1600, good cood. S2500. /orfer. •1975 Blue 1.8 44,000 miles 174\MOTl m9510 ------'76 Honda XL 350, hke #I IN CALIF. J9't9 Stephens 30', many new, less than 200 mi's, 197ICHEttOKH xtras, good cond. S8750. $1000 firm. 847-6797 Dunton Ford J~'"' • ~ ..... •' ""•"'"' ..... ,. 1977 l20ia 768-7222 int .. hard & soft tops. _613-_J_J_so _____ _ some body work SllOO. 73 450 SLC. s1lver·red. 751-4Ul2,S48-&U.J sunroof. air, AM /FM 8 '76 8210 Hatchback. trk stereo. wire whls. 496-7598 an 6pm. CHIEF -----=------'68 BSA Victor 441 cc Gd 546 -7070 WANTED! Bl.a ck w J gold Interior. Stereo cassette, air cond & only 12 .000 miles! (0940) brown. AM IFM. 4 spd, new radials. 759-0099 13631 H•rt>O<8'°"' low mi, xlnt cond S2.995. '7l MBZ 200. Gas. 4 cyl. o""""' Oro,.'" .... nu ·-~~'tl! Sad dleback Valley ong stock cond. S42Stofr $7995 Manne. ~eek craft boalS a48·3632 (J8Al7NN1'2A78) '77FORD COURIER l lH09770) Lal e model Toyotas. Volvos, Pickups & Vans. Call us today ! t971 l20i ~~3759 '~~:::=::=:~=====~~ Very dean. Make orr. avail Southern Orange -------.-- Co. Sales, service &ac· 1976 Harley Davidson <.>essories 27601 Forbes SS.250. Brand new only Rd. Unit Ul Laguna 15 mile~. This is not a Niguel831·9872 typo (mastake). OnJy 15 miles. Askmg $700.00 or 1971 J.20 rlCI< UP $7395 <J8AUPN1~1 $3951 SUNSET FORD An "Excellent Car" with special mags, air cond, sle reo & Fog Ii gbts. 110535). ''741"1 260Z. AM /FM 8 trk. A/C, pinstripmg, Mi ch's. mags. $4995. 846-9125 ll t-2040 49M949 •m 510 sedan. completely ~-~~--~~-1 ----------• custom & restored. leav· loah. Sall 9060 best offer! 645 2613 ••••••••4"lt••••••••••••• 250 KTM Pent.on MX. 250 ltU Her'-II•& ~E COUHTY'S ing country. mst sell FREE I 00 "" 64._~c;'0t; :-::o-••• 7 OLDEST si:m. 968·~ GAU.OHS GAS & '72 Datsun 1200. 23.000 mi. 5440GafdenGrove Blvd. Westminster 636-4041 16'HOllECAT MT Honda Els inore Clean w ith lraller. dJrt/st546-6299979-8068 67s..t753. with purchase oC any v.. 9570 -~ Auto. R & H, new sll jeepwiththilcoupon ................................ orfeu r adials. 35mpg aver. ________ __, '76 Honda Enduro 175 Low miles. gd cond S350. ••••••••••••••••••••••• N rf d $1800 laAMD MEW 1971 Sal -Service Lea i g ear pe con · · WE WILL II.AT R:rea C-~.lsnc:.n Pvt pty. HB. 842·9949 Ca1·34 super cono .. ran t.asllc price-Just reduce 675-092it 548·6257 "' ... Y~~DEAL llOODOOGEVAH AHGIOfllN 9705 -....... ·n GS~ Suzuki. tow low ~ '""'' '~ (l70228) (41034) ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rolls oyce BMW .,4 260Z. Gold, like new. 4 OM AMY HEW OM. Y $4995 ur74 OTB 2000. small work 1MO Jamboree spd, loaded. $4300. Pvt nu. asking Sll50. Also '77 J•-IRVl~E DODGE _...,,_. *"'"""'/'-Newport Beac.b 641H1444 -"ply-'-. 49M283 _____ _ XS 360 Yamaha xtra low ......-" n.,.,...,.. . ..-N val. _ Very c I ea n 3 3 · mi. asking $950. Aft S WIAIE 40AutoCeot.er Dr. , __ a_l.(187 __ 41_&45-_3'8_7_· __ 99 2.800 Baveria "Gem", '71 Oal!Jun Wagon. Tape. Cat am a ra n . M an 847-5354 OYERSTOCICED IRVINE looks & runs better lb an FM I AM . A I C, n e w :::::: ~~~~~l~~1.~ 13: Must sell Honda 175 IJ0..3311 Allcll 9707 many T3's. Must see. Bsl brakes. & Urea. S9SO. Call .aign w1i:abin Call even t714J 5454611 2S36Harbor Blvd i3 Dod&e BlOO Van. auto ••••••••••••••••••••••• olr. 75l-6892 ;&45·7434 _ssz._0483 __ . _____ _ ~1·9610 Costa Mesa trans, To mi's, xlnt cond •SLY FOX 75 BMW 2002. AM/FM '71 PU. gd cond, nds < Honda 4SO molorcycle. 714/ 549-8023 for work or cusloml.zlog. s~l.&.LS• cassette, air. $8800. minor work. rns well. ~ ~ new Urea, r ack (arlng, 12895. 552~ .-~A.:,;I F 768-9051 ~. L rt l d ~ .... .,.,.ea• ...,.. ., .... ,. . .,.,. J W bit. 1976 uu ox ...... _ .... 77. Iv msg. UltU OUll y appomte ......... •. -·-'" eep aeoneer. r e "D rtt'fl..l>. PS/PB. air 81 4dr ai --mid sl•.. _,_.~e 32' DeW ~..-kUrea I ue. ·• r, ,4 2002, whl, 48,000 mi's. --------=--:~l,lllU _._. · xlnt cond. $28'75. Cat atereotape,31,000ml A/C, AM /FM . New 'Tl 280Z 2+2, auto, A/C, cnaamg yacht. ~ps 6· '73Triumph Bonneville. olfer.55&-?074. -..i (2:98NWC> Michelina + xtras. AM/FM, like new. $7600 forward I aft cabins. t '"'""C nu paint.......... 11u795* ,, .. ,. ........, heads s hower ful """" • _.,., 73 .. 111..tla... '18GMC Rally STX, l ton *-&M-2222 _....,._,_••0 _____ _ 0 alley, 'ete"'ric bot' /COid 846-12.88. ,. ... Sc.t 4X4 van. xlol cond. fully l · • 11!--l 9723 water system. 36H :11 VZ 400 Va m•ha, ~ . .-guu l'74AudiFo• 320 , '78, 10,000 m1S,r'9ITW"t . 6 eyl., 2 1 trans .• 4 equap . ..-· i.... Yellow.2dr.,stereo many xtras. Dir ap-••••••••••••••••••••••• Volvo diesel. Many ex• almost new. used 4 hta wheel d ve. locking • ..., ,_....., ., 1 500 kind '183MGTB riaUn traa. Slip available . t otal. $1295. firm . bubs, removable top, GMC 77, "1,000 frwy 8t.rk.44.000m1. pra'""' ~, • as • ,p e Ml,SOO. Will cons1de 67~1Z7 rad lo and healer. mllel, c:rptd, aUck. 55000. <063LGT> Sl0.,500. '92•1422. 640-3139 121,900/oltt. Dir tra~ or lo caah down ---------• (-'EY> '1'tal. aft e153&-582S •$3195~ '7"' "''""I to f ~orM2·089e <'aJTy 2nd. 67~1120. .....,..._._ StM/ -Sltt9 . ,µ ~ .... """, ., _.., . ,,~--. 1"'l.r~.· M ... '725 ...._ ~ .... /Stor09f tl60 t'l~.t1:•iiiiir----~-X~:;l Pb 3-1286 •••••••••9"••••••••••••• 'Cal "'· tnll8'·~. 6H #.-. ................ ~ Ev1nrude, ~ ~ond. Rent a 1977 Executh•• with air low mUea1e. Bestoffer.67 . Motor.home or Manl lllateofler.557·3044 i I 1t -' •• Hll ROBINS Columbia 15.. dnt cond. New cover, lrlr, O/B. many xlru. Must sell! 673-~ matorhome from Herb 1-)-ledlandeJ'. Call any ot U..ownbera 8'M777 137-7777 41' Yankee Clipper Ketch, IZMlll blah lo "73. loa~ Xlnt. --------- ('Ond. IJ0.000. P.P RENT 23' Fireball, self- 881·1544. c.'JOftta1Ded. Lota or .uu. wn Sabot. xtnt c:ond. MS·2283 141-4626. RENT. new 71 22' Motor i..aMr-NI& trdeli Home . loaded, FORD J ' I •fl\ .. • I ,f;' n It 'J l tJ' 11\. ~· ,;. ,, J I 1)\ll "13 Dodge 8100, fully cuat lnelde/oul. Perf c:ond. $150C). 770o$01 I '76 ooo.t 4a4 llT1 VW •an, convert.a for ~.TON PICIUP =~U.1~0:~.e:u:. VI, aulom•tlc, pwr. .7~or968-73d ttMJ1Dlo Whit• spoilt _.... • ot.r roed Una. '11 JSO Ford, 460 en1. rdo; ...... 6 leu thaa .,.... •tru. 4 moot. old !!t• cn.u.. Ser..... _-.o111 ______ _ IM. PlllOO'I'. Mleil W..e.4 9190 .,., ....................... . llqlaubot :-c..,,, or da1/Wll/mo.67Mm l71-4laO F\11' a.& '11 Patt Anw WC PAY TOP OOLLAI\ 20' Double Mabot Kwl ~~I M/C. BTUd ~~~== wttJ\ trailer. New p.lnt. 5S-J080 • Cl.ASllCS Slip avaU. BJ. OWfttt • Ure-: car •uat.ra ci.u .-,ouuted "0001ofr .,, o,. 1o-4 .,.. mJlil. .. .... YS1-3Z72Gl'ln-lt44 Ste. QleYJ cbaNJ.1.; .O ·---i.-..------1 MUm.ac ~ U mpe. t.'llOO/flrm ,.... -. ,Jl'OY w.at ht _......_ 8IY4. a..tn.d Adi fG. C.C.U di PM Ol6ly POot cw.tnldl. ODlla ... f7t..0 •~AUDI IUYI• tm Audi 100LS • dr .• al.ltO., air. 8 tn..~, 34,000 ml (~A.I E l *'4ffl• 1171 Audl SOOO •dr., nto., P/8. P /8 , air., cueetw. a..ooo ml (0Ulf) •lt7tl• i--~~~---~~-- ' f • BMW, wide Urea. full .... ,,.ra Oa.res. fllOO. .. .... .. 55'7.a::IO Over 200 P'lata \o IOI McLAUM•s ~~.!::J!. IMW olSoorU carut 850 No. Baach Blvd. Dlat lllLLER IA Habra 111<1l'ORS tComerBeach aJOWWamer.S.A. • Whlttler) 55"7.all2 71A/l~S3H •7, FIAT 1M Spt Cpe. CloMd~ndaya Ste...o ma11. lmmae. c.,.. ., .. $2191S.Pb~ ....... ••••••••• ... • ••• '75 Socwt Coupe lM. On\J '73, suoonnn. l1.000 mi'• kDd ailver· '4MJl4. ifq, alr, AM /PM. saeso . '7• O.pri 2800. all sttu. -~---·m_•..,,a-_1> ____ , lowad. _., Plat., "10, ISO Spyder, tm>- 4M..sill Jed car, MSt/ofr. PP. ~ntl•lmdl Capri, '74, Vt, tttreo. tape. db Ult., ~ or Sell wtdl EASE I l>eltolf•. •TAr U'u IRSUB a-lfted Adi Ml-S1I ' .. 496-1491 HOUSE OF IMPORTS, INC. Authorized Mercedes Benz Dealer IEST 58.ICTIOH IM THE WEST!! IMISILS 7t 220012'l18MIG,_ ·7~ '40DIOll6M4JY.-1' 300 0 1031 °'2\ 8'0Wfl 78 3000 C0317371 S.-'7UOODl8et Hel)lo,,,.,.. 7tJOOCOtOOl7201-• 132200(Ser ~181uo SIDAHS 75 2«> 111 ""91 8lue n~SELIS.. 97~1""'9 '711t90111ll10)8• ... 7l'MO E~V- 7• 2IOCll011•11~ 7 4 21() c llCIQ301 J Go!o 74 HOCl1019781Wlll'~ 73 4SO Sf. IS. 1766) r• 290 SE fOQO:So 71 Reel 72 290 aE (011M8) a.... 77--~......, '/6 0 0 SE (03* 11 8"'9 7!1 4&0 SEL !Olnt3l~ 1' 4&0 SEL \014M1) Blue 76 •60 aa (0377201 Blue 1~ •SO SE\. 1030941)~ Tt 450SELt~I0.-77 •f>OSELt~lll'- 11 o osa. coeeo101ew 51.·, 75 ~ Sl IS. 711861 Stt.o. •ao1t(llDf11/•-'n4IOa. fOC*111-.. 70•aLta. 32n)0-'10 ao k ,.., MIO) hie 744t01L(ler ~.._ .,. 410tl (hr me),._ ..,,~ .. f0Cllllt1 ..... ~a 4IOSl CCQ•rtll-. 71' 4"0 ll (S. 0 UIOI 0 111y KA: .. ta 49011.C fOOOl:NU~•-• 74 ''° SlC 11Xle12tl 11,_ 76 d OSlCIOOIUelWMI 'l&~kCl~19"-78 4IO Sl.C IOUl111..,,_ 77 4llO SLC (1)\11111 O<ay M•10111y or '"••• care ••• ...--'°' ., -lrwtclne rill 119•1 to ftCllMl CloMt CA4l JOeoAf llde-AIUI HOUSE OF IMPORTS, INC. •'AMPlllD POISCHIS• um Porsche 9ll SCCoupe 4apd., alr, pwr. windows. sunroof. Black aUoys, cassette. Leather. (:.&UMXI 1976 Porsche 911 Targa sspd .. air. stereo. while, 30,000 ml. (10120) 1973 Porsche 911TCoupe Sspd.. gold. alloys, stereo, 65,000 mi. (72AGPSl 1977 924, all black, polis hed whls. air , AM /FM cass, snrf. 4· 1pd. Lille hew! Bt.IY or Just take over lae. Wkdya, 640·5142 Eves/Wllends, 581 ·• tu. reblt ena/body. low ml, alloys, AM /FM, mint cood. tszOO/ofCer. ~ ·•m. anrf, alate arey. 17,000 •1ae.e.u.-. ''7 Ponclle. Bahama or&lll•, 5 apd. Orte. Very clean. '44·4887 evet • wadi. '78 Porsche tUE , blacll/blec:k, sunroof • I BlaQPUDkl ~ CMI,, mfnl cond. su.200. llWN1 .... ==- ZU/tZt ..... 794fl2J.72IO IM Yellow/Tu, alloJt. .. ...... _...._ BIJIUPIDkt AJl/1')11 trk. t\ml'{, air I& bra.19-GOlt ..... " 1 ......_ .......... ...... UMCI ....... Ua.d AIMI, Us~ AllhK. Ua.d ••••••• ~~1 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ........ !. 1r11d MIM. ... 1.W Mlel.'nu:W ~.. 9712 9920.,..... ttH.... tt40 t9SJ..... 9'11 ••••••••• ............. ••••••••• ............. • •••••• -;;i-••••••••••••• ~...................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·······-·-·-·········· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pw iClw t7IO T.,... t1U 1\:1 O 0 9767 mo Moel tM. ti.t otter '74 Monl• Carlo, PS. PB. ·• Ccll'oMl 4 dool' 311" ... ,.ST• "1 0 ... , lt7J PIMTO RIO DAILY PILOT -····--••••••••nu ••••• .. •••••••••••••••• •••••• .. •••••••••••tt•• HI mllet. 1ood cond air, cntr COf\IC>le, awiv ~. SCMlded ti oJtan ' ~ 4 •u• 11. t ·C:YI. 4-spd. 4 sJ)efd ~and 'Cl Oon•~ble. dnt rw:a-•lt77TOnA 'H Tll'f, wllt w 'tln. ~ letb p ,900 ~ '150.551-18'2.CM lDMrH4iltd1hcll AM/P'M cau 12600 red><> <0'1WDB> DIAi eond.. very ckan. c•..,.. .a. loeded fl In top cond 4 spetd. rsa • P n1on 644·~ t••t '5JQO. l412..JT10 ---• 11.000 ml' lelOO/ b9t AllNe. UM4 '74 Nova Htcbbck. air. 9940 atMrtn1. d lat brakes. _ S .... ~--S •od. at.no. m.p, alr, ~ ~ "' •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• PBI PS. 12850 Oya. JllcbeUn a\tel·belted ''" Muatan•. xlnt cood MAIOUISTOYOTA .,7POISC.. Zl.OOOmi U.lllSlUU • AMC '901 ~. Eve11wllenda. •• redlall. aftd Ghia aroup t>We.moo1otttt M1BONV1EJO 1UllOCA11•• •Mo.HI• ,_ "n. xbrt con<t. P.P ....................... ~ : PHILO eras. <Jim) <U8283) S48-llUJ5SM442 111.J1104f5.a210 81.ack, IUallP!uakta :::.or bHt off•r. ?6HOaMIT •a Nova SS. x.lnt cond. 8 LONG RUllPttce~ '701"91.aaa n. Hyl. ona •<~>cudltlont na SPOlrTAIOUTW•M. cyl. auto. -.so. M5-15'17, su.~ce00$4883 owner '2500. Pl)'I 8 Ill " .. -m.• lt76TmUMPM 'ftle D/L model with rull 542..r71 .-5'9·-.S,aft5 ... ••••••••-•--•••• HAnoeM.W ""' poWtrandall&buxtraa! '714drCaprice, td cond, ~ DISCOUMT '65 Mustang Fastback, ~~:P~-::. \l'fll Btacb Blvd .. H 8 ' eyl, 4 t,..d. AM tl''M (Jll.10) Piii new paint, orit owner ·~ needa work but run:J, cood. 33,500 ons: Dli. C.U~ ,_,,._....::.. rlld.lo. ea.Mte 1lerto. PW,Pb/L,A/C. PS. PB, ~~ t850.8*0328 New paint. Staanleu a.-a...... t4MPOD> <•> •1..-n FORD Sl995. P.P.aas.JJ.:U eo,.... ·es convertible. "uto. 6 lteel bed, rrooo. or Best '14 114, AMIJ'M r9C1Jo, 5 ... ff ~I • olf epd • .,.. P'P· tdSO It c&IC .,.... M4Q O•*° Grove Blvd. '1l Chevy Suburban Carry cyl, or.nee. make ofr « T52·03N D..cll :: C~ W..tmlmtef 638~1 All,~ en1. Power Is alr. ~~.:::,:=oi..-= 84S-21ll, &46-6303 7" Vala.re Waaon, PS, PB. Sn~. 11112·5874. ·75 Mustang. V a. full , au, 23,000 mi, idnt ecJ8d ·e1S1.rperC1bOon",1vory, Alrcmd..Atl/Flh.clio power. air. 2 nu tires. s.rsaoos.a.ns,z drtbrwnt.oP.lJnmacl lmrai) . br'77GREllUN 'taChevy,lllnttrana '17Fa.leotuUck,Zdr. 77LTDll Xlr 4'f tJ31 ~Mft Levi interior! a.oo. 52K. 1 Suri;rSbarp! n t con d U U O • ~ H•I ...a... --.a. (4MSLN) C.ll881.f1'98aft7 841-IOZZ •..vLB) MS-~. 74 114 :a o, n•• paint. _ ,..,,_,,,_ ._... ...;...____:...;...______ •••••••••-••••••••• 47.000 ml. blaupunkl •ISSIOflf V'IEJO a .. 5 '74 Malibu cla.aaic. Uke Granada Ghia. 1'71. 4-dr, I S4771 75 MUST.-H '1'7 Flrebinl Tran•·Aln. AM l'F111cua. mao. slnt IJl...,.495-IJIO Y I a ; '711 t-11~ FORD new. runs le k>okJI Wit. nu tll'tll, AM/FM radio. ft~rT FORD (329MFNl aW>w/xtns SS500. t'Ul1d owner tramferred .. ••••••••••••••••••••• ~I • Mst sell. Beat offer Luxury car. SS500/b9t. .JUftAI $3615 ~. •ft)'Ume. '1.SOO 152 _. •m,~:~:'~.f:!'r0w~~ C~;,:f= ~:>~Grov=. .:=.2dr .• eoodcood .. 1:':n1 Convettlble . =~=rGro•=1 SUNSET FORD ~'!~L~!· dat cond. ·~ Porat b• WA. slftt bl•l'll tn t eraor Tbiacme'•ln•"""'rCGDdl· -.....-9910 ---u•. c..o.-G--'-G Bl d ........_ <.'UOd, mmt Mll. tie.t ol Automaitt. air cood.. ,..... -·-.. ~ SWlllDer. l owner. 44.000 •• LTD 1\n wd .. , A/C. ,,_, .,_,.,, rove v Ul·9631 aft. g r -. ....,. "Iii F""' i h Uoa and baa lt all I I ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~842·3105 oril ml'a . ..._ .. realiatlc _. Westminster 638-4041 cr,v1.r.,_e11•. " I -stereo wt 8 tnldl: tape, aUdl ahift .......... n • ... era '70 V•ry ~ new Ures, brk.s. 1reat ·• Tempest. ad eo11d. -\nd!LaCialk>J•beell. eewUJ'S .... \;a...... ~ 1-scuavaftLIT °"inNer.Bcouklered.n .. ,-.~ated oond.S75./fa.rm499-4139 a.-ble 9t55 •100 1bsl ofr Aft• -9711 _............... a.-1·u '"'000 C...t,_· &A •I ~---.. •·•--.CaU .._. ... ,ALA...,..W""4vGOtil • v•...--• v ---~ .. !:" --......... ICUQUIUVU -•'---'-,, .. 5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 631~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• malea a.at o(fe,r rn ~ -.. --------Tl.ST OttlYI OUlt P'Y C.llN7 7'511. 2586 Newport Blvd. . V·8. automatic trans . '71 Pleata. xlnt cond, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 75 OLDS 1975 F1reblrd F.aprit fully C .a.• COSTA MESA C1•1c ffll ractory air condlUoni.n1. AM/nlcw.loml'a. t'74UMCOLM C...S.:a• eqwp'd .\Ill/FM <'HI. "U ,... •oa YOU 641-366 I ....................... power .steering. power $3600 983-0Ule COMTIM8fT AL Cabrl°'et top, (ull power crwae control. S3H5. OFTHI TIAR.. SIU. Y<Mla •"'RR disc brakes, AM/FM '71 LTD su wan. slnl V·B. automatic trans. factory air cond .. tall •at eves <U......, > radio. beater. whitewall cond, 11000/Mat ofter whee.I " LIKE NEW' · Good lftveolOI')' tn •tock TOYOTA. •uvw 'It tires(658MFC> (P8688> 5'9-1700at\6PM factOl'J air coaditiocung. 1386MXTl '73 Pomtac Grand Pri• H.urry~:..~•ul' SEE US! Runa ;':od. Good $3499 i:w~.-.=,~1~o~~ SJ999 lmmac. ""llpower.new MAJDAjalNAUlT MAllOUIS TOYOTA transportatioo car. Ask· '7l LTD. 4 door. Gd Uret. power aeats. AM /FM Nabers paint•urea 6C-(IT 4 2l!i0Harbor Blvd. IOSsJONVIEJO ing$750.00.CaUM7-5G2. ~br~: trans. l800/olr. radio. heater. whitewall COSTA MESA IJl·Z .. 0495-1210 • Un!a. wheel covers. tint· .&.UJOC-..... TIMu *ttllrd tt70 ' 4 .rs?OO lt6tVWIUG Gran Torino. ~"M ml, ed ........ vinvl roof. tilt ~ ... , .. -C......._' ...., h..-1 " DI d ••••••••••••••••••••••• ._ Toyota Crown. 4 dr, 4 speed trans .. radio & -·rs A/C, auto, V·top, new w ee. cruise control v ofN•MtllCa mac Rais aoyc. t7H 49,000 ml. lmmacwate. heater. (ZN D497 >. A C.....,. radl Urea, xlnt condr t3118LWG I <8599> I 425 IAll9 ST. I '71 FOID ....................... ZVDOU21195.4M-252.'S SHARPCAR! • stereo lape, $1,995. $4299 ACIU>SSFROM FEDCO THUtela.0 •t DEALER IN U.S.A _ ~ .. 1'.....JJa, runs $1599 833-2574 tCheryl S-5> COSTAMISA 5'>bt power seata, power -•VI,,_ """"' TEST .• Kinpwood Stn Wp. s~ • 1" . ~. stereo radlo/8 ROY good. AM/FM '650/best Nabe A/C, R ft H. orig owner. ~ t.rack, cnue control. tilt CARVER offer Call 5454475 or rs DRIVE id t rana' car $495. 77T--ellD Viat.&Crulaer. power. ~.custom Wheels Ir ROUS·ROYCl 64>4783 AUTO CEMTll A DIESE 6'MCM0;/640-8044 rullpower&more! 9BUl. l950/or bestolfer LOADED' <G&UMX). 1Mtnm-.... LW13 Corona, air, AM /FM Div. ofNabersCadUlac L a.ry.ltr 9925 <Bl1SWD) '15M648/t144-8722. $6995 \'-----' :::::' •uoo radio, PS. PB. auto, rear 1425 IAJCM ST. SEVILLE ••••••••••••••••••••••• $41SO -...T-L.-- ClOSE D~uNOAYS wind defroster. new ACROSSFROMFEDCO • lt75CHIYSLIR SUNSET FORD ... arr 9950 t 9 d0LDS 1~1"3 li68 Silver Shadow. RHO. 2-dr, 67,000 ma's. Body by Mulliner. rrunl. 121.500 P P. 675-86Sl. Rolls & Bentley owners. 631-4790 for reUable & re· asonable work by lramed English mecllaruc Rolls Royce '76 on gmaJ owner Only 34,000 mi . J vory w /tan lop, Ion& wheel base, ractory war· r-dnty transrerable. Im· mac. Southern Callrornia car. $45,000. 540-3931 9760 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Swedish Saab mechanic 11ow al lvo1tn '1 1995 Harbor Bl, C.M. 645·1982 5ubartl 9762 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '74 White Subaru 2·dr sedan. gd cond.. $1800 675-0283 aft 6 tir es Askin1 $2.0oo. COSTA MISA COIDOIA ....................... C...... S.: •• ~l. 54"-'-l AA Power seats, ro:er win· 5'40GardenGroveBlvd. ORANGE COUNTY'S 4 Door Padded hardtop. ~T v 7 NABERS ..._,_ I ks Westminster 636-4<Ml .... ~~ fuiJ power. air cood and 77 Coae>UA '"'"''"power oc: • ..... .,,.....,, 39.000 actual one owner (CN07) VW DUNE BUGGY. Rent ~ AM/FM radio. crulae 77 GttAMADA lJNCOLN·MERCURY mila! l580KSQl Sl655 eng re bit. sand/street , cao(~~ZH"). low milea1e. 4 door. DealershJp is now OPEN 52199 tires. Canvas top/tow .....,... (IMIRXG > IA Y R.ADEIOE SUNSET FORD bar met. suso. 67~o 54295 54150 ~t~ M40GudenGroveBlvd. $4000. '74-'75 .VW BUS. 9 c!c::?°~~oo SUNSET FORD i.:~1:!=u.:,.~ 1 ~rs Wesuninster 636-4041 puaeoier,21.000mi,air, NA'RERS SDFwy·LakeForestexit AUTOCIMTH AM/FM S·t.rk, bed. 5'40GardenGrove Blvd. IRVINE Dlv ofN•t>enCadillac 1972C8JTOCYC?TA ma70 13 Cpe deVUle, take over ~ Westminster 636-4041 130.7000 t425 IAICR ST. .,_ '74 Super Beetle. $2300 or pmt.s, xtra clean. full 7 PO MEI URY ACROSS FROM FEDCO 4 C¥1, 'speed, AM /FM ofCer. 1 yr warranty. pwr, see l o apprec. IPIMTO MY 1976 C COSTA.MESA radlo, beater, wheel cov· &44-t966 642-9260 2600 Harbof Blvd 2 DOOR SEDAM MOMA.ICM GHIA 5 ..... 91 n en (002.ESS) (P8336) COStaMesa. 540-9 100 Dark brown metallic. With power windows, ...v-$1999 'fl Squareback, Uke nu, 197SCADILLAC 4·apeed , front dtac bucket seats. AM/FM •-'7-5-Clm..---~-S-ALO--N- ma le loots xlnt. P .P. COUPE DE VIUE brakes. rack and pi.n.lon stereo. cruise control. till 1 d L d d $1800. 71'~. Cabriolet top, leather in· '76Cordoba, blk w/blk Ith steering, bucket seats, wheel le only 7,6S4 miles. ~=~J:~a e · '72 Bus, xlnt cond. Air terlor & stereo tape inter, full pwr. mag whls. tinted glaas. tSlk 53l (619RSB>. ,....._ _______ _ :!~:.~~·or ~i~h~fh~~K ). ::,~mi's. $5000 firm. <162648> 53177 $4995 ·~<>r;:f~/ebuilt eng. $4999 '73 Town & Country, 9 NABERS 497-1946 aft 1 ''11 VW St.a Wgn, needs Nabe. pass, Best orr over $1500. '77 Cutlass Salon. Full 75 C-· I ... body work, Eng work. rs 833-0351 ~ pwr. T·top. MC. tape. -v-F\ael injected. $600/bst • b s 9 C137N1Fl off. Need to sell Badly ! AUTO CENTER '75 Cordoba rully eqwp, ~;Mo.so!· 5 0 Ul2S 646 ·2601 aft 5 . Dlv.ofNaberaCadillac white,$4000/betorr Dunton Ford .. ,/ \ '•" I 1 ,\. I' ' :.. 5~ ", · 7070 Dunton Ford ) }!,.() • ''·· ' ,, lo t ... 546 -7070 2600 Hartxw Blvd. '7S ~ supreme. 2 AUJOC•ta Div ol Nabers Cadillac 14'211AIBST. ~C~ F'ROll FEDCO COSTAMISA 540-91" '73 T·B•rd nan power ~radials. Wife'' car Askml m>o. 811Hl32 1'7lFOltD THUMOHlllD Split lather seat.a. fuJl powt'r fs stereo (7<00SQ). $2599 Nabers AUTOCBfTa Div of Nabers Cadlllac 142SldBST. ACROSS FROM FEDCO COSTA..SA 54MIM ~llU~n FORD '89 vw Sqback. New eng, 1425 IAJCB ST. 7 59-0lll -ltl auto,wagon,snrf, as ~I sun roof, $950. Pb ACROSSFROMFEDCO 1976CHRYSLER sumeloan + S700 :4°GardenGrove Blvd. 64.S-2561 COSTA MISA COllDOIA COUPE 7 .c_.__ ~!C~osw~!Mesa.~!540-~!91!00~~· dr, Burgundy vinyl '61 T.-0 --........ ii , .... _....... Beat0ff ... 5imt..:nl ECOMOMt fltQUP . ...u...,., s ver ....... ..-.y. 1-...;:.:.~=...:.o;;=;.;..:;_- 106.t incb wbeelbue. '73 Ma.rqw.s Brougham, ~~~: ~~~~~ AIC. tfll~ ..... -.: 1061 noo ..::::: ~1 ~·Ghia, AM /FM radi~, 540-9 I 09 ~in~ct;,~e:i!U:J:~: ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• r ~3~t cood. Mu t "1S Sedan De Ville. blue. power disc brakes. 1800 .. , e b 'dht 4-dr. loaded. Xlnl cond. •-.;_.....;~------Auto . trans .•• power cc en., n •. n ,. Nu tires 34 000 ma's 75ST·•aa11 .. -:1 nnw br-'--orange wUh tan antenor . .....,._, · ' · ...., -~ · ..--ft' ..-. disc brakes. WSW ti.res. v•-•· (822.LWZ> air (700RKB> LOOI FOR ME? What's Missing? at .... s. Diego.,. ........... flwyt. 11WILLY THE WHALE AND HIGH PRlci5" DISCOUNT SALE LOOK DISCOUMT'S UPTO FIESTAS • • • .'400 COURIERS • • • . ssoo, PINTOS •• • • • .'400' FAIRMONTS • .'400 • • • DOM-r MISS THIS SALE IF YOU .. E IN 1HE VAN MARKET ,11 11 1 ' ; 'S " .... ..-; ....... , •.... ,. see. · loaded . sharp, S.S. 750. power windows. AM /FM '76 Rabbit 4-dr. lo mi's, PP.646-5586aft6PM radio, beater, whitewall air, AM /FM ster eo. 1969 C.,..,..111 •c tires,t.anLandau top.tilt <SGTATD87089) 1.8670> '71 Station Wagon. ruM SJ 1 ll SSHS s•11 good.all~~· SUNSET FORD ~~~~o $3300 894 9682 -.._ wheel. cruise control. . . COUPE DE VIW opera lights t960NVH > '60 VW BUG. Sunroof. Thisonehasfullpower& (8399) '71 STATION WAGON. 5440GardenGroveBlvd runs Id. $500. Aak for lsUKENEW! (ZSA561>. $4799 loaded, $1005. 64().1005 aft Westmmster 636-4<Ml ___ 7_4_f.-.-.... - lll·UIO 495-12IO Karl6Sl-U911,48Ml"6 $1599 6PM Plllto '957 Lotaofelttl'as! '71 VWSuper Beetle. New Nabe tWwag 9952 ....................... U411KQUl paint, yellow. clean. rs ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73 Pinto. clean & mech SJS7S $UB5. Call 962·7498. ___ __..;...,_;_;;........~= •70 M v 8 pert. Nu auto tram & AUTO CENTER 1977FOIDLTD ustang · · nu di f'llUf'n fOIO '74 VW Pop.Top camper . brakes & radiator. Rns ra al.s. Lo mi's. su95. ~n.JLI Orange, n ew tires & Div. of Nabers Cadillac WAGOM great . $1795 . P . P . ,_1'18-_3066 __ . -----• 5'o40Gardeu0rove Blvd. clutch . $4700. Call 1425 IAJCM ST. V·8, automa&lc tr ans, 673-3048. '7' Pinto. AM /FM tape. Westmmster AJ3M041 .., ... -ev-. ACROSS FROM FEDCO ,,.=•IM-'. al 99•0 fa,..,...., air con .. •t•-•-.. ti •-'-tt R s .,......_, '"' OS ---on ~ .......,., w ......,,.,, '74 Must. •·cyl, 4·spd. new res..ua . un . 77 t.·•llllla C TA MISA ••••••••••••••••••••••• power steering, 90wer . • ........ od ... cN\ ........... n .-v 1975VWBusCombi,new 540-9109 . DR .. disc brakea. All/FM 32,8rlrru,AMo'FMcass . ..,._.., . ..-.-·-F\illpower•more! paint, brwn/belge', xlnt «:'ui!r ~d~.1-:3 a':~!~: radlo, whitewall tlrea. P l~. Mag wbls. TA 77Pltil1'0 <~D> cond. FM stereo, CB. •73 Eldorado, 39,000 m i's, $1500. 64Mlr79 wheel coven, (078SSO) radials, $2500. 962·7982• CIUISIMG WAG.oM SS775 $UOO.Call eves:673-2M5 blk w/red leather $3500. --------(P8601) !162-3820 (625.SPM > SUMSITllOaD vw ,64 VAN,(333SNC) 548-7578/646-7'193. '72,62,000mi,ortgowner, $4999 '65 Mustang Classic, xlnt SJ6tl 5440GardeoGroveBlvd. MUS\ seU! SS75. 491.4744 197JC'"""I'• •c Sl,750./cash cond, 289. V·8 . cam, westmmster -...cM.l :.J°" U43, Lag. Bch. COUPIDEVlW 557·3769 headerl.837-5(87. SUNSET FORD ¥9 H74 ----------1 FuU power, till wheel. '69 Mark IJI, good ant. '75 Murtaog VS . full 5440GardenGroveBlvd ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• "67 lllg. SSSO. cruise control & stereo. Ruoawe~ power, air. bucket seats, Westmin5ter 636-404l '74 W•aoo, FM a trk. ---~---6·-----1 (95492). a-2299 ~~.A:~r:!i1. ~1:,dg map, clean $1208. ~ Coneth 9932 ----======• ownr. All 6pm & wknds. 74 rtMTO ~J 'iS Bus, 35,000 mi's, steel ••••••••••••••••••••••• 752·1629, daily til S : blt.ed radials, AM/FM Nabers 1977 CHEVIOLET 76flOID ...._.._ STATIOMWAGiOM "72 Vega, on1. owner, S•-c••• .... """,.._t ofr .. _ --Automata" trans., air -ooomi.'97S. ..... -· _,.,., "" . CORVETTE · -..is •---------.... """ Must sell! &U·5255. -....REU 88 ... V8 conditioning. AM /FM ~7M& AUTOCIMTB Automatic, AM .FM (...,. I .. ust-ana •• 289.auto. k '89 VW Bug, auto, reblt Div.otNabenCadJllac st.ereo8 track. air cond., $4111 runs good. new in4t, s283lerNleoF, rac • mags . "73Vega. '74eogine.40,00l -.. ..._._ -•-as'"m· g .. 250 < > ma'•. Great ecooomv eng. -· 1425 IA.ICM ST. leather interior. 1auges, SUNSET FORD ....... .... • ~. · $2650 " 1 640-115' ACROSS FROM FEDCO ma1 wheels and low _962-_7S_l.9______ $1350 Call556-0893 '74 VW Super Beetle, sun· COSTA MESA miles. <006RYW> 5'40Garde:n Grove Blvd. '67 auto new tares SUNSET FORD '13 Vega Hatcbbuk roof, low mileage, gd 540-9109 SADDLEIACIC Westminster 636-404l brakes. ad cond. $1000. ' 5440Garden Grove Blvd Great cond. Auto, air cood. $2495. ~ VALLEY IMPORTS 845-6582. Westminster 636-4041 radial. SlOOO. 494·380'1. '6I VW '78 CAD SDV, loaded. 131·2040 495-4949 Classified Ada are the "JO Mach t, new paint & $6990/besl otr. Owner answer to a successful cbrome. full pwr, A/C, ......._Mew tlOO ......_ tlew tlOO Newengine,Malleo.ffer anxious. 847-0039, C•11• 99Jl garage-oryatdsalel It's caaa 351 Cleffland TA ............................................ .. 751-8967or83&-3686 84'1·91188 ••••••0 ••••••••••••••• a better way to teU more ' ' l977 Cougar XR7. 