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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-08-18 - Orange Coast Pilot17 • 6 an ose Blaze 1 Fashion Island Diedrieh Bid .. 'Bo1nh Case' Ends For DiS Deni~ by Judge DAILY PILOT * * * 10 < * * * FRIDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 18, 1978 VCM.. 7t, NO. :m, 4 SllCTIOMS, • ~A.U r Fire Disaster I Dledriela lndiet•ent NoCwse EntXJunter? Bomber Killed; 3Hurt . "~ ......... INFANT'S BODY REMOVED FROM SAN JOSE FIRE Six Perish In City'• Worst Blaze In History • 2 Me"' 4 Kids ·Die In San Jose Blaze SAN JOSE CAP> -Two men and four children were killed early today when a two-alarm fire s wept through tbe)r townhouse. Dead were Floyd Brown, an unidentified friend of the family, Brown's three children and an 11-year-old cousin, according to Capt. Larry Salo, San Jose Fire Department. The' names ol the chilClren were DOl immediately released. They ruged..b:o.m six months to 7 years of age. Brown's wife-. Deborah ucapecl by Jumping out a &eC"o11d floor window of the •mote-ftllectbUlldinl. Salo~aid. Sbe was t.ken to Alexian Brothen Hospital in San Jose GlJARD DOG l.mES JOB where she was being treated for first and seeond-degree burns on the upper part of her body. She was in stable condiUon in the in· tensive care unit. the hospital said. The ftre brote out at 4:36 a.m. in the Browns' townhouse, which is part fA a SO.unit condominium near Tully Street and Hipway 101. It was brouaht under control by firemen abcMal ball an hour later No ether injuries were re· ported. By KAftlY CLANCY OflMOellyNl!tl .... Another move by Orange County Supe rvisor Ralph Diedrich to have the bribery in· dictment against him quashed ended in failure Thursday. Superior Court Judge John Judge Denies Hospittd for Fiejo Rapist By TOM BARLEY Of•OlllY~se.tf Warren Dale Clewell of Mis- sion Viejo was declared a men- tally disordered sex offender Thursday, but an Orange County Superior Court judge refused to return him to Atucadero State mental Hospital. "It's just sheer lo&ic." Judge H. Warren Knight commented. ·'He bad five and one-half years there before this latest crime OC· curred and the treatment doesn't seem to have done much good." Clewell. 28, left Atascadero in March af\er r;eceiviq treatmeilt as a mentally disordered~ of. fender for erimea eommi iD Los Angeles Comity Two mobUul later be plc"ted up a 13-year-Old El Toro girl aa sbe walked home from Serrano In· termed.late School and drove her to Irvine where she was raped, savagely beaten and left for dead. Clewell ha ple1W pllt)t to· (8eePIUSON, Pqe AJ) Flynn denied a J;POtiOD by de· fense attomey Marshall Morgan to dismiaa the indictment on tbe contention that the district at- torney was prejudiced in his band1ift8 fA the case before the Orange County Grand Jury. Flynne aslo denied a motion to dismiss a bribe conspiracy charge against Fullerton archi'tect LeRoy Rose , Diedrich's co-defendant. Flynn said be would rule next Friday on other motions to dis· miss the Diedrich and Rose in· dictments. Their Superior Court trials are scheduled to begin Sept. 18. Thursday's court appearance was the fifth in a round of pre· trlal motions by Rose and Diedrich defense attorneys. The indictment alleges that Diedrich ln 1973 solicited bribes from the Robert Grant Com· pany, original developers of Anaheim Hills, iD return for a favorable land use decision. The indictment alleges that the money wu funneled through Rose and former Diedrich at· torney Michael Remin,ion, both of whom provided services to the developer. , Diedrich defense attorney <See DIEDRI~, Page AZ) NIGHIH4RE STIU IJ4UNTS FAMILY Tie crime a1ainst their dauabter happened months ago, but a Newport Beach family ls at1ll llvlnl with the nlahtmare. See Featurini, Page Bl. LA MESA fAP> - Twenty.five citizens telephoned police te ex· Cress alarm about a riot. red UOt in tbe Ky . • .,.... lllbf" moved and then stopped and, when it stopped for a second, part of it dropped from the sky," one caller said. The sightings were Wednesday night. Police said somebody apparently attached a flare to a helium balloon. RayDemes 'Yoluntary' Confession WASHINGTON CAP> James Earl Ray conceded today be had made a detailed and un- qualified confession to the murder of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and would do so again under the same circumstances. But "all guilty pleas are not made in beawen," he said. Ray. in bis third day of testimony to the House As· sasslnations Committee, was questioned time and again about why, if be were innocent, he re- peatedly affirmed in a ·Memphis court March 10, 1969, that be "fired a shot from the second floor bathroom in a rooming house and fatally wounded Dr. King." Rep. Harold S. Sawyer, R· Mich., pointed out to Ray that his trial Jud&e. in accepting a bargained guilty plea for a 99- ye a r sentence, offered Ray many chances to recant lbe COD· fession and the def enda.ht re- fused each time. Moreover, Sa~ noted, Ray told the court tllat •no one med pressure" to convince him to foreao a full trial. But Ray Mid that wasn't the cue, ~ of wbat be told th• court. He C!laimed bis at· torney, Percy Foreman, pres· sured bim on the plea, that be had suffered mistreatment in jall, couldn't sleep, and Ills health bad deaenerated Sawyer uked why Ray raised thole luUll before his sen~c­ in1. "Dld tou make any complaint • at all about Mr. Foremua?" be prUMd. Ray: 0 1 can't Ml bow I'd do anythiQI ~ dlff.-ly, baaed on the plUOn the ptOMCutor aDd Pwey Feinman bad ma tn. There •s really no .,._ deal aboUt manetaYeriftl a defendant mto a pUty Plea. All 1U11t7 pleas a.re not m8deill Maven.• Earlier, Ray threatened to seal bll U111 ln a dispute over ac· MANILA,PbilipplnesfAP>- A bomb went oil in the toilet of a Pbilippine airliner at 24,000 feet today, apparenUy blowing the bomber out through a hole in the fuselage and wounding three passengers. official sources re- port.ed. The airline said the plane landed at Manila International Airport 15 minutes after the ex· plosion. It was the second bombing a board the same airliner, a British-made BAC·lll flown by Philippine Airlines. In 1975, a band grenade exploded in one of the lavatories, killing the man who brought it aboard and wounding 4S passengers. The sources said a political motive for the bombing had been ruled out, and investigators were looking into the possibility that the bomber had been trying to d e s troy the plane or somebody aboard for insurance money. Philippine Airlines said the explosion occurred in a rear lavatory 50 minutes after tbe BAC-111 jet took off from Cebu. in the central Philippines, for Manila with 84 persons aboard. The sources said a man was iD the compartment at the time, apparenUy planting the bomb, and was blown out over the Sibuyan Sea 120 miles south of Manila. Airline spokesman Enrique Santos would not idenUfy the missing man but said military <SeeBIAST, Page A.z) Weaaher SUDQy tbro\llh Saturday but aome low clouds dur· in& early mornin&-.boun. Lows tonight 62 to 65. Highs Saturday 70 to 74 at beaches to 84 to 88 lnland. INSIDE TODAY . Row power of CNcono QCmfl nvolrw '*"" f0111a fn 'Zool Sult.' ForomMIDot ,,.. MW plov .. Loe A.ftotla, ... ,,. Cl. l•elex • ...,...._~•-·~<~Y.P..-Alj~,....__.;:~~--~--~~~~~~~-, ~ ~ Firefighters battle a fire caused by an explosion which ripped through a chemical plant at Chicago Heights, where 100 employees were on duty The blast killed two men and injured four others. Car. above. was c~hed ' by a telephone pole in the force or the explosion. Arson at Gunj>pint In Vernon Blaze? VERNON IAP> Employees al a commercial warehouse in Vernon claim they were forced at gunpoint to set the building on lire -on the heels or an an- nouncement that the city's fll'eriebters may not respond to alarms beginning Saturday morning. The employees, .about eight of them, ~fused to identiry the persons who allegedly forced them to spread gasoline on the wa r e house floor and set it afla me late Thursday night, said a spokesman for the Los Angeles County Fire Department. Th~ employees said they feared ror their safety if they cooperated tn the investigation, which is being handled by the Vernon Police Department White Shark Survival Questioned SAN DIEGO <AP> -Sea World officials say they are wor- ried about the survivability of a rare great white shark captured Wednesday off the Ventura coast. •·At the moment, this is the on- ly 1iving great white shar~ on display in the world,·· fish · curator Ray Keyes said Thurs· day. "But ita survival depends on whether jt will eat in captivi· ty and cohabit with 20 other s harks in our live shark exhibit." Now, the great white is a ~mewbat smaller version of the 11\0nlter fl.Sb portrayed ln IDOV· Jes. The "°foot-9, 60-pound shark, less than a year old, was cauahl ib the net of Ben Henke, a com mercial fasberman who notified -Sea World. Ron and Valerie Taylor, shark experts involved in the produc- tion or "Jaws," were at the park fllmine a television special when 1.be great white was brought in. · Park officials named,it "Ron,'' in Taylor'shonor Like Its neighbors in Sea :World's tank, Ron will be of. .1ered different types of fish three times a week.. .. Most or the other sharks are from Florida waten and they don't know that Roa Is a gut white shark," said Sea World spokesman Bill Seaton. "But as be grows to 20 feet or more, he :wtU gain considerable respect " The blaze required a ssistance from fire departments in nearby Monte~llo, Lynwood and the county because of a shortage of Vernon firefighters due to pro- tests over Propasition 13-related layoffs. About 25 firefighters knocked down the blaze within 10 minutes. But it took up to 3> minutes for the assisting depart- ments to res pond, said Ron Cummings, spokesman for the Inte rnational Association of Firefighters Local 2312. There were no injuries in lhe fire, and no estimate or damage was available. Cummings said be gave the ci- ty notice Thursday th a t firefighten may take a "safety and job p~tion action" after 8:30 a.m. Saturday mornin8 if there are too few firefighters available to safely put out a fire. That means, Cummings said, that firefighters may not answer calls. "As rar as we're concerned, anything goes alter 8:30," he added. He denied reports that it was protesting firefighters who may have allegedly coerced the warehouse employees into start- ing the blaze. "I can't believe any firefighter would do that." Relations between the city and the firefigbters deteriorated three weeks ago when city of. ficials announced that 17 of the city 's 101 firemen would be terminated in September and October. Those 17 men are rutty trained firefighters but filled other pasi- tions, such as dispatchers and mechanics, said Mike Bower, ci- ty information officer. As of Thursday, 17 other firefighters were suspended temporarily because or various disputes with the department. A nonr al 24-bour shift is manned by ~ firefighters, ~ut only 13 re- ported for work Thursday. Bower said that Vernon, a 5~-square mile city that borders Los Angeles on the southeast, has made mutual aid pacts with the county and neighboring cities to assist in fire protection help 'Mad Anter' ~Mark With Paint D£LAFIELD, Wls. <AP) Beware the mark of the ant! The Mad Anter hu struck at about ball• dolen places around Delafield and nearby Wales, UI• 1111 • ateneil 1IDd spray-paintto leav'e 28-1.nch·lone black ants on buQdlngs, sidewalks, tennis court.a and at least one blllboard. Some think It adds to the de· cor, some are disgusted and Just about everyone ts wondering who did lt. .Dne place bit wa1 Maney HA'Nlware in DelaOeld. ·•1t·1 beautifully done with a superb st.encU." said owner 1'om Maney. "No, lt doesn't make me mad. If It were tlopD)', yea, but It'• bea\llWUll1 dOae. r. Pollcem.n Jobli ~ calla It malldout mllebief, bUt ooe no oat bu filed a complablt to police .,., looldDc for.,._._ Tia• Col.tal lu baa beer> awarded two a•t•. bat tbe ........ .-11 Could ••• tila\~ wone. .. It "911 bH Ma IOllM uQCld; ~ ... 8iU1 Mme- Hqtald. ~ Energy ,Bill · Moves p,....p~AJ DIEDRICH •• Morgan argued Thunday that tbe di1trict attorney already bad been found to suffer a conmct of anterest and "appeararnce of prejudice" against Diedrich while the bribery indictment was being pursued. Carter Natural Gas Plan to Congress WASHINGTON <AP> -~­~ant Carter ~as s cored a breakthroulb that 1eta bis long- st a 11 ed ener1y plan moving aaaln in CongTeSs. Vice Preei· dent Walter F. Mondale and con- eressional energy leaders said today. After meetina Tbursday night wttb four meml>en of a House- Senate conference committee Carter obtained agreements necessary to get the natural gas portion of the energy program plan up for action before the full House and Senate. The last two conferees to sign ' the natucal gas conference re- port were Democratic Reps. Charles Rangel of New York and James Corman of C&lifornia. Sen. Henry M. Jackson. D· Wash .. chairman of the Senate Energy Committee. said the big. 1est factor in changin1 their . minds was Carter's appeal that failure of Congresa to pass an energy bill would .seriously worsen the condition of tbe U.S. dollar overseas. Jacks on predicted an ex- tremely close vote on tbe com· promise when it comes to the Senate floor. He said Senate ac- tion on the compromise would probably be held off until after the congressional Labor Day re- cess. Senate liberals have threatened a filibuster to block a final vote, but Senate leaders. believe they can gather the 60 votes necessary to end debate. Obtaining final approval on the compromise itself is expect- ed to be more difficult. Becaus e the House has already recessed for its own 20-day Labor Day recess, failure to get the agreements Thursday would have most likely meant collapse of the natural gas pric· lng compromise. The compromise would lift federal price controls on natural gas by 1985, wilh gradual price inc r e ases in the meantime. Carter sent bis energy legisla- ,,,..,,. Page A J RAY ••• cess to decade-old documents. but eventually agreed to con- tinue after receiving a promise that he would receive copies of the evidence. Ray's threat. at ~e urging of his attorney, Mark Lane. prompted another delay in the hearings while committee mem- bers huddled to see if the docu- ments including copies or Ray's handwritten notes about bis travels, could be produced. Lane demanded all in- vestigative reports on Ray fol" use by bis client in further ques- tion ins. When that motion was set aside. at least temporarily, Ray demanded at least his handwritten notes. "I don't see bow I can 10 on without them to help me rec- ollect," be said. After the huddle. the commit- tee agreed to make documents, containing 20,000 words of evidence. available to Ray before the day was out. Meanwhile, members of tbe committee agreed to avoid ques- tions based on that evidence. Today•s proceedings, were de- layed nearly an hour wbeniLane asked extra time to prepare bia client after having battled the committee over charges of trtckel'y in lts first two sessions Wednesday and Thursday. Once today's session got un- der way, Lane triggered another round or verbal fireworks with the panel by accu~lng Rep. Lowa Stok,a. D-Oblo. of ··nm- leading the American people" about the dates on materiab en- tered into evidence a day earlier. BLAST ••• mvesUgators belleve lt was a one-man oper&U -- ·'We left Cebu with 18 passe~ but we deJ)laned only 17 ln -itirilla, iiiG. - There were six crew mem· bers. · The airline's statement said the passengers were h•ving breakfast al the time. It sald three pasaenaera were wounded by flylna spliftiers and the others panicked. . Qutc'k action b:v the •ouot. Capt. Antonio Mlaa, ln brlnllnl the plane to an alUtude of 12,000 feet as it Iott pNllUN ~ averted a diluter. t.be mt. m.nt addid. TM pnuure •~­ ba la nee. comparablt tc> a punctilnd balloon, could ba" cau1ed further structural d••• .. to tbt tuiela,.. Nid tM :~ir.:-UN at blO • Mftned"Ute ......... tbe pilot or • BAC·lll tMt Wiii blJllCftill '1 1tadent radlcala.. to Canton, CWaa.1D tt7L -...\ lion to Capitol Hill 16 months a10. Without the signatures of nine senators and 13 House members. the natural gas compromise would have been blocked from final consideration ln the House and Senate. the White House Thursday nJaht and obtained tbetr sipatures on the conference report. Besides Corman and Ranael. Carter called Republican Sens. James McClure of Idaho and Pete Domenicl or New Mexico to Appearing on NBC's Today Show. Mondale said. "We had a breakthrough last night on the long overdue gas conference re- p or l." He predicted the breaktbrouah would 11ve moaieatam to tbe loa&-•talled energy program. f Caneer Agent?· Dye l~nl Removed NEW YORK CAP> -Clairol, the nation's largest prOducet of hair coloring products. $aid toda.y it has removed from i~roducts an ingre.dient suspected of causiru{ cancer fh animal& · . Clairol Vice President Jai:!lt~r said most Clairol products on store shelves contain the ingr~ient. 4- methoxr.-m-phenylenediamine, but that new shim- pents will not contain it. . · The Federal Food and Drug Administr~tion has . proposed warning labels on ,Lroclucts containing µte · ingredient, also known as "f'Ml'I>. but h~ not is- . sued a fmal decision. -. · · Shor said Clairol believes ~ ingredi~t .,..,~e-. . .. but we feel it's a proper busmess decisaon to not have customers face that kind of warning label.·: The FDA proposed the label after the Nattonal Cancer Institute reported the ingredient. when fed to rats. appeared to cause bladder cancer. '" Both Doing Fine He was ref erring to Superior Court Judge Phlllp Schwab's ruling last November which said the state attorney general. not the district attorney. should prosecute Diedrich on an earlier indictment charging alleged violation of slate campaign finance laws. "The day after the district court or appeal upheld Judge Schwab this indictment came down,·· Morgan argued. "Here the district attorney hes been found to surf er a con- nlct or interest and he goes through that and I think the en- tire process is tainted," Morgan continued "Now is the time to correct thls and I think it can only be corrected by dismissing this in- dictment.·• be said. Deputy Olstrict Attorney Michael Capini argued that there were different sett of facts 1urroundint the Schwab rullQI and 'the motion before Judee Flynn. He said Flynn already ruled on the question of diatrict at· torney prejudice whele re-fused to take the dist at· tome1 off the bribery c .. Roae'a attorney, lvan Aronson, argued unsuc fully that the indlctment against bis client is based on spe~ulation and c~ture along with one "ambiguous, misleading state- ment'" allegedly made by Diedrich. "You can't tie this thing together with glue and string like Mr. Capiz2i is trying to do," he said. Ju.lie. and Daughter Aronson also argued that a three·year statute or limitations ror prosecution of conspiracy bad expired. Capizzi contended sufficient evidence exists to show the al- leged conspiracy fell within the three-year time limit. Go. Home Saturday Julie Nixon Eisenhower and her daughter JeMie will be.go- ing home on Saturday morrung, a spokesman for San Clemente General Hospital announced to- day. David Eisenhower . the baby's father. had said earlier that his wife and dauabter would ~ ably be released on Tbutsday or Friday. But the extension of Mrs. Eisenhower's hospit.alization to Sfltur<lay s houtcl not be in· terpreted aa an indication of any complication in ber recovery. said hospital administrator R. Hannan Jones. Both mother and daughter are doing extremely well. be said. The decision to postpone the new mother's return home was reached by Mrs. Eisenhower and her obstetrician, Dr. Eugene C. Curzon Jr., according to Jones. ··A typical stay at our hospital following cblldbirtb is tbree to four days," he said. "Mrs. Eisenhower and her physician simply agreed that Saturday would be the best time for her to go home.'' Jennie Eisenhower was bom at 1:32 p.m. on Tuesd•Y· with her father assisting with the natural childbirth. Tbe dark haired. blue eyed baby girl was 23 inches long at birth and weighed nine pounds, four ounces. "Big and beautiful -sbe·s just big and beautiful," the ob- viously elated Eisenhower told reporters. The baby's proud grandfather, fo.:mer President Richa~ Nix- on. pointed out to tbe press that Jennie is the first child born in the United States with relat.aves on both sides d the family wbo were PftSideots. As well u being Nixon's first grandchild. Jennie is the great- grandcbild of former Presideut Dwipt D. J:iMnbowet. ·Priest Facing Sex Sentence UNION CITY f~Pt -A Union City priest will be sen- tenced Sept. 19 aft.er pleading no contest to sexually molesting a p~ochial school boy. Tlte Rev. Stephen Klesle, wbo was a teacher and the director of youth activities at Our Lady of the Rosary pariah school. wu released on bis recognlzanc~ after appearing in Munacipal Court. Police said a formal complaint was filed against the 31-year-old priest. after three parents com- plained to the school about games the priest played with their children in the scbool 's ~­ tory. Mayor in Lead CLEVELAND IAPI -Mayor Dennis J . Kucinich ·a slim margin of victory over a ~all drive has slipped to 303 votes after the first day of a recount. FreaP~AI PfilSON ••• seven felony counts which m- clude kidnap, rape and attempt- ed murder. Judge Knight explained to de- fense attorney Terry Giles that the three psychiatrists who re- cently examined Clewell were divided in their opinions on his • amenability to treat.ment. The judge said be concluded from reading all three reports that. while Clewell might be eager and willing to undergo further treatment at Atascadero, the odds are in favor or the conclusion that such treatment might be pointless. He ordered the criminal charges against Clewell re- instated and set Aug. 24 as the date he will determine the length of the defendant's prison sentence. Deputy District Attorney Paul Meyer said he will ask Judge Knight to impose lbe maximum term of 20 years and four months. Meyer said there is no reason why Clewell cannot receive the psychiatric therapy he needs at the state's Vacaville facility and he repeated Judge Knight 's ob- serv ation that treatment at Atascadero had proved to be pointless. Giles and Clewell's father. Mission Vi eJO printer Robert J . Clewell. commented outside the courtroom that they were dlsap. pointed with the court rulin2. Too Much? Too Little? OONT BE' MISLED BY DISCOUNTS. l>EALS. SALES ANO GIVE-AWAYS. THE COMMON LAW OF BUSINESS SAYS IT BEST - IT 'S UNwlSE TO PAY TOO MUCH. BUT IT IS WORSE TO PA'Ltaclll:OLE.. --.. ...... -------rF YOlf'PAYT00'-1UCH. YOU LOSE A UTTI.£MONEY AND THAT IS ALL. WHEN YOU PAY TOO LITTLE. YOU SOMETIMES LOSE EVERYTHING BECAUSE THE PRODUCT YOU BOUGHT · WAS INCAPABLE OF DOING WHAT IT WAS PUROiASED TOOO. YOU CAN'T PAY A LITTLE AND GET A LOT. DEN'S : iiiitallatiiin: ·"Custom d1ap11i11• lnolUR • wood floor 't10NI! 646·A838 -f>.t6-23.U 1 I ( Orange Coast Today's £1osl.g N.Y. Seoeks VOL 71, NO. 230, 4 SECTIONS, 41 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY., ,CALI FORNI A FRIDAY, AUGUST 18, 1978 106 Cut Froni Newport-Mesa Faculty BJ MlCllA£L PASKSVJat .......... Tbere wW b9 m fewer lld· minlatrators ud 100 fewer teac:hen ln lbe Newport.Ilea.a Unified Sebool Dtltrlcl when lthool ~ lb.la ran because ol Prol>C>Sitlon 13 and drops in atu- deni enrollrMnt Dlatrict oftlclala esUmate the red\lttlona in admlnialraUve staff. offtca-workers and nve mainlenante supervlaora will aUc:e the Pl)'roll budtet by about $311.000. On tbe teaehln1 aide, tbe ellmtnatlcn ot 100 teacben <47 temporary> combined wltta as real&UUam or retlremeou and • teachen who are lolna on leaves ot abMDce wtlf cuf tM payroll an estimated Sl. '1 mJIUon. 1be dlatrid bad about 1.2$0 .. when lut year. An ualatant aupertntendent. oae elementary school principal, a career education coordinator and one Halstant hilh school prtnctpal are all>OOI the six ad· mlnhtraton who won't be re- turnln1 to tbe diatriet this fall Dl1trict 1pokeswoman Jean Harmon aald some of the ad· mlnlatraton have retlr«I but the dlatrlct la not aeeld111 replacementa for tbe positiooa. These aalarlea amount to about Sl.89,000 a year Five malntenance supervisor posltions were eliminated Aug. IS for an estimated savlnga of $'18.000 A total of 14.5 office worker positions have been eliminated. but the exact savlnla to the ells· trict ls mlknown because some of the workers ''may be working somewhere else in the district at lesaer salaries," sala Mrs. Harmon. One administration poalUon. that or data processing director Dl'. Paul Tyndall. will probably be reinstated. officials noted. Tyndall bad been earntn1 $26,oot per year 1IDtil the dlstrict set up a non·profit data proeess- in1 corporation with Tyndall as director. However-, the corporation is being diseolved because of finan- cial problems that have led to a lawsuit and T:Yndall may return to bis former district duties. District trustees are now mov. Ing towards finalization of a 1978-79 budget of $4:5.2 mllliot1. The district would be left with reserves ol about $800.000. Last ftKa1 year tbe district operated on a total budget of $M.9 million. a figure that in- cluded reserves ef more than S2 million. Tax Cut Sought Leaseholder Relief Bill Pushed Aaaemblyman Ron Cordova ( D· El Toro> has introduced legislation that will give homeowners whose houses are on land leased from the Irvine Company the full property tax benefit of PropostU<>n 13. As things stand now, the leased land tor which the homeowners are obligated to pay taxes was assessed at its value in July of 1977. That is when ownership or the Irvine Company changed hands. Consequently. As sessor Bradley Jac:obs and his staff were obligated to value the land at its worth then rather than roll , its value back to what it was shown at March 1, 1975. as pre· scribed by Proposition 13. Cordova said Thursday that, as a result, the homeowners have been deprived of tax sav- ings benefits because of a transaction Ube company's sale> in wblcb they bad no benefit or interest. That is why he introduced the legislation that has now cleared one Assembly committee, Cordova said In the county assessor's office, Webster Guillory estimated there may be as many as 5,000 Cancer Agent? Dye lngredi,em Removed NEW YORK <AP> -Clairol, the nation's largest producer of hair coloring products, said today it has removed from its products an ingredient suspected of ca us~ cancer in animals. Clairol Vice President Jack Slor said most Clairol products on store shelves contain the ingredient, 4· methoxy-m-pbenylenediamlne, but that new ship· ments will not contain it. The Federal Food and Drul Mmlnllttatlon has proposed warning labels on produets containing the ingredient, al.so known as 4MMPD. but bas not is· sued a final decision Shor said Clairol believes the ingredient ls safe, .. but we feel it's a proper business decision to not have customers face that kind of warning label." The FDA proposed the label after the National Cancer Institute reported the ingredient. when fed to rats, appeared to cause bladder cancer Bomb Blasts Jet, Killing Terrorist MANILA, Philippines (AP> - A bomb went off in the toilet or a Philippine airliner at 24,000 feet today, apparenUy blowing the bomber out through a hole in the fuselage and wounding three passengers, offitial sources re ported. The airline said the plane landed at Manila 1ntematlonal Airport 15 minutes after the ex ploston It was the second bombing aboard the same airliner, a British-made BAC-111 flown by Philippine Airlines. In 1975, a band grenade exploded in one of the lavatories, kllllne the man who brought it aboard and wounding 45 passengers. Weather Sunny throu&b Saturday -but some low clouds dur- ing early momina hours. Lows tonl1bt 62 to 65. Highs Saturday io to 74 at beaches tcJ It to M lilled. The sources said a political moUve for the bombing had been ruled out, and investigators were looking into the possibility that the bomber had been trying to destroy the plane or somebody aboard for insuraDte money. Pblllpplne Airlines said the explosion occurred in a rear lavatory 50 minutes after the BAC· 111 jet took off from Cebu, in the central Philippines, for Manila with 8t persona aboard. The sources said a man was in the compartment at the time, apparently planting the bomb, and was blown out over the Sibuyan Sea 120 miles south of Manila. Airline spokesman Enrique Santos would not identify the missing_ man but ...1aJd mJll_taey investigators believe it was a one.man operation. "We le rt Cebu with 78 passengers but we deplaned only 77 in Manila," be said. There were aix crew mem· be rs. The ilrlme'a statement said the passengers were having breakfast at the time. It said three passengers were woWlded by flytng spllntera and the mllcupedeked t--tJRo~w•powrPJSof..'EChicarto9IU...,,;y:==r--=:_QulCi action by u1e-ollot. rioal'll bunta forth m 'ZooC Capt. Antonio Mlaa, In brlnlinl Sidi.• For ca reNIO o/ ,,,. MW tbe plane to an altitude of 12.000 pltsf tn Lot Anotl.n, llH PaQe feet as it Iott preuure inside CJ. averted a cllaa1ter, the atate- m.ent added. Tbe preuure lm· balance: comparable to a puncturea balloocl, eould have cau1ed further 1tructural dama1e to the r.eta1e. And the lowered cabln PfWIUre at hl&b altltude could bave barmed tie .,.. ....... l•tlex Miu wa1 tbe pilot ot a BAC·lll that wu bljac-ed by •tudent radtcal1 lo Canton. Cblaa. in uni. ........ homeowners affected by "the peculiarity" of the company's sale impact on this year's tax liability Most of the parcels involved land held under 99-year leases calling for the homeowner to pay taxes on the leased land. Cordova said be favors ex- panding1bis Assembly bill to in· elude business property as well as residential. He also said the wording of the measure "needs cleaning up" to help narrow it down to apply on- ly to the circumstances involved with the Irvine Company leased land 'Qornbing' leads to Drug Bust An Investigation that started WedneadQ aa a bomb IHre • the Nelmu-llareaa 1tore ln Fashion Island, ended Thanday with the arrest ot a auapeded narcotics dealer. Newport Beach police booked HarrJ Edwtn VMpan. JO, wbo llsta a ~ Dteto iddreill, aa be returned to. the department store to reclaim a missing briefcase That briefcase touched off a bomb scare Wednesday monU.nc when an unidentified woman brought it into the store, put tt on the nearest counter and told the clerk, "Somebody left this in the parking lot." The woman Immediately left the store. Because of the clrcum5tances and the fact th~ case was heavy, police called tl> the scene a.aid they were fearful it might COD· lain explosives. The Orange County Sheriff's bomb squad was summoned. The case was taken to the sheriff's bomb disposal area and opened. Instead of finding explosives, the deputies found two dozen $100 bills, ten tabs of LSD, several sets of Identification, a ledger and a set of airline tickets for Karachi, Pakistan. Narcotics investigator Mike Hietala who was given the case for investigation, decided his fir&t step woµld be to check with store emplo~ to find out if the man pictured In tlle identifica-tion bad returned for bis case. ••I went out there Tbunday mornlns and there be waa," Hietala said today. He booted Vaughan on sus.pleton of possession of LSD for 1ale. Hietala said Vauahan b8d Just been released recenUy from pro. bation in connection with a federal conviction for smuglllng 1,100 pounds of marijuana. He ~ told Rl!llil be.:. 1ii11 fife cn-e and several packages in bis bands wbea he left Fashion taland Wednesday. ''He set the cue down to put tbe stuff In bis car and Just drove otf and left it," Hietala said. Onirning lato t~ Tur•· Surf er operatang near Huntington Beach Pier today was even creating some white water with bis right band as he cranked bis burn at bottom of this wave. His ac· tton was frozen here Wlth a telephoto lens from the pier. Lifeguards said surf was running with some six·foot sets today. Equestrian Center Work Bid Approved V•ejo Women Arrested on Sex Charges The 9range County Falr Beard approved a $1.3 mUlloo conatructlon bid for the inlUal pJl.aH...alan equestrian. center on the county fairgrounds in "Costa Mesa TbUJ'lday. Construction of the bone and show facility is the fint step in tbe fair'• pl&DDed $18. 7 million expansion tlfort. ----·-· ----a...--'JLel-Miseioo Viejo women CalabasasatacoatofS332,000. who a~l edly offered Costa, After first phase eonstructtoo M l. la comDleted, the tair will tear esa ercover po ice more "-!Ill _.Jdatlna. bun& ··~ than a massaae 'lbursday night lil!Blon Drive to make way for wenrjJdled-m'clUIJ'lesofSOlfctf· , added construction. Ing prostitution. police said to- Tbe fair's master plan calls d'ifoxanne McKenleJ. 23, and ; for a_pace for 500 bones, train-20-year·old Marearet Belle tne areas, three trainin1 rln&s Moran, bothof 22322 Boltana, Mil· and a new abow arena that will l Vi 1jo .___1..ed o .S seat 2.000 people. Tbe overall son eJBUwereuuua at ranee "We plan to start construction ' t11·two mantbs Cpelldini ftnah1p. »---L Fi•-u...:lt;....I proval by the state> and l'OID· ~ -" .uu eu plete tbe equestrian center by pnJect 1-.bould be completed tn Co~~ Mesa fuvest11ator Tom three years, said Fulk. Boyland said an anonymous male, perhaps a dis1runtled * custom_!!"#-ccmtacted ~ ..S TWEN'l'YNJNE PALMS CAP> Ch r ht Ill a a.•' 1 aid F a.l r -Flre OffJdals ealdlMy Jflnal~~~ ll'UJ,t. __ to bave-. ·~ftiiii:tllat .._r-=:-"'.".~1t-:~.:,1M1iiii charred~ .... ~ a.bctuUIYe::IC!aot-... piltdQIJ-==;:::= rua1ec1 dwrt terratn at .ioellua • ..... itiil • 10 ...,_ wttat Rites Planned Tree National Monument under Z2IO tw.ne ltalll. --- complete control by Sunda1 Valley Crest Land9Capln1 Inc. Funeral aeni"8 1'll1 be cm. .-1.... ot Santa Alli WW comtnact tbe d __ .,. mo.~. new fadlltlel OD u.adeveloped u .... ~ Saturda)' for Iona-time fair acnaae near the lntenec> Corona de1 Mar reeldent tmma NICBTM.4RE snu lUUNTS FdMILf tloa of Arltn1ton Drl ve and Deets, wbodled Wednesday at the •1eof81. • Newport Boulevard. Mrs. ---.. ... WU retired at The new borM 1talb wtll be .,...... bullt by Port·A·Stalla of tbethneotberdeatb.had worked for 40 yean ei a Nllltered nune I at St. Judelbpllal ln Fullertoa. She leav .. her IOD, David Deeb of Col"ONi del Mar and three 1nndcbllchn. Services Wlll be conducted at ti a. m. at lleln>ee Abbey CemeterJ. Anaheim. 1ave a ~ aam• fQr-HMr--:::~ frN&.~ •ut~c.u mmace parlor. lnvestipton set up shop ID a local bot.el and when the two women arrived shortly after 7 p.m .• theJ alleaedly offeNd sex for a $100 fee. t • f Olargee Remain OAltLAND <AP> -A Judie ~ baa refused to drop char&• ot kidnapping with bodily harm a11ln1t William and Emily Harrt.1, ruUna that a Jury must ~ determine whetber J:latrleJa lleant wu ..,.lcally •baled durinaber.trr-4abductlon. · • '\ I I il DAILY Pil.OT N/C • Flood Paet Denied Newport Stalla on fl.S. ln.urance . Newport Beach cat y coun. cum ... beft relUMd to enact "' emerc~ onllnane• related to the federally mandai.d nooct In· aurance PtQlram. chooalnc ln· 1le1d lo lllold a public heartn1 on tbe matter• their Aua. • mMl· tn1. Coundl""" haw beee duellftl 'NU,b U.. hcleral lnaurance Ad· mln.latraUon ror "'°"' than two years over lbe cl\)''1 •latua ln tM flood tnaunne. procram. The dispute centemJ on IM aovern.meot ·a conteaUon that vlrtuall.Y all ol tbt watsfraat ...... o1 u. ctt, would nooct dut lac a J.00.y..,. l&orm 118tll Dol•tl Fin But t1 atftdala aucc:aatully Cot U.. atW1 \0 re•11M1 U.a calc\llaUona which Umlted des· ••nation or the flood haaard areH to Balboa laland a.nd Ne•n Shona. &Uuctune tMJt la lchatlfttd ftood h11ard •N• an r.,ulnd to C81T)' fedefally·IHUed ftood inaurance ln order to q_uallfy1 for any rlnAIK'lnt from federally In aured lcndlnl lmUtuUona. The ordlnU\ce IOUjht lloncbly mu1t be _.cted by ~. 1 ln or der fol' thole flood baurd ana property ownen to 1tt that ln· aurantt But COWM:tlmea balked at tbe Julie and Daughter Go Home Saturday Julle Niaon Elaenbower and her dauahter Jenrue will be~ Inc bome on S.turdQ momlna. • spokesman fot" San Clemtlllte General Hoapltal aanounced to- day David flsenbower, lbe baby's rather. had said earlier that bis wife and dauabter would prob-!,~~ oa Tb~ But Ute eatenslon of lln EJsenhower-S bolptt.alJ.aation to Saturday abould not be in UJng Betreh OU Tenninal, Pact Signed LOS ANG~ <AP> -Gov Edmund G Brown Jr., Standard Oil Co. ol Ohio and Southem California F.clisoo Co. announced today a long-sought agTeement that could clear the way for an Alaskan oil terminal in Long Beach The agreement would reqmre Sohio to apend $78 million on an- ti-pollution equipment at an Ed.iaon power plant. Sohio would also spend aootber $3 million to S5 million Gl environmental con trols at dry cleaning plants. "The contract siped tc>Qy by Ec:lisoD and Sohio guarantees an a m_p_rovement ln Seatbern Cllifomia air quail~ ud wW alao help reduce Amertea .. de- pendence OG foreign oil.·• Brown told reporters at bis office here 'The net result will be an air quality improvement " The ap-eement comes three years after Soblo announced plans for the Long Beach oO terminal, which would receive crude oil from Alaska and theft pump it to Texas and the Midwest through a aystem ol pipelJnea Tbe Sohlo proaram, wblch would dean up far more DOllu-lioo than il generates, would re- Portedly also leave the Long Beach air about nine Umes cleaner after the project la In operaUoa. The plan ls believed the first tl.me on a silnificant scale one company has agreed to pay for curbing pollution created by other companies to win approval of ita project. terpreted u an lndlcaUon of any complleaUoo In her recovery, said hospital adminlatrator R. Hannan Jonee. • Both mother and dauabter are doin1 extremely well, he said The decllion to poetpoae the new mother's return home was reached by Mrs. Eisenhower and ber obstetrician, Dr. Eugene C. CUnoa Jr .• accordlq to Jones. .. A typlcaJ atQ at our boepilal foJlowtna cblldblrth la three to four days,•• be aald. "Mrs. Eisenhower and her physician simply aareect that Saturday would be the best Ume for her to go home" Jennie Eisenhower was born at 1:32 p.m. on Tuesday, with her father assisting with the natural childbirth. The dark haired, blue eyed baby girl was 23 inches long at birth and weighed nine pounds, four ounces. "Big and beautiful -she's just big and beautilul," the ob- viously elated Eisenhower told reporters. The baby's proud grandfather, former President Richard Nlx· on, pointed out to the press that Jennie is the first child born ln the United States with relatives OD both sides of the f amilJ who were presidents. As well as being Nlxon•s first grandchild, Jennie is the great· g:randcbild of former President Dwight D. Eisenhower. David Elseibnwer is currently writin1 a biography of bis grand.father, the former Preai· dent. He is researching and writ- ing the boollt at bis Caplatrano Beacbbome. Tbe new father baa intenupt- ed bis 10-bour-a-day writing schedule to make extended Yla· it.a t.o bis wlfe and daughter ln the hospital. He descrlbed Jennie's blrtb u a blab poblt o1 bia life. ma wtte was .described toda1 by a bolpltal spokesman u beln& "oa top of tbe world. .. Suspect Blaster? HAYWARD (AP) -Police believe the thunderous dynamil1.. blast which rocked a quiet neighborhood here Tuesday was the work ol Mark Vargas, 24, of Sacramento. an accused armed robber trying to intimidate wit· nesses scheduled t o t estify against him. ordlnanee, • ltaftda?d measure requlred by lite flood ad· mlnlatrauon. Councilman Don Mclnnla tlUJ· 1eatect the heartnc after citing a few pa ...... ot tbe ~or­ dinance and Mklq C:lu Ulca- lion or NVlalonottbem. He cited as an example one paaaaae that reads: "The Qty Council or the ctty of Newport Beacb find• tbat tbe flood hHard areas of the City of Newport Beacb are subject to periodic Inundation wlllcb re- 1ulta lo property loss, beahb and aafety buardl. clisruptlon of commerce and aoverlllllental aervice, extraordlnary public expendJturee C~ Oood protecUon and relief ad impairment of tbe tu baH." "I for one would have one bell or a time voUna for that." be declared. Mayor Paul Ryckolf alJ"eed with llclnnla. u dJd COUacllman Paul Hummel, who noted the JO.pa1e ordlnance ls clotted with almilar 0 peculiar puaaaes ... Clty Building Director Bob Fowler told councilmen they could still 1et tbe measure enacted u an emer1ency or-dinance to meet the Sept. J deadline after their Au1. 28 bear· Ina. although be noted the Insurance administration of. flclals "are lettin& very nervoua about this." Strf,ke Enda lnMemphiA MEMPIDS, Tenn. <AP> -Striking policemen and firemen voted today to re· tum to wort by evenina under terms ol a two-year contract that would end a walkout wblcb kept the ci· ty clamped under • curfew for a week. The 1,100 policemen and 1,400 firemen voted in aeparate meetings to ac· cept tbe agreement, reached early today in negotiations between AFL- CIO and Chamber ol Com- merce. Unaoa INlden, said tbe contract guaranteed no penalties for the strikers. Stereo Theft Foiled u Victim Wakes A pair of Central Newport Beach residents stW have a stereo system to enjoy today after one ol them awoke to cbue off buralars who were lrJ'ina to steal the-.14 system~ Gary Newman of 110 41.at St. told police be awoke Jmt before mtdlliaht Wednesday to bear somec>i\e ~ around tbe bome be abanl with llk:laael Sberman. Newman said be got up i,o check on his roomle atid instead found the stereo out of its sbetf and alWng on the pound by• side door. Nearby stood two yovrrg strangers who took off running when they aat.i Ne•man. He said be chased them for a few ~ks but 1ave up in favor of securing the house and the $1.650 stereo. '• Tbe Sobio project is reported17 important to President Carter's energy program. But it would still have t.o be approved by the rnternal Revenue Service, the California Air Resources Board and the South Coast Air QualitJ Management DlstricL It must also be approved by LOng Beach voters, who will de- cide in November on a referen- dum asking whether they want the terminal in their city. OppOQeats ol tbe project dte heaftb studies that claim eaoission would harm residents Bild polat to the possibilities ol oil SJ!illaand~ Newport Ma}ror 8i.S Traffic Button Pla,i for IDOl'e lti8D Uii""dtJ..-1 aHre lil ca" some ~r'dtles doo't appl.y anCltbere aN utra rundl-.vattr- ble. ··we also inctuded the puab bat· tou tn CaM die l>epartmeot of .,, ...... INFANT•& BODY REMOVED FROM SAN J08e FIRE She Perlah In City'• Worat Blaze In Hlatory 2 Me"' 4 Kids Die In San Jose Blaze SAN JOSE <AP> -Two men and four children were killed early today when a two-alarm fire swept tbrouah their townhouse. Dead were Floyd Brown, an unidentified friend of the family. 1-rown 's three children and an ll·year·old cousin. according t.o Capt. Larry Salo, San Jose Fire Depa~t. The names of the children were not immediately released. They ranged from six months to 7 years of age. Brown's wife, Deborah. esca ped by jumping out a second floor window of the smoke·fllled building, Salo said. She was taken to Alexian Brothers Hospital in San Joae. where abe was beln& treate4 for ftrat Oct secood-degree bums on the upper part or her body. She was in stable conditioo in the in- tensive care unit. . the hospital a.id. 