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I Huntington Beae h Fountain Valley EDITION VOL 71, NO. 229, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Double Eagle II Makes History . , THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1978 Al•eraoon N.Y. Stoeks · 1 TEN CENTS i U.S. Balloonists Land in Fr8nCe 1~ Norton Found Guilty Political activist Loran Norton was found guilty of multiple per· jury and perjury-r elated char~es by an Orange County Su perior Court jury late Wednesday afternoon. AP__... Atlantic Crossing A First BULLETIN P A RIS <A P I -T •ree Amertua batlooalstl set dilnnl t.oday In a Reid near tile &oWD of Evreu, welA ol Puts, &o eed &belr llbtorte JMrneJ •• tllie flnt &o croaa tlle Adaatlc: bJ baUooa. The six-man. six-woman jury deliberated almost tbree full days before deciding Norton lied lo the county Grand Jury in ear· ly 1977 when the jury was in· vestigating politicaJ corruption. Norton's conviction didn't stem from the Grand Jury in· dictmt>nt that followed his two appearances before the jury in February 1977. FLOATING ABOVE THE CLOUDS, BALLOON DOUBLE EAGLE II PASSES HIGH OVER SOUTHERN ENGLAND ON WAY TO FRANCE Three American Balloonlatt Achieve Their Goal of Becoming the First to Cross Atlantic Ocean by Balloon PARIS <APl -Three New Mexican adventurers who made the first Atlantic crossina by balloon floated across the-- French countryside today toward a triumphant welcome ln Paris, but they appeared ready to drift on even farther to set still more records. The iod.lctment was quashed in a court hearing late last year, but the charges were reinstated al a subsequent municipal court hearing. Those charges accused Norton of lying when be testified he bad not used SS.000 given him by former political financier Gene Conrad in bis 1976 campaign for the state Senate. The charges also accused Norton ol encouraging his one- U me political ally, Gary Newmeyer, to lie to the jury. And to those charges, the jury in Superior Court Judge Walter Charamza's court said, guilty on all counts. The verdict all but ended a political trail that Norton, Sl. began as a leading county spokesman for The John Birch Society when be was a Santa Ana police Heutenant lo the ear- ly 1960's. Norton's political fortunes car- ried him into close contact and association with Dr. Louis Cella 's former political con· federation and, in 1975, into county Supervisor Laurence Schmit's office as an executive aide It was after leaving Schmit that Norton decided to strike out on a political career of his own as the Republican nominee for slate Senator in central Orange County. During his two-week trial, Norton insisted he was among the former Cella allies singled out for prosecution by the Dis· trict Attorney's Office. He also insisted that Newmeyer lied and attempted to entrap him during the investiga- tion leading to the criminal charges flied against him. After the guilty verdict was banded down Wednesday, one juror, Paul Bender of Garden Grove. said the jury did not put much stock in Newmeyer's testimony against his former benefactor. However, Bender said, the tape recorded conversations bet~een the one-time friends ''were g1vengreat credibility.'' Norton accepted tbe jury's verdict calmly even though it may mean be could be sent to alate prison for from one to (See NORTON, Page A2) Fmal Rites Conducted For Athlete • Flags in Fountain Valley conlinued lo fiy at half·staft• today Jor star Q..uarterhack.Dou.a Thompson, as a tmaU eroup of family and clot~ lrleocu said their J>rivate-aoodbyes. Visitation for the invited i?OUP was held at noon at Peek Faml\y Colonlal Funeral Home In Westminster for the 17-year-old Fountaln Valley High Scheel football player who was. killed Moad•y in • traffic •ccident. His teammate. Fountain Valley Hl1b School tailback Wlllie Gittens, lJ, who a pparently dosed oft at lbe wbeel near Blythe, raulttna lo tbe rollov•r accident, was -UUUftd 1 ""i lie 11 now out~ t.bc bospll"1 - ' ta a~ony ov r tM tta1edy as Ua~y drove to Arlaona Statt Unlv•nlly wh•re both won football •cbolarshlp . Gltt•ns ~Y WW attend i"rtday's flidlfaJ, Terrorists Hit Chicago Consulate CHICAGO CAP> -lfwo Croa- tian terrorists armed with guns and explosives seized eight hostages at the German Consulate today, police said. One hostage was later released. Officials said the terrorists - believed to be a man and a woman -apparently wanted freedom for Stjepan Bilandzie, a CroatJan nationalist leader im- prisoaed in Germany and facing extradition to Yugoslavia. The ·switchboard operator at the consulate -on the 10th floor or a Michigan A venue building in the downtown area -said the terrorists were thre atening to shoot her and the other hostages .. One hostage, reached by telephone, was asked i£ the seven were in danger. "Yes, we are, very much," was the response. The switchboard operator. asked whether anyone bad been injured, said: "Not yet. but it doesn't look good." She said she was being allowed to use the switchboard because the ter- rorists wanted to place a call to a German prlson. "They're threatening to shoot everyone," she told a reporter. "I can't talk anymore, they're all hollering at police." Police said they were trying to negotiate with the terrorlsls They cordoned oft the area, located across the street from the Art Institute of Chicago, where crowds were Jined u,p to view an exhibit or artifacts from Pompeil. Officers said four men and four women were taken hostage initially, but one employee of the consulate was' released a short time later. Officer Dean Ford said the employee, who said the ter- rorists bad a bomb. was being interrogated. Workers in a building adjacent to the consulate building were evacuated and told to go home. A spokesman at the German Embassy ln Washington safd of· flclals there beard about the in· cldent from Bonn. "We're j\lSt on the telephone to take all the necessary measures to ge,t them treed. We can't talk abOut it now,''.Jl.0-enf! basay .spo!usman nt4. • Later. the embassy's press of. ricer Fritz Zief er said the "only demand I ean-eoolirm-is that the terrorists want lo talk by telephone with tbls BUandzlc.' · He said that a German court last week decided that Bllandzic, a 39-year-old Croatian national who la ln prison in Cotoine, West Germany, ··could be •xtudlted lo Vuaoa1a>tla. but Jt doesn't mean he wtD be." Biidget Meet Set Fountain Valley <elemen· tarr> School District trustees wil conalder final approval of a $16 '1 million 1978 79 bud.et toJllght Thiit.etl wlU meet at 1 ao p m. ln tbe di&trlct oftlces near the corner of Talbett Aveou Md Ntwlii.nd Sl,..... .. Meas ure Approved Tax Cutting Fever Rages in Assembly SACRAMENTO <AP> -In an outbreak of election-year tax-, cutting fever. the Assembly bas approved a $700 million income tax cut and a p~o~sed b~lot measure el1m1nat1ng homeowner property taxes. Tbe income tax measure, financed from the state surplus. would cut taxes by $75 tor single persons and $150 for couples. and give some additional breaks to the elderly. The property tax measure would abolish the remaining $1.8 bilUon of homeowner property taxes. give renters a $267 tax cut. and eliminate the business inventory tax -financing all those changes by re·imposing S3 billion Of the S4 billion in bUSI· ness property laxes cut by Proposition 13. The m eas ures breeled through the low e r house Wednesday night. on votes of 73·0 for the income tax bill, AB 3802 by Assem bl yman Lawrence Kapiloff. DSan Diego. and 6H6 for thE! property tax plan. But the latter. sponsored by Assembly Speaker Leo McCarthy. D·San Francisco, may race a roadblock in the Senate. To reach the November ballot. it must clear the upper house Friday, and the Senate must ap· prove SB 2243 by Sen. Alan Sieroty, extending the Aug. 15 deadline for the passage of ballot measures until Friday. SB 2243 was before the Senate today. with a vote expected. McCarthy said Wednesday he counted majority support in the Senate but not yet the needed two-thirds vote. To its Assembly supporters. McCarthy's measure. ACA 2. was a tulfillment of the voters' mandate June 6 in. approvin5! Proposition 13, a $7 billion property tax cut spawned by the so-called taxpayers" revolt among homeowners. To i's oppo- nents it was the opposite. "Homeownerl& and renters thought they were,.e ng • fair de a 1 from Propo on ~a." McCarthy said. " ey·re '.nlq.(i. 'REPEAL PROPERTY TAX' Assembly Speaker McCarthy getting one " Countered Assembly Republican leader Paul Priolo of Malibu. who supported Proposi· tion 13: "You're trying to prove the people of this state were wrong The people or this state are not going to stand for the leading opponents of Proposition 13 tampering with 1.3." State Chamber of Commerce spokesman Jim Kennedy called the measure ~·Jaws Ill for busi· ness" and "a massive tax shift" that would hurt the business climate. But Assemblyman Louis Papan. D-Daly City. asked how any Republicans could "look a homeowner in the face" after voting against the measure. Six of the 23 Republicans jolned 55 of the 57 Democrats in vol'i'1g aye. Several of the RepubUcans were from farm area's, which would get a break from provisions giving farm <SeeTAX CUT. Page AZI Board OKs $800,000 Merit Hike Paris air traffic control re- ported the silver balloon Double Eagle II at 13,000 feet over the . town of Evreux. 80 miles from Paris. It crossed the French coast at Le Havre. Coast Community College Dis· trict trustees agreed Wednesday to spend an estimated $800.000 next year on merit raises for employees. Although the state Legislature has said it won't give apportion· ment funds to gover.nment grou ps t h at grant ralaes. trustees said they believe this restriction applies only to reg· ular step raises and cost-of-llvinl increases. Merit rais~ are given to both teaching and non-teaching staff on the ba.si.s of a variety of fac· tors. including additional educa- tional oc professjonal training. The money for the raises will come from district reserves. re- ducing them from S4 million to $3.2 million. a spokesman said. However, trustees voted to continue a suspension of sab- batical leaves for 1978·79. They have estimated the cost of replacement salaries al $300,000. But they said they'll review this policy on Sept. 7. when the final budget will be approved. and that t.he ultimate sabbatical decision will depend on the exact amount of state funds received. In other action. trustees gave final approval to a five .year lease agree ment with the Newport.Mesa Unified School District The college district is leasing B.aY View School in San- ta Ana Heights for some $80.000 per year as classroom space for Coastline Community Colleae. Trustees also approved a mo· tion to sublease Bay View to other organizations at times when it isn't needed by Coastline. LNG Site Seen Quake Prone SANTA BARBARA <AP> - Indian opponents of a liqutfied natural gas terminal proJ>O!Sed at Point Conception said Wednesday this week's Santa Barbara earthquake confirms al· leged dangers of the site. But an examinulion of the area by state PubUc UUUties Commission geologists appeared not to support arguments made by the Santa Barbara Indian Center. ...., tpdi-.-n Centv~okMtnan­ Jobnny F_l1nn S"ald, "The epicenter orthls earthquake laal Sunday *" mOtt'tban 40 miles from the area where the Point Conception site ls. but the site shook and rolled and there's every indication there was some very seriou,, earthquake ttctlvtl)' out there." Julie, Jennie Fine SAN CLEMENTE CAP> - Julie Nixon Ellenhower and her new dauahter, tbt" flrtt 1randchlld of former presldent Rlchard Ntxon and hit wife, Pat, art-reported ln Sood condJUon at San Clemente Hoeplt.MJ. M Tft !:ltcnbowtr aan birth Tuuday to ntne-pound. four. ounce Jennie •,. r Viewed from a helicopter. the 11 ·story balloon coasted gracefully through a c loudless sky over a checkerboard of farmlands, nudged along by a 17·mph wind. The men were clearly visible in the red-and·yellow gondola, bundled in coals against the bit· ing cold but apparently relaxed. In a brief radio conversation with journallst.s at Le Havre airport. one of the trio said. "Ir weather conditions stay favora- ble we will try to go as far as possible to establish the max- imum of records." Larry Newm an, 31, Ben Abruzzo. 48, a nd Maxie An· derson, 44. all from Albuquer. que. have already set time and distance records for balloon light. Tbt> Double Eagle II complet- ed the Atlantic crossing at 10 p m. Wednesday (2 p.m. PDT>. Sh.annon Airport reported. reaching the southwest coast of Ireland 121 hours and 18 minutes alter the 112-root-high. helium· filled bag took off Friday night from Presque lsle. Maine, near the Canadian border. Officials of the Paris Airport Authority were preparing for the balloon to land at Le Bourget Air port north of Paris. where Charles Lindbergh landed the Spirit or St. Louis on May 21. 1927. after the first solo flight across the Atlantic Ocean. But they said no landing request bad been received. It was the 18th attempt to. cross the Atlantic by balloon, <See BALLOON, P ate .U> 'lBJEF MISS~ $8,4@ IUUL CHATTANOOGA. Tenn. <AP\ -The thief who grabbed a 88· year·old Chattanooga woman's purse netted '31 for bis efforts. But he overlooked $8,469 in a brown paper bag inside. Roberta Taylor. 11, of Chat· tanooga, found the purse a rew hours later and returned lt to the owner, the "18,469 intact. The owner, not Identified by police, rewarded the girl with $100. Coast Weather Low doudinesa ..al_.. and mornm, hours with mostly sunny afternoon Friday. Lows tonight 58 to 64. Highs Friday 68 al beaches to 78 to 84 lnland. ... A% DAIL V PILOT H/F Divorce Properly Split Set By TOM SAALE\' "°' ......... ~ ..... Lowyers ln •n Oran1e County Supertor Court divorc:e trlal Gf • t etin11 the dhipo itlon of SS mtulon In community propMty held by un estun1ed S11n Juan . Caplitrano couple appe111r today to be cklele lo at'\Uemenl. Tbc nel'OtiaUons lhat appear to be Mar succ:eu umt aft.er a month of tr'•' bf-fore Judi• J ET "Ned" Ruttt-r who ha discussed lhe expttled settle ment W1lh lawyers for Jam• Huis h and bla former ware. Marie Part of \.be settlemtont caUs for Huiih to pay~ wife's le1al fees of $100,000. Mn. Hul.Sb baa been represented by trial l a wyer Melvin Belli or San Francasco who bas been paid ~ an hour by he r for his courtroom services Th~ couple was divorced in November after t7 years of m ar· riage. A custody aareemenl for the couple's four cbiidren. a1es S to lS. was worked out before the trtal began. It was learned late Wednesday that the settlement involved a proposed equal split or the estimated SS million in com· munity property. Judge Rutter bas scheduled a hearing for Aug. 22 at which time the settle ment will be ratified or the trial ordered re· sum ed. Lawyers for both sides de· cided to try and reach a settle- ment in the beUef that Judge Rutter might order the real prop- e rty to be sold a nd the resulting proceeds divided between the couple. They said such a sale would have made community property immediately taxable and would have resulted in a s ubstantial loss for both sides. Testimony in the trial r e- vealed lhat the Huishs and his brother and slster·in-law are partners in the 18 corporations that own recreation complexes throughout Orange County. Los Angeles County, in San Diego County and in northe rn California. lf the settlement is approved. Mrs. Huish will receive two such facilities in Pomona, 18 acres of commercial development in that city. a cabin in Springville, Utah. and a $25,000 down pay- ment on a home belng buih in Provo, Utah. Huish will retain the couple's Sa" Juan Capistrano home and his one half interest in the re · maining recreational complexes and property. The other half will be retained by his brother and sister-in-law. F,....PflfleAJ T AX CUT •.• land and machinery more favorable tax treatment. Kaplloff's income tax bill, like McCarthy's measure. was hustled from the Ways and Means Committee to the As· sembly floor on the sam e day, after the house waived rules that require delays between commit· tees and the floor. The bill would raise the in- come lax credit from S25 to SlOO for individuals and from SSO to $200 for couples, give each homeowner a once-per-lifetime tax exemptio n of the first Sl00,000 in capital gains from the sale of a house, and give a re· tirement income tax credit lo som e elderly persons Kapiloff, who races a difficult re-election campaign. called the bill "a modest proposal to return some of our giant aurplus to the people from whence it came." WarehoU8e Burned BALDWIN PARK CAP> -A fire which s wept tbrouch a Baldwin Park warehouse caused an estimated SSJ0,000 in damaae before it was brought under con· trol, fire officials said. DAILY PILOT c ,,, ......... p,... Pf!lfl'! A J • end the 18th from wnt to east. The lift previous attempt. and lb• clo.at \a being succesarw. WH made two weeks a10 by Brttons Donald Cameron and Christopher DHey, who ditched 117 miles from the French coast. Seven persons died ln previous atte mpts. On Wednesday momln&, the three broke the record for lime aloft of 107 hours. 37 minutes set by Ed Yost of Sioux Falls. S.D., in an unsuccessful trans·Atlantlc attempt in 1976. By this mom· ing. they had traveled more than 3.000 miles. eclip1ln1 Yost's dis· tance record of 2,740 miles. Shannon air controller Gerald O'Connor said the three men thought they were still half an hour from land when told they had reached Ireland. He said there 'Were "quite a few sbout.s of jubilation" when they spotted the lights of Loulsburgh through a break in the clouds. ....,,...,...._ JAMES EARL RAY LISTENS TO ATTORNEY MARK LANE Grilled on Hou•• Committee Wltn•H Stand It was the second tra ns- Atlantlc ba lloon a ttempt for Abruzzo and Anderson. who stayed aloft last year in Double Eagle 1 for 64 hours and crashed five miles northwest of Iceland when winds pulled them off course. PARADE OF ANTIQUE CARS MARKS RAMP OPENING tn Huntington Beech, They Uncork Bottteneck Ray's Testi11Wny A ttacked in Probe WASHINGTON CAP> -The House Assassinations Commit· le~ tried today to shake one dis· crepancy after another in James Earl Ray's bizarre account of his travels with mystery man Raoul. triggering a storm of pro- test from Ray's attorney which delayed the hearing time and again Re p. Louis Stokes. D-Ohio, picked op on a theme cut short Wednesday when Ray was ex cus ed after compla ining or wea riness he said he suffered from mistreatment by prison of. fi cials. At one point in his attack on Ray's alibi. Stokes dra matically produced a doc ume nt -u change of address card for Dr Mart in Luther King Jr. 's hometown --after Ray denied SERVICES FRIDAY · Trainee Roberts Funeral Rites Slnted Friday For Trainee A contingent or uniformed Newport Beach policemen is ex- p ected Friday al fune r a l se rvices for o ffice r trainee Gordon Roberts. 27. who died Tuesday of motorcycle accident injuries. He was due to join their ranks next month aft er gr aduation from the Los Angeles Police Department Academy. where he enrolled after discharge from the U.S. Navy. A memo ri a l servi ce is scheduled at 10 a.m . at Pacific View Memorial Park Chapel ln Corona del Mar, followed by private burial rite,,. A resident of Fountain Valley, Mr. Roberts wa$ fatally injured early Monday when his personal motorcycle collided with a parked car on Daisy Avenue not far from bis home. tdfnutes afier he was pro- nounced dead llt Fountain Valley Community Hospital. Roberta' vital organs were re- moved for donation to recip· ients. His heart was nown to Stan· ford University Medical Center via Lear Jet in care of a surgical team for trans plant Jnto a critically ill male patient. Spokesmen for the Regional Organ Procurement Agency based at UCLA said Wednesday Robena had asked bla wlft, Vic· toria, to see to it in the event of bl.a death. He ls survived by Mn. Robol'tS, who la carryll\& lhelr second child: a dau1bler, Kristina, 5; blJ parent.a, Gordon Robehl and Ntna MorrelU, and two slatera, Bobbi Rahmlnlan nd Karen Wellendorf. Th• family sucaesta h'len<b m ay contribute an b.11 narM to the Newport Beach Police Oepart1Mnt Memorl1l Fund \> that he had filed such a card. By Ray's own admission long ago. s uch a document "would be damaging" to bis story if. as Stokes demonstrated. it existed Stokes assailed Ray's state- ment to the committee that his unfound and never fully iden- t ir1 ed accomplice had never handled the .30·06 rifle which later proved to be 'the weapon used to kill Dr. Martin Luther King J r. on April 4, 1968. Ray churned be bought the wea pon for Raoul earlier in Birmingham. Ala .. for what he thought was a gun-r unning scheme Ray said he and Raoul had worked together for months. fro m Canada to Mexico. in various smuggling deals. Stokes noted that Ray told the committee's staff in an earlier interview that Raoul had in fact handled the .30·06 rifle. Ray conceded that he bad. But he said he h ad been con- fused when the staff interviewed him because Raoul had in fact been with him in Birmingham when they purchased another ri- ne for smuggling. That rifle was exch an~ed a day later for the .30·06 after Raoul left Bir· mingham. Ray said. "Al first. at the st aff in· terview. I thought it was cx- ch a nged the same day. a nd Raoul would have been there." Ray said. Ray's memory was attacked over and over Why had Raoul never been found ? Who could have seen them together? Why couldn't Ray furnis h more descriptive information about Raoul. such as his real name? Ray had no hard answers. "Possibly a barmaid in Bir· mingham. Possibly a waitress in J im's Grill in Memphis" had seen him in Raoul's company, he said. But he couldn't be sure. And he ment ioned no one in Mon· treat. where he alleged be had met the man. NORTON ••• three years. He is lo be sen- tenced Oct. 4. "Yes. we will a ppeal the verdict." Norton said as he walked from the courtroom. "I believe the jury ove rlooked physical evidence that showed Gary <Newmeyer) was lying." In keeping with his outward easy going personality. Norton s mile d and approached the foreman of the jury that had convicted him. ·'Thank you for your con- sideration," he said. "l know you did what you think was right and 1 thank you for that." "Well." t)V. jury foreman r eplied . "I'm sorry it didn't work out better for you. But we did~ we did what we_yaw as our duty." 21,370Hear Rock Singer LENOX, Mass. CAP> -Ap· pearins at the summer grounds of th e Bos ton Symphony Orchestra. rock sinaer 1aclcson Browne attracted the bluest crowd ever to bear a popular music concert at Tantlewood. Official paid attendance al Browne's Tuesday evenins's show wu 21,370, ecltpstna by 120 the aUendan«t at a 1969 Jef· tenon Airplane appeara~ said James Kiley, Tanate operations mana1er. Overall attendance, lncludlnl those enterina on free puses and people wbo "jumped the fence," may have reached 25,000, official• said c Abruzzo. married with four children, deals in real estate and is a veteran pilot and balloonist. Anderson. who ls also married and has rour children. heads a uranium and copper mining company. Newman. who was married five months ago. ls a hang.glider manufacturer and former airline pilot. Milidirr Purged SANTO DOMINGO. Dominican Republic <AP l - President Antonio Guzman kept Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance and other inauguration guests waiting while he purged the Dominican mllltary com- mand in his first official action. Guzman swore in four new com· manders Wednesday as Vance and the others walled in another room at the national palace. Huntington Hails Offramp Opening Balloons and a procession on antique cars Wednesday heralded the opening of a new offramp at Huntington Beach's busiest intersection. Ribbon-cutting cere monies marked the opening of a new San Diego Freeway offramp syc;tem providing easier access -to commercja1 developments in the area. Better access is afforded to Huntington Center. the Old World Bavarian Village. an in· dustrial sector along Gothard Street and also to Golden West College. The ramp channels traffic on· to Beach Boulevard as well as the southbound San Oie li!o Free way and is exp~cted to clear some or the severe traffic congestion that plagues the area. Seven years in the planning. the new ramp was built without CalTran.c; fwids afttt the state refused to foot the bill. The city put up $800,000 in gas tax money. Huntington Center contributed $140.000 and S00.000 more was given by Jerwel En- terprises. Before other shopping com- plexes sprang up in the wesl county, even when Huntington Beach was smaller. at times during the peak,.A::hrlstmas season police were required to hand-direct traffic in the vicinity of Huntington Center. BOWTOTAKE A AND NOT ........... YOUR FAVORITE SHOWS. "rr'S A SONY' - Just keep a Sony Betamax SL-8600 back home. Set the optional timer. select the channel you want to record and take off knowing Betamax will record up to three hours with our new L-750 video tape. Then, you can watch it when you get back. So before you visit your local travel agent, visit your local Sony dealer. WHY il&D FOR VIDEO? • Free Movie and/or Blank Caasettet. ·• Free Duplicating Service • Continuing Discounts on Blank Cassettes . • Strong Extended Warranty on Labor (Ask Us) • Servioe Right Here-At The Store • Certificates Foe Use of Black & --wttite'-ana ccrorcatnetas. • LoW-<:ompetltlve Pricing. IT ALL ADS UP TO TOUI UST VIDIO IUY. _.,. llGMT MOW ......... S9QALS DUii ... OUI UMOO ...... SALi - 275 Eai1t 17th St. Costca Mesa For The Very Best Deal Yoti owe H to Phone 642-1882 Store Houra = H.!_et N 30 , ........ .... .... ~ ... .... , .. '""' Muttr 0Wge · VISA 8udott~• S-1·0••· ......... i ou.d --.., ... , ic·•· 1or all ·' 0111· honu• 11•lt•t•tro11ie· ... .. ,..~ , .\ .. ;a • ··. j "!"' .. . :· ' . i . t . ' I .. : . f .· 'I '• ... NAT~ BefagePowerBoatBaaEyetl W AlllINOTON <AP) -Hotilna to baa hlllHlln• lk>ata pera~ on a Nevada wUdllfe r ha&•. Dt111tru or WUdUfe, ll c:onset'VoUoh ortaniPUon, haa arped ln U .S. Dlavtct. CGart bore that pie ure boatert •M • .._ ltiera dllturb DtlUl'\C waterfowl. Attorney Je~y H. Howard, ~l • for Defenders, aoulht Wednesday to prove that hlch·apeed boattr1 already had cut tM nesttnt f(>tential for duck.a QB Rvby take Natlonul Wlldltft ..... •OWAaD CITBD government document.I dttlartn1 that aan .,,..._ ol 4,000 canvasback and redhead dueb an prodace4 .-1111 ca Ute l'tlflale. But ln ms. How.,.. said. 09lY 2.oeo recUMad Mid canvasbedl ckatkl w-. ra'"4 oa tM refu,., ud onb 3.000 in ma. PoWlr Mata were operatllac on t.M rdu,.1D both years. • oet..-1 already has won a te• Pol"8l'Y restntnina order prohibiting the eovernment horn permlttfni boats to oper1a. oo Ute ntap wtth 810tors or more dMlft JOborMPoWer. THE GO'VEllNMENT HAS propoMd u plun whlcb would ban motorboa&iq on the ~ half Of the refuge. The southern balfll zoMCl, with horsepower, .............. ~fmposed OD PQrtiom ca tM _..,.._ -· U.S. ~ ... ~ ... •kc direc- tor Lym Clft9walt tesUfi~ U1e pro- poeala permittllll bl,.,..•P"d pltuun butlnc and water siiln• der Aue. l • ••aboUI lane UUJe iaapaet oa waterfowl ~·· became IDOSl clDcb have ftl4ibed oatlnc by tbal date. RUBY IAKB NATIONAL Wildlife Refuge ls ;i hilb-aliltude llUll'lh on the Nevada desert. It bos~ nesting can- vasbacks and redheads, two species .,.hose populations are declirune over a broacl portion of their ranie. DNl. y PLOT A J J E1ttteut1ve Oflicff: 1812 Edtnger Av. .. Hunhngton Beach, CA 92JG.41 Southern Cat1l0tnla RegtOl'lal OUlces· ~ V U., Voe# SI Buena P•"-CA 90620 20715 S. Avalofl Blvd. Carson. CAll0748 ~ 22821 I.* F'oreM Ot . (Liiie f,Of991). E'I T0t~. CA 92630 • 1001 E. llT!j)efoel Hwy . LaHetlfa. CA90631 4140 LonQ Beach Blvd . Lonq Beech. CA 90807 .Jrsf~a 1095 11\nne Blvd . Tusffn CA 92e80 llltot" 235 H. CltfUI Ave West Cov>na CA 9I193 Looking for great valries this weekend? .Start here! Save 28°"~ Fashion-right looks with Calcutta pants for women. Elastic waistband for a comfortable fit. Si7A!S 1().20. Voile top with sweetheart tie-neck. Prini design po1y. ester/cott.on. S,M,L ..... 9.88 WOMENS SPORTSWt:,\R 7ss REG.$11 SPECIAL ¥ LITTLE GIRLS' SUMM.ER TOPS }44 EACH Knit tops in aaeorted stripee, solids. Easy- care poly/cott.on. 3-6x. Fashion denimt. Poly/ cotton in ~-6x ....... 1.88 CHrLDREN"S FASHIONS PURE LUXURY® NYLON PANTIES Bikinis, hiphug-sse gers or briefs. EA. CoU.oncrotch.R£G. 1..49 Misses' 6, 6, 7. TO 1.59 LlNGD.IE . . . . Printa ahown ant on1' Jeptl ....... ., .... atyla avallabloa. Save $4. Men,s disco fashion shirts in lively prints and aolicls. Join the disco scene in ex· citing long sleeve shirts. Choose from a super array of solid colors and engin- eered prints. Sizes S-XL. 7!!! 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Ligh~ight Ji>Olyethy~ene 844 container resists dentmg, cracking, abuse. Will not rust. Heavy-duty, moJded- in handles ir easy carrying. REG. 12.99 HOUSEWARES . ' SAVE33'*' ASSORTED KNIT S-HiRT!,FOR GIRLS tte-~ne&. v: 397 -... ·neck or'~t · front styles. In EA. colors. 's.,.M. L. REC. $1 auiJ..s-FASHIONS 1 1/2 ~0FF* NF..EDLECRAn KIT~ Choose from a selection of creative kita in a bi1 var- ie*Y al decotatJve deaipa. ~low)rice fASHION FABIUC8 I 8 'AJ2 DAILY PILOT s Thu~. Auguat 17, 1978 Punch "We compromised-my husband always wanted a dog .. £ontUet Patty 'Firm' About Book SAN FRANCISCO l APl Patricia Hearst has told a federal Judge that unless she is allowed lo check into attorney F Lee Bailey's contract to write a book about her trial. "crucial evidence" about a conffict of interest "will never become part of the record." Her new ,attorney. George Martinez. asked U.S. District Court Judge William Orrick on Aug. 2 to set aside her seven.year sentence for bank rob· bery because of "an impermissible conruct of in· terest" between Miss Hearst and Bailey during her 1976 trial. • 'J'BE MOTION WEDNESDAY CLAIMED her trial was "reduced to a mockery. a farce and a sham because of ineffective assistance of counsel" and blamed the conflict on Bailey's interest in publishing a book on the case. Martinez filed a rebuttal Wednesday to the government's opposition to his request Monday for permission lo question G.P. Putnam Publishing Co. and its editor-in-chief, Walter Minton, about the contract with Bailey. Als<> filed was a declaration by Miss Hearst saying that before being told by :\'lartinez on Aug. 9. she did not know Bailey signed a contract with Putnam paying him $225.000 for a book. THE GOVERNMENT TERMED THE conflict of interest issue speculation and said no evidence linked any improper behavior by Bailey to any in· c-ffectiveness al trial. :\1 artinez cited an American Bar Association cannon of ethics which says an attorney should "scrupulously" avoid making arrangements with J client for rights lo ;.1 case before the matter had ~ bt>cn terminated The court was told there was a contract between Miss Hearst <.ind Balley which amounted lo agrt'Cment she was not to compete for at least 18 months with a contemplated book by Bailey as well as the agrccmenl he signed with the publisher µ month earlier. .\LSO CITED W.\S THE C.\LIFORNIA state court decision overturning the mass murder con· viction of Juan Corona on grounds of ineffective representation by counsel. in part because his at· torney wrote a book on the case. Judgl' Orrick has asked the government to respond by Sept. 15 to the motion seeking lo set aside the sentence, but has not taken any action on the discovery request. Confessed Thief Turns Christian VISALlA <API -A disbarred attorney who turned thief. then converted to Christianity. has pleaded guilty to a grocery store robbery "to make <1mends for past wrongs." Robert Michael Lee, 32. or Rohnert Park. showed up at the police stution in Porterville near here Aug. 1 and confessed lo robbing the Safeway Store there Aug. 3. 197S. LEE THEN TESTI FIED BEFORE the Tulare County Grand Jury which indicted him on the last day a charge could be filed before the three-year statute of limitations for robbery expired. · After Lee's guilty plea Wednesday. Superior Court Judge David Allan scheduled se.:itencing Sept. 14. Lee said he became religious while in prison on another robbery conviction and began to as· sume responsibility for his acts. "IT WAS CLEARLY A BURDEN God put on my life,.. Lee said of his declsion to confess. ·Christians are under an obligation to do what they can to make amends for past wrongs ... Lee said his troubles began after an unsuc· cessful race for the State Assembly from Lake Tahoe in 1974. He let his law practice slide and tried to pay off his campaign debt by gambling. Lee uid in an interview. When that didn't work. he turned to robbery. ~s~. -"I don't want tbe publfcit1 to renect ad· mirabty on me," be s~1d. ••t"Cho!Je to talk-beelt\.ltt"' oT wbat GOO tlirouih Jesus puist b~ 11\e in tb~ last two years." ... D~BaidN&bs $100,000 'Dost' JAMUL <AP> A rold left the co-owner of a ~ord abop ur'lder arrest and put a 1lQp to u plunt that eve'I')' w"k turned out WOOO worth ot the dru& PCP, or ongel du.t. authorlUel.uy. HoWI A. Gaines. •· wu arreeted Wednesday at bls ehop in Sk.yUne Mat Ult Mexican border . SllerHf'a Lt. Beb Aquatlne Uld 10 pounds of PCP ..... ebed. Th It.reel val ot the COnftacated dru.1 was estamated et Sl00,000. Alao confiJc&ted were cbeml~ and eql&ipmtnt \Md to make tbt drua tecbOkallj known •• peae~k»dlne. Aul\llliDf' aWI. A~lne taJd Galntt wu bOok-4 at the ~= CorncUonll c.eater n Sin Dit-to for tnvtt ol poe1fNloft. 1lile arid man\ifadur. of. eofttroltH •bit~. . ~ I One of tM b.tter DGmM for motor olL andbffn arollnd for yean. ThoM Quakenknow how. 30WT. ~T. A grand lubricant for all You.r equeab and achea. Also protect• metal lOOMU ruated part• and flffa aHclry mechcmlama. 97~oz. REFRIGERANT . 12FREON 77~o~ Subject to Stock on Hand Reload your car air condltipnlDg unit. It may only need eome tr.on. Cool air la worth Tl~ on the freeway. GENIE ~ HP SCREW DRNE ELECTRIC ' GARAGE DOOR OPENER IHE. Vfll\IE IS SMOOlH· tT1S A WORM 6~2 '('kNcw ., :..1\ . ., .... ~ -l . ' -., ~JI , ~ PVC SPRINKLER PIPE CLASS 125 10 FT. LENGTHS 37' 47' I've heard of the class of '42 but 12S? But then if you know sprinkler pipe, you'll know it's the good atuff at the right price. EVEREADY FLUORESCENT LANTERN I O!?os Fluorescent 119,hL If you're in the middle of 'War and Peace" and the lights' go. you'll be glad you have it. A good aoU amendment for heavy clay or adobe aoiL Alao good mulch for flower beds. last• long and keep• weeds down. (You want how many?) CRYPTARll Here ia a lot of convenience for a little money. Cryptar lets you know that the chances of someone elae having your same code is almost nil. (And you thought they were giving you a course in Ancient Egyptian.) DELIVERY AND NORMAL INSTALLATION .OF OUR UNIT 4900 ~ 1.~ UNDERCOUNTER ' FLUORESCENT LIGHTS 377 Good idea for work rooms. kitchen. play rooms. anyplace where you're tlr9Ci of working or playing in the dark. COOL ATTIC POWER VENTILATORS AUTOMATIC SHUTTER # 2121 Let the wind do the coollng. Neat ldea. We've put the aun to work. •by not the wind? All alsea. there· s one for you. .. YOUNG FAMILY INTERIOR-EXTERIOR LATEX WALL PAINT Made by one of the "blgglH" (he aaya that all the time) ao you Jmow u· .. good. 2 87 co5~RS GAL WJUTE CALIFORNIA . YALE ENGINE OVERHAUL 87~T. ONEGAL. GAS CAN 99c · Good idea to cany one in th• ttUck for · little inconvenience• (like running out oJ gas). Be prepared. .-, .· ·: ·. GS404D lS THlS A erooo 'Pf<lCE 7. l>t>ES Lb~ 60 \N\T~ BA6ELS?l>oES '-·"'· "A'4£ S VMS\.ll~E ~ D&ES NA'116MAL SSt..L. CHEAP? CMEE>~ PACIFIC ASPHALT DRIVEWAY MORTAR 1 87 GAL 7.87 5GAL. Or if your driveway bas holes or large cracks. you might need to do some patching first. . . ·. -· PACIFIC ASPHALT DRIVEWAY COVER. 1 67 GAL 6.67 5GAl. If you've been thinking of aeallng and protecting Your aapbalt driveway. elbow grease and change will do it. DRIVEWAY COATER BRUSH 2sr McCULLOCH . CHAINSAW : . MAC 120 12" 6797 ~ 8797~~ .• MAC 130 14" 12797 ~ . MAC 14014" WITH AUTOMAnC S8ABPENER 1479~·~ Gaa powe~ "1th chain~ the aafety fecrnar. tbat stop• ci moving cbalD In mllJIMClODd8 to reduce the M.ard from ldckbcrck. CSuhtect to Stock on Rand) 7 \ Irvine WL. 71, NO. 229, 'SECTIONS, .-0 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Double Eagle II Makes History Today~!l Closing N.Y. Stoeks THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1978 TEN CENTS \ U.S. Balloonists Land in France Dollar Spurs Market NEW YORK <AP> -The stock r:narket went on a buying spree today. encouraged by good news about the dollar. and crashed through a psychological barrier at 900. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials rose 12.21 in the first two hours but fell back to a 7.79-point gain to 902.37 later in the morning. Advances held a 3·1 lead over declines on the New York Stock Exchange in heavy trading. Gold. meanwhile. fell about $6 an ounce. The good news came from Washington. where President Carter asked aides Wednesday to look for a way to halt the dollar's fall. aftd overseas. where the dollar responded to Carter's statement with a healthy gain. C Related story, B6 > Tbe dollar has been declining steadily on foreign exchange market s in rt:cent months because of fear s about Ame rica's large trade deficit and general economic condition. The ~urrency dropped to record lows this week against the Swiss franc. West German mark and Japanese yen. The Dow has passed the 900- level several times in recent weeks but has been unable to maintain the momentum to close over 900. The Dow's last 900-plus close was July 26, 1977. Analysts sald an apparent rise in interest rates instituted by the Federal Reserve Wednesday was the first step in dollar'.s s lide. and the market. usually wary of interest r at e rises. f'esponded with a rally late Wednesday and today. Wesl Germany, fearful a weak dollar will price its exports out of world markets. praised the Carter administration's interest in shoring its currency. Dealers cautioned, however. thctt the long-term future of the dollar is still far f1 om bright. A Frankfurt trader said the money market is in a "holding pattern" pending indications of what action Carter might take. The dollar edged up by almost one percent m 24 hours in Tokyo to close at 185 475 Japanese yen. Vegas Hotel Fetes Hughes LAS VEGAS <AP> -The Desert Inn Hotel and Casino paid tribute to Howard Hughes with th e d e dic ation or a memorial plaque that will make the image or the late millionaire more conspicuous in the resort's lobby than he ever was when be lived on the ninth floor. The dedication Wednesday marked the first formal tribute to Hughes' Las Vegas legacy since bis death in April. 1976. ,.~ ........ FLOATING ABOVE THE CLOUDS, BALLOON DOUBLE EAGLE U PASSES HIGH OVER. SOUTHERN ENGLAND ON WAY TO FRANCE Three American Baltoonlsta Achieve Their Goal of Becoming the First to Cross Atlantic Ocean by Balloon 2 Wonien Lose Lives In Traffic Two pedestrians died as the result of separate Oran~e Coun- ty traffic accidents Wednesday, Oran,ge County Coroner's deputies reported today. Lorene Ann Brooks, 78, of 12891 Loma St .• Garden Grove, died at 2 a.m. today of injuries suffered ln a 10 p.m . accident Wednesday in Garden Grove, police said. She was cr.ossing Garden Grove Boulevard near Adelle Street in a ~Uian cl"OSswal~ police alleged, when she wu struck by a car driven by 22· year-old Michael Lantz of Cypress. NQ charges have been flied pending investigation, officers reported. Beverly Blood, 46, of 534 Glen· dora Ave., Orange, was struck and killed at 1 :35 p.m. Wednes· day as she stood on the shoulder of the Santa Ana Freeway near Euclid Street, deputies said. Investigators said Mrs. Blood had driven a friend lo a stalled ~ar on the freeway and was "standing beside her own vehicle. when she was hit by a plckup truck. The truck driver. George Rivera of Los Angeles. was not cited pending investigation. of- ficials reported 'Green Card' Ring Broken CONCORD (AP> -A coun· terfeitlng ring that processed fake "green cards" for Illegal aliens has been broken up by police officers who stumbled on- to the operation. Nine persons were ar~esled Monday when police tried to serve a warrant on 24-year-old Adolfo Gutierrez, a suspected ii· legal alien. 'Others Keep Jobs' Accused Embezzler Proiests Dismissal A Newport Beach woman who stands accused of embezzling an estimated $9,000 while working · for Orange CoUJ\ty's welfare of· fice ls protesting her recent dis· missal as unlawful. Mrs. Rhonda Kay Patton, 30. bas begun ad(Jllnistralive pro- cedures desi1ned to compel Chief Deputy Welfare Director Richard Ruiz to reinstate her to tbe job she lost this week. And she bas pointed out in ber defense that senior county of· ficials accused of much more serloua criminal charges were not removed from their posts prior lo conviction. Named in a declaration pre- pared by defense attorney William Dougherty are former county supervisor Robert Bat- tin. former county assessor and congressman Andrew Hinshaw and former chief deputy as- sessor Jack Vallerga. All were convicted or criminal charges. Doul(berty also notes that county Supervisors Ralph Diedrich and Philip Anthony stand accused of criminal charges contained in grand jury indlefmerts. Neither supervisor has beenfired. she-points out. "It seems to me that I am be· ' Ing treated less fairly than some or the more important pet-sons being employed by the County of Orange.·· Mrs. Patton said. "During the tlme that some of these people were involved in criminal trials the county permitted them to keep their jobs and di'aw salaries." Energy Plan Push WASHINGTON <AP l - Congressional energy leaders and admlnistration officials bave opened a'n intensive cam· paign to Jel President Carter's energy plan moving before Congress quits for a two-week Labor Day_rece1s. And she asked:· "Maybe I am missing something but can you please explain to me why these persons keep their jobs until they get a full court hearing while 1 am fired immediately and must seek a job even though I haven't been tried yet?" Ra.iz said Mrs. Patton'$ dis· missal is not technically related to. the criminal charges filed against her. lluiz explained that she was fired for falsifying department records. He said the violation bas been proved to his satisfac- tion and that Mrs. Patton's dls· mtssal was inevitable and lawful. The criminal charges against Mrs. "Patton allege that she con- verted welfare checks addressed lo indigent applicants to her own use and that she used u post of- fice box in Cypress to divert the checks to her. Handicapped Changes Sex SAN. DIEGO CAP) - "Everything is perfect." says Bobbie Lea Bennett after undergoing sex· change surgery. reported· ly the first by a han· dicapped person. The former Robert Ben· nett. 31. was altered in the pperation Monday at the University or Texas medica l branch in Galveston. In eight weeks. she suid by telephone Wednesday, she plans to return home to San Diego. A rare bone disease con· fines her lo a wheelchair ... Bay Story Attacked In Probe WASHINGTON <API -The House Assassinations Commit- tee tried today to shake one dis- crepancy after another in James Earl Ray's biiarrt' account of his travels with mystery man Raoul. triggering a storm of pro- test from Ray's attorney which delayed Lhe hearing lime and again. Rep. Louis Stokes. 0 -0hio. picked up on a theme cut short Wednesday when Ray was ex- cused after complaining of weariness he said he s uffered from mistreatment by prasoo of· ficials. At one point in bis attack on Ray's alibi. Stokes dramatically produced a document -a change of address card for Or. Ma rt in Luthu King Jr 's hometown -after Ray denied that be had filed such a card By Ray's own admissi'ln long ago. such a document '"would be damaging" to his story ir. as Stokes demonstrated. it existed. Stokes assailed Ray ·s state- ment to the committee that his unfound and never Cully 1den· t ified accomplice had never handled the 30·06 rifle which later proved to be the weapon used to kill Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on April 4. 1968. Ray claimed ht' bought the weapon for Raoul c-arlier in Birmingham. Ala .. for what he thought was a gun-running scheme. Ruy said he and Raoul had worked together ror months. from Can11da to Mt-xico. m various smuggling deals. Stokes noted that Ray told the committee's staff in an earlier inte rview that Raoul had in tact handled the 30·06 rifle Ray conceded that he had. But he said he bad been con· fused when the staff Interviewed him because Raoul had in fact been with him ln Birmin•am when they purchased another n-ne for ~muggling. That rifle was exchanged Ii day later for the Atlantic Crossing A First PARIS <AP> -Three American adventurers. the first balloonists to conquer the Atlan· tic. set their giant silver craft down today in a wheatfield near the French town of M iserey. 55 west of Paris. completing a his· toric Journey that had dereated other men for more than a cen· turv. The trio -Larry Newman. 31. Ben Abruzzo. 48. and Maxie An· derson. 44. all of Albuquerque. N M. -put their balloon Double Eagle II down at 7 .SO pm local time. (10 :50 a.m. PO'l'L on a beautirul. cloudless evening, just before dusk. Spectators waiting at a nearby highway rushed to the balloon to conuatulatt-the three. The balloonists unfurled an AmeTican flag from their gon· dola when they crosst'd the French coast and lowered .1 French tricolor as they complet ed the flight. which ended by un· official estimate 137 hours. 18 minutes after they went aloft from Maine on Friday. The three airmen scurried to secure their craft against strong ground gusts wh1ppmg the field. four malt$ from M lser.-v. The balloonists app1:1rently had to land in daylight for safety reasons. Eyewitnesses said tht' - balloon had visibly deflated. ap- pt'aring more likP 11 tttpered. creased silver exclamation point thun a sphere The Double E C1tt lt> 11 hud crossed the French coast at Le Havre Vlewf'd from a helicopter . the lJ story·high ba lloon had coasted gracefully through a cloudless sky over a checkerboard or farmlands. nudged along by a li mph wind The men were clearly v1sibl(1 in the red-and-yellow gondola. bundled m coats against tht' bit In~ cold but apparently relaxed In c.1 brief radio conver!lat1on with Journalists at Lt• Havrt: airport. one of tht' trio said. "H weather conditions stay favora- ble we wtll try to go as f1:1r as possible to establish thl' max· imum of records ... The Double Eagle II complel· tStt BALLOON. Page AZ> }UUE, JENNIE 'DOING WEU' 'You know . I "aw all those babies, and Jennll' 1s JUSt so much mon· lively than tht! oth.ers," gushed former presi· dent Richard Nixon <1fter view- ing his granddC1ughter at San Clementt-General Hospital. Assembly Approves Tax Slashes 30-06 after R1:1oul left Bir· mingham. Ray~id "At first. iil the statr in· terview. I thought it was ex· chirnged the same duy. and Raoul would have been tbere." Ray said. Jenntt> E1i.t•nhowcr. who weighed n1nt• pounds . four ounces at btrth Tuesday. und her motht•r , Ju li e N ix on Eisenhower, wert: reportedly do· mg well today They arc expecl· ed to go homt> Saturday. Coast SACRAMENTO CAP> -In an latter, swnsored by Assembly outbreak of election-year tax-Speaker Leo McCarthy, D..San cutting fever, the Assembly bas Francisco, may face a roadblock approved a $700 milllon Income intheSenate. tax cut and a proposed ballot T h the u be ballot m e a s u r e e I f m l n a t t n 1 ° reac ~ .. ovem r , homeowner property taxes. it must clear the upper house The income tax measure, • Frlday, and the Senate mual ap-prove SB 2243 by Sen. Alan financed from the state surplus, Sieroty. elltendlng the Aug. 15 would cut taxes by $75 for single deadline for theufassage of persona and '"° for couples, b u and live some additional breaks a ot meuures un Friday. to the elderly. SB 2343 was before the Senate The ~operty tax measure tode)'. with a vot~ expected. ld "·'" •'-lnin ... McCarthy saJd Wednesday he wou 8 WNJ ..... e rema I •"'·8 counted majoritv su~rt tn •'---blWon ol bomeowoer property J . """" taxes.five renters a lla81 tu Senate Mt not Jet e needed ti 1-..-.a: ................... ___ two·tlllrdl Yale. tut, a • m-..., -To ib Auembl)" supporten, inventory ta• -, ftnanclNI all McCartbyJa mea.ture, A.CA 2, ttiole dtanld by re·hnpOlln• SS WH a NlftlldNnt ol lbe votera' blllton of Ute " blWoc:i la bull· mandat.e Juoe e In approvtna neaa property tau• cut by Propoaltlon 13, 8 •t billion PioJ)OlitioQ ia. · ~ • The me a au r ea b re e aed propeft1 tu eut IJNlwned b~ ~ tbrousb tbe tower bouae 10-caUed taJtpayera• revolt WednlldaJ a~ oa ~ ot'JS.t 1mon1~en. To tta OPPo· fort"• liliioiDe iu 1:1m. u .. by nenu ftl &bioppmlte. ~·••llDblymaa Lawrehc:e "Hoaneonera and renters x:= o~ n1a...-.. -... tl H thouaht llMt)' were 141Wq a tatr • .... ~. -·-dear trom g:.;ro 1tl11n ti.·· fOr ,...., • jllaa .... (~:ru ••• ,.u, I Ray·s memory was attacked over imd over. Why had Raoul never been found ? Wbo could have seen them together' Why couldn't Ray furnish mort- (8ee RAY. Pa1e 2> Heritage Park. I Rites Planned Construction of an arts and crafts bulldln1 In Irvine's Herttaae Park will be marked with a aroundbreaklng ceremony 1cbeduled at .ill .30 a.m. Aug 24 at the park. City officla14 have invited l'e$l· ctenu to attend. The park ts located on Walnut Avenue. off Culver Drive, next to Irvine Hith School. E1tlmated construction cost b Sl.2 mllUon The bulldtn1 ta scheduled to open to the P\lbllc next April Weather Low cloudiness ntghl and morning houn with mostly sunny ufttirnoon Friday. Lows tonight 58 to 64 . Highs FrldMy 68 at beaches to 78 to 84 lnlund. . - tt DAILY f>ILOT 2Thngs Hold7 Hostages ClllCAOO !API Two Cro• tum terror\: Ol arm~ with au~ l,nd exploslvt-11 sehtd nine bost.•aes at tht Gt'rm•n Consulate today. poUu uld. One h<>lihlllt wH later releaa~ and 1&n<>Uwr escaped Ofrldub 1mld ~ terrorist.a believed to be a men and a woman apparentb wanted freedom for SUf>pan BDanddc. a C'roatlan nation Ust lud r lm- pTlsoned m Oermuny and facm& extr1tdltion w Yutoslavlu. The swltch~rd operat« at the consulate on the 10th floor of 11 M 1cbi11i1n A venue bulldinl in the downtown areu said lbe terrorists were threatening to s hoot her 1&nd the o th er hosta1es One hos tdge, rl'Jl'hed by tPlepbone. was asked if the seven wert' in danaf'r "Yes. we att, very mucb," was the response The swllchboord operator. asked whether anyone had been Injured. said: "Not yet, but it doesn't look good." She said she was being allowed to use the switchboard because the ter· rorists wanted to place a call to a German prison. "They're threa,ening to shoot everyone," she told a reporter "I can't taUt anymore, they're all hollering at police." Police said they were trying to negotiate with the terrorists. E',.._PageAJ TAX CUT ••• McCarthy said. "They're not getting one ... Countered A sse mbly Republican leader Paul Priolo or ~ alibu, who supported Proposi· tton 13: "You're trying to prove the people or this state were wrong. The people of this state are not going lo stand for the leading opponents or Proposition 13 t ampering with 13 " State Chamber of Commerce spokesman Jim Kennedy called the measure "Jaws JJJ for busi· ness" and "a massive tax shift" that would hurt the business climate. 1 But Assemblyman Louis Papan, 0-Daly City, asked how eny Republicans could "look a homeowner in the face" after voting .against the measure. Six of the 23 ·Republicans joined 55 or the 57 DerQOcral.s in voting aye. Several of the Republicans were from farm areas, which would get a break from provisions giving rarm land and machine ry more favorable tax treatment. Kapiloff's income tax bill, like McCarthy 's measure. was hustled from the Ways and Means Committee to the As - sembly floor on the same day, after the house waived rules that require delays between commit· tees and the floor. · The bill would raise the ln- fome tax credit from $25 lo $100 for individuals and from $50 to $200 for couples. give each homeowner a once-per-lifetime tax exemption or the first $100,000 in capital gains from the sale of a house, and give a re· tiremenl income tax credit to $Ome elderly persons. Kapiloff. who faces a difficult r~·election campaign, called the ball ··a modest proposal to return some of our giant surplus to the people from whence it came." Military Purged SANTO DOMINGO. pominican Republic <AP> - President Antonio GuzmaA kept Secretary of State Cyrlis R. Vance and other inauguration guests wait.tng while he purged the Dominican military com- rnanqJn his first officjal action. Ou.zman swore ln four. new com· In anders Wedne;day, as Vance pn<J the otMrs wailed in another fooiq at the national palace. . . DAILY PILOT • , ••• 2Escape lloat Fire Injuries Harbor Patrolmen said John Pacclorinl of Corona del Mar and Robert Belser of Hunllnaton Beach must have bffn enjoyi.n1 a lucky day Wednesday. The two men escaped injury ~hen their runabout caught fire Just arter l p.m. in Newport Harbor. Patrolmen say tbey were un· usually lucky because the full 20-gallon fuel tank didn't ipit.e in the fire and because when the blaze broke out the boat was cruisine past the Harbor Patrol headquarters. H1gbway. Patrolmen said gaa that col- lected in the bilge during fuelins was ignited by a spark from the engine, sending both men over the side, into the water. Orficers extinguish ed the blaze before the fuel tank ianlted and estimated $1,500 damage lo .. Three of Kind Trip"le Nudity lnVestigated -, The 21.,.yell"-old West Newport woman '°Id poUc~ she was a little surprised when she bicycled past a naked' man who was standing between two cars on Sea.ahore Dnve early Wednqda.Y. THEN WHEN SHI! spotted a second nude. leaning a1ain$t a telepbone pole, she aaid she became ap- prebensive. But when a third starker came running out into lht" stre~t. waving his clothes in hls hands. she got downright pamcky. The woman, a waitress who was on her way home from work, called police. OFftCE&S MIGllT HAVE _been a little skeptical about her story except that a cb~k of the neighborhood at 40th Street and Seashore Drive, where the triple nakedness occurred.. turned up one other witness who spotted the trio of nudes. Officers aay they are investigatina . ,....,.... JAMES EMU. RAY LISTENS TO ATTORNEY MARK LANE the vessel. · Panel Says Women RightS Fight Lags GrtDed Oft HouH CommlttM Wftneaa Stand . Pi,llmreatfe Bandit Took Peek Too Many RIVERSIDE !AP> -One peek proved too many for a would-be robber who walked in· to a downtown Rive rside doughnut shop with a gun in his hand and a pillowcase over his head. Police say the man took $60 from the shop cashier Wednes· day. but, realizing he'd forgotten to cut any eyeboles in bis dis· guise. was forced lo raise one corner of the case to make his exit. Based on a description given to them by a customer in the shop, police later arrested Ralph Graves. ?:l, at his home nearby for investigation of armed rob· bery. Police say they recovered the money and the gun, but not the pillowcase. which had been re· turned to a none-the-wiser pillow. And Graves refused to finger the right pillow, police said. E',.... Pap A J BALLOON. • ed the Atlantic crossir'lg at 10 p.m . Wednesday <2 p.m. PDT>. Shannon Airport r e ported. reaching the southwest coast of Ireland 121 hours and 18 minutes a fter the 112-foot-high. helium- filled bag took off Friday night from Presque Isle. Maine. near the Canadian border. Officials of the Paris Airport AutbprilY. were preparing for the balloon to latid at Le Bourget Airport north of Paris, where Charles Lindbergh landed the Spirit of St. Louis on May 21, l~, after the first solo flight acrQ.Ss the Atlantic Ocean. But they said no landing request bud been received. It was the 18th attempt to cross the Atlantic by balloon, and the 16th from west to east. The last previous attempt. and the closest to being successful. was made two weeks ago by Britons Donald Cameron and Christopher Davey, who ditched 117 miles from the French coast. Seven persons died in previous attempts. On Wednesday morning, the three broke the reedrd for time aloft of 107 hours, 37 minutes set by Ed Yost of Sioux Falls, S.D., in ao unsuc~essful tra~s-Atlantic attempt in 1976. By this morn- jn£., they_ h,ad..traveled more than 3,000 miles, -eclipsing Yost's dis· \at\<:e