'The ON broke out at 4:38 a.m. in the Browm' townhouse, which license Plate Thefts Told Several license plate theft.a have been reported in Newport Beach, police said today. According to .POiice reports, Mltche Hunt. of 113 Baywood, Richard Bush, of UlO Park NewPort. Gregory Herbert. ol 121 '4tb St. and Frank Uoyd. 01820 E. Balboa Blvd. have reported the theft.a since Tuesday. Police are investtaatlng. May~r in Lead CLEVELAND <AP) -MQOr' Dennis J . Kucinicb's slim margin of victory over a recall drive bas t!llpped to 303 votes after the first day of • recount.. is part of a SO.unit condominium near Tully Street and Highway 101. lt was brought under control by firemen about hair an hour later. No other injuries were re· ported. Four Plead Innocent to Work Fraud Four Moulton Niguel Water District employees pleaded ~ cent today to criminal charges stemming from allegations that em ployees under their supervision performed domestic chores for them oo district time. 1 District Manager Carl KymJa, 44, of Newport Beach, bad earlier pleaded not guilty to charges COlltainert In thf. ume Kymla and the four defen- dants who appeared today before Superior Court Judae Robert E. Rickles were ordered to return to court Oct. 13 for pre. trial motions and the setting of a trial date. Free on their promise to ap- pear are Kymla, John Perry. 32, director of administrative operations; his brother. Chuck, 28. a maintenance yard foreman; inventory control clerk Vemon llcKown. 34. and maintenance yard super'ri9or Kenneth Krieger. 38. Charges of miSuse of public funds, grand thdl. destruction of public records and misap- propriation of public funds. are contained in the indictment. Tbe grand jury indicted all ftve after bearina testimony to the effect that clistricl workers aJ. leged)y mowed lawns. repaired cars an.d carried out mis· oellaneoqs home repairs for the defendants on district time. Tax Cut Support · Seesaws .. SACRAMENTO <AP> -A.a· sembly ~alter Leo McC~ launched • iut-dltcb effort ~ save his ~ to abollah ._ bomeowuen property tax todll)' wblle two locome tax cut bilfl gained momentum. · Al the same time. a propoql to clamp stringent spending llmlta on state and local loverQ· menta tbroucboul California was threatened by the leglslaUve i.o- ngbtlng over rival tu cut pl1D19. (Relatedat.ory.A5> • Ju•t 13 days remain befo~ final· adjournment of the 1f11 session. But In spite of the near· Ina adjournment, the Le1islature made little progress Tbunday toward •treement ~ any major tax wue. Instead. the Leglslaturt stumbled from one deadlock to another amid bitter squabblinJ and the fres h memory of Proposition 13's tax revolt message. The key obstacle to both ~ property tax cul plan and the spending limits proposal was the state Senate's rejection of a bitl drafted in the Assembly which would extend until today the deadline for placing conslit\a· Uonal amendments on the Nov. 7 ballot. · McCartby'a plan. which la a major revision~ Proposition 13) tax cut provisions. and th' 1pendlng limit, are botb coo s titutional amendment• Therefon. both could be deaCf for the year unless the twic». defeated extension bill is N· v\ved for a third flme and passed by an increasingly balk)t Senate. • Police Probe Parked Car Vandalism Newport Beach police are iD· vestigating a series of attacks dn can ~ed in tbe lots or tile Oakwood apartment complex. Residents of the complex at Irvine Avenue and 16th Street have reported the vandalism over the past two days, officers said One resident. David WestruP. - said be found his car with flat- tened tired, a cut fan belt and ttje wiring pulled l00&e. • Another. Rick Martin, said he and his roommate have bad their autos' paint Jobs damaged in the past month. In the latest incident. Martin said bis newly painted car incurred about $300 worth ol damage when someone poured caustic chemicals on it Newport Cops Seek Thief With Beard Newport Bea.cb police are seek· Ing a man wiUI a ruu beard who ran oul of a Lido Viltaae shop with a small decorated boa •aJued at $150. The theft was reported Wednes· day by a clerk at Port O' Call, 3400 Via Lido. Sbe told poltce Ille showed the Russi.an-made eollec- tor item to the man only to bave him run out of the st.ore as she was relocking the display case from wblch the box was taken. Too Milch? Too Little? OONT BE MISLED BY DISCOUNTS, DEALS. SALES ANO GIVE~WAYS. \.. • Fitb -~~-Gl)tM ~ _..,,,...... .. -tsll--t able to get die ·•~.:-· structicJntnsuftieieot 1.UUe we bHe t.o -traMfer tM fi .... THE COMMON LAW OF BUSINESS SA VS 1T bEST - IT IS UNNJSE.IQeAY 100 MUCH. BUT IT IS WORSE TO ~~"'nooJ;tme. -.. - IF YOU PAY TOO MUOi, YOU LOSE A LrmE MONEY AND lHAT IS ALL Devlin aplalned. ~~~~R~1~:=.-· :=1111•1;..e.~- Accord.in& to Public Worb Director Joseph n..11n, tbe d\Jta ellctble for about sai.ooo in state money for use on bicycle and pedestrian aaf et.y Dl"Q)ectl. In the ad:lon tUen lloaday. ct· ty omclals .tll actually be uob· ln1 for more titan twice -fbit '21,000 niure. ; i>evUn UDla1Md tHN are two proJecu to i,. u~ oa thi ..,.. pUcatloll-tbe U IMaUoinl fW lllDallMJd ~rMdJODI ud I szo,ooo eontrtbutlon to toQlti'uC. tton ot • blc)'cle brtcbre over tM Delhi Plood Ooatrol Cla:MMI u .part of a bMJcle path ~ lbe Upper Ba.y. He aaid the requnl! were made dll:=~~~~~but- tons are ldenUeal to tbe ped•triaD ~ currmtl1 in UH, except that tbe MW' QOM would be' located wbere cycU..... eouldree&tbem from tbe•treet. Rr.otOltqUllltloaldauchaDl'Q)· ect n llghtoftbitdt.1'1~ with traftlc flow and •UN-.d any ·~mono reeet'*1·~ tha clty for tikea could be used Oft pathwayuDdtnlJs ~tead. Wbllt llyetoft ... UftlQC• • cea1Cul ln bloc.kina tM applica· uon, be IOtbiaCOUDCU ~ to aar.. to lia.. tbe Ctl1'• Tr.ant~ Pia Qt ... NJr·.! vlao17 OJmmlctee reYtewtbe pro- polecl prOjeci. .. l WHEN YOU PAY TOO UTILE. YOU SOMETIMES LOSE EVERYTHING BECAUSE THE PRODUCT YOU BOUGHT · WAS INCAPABLE OF DOING WHAT IT WAS PURa-tASEO TOOO. YOU CAN'T PAY A LITILE ANO GET A LOT. I I Rat Reprieve? '13' Cuta Peat Con1rol •1 0111Y a.ANCY .............. o.,.... CcMmly raldeatl wtt.b rat aod mo1quito prob- lem• tbll aummer &N Soilll to have to do mucb of the ex· t.rmlnatloa ~ them.elves. GUbert Ct\&llet. manager of the Oranie County Vector Control Dlstrict. aaJd a 10 percent bod&et cut broqbt on by Proposition 13 has reduced the district's home-call ervke. AS A &ESULT, residents with swnmer rat and mos· qui lo problenu aren '\ 1etliag home service calla within 24 hours ot their complaint. Instead, lhey are being offered advice by phone and brochures to assist with pest control along with Cree bait available from vector control headquarters in Garden Grove. Challet said when pest problems seem to be severe or neighborhood-wide, technicians are sent to inspect and of· rer in-person help FOR EXAMPLf;, a specialist recently was sent to a Huntington Beach ~lghborhood being troubled wilb too many mice, Challet said. While mice ran outside the district's purviewif ~.e said, the technician offered the residents advice on e~atlng the rodents. An information worker also visited an Anaheim neighborhood last week to advise residents on ways to cope with rat problems, he said. PROPOSmON 13 left the district $120,000 sbort or its $1.2 million 1977·78 budget even with the help or special state aid. Challet said. As a result, 25 seasonal workers weren't hired this summer, he said, and the regular 32-person crew has been forced to concentrate on mosquito and fly control. Technicians spray known insect breeding areas every two weeks in summer, Challet said. BUT ONCE mE summer season ends, he continued, technicians will be. able to offer more home service calls, chiefly concentratin,g on neighborhood cat control. So rar, Challet said, the rat problem seems to be about the same as the past few years and hasn't shown signs of growing because of the curt.aliment or vector control service. The Orange County rats are a 'Six-inch variety known as tree or roor rats and are found mostly in oJder parts of Santa Ana, Fullerton, Anahetnr and Gardea Grove. Those areas contain more vegetation along with <Jld orange groves and other fruit trees that offer food and nesting sites for the nocturnal rats THE RATS ARE capable of carrying disease. chiefly plague, and can transmit it to humans through neas. he said. Cballet. said he has received about eight calls from citizens complaining aboul the cuts in service. But dis· trict officials also have noticed a reduction in service re- quests this s ummer, perhaps the result of announcements of service cuts, he said -Hanna Parole Set ' For September, '79 WASHINGTON 1 AP > - Former Rep. Richard T . HaMa. D-Cal If .• will be paroled on Sept. .6, 1979, from prison where be is serving a term of six months to 30 months for pleading guilty to a bribery conspiracy charge in con· ion with the Korea payoll dal. e U.S. Parold board ruled Thursday that Hanna must serve approximately 16 months of bis ·sentence. The decision was an· nounced today Hanna, 64, was accused of tak· · ing part In a scheme lo ply ·members or Congress with cash and other gifts to promote South . Korean interests. · The only other former con· , gressman who has been charged : ln the Korean payoff scandal is ·Rep. Otto E. Passman, who is ;awaiting trial. Passman was in- dieted on c harges b e took $213,000 in bribes Crom South Korean rice dealer Tongsun Park. . Hanna. who is at the federal prison at Maxwell Air Force Base, in Montgomery, Ala., is eligible ror parole on Nov. 7. His mandatory release date, if he were denied parole. would be May,1980. The parole commission did not explain its reasons for ordering Hanna to serve more than the minimum period. Fares Increase? SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -A Bay Area Rapid Transit COPl· mittee has vc:ited to raise the transit system's mlnlmum rare a dime -from 25 cents to 35 cents. ! Tbe Sunday Daily Pilot's Ml ( ] : coverqe ot Oran&e Coast hap-S UNO AY'S BEST • penln11 wUl be supptemented by : FamJly Weekly mqadne'1 look : behind the 1cene1 at La1una : Beach'• tamed Pqeant of tbe : Muten. · "'Our other artJelea wm ex : pJore: l POllCB ""' YOUt-A bull· : nen coaeultant t.bJnks there'• ao1netblnl to tbe "Star Wan" idea of·~ f'Orce." He tbiDkl (it'• •t.rtu. and tbat tt t'9D be •• poaUve put ot maklnl--.. : ud pel"IOIW ll "9 bittfr'.. ; ; •APPLYING llJCCB88-~ ::~~~:..::~ ~~ • clcled to nc~tl .far8* : to.al rll*inl'W ~ liicih ill .; w&at It bild alwail clODi belt. Frid!y. AugUlt 18, 1W8 DAil Y Ptl.OT .43 ~iedrich Fails Again 1 Judge Denies Bid to Quash· Bribery Indictment Anolher move by Orana• County Supervisor l\alpb Diedrich to have the bribery in· dlctment qalnat him quaabed ended ln failure Thursday. Siu>erlor Court Judge John Flynn denied a moUon by de- Hospital Denied • For Rapist By TO• BA&LEY Ot•Dltt!P ..... S- w arno Dale Clewell or Mls· sion Viejo was declared a men- tally d~rdered sex offender Thur~. but an Orange County Superior Court judge refused to return him to Atascadero State mental Hospital. "It's Just sheer logic," Judge H. Warren Knight commented. "He bad five and one-half years there before this latest crime OC· CUTred and the treatment doesn't seem to have done much good." Clewell. 28, left Atascadero in March after receiving treatment as a mentally disordered sex of· fender for crimes committed in Los Angeles County. Two months later he picked up a 13-year-old El Toro girl as she walked home from Serrano Jn·· termediate School and drove her to Irvine where she was raped, savagely beaten and left for dead. Clewell has pleaded guilty to seven felony counts which in· elude kidnap, rape and attempt- ed murder. Judge Knight explained to de· fense attorney Terry Giles that the three psychiatrists who re- cently examined Clewell were divided in their opinions on his amenability to treatment. The judge said he concluded from reading all three reports that. while Clewell might be eager and willir1g to undergo further treatme n t at Atascadero, the odds are in favor or the conclusion that such treatment might be pointless. He ordere d the criminal c harges against Clewell re- instated and set Aug. 24 as lbe date he will determ ine the length of the defendant's prison sentence. Deputy District Attorney Paul Meyer said he wiJI w Jud~e Knight to impose the maximum term or 20 years and four months. Meyer said there is no reason why Clewell cannot receive the psychiatric therapy he needs at lbe state's Vacavllle racility and he repeated Judge Knight's ob- serv a tlon that treatment at Atascadero had proved to be pointless. Giles and Clewell's father. Mission Viejo printer Robert J. Clewell, commented outside the courtroom that they were disap- pointed with the court ruling. However. both men said they felt sure that Judge Knight, while ordering a prison term for the disturbed defendant, would ensure that Clewell got all the psychiatric care necessary for his type of mental condition. "We don't want him tn lbere for 20 years and four months. of course." Giles said. "But I hope and pray that. when be does come out he can be returned to society as a useful and produc· live citizen." fense attorney Marshall Mor1an to dlsmlas the indlctment on the contention that the district at- torney was prejudiced In his handllna or the case before the Oranae County Grand Jury. F lynne aalo denied a moUon to dismiss a bribe conspiracy charge against Fullerton architect LeRoy Rose. Diedrich 's co-defendant. Flynn Said he would rule next Friday on other motions to dis· miss the Diedrich and Rose in· Irvine Company's Hugh~s Quits Post Frank Hughes announced his resignation as Irvine Company vice president today in order to work for a new development firm. Hughes, who has been with the Irvine Company since 1960. bad been serving as vice president of the company's residential division and president of the company's home building sub- sidiary, Irvine Pacific. He said today he bas accepted the position of director or de· velopment and management or a diversified real estate invest- ment firm which will acquire a portfolio of investments for German and CanadJan interests. The fi rm, to be named Arosa Development and Management, Inc .. will be based in Orange County. he said. In his early years with the Irvine Company. Hu ghes worked primarily as an engineer and later assumed plannil)g and building responsibilities for projects s uch as Eastbluff, University Park, Turtle Rock, Rancho San Joaquin and Big Ca· nyon. The most recent project he headed was the development of Harbor Ridge, the luxury bome development in Newport Beach. Hughes informed company of· ficlals or his resignation one week ago. In a statement late Thursday, Irvine Company officials said Hughes' corporate position will be filled by Thomas H. Nielsen, 48. Nielsen Is a former associate of company p resident Peter Kr..emer when both men worked for the Newhall Land and Farm· ing Company. Lately. Nielsen has worked as a developer based in La Jolla Company officials said War· ren James, vice president or Irvine Pacific. will be in charge or the subsidiary until a new president is selected. Innnonity Granted WASHJNGTON IAPI The Senate voted Thursday to grant immunity from prosecution to Senate Ethics Committee wit· nesses who testily about the financial affairs o f Sens. Herman Talmadge and Edward Brooke. The panel's request for the granting or so-called "use immunity" was agreed to by voice vote. QUITS IRVINE COMPANY ~omebullder Hughes Negotiators Resume Food Strike Talks LOS ANGELES <AP> Negotiators for the retail clerks union and the Food Employers Council were to resume talks to- day in a last-ditch effort to avert a threatened weekend walkout at s upe rmarkets in nine Southern California counties. The talks, which had broken off Sunday, were to be held at the Los Angeles office of the Federal Mediation and Conelli&· lion Service. local mediator li'rank Allen said Thursday. "We have untll 6 o'clock Saturday, so we have a few hours left to salvage it. I an· ticipate tbe talks will go round· the-clock until the deadline.·· At· len said. The 70,000-member Retail Clerks Unlon in Southern California earlier Thursday re· jected a suggestion by Wayne L. Horvitz, diredor of the media- tion service in Washington, that it ignore its Saturday 6 p.m. strike deadJine until there was additional negotiation with other representatives sitting in. All Purpose Plant Food ~P.ilWn...More Vlglfablel. .. --PnMd by famous lJnlVlrlltyt -.Uh fost. EASYI Jult mil wtth wattr. f"Of att ~and houtl plantl. It Price INSTANT LAWN 1to1touu,.. ...&---· sr-~· wldt fretf\ Md,,..... waa .. 9.-f ~BennUda ...................... .. ~ ........ ,.. .......... '1M ~ ....................... 91." dlctmenta. 1beir Superior Court trials are scheduled to begin Sept. 18 Thursday's court appearance was the fifth in a round of pre- trial motions by Rose and Diedrich defense attorneys. The indictment alleges that Diedrich in 1973 solicited bribes from the Robert Grant Com· pany, original developers or Anaheim Hills. in return for a favorable land use decision . The indictment alleges that the money was funneled through Rose and former Diedrich at tomey Michael Remington, both or whom provided services to the developer. Diedrich defense attorney Morgan argued Thursday lbat the di.strict attorney already had been louod to suffer a conflict of interest and .. appearance or pre/udice" against Diedrich whi e the bribery indictment was being pursued. He was referring to Superior Court Judge Philip Schwab's rullng last November which said the state attorney general, not the district attorney, s hould prosecute Diedrich on an earlier indictment ch~rging alleged violation or state campaign finance laws. ''The day alter the district court of appeal upheld Judge Schwab this indictment came down," Morgan argued. "Here the district attorney has been found to suffer a con- rtict of interest and he goes through that and I think the en- tire process is tainted," Morgan continued. "Now is the ttme to correct this and I think it can only be corrected by dismissing this in- dictment,·• be said. He said Flynn already ruled on the question of d~· trid at-torney prejudice wh n he re· fused to lake the d strict at. torney off the bribery ase. Rose's attorney, Sylvan Aronson, argued unsuccessfully that the indictment against his client is based on speculation and conjecture along with one "ambiguous, misleading state- m e n t" allegedly made by Diedrich. ''You can "t tie this thing together with glue and string like Mr. Capizzi is trying to do," he sa\d. Aronson also ar gued that a three-year statute of limitations for prosecution of conspiracy had expired. CapJai contehded sufficienQ evidence exist.a to show lbe aJ.• leged conspiracy fell within the three-year time limit Tough Decision LOS ANGELES (AP> -Bruce Altman, the Los Angeles County public administrator-guardian criticized for playing backgam- mon on county time, bas agreed to resign his $38,804-a-year job to accept another county job at the same pay, l f .44 DAILY Pt\.OT t,. .. -.... , .:-~4.' ·,.~•••tiag ' . ~ .. Q ...... ~ Te•~~''' M .... bme Shoot at Your Risk atel&AftNG roa avcu osn.-1n tbeMd1Y1of J>Olt· Propoattlcn 11, lt'1 dltncult to rueu where our local eoutal IOYemmmtawtDturnnutlDtbeeffO{ttopumpupmunlclpal t.reuun.. n '• Meoimtni a da11y1uJ'1)riH. La.-. Beech ta a caM ln polnt today. Tbl dty fathtr1 bav• a new law belq DNOal'ed that boolt.a the'" for tak· lns m~ctmw WfUttD the city llmitl to saoo per day. IAluna to _cbarce as per day. alllf ftnalb lldopWd, thil new ordinaDc. will put tM ~ °!.,. ~_P.'C'lur9 companies, videotapin& operaton aUll com~ pbolOIJ'aphen wbo wuL to UM the Art Coloa1 11 a blekdrop for theatrical efforts or deodorant commerda1a YOU SlJSPECT T8l8 hiked pboto fee bualnelt ll all part of 'What otnclaldom lik• to call .. .,__,Uoa 1J Sptnott." •• ...,.... When lt comes to searcbln1 for dollars, tbe bureaucnta seem to be apJ.nnina in all dlrectloaa. Well. YoU have to hope Laiuna'• new city photo f .. won't chase off all the motion picture companies that have frequented the area in the past. The Jantzen swim suit people were in the Art Colony just the other day, for example, to shoot a commercial. Some rather lovely young ladies were stars of this epic. The swim wear ls for next season. This year's beach ap- parel, if you want to call it that, is already outmoded. When news photographers showed up, however, to ogle what everybody else will be ogling next summer, the Jantzen people became enormously nervous. No photos please. These designs are Top Secret. AFl'ER CAREFULLY STUDYING the threads adom· ing the model for the 1979 beach season, however, the newsmen were unanimous in agreement that really, with that suit on. nothing was Top Secret. The suit could barely be classified as Bottom Secret. Anyway, you have to hope that Laguna's new filming fee won't drive away all of the movie companies that have added all this local color in the past. You have to hope they won't abandon the Laguna lifeguard tower for a back drop in favor of cheaper shots at Santa Monica Pier. If the commercial-shooters go away, all the wide-eyed newsrepartersmigbthavetogobacktowrltlngabouttaxea. Soviets Drop Suit Against Reporters MOSCOW <AP> -A Soviet judge dropped the civil slander suit a~inst two American re~rters today saying the widespread publicity given the case maae the retracuon their papen refused to print unnecessary However, Judge Lev Almazov said he would inform the Foreign Ministry that Craig R. Whitney of The New York Times and Harold D. Piper of The Balttmore Sun bad not attended any of · the le1a1 proceediD&s and that he comidered tbelr behavior cl.la· respectful to the court DURING EARLIEll court sessions. a prosecutor asked that the Foreign Ministry remove the correspdbdents' presa acet'edlta· tion, in effect expelllng them from the country. Piper told other Western reporters be doubted simUu action would be taken agalmt other correspandents ''too often.'' "II every time a correspondent writes sometblng that the authorities do not like he ls broQaht into court, it would end up making the Soviet Union look ridiculous." he said. WBITNEY SAID it was important "that a Soviet court bu failed to dictate to American newspapers what they may print In the u.s.'• I ' '20 Pereeat (;•t' . . Tax StruCtUT.e PORT WORTH. Texu <AP> -Fluabed wltb hi. Propoeltlon.11.Yie- tory hr CaJlfornla, tax actlvtat Hohrd Jania bu flnd W. fin~ volley at the national tax atructure. ldvoc.urt1 a • ~ CQt> tn peraonal fncome tax. · Over a four-year period. Jams said Thursday. Im five-polnt pr!' peeal would cut hlderel tax• by 110 bUUon and expenaes by tlOO However. he said be w... eaD· billion. eliminatint the national cerned about creatlna' Jobi. bud1et deficit. "The capital ,.SU tu bam· ••THE PEOPLES' plan to llmit taxes wUl reduce the tax burden for all taxpayers. stimulate economic growth and m0tt importantly, it will virtual· ly wipe out lnflaUon,.. the 75· year-old Californian told a crowd of about 2,000 at a local conventton center. Part of bis plan to slash federal tax11 and spendln1 ll to abolilb capital 1atna taxes on in· vestmeaU. Jarvtl said that pro- poaa l milbt be seen as "a scheme to help the rich." Terrorists Surrender, Release 6 CHICAGO <AP> -Two armed Croatian nationalists who tbreateaed to blow up the West German cooaulate released 1lx iw.taaes unharmed after heed· ing long-distance telephone pleas from the impriaoned man they bad IOtlgbt to free. Authorities credited the brother of the prisoner for the terrorists' peaceful surrender and the boeta1es' safe release after a 10.hour drama. POLICE SAID Ivan BUandzic was summoned to the scene and there spoke by telephone with bis brother. Stjepan Blland.zlc. 39, a Croatian national im· prlaoned in Cologne, West Germany. Bllandzic is the 39-year-Old founder and chief of the Croa· tlan People's Resistance. A Cologne court ruled last week that his extradition is permissi· ble because of evideDce that be was involved in a 1976 assassina- tion attempt on a Yugoslav diplomat, smuggling stolen weapons to Yugoslavia and other terrorist activities. His supporters say he will be killed if he is extradited. Ivan relayed. Stjepan's pleas to release the hostages and sur· render peacefully. ••.ALL HOSTAGES are safe and unharmed," Chicago police spokesman David Mozee said Thursday shortly after 7:58 p.m. CDT. The hostages and some family merqbers who bad rushed tQ the scene .were whisked away by police without making any state· menu. , Wbat bad appeared to be an e:sploelve device and hlgh ex· plOllves carried ln attacbe cues by the aunmen proved to be harmless, police bomb squad ex· perts said after investigation. FBI sl>Okesman George Man· dicb said the terrorists, iden· tilled as Bozo Kalava, 35, and Mlle Koclzoman, 32, will be char1ed wttb violation of the federal Protection of Foreip Of. flclals statute, which carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prtaon and a $10,000 fine. pers investmMt and prodUdlYl· ty and stifl'ea the Jol>-creatlnl , ability of our eeQllOIDy;• he.aid. THE PIAN also includes: -Cuttlna &be personal income tax by eo percent over four years. , -Altocatlnl 2 peTCent of each year's federaf budeet to reduce the natloaal debt. lowerinl in-terest costs the United States pays. -Inde:dna all taxe1 so t.bey would not increue for UJODe wboae pa)' ralle WU not &reater than the~ rate. -Placlnf an unspecified absoJutAt Um1 on the percentqe of the gross national prodJtct which can be collected tn fed«al taxes. CUTl'ING TAX income by 20 percent wtll not alf ect vital services, J arvta aaid. "Many Americana didn't believe tt before PropotltlGD U. but the facttbat. while death and taxes are inevitable. being taxed to death llMt." be said. PaON81'hON 13 paaaed in California by a 2·1 marpn. Tbe state camtltutlonal amendment put a cei.l1D8 on property taxes and limited the amount by wbich they can be railed. J arvia plans a nine-clty tour to publicize his American Tax Reduction movement. Plague Suspected . D~NVER ~AP> -A pre· lamtnary diagnosis by a Colorado Springs hospital in· dicates a J.S.year-old girl died of plagu,, the state Department of Health said. The atate Center for Disease Control at Fort Collim is expected to repart on the pre- liminary dlaanotts early next week. Storms _ Dimjnishing ft ,. tO'J • ti 10 .II '4 74 ., ,. 1os a .. " ., '2 74 .. n 11 .... .. 11 " n .at .. Q ·" ,, .. n » " ., NATION /WORLD Seel .. DotdJles Two imitators of the late Elvis Presley appeared on stage together at the Silverbird Hotel on the Las Vegas Strip. Hotel 1a)'8 it's the first Ume Presley lmltaton bave ap· peared together. Bill Haney of Memphis, left., cloeed a three·ni~t stand, while Johnny Harra opened his regular engagement at the club Thursday. U.S. BallOonists Plan 'World' Trip PARIS <AP> -Elated over their conquest, the three Americans who made tbe fl.rat croai.n& of the Atlantic by balloon aaid today they want toballoooaround tbeworldln30daya. Ben Abruzzo told a news couference that a round-the-world balloon trip would be expensive, but it would be cheaper than climblne Mount Everest. . - .. ~THE RIGHT BALLOON, we could eet to blahel' altitudes and go round the world ln 30 days,•• be sald. Abnmo, 48, Maxie Anderson, 44, and Larry NeWJDan, 31, all of Albuquerque. N .. M .• droDDed down to a tumultuous welcome ln a wheat field 60 males wesl Of Paris Thursday evenina, then celebrated late into the night in the French capital at a party given by Count de Saint Sauveur, secretary of the French balloon federation. PRESIDENT CAllTEa coqratulated them by telegram and invited them to the White House. The French lllnlster ol Sports awarded them gold medals. Media representaUves beslepd them with offers. And they drew straws for an unoftlctal prize. spending the night ln the slngle bed Charles A. Lindbergh occupied at the U.S. Embassy residence after be made the fU'lt solo fUabt across the Atbntic 51 years qo. Newman and his wife of five montbl won. Air France offered to fly the trio~ on its Caneorde, and Ute ballooDiaU said they already bad planned to travel on the · supersonic jet. ·•we came the slowest way and we're goina out the fastest way,•• said AbruJ.llO. · , . ,. Frldlt. ~uguet t8. 1978 DAILY PILCH .45 .,. · Spending Limit .. ,, ........... .. . ~. ,• • • • • • • ••lf•C.-.elc•'•' " ., ......... SACRAMENTO fAP> _ Ctacka nearly one IN FACE OF DEFEAT Sen. John Garamen· mile Iona have been found ln the ground in • Mt. di. left. author of spending limit bill. and Sen. Shula area shaken ror twe weeka by a aerlet ot Alan Sieroty silently express feelings as m.lnor earthquakes. the at.at. seololiat ~· Sleroty's bill to extend deadline for placing State Geololbt James Davis ~ a at.ate-items on November ballot failed on Senate ment Thursday aayl.nl th•t there are dltcoe· floor Thursday tinuous north·south cracb and that one larp ------=------------block ol IJ'O'IDd aank three feel. Alll••I BlU Gees te .,...,. SACRAMENTO IAP> -Legislation to curb the mistreating or killin& of animals or humans while making motion pictures bas gone to the aov· emor'sdesk The bill, SB 490 by Sen. David Roberti, D·Los Angeles, would make it a public nuisance to ex- hibit such movies. Theater operators could be given court orders to ball showings SACRAMENTO <AP> -LegislatiQn supported by liquor retailers to reinstate minimum prices for alcoholic beverages has been dropped for the year by its author Assemblyman Richard Alatorre, D-Los Angeles. said Thursday he referred bis measure, AB 935, to a hearing this fall because be was sure Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. would veto it. LOS ANGELES CAP> -Negotiations between representatives of Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. and Atty Gen. Evelle Younger have dislnt.egrated, possibly ending any chance ol debates between the two m.uc>r gubernatorial cJU'l(Hdates. Both sides conceded Thursday after their sixth negotiating session that they simplY could not agree on ronnat .-e.-........ ..... ~AN FRANCISCO must be divided between CAP> -The part of a spouses lf their mar· milttao disability rta1• m dissot.ed, tbe pension which replaces Cal if o rn i a Supreme retirement pay is com-Court _bas ruled 6-"1 ln a m u11ity properly and San Daeao CouDt.Y case. Voters to Get 'Shield Law' SACRAMENTO <AP> -The state Sen.ate bas decided to let Californians vote on whether news reporters should have the constitutional right to refuse to disclose their SQUrceS to judges. Thursday's 27-6 vote to place ACA 4 on the ballot wu a reversal of a previous stance -and it barely drew the two·thirds majority required for passage. The proposal, by Assemblyman Jerry Lewis. R-Higbland. would put the so-<:alled rePorters' "shield law" into the state constitution BUT IT WAS UNCERTAIN WBETBER it would go on the November 19'78 ballot or the June 1980 ballot. That's because a bill ext.ending the long-past deadline for November ballot meuures until today was killed for a seeond time by the Senate Thursday. But some extension measure could still be approved in the next few days. Lewis' proposed eonstitutioftaJ amendment. which fell four votes short of Senate approval in May. follows two highly publicized cases in which newsmen ln Los Angeles and Fresno were jailed for refuslne to divulge sources. Current state law prohibits reporters from be· lng beld ln contempt of court for keeping sources secret, but some judges have ignored that pro- vision TBE QU~OPitl& WIUililE& the ahleld law should take. precedence over such legal proviak>os as the rtgbt of courts to control thelr proceedings and to insure a fair lriat Ini;-the Los An;t!lea a.ad l"re$fto cases, at· torneys ~ ~ officials were suspected of violat· tog court orders by leaking information to re-ponen. \ cc • DREXEL •HERITAGE • HfNREDON •BAKER •HEKMAN • MASTERCRAFT • WIE~ ~ • H18RITEN • KAltCES • :r ?-i ~ • Hpw to tiave a more beautiful home this Fall? Shop now, save now and· discover I · We're right in the middle Of 01.Jr most spectacular sale ever. Savi on su ¥m brands as rexel. eri age, Henredon, Baker and' much more. All of our upholstered merchandise ~ " may be $P8Cial order.ed ln your: • choice of cover at substantial savings . ~ Stop in now -o,nly two weeks . left of this exciting event. ~ I • i • < ~ Senate Eyes Bill SACRAMENTO <AP> -A Ronald Reagan·style government spendin1 Umll. which would take Proposition 13 even further, la one step cloeer to the November ballot. But Democratic backers needed a compromise today ln the Senate on a bill to extend the long-past deadline to cet propositiona on the Nov. 7 ballot. The Senate defeated the deadline extension. SB 2243 by Sen. Al~ Sieroty, O.Los Angeles, on a 22·1.5 vote Thursday. five short of the two thirds !Qjority required. So the bill went to a two-house conference com· millee for negotiation of a com· promise. THE SENATE HAS NOT YET act· ed on the measure to limit spending, SCA 61 by Sen. John Garamendi, I). Mokelumne Hill. But the Assembly approved it Thursday on a 76-3 vole. Democrats led the support for the latest version of the spending limita· Uon bill. an issue that has occupied legislative attention since the passage ol Proposition 13 in Jtme. Although the three Republicans wbo voted no said it was not a strinaent enoulh llmlt. other mem- bers from both parties praised it as strict and conservative. .JUST BOW STRICT and con· servative was a matter of conjecture. with the Department of Finance, the legislative analyst and Assembly GOP researchers providing different projections of its effects. "For someone who ·s an advocate against a spending limit, this may be the most conservative limit we could draft" said Assemblyman Willie Brown, D-San Francisco, a liberal who suggested the Reagan-like limit. "This tepreaents a rather con- servative product for many people on this floor," said Assembly Speaker Leo McCarthy, ~San Francisco. as he called for •·a lot of Democrats and Republican votes coming together lo support an idea the people of this state want." THE MEASURE WAS a com- promise of ~ two-house committee. which two days earlier had amended it to include provtsions similar to the formula in Republican Gov . Reagan's Proposition t , defeated by the voters five yea.rs ago. The new version would tie spending to increases in the toatal i.nCome ol all Californians but decrease the percentage each year. The complex formula, similar to Reagan's P1'9positiqn l, would use a1 • a base the 1977·78 fiscal year. when • state government spending was 8.26 • percent of the total personal income • of all Californians. • • UNDER THE FORMULA, that : HERB • · percentage would drop one-tenth ol t • percent ie&ch year until It reached 7 ! FRIEDLt\SDER • percent. 1 • IS MAKING • Under the measure, the same • GREAT DEALS • growth factor would be applied to . • Fa· EE • local governments. but they would be • • 1 able to choose either 1917·78 or • • 1978·79astbebaseyear. • 50 GAL~ •· Exc:luded from the limlt would be • Ot' GAS • • emergency funding, money from ~ .. •h••••••""'' ..,_,.,.,_,h ... ..,, n~n:tax sources such as fees, the SS .• or 011. ('llAS<a:s •· balhon the state gave local govern· • •• _.. • ......,..., ... ,_,._ • ments to alleviate the effects of • .. ._ .. ___ .... •· Proposition 13. and programs man· • e HONDA e • · dated by courts or the federal gov-• ui••-1M. • t • silml .......... 9'"' ernmen . it* * * * * * * * * * * ••, • MG-TRIUMPH !• Packager Wins Sal.e Fraud Suit : e JAGUAR e : • FIAT-LANCIA •r • U1 ~~·~i:i .. i:io-..... -.m • :1't-* * * * * * * • * * *« • e TOYOTA e •· .. ................. . • 1 • ..-._r NI.Mel ... ·············~ LO~ ANGELES <AP> -A • MOO'ORH01'1E tll televisaon same show packager~ •s\LES& RF.ST~LS• been granted $7,436,364 by a Supetior· • · • . :· . · . •' Court jury in connection with a • RESt.R\ t. ~OW ., lawsuit claiming that the packager • 537.7777 t:xt. see .. bad been fraudently misled by the it* * * * * * • • * * * -. corporation that bought bis company. • e LEASING e • An attorney for Ralph Andrews, • 4: .... • ,.":.~ • packager cA sucb TV shows as Liar's ~ ~~t;xl. 600" ~ Club and Celebrity Sweepstakes, said • * * * * • * * * * • • ••1 Thursday the verdict ranks high --------- among the largest awards ever made in private civil litigation in the enter· tainment industry. THE SUIT NA•ED Meredith Corp., MC Productions Inc .• Meredith Productions Inc., Thomas Naud, Tom Naud Productions Inc. and Jawam Productions Inc. as de- fendants. According to the suit, Andrews sold Ralph Andrews Productions Inc. to Meredith Corp. in 1970. But under the terms of a settlement aereement made in 1972, Andrews reacquired operating assets. his trade name and Meredith's covenant not to compete as a packager for three years. After a seven.week trial. the jury found that Meredith did not intend to perform its covenant and bad fraudulemly misled Andrews about its intaUoos to cootinue packaging sbowa for t.eleviaion. • Dlaf DfNCt 64~·4321 caar Collect Subscribe to the newspaper that covers your hometown best ... YOUR Hometown Dolly ~ewspapet' DAILY PILOT tnen~·. HanglO. O.p. I o,~~hore, Guith51lver. Stubble:; women~: f\c¥.>i rfJ, GrMriy lcJI, ~~. 5.Jn~h 1r1e ttaN011 . tian5 Io ,Tannie Glolhai 20% to 60% OFF men~: ~gner. Gane ,Lacabte, Anba., Adida~ women~·. AnbB, Rv.\h Robbin?.Ta\\, Head / lurffmr aro ~y~~ng -~uf _ ··-·· ... Hobie Surfboards, Lightning Bolt Slriboards, Morry Boogies, O'Neil .Wet Suits, Rip Curl Wet Suits ,.'21" e. ~ tti~ay/Cd m 5IOC.\I. N. of ~t Trleatre ?1')1.i"9 '"' nl19(" ·~---------------~--- --------~----~------~· \"44~ C.U\vet"' Dr·~ J:1"v1t'\~ I 1 n wa' nut ~ ~e...--. vnone -s~ s:JS2 .. .... Friday, Augutt 11, 1971 Robert N WMdl Publithtr T~s tCMYll lEdltor Bartwr• Kre1b1cP\/Edltorlal Paoe Editor Oronoecc.11oa11v ~101 Editorial Pge ............................................................ ·Bus Ryder, We Need Your Help • Bua Ryder to the rescue! Rescues lonely people and flndl them frlenda! Helps \he poor aet to the doctor! Shutt.I• Idell to the beach! Lea ea transponaUoo problems ln a aln1le bound! 5Qcll was the theme~ a comic book produced a cou- ple of years •to by the Orqe County Transit Dlatrlct. The book. whlcb drew widespread attention and crltlclsm, featured Bus Ryder u a Superman-type character wbo tulflUed all manner of transportation needs throuah the OCTD's maulve neet. All rl&ht, Bus Ryder, where are you now that we real-ly need you• Thousands or Orange Q>unty atudenta are 1oing to have problems getUn1 to school this fall. Bud1et cut· backs have forced most school boards to cut back sharply on transportation costs. In virtually every dlatrtct many students ~ going to be walking or blke-rlding ton.1 dis- tances -or bumming rides from the family or friends to get to school and back. A perfect spot for Bus Ryder. He and the OCfD could s huffle that ~vehicle fleet around and show that public bus transportation really does work and is responsive to a pressing need. Alas, Bus Ryder is dead. His spirit doesn't even live on 'l'he OCTD wrote school board presidents of all Orange c.ounty school districts this week to say that while it welcomes student passengers and would like to cover the school bus shortage. it can •t be depended on for much help OCTD Chairman Ralph B. Clark pointed out that OCTD itself took a licking from Prop. 13 and bad raised fares and reduced service for the first time since busses began running six years ago He said the bus system might be adjusted here and there to accommodate school travel needs, but that ma- jor readjustment poses "enormous administrative, personnel. union and logistical problems ... He also said OCTD busses cannot be used exclusively for the transportation of students. He did find one bright ~. If a student is lucky enough to find a bus going bis way at the time he wants to go to school or come home. he'll get a five-cent reduction in the 30-cent fare Bus Ryder would have done more than find a lousy nickel for all those kids. ·Police in New Arena There was a time not long ago when police associa· t1ons were loosely knit organizations that looked after the welfare of members and members' families. In most instances, police associations today are near- unions that represent their policemen members in such matters as salary and working-condition negotiations. In recent months. some police associations have stepped into the civil arena to have a Joud say m matters usually left to civil authorities. In Anaheim. for example, association spokesmen said they didn't like Police Chief Harold Bas trump's di rec· tives on auto pursuits and tbe use of choke bolds. They armed themselves with an association vote of no con· fidence and demanded that Bastrup be fired. Association spokesmen in Laguna Beach raised Cain with the City Council when Police Chief Jon Sparks wasn't fired after his recent embarrassing bar fight. And in Huntington Beach, police association spokesman Dave Gammel charged the City Council with "condoning prostitution" when it balked at closing down a suspect health spa. At the county level, the Association of Orange County Deput)' Sheriffs has virtually politicized itself and is at- tempting to get its own president. recently resigned for campaign purposes, elected sheriff. These activities are worrisome. They come close to infringing on civil authority and tend to renect an at- tempt by those employed to tend the shop to run the shop. To be sure, there is nothing wrong with and a great deal to be said for police officers speaking out when they see wrong· However, police associations aren't much different than teacher organizations or other public employee groups. They sometimes tend to confuse what their mem- bers want With wlnlt 1S ln tbe pUblic•s best interest - A Display of Spirit • ()pinions expressed In the apace above are those of the Dally Pilot Other views expressed on lhJ• page at9 those of their authore and artlsi.. Reader comment Is Invited. Address The Oally Piiot. P.O Boit 1590, Costa Mesa, ~A 92828. Phone(71'4) ~1. Boyd/Risks 87L.M.90YD • How do J011 •oc:ount for tbe fact that a divorced woman ls a CCllllSderabl)' bitter mar· rial• lilt iMt ta a dl90l"Ced man? So tbe at.atlltles In· d.lcate. at ~ ra~ Our Low and War man bM loOked IDtO thla matter. toO. For one thlAI. aayt bt, .....,. tMd to mUTJ lit an Mi'tier .... so tlle1're more llblJ to .................... ...... .., ....... .... ...... ~w-.. ..... A:ai ,_ ........ at•lu. ........ ..... , ...... ,.... 2 ........ 