record o( 2,740 miles. • ' Shannon air controller Gerald O'Connor said the three men thought Utey were stilt hall an hour frotn land when told they had reached Ireland. He said there were "quite a few shouts ' ol Jubilation" when they spotted th• UgbU of Louisburgh through a break in the clouds. F,....P_,,eAJ RAY ••• 'llllEF MISS~ $8,469 IU.VL WASHINGTON (A p ) -ness last sprina. The report is American women remain far entitled. "The Spirit of behind in their struegle to Houston," referring lo the rlrSt CHA'JTANOOGA, Tenn. <AP> achieve economic, political and federally runded National descriptive information about _ The thief who '"'abbed a 68-social equality with men. a Women's Conference beld in Raoul. such as his r eal name? 0 • presidential commission report· that city last November. Ray had no hard answers. year-old Cbattanooea woman's edtoday. The report ciled these as ••Possibly a barmaid in Bir-purse netted $3! for his efforts. The National Advisory Com-among findings tbat it said show But he overlooked $8,469 in a • · d mineham. Possibly.a waitress in b mittee for Women issued that continue ine qu a lity for ~ rown paper bag inside. · Jim s Grill in Memphis" bad Roberta Taylor. ll, of Chat-assessment in a report sub-American women and shatter seen him in Raoul's company, tanooga, found the purse 8 few milled to President Carter and myths about Lfiem : he said hours later and returned lttolbe Congress wtth a plea for -·The number of working But he couldn't be sure. And owner, the $8,"69 intact. The "prompt and positive action" on women has more than doubled he mentioned no one in Mon-behalf of women. in the last 25 years. with women treal. where he alleged be bad owner, not identified by police, "We demand immediate con· accounting for 41 percent of the met the man. rewarded the girl with SlOO. tinuing action ... by federal. labor force. But on the average, "Mr. Ray. I say to you, this state. public and private instltu-women earn only 60 percent of committee has reviewed every lions so tbat ~Y 1985. tbe end or what men earn. FBI document relative to this 'f, • Ruled Out the International Decade for -Only six percent of case. every other investigative OXID Women proclaimed by the Unit-American families fit the document. and nowhere is there MODESTO CAP) _ Officials ed Nations, everything possible "typical" pattern of a breadwin- a reference to a man named haven't been able to determine under lbe law will have been ning father. homemaking Raoul." Stokes said. what caused 13 children to get done to provide American mother and two school-age To that. Ray replied only that sick at a labor camp in Westley women with full equality." the children. perhaps not all documents had in southwest Stanislaus County. report said. -Alimony is awarded in only been found in the matter. Pesticide poisoning, first The advisory committee is the 14 percent of all divorces and no Stokes : ··tr we can't find suspected because traces were successor to the International more than seven percent of Ruoul, we can't help you very found in the area, has been ruled Women's Year commission. divorced men actually make much. cun we?" out. which officially went out of busi· payments. Ray : ''Ithi~ theoobthmg~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ that could help me is a judge." I Q. ''Don't you think if we had more information about Raoul, we might be able to locate him?" A: "If I had gone to trial in 1968. he most llkely would have testified against me anyhow." The proceedings were mter· rupted and delayed over and over when Ray's attorney. Mark Lane. a longtime postulator of conspiracy theories in the King and John F. Kennedy assassina- tions. obJected to the coµrse of the questioning. Lane repeatedly com•-ed or not having transcripTand other documents related to the interrogation. Woman Prays.: At ~rong Grave, SIU3s PROVIDENCE. R.I. <APJ A woman who says she prayed al the wrong grave for 17 years b ecau se s he thought h e r husband was buried there is su- ing the Roman Catholic bishop of Providence, a church and a cemetery Beatrice Daigle of Woonsocket filed the $250,000 damage suit .. in Superior Court here Wednesday. She claims that a mistake by St. John the Baptist Cemetery in Bellingham. Mass .. caused her "frequently and continuously" to place flowers on the wrong gruve and pray at the wrong grave "for the repose or her dead husband'ssoul. •• The Church or the Precious .Jl)ood in Woonsocket sold Mrs. n111~ '\h(! plot in the cemetery in 1961 for $75. The mistake was discovered April 26 . when workers opened the grave because Mrs. Daigle wanted to move the remains to another plot. the suit said. The suit said Mrs. Daigle still suffers "severe emotiona l trauma and distress" because of the miBta.ke. Her husband was buried ln .a nearby grave at the cemetery. llOWTOTAKE A AND NOT~ YOUR FAVUIUTE SHOWS. "IT'S A SONY." .. Just keep a Sony Betamax SL-8600 back home . Set the optional timer, select the channel you want to record and take off knowing Betamax will record up to three hours with our new L-750 video tape . Then, you can watch it when you get back. So before you visit your local travel agent, visit your local Sony dealer. WH~ M&D FOR VIDEO? • Free Movie and/or Blank Cassettes • Free Duplicating Service • Continuing Discounts on Blank Cassettes • Strong Extended Warranty on Labor (Ask Us) .C.:.' ; • Service Rtght Here-At The Store ' • Certificates For Use of Black & White and Color Cameras. ...... -- t's No Drill f oulh Solves Dental F ean MURRAY, Utah <AP> . -The 8-year-old boy faced an appointment with t))e dentist, so be dl4 wt;>at most of us have want~ to do In slmilar circumstances -he called for help. ___._• Low-a>mpetltiVe Pricing. IT AU. ADS .. TOY~ llST VtDIO IUY. ......... IHIHT MOW-IXT'IA WC1ALS DUmlle OUI 18tODILIMG SALa ~ DisP-atcher Bob Nelson of the Slllt Lake County sheriff s offlce said a deputy was •ent on un emergency call after 0 call c~me in from a young boy who sald he "needed u poUce officer rl~t away." • A deputy was seftt. He f9und the boy. whose mother wa trylne to Utk hitn to the dentl$t. The mother and son were not ld n(lfled. The distraught boy had jumped from her cur. his mother sold, runnlna into the ho~e to "oet some help.". · · • I 1•.-0••· ...... iunal -._, ... , ic·c· •o•· ~116 .'our honu· •·l•••·&•·on".., . ' . ' ' 7 - Laguna/South Coast Afternoon N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 71, NO. 2.29, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1978 TEN CENTS Double Eag'le II Makes History U.S. B ·allooilists Land in· France l.aguna Puts Gag On Talks Laguna Beach city .:ouncilmen have approve<! an informal rule prohibiting members of city commissions and committees Crom speaking before governmental agencies on behalf of t.be city. A rule drafted by Councilman Kelly Boyd states committee members must seek City Council approval to speak before other government agencies, or clearly identify themselves as speaking as an individual. The issue arose several months ago when several council members chastised a former board of adjustment chair man for addressing the County Board of Supervisors. Michael Schley. who was later fired by the City Council, a llegedly criticized several supervisors in a speech before that .county body , and complaints of his action reached City Council ears. But opposition lo a policy attached to the proposed rule came from Councilwoman Sally Bellerue. who said the whole issue "gets <town lo good old freedom of speech." She said many Lagunans who ·ser ve on commissions and committees are also active in other groups, such as the Laguna Greenbelt, Inc .. the Sierra Club and other v~al organizations. · ·'They have a right to speak on behalf of these groups as long as they identify themselves as such," she said. But Councilman Howard Dawson disagreed, saying, "Ir you want to serve this city on a committee, you should not do personal ax-grinding in front of others if you disagree with the m ajori t y vi e w (o f a committee.)" · ''If it's so all important to make your view known. you perhaps shouldn't serve on a committee," he added. Bellerue hinted that Dawson's notion would make rubber stamps out of city committees. "I thought the purpose of committees was to gel a variety or views from the citizenry ... she challenged. Councilman Wayne Baglin increased the scope of the issue to the federal level. saying, "I c an't imagine anyone telling Sen. <William> Proxmire h e can't say what he wants. "We don't restrict federal office holders for speaking out, and I don't see why we should do it at this level. "What happens if you just want lo be a poor loser?" he quipped. 'Symbolic~ TaxCutOK'd San Juan Capistrano council m embers dropped the city's property tax rate from 82 to 75 cents per SlOO of assessed valua- tion W e dnes day night , acknowledging that the action probablywasnomorethanasym- bolic gesture. Under Proposition 13, Mayor Kenneth Freiss said, the -city I!" not allowed to levy a property tax, but will instead receive an .ipportionment from the coun- ty's collected proper ty tax revenues. S4N JUAN FRUIT. ~~D DOOMEDP tUcbard Oiddlnp was work- 101 ln blJ f•mily'a roadside f ruit stand when San Juan Caplltrano wu a f armln1 com· munitJ ol 1,000 people. Now Jt'1 IJ'Offlnl UJ>, and tt &nay be outrrowin& Glddtnp' market optraUon -that ts, 1f the c~ Council decide• he's riolaU., 1 aoaJnt ordinance. ... , ... AU. ............ FLOATING ABOVE THE CLOUDS, BALLOON DOUBLE EAGLE 11 PASSES HIGH OVER SOUTHERN ENGLAND ON WAY TO FRANCE Three American Balloonists Achieve Their Goal of Becoming the Flret to Croaa Atlantic Ocean by Balloon Supporters Qualify SC Recall Supporters of a recall campaign against San Clemente Mayor William Walker and Councilwoman Donna Wilkinson said Wednesday they have the minimum 2,741 signatures to qualify the recall for a citywide vote. A recall election requires signatures or 20 percent of the city's registered voters to be collected within 120 d ays. Supporters of the San Ckmente recall campaign ha"'O"!'" until Tuesday to submit their petition to City Clerk Max Berg. Berg will verify that the petitions contain at least 2,741 signature:s -20 percent ol San Clemente's 13,705 reg~stered voters. If they do, he will refer tt to Orange County Registrar of Voters Alvin Olson. Olson will determine whether at least 2,741 of the signatures can be matched with his record of r egistered Sao Clemente voters, said a spokesman for Berg. If the number falls short or 2,741, recall supporters will h ave 10 days to gather the number of signatures required to make up the difference. U all conditions for a recall election are met, the City C'buncil will be required to set a date fot a special election. This date will probably follow the November election. Berg's spokesman said. The recall campaign against Walker and Mrs Wilkinson bas been sponsored by the San C lem e nte Hom eo wners Association. Council members Howard Mushett and Myrtis Wagner have endorsed the attempted recall. The petition charges Walker and Mrs. Wilkinson with lack of responsiveness to the public and abuse of public funds. Both have denied the charges and have called the recall attempt "an abuse of the recall procedure." In April Walke r . Mrs . Wilkinson and their spouses filed a $4 million civil suit against the four me mbers or the horn eowners · associatk>n 's recall committee. Mushett and a sixth San Clemente man in connection with the recall effort. The lawsuit claims the six men conspired with others "to c r eate fals e fact s and circumstances for the purpose or impamng and interfering with the impartiality" of the recall process. In June. the five men named in the Walker·Wilkinson lawsuit. excluding Mushett. countersued, seeking $16 million in damages for alleged slander Both lawsuits are pending. Property Plan Near $5 Million DivOrCe Settl,emem ~hed? By TOM BARLEY Of"" o.ily l'IMt Ii.ti Lawyers in an Orange County Superior Court divorce trial af- fecting the disposition of $5 million in community property held by an estranged San Juan Capistrano couple appear today to be close lo settlement. The negotiations that appear to be near success came after a month of trial before Judge J .E.T. "Ned" Rutter who has discussed the expected settle- ment with lawyers for James Huish and his former wife, Marie. Part of the settlement calls ror Huish to pay his wife's legal fees of $100,000. Mrs. Huish has been represented by trial lawyer Melvin Belli of San Francisco who has been paid S250 an hour by her for his courtroom services. The couple were divorced in November after 17 years of mar· riage. A custody agreement for the couple's four*chiidren, ages S to 15, was worked out before the trial began. It was learned late Wednesday that the settlement Involved a proposed equal split of the estimated $5 million in · com- munity property. Judge Rutter has scheduled a hearing for Aug. 22 at which. tim e the settlement will be ratified or t.be trial ordered re· sum ed. Lawyers for both sides de- cided to try and reach a settle· ment in the belief that Judge Vegas Hotel Fetes Hughes LAS VEGAS IAPl -The Desert Inn Hotel and Casino paid tribute lo Howard Hughes with the dedication of a memorial plaque that will make the image of the late millionaire more conspicuous in the resort's lobby than be ever was when he lived on the ninth floor. The d edication Wednesday marked the first formal tribute to Hughes' Las Vegas legacy since his death in April, 1976. Rutter 'llliChl order the real prop- erty to be sold and the resulting proceeds divided between the couple. They said such a sale would have made community property immediately taxable and would have resulted In a subst antial loss for both sides. Testimony in the trial re· vealed that the Huishs and his brother and sist er ·in-law are partners in the 18 corporations that own recreation complexes throughout Orange County, Los Angeles County. in San Diego County and in northern California. If the settle ment is approved, Mrs. Huish will receive two such facilities in Pomona. 18 acres of commercial development in that city. a cabin in Springville, Utah. and a $25.000 down pay- ment on a home being built in Provo. Utah. Huish will retain the couple's San Juan Capistrano home and his one half interest in the re- maining recreational complexes and property. The other half will be retained by his brother and sister·in-law ~a to Annex -Miller's ~Gardens - • • Laguna Beach will annex the 2.5-acre Hortense Miller gardens as a city park. That means local visitors and _ busload.s of borllculture club members will be able to view the terraced hillside gardens maintained for more than 20 years by Hortense Miller, on the site atop Allview Terrace. But Councilman Wayne Baglln had his doubts about the annexa- tion ln light of Proposition 13, and didn't mind looklng a gift. horse in the .aiouth Tuesday DIJ~t. Nlrs. Miller provided transfer of the property to the city on Lbe condition that she be allowed LO Jive out her life on the estate. Tbe quitclaim deed al&o stipulates that the 1ardens must remain open to the publh: and rnalntalned in their current •talus. · But Baalin w.s tblnttlna of the addlUonal cost to the clty ln m alntalntna t he home and gardens after Mrs Mlller's death. And h..e feare.d le1al re· ~cusslons from othet rtsidenta of Allvlew T rract, aome of wbom have expr ea dlJmay at prospects of increased traffic on their private road. ~ But City Manager Fred Solomon assured Baglin that the cost to the city would be tolera- ble. He estimated rn aintenance cost at about $12.650 per year, and staff members reminded the council that a volunteer group will be at the gardens more than 520 hours a year pulling weeds and trimming trees. Councilwoman Sally Bellerue chided Baglln, remjndlng him of a slmllar offer for the city to ac· quire the 11-acre Smithcliff estate two decades ago. "We turned Mr. Smith down ' for the same reasoos. and we lost a wonderful opportunity for a beautiful park," she said. Baelin was emphatic to bis op- poslUon however, 1ayln1 the city will "wW be assumln& a piece ol property with all of the Uabllltlea and no Income to Lquna Beach." B&ll tbe m-.Jorlty of the council did not qree with Ba1Un 's con, t.entlon, and voted 8-1 to approve the annexation. M1yor Jeck McDowell wu not present .at Tuffday'9 meet.lnl, and llH'ln voted aaatnat ~ proposal. ' ·~ I Atlantic Crossing A First BULLETIN PARIS <APl -Three t\meriean baUoonlsts set down &oday In a Oeld near tbe town ol Evreux, west of Parts. to ead their blstortc journey as tile ftnt to cross t.be Atlantic by balloon. PARIS !AP) -Three New Mexican adventurers who made the first Atlantic crossing by ba I loon floated across the French countryside today toward a triumphant welcome in Paris, but they appeared ready to drift. on even farther to set still more records Paris air traffic control re- ported the silver balloon Double Eagle II at 13,000 feet over the town or Evreux. 80 miles from Paris Tt crossed the French coast at Le Havre. Viewed from a helicopter. the 11 -story balloon coasted gracefully through a cloudless sky over a checkerboard of farmlands, nudged along by a 17·mph wind. The men were clearly visible in the red-and-yellow gondola. bundled in coats against the bit· ing cold but apparently relaxed. In a brief radio conversatiol\ with journalists at Le Havre airport. one of the trio said, "If weather conditions stay favora- ble we will try to go as far as · possible to establish the max-- imum of records." Larry Newman. 3 1, Ben Abruzzo. 48. and Maxie An - derson, 44, all from Albuquer· que, have already set time and distance records for balloon night. The Double Eagle It complet- ed the Atlantic crossing at 10 p.m . Wednesday 12 p.m. PDT>. Shannon Airport reported. reaching the southwest coast of Ireland 121 hours and 18 minutes after the 112-foot-high. helium- filled bag took off Friday night from Presque Jsle, Maine. near the Canadian border Officials of the Paris Airport Authority were preparing for the balloon to land at Le Bourget Airport north of Paris. where Charles Lindbergh landed the Spirit of St. Louis on May 21. 1927 . after the first solo flight across the Atlantic Ocean. But they said no landing request had been received. It was the 18th attempt to cross the Atlantic by balloon, and the 16th from west to east. The last previous attempt, and the closest to being successful. was made two weeks ago by <See BALLOON, Page AZ) Julie, Jennie Fine SAN CLEMENTE <AP• - Julie Nixon Eisenhower and her new d ciught e r , the firi;t grandchild of former president Richard Nixon and his wife, Pat. are ~rted in &.00<1 condition at- an Clemente Hospital. Mrs. Eisenbower gave birth Tuesday to nine-pound. four. ounce Jennie Coast Weather Low cloudiness nt1bt and morning hour& wttb mostly sunny afternoon Friday. Lows tonipt S8 to 64. Higbs Friday 68 :al beaches to 78 to 84 Inland. • INSIDE TOD"'ti . Aa Orange CountJl btcome1 more metrop<>Uian, mfft or( taking 10 cartJlfng ~·· SCI Fealvring1 P• Cl. • • .. DAILY PH.OT Parks Wntraet Approved Bob Jobnlton, s.n CJemem l)arkl pl nntt. bu submitted hit lanat.loD. nyiq departm nl· .i cutbacb lt>avf him no room for odvcanc4"ment. Hv plans to worlt for 11 Carbb.id en1tnetttnc trhn Jobna10C'I was hin'Ci In tt15. Wbtn ttw poslhoo of parlts plan· ner was creutt'Ci In Jwie tbt City CouncU cut b~elt the pa.rt• and rttreaUon department. votln1 to bJre a landsclJ>e maintMantt firm for purk upkwp. One ol lbe positions eliminated 'W•S that ot department di~ 'fhat poll ls cwn:nlly held by Arlie Watermlin, who will rl"litt ln October t'lly Mana1er Geruld Ween s1ud Wednesd~ that Johnston'a r t>sicnatJoo will open the way for a re.evaluation of the pcirks pla nner position. ··We 'ti have to take a look al wht>ther we need a person with plunning skills in the parks dt.>· part ment. ··he said The department's personnel re- ductions leaye only a recreation coordinator. a secretary and a custodian, Weeks said. Johnston's resignation is ef-fective Aug. 30. Oemente OKs New Sewer Bond Election A S4.2 million sewer bond election was set for Nov. 7 on a 3·2 vote Wednesday of the San" Clem ente City Council. It is virtually the sam e bond measure defeated in March by 185 votes A s uccess ful bond election woule allow the city to accept Sll.9 million in state and federal g r an ts for sewe r syste m improvements. city Finance Director Rod Colom a told councilmen. With the city's bond funds and the grants, San Clemente would have SlS.4 million to bring the city into compliance with Regional Water Quality Control Board standards and to build a wale r reclamation plant . Coloma said. Voling against the sewer bond election were co.Weil members Howard Mushett and Myrtis Wagner. Mushett said the city would need only S387,100 to bring its sewage system into line with control board standards . Additional expenditures would o nly saddle San Clemente taxpayers with additional bond indebtedness for the next 20 years. he said. Mayor William Walker and l'Ouncil m e mbers Donna Wilkinson and Roy Ha mm voted in ravor of the November sewer bond election W a Iker said ince ntives for s upporting the bond issue inc ludt> a reduction of the current $9.25 monthl) sewer service charge lo $7 .70, projected income to the city as high as $400,000 a year in sale of reclaimed water "which we're now s pewing out into the ocean." and provision for sewer system improvements entitling San Clemente lo additional grants. Co uncilm e n voted unanimously not lo prepare a ballot argument supporting the sewer bond issue. Instead, they agreed to accept an offer from the Citizens Committee lo Expedite the Use of Reclaimed Water to prepar e the ballot argument Warehome Burned BALDWIN PARK ·cAP) -A fire which swept through a Birtdwirr Park w111 ebvuse caused an estimated $500,000 in damaie before it was brought under COD· trot. fire officials said. DAILY PILOT ............ JAMES EARL RAY ~t8T!NS TO ATTORNEY MARK LANE Grilled on Hou•• COmmttt•• Whn•H St•nd Ray's Testimony Attacked in Probe WASHINGTON <AP) -The House Assassinations Commit· tee tried today to shake one dis-crepancy aft.er another in James Earl Ray's bizarre account of his travels with mystery mar. Raoul, triggering a storm of pro- test from Ray's attorney which delayed the hearing time and again. Rep. Louis Stokes, D·Ohio. picked up on .a theme cut short Wednesday when Ray was ex- cused after complaining o f weariness he said he suffered from mistreatment by prison of- ficia ls At one point in hi!> attack on Ray's alibi, Stokes dramatically produced a docume nt -a chan~e of address card for Or. Arch Beach Now Requires Fire Walls Builde rs in Arch Beach Heights will now be req uired to install one·hour fire walls on their projects in the hilltop com· munily overlooking Laguna Beach. Council action Tuesday came in the form of an amendment to the specific plan for Arch Beach Heights. The coun c il vote was unanimous, with Mayor Jack McDowell absent. Arch Beach Heights has ~n the scene of 10 arsons in the past three and one half months, and residents and city ofricials /ear a domino effect should a fire gel out or control in the 17-street community. The area was subdivided in 1910 in a grid fashion which did not take into account the hilly terrain of the area. As a result, homes are crammed on 25 by 100 Coot Jots, and a person can often touch two acljacent dwellings with hands outstretched. The dangers to the area were emphasized last April when a home under construction on La Mirada Street was torched. its flames spreading to two other construction sites and a n exist- ing home. causing an estimated $750,000 damage. The one·hour fire walls between dwellings would give firemen an opportunity to quell a fire before it spreads to other homes, city officials said. Career Ended? Madin Luther Kin~ Jr. 's hometown -after Ray denied tbat be had flied such a card. By Ray's own admission long ago. such a document "would be damaging" to his story if. as Stokes demonstrated, it existed. Stokes assailed Ray's state· ment to the committee that his unfound and never fully Iden· tified accomplice bad never handled the .30-06 rifle which later proved to be the weapon used to kill Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on April 4, 1968. Ray claimed he bought the weapon for Raoul earlier in Birmingham, Ala .. for what he thought was a gun-running scheme. Ray said he and Raoul had worked together for months. from Canada to Mexico. in various smuggling deals. Stokes noted that Ray told the committee's staff in an earlier inter view that Raoul had in fact handled the .30-06 rifle. Ray conceded that he had. But he said be had been con· fused when the staff interviewed him because Raoul had in fact been with him in Birmingham when they purchased another ri· n e for smuggling. That rifle was exchanged a day later for the .30·06 after Raoul left Bir· m!ngham, Ray said. "Al first. at the st art in· le rview. I thought il was ex- changed the s ame day, and Raoul would have been there." Ray said. F,.._PageAJ BALLOON. • Britons Donald Cameron and Christopher Davey. who ditched 117 miles from the French coast. Seven persons died in previous attempts. On Wednesday morning, the three broke the record for time aloft of 107 hours, 37 minutes set ~y Ed Yost of Sioux Falls. S.D., m an unsuccessful trans·Allantic attempt in 1976. By this morn· ing, they bad traveled more than 3.000 miles. eclipsing Yost's dis· lance record of 2,740 miles. Shannon air controller Gerald O'Connor said the three men thought they were still half an hour from land when told they had reached Ireland. He said there were "quite a few shouts of jubilation" when they spotted the lights of Louisburgh through a break in the clouds. .Jury Fimls'Norton Guilty of Perjury Polltlcal activist Loran Norton was round guilty of multiple per. jury and perjury-related cbar1es by an Orange County Superior Cou1'.t jury late Wednesday afternoon. The six-man, six.woman-jury deliberated almost t hree full days before deciding Norton Ued to tbe county Grand Jury in ear- ly 1977 when the jury was in-. vt!1Uaatin1 poUtlcal corruption. Norton's conviction didn't stem from the Grand Jury in· dlctment that followed bis two appearances before the ~ury tn February 1977. Norton of eneouraging~ hJs one· lime political ally, Gary Newmeyer. to Ue to the jury. And to those charges, the jury ln Superior Court Judie Walter Cbaramza's court said, guUty on all counts. The verdict all but ended a political tr•ll that Norton, Sl, betHlJl as a leadlne county spoUsman ror The John Birch Society when be waa a Santa Ana police lieutenant in tbe ear· ly 1960's. The indictment waa quuhed ln 1 court beartna late last :vear, but the charges were relnsuted at a 1ubHquent municipal court -heartna. Those chartes accused Norton or lyln1 when ho teltUied ht bad not used ~1000 1tven blm by rormCf DOliucaJ flnancle.r Oene Conrad in bl 1'78 campaten ror tho atate Senato. Norton's pollUcal fortu"es car- ried blm lnto close contact and auociatlon wlth Dr. Louis Cella 's rormer polltlcal con· federation and. In 1975, lnto county Supervisor Laurence Scbmlt's office at on execuUve Olde. The charges also accused ._, lt w aft.er ltavln1 Schmit that Norton decided to strtJce out on 1 political cateel' of hts own as th Republican nominee for it.ate Senator ln central Oranc County. Incollle, Property T~x Cuts · Proposed SACRAMENTO <AP> -In an outbreak of electton·year tax· cuttin1 fever, the Aasembll(fi6& approved a 1700 million Income tax cut and a rroposed ballot measure e lmlnatlng homeowner property taxes. The income tax measure. fin anced from the state surplus, would cut taxes by S7S for single persons and $1!0 for couples. and Clve some additional breaks to the elderly. The property tax measure would abolish the rem ainins $1.8 billion of homeowner ~rty taxes. give renters a tax cut. and eU.mtnate tbe business inventory tax -financing all those changes by re·imposing S3 billion of the S4 billion in bu,,i. ness property taxes cut by Proposition 13. The measures breezed through the lower house Wednesday night, on votes of73-0 for the income lax bill. AB 3802 by Assembly man Lawrence Kapiloff, D-San Diego. and 61·16 for the property tax plan. But the latter. sponsored by Assembly Speaker Leo McCarthy. D·San Francisco. may face a roadblock in the Senate. 