1...,111 ' ___ ,,,_ .... women ln 1eneral try harder than do men. ' Tboee .tlo arsue ln favor of eapltal pwdtbment like to QUlllte tbe lllllil, wtilcb, IQ. deed. JnHrlbl9 the dtath --~ f« ~-&it· od• 21:18: .. ~ ... a m-. wbldMI-be Mila blm or ta f-.1 la;pG•ll"OD of lalm.llaallbe,.t.odudl ... \: Hamilton Jordan ·Explains All W ASKINGTON -After all, Jlmmy Carter la the only presl dent we've aot. and riveted to h i m i s Hamilton Jordan, 31, second only to Rosalynn in influencing the leader of our republlc. Jordan acute- ly feels the dilemma or knowing that wblle Carter works in the rt1,bt direction, the public doesn't think so and maybe it all baan 't bottomed out yet. Quickly put, Carter bas lost credibiUty. He is low in the polls. Some Democrats stir against him and eongr(Ssmen mutter about the "dumbbell" White House. Moreover. the mention of Bert Lance, Dr. Peter Bourne. Midge Costanza and Andy Young can cauae teeth to gnash and faces to redden. AND YET President Carter has succeeded with the Panama Canal Treaties, the Middle East airplane sale and N!movlng the arms embargo on Turkey. Those accomplishments took courage and hard work. and. for the mo· ment. hurt him politically. Similarly, his push for reform of the U.S. Civil Service, a ra- tionally integrated energy pro· giam and a comprehepsive Mid· dle Eaat settlement wins him no political Oscars-a_,d, Indeed. cause great blov. of people to get mad at blm. "We just bopped on a wide, range of tough issues," Jordan says, "and failed to com- municate to the American peo· pie what we were doing. We faile d to clearly present our goals and objectives. So we're hurting." SO BABBLE is the problem? But didn't the new administra- tion come here declaring that cabinet members and other of- ficials would speak freely, that they were the best around and that there would be no· concen- tration of power in the Carter White House? Yes. but that was 18 months ago. AAd now Jordan says: "Cabinet members can't be In· dependent to the point of not reflecting the president's views. We are trying to speak more Charles McCabe with one voice now. And yes, l'U admit that when a presta:ent has to fill so many top jobs in a short period of time. he won't rm them all perfectly or well." Jordan's complaint is that it seems every time the president makes a solid accomplishment <be cites the European summit in Bonnl, something breaks in the news <the Dr. Peter Bourne embarrassment> which clouds the event. INDEED. Jordan himself figured in colorful news stories half a dozen times, and he says: "I regret that publicity about my social life -sometimes false or exaggerated -diverted attention from what the presl· dent was accomplishing. So I've hurt him. and maybe I must just suppress my own personallty. ·' But he insists that it is Carter's tackling tough issues which butts the president more. "The president spends more lime on the Middle East than any other problem." be says, .. and he bas lost much support . in the Jewish community. But he knows that for us to work hard for peace now, Israel will be far better off in the long run. ··w e could have put Band-aids on the energy program or on the Social Security dst e m and saved ourselves a lot of political misery. but we didn't. We got hurt on the canal treaties. We knew civil service reform would be controversial. I guess if we called it 'Get the Bureaucrats· Bill' we'd get some support. but we can't do that. "'WE BAD to arrange the summit for tbe Israelis and Egyptians next month because the prospect for everything rau- ing apart was so great. Sadat was on the verge of throwing up his hands and leaving the peace table It was bold. but necessary, and again. pollUcal· ly, ll might be a step back. "During those first five months when Jimmy was gov- ernor . back in Georgia. I was very poUUcal and offered advice to win us votes. But after a while I realized that political con· slderations woul<J never carry you as far as a good record. Irs the same here. "We're ltvang in the 'me' generation. and people take it o ut on their government They've been ftustrated because of Vietnam and Watergate. but even more they are dissatisfied with what happens to their tax dollars. 'ACl'UALLV, the economy is strong, stable and diversified. but this is a time of dissatisfac· tlon. l guess If Carter had a crisis. he could galvanize public support, but we can't do that. What do they want us to.do. in· vadeCanada?"belaugbed. Jordan gels exercised over the charge that President Carter u n "t getting good advice. "That's a bum rap.·· he says heatedly. ··we·ve got Cy Vance, Harold Brown. Mondale and Bob Str auss -all of them old pros around Wus.hington. We"ve made important changes in the White House and we've de veloped improved coordination strategies for what's ahead. · To talk with Jordan for any length of time is to realize that once the barrage or collo· quialisms and disarming. casual remarks are sifted out. there is 11 good mlDd at work. Some peo- ple -Robert. S. McNamara is one -are so coldly an11lytical and assured at the outset. that you must believe there is a good mind at work. and it is only af terward that you may doubt the utterances. JORDAN might be a sort of Peck's Bad Boy. whost• com- pany I personally would enjo~. but in an era when gossip sel19 big in the media. his personality clouds his work. Aw shucks. ··1 wasn't sure I'd stay hert-> rour years:· he says . '"If Wl' were in good ·shape. I might leave. but we·re not in good shape. so rm staying the Prob- lems aren't il'T'eversible. We still believe if we do a good job, 1980 - wlll take care of itself, and that's 2'h years from now." Right to Privacy RUJlS Into Conflict When "Son ol Sam." the mass kWer of women, was arrested Ll\ New York thla 1prln1. the police found an "uecuUoner'a list" of murden for 19 n.elahborbooda, alon1 with entries In A dlary ~ cordln1 h1a torment and bt1 re. aolve to kill .. to mate people notJce me." Of all the ao-called evidence selJed at hla apartment. t tbhm tbh entry tel.II ut more about bll twlated mind t.ban~ el•• ID 01e two tar1• ea rd board It 0 S e I . , ..•.. .... llllltr.,,,I _. ..,.._..._. tangential connection with .1 pohce case have some time!:> been unjustly publicized. Hw.; anybody the right to invade the bereavement of the family of .1 killed or kidnapped child by stealing his picture from ato1> the piano? This sort of thing still gets done. Quiet~ werr beliaved. Hartt won. ing. Well liked. Until the isteam builds U.P and the boiler burst.a Then. suddenly, the story comes out, the eurly symptoms are traced back, the figure In the carpet tatkes on an ominous shape aomeoQe should have seen 1t the bellnnlng. Compulalve crime of this kind -whlc a. nothlnt like ordlnUJ crtme ls det.fftlbte. cheft•· bait, pttventable. But aomebocty h•• to pay attten\lon at an Mtty ..,,, If not P•Hnll. tben te1cbers. II not tucben, ot.IMI' ~ult.I with I UeG ~ and a ...tatM ..,., 8oo GI &am' fllM latitW tM .................. -... Dew k • die ........... If ... ........... ,u ...... ... ....... k .. .., .. .... •tanealW ..... ..... ................. lfnlltrn 1. . .. . • . CALIFORNIA I NATION F~. August 18, 1978 . .. } • • II . ~ • '\ • .. DAILY PiLOT A 1 : . • " • By BU Keane · Men Casualties? .. Feminist Says Trouncing lJnfair SAN DIEGO <AP > - Tbe new comniander ol ¥ lbt Paclllc f1eet 1&11 racial lnclde!U between drunkeo nUora wlU no loqer be tolerated. Adm. Donild Davia has t11ued a natl~ to lb• 200.000 mea and V(Omen ln hll commaltd ~arnln1 them tbat raclat remarks cannot ~ ~xcuaed by clalmlna ·•to overtndulaence tn alcohol." LOS ANG&LES <AP> -As the smoke beglns to c1e.ar on feminist battlefields, one winner -a womao -says the I01era - men -have been unfairly trounced. Natalie Gittelaon. who has written a book destined for con- troversy, counts up male caaualtlea of the women's rev- olution and insists that some spoils of war sbduld be returned. ·A fleet spokesman allld report.a on many ' racial lncidenta lndicate they start amort1 sailors ctJink Ing at a bar .. WE MUST RESTORE to men lbe dignity. ll\e sense of honor that, with the best of in· tentions, 10 years of liberation "We hove to ride the trolley to u1e up our "A" has eroded," Mrs. Gittelson said " in an Interview. coupons. Her book, "Dominus -A ------------------Woman Looks At Men's Lives," derives Its title from a Latin term for master, •'once a title of A t-ak honor accorded to men." Mrs. U Om ers ~lttelson wants the title re· ms lated. Two More ro Offer C~ OptiOn s The author had come here from the East Coast where she is an editor of the New York Times Magazine. Her cross- country book tour bad taken on WASHINGTON <AP> -Two of lbe 6ig Three automakers are preparing 19 offer factory-installed CB radios for more of their models this fall, while the third already offers the op- tion on all but the smallest of its c~rs Spokes'llen for Ford and General Motors both reported the planned ex- pansions when asked in telephone in· tervlews how the auto industry views the future of CB radio. "WE SEE 11IE CB market as the CB industry does," says assistant general sales manapr Thomas J. Sheehan Jr. of GM's Delco Elec tromcs Division in Kokomo, Ind. • "That is, slow growth, but enough growth to make these products via ble." he explains. "We're in the CB business serious· Jy .. not as a fad but as a conve· nience and for its utillty," adds James Allen, product Information specialist for Ford's Diversified Products Divisloo in Dearborn, Mich. BOTH GM'S SHEEHAN and Ford's Allen said their firms plan to make the factory-Jnstalled radios available on more models when the ~979 automobile year begins in Oc· tober Bob Heath. a Chrysler spokesman in Detroit, said bis firm offers fac tory-installed CDs for all models ex- ( CBCH4'ITER ) cept for the small O~ni and Horizon models. All three firms also offer the op- tions on some of their vans and trucks. Chrysler offers two types of CBs - one an AM·CB combination. the other a combination AM-FM-CB, Heath says. He described the radios as "high-cost'' items starting at more than$400. FACTORY-INSTALLED radio equipment generally costs more lban similar items bought and installed separ~tely. Ford. which offered the CB options on its larger models this year, will make them availa ble on more models In lln9, including standard· sized Fords and Mercurys. GM plans to make the options available on "virtually every car" in October. Nearly every factory-installed CB is connected to antennas lbat can be retraf;ted,, thus eliminating them from sight. oC possible thieves. Usual· ly. they are multi band antennas that can be used with whatever mode the radiolstunedto-AM,FMorCB. the aura of a crusade for an en- dangered species. "WOMEN HA VE MOVED up, blacks are making strides," she said. "But white middle class men are sliding down the moun- Damages Settled LOS ANGELES <AP> -A Bing Crosby sound- a like whose com - mercials were dropped by his sponsor because Crosby threatene d a lawsuit has settled a $2 million damages suit against the late crooner's e s tat e, spokesmen said. Jack Harris and the Bing Crosby estate have reached an out-of-court settle ment whereby Harris will receive an unspecified amount of money and be allowed to continue bis Crosby im-itation, said Enid Blue- stein, spokeswoman for Harris. tain. At least that's their percep- tion of the situation." How does she know? For three years. as her book· Jacket tells it, Mrs. Gtttelaon has been out there in the sexual wilderness of America in· terviewtng hundreds of men, "young and older, straight and gay. black and white, men of all social and economic classes." She visited lbelr offices, rode in their taxicabs, eavesdropped on their rap sessions. WHAT SHE FOUND was a huge casualty ward in which not one male listed himself as unln· jured by women's Ub. "I found this was a country of up women and down men," Mrs. Gittelson said. , "One man sald to me, 'I once believed it (feminism) was a movement for equality. But it's not. It's a superiority move- ment.' He said, 'Women really want lo be No. 1'" ·'That's the perception of men." she said, "that women are on the way to becoming the super-sex." ADMl1TEDLY, BER survey was "impressionistic" with no statistical figures. A similarly conducted survey was the basis of her previous book, "The Erotic Life Of The American Wife." ''Dominu.s" portrays a variety of disgruntled American men: the pastor who sheepishly ad· mlts be resents his wife sitting In "the daddy chair," an ei· ecbUve who complains that his TV producer wife has ''.delusions of grandeur," and a number of men wbO mutter about women's new sexual demands'. Impotence and homosexuality, Mrs. Gittelson coru:ludes, are the end results of women's lib. AN UNFADl CONCLUSION! Some have already said so. ' Tfley point out that women sUU get smaller pay for equal work and are far from dominant in business. Mrs. Glttelson shrugs off those facts. "Even though there may be a hugY$plit in earning power, en6'fmous strides have been made," she said. Sbe claims famous feminists are her friends and denies she is advocating a return to the dark ages of female subjugation. "WE CAN'T TURN back," she said. "No woman ln her right mind would ask that the re- wards of the past 10 to 15 years ........... •REVO L UTI ON \ VIEWED be taken back." Natalie Glttelaon 23" Collector's Curio Cabinet • throucn t1ie11audlt1!ly .. .our • ••--mbla..Yourself walnuf-sta1ned m1ntdwlmbet' ~f'J~~~~~ Ill~~~~· IQW v-• hatt·moon shapedi~~eurved 111 Furniture Wtndo'#S ... 1nSide. hnd a 1r10ol wh•t·not coltect•na shelves! • rich, walnUI look MnlM't T~ • musuresa mere 13" •6" •23"' 1n no time to divide a room. 19 .99 I l'O<Tle tor home e,....,_m.nl ""'ClOl-•!pOl-1e1-ru · lltghl~~= A. & B. entart.lirllMnt cenun:..m 48"Xt&"'lc26" 17. 99 60''xtfr'x29" 24.99 . c. dealnlklr ... 32''119"X2T ..• If...,_. tUtf 9.99 AT YOUR SERVICE I HEAL TH ·Vegetarian Mothers Warned t BOSTON fAP.)~ V~arian mothers who bcuit.f.ed thelr·lnlants and don't take • vt1ambl •uPPtement may be ln· 1tnaai.Qs U.. cbaace tbeir bal>MI will ,1ulfer • aewte. liometimea fatal nutrt 'lJODat deftdeaey, lto(ton warn. A 1t1"17 aaya because of their moUten• dleta. theM Infant.a do not 1et • ..ttamJ.n 8-12 and may r aU into a ~-·-'• ,..,. m.a DOCl'Olt8 DPBA81ZED tbal bNHt·feedln1 11 ufe. H toaa as ~ motben reaUse thetr mUk .._ oot alw~ provide lhelr cbUd wttb • oomphq diet Tbe problem ii lbat vitamin &12 lt eoatalDed oa1y la protein soureu like meat. e11s and mUk. Children of mot.hen who avoid these roods tack the vltamln. Tht study. conducted at tho Medical Center In San Dleao. was publlabed ln Thuraday'a New Enchand Journal ol M~dlclne THE DOCTORS STUDIED the cue of a ab month·old boy brought to the boapltaJ by hla 218-year-old ve1etanan moth tr -tte ftnt became droway and then went lnto a coma and waa totally u.n- a.rou11ble." said Dr. WUUam L. Nyhan. OM of the researchers. "His body ~m­ perature decreued. and I would predict that th next 1tep would have been tbat h~ would atop breathina. He wu ln dan1er of dying, · · The boy's body wu covered with dark blotebes. and he wa1 severely anemic. The doctors round that the amount of vitamin B-12 ill hla blood was only abodt ~ percent of normal. THE CHILD RECOVERED when given injections of the ~ltamin and later stayed in aood health whep his mother fed hlm oral do•es of tbe nutriert. Nyhan said adult veaetartans rarely suffer the symptoms of vttamln 8 ·12 de- ficiency became their bodies are not arowlng rapidly. However. ht said ~ abould also take vitamin supplements. An editorial accompanymc the study recommended that nurstn1 vegetarians 1ive their infants extra Iron and vltamins D and K because their milk may not contain enough of the nutrients. · "Most or us in pediatrics believe that the natural system is probably the best." Nyhan said. "'Got a problnri'.' Thn wnte to Pat Dunn. Pol wiU cut red tape. getting lhe amwera and octwn J10M need to aolue ineqvitte& 1n government and bwmeu. Milli 11our quesCaon.s to Pat Drum. At Your ~e. Or~ Coaaf DoUy Pilot. P.O. Boz 1560. Co&ta Me&a. CA 92626. Al many letteT& a& possible will be an.nuertd. bW pltona1 haquine• or lethtrs not including tM reodn·1 full oome. oddreu and bu.sinea hours· phoM number~ beconside-red. Thiacolumnappear•daa· IJI e~ Satun:loys. ·· Del•• •t~t• St.di 8 .. rt.,,e Stlrrfag ere.ta•~ Woman Jailed VISALIA CAPI -A Porterville woman was sentenced to 200 days an JaH for a conviction of kidnapping an 8-day-old infant from a hospital nur se ry . Patrlc1a Maynard. 24. a1ao was placed on three years probation. VICTOR B. SIEW, M.D. INTERNAL MEDICINE Annaunc:es The Opening Of His Office At w .......... Ma&lcal c.nw-Suh '17 10900 w...., A..- r.Mt Vdllrt, (it MLlllD 9270I (71•) 964-257• . . ' ·~ . . .. ~· :·: .. DEAR PAT: I ordered and paid for a S72S carved mirror from Kaleidoscope or Atlanta, Ga .. last Feb. 21. When it hadn't been delivered by May 3. I phoned and was told lbe mirror was tem-porarlly out of stock but it would be mailed May 24. Then I received a notlflcatlon of shipping delay until June 6. I still haven't received the mlrror and when I try to phone the company I just get a busy signal I've tried four days m a row at all hours. DEAR PAT: When the varnish set on a table I finished recently. I noticed a lot or lltUe bubbles in the surface. I've sanded them down. but before l redo the table I want to know what caused the bub· llbllE VERB CENTER . H .R Haldeman, former White House chief of staff, prob- ably will get the profits from bis book. ..The Ends or Power" OO\~' that a New York secretary has agreed to drop a laws uit aimed at s topping them . Haldeman s ay s Watergate legal fees will offset any prof- its. Now what ? . M.Z .. Newport Beach A VS laad the same basy signal prOl>lem yoa did. n.e eveatul contact resded la Ute firm agreelng to alalp yoar minor lmmedla&dJ. A spokesman says &be inJtlal delay oearred-.eeaaae of a damaged aldpmenL Tbe June date wH aalued became u.e eompaey bad to revert to a maa•al abipplag system dae to a eompllter breakdown. Kaleldeklcope apologized for your lneonvellleace. Taz Ret-d Due Wit• l•t~t'! DEAR PAT: I filed my state income tax re· turn Jan. 30, but still haven't received my refund check or any explanation for the delay. Isn't there a lime limit for issuins tax refunds after which in· terest has to be paid? ls thtt.e any organization or individual I can write to about this? P.E .. Huntington Beach Phone the state Franchlae Tn Board at <800> ---------852-5711 to report your delayed refund check .. \ Pig Tale Stirs Ire WASJDNGTON <AP> -A $5,000 federal re- search project in wbieh pregnant pjgs walk on treadmills has won the Golden Fleece award. given by Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis. Proxmire announces the awards monthly ror government projects which he cites as best examples of wasteful government spending. The Agriculture Department. which is fundinc the pig project, said the study is being conducted '"to identify methods of reducing psycho&ocical stress and boredom ol tbe tethered sows durlDg CestaUon." represeotaUve will investigate your problem. ex· plain the delay and do whatever is necessary to see that YOlll' refund ls Issued. Be prepared to pro- v Ide yoar Social SecurUy number. A board spokesman told AYS &hat I pettent ln&erest per an· num ls reqlllred fer refallda Issued after JaJy IS. OalJ WIU Talce Saele Ta,,. DEAR PAT: I filled out my selection card for RCA lluslc Service in plenty ol time before the deadline date. and left the envelope iD my mailbox for the postman to pick up. It must bave fallen out because I discovered it while doing yard work the otber day. So, the card clidn 't reach the club in time. and I know an unordered tape must be on its way to me right now. The "selection of the month" is automaUcally shipped tr the can! is not returned in time. Do I have to keep it under tbese circumstances? P. B .• San Clemente No. RCA Mule Service now bu a record of your reuon for refasal and all you ban to do ta re· &an tbe tape wben It arrives. A .. Rd.am To Sender'' label Is oo the back of tbe lnvolce. RC.\•a aJH)keawoman saya tbat when a member falls to retana a eard la time and .-.. 1raM "" telec· tlon of &be IDOlllll, It still can be retuned. but a note of esplanaUoa most be tadaded. Tbe clab's phone number '8 (317) 639·Z431, If the member pre· fers to call In this notlftcatlon. 11978 WaHpoper.r to go 0P£N ••·9MON·Fll.10·6MT.NOON to5SUNOAY z bl es. R.H .. Fountain Valley A YS sources say il souads like yoa stirred the varnish or otberwtse dlstarbed It Just before use. Avoid doing tb1s next time and yoa aboaldn't bave any problems. ~ 2 A' LAS'I T ......... , ....... , fW • lht .... Ywe ...... _. e i1 , ............... AU.11•¢' ...... 2 •AJM.v..... a (;'enter Glad to Get CalU DEAR PAT: I have a large collection or empty aluminum cans. and would like to know where to dispose ot them. I'd prefer a location close to Newport Beach. • M.C .• Newport Beach Tiie VC lrriDe Reeydlng Center ls located ln &he UCI corporatloe yard oa Jambortt Boalevard, one block south of Campas Drive. Tbe ceater ac· cepts most recyclable materials, l11dadlng newspapers, maga1lnes and odler 9aper prodacta; glass; un cans; atumtnam and ~r metals. Operated by tbe UCI Eavtronmeatal Coalition, proceeds are used to sponsor environmental pro- grams on campus. Course Offered Billed as a "first" ror Orange County, a com- puter course in numerical control pro- gramming Is scheduled as part of Saddleback Community College's computer science cur· riculum. The class Computer and lnlormatioo Sclence 180. ta to meet Oft Wed· nesdays from 7 to 10 p .m .• according to in· structor Allyn Rice' who said the first meeting is scheduled Aug. 30. Registration Is under way, and new students are reminded by Rice to file appllcat.lons In the college admissions of- fice to obtain an appoint- ment to register. INTRODUCTORY OFFER! SPECIMEN ALOE VERA ............. I lie• pot. II to 2owh1...._ 50%0FF Reg Ser SI 1.95 s5•s COME IN TODAY! Offer good thru Wed., Allgust 23rd llLllE VERll. CEl'l'ER ~-=~ 111• Allraaldmat.FomtlllnVlller O-WlllDdr ..... flla..oolltAe9'oddu91 .... .......... ,....? -111-1111 . AH,To&AT 'IHE QUEGUJt,n G .. ·. .. . ~· ::.~ .... .. . · . ... '· .:· . -... ·!: ... ~·· -~· ·:· . ... ··:: .. =~··· . . . . :::: ... "'":· . . . . . ·:· . . --. .. . :·: . . ... :=: . . .. . ~ . -. .. . . ~-... . . . . . ... .. . . . . . ... . .. . ... . . · .. ... :·: .~ . . . !: •. ·· . . ::: . . . . . &oth t«>tt• oprn 10110 9 Monday~ S.Mdl,. 10 ID&~ A~~~ AmNMIMIMlf CM.,..nltA1MnC1rdlCt!MfY envia evail•l* C TAC 1978 • .. .. -.... " ! t· \ ORANGE COUNTY OM. v f'tl.OT At :·Teaehers Feelin&1 '13' TRIES SPANISH Fred Gerda By.JACKI RYMAN Of ...... ,. .... Pf'OllCll.tuon u may not be nttlnl qwi. UM at· tenllon lt did a month or two-..,, lKit for many Oran1• Cout r•identa, the rMl tlf tda ol lbe tu cut lntt.l.Uve ere Jmt betlnninc. At Golden Wat Collett ln Huntlnaton a .. cib, "ll'I l_!)lna to be a diffennt lnatituUon," COin· m•ta Bruce WlWama. community ,..latlon1 dlrec· tor. Some ot the chan1es wUJ be tmmtdiatel)' vlll· ble to thoN uslna the canapua: tewv computer terminals, clan 1chedulH and aradel that won 't be malled out, less careMly tended 1rounda, aborter library boun and fewer book• and let• new equipment on campua. BUT THE CHANGES WflLL be even · more immc!Cliate for a number of non-teachlnt staff memben who wtU be tolnl back to the classroom. or. ln a few cues, tacblna for the ftnt time. Tbe cbanle came about at the request of Golden Well COUece President Lee A. stevena. He Pointed oat tbat • percent ol tbe eo11.,.·, budlet b in salaries, so cutbacks in other areu won't be 1utftcient. ID the bopes of not bavinl to lay oil any full· time peJ"IOftDeJ or eliminate any cluaea, Dr. Stevens uked staff ipemben wbo have thelr teacbinc credeot.lala to volunteer to teach courses· for which part-time teachers would otherwise have to be hired ABOUT TWO DOZEN responded. And, while their three hours a week ot teacbinl will be com· pensated for by time oU rom other work, class preparation and grading will be done on thetr own lime. And their recular duties won't diminish. Two administrators and a librarian agreed to share some of their reactions at this upcoming plun1e into the classroom. It's been six years st.Dee Dr. Edith A. Freligh, Golden West College director at management and personnel services, bas taught an English class. ''Frankly, I think it will be better for me than for the studenta," she said with a smile. She's go- ing to be teaching an evening class ln detective fie-., tlon · "l'M A GREAT DETECl'IVE fictlon buff and I really believe it's a neglected aenre," she said. Dr. Freligh added that many people are unaware that some mystery writers, such u Dorothy Sayers, are also noted literary scholars. Dr. Freligh, wbo bas more than eight years of community college teacbtng experience, said she thinks tbe return to the classroom may be beneficial in several respects. "For me, lt1s like going back to a mountain lake that I remember," Dr. Freligh said. "I didn't plan it, I didn't expect it, but I'm absolutely de-lighted ... She said she believes the new assignments will also put administrators in closer touch with facul· ty concerns "FACULTY GENERALLY LIKE to think that bt in the Ions nm probably 8ood for taa .. .I don't lbink we wW ever be u 'rich' u we were." .. I'll aEAU.Y DCITED about ll. It's a class that bun't been ta~t before," aald Fred Garcia, Golden Welt Collec• 1 deu of ldm1aalons, records and fwdance, wbo lut tauaht about lix yean aao. ltbouab bis malD fttlcl la blltory. Garcla a1ao can teach ~· Tbla fall, be wW teach a clan for non-Spanl.Jb 1peaklna acbool employees who need to be able to talk to monollqual Spanisb- 1pealdn1 (amllies and atudeota. The clua was requested by a number of schools, Garcia said. He said bis preparation is focuslna on vocabulary for specific situations, "such as when there's an emtl'8ency at home and the parent.a come in to locate the student, or it they come to enroll the student, or it they come to find out about the 1radlna system." GARCIA SAID BE DOESN'T believe ad· mlnlstraton' return to the clauroom will hurt the quality ol education. nor does be see It as harmtni ataff morale. "I don't loot at it u golq back," be observed. "I aee it as a different job aUlpmenL "In terms of morale, I think the uncertainty of ftnancl.nc ls a bluer factor. A system bas not been adopted yet tor financing of the community col- leaea <aft.er the state budget surplus ls used up>." Although he's putting in a lot of preparation on hlS own time, Garcia said be believes "it's am· portant to be making an extra contribution this year." AND HE'S EAGER TO recapture some of the experiences be bad·as a teacher. •'One of the things I enjoy in teaching is the process of doinl it, when you explain something and then you take a look at the class and you see those who got it, those who are confused and those who aren•t even contused yet," Garcia said. "You have to go through it again without bor· ing those who got it, while unconfusing those who were contused and con.fusing those who weren't." Faye Osborne won't be gol.nc back to the classroom -she'll being aolng into it u a teacher for the first tlme. A LIBuaJAN AT Golden West College, Ms. Osborne studied tap dancing as a cbJld, bas been active in many sports and began studying ballet six years ago, taking several classes a week. Beginnlng this fall, she'll be teacblng it. "I have mixed feelings about it;• she said. "I've often thought of teaching ballet and this ls an opportunity to do it, but at the same time I've dis· placed a person who would have been h1red. Also, I won't be able to spen4 as much time ln the library " Because two other librarians are also teaching classes and several vacancies have been left un- filled, Ms. Osborne said she's concerned about the library being short-staffed. If yo• do•'I ••oh, 1'"9er• No11·S.oA•1 Policy •"Y "°'"' yo.r bo•u. •lo or •*""•' forleu. ~ . . Ov2tstYeal l$11=SS$41 : -ow OfF u11m INSURANCEc.11 u "o"' Take Center Drtw • 191' HARBOR IOULIYAIO CDS TA MISA for new MIY ~ !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~!!!~!!~~~~ from San Diego Fwy. ------direct to Huntington Center [JACK ANDEUON J and Old World Vi1111ge. ------REVEALS I" the DAILY PILOT administrators have forgotten everything they ------------------------------------------- knew about teaching," Dr. Freligh said. "Sometimes it's partly true. But lt'a like plckln1 up an instrument or a language you were ooce good at." . ,• Dr. FTeligb also sees a different perspective on the ~tioo 13 cuts from her position u director of personnel services . She said she believes the main problem for ,._ college sWf members is uncertalnty. tbe fear of ..... ----------layoffs coupled with a salary freeze that hurts dur- ing an inflationary period. :: TEACHES DANCE Faye Osborne ·suit Settled LA CRESCENTA <AP> -Without admit- ting wrongdoing Hightower Toyota, Inc of La Crescenta has agreed to pay $9,500 tn cavil fines and modify its rebate advertisements The· agreement settled a suit brought by the Los Angeles City Attorney's office accusing the firm of misleadJ.Jlg advertis1 ang. IF GIVEN THE CHOICE. Dr. Freligh said.1 she would prefer to see some layoffs rather than salary cuts ' "I think it's better to pay the people you can afford than to keep all the people and pay len than the cost of living," she said. She said she believes the college la becomlnl more cost ~ious now. Dr. Freligh benelt la headina up a two-month task force to proflle tbe college, pUtting together data on each department in terms of budget, frants, tasks and servtce. · Another committee wil then recommend cuts. l ·•As in most things, we can probably clean up our act a little," Dr. Freligh said. "I think it will IFlorist Speciall Beautltul ROSES u;~ .. love buds ... Takehom~ dozens! In popular 0 roM0 colon. PLANT AN BE Many beJb• to chOOMt from lncl\JdiDI: MINT, BASIL, OREGANO, ROSEMARY, SAGE, DILL and more. 3" POT R G .. 98. ~· ............... w .. so" DICHONDRA ............... 3 so" HV1NO ~DA • · · · · · • • • 3H SQ fT Brr At the Bavarian Motor Works, it is our contention that extraordinary per- formance is the only thing that makes an expensive car worth the money. An attitude that-judging by the substantial popularity of the BMW 320i among women-is not supported solely by men. While most small sedans can best be characterized as boring, the BMW 320i is a car designed by racing en- gineers and perfected at places like LeMans, Monte carto and1he-Nurbargrirrg; where precision is crucial and agility and d~rability are .. \ ' ' . . .. 1 't • \ • . • ' . • , • .. , . ' } ' 1ooked upon as necessaFY--~~----... requirements. ~ If you'd care to jOOgetor yoorself, phone us and we'll arrange a thorough test drive. ,..UKM_ ... _. 9~-o• 13™PH ;o~;~BWt.tnc ~-Roeo 0olllM!O (n4)~ ~m• 14w~ foe 4270~ MW 8ot-..o 36 Clierrt ~ (213) 761-6133 (213>42™94 IS ~ ·'~-~BMW J.niYMi ~L...t ~-tont • (213) 299-3270 (113) 86&3233 12 ~ 6 (71A)6JM77S IMOCr1I. me twU:1~ uo *02 ~-.o95 E~ Pal11 ~l~ ~~ ' -·- 'C . .. . • 41 • t • ,llJ• OAl&.Y PU.OT ,,,day, Auguat 11. 1m CALIFORNIA I OBITUARJEq QUEENIE Synanon 'Non-exeiµpt' Particular People Select JOHNSON & SOH : Home of the "Golden Touch" ' ... _., Sime Rules Foundation Property Taxalile .: ..... .... '\ .. . " ... SACRAMENTO <AP > -The 1tale hu withdrawn a property tea •HmpUon for Synanon FowadaUon, • eontrovendal .... habilltaUve ll"OUP or1aniied to help drua addicts, alcobollct, de- llnquents and the mentally dis· turbed. Th nilina by a Stale Board ol EquaflaaUon exemption offtcer makes an estimated $11.5 · mllllon ol Synanon property in 1even counties subject to local property tues of about $1.S0,000. o• ... ..__._ ""--- TH~ SAC&AMENTO tJNION reported that chief Synaoon rinanclal officer David Ross ~­ fuaed comment in a telephone interview on wbetber an appeal was planned. "'l'bere It la ap.in. I heard It dearlJ dlit Ume. 'Drink •'" toUIA IOMH SILVA SOU%A. Ml••H el ~ MT. 5'ul.e •Ill ... ..... ..._..ea. .......... 11d l11terme111 Hot1 S•Pttl<ller -•erv. HerW l...Min-M9unl Olive orttt•rv Costa Me&a forwardint rectors.~ MKMILUM ROIERT JAMES I lacMtLllN r~ I Of C-""'"-· C.. Pe&Md owa1 n AUQU$,I 17, ""-5urvi"9cl by llrs ife GeriNde F Moc.Miiiin, llil sons aul '· MacMlllin ot eor-def Mar. a. and Roear1 J. MKMHton. Jr Of el\Nle. Ca., lus CWl!Qftlers Miity atlleriM Grimm ot ~ Me'9, C.. .• Joanne Horttl Of Sa<•-14, c... nd 1S 9rMC1Cllildren. HOl'f "OMlrv 'f, AUDUll 20. 1911 M 1 00 P.M. Ma.SS Of OVlstian a..riat ~ •• "91fSI 21. t91I M 10:00 A.M. tlotll at 1 Jotwl e. ._,st c.tM!lc °"'ell. la Mes&. llalt2 ~ F-r•I c.ostaM!ts.~ CL.9AMY IARIARA JEAN Cl.EASIY. resJ.. ., Colla MIM. ea. ,._.. _., AlilUSt tl, "11 lft .....,.,, 8Ndl. • ...,,. ,,..,_., >4. 1924 "' Gr ... at11, Moftt-. Sur•lffd "" lier Oevld J c::tNlb't. -Jollll acolls of Slerre Vi~t•, Art11:0ne, lier EsUler 0..-ol Oenver ........... Aolllrt ........ fll 91i1...,..port ~ .11111 Hofnlne ONdl "°"""' llOCll ., ~. acto Md 1~ Wlt11am r of Delww, Colorado. F-at kes _... tie Mid at 10:1DAM on tvrday. A..-st ~ "" aot hclflc I•• M""°•iat Parll In Ifft of __..i comr1bullon• ma'f • mad• In lier name to Ho•v morlat MIHottal canc.r R~ nit. Peclfoc vi.. Mcw1var'I di~ Dl:llTZ EMMA M. DEETZ. retldellt of ·~ 8eecll, C&. Pas.Md -on uvu•t 16, 1911. bcw'll J-2t, 1et1 In ,,_.,, s..vl"9cl 11'1 ..,. fAlfl 0..ld . . Deetz Of OW-d9I MM, C..~ 3 aftdc.tllld!WI, "-"" IUme Of MM '""· ca .. Hl<lll """ o.a ., c.-' Mer, C&. and~ C. ~Of E• inlln, Ce. "-at ~ 'llflH M tel el II :00 AM oa s.twuy, A119U$1 9, 1'11 at Mii.-Ablley CAmetery Mllel"'-Cl. PKiflc View Mef"Nar't rectors Deaths Elsewhere ·· NEW YORK <AP> · Jame1 Gollld Co11ea1, 74 , a prolific author whose 13 novels included the 1949 Pulitzer pnze fiction winner "Guard of Honor" aod the 1957 best·seller "By Love Posses~ed." died of pneumonia at a hospital in Stuart, Fla., on Aug. 9 and was cremated -the same day. He would have been 75 on Aug. 19 WASHJNGTON <AP> -The 16-year-old son of former Senate scandal figure Bobby Balter was killed Thursday night when bis. automobile struck a tree at a traffic circle in northwest W asbington, police re- ported. Lyndon John Baker was driving at high speed when he los• control of the car For the· Record For more than a decade, Synaooo has received exemp- tions on about 90 percent of its property, valued last year at $12.3 millioo. In the past, only some boats and planes used for recreational purposes and a 1mall put ot S)'Jlb0n'1 proper. ty UHd for CGbUbettlal )>urpo.es was tued, nld aemptloo of· ficer WWlam Gromet. DelMDdiNr on the outeome of po111lble appeals, the ruling would allow local governments to start collecting taxes on Synanon properties tb1s year SYNANON OWNS 3,Jtt acres in Marin County, 1,800 in Tulare County. and ell)' properties such as a wareboUles and resldential buildings in Alameda. Loa Angeles, Orange, San Franciseo and, San Mateo counties. Grommet 1aid all organiza· ttons claiming the welfare tax exemption on the basis of pro- vldlpg rehabilitative programs were reviewed tbi.s year, includ· ing all veterans' thrift stores, and action ~ sUll pending on some "quest.Jboable" veterans' stores. Grommet said be denied the exemption for 1978 on all Synanon property because "the property hu not been used ex· elusively for charitable purposes." GaOMMET SAID mE major reason for denying the Synanon exemption wh the lack of clear distinctions between persons be- ing rehabilitated and staff mem· befS, I In a July 29 letter to the state. Ross said: "Every person ... is almost immediately put in the • position of learning and then teaching what-be has learned to someone who is newer in Synanon tbaa be is ... It is therefore not possible to make a meanlngfu.1 distinction between those being rehabilitated and -those who are 'staff.· · · Grommet said be d idn 'l believe the state welfare tax ex· emption was intended to support "lifelong rehabilitation" and that a cutott point is required. . =~ .. •• .. .. . "Tbe aervlce la great ... and so are the people·".~. LINDA MOSQ ;~ Coat. Mesa, Catth : ANOTHER SATISIFIEO CUSTOMER * · .. '\ ' . J .JOHNSON asoN ~ _dhl_ ., 1 \l'.T .~ ;;_ 2626 Harbor Blvd.• Costa Mesa• 540·5630 ~ '• SUMMER CLEARANCE $79500 * * s795oo .... ~., 110 Broadway CoetaMesa 642-8150 SMl1K-nmt!ILW.AMI MOaUAAY WIS1QJllP CHAPB. 427 E. 17th St Costa Mesa 646-4888 ...all01MMS SMl'IH'S wo.TUARY 627 Main Sl Huntington Beach 538-6539 JIU I U wo.TUARY '976 So. Coat Hwy blgu'!Weectf 494-1535 1633 N. El Cam1no Real san Cement• 492-0100 ........ , CO&.OMW.~ NOMI PICTITIOUS 8UStMaH MAMll STAffMEMT Tiie foll°"""ll ller9llft Is dDlne buM- MUM. MERCATOR COMPANY, 1440 Temple Terrect, Laguna Beach, CatltomlU2'S1 Rk'*"9 P. WIMIM, 1440 Temple TettKe,. ........... 8Mdl, C.lltornte TlllS~llt~bf4111111-dhllduat. Rkhlrd P. WMllln Tlll1 lt-.n-t -flied •1111 Ille Ctoltit1 Clerk llf Or«tOI County Oft AlllUll 1, "11. ...... PulllllNd 0r-. Ooett Dell1 Piiot. Auousc 11.11. u. Sept. 1, ,.,. ~ 001 Choice 7801 Bolsa Ave ---W~~~ir---......,,1...:;;:::;n;;:;;;:;iiii;;~::::.,il:~----~•~ ..... -._. 893-3525 I « NEW Schafer & Sons Piano or Organ s795 PLUS TAX YOUR I CHOICE • ~ 0 ur .Cho;c,.. MOST MAJOR BRANDS' 26 BRANO NAMES- THE WORLD'S LARGEST SELECTION OVER 100 :~~ In Stock NEVLAND USE ............... .,; • ~~~~t'~~~•!ll''lH~~mnnmn1\m~tn11n \,\f11~u, , .. i1 . 23 ,, Dieg. Meu. Color Consoles Solld-atate Titan· chaaals, Power Sentry Voltage regul- atl n g systems. Brilliant Chromacotor picture tube. Outstanding quality and dependablllty. ~477 Color Consoles LimHed To Stock On Head 'rtdly, Auguat11. 1971 • OM.Y PILOT AJJ. .4U CWL Y PILOT • P\JIWC NOTICB PUBLIC NOTICE STATaMaNTOl'AaANDONMEMT . Ol'UUOP PICTIT!Oln •USINllSS MAME ,.... 101'°"""9 .,._ -~ tlle llM Of tfteflctlt._ ~n.me: PHOTO·TEC~ CO., 110•1 wesn•• 0<c1o. """'"'9IOCI 8011<11, C.tllfoml• ... Tiie Flc.itlcMA 8WMD MITIO re· i«r•CI to ..,._. w~ lllOCI In OrenQe c:-t• on~ 1, 1'1). • Selworel H. H•r•lson, 110'1 WHtlell.O CJttlo, HUl'IU•on llff<ll, 'C.tllfoflll• .... • Tl\lt ~ ... , ~-by .n ""'~-, £_...H.Ken'IMn • T1'h ~ ... 11..-•"" Ille · '°""'"' oen of Or-Qlwlty on I AYV"'l I , "11. • P_.IJU ~ ... Klloel Or ... Goett Delly PllOt. 1 ~II, 11, 2S, s.,t. I, "1t .. r--; PUBLIC NOTICE I .•. ,...,, AugUlt 11, 1171 PUBUC NOTICE PUIWC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBIJC NOTICE PUBU NOTICE PUllUC NOTICE ......... - ' BGATING Frtdlly, August 18, 1971 DAILY PILOT .4J3 C11rtis Nears Etchells Crown UCTIO ................. · • ETCHELLS SAILOR8 DR1W flOR WeAntER llMK IN 1ITU! RACE ·.: Scene Can Be CCNnpenMI tD FrMny Off• .. • """' Hour Prince of Wales Bawl Set Monday Off Coa.st The Newport Harbor Yacht Club wUl continue to be the scene of in· ternaUonal and national yachting starting Monday when eight of the top match racing teams representing the United States Yacht Racing Uoion 's eight areas start competition for the prestigious Prince of Wales Bowl .The PrinceofWales regatta is one of four USYRU championships to be beld in Southern California next week. 1be lllis&on Bay Yacht Club at sp ~iego will be host to the Smythe, Bemts and Sears Cup competition for j\inior sailors Startin& Sunday THE PRINCE OF Wales competi ti~ will be sailed Monday through 'fhursday with Friday being set aside ~ an "insurance day." The ladder- t y p e re gatta will be sailed in Etchells-22 sloops using some ol the boats that have been involved in the EtcheJJs world championship regatta ending today. The Etchells was chosen becauae of its strict one. design quaWtcation and will be even 11\0re finely tuned for the round-robin riultch racing. Defendinl cbampJon for Area G <CaUfomfa) will be Ed Trevelyan of the Conm.tdo Yacht Club who bas Ragamuffin Top ~pper Yacht; Kialoa Far Back . .. HONOLULU CAP> -Ragamuffin, a · 47 ·foot vesael from Australia, bas won corrected time honors in class A in the fifth and final race of the Clip. per Cup Yacht Series here. With Thursday's win. Ragamuffin has top corrected time honors for Class A -the largest boat& -in all five events of the series · Vndine of Larchmont, N.Y .• took fir s t -to-finish honors Thursday, crossing the finish line in four days, 20 hours, six minutes, 11 seconds. Three hours behind waa rival K.ia loa, also a 79-toot vessel. Most of the remainlng 23 sloops were expected to complete the coune today won the conlecl bowl two years tn a row. So mucb for next week. Tbe weekend in Newport Harbor wfD a1llo be buninl witb acttftty as two yaebt clubs IP'•*lr neat.a. The Voyqen Yacht Club wW send a neet of Performance Bendleap ftadDI Pleet yachta out oo oceu eoaraes la tbe fifth race d the HampbreJ Bo«art Trophy Series, along with Midget Ocean Racing Fleet yachts in quest of the McLaughlin Trophy. Both events are scheduled Saturday. n WllL BE "ladies at the helm" at the Lido lale Yacht Club where the girls wiJJ .. man" Lido-tu in the club's annual All Girl Regatta. The girls will 31.lo be the stars of the show at the Capistrano Bay Yacht Club Saturday In a Sabot Regatta, and the Dana Point Yacht Club will stage the fifth race of its• Dan.a Series for PHRF yachts on ~~m California Yachting As· soctatlon calendar: Nl!WPORT HAR~~ CLUB -USYAU Pr-. fl/I wales eowt <MmPl~P lmelcll rec .... 1 Sun-*Jo~=~~T CLUB -8o9Mt·LIUQfMln $trlH Ne.S CPMRpt.M()tlFI Selunley. UDO tSUE YACHT a.ue -All Gin A.....,., s.~ csizJ.. =AOIT CLUB -0-P01nt s..-i.. ..._ S,CPMltF>.,._ • CAfltSTMHO MY YAOIT CLUa -Udlft S... ·--~. a.. .. 1911K '--" a..dl HUNTINGTON HARBOUR YllCHT CLU8 -..... OlaSitrleaH9.NIPHAFls.tur'Uy,~. U"l 1 L.t: iH1~ t-LEE f -Juntcw 111111..._. C'""1'> 5~ BEAC>f YAOfT a.ue -Inv......_. ...... (s.e.tJS.WW, • ............ ..., A$$0CIA110tt Ct' SANTI< MONICA UY YACHT ~~~--~ cMnlp' 0 s..r-Ser~~~F~~y.• -W' Jlw-4 KfJIG HllAllOR YllCHT CLUI -S.-S.. s.m1,.., ... s.twmy; '--~. S...,; S.. t-.10 l"IWt .......... Clim tit SI ...... .......,, s-sr,. MllL18U YAOtT CLUI -....... OllPrte¥w -...... SMurWy, ......... CORONl<OO VAQfT~ i ~ ....... 0.. ~~~~ a..u . -USVttu ""'-· BemlsendS....0.........,~-:1:,AMt.U. SAN OIEGO YAOfT Q.UI -WW.. U.W.. ~~~us-Ql1•1-.aleftn CSOttl"I SIMey; Mh9lllt.., _....,. r .. , ........... Sw*y. SOUTHWEST•i.N YACHT CLUI -,,_. .... OWmlOM, s.turclty~. CHANNEL ISUN y~k!,'-!.ua -........ R ... IUI~. • PIER..OINT BAY YACHT Cl.Ua-OlalltlarM-. •CPMAFI ~.~. Vl!NTUfit!' ~~T CLUla -81 .. Wew ,.,_No.• lpt4Rl"l SeturdeY; Sundey. ~OHi< VALlJEY SAILING ASSOClllTIOM -...... Fair ... .,,....,. A..n. s.tur'CNy. SAHTll 8Ai.8AJtA U:tLINO Cl.UI -...._ No.2 1-4Hlgn, PffAJl'l Sundey . · The classic "di~' buck ·makes a triumphant retum. -The-sn6ttavorlte of the 40's and so·s. Looks sensational today with Jeans. cords or almost any casual outfit. Five-eyelet blucher oxford In authentic "dirty" (sand ..cotor} buck ~~he-leet~e«:t.cre~ sote.Easy-orl"~ Pre-&lason prlee 33.90 Reg .44.00 ., ALllON IAMJIABBY ..................... lAall -.ledte ta Mid to be an important hdof • • ._..yacht nee-a. If .._ t.e die cue, Marblehead, Mus., akip- e>ers ...-. to bave soaked up aa much or more local biOw.._. than the locals u tbe atxth and final neoe ot tM Etchells-2.3 world championship re1atta '°* uadel' way in tbe ocean otf Newport fleacb at I p.m. today. .........._ ..... STATE SAL ____ __, • !STATE JEWELRY • CHINA • RUGS • SILVER • FINE PORCELAINS • BRONZES • FURNITURE • OILS, Etc. DaYld Qll'tia of Marblehead, 1111 world cbam- p6on in tbe clua. came up wttb a ftrat place flniah la ThUl'lldaY'• fifth race to cement hla claim to a aeeoncl world Utle ID tbe at-foot claas. By throwing out bia 10tb place flnJab ID the ftrat race, Curtis has a reeord ol 1-N·l for a total ol U.7 polota lmder the Olymnplc ICOriDC ayatem. 1~ Million Dollars Worth Fri., Sat. Ir Sun. August 18, 19 & 20 8:00 pm ln8pectlon Fri., Sat. & S-. z.1,.1r1.a,. BUT PU8BING RIM BARD Is another Marblebe..ter, Rick Howard whose best four races have been 1..,5-2 for a total ol 20.4 lood point.a. Howard ftniabed a«ODd in Tburada,y'a fifth race. Ria throwout was a lftb ID tbe second race. Don 't miss this important sale! Fine crystal, chin• sets, European furniture, bronas NSll oils and many other items. ' ' -Dick Deaver of the Balboa Yacht Club looted like a wtmer after three races with a coaalateot 4+2. but finished 18th in the fourth race to live lllm a total ol '1 points. He ftntabed even farther back Tbunday, fCll"Cinl blm to keep tbe 18th place ftniab. Lou of dl•mond sollt•ires and clusten. Fine man•1 Mld ladies watches rings, urrings, bracelets, necklaces, etc., set with diamonds, emeralds rubies, sapphires. Several importent large emer11ds and 11pphires'. ClOle beb1Dd Deaver ia anatber-llarblehead skipper, Peter ~. wbose best four races leaves blm witb 43. '1 polnta. TEAMS· BaMAmetlcerd MMtlttChW<1119 Penonel chedc · C.th ·Some •••nded term• cen be errenged. ~ff'/ mOfll«J for COmMIMcl9 of 1111• to: TOI BOGAN 01' 'l'llE bolt Newport Harbor Yacht Qab fiJdabed ninth 1111.ll'ldaf to maintain 46. 7 DOlnta.for ftftb place. nevvport galleries, ltd. To cllneb the title. Curtis was faced with a muat ol better than 10th place and about four boat.a between bJm and Howard. Thursday's race was postponed about 30 minutes as the race committee waited tor the westerly breeze to fill in, and a aeneraJ recall de- layed the start even Jonaer. Tbe breese switched and went light half ·way tbrouab the race. TllD£ WEU SEVEML protests in the race, but none ol them would affect the top 10 in the stanclinp. Top 10 finiabera, fifth race -1, David Curtis; 2, Rick Howard; 3, Bou McDonald. Sydney, Australia: 4,.Jobo Fraser, Sydney; s, Peter God· frey, Marblehead; 6, Frank Tolhurst, Sydney; 7, Ted Munroe, NHYC; 8, Hank Easom, San Fran· ci.Bco; 9, George Twist, NHYC; 10, Don Edler, NHYC. Standings, best tour of five races -1, David Curtis, ll.7; 2, Rick Howard, 20.4; 3, Dick Deaver, 41; 4, Peter Godfrey, Marblehead. 43.7; 5, Tim Hogan, NHYC. 48.7; 6, Noel Brooke, Melbourne, Australia, 49; 7. Carl Sutter, Seattle, Wash., 54 ; 8, George Twist. NHYC, 58; 9, John Fraser, Sydney, 59; 10. Richard Hackett, San Fraociscq, 62. 2462 West Coast Highway, Newport Beach, CA (714) 645-2200 CONSIGNMENTS ACCEPTED 'TIL 5 P.M. FRIDAY A rt Lavin• AuctlonMr AMLING'S Newport Nursery and Garden Center Atlantic Sailed By Heart Patient 10°/o OFF ·:·:On All Pottery · C•at.i lt'etsikr s-., tlWWlllfl $abinMy wlttl -...< ............ ~"°'"' LloM ., .. ._.. wtllCls nl911t end ~ llClln.14'tM Seluruy In 10s et 11weci.s to• IMlrlca. Ceestel ............... Wiii fo1ft99 Mtwaen 61 Mtll 11. Intend t•m· ~ wlll ninoe ...._. '° end a TM __ ..,,..,...,..Wlllbe ... s-.•--,nc1n P1tlMY s.c..t._ s:ep.m. t.o Sec-4 llllb t:J5 p.m.. •.1 IA't'UaDAY l'lnl... •:a..... .0.t FlntMtll tt:ISa.a. U S.C..... •:a ...... O.t Secoft4 lllllt · to._-. ,_, Now thru August 31st .: Flrd row WNDA::t•••"'-.... ~~!ie~~~~~i•~~~c.};(:~~Q·'.SJ~~~l'C:YiCAilJ.~~~riJ!.~ Finl tllgll ll:SU.m. S.S SecoftCI low S:2' p.m. O.t SecMclMtfl tt:»p.m. U S4lft "-':u. e.m .• Mb 1:77 p.m. Moc. rl-7:5' p.m., M h •:D e.m. ------- ., ·euv ONE DINNER· RT REGULAR PRICE AND ... BOTHE SECOND ONE FDR JUST •1.00 Ttt.l's the special coupon ofter being m.de by SplfM RMlaufanta. MKArthur at S.D. Fwy., In kYlne and 3'25 Harbor Blvd., In Costa M111. During August, except on MondtiY!, these coupona enllble you to buy one dinner at the regulat price and the second dinner for just $100more.11·10ttrway ot saying "Thanks" for being our cuetorner. . I '1---·pupon···-~ ~·--111*'""1 •• gm.~ • Brochettes of Beef 1 • Breaded Veal • *3.35 ::1 *1.00 I ·1 •2.45::: '1.00 • served With aoup a ~ I I served wllhlOUP ~ I or .. 1.0, veg•llble, 'ff·~· ~.. or salad, vegetable, <§. : QOlat~or rtcepllaf. ~ I I potatoorrtce p1la1, ..;._ ~ I roll and butter roll and butter Tiit 011fY 11Q111,_1s are INt you b!llll 11111 ~ tlCll 1"11 1 I TIMI only •eov•rtll'ltlltl art 11111 you llrl!IQ !Ills COii~ will'I you I 1nG Dodi c11nn111mustbe1111111111 The SEcoi.o DINMEA FOR ~boll! 01t1nen must tit lllt s.11111 Thi SECOND DINNER FOil $1 00 oller d OCoCI ontv II Spree ...._.IS. MacAlttlur II SI 00 Ollll • OCoC1 Olllr Ill $iW• Alsllu!Mlll, ~ • s D fwy • tn 1M11•nd3125 HMllor &Ml • 1h COiia Mesa llld I I S D fwy • 1111rv1111 llld 31~ H¥1IOr lll¥0 .• 111 ~Mesa ltld I llldt ~ 31. 1971 on. pd .,., ...., -.pl M01101J 111111 August 31. 1978 Oller OCoCI .,,., Cl'Y •"'Pt Uollday. c...., SCllCllll IDllll Ill •ltn Oji 1111 ~.,., .. --CGllllOft ~la muse tit •• Oft .... ptllWW and "11 --• lrOlll :i pm ID 10 pm. M vlltr RM-. .. .,,..,_ • • lrOlft 3 pm ID 10 pm M.., _ .... .,.at~ • -~-- - -• -• -~ ~ Jll1'W -~-· ••• ··'""=---, l'---9*1PO"·--.. ~ ~··--·~····~ 1 liver & Onions 1 1 Fish & Chips 1 I *2.45 ::: •1.00 I I •2.85 =' •1.00 . I I I Mrwdwltheoup ~I I aervedwlthaoup ~--I Of•lfld, ftgetable, oraatad, vegetebfe, ' ·~ I potatoorttcepllaf, ~ I I potatoorrtcepti.f, I roll and butter roll alld butter ~ ~ I Tiit only rtqu•"'"""' "' lhll l'V" llfmg 11111 COllllOft .rlll Yoll I I Tiit on~ r~rs 1rt 1"'I yGll ll!lflO 11111 gaupon wutll YOU I ln(l llOlfl Oln'*' mull bl ll1t 111111 Tiie SECOND 01NN£R FOR (111(1110111 Oillll8'1 I '411C lit Ille Slll'lt. TM ~O()tjD OINNER FOR $1 00 olltf 11 OOoC1 only •I SPll'IS AtSl.l.,lnls, M~llllll! II $l 00 ...., • goed 0111Y 11 $pl'9 AM!luflllts. ~ 11 I so Fwy .1nlrvtnuod312~H.rllOIBMl,.lftCostaMtsUncl I I ao fW, .• 111 .. d 3l2$...,..M .. •C.... ..... I IMS Aua\111 31, 1071 Otltf OOoC1 •11y Clay txotOI Mcnelly "°9 _,,., 31. 1971 O!ttf good tny City ._. MOftCllY COu9Q!l IC*lala lllUll Ill •ltn on N PllllllMI l nd l rt..,.. C:0..Pll!'I tpeellllS 1111111 llt ... fl\ !It 111"1'1111illd.111 ten.i • _,p. •1'J,ll All • ...., ....... ,... • 1111111.1,111 •• ,0 ,.111 Al ... 11111111 ............ ~-•••••••~ ~••••••••••r ....!!.~~!,.,. • .. , COSTA MESA ~ ........... -~ I •• '· • • • • : . . . • • ·: . . ' . : •• : ' ; . ' . • i . t ' I I ·, :!J4 IWL Y PtLOT Fnmy, Auguat 11. 1971 ' ' \. ~·· t~-< ~, . ' '--== ~ 1/3 off I easy-care knit shirts 5.99 AEG.$9 A special price on our entire stock of $9 knit shirts. Choose bold stripes or trimmed solids. Soft, mechinewash- able pdvetstet I cotton; sizel S-M-L-XL. save on solid color luxury towels-2 styles 2.99 REG. ta, Bath Size a. "c.mury'' by T..,..,,.. ... : sheared cotton-terry woven to cotton/ potyester blend; hemmed ends. b. ··~by Cermc>n9 :combed cotton woven_ to polyester I cotton. Hand towel, reg. 3.60 ..... , •• 2..21 Washcloth. reg. 1.80 ........ 1.19 fancyfoObNorkforwornen at one low price 12.97 REG.14.91618.99 a. Man-made, slim strappings; rust, black or carnet, built on a high wedge. b. Ankle-strap casual; man-made uppers in brown, btack, rust. Wood· look walking heeJ. Shoe Department 1.01 savings on fall handbags 5.99 REG.t7 . .. ChoOle from a variety of colors and ltyles lnduding teether-IOok vinvta with melal ICC8' .... c:anv8I total with vinyt or self trim. Greet for campual entire stock of 14K gold p cecrea nga 25%off Reg. t11-M SALE 11.1N7,41 0'°°99 from our ONBt 1ll1ction of hoopa, modfa end bell deeigns. Ane Jewelry Depenment all 46 stores join in.celebrating. the oPening of Mervyn's new store in College GroVe, San Diego '~ ~ ----~~ a i ' \ \ / ~" ~ I ~ our three: beat-selling boys' Jackets special purchase from Levi's• I tops and pants 5.99TOPS -_25%_off 9.99PANTS ~ - Pllns--.n.Hne, iradltlonel lltyffngrfn polyester/cotton, 100% cotton denim or 100,. cotton fabrlca. Indigo and white, in sizes 6 to 18.- Tops: big tope fn IOft gauze; elz9I S-M·L. Or button-ftontwoven p&ald lhlrta. Poly- ..,./cotton blendl. Sinl 8 to 18. • I .. ~ /. back-to-school dresses 25%off &a.a4.eX. Reg. $8, SAl.E 6.99 &a.a 7-14, Reg. t10, SALE 7.41 Two-piece looks, peasants, smocks, more. Many full or tiered skitt.8; alt with details. Floral prints, solids or plaids. Easy-care polyester I cotton. our entire stock of corduroy Dura-Jeans* for boys and girls REO. ti PR •• SALE 7.89 PR. 2 PR. •15 Boya'.UeeS.12 REG. •10 PR .. SALE 8.99 PR. 2 PR. •17 Girts' sizes 7·14 The jeent for active children I Oeeigned for long wear in washable, pennanent press polyester I cotton/ nyk>n tri-blend; reinforced at stress points for lasting fit, shape retention. Other sizes at comparable savings. Mervyn's own western jeans for men 9.99 REG.10.99 Striated or pre-washed denim bells of 100% cotton. Bruahed cotton denim Of cotton/polyester, all~ , forced et strell points. Waist :-.... 29t93;8· ~ Sequoia: textunki rayon/ acetate; acrylic foam backing; 7 lizee. Reg. •1Me0 •...•.•.•. IANI• ClwnM>nt: cotton/acrylic/~ open weave: patyeeter lining. 6 lillil.: Reg .• 22 .. 76 ••...•.•• 10."'31• theta are only a few of the over 200 items on s&le In our stores through Sunday, August 20th . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. ~ ' ~ II ~ • ' I .j .1 .. . ..... r I F-eaturi INSlbE:•Ann Landers •Sports •Stocki DAILY ptLOT "'-· Augu.t11. 1971 .. • JU • .· ·CJo·aleollolles They have assumed a victim role in life and believe their problems are caused by their spouses' drinking. By MARCIA FOa5BEaG Of• Ditty" ...... A sYJllllC.Om or alcoholism ls driJ)ki.ne. A symptom of tuberculosis la couahlnl. We don't say, "U you loved me, you wouldn'f cough," to a penon with tuberculosis. But we DO say, "U you loved me, you wouldn't drink," to a penon with aleobolism. So everybody in tbe f1unlly points a finger at dad and says, .. U you loved us, you'd atop drlnklna. Jf you would only S}'?p drlnklna. all of our i>ro61ema would be solved.' Sounds·valld, but the truth ls, even tboug he DO~ love tbe famil)', tbe love isn't goin1 to help him stop drinking. And once be IS treated for alcoholism and quill drinking, everything ISN'T fme, because the family bu then to face other problems that have nothing to do with alcohol. 'Ibey have to face normal life struggles that bad previously been pushed aside. They can't focus on the drinking u the caoae or all the problems any more. TllDE AllE .JUST a couple of ex,unples of what happens to the I amWes of people with alcoholism, a progressive disease that gets worse without treatment. In a sense, tbe spouse and children have accompanied tbe alcoholic along the progressive downward path of tb1s ill· ness. Because of a gl'Owing ClOllcerD ·for those· close to the alcoholic, treatment of the entire family as a grou~ ls now a recoplr.ed approach for recovery, indicated Judith Hollls, who spoke at a program sponsored by Mariposa Women's Center in Orange. The center la a no-fee drop-in resource and activity center for women witb alcohol-related problems. Ms. Hollis, clinical supervisor, and Edward Storti, community coordinator, San Pedro and Peninsula Hospital Alcoholism Reeovery Service._ talked about the spouse and the lamlly of the alcobollc, illustrating the. disc~ with a film from tbe CO'RK Foundation titled "If You Loved Me." Ma. Hollil &aid that in the put, family members bad been used as "reference aources" in treat.meat. They came in as "helpers" who were gCJllll to "tell us" about the alcoholic, "but no one realized that tbe family was as sick as the alcobolie, '' lbe l8icl. . · 8111! 81tOUGBT THE subject to a J)el"SOnal level by aDllOUDCing, "l'm a co-alcoholic. A co- alcobollc la somebody whose life baa been vital· ly affeded by alcohol, somebody wbo is in· tertw~ w4b som~rte else's drinklng." Co-alCobollca have as~umed a victim role in life and they believe that all of their problems are caused bt their spouse's drink:inC. said Ms. Hollis. She cited her own case: "I was obsessed with my· husband's drinkinl and I was biding behind It to minimize the extent of my own problems. I welgbed 225 pounds and I bad been a compulsive overeater all my life, but lt was ms drinklngth4tCAUSED allofMYproblems." The co-alcoholic 'is often "much sicker" than the alcoholic, said Ms. Hollls. In treat- ment. It's dlfftcalt to get tbe co-alcoholic to talk abo-.at herself because sbe insi~ts "there's nothing wruig with Die." <Ms. Hollis said that although the number of female alcoholics is in-1 creasing, she wotlkl refer to the alcoholic as "he'.' and tbe co-alcoholic spouse as "sbe."> IN ADDmON to denying "how bad things really are." co-alcoholic spouses and children often feel guilty for having "caused" the (See CO-ALCOHOLtCS. Pase 82) Vietims of Crime ,.. '/ cook and talk and cry and hear l!'Y daughter out as she tells it over and over with every nuance explored. . . ' By CBEllYL BOMO OftlltDIMy ........... At f a.m. the wind was bowU.0, and the sky was pitch black. A blanket of pounding rain was moving homes from foundatloal and pusbln1 blllsides into roadways. The iDtnlder' stole like a roach into tbe 16- year-old 1irl's bedroom. He found an extra nlgbtgowii and carefully tied tbe sleeves into a noose. Then he methodically walked toward the sleepinc girl and placed a pillow over her face exerting pressure that mltbt bave smothered her. She woke sereamin1. But ber cries were muffied by the pillow and ~ storm. Struggling for her life, she bit her attacker's band and they rolled oil the bed and onto tbe floor. He began punching her in the ,face with his fists. By this time. the teen-ager wu semi- conscious and beard the intruder order her to turn over and bequiet. Somebow she was able to break free and ran screaming to tbe safety of her parents' room. She bad reeognized her attacker. Within minutes. police and paramedics bad arrived. And the girl's frantic parents were as- sured that the black eyes would heal, as would the cuts and the bruises on bu body. Her broken tooth could be faxed. But the real damage -the damage to the psyche of a Newport Beach girl we will call Janice -bad just begun. And the effect the al· tack would have on her entire family would soon surface. Janice and' her family had ·become victims of crime. A few days after the incident, the attacker <whom the girl recognizf!d as a nelgbbor and the father of children she used to babysit for 1 would be arrested and released on a $1,000 bond. For three months, until be pleaded guilty to charges of b~ary and assault <an attempted rape charge was dropped due to lack of evldence), the family was haunted by the 31· ye at-old businessman wbo. tbey say. drove past their holJ'e eacb evenina and made obscene • phone calla to Janice. : Immediately after tbe incident Oft that March niaht. the family physician recom· mended Janice be atven P.SYCbiatric care. The • psychologist who later counseted the bllh acbool student. usually bubbly IDd carefree. described her condWon u a form ot psychosis resulting from tbe trauma. The girl's grandmother. a teacher. came from her Puaclena llome to stay with the faml· ly. She began reeord1na Iler sranddaqbter's nightly h1sterical outbursts ID a Joa. Other family members recall bearina Janice acreaming .. He's tillinl me! He's tillln .. me!" in tbe middle of the ni1ht. The grandmother. wbo was sleepUig in the same room with the girl, witnessed her chronic in· ablllty to sleep. the need to have ligbta on at atl limes. severe anxiety attacks and repeated nightly checks for prowlers. At tbe end of March. she wrote: .. Even when sbe doesn't awaken and get up. because it Is my bablt to be awake at times dur· ing the night. I bear her talking and turning restlessly, or saying such words as: 'I scream. l s cream, I scream;' or 'Murder. murder. murder;' or abe calls out angry words." Tbe rest of the family. too, were beginning to visibly show signs of str~in. J ante.e's father. a quiet. gentle man who rocked bis sobbing daughter in bis arms after the attack, bact difficulty coatroJlinC bis rage. Each evening be would driye past the attacker's home on the next block and each day he would stand out.aide bis home waiUng for tbe man to pass. He started steeping with a knife under bis pillow. The victim's brother announced to the fami· ly that be wanted to k111 bis sister's attacker. His mother, a pacifist and a volunteer worker with the poor and underprivileged, was hor· rifled: "I tell blm we won't waste our energies on unproductivethinlring. Weneedtostayunclouded <See VICl'IM.S, Page BZ> ............ .,"'! Diane Elias: On her way to the Houston Opera Studio. Opera's Ber Leve. 'Once I got on the stage I never got off,' says Diane Elias. 'I just knew that's what I should be doing.' . . • ' I , . • : . I 1, I ' • ' : . ONLY PILOT ... FridlJ, Auglat , .. 1171 ANN LANDERS I HOROSCOPE ~-~-~--------=--~~~---------------------------------~~~~~~~ M.S. Victim Asks for Jobs [. RUFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm a vlc· Um of multtp&e Id I and ban bff n for 2~ -l.ears. l have ra ed two .obUdren and IUneUGMd • Ln ever;y way normal . •omen do. 1l la not euy to flaht M.S. but an evt"n toqher baW• ta 1.tlln.1 u Job When I ftU oul an IP· pllcaUon and see tbe part of the form °''' A•• IAal•en 1a11 "meclieal hlatory." my heart alnka. I know M S wtU count acawt me Any bandtcappt!d ••• Viethns <........_Paaeau -to be effectiyt ln aearchifta fOI' answers.·· • But even Ibo was havtq trouble lteepin1 a level bead. "I don't really know bow I would re- '4cl if I bad to face the man. lt stW seems un- real First, I have lo asaimilale the fact that our safe hann bas been lnvaded and tbat a child I bore was almost killed on someone's whim." Because Of the obscene phone calls that followed within minutes when JanJce's parents left the house together -and the fear the girl's attacker would come back to finish the job - they stopped leaving the house at the same time , And each evening the smaller children in the family would discuss the episode matter of factly at the dinner table; then the entire famlly would double-lock doors, board windows, and pull drapes In preparation for the night. None or the children slept in their own ' rooms anymore; they buddied together in fear. . If the wind rmtled tree branches against a win· · dow, famlly members would all find themselves staring at each other in hallways. The victim's mother characterized the family's day-to-day ordeal: ·•we act as lf there has been a death in the family. We grieve In the style of an Irish wake with anl(Uish and questions punctuating the now of everyday things. ··1 cook and talk and cry and hear my daughter out as she tells it over and over with every nuance explored . . . She said she knew she was dying o.nd she did pray, like they say you do.'' She and her husband spent endless hours telephoning police. trying to apply pressure lo get the assailant's misdemeanor charges .changed to felony offenses. They felt victimized :by our system of justice and were at a loss to ~explain what they felt was a lack of empathy •from the police department. Eventually their persistence paid off. But there was a price to pay: Neighbors began tak· ing sides, intimating tbeteen-ager bad entlcedber attacker in some way and telling the girl's parents they were making too much of a simple incident. Said the girl's mother: "'lbere have been limes that we felt vaguely guilty of something Perhaps we sboulcjn't have lnconvenlenced the neighborhood by being chosen for the bloody at tack?" Her husband aaid he felt as ii be was "up- side down -like speaking in a backward alphabet" when he first learned bis family bad become the subject of controversy. Even Janice, after faclng her calm and t;>usinesslike attacker ,in the courtroom. was becoming angry. She told her mother she wished she could bit him "Just once." And so the drama contlnues, even though the man is now serving two, concurrent 16· month sentences in the state penitentiary. . The neighborhood remains divided on the question of guilt and innocence. And recently 1he assailant's wife has been making regular .telephone calla to the police department, rePQrt- ing phone tb.reata and tbe harassment of her .cbUdren. penon it vtewed 11 a poor rbk I wu • MCretary for a publhhtn1 houae but now I can do only ll1ht , Help for Victims officC' work ln my home town because I cannot travel Iona dlatances to and from a Job. Surely there are some companl• who will hire ua. I speak not only for myeelf but for all han· dlcapped people. Wf' NEED to work for morale purpoteS as well u for the money. Will you say aometh.lna ln your col· umn that miaht help! - To ease the financial burden, a family like Janice's may seek assistance from the State Victims of Violent Crime Proeram. Victims have up to one year to apply for aid -unless there are extenuatln1 circumstances. The applications may be obtained throu&b local police departments. California was the first state in the U.S. - preceded only by New Zealand and Great Bri· lain -to adopt aid to innocent victims leeisla· lion In 1965. Accordlna to Eu1ene Veglia of the Stale Board of Control In Sacramento which operates the program, the existing law was designed specifically for those in need. But, in reality, be admitted, few cases are turned tlown. The persons benefited. said Veglia, must be "innocent victims and not compensated from any other source." The program, be feels, is vital in a society where victims "suffer trauma upon trauma" wblle the criminal "gets a slap on the wrist and gets out." Last year, in Orange County alone, 58 claims were approved and approximately Sl24,561 in aid, or an average of $2,147 per case, was awarded to victims. This ls higher than the state-wide averaae per clalm of Sl,924. In 1974, benefit amounts were increased from $15,000 to a maximum of $23,000. A victim may now be reimbursed for up to Sl0,000 in lost wages, $10,000 in medical assistance <which in· eludes burial fees to survivors>, and $3,000 for job rehabilitation. In a case like Janice's -where the criminal is not indigtml -a new law adopted last January comes into play. The court can levy additional fines up to $10,000 depending on the convicted person's ability to pay. This sum. when collected, is placed in the Victims of Violent Crime Fund. If an injured party applies to the fund for aid, and later decides to pursue a civil suit, the state. accordinR to Ve~Ua, bas an automatic lien on any award for amounts previously dis· pensed through the Victims of Violent Crime Fund. Janice wakes up crying at 4 a.m. and con- tinues her visits to the psychologist. And although her father no longer eonceals a knife under his pillow, he now must llaten to bis younger children "talk about a neighbor now being locked 11P with the same ease as they ap- proach other local topics." "The Ume of innocence that d~ribed our daily existence bas been tarnished," said the victim's mother. Although tbe family in t.b.is Newport Beach neighborhood bas a $200,000 lawsuit pending against the convicted felon. Janice's mother has no illusions about money compensating their loss : ''The attack and her near loss of lite singled her out as a victim. But that was only the tap on the shoulder. None of us knew then that to sur- vive that part only readies one for the next stage. , "The victimization or the innocent continues long alt.er the cuts and bruises are gone." ••• Co·aleoholles <From Pase BU alcoholism in some way. which leads to their need to help "cure" the alcoholic. ·'They believe they are special and that no one else can help the alcoholic," said Ms. Hollis. When the alcoholic enters treatment and stops drinking, "the family gets angry and says, 'Why does he listen to you when J have been • saying the same thing for years?' That rein- forces the family's inadequate feelings." Ms. Hollis maintained that co-alcoholism , follows a progressive downward pattern Just as alcoholism does. tp not until the co-alcoholic hits bottom and Is 'sick and tired of being sick and tired" that the "road to recovery" begins. 8 UT ALONG the way, ''we (the co. alcoholic) get slcker and sicker," she said. Often, it starts with a dysfunctional family system where a child grows up taking full reapoasiblllty for the parents'~-''They 1J1fbty rrow Up ey aren't alcoholics themselves -· trying lo save and cure somebody else. They feel that that's where their mltjor self.worth Ues ... Co-alcoholics become obsessed with tbe alcoholic's ~. "The kids get into trouble, the house falla apart. But none of that matters because her main thJng ls to get him to stop drinking. ''She resorts to a lot of different methods - hiding bottles, dumping out boUles, refusinl ln· vitatlons to events. Sbe doesn't spend much time on herself and doesn't care much about herself. She withdraws. ·'She starts covering up for him by calling in to b1a Job when be can't make it. Sbe often takes on a pivotal role in the family by taking over bla respooaiblllties as a father. "But she's HELPING him to keep d.rillking. She's helping him by not maklnl him face the responslbWb' of b1a own drjDklq. When be comes home dnml and th.rowl up, abe cleans it up. Or abe ba1la b1m out 'of Jail. Sbe'1 belpln8 blmkeep~." Se>meUmel ~~alcabollc becDll)l9 vtolent iiidDNli up 1M 'aT&'b6fte wben be'• dnm.k. Or 1be wtlbel ''be would die oe tbe frwtraJ. "Theo •be feell wone about tbe YioleDee because abe t.blnb, 'I'm the onl1 one baldlq tb1I au t.ocetMr and I'm acUQ Cl"U1·' '!bat'• the inlanlt)' ol her dlleue," aalcl lb. Hollil. S.R. OF SMITHTOWN. N.Y. OBAR 8.L: 8&1tl1&1c1 1laow ltandleapped empto,_. ue ..... de· peadable, more co•· 1elnUomudarea'"9t from work lea freque.t· ly tban dllole wlilo bave ao plq1lcal dlaablll'1. eandle•rped emp{:$o ee1 a moat always ve morale, lncreaa rodac&lvlty and dmlraUon In tlulr fellow employees. You can aJao contact tile llaltlple Sclerosis SoeldJ 8' -Eut 4bcl Stred, N.Y., N.Y. ltt17 -or a local M .s. claapter la you city. w.ue ... 8oeWJ' .. not ID a ......... CoproYlde JIM, I& caa •U. refer· rala Co die local olllee of Yoeatloaal relaablll&a. tloe. Goedlaek to yoa, de-ar. AINI please let me be• llowJ011eomeoa&. DEAR ANN LANDERS: You goofed. Why should the mother of the bride send notes to friends and relatives to let them know "Mary" received their wedding gilts and checks? It's nonsense for a mother to take an adult daughter of( the book. If a elrl is old enough to get married sbe should be old enouah to write a thank-you note. I'd like to suuest that Mother aet off Daughter's back and stop "reminding" her as if she were a small child. U another friend or relative asks Mary's mother lf their gift or check was received she should reply, "You'll have to ask Mary." Too many mothers ac- cept guilt that does not belong to them. This ls Mary's problem and she s hould be made to deal with it. -BEE N THERE DEAR B.T.: Sorry, I still think I'm right. Mary's mother la not taklng her daPgb~r off tbe book. Sbe II merely notifying the senders that their glft1 have been received so they can stop wondering and pay tlletr bills. The slob stW bu &be obligation of saying .. Tbank voa." Horoseope 8"TUaDAY. AUGUST 1t 81 SYDNEY OMA&ll ) ARIES <Mar. 2l·Apr. 19): Don't be too quick to abow band. reveal olan. Be discreet. You have law, authority on your slde. Know it and be confident. Member of opposite sex cares -and you'll know lt, ~oney, responsibility are In picture. TAURUS <Apr. 20-May 20>: AceeDt on Joy of achievement. You get news wbleh verilles feellnp, predletlons. Youi: project.ions prove ac- curate. Gemini, Virgo, Sagittarius figure prom- inently. Wiab is fulfilled. Now, keep promise you made to a very dear friend. GEMINI <May 2l·June20): Net approach to career, business is indi~ated. Leo ls ln picture. Accent on authority, civic duties, honors. responslblllties. You'll get green Upt to take a more independent coune. ~lal note: Avoid llftlna heavy objects today and tomorrow. lt' possible. CANCE& (June 21·July 22): Accent OD publlsblng makJng contact with persons who can supply your needs. Aquarius, Pisces persons figure prominenUy. You're able to articulate feelings. Share spiritual experience with loved one. . LEO <July 23-Aua. 22>: Doors open. What was a restriction, is removed. Gemini, Sa1lt· tarlus persons ftgure prominently. Key is adap- tabWty, enthusiasm, uslng available material. expand.Ing horizons so YO'I can view picture as a wbole. Lunar accent on bldeet. flnances related to partoer or mate, taxes, cutbacks for purpose of ultimate,-Jons·range investment. ·VIRGO CAq. 23-Sept. 22>: Spotlight on public acceptance of your format. plan.s. Work on product. creation -smooth l'OUlh ed&es. Partner or mate ta very much a part of picture. 8e posiUve of legal rights, permissions. Let otben take lead ..,... be keen, careful, shrewd ob-server. LIBRA lSept. 23-0ct. 22): Study Virgo menage. Be analytical. Don't be satisfied m'erely to know something occurred -find out why lt l\appeoed. Member of opposite sex has somethlril important to say about work pro- cedures, recreation, nutrition. Be receptive. SCORPlO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Accent on sienificant decisions involving chan1e. creaUve endeavors, children, affairs of heart. Taurus. Libra persons figure prominently. DomesUc ad· Justment la on agenda. Be diplomatic. Refuse to rush iuQ!Dent. SAGnTA&IUS <Nov. 22·Dec. 21>: Concen· trate on basic values -land, property, hoJDe, solid objects. See as is, not throuCb haze of self. deception. Pisces, Virgo figure prominenUy. Ac· cent on closing deal, defa.nl:ng terms, learn.lng what ls or value as contrasted tospeculallon. CAPR.ICOllN fl>ec. 22·Jan. 19): State opln· ions firmly, but leavened with humor. You are winning support, although some persons are "afraid" of you. Relatives, quick trips; outlines. messages are part of active scenario. Another Capricorncouldplaykeyrole. · AQUARIUS <Jan. 20-Feb. 18>: Accent on in· come. collections and payments. You're able to complete projects. Aries, Libra flrure prom· inenlly. Extend i.nlluence. Come out of shell. Get off sidelines and into the game. One who takes, withoul giving anything in return, may go out of your lite. PISCES <Feb. 19-Mar. 20): Make new starts, be confident. independent -cycle is such that you get results. Timing, Jud&ment, in· tuition are on target. Lead the way -imprint your own ~tyle. Make personal appearances. Leo, Aquarius persons figure ~rominently. ... .,.w • ...... ttu ......... c-.w..-......u. OM/OFFIASY Now like the riew Center Drive ad off ramp on the 405 treeway for~ euy eocea to Huntlnotof' Center and Otd WOfid Vllllge. Pmiinl ta . maba fast ptaway to Mmtlan, Talliti, 'Rio de Jairo, The Cribm or St T l'lp8Z 1 ....... . AnJdinl Gees is lminl tlleir 25°/o off S.1-.r Sale lllllnSlocll o.ev Sun. M n• Ju...._ .... ........... 67 .. 7161 t744tnaa ,...711.Uto m M. c:.,.. Dr. .... """'bwt2t 0 CCNllplete ~ coverage ot countr gowemment ..aa.n and court1. Everr•r In the DAILY PILOT • •• Diane <Prom Pate BU learn any role, however. because she eventually must know them all. GIAte OPIMIM6 ••••OUNCaerr W. JOB. PASCO, D.V.M • (Fonnerty of tho ~Center AnllMI Hoepltll) 11 'z· 1f ......... CAtt711 "By the Ume I am 30 I should be able to go anywhere and sine," she said. Though she la Just 1eWq started on her career at the age of 216 abe isn't won1e4 "Meao sopranos bloom late." she explained. "Sopranos do tbe major roles earlier. But success feeds on security." .. She bas viewed ber failures, which have been few. ln the aame vein. ''I always knew I bad a lot more to learn," she saJd. Opera ls a demanding way of life bu\ Miss EUu, a pretty, dark-haired youq woman, is taking It all in stride. "It takes sacrifice," she assented. ''But we need that sacrifice. "There ls notbln1 more fWI than doing this. It has real rewards." she said. PHONE 17141 552· 1723 fOl MPr. 01 • •••tCT C ,1111 Y1laLs1Swulw NEWPORT.HOUSE CALL PRAcnCE c:.. ............... s.r.llllt....,_.._......._ c....w..as.--. Affiliated~-... DOYa SHOllE5 Yil&ltUY HOSPITAL nMI ..... IAMTA AMA 1•1rn. CA. our beet selling shirts and pents ... .. ·1 I ) s ' ) •• l • .. .. .. ... ... .. •. 'I. '• .. ~ . . ' •'I . ' . •" I .... .. :· .. t. ~: .,, : ' .. ·' ·: I l t ' \ .. - ---~ ""'*'--c:=__ '-------------- ' Business Frtd9y. August ta. t979 OAlL Y ~l.OT t3 Ne., B oada lllodel This Automotive News drawing reveals lhe aeneraJ configuration of a 2x2 sporty coupe that Honda. a Japanese auto maker. wtll launch in the U.S. and Japan in the spring of 1979. The new model will be seven inches shorter than the Honda Accord. but will share many of the mechanical features or the latter. Overseas Trade Urged County Firms Told of Foreign Markets By TOM BARLEY °' ... Datly ...... Mafl Orange County growers and manufactur.,.s are being urged by stale government to make their products available for overseas markets that are eager and wi111ng to ~pand their California trade. Richard C. King, director or the state's Office or lntematlonal Trade. issued the invitation this week during a meeting of the International Law section of the Orange County Bar Association. AND KING MADE IT CLEAR to local lawyers and businessmen that his beefed-up office will be only too happy to offer advice and suggestions to manulacturers who feel that their products migtit contribute to what King hopes will be a boom in California exports. ·'There ls no shortage of markets," King told the OCBA meeting. And he pointed to Japan and the members of the European Common Market as being among the most eager nations to trade with California. ··And then there is the Middle East and Latin America," King said. "They offer splendid pro- spects for exports and I think both our volume and variety of products can be expanded if we look to these areas " BROWN SAID SZ.S BILLION of California's annual $10 billion agricultural production ls devot· ed to exports and that can be improved if growers will look overseas to the nations that are anxious lo buy California crops that have always been re-garded as top quality. King said many overseas nations are eager to buy chemicals, electric machinery and construc- tion eqwpment which is readily a~·lable from California companies "And then they are always loo · g for know- how." King said. "We have a chance to export the people who can provide overseas countries with financial and technical management services." KING, A REPUBUCAN PLUCKED by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. from private industry to gave a shot in the arm to the state's international trade bureau, said there are ample opportunities for Catlfornia firms to break new ground. "Solar energy development is the coming thing," King said. "Here Is a great opportunity for CaUtornia firms to go out into the third and fourth worlds and show these people how to harness the sun." . King said Gov. Brown realizes that California can vastly expand her e>ep0rts even though 14 per· cent or the st.Me's product goes on the overseas market as compared to 7 percent of the total Unit· ed States market. "Even so, we still have a trade deficit," he said. "We export $11 billion In goods every year but we import $1S billion worth of products." KING SAID THE DEFICIT could be quickly eliminated if California firms increase and expand their export trade. King said Gov. Brown had become increasing- ly concerned about what often appeared to be "ex· port apathy" among many manufacturers whose products would be eagerly snapped up if they could be shipped overseas. "Our office wants to counter tbat kind of think- ing," King said. "That's what we are bere for. We want business to go after the trade and the markets that will create jobs for Californians." KING SAID ANOTHER AIM of his office will be to ensure a "better presence ln Washington, D.C." "We want to work with the federal govern· ment white we are making sure the government knows that California is eager lo expand her over· seas trade." be said. "We intend to get proper treatment at the federal level." Industries Eye Baja California TIJUANA, Mexico <AP> -A company in --------------------. Spain ls negotiating for the right to make cham· pagne in Baja Callfomta, while Chinese and South ORDER YOURS NOW • • ·-----·-----~" ... 1000 BEAUTIF-UL STICK~ON r STYUSH TYpt._ ORQOOo QUALITY WHITE GUMMED PAPER • PERSONALIZED •EASY TO USE ' • FOR YOU OR A FRIEND ... I ' Korean firms want to build electronic plants in that area. A boat-building company in Poland has asked to open a plant in Ensenada and negotiations are under way for other enterprises proposed by com-. paniea ln Poland, the People's Republic of China, South Korea and Spain. FREE ZONE STATUS IS ENJOYED in Baja California, the northernmost Mexican state with Pacific ports. Thal was extended recently to 1985 . A spokesman for Tiguana businessmen says the present situation, in which 95 percent or forei'n investments are U.S. owned, ls changing. • As a result of our tree.zone status, we can buy California goods or items from anywhere in the world without having to pay federal taxes on them," said 1.ozimo Mora Perez, president or the Chamber of Commerce, in an interview. ANOTHER BUSINESS SPOKESMAN, A.E. Armando Lara Calderon, said increasing foreign investment is expected to reduce the 18 percent un- employment in Tijuana, where 144 assembly plants are located. Mexicans are forbidden by law from moving foreign-made goods outside the free zone. ~ Inteltron Gets Audio Magnetics lsadore Phllosophe, chairman and owner or In· tellron Ltd .• Los Angeles, announced be acquired the controlling equity poelUon of Audio Magnetics Corp., Irvine, a manracturer of magnetic audio tape. GM Optimi,stic for '79 Auto Firm Sees 15.5 Million-unit Year NEW YORK <AP) -Aller three good years in a row for the auto industry, there is no shortage or optimism emanating from General Motors Corp. headquarters. GM Chairman Thomas A. Murphy, known ror upbeat busi· ness rorecasts. stayed in character this week In his as- sessment or the outlook for the 1979 model year. COMBINED deliveries of cars and trucks m the United States. including imports, will reach a record of almost lS.4 million un· its for the 1978 model year. Murphy estimated. In the year that begins next month. he pro· jected a further gain to better than 15.5.milUon. Murphy based these figures on an equally bright forecast for the general business outlook. His script calls for the Gross National Product to grow at a 4 percent annual rate. after ad· Justment for inflation, through the rest of 1978 and into next year. Firm Plans Mesa Center The J.A. Stewart Construction Company or Westminster has been named to build a warehouse and distribution center ln Costa Mesa for Stanley Tool Works, a Connecticut-based company. Stewart Vice President Ford McKee said the one.story struc- ture wUI feature till-up construc- tion and have 90,000 square reet of joterior space. The. project is valued al $1.1 million. The facility will be located on a rtve-acre site al 1580 Sunflower. and is expected to be completed by mid-November. • "THAT THERE IS a strong economic base for further ex- pansion is supported by most or the principal indicators of current performance. and there is little evidence or the excesses -most notable in the inventory area - which usually foretell a reversaJ of trend. ".hedeclared. ·'The consumer sector is llkely to be a sustaining force deriving continued support from rising real incomes and further in· creases in employment. Moreover. des1ute record in· creases in con.sumer installment debt, consumer debt repay· menls have remamed an line with rising income." GM 's projections naturally command attention. lt is. after all. the nation's largest in· dustria1 company. as measured by sales. and the second largest in terms of assets and employ- men t. with nearly 800,000 workers on the payroll at last count. BUT ATTENTION IS one thing and agreement another. Many current economic proJeC· lions call for a substantial slow· ing in business activity soon. and the auto industry is normal- ly expected to rollow the trend of the over-all economy closely. By traditional Wall Street measures, investors are main· taining a cautious approach to GM's stoek. The yeild on the shares. based on dividends paad the last 12 months, is a lofty 10 percent, and the price·earnings ratio is a modest six to one. Analyst& who follow the auto industry also note that Murphy's earlier projection that 11.75 million cars would be sold in the 1978 model year has proved lo have been loo high -although some of them also acknowledge that the forecasts they made at the same time were too pessimistic. O ver The Counter MASOU~ f'OR 1979, PETER D. Zaglio. auto analyst for the brokerage r I r m o t Loe b R h o a d<t s • Hornblower & Co .. said "( t.IUnk ·he's being a little optimistic ... After the solid gains the in· dustry has chalked up slnce·the industry slump in 1974· 75. Zaglto said. another strong showing in 1979 might be "a little too much to ask." GM 's capital spending plans suggest that the company 1i. backing its view with a commit· menl of dollars to new plant and equipment -to the tune o{ SS bilJion in calendar 1979. • O BSERVERS HASTEN to note. however, that those plen.s are not sofelv a matter of GM 's Judgment. They are dictate<j to a considerable extent by laws setting future safety and ruel· efficiency requirements for the industry. , With t.ho.se large capital needs. auto executives like Murt>hY would seem to have extra reason to hope his optimistic sales pro- Jections are on target. United Seeks China Route SAN FRANCISCO <AP>° United Airlines plans to apply to the Ci vii Aeronautics Board next week for routes linking eight American cities to mainland China, according to a published report. The San Francisco Chronicle quoted a spokesman for United as saying the airline is seeking permission to fly to Peking. Shanghai and Canton In mainland China. as well as Hong Kong, and the Japanese cities or Tokyo and Osaka. The starling points in United's proposal were San Francisco. New York, Chicago. Den~er. Seattle. Portland, Los Angeles and Honolulu. .' P<L Off "·' Off II• Off 10 0 Off •I Off ... Off •• Off • J Off • J Off 1 ,. Off I• OH 1 \ Off •.• Off ... Off •• Olf ··' Off • ~ Off •• \ Off •.J Off •• 2 OH s,. Olf S" OH s ... Off H Olf ,.. OH S.• MUTUAL FUND S .. • • " I. .. : : . . •' '' 1.:: • I ·~· .. ·'. •'I • 't' :.: : .. ' •• . , . . . . . . ,. : ~ I ., •t I ! • I _, . • I .. DAl.'YPLOT llN Friday'• Cloain8 Pric • • N¥SE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS STOCKS I BUSINESS Bush ls On Gold Lures Comumen 8y SYLVIA PORTO When the price of sold smaabed through the S200-an- ounce barrier Hrlier tbls month, It heralded an accelerat- ing world &old rush baaed primarU:y on mlatruat ol tbe dwlndlln• dollar. confidence that eold wW not be banlabed from the lntematJonal monetary system and the centw1es- old tradition thal gold ls a haven for resources In Umes of uncertalnt,y. But the average American need not. bother to try to par~lclpate In tbe International currency and metul markets. You can get a sense of the glitter of 1old by buy· il\g aold Jewelry. That ls obviously beina done on a mount- ing scale. Sales of gold jewelry are estimated at 50 to 60 percent ahead of 1977. THE GREATEST BOOM IS IN GOLD jewelry for men. it ls attributed not only to tbe appeal of gold but to the return of an era or eh:gance in men's attire and roman- ticism. But a would·be buyer cannot go safely Into the gold jewelry market without some basic knowledge. c 1 I The karat mark Identifies the percentage of gold in an item. If an Item is marked 24 K, It ls made of 100 per· cent gold. with each karat representing 1/24 parts gold. Pure. solid gold is too soft to be us ed by itself in jewelry. It must be al· Money's Worth loyed with other meta ls ' ror strength and hard· _______ , ness. Nothing less than 10 karats can be called "gold "or "karat gold ... under U .S regulations. England allows the sale or 9 K "gold" jewelry. <2> AN ALLOY IS A METAL COMPOSED of two or more metallic elements and it is used to Improve its prop- erties. Most alloys are obtained by fusing a mixture or metals. Gold is a versatile metal. and many shades can be made by alloying it. Karat golds are available In yellow. red. pink. green and white. wlth the color variations made by va rying the proportions ot copper. nickel, zinc and silver in the alloy. The proportion of pure gold is un-changed. 