'REPEAL PROPERTY TAX' AHernbfy Speaker McCarthy To reac;h the November ballot. it must clear the upper house Friday, and the Senate must ap. prove SB 2243 by Sen. Alan Sleroty, extending the Aue. 15 deadline for theuf assa1e of ballot measures un Friday. SB 2243 was before the Senate today, with a vole expected. McCarthy said Wednesday be counted majority support in lbe Senate bul not yet the needed two·thirds vote. To its Assembly supporters. McCarthy's measure, ACA 2. was a fulfillment of the voters· mandate June 6 in approvln2 Proposition 13, a $7 bilUon property tax· cut spawned by the s o-called taxpayers' revolt a mong homeowners. To its OPDO· nents it was the opposite. "Homeowners and renters thought they were getting a fair dea l from Proposition 13," McCarthy said . "They're not getting one." Countered A sse mbly Republican leader Paul Priolo of Malibu, who supported Proposi- tion 13: "You're trying to prove the people or this slate were wrong. The people or this stale are not going to stand for the leading opponents of Proposition 13 tampering with 13." Ranch Annex Approved A long.sought annexation agreement for 88 acres or Bear Brand Ranch land was approved Wednesday night by the San Juan Capistrano city Council. About 40 single·family homes are planned for the hillside parcel west of the city near Calle Aspero. The council concurred with Co uncilm a n L a wren ce F . Buc hheim who said. "I think this is the best situation we can come up with." The most controversial aspect of the annexation agreement were provls lons for traffic access to the Bear Bra nd property using the city's streets of Calle Aspero, Calle Ricardo and Crumrine Road. Residents of these streets predicted sever e traffic problems and vehe mently opposed the city's agreement with the ranch owners. Spokesmen for the protesting residents insis ted that the council annex the Bear Brand acreage before setting any agreements with the Ranch owners. Mayor Kenneth Freiss told the homeowners the council had been advised by legal counsel that the ranch owners do not need the city's permission to use its streets for access to the Bear Brand property. He said the current "good f aith" agreement offered advantages to the city and the ranch owners which neither even expected to have when the lengthy negotiations first began. The annexation agreement will now go to the county's Local Agency Formation Commission for approval within the next three months. councilmen said. AND NOT .......... YOUR FAVORITE SHOWS. ~ "IT'S A SONY' . Just keep a Sony Betamax SL-8600 back home. Set the optional timer, select the channel you want to record and take off knowing Betamax will record up to three hours with our new L-750 video tape. Then. you can watch it when you get back. So before you visit your local travel agent, visit your local Sony dealer. WHY AA&D FOR VIDEO? • free Movie and/or Blank Cas98ttes rvioe • Contlnui~ Discounts on Blank Cassettes • Strong Exteftded Warranty on Labor (Ask Us) • Servi()8 Right Here-At The Store • Certificates For Use of Black & White and CoJor Cameras. • loW<OmPetttlve Pricing. Phone 642·8882 8~1J&M'!:f N30 - 1•,.o•t· ....... t4t11.d " .... ,it·•· ,.or ali .'\o ur honu• 4•lt•c•1roni(·~ -. > • ... ,.,,. . , I ~ .. AJ• DAIL V PILOT L/SC Thurlday, Aug"lt 11, 1118 ' . ... .. ;;. WE ARE HAVlt-'G A ••• ( ~tJM~lT~au· •••• }2th ~:: ... HELP US CELEBRATE AND .I. ave Save am-~ ; ca-~ PRICES DRASTICALLY REDUCED! GIFT ITEMS SB.EaED DRAMATIC SPORTSWEAR ••• GREETING SAVING) Seperates and Coordinates UPTO CARDS DRESSES ••• 50% OFF ON 1 ~ PRICE TOYS Casual and Dressy PARTY PANTS COATS SHOES FREE JEWB.RY WILSON Nature Made . ACCESSORIES DEMO ON TENNIS VITAMIN HANDBAGS MEW SALE HAIR BALLS REMOVAL Golllg0.1110.. $]99 Fox • t'J ' SYSTEM ~ Dept. s-HILay D MONARCH BAY DRUG ' -REE GIFT FOil AW urie #17W.•da.., .... Lac •Mlll•I Of9e7DAYS 496-223 I • 4H·ll I 2 #7 Moncrch Bay Plaza .,....,,... ' ... te 7 pa F••hions for M'Lady .... , ..... 6:11,... LCICJlllla Miguel s..11 ..... ,,... We welcome you back to Monarch Bay Plaza. Thank you for your patience while our roads were being re-paved. <ilrofun llouse RESTAURANT 496-5773. 499-2626 -~ Cfree (714) 496-3303 I 496-2231 • 499-3812 MONARCH BAY BOOK COMPANY (114) 496-8701 NIGUEL' THEATRE 496-1253 Ci ~mYSIAL inn PINE IMPORTED CRYSTAL (714) 493-1800 MONARCH BAY DRUGS (714) 496-1247. 499-3511 I .La9u.na. 'J 'UlCJtl ~l!.'tCJic.L, One. A IR 8EA RAii.. TOU~S (714) 496-1265 ?lf#,ell 1'a1e ·'71Uillw 499-2221 • 496-5728 ·---... ------ •\ ... T.Wpnone 1714) 41UM~OI SOUTH LAGUNA HAF\DWARE 499-1572 • 496-5708 Jrl;chers One Jlour Cleaners 49'rS124 . 1.AOU+4A NIOUU. 01'~" UNITED CALIFORNIA 8ANIC JULIA MllDIUH MAH/1011' ftUl"HOHle ~·· ll?a Hl·lt?O ONE FEATURE OF THE y Aarr is the inside steerint station. Thla insures the safety and com· .. fort of the sin1lebander or crew in conditions that would tax the helmsman in a conventional cockpit arrangement. Double swiveling prams, port and SINGLEHANDED YACHT DEBUTS starboard. provide unobstructed visibility over tbe Boat Also Make• Ideal Crulal-for Two sloping doghouse. The sail can be controlled from -------------··-• ___ ___; in.aide. even when reefing is neceessary. Bounty Yachts is in production on a one-at-a- Ume basis, building the 29 at its Huntington Beach plant of heavy. reinforced. hand laid-up fiberglass construction to the specifications of designer Primrose. • The deck is relnforced with layers of balsa for additional strength. The boat has an outboard rud- der for directional stability and control which adapts easily to a steering vane. Kids' Labor Tallied GENEVA, Switzerland <AP> -An estimated S2 million children under 1S years old are working in the world today and the real fipre probably ls much higher, according to the Int.emational Labor Organization. lts survey says Shat in some areas, notably the Middle East and Central America, children aged 1 are employed. An estimated 29 million children under 1S are employed in South Asia, the report said. THE SEMI-LONG KEEL IS ballasted with in· temal lead and provides stability needed for ex- tended passages. The cockpit is small and well- scuppered for rough seas and there are 10 dog------------r=========- down opening ports. A Volvo Penta 13-bp diesel engine is provided for harbor maneuvering. Below decks the NA-29 accommodates as many as four on port and •tarboard berths. There is a full galley with gimballed stove, stainless steel sink and ice box. There is a large chart table and drop-leaf dining table. The "head" is private with a stainless vanity sink, stowage and sewage treat-ment system. 1-----------1 Plant contact: Erin Wals h, Bounty En· l:JrmaA t•f;rtwl\ terprises. Inc. 15661 Producer Lane, Unit I, Hunt; ,-:-~v u!'it»tbu' ington Beach. Phone 894-4010. .....< Sentence Given To Hell's Angel .. .. ·SAN DIEGO CAP) -A man described by the pro1Secutlon a J>ASiden\ of the local Hell's IAnge\s ts going to federal prlson for 16 months in an al· leged plot to kill a rival motorcycle gang member. Thomas James "Crunch" Renzulli pleaded guilty to solicitation to commit a crime. He was sentenced by Superior Court Judge E~ward T. Butler. Aerospace Study Set The third annual California Aerospace Workshop, designed for students. educators and persons employed in aerospace, will be held Aug. 28 through Sept. 8 at Orange Coast College, Costa Mesa. It is free and credit is available. Civil Air Patrol and Air Force personnel will conduct the lecture sessions from 9 a.m. to noon or. weekdays. There Will also be field trips. Additional information can be obtained by call· ing 556-5812. t\esa Verde 19iquor THE OiAINS WANT WAR HERE'S A SALE! ftY 1MIS OM1. M41UT IASllT rrs LOWB 1HAM YOUI PllClt SAVI 33" COOIS R R ... Sl.77 11-.c .. $ 43 TtlSOMlllATS YOU. SAFEWAY! IAVl20% VODKA ~ .. s399 r - -~ "" I - A great place for kids. .. -. OM/OFF EASY Now take the. new center Drive or/ off ramp on the 405 freeway for direct easy access to HuntingtOft center and Old World Village. and Loan Association P.O. Box 1348 1700 Adams Avenue Costa Mesa. Ca. 92626 (714) 754-1801 Thur9dly.August 17. 1978 be ... After cocktails or wine, enjoy our famous country dinner. lt•s only $4.95 for all you can eat. (Even less for small children.) You get soup and salad. fried chicken plus a second delicious entree that changes daily, garden vegetables. mashed potatoes an<l gravy, lots of hot com bread and hooey butter. All served family style. VISA and Master Charge accepted. DAlLY PILOT A• Dinner: Mon.-Thurs. 5-9. Fri. 5-10. Sat. 4-10. Sun. 12-9. The Bil Yellow Houae in Co.ta Mesa a. open for lunch Monday throuih Friday, 11 :30-2:00 p.m. TheBig Yellow Bouse Resta11ra1lt ~ 1639 East Imperial Highway. Brea • 30iO Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa Bring this Gift Certificate in to Orange Coast Savings and receive your FREE SAFE DEPOSIT BOX. Remember. you must open a savings account at Orange Coast Savings. We'll be happy to transfer your account from another savtngs and loan or bank for yov. Just bring In 1he passbook <X certificate of the account you wish transferred. If you are already an Orange Coast Savings , account hOldef. you may also receive a FREE SAFE DEPOSIT BOX by making an additional deposit to your acoount. J.I DAILY PILOT USC Thut"ldlly Augue1 17 1171 LOCAL Will Zoning Beef Close Sftn Juan Bruit Stand? By &DECCA RE&.M .............. Fruit l\and ~operator IUc rd Glddlnp bu w tthed Sift Jwan Captatrano irow trom a rarmtna communlt.y ot 1.000 ne{Sb bon to a amaU city ol 11.000 and a lol ot 5t r• nl~rY durtn1 bis • · yu r hfetim• He-1aya he dooaln t mlnd lhe changes. Until r ecently whe n h t' became Ow pnnc1pal ft1ure ln J l..i nd-use quarrel. Giddings bdlev~ San Juun w 11& .1 p ld home ror U1' umbittous m•n -.i th .1 la$t &rowana busln.-ss .ind ~1 voun1 family to, upport I N JULV. \ NEIGHBOR J f ,·u:.cd hlm of '1olatlng a toning dc:.1g11utlon und J:.ked the Cat y Counc il to hm1t ur dose the f,1m1ly-0pt•r ated fruit stund on Ortega Hl&hwuy Tht• rouncal's rc:.pon:.e wall dt• ll·rmint' wht•thcr Oaddings de· l'l lil·~ to ::.lay an San Juan or mon• ha::. !>tund t>ISt'where hl· :-..1ys Tht•n l'Mht'r lh1:. ye;u-, rucing J Hl't'd fur more e<tuipment and prod uct• storage. Giddings 'took out a building permit and begun construction on a metal 2.800 root .. a gri cultura l st or ag('' !'>lructur • Hf. S.\ YS HE thought the rl'<i building would look pretty good Neighbor ~111ton Long di::. agrees dl trlct" r.onln1 dcralanatlon ot ..... ,, d\4&tttd 01"8&& N ·1GJ1aoa. aov· I,. 8ymt&. a former eounellmaan. Join LOaa ln h11 compl Jnt. ByTnes ct.Ued Uk-tund u "pry b a r Io r e r t t• p a n I c o m · mt-rch.ilbm" und criUclud OM!· dln11 for uttc mpun1 to nout ton· ln(I rf'•Ul1;Jllon11 and turn the• aru Into u commercial pro perty RenectJna on the controversy. he 1ay1, "Anymore. you can't 1turt ll am.itll busin~• and grow and pl"Oliper Uke a child wouJd crow up. Now. 10u either sta rt •mull und stll)' that way. or go full bore.·· 0 Iddings . rather Hurrison beaan the s mall produce opera lion 20 years ago with some fruit crates and umbrenas on several acres the family owned a male or so west of the present stand on Ortega. RICHAJU>, THE YOUNGEST · son. assumed operation of the business when the larger proper ty was sold and the Giddings moved to their present approx· 1m a tcly one-acre lot in 1972 Harrison still owns the property. on which Richard and his ramtly also live. and an older son. Jim. pitches In to help with the busi- ness now and then As more people moved into San Juan and tra m c on the winding highway increased. the younger Giddings saw ne w potential for the fruit stand and began to expand Th ~ San Jua n L a nd U s~ Management Code or 197S and prior zoning regulations were unfamiliar documents. he says. GIDDINGS DOESN'T hesitate to admit be wants to expand bis business. Eventually. he wants to develop the fruit stand Into a country ma rket . s ome what similar to the Irvine Ranch Markct and "rustic in design " He claims the city h as a .. n eighborhood commercia l" zoning designation floating 1 un· assigned at present I for the area they do not know who is ri~t. G1ddinas or Lone. Tbe pla~g department has asked for a ew weeks to review the sltua on before making a recommeOda· lion to the City Council. ' GIDDINGS APP EARS a ·bat bemused by the rand-use tutsle but has determined to fight it out~He says he will abide by:the council's decision. , At the city's order he stopPed construction on bis agriculhfral building and has applied ror a zone change designation. He believes he has a lot or support in San Juan and bas colleoted almost 600 signatures. with ad· dresses and phone numbers of ~ustomers as back-up. Be caus e of the floating neighborhood commercial 11e· s lgnatlon for t he are a , he believes a market will someday go up on Ortega . ' s urrounding his pro pe rty on Ortega. "I think t hey lneighbors' would be happier to see a rustic m a rket serving an old-fashioned need." he says. "than to see a Tic· tocker or something plastic tike t hat go in." o.lly ...... Si.ti P ..... At this point. city officials say FOi THE NOffSSfOMAL TOUCH: DECO INTERIORS INTlllOlt PLAHNING Ate COMSULmec. C1 91 la llledilfi 9f ......,_, ....... c.,.., ..--. ,......,y,.....,...,...,.._ecc......_ ll1S1t Our Design Studio 2"92 ...... , itw Pllwy ......... 'Mio IS-Diep hry. fo A""Y fhJ. Jat S... ef T.,... ~I. In the pa~t fc" year~. lht• owner of more than seven acres directly behind the fruit stand has watched the growing busi ncss with increasing irritation When the metal frame build· in g began to go up. Long de cided to make his complaints o~ ficial RICHARD GIDDINGS ANO FRIEND OUTSIDE SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO FRUIT STAND Is There Still a Place for an Ambitious Young Businessman on Coast? 4t5.0Z02 MaMey Mn W.., IJM400 Last month, hr told coun cilmen the fruit stand w<1s an .. t·ycsore" that was creating : traffic hazard. Tht• Giddingse:. .ire violalin~ lht' "small fo rm Shut-ins Get Daily Calls: "Not Alone' Auxiliary members of Soutt> Coast Community Hospital an• offl•r1 ng a serv1cl' to t>lderly 1.agunJ Beach residt•nts <•nd in· \alids .. You Are :\ot Alone .. 1::. tht• namt• of the tt•lcohone s t·rvic1• throu~h which <.1uxilia ry vo lun· ll'ers c·ontact shut-ins by phone d11til) The purpost• or lhl' prognm IS to prov1d<• daily contact for peo- ~t· who hve alom•. If there is no 'V's wc1 at the horn(•, a second call is made to alert a relative or fr1l'nd For more information on thl' progrum. call the hospital ~1l ~ \311 ' Ckmente Eyes Tennis Fees To Cut Waits M ete~ may be ins talled out· side San Clemente tennis court!> in coming months in order to as· sure that players who gf't to courts first don 't monopolize them Cit ) parki. cC1mmiss ioners havt• asked Steve Judd, recrea- tion coordmator. to prepare a rec· om mcndation on tennis court mete rs fo r tbl.' commiss ion's meeting on Tuesday . Judd said complaints h avt' been made to the city staff by pl ayers who suy they are kept waiting too long lo play on municipal courts. Charging for court use will reg· ulute length of play, said Judd. and hel'p offset court lighting and maintenance costs. The staff recommendation has not been completed. but Judd s a id he expects to propose a no minal c harge, perhaps 50 cents for 45 minutes of play Saddlebaek Offerings PE Classes Slated 'Ph ysical education classes ranging from jogging to preven· t1on of athletic injuries a re s~heduled at Saddleback C.Om- munit y College beginning the week of Aug. 28 , a collee s pokesman has announced. Three Jog-A-Long to Fitness cours es ar e s lated to stress cardiovascul ar and respiratory performance for the individual ~tudcnl T H E C 0 V RS E S .\ R E scheduled for Mondays and Wed· nesd ays fro m 5 t o 6 p .m ; Tuesdays and Thursdays from 5 to 6 p.m. and Mondays and Wed· nesdays from 7:30to 8:30 a.m. R ac que tba 11 c l asses are scheduled daily, with beginning sessions offer ed Mondays and i"rid ays from I to 3 ~ in· termediute courses from 1 to 3 p m . on Tuesday~ 11nd Wed· nesdays and advanced classes d uring the same period on Thursdays. A s trength analysis course. de. signed to evaluate running styles 1, and strength improvement pro. grams, ls scheduled for Mondays and Wednesdays from 1 to3 p.m. The three-unit course requires two hours of lecture and three hours of activity weekly. PREVENnON AND care of athletic in.juries will be taught from 6 to 9 p.m. on Wednesdays b) college athletic trainer Bob Ragla nd. The class emphasizes pra ctical application as well as theory and is designed to assist trainers, coaches . playground personnel and athletes. For further information about physical education courses, dis- trict residents ure asked to con· tact the physical education de· partmcnt at 831·9700 or 495.4950, exten sion 341 Class Offered In Lifesaving A lifes ave r course in cardiopulmonary res uscitation will be held Aug. 23 at South Coast Community Hospital.• · #· Tl\e class will be 'held in the hospital auditorlum from 6 to 10 · p.m. It is sponsored by a CPR board of directors and advisory members of the hospital. Volunteer teachers include member of the Junior Women's Club; help in the form of CPR tra~ng equipment-ha& come from the Laguna Beach ex- change Club. For more lnlorma· tion on the course, tall the hospital aU99-1311. City of Irvine Ule-tuafdi 1Wtmrnln1 in the aecond annual Ora.nae County pool Ufepatd ~petJUOn took first plaet, defeat· n1 Lbe next closest city team bY 32 points. TbO Irvine team scored lOC, with second ~lace Buena Park 71 io the compeUUon. Swimming eftnts wet~ held In SO·meter butterfly breaat, back and free stroke races. Tber also was a wcl1bt·to· contest and ' coed.med.le~. ~ rtnl place wln ners for JrYkle tnch1dtd Tracy SmJth, Co'nlllt GauJttr, Donna G~bowskl, Sarah Simon, Doo Haaon and K.lrlil Hamilton. OtMr compctina clUes included Co ta Mesa Uut "ar'• wtn· Dtr >. Lasuna Beach and Newi>Of'.t 'Beach .. e ~•o Large Capacity Programmed Washer \ Use M1n1·Baske1 tuo lor small loads of reg- ular fa brics. or delicate tabncs. up to 2~ pounds • Uses 30% less hot waler than the low waler level • sett mg ot the washer s big tub Variable Water Levels l . ·-- -Fou"r Wash/Rinse =-Temperature Combinations Bleach & Fabric Softener Dispensers '--"~~ Other Mini-Basket Tub Washers Available: WWA8500V -$50 Allowance ~ ...........• 41t.t1 WWA8350V -$20 AJlowllnce ..., ·· · ·· ·· ·· ····• WWA7trrOV -$20 Alloweoce &Mt •.a....-. .... 11.11 WWMl«N -$20 AUowtnoe 1~~-· HY.ft Model WWA8450V Here's atl you do ... Purchase one of the selected models between July 1 and Augyit 31 , 1978, complete the teplaceme?lt form (obtained from your dealer} and 111!\il to General Electric for .. your replacement allowance. .. . . . .. .. . .. •. . . . . . . NATION Refuge Power Boat Ban Eyed WASHINOTON <AP) -Hopins to 4.000 eanVNback and rodhead d~ks ban ht1b·1DOC)d boata pormantnUy on u are produeed aMu•UY on UM refuce. Nevada wUcUif ref\lit, Defenders or But In im, Howant 11ld. ~nly 1,000 Wild I ii , u c:onHt'Vatloft orcanlnt.Jan. Ndllloacl ad eanvubtclt duCu were ha• orpod ln U.8. Ot1tftct O>urt here ralted on tM relqe. •nd onlY 3.000 tn that pltasure boatert aQd waLor 1k1cn 1916. Power boats were operatln1 on U.. dil'lUrb MSLina Waterfowl. fWlt ta bolh ft~. Attorwy Jeffrey ff, Uoward, coWl.ltl DefeMef'I airMdY bu won a tem· for O fendt'l~ IOUlhl W odntsduy to porary rettftininl order ptoh.lblling the prove that · peed bOat.en wr~1.1dy IOVtrnmat from PIJ'llllttina boat.I to bad cut the ne1Un1 l>(Mntlal for duck!. operate on the ref\Ale with mot.on ot on Ruhv Luke" National WlldlU~ mon tbtn lOhonepo"'· Rl'fual'. TBS OOVUNM&NT BAI profOled 1'!"¥-17 ..... -• uowAaD CITED aovernment a plan wblch would ban ~Uni · "· · -... -,._" document.I ~ ........ tbat an •v•race of on th• northern hall o1 ~ nf\ale, The HaaonaJ and speed re1trkUons lmpoeed on portions on the vartous zones. U.S. l'bh and Wlldll~ Servi~ dboeo- tor L)'ftO Greenwalt teaun.ct U. pro. po11la permlttlq hllh-as>Md pleaaure boaUn1 and water aiding after Aq. 1 "aboWd haw little Impact °" waterfowl prochacUon" bec!auH most ducllll have finished nestln1 by that date. R1JBY LA1'E NATIONAL WUdllle Ret\lte la a h11h·a!Utude manb on the Nevada delert. I\ bolt.a MIUq can· vaabacb and ~ada. \wo 1pedea whoa• PQSIU)aUona are dfflbllftt owr • broad PQrUon ot tbtlr ran1e. DAILY PU.Q'T AJJ MERCURY SAVINGS frecutlv. 0ttlce1: 7612 Edinger Ave .. Huntlfi~ton e.ach, CA 9*7 Sout~n Coblom/11 Reg'°""' Oll•CI'~ -. 916& 'laltly 'hew SI • Buena Pat-. CA ~o ~1t5 I . Av.Ion Blvd , Clll•on. CA 90U6 Gl 22921 \.ak9 f0f991 Or. (L.at.e Fort1t1. ft To10, CA 92630 1001 Ii, ll'llQeflel Hvry ~La H•bfa. CA 9083 t • •.o long IMch BIYO • long Beacn CA 90907 ~!IQ tOM IMM ll>.ld • T uStlf\. ~ 82680 St HSN. Cllrut Ave . West Covina. CA 91793 llttOt& -1 11'11"1 •• "' .: ... '" • ,---: -.... eouthembaltlalOOed,wttbbclMPOwer. ~~~~~--~-===.=.:==::.:====-=~-------------~~================~ ----- . . -STORE'UIDESAI E ISALEENDSSATU!UlAY,AUGUSTISTH ... l ..: I ' I" I • HURRY. SOME QUANTmES ARE UM.ITEDI Looking for ·great values this weekend? Start here! Save28"~ Fashion-right looks with Calcutta panta for women. Elas tic walatband for a comfortable fi~ Sizes 10-20. Volle top with sweetheart tie-neck. Print deaign poly· ester/cotton. S,M,L ..... 9.88 \\'0:0.ll::N S ~POR'TSWY.AR 7ss REG.tll SPECIAL Ll'ITLE GIRLS' SUMMER TOPS }44 EACH Knit topa in aaaorted stripes, aolida. Easy- care poly/cotton. 3-6x. Fuhlon denbm. Poly/ cotton in 3·6x ....... l.88 CHILDREN'S fASHIONS o-44% OFF · PURE LUXURY® -N.YLON..P.MiTlES. .. 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In · colors. S, M, I... RF.G. tie ouwr fASHIONS 1/20FF* NEEDLECAAFI' Kn:' ASSORTMENT Choose from a selection or creative kits in a big var- iety ofdecor•\ive desipa. ~-..... JA!HlON JABJUCS \ • Orange C?oast Today' Clo lag N. ". Stoeks VOL. 71, NO. 129, •SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1978 NIC TEN CENTS Double Eagle II Makes History U.S. Balloonists Land' in France Dollar Spurs Market NEW YORK <API The stock market went on a buying spree today. encouraged by good news about the do Hur. and barely crashed throueh a psychological barrier at 900. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials rose 12.21 in the first two hours but fell back to a 5.54 point gain to 900 12 at the close. Advances held a 2-1 lead over declines on the New York Stock Exchange in heavy trading. Gold, me;mwhile. fell about $6 an ounce. The good news came from Was hington. where President Carter asked aides Wednesday to look for a way to halt the d olla r's fall, and overseas, where the dollar responded lo Carter's s t atement with a hea lthy gain. <Related story. 86> The dollar has been declining steadily on foreign exchange m arkets in recent months b ecause of fears about America's large trade delicil and general e<:onomic condition. The currency dropped to record lows this week against the Swiss franc. West Germun murk and Japanese yen. The Dow has passed the 900- level several times in r ecent . weeks but has been unable to • m ain.L.ain the moment.um to close over 900. The Dow's last 900-plus close was July 26, 1977. Analysts gaid.,pn,appa.:.a\ rise ln interest rates lnsdtuted by the Federal Reserve Wednesday was the first step in dollar 's slide. and the market. usually wary of interest rate rises. r esponded with a rally late Wedn~sday and today West Germany, fearful a weak dollar will price its exports out of world market.s. praised the Carter administration's interest <See M.\RKET. Page A2) Bad Wiring Blamed for Fire in Mesa A fire authorities said ap- parently was sparked by faulty electrical wirmg caused about $7 .000 damage lo the garage or a Mesa Verde home early today. Costa Mesa firemen said. . There were no injuries and the borne occupied by Gladys Thompson. 3185 Gibraltar Ave., was not affected by the blaze. · Costa Mesa b1Atl.!.11ion chief J ack Perkins suid the 3 a.m. blaze was doused in about eight minutes by the 14 firemen who responded. Damage lo the structure was set at SS.000, to the car and con-· tents inside, S2.000. said chief Perkins. ,.,...,.... FLOATING ABOVE THE CLOUDS, BALLOON DOUBLE EAGLE II PASSES HIGH OVER SOUTHERN ENGLAND ON WAY TO FRANCE Three American Balloonlats Achieve Their Goal of Becoming the First to CroH Atlantic Ocean by Balloon Tu:o Escape Injury in Boat Fire Ha rbor Patrolmen said John Pacciorini of Corona del Mar and Robert Belser of Huntington Beach must have been enjoying a lucky day Wednesday. The two men escaped injury when their runabout caught fire j ust after 1 p.m. in Newport Harbor. Patrolmen say they were UO· usually lucky be.cause the fUD 20-gal{on fuel tank didn't ignite in t!le fti'e and beQuse tfba the blaze broke out the boat was cruising past. the Harbor Patrol headquarters. The 16-foot. boat, Yard Bird, belongs to the Boat Specialist Inc .• a bbat repair business local ed at 2439 W . Coast Highway. PatroJmen said gas that col- lected in the bilge during fueling was ignited by a spark from the engine, sending both men over the side, into the water. Officers e"tioguished the blaze before the fuel tank ignited and estimated Sl.500 damage to the vessel. Horwrs Set For Steuxirt Cal Stewart. the retiring Newport Beach director of Parks, Beaches and Recreation will be honored al a dinner Aug. 30 at the Irvine Coast Country Club. Stewart, who has been the city's PB and R director for 17 years, is currently on vacation. lfis retirement becomes effec- tive Sept. 1. Dea dline for reservations for the dinner is Aug. 25 through Ron Whitley, acting PB and R director. The cost will be $12.50 per person. 'Others Keep Jobs' Board OKs Accused Embezzler $800,000 Protests Dismissal Merit Hike A Newport Beach woman who sta~ds accused of embezzling an estimated $9,000 while working for Orange County's welfare of· fice Is protesting her recent dis· missal as unlawful. Mrs. Rhonda Kay Patton. 