131 Fashion jewe lry may be gold plated. gold elec- troplated or gold washed. These Items are defined by law, according to the percentage or real gold In the jewelry People who are unfamiliar with the terms could wind up beguiled into paying "karat gold" prices for gold pl ated jewelry. 14 I Gold 'illed jewelry, also known as "gold overlay"' is rated between karat and costume jewelry and is made by mechanically bonding a gold layer or layers to a base metal such as copper. It must have a fineness of 10 karats or better ; the outer layer must be at least l /20th of lbe total weight. Thus. ll a 14-karat layer has been used. the jewelry should be marked "14 K gold filled ," or "14 K G.F." <S> ROLLED GOLD PLATE DESCRIBES high.quality costume jewelry. Manufactured by the same method as gold filled jewelry. the.gold layer ls less than I/20th of the total weight. Look for the markings thut tell you the ratio or gold to the metals used: "1/40th 12 K Rolled Gold Plate." or "l/40thl2KR.G P." < 61 Gold electroplate is jewelry that has been elec- trolytically coated with at least seven millionths of an Inch of karat gold. If the gold coaling Is thinner. the jewelry s bould be labeled "gold washed" or "gold flashed." If it is a thicker karat gold label -at least 100 millionths of an inch-the manufacturer can mark the product "heavy gold electroplate ... Fed Discount Move Brings Stock Loss NEW YORK CAPl -Word tbal the Federal Reserve Board was raisin~ the discount rate in an aUemot to stabilize the ailing dollar sent the stock market to a small early gain today. But it dropped back at closing. Tbe Dow Jones industrial average was down 3.12 points to897. The Fed said it was raising the discount rate -the in· terest charged on loans to member commercial banks - from 1\1• to 7~ percent, effective Monday, "in view of re· cent disorderly market conditions in foreign exchan&e markets as weJJ as the continuing serious domestic Infla-tionary problem." St~la In Tlw Spot llgltt ,w;c:r(API FINI ~--ages JO Ind or:rn ~tt ~ =-i':1 1S1 Tm UU3 2:SUS U U7 tsl.01-0,7J U Ult lOt 'O 107.41 IOU2 ,....._.. 0.21 H Stir JOU3 JIU• :907.44 309.~ o ... lnclU$ • • • • • • • • • • • 2,47', toO i~i: :::.:::::::::::::::.-m:: 6S Sit! • • • . • • • • . . • • • • • • • . • • . 3.aD, 100 IHaaf Storlu Did NEW YOAIC IAPl SAl.H NEW YOfUC !API ·NY 51«11 ulfl ..,..,, ........ •••·••••••· ..... a4~ ,.,..,,._ ..,, • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 45.%10.ooo :=11-::0 :::::::.:::::.:·::·· ::=:: Year~ •.•.•.. .......... • • 20,l00.000 T-yea._ ~ • • • • • • • ••• . • • • 14,'20.000 J•11 , to -· • • .. •• •• • . •• 4,E.m.m lt17 lo Nie • .. • • • • . . • • • • , 3, , '10,000 1'7• to csa.. • .. • •. • •• . • • • • • a, ,'30,COJ WMAT II.MIX 010 -New VOAIC tAl't "'-· >1*"' ~l m 163 250 U7 '" '37 .. '°' I i . ,. • gels! . ..l .... ,,,.. ·"· ... , "'. MUcues Co~tly .Again for Ha"los %! .. ; . I ..... ,..... LAWRENCE McCu:rCHEON FINDS BIG HOLE EN ROUTE TO RAMS' FIRST TO. By DA VE CVNNINGllAM ot•DlllfY ........... The Angels should. consider themselves lucky. After hoSUna a three.game series with the wlnnlnlest team in big league baaebaII, they dropped only hall a game in the standings. But the mood in California's clubhouse Thursday nieht wasn 'l one of a team that felt lucky. 1be Angels had just lost their second straight to Boeton, 8-6, in a see-saw, errof-placued game before 30.486 at Anaheim Stadium. .. WE'RE NOT REALLY play. ing very sound baseball rlaht now. It comes down to that," said Manager Jim Freaosl. "When you give a team like Boston four or five outs an in· ning. they're going to do that to you." Fregosi was ref erring to the deadly sixth inning, in which the Red Sox scored twice without the benefit of a hit. Second baseman Bobby Grich made the most costly mistake, dropping a potential double play relay which opened the door. "We're going to give Bobby a couple or days orr. He's trying too hard,'· Fregosi said. "Everybody who's played the game knows what he's going through. He just needs a few days to gel his mind off it." BESIDES THE CRUCIAL er· ror. Grieb went O·for-4 and stranded three runners in scor· in~ position. Rams Begin CllJDb Out of Grave SEATTLE <AP> -The Los Angeles Rams have begun to climb out of the grave they were digging ror themselves under George Allen. record crowd for a Seahawks home game. ··1 wasn't happy about the circumstances when I got the job. I don't like to see anybody get fired, ' Malavasi said. cisco in which they hadn't allowed a touchdown. "We all very much wanted to play well for Ray," said quarterback Pat Haden of tbe Rams' new head coach. Ray Malavasl "Wedidn'twanthimtogetlheaxe,too •· MAIAVASI. Los Angeles' offensive line coach who took over last Sunday when team owner Carroll Rosenbloom fired Al· Jen as head coach after only two games in the job, guided the Rams to a 216-7 Natiooal Football League preseason victory Thurs- day night over Seattle before 63,235 fans, a "WE'VE GOT SOME people who want lo win and a Cine coaching staff. I thought we plak~m':al well," be said. The dominated the game from the •0 1'M GLAD it's over. We didn't play very well." said Seattle Coach Jack Patera. "We played like the Rams did their last two games -flat." Running back Lawrence Mccutcheon. who sat out tbe fmal three periom with a thigh bruise. staked Los Angeles to a U> lead with a 4-yard TD run with 8:57 left ln the first period. Cullen Bryant's 42·yard punt return set up the five-play, 25-yard drive. look Out! .. Nicklaus . Only2Back HARRISON, N.Y. CAP) -Jim Albus, a long-shot club pro only one stroke out of the top spot ln the Westchester Golf Classic, looked toward the weekend and decided his chances were, "re· alisticaJJy, not good ' Barry Jaeckel, the lmprovmg youngster who held the first· round lead Thursday. looked at some of those chasing bis six under-par 65 and observed: "As far as I'm concerned, there's 149 Jaclc Nick.lauses' back there. "But, if it got down to the last nrne holes or so and Jack Nicklaus was stalking me -or anybody else for that matter - we'd get a little nervous." And Jack Nicklaus was in posillon The game's greatest player, winner of the British ()pen and three American titles Ui'ls -Near, was only two lbots back at M L outset for their first exhibition victory. In losses to New England and San Diego, Los Angeles bad scored a total of just seven polntJ. The loss was the Seabawks' first after victories ~ San Dlego and San Fran- Pat 1bomas' 16-yard return to the Seat· See RAMS. Pa1e Ba Garvey Keeps'~ Going Sizzling Dodgen Face Mets Tonight PHILADELPHIA <AP> -The game came down to a battle between two veterans -batter Steve Garvey or the Los Angeles Dodgers and reliever Tug McGraw of the Philadelphia Phillies. Garvey became the winner when he ripped a McGraw pitch for a bases loaded triple that keyed a 5·2 triumph for Los Angeles. THE CLASH CAME in the eighth 1nnlng Thursday night or a" 1·1 game. A walk, a sacrifice. an tntentioanl walk and an unin· tentional walk had loaded tbe bases for Garvey. As Garvey walked to the plate, his mind was working. He said the uppermost thought in bis mind was to drive the ball somewhere, keep out of the double play McGraw, on the other band, said he was thinklng ground ball. do~, strikeout, popup -tn keep tbe Dodgers from scoring the go- abead nm. that Garvey should get credit for bitting. THE BALL SHOT down tbe llne into the right field corner. three runs scoring. And Garvey also scored when tbe relay from second baseman Ted Sizemore salted over the catcher's head for an error. Someone asked Garvey if be Dodgen Slate ""O-• iu.ac CNll UK Angeles •t New YOrll UK Aft911e .. New YOrll LM Angeles .t New YOrll Sp.m, 11 •.m. 11• m. would add the hit to his career grand slam mark. Garvey laughed, then said. "I guess you could call it a semi· grand slam. I'll take it if you want to give It to me. Maybe we could list it with an asterisk. But I'll take the triple." something positive to write S\bout. And it will make lt a bell of a lot easier for me and for you." UNTIL THE EIGRl'll it was a 1·1 struggle between winner Burt Hooten <13-8) and Randy Lerch, who left for a plnchbitter after seven innings. Dave Lopes walked to start the Dodgers' eighth and was sacrifked to second. Ozark wanted no part of Reggie Smith, who had beaten him the pre- vious two nights, so be ordered Smith walked. Then came Garvey. McGraw tried to catch Garvey with a fastball, according to the reliever. &.Ot.....UI utlfttl> Hortfl cf A.Smllftrf C.V• 0.nte'tlb o.a.•wtt ... ,..,_( AvsMttu "°""'P Fonterp •rllM 4 I 0 0 2 1 1 0 JIOO 3100 J 1 2. 4000 4010 3000 t oto o••• f'MILAHU'MIA Mc9'1derf J.Mertlll .. ...... HMM\'1111 Ullll\Kl lf kMllOllb O.M.Mdoad ._.., SI_... Ut'c111> Mc<:Mwr .. -~ .... ~·llfl H.rrt111pr •rllM •••o •••o 4100 4 I I 0 4 Ito 2100 1000 4010 ••12 2000 •••o ••o• Otto Otoo That was rouMmder·pa.r on the t11bt, billy, weather damaged 8,803-yard Westchester Country Club course. And lt could have been better McGaAW STARTED Garvey Nicklaus was five under par wtth a screwball for a strike. SO WILL THE Dodgers, who won their fourth straight, 10th ol their last 12. and held on to their one game lead over the San Francisco Gtanu ln the National Le•gue West. Tot•lt 2' S 4 4 'T01•1t U t 1 I losAnttlft 000 t• M-i Pflll .. lllflle 000 000 '91-2 for the first 10 boles, then But the nest pit.ch was a matter •~~'."'mil~~.~~~ Ho b.ad.to~ontt p.._ ________ __ ·tte. aM .tllb lldls 1o m · . ~~" y;. The Phillies lost their fourth straight and bad lbelr first place lead over the Chicago Cubs in t~~tM;ld. te-..illa - E-S•Hmor•. LOB-lot Ano••H (SI, PllUMet~ Ill. 28-Mc9"de, Slzamen. J6- par and bogeyed the 13th, taking at the plate so be cou d get un- three from the rou1h just over der the ball, described it as a · the green. breakina ball, over the plate, "I played well. bit ihe 1>aD maybe a nwe outsrcte. wen-;--Ntck:taus-nid;-••1-~ JlcO aid.. tt w_a_s_a hit didn't get the ball ··ctosa enOaah &all, low anclaway, a IOOd pitcb See NJauAUS, Pase IM games., a~-1>8nnf' .0 did bls best to keep his slnklnc club afloat at the post game news conference. "There is no reason to panic," .. O.urk 1Dsisted. "We..'JL b t out or tL You'll Ctba media ave There's No Agreement--Killanin LONDO?j (AP> -Lord IWlanlD. lftll· dent o( the International o•ci:c Olimmtt-tee. Hid toclay "tbere bu DO ....... ment to rree"to. A.Qael• trilm ftDUdal raPofttibllltJ tt tbe du ...,. UM 1114 Summer <>tymptc Oam•. Ke Mid reporU frOm Loe MceMI that tbe IOC -.... CCIII( Ude -.... ,.,._ are lucew1U trj •baD be ·Jointly n1ponalble for runn.lq Ud ftUlldnlt.btOama. No .... ~l>aakane, presldeqtoltbe U.S. ObmDtcmlttee, told Loi Ancelea \be U80C~w0Uld be rnCb to auaraat.ee a flDandal klu 1f tbe Gamet aN beld bl the CaUformadtJ. • G rlcb and Fregoal met privaU,l.y following the ••me. "I've got to feel I've made some costly erron." Grich said. "On the one tonight I was lb1nking double play. Chalk gave me a soft toss and I tried to bare hand it. ·'When you are a nm abead it is nol the best lblng to do. You A11.,.&Slai~ NIO....M KMl"C C7111 TonlQl>t u~.-~ '1:up.m. SltturN't .. lllll'ltn .. c.1Hon1141 1: ll "'"'' S4lnd.-f a.Ill-..~ U:SSp.m have to make tbe other team beat you. It's one of the dumbest plays I've ever made." Ho• Iona Grich will remain on the bench ls unlmo~1 but be will certainly be resU!Cl tonight as the Angels welcome Baltimore for a three-game series. Chris Knapp <11·1> is slated to open against the Orioles' Scott McGregor <12·10>. WHILE THE ANGELS are fighting to st.ay at the top. the Oribles are struggling to keep from being blown out of it ln the Eastern Division. They trail . Botton by 11 ~ and slt alone in . > fifth place. When asked about the Aneels' lackluster performance against Boston, Freaoai reacted ln a near shout. "What's everyone geWq so excited about'! We're only a game out with 39 left," he ·· .. snapped. "We've played two bad ,;'.: games in a row. at least de-.. : · renslvely. and we don't usually ::: ; do that. We're in a slump. But so :·: : is Kansas City.•• :·; : •1# I THURSDAY'S CROWD ';· pushed attendance for the three· · : game series to 109.165. an Anaheim stadlwa record. The previous mark was set in 1986 aealnst the Yankees. What they saw was a drqged out. tbJ'ee..and·a·half hour affair that included enough highlights and low points for a week. Consider: -Boston rookie Garry Han· cock filled in for slumping Fred Lynn and stroked three straight singles. driving in two runs. He • · was rewarded by being lifted ror :: a pinch hitter in the sixth inning. :: -Joe Rudi gave tbe Angels ··, See ANGELS. Paae BC OOPS, SORRY -Boston infielders Butch Hobson C4 > and· Rick Burleson <7> collide as they chase after a pop fly hit by the Angels' Terry Humphrey in the third inning of Thursday's game. Humphrey was safe at first to load the bases b\lt the Halos didn't score enough as Boston won 8-6. Oranges Peeled Apples Eliminate Anaheim • .. ... 1.•., ·:: .. . . ..... .... • • -DAl&.:V PILOT ''~· Mlg'..e 11. 1'71 BASEBALL/GOLF/SOCCER A Capaule Report From the Wortd of Sporta Red Wings Lose Gamble As Kings Get McCourt FNm AP l*DakMI DETROIT -The Detroit llod Wlnia HY Cil they have Jolt one of the b•ue.t 1amblea ln the , history ol thto NaUonaJ liockey Leque ln order to saln the ao•ltender many consider the beat ln lb bualness By deeree ol arbitrator Ed HOUJt.on, rooldt Red Wln1 c~nlM Dal• McCourt waa awarded ThW'lday t.o the Loa An&el Kinas ln payment for Detroit havtq alped all· t.tar aoall• Rogle Vachon lo a five-rear contract laat week Ted l.Uldsay. the Red Wines aeneraJ manacer wbo took the gamble. was cresUaJlen at bearlq tbe report. "l can't belJeve It ," Lindsay said. "I don't want lo 1et mto It too much until Friday. 111 just have to co to the Of· flee and hope there's been a mlstake. That's all I can do." M cCourt wu a standout lot lbe Detroit club last year with 33 eoa.Js rn his rookie season, lo set a club record, and 39 assists. Many fi1Uttd be would be lbe cornentone ol lhe once· proud Red Wings' franchise for years to come. McCourt. at 21, is 12 years younger than Vachon. llorfl'• s .... ft9 E•t•t~ Ceat _.93,188 • STOCKHOLM -Triple Wimbledon cham- pion Bjorn Borg's new summer estate cost a re- ported $463,000 -and it doesn't even have a ten- nis court. Borg bought the lsland estate about 100 miles south of Stockholm as a s ummer home. real estate agent Bengt Rosenberg said. The estate boasts a manor, 12 other houses and a &Ym and badminton court, but no tennis court, Rosenberg said. "There is plenty of room for building tennia cour:ts," said Rosenberg of the Kattllo Island est.ate. ...... ,, .... Angel broadcaster Dick Eaberl couldn't contain bis emotions any longer after watching Ken Brett balk home the winning run of Thursday's game with the Red Sox. Said E•- berg, "This team is a joke. U they plan on winning the American League's West.em Division they're 1otng lo have to play a lot better than they are now." Else.,llere I• Spercs ••• O.J. Simpson says he's "ready t.o play" and EiJ 49ers coach Pete McCUUey says be will when .. -.. San Francisco meets the Oakland Raiders this " -" weekend ... Offensive tackle Bob McKay left ,.,.... r..,,. as ANGELS ••• two alnal411 and a homer in hi• "rat thr lrlp1 to the plate, drlvin1 ln thr runs and male· lnl a clrcua catch ol a alnkine llnt drive ln the sixth iMlnt. -ANGEL CATCHER Brian Downin& took a row Up In lhe rl1ht 1houlder and was sent to the hospital ror preeautlonaey x rays, which •bowed no fracture -Boston·~ Carl Yaatr%emskl left the 1ame ln the fitth after rc·lnJurl"I hla sore riaht wrlst. -The Anaels knocked out rour atra1-ht hits ln the filth in nlng. tumlng a S-3 deficit into a 6·5 lead. They promptly squandered the lead in the sixth , allowing l wo runs without a hit. THE ANGE18 and Red Sox combined for 24 bits and pro- duced 44 baserunners. The Angels left 10 of their runners aboard. Bost.on reliever Bob Stanley was erratic. giving the Angels seven hits and three runs ln bis st int, but picked up tbe victory. He said it was an emotional win for the Red Sox. "We just keep corning at 'em, no matter what," Stanley said. "With this lineup behind you, a pitcher knows he can give up a few runs and still win." What he could have added was that. with the Angels' sloppy fielding, California can score a few runs and still lose. "Those innings when they don't get any hits and score runs, that gets to you." Fregosi says. "U they'd beat us wilh hits, I could take that. But lo Jose it like this . " aOSTOH Mrlllll llurleSOrtU •I 0 0 Rerny2b • 2 to Rke 11 S I 1 I vastrnrnSkl di\ 2 O O O 8rol\amerdll 3 t 2 I FISll < •I 2 I Harteock ct J 1 J 2 Balley pt\ I 0 0 0 L.,..... cf I 0 0 0 Evensrt 3001 G Scott lb s o 2 I H~Jb II 00 CALl"°'"'IA R Miiier cf UMfordJb lloslOCll rt Bayt« lb RllCN 11 Goodwlrtcllt ~lltQ C H1.1mpt1reyc 0-.lllH Grkh20 Hrlllll s 0 1 0 s ' '0 JI 1 0 j 2 1 0 s,, l •022 1000 2010 • 0,' •o oo Total\ » I 11 1 Totals JI• tJ ' ~ton 022 012 010-4 C.llforrtla 102 ~ 000-. E-Grlch, H~. C"411k. OP-llostOll m. l08-8oston 13, c.lllornla t . 28-Rk.e. FIK, G.Scott. HR-Audi 1111. S8-llayl«. S-llvrMsoft Sunshine Takes On .Eagles Batllina to win the Western Diviaion title and draw an openln1 playoff bye. tbe California Sunshine 1oecer team will play its final home aame of UM re.war season ~t acalnst the New Yon ~ires 1t Or.nae Coast Collece. It be&lna at 7:30. Aug. 28 and leaves for Korea Sept. 3. For tonllht's season windup at home, Garcia. John Lowe>:1 Andf Chapman and perhaps Malcolm Darung wil be on the front line for the Sunabine. ''Tb.la la a must win situation for us," a team spokesman aay1. ''We have to beat them and score three 1oala to have a chance at winnlne the dlvlaton title." Darline was recently acquired by the Sunshine. He is a former first dlvlsion player in England and al 31, flfures to help the Sunshine ln tbe playoffs. , Goalkeeper for the Sunshine is Tom Reynolds whose 0.74 goals against average is the best ln thee, league. However, he may wind up short of tbe re._. quired time to quaury for the honor. 1 The Sunshine closes out the reewar season Sunday nlaht in Sacramento. • Sun.sh1ne coach Derek Lawther hfs been selected t.o coach the U.S. B team that will be play- ing ln Seoul, Korea next month but playoff activity may force him t.o pass up the honor. Poli Garcia ol the Sunshlne and Al Trost of the CaUlornla Surf have been selected aa players on the U.S. squad. The team reports t.o Squaw Valley In a preliminary game tonight, a group ol Oranse County youths '17·19), will face a West· German team at 6 o'clock. Lawther selected the all·star squad from 120 players during the season. The West Germans have lost only one aame since th~y arrived in the U.S. and will be favored. to.night. Froar..,,.as RAMS BUTZ SEATTLE ••• Seattle as with an lntercepUonor a Jim Zom paaa set up the first ol three field coals by rookie placeldcker Frank Corral, a 29- yarder that cave Los Angeles a 10-0 lead late ln the first period. Corral, from UCLA, added kicks of 23 and 39 yards in the second period for a 16-7 Rams halftime lead .. LOS ANGELES, which was penalized 14 times for 13S yards, virtually wrapped ur lhe victory on the first play o the second Stars, Breakers Meet Tonight half when Zorn. who was In- tercepted four times. threw a screen pass t.o David Sima. Sims Juggled lhe ball, which plopped mto the hands of Rams cor- nerback Rod Perry. who raced 22 yar~ for the score. The Rams' final score came on Rafael Septien's 49-yard field goal with 1 :03 left to play follow· ing an interception by linebacker Bob Brud.zlnskl. The Seahawks, who com· mltted six turnovers, JlOt their only score on running back Sherman Smith's 13-yard run late in the second period. sc:otll aY OUA•TI Ill Lin A1199le 10 6 7 >-Jt SHttle 0 7 0 ~ 1 LA-M<Oltdllorl 4""' !Correl llldl I LA-FG Correl 2' NICKLAUS •• to the hole on lhe back nine to shoot a number." He shared third place with Don January, Rex Caldwell, F.d Sabo, Alan Pate and Jay Haas the winner of the San Diego Open earlier thls season. All were at 67 on the short course that often produces some ol the lowest scores on tbe PGA Tour. John Mahaffey, winner In bis last two starts, birdied the last two holes for a 68' that put him in challenging ~ltion for a rare third consecutive title. · "My concentration wasn't too good early in the round," Maba.(- f ey said. "but over lhe last few holes I fell 1 got it back t.o where 1 had it the last couple of weeks." 11 LA-FGComll23 The Orange County Stars wi s.-Sm111>uN111&..eYPOldt1tk 1t1 11.J .. o.. J•~ J.N"'°" ~ be out for revenge tonight <7:30> LA-FGCorre1Jt J c.10...1 ll.J2_., a.eo..-~ when .-.. •-t.e on the San Diego LA-Pwrv tt lntwc.9fltloft retllfft ts.pt1eo111k•> E.SHo a1.~1 J.Pa•• >4-is-.t w.;, MIA l.A-FGSeptlen4' A.Pat• ~7 O.CN91as ~· Breakers at Fountain Valley A....,.m o.J,_,., ~1 A.Gnir11tt ~" High ln an International STAT1ST1cs JHus ~1 o.Echlt>tQltf' ~10 Volleyball Assn. contest. F1n1 ctowns ·~. ~ ~~~-::. ~~ ::~1• ~: R11s11es-yarm .0-1,. J2·I07 J.~y ~ A.T~• ~10 The Stars U9-13), second in P""'"H•lb m m 11 Frtselh ~ M.G•"" &>S-10 the Western Division, were em· ~:~~ va~ n.;~~1 .. ,~ ~·~1111!•' lW1-411 11.01cu11 »-is-10 barrassed when they were """" H• .. » wArns1moa = ~::;:::; ~: be ate n by the 1 as t p I ace Fumblftoolos1 1-1 N P °'t""'" M-:w-..e M.SuttlWI 3'-34-10 Breakers 3-2 in San Diego on ,..,,.itlfl-v~=.1v1ouAL Luou~·•n 1...s ~.:= .... • = ~·.~': ::::::: Wednesday. RUSHING -l.o5 A~. Tyler INS,~ O.G<'h•m 2~ J.McGft D-37-10 pell.tit l-31, Jodttl ~ Seattle. Srnllt> 11-27. 8.Sllenr ~ 0.~llH 3W$-10 T he Stars have only four THterrnan•2'.~~•1•· G.Glbef't ~ L.T""'""' ~10 PASSING -l.o5 Af19elft, HllOefl t>-n.1, IJO; J.Mlkllell ~..... T .A-~10 the Detroit Lions training camp and said be was retiring because he did not like lhe way the coach ran thlng, ... Efren Herrera's agent bas suggested that the Seatue Seabawks trade the placeldcker after negotiations for a new contract broke down ••. Tight end Rieb Cuter has been acquired by the Houston Oilers for future undisclosed draft choices from the New York Jets ... Wide receiver Jim SmJdl broke bis left ankle in a collision with linebacker games remaining, all at home, Fwraoamo2+t.20.s..ni..Zorrte.t.M. •». J,"-ft 32-17..... F.z.ur JW:l-10 1,. H 11 u ••so before lhe start of playoff action J•~~~E;.~~~.~'-o:-~~'!:ii.~~111;: ;::: ~ .. ~~:~.. = ::~!i~ ::=: aon°" theflrstweekinSeptember. "-ar02...a.11.1t11e2-u. G.J-. ~ M."-Yff u.ss-10 1, Remy. SF-Evans. WrlQht 2~ 6 3 2 t ------------------------------------------- • Loren Toews during a passing drill at ' the Pittsburgh Steeler training camp . . . Fullback Brace Glbsola, the second leading rusher in University of Pacific history. has been claimed by the San Francisco ;qers on waivers . . . The Green Bay Packers walved 12-year veteran linebacker Don Baasea and ac- 8.Stenley IW, 11).11 6' > 1 3 2 O CAtlFOtt NIA Aaw 2~ s 2 3 Griff in IL, 1~1 J 2 • 2 K.8rttl 2 3 I I I I Flbmorrl• 11 > I 0 O I O Balk-K Bretl. P8-Flslc. T-3:21. A-JO.AL * ANGEL NOTES -Boston wcOlld btiernan quired running back GordoD Bell on waivers ... The Chicago Bears s.igned free agent wide re- ceiver Travis ~cCord. Jerry llerny hiMf'"'' 1•-oame hlttl"9 slreM ~~~an• pl•y !Mt «OUMd llMt· ed remarh from Red Soa slM><1St09 atctt aun.-. Remy's lflllekl ,,.,-wld first beM U"'l)lr• 0.... ,..... ... bleW a cell lt\llt wOUld flaw Ql.,.fl Remy a f\lt IM-of .., eN'IN' ... If ~ stupid --dlMflO Ills lob IMtHd of stlow!INI· lltQ, Jetrv -.kl "-a ~ st.rNll 10c1ey;· Bvr.._ Mid priOr to Thur'lday's ....,., Plllll'" lfQflalled out on a ct-ptay .ttff ,....,., .• s.c:rlllce bunt. t'-~Ms <Ml to .... ......, 0... .. yter llOllbled tr. ti.II. "If lie cMclfl't Jull'P Ille 9un Oft tt>et c..11, I ~-tlle offlclel scorer ~ llaW otwn him • 1111. •• llka1eloft seys. So ,,_ Remy. art A1199I i..rn ~ belOte belfte ltadld to Bo5l0rt, SIMts all -• Hit \lreM Wai .. ~ by • Boston ilfrttr INS y .. r ••• To ecqua,. Remy, tN Reel So• 1r.-. o... •-'° ttw MQitts. _,., n.urw.r n!QM's oarne • ., "-M's first s!Mt ~st 111s tonNr IHmrnat~ ... Aemy't Milici .211 -~ Is t11e rHson '°"'*' tftlntlnQton llNcll ~ Jedi • ......,_ 11n·1 llat1~ 8~ la Mttlnt .US The s alary of baseball Commissioner Bowle 111 Kubo has reportedly been boosted from $150,000 to $200,000 with a further bike to $250,000 scheduled to take effect a year from now . • • _ In • ullllty ""9 -!O oames • • Righthander Ed Hallcld fl.red a four-bitter and laek Oark slugged lus 20th home run of the season to lead the San Francis~o Giants to a 3.() win over the Montreal Expos .•. Dan Ford's single scored Bombo Rivera ln the 10th inning, lifting lhe Minnesota Twins to a 6-S victory over the Kansas City Royals . • The Houston Astros bave an· nounced that Bob Watson will miss a mlnlmum of 10 games due to a severe hamstring injury to bis right leg . . . Rick Reusebel fired a four-hitter and Dave Kiqman hit his 20th home run of the year, leading tbe Cblcaao Cubs to a 2·0 triumph over Tom Seaver and the Cincinnati Reds. GoHLeaders ••.u.,re1e.,w- Flr"-RUllCI IMdlwt -lrt 11'9 Lady Slroll't LPGA IOlirrtarnent al the •,411 yard, PM·n 0.•rttofn,MICll. COlintryClllllc_..: K.~t-"I ~ P.Hltolllt $.P9St ~ P.BrMllff $.Roberts lWS-lO J.llrlts S.Mlller JW7-10 $.Lillie u.a-n :IW1-n as.a-n .._n RAn10: Tonight -Baseball -Dodgers at New York, S p.m., KABC (790); Baltimore at Angels, 7:30 p.m .• KMPC (710) p .... .,.. ».as-71 11. llrfndt O.MM,.., JWS-Jt O.AllStlfl M.L.Cr<kr ~ O.LrtdQst 11.S.Sotomn ..,._n M.HffQe O.Mrstrten 37-lS-n J.Krninlll ~ IWJ-13 aws-n 37-!7-14 37-37-74 lWt-74 ~1• 3747-74 TELEVISION: Tonight -Football -Mlnnesota at Miami, 6 p.m • Channel 7. O.PatrtOft ..,._72 M.FIOyd P.Me.,.rs :i..a-n J.Fffetft 11.0lllen s.»-1S M.llrev H.8.0ufta 31.._,, JolmOll&S- ,.ISEMT ••. Baseball Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE West Division West Division Kansas City Angela Texas Oakland Minnesota Chicago Seattle W L Pct. GB W L Pct. GB 65 54 .548 Dodgen 71 50 .587 66 57 .537 1 San Francisco 70 51 .579 t 59 59 .500 5\.'.t Cincinnati 68 S3 .562 3 61 62 .496 6 San Diego 62 59 .Sl2 9 54 67 .446 12 Houston S6 64 .467 14\.2 49 70 .412 16 Atlanta 55 65 .458 15~ 45 76 .372 21 East Division East Division Philadelphia 63 54 .538 Boston New York Milwaukee Detroit Baltimore Cleveland Toronto 76 44 .633 Chicago 62 57 .521 2 68 Sl .571 7~ Montreal 58 63 .47,9 7 67 52 .563 8~ Pittsburgh 56 62 .475 11,.,a 66 52 .559 9 St. Louis 50 71 413 15 64 55 .538 lH'A New York 49 71 .408 15~ S3 66 .445 22'At ~S.Plli~~~ 46 74 .383 30 ChlUtQ02.ClflclnMllO ,_..y'a S-PlltMurvll W , ._.IOn M ~~~ifr'~~::;:.~~~;;::;~ ~Pm~~r=~~S9"~tfll}Cbe0~~0 :" ~ ~ -_, l.,_.,,T9"R .-•• IUYA M'EW ZEPHYR ..... ........ Oel"'4tt, 0..•1cU St. LOlilS •. AtlanWJ MlnMMIQ6,K-OtyJ I01rtnk9 T....,'10-S Clll<aQO •. T•-t ~ IJOllll 1).71 at Hew York IE~ OfllY ..-.S~ f.101,rt T ... y'tO-CllKll!Ntl ,...........,. 1CH or HIHM S.111 at 9altlmw9 IMtQneiw 1:1-tOI et A11ae11 CK....-CNcaQO ,.._..,, S.11 1 i.11," saa cu.. t1t•M1111u.n u .,, u MlllltrMI 0.JuQO ("°1y t.t) M ~ <Wltll-ffi, 11 ClileQen U•71. 11 09tNlt ......... Mt•U1Ulw 1 .. .._ .. Seit PfWl'd9cD c~ \M) ................ -U.J;li - --10w~ -- T __ IUI_ ...... ,., ........... (,._ ~ C"'*-2AI lit "ttimwlb t ..... W), .. ,,, " " Te ... llMladtW> .t ._...Qty (Giit ,._.., AllMM ( ..... MO lit tt. .... IV~ 11 IMl11t llMttftn'-•144> ........ ,,.......,,,ll ........... ,,...,... '~ ......... (MMdllll .. "'·" 10 SPEED lllE .,_., .... ...., .,,,, ....... .... ALL AT YIAI IND PllCISI I '• I " .. ~. t I I ' ' • I 1, • • ' WE'RE HA Yl•I A WHALE OF A SUITS From The World's Rnest Tailors Mow..,to 75°/o Off c L E JUMP SUITS A JOGGING SUITS R Now 50°/o Off A Nothing Held ~ --N~ c . SPORT COATS Feather Suedes Ultra Suedes Woolens & Si•s Sumrner Fabrics Now Up To 1/2 PRICE SPORT SHIRTS SWEATERS Mow 50°/o Off Regular Price • •• 1 ' ' ' .. J - a nan • 0 .. ... I , . ' l'OOTBALL: I TENNIS I HORSE RACING RaRlera Selected ~una Tabs Football Coach By SOOD C.UUOM ........... Walt Hamera, to ¥\maaUJ no one'• •UJ'PliH ln the Lapaa Beacb area. wlU be the •.anltf &ball oo.eb at I.aiua• ae.eh wbilD tbe ArUMa take UM U...fall. a!:frt~ :::= P:. 1.-1-aatldfllted dedlkm ,,_. c:t.y. U1ial: ''TMn'IBONalGft to b•ll•n lt WOD't b• Walt Hamera. Re ll my cbolff Pd J'll be ..._. tUl NCOmmen· datloo .. ~. n won't beeome offtclal. however. unU1 Sept. T at the 1cbool board meetlnl." HA•BaA FILLS the vold left tbl1 2ut 1prtna wbea Denn1s Haryun1 was relieved of tus coacbm. dutles after admlttina l\e f alallied aome dlaeus marb iD track .nd Oeld in order \o ad· vance some Laeuna Beacb atbletes into the st.ate prelims. Hamera t.as no prior ex· perience a a bead coach, btrt bis credentials are impressive. He was a high school All· American at i.ne Tech Hlgb in Chicago, playing 1uard and linebacker for a school which boused S.000 boys. He J)lQed in the 1967 Rose Bowl In J>urdue's 14·13 victory over Southern California HE SPENT nvE years in the M arlne Corps and waa a belleopter pilot in Vietnam foe twoyean. . And, be played a l&r1e part in La1una Beach's recent success, dom\nated by a sterlln1 def.nse and specialty teams wblcb turned the Udes ao often with WALTHAMERA blocked punts and kick returns. "I'll be staying in the same area," says Hamera. "J regard the pla,y of the lines and the speclalt,y teams aa very impor· tant." The rile to bead vanity coach la dramatic ln a sense since Hamera was a gas station atten· dant three days prior to geWng his job as an assistant at Laguna Beacbln 1974 WHILE HAMERA'S position is not one totally envied due to the numerous obstacles facing a Laauna Beach football coach, be aaya the plctute is not as bleak as It might ·~:emar. Aaslstinll era will be ex· UCLA pfayer Frank Buck At Los Al Satarday McHargue to Ritk Darrel McHargue, America's leading money-winnln1 thoroughbred rider this year. will make two appear&J>ces at Los Alamitos Race Course u the meeting winds down to its conclusion McHargue will ride in Chicago Saturday afternoon, fiy west to ride Tex Ob in the SlOOiOOO Los : Alamitos championship that night. ride Sunday and Monday at Del Mar and return to ride Tex Oh on Tbeaday's clOllnf lli&ht card. . The $100.000 feature Saturday ~over 440 yards mlth 10 bones ~ &cln1 the 1taner'1 nag. Tues· • ay nlgbt'a feature will be for a purse of $30,000 over 870 yards. Getlinlt McHar~e to ride at Loa Alantltoa ls tainer D. Wayne Lukaa. He la the only one to have two horses entered ln Saturday's race. Terry Lipham wUI be aboard Little Blue Sheep. McHargue started his racing career riding quarter horses in Oklahoma and isn't new to the scene. . Kenny Hart. the leadlni rider in the current meetinJ, will be aboard Flaala;v Go lloont SaWr· daJ. Danny cardoa, wbo la leek· iDI. bla third 1trat1ht Loa Alamltot lidinl title, will be ttd· lftl Rambllal Sally•• wtnner. of the sopbbmore bandicap <quarterback.a>. Dout Smith <of· fenalve line> and former Los Alacnltol HJtb and UC Davis player Rick Svoboda <defensive coordlnltor and ntffiyera >. • •1 1tUJ have one a pot open for otf enalve back.a," says Hamera, "and llke the other asslstant po1ltlona. It'• a matter of 1ettlnl ·-•lit-on.'' Aside from the walk-on aspect for a11latanta, Laauna Beach ls the 1mallest school ln enroll· ment in Orange County to field ll·man football teams. BVT IF THE PLAY of the sophomores in um ls any in· dlcation. that should be no pro- blem. ··our sophomores only had 14 on the squad," says Hamera. "But they played the entire seuon. And, you know. thab.10rt of adversity tends to brina out a lot of courage. "Scott Haven, fOJ' instance, one of our candidates for quarterback and cornerback, played with broken ribs in one game simply because be wu the 11th man. There was no one else too play. And there were others in similar circumstances. Our players have a background of making do. ''Thls spring when I was the only coach left after the others quit some of our players were actually acting as coaches on the field. "A BIG REASON for my op- timistic reasoning as the season approaches 11 the fact that so many or our players have matured with the added responaibillties brought about by adversity. And you can't meaaure everything simply by the won-loss record." Are there some goals for the Artists? . "Our immediate goal is to play as many kids in as many spots as possible during our four non-,league games. We're gotna to take a look at a lot of people." One bript upect la lbe nuni- bera Hamera may find himself with. At present he baa a roster of 78 Juniors and seniors, of which he's hopeful wlll materialize into a squad of 40 when pre-conditioning begins Aua. 28. Aa for Laguna Beach's attack, Hamera says there wlll be nothing dramatically different in terms of ~xcept that what bU been a .,._v• oriented outfit may be even more intealtve. \ ~ Baseball Sinu, Woodt BattlB Uaders Dave Sims and Gene Woods, two of the hottest riders in speedway motorcycle racing, will meet in a two-lap match race at the Orange County Fair· grounds ln Cost.a Mesa tonight as a feature of the weekly cycle act.ion. Gates apen at 6:30 with the first of 24 heat races getting under way at 8. •• DAILY PtLOT 81 acm s1m'~T~~LAVER Coaeh RI.eked : OON'T CHANGE Irvine Selecu Herring YOU~ MIN[) I . . • Sol,omon Upset By Teltscher From AP Dlapatcbes STOWE, Vt. -Unheralded Eliot TeltscMr of Palos Verdes registered bis second upset in two days, stunning second-seeded Harold Solomon Thursday, 6-2. 5·7, 6·2 and advancing to the semifinals of the Stowe Grand Prix tennis tourna· ment. Top-seeded Jimmy Connors advanced to the quarter-finals with a &·4, 6-1 romp over Ferdie Taygan. Gottfried. DIMM Ad"811ee TORONTO -Eddie Dibbs defeated Kjell Johanson of Sweden 6-3. 6-3 and Brian Gottfried had HtUe trouble disposing of Tom Okker 6-2, 6· 1 to highlight Thursday's action ln the Canadian Open Tennis Championship.a Other reaulta included: MM Gll~~f~!.~ ~ =~ li!~":i.~~I~~~,...:.~ JOIMI Meli-otK. "4111\1 GulltMnn 1•. M : bWI ltM>ll'lll def. Coll11 Olll4e¥ .. 2.W ; a.l&DT"-.iydtf. PeutlCnlllllM ... I. 0 1-0.... ..... Mimi J..-:c~ l111Urf• ~ Menlll0¥9 def.Y-YIHmNll .. t,._l;leflOaL'"'def.Vl~~1l4,W,M: Vlrvlftle ltuzkl def. lAtlrt Hllfll .. t. 1 ... Stodd•• o ... i. Mllcuoa CLEVELAND -Veteran Dick Stockton. second·seeded and now the favorite after the ear· ly ouster of top.seed Roscoe Tanner. beat yoWlg Tim Wilkison. 6-4, 1·6 Thursday in the second round of the International Open Tennis Cham· plonshlp. John Yuill was eliminated by Australian Peter Feigl,6-2,U,6-3. ln other matches, fifth-seeded Brian Teacher lost to Paseal Portes 7-6, 6·7, M. seventh seeded WUtem Prinlloo lost to Van Wlnitaky 6-3, S-3 and •i&btb 111 lled llmail El Sbafei ot ~ WU de· feat.eel by Qui.atopher Roger-Vasae11n M. 7-8. Al Herring has been choten bead . varstly basketball coach at Irvine ffl&b Scbool, succeeding Pat Stewart. who resiped to coach a Dutch na· tlonal team ln the European pro lea~· Herring. 44, waa the Vaqueroe Junior vani~. coach this past aeaaon after apendlna 10 yean ln ·~ similar capacity at Paramount > High. . A Mlaslon Viejo resident, Herring's junior varsity at Irvine compiled a 12·10 record lut aeuon. 1be Vaqs were in their initial competition and were competing without aeniora. Al Paramount. Herrina'.s last five years at tbe helm found bis teams productna a 68-27 record. at. ..... ,"° . "I like a quick' tempo and I believe prtmarily . in a man-~man defense." says Herrin1. "We 're- going into a new league <Sea View> this rau. so irs· har<l to make any predictions. The main thlna ror:: us ls to be competitive ... Herring's backaround includes the UCLA Bruins and minor lea1ue baaebaU prior to bis basketball coaching at Paramount. He was a starter for UCLA under Coach John Wooden when the Bruins captured the Pacific Coast Conference champlonabipe in um and 1956. ELMORE TOYOTA LEASING CILICA'S, CO.OLLA"S. TIUCIS 4WD LAMDCIUISm ~. s I I 62' '::: Ceo. Co.I .... , 00. .......... IM41. TOlll ..... .__c 1237 29 ..,._ ,. Mo. "9111 • "-'-· ... OS. EL~9!!.~RIQRS &7141lt4-JU2.1714111t.zm.12u1 ttwan AM fOa HOWAIO IOlmllS • Sima edged Woods in a botly-C'ODtested scratch main last week at the Fairgrounds. Woods, the younger brother of former tbfee.Ume national champion Rick, bas been among the top riders all season. The Largest Marina ale Eva; Held In Southern Callfomlalll .. MO NONSENSE .. \.EASING CHECK THESE PAICESlll BARIENT-a niame you CM truett T"4WN not In our catalog Md .. don, nonnally etodc ltlem, but MOii made • epecJel buy, and buy -did! s.a .. dlw, aluminum,~~. Mf talllng, all l)OC)Ufet llz•• In atock. JYM look ettNapttMI a.rt.nt •10 Cl'NorM ...••... Lilt Price 1103.()() llOfll'e IPllaAL MCE ••.•..•• ONLY tn .oo Z·SPAR z•AR-oM of tM oldeet namM In mertne coettnge. How'• ~ bottom Ute• deya? If If• time f« • Nut-out or II ~ lull want to ..._. ~ fftOMY now'•'°"' oMnoel IM2 Blue Bottom hint .... Llat Price 188.80/Qel llOlh INCIAL PllllCl ••• ONLY tn.I0/9" DANFOtJTH --------------------....... .------------..~ ... ...,----------------~ OANFORTH-worid'a IMc»r In enehor CIMign. All popular 11.iea end atytaa In atoctL From 6' to 80' llOll'a Vot )'OUr endlort OenfOfttl 138 boetl from 25' • 32' Liit Price 168.50 ~ llOM'wlPICIM ,,_IC• ....... n ~· .. .... !!2'J!----~------ STAHDAAD 'HoAIZON-Y'QU-V. heard tM MIMI Llt8f'91tr tM best. Mlllng 26 wett, t4 ohen~I VH' In tllatory. H you want si-rfonnanca at a pnc., ltllt .. It. ~on 25 ~ wttti your~ of a or BENMAA-41 you know que•tvttten you Mow a.rimer. 8IV pilot performenc:. at 1ma1t pflot coat. Al modtla In stock. bee ooMtorWMt .... ,.......,_,..._ ......... I'll Bennw~21 .•• 'U..Prtc:.1796.00 ._..~MAL PRICI ..... , .•.• tlfl.OC> SIGNET ' SKINET-the moet papu1a1 marine lftltl'UfMftta ev.r and now MOM flea ttiem. Loga, wind IPMd, wind Point.""'..,...., depth. MOlh got~ ... We're blOWlno tti.m .,. out et wtlol...,. pncnt Ml<-75 Comtlll'letton f<not·LOQ 0-t2 j .: • • ·, • I l I f d • .. DAIL 't PLOT SPORTS ON TV I HORSE RACtNQ 1171IOWAaD .. l'r8 .,. ........ ·'Oh, no!" IDMDI WM Sos an mwacer Harry Caray u Qdeap I« aaotber fame I« away ... .,. blew • It!" • that cate1ory. Cara1 HP~ly even hu .., tlttendance 011 .. ta bil contract. Other1 who are 1 .. thin rettralned In tbelr admlraUoa of tM home tam lnttude Rlmato. BND· naman and Joe Tait of Cleveland. Broadeasthig Dao A.lie~ Barbel- Were the Best ByAllOtlaWPna .. "H 1· U...'• anocw ... f« OQ .. std•.• Hult. ctaelnaatl'• M•m 8nnuwun • t111t RMI hOn. '11l• Ylllk... Pla1l tblU, apot. ""' lM fact tW .. opf00ent 11'11Md bome plate OD a ,.,..,, NSMI tO tbl Amona t.boM ln the ~ camp. bf'Offe ..... =.!'la , ... rally C.· CedH, ..aw •iow maused to re- maln Ulti....--~lftNill lcull=tbe Loe A_...fDD!dll!n, J:rni• ..-well Throuch the yean, ~~ creat bueball 1·2 punches have been Rutb-Oellrtl, Snider·Hoctces. Aaron·Matbewa. Mantl•Marls, Mays·McCovey. l~i~~=====ii~==;~;~ Perhaps tbe createat tandem In the sport. .. owever, nev,r bit a home run or ran the b~. • i Mel Allen and Red Barber, two men who at times were more f amlllar to the ~pie · they broadcaat sames to than were the names of the playen on tbe field, recenUy en\lred the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstowft., N.Y. Each of them received the first Ford C. Frick awards for broad· pboa• to inform Ute New Yotll dueou& Gal9CITR UPOa'TINGt JlaN. ty. JMit ~ aa._ 01 llll CV. rent mip Of local lMllMaU ..... , cera. a ID.lad bat vi roo&tn Md re- porten wbo brlna the naUonaJ puUme, or • oc.eeioeallJr .e.t veraloD Of it. tato llolDee am. tbl cowatry. Tben an UtiOee Wllo call ( ~ONw) 'un a1 they see 'em. And U.. Jre otben who call 'em as they've been told to call • eQI. .. Tbe control of uaouneen by ballclubs -owaera, 1eneral mana1ers. whomever -ia a dlfftcuh thlq to recWate. .. ..,. Sbelby Wblt· fJeld, Sports Editor of Aaaociated ·Press Radio "You're deallnl with wealthy, powerful men. Some are egocentrics who feel that when they purchase a club for $1S million they also purchase tbe broadcaster. It's sort of a fringe benefit." of the DICrotl,,....... aild Ned uct Jm w.-et u. 1c>1ton Red Sox. A·sreet ...-, ....._.. announ· cera fall ~MN ln the mkldle. Root!Qa for tM bOme INQl ll cine tblns .. Tt~ bet .. anotbtr· R!llAINI UNINAIED Dodgera' Vin lctllfY ·~ llOIA>MOT wu director ---------ot promoUoaia for the Senators When J wu there," ncalll Whtttleld. ·•ne told me, 'tbe ftnt tblnl you've IOl to Pro Tills learn wtliea you work lor Short .. to Ue.· ''Short WU. real hard sell su.y. Set for TV His phl~y waa to pusb thoH aeaaon Ucketa. He'd want you to tell the fans they better support the club Two top National or they'll lose tt. He'd wot no Football League exhibi· critlci1m. You don't mention slumps tlon games will be or negative atreaks. And lf the club • televised this weekend. 1trtkea out 14 times in a 1ame you l:onlgbt's Minnesota· had to play up the aupertor pitcblne Mtamt game will be and Ignore the feeble bitting. You televised by ABC <Chan· were supposed to downplay the er· nel f), ~ginning at 6 rors. o'clock, while Sunday's ••And weather was one of the Oakland-San Francisco keys," says Whitfield. u11 it was bad contest wUl be aired by weatli'er be didn't want you to men· ~BC <Channel 4) at 1 lion that because lt might be good o clock. cutin8,pcellence. • ALLEN GaEETltD the crowd with bla famlllar "Hello There Everybody," then pro. ceeded to enchant ttie Ustenert with a looll back at bis career and the usoelatlom be baa made in baseball. "I auesa I began my career at age 11." re- called Allen. "when I was a batboy for the , Greensboro Patriots. A seed wu planted tbeR, thougJ:t I didn't know It." Sarber broadcast the Cincinnati Reda and ~rooklyn Dodgers before teaming with Allen with the Yankees. "I All DEUGBTt;D to go into the Hall of Fame with Mel Allen," be said. "And also with Larry MacPhail <another Hall inductee this yeat>. who was a pioneer in baseball broadcasting. Larry gave me my start with the Reds and be brought me into Brooklyn." "When Larry took over the Dodgers, there bad been an agreement ln the New York area that none of the teams would broadcast its sames," Barber aaid. "Larry said, 'I'm going-to ~cast' and be brought me into do the games. WffllelldElltllllltlonSdlldule "Then the Giants said if the Dodgers broad· WHITFIELD BELIEVES that w11111lftolllll~lt'nllre cast their eames. they'd get a 50,000-watt staUon weather ln outlying areas." bo try to th -t-.. Mlnnetel4A • MYrftl <• p.m., CN,,. and blast us into the East River. So Larry told me. owners w use e au waves Ml 7) 'I've aot a 50,000-watt station and I don't want to be as their persona.I property are less ......., e Prevalent these days. And there is Pt111MetcHeeeAu.nt.e blasted into the river. So I'm counting on you.' TllfTllNI Bey lit ..._ °"1MM less interference with games on the o.iwer • 11utt• networks. of course, because they PtltAUrgtlee .... v0111G1M11s "RADIO PLAYED a major part in the de· are not particularly beholden to any ~.4:t= velopment of baseball. It brought the game to one club. ABC gets top bonora here, H-to11eto.1ias women, got the female population interested for having made strides in the area of New verti J.as:..:" OllOO the tint flme. It taught tile game to women.·· •1!1..~· VS. •uto. trans.. full power. ~ c:ontYot. AM/FM 0 tr.ck stereo, auto. .. , cond.. titt wheel. luxurious appo1ntcnent1. S•r. 18Y89S95CM03 :'~~~~s23012 .,.., ...-IMOO.oo '°"' ,. P"" (!Ml "' -1244 •• - -""' ll5000. ~mDOOl~M ~ lAX LINCOLN MERCURY WHITFIELD KNOWS about strong-willed owners. He broadcast Wublngton Senators games for two seasons while the club was strugllnc under owner Bob Short to make ends meet lQ the natiaP's capital. When the club moved to Texas, WhlUield s tayed home and wrote a book about bis experiences. "Kiss It Goodbye." As the result of the book and an ex-tensive investigation by the Federal Com muni catlons Commission, televlsioa and radio stations are now r~uired to broadcast a disclaimer if the announcers are hired or ap- proved by anyone other than the sta· tion. That doesn't guarantee an Im· partial broadcast by any means but Jt does put the unwary fan on notice broadcasters rights by insisting on K-.so"ee .... eno1enc1 "I'll place this plaque in my home near tbe 16500 IUOt llVD. hiring its own announcers without ap-~~ • 5111 Frw1tco 11 p.m.. door," said a teary-eyed Allen, "glance at it when HUN11M8TON IUOt 841is884• proval from anyone. ......., I go to work. shake my bead ln disbelief and say. liliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii&ll 0etro1tetOIWlllNI 'How about that."' But local broadcasters remaln----------------------------------------~----- mE WRITE sox• Caray ls the current king of the "rooters." sup- planting Pittsburgh's Bob Prince in vulnerable to the whims of their employerJ. WhJtfleld recalls an in· tervlew be bad with Red Barber, the former Dodger and Yankee broad- caster, a .couple or years ago. "Red said, 'I don't know of a baseball club which doesn't control its broad· casters. Uthe club doesn't want you, you can't get or bold onto a job.'" That seems to sum it up. . Alamitos Results ,.,....,.... tna ........ _ __, l'lnt ,_ ltdal1ro "'-9> 12.21 U0. UO; Mir --t.-..ir1 1.20, LOO; Ulle ON T1..,.a O•art> uo. S1 EMC\t (4:6> Plld--. sec.ond r---..und ...,__ IHMi) UO, ~ Mii; ~lndl 5'llMy •V•uohnl S.•. J.IO; ~ Atomic; ~CPefMrl7.00. r1urd rece-K11lo11t P'llollt I P9tMrl IMO, SAO, IM; Querter 89ndlr CH.U ..._MO; ...nll't LM t'BlnllS) a.JO Fourtfl ,__. Ml Ttver RO(llet CH1rt) IAO, 4.20. 2.90; LuMCltlc IR01191tl 4.IO, 3.40; Mias 811ned Limit C°"I 4A. SS EJl8Cta 17~ .-1c1 ~··· Fllll'I r~ V Cllll Ce.-1 ll.40, 6.IO, UI; CM'Ols Shi KJtty IH1rt> IA. UI; Boulld To FIMM fC.rOOza) 2..IO Sl•lll r--Jelt Oler\)er 2 (W.._> 11.00. 1.20. S.60; Olllrro•1 Rock.t • Aouo111 10.IO, 7.40; Gol11 JHse IV...011111 4.2D. SS EJl8Cta 12-31 P9k1 '3'1.50 Slft11ttt r-.-vtdllll CINllM> 1oL10 29.00, 7 AO; Two To Go<""'-> 4.40, l.40. Tiie 0. CW.,._l 2.a Elglltlt r.ce-R0<•et 141 Bny IHertl UO, 2AO, 2.20; ReMc!MM IAdllr) UO, 2AO; 01d1...,,,. KAM ~~~~ J.20. S2 Eu<te fWl ttekl Nlntlt rec.e-Tlny Sip Cc.nloP> 6 'JO, 4M. 2..IO; ...,_ Te <Waallr> 14.00, 7.40; Moonlloht Oencer (MylH) 4.a. SS ~ CM> peld $270.$0 At111MMQ-10N Pro Soccer * * * * * * S.C•rda9'• rt' Ageada !1:15 LD (4) -BASEBAU. -The Cinclnnati Reds meet the Cubs in Chicago's Wrigley Field. Noou (11> -TBIS WEEK IN BASEBALL. 3 t:'e!.2> -GOLJf -1blrd round play in the W estc Cluaic, taped. 4 p.m •. (2) T" SPORTS SPECl'ACVL\.R -Al firmed-and'~ are-slated to meet again in the Travers ats..toga Springs, N.Y. Also, bighll&bts of NASCAR's Tal.ledega soo.. <28> -P&O SOCCU -Arsenal meets Ipswich Town in Great BrttalD's most important soccer match: the FA Cup, taped at Wembley Stadium in London. 4 : 30 p.m . (7) -GREATEST SPORTS LEGENDS .... A tribute to Bob Hayes. 5 p.m. (7) -WIDE WOaLD OW SPORTS - The Cbeyellne Frontier Days Rodeo. Also, the women's MU 10-meter platform diving from Mis· alon ViejO. ~--pft'A-- 11 a.m. (2) -AUTO a.ACING -The Milwaukee ~ from West Allis, Wis. (4)--DOOllBDAY IN TBE DOBIE -lllgbllghts of 19'l7a Sapenowl XII between Dallas and Denver. (11> -DODGBa BASEMLL -The Dodgen meet tbe lleta at Sbea Sta41umin New York. 11:30 a.m. (4)-8P01lTSWoaLD-'lbe Hall of Fame international divina meet bom Ft. Lauderdale, taped. Also, the celebrity cballenae off-road race and coverage of Dlana N7ad's at· tempt to swim from Cuba to Key West. Pia. 1 p.m. <2> -GOLF -Final round play ill the\ American Express Westchester 'Clauic ·from Har· rt.son, N.Y. <4> -NPL FOOTBAU.-0. J . Simpson is slated to make b1s national-TV debut in a 48er UD· iform against Oakland atCandleltlek Park. 2 p.m. (9) -TENN18-11ae QMIO'• eln&lee flnal in the Canadian Open at T~to. (11 > Pao soc. CER -'taped coverage of an NASL playoff 1ame. Racing Results for Del Mar .... TilllrMIPt , .... ....,_..., · First r--swt N Alet <~> uo. 2.10, tAO: Go INnnY Go (Ptft. uy> UO. UO; Wlllley C"9rdl ).211. Sece11d r~elflOra Cllotc• • tMc H11r11••> tt.40, S.IO, 1.20; Peril-TI-,cSl ... tMllerl 'Al. ~-; l!rlft'I T-CPW'CI) 2.M; ~ ,., Ool*e (M) ... .,. tlllnt ,~ GlllM ({MM,) 1.40, UI, UI; IWWlt!C (~I 7.20. UO; .,_Kitty (Veflllqllftl IUOj U •UCS. C>O e 1a. l!!eMM Vldreta 1--..1 UO, t.10 • Dellat ow ~11.10. uh· Kte c .. u peld PG.00. l!l11tt1t rec-crew Of Oc•I• l~l UO, SAO, MO; Vote Of C...flel•nc• <Piere•> tt . .o. •.oo • llNlll Sir CO.Wis.Al. flflllttl ,_ MM11'1 Siter CTtrol t1.41, 4.JI, MO; ,......, Gift C~ cey) I .It, a.21; Cot1H11 Sur '°""' .... ' .... » EMCte 17-1) ...-*" .... ...... ._,..m, YOU GET MORE THAN YOUR MONEYS WORTH AT TOYOTA. --ONE EXAMPLE, COROLLA SR-5 UFTBACK.-- Montdul'llbllty. Q)rol1as aren't batted together like some \'ehlcles lheYre built with welded unitized body construction. 'tt>u'll nooce this "tightness" when you el<Smtne Mont confidence, That's what we build fNefY day. More and mom people are buying Toyotas. finding oui that bfotas are built better than they ltlought possible. E~ dav more and more people discover wtfo.J we can~ ·rr you can find a better builr small car than b,<ota ... buy it." a lbyota. drive a byota and o.vn a b,tota. ,> More 11t1cllon. This Corolla Men COIWellllla. This $R.5 Uftbad< not onty has O'lOfe versatility than a sedan. but also features a special split fold.down rear seat. is only one of 29different byofa vehlcfes. No Qther import manufacturer offers rrore modefs than~ \ ......;~=-:::::;; .. Mare dependabllty. This year. fOf the first time-the b,<>la O:>rolta line is equipped with fully transistonzed ignition. It's designed to start when a "points/condensor" system could gNeyoutrou:ble.~~:;iiiiiiiii'ill'_.~ 'I l t b fl p ' l ·, I • I JI ; I ~ .... + • . . .aNSIDE: -Out 'n About •G be Kaplan Show •Intermission •Movie Rnlews ~.Aug.,1.1171 DM.YPILOT ·1 ·;~" .. \7iibranCe Sliowcasecl in 'loot Snit' KAREN HENSEL AND DANIEL VALDEZ APPEAR IN SCENE FROM 'ZOOT SUIT' By JACKIE BYMAN .................... "Zoot Sutt." which opened officially tbla week at the llark Taper Forum 1n Los An1elea, 11 street tbe~ at lta beat, its raw power ~ ol1 beaut.lfully by top. notch acting and production. Not that the new play by Lull Valdes is wit.bout lta flaws. but most atadie0ces will find them more tbancompemated for bytbe play'1 vlbrance, lta humanitarian message, its insight into llex· ican-Amertcan Ute IDd hlstory and its fuieperformances, THE DIRECTION t>Y the author is snapPy and crilp, com- plemented b1 Dawn Cbiaq'a dramatic JJlhting. the clever set by R9berto Moniles and Thoma A. W a lab, the costumes by Peter J . Hall and the score arraniect by Dan Kuramoto. ''Zoot Sult" is about a shock· ing era in Los Angeles' past. the 1942· fr'*ne·up prosecution of a Chicano iant (or the murder of another gang member. The trial scene, which rin.Js with dialogue from the transcript, may be exaggerated but there is no doubt that justice was a rare visitor in that courtroom. THE PLAY is at its best when depicting the interaction of the Mexican-American families and friends, at its worst when it strays too far from that scene. Some of the police and re· porters• dialogue sounds like it came from a B-movie. "Zoot Suit" Is marred by an occasional lack of focus, and it needs some careful cutUne. 1be end drags on a little too long. Among the performers. Edward James Olmos as El Pachuco is clearly the star. He's also an outstanding singer With a charismatic stage presen~ that should make him an actor to watch. ' · CHICANO GANO RIVALRY SHOWN IN 'ZOOT SUIT' Daniel Valdez, who also served as musical director and is the author's brother, is mis· cast as Henry Reyna. He's a capable actor and be does a professional job, but be lacks, except in spurts. the enger '1lnd the passion one would expect in a figure wbo clearly dominates the hearts of every one around him. Outstanding s upporting performances come from Lupe Ontiveros as Reyna's mother and Rose Portillo as h is girlfriend. Also worth mention- ing among the generally talent· ed cast are Karen He nsel, Charles Aidman, Vincent Duke Milana, Arthur Hammer. Mike Gomez' and Paul Mace. "ZOOI' SUIT" isn't heavy on subtlety -its points about 4js. crimination and the scandal· mongering of the Hearst newspapers are pounded in. But there's enoQ&b humor, drama and life in tbe play to counteract the overstated morality lesson. By the way. for those who ~ keeping tabs on inflation, there's some good news and some bad news at the Music Center. The good news is that the Taper now provides a free cast list for those wbo don't want to plunk down 2S cents for a progrm. The bad ne\1$ ts that parking has gone up to S2.50. The Man, His JJUsic and MemorWs Stan Kenton's County-Fans 'Live From August 'to August~ By m•av HERTENSTEIN 0t•De11YPlllltRltf Stan Kenton, seriously h a mpered by symptoms from major brain surgery, remains attentive and outspoken. He is opinionated on bis favorite topic, jan, dislikes nostalgia and takes pronounced rape at rock and COWltry muslc '-IT TAKES SOMEONE with a li\tle class in musical tastes to appreciate jazz," said Kenton, sitting in his Costa Mesa hotel room. His band is at Orange Coast College where a minl concert at 7 o'clock tonight concludes a week of the Stan Ken· tonjazzcllnfo "Radio s tations h ave been kind of rotten about cutting out jazz," said Kenton, referring to minimal alt time. , , "I can•t stand those people playing rock n roll," said Stan, lighting a cigarette. ''They I A .. ' I wear f'UnnY costumes with weird hats and all that. It's crap and a poor grade of music. .. BUT DID YOU know." he said, "More and more kids are interested in jazz. They aren't so botfor rock 'n •roll anymore." · Kenton attributes the jazz renaissance in re· cent years to good school programs. Indeed,' his band m embers as well as teachers from throughout the nation. spend most of their summer d ays at college jazz clin,ics. "SOme of the older mllsic teachers weren't interested In Jazz because they didn't un· derstand it," Kenton said. "But most of them have retired. Things make a lot more sense <Jazz education> nowthantheyusedtoo." He spoke with pride of the high school and un- iversity teachers that travel to the clinics. "See that fellow out there?" Kenton asked. pointing to a bespectaled man standing near the swimming poo l. ··He's one of our bes t teachers." Stan was speaking of Neil Slater~ a jazz studies professor at the University of Bridgeport I Conn.> a nd piano player in New York City. Most of the Kenton band members are young. AND WIOLE BE seldom hires those aitend· ing clinics, "they are too young," Kenton says a road band job ls "usually for the young guys. Once they get married and have. children. they have to think about settling down. Most of.our guys are not married." Country music. that produced commercial· ly in Nashville. is cheap and dumb, Kenton said. "It doesn't usually have enough class." Jazz is growing in popularity with au- diences throughout the country, he observed. "The symphonies play classicar music· 100 or 200 years old." said Kenton. ··w e find the peo. pie are more interested in jazz." HE CALLED mE 900 who heard a concert that lasted over two hours last Sunday night at OCC, "very rece ptive." The audience cheered long and loud aflereacb number and solo. And while Kenton sald no section of the country seems to favor bis music more than another. Audree Coke, his manager. said ·'Southern Calltomla is Kenton country. The fans drive us nuts." Apparently. One older couple. overheard at OCC, told one of the band members, " We live rrom AugusttoAucuatfortbls." Kenton 'got bis start in l.Ml at the Ren· dezvous Ballroom oo Balboa Peninsula . 'No. I inJazz Carmen McRae in Toim • I I ' I l -I I . • J !I 'I - .. ___!_------~._-~ -~ ----_. ---- - ----~ -= OAU.Y PILOT Fri..,, Auguet 11. 1171 \ Kaplan Act 'BUilt-in' Wlnediiu& WOrla o1f Hu 'Kiitler' S"""8U By DENNIS M~LEUAN OIUlllOl4tt .......... A comedian ls way ahelMS of tht> aam. when be bu hts °'"' theme aona rm instantly ~· 01ntaable mu1lcal •~atun ~at •et.a tht tono for la er. Bob Hope hu ''Th•• r.tM Memory, .. Juk Bett!lJ ... ._ .. Lov• ln BJoom ·• al\d G~ • ••hurray tor c.pt. Spauldtq." Aqd IO lt ls WMn the U0-at tho Knott'• Berry Farm Good Timea '!'beater dim and UM •• dlence bean a mek>dle 8'uD, Bum . Bum . Bum ·Buln "Welcome back .. " THANKS TO bls popular TV series. "Welcome Back, Kot· ter." Gabriel Kaplan QOt only has a theme sona lo ope:n bis comedy act, he bas an kletltlfia- ble comJc penoaa and, IDClft impOrtant. a bullt·ln followtiw. pertence1 of powlna up in New York CU.y. There naUy ••A four )'outbs ln hi• acbool.Who were the basis for the· Sweatbo11 in bis TV 1erlet. BU& tbe real Epateln was a hundred tlmea worse than the TV character, he says. "Epstein •H voted most likely to take a Ille." Kaplan'• eye for humor In the ~mmonplace bits the mart on a number of t.areeta: -Telephone answering rnacbinea: "Hi. this Is Billy Carter. I'm not In right QC>W, but you can leave tbe me8s~ as soon as ~ hear tbe bUrp, • and "Hl this f.s P•ul Williams. I'm ln rl1bt obw. I Just can't reach the phone." And be plays on tbat fact \hroulhout bis all-too-brief aet -it 'a jml a tad more tban 30 minutes Ions -that be wW perform tbree times tonipt. Saturd•Y nlaht and twic:e on Sunday. IThe show ls included in tbe pri~ of park adn\tssion>. AHEAO OF THE GAME Cornec9an Gibe Kaplan I DISPLAYING BIS Jmatk for voice charaeterisations, Kaplan touches on Howard .Cosen. F.cl Sullivan and a awn-chewing blind date who was so m'ade-up she looked like the "A voil Lady blew up in her face." In the fin81 minutes of the pleaaani ·but all·tOO·brief act, Kaplan asks for and re!Celves re· quests for "Uncle" Jokes from the primarily youthful audience. Comic writers send him material, be trades it . . . The flrst time be play~d Knott'& in Buena Park, Kaplan recalled, was three years aao before the start of bis hit series. "People said 'Hey, I know you, you're a comedian.' Now. three years later, people think I'm a teacher." Kaplan ·tbe comedian bas not changed much since his pre· Kotter days .. There are no boffo yucks, no rat·ta~tat barrage of one·liners. Instead, he bas an easy.going, casual. demeanor and conversational style that draws humor out of the com· monplace and, of course, his ex· Like the "Welcome Back" theme song, Kaplan's Uncle jokes are a regular part of "Welcome Back. Kotter." "Hey," he says. "did I ever tell you the one about my Uncle Max? ... " Floral, Wildlife Scenes • in Batiks Exhibited "" PAINTERLY BATIKS -"The Natural World of Maggie Kendis, ·• floral and wildlife scenes on poplin on exhibit at Huntress Gallery. 2811 Villa Way, Cannery Village, Newport Beach. Reception for artist Sunday, 3 to 7 p.m. Hours Tuesday through Sunday ll a.m. to 4:30 p.m . MOMENTS OF STRESS -City of Garden Grove exhibition at Mills House Gallery, 1Z732 Main St., or works under the collective title. • f r Galleries I Exhibits • "Emergency: Circumstances Calling for Im· ; ·mediate Action.•' Opens Sunday. through Oct. 2. ; Hours noon to 4 p.m . Thursday through Mon· ff--------- -Oay. Reception for five artists Sunday 1 to 4 p.m. VERY VERMEER -Southern California born artist Raymond Pag~·s Dutcb Old Masters' techniques, oil on wood panels, on dis- play in show at Haggenmaker Galleries, 372 N. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach. Opens Saturday, reception for artist 6 to 9 p. m. Open every day, 10 a .m. toSp.m. CRAFT CLUB SHOW -San Clemente Arts a nd Crafts Club's annual Outdoor Art-craft Fair and Fall Exhibition from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday at Cormounlty Center. Avenida Del Mar and Seville. Works on sale. NA11VE PO'ITERY -Pots by a trio of In· dian potters, some old, some new, on display at Bowers Museum, 2002 N. Main St., Santa Ana . Open Tuesday through Saturday 9 a.m. to s p.m., Sunday 1 to S p.m. and Wednesday and Thursday evenings, 7 to 10. USC Plays Set Full.erton Dance Site I ....... te LOS ANGELES -Subscription tickets for "Four of the World's Great Comedies," a USC theater serie!s. are on sale for the 1978-79 season. "The Inspector General" opens the season Oct. 26. Otber·acheduled plays are '1Tbe Show· Off," "The Imaginary Invalid" and "Pal Joey." Information and ticket sales, (213) 741-1111. KENTON ••• The Muckenthaler Cultural Center in Fullerton will present "W lggles, Jiggles, Twists and Tums," a solo dance concert for children, at 10 a .m . Wednesday. '0 'll&t ~~ Cell 842-5178. Put • few words to work for u. <FremPag•CO mishap than what he had related to the OCC au· dience -"When I came to I was in the hospital." . And while he may not be much on his fame, his fans are. "Ob, Mr. Kenton can I get your auto· graph?" said Linda Grusbon, lfuntln1ton Beacb, a maid at the motel. "It's for my dad, <James) he's a grett admirer of yours." The Man obliged, a smile on his face. But it was a face tired from work, the accident ex· perienceandage. Admission is 50 cents. The event will be beld on the front lawn of the center, l20l W. Malvern. Cathy Kaemmerlen, choreoarapber and teacher, will present the solo coqcert designed for children aged 5 tbrougbl2. Ms. Kaemmerlen 's repertoire will include skim oa llnllblng teeth and other topics connect- ed wtthd!!ly cant . Chi,nese Kids ToSinginOC The Joy Children's Choir from Taipwi. Taiwan, Republic of China, will perform Fri· day. Aug. 25 at the Memorial Hall Auditorium of Chapman College. Orange. The 7:30 p.m. oro· gram will feature vocal singing, Chinese musical instruments. folk dancing and Chinese and western folk songs. Adult and general reservation tictets are $5 and 13. Children, 18 and under. and student pre· ferred and 1eneral reservaUon tickets are $2.50 ~d $1.50. Information 898-20'1. ~ftA TRANS CATALINA AIRLINES MISCELLANY Disney Drunanaer ~ Drummer Buddy Rich will conclude a week of performances tonight and Satur-' day ut Disneyland's Plaza Gardens. Rich and his band will perform at 8.30 p.m. and 12:3o a.m. at the Anaheim park. Rich is a wh~ with drum sticks and his band plays progressive jazz. Disneyland is open daily through Sept. 4. 8 a.m. to l a.m. LONG BEACH/CATALINA CRUISES GO 'rHIS WEEK• 17M1t1 • 112"'52' • (114> 521-7111 ONE· MAN EXH161T10N Opens Saturdl!y. August 19th 'Q>mmemoratwe Post~ tor Occa3iott I ~~ 37% No. Coast HJl)away. Las-• Beuh. c.~ tZl5t Open Datly 10'00·~·()() PM 0 7'41 ·~-287~ • f 714 t 7 52-1600 ~ 213~420-2444 w ...... ...... ,...., .... It won't stay down ltwllbe fnlll ....... ofc•11cl. J.1• ~TTOUIN.LMOW , ~,.;-' l f , . &..UT°' 1MI.,... PEACHIS• PLUMS 4 us.s I oo u.ltlC.. because they're losing money. But who cc:res! Look at these Low Proclllce Price• and it's Newport Produce 9-alty! LOCALWWM TOMATOES I Sc,_. LWIU.. w-.c:...- ·, 'J I i b f1 : ; J ! I I ; ~ ' .. ,. ~ . . ' : • . IL ' . bUT 'N' ABOUT _/ ' Fridly, Auguat18, 1918 DAILY PILOT <::J Four Freshmen • l Return/Return Engagement Scheduled At Newport Hotel by Popular Singers Newport'• Marrlou Hotel ta 1ta1ln1 .. m-1or untertainmonl attraction dwi.rJI tho upcornlna Lubor 01.f weekend a two-n.lahl atand by ont' or the count.rY'• best·k:nown quMl"leU, lbe Four f'reah~ roataurant. loqa&ed at 308S Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mua, ll bavlh1 a nU'\y summer chicken and flab ule. 1 Actually. the e>ttuk>n maru aomcthlnf or ·a . rf"turn/retu.m ena•c•ment tor th Popular sinctna airoup. wblch played to sellout hOUday trowds lM put coupl of Y'(.'an. Thia time around U.1're pearlna Saturday and Sunday. &pt. land3. DUUNG A LONG and colorful career. tbt Freabmeo ba~ sold over a million ~rd lbuma. One of t.helr nrat hit numMn1, "It's a 8lue World," ls now ~nsldtted a cluslc In the music tnd\artry. In 3dd1Uon to \Mir encarlnc vocal atyllnas. the nnaltitalent.ed ll"OUP plays a total or seven different instruments. A novel brand of relaxed humor has also become a Four Freshmen trademark. As an added attraction, each nlaht's pro· gram will reaLure the 17-piece "Society for the Preservation Qf Big Band Music." playing mu.sic in the Glenn Mlller tradition. TRE FULL ENTERTAINMENT package for both nights includes two complete shows. a , New York steak dinner with Caesar salad and pear Swiss for dessert. and dancing throughout the evening to the big band sound. The cost is $20 per person which includes tax and gratuity. The Newport Marriott ls located at 900 Newport Center Drive. Reservations -the only way to assure your attendance either evening - can be obtained by calling 640-4000, Ext. 6100 • • • JA.Zl. AND POP MUSIC fans are being given equal opportunttles to stake out their respective territories at Isadore's in Newport Beach. The Jumping Coast Highway nightspot is hosting a couple of "bi&gies" this week and next. From tonight through Sunday, Bo Donaldson and the Heywoods, a long standing staple on the American concert and re- cording scene, will be holding down front and center stage. On Mor¥fay, Aug. 28, as a follow up to several recent gigs that left the house with s tanding room only, Isadore's will again ~potlight the Orange County Rhythm Machine. The 16-piece Machine, a home-irown ag- gregation that got ita start at the old Hungry Joe's in Huntington Beach, will kick off the Aug. 28 musical proceedings at 8:30 p.m. lsadores fronts on Bayside Drive <333 is the actual nurnber> at the intersection of Coast Highway, Newport Beach. Telephone: 673·2733. • • • LONG JOHN SILVER'S seafood ~hoppe A NEW DINING ADVENTURE mAnDAn1n CHINESE Geurmet OJ1s1Ne PEKING• SHANGHAI _ ~ SZEC~N •HUNAN £ l.;·~--~ ~~~~= .t· ~ y_,.Ho.t.aMoll-- . ... ...... Clllmg ... ._ ___ ,,. (Former Chef of the JO Twin Draoo~m> 1500 ADAMS A VI. tAt ...._....., COSTA MESA 140.1937 SUS O. STtAK TERIYAKI Cholcnt !>-' lftf!Qtlll~tly l>fOiled lo pl .... ~ dltcrlMl,,.tlng taatt SUS RICE 8out' CM' THI Ot\Y TEA 1l11•atl1 . '• Above all, the sale prQ.Wtdes an opportunity lo uvor two 1reat tastes \n one money-saving meal. For the bar1ain price of $1.99 <lo place of the r~gµlur s:u4 tab> you'll receive two 1olden flab nuett and two crltpy chicken pea leas- l>lus Lon1 John Silver'• slaw, frtee and a largt> UI 01. IOft drink of your choice. * * • WORD'S JUST IN lhat Matsu, an ele1ant Japanese restaurant witb a seatinl capacity of ·270. 11 ache(tuled to open on Beach Boulevard In Huntlntton Beach ln early September. I'm told the new Oriental dining attraction. personally supervised by co-owner Masao .\sabina. will off er outstanding culslne that reflects trainln« in some of the best kitchens of Tokyo as well as Maxim'aof Paris. • • * WORRY NO LONGER that "Three Sheets to the Wind" suggests overindulgence. You can say you've been there and found it charming. That's because a new and attractive sandwich and salad shop by that name bas just landed on the local dining scene at 500 Pacific Coast Highway, Newport Beach. Telephone: 642·9960. In addition to giving you the opportunity to eat all the pe~nut.s you want -and allowing you to toss the shells on the fioor with the sawdust - Three Sheets supplements its sandwich and salad fare with "fatisfying" desserts <like mom's apple pie and double layer carrot cake>. frosty mug drafts and chilled wines. . Sandwiches on pita bread include the Peter Principle <avocado, cheese, sprouts and tomato. $2.10), the Salt Pita (Canadian ba~n. avocado. lettuce and tomato, $2.75), the Pacific Pita <tuna, celery and walnuts, $2). Italian sandwich specialties, all served on an oven crisp roll. include sausage, bell pepper and onion, $2.10; meatball, $2.10; bot pastrami, $2.25. The chicken salad includes water chestnuts, almonds and grapes, $2.95. • • • ONLY NINE MONTHS after the first Orange Cotmty spot opened in Fountain Valley, Stuart Anderson's Black Angus chain launched its third local restaurant in Santa Ana last week. Located at ~ Tustin Blvd .. the Santa Ana edition opened its doors close on the heels of· the Garden Grove location -12900 Euclid -that. welcomed its first diners on Aug. 2. Since Anderson opened his first Black Angus in 1964 ln Seattle, the operation has en- joyed one of the most rapid growth patterns in the food service industry In recent years. The restaurants feature a wide menu selec- tion of quality steak dinners priced at $5.95. There is also an adjoining lounge with live con- temporary nnd disco beat music offered Mon- day throuah Saturday evenings. The Fountain-Valley Black Angus restaurant ls located at 17920 Brookhunt, just orf the San Diego Freeway. .. .-... HTS- All-night Movies Due In Tustin Ten straight hours or films will screen when the Tustin Parks and Recreation Depart- ment presents its first All-night Movie Festival Tuesday and Wednesday. The event is scheduled from 9 p.m. Tuesday to 7 a .m. Wednesday at the Clif· ton C. Miller Community Center. Centennial Way and Main Street. No one under the age of 13 will be admitted to the supervised program, a spokesman for the recreation department said . Those planning to attend are en- couraged to bring sleeping bags and pillows. Admission is $3. AMONG THE movi es scheduled are "Logan's Run." "Paper Moon," "Sky Riders," "Hush, Hush, Sweet Charlotte." "The Haunting," and a favorite starring the Marx Brothers, "A Day at the Races." A bring-a -friend contest is scheduled for the initial run. The person taking the most friends · will be awarded a prize. ln· formation 544-8890. The Four Freshmen. from left. Ken Albers. Bob Flanigan, Denms Grillo and Autie Goodman. sold over 2 million re- cord albums at the height of the1r career. Bag of Laughs Unknown Comic Plans Visit The Unknown Comic will appear at The Laff Stop. Newport Beach. Tuesday through Thursday. The Unknown Comic started as a writer of introductions for Chuck Barris on "The Gong Show." While doing that he observed many staff members taking a turn on stage as gag contestants. Needing some extra money himself, and wanting to remain anonymous, be put a paper bag over bis bead and was an im· mediate success. Since that time he bas made over 120 ap- pearances on the daytime "Gong Show," in addition to being a panelist on nighttime "Gong." The Unknown Comic's alter ego. Murray Langston, is a sue· cessful performer in his own right. Plans for him include a daily talk show, "Everr. Day," to air in the fall. Appearing with The Unknown Comic will be Willie Tyler and Lester. favorites of the LaffStop. The night club is at 21.22Soutb East :Bristol. Season Finale Set "The Sound of Music" will conclude the 28th Long Beach Civic Light Opera season with a 12-performance run tonight througb Sept. 10 at the Jordan Theater. 6500 Atlantic Ave. Diana Monter plays the lead of Maria and Robert Grummer is Capt. Von Trapp in the Long Beach production . Curtain is 8:30 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, 2 p.m. Sunday. Tickets, information <213 > 432-'1926. (JACK ANDERSON )REVEALS In the DAILY PILOT FOR AREAL TASTE TREAT r:r1. #. ,I G]itfl-c.iO•~~ ~irvorter • GOURMET DINING -MEDITERRANEAN RM. 18700 MAC ARTHUR BLVD. • CHAMPAGNE BRUNCH SUNDAYS 10.J PM • DANCING NIGHTLY -CABARET LOUNGE IRVINE, CALIFORNIA • CAPTAIN'S TABLE COFFE6 SHOP -24 HRS. l()ppo$1te Or11nge CountvAorponl (714) 833-2770 ''YANKEES' A WINNER" . ;J'HAT FUNTAS:TIC STAR OF STAOE & SCREEN 0 Tom Titus 01ilv Pilot "DAMN YANKEES' SUCCEEDS AS Tuescsav tl'lril Suncs.v Tues. "Sped1I" • •11.00 wed., ThU1'1., sun. -Ui*.00 Fri,· tl6.00 Sit.· tl 7 .oo lncludH OlnMr, snow, Tax & A CoffM MARTHA RAYE - NOW PLAYING TU.Sdl)'t tflTU Sund~ Tues., W•d., Thurs., Sun. Eve.· $14.00 Fri.· t16.00, S.t. • $17.00 Sun. Brunch MattnH Adults· tl 1.00 Chllctren • sa.oo Includes Dinner. Show, Ta>c & Coff•• FINE ENTERTAINMENT". K1r1 Wrfl'( Anaheim Bulletfn _____ ..., '~a111n yanlceea'' _ .. -~-~­':';:!~ ........... ~ STAflfl!NO BRIAN AVERY AS JOIE HAf'DV 1 HOTEL WAY, ANAHEIM -<Acrou From Disnevlandl you never know • what you'll want next 11 'l I • ti b fl J> , Jr ) p • I J 1 ! I f' DAILY PILOT I I ALBUMS REVIEW I MISCELLANY pe Other Boslatl Du~ Ot ·Big A I •1111~!!;,~,... Rock GrouP-, an OYemlght Success Story, to Play Anaheim Stadium Sept. 2·a; I Bo&ton. rock'a onn!Pl ••.UO. wlth tbe ~~·~~t:~1:-=.:•:=-.•v~!~~ Foll~up to Hit Alti~m. a Year in the Making, in Coastal Music Stores Today ttlQ the Bll A <AnalMlm 9tedtwrjt) Salurdll)'. Sept. D. . Porbapa even mon hQportant Ulen tbe qulntet'I retW"ft to the road-an lalltal tour laat year met wttll mbed crtUcal NlfmlM -II tbe release, flnally, of tM baftd'I lOQI overduie foUow.qp album. I .1111 lntrodt.dlg our SUNDAY BRUNCH from '1:00 ...... .. Clou1c Qlltche," .. Double Wal/~:· "Egg• Be11ed1cllne," "Crab NewNrg" and our IJ)eC1aJ ··Charles Dicke1U Mired Gnu.·· LClth Compllmentsy Champegne Open IWIJ 10-2 CROWN HOUSE RESTAURANT 32802 COAST HWY. LAGUNA MbuEL (At c.-v-, r.-,1 499-2626 496-5773 South CotUI'• Fine•I Cuiaine IVY HOUSE RESTAURANT 314 FOREST AVE. Open 7 Days ,Highest Quality .l\at1ve Mexican Foods' ALL SPORTS MNTS GIANT 7 FOOT TV SCREEN . • : Mon.-Tu.. 11 jo o.m. to 10 p.m. : Fri. & Sot. 11:30 o.m. to 11 p.m COCKTAILS' : ~indoy ~ p.m~ to 10 p.m. . ' . • 9093 ~ ADAMS, HUNTINGTON BEACH . I • 962-7911 Monday thru Thuraday Speclels (Friday, Saturday. Sunday 'til 6 p.m.) ••tei>t holl<Mys Red Snapper ............... 4.45 Mahl Mahl ................. 4.76 Grilled Sea Basa ............ 4. 75 Fllet of Sole •••.•.•..•....•• 4.95 Top Slrtoln Steak ...•.•••.•. 4.95 Lobster Tall ................ 8.95 Steak I Lobster ............ 7.95 Plus Fresh Fish, Other Seafood and Steaks ,. ••• , •• , 16278 PACIFIC COAST HWY •HUNTINGTON BCH •(213)592·1321 3901 E. COAST HWY • COAOHA DEL MAR• (714) ~0900 "' ' 1t•1 called uDoft•t Looil Baek•• OD Epk Reeordl <n: 3IOIO> and aJleUd be In Oi'anp CoHt mualc outlltl toda1. nuT lft FOa releue In Mareb. lm. the 1lbwD wu delayed Um• and lime ataln, re· portedly beoauae of 1ultarlJt Tom Sebol1' r.•rfectlontam. No doubt a all&bt case of •aopbomote Jinx .. Jltten played some part. But lt '1 nnally here and the folks at Epic can remove the "Wben It's Ready" buttons they've •n weartoa in public the put few monthl. "Don't look Baell" certa1nly wl1l be tbe most widely 'dlscualed and critically acruUnited album of the year. Roundlq out tbe Bolton veaue at Anaheim wut ~ .~ heavy metaJ vetl Black Sab- bath. LA rocken Van Halen and tbe SamJD)' Haaar band. TICKl.TS FOa THE Wolf. JUumlller pro- duction ao on sale at tbe ltadlbm Aue. as, tbe same day u the Electric u,bt Orebel\ra'a Blc A abow wWa Joumey, Kinlftlb and Trlcklter. ELO'a evening performance Will ·reature a hi1bl)'·touted laser U1ht show and invenUve staf Ina from. the same folks who devised Parliament's P-Funk "Motbershlp." lt'a a 60-fool high white fiberclass spaceship that will split open to reveal the band. It should be interesting, the ril cost $5 mllllon. ••• AOP CONCERT NOTES: Guitarist Ted Nugent's Sept. 5 show at the Lone Beach arena sold out in two hours and tickets for an added show didn't last much longer. Carlos Santana ls due at the arena Sept. 22. Bishop and the Robert Stoddard Band <Radius Records> are at the Balearic Center in Costa Mesa tonight ($3). LeOn Redbone toni&ht and Saturday at the Golden Bear in Buntinston. Stars ·Shower F orom Show Scheduled INGLEWOOD -Brisk ticket sales have been reported for the ninth annual "Show of tbe World." Sept. 23 at the Forum, although many seats remain in all ticket-price ranges. Glen Campbell, Flip Wilson. Pat and Debby Boone, Disneyland's Kids of the Kln&dom . Nelson Riddle and his orchestra and others to be announced will be performing in the benefit show for the Permanent Charities Committee of the Entertainment Industries. IN THE BEST·EVER early advance ticket sales for what several reviewers have termed "Southern California's entertainment event of the year" Stanley L. Spero, KMPC vice presi- dent and general manager. said, "I believe lbw ls an indication that people have come to know the quality of this show each year with these artists doing their full routines rather than some 'walk-oA' or token appearance, as well aa appreclatinJ the important charity work that their attendance makes possible." Seats, priced at SlO, S9 and S7, are on sale at the Forum box office. Tlcketron and Mutual ticket agency outlets, and are available by mail from the Forum. PO Box 10, Inglewood 90308. Disco Big Hit AMERICA'S Y~UNG HOPES: The BrlUah new w~ve Invasion ifabbed a lot of be-41.lnes last year. often at the expense of Fresh new Amertcan bands like Cheap Trick and Talldni Heads. A bard-edged wttb a perfect Image -two cuUes and a pair of Bowery Boys -Cheap Trick's third album. "Heaven Tonight" Epic <JE 35312> presents a narrowing musical focus Tunes like "Surrender" sparkle with carefree pop energy and a humorous lyrical out- look that make Cheap Trick so eqaging and up.. lifting. But there isn't a ballad to compare with "Mandocello" <from the first album> and ~me of guitarist Rick Nielsen's power bas been dulled by glouler production. · Still, Cheap Trick is a band in stylistic transition. It's one that owes a debt to the '80s most underrated band. The Move; the remnants of which (Jeff Lynne and Bev Bevan> led to tbe formaUon of ELO. THE DEBT IS REPAYEO nicely with a re- make of The Move's "California Man." A solid. if not overwhelming effort from a band with greater potential. Talking Heads, having shown in stunning live performances that its "art school rock" label is a misnomer, links up with avant garde producer Brian Eno on it's second release . "More Songs About Buildings and Food ... Sire <SRK 6058) . Pert Tina Weymouth ls developlna into one of the most creative baas playen around, 1up- ported ably by drummer Cbria Fraou. Al with the first album. Talkin1 Heads takes a few listens but the rewardl are many. ·~olden .. ~J. ~ ....,, ~ Sl::Jragon . . GENUINE OtlNESE MANDARIN otSHES Specializing In Chinese A La Corte Dishes LUNCH•OINNER DAILY Food To Take OUt 11.30 A.M. to 10 P.M. 20HH.wlM. COITA.MISA 642-7161 • 6ll·HI I Eno's production and keyboard contribu- tions result ln a lusher a nd more evenly balanced feel. But none of the quartet's major assets -punchy melodies. odd lyrics and David Byrne's frenetic vocals -are diminished. -----------------_!!!!~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!!!! 'Champion' Cellist At Bowl Cellist Nathaniel Rosen will be presented in a "Welcome Home" concert at Hollywood Bowl al 8:30 p.m . We<L- nesd ay honoring his triumph at Moscow's In- ternational Tchaikovsky Competition July 4. - : U ti II•• 111111 I . . . . .• ~ ~ t -·--.--.- TH IS WEE~'S SPECIAL Roast Prime Rib of Beef •••••••• s695 Served With Your Choice Of Soup or Salad. Potato or Rice. Fresh Vegetables and home-st~le San Franciscan Bread Offer Good Thro August 24, 1978 JACI KNAPP IS IACI AT THE PIANO IAI Ml&HTL Y 18.17 WESTCLIFF DR. (Between Dover a Irvine) NEWPORT BEACH Closed Sund•r• Call For Our Daily Luncheon Specials Reservations Suggested 645-5222 The Pasadena-born Ros e n , the only American instrumen. lalist to win first prize in the contest since Van Cliburn look the gold medal in 1958, will play three works with the Los Angeles Philharmonic under Michael Tilson Thomas: "Saint-Saens' Concerto No . },"~!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Tchaikovsky's "Rococo Variattom•• and "Pezzo Capriccioso." It wtll be Rosen•s first ap. pearance in Los Angeles since ~victory. THE CELLIST has been the winner of many emnpetitions, including tbe Naumburg Award in 1977. He Is principal cellist of the Pittsburgh Symphony . A disco dance party Is scheduled at 8 p.m. T h e c e 111 st h as today on the outdoor stage of Santa Ana College. performed with the Los AND SOCIETY FOR THE PRESERVATION OF BIG BANOS Those putting on the dance are expecting a Angeles Philharmonic large turnout of participants based on the fact at both the Music Center that a summer disco dance class attracted and Hollywood Bowl. "overflow" attendance. • Tl ckets are at the A disc jockey, organ. mirrored ball and Hollywood Bowl Box Of· floodlightswlllbeusedattbedance.Admlsslon Uce and all Mutua l la $2. No alcbhol ls permitted, according to a Ticket agencies. Credit 11 k card orders m a y be co ege spo esman. ph~ned Jn at < 213 > It is suggested those planning to attend 851·5212. Information bring a jacket. call <213) 87-MUSIC . lroins to San Diego Busing to Shakespeare Irvine Culture Arts Department is sponsor· ing a \bus for an Aug. 26 performance of Shakespeare's "Micbummer Night's Dream" at the new Balboa Park Am· phitheater in 5an Diego. ·The bus wUl lea ve from tbe parkln1 lot of the University Parlt Sboppln1 -Center, Mtcbelaon and Culver drives, Irvine. at 6 p.lb. Coat for the roundtrip and theater ticket is S13. Reservations may be made by mailing a check to City of Irvine, Cultural Arts Depart· ment, P.O. Box 19515. Irvine 9271• or telepbon- ina 754-3600. TWO COMPLETE SHOWS Saturday end Sunday NEW YORK STEAK DINNER Featuring CAESAR SALAD and PEAR SWISS Firs~ you'll enjoy a marvelous soup du jour or crispy tossed green salad Then we proudly serve you a generous portion of succulent Prime Rib, the king of beef, plus a piping hot baked potato With all the trimmings, fresh sour- dough bread and butter. For the finishing touch, it's coffee or tea and a tantalizing dessert All this for only $5.95. MondaJ·SaturdaJ S to 7:00 PM. Sunday 4 to 8:00 PM. ------............. -. .,.,,..Charley BttlWns J ~ I ... ,.,.~, ,~, ............. ,.~--.,,... ...... ,.. .... . .... ...... -~ -- I . I I I 1 · I I ' .. • ... , I INTERMISSION OC Actress ProveS Hit Jean Koba Plays 4 Roles in Long Beach Ynr 1n and year out. Jean Koba baa proved h"rself one ol Lbo Oran1e Cout'1 most talented und versatile actresses. lier perror~ances ln "Aootbtt' Part ol t.bt f'ort'Sl," "IMath ot u Salesman" and "The Lion In Winter" for playbOUMI tn HunUoct.oo Rueb. Laauna Beach and Westmlmter. respecUvely. wlU))e 1001 re· me1Ubered. Wlt.h Mr husband. Alex. who directed her In ••Fori:lt" 11\d many other local pla~s ~•lnnln1 w1th Westmiosler's .. The 8 11 Knife • In 1911. the Koba& bna be.a Instrumental ln helpan1 lo rai.. lbe levtl ol community theater In thll area Their contributions over the past seven ye¥rs are Impressive indeed Their latest venture. acrou the county line nt the Sludlo Tbeater of the Long Beach Com Intermission . Tom Titus munity Playhouse. ls one of their finest - Georee Furth's "Twigs." which features Miss Koba io tour markedly contrasting roles. She is ably supported by seven actors, all but one of whonf are imported from the Orange Coast. Ina ln for an ori1lnally cast actor>. It Is a warm. com ic vicnette as they discover a common bond und romance blooms on the horizon. The second -and by tor the best -or the pluyleta casts Miss Koba as the neurotic wtre or retired Army sergeant <Jim Flynn> whose old buddy <Lou Kosoy> a rrives for Thanksgiving All three deliver superb performances In a Ncene blendina comedy and drama with equal portions of realism THE TEMPO SWITCHES to high farce in the third sequence as Miss Koba and J ack Wlllenbacher play a well-to-do couple trying not to celebrate their 25th w~in1 anolversary. The intervention of his dear brother <Harry Gordon> and some Mack Sennett·type comedy keep this one upbeat all the way. In the finale, Miss Koba appears as the mother ot the other three, terminally ill but still scrappy enou1h to give her husband <Jack Harris) a rough time or it, and holding out long enough to realize her one life's wish. with the aid of a be fuddl ed young priest <Dave Chnndler> . •'Twigs·· is a bountiful evening of theater . and one that will inevitably be repeated when playhouses along the Orange Coast gel wind of this remarkable play. It spoUights Jean Koba al her masterful best . and will continue this weekend and next at the upstairs theater at the Community Playhouse. Call <213> 438-0536 for reservations. • BACKSTAGE -Larry C. Lott. who studied ~ I DAILY PILOT C5 Jean Koba, well known and long- time performer in community theater In Orange County is featured in oomedy by the Long Beach Community Playhouse. I Dvorak Music • • In :Seal ·neacli Dvorak's "American" quintet will be featured in Saturday's Seal Beach F esUva l concert. The event. second of the sum· mer season, is scheduled for 8:30 p.m. a t First U nit e d Met hodist Church.148Tent,hSt. Violist Robert Kuehn wlll join tJt'~ Yuye Quartet In Oef{onnlng the Dvorak piefe.~ wtit· ten while the composer was v aca tioning in Spillville. Iowa. "American .. is a piece mixing American a.nd Czechoslovakian folk music. It Is on the pro· • "TWIGS" IS ntE STOllY of a day in the hfe of lbree middle·aeed sisters and their crotchety mother-all played by Miss Koba In the performing coup of the season. Without a pro· gram one would never believe the same actress was interpreting all four roles, so effective is each characterization. drama al UC Irvine and was a member or Bob Cohen's estimable Irvine Repertory Theater in the Sixties. is now a professional actor and re· cently played leading roles in "Born Yester· day" and "Night or the Iguana" in his home town of Greeley. Colo. · l,agi1na Chamber Music Set gr am with "Lullaby" wrltteq tty George ••• Gershwin. The quartet ------------------~-· will also play Mozart's "Quintet In G·mlnor, K In the opener, she is recently widowed and moving into a small apartment, aided by the owner of a moving company <hus band Alex rm Modern Touch 'The Tempest' at UCL4 Director Lamont Johnson has. given a futuristic s pice to Shakespeare's "The Tern pe~t · · at UCLA's Ralph Freud Playhouse In :\1 acgowan Hall through Sept. 3: The magician Prospero, played by Roscoe Lee Browne, Is portrayed as a contemporary physicist whose spells and manipulations are surrounded by laser-created, multicolored special effects The play. which also stars Susan Batson. John Rubinstein and Thomas A. Stewart, is staged Thursdays through Saturdays at 8:30 p.m and Sundays at 2 and 8 p.m. The production ls the inaugural for the first season of the UCLA Resident Theater Company. Tickets are S9.50 general and S3 tor students. l n· formation <213> 825-2953 . , ····· ...... . . . ~ ............ . ~ .