30, has begun administrative pro· cedures desigMd to compeJ- Chief Deputy Welfare Director Richard Ruiz to ~instate her to the job she lost this week. And she bas pointed out in her defense that senior county of· ficlals accused of much more serious criminal charges were not removed from their posts prior to conviction. Named in a declaration pre· pa r ed by defense attorney Willia m Dougherty are former county supervisor Robert Bal· tin. former county assessor and congressman Andrew Hinshaw and former chief deputy as· sessor Jack Vallerga. All were convicted of criminal charges. Dou.cherty also notes that co unty Supervisors Ralph Diedrich and Philip Anthony stand accused of c rimina l chal'ges contained in grand jury indictments. Neither supervisor has been fired, she points out. · · u seems lo me that I am be- ing treated less fairly than some of the more important persons being employed by the County of Orange,·• Mrs. Patton said. ··ouring the time that some of these people were involved in criminal trials the county perm ilted them lo keep their Jobs and draw salaries.·· And she asked: "Maybe r am missing something but can you please explain to me why these persons keep their jobs until they get a full court hearing while J am fired immediately and must seek a job even though 1 haven't been tried yet? .. Ruiz said Mrs. Patton's dis· missal is not technically related to the criminal charges filed against her. Ruiz explained that she was fired for falsifying department records. He said the violation bas been proved to his satisfac· tion and that Mrs. Patton's dis· missal was inevitable a nd ~fwfu.L 'l'be crimJoal charges against Mrs. Patton allege \hat. she con- verted welfare checks addressed to Indigent applicant& to her own use and that she used a post of· fice box in Cypress lo divert the checks lo her. Vegas Hotel Fetes Hughes LAS VEGAS IAP) -The Desert Inn Hotel and Casino paid tribute to Howard Hughes with the dedication or a memorial plaque that will make the image of tbe late millionaire more conspicuous in the resort's lobby than he ever was wher) he lived on the ninth noor The dedication Wednesday marked the first formal tribute to Hughes' Las Vegas legacy since his death in April. 1976 Hughes moved mto the pent. house of the Desert Inn m late 1966 and bought the hotel in March 1967 as his first Las Vegas resort property Risks Cited WASHINGTON CAP> -Presi- dent Carter said this afternoon at a news conference that failure in the upcoming Camp David summit among Israel, Egypt and the United States "could re- sult in a new confiict in the Mid· die East." Coast Community College Dis· trict trustees agreed Wednesday to spend an estimated $800.000 next year on merit raises for employees. Although the state Legislature has said it won't give apportion· ment funds to government groups that grant r a ises. tr•stees said they believe this restriction applies only to reg- ular step raises and cost-Of-living incre .. ses. Merit raises are given to both t.eaching and non-teaching staff on the t>a:;ts of a variety or fac· tors. incluatng additional educa- tional or protessional training. The money for the raises will come from district reserves. re· ducing them from S4 million to $3.2 million. a spokesman said However . trustees voted to continue a suspension of sab- batical leaves for 1978-79 They have estim ated the cost of replacement salaries at $300.000. But they said they'll re~iew this policy on Sept. 7, when the final budget will be approved, and that the ultimate sabbatical decision will depend on the exact amount of stale funds received. In other action. trustees gave fina l approval lo a five-year lease agreement with the Newport-Mesa Unified School District The college district is leasing Bay View School in San· ta Ana Height.s for some $80.000 per year as classroom space for Coastline Community College Trustees also approved a mo lion to sublease Bay View to other organizations at times when it isn 't needed by Coastline. Burglar Gets . 2Handhags Assembly Approves Tax Slashes Newport Beach police ue hunting the cat burglar who took two purses-containing more. than $4, 700 in valualfles from a hotel room occupied by a sleeping family or five. Visitor Neil Bergman of Skokie. Ill .. told police the purses contained jewelry and cash. SACRAMENTO CAP> -In an outbreak of election.year tax· cutting fever, the Assembly bas approved a $100 million income lax cut and a rroposed ballot measure e lminating homeowner property taxes. latter. sOQnsored by Assembly Speaker Leo McCarthy. D.San Francisco, may race a roadblock tn the Senate. To reach the November ballot. it must clear the upper house Friday. and the Sena le must ap- prove SB 2243 by Sen. Alan Steroty, extending Ure Aug. u deadline for the passage or 'ballot measures until Friday. SB 2243 was before the Senate today J. with a vote expected. Mc\,;arthy said Wednesday be counted majority support in the Senate but not yet the needed two·thlrds vote. To lts Assembly supporters. McCar~by_'s measure, ACA 21 wa1 a fulllUment of the voters mandate Jun. t in approvimr Propoaltlon 13, a n billion property tu cut apawned by the so-called taxl)a)'era' revolt amoba homeOwnws. ~o lta oppo. neJ)tl ll'YtM ~It•. • · HomWW1Mn altd renters Ulount•1·wwe -~ • fair ~••f hO• '.l!f:otoltUon 13," <lftTd c.vr; Pan AJ) ' He said the handbags were on a dresser in the hotel room on the ground floor of the Newport Center Marriott Hotel when his family retired Monday night and they were gone Tuesday morn-lna. PolTee said the tltlef may have gotten into the room via a slid· Ing glass door that was left open. aJLLEGE GE7S llE4.Lm CUNIC Oetting slck Just won't be the same this year on the Orange Coast Colleae campus in Coata Mesa. That's bec:auae the college'3 health service, formerly houaed ln traJlen. bas 4 4hlny t'lew 12,000 -aquare foot bome. To flnd out abou.t k, tum to Paae AlO. Atlantic Crossing A First PARIS <API -Three American adventurers. the first balloonists to conquer the Allan· tic. set their giant silver craft down today in a wheatfield near the French town of M lserey. 55 west of Paris. completing a bis· toric journey that had defeated other men for more than a cen- 1 urv T·he trio Larry Newman. 31. Ben Abruzzo. 48. and Maxie An· derson. 44. all of Albuquerque. N M put their balloon Double Eagle II down at 7:50 p.m. local lime. HO SO a m. PDT\. on a beautiful, cloudless evening. just before dusk Spectators waiting at a nearby highway rushed lo the balloon to congratulate the three. The balloonists unfurled an American flag from their gon- dola when they crossed the French coast and lowered a French tricolor as they complet· ed the flight. which ended by un- official estimate · t37 hours. 18 minutes after they went aloft from Maine on Friday The three airmen scurrted to secure their craft against strong- ground gusts whipping the field. four miles from Miserev The balloonists apparently had lo land in daylight for safety r~asons. Eyewitnesses said lbe balloon had visibly deflated. ap- pea ring more Uke a tapered. creased sliver exclamation point than a sphere The Double E agle II had crossed the French coast at l.k Havre . Viewed from a helicopt~r . the ll·story-high balloon bad coasted gracefuJly through a cloudless sky over a checkerboard of farmlands. nudged along by a 17-mph wind. The men were clearly visible in the red-and-yellow gondola. bundled m coats against the bit· mg cold but apparently relaxed. In a brief rctdio conversation with journalists at Lt> Havre airport. one or the trio said. "If weather conditions stay favora· ble we will try to go as far as possible to establish the max· \mum of rec-orrl" " The Double Eagle 11 complet· ed the Atlantic crossing at 16 p.m. Wednesday 12 pm PDT>. Shannon Airport reported . reaching the southwest coast of Ireland 121 hours and 18 minutes <See BALLOON, Page AZ> }UUE, JENNIE 'DOING WELL' "You know. J saw all those babies . and Jennie 1s Just so much more livt'ly than the others." gushed former presi- dent Richard Nixon after view. ing his grandduughter at San Clemente General Hospital. J l'nn1e Eisenhower. who wt-1g hed nine pounds. four ounces al birth Tuesday. and her mother . Julit> Nixon Eisenhower. were reportedly do- lf!g well today. They are expect- ed to go home Saturday. Coast Weather Low cloudiness night and mornJng hours with mostly suon.y afternoon Friday. Lows tonight S8 to• 84. Htabs: Friday ~ al beaches to 78 lo 84 inland ' ,. 1lJ DAil Y PILOT NI Zero In On Ray WASHINGTON <API James Earl Ray detlared today \b•t ii he had Men in Dr. Mart.lo Luther Kins 'a city of AUanta ahortly betOC"e lbe ctvll r\lhta leader wu &laln. ''I'll \wit lake retponsibUlt.y for I.ht Kln1 enc be re on t.elev\ak>rl · · Ray \hen wu pruenled W1t.b eyewltlleaa and ~umaQ•ary evldeac. Uuat be waa lndeed in •he Gecqia captlal juat 0..... or four days before both men WOW\d up an MempbJs, where Kint w shot Apnl '· 19U In re.ponse to the preaenta. \ion, R•y au11eated that t.be evidence "mifbt be • mistake . or ~ kt.nd of a foried document." Ray'• VMS)OD ls that he was followla1 a mystery man, "Raoul," in a s mu111tng scheme. But the committee pursued t.be suspicion that be bad stalked Kina . Rep. Louis Stokes, D·Ohio, elicited Ray's acknowled1ment that be had passed througb Selma, Ala .• -where Kins had be~n after leavlnf Los Angeles in mid-March o 1968, and went to Atlanta, as well, later in the month. But Ray insisted that alter meeting Raoul in AUanta, they headed for Birmingham on March 28 to buy guns for Bmug- gUng. Stokes: "Did you return to Atlanta after leaving Birm- ingham?" Ray: "I did not." Stokes: "Do you want to cbanee anything at all about that statement?" Ray : "No . . . Regardless or . how many documents you have up there I know I dido 't return to Atlanta, and lf I did. welJ, 111 just take responsibility for the King case here on television." Stokes then introduced a laun-dr~ slip showing Ray's alias, Eric S. Galt, dated April 1 in Atlanta. And be quoted a state- ment by an Atlanta rooming house operator, Jimmy D. Garner, who said he saw Ray on the premises March 31. The exchange brought a heated protest from Ray's attorney, Mark Lane, who disrupted the PTI>Ceedinga throughout the day with charges of trickery by tbe committee. Once, Lane was threatened with ejection. Man Accused Of Taking Punch at Cop A Costa Mesa man who al· legedly look a punch at a police officer early today a nd then had to be subdued with the help or two citizens has been booked on a charge of assault against a police officer. investigators said today In c us tody is 22-year-old Michael Paul Arnold, of 2277 Harbor Blvd. He is being held in lieu or $2.500 ball, plus an addi· tional S51S for an outstanding traffic warrant, police said. Cost a Mesa police officer Douglas Pritchard a rrived at the apartment complex about 3 a.m today following a report of a family disturbance . Police said Arnold became violent and refused to accom- pa ny officer Pritchard to police headqua rter s a fte r he was served notice of the outstanding warrant. Arnold allegedly s wung at Pritchard. and during a brief scuffle. two unidentified men ca me to th e a id of the patrolman. Officer Pritchard was uninjured. The two citizens remain un- identified. "They merely walked back into their apartments and went about their businesB," not- ed police Sgt. Sam Cordeiro. 0..ANOE COAST a DAILY PILOT ' Mesan Injured Medics prepare to take Robert Knaak, 41, to Mesa Memorial Hospital after he lo.st control of his car on Newport Boulevard near Santa Isabel Avenue about 9:30 this mofning and smashed into a parked vehicle. He suf- fered facial cuts and possible head injuries and was being held for observation at the hospital. Knaak moved to Costa Mesa from San Gabriel just last week. Police to Attend Rites for Trainee SERVl~S FRIDAY Trainee Roberts Fro.a Page AJ BALLOON. • after the 112-foot-hlgh, helium. filled bag took off Friday night from Presque Isle. Maine, near the Canadian border. Officials of the Paris Airport Authority were preparing for the balloon to land al Le Bourget Airport north of P aris, where Charles Lindbergh landed the Spirit of St. Loujs on May 21. 1927. after the first solo flight across the Atlantic Ocean. But they said no landing request hud been received. It was the 18th attempt to cross the Atlantic by balloon. and the 16th from west to east. The last previous ;.itlempt, and the closest to being successful. was made two weeks ago by Britons Donald Cameron and Christopher Davey, who ditched 117 miles from the French coast. Seven persons died in previous attempts. On Wednesday morning. the three broke the record for time aloft of 107 hours, 37 minutes set by Ed Yost of Sioux Falls. S.D .. in an unsuccessful trans·AUantic attempt in 1976. By this morn- ing, they had traveled more than 3,000 miles, ecUpsine Yost's dis- tance record of 2, 740 miles. Shannon air controller Gerald O'Connor said the three men tbousbt they were still ball an bnur from land when told they lta4 re~beO lrehmd. H~ said there were "quite a few shouts of jubilation" when they spotted the Ughts or Louisburgb through a break in the clouds. F,....PageAJ MARKET ... in shoring its currency. Dealers cautioned, however, that &he long.term future of tbe dollu is still Car trom bri&ht. A Frankfurt t.r1det saJd the money mftket n lit a ''botditl1 pattern•· pendthf tntttcaUons of what act.Ion Caner mlaht take. The dollar edied up DY alll\0$l one percent ln 24 hours tri Tokyo to close at UIS 47S Jopantse y4'n. j A contingent or uniformed Newport Beach policemen is ex-p ect e d Friday at fune r a l serv ices for office r trainee Gordon Roberts, 27. who died Tuesday of motorcycle accident injuries. He was due to join th~ir ranks next month after graduation from the Los Angeles Police Department Academy. where he enrolled after discharge from the U.S. Navy. A m e m orial service is scheduled at 10 a.m. at Pacific View Memorial Park Chapel in Corona del Mar. followed by private burial rites. A resident of Fountain Valley, Mr. Roberts was fatally injured early Monday when his personal m o torcycle collided with a parked car on Oaisy Avenue not far from his home . Minutes a fter he was pro- nounced de ad at Fo unta in Valley Community Hos pital, Roberts' vital organs were re· moved for donation to recip· ients. His heart was flown to Stan- ford University Medical Center via Lear Jet in care of a s urgical team for trans plant Into a critically ill male patient. Spokesmen for the Regional Organ Procure m ent Agency based at UCLA said Wednesday Roberts had asked his wife. Vic- toria. to see to it in the event of his death. He is surv ived by Mrs . Roberts, who is carrying their second child; a daughte r . Kristina. 5; his parents, Gordon Roberts and Nina Morrelli, and two s isters. Bobbi Rahminian and Karen Wellendorf. The family s uggests friends may contribute in his name to t h e Newport Beach Police Department Memorial Fund. Froa Page A J TAX CUT ••• McCarthy said. "They're not getting one." Coun t e r e d Assembly Republican leader Paul Priolo of Malibu, who supported Proposi- tion 13; "You're trying t<> prove the peopt.-of thls state were wrong. The people of this stale are not gping to stand for the leading opponents of Proposition 13 tampering with 13." State Chamber of Commerce spokesman Jim Kennedy called t))e measure "Jaws 111 for busi· ness" and "a massive tax shift" that would hurt lbe business c~ate. • But Auemblyman Lollis Papan, O.Daly City, a.ked how any Republicans could "look a homeowner bi tbe face" after vo!l.n1 -Cains& the meaaure . . sax or the 23 Republicans Joined M of the S7 Democrats in votln1 aye. Several of the Republicans were from farm areas, whJch would 1et a break from provisions 1fvfn1 farm land and macblneu more Cavorabl ~treatment. 1 Kaplloff'a liicome tax blll, like McCarthy'• meaaure, was bu•tl•d fr..a b.-Wa1a ~d M .. n, Commltt•~ \o the A•· 1embly floor Oft the Hm• day, alter the houae waived n&les that requlr cklay1 between commit· t..es nd the noor ·coastal ... Choices Criticize a The appointment of three ot to members of a Newport Beacb commltlff to work on the city's coastal plan appean beaded for controversy. The city's Local Coaatal Piao· ning Advisory commlttee is to devise the planning document which ~ll eventually enable the city to reaain control of its coastal zone property from the coastal commiuion. Seven of tbe committee's members are to be selected by the seven city councilmen . The other three were to have been appointed by each of the three citizen advisory committees that deal with transportation. com- munity development and en- vironmental quality. The controversy is centered on a new move by counellmen to make those three selections themselves, rather than aUow- in g committee members to makelbem. Monday, councilmen were to have made each of their appoint- ments, but the selection process was delayed untll Aug. 28. Part of tbe reason ror the de· lay was the dispute over the ap- parent shift in the appointment procedures for those three ap- pointments from the existing citizen committees. Councilwoman Jackie Heather, who opposed the plan . to have councilmen select from tbe citizen committees, said the point of setting up the appoint· ments for the coastal planning committee was to remove com· mittee members from council influence as much as possible. "We already have seven ap· pointments to the coastal com- mittee. What's being proposed would mean the council would control all the appointments." she said. The change in appointment procedure was suggested by Councilman Paul Hummel who noted that councilmen choose from two nominees when mak· ing appointments to city boards and commissions. Three of Kind Triple /VuJi.ty lnve1tigated The ~·)'ear-old West Newport woman toJd poliCt' sbe was a Utile surprlsed when she bicycled pust a naked man who was standing between two cars on Seashore Drive early Wed!Jesday. · THEN' WREN SHE spotted a second nude. leaning against a telephone pole. she said sh4!' beca me ctp· prehensive. . !Ju.t when a third starker came running out into the street, wav:ine his clothes in h1s hands. s he iOl downricht panicky. The woman, a waitress who was on her way home from wOtk,.called police. OFnCEILS MIGHT DAVE been a little skeptical a.bout ber story exeept that a check of the neiehborhood al 4otb Street and Seaabore Drive, where the triple nakedness occurred, turned up one other witness who spotted the trio or nudes. Officers say t.ber are investieating. Newport to Alter Building Standards? A small group of Corona del Mat residents. aided by Coun- cilman Paul Hummel, have suc· ceedec\ in getting t.be city to con- sider new building standards in their neighborhood. At Monday's cowicil meeting Hummel, himself a Corona del Mar resident, iot his coJleagues to agree to study the portions ol tbe neighborhood thaL are zoned R-1. Hummel lives lo a!I R-2 zoned part-Of Corona del Mar. His action was prompted by a letter sent to the council from the Friends-of Inspiration Point. one of whom, George Hall. lives next door to a home under con- struction that Hummel says il- lustrates the problem. "The thing's Just massive." Hummel said of the house being built on Oeean Boulevard. The councilman said that. in spite of the existing building controls applied to the area. res- idents he's talked to are fearful it's become ~ densifted." Under city and coastal com- mission standards, the single family lots can be built t<> 1.5 limes the area of each lot minus setbacks. The height limit in all the residential a reas of old Corona del Mar is 24 feet. Hummel says he thinks those limits ought to be restricted even further because the build- ings that have gone up recently in the area south of Sea View A venue that is R-l are quite large. Hummel. a former member of the city's Planning Commission. said his philosophy on any zon- ing problem is to consider what the area would be U.ke if every lot was built to the maximum. "It would be a jungle." he said. The first step in the city's study will be for tbe plannin& commission to look at the prob- lem. Another aspect of the building standa rds that Hummel and the Friends want studied is the con- version of single family homes on oversized lots to two units. AND NOT ........ YOUR FAVOIUTE SllOWS. 4'1T'S A SONY.' Just keep a Sony Betamax SL-8600 back home. Set the optional timer, select the channel you want to record and take off knowing Betamax will record up to three hours with our new L-750video tape. Then, you can watch it when you get back. So before you visit your local travel agent. visit your local Sony dealer. WHY AA&D FOR VIDEO? • Free Movie and/or Blank cassettes • Free DuPlicating Service L • Continuing 0'8counts on Blank C8ssettea • Strong Extended Warranty on Labor (Ask Us) .. • Servioe Right Here-At The Stoce • Certificates For Use of Black & White IU1d CoJor cameras. • lo~itlve Pricing. 7 ' ' ' , l Saddlebaek Af&ernooa N. Y. Stoeks •I ., VOL. 71, NO. 229, 4 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, AUGUST 17, 1978 J TEN CENTS Double Eag/,e II Makes History f U.S. Balloonists Land in France Divorce Property Split Eyed By TOM BARLEY Of.Oelty ........... Lawyers in an Oranae County . Superior Court divorce trial af· fectina the disposition of ss million in comrgunit)' property· held by an estranaed San Juan Capistrano couple appear today to be close to settlement. The negotiations that appear to be near success came after a month of trial befo re Judge J .E .T "Ned" Rutter who has discussed the expected settle· ment with lawyers for J ames Huish and his former wife, Marie. Part of the settlement calls for Huish to pay his wife's legal fees of Sl00.000. Mrs. Huish has been represented by trial l awyer Melvin Belli of San Francisco who has been paid $250 an hour by her tor bis courtroom services. The couplE were divorced in November after 17 years or mar· nage. A custody agreement for the couple's four chiidren. ages s to IS. was worked out before the trial began. It was learned late Wednesday that the settlement involved a proposed equal s plit or the estimated SS million in com- -munity property. Judge Rutter bas scheduled a bearing for Aug. 22 at which time the settlement wm be ratified or the \.rial ordered re- sumed . Lawyers for both sides de- cided to try and reach a settle- ment ln the belief that Ju<tge <See DIVORCE, Page A2) Hash Seller Sent to Jail A Laguna Hills man has been ordered to serve 10 weekends in Orange County Jail after plead- ing guilty to charges of selling h as hi sh to an und e rcove r sheriff's officer. Superior Court Judge H, War- ren Knight ordered the jail time and three years probation for Michael Timothy Cady. 24, of 25242 Costeau Drive. Cady was arrested last Nov. 29 after he sold one ounce or hashish to an undercover officer for S75. ............. FLOATING ABOVE THE CLOUDS, BALLOON DOUBLE EAGLE II PASSES HIGH OVER SOUTHERN ENGLAND ON WAY TO FRANCE Three American Balloonlats Achieve Their Goal of Becoming the First to CroH Atlantic Ocean by Balloon Assembly Approves Tax Slashes SACRAMENTO <AP) -In an outbreak of election-year tax- cutting fever, the Assembly bas approved a $700 million income l ax cut and a rroposed ballot me as ure e iminating homeowner property ta xes. The income tax measure. financed from the state surplus, would cut taxes by $75 for single persons and $150 for couples. and give some addit.ional breaks to the elderly. The property t ax measure would abolish the remaining Sl.8 bllltoa ot bomeofter property taxes, give renters a S261 tax cut, apd eliminate the business inventory tax -financing all those changes by re-imposlna $3 billion of the $4 billion in busl· ness property taxes cut by Proposition 1.3. The m easur es breezed through the lower h ou se Wednesday night, on votes of 73-0 for the income tax bill, AB 3802 by Ass emblyman Lawre nc e Kapiloff, D -San Diego, and 61-16 for the property tax plan. But the latter, sponsored by Assembly Speaker Leo McCarthy, 0 -San Francisco. may face a roadblock in the Senate. To reach the November ballot. it must clear the upper house Friday. and the Senate must ap· prove SB 2243 by Sen. Alan Sieroty, extending the Aug. ts deadline for the r assage of ballot measures unti Friday. SB 2243 was before the Senate today, with a vote expected. McCarthy said Wednesday be counted majority support in the Channel Gm Burst Noted Before Quake LOS ANG·ELES <AP) -A burst of tµgb-pressure gas set off emergency equipment at an ex· ploratory well in the Santa Barbara Channel just four days before a damaging earthquake rocked the nearby coastal area, says a government geologist. The U.S. Geological S\lrv.e.y said Wednesday the problem at the Texaco well Aug. 9 is being studied for a possible connection with the Sunday afternoon temblor. The USGS scientists are.trylna to determine "whether the earthquake could have caused the pressure or whether the pres- sure could Jhave caused the earthquake. w~ want to know if ther~ ts a cause-and·eff ect ref a~ Uon•hiR.," _said B.ussell Q_ W .a1.6mcI; wbo i&. -4ireclloe the study. Wayland said in an interview there is no evidence yet for either conclusion. The earthquake, which caused more than 112 mllUon ln dam1.1e ln Santa Barbara Ooun.ty, was centered in the channel about eight mJlea west·aorlbweat of the well, the USGS said In Wasblnston, The aclesatlata will alto try to deterrnlrie tr pressure~ tn the well, wtilch Is beln• plu11ed wlth conertte, could force cu or oll up lhroup the 1'ta noor. the USOS allcl. W1~l1nd uld .afmtlar pr:ob- lema octw p"effo4ieW1 m dtl drlWnf oo-rauona ,, 'REPEAL PROPERTY TAX' Assembly Speaker McCarthy Senate but not yet the needed two-thirds vote. To its Assembly supporters. McCarthy's measure . ACA 2, was a fulfillment of the voters· mandate June 6 in approvinl! Proposition 13 . a $7 billion property tax cut spawned by the so-called taxpayers· revolt among homeowners. To its oppo-· nents it was the opposite. "Ho meowners and renters ..... ...,.... 'CUT INCOME TAXES' Assemblyman Kapiloff thought they were getting a fair dea l from Proposition 13." McCarthy said .. They·re not getting one.·· Co unt ered A ss embl y Republican leader Paul Priolo of Malibu. who supported Proposi-tion 13: "You're trying to prove the people of this state were wrong. The people of this state are not going lo stcsnd for the leading opponents of Proposition Jury Finds Norton Guilty of Perjury Political activisti Loran Norton was found guilty of multiple per- jury and pe rjury -related charges by an Orange County Superior Court jury l ate Wednesday afternoon. The stx-man, six-woman jury deliberated almost three full days before deciding Norton lied Io tne countyGJ'ancf'JUrYln ear- ly 1977 when the jury was in- vestigating political corruption. Norton's conviction didn't stem from the Grand Jury in· dictment that followed bis two appearances before the jury in February um. Tbe indictment was quashed in a court bearing late last year. but the cbarges were reinstated at a subsequent. municipal court beartng. 'Ehott charges~ Of lying when he te5tttted 1re1uld not used $5 000 given him by former poUtlcal financier Gene Conrad in his 1976 campalgn for tbe state senate. The cbaraee also accused Norton ol encouractng bis one· tlfl\e political a lly, Gary Newmeyer, to Ile to ttie Jury. And to thod charies. the Jury in Sµperiol'. Court Juc:tae Walter Charam11•1 court aald, gullt.Y on all counts. The verdltt all but ended • political trail that Norton, 51. began as a leadtna count)' spokesman ror Th~ John Birch lodfty ...... be wv:-1-:Saot1l Ana polltt Uculenant In the ear· ly , •••. Norton' Pollllcal forWne9 car· '*'!"",....,..... 