~· • • CLong BeacJi • ·:. e '1, • CT • •It Q •• .! .: ~~V1C -1-11g~Lt 'Perll •• : :: PRESENTS: So' RJNj) :: ... ~ .. •• 'JJIJ'J •• ·::01~111ofcAuG 1s-:: •• ~llUP~ SEPT 10 •• ee LIVE ON STAGE ee •• •• : ee FOUR GREAT WEEKENDS.... ee ••Ticket Office: •• ;.. . . . •• 518 E. Fourth St. Long Beach•• ••• •• ! ••Tickets: $2.00-$7.60 •• . ee performanceut JORDArJ THEATRE ee •• 6600 Atlantic Ave. Long Beach • • : ee FRI. & SAT. EVES at 8:30 p.m. :: • •• ~~MAT.at2:00p.m. •• •• ~liiiil •• •;e •OR ~ONE: 432-7926 e •e ... .. . . . .. . . .. .... . •••••••••••• DAILY PILOT The Laguna Beach Chambe"): Music Society will begin its 19th season Nov. 6 with the Paillard Chamber Orchestra of France. Other chamber groups scheduled for the new season include t h e Ba rtok Quartet fro m Hungary. the Tel Aviv String Quartet. the Verdehr Quartet and the Trio Milano from Italy. Season tickets are S26 for members and S16 for stud ents. They a r e available by phoning the s ociety's o ffice <1l 499·3Hl6 or 545-7535. 516." Other festival concerts are slated Aug. 26, and Sept. 2 and 9. Tracy We lls a nd "Thal Big Band" will make its second or four s ummer a ppear ances Saturday at the Catalina Casino a t Av a lon . Catalina Island. Music from the big band era will be played for danc· ing from 9 p.m. to 1 a .m. A d a nce "special" boat will leave San Pedro at 7 p.m. and re· turn at 1 :30 a .m . Transportation cost is $10. Dance tickets are $7 .50 each. Reservations ROSCOE LEE BROWNE IS PROSPERO All conce rts will be h e ld in the Laguna Beach High Schoo l auditorium. 625 Park Ave . 527-7111. ' "JAUNTY FUN" . -Alcti.rd 9cNckel. T11M1Mga1.lne "What we have here is a total lack of respect for the law!" .. "S••ll•t aad tll1 Bandit" 11 fer 1nrrMdJ ••• 11 crazr 1b11t -1rt R1r11ld1, cratr allllt c1r1, · crazr 111111 car cll1111, crazr 1ll11t Cl r1dl11 ... . ' ,,_ I ) ·.,.., -·~ .. ·-... am.~~l cm.w ;;?.Jo I ....... ~ H • ._:.. i. ')r' ,, 1•. --.. '" .,.IAYIM CAM WAIT"' IN• ....,......, .. "'"...._ .. ,..,,,_ .. ,,.-.. •n..- ITM WAllCNt ..... MfltlAINC*"'CNt .... ...,. ........... "°' LUD a CO&O ""• ft.YI • (t')NIMYfllDAYlllt -~·~., ... ..... ..._ ..... Of .......... ..... WI-I~'- . I ' ti b fl ~ J ) J f \ '"•· ~-11. 1111 MOVIES \1 'Hooper' 'SJambang New Film Gets ~ Super Sendoff MAll'S ...... ,....,.. 1 Thriller W amer Bros. Pictures launched what is r e- garded as the biaaest and most. comprehensive promotional and merchandisin& effort ever a.c· corded a motion plclure when 500 business leaders UMmbled lbia week at the New York Hilton Hotel for a monument.al marketin& sym · posh.im on ·'Superman." The rum is scheduled to open Dec, 15 ln theatres across the United States and Canada. SO. COAST PW• c.llMtu M• lrlslll *"" "'HOT LIA» & COLD ,..,.. 1~111 .. lltat "llllAl'f AtlDA r al ..... t' I "Hoop,r" ia • 1l11 mban1 loUowup to lut )'Hr'a aurprlae hit ··smoateoy and the Bandlt." Tbll Ume Burt ~ II the world'• putcst ll\Ult.man, and dlrector Hal N..e,.m knowlftl ty leads b1.m and b1s braWQJ c:oborta &brOU&b • autc nrtoo of rant.astJe stunts. ,., MUM'S "HEAVEN SO. C~~ULW CAN WAIT~· (PG) ,· N eedbam. one or Uae belt atu:Dlmm alln. •ftoualJ bowl the terrltor1, but be •a also skllUul at portra1lnt tbe camaraderie of tbat fearless breed. ·It '.a aJl fairly mindless, but totally ~. Reyoolda '8 supported Dlce1y by Sally fleld,, Brian keltb and Jan·MlcbaeJ VlncenL Rated PG "NUI. PLAY" <°"'*4NK Ille l<QDt KrewMd ~ ..... Hlk"'9U .... .., ... ...C<Mdil _t .. tNtlfN , .. ,.. .. _......, ~ -tlap6ticll, ..._.I cMrecwr., • modlcllfl'\ of-•· Most Of all,-· It Goldie..._, wllO clellyers • lllrllltantly ..uilMd pwtor,,._ es tN bloflde '"~· CMvy Oll9 ,..... °" -"' Ills TV m..,. ...... ~ ... 1111 ...... M I IMdll\e mM -Pf'eml• cethl ............. -.., Hltdlmtll -........ '" '"111vW 5*rNll," --'"" -..., dll'Kteel as well. He --tlow to U. Ille actlOfl ...... Rat.cl PG, ~y e.c.. of , ......... UC .,.~~.--.altmlM WMO'LL ftW TMa llMM 11 en ....U--_.__, ..._., f/I llOw .. Vie--CM r..-~ ti-. MkllMI ........,, • STUNnlAN MUST DEctDE BETWEEN LOVE, C&REEA Sally F1eld Co-atara With Burt Reynolda In "Hooper" Star Ages Fast Gossett in New TV Series :::-~ ::::'U:..-:::.. '::°...::: By JERRY BUCK 11ts wtte. ~ w-..,,. • ,__ -.w LOS ANGELES <AP) -His best friends walk past wit.bout ~H~~....., __.. • MllltUC..,. recognizing laim. On the stage he has to be pointed out to visitors -. _, w _,,••,.,.,,., ... it.....-., searchingvalnlyforhim. Mot1 ... u .. -,,.,., ...... -Nletna, .. .,.. He is Louis Gossett Jr., and his familiar bald pate known to :i-ei:=:i._. •• _.,.._ .. ., viewers of "Roots" and "The Deep" ls hidden beneath a hairpiece. ,,,:.::11~~ ~ .!;t~i!v-:'':,,J~: Not onlY that. He's wearlng a swallowtaU coat, a starched _...,,.. ... IC'ft,,_,.,....,.~ shirt. high collar and white gloves for bis role as Mercer. the "....,"·"c:.-1Mrwot1..,....,""1 ..... • houseman, in the NBC miniseries "Backstairs at the White _"_,~~otoruaus.. House .. .,, "=.:=. =~~:=~1:=':; ··1 've got to go though 51 years of changes and hairpieces and -IWfflllllQ po11tt. ui.r11 minded ¥1.-n may makeup," said Gossett. He ls :r7 when the drama begins and 88 tcllff •' u. t ... "' • ~ IMCll"I ,..., w • when it ends in 1961 *-•te 00W4no1-.11Ut the IKtlClll It t• -<lewr ._.to ~thoM In-''" of_ !al=~.,..,,.'"'" .. '°"' 1,, wasNlllllO". ACTUALLY. HE IS 88 when It begins. because he and Leslie ....... ,.,,,.,111'u1ory1.,.tetc11ec1• Uggams. who plays White House maid Lillian Rogers Parks, in- wrn ... c11rector Pt1er "'-•u ..,._,1c1 •tDrv troduce the series as another president, John F. Kennedv, prepares to ten ... wllo <Ml Clo'-lllle pen-nca frol'll " hell<opt..-. es ..,..1 "KtorL TN cm: .,_ move into the executive mansion. erou,,, 8nnda Vac<¥o, sam wa1en1C111, O.J. The eight-hour miniseries, now being filmed by Ed Friendly SI-tMI "'*"-. K-llla<ll !Incl Telly sna1a1rna11ri..,'-'!~R•i.oPG. Productions, is based on Mrs. Parks' book recalling the preslden· ''TMEaUOOYMOU.YST01tY"ltt11e-1te tial families during the 51 years when her mother, Maggie Rogers. 1111 °' the -tMtoUI, • ...,i1e, percept!¥• and then she, were White House maids . .,...,..., t11 the tK11 ·n· roo .,._, wtiow-No date bas been set for al.Jina . ... ~ 9f"'9CI In. ,,,. ~ """' ft The IUipl..., , .. ...,. ~ Glln.t" 11 uw1111er -"I took the role becapse of the chance to age." Gossett said ~ -hyped; n s1mp1, t•ll• -• durin~a lunch break in his tiny dressing room trailer parked out· \.UOl)O(ll, TeU$, boy rnaN19M lo as<• the 'd ll 11ettt1hot•-mw11<~wt1Nut'°""'"'t s1 e t e stage. "No one wl know who I am in the beginning. ""=-',....,.•dlndlOfl.....,. tM story iNVlft9 They'll have to put a sign on me with my name on it. __. HollY'I nwak Is~ w1111 .. ciwn-. __., .. utv -~\:'n .... n11oc.'f!M<k1. "THE ROLE APPEALED to me. I'll do anvthinO' I can to Tflle tllm'I ton:a IS Garf ..,_.,, e '9--< Q -ut11auw1 .. IM!Oflllfactor...imuak 1M,Doe keep from being typecast. Even a small part if it offers something Stf'DU\I ...., 01atta Mat'll" Sm1111 .,. klNI • different. I bad my choice of playing Mays. the doorman. or oti.r ~ .... Cl'k-Ratecl PG, """" u M h d b k.. .. Oflty •..,..........,...to wrtr QUAt11iut1on ... ~uetter. ays as a eat scene,"'"' Mer~er gets to age." tam11r111"" Robert Hooks, a former colleague of Gossett's from the Negro "1NTaa..anou1. vnv..,.. is•~. not Ensemble Theatre, plays Mays. : ~~·,:., .. ~!";'.:W:V: ~!~'!!:'~t': Gossett. 44, also aged from 45 to 70 in bis Emmy-winning role 91'1 ..... beats ..... OdCtt lo""'" IN 1119 1'orW or Fiddler in ABC's "Roots.·: race.~ lt-eslOW4ynllw 't'OU"'i Ta'f\Or,llul "I Started growing bald at 18 and it was difficult for me lO get ~ l>as Ille -aw ,,etaftC.e, ancJ ~ rlclft ama11t>e'"""''· cast being.young and having a recedine ~airline. So I bad to play a ProckKK-4lrector·-tt .... ,.,.,, '°"'" .... lot of cranes. Then my face caught up with me." Gossett said. 111•'1'1 ~ enentklfl for tlllt Mfltlmflltal "'°"" !ft of .,_. Hit pec:e II IOO lelwr••Y •l ·-· IMlt -•ot•• e1tt<t is l!Nf't•armlne. • ~i«<N -IT WAS FOR THE movie .. River Niger" that he shaved bis "C:;!~~'::'~.::::,111:;., bead. He bas ~ept it shaved since then. ~··"• AnV*IY "'-"'" .. , ... 0trlftlll< "That was the first time my friends didn't recognize me," be =--~~-~,::r:•:,.':.wNtc:oulcJ said. "l fiaured maybe the producers didn't know me-either. I re- .. .,. .. ,caet *" .g .. 11 • "'*''-w introduced myself to the pr~ucers and that's when I began to get Htr9me1, 111111 _,,, Cllftretlouf ... ,..... ot significant ,roles." ;:!:~.~ :.';: ';-',,:Z ~~;: Gossett had starred on Broadway. but ln Hollywood be bad bis vor11 c111e IOCMYAltll ,."'" share of guest st..arring roles on such TV series as "The Mod The mow1e M11CM1., <em111net • tNfltY 11G-Squad," "The Parlrldge Famlly," "Bonanza•• "Police Story'' and =~::::..:;-,::=·= "Tbe Rockford Files." In the latter. be and isaac Hayes played a The division allied wilh the film company in the megamillion-dollar campal1n lo sell "Superman" through every medium in every market ln the United States include Warner Books. Warner Bros. Records. DC Comics. Licenaina Corp. of America and Atari. THE KICKOFF presentation and luncheon. designed to inform and coordinate all the participants in the "Superman" marketing pro· gram. brought together licensees. record dis· tributors. book and magazine wholesalers. de· partment and chain store buyers. merchandise managers and retailers. More than 100 licensees. representing almost 1.000 products raneing from watches to wallpaper. wereonband. HIGHLIGHTS or the campaign include a mu1umuuon-<10uar nat1onw1Qe aaverttsmg bar· rage. covering TV. radio and newspapers in every major market . the merchandising of en- tire lines of ·'Superman" -inspired goods as part of nallonal tle-lns with department stores and retail outlets. and the publication by Warner Books of eight "Superman" titles to be Issued in conjunction with the release or the film. Also-the release by Warner Bros. Records of tbe fllm's soundtrack. featuring the John Williams score. as a major album and a single prior to the film's release. and backed by a na· tlonal TV aod radio promotion to generate ex· tensive crossover plugs for the rum and the Warner Books tle-ln. Marrieds Star Rob Reiner and Penny Maraball will star in a two-hour telefeature for ABC. "Love me and I'll Be Your Best Friend." which will be pro· duced by Reiner/Mishkin Productions in as· sociatlao wtth Columbia Pictures TV. AcCOl"dina to Larry White, executive vice president in Charge of worldwide production for CPT. the script was written by Reiner and Pb.ii Mishkin, both of whom will serve as executive producers. Norman Powell will be the producer and Jim Burrows ls signed u director. 11111 Wiii Y1111•1n n was llFI II 11 llCI Tl Ill MIVIES PETEISUlEU c · '-v.__ . s.~ HeU£&T LOM • Rl1lelT IEtfi& .• 111itli I DYAN (ANNON: Mnic HellY MMQMI • f.cecvtivc Prt4..ccr TOllY ADAMS $Cfttf\ ria, i., flMK IUR YWAW T~~ IPGJ Mlt9r1Jltl CIOSr ! 12:45-2:3M:30-e:21 Ml-lln I!!!>~~ l :Z0.10:15 IAH'S SO. COAST PWA au,::;- ....... a TOAO 8eddletllctc 511-5'80 FOUNTAIN VMJ.Ef Edamda 131-1500 COSTA llESA 8o. COMt Plaza 541-2711 MAI IBM C8f'llurw 21 772.-z MAHDI II l7MllO OMNQI UACllyC....DWttt Or.-Mll137.0S.O, IAD._PlmaN131 wtlJWTl!R Cllw w.t 131-7581 • ~ _. • _... ot"""" roa .,,. ro1111N1 pait of black detectives ln what was hoped would be a splnoff ot~=~le'fCI MvlrllJI vunue tllt ._ series. rt did not sell. Gossett was also a regular on the ABC series --------------------' K....,......,., carlcetw9.--..111111111•wtlf>I "The Rebels.'' • -•trr~FnM ,_,....._,.,.,_.. After "Ba'catairs at the White House," Gossett makes bis film [ L M. BOYD ) f =.~:C=:1U:.".:.::0..~0:1:,.:,;a: directing debut with "Stomping at the Savoy." It tells the story or -~ .,. ll'411> ...., ~ '°" u. oan ot "" four youna girls from the South who come to New York in l?J9. INFORMS In the eltMtltlWMllO. d ~~~==-=~~~~--~~--------------~----------------~~--~--~------~--~---~~~~~~ ~RmAL 8TUICM09 TOUR ..... ~ QlMll6lf't OPEii IGllMl-WT TOUll 1111 N . r . . ..... c1nEDOmE6SCAEEn -634 25~3 [0f'l'1PLEX C1'apm•n Av• & S."U Ana ..... w.,, MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY "SGT. PEPPER'S LONELY HEARTS CLUB BAND" (PG) "SMOKEY AND THE BANDIT" (PG) "THE BUDDY HOLLY STORY" "THE SWARM" CPG) '"{HE CHEAP DETECTIVE" rPG) ''MORDER BY DEATH" ''HEAVE;N CAN WAIT" (PG) t'\--.., .. ,...,,... ~ ......... . "lMllltlll llA •lllB! Ell_ IN 111 lllllSE If allEllYI fll,_ --'Im IN PlllllJ 11 UIBI IS Ml Vlllll." ' ---«IS Wl.D Am CUZT ••• l.YfD .. REml LllE Al All- FIEMIM Pl.Elm .. ArMlf flllllum.ELEFTMGFTI I II IUT WHO, • TIE Em, CAl'T llESllT •1111111 •AU. ...... ". I ----"A MITOF A~ •OFlllE mur--..n Of AU. r.. -WLI, tUlnC, WII'f I I Yll'U .._TU \'IU Clll" -•" ....... ........... ~--111 · • •• ,,._ , • ._..._.ti••" I .... .. l@llO •• -.,. ~· ·•r ·, I I t b fl p ' ~ I • I J I ! I MUSIC REVIEW Friday. Auguat18. t978 fte Byrds Keeall '60s Nostalgia Mixed With Now Music in Reunion of Sorts 81 ILAYM.NO EST&AOA °' ...... "' ........ Roaer McOulnn Gtne Clark and Chr11\ Hlllauan'1 ahows ha!.t Wt-t"kf'nd at HW>tintton 8eacb'a Golden 8t'n are about as close aa tht· old 8~rd'1 band IDQ)' tver 1et lo 1 reunlor •. The onty e~t lbt may be cl01cr will b1· wbtin tM trio phis 11 JOasable appearance by 1·x Byrd Duvld Croeby f(Ct to1et.her tn the studm later lb.ls y ar. THE BYllDS. PROBABLY the most In nuentlal American •nd ol t.bt 1960's alon1 with Buffalo ~eld. can never reform lnlo thl· powerbouSe ~Y Oii:~ were. There is JUSl too much space betweeQ lb• '80s and '108 What fans can Cl>nllnue to count on as some tlne new country·ftlk rock tunH from thre~ talented IOlll writers and muslctans Their shows at the Bear were warmly re- ceived Each of t.btir six performances was a sellouL Al 1n the past, McGulnn's excepUonal 12· 6trln1 electric Cullar and the group's solid three-patt harmonies brought the sound or the ByTda lo the slate qnce again You m•Y not rllmember all the titles bul try to recall ~ lunes or "Chimes of Freedom." "Feel A' Whole Let Better." "Mr. Tambourint> Man.'' "Eight Mii~ Hl&b .'' "Turn. Turn. Turn" and "You Ain't Golf\' Nowhere." The Byrds are commonly remembered as playing lbe acoustic music or Bob Dylan and bringina il lo a lar.er audience. It was soon after thdr aucc: lhat Dylun also electrified his i;on1• J11llman. who played ban and some ~uatur und mitndoltn ul the Dear. said backstage h1• wished the trlo would Just play thelr posl· liyrda era ton1s. Ile has play~ m Steve Still's Manassass b.ind ~md lht' ft'lytne Burrito Brothers and ap· pears to~ the most independent of the current trio AU three have made solo attempts on stage but have not excelled an their respective album project.a. · Accordina to Hillman. the upcoming album' ~1th McGulnn und Clark wtll have all new malertl.d "with a heavier backbeal -more rock 'n' roll" but maintain the smooth harmonies of lhe old Byrds. McGUINN 8A1D THE trio is usinc much or the new material in their act now. The band re· cently returned from a six-week Australian lour and plans an East Coast trip lo promote the album slated tor release ear~ next year. M cGulnn performed his licks and sana his tunes, including "Chestnut Mare," with as much energy as ever. But the band leader wanted lo talk about new songs such as "Don't Write Me orr• and ··seasQns Song" as well as Clark's "Release Me Girl" and "Feclin' Higher." McOulnn spoke candidly about lhe name or the next album which will not be "1be Byrds." "David Crosby and l haw a bandsbake agreement not to ust! the B)'Ma l\ame because It became so cllluted when lbe orlclnal band fragmented and 1 formed new bands called Tbe Byrd1," McGuinn said. But lo many. McGuinn. Clark and Hillman will always be the essence of that •eo•s band with lhelr Cunpy "cranny·• gluaes and ells· tinctlve electric folk-country S<Mmd. ALSO PERFORMI NG AT the Bear last weekend wu rlsing talent Caroline Peyton whose short set was not enoulb lo display her fine vocals and crisp 1uitar work. A de ha lady from Ml.ssl.sslppi wv. Mias Peyton blends blues. country and folk sounds with her classically lralned voice. Several of her songs from a single album that sltnply bears her name have been beard on local airwaves. Berle Gets Role LOS ANGELES -Millon Berle will make a special appearance in "The Muppet Movie," the ITC feature now filming in Los Angeles. Berle will play a used car salesman who wheels and deals with The Muppets on their cross-country journey lo Hollywood. Jim Henson's Muppets are making their theatrical film debut ln the musical comedy. NOW THE FORCE ISAT A THEATRE NEAR '40U r C1WlHO Orange 634·2553 Oa11y1:30·3:45 .e·oo •8:15°10 IHl6DI AU:_'Ml":'H >.:.;c·[rJr.p[k EA117H 'h!N.> llr !"ll/E fill.LY t'l/E'..1 !I NOW PLAYING -IOIDTS'llQWOOD 1.:•cL _'"l :-,. c_ ::.J I 1 I.Ill tLl __ I EDWUOI CllEMA fOUllTAll YllUY DRIYE·IN Costa Mesa 546·3102 Fountain Valley 962·2481 Delly i :~:SH:oo •:u . IO:IS A BURT R NOill~·lAWHf N~l GORDON IW~uction ~lDS ~ lllhtl! JAN· ICHAR ~RClfSAUtRfllf BR~M KBlH ·ROBmTmtN hlCltm Prm lAWI ~( GORDON· Sto~ ~, WAU GRUN l WAlllR S. HmNDON Scm1,1" ~ lHOM RICKMAN IQ~ Bl~ KIBBY . fro~ICI~ ~, HANK MOONJ(AN -~-= Dirlcfl~~llALNHOHAM ~-C• .=.-so 1~~""1~=-'l!.·d * PUTr CfTY aNTEI Ororae 634-9282 HUH11NOTON CINlMA AN.AHEM DIM.fN Ardwim 819-9650 He..rntnatoll 8toch 848-0388 UA MOVIES ' ereo Mal 99().4022 llOOIHUllT Anaheln'I m-<>446 EDWARDS CINEMA CENRR ••FOX FUlerton 5f15..4741 Costa Me.a 919-4141 ORANGE MAU Orange 637-0340 *70MM DOUJY •*36MM DOLBY so.Y. NO ,ASSIS MX8'l8> flCi. MS INQ•:(il8811' MATINEES N MOST 1lEATRES o«ex 1MfRll cmc:l'Omi flCi. 1HOWrW Ot au UUlll. "ALllOST SURE TO BE THE MOST PGPUUR EmRTAlllEIT OF THE SUllER." ,,.,.Aft .. , .... ~""""~ ~aiWMfiE - .~ ~~-~ mmA-~ Jolln Travolla OUula Nnlton-John isthewonl DAILY PILOT C7 .· • l . --~~-_....~~--·-------~----- I Q DAILY PILOT Television TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTING§ I h'.11 l \ \ E:VBillO .. ,, "'::cv<»m At04ttw•..-..io ......... Ill••• ..... ......... """" ....... u..~ MlftMeOta Y1t11-.a 11 ........ ~ .WLQ.WU~ .,_ ..... Of n.o.na..e o.tfl"W.end~ .. CNI '° N90lllt a CW-. Wll ...... b1~ Cftmlnlf~. ewovm .... ·~ ~­ ( tt'9) 011on W11te1 ....,.. COftlfl A ~ men W.da Cl"M' ~ blit~tOlle•­ PIC* l)UbllJMr ti iv... "° "*'I • ITNET9 OI MN AWQICO A dlrMged lllller ._ QUIMd •., ~ Foroe oni. cer bflnga Mltla lftd s ..... 10 the Ail Foree a-10 lnv.tlgat& • ow..u.sv 1t'elglatg Pro'fJlene Hugh 0 '8'1111 on WOttclnQ •llh Amerlc:1'1 youth. maAclng hwO p1art11 from one. Pr1v11a Pena1on Pllne; 8elll Abn;g end tlKMr Mety F'raderictt dl-.cu11 the Woman'• Mowmant (R) Lisa Hartman as Tabitha has a close encounter with a Russian weight lifter c Peter Palmer> tonight al 8 : 45 on ID 8P£CIAl "North Ster. M11k 01 SullefO" The . lest '-04G lig1Ka In con1arnpor1ry Ill" .. profiled. woth • IOOll al the lanslons. contradic· tions and s1ruooi.. behind hlS herculean ~ ICUIP· llKM (I) C8SNEWS a.'30. MICHAE1. JACk80N M•gartt1 PortlllO. director gan«.i ol MaKleo depalt· rnent of radio. laleoMk>n end dnemltology present• aildM and diteuases the new "Tre1su11s 01 MuJco.'' l _A ~- I TOTa.L THE TRUTH 7:00 C8S NEWS H8CNEW8 UARSCUJ8 G 80WUNGFOA DOU.AAS ABC. Channel 7. • 9IOOIWHY ··~ Earl\art .• • MACNEll. I L!HM1' ~ Ci> 8HCIAL "The Unwanted" AIWIJ. emplc)yer9 end lmmlgre- uon offic:llN •e inter· vieWed on tha problem of 11teg11 immigration 11 it etfac:ts MaJtlean ..... U S cllizena end reildanta ofCllitomll (I) JOKEWI WILD 7~1 TATTLETALES WllO IOHOOOM "Explortrig The lllnoe•• An adventure 1c:t011 the vut Ueno& (plalna) of V- il lo reach the Jungtaa al the baM or the Al'dal Moun11lna wllara lendlodled lreeh w111r pof'l)Olae, Vilt colonl1I of lantesl><: birds. c:epyblrJ. d-. and c:11man lbound Claa1111n £bii119• 9 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles e KTLA (Ind) Los Angeles 8 KABC-TV (ASC) Los Angeles Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Diego G KHJ-TV (Ind.) Los Angeles 0 KCST (ABC) San Otego I KTTV (Ind.) Los Angeles KCOP·lV (Ind.) Los Angeles t!D KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles C9 KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach I N&WLYWEOOAM! JOKER'S WllD BIOGRAPHY "John Barrymore" SI 21 TONIGHT HOst· Clel1 Rol>er1a (I) THE MUPPETS Gue9t. Lou Rawls 1:00 G (I) WONDEJI WOMAN klt1<n1110n91 puce talka ate. jaOplfdized when • young c:111rvoyent baglna manlpulallng the mind• of the diplomats~-(R) D BLACK SHEEP 80UADRON "Sheep In The Urnelighl" The Black S'-P lta pro- clllmed hetos etter unwlt· t•rigly llYlflQ Am Lldy E!Mnor ROOllYtlt'a llr· plane from ll*"Y fire. (R) D MOVIE • • • 1.1\ "01ughtera c8uregaoua" ( 1939) The Lane S111era. John Garflald. Thnle alalera try • to ~ their parent•' probleme wtlile wonting ou1 tnaw awn romancea (2 hrs.) D MOVIE * * * "Doctor Al Se1" (1956) Dirk Bogarde, Bri- gitte 81rdot. A young d0c:1or, working on a c:ergo boat 10 1\/0ld • forced marr\aga. gets lnYOtved wttti a belullful French g1r1. (2 hr&.) «!)MOVIE **'J\ "Wa Joenad The Navy" (1ffl') l(enneth Me>re. UOyd Nol1n. A"4W belftg 8'lllfllad "°"' aWMn to atatlOn, I young MYll ofllW lll4lldia up II I hero. (!_IW.) •• WAIUftOTON wmc•..vww '*I rw:&.a.W.:MET --"Ouanohlno Profit•" ~: ....,,. 0. Fruz.a. no. v•ce prHldant - r .... rc:n, Oppanhaim11 Co .. Inc. 1:4'. TAlfTHA "Tablth1'1 Weighty Problem" T1bllha 11 def9nlelIH agllf\11 an ll'nOl'OUI wa!gtltlmar wt.-. .,,. loeJI .. wttcher•lt ~!R) l:OO ;'iK' IHCMDl8U! Dfttd ....... '""'*'10n· &tee I ecilnllat IO gain ~ to gamm• r1y ~-IRI G IDT°' M>CtCFCAO "The No-Cut Oontrect" A am1ll-tlma qu1rtarbac:k tRob Reiner) lmpllc:ates Aoc*ford In a bldmlil acaiema IOYOMno both mob1tars and fed1r1I 111.(R) MERV GAIFF1N MASIW1££E THEATM "Poklwk II" Cltollna rac:u· pera111 In London: ~ becolMI 111 etl- lil!._bia widow. (f>lft 11 of 131 m TAXC'11'8AHOTAX AEfORM "The Quest for Equity" 9 M01IE * • "The St,....a Of San Francisco" ( 1g121 Kerl Milden. Mldllal Oouglu. A young l1wyer la framed tor the murder of • Oit1 whoM body w.. found tloltlng In Sin Frtnc:ilco Bly. (2tn.) t:15 8 OPERATION PeTT100AT • "The ln1t1nt Enalgn" ~ Stew .. Ulldetgoes a r1dlc:1I peraonallty c:Mngt under u. 1nnuenoa of madtcellon. (RI t:'5 D HOLLYWOOD 8QUAAE8 10:00 9 Cl) °WINN£R TAKE ALL A pollc1 ll1uten1nt (Mlc:hlal Murpfly'j and In 1naurence lnvaatlgtor (Jolnnl Pettit) 1e11n up 10 flnd 1 fot1Vne In stolen amerlld9. (R) a QUINCY "A Ol»stlon Of Time" QUlncy confllct• with • aKclc lawyer and 1 phony doc:10f In hie lnv9atlg1tlon of a hMfth ape patron a dea1h.(R) ea NEWS ti) FOCUS OH BRfTAIN "The Ullter Connection" TUBE TOPPERS K'ITV m 6:00 -"Citizen K~." Orson WeITes wrote, directed and starred in this 1941 classic about a powerful newspaper publisher with Joseph Cotten and Ruth Warwick. CBS 8 10:00 -"Winner Take All." The premiere of a new mystery/adven- ture series pilot with Michael Murphy and Joanna Pettet as a cop and a freelance insurance investigator. KHJ B 11 :00 -"Love Me Tender." Elvis Presley's first movie, circa 1956. is set in the Civil War era with Richard Egan and Debra Paget. fD GREAT PERFORMANCa The Bertin Pl'tlth¥monic, conducted by Har1>art YOn Karajan. perform Brlhml' Symphony No. • and Wagner'• "Overture To Tllf\fthauMr .. GD MOYIE •• "8ec:tet Agent" ( t936) Pater Lorre, Madeleine Carroll. In order to klH 1 apy. • writer Ind • 19male egent poM IS huaband end wife. ( 1 hr .. 20 min I 10:161 THEOONG SHOW 10:30 8) NEWS 10:46 N£W8 11:00 tJ D (I) Im NEWS 8 LOVE. AMERICAN STYLE "love And The Woman 11' White" Two bachelors meet a beautllul woman wtllle VIClllonl"ij. "l0\'8 And The Burgllt JOke" Zelda la not bothered In the least by 1 burglar. D MOVIE **'_. "love Me Tender" 11g56l El'M Pr-'8y. Rlch- •rd Egan. A pair or bf'oth- ers from the South light on oppo9l1a aldM o1 Iha Clvlt War. (2 hra.) G» THE 000 COUPLE Felbc oat• Olclr In troubll with the lnl...nal R8Ylnue SeMc:e ...nan he'a Cllled 1n on a minor rnetter. ., FEANWOOO 2HIOHT Guasta: bOdy language expert April Mc:T-. c:on- aun-~Lou Motten. organic food freak SUSlll Cloud. end Barth Gimble Sr. and his dog LCK.>le. fJl) DICK CAVETT Guest: archtlec:l Philip Johnson. (RI 11:20 '1i) MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT 11:30 fJ (I) C8S LA m MOVIE * * "Mec:ho Celtlllan" ( 1970) D1vid Janaaea.. Jean Seberg. An escaped convict Melca ~ on the man raeponatbia tor his lmprfaonment. (RI 0 TONIGHT Host: Johnny C1r1on GclMt: Mwy Lou Toto. e TWIUOHT ZONE 'The Moneters Are Due On MIC)la Street" Strenge oec:unancee In • amall tow" 111d people to belleva the'/ are bemg lnvlded 0 ~ IAAETTA "PhOtOQtll)hy By John Doe" Barltla'1 1nves11ge • lion 011 potlcemln'a death lead• him to en unu-1 a1111nca ~ a mot>- star end 1 judge. (RI CD HOGAN'S H£ROES Hogan pllns to decoy Ger- men bpmber ftlghta -v rromlondon II> GETSMART "Kiili Ot Dellh" Mex ~ to the r8JQU8 or 1 m1dc:1p heira11 who staged her own kldoep. ping. flt CAPTIONED WORLD NEWS TONIGHT t.CRNINO . 12:00 8 TWIUOHT ZOfe Wa11thy P1ul R1dln 1rr1ngea an ll'trlc1te rewnga ror lhOJa he think• have wronged l'lim 11'1 hla Ille. CD HOT CfTY 018CO The hOttest nemes 111 ttll world ot disco w1n be guesll"ij. 11ng1ng the leta.t dlecO hit• Whtie \ha Hot City Dencers rnOV9 amid • maze of pullltlno ...., beama. ftaahlng str<>bal. miffora end epeclal attecla, Q) HONEYMOONEM Ralph I rial to rlfllC)ld hie Chllfactar for Aiiee's-Mice, only to have her Ilk him to return to his old Nit. · 12:30 8 MOVIE * * "Mlldilon Avenue''- (19621 Dana Andrda. Eleanor P1rker. An unex· pecteo tum ol events reY9111 ..... , • lllghly· raapaclld public flout• POMI I dMdty tlntt to the nation < 1 tw ~ 55 • I • MOYll • • ••TrlUl'lll" 11"31 JOhn C:O... L~ Bart. A~ gift~ "*'""Y .. ""1lld .,,., wftnaJllnO ... ... ... murdef. (2 .... , 1HJ. MOVll * •"' "Tribea" (1970) Dar· ren McGaYln. ~ VlnCJnt. 0 MOYll • • "Or1veyarj1 Of Honcf"' (19711 Bii Clnln. 1:00 D MC>MOHT 8"CIAl. Ho9t: Frlntlle Vllll GuMta: Allant• Rhyttlm ~. Wiiier Egen. A Tl11a Of Honey. Nick Glider. I 111ute to Jim Crooe. • film ettp of OIMI ......,.on.John Ind John Travott. from ··o,__ .. D MAYEAICK "The OIYll'a Naclc.laca" (Part JI I ICAP FICfOftf 1:80 TAU<MOUT WITH TAUMAN JACQ.118 "Mlri1U4"1 And The P•• i ~·· HIOHHOPE8 LOVE. AMEllCAH STYLE "love And The Bowllng 8141'" A bowling aodlc:1 p!'Omiaea to glYe up tile 2:008'MoVIE • • "Clll Ma Genlu." IJHll Tony Hancock. 0-ge Sanders. G) MOVIE • • "The Giant (;qw" 11o.sn Jeff Morrow. M•• Cordly. 4 (I) LOVE. AMENCAN ' STY~, "LOVI And The T'V Weekend'· A mtdd11 l;ed mll\ ptana to IOW wild OllS. ~,NEWS 1:215 HEWS 2:80 :aEDWAADS • • "Eat End Chin!'' 11934) George Ritt. Jeln P1tk.,. 8D OETSMART · · Puuyceta Galore.. Mu ll'CS " .,. c:euon• 1nc1 ra1dlad tor shipm1nt behind tha l«>n Cur111n. 3:00 •• NlW8 3:ao MOVIE • • • •;, "The eun1.g111er And The Lady·' (tt50) Robert Stack. Giibert Rollnd 3:388 MOVIE • •• • "My FIVOrita Wile" 119..01 C1rY Gren1. lr- Oun(WI. 3:a&I NEWS 4.:00 MOYIE • • "Aradn For. H.r~· (1059) Steve lkodie. Torn Hubblfo. • "90YIS **** "The DMd HeartM (1"4) Nennd91• Knox. Theodore ..... ..,\II Kl>.\' ~ l'l001 • IWF a&illE8Ta HONGKONG PHOOIV • I 0 DYNOMUTT • NOTP\l»OI U.PATTEMI WOMNtMILlO MAL I YOGA FOR HEALT'ti JOllerAACH 7',JO OAMIM THRD "Fac:ada" A mulleel poel1lon by Str Wlllleni INJlton~a. ~ of Denll ~h Sltwit wtlt be pt9Mntad. (R) eoooo l R:: ... ~ ....... , ... :f"'""~-1 * *'J\ ~Orl\111 A CrOOlltd Ro1d" ( 1g5') Mickey Rooney. Dilnne FOlllar. A young Iulo mechanic:, WhOM amblUon II to driYe In a wor1d lanlOU8 IUIO rec.. II UNd by 1 g1r1g of c:rootla. (2 ht's.) • '" •='='THI! ALIUTIAH l8lAH08 The land. the Wiidiife, and. Iha peopla ol Ulls belutlful end remote cheln of I ~Sate doc:umenlfd ()) Fl<>WEf' f\ARAHOEMENT l:OO. (I) A080NlC f!OOOE8 r. ~e MIYarlc:k" 09S21 Wiid Biii Elliott. ~ '*'--A CeY1lry •tenal\t la ordanld to ct,band 1 g1r1g of gunmen • ~ed by c:ettternan In their ••empt to drive off ~1 •IMdett (1 tw~30mln.) GMCMI *l* "Air Cadet" (1g51) Sl4(phen McNaffy, Gell RulMll. Tiie c:Naf lnllrue-. tor tat • llC fighter blM IJ ~ when one of his ~. tuma out 10 be the l 1><0~ ot 1 pilot tor whoee oeatll he ,.... responelble. ~"'Coe ~LANO ANOTHl8 A Aloy of the Island natioll of T-an Ind Its 8:30 l'(;)';;m BUGGY ~~VMPICS Sf£CIAl "~ Only Thl"ij I Cerf I 0o 11 Hfll!'" The lnnov1ti\fe pr119ram1 instituted by W~Olll O.C.'a Oaltu· det College to help pr• pare deel stuelenll lor col- lege are examined. Hee Haw :Spirwff Readied 'Bainbom' a ftetur11t '.trip ~UDY GAAi.AND IN 'WIZARD OF oz· SCENE Early Ufe Re-cre•ted In 'Rainbow' Judy's doing. During her later years, it was only natural for her to place the blame on others for the harm she was doing to herself. ''I TALKED TO .JUDY a lot when she was 18, and I later talked a great deal with Dave Roee -I lhiqk all of her husbands tried to help her. What Ethel did wrong was treaJ JudY like a 12·year-old when ·she was 12. But she bad been workihg since she was two, and she feltl8, not 12. ·•Judy wu (luick and brllbt. and her o,otber bad no sense of humor. A~r a. while they lost all communicatlon. ' .. If a motber sees an ol>portunlty for her kid to be sorneb<>V,. ¥Je'll do aft)'tbina. She Justifies tt on the grounds lbit she is fQrtbering J.he kid's c~r and providing for the future. My mother was like that. She alw&),'S told me, 'At least you'll never have to pump gis. "' MARTIN BALSAM 18 CAST as Louis B. Mayer in "Rainbow." The MGM boss has been portrayed by Garland biographers as an ogre who would feed Judy uppers and downers to keep her thin and working . ... I don't thtnlr1.ouiL.8....would have done tb.t. "· said c~. wbo:Itadms own ~Wl-ih­.Mayer.. !lie mtaht ba)Le_ said to .aa 1ulatant, 'See_.._ that abetites olrwelgfi(• That'a-&l.l." COMICS I CROSSWORD . i 'Would you mind finding your shade someplace elae?" fUNKY WINKERBEAN JEROME, rT~ A lRAOl'"TOO 6JfTM 1ME SAND 1lflT AU. NE.IA) ~MJE.10~ A SPECIAL INm~llON. \SHOE l MOON MULLINS ---=----~_.. -·---~---=-------- BOOMER MISSP~ACH s-tS by Tom Batiuk by Jtff MacNtlly by Ferd and Tom Johnson l ~SS ws DO·· }.T ~~ST Tit.&. ws ~ET A N~W-SET OF SPRINGS. JUDGE PARKER ------- ,,.. A&IQUlt18. 1978 DAil. V PtlOT (9 by Wm. F. Brown ind Met Casson DOOLEY'S WORLD DR.SMOCK Yl!!SSIA, yt)LJ SHOW MS A V1!1"1ff' I NAA IAN W11"H INSOMNIA, AN' :t'~'-SHOW YOU A 8<.JY WITH A RBAl.-PROe>t...E!!M .' by Mell PEANUTS IF SOOEONE 6ET5 JfU. 'r' ON HIS FACE. ~U CAN CJJl/ TO HIM "WIPE THAT ~I<' Off '(OOR FAC£! H 44~ coMTl~AL EXACERBATION J ·~o ~ VEXATIQUS J ~CAUSE M~ DISCOMFr1lJRE ~ NJ01ttJDIO~ AND !' tJPSer MY IMFREQUEUr i ~1TWJQOIU-HUH~ : by Charles M. Schulz by Rager Bradfield 1.~~-~ J·~--HU-...;:;.;-------1---..;;.a - ... 2 t,• ••• ··~·~·· ...... ~ 519H,-•.•• ..................... ....• :HO HUM ..• .. • ~ Sl6Hf. ..... . ......... 5 .... . ...... 6 .... .. l 0 byGtorgeL~ by Gus Arrl91a TGDAT'S caasmaD nZZLB ACROSS I Well-be· hlYed Ura 10 Rellxation 14 ll'llC1Ne 15Alao -- Hood's fnend 16 Afr. nau111. *· 178¥ 18John. Booze 20 Miitltv uM 22 Showing ... ubelance ZJ~ 14 SUOPlv IQllll 26Modefn - l7 Sha• speareen ch¥1Ctef )) Trimmed with the bait 34 "The Count of Monte _ .. C Knittmg rod 45 Put into office f7 Smpa of eu· tho!ity 48 Coe4 ICllltle 49 P9C\Jljltity 50 81fTed fTom UM 53 -ela1 Sp. !pOtt 54Wllks llmely !i8 Second·Claa ~ 61 Afr. riwr 82 Competent UNITED Feature Syndicalll T huracsav·s Puule SolWICI! 63 Portly 10 Rdateinde-ers' mart 64 Jryy !Iii JS Cheated 15 ~ oil It Bleclt· Poet 39 Showed the C.-12 AggrMMld wav 98 Slqy re· 13 Slwbudcs 40 T rvs~ ton ol the 19 FIM\denl 42 SNt llnt battle site '4 Mlllelloleflt 67 Weec>1 21 Animal'' ~ Wrath lloud sktn 47 Most and DOWN zr, F9iled bedlv 49 Las Wiid 1 Endrc:led 26 USSR tegion 50 Emperor ol 2 Pokh "* l7 Moderate the past 3 Tlble ortnge vet· 51 Boih: Comb. 36Drorq ICMldl IP'ld: low lorm lnfonne!.~.~~~~L--ii-(~n-mc...-~-----_....,.-1 4 Denude of 29 Be con 38 Englietl "* . 11 lntirnl11on • 38 Aarcnft .,....,_ 41T ... 42hmed uo the toed l{llt tinglrll 5 F'11rv queen ll Plev on 6 Slowly: M>fds •MUStC ]t W1nts ur· 1 Weoghl un1t gently a Friend 32 ~°"°' 9 VII V amell J3 fll'ooft'lld· • 53 Teunt: Var. !i6 Venus de - 56 Commonet 57 Com· prellendl 59 Weight unit ., Thtng. law I .r: • Fr!dly, Aupusttl. 1971 DAil. v PILOT DI ~r~tEOfJORE ROBll ts 1178 Automobile Takes the Hassle Out of Your · New . Car Deal. e Over Factory Invoice plus 3¥.r-36~000 rill& Ford Motor ComRanY Extended SerVlce Plan. ($155.00 Value) O~R 60 IN STOCK '76 POID LANDAU IDILPIU.Mm19AM • F ectory air cond., full power, vtnvt roof. deluxe Interior. apllt •••ta. tilt wheel.. & apHd control. Lie. t124880 Sttt. tP3624. I s4775 ?3 FIAT 121-SLJDOOI Thia one has a four speed tranamlaeion and la a SHARP. SHARP CARI Lie. t476HXV Stk. #908-A. 11788 PIMT02 DOOi Automatic tranamlaalon and factory air conditioning. Lie. · 1696KJT Stk. tP:W22. 12388 '73 IMTIRMATIOMAL SCOUT4114 8 cyl .. 3 IP9ed trlna .• 4 wheel d(ive. locking huJ>e, removable top. radio & heater. Lie. 1683JEY Stk. #199()CT. 174FOID MUST..-I COWi 4 Speed trans., bucket Mats, t.chometer & gauget. radio and helter. Uc. t~71KYY Stk. 113827 ' 171 llOID WAGON MAM 10llMO 5"111 VB. automatic trana.. pwr. •steering. air cond.. luggage ~rack & AM/FM stereo. ·Excellent condition! Lie. 1232RKM Stk. #18728. '2 '77 PORD elAMA.DA 4 DOOi .-Y.l • .:AUf'-WtJJC..Jl&na..,.~ •• -' sfeeilng. pWI'. brakes. radio. heater. W/s/w tires & wheel sover11. (le. #107SWS Stk. tt537A. 14396 ROllNS-READY USIOCAIS .. ..., .,.... c. w. w ............ , ..... n.w titH, .. ,. • PllJOIMAMCI • SAPlnAHO • 11UA11Un i.0wo-........ ltc .... M ... D .. a.._. .; llAKES u.,.. ,_., "'"- "'*91k 5"'- .; ELECTRICAL ..... """"' ........ ... ,__s,..- ./ FRONT END wi... ......... ~ ... ........ .,.... ./ POWEITIAIM ,_._ ...... ........... ............... ./ --·-tunteaflOM'-· w..o•ca... ...... Oii .... 21/2 ACUS OP' TOP CA•S IACICIO IYOYM 56 YIA•SOf SllYICITO OIAMGl"COUNTY . OVER .. FACTORY :P' INVOICE on these new FAIRMONT passenger cars In stock MUSTANG II Factory Invoice +5% GRANADA FIESTA-------~- • Faetorv invoice 1nclude1 fretght. preparabon and laetory hOkSbaelcl. LTD 11 Your Easy Deal ' tiD&vs-on;y.;1 l!~-~.~~J Finance Counselors on duty. 176FOID PIMIOWAeoM Automatic tran11 .. power steering, factory au condttlontng. luggage rack. l'lldlo & heater. Lie. #622Pt<F 'SU<. 11S25. 12490 ..,, CHIVIOLl1' MAL*I CLASSIC COWi VS. automatic trans.. pwr. steering & brakes. factory air cond.. vtnyt roof & AM/FM stereo wt cauette. Lie. t637TZWStk. 1193BA. ·s3792 ?I.on PIMrOWAeOM Fully eQulpJ>ed ~ncludlno automstto trena.. air oond.. IUO' gage rack. etc. McW 1)8 .old thla weekend! Lie. t034R8X Stk. t317A. 174 CHIYROUT 111 TON lflOIT Y~ VS. autommlo trans .. POWet steering. power brakes. custotn paint. radlO & heater. Lie. t090KWV Stk. tP3.135T. 176 CHIVIOUT IMPMA tPASS. WAeoM ve. automatic t,.ns.. power steering, power bnlk". PC>W9r tailgate. AWFM stereo 8 track & luggage rack. Lie. #098PON Stk. #2017A. 14298 . '71TOYOTA .... -.... ~oaollll'W~-"" 4 epeed franamlaalon and luggaoe rack. Lie. #143AVR Stk. I 197().B. 12288 ' tmVPOIT llACH ' I BDWEEN $200/411,• I COMna•h' LOCAT10M -• block to shops and beaches, altake roof, 3 bdrm, den. and remodeled ldtcben. Askinl '270,000. ~ ..., ... 11'4.,_r _. ._.I ¢1 t t l ..... ... •• .. di bl..,. .... HAMDSOWI NOMI -4 bdrm pool home in Irv. Terrace. CdM. Lge lot, parq"uet noora. heavy shake roof . Handsome at $207,500 . ................ _ ... ..... .................. c .. .... ..,, ... a.-....... ~ ......... ·-----1111111--i .-w.:-.-.... .,1 ,17..._ ••eras.... -r-.. um t bdrm .. a bath. ,.... 0 ........... .._ .... ' =r-. Arwf..,Mat' nt ... ......................... Dal•d ............... ....... flraplmce, • --' md ..... •a• ... .... IWs Y9e....., 1p1dll Tllh II• we Si8 borne la a 1uper buy! Cenaral air coodlUooint, a.,. finiahed bonua rm .• wet bu otr ra~ rm .. a Ca( aarase • plulb eoeoa brown carpet. A are.t valuoatSl•.800 .... ••••• .,,......., fw ..,.. .... .... ...., .... SJtl.000. I MEW DUPl.ll ~~~~~I Ow••r'1 nit co•pletelr r••Otl•l•d 1 • rataE PURCH•taf IKtu &1 ....... wltlt llhW ........ I LIAl IN W:. 11a Mew =r."• lo ... w .. .,., Want to be a home owner -•tpacn -•H-the down? We have one •It IMls oc•••lew. Lew .... tH•H or more houses or condos ~ fl _. .. .-1&.. S ._ ,..... but need more Ume rorl property wltll co••••l••ces •••rltJ. when the owner's have $201,000. offered to entertain )'OUf I proposal . Newport Beach or Irvine. Put us FIVE BEDROOM IAIGAIN to work for you, call ............. ..,dlcONledllwwtlll -· ...... IM'oww c..,.... ....... ,.. .... weock. ::. r-. pool. t--zt,·...,.. ..ct""'" oa•• ,.., .... ,..,,.'I !Jo Good tct.ool clstrict -..,. SI 0 I .SOO. LAGUNA BEACH EMERALD IAY Fow 111•00. ....... wltlt ca: Is r <1-.'9 s.,artt .-, .._. wltlt .,._ ce•p. ............. dwODdfloerl. .... IS. ................ ._., ........... .... ..... Han'• • .._ ,... ,.., ... .... looklllg for. $400,000. MYSTIC HIW lolltlg 9""!' ..... Cllld c-r-..... ..._ SAMJOAQUIH SPICT ACULAR , VIEW!! This Jvly 2 bdrm condo overlooks lvly park, lake & UCl. Adult oriented complex ln the hills, near pool & jacuui. Hurry on this cne . 11 won't lut at only Sllt,900. ~9'91 ~ Walker l~ Lee BUSY & NEEDING H.Y. llQAOMOOI -5 bdrm. 1 story, backs to community canyon, great family area. $279,000. UDO Cl ASllC -()pen beams thruout, bright & airy. 4 Bil & 4 BA. Move in condition. ~.ooo .. LOY& Y OM UDO -Country Spanish decor. 3 bdrms or 2 and den, completely remodeled, ln finest taste. Vacant at $310,000. CDM CLASSIC -Cap,e Cod 3 bdrm, 2 story, picket fence, French doors, nice yard plus income unit. $212.000. llOADMOOI .,.... Favored family area, sgle story, 4 bdrms, 3 baths, 2 frplaces, 3 car garage. Unique at $252,000. MCLAIH -Townhome with contemporary look, tennis, pool and jacuazi plus an incredible view of the Btg Cyn Golf Course. $215,000. MISA.YaDt REDUCED TO $89.000 Attractive 4 bdrm .. 2 ba. home in immac. condition. Xlnt loc. IACI IAY Fine 4 bdrm., 21h bath f amlly home on quiet cul de sac. Oversized pool, playhouse, extra storage. $169,000 . IAYFltOMT Several fme bayfront homes with pier & slips BILL GRUNDY . REALTOR . hlbl ..... ...,.., ...... ad .............. two IHllll ..._ • &,._.. 1eoc1L rm•....,. deck .ct patfo, perffft fw Mtdoor 111larhU11 !Jo A ._ far ... cltc1 I I ....... $149,900. UniQue Homes oJ Mesa Verde ls " IU&Jed into" a reloc a tf on referral !!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!~!!!!~~~!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! service that bas created J·: I p,"Y'"j' ()• Y• "" p, (, J . a demand ror more saleapeople. We are busy and need help! Ex· perlenced or new salelpeople may applx. Auta~ve .. (anUques> of· nee " top qualfty cpeo. pie) auoclates to work wltb. Contact Sandy Orlowak1 or Jim Wood at 54l-al80 MEWUmMCM! llAUllPUL W4,..,.0M1' Ho.. llSHOP-MAMMO'IH .... , ........ ...., dlffw..t c ..... =d ....................... .... ...,_....,.-~ ..... forces 4 Bdrms. plus family room, 3~ baths, 2 fireplaces, 2 patios. Boat slip and sandy beach, in Balboa Coves . $327,500 • .. w n I• P• 1310,000. llACH DUPLIX awmlDI 2 bdrm unita wltb flreplacet, aun deC!b I& encl'd paUos. Xlnt rental area wttb uu• limited l..nvutment potential. 1115,000. -.m1 OP1M SAT/SUH l·I M .... Co .. t.M.I. 644-7020 IALIOA MY PIOPBftlS 2123 SAM JOAQUIN HIU.S IOAD UALTOllS 671-7060 MIWPOIT llEACH . IALIOA 151 1'MD Slaan> duDlex, 2 BR. .a b.I untti. aleJNJ to Nortb "-HOllYIST =ront. Reduced to -t_wou1c1 a 400 square root ~o.._? Real Eltata ~A VllDI -Walker t; Im: ~ ... ..,, aDDNl to YGfl? ~Co d ~r:1 ..._ ______ •I 58Jlf~bome. Move· ~ett•t e.ifl on lbls fi e n om u ·,. in eand.. Good acbooll • ~~ ma1Dtabied6 orma~~~ Co close to everytbln1. ~L-· in~· 2 ~HSTO~at1-Y · WANTm•. Sl28.SOO. ..,..... 8 .,.,me 18512 Beach Blvd II e. •STSIDI ....... ~ Priced at nr-n ... --......1 for tormer 1511' 1~eT.te sae,eoo C411196Ml67 :::W";_ in 0ran1e COSTA MUA L()ALL7'1.at91. needl new owners I ... '°' m.--a BR, 2 ba bome. 88.ALDIAYI ta.Pt PIOIATll Reduced tbbalanda, U · ecutlve eMa&e. lteDs to ocean! Breatbta1tlog view. Low price wlll sur· J1ri:se you! Hurry ! Call tod.aJ for deUils. ta-0303 FO~r sT E OLSON . . ·--= SELECT meone wbo will enjoy a _,, -~ On SELL YOUR OWN HOME beautiful jacunl year Newport ..,...,._. a --___.;-'---- PROPERTl ES •FEE·Aaistinada round ... someone wbo ~=~ma~~ $66,000 ..... . ·· .·. ·tt. 1r . . ftn, aaJes. escrow~ needs a lot ol t'OOlD With --. I rd e o r REALTY FRBE Uttle maintenance. 3 aldet2Dd T.D . ..,.......750. ~· 3 ~ home IW.=~abll ll.E.Ad~~ce =·.:a~~~~.:~oeN~ 0·" ~~,.: r:!.de:Jlr!~ I for one ao.m. pa1-it, papel' ~ much mer days ln bute park 8lta alespenon --------• mot~~~ .. 7111 ~ like backyard. Im· -II omc•. same UDO ISLE DIAMOND -...... "" '"' maculate. Just llated I •• "' 25 yrs. Call Gene a Br, a ba, excepUpnaJ -.nu ecmtructtoe " decor. 2 8a1bN l9llnd RINllY JAv• Qabbouae, ten• Alllll!l\'ll'"fM.'CT~ nil au bay awlmmlH 67i•l700 ~ Walkt:r 1; I r.r. CHET PURCBI. After many years in Beal Estate Management. most recently aJ Mana~er of the Bluffs Community Association. Chet has gone into real estate sales with Harbor Realty. Chet's unique background enables him to orrer professional experienced assistance to families wisblng to live in The Bluffs and other desirable areas. Whether you plan to buy or sell, why not "Let his experience work for you"? You can save yourself lotS o1 time an4 money dealing with an expert .:.... so give Chet a call. You'll be glad you atd. 67-J.4400 ... CYM .OUS COUISI VllWI . Spacious 3 bedroom. tow~bome overlooking the exclusive Bag Cyn c.c. Formal dining rm. large kitchen. 21h baths. Carefree living with tennis courts, pool, jacuzzi and good security. Call for information $219,!iOO. WISLIY M. TAYL~ CO .. llALTQaS Ziii S..Jaaq' ........ HEVfPOll'f C1NYJ1. M.L 644-4910 TWOUMTS 4 Bdrm. + bachelor. Frplc .. bullt·ins: steps to beach. $165,000 lncludini land! OCIAMROMT PRIME EASTSIDE ~ SPYG~ ESTATE . 11111 AN llttlitPASSED Vlll Overl00idil1 i'be"bi'fbor. ocean Ud night Uahll ol Corooa del llar Ii Newport. 5 Bdrm•. family room. bonus rooni. ~ecor to placate the most dlscr.lmloatlng famtl1. Landacapln& Uiat colbplementa tbe home and lta locaUoq.~ther 'amtnJUes include: bylltln cuum, security systeqi, oak panellbg, iged flooring, jacuzzi, and much ~uFh more. Priced at $587 ~000, For. a private abo~g of this one ol a kind home, call 67~11. · ' • • HAPPIMISS IS -A 4 Bdrm 3 bath ~qui,site home with step-down formal, dining and large family room. The landscapint. is new and dec·or charming. Near shopping & 'parks in one· of Costa Mesa's most prestigious ~reas. $132.500, submit your terms. Cal 54M14t~ J 'PAI.I SIDI LIVIH5 -For the discrh'ninatir)g home owner. Popular 3 Bdrm home -read)' for J(OU.J' move. Almost private park adjacent to your delicate lighted home. Brand new on the market at only $117 ,000. C .. I 64M161. I • S1·rvin4 CoJ'>l.I M ,•--.;1-lr~1r11· t~.111!111qtor~ U•.,1ct1-N• wpnrt B ... H n IASTmtHHOMI IMWISTCU" A mual. for crattsmanabtp, style & Dl&tern flow. See this 3 lldrm or 4 Bdrm 2 bath. formal dining or family room. + sunroom or ~'fl'OOID (try 3 tables of dge>. 'A trulY aubatan· ti Eastern feeling of permanency with Olllfornia 1Jvin8. Priced rttbL mtta;~ ... HDMIW S•ROOMS SeUier will pay-for your _. crpt in this exc1tmg new a story home. 5 bdrms. s ba & a huae rrq· ly rm w /h'plc. Try lea::ae opdon. 1» 1501 -Walkm t; Lee QU~ll SALE! Price reduced $5,000 on beautiful 3 bdrm. & fam1· ly rm. ·home in pre· stl&lous JASMINE CREEK. Lovely appoint· meats. frplc .. security gate; price now only me,500 .. '"° 5 BDRMS.! Mucb 80Ulht after fami- ly home in Eastbluff: band,y to shoos & scllools. ai.o ca~boii.c church .