'WE Will APPEAL' Poltucal Rgure Norton rled blm Into close contact and aseroclation wt th Dr. Lou ls Cella 's former polit.lcal con- federation and. ln 1975, lnto county Superviaor Laurence Schmit'• office as an executive aldt. ll was after teavin1 Schmit th•HJorton dec:lded to 1trike out on a politlcal career of bJs own u &.be Res>Ubllcan nominee for < NORTON, Pal• A.a> 13 tampering with 13. ·· State Chamber of Commerce spokesman Jim Kennedy called the measure ··Jaws Ill for busi· ness" and '"a massive tax shift .. that would hurt the business climate. But Assemblyman Louis Papan. 0 -Daly City. asked how any Republicans could .. look a homeowner in the face" after voling against the m easure. Six of the 23 Republicans joined SS of the S7 Democrats in voting aye . Several of the Republicans were rrom farm areas. which would get a break 1 from provisions giving farm land and machine ry more ravorable tax treatment. Kapiloff's income tax bill. like M cC urthy·s meas ure . wa s hustled from the Ways and Means Committee to the As· sembly floor on the same day. after the h()"'5e waived rules that reqttire delays between commit- tees and the floor. The bill would raise the in- come tax credit from $25 to SlOO for individuals and from S50 to $200 for couples. give each homeowner a once-per.lifetime t a x exemption of the firs t $100.000 in capital gains from the sale of a house. and give a re- tirement income tax credit to some elderly persons. Kapiloff, who faces a difficult re-e lection campaign. called the bill ··a modest proposal to return some of our giant surplus lo the people from whence it came.·· WomanProys At Wrong Grave, Sues PROVIDENCE. R.I. <AP> A woman who says she prayed at the wrong grave for 17 years b eca use s h e thought he r hus band was buried there Is su- ing the Roman Catholic bishop of Providence. a church and a cemetery. Beatrice Daigh~ of Woonsocket filed the $250,000 damage suit in Superior Court here Wednesday. She claims that a mistake by St. John the Baptist Cemetery in Bellingham. Mass .. caus~ her ··frequently and continuously'' to place Oowers on the wrong arave 8M pray at the wrong grave "for the repose of her dead husband's soul." The Church of the Precious Blood in Woonsocket sold Mrs. oarste the plot -Jn the cemetery m 19& for $'75. The mistake was dise1S'Yere pr 26., wben workers opened the gra~e because Mrs. Daigle wanted to move the remains lo another plot, the suit said. The sutt sald Mrs. Daigle still s uffers "severe emotional tuuma and distress" because of t he mistake. Her husband was burled ln a nearby lfave at the cemetery. Delta Plan Ready SACRAMENTO <AP> -A state board hu adopted e Sacramento.San Jo1quln Delta plan which It say1 wlU Make mon waler available to the south In drou1bt Y'ata, and oiore for Delta water quality. Atlantic Crossing A First PARIS <AP > -Three American adventurers. the first balloonists to conquer the Atlan- tic. set their giant silver craft down today in a wheatfield near the French town of Mlserey. 55 west of Paris. completing a his- toric journey that bad defeated other men for more than a cen- tury. The trio -Larry Newman. 31, Ben Abruzzo. 48. and Maxie An· der son. 44. all of Albuquerque, N. M . -put their balloon Double Eagle fl down at 7 :SO p.m. local time, < 10:50 a.m. PDT>. on a beautiful. cloudless evening. just before dusk. Spect ators waiting al a nearby highway rushed to the balloon to congr atulate the three. The balloonists unfurled an American flag from their gon- dola when they c rossed the Fre nc h coast and lowered a French tricolor as they complet· ed the m12ht. which ended by un· official estimate 137 hours. Ut minutes after they went aloft from Maine on Friday. The three airmen scurried to secure their craft against strong ground gusts whipping the field. four miles from Mist>rev. 'fhe balloonists a pparently had to land in daylight for safely reasons. Eyewitnesses said the b alloon had visibly deflated. ap- pear\ng more like a tapered. creased silver exclamation point than a sphere The Double Eagle II had crossed the French coast at Le H a vre. Vi e wed from a he licopter. the 11 -story-bigh balloon had coasted gracefully through a cloudless sky over a c heckerboard or fa rmlands. nudged along by a 17·mph wind. The men were clearly visible in the red-and-yellow gondola. bundled in coaLc; against the bit· ing cold but apparently relaxed. In a brief radio conversation with journalists al Le Havre airport. one of the trio said. "lf weather conditions stay favora· ble we will try to go as far as possible lo est ablish the max- imum of records."' L a rry Newman. 31. Ben Abruzzo. 48. and Maxie An· derson. 44. a ll from Albuquer- que. have already set time and distance r ecords for balloon flight The Double Eagle II complet· ed the Atlantic crossing at 10 p.m . Wednesd ay (2 p.m. PDT>. Shannon Airport r eporte d, reachmg the southwest coast of Ireland 121 hours and 18 minutes after the 112-foot·hlgh. helium- <See BALLOON, Page AU Julie, J ennie Fine SAN CLEMENTE <AP> Julie Nixon Eisenhower and her n e w d a ughter. the firs t grandchild of former president Richard Nlxon and his wife, Pat, are reported in good condition' at San Clemente Hospital. Mrs . Eisenhower gave birth Tuesday to nine-pound, four· ounce Jennie. Co ast We a t h e r Low cloudinHs nigbt and momin1 hours with mostly sunny afternoon Friday. Lows-tonip~ •to 64. Hlaha Frrday 68 at beaches to 78 to 84 inlan~. .. t • .. d .. ~ .. • 'ii 1'1 rrt· an cl A.2 DAIL V PILOT 2Tlwgs Haldi Hostages CHICAGO (AP> -Two CToa· on terrorlst.a armed wtUl cuns •nd explo$avea Hh d otno 1'oatacu ut tbt Ger an onauh~tt today. poll~ uld. One hoata,e was hater releued and anothet t upt'd omeluls suld l~ tnrorksts bt-llevt'd to bf-11 m•n und 11 womun upp renlly wantt'd ftffdom for StJ~pan BU~k. 1 Croallan n•UOnali t leader im· prisontd in Germany and facln& extnadlUoo to Y'-\IOSl< via The awttchboard operator at \he con.suhste oo lbe 10Ua Boor of a Mld\laan Avenue bullcllna in the downtown ar.a satd tbe \errorlst.s were thr~atenang lo 5hoot he r und the o th er laostages One ho:.ta1e. reached by telephone. was u!.ked If the i>t:-ven W't!f'l' m danizt>r '"Yt•i,., we ar~. vt:ry much. "°al> the respon::.e The s witchboa rd opt-rat or asked whether anyone had been injured. said : "Not yet. but it doesn't look good." She said she was being allowed to use the switchboard because the ter- rorists wanted lo place a call to a German prison "'They're threatening to shoot everyone, .. she told a reporter .. I can't talk anymore, they're all hollering at police." Police said they were trying to negotiate with the terrorists. f',.... P-sre AJ NORTON ••• stale Senator in central Orange County During his two-week trial. Norton insisted he was among the former Cella allies singled out for prosecution by the Dis· lrict Attorney's Office. H e also insisted that Newmeyer lied and attempted to entrap him during the investiga- tion leading to the criminal charges filed against him. After the guilty verdict was handed down Wednesday, one juror. Paul Bender of Garden Grove. said the jury did not put much stock in Newmeyer's testimony against his former benefactor · However. Bender said, the tape recorded conversations between the one-lime friends ··were given great credibility.·' Norton accepted the jury's verdict calmly even though it may mean he could be sent to state prison for from one to three years He is to be sen· tenced Oct. 4 "Yes. we will <1ppea l the verdict," Norton said as he walked from the courtroom. "I believe the jury overlooked physical evidence that showed Gary (Newmeyer) was lying." In keeping with his outward easy going personality, Norton s mil ed and approached the foreman of the jury that had convicted him. ''Thank you for your con· sideration... he said "I know you did what you think was right and I thank you for that " .. Well ... the jury foreman r e plied, 'Tm sorry it didn't work out better for you. But we did. we did what we saw as our duty " Home in El Toro lnoted by Thieves _B~rglars who forced open a shdang glass door to gain entry took jewelry, television sets and kitchen appliances from an El Toro home. Orange County sheriff's of· ficers said the break-in was re- ported by butcher Larry Seth Korn. 30. of. 23251 Los Alisos Blvd. They valued the loss at $2.965 ORANGE COAST se DAILY PILOT ::or~~~===::.= i:-t-...c-..., ""-"'----·--·· _....,. .... , t .. °""' __ .._,,_~_,_ l .. ft Y•I .. , lnlM ~~ v.Jie. -~=:a:-:.=::r~~ ~cm:=-~.::.--... -,,. -·--,.,_,_ '"*""" JM•• c.-. Vitt ...... _____ __ ~-.... n:..::.: • ..r..:--" ~ .._.. ....... A""IMIMllft ...... N ..... ....... edl Y111ft0f-. • ,,,,., Lt .... -·· s... or..,-.,. °'"°" CKi.Mt .. 1JJOWl•I~ ....... Mt••ll .. ~ .. Kll IN-:t,:"::',~• ... ~ .. --~.,... ·- ,.,, .......... JAMES EARL RAY LISTENS TO ATTORNEY MARK LANE Grilled on Houae Committee WttneH Stand Ray's Testimnny Attacked in Probe WASHINGTON fAP> -The House Assassinations Commit· tee iried today to shake one dis· crepancy after another in James Earl Ray's bizarre account of his travels with mystery man Raoul. triggering a storm of pro· test from Ray's attorney which delayed the hearing time and again Re p. Louis Stokes. D-Ohio. picked up on a theme cut short Wednesday when Ray was ex· cused after complaining of weariness he said be suffered from mistreatment by prison of. ficials f'rottJ Page A J BALLOON. • filled bag took off Friday night from Presque lsle. Maine. near the Canadian border. Officials of the Paris Airport Authority were preparing for the balloon to land at Le Bourget Airport north of Paris. wherp Charles Lindbergh landed the Spirit of St. Louis on. May 21. 1.927. after the first solo flight across the Atlantic Ocean. But they said no landing request had been received. It was the 18th attempt to cross the Atlantic by balloon. and the 16th from west to east. The last previous attempt. and tbe closest to being successful, was made two weeks agO' by Britons Donald Cameron and Christopher Davey. who ditched 117 miles from the French coast. Seven persons died in previous attempts. On Wednesday morning, the three broke the record for time a loft of 107 hours, 37 minutes set by Ed Yost of Sioux Falls, S.D .. in an. unsuccessful trans-Atlantic attempt in 1976. By this morn· ing, they had traveled more than 3,000 miles. eclipsing Yost's dis· lance record of 2.740 miles. Shannon air controller Gerald O'Connor said the three men thought they were still half an hour from land when told they had reached Ireland. He said there were "quite a few shouts of jubilation" when they spotted the lights of Louisburgh through a break in the clouds. It was the second trans· Atla ntic balloon attempt for Abruzzo and Anderson. who stayed aloft last year in Double Eagle I for 64 hours and crashed five miles northwest of Iceland when winds pulled them off course. At one point in bis attack on Ray's alibi. Stokes dramatically produced a document -a chanie of address card lor Dr. Ma rtin Luther King Jr.'s hometown -after Ray denied that he had filed such a card. By Ray's own admission long ago. such a document "would be damaging" lo his story if. as Stokes demonstrated. it existed. Stokes assailed Ray's state· ment to the committee that bis unfound and never fully Iden· tifi ed accomplice had never handled the .30·06 rine which later proved lo be the weapon used to kill Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. on April 4, 1968. Ray claimed he bought the weapon for Raoul earlier in Birmingham. Ala., for what he thought was a gun-running scheme. Ray said he and Raoul had worked together for months, from Canada to Mexico, in various smuggling deals. Stokes noted that Ray told the committee'1 staff in an earlier interview that Raoul had in fact handled the .30-06 rifle. Ray conceded that be bad. But be said he b ad been con· fused when the staff interviewed him because Raoul had in fact been with him in Birmingham when they purchased another ri· Oe for smuggling. That rifle was exchanged a day later for the .30·06 after Raoul left Bir- mingham, Ray said. "At first, al the staff in· terview, I thought it was ex· changed the same day. and Raoul would have been there." Ray said. Ray's memory was attacked over and over. Why had Raoul never been found? Who could have seen them together? Why couldn't Ray furnish more descriptive information about Raoul, such as bis real name? Ray had no hard answers. "Possibly a barmaid in Bir· mlngham. Possibly a waitress in Jim's Grill in Memphis" had seen him in Raoul's company. he said. Business Machines Taken From Club Burglars whose method of en· try Is unknown look business machines and cash from the or. fice or the Mission Viejo Country Club. Orange County sheriff's of· ficers said the theft was report· ed by officials of the club at 26742 Oso Parkway. They valued the loss at $763. Panel Says Wonren- Rights Fight Lags WASHINGTON <AP} - American women remain far behind in t}leir struggle lo achieve economic, PQlitlcal and soefal equality with men, a preslclen1ial CQmmisslon report· edtoday. The NaUonal Advisory Com· mittee for Women Issued that assessment in a report sub· mltted lo President Carter and Congress with a plea for "prompt and positive action'' on behalf of women. "We demand immediate con· tlnulng action ... by federal, state, public and private instJlu· lions so that by 1985, the end or the International Decade for Women proclaimed by the Unit· ed Nations, everyWna ponlbl under I.be law wlll have been done lo provide American women with ruu equality." t.M report tald. Tbe"'1ldvilory committee ll lbi aucceaao to the rnternaUonal Women'• Year comml11lon, •hlcb oftldal'1 ...at out of .... ness last spring. The report is entitled, "Th e Spirit of Houston;• referring to the first fede,rally funded National Women's Coftfereftce held tn tbat clty Jast NQl!..embe.r. _ The report ~•tect the... as amona findings that it said show continued lnequallty for American women and shatter myths about them: -The number of workina women haa more than doubled ln the lut 25 yean, with women accounttna for 41 percent of the labor force. But on the averaae, women earn only 80 percent of what men earn. -Only tlx percent of A mertcan famtllea flt the ''tfplcal'' pattern of a bttadwtn· ' nrns fetber. bomemaktnc mother and two acbool·aae children -Allmonf I.I •••J'ded tn Only t4 p.ercn ~ aU dl~• and ao more Utan Hft ,....._.. ef divorced mu ectuall1 mt.Jtt PQmeaU. I Ranch Anne~ Wins OK A lon1·1ouahl annexation a1reement for .88 acres of Bear Brand Ranch land wu approved Wedneaday nl1ht by the San Juan Capistrano city CouncU. About 40 slnile-famlly homes are planned lor the htltslde parcel west or the city near Calle Aspero. The council concurred wtth Councilman Lawrence F Buchheim who aaid. "I thln.k this is the best situation we can come up with." The most controversial upect of tbe annexation a1reement were provisions for traffic access lo the Bear Brand property usina the city's streets of Calle Aspero, Calle Ricardo and Crumrine Road. Residents of these streets predicted severe traffic problems and vehemently opposed the city's agreement with the ranch owners. Spokesmen for tbe protesting residents Insisted tt)at tbe council annex the Bear Brand acreage before setting any agreements with tbe Ranch owners. Mayor Kenneth Freiss told the homeowners the council bad been advised by legal counsel that the ranch owners do not need the city's permission to use its streets for access to the Bear Brand property. He said the current "good faith " agreement offer ed advantages lo the city and the ranch owners which neither even expected lo have when the lengthy negotiations first began. The , annexation agreement will now go t.o the county's Local Agency Formation Commission for approval within the next three months. councilmen said. 'rhree of Kind Tripk Nudity lnvestigat,ed The 21-yeaN>l,d West Newport woman told police she was a little surprised when sbe bicycled past a naked man who was standing between two cars on Seashort> Drive early Wednesday. TllEN MIEN SHE s potted a second nude. leaning against a telephone pole, she suid she became ap- prehensive. But when a third starker came running out into the str~t. waving bis clothes in his bands, she got downright • panicky. Th~ woman. a wailress who was on her way home rrom won. called police. OFFICERS MIGHT HAV E been a little skeptical about her story except that a check of the neighborhood at 40tb Street and SeashOre Drive. where the triple nakedness occurred. turned up one other witness who spotted the lno of nudes. Officers say they are investigating F,.._P.,,eAJ DIVORCE ••• Rutter might order the real prop· erty to be sold and the resulting proceeds divided between the couple. '."\ They said such a sale would have made community property immediately taxable and would have resulted in a substantial loss for both sides. Testimony in the ·trial re· vealed that the Huishs and bis brother and sister-in-law are partners in the 18 corporations that own recreation complexes throughout Orange County. Los Angeles County. in San Diego Coun ty and in northe rn California. If the settlement is approved. Mrs. Huish will receive two such facilities in Pomona, 18 acres of commercial development in that city. a cabin in Springville. Utah. and a S2S.OOO down pay. menl on a home being built in Provo, Utah. Huish will retain the couple's San Juan Capistrano home and his one half interest in the re· maining recreational complexes und property. The other half will be retained by his brother and sister-in-law. Market Hits Upswing on Dollar News NEW YORK <AP) -The stock market went on a buying spree today. encouraged by good news about the dollar . and crashed through a psychological barrier at 900. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials rose 12.21 in the first two hours to 906.79 late in the morning. Advanc~ held a 4·1 lead over declines on the New York Stock Exchange in heavy trading Gold. meanwhile. rell about SS an ounce The good news came from Washington. where President Carter asked aides Wednesday to look for a way to halt the dollar·s fall. and overseas. where the dollar responded to Carter's statement with a healthy gain. <Related story. 861 The dollar has been declining steadily on foreign exchange markets in recent months b ecaus t> o f fe a r s about Amersc;, 's large trade deficit and general economic condition. llOWTOTAKE A ANDO.MISS . . YOUR FAVORITE SHOWS. IOI "IT'S A SONY." Just keep a Sony Betamax SL-8600 back home. Set the optional timer. select the channel you want to record and take off knowing Betamax will record up to three hours with our new L-750 video tape. Then. you can watch it when you get back. So before you visit your local travel agent. visit your local Sony dealer. WHY U&D FOR VIDEO? • Free Movie and/or Blank Cassettes • Free Duplicating Service • Continuing Discounts on Blank Cassettes • Strong Extended Warranty on lBboc (Ask Us) • Service Right Here-At The Store • Certlflcates F=oc Use of Black & . White 11MS Cotor cameras. • law-a>mpetltfve Pricing. n ALL ADI UPTO YOUI MST YIDIO IUY. -AMD.....,. MpW-IXTU S.-CIAU OU ..... oua ...ooaa..-SAW , 211 h•t 11tll st. Cos'ta Mesa • . Phone 642-8882 atcn~,°'t~ M Set N 30 l "f ••II ~· ,,,;1 ,1 •.,.,., \ ,, .• leli ,11! • IJllf' ftttl114' 1•l••1·1t•ttltic .... I Tun1iug Politics To Entertainment BJ GA a 'f OaA.NVll.l.S .. ..., ...... For ta. moct ~ Pol'!bl ..._ .,.'t wonb the Slt'lte ol ectmllsioa e..-en wt.en lldmllAon ii'"'· TllAT'S 81.:CA J: ma.t e_.... ....... to UN de· hates to al~ k>rul·wtnded DOD·WHJI to ....... and ... IUCI. .., And Whell ~,·re not n.elQI 1lpUkMt Luues. many pollUclarw an toad ol •1DI clebate Ume to lake ebtmay aldeswlpel at t.bd.r opponent and, In aU IOrtl ol otber wa 1. 10 embaJnu tMIDHlvea Md ban tMlr audlenee. c ~f '.' , .... I ) j • Tbla wffk'• Ron Cordon.John s.ct.mlll debate tn Newport Beldl WU 1 from anotber' mold. bowever. And a. quels to the ~Uon b«ween the two state Senate eaodidat.n abould be even belt.er. '· .: TOE CBA&ACTB& and personalities of Scbmlt.a and Cordova fl1ured lo make their meelln1 en.Uihtenlnc and ent.ertainiq. ~ Both men are lnteWleot. utieulau and wiltJ. Nehber C'..onloYa nor Schmit.a knows bow to avokl 1lvln1 a d1red answer. And nettber' man hesitates to take an unpo_pularst.and. even when ltbwu. Cordova and Schmit.a come from different dlrecUons. A nt:a CLIMBING to poll Uc al bel&bts as a Republican spokesman for the far rilbt ln the mid·1980's and e~ 1970's, Scbmit.a is on the comeback trail. C va is trying to stay on the poliUcal ~)' he began in 1976 when be was elected to the state auembl)' in • a sbock:ine Democratic victory in a solid Republican dis· tricl. Schmitz ln the debate pictured himself as a man wbo, if anything. was ahead of his times when be was an of- nceholder. a pioneer forerunner in the taxpayer revolt that was lo come in 1978. CORDOVA DEPICTED himself as a man not burdened with pbllosopbical hangups, as a lelillator con- cerned with the art of doing rather than the art of politics. As each man searched for the upper band, Schmitz lashed out at Cordova for being a Democrat . .COrdova scorned Schmitz' membership in the John Blrcb Soeiety. Schmitz said he will wln ln November. But Cordova re-fused to play the underdog's role. · BACK AND FORTH the two candidates went. each hoping lo score polnls. ii not a knockout blow. Schmitz proved to be the most adept at crabbing microphone time. In their fU"St 20 mlnut.es of talk lime, '>chmitz was on lhe air about 13 minutes to Cordova's seven Cordova proved to be the most adept at off microphone mugging When Schmitz reached for an answer, Cordova's mouth slackened and his eyes rolled skyward in an obvioU.s display of astonishment at his foe's "errant" ways. BUT CORDOVA betrayed his wit by launching his catchy one-liners with a dead serious face, giving hls humor a tm.eot orneriness rather than wtt. In contrast to Cordova's prosecutor-like seriousness, Schmitz frequently smiled and cbuckJed. Cordova, who has an Immense everyday voeabulary, dazzled the audience but may have not helped its un- derstanding when be used such words as eschew., centrist and \deoJoeue. !" SCRMIT'l FELL down on questions about the housing crisis l"What housing crisis?"> and his legislative rtt0rd as a tax reformer <"Property tax ls the purview of local government"). Throughout the debate, Schmitz clung to his endorse· ment by tax r eform evangelist Howard Jarvis and invited those interested to visit his campaign beadquarters where a plaque received from Jarvis in 1967 hangs on a wall. Just as tenaciously, Cordova grasped bis legislative record as an assemblyman in the post-Jarvis era and bis votes in favor of limiting state and local govenu:nent spending. WHEN THE DEBATE ended, Scbmiu supporters claimed their man to be the winner. Cordova backers said their candid.ate was the winner. The answer obviously is in the eye of the beholder. On balance, though, Cordova seemed to have an edge in substance while Schmitz held a margin ln style. HA VlNG FELT each other out in their initial en- counter . Schmitz and Cordova's upcoming encounters are likely to be even more lively. And when the traveling road show comes your way. you 're likely to find it both interesting and entertainin1 - a sound exercise in the democratic process. Both Women TUJO Pedestrians Killed in County Two pedestrians died as the result of separate Orange Coun- ty traffic accidents Wednesday, Orange County Coroner's deputies reported today. 'Careher' Strikes Out Rapist Sent to Prison A H...,Uniton Beach man who admllted ln court that he raped ii Golden West College coed on campua tut Mey 21 has been atntenced to five yea.rs ln state prtaon. Oran1e County Superior Court Judce Kenneth WUliams or dered the prlain term for Jesse Flores. 23, after Flores flied a aullly plea rather than face trial on rapo charges. Florea. who a lao attended Golden West . additionally pleaded eullty to cbar1es of al· tempted rape flied whep a Hunt· lnaion Beach woman was al· tacked In the downtown area last March 31. He was being tried on that charee when he fled from Superior Court and raped the 23-year-old student the next day in a restroom near the camlfu.s gymnasium. Judge Williams ruled that the five-year prison term is suffi· cient punis.hment for both crimes. I ............... DARYL GEORGE POSES WITH ONE OF HIS STAINED GLASS CREATIONS AT FES11VAL No Starving Artllt, He'a Into Commercial Windows and Buline .. la Good Flores was arrested May 2S by police who staked out the area where he was believed to be hid· Ing in Westminster. Flores at· templed to drive out of the trap but was cornered by pursuing police cars. Jury Finds Man Guilty In Slaying Artist Finds F11n In Stained Glass By JACKIE HYMAN missions I get, the people have 01 .. o.1ty,..sUH never beard of the festival and Daryl George may be one of they couldn't care less bow well the few artists who really isn't 1 do here," George said. concerned about whether or not He said be likes to display an- he sells his work at his Festival nually at the festival because of of Arts booth in Laguna Beach. the creative freedom. In fact George, a stained-glass "It gives me an excuse once a An Orange County Superior creator, rarely shows up at his year to make something nice, Court jury returned a verdict of display, which includes only two something that's not presold.'' first degree murder Wednesday pieces: a four-foot-by-eight-foot George said. in the trial of a transient who window depicting a scene from H Id h b g "'I g robbed and then killed a La Western history, and a Tiffany-e sa e e an ma.. n Habra man last Nov. 14. l l h d rth l stained glass about eight years sty e amps a e. Neve e ess. ago. The same jury will return to he just sold the window for an "I'd wanted to learn bow for a Judge J ames K . Turne r 's undisclosed sum. couple of years:··George said. courtroom Monday to determine Jn contrast to lhe popular Im· "I was making leather things. if Maurice Seton Thompson. 33, age of the starving artist. Th I "ound 1 b 1 is lo recel·ve the death r\Dnalty en 1 a P ace w ere ... ~ George will tell you he's got his "'ould learn how to make stained for the slaya·ng of :\l1'chael Lynn .. career J'ust where he wants it. glass .. Whalen. 34. of La Habrn. · "Everything's just fine the He now has three employees Thompson was also found guiJ. r r. d d w ay it is." said George. a working for him on the com· ty o irst cgrec attempte Laguna Beach r esident who missions. which have come in murder for the shooting or his R bo GI Whalen's fiancee. Mrs. June oper ates own ain w ass from the East Coast. Hawaii, Filice. 40. Company. ··1 get to m ake the Texas and even Alaska. ones I want and 1 don't have to H d th h rs be It was testified that Thompson ow o e pure ase ar broke into Mrs Fillce's La make the ones 1 don't want." about his designs? "I don't Habra home. demanded money He explained that his firm know. I don't ask the m." said from the couple and then fired works almost entirely on com-George. three shots into Whalen. Mrs. mission: creating windows for The prices range from '$250 to Filice said he then turned on her rest aurants. hotels and other $20,000. "There's no point ln say. and pumped three bullets into commercial establishments all ing what the prices are because her. over the country. every one's different;• George TuvEscape Injury in Boat Fire Harbor Patrolmen said Jobn Pacclorinl of Corona del 'Mar and Robert Belser of Huntington Beach mmt have been enjoying a lucky day Wednesday. The two men escaped injury when their nmabout caught fire just after 1 p.m. in Newport Harbor. Patrolmen say they were \Dl· usually lucky because the full 20-gaUon fuel tank didn't ignite in tbe fire and because when the blaze-broke out the boat was cruising past the Harbor Patrol headquarters. The 16-foot boat, Yard Bird. belongs to the Boat Specialist Inc., a boat repair business located at 2439 W. Coast Highway. Patrolmen said gas that col· l«ted in the bilge during fueling was ignited by a spark from the engine, sending bOth men over the side, Into the water. Officers extinguished the blaze before the fuel tank ignited and estimated $1,500 damage to the vessel. The jury also found Thompson ''I'd say 98 percent of the com-sald. guilty or armed robbery and -----------------....------------------------ burg lary and added the pro· vision that he was in possession of a firearm at the time the two felonies were committed. Thompson :.ic c e ptC'd the verdict calmly. He told thl' Jury during the trial that he was in Long Beach trying to steal a car at the lime Whalen and Mrs. Filice were shot. Arresting officers said they found the murder weapon in Thompson's hotel room and claimed that he confessed to the shootings shortly after his ar- rest. Masked Thug Gets $449 in Motel Holdup A masked man wearing a ban-danna over his nose old WUd , West badman-style and bran- dishing a long-barreled revolver robbed a Westminster motel or $449 Wednesday night, police re- ):>orted today. Investigators said he saun· tered lnto the office of the Newland Motel, 1404-0 Newland St., near Westminster Avenue, and took the cleric by surprise. Loss in the 8 p.m. armed rob- bery included $364 in cash and a check ~ady made out to cash for the remainder of the sum. PolJce said the bandit was a male Lalin. about 25, who wore a eJavy blue watch cap in addi· lion to bis bandanna mask, adding that be fled on foot. • •• Drexel Heritage Summer Sale! Newport book'ale Sale Pr1ced 239'0 Drop front unit with drawers ....•••. Sale Pttoed MP Door boolale .... Sale PrlCed 289DO Walls for all! Drexel wall systems to fit every space and please every taste Repeal ourselves? Never! With SQ 1ndcvldua~stte a selectlOl'l ot Drexel' wan systems. each sloraQe scheme is exactly suited io ycur space nmita11ons . . and your taste Our design stall Wiii stiow YoU cnspty styled contem· porary cases. exohc teak-hnrshed p18Ces bngnt with Ctl1nosene. untts rteti 1n baroque curves and panelling Functional toud'les are equally var· 1ed, from drop desks and bafs to silver drawel'S. l\' and ste~ spac,s and display cases wrtl'l hghtedshelves Wanstoran.wesay. and -thanks to Dre><el -neYer !he same twice• WM door boOl<CMBI ................. Sal• Prtced 22QllO Orawet and door bookCIM with I~ tight and grille doon .......... Sale Prtced l54aoo . 4 II It .. .. :a . ~ 1'a re n4 o'D I t fre- •rifl .44 DAil Y PILOT .. Q .... ~. ~ ~~~r -~ Take Tliat, Teach . ..,.._au• osn. -._._bas to your adtool ,...., maybe JOU Jmt dktl'l rMllM a.ow Nrioul it •aa •'-' roa v~ abuud fOUI' teaclMn. A=:•• on 1ucb vwbal affroall ll currtntl1pendin1lnow • lo WI lnaUnce. ce.rtaln g• teac:Mn UM l"ount.aln Vallr)t Elemat~ :i Dtltritt '-" cUrpd admlnistrato1' wlUl ftrNJlY lbua .... tMm. And by eoUY. the vtolaUoa. it~ Int.be courta, la a mJademeanor under Section 44812 ot tM C&lifornla mduea· tkmCode. ' I doo't know wblcb one ot tM alleltd\f lbuiled teacben looked l.bat ooe up, but lie or lbe iMWd set an "A. .. I• unearthlnl an ot»cun lecal ltatute. llADSNING BACK to ~1 own Hbool d111, I'm c:er· t•lnl:J ,Sad they weren't applytnl SeeUon ..all to our 1tu· dent body. Heavena. juat lh1nk wbat they mltbt have done to the kid wbo plnDed the "Kick lie" note onto Mr. Keller's coat· lail back ln dlbtb ,rade aenera1 adence. Not only was that miacreant IUllty of verbal abuse. but be was callln& for some pbys{cal discomfort for Lbe. teacher, too. Then we bad ooe elementary acbool teacher who was known behind her back as "Old Cherry Noae." That's verba l abuse ii there ever was Seet1on "812. Plenty ol students would have been guilty of balling her by that hideous nick.name from behind busbea or even Parenl Committtno Verbal Crime Upon TNdwr by scrawling on the blackboard somelbint like: "Old Cherry Nose Strikes Again. THEN JUST CONSIDER the high school football coaches who labor with youths of our region. These people are teachers, too. When one of these teachers starts losin1 on the gridiron, verbal abuse is rampant. The hapless coach catches il from players, students. principal, other teachers, the waterboy. alumni and booster club members. Why. you've even beard this ldnd of verbct abUle heaped u~ the teacher-coach from the grandstands on Friday Dlgbts. U comes in open sboutlne. Sometimes in choruses or in unison. • IP V.BAL ~USE or a teacher is a crime. tile . verb~e heaped upoi'I our high school coaches la clearly a misdemeanor of the masses; an enormous,wave of public criminality. Clearly, if all the violators ar~ tracked down and brought before the bar of justice, the DA's office is reall~ going to be busy. Safeway Ordered To Horwr Pricing W ASIDNGTON <AP> -Safeway St.Ores Inc.; tbe nation's No. 1 food retailer, is under federal order not to cbarae more than lla ad· vertlsed price for sale items. In a consent agreement that became final Wednesday, the Federal Trade Commiasion concluded a three-year-old case against the 30-state supermarket chain. The Sept. IS, 1975, com- plaint alleged that a "silDificanl number" of Safeway atom were failing to mark down items advertised u beina on sale. WITH CONSUMERS TBUS ~GED the re1ular prices, the FTC said, the chain was en1aglng In an "unfair act and pracUce." The FrC ordered Safeway not to advertise any Item for aale at a certain price unless each item la marked with the sale price or a lower price. Klut•C' .... ., ft9Auocla&M ..,.. A YOUDI Iowa boy wbo bad been ln a ClOma 1lnce b1I father alle1edly aaaaulted hlm wu re- m ov •d froqi a llfe-support 111tem today after h1a heart 1topped, doeton said. Court bat· ti" eontlnued, meanwlille. over the fate ot two other comatole cbtldren, also alle1ed victims of do.ineaUc violence. In Del Moines, the body of 2· year-old MaUbew Schrier was turned over early tbia momin& to Dr. R. C. Wooten, the Polk County medical examiner. Wooten said the boy's heart had stopped beatlna at 12:57 a.m. Matthew's father, Richard,~. bas been char1ed with first· desree sexual abuse in connec· tloh with the injuries. The boy's death could lead to murder cbar1es &1alnst the father. MA1TllEW HAD been kept on life.support systems since be was hospitalized June 28. Wooters said bis heart bad stopped "more than a dozen times" Wednesday. but each time doctors were able to re· establiah a heartbeat unW the "irreversible cardiac arrest." In a courtroom in Dedham, Mass., the parents of another boy were fighting over whether to keep their son on a respirator. The father wants him removed; the mother wants the system to stay on. School Opens In· Memphis, Sans Pickets "I'd like tn plus pulled," Neville Stt:lne, n. told Norfolk Probate Judie Je_remlab Suntvan at a beulnl tbla week. "A ve1etable •.. I can't ll•e with •eelne blm Uke lbat. •• LOUIS STONE. 12. of Stoughton, M ..... baa been in a coma sin~~ Ju!r 2 w.laen hi• father aCClcltntallY ettot btm In the heart wttb a 88 pn dartnl an argument with bla wife. police aald. Two week.I later. Myma Stone flied for divorce. Louis la tbe1r only child. Doctors claim Loula ls clinically dead. But Sullivan ruled Wednesday that all criteria for brain death bad not been met. Sullivan noted there was persistent nerve ceU activity in the boy's brain stem. Preaaure on the shooting scar causes lbe boy to tum bis bead. ralae bis shoulder and atend bis arms and hlpe, be noted. Dr. Milton Broulham, chief ol neurosur1ery ·at Boston's Camey HospltaJ, tesWled that the boy's brain is not dead, a lthough it bas suffered ir· reversible damaae. LOUIS WAS SHOT as he ap· parently tried to intervene in his parents• quarrel.. At the time. bis father was bold.in& a pump action air rifle, wfllcb dis· charged about seven feet away from the boy. His father bas not been charged. Norfolk Dlatrlct At· tomey William Delahunt said no determinatloo baa been reached as to crlmlnal responsibWty for the shooting. Corter l'ldts CIA President Carter visited the Central Intelligence Agency in McLean, Va .• Wednesday, accompanied by CIA Director Adm. Stansfield Turner (partially obscured) and National Security Adviser Zbigmew Brzezinski. Kidded about bis black eye he was sporting beneath the ban- dage. Brzezinski said the shiner resulted from surgical removal of a mole. Panel lnvestigat~s JFK 'Cons\iraf?y' A Denver 1irl bas been in DALLAS <AP> -The Warren Commission "found no evidence critical condition in a coma for or a conspiracy, foreign or domestic." int.be 1963 killinl of Presi· MEMPJUS, Tenn. <AP> -The eight days after alleeedly being dent John F. Kennedy. said former President Gerald Ford on the city's 117,000 public school stu-beaten because of a bedwetllng eve of a Yiait here by members of the House Assauinationa Com- dents and their teachers began habit. mittee. h f 11 t tod "th Ford, who was a Coneresaman when he served as a member of l e a semes er ay wi out The court-appointed attorney the commlsaion, defended the commission 'a conclusions Wednes- disruption as striking policemen for 2·year-old Gaynell Mann day during 8 visit to this Tuas city where Kennedy was killed as and firemen kept their picket filed a motion in Denver be rode in a downtown motorcade. lines a way from the schools. Juvenile Court Wednesday ask· ••As far as we have been able ing that life-support equipment THE BOUSE COMMITl'EE is inveatlgatine a conspiracy to determine there are no keeping ber alive be shut off. theory In the Kennedy killing. pic!kets," Sam Jacobs. chief of "If she's clinleally dead, ahe Ford told reporten at a recepijon= ••I •Wl fully support the eourlty fort.he l,7.5 acbUbls in has the right to die," sald at-Warren CQmmiulon•s coaclusioas. Tbe baste cooduaioo.s were ... -Ule Memplds Ctty Sell'o<ils torne)" Milo O.ner. "I don't feel that Lee Harvey Oswald committed the aaustnation:• system, said. "We're off to a her life should be extended ao Fifteen yean after pmbota rang out ln DealeJ PJaaa, the normahcbool day." the police can have a strong House committee is investigating an often-repeated tbeoey: that murder case som~wbere down there was a conspiracy to kW Kennedy and that tbel"e was more • l:ITY ~NIT,\TIOH workel's the roa4" than one ~an. ::..~ .. • also rep6rted to work.this morn· ......... -----------..-----~-·--------------·-· ------Ing. Lorene Osborne. president or the 5,500-member Memphis Educa tion Association. had said that teachers would not cross picket lines. The police union sent pickets to several schools Tuesday when teachers were to be1ln preparing for the new school term. The teachers wait· ed until the pickets withdrew before reporting for dutv. HOWEVER, THE president of the 60,000·member Memphis Labor Council, composed of more than 100 Memphis·area un· tons, won unanimous endorse- ment for a general strike in sup· port of the striking police and firefi1bters. Council president Tommy Powell said his group would meet again Friday before calling any strike. City attorney Cliff Pierce asked Chancery Court Wednes- day to find the two striking un· ions in contempt for refusing to obey back-to·work orders. • • • and Snow Warning Ca11;celed .. .. Storm Dumps a Foot on Yeltm..wne, Moves EWJt Te91perai•re• ... '--.... " .. " n " 11 •• " ,. " 70 ... 70 .eo .,. ., ,, 17 1' A1 " n ... a .. ::: ...... 101 ,, tJ A . .. .... ., "11 ,IJ .. .. ta JS • 1' .II •• 11 , .. ,. .. tt .. 1' . .. ., ., II 6' . .. .. ".11 ' I WMbMw ft'• about • alrnple lhnlb, • eopNltloated bed of flower•, or ._...., .... *" of veget8ble1. Ute OaNy Piiot'• garden page blO ... IM ft9fY 8atwdef .... heftdy hlntt and deUghtful faature1. . w •.• give you tip• Oft ...... to plant. nen to prune •nd -when to plVClk Our Wlttera •IH brtPten ttte garden Hetlon with lf\tefe1t1n9 te•taft9 Oft toeal people who grow unutUal plants or achteve exc1i1att .. '9iiff1 . Our CfdP of 1torte1 come• up new every Saturday to help you have more aucoeu end more enjoyment wlt9' your growing. If your thumb 11 ..-. uee It to fllp to the p.,..n pege In S1turday· • Dilly Piiot . DAILY PILOT 642-4321 • STOCKS I BUSINESS Tbunday~ NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS 2 p.m... (EDT) Prices ~,.__._.,....."" .. ,."v...-......... "'9c.fl( ... ,w. o.t .... ••,Cll!deMI•.-. •11<....,,..W_..l\I._ l!MlltNI At-1•1*>9'1.cvrllltt ~lfltlilWt. .. lluldey, AIJQldl 17, 1971 s DAILY PILOT •7 With Care Com CollectoEs: -Gather a Mint 87 SYLVIA POaTU ' In Chleaio recently, a coUectloo \>I 1.530 coins. one of. the most Important 1n the n~z was auctioned off piece by Plett far la.2$ mlWon, more man tbe expert.a' expecta. lions. A SS gold piece, lRk>ver·lDC, weal for 1140,a. Even lboutb ~two sucb cotns an known to extat., the price w11 calkd 'way over the estimated value." Thia W·tbe latest manlfesta.Uoo of the boom ln ~ not meaat tor spend.Ing. atone wttb tbe upur1e lo boob not meant for reading, palntln1s and acu.lptures not neceaearily for viewing. A llM ..CENT PIECE, minted in honor of Presldtnt Kennedy the year after he was auautneted, ta worth SS. A 19tO quarter from the Pbiladetpbta mint, all silver and never circulated -commands $8, up from 17.50 Just three years ago. A 1950 Jefferson nickel, minted in Denver in limited quantities, will bring $11. An uncirculated 1909 penny V.D.B. <Victor D. Brenner series> will get SJ.a.50. But how does the amateur learn the value of casually collected coins? The chances are the "collection" ls only an "ac· cumulation," says George Parota. spokesman. for tbe numismatic divlsl.on of Deak-Perera, New York·based dealers in international curren- cies. But to make s ure: ( 1 > Take the collec· tlon to two or three 1 respected dealers, ask ._ _____ _, each the value of tbe entire collection, not Just best pieces. Dealers will charce for a formal, written appralsa\. cDeak·Perera, for instance, charaes a fee of 1 percent of the total value. with a minimum fee of m ., The appraisal is refunded if the collection ls sold through that dealer. <2> Do not make an inventory of the coins to present to a dealer for appraisal. The dealer wants to see the coins. (3) UNDE• NO CIRCUMSTANCES TBY to clean ~ coin. A poor cleaning job can slash a coin's value. <4> If you are told you have expensive coins, do not keep them at home; put them in a safe deposit box. Some advice for beginners: <1 > Don't try to collect every type of coin. Specialize. Rea" extensively. Get the advice of speciallats. <2> Buy the best examples you can find. Over the long run. the better coins are likely to climb the most in value. <3 > Don't succumb to fads. In recent years, forelp governments have been selling virtually worthless coins in fancy padcaging for as much as S30. Tbe prices then have fallen back to the SS range. (4) DON'T INVEST FOR 111E short-term. Collec:tions are to be designed for long-term investments. 15) Beware of coins that appear grossly underprtced. They almost surely are just gyps. <6> Don't buy or sell through unknown mail order coin dealers: patronize only reputable fl.nos. <7> Don't hoard on the basis of rumors. Treasury tl sliver certificates were redeemed 1n 1968 for a.a much as Sl.85. Today. they cannot be redeemed above the face value. 181 Beware of overgraded coins. Unless the true coodl· lion of the coins is described, you are beadln1 for trouble. <9> Note that the value of coins does not depend oo age. face value. or original price. Value la hued on...rarit)'. condition, demand. date, mint mart and authenticity. . PenoaalS~ ! I Neighbors Haill I Small Utility i READSBORO, Vt.. <AP> -When the liaht.s go out lo Readsboro. the fint thing people do ls call to see lf t1* electric company is home. "If be Isn't, you just light a few candles and wait a while." says Vlllage Clerk.Margie Crtstofollnl. BUT MOST OF THE TDIE. the call is followed sbortlt by the sound of Robert .. Buster" Berard raUUng up tbf! drive way in the Readsboro Electric Department's 19'2 lln' truck -its only line t.ruck. • With about 250 customers, the Readsboro ElectrU! Depa rtment is the smallest of Vermont's 27 electric utilities. Berard is the lineman, engineer, meter reader a~ . maintenance supervisor. Mrs. 1 CrlstofoJ!ni keeps the records and sends ~ out the bills, and three bailiffs -tbe village fathers -are responsible "fqr lon1·term policy. "We don't have anythlng moderD.. Just about everything ls the orilinll equi~meot. Dates back to the '30s ardl '40s, • Berard says, leaning against Ot,e antique truck. "It's the only truck we got, but it .... ....,.o stlll ruM pretty Jtood. We Just sort of fil it up every Ume lt breaks down, and it 's kept on goine," bJ says. · •' DESPITE THE OLD EQtJIPMENT. and the limited financial resourees available to a munic\pal utility 1ervb.a a village of 469, people ln Readsboro 11ve tbeir elec~ company a vote of confidence. AM Bit.et, who bolds forth ln the vWace's wooden poil office . says abe "can't remember a time wben the ~ went off because t.blngs weren't kept up. ''People Just seem to call up Buster when there's ~ problem, and he fixes tblngs up pretty fast," she says. i Richard Saudek. the ,slate's Public Service Boa,,.. chairman, sajs Readsboro is ''fairly typical" of the 1tate'• smaller uUUttes . .. MOST OF THEM WERE SET up ln t.be 'aDI, before the bla eomjNUUee would to into &bele 1111aller ton.a. ~ tbe ones that have eurvived really tnow bow to opente Ota a ahoestrtni." :• ''The smaller ut.illtiea' atrenatb ls the penonall~ kind of ~b:,>;hr;:vtde &.hat a btcaer company, 1~ -Cenual V Se.alee. Corp.. ~'t.1' ~ Enn!! Gidney, a PSB staffer. , _£.._..:t. For Berard. Mrs. CristofoUnJ and Readsboro• ower vWage ottlcera, "pel'IOftalJ.Jed service" can be a mix~ ~easln1. lt means dealln1 •Wl customers wbo al.soft~ nelabt>on. But lt sometimes means )istenlnl to compl~ •htle on a t.rtp to the • vtua1e srocerY, or l•l· tins pbone calla at ( J home under te.. thari K?JUSD.rV Ideal C.lrcumltaDC!e9. on_,..,. '---------~~----' IUJT THE IN · formed •Y8t*m worts, ! keeplns fteadsboro free from the publlc cont.roveny lh•l 'rt quently matb the relationship between tarae uUilUel an~ th 11' ratelM')'e.ns. :. "We lat applied fOI' a rat.t lDcreue two Jian ...,_ )In Criltofol1nt NJI. '"Tbe fellows u.p ln MootPehf. atld we had lo bold.a publle hea.rtnt so s.oPM could ~m on lt -bUl nobody came." U DAILY PILOT ThurMtay. August 17, 187'1 WOALOJ ENTERTAIN~ENT" Ma rr~e MiniMter Ma~~s . 'MidSum1"'er A,f adnes~'- LONDON tAP> -"Who an his r1aht mind would want clvtl eer VM\t m\lekina around wU.b mar r1•1ea!" ask~ one member of P•rllament. "Why not a mlru t r for t.M mlddlt>· l~d· A m lnl1ler ror divorce! A mlnl.ster for dut.h!" aaked a Loodon ne 'IP 1per. call· int lt "midsummer madness .. THE CAUSE OF of the uproar ts a plan under eonalderatloo b)' Britain's Labor aovernment to uppolnt o minister for marrtq -ulrtady dubbed by some THE FAMILY CIRCUS. n wap u "Mr Cup d." Tb pro90tat waa made by a iHome omte comm"t' tbat r com mtnded lM appointment of a Junlor mlnl11ter to coordlnato lht work of 1roup1 reaponalbl ror marrta, 1ul<11nc and «'· search lnto wh.y famUIH break up ln Britain, wb re-one mar· rla1e ln lhrff ends in dlvorru. The Hom Olflce paya out nurly tl million a year In arants to nve m•ni•ae counsel· t ns or1aniullon1, and the ~partment of Health a.nd Soclal Security aays welfare benenta By Bil Keane "Daddy likes to go on the benches best." Producer Signs Two Top Stars By HANK GRANT n.. ..... ,......_. Producer Ross Hunter's hunt for two top stars to headline his third NBC telemovie. "The Best P lare To Be." may be over. He's virtually clinched as his peachy pairing Audrey Hepburn CJnd Anthony Quinn . . . Lynda Carter's proof of being a '"Wonder Woman" in real life with her s mash stand at Caesars Palace in Las Vegas has earned her a firm bid for a gig at the London Palladium, no less. And m )' Nevada spy tells me further that Lynda's c losing night at the Sahara Tahoe earned her, by actual stop.watch, a record 6'12·minute standing ovation at the Dunes in Vegas. My New York spy reports that Diane Kea&on has taken a l<>af rrom versatile b.r. Warren Bea&ty and hCJS formed a company to produce her st arring movies "Sugar-throat" George Borns is mulling the firm o(fer or a lucrative concert lour or Australia. Really. George cs as. good a singer today a ~ -~ · 50 yeaN> ago. But Gracie AUen married him anyway ... My football spy tips that aM soon as frontman Jack Heller latches an NFL fra nchise or buys a 1uassau. pald to aln1le·pa.,.nt hornee COit ubout St.$ bill Lon annually. tbou7h h. H)'I some ()f thole bcme ltl would be pald t.o the re· clplcnta even lf thelr homes weren't 1pllt ''A MINISTER rOpon1lble tor coordlnat· Jn1 and developtna au the state help 1vail1ble can only be a b.le11ln1.' 1 aaJd tbe London Daily Mirror, which backed the plan. Also amonc those welcomin1 the Idea was Dr. Jacobu.s DomJ· nlan. a peychlatrist who beads ready, aim ... water the $arrlage research center at London '1 Mlddletex Hoapltal. Re Hid marital tnaidowoa anCl dtvo«• are ~adns "an acute aootal Pl'Ob1-n'' la J,bla COUDP'Y ofM mllllon. ''lft 19'11, there w~e 825,000 one•parent fa.,.. aJ1d about 1.25 paJlllon· c~" be salct. "Tbete ls a J)ttvate prtce in· terms of bµman suttettn• wtUUn the family, -and 1 P'&blle price in support for wives and cbUdten who need to be tuen Into care." Mas. HELGE &UBINSTElN. Ralnblrd plstol style noz. th9 I• adjustable to cover .the area desired. With team for a move into the L.A. Coliseum, he'll bring Bob Waterfield outta retirement as his new team 's gt-neral manager . No scam, Bob's the boy Heller wants and his lraruan and European moneymen are most agreeable even though they're not familiar with his football prowess. But they sure were impressed when told he was once married to Jane Russell. ~ ~ shut-off. #T1·C. 19 1•• Reportedly irked by film start delays. Al Paclno•s bowed outta his starring role in Marty ~ Bregman's "Born on the Fourth of July." Pacino's now pinned to topline Norm Jewison's "And Justice for All" pie to pop in Oc· tober ... New Two You : Steve McQoeen & Barbara Mentor who just happens to look very muc h like Steve's ex, All MacGraw ... My London spy reporLc; that British actor Oliver Thomas, obviously miffed at be· MCOUHN ing paid a mere 16Gs for bis u. tie role opposite Joan Collins in "The Stud," turned down twice that amount offered to reprise his role in the sequel, "Stud II." . . . Also in Blighty, Marianne Faltbfall. so faithful to Mick Jagger in happier years, is gearing to hit lbe con· eert trail for the first time in 10 years, touring Europe with a five·piece combo -all men, or eourse. Dyan Cannon need no longer be coyly secretive about the na me of the new man in her life who may yet lead her to the altar for the first lime since Cary Grant said "I do." He's actor Armand Di San&o, whose most recent role was in Sylvester Stallpne's "Paradise Alley." ... Morgan Paoli &ughl an extra flight ticket for sweetie Carmen Sehefold to &<!'company him to West Berlin location of his costarring role with Richard Burlon in lbe "Sgt. Steiner" pie. And for honorable reason, he'll tie the knot in Berlin with the German·bom beauty on Sept. 9 . . . HusUer mag honcho Lury Flynt will move permanenUy to Hollywood, soon as be gets outta the hospital. Not to be near Bagla Defier, but near to bis new editorial oCfices in Century City. · Unpublicized till now ls lbe fact that so many of our Briti.sh•bom thesps have bad anonymous phoned, telegramed and cabled death threats, the FBl's goUen into the act and has advised several or them in Hollywood to 111ove away from thelr puds and..p tnto Jalding for a ~. . • My studJo spy ventures lbe-.&Ulii: if ~eyfim COl'I· Unues to ref~ a reprise or his Oseat·winnine "Goodbye Girt" role in the sequel, isn't Nell ShaOQ prepared to grab Duatln eon ... as ••nba ~Jllson'1 new costar? · ' New l'wo You: Thrush c.sta c.&eUo <the late Loa'• dauebter> & psychic KemQ &1acpoe, dinln1 at Ah Fong'•· KennJ(, of coune, refused t.o open bis fortune cookie • • • Still StHdy As They Go: Can4lce Beqe. ii Jbra•tm Mo .. aa, munchin• Moussaka at the Alexllion ... Hap llefaew' has Jl••1 Cao as an Interim house f.Uest at b1s Playboy Manae. Can t. think~ a better place to Allllal• multa& eatraqement blu•• • • • Mi ...... ."New "York .•PY reti0rt1 tbat • Mtdlael a-eu., DO •urJrise "now Plannlnf 1 • • qucil to "Chorus Un.'' wl&h bia~ala ptckltta up wbttt they left olt. wttb rehtirbl ltarta tor the musical wilblo the musical. ·. SANTA ANA J Son °'4'90 Frwy. a· treat toi' Whit JOU grow VJgoro An Purpoee Fer· tlllzer I• the answer tor better nowera. ,, ... and ahruba. 20 lb. bag. Reg. 4.19 2•• 111111 llnllh tor Wiiis chairmllb of the Lohdon Ma~ rtaae Guidance Council. said, 'Te are ab&oluteJy delighted." But the Rt. Rev. Willlam Westwood. Anglican bi.shop of ' Edmonton. said the plan "fills me with terror." b~ said there is ~'"f a.r too much Jnterterence nowadays ln the way people run their own lives.·· Ab 8Jt'1'Y mesnber of Parlia· ment. Norman Tebblt of the op. position Conservatives. aereed that 11overnment ministers should not .. muck around" in marital matters. IN TUE UNI ED Statn where more thn OJle out Ol three marnae~ end io divorce. there '5 no post ed.w ~I Uo \be one pro ed .., • esldeqt Carter Cd pla:"le a Yt'bite Howie eonlerene'7' .. ~ families. but th~ has been put off until sometime in the .1980s. The Daily Telesrapb, wbicb suppoftS the Conservative Par- ty. collUDef\ted: ··As a serious propoaal. it ~ngs to Ut, sterile bureaucrattc world i" which there is a p>litlcal solution to everyt.tdq. ' you scream, i I scream for hom•ade Ice cream Big 4-quart eapecfty lce,cream maker ... provides a IOtOf c:oof delight.I for a sum· mera day! Easy operating electric freezer. Bright Kelly gree~ polypro- pylene. Recipe boOk Included. tF007 A ' r dollble yoUr cover lawns • ~~· ot all shapes Your choice of rec· shut-off 'Y' con Of' to tangular #R300C, circle allow you to Ute hoees IC300C. square #S300C tre>tn one cxrtlet. Y ·26C. Of' twin clrcie #T300C. Reg. 3.99 Reg. 2.15 each. 2•• datotf ulldlllrables Vlgpro Garden Oust ~ loaecta In your vegeta• glfden. 10 oz. sq_. container. Reo· 2.1$ 1•• 1~ sptiy away the pests Vlgoro 50'Y. Malattuon gives you generul protection from destruc· tlve lnMCta. 1 pt. alze. IMP 2•• tlmcov•up for dirty b1cb Qftdden Spred LU9tte Alkyd Semt-Glou.CIO.to_.~ lheen, re.lsta gruM, steam and tood deposits. Reg. 18.95 11 ~ •