• - 1210.000 . BAY& BEACH NEWPORT CTR. OR. 5'111 3 Bdrm. + den home on .... ft. lot; frpl., built· Im. patio, beamed cell· mo. 137s.ooo COSTAMISA Very 1Jpecial country English. Three lar1e 8.e"1 Estate bed.rooms. two baths. STSIDE 'CLASStc' . SHOwrs,AClt over a'tOQ aq ft ot btflly decorfted Uv apace. Huae~us1tr suite + 3 other &ce bdrma have wait-Ip claeeta. Frplcs in liv rm .. buce add-on rm. ly tat: Frml din .rm, 13'~'. w~ bar, buce yrd. All tbJa for a sreat ~1 Call for al'pt. fli..a &GDU Eves associated Ill • 1 11 lo 101 •·, I. ' ---. three huge brick 'IA fireplac.es. bvero POOi.HOME kitchen with all' th~ 260 SllRICS modern appliances. 008TAMESA =l ~=«\in~ aiarmtq 4 BR, 2 Ba. ~at$1.st,SOO. ~le .• new carpetlna. OU OF.....--~sclloola. seuoo. .,_...,rva,, OPENSAT/SUN1·5 IACICIAY REALTORS OMLY $14,500 675-5511 P41\BL Jaatde sunshine : so MESSYMAMSIOM .... &.TKER m8QY .~ " high ~ 4 BR fixer ~ YWJ:a.a.. ~ Walkt!r 1; lt?r. vaulted oeilinp. Livtna Newport Beacb I l..arle m la euy lD this 3 bdrm. 3 lot' Remodel & proffl• rrr •1•• ba condo. Owner will eaD't last• Hurry' CaU ~·~,.,..,~~,..~i:iiiiii~~-~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii help ftDanee or conaider ·645-0303 · · I lease • optloa to bQY. -.UOl -Walkt!I G Lee FO~ESTF OLSON -..c 0 4 Half ol buyers payments for t year or all for 6 months principal & interest based on 80% loan. • • S'J(ooo. 3 Bdrm, 21A ba Cape Huntlnston Condo. · ; .' t75,900, 3 Bdrm, 1 ~ ba.•House, 1 yr new~ . .• ,97,900. a Bdri:D, 2'At ba. 1 stoey Huntlngtoo Viewpoint Condo. CAMEO SKOllS Reduced to the loweSt priced view bqme in Camep Shores. Custom built 3 bdr111.1 home on large . c~nyonside lot. Just a 1short walk to erivate beach. Compare -at Jl49 500 this is a au per buy. Open this ·weekend. Try le&Slf/option. -;m. Milff)rd Lachenrnyer Ri>.11 I u r saz.ooo'. eau me 61-etTi, ________ ---VllW-=-~.-YllW~~.-...,, tee lt together. Aat G.1._ _____ ._. ~ -------i Thoma a, 615·8251 ; 1• .,..,,..., • . •111,800. 4 Bdnn, 2~ ba, 2 atory House, fruit trees. l . c • • I • I I 4 ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~-~n!!•!_5or~'""°'7!!!~0~. --1 LYIJ •'Trtna" model Ill :; Tbe 111'61. I.JD 'bllni on vacattoo In JOut own Uv· iQI nn. a bdnna. 2~ ba, ISlllUtvel eoodo. 751H501 ~ Walkt:r t: I P.H ,,_ ... ,_w; ..,.._,_.Wt HMMIP...Wt "°"'"'°"W. DAILY Pl\.OT D:t ....................... ..............•........ .•..........•.... ..... . •..........••....•••.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....... llor s. ......, ,.,. s. ~ .... s. =.~~ ... !~.. ~~ .....• !'9~ ~~ ....... !~!~ ~~ ....... !~!.~ ·~ .. ~ 1040 &~;;;;; ............................................................. . •••••••••••••••• .. ••••• ....._ I ~~ IOI.I....._.._. IOIJ •CANYON 8roaclmoor home for I a l e u~t.ooo ow"' A•t ~ . o.ac-.ous 61.AVISHI Lu.xwy l.nCameoSbor.-. Lars• aet!l~dtd front ~ou:~: ________ _. bta room• family room. ________ .. Formal dlnlna room. ~_... r ... LUFF Cbef'a kitchen bu evfl')' ~• • conv1nl1nce. Lavlab Cilil9 • ••-V l·I multr wlnt. Oen or Prewlew Frl l0am·2pm. lt.Ulb· Sewin& 6 lauodry VIEW! 4•Br. ram-rm room. lnCludN pool ta· ho m e by L u 1 k . bAe, blta aereo system. Jacunl/1pa. Walk to fantutlc 1tora1e too. schools. 1hoppln11. ten-Private beaches-and n Is . The perfect much mote! For private n e i I h b o rho o d • th e preview c&lJ 87s.t$50. perfect home Come see! Ol'ffl ro • '' H'-"' 1011 Nlt't • fHE Rf Al MIW CUSTOM ~ ..... 2..... CUSTOM HOMIS $7500. DOWN ·-·················· ·-·•-~r.-.-.................... t;;i ••••••••• HOMI double 1ar11t. patio. ~DAILY a BR. 2 Ba . new cpta, 1Dlftur "ROVES 8'iildff .. ,.. Hll thts rrwt u.... 1prlnller1. Ml .. 2W St. C.M. dr]MI, paint. Glenmar ··~ a b 11 11t11 u I I a tor 'Y m,900, =a.ft ol theM 7 new home. Mio from b&ach. BEST BUYI. ~ bollla. Cbo&ct ol •-Mic..lt _. bof.o.a oa a qialtt l'U carry balance al f700 carpet •U'-. RV lttelll -r Ml-zt' cul·dt·aac. Each w /4 mo. No credit needed. ffurrY on thla 3 bedroom ...,, Oft tllla oci.t Cal 1~~~~7~7~~~ bdnna, a batM, wetbara, 85'7·18 ~only. fa m ii y ho m • w lt b ..-I· a fpk:I, ls mlaCh more. MIPU'lte family room. It IT'S OOOLI M•a deJ Mar Ccme 11 aee for yourself S6S Resale Speclaliata. la I Sycamore with an , .I> Hf RllAGE IH i\I I r lH'. '8f bl ~ dto what lovely homes they 3,4 or 5 bdrm mode la lb'lwn. 1'5C> aq ft ol pure :/:ie si1,~. Owner art ! Owner /a1ut avail, some w/pooJ1 . Jamuy wlt.h central air. wtU htlfi ftnanct. Prlo ~ or "2·21&4 or ~ --.,., aeJI deaD.ID& ovens and -· ca I # ... m.o7l2.. ~-ir . ..,,.....ues IO much more. DON'T "'")'. owner .or ap.,. WAIT ON. THlS ONE!! ~c••« Ml·7530 IYOw.B cait•...t .... roc-detalb. ......... .....,.,.,.. la l ....... , ... TOllACH __, Ill -.,...... m.....-· MESA VERDE Pri ced lower~4 lo from th.la cute 2 Bdrm bit! In food w .. talcle SHOWPLACE "8JOO. on th.la well kept condo. 1 mile to beach. location, ll•I• three '4 ttte,1).trll/vlew, cmr. 4 BR Ea1talde home. rl btdloom. two t»th home :JI: 6 nlctr than most Prtnc. only. 64M81.3 ~.t are~:.. J~~•-eht ror WO two car jlfll•· h.. hrne1. Sl'ft,900. By ...... ecq>"' s..-.u.ul out. lollely Jenc:.d backyard owner. 5"8-9289. 1967 5-er.._CIMh J mwo. COSTA MESA No need to Meaa Verde. Lingo Rul&Wl PIACI AND TU~ IN LA._..N .. I& -l1ciAM •••lwW-Hlttr• "-.. ......... 9 tl1hd1Yt.w .......... ,.... ........... ··~-:: ... wood .ac.h .... tWa fellP 11• ..... .. • .. ....... c •°"' ..... , ..... SI06MO. 495-1720 MIO! Onl1 •.ooo. Call Baleartc. HOMEl.nprestitlous A J 811AIL qlalllfy for a mort1a11e OPIH SUNDAY 1·5 ~~CE loan $15,000 to usume 1121........ IAMCHUALn F"liA ~ V.A.. loan. Nice 3Br Great entertainer's ..... -ftmlllTllU Hl·2000 "'-10441"1 ........ t041 homt, din rm.11 fam rm. , dream w/formal dtnl.n& ft9ft r....,.. •---------••• .. •••••••••••••••••• ...... ••••••••••••••••• PIOPllNS"' IOl'PCMllfrpk,hugewell rm. Spacloua fam rm 875-4890 Deerfield townhouse. OWNER. Lovely 2 story.•-------• 10,.. t11.1:11 P.M.t kept yd. rn.900. Prtn OD· w/Welbar. Pool 81 lot. ~~~~~~~~!'I Plan 3. a br 2"" ba, ram 4Bdrm. 3Ba. dintna & OYO at ocean: North \)'. 55'7.s.'illO Beat buy ln Mesa Verde. ENJOY YOUI OWH rm, bilhly upgraded. fam rm'•· Calif bmea. end. brite Ir cheery Z BR . OOPS. OW.• $1~~AL REALTORS IACK YD SPA fmilhed patio. 182.900. Country ldteh. out.stand-2 Ba, lrg. IJv .• deck. vtew DIOPP• NICll IT'S um.I-6'5-0882 By Owner. 55M9!4 in& cond. 189.000. 4912 Owner finance. 1111.000 lleea Verde estate. Enc Inf thia bt0ho3Br. 21h8a + Woodbri'~ S 2 Greencap.S»8523. r..Ale911tr. lran1terred. Now : IUTIT'SCUTI! A6/0YAASSU ..... •-11t am rm me, l~ yrs e ycamore 't4.7571 • "•'" · nl : e · Sn1.11 lllUe honeymoon Name your terms . fM0.833-98Udys,840-3896 BR. 2YJ ba. UP· ~ " •110. ·oo ... t B tb •. ,. -old. by owner. $129,500. at)' •11 amllt.~e. 4 so•11 .... G -.au1, 8S5-02ll. pager cottage in It's own little Owner motivated. 3 BR. evestwkndl. ~ed. Try $1 ,ooo CBU .... GS "51$. forest. Upgraded kitchen fam rm, 2 ba. &aide 88 Slue Jay e>pen " ..-51---.v with nook. Everything in Sharp, clean, rear RV Open until IOld ..__,:Sa•-·-IU.d,;._ .. and cathedral windows ~ ~-~..--1' .... •_.. sood condition-fruit aceeu. Agt. ()pen Sat. Byowner•.ooo'. v, -,., ..... _._ pve you that open and • ......u ... .....,.... MC......,.. tn!a--«ment drive. In Sun. 2157 Rural Ln, mJtobch,1800aqft,3BRt--------•l airy feeling. PLUS 2 on .3 1cres, surrounded love$, Eastaide at only 548-1029 +. Huie u.aed brl~k llSTIUYIM separate bed.room areas by towerinJ eucalyptus ... ea117c .. ,.....,. _________ , patios off ll.,. .. , rm din •• Vii.Jiit offer you maximum tree.. riding trails to -· -·~. MOW AVAIL.AIU! l"f ~ .. p1a";i;n & msU: .,.... privacy. =:c~~o~th~ uliol: J 9UAIL UMDH $70,000 auate, customized kllcb. ~e :!~h~ i::v!':T~ que buy! Priced at p• £.CE Yourcholceof6homes! Veey uruque " in xl.nt sq.ft. With gardeo room SllS.000. 963-6767 laA US Gov't loans av all ! oood. 96M877 oCftbe master bdrm. Call O'fNr119•11Hi..101"'"'' rlOPl!llTIES• VA·No money down, Hunl Bc h Condo, by 546-5880formoredetails. FHAJowu$408montbly. owner. 2 story 2 bdrm l REALTYMETWOIK ba. nr. pool $53.000. ---..!--HERITAGE TH£ REAL 10,.. TII l:JO P.M.t SINGULAR Woodl Cove borne for the quality CGaSCioua. Newly built with spacloua room11. ma~ amenities and mapi.facent ocean views from every room. $111UOO 957.a400 847-4451 -------~· . REALTORS ~ -'\ ESTATE RS_, ~ -' ESTATERS BACK BAY 31117 REDLANDS 2 ONE LOT Dell&htful 3·Br, 2·Ba --========-• Lge R2 lot, nr 17th St --------1 UMqUEHOMES bomeooqulet..cul-de-aac .. 1111 o.a.x 4 Br,2~f~ dl.nlng, ~ping area. 2 small STOP!!! Custom uec.utive HeritagePan2br2V.t». 't523£'~~11Mtf£ SUUtBCOOUI ~ ~~·~~P~n s':; Lowett price la CdM. bnck frplc, corner lot, 2 unit;.~~~ n U you are looking {or the estates, walkl.nJ dastai;ace upgraded, landscaDed • .._ ________ , Pool +clear view ol Sad· M a r le t la . O w n er 28drm, lBa In 1!.ent. car gar. 900 Dogwood. 13• •..130 finest duplex in the best tolgesurf3 .. ~.s~ba·. oevaertunn2000 1 dtaped. $78.SOO. S.Sl-o685 .. • 1 ... -.1 dlebadt. 3 ~ 2~ motiva•.-.a. StudioBy~. ~!!~. · no..--751 ,.,,.,~eves. _.., "'---Ide area, tbtS' 1• for "' • -• ba f mil _ .. """ ......... _,.,...,.. .. ._... ...,,,. IColUU> "' aq. ft., den. family rm. Woodbridge Brighton. 2 LO-·yiuv•-e. • • ~rm. uc""' IACICIAY you!3Bdrm.,familyrm. formaldl.nrm,2frplcs + BR+ den. 2..-. ba. sun· •--toll3UOO. · JACK HOWELL Du P 1 ex . 1OO·7 O o v. SAVE The Back Bay Village home + pool & Jacuni; 4 separate patios. vtew of deck. up~aded tbnAou\, It's the Yale -Model -in lle8ff llA&.n ''11 worims Bepla, PrimelocaUon. condo-a Br, 2 Ba, 2 sty new 3 bdnn .. booua rm. ocean. Follow Beach A/C,$121.500.S51--0lllS \lillaaelll. Lartceslolall 131-lt 14 644-1156 Belt•· $152,500. Bkr end unit, iv. yrs old. ·~ Open Sun. i.s. 302 Blvd so. to lndJanapolia. the townhomes. Four1~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~ courteay. Very desirable area. Ramona Place <off Santa west to Delaware. so. 3 PATIO HOMI bedrooma • 2..-. bat.ha -I~ Aa.at •~ m.70& ~, ~18 000 $115,750. Call 040·5112 AnaAve.> bib to model. Open al· JnkMll)'adullcommuni· formal d1n1ns. Two Drnllf'£D ~Y ~1.200 •-------• agt. temoonsorcan Realtors ty,tbiloneyearoew.two ~acea ·dcor'm"'rty llUMI =~~~~:.~~: ~ n.a~Olf Yl111W EA Ts1&E new 2 _...__MIS_A_V_ER_D_E __ , 4 H=U~=:~ on IGulllllll~3630· =-~:~~ ~~~".t!i $10• Joan. • ........... am Y rm .• bedroom coado units on 2STORY ooelargelot! H•-+'a•• 1042 fireplace,doublegarage, !!_~la:rdandine. ~ NEW HOME WITH So.Calflffllty ma11lve lot; crisp & the-nut block are 4 br. family rm, 3 ba _..._ fenced ardand rt t ............. Ulla.,. .... 546-5605 bright! Area'• best 817,500! You can get this +redwood tub spa in tz ,._ ....................... paUo.a~to.,!iav:O: laworth;yohloftllook! ~~fACNT¢fEUw1s~ ~ -------~ val~~S~~Jer one for only 9119,SOO! Call secluded yard. Only 1• I I EXECDUPLEX tennis! All this-only Bdrm, 2 baths, jacuu1. OPIH HOUSE REALTORS 640-.5560 ~CARPET7SH202 $112.SOO. David Bourke. A.sldngonly Sl.59,000. $78.900. Call 752·1920. stained glass. micro· SUNDAY 12-5 e~~~~~~--------t Rllr.546-9950. DOH Y. rUJOO.dC SCOlTllAl.TY . J l!\UAIL wave,oalySl.85,000. ~ Ei."".>E,r .... ~,,~!!~m & ~"!?. ~~~~i;;:~ N~~~~tc,t~~~J fit~\ ~.::.~:.:~~.!!~! ,.~CnuE· -~ ....................... ·-·····'··o.• .. -1'he--Fla-~-· ._f666_ne_aJ_to_r~_ inp, sunken Roman tub din nm, profeu decor Sll,SOO 557.3470 $89,SOO. Bkr, 754-Q62. _._ _ $62.500 in roaster suite. th t M t UOUI u.o .. ES I La One bedroom, own your Oww-Wll Alt•c•. ~~i689!n*4~s . No qualify.Orama tic. nu 2 NEID A LARGE ~ODO to.i ft •.Jo P.M.t '~';ch'. jose:h ff~~ own. Like new cond . ...aA ~, .... ~ sty, 3Br, 2~ ba. Nr bch, R1 1 E Bkr/ ...... _ Call~ .... -11 Prime louUon. Walk to ""' "9 llVI .. TlllACE 8K dn SJ.29.950. 646· 1035 CORNER LOT? Dana'°"" I 026 SAC F C DAU"· _.,,,., • tow n a n d b t a c h 20n~ ps>er Bay Drive Extra deep lot bas 2 en· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ow 2 beaut.. new ~ Ors, total· ........ ~ 8 e a u t I r u I w e I I E.oflrvmeonllesa. =~~d~~~r MESA VERDE trances . Mature 2 4Br, central air, 0 N ly upgraded. Agt. *..,.,....~ * mal.ntalned bldg. Gar. CIHTUIYZI 1419SantanellaS159,500 By owner. 3 br 2 ba. bedroom home with spinlders.lrgcovpatlo, 673-4311 Ocunddeolbwy.level lndrYE.c1I. OWNER __ 7_5'-_133S __ or_7_51_·39_10_ A&t.m-58l7J844..991S ~~~rpt!; ~~ hardwood floors . shows new ext paitll. 33891 Big No Qualifying! Owner lrviDe bargain·YoUr own ~~=a';! WUJ..-~ANCE. COLLNIPARJ( •---""--------"as needs painting etc. ~ride or owners~lp . Sur.661·335lagent. willffnanceJCallNow! priv POOi on over al.r.ed pain; rdeal for home" 8dai .. "9•nfwM.t Br lllXIRUPPB 2980 Jacaranda. Call otentlal R·2 zoning. Q.OSETO M•11o..1• REDCARPET7S4-1202 iot. 4 bd, 2 ba, upgrading Income. Hurry. only 4'7·3111 3 • 2 ba. Encl patio. n..i-~TLC to•'-•-Youcan'tgowrongaton· "" """ ... _ ............. w~a ..... ne_. $!!0.950. VA/usumeloan. unu _, ...... · · ' ..,..., afterS.675-8461 ly S87,500. Call now for Btful s~t·level, 3Bdrm, .... ._uuu•.~ '4:\1 •• ~~ ... --.. y •--------- So.,.._..1_.. DUP & you'll see a ----------t -.a~-......... _ r •car FIX to fnt')'I. acbooll. park. -nc.J• 49(..0731 -• .__, POtentlaUy beautlful 3 MESA VERDE 4 Br 2 Ba, ........ .....,.. "YUNI• am rm. 0 •.s>O. Oall5Sl.enl t• ........... Dr. 546-5605 llR home PLUS income xl.nt cood.., 182,!iOO. Open ~ 'CALL NOW fi;{ $o 0 c e 8 n v 1 e w · ~MM!t..a Uoaarpa11ed 270 des. 2 BR Lquna Charmer ---------•from the sep. 1 BR rear Sat/Su.DU-6.2972.Androe · lairlc "~ w1Jitewater view S BR w/~. Plana for H · IMMIDIATI apt. Lota of special St.,54M478. 752·7315 Peter7~ ... ~~~· UP New2BdrmTownhouse. luuriou• home. lu1b panalon. Huie deck. MOVE·IN, better than featurea to show you. Mull aell MS.SOO. Ph sardeD room, huge mstr eoodview.. $1.44,900. new Mesa Venle, 4 BR. Please call 64().5ll2 agt. teSA VlllDI DONALD M. llRD B Toro I Ol2 this huge collese park MS-9'73$ alt 5. suite w /fpk. decclrators 2'IO P.ti ATe. dining• family. Ready ·--ucr• Nr golf course, larger 1 Auoci•te•.•"''•" ••••••••••••••••••••••• Vi Co dellsht. 1200 sq.ft. New construcUon. Chris for total enjoyment. ---~'" sty luxury home, 4 BR. 3 By Owner 3 Br. 1~ ba, $6,500 DOWu home! acaut! me see Univ Park 5 Br Chao· RedWood deck, $338,000. Able du1•n . tie & ~edto$139,900.. OCIAMVllW BA, den $169,000. By comer lot. $83,500. 209 " this home and bring in cellor model with land. 1241 Skyline Dr. Open dramaUc CU:tom home. OPENSAT/SUNl-5 JASMIHIClm owner.540-7198 LoYola.546-8783 Aaaume exiltin1 loan of ~~~~754·1202 Sl28,000.callS68-6136. Home Fr/Sat/SUo. 12·5. un1urpassed views . 2005 1 .......... OS By owner. Extended i..uroi. .a.4-..TS $75,000 and th.la 1600 ft -~~ft99 Owner/qt.494·9121 _.,.,. , .. -•• RE •· ._.. bal /vi I & Back Bay area condo. ___ "'°' __ ,._.,_.,... ____ 1 home Is youn 4 Bdnns -. ... -W"~V 1 ' --· _ .... a · · ... CNrMVCCBalearicPk) conyw ewo ocn SBr --+den Upgrd'd 1 .. d,:_1_ • ,,...nA11A W db Id Pl 1 *~* c.onatr.Co.49'7·3'21 HAL PIMCHIM 1rnbelt (no rooftops). • -· · --------•! 2 baths, ,..e uunll area, ••aG.a.I ... ! oo r ge ace . ••s.,.. Split level, 38drm, Pool, tennis. Jae. By 567 SOO bright cheerful kitchen. -""" 5BR, 3ba on cuJ.·de-sac Lovely ocu.o &c canyon --------REALTORS 2YJ8a. Plan v. Assoc ownerl82.000.631·0718or • lge corner lot. Fully Pricereducedtwice·now next to beach. 731"'484 views from thia Temple fmNltlcOce• 675-4392 faclllUes, pool, tennis, 75CM<Ma 3 Bedroom, patio, quiet enclosed. Cov'd paUo. onlY 189,9001 2 Story 3 wkd.ys. Hills home: 3 l>dtms .. 2 VIEW' -5-HEU<--l-S._L_E_O_F_Ll_DO __ , jacuzzi. Gated comm . Sllltters-------~ tree lined street. Won 't new sprinklers " bedrms&alganUcbonus ba .. dining rm. Needs ,T • Call 759-9'21 ror showing. last! Call &&s-9161 landlcaping front & rear. room. Lovely country UYE IN TLC. $175.000. Pl obate AQulnlard Realty 1289,500. & Beal Newly painted. New kitchen. Spacious master WOODIRIDft.E AGENT&46-ZU4 4% · 3% · 1% Special at -H chocoiale brown plush ~vered patio. Gas , • S295.000 suggested pnce. US Via Waz.lers. Openi--------•I cpl'g, all new mini TRANSFERRED form.~. 3 Bdrm. 11/a OCEAN VlEW 3'00 sq ft Call Mr. F.X. Curran. bouseDA.ILY. $397,000. A HOMl+IMCOMI Ceilincn blinds. A rareopportuni· R MUST HAVE ba end unit. By owner. New. Victoria bcb close 1·4 pm week d11 y11. ~~J:~.:::ru:::: soutbol8a.)'11de. A rare Accent-thls°tOuesePark ty at •1,500 full price. IMMEDIATE SALE! S5M1M byA8l.67J.5721 2JUU.7239_. ---- buyer&aeller$7940. Mu and s u rp rl a Ing l y delight. 3 bdrms, family Owner/Brk. 581-2600, ~G:l~~V~~R~ TUITL80CK pmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.iiiiiiiiiii..iiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;- HviD&s Sll.910. Thls new spacious 3 bdnn + den, 2 k l t c h e n • b e a r t y 586--0367 • OPtN "' 9. "s '""' ro11 N.Ct • tlglll•ds · OPBif HOU SES vaA•-•ma-a'onlaC°'I story home PLUS a fireplace. Lota of up· 11t t•v~ 103..1 , · ~ .... ~ _, .., ,,.... v,, Beaut decorated lrg 4 SAn.DAT SUMD ..... T I A fast nickel ls ter 1X10my never-vacant ren· grades t h'r u out . $69,500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• "-'-. 2v. ba, W/lnAI'· • "" t. 4 ~ tban a slow dime. tal. Pvt fl.nanclng pro-Profes sio n a 11 y :, uu.iim ..-~ -.. vided ..... ti'"' 811 ~ Bdrm home .._...of.__.., ~~ >: tacu.lar view. Top~al ... -Ah•-~ Cbarlts-32nd year. at su ... t.an .. Sj\V· landscaped. $82,500. • •tnrU l'LWWI'' 'llf> .......,. ~ 673-8250 1.nestobu)'er::J: BKR.540-1720 w/ ardwood floors . Affordable 3 br. IV. ba. · ·Y · crpts,dli19,landsca · Ctl for Raised brick planter In w /lu1h lawn & many l yr old Lusk home .. Beat MOVING 7 644-721 I enclosed bonus rm. fruit trees for sale by VJ. IN IRVINE Irvine loc Owner/All VA/FHAterms. owner. We'll save re· 7$2·2867 aft 6 Open Gel housing lnformaUoo 75 .. 7800 altor's comm .• so make ~~.~~m·bo~.e .. wthiteh _Sat_tsun __ l..S ____ _ from anywhere in the .,. a~ anu USA at no cost orobliga. ''#1 lltC .. fWMe" anoffer.554-7990 owners are IOUS! ORANGETREE CONDO, lion can toll Cree <not on ., 1 ....... IHch 1040 Now uktng only •uoo. f\e 111. s:s..soo. Sharp t rentals> 1 ·800·525-8920, 81/2"0 ., A ••••••••••••••••••••••• BR, on lake. pooOacuni, ext GU41 ASSUMAILE OCEAN VllW teonis. 22 Tangelo. ()pen Sat/SUD, l·SPM. llSTIUY IRVINETERRACE &abstant.lal price reduc· tion! 3 Bdrm, 2'11 bath wtth new carpets, lovely aarden patios Ir ll'eeftboule. G~llt IOCa· &n! NOW-SW,000 PETE R A fantastic two story, 2 Story, 3 bedrm, 3 bath. ~ ,.170 -· ,.,. .... four bedroom pool home ~ from the beach. _..., _,,,..., wtth lovely patio area, Breathtaking ocean view CAPPB.1.0 RIALn heavy .,bake roof, double S..-,,_., H.-or surf and .aand and MUST SH l I a ra I e I Great Io r 3 Bdrma, with huge low Catalina. Atrium model. parllea! Near South maintenance patio & Dramatic stain leadl.ng Immac decorator's Coaal Plua ! Only POOi. frplc, "bonus of· tobldeaway ma1teraulte dream house In Wood· tll8,900! Cal1752-1920. lice". Easy access to wttb romantic fireplace. IAMCHIWTY bridie. 2 stcy,.f Bdrm_, 3 ' '-'llAIL frwyf&beach. $125,000 Prlute balcony off bL OpelL f.S..SilliCJQ at T~ EBBTJDg&J:ALTY muw aultewltb view or A l..ZOOO IJJ2 Partridc'e. DI &CE '9rl-M56 the blue Pacific. Prtced Sharp.001q ft 4 bd ram IRJ!!N!lrvineHllll .!°~TIIS"" CtlRPY AS ~t!ui~•~fi!S~: rm. 1r1 matr st wdrplc, · 75U50l '""_..._ Hwry?Call . 87 A&tf'13.ml _., Down. OWJler will 10,-Tll!.M,...... ACllCKET 'Ol'fN,,1Q•llSll.lfol/OflllVICI w~oo Plan·B. 2br carry .. Deerfield Neat street, POOi, paUo.191 VI • townboaJe. Plan 3, aer, ':r~.: ~~t~ If&:~~ ~:: .. ~b~~ohr:;u,! :iJll. 11'.~ ;:tiol. P•~e~!: 2~Ba. t~~h~~ peael''· aprnJdr, cot:1-,~rll1! 1'7.900. Catt . .l ct.y.:a.= 1 ~ By owner. cretedr .• elec aar drop· ~.. !!!!!!I BR. 2 m den f - nr. •.500· wt$7$00 c1n. '-'UAIL 4bt 21>1.01w rp11m1to sdl.n. • 1a \03.i 1---------1 Meu ~el Mar. 2811 T bch, $79,900. Owner ~rm. ~c' 'Have. you read tot4Y'• l.or'eQlo Ave. Ownr/al\. .P~CE -.at0;64U850 -• evs~ . ~Ml? 1111111. -75-1---· -----1 PIOPllTIIS'" BlCYQ.E TO BEACH 1Dll81-.0pen h&.Auc ~:ma. tile.-~ ~-ftelil~~f026 -1 ~hl':aba...-.....lieont·l .. w.~~·~Hi'~trr.90t;~, ~---I~~~--;;,;:::;.~-:--:'.'= e1--;.;::;;.;:;;~z..;;;;;..:..;=~ ... booacaMS, U)'litel M1W U111• -DAMA POIMf Beaatlfut 3 bedroom. 2 bath execuUve home wlth{ioramic ocean, coastal & city t views. Private muter suite wi beamed celll'!_lj ftreplace and view deek. Heated ·iNJOI With Jacuut. C10H to tM miifiia.~$299,900, +other ex.tra1. New c.upet.lnt, enenatve tile patio w /co~!rt ha1h laadlcaplo.a, utC , fn&lt tnea. Xlnt DelPboc'bood • uhoota. t1041500 . ...,, ()pn Hae S.t/SllD !l1. ·~1 111.lt.:P H1 .. il l \t.1t1· . wr.,_ , -1 , • • .-.. JUST USTID An Immaculate lour bearoom-(plus den>. 2 batlr family home with rtrepla(e. Huge rear paUo with manicured lawn and lovely landscaping. Kitchen recently remodeled. Ocean view ..• SEE IT TODAY •..................• $138,950 . .. .. H ii ••• in :J 1"is \Sf, L- ....................... $9,000'DOWN Brand aew 2 •b' 4 BR, 3 a., den. botiUI room, 2 wetbara, l 'll ca1T7 at SUOO mo. No credit needed. 95'1 ·i.. Prtnc. ... ti: Macnab -Ir~ me ,,,, '"~' ·~··· .,.., J7 StlS \11 acre. fN?e um. A must. See. Ntce cottage. fee. 845-4900. *CONSUMER'S GUfJ>E Circle this! S210. Nice area. Kids. pet. rehig. Small fee. 8'.S-4900. •CONSUMER'SGUID£ --------• Woodbridge Est. SUper S250 lge 2 br, kids, pets, plush Jeff. 28d. den, frpl. gar, fned yd. Call today. lndscpd. $550. 6"-4809 Fee.~. •CONSUMER'SOUIDE Univ. Park, sep. home; 3 Lr& bouse 4 bd. a ba, fenced y'1'd. nr schools, ~· 548-2985. 847-7851 3 BR. 2 Ba, A/C. ~! DO pets, pool, leJM, 1 chl)d. 5'30. mo. S62·9549 or 551-2193 2 BR.1 Ba_, ocean view, no ,.. ,.. ... yrd wrlt. bric.It . p,atJo ~E<nJ'" 4 br. 2~ ba, sep. w/bbq. ~. l /981-«186or 119112-2108 ~Macnab -Irvine ....... u ..... .... .....•................. ..................... . OCEAMROMT 1 Br.1 ba. S37S yearly STIPS TO llACH 2 BR. 1 ba .. nr. N'pt. Harbor Yacht Club. Yearly · S450 associated Uf.l 't· f ""-:o u I i\ · '" ._, ' • "" t-J t • ' • Tll EFFllDIT AL TElllATIVE lfo. to mo. real incl: ::.:.:: l. a e r " .• fed pltODe COV• en1e, cool. rm, m•tt~ eerv., partina, fl more w ~EXECtrl'IVE ·• SUITE 840-5470 ) 11-----64_15_•_4.;..o ___ ,350 sq ft C.M. dbt ofc .._ HERITAGE POINT INice room. gd loc. Noo wmse space. AU uw p;d. I smoker, refs. over 50. $128/mo. 675-6251 ' . 645-6709 Deluxe Costa Mesa pro· An apt commwuty de· lee sunny room. lite kit. feasioftat office. 48', 1500 signed with you in mind ." 1nc1ry prlvgs. Ref's re· sqf't.548-2103. • featuring 8apaclous floor . q 'd. 548-l.372C.M. . plans. F\lrnisbed cw u.a· Deluxe office, 1200 sq. t. fornlahed 1 2 & 3 Boom w/balcony In Nwpt Misaklft Viejo. A.IC. bedroom apts. Available Back Bay area. Prefer sq. ft . Prufer Mamt 0 . foroccupancyJunezoth. mature employed <n4>831-T444. • peraoo. Olympic pool. tam.la ct. sauna. jacuzai. Desk space aeroas frclm $175. Unfurn&sbed. SJC mlasion. From SIS. MIHll251. Coaf area w /wetbar. _,.i. < Jde•I for 1bop1. Agt ROOll rvR RENT 1/661-1001 or '496-1786 D> ft. 1 Blk fT HB bcb SJC i Noldlcb.96N5f7/lvmaa . fUU.SRYICI S rl11t• 4200 •U:OOMCIS -······-··-····· Penooal lelepboae/ ~ PV"r BEACH-Balboa ceptionist. aecrelal')'. Pmn. sips 2. aso per wit, coafer-..ce room, cotra _•_•_aU_now __ '7_W083 ____ , ar boepttatity servied. OCEANFRONT CONDO ON THE SAND-VIEW Near comer of Walnut I& Pool + Sauna. Furn Jetl«Y ol1 S. A. Frwy. oles avail, reuonaDti. lbc54tM402 llM THE WATER!-! D1• 1•s.hs 6ll&t750~Ft .. ,....~-j 215 & 504 541 ft Udo ....... v..,. .1 .. OA.ILY Pll.OT .. . G =·:t I )r-'"'~"11) ~1t,.i1 I I I ' --.. -~ . . . . -........... ...... t Ill lteift.... Ji_t9 If • I • • , ... ~ .. II.., NNtla;JPIP'Nt n lt1t4 .............................................................................. , ....................•............... ~······················ ...... ._ ................................... , ••••...•....•............• B•l~lerv. Caato• rra 111 l1ta ·: Dlll=U.wluwww, 1 .......... ,.,._, he OOC9tUdea&. l Tootraclr. L.M.S.-Roto. Sod or a.tomWdlpaperln1 Pro/. WW do palnlltll & PERRY'S PLUMBING TIUP-CHAllOESlO o..bm,'9cta6c:owsa. :"'-~Wfr,0\aAI'_.... •Hlmat.t, call Trula. trtt trim, Rois Sttdtd La•na . All1WOl"kauar.~ . ..i. w1llpa9u1n1 In Complete p&11mb1nt -Mal.a.I.A. ui... ~ __:•,._ C.W,_IOIOlmoalY. MN'JQl,eoazM Spri111kl•ra, Plant1n1. 8'7Ml58 £XCKANOE f« \St le aervlcea. Drain Ii ~r oe.aut 1151 01• "' •. -.._ .. .~ s+d;:;.e· -T•-----~---0.,.. lentce eolbp XJn&refl, efS.183l __ .,_ , lut mo. rent In ruce c I • 4l n 1 n ti . f r .e ~ ~£ ,•, r..---AD1 _ _,_ ' ' al!:APDI' baWiu. lD 1Dt, ni.11Cnwl U'el 10f1 neilhborbood, l yr lae. e5lJm&les. 2C hr lff\'1C.. + ........... aba Jobi. cau All• or ...................... , !!~_.!1~ C .. •ll Juan, town. rr. est.I. CHCAPI !utopeaaLandlcaper yn. Prof. qual work. 119-5545 S73-3ll1 _.................. ........ H . .lt . .-.l•ltltc ...,,-.... -,. IG-Wor•1* ~~.Fair priee. Reu.lns.Dave.51&-8425 PaHot ---------_,..=_.~~Parrlal lot ••· .. •·Cablatt.a for u.araa MMrr• I : • ........_ It•••• , I .ltM971da1oreve. ~· llllt., Ex· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ •••••••••••••• ~ •Repalra •Sea1coatlnf -~. """ ·-•· a.&CT'IUCIAN·Pl1eed • • ...................... t.IDCllcaplftl. -r.... trim· · ee •~· ,.. · PaUo covers. concrete II REPAIR & REROOF. AU un .... 1• • ..........__ -11·~ --···-··· .. •••••••••••• ter • John n...ck •Lk. NB. CM •S f:Mr· Cu ma.4•. 11lllt.-frM •llmatt on ~J::iANpl~=?,; Wwa a.EAU.Va.~· EAN mlna. Clean·up. I yn lll~orM6-21el wrou1ht iron. Free type a., ha n a' e 11 . ~.....,.. ~ -..ortaUjobe. nn Miftor:NS-3'20 HOUSE. call 0 am exp. Free ett. Noboru. Interior exterior. MU.matet.SleveRlcbey. rockab•kea·compo·lar. t ~....-. Ucwed mGl9 · • • Glrt.,...eeest.8'5-S 531-etaor89'1·2862 Resldentlal & comm'I __.,or154-0386 Freeest.M1·5930 ~.~ fl 1 •11/ ....................... ~IRllL HoHHlttta1. Coll~fte U'INICKYFOXES ••••Lr properties. ~ichard ....... /1.,.., M.cDANEL ........................ ~---. rldbul. trtc. ...... ! ............. ,. ~~ef'. w/ebi~d cleaninl yacbt.a, apta, ....................... Marshall. 146 04U or ....................... Roolin&lillepa.irs Martoe Rtfall"/Malnt ~H~aTabow TAYLORJ'ENCECO. your boro./ptt~;l:n: home• ofea. free eat. Brickwork. Small Jobs. m.eoaz Neatpatcbellctextures Lie.~ 1/981·9'39 X1nl ...ta. All wort l\W' .1C.'9 Wood• Oa .. Uok whlM ~ vae.tUoo. AU M&a12 Newport. Colt.a Keaa 6 15 yrs paintin1 Ora· Coty. NB IST. 193-1439 Tie ........ ..,...... C-.tQnu• UeftU.W U.1117 local .. SW Bluebook N-HoUleCIHaln& II han· lrvtne.8'75-3175evn. topqualltyStLic#SM950. PAreHPLASTERING ..................... .. ••..... ._ 'ea --••••••-•••••••• ..... Ill fveDH9. • >.vall. im· dyman r~. NB/CM.~ SlMIPete CUI N -• 111 -•-Facmdatloea retalnlni -.. • __.. e-·ti • -• n..~ H'.• ..,._aft A 11 t y p e • . F r e e CERAMI e. ~or re-..... •••••••••••••••••• lb bl • tl ••••••••••••••• ... •••••• uwu. vu.-....... s.7 ..,..._, c · _..,,,_ 11 ...... •••••••••••••••• \4 olf Oil all wallpaper. U estimates. Call S44Ml825 model. Free ..Umates. ~~-= ::.U.ir.c1.'· P• oi. c~:.'~~.~~:i1!•J: ~.;!?;f ................ :~·Service" .~a~~~~~Gg . ~~~':"at' The Ftm"lllll1 c__,t after ~ d 1 ....... AU ~ of eoacnte Ml'\liciatta·llOT H u1 kl I d d H I i • B . anywbereatu,Ume!.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ua om wor-.. ra n· ....t. Block walla. p1u. !!..w• ~~ er ump ouaec ean n • Y 3'bnTdys 631·tl02 F\ne Int/Ex\ 6 aCOUIUc Any plumbing, water boards. tubl. showers. D1voru1 8aokrupt ~y ..._brt •. Uc ..... boeded. Prof. landaeape main·~~.~~·= Ref•rencH .... ._/P rt palntlng. PYeeest. Low aerv.leab,bathrm encl. ~lriea. e .. ~;....,~ue from fUlAa tb flnal $.1.S eGeN teDw9, u.cL de..,. 6 r .., .. ,... rates. Lie ~2. Call ceramic Ute. Reas . .,...mate..1/-..-.. • ., Actloa Le1al Typlnf baullnf. U~blllty la· Bliek Hoe • Skip • Damp Hou1ewort.. all areu, ez. •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• Paul. t'J3.en7 832·atel Tl"ff Serltc. !!t. .. ,,l~t '41·2N• • t ~ wcdl ,~all typee. •awed .. bcvd. .foma•v' &nack. A.lpbt!t drlvtw•.Y per .. refa,tramp. 8p~dRSRPAlNTINB ? O.l~A .. "P-ring 22 DRAINSC.EARED F1at ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---•· ~ ..... • cw wllmda. • • • ~ removal~ Toi-oll·Pill m..-xpr • eaa a.es. •......... --· · Mum • ..-.i R&ASONAllLS RATES. ~ Ml--OM1 or Free F.at. Call Gene yrs exp. rree est. rate. 113.SO. Maana. Expert shaping, tbJ.rul..ln& C.,1 .. a C lrcr&r Larry's Lawa Care. _.. So. American Cpl. wkly, DOGt An)'WberelDCo.831-5361 124.50. No 1immlcu. & atump removal. -..................... -••--GU. emptlea or 1 tlme Rooterman.138-21682. Landacape creatlons. Cuatom RtmodeUn1 • ....................... ... ... ,..., s,..ts clean'I· ffoDell. free est. Pal.ntl.na. Extr/lntr. Ex-2 xlnt paloten ~ do in· E E 675-2821 Addltlou. Call Vince R.l.Huff .. a•Soll. •VERYLOWPRJCES• ...... , .............. ,. Refs.Marta,Ml)-4929 pr'd, booeat. neat, reu. ter/exter wor at lo PLUMBING NE D D.1-----aU---- Lenboff6A.aoc.871-740C Bemodel6add.1Uons. O.OanlealalMalDt. 1 .. dwnlDum seamless Uc'dlM-lCKSDave ntes. free estm. Kevin CA.LL TreeService-types+-_......or Ml"'561 Georp Mt-101S ed W o m a n • e 1 p e r . ~1M.lke •58S1 P It K PLUMBlNG removal: pa.Im trees any CUS'l'Ollintartorurpen-Ucemed6Bcmdeci l1dnlutten w/bak 00 hou1ecleaoin1 . Floe Exter. Palntlna by . F~l&EFF'ICIENT. ht.494-11188or49'·2129 trybyJa.y. · llurahmi'• Oardealn1. ~..u=enbl:C:J::· References. 842·2558 R. Sinor. St. Uc .. loa. Tr)' ~,,!7.!111C:.f~ ~t;nor Lac 10 yn exp. Remdl. WIMlow Cle 1 IJ IO.allOI Remodelln1. addltlooa, Oean111> fl mabrt. M'bn. · anytime. me. 818-55552' bn. ='6' · or replpe. repair toe We re-•• .. ••••••••••••••••••• rdwd decka • spu, MW DM'U,Homel38-1SZI ... 1 •• ,A.. _.._ta. pair le new constr. Call Carpenter, handyman conatr.Lled.556-1241 II ... L .. .. Prof.....,...._. Ext le int. now• John Palermo Ir Peoplewbollveingla.sa Free est. Call after 5. Gardenln1Servtee.Yardl ·llilZJW -•mte• !I Low ratet. Reta. Free C.dlllacstoQo.Cart.a K ·1 M j ' k <?l4> bcM.Msoeedaaood Jett, sta-2Xl7 Addlt.iool, remdl, res. Is -Cleamqil -Lawna. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........ ~•••••••••••••• eat. 538-4780, 536-alJ Whatever the Fad SS:.~115 a 1 c wmdow cleaner! comm. Free eats. Compl•te 11rd main· Small JObe, 25 yn exp. Dig·It Landacape. Reaa. Roll 'emotftbemarkel · "A Clear View" 631-o217 Find what you want ln De.tiiros ~ plaQ. Lie. tenanee. Trim t.reea. Plumbbd, elec. etc. Call prices. Prof. landscape It Classified Ads, your one-With a Classified Ad Sell thJnp rut wlt.h Dally Dally PUot Claulfieds. Spiro, 56l2:50 ft-ee est. 6'll-OM7 P•IMl aJlt. 811..QM irrig. Ml-7070 atop 1boppln1 center. Call Now! 142-5878 PUot Want Ada. Want Ada Call 642-5678 .... Wmhd 4600 I '111 Lelt•'-d HOO,_.,.. USO HlfpWmtled 7100 HefpW..... 7100 HefpW..e.d 7100 MltpW..e.d 7100 HslpWC!llh4 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• C,11 hallty SOOS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• ..... ••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• .. •••••11• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Youn1 Female need1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lmt or Found a r.:1 Call A Comp/bakpr, fem, live· Automotive Macbln1st Babysitter needed for 2 lo.,... F c~ studio apt. Will pa.y up to Retired eouple bu mone7 .. i J A t MODELS in. aal pvt rm ba TV CdM ASSIMILlllS -....... Gd T II blld I . _.,,.:r.J--. $11S/mo Costa Mesa toleod.1.aU,2ndTD'1 no ma . II a anc• Ref6'4-9888,M4-9808 ...... .-.,...,,. pay. op ama c nn n my Growinl co. er older area. Excellent re· A&ent. l.a3'7-1744 Leap53'7 ma, notee. ISCOITS --A U1in. ot 8 mo'• factory beoeftt.a. Lre •~I home. Sdys/wk.~. woman. Noos~er. Sal ferencea. No Room· FOUND: 211.dedoo. bll ~ToucbofClua Ailw•'fl1lilCIS.. ..,embly ex-r req'd. !.~12.!ny . Cal Jim. 1•av5ma opea..831.3290. mat.ea. Aall ror PatU. 2ndT.D. made-bouabt. " la red 975-0062 _,, tJom -\.alt ---· ,..., M2·1°'5 bef 10 a.m.. LutberlDvest.meatCo. :,~,'!:ff; ml a: ~:ri:::! :::f.-rr~t ~c!.utt. beto1 en Sou~~~uto~Supply needed 7 yr old 1irl. BOOKKEE~ER. full ~aft 10 a.m 111-2510 Adama/Brookburst. HB. w,-a.-1u dnw. l7UIZ1 °' LOCK GUWUI ~e_ . lhttner'• Sehl Dist pref. charge. Acct g Sen1ce. ---------4---------1 a.3'MI 3'Hra 11/CViaa _., ~.f~ANY 681 .~. · 4 d.ly wk, 2 to I PM. La1una Hiiis area . Archhed oeedl 1 Bdrm • na•~•••I bl A/Rec. Gen'lOfc ssssMcFadden, HOSTISSU MM381atu. !'!-~:!'l workin& ccad. apt. Corona del llar •-i 11 Ill/ POUND: In ~tral Park Dou • Crypt, Harbor F U Fi j I H b , ·~ area. ~ oceupan-1 :::-.--=-..... ll13. H.B. Blk mal• Lab, Lawn Kem. Put. Costa I me. ne ewe ry untBc lfq! We're loot1n& for a Babysitter, t4 mo. boy. V1-• f .. _ .. , -,._ --''·-rt.""'"-lO lieu. Mr. PboeDix. eves at.ore. Creallve at-Equal()ppEmplyrm/f smture penon tb meet Mon·f'ri a-s. Call aft. BOOKKEEEPER F /C ey. A.W• re 1• nea aor ....... •••••••••••••••• oo.,...._,ama _,...., -.-1. moapbere. Be nefita. So. and greet our customers. 5"11m548-9294. Permanent Prr. Hrs AM RaMqbM>-705l h m =-••h 5100 FOUND: Female Coast Plaza. Call for No aellin1 required. sdayawk.CaJl&U-1259. ••••••• .. •••••••••••••• Doberman mix, vic Doable lawn apace, $165 appt.50-1436. Aaaemblen Please call Tom or Babysltter/bllkpr. Careerl---"-------hi 1• O,:pwtwlty SOOS ••••••••••••••••••••••• TRAVB. AGENCY RAMCHISI 1be new way to own • travel agency. Travel Network. Start your own. Exp. not required Coolplete support 4' loog term service provided. Call Mr. Charles, 714-838-B'M2. PDINY PINCHER ADS ONLY S2 n-"-lltb c M F P Harbor Lawn·Mt •-MIC .,.,,_ .. 'oc an '-'-'"I in· parenll need mature lbltkeeper full chg. tri.al V£1lDfe -• . . o'u. ~ rt-• p k0 ART DEALER need -••v naual' .... _..._ .. bal ct 4 I CMf.lZ14 C.M.•~::,.oor'Mo.a~~.' sharp YOUDI airl·Friday ASSIMILRS t.ervlew 9.12, 1·3 Mon. resp penon to wor .. ~ • comp. ac g. g1r part Ume. Some book· Medical co. in Misalon t.bru Wed. hr wk In OW' home caring orf.. salary open M v Folmd. Shlbtzu type male keeping. MC).(8)S. Viejo is seeking exper'd HARIOUI vw fOC' our baby & assume ~1_68-_13M_. _____ _ dof. Vic. Mlaaion Viejo SocWClllat 5400 assemblers working Your SUPER Dealer some hahld duties. Only BOOKKEEPER area.831).~ ....................... ArtMHcleWCM'tl w/emall components. lnHuntingtonBeach ~Y~:::'t~o~ef:1t:. Accounts payable. Foond. YI blk Cat, Vic. Reap. adult w/exper. In Good ere sight, "ID8nual 842-4435 Reply to.Daily Pilot. PO general office expr. re· 10th &Palm, H.B. SIMGU? needlepoint, knitting, ~!~1~!.tYNerweq 'bdui. ldXlnlngt. AUTOMOTIVE Box 1560, C.M. Box ~ quired. o.c Alrport area. ......,..,51 CallINTROVIEWforthe crocheting & crewel -""',_"" •-·lude appropn'ate t'nro u-u•u "·"'0500 ~· f i ' l ~I def:ndable hard Young man or lady with u...: .... • _, er_,. Sell any Item or com· intelllgent & discreet wanted or poa hon n and phone no 1--------- bulaUon ol itema foe $7S FOUND: MON. AUG. 14, way to meet new aingle I needlework sbop. Some dlvlduals call clean driver's record to · look Peta tip or less witb a Peuy GREY PERSIAN CAT, lJeOple. 752-5411. retail exper. helpful Penn. work avail only. auist a progressive Banking Person. Paste. display & Pincbet Ad. 3 lines ror 2 MALE. W /WHT FLEA 64&-3493 aft. 9am C.11Susan581-3830 sales force ID th~resen· s..te. Wast._. reader ad copy ont~ com«Utlve da1S· Eacb COLLAR. VIC. GENE'S i I =· ~~l,~~upckaneep. p!.."'!'1brtale IOOGlewrnSt n.ats. 2 Days a wk. Mon Furniture 1trlppln1 additionallinelsllOtfor !_.R,!.!aft· L.~<JuBCH . •:"""--ASSEMILER e11rs1M1·-... __ ,, ...... ·-·-.. 11 9p T 108 francblae est.ab 2 to lhe2days.Cba.ri'elt! ....--unJD ,.~ -.,_ future promotion for --,,--_.... am· m. ues m --·• Costa Mesa~a-Nocommerclaladl ............... •••••••• of electro·mecbankal aECTIOMICS .Wt.able employees. Con· la accepting appUcaUons &pm. Apply Pennysaver. t .. ion ..... For Sate at far UWAIDUI SG111l1 • device•. Preclaion 4c 2 Yn min exper. elec· tactCliveSkiltonal for experienced Branch 1680PlacentJaAve.C.M. For more lnformalioD LOSTi Bit male Lab, lat wt._ 7005 ~~ble !~t foNr imall. trooic directional IAUllMOTOIS Secretary~ Sal com· below COil. S7000 firm andtoA••-...,.,•adcall •<n-"....tA u.--i1 "'-~ -IDflCO. oexper •vetems. oil lnd"•try. -··-t.ew/exper xlnt IUSIOY Ml-'7822 .,._,.,,_ w;:t'~t;;'t':::<r.;.-: ••••••••••••••••••••••• oeceu. Call for app't, iii.tbeoeflta.OranpCo. t7f .. J50097'·1776 ~Call Mr: Lesch Day shill avail. Union Bath boutique. UIUque & 642-S&JI 631·116' REAL ESTATE 6CUS84. airport area. Call Ray "'UTOiJIOTIVE 497-1771. benefit.a. Please call '°" beautllul merchandise. S.R. Enfineerinl GUman. $57-8051. "' Equal Opp Emplyr m /f appt. 6'5-5000 ext 52<> P i I NB I SCUM-l.ETS Uc~sE 834 Production Pl, NB. 11..M Maclt•I"" Moa·Fri 9am·Spm real a oua oc. •--lie -·"-•"""' ~ ...,... Bank1n F1ortda business owner. ,,_, uaoa UN-,., guar. SCHOOL ASSIST. OFC. MGR SDadcllsfl g Must sell. 813/262·1115 or 120. Haire raft Plant ~ ASSEMBLY Some uper. needed in Busy Chevy Service TB1St n4/fl40.'1234 5'9-1005 ANS $ OFFERS teneral office work. Dept. to add technicians P/time eves & Sats for GYM Lost .. .._... s~oo Unsaid-ouay -s AIP. 4c .~ also lood for Ii I b t . q u I c k our So. Coast Plaza ore. ,,_ • Probe "-.. TRAINEE pubUc ra.,"" .... 752-0565 mechanic a I • l SA , '""-r p-...l'd Call Cat.bv Best buy In Orange Co. ••••••••••••••••••••••• BONDS.uonae1 -..... Led•• Fne door/glass alignment, ~,;;'at~. " for T ·pment & loca· FOUND: Blk German MAN Attendant Io r .. _ .... rid . ,. ....... -1 Sb h d f I My son ln colle1e callecl <orexperlenced> Quadriplegic p /tlme etc. w1ou ..-e P e 10 ...-.onwa tioo-0,000 full price. ep er • ema e, nr meovertbebotldays He •CntbCourseavallabJe Micro •di•u moma.CaU&42·'92t, workmanship. Perma· ,_...alS..W.C. Owner. 991.ass2, noon· Callfoml• & Mlnnesota, aurpriled me by not_.. •Materiala~rovicled. We are aeekin1 in· nen~ varied 4c Interest· 3333Briato1St.CM IUSIOYS HomssEs Days It Nights Apply in person After3PM n. AllcMwt McwfHr 'lSflW. Coast Hwy, NB 9Pm. wtdays. C.M. 5'5-334Z ina tor IDOQeY. lnltead, ;!:!!a~s!d ~=~~ divlduala for fint ahif\ !.'!!.:....l~dea~ Opfopor J::tty· Equal Oppor Employer HEALTHFOODSTORE IAltSbep.Huskpup (fem> be ulled me to reeom· poattiom ID our Produc· AutoMana1emenl •au.,.. C-raAsaJst. 10 Beautiful Idyllwild. Jlllbm/blk, wh tip on mend a 1.ood bail ~own lalt.e-ilay UonDepartment. WewiU a. .. celr for a vancement.. Bartenders. experienced. ....._._ si:l>.000 sross & climb-tail. Name-Summer Vic. BONDSMAN. fuqbtcluaes. train the ri1ht In· I 1 ..col $9.5~/hr. See Mr. private country club. ..--___..- inl-Incl Apt. Call (1l4) II•• Woods. Reward •Placement-up to 80% dlvtduals in tbe micro-Trevino, HOWARD Call 644-5404 for In· Some photographic ._2806 M&-0113 FOUND: Bedllnstoo Ter· commlsaioo. electmlicalndu.stry. M••ar•at Oievrolet. Dove le Quail ternew. know'I beJpful. Apply. __ rter. male, abt 4 or 5. ARre11lve individual Sb.,NewportBeacb. 1---------Pennyeaver. 1660 Donut shop w/fut. food a. Lollll Blue point Siamese. MlleSq Pk, P.V. 554-4813 Fne3Week Comprehensive com· needed to manaae oae ot tn'OMO'nVE .._,, Styllt Alat. Placentia Ave, C.M. ice cream, prime loc in 3 lit , an• w e r • to • SalellTrainlng. pany beneflU including SoUtbem Orange Cowl· A To train ror cUentele. 1---------yr old SC Sboppin& Marahtnellow. Trade Found, •m male bel1e, e.l,_.Detali major medical and den· t)''afineltFfddepta.A OMCllMA Top waies. J bJrmaclt Center. Xlnt 1rowtb wtnda. Saottago area. ~· oldit~c...rJ: 6 131-1003 4fM442 tal. Call or apply ia aw;ceeafuJ bactaroWMI in UFITIME lmowledle belpfUJ. Full CASH CAID potenUal,$1S,OOO dwn, M8-98M amer, · Katella person 3952 Campus linaDc9 and iDluraoce a OPPOtn'UMITY clienteie for right. party. COMES TO bal usunubl~.:.-~-~ r.1a1ll1 HSO Real&tateScbool Drive. Newport Beach, must.TopaalatYlccom· ~PERSON 837-4250«U1-8119 c.e.••FOR._.I..,! G ,000 mo. PP . ......--... • .... •••••••••••• .. •••• l2031CamlnoCaplatrano (71') M(M!Olli). Equal Op. mil8'oo + new demo to rOC' used car position wlt.b ~ " A aftSPll REWARD S-zlil'='•--.a-SanJuanCaplatraoo port.unlly Employer the rt.pt ~·Jf youd a domestic luaury car • ..., Matte Weoeedtopsalespeople -.. ---M/F/H. are 1oal orien""' an dealerlnOrangeCounty. ManJcurtlt. 83'7-4.250 or to launch this new ,.illlaalon Viejo beauty LOST: 2 yr old white 1815So. ElC~1~11d RESULTSCOUNT want to join qur team. Free demo plan Ex· UHJ77t. _ market ing concept. salcoSynold. 7stalions. Samoyed female dog. SanClemeot.e. Fu"" c. s c Ac baa ... aed JRANSMASK please call Jean for a 11 t · •---------Protected temtories -Aaking $16,000. Make ol· Last Sa in For appt. m. 7296 · · · · '• u ConfldenUal tnt.erview at c e en c 0 m P 8 n Y Beaut.>' salon in CM needs fer. Owner anxiou s. d Ulth'T~t!~ Ans~t! employ tor over 200 tn•>$U-41702 benefits. All. replies hair atyllst.a. Guam -t-xlnt renume ration • Prufer M1mt Co . "Shondl". Please can ~~.=~ ~.ID ~~~~'ii~: CORP ~oociay.'~iday ~c~u:i~:~d~t~~: comm.548·3446. ?o~~too:.~:~UC~t~ (114)831·1444 548·4878 before Spm, Oukallt.t,4M-5lll xtru. We need all ages· • l .30amtoS.00pm care ot The Dail)' Pilot. Beauty Salon In C.M. 955-CASH lleauty ea Ion fully 66&-85Uafl.Spm types. <n•>tS7-0282. P.O. Box 1560, Costa need1 W11 Stylists.I~~~~~~~~~ eqWpped. Rent$1500. mo-u.t II. grey Poodle ap. P~~~I,; .,.W..a.d. 7075 ~ ~ Mesa,Callfornia.92.621S. Guarn+comm.548-3446 ~Wasll See owner Sat 1oam to proa 5t anwen Pierre. rdernl. Abortion, ..........._ .. ••••••••••••••••••••· 1;-: AUTO PAITS 11a..-ay Q.IRK lmmed. employment in noon at 2815 La Fayette, vie Pomona ft Victoria -... .._ C.ll •-N B Call CanneryVUlage. 8-UReward~ Uon&lleelQI. Certified fract nurae COUMTllMAM Willln1 to train In· ·.. · ·areas. APCARE 5C7·2583 WlllUfem patient. Experienced auto parta d\lltrtoua, mature indlv • ._M_•_••-·----- IALIOA ISi.AND Siamese cat Seal /:inea ....... YICll ..... oountennan needed ror t 0 c 011 ate i e I I 0 n CASHIBS : ~~~~.:tor": ~i:~:·:.· ::1fe~~.. ~ .. M•.!,_• =.1:111.t~::'a:lr:': STRUCTURES :~.~= ::abe:.i~·:k:ik~ o::O~:funa talla.M().5U2agt. ~ .. !'kW7 .. 1100 rew .._._ vfltt Brownle-'7087 A'SSEMBLERS I. in penoo at Sacldleback Apply betwn 8 & 3. Na· Wetraln.Co. Benefits ,,.,.,_ 8en'talallOranteCo. M-_ ~q._·~~rt.a. 28402 t.lonal Education, 4401 ..M.Eill1 ~ Mmaftolocm IOJS ~ m.ma. ·~x.s.c..ww~ ,_ -_ ptwy., tits, Bircb&t;-N:B;Equal()p-_,.H~borBI CM -·••-•••••••••••• t.OS"r. Siberte .-..-•>'• telterl, Term papen, lion Viejo. portunit.y Employer -' 'Dt. 2nd • 3rd T .D.'1. male, copper/wbt. 1\4 *nt1u ...v add en" etc My home a 2 • ....a-y lnte--·lewa p TYPIST Caahien&Salesmen · Ctedltnoproblem. yn. v~ friendb', wear· ~,...., 1 • · ..,. ... .,.. ,-. Alfl'ORENTAL BICK R-731-4271 l1ll no tap, alisce 8/t . ESCORTS• m.at Thi W k TRAJNEE Work with computer Wea-Ca! Nurseries ~ ,_A .. -'by Call Roger 552·0103 or Phforapp't 835-3749 HtfpWmhd 7100 8 H Opportunity for In· print outs. Some local ~ply:~15:° t na•-9111 ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Auguat 19 1978 l telllgerrt. hiendly, neat travel. Mon tbru Tbrus. 111'11 • es m CoastHomeLoanl VIDEOllOVIEPARLOR Acca•tlltClertt I appearing young man wortwffk.S600toS800-t-Cashler, aper. full·time. OOyou ...... 0 C""'H• Found. reddish brown Pree30mln Introductory ...... to ....... -•-1,. .. ey over 18. Prev. exper. not benefita &car allowance. , ---of"'"'"" ... 'a ..... 'i:dr..&3rd~ · female lonlbalr Do1. Yildt. no purdlue req. -....--,,... req. Start wtth lot man Ca I I Barb a r a at ~ 'M4..44ii · ..... · {BeoJl t1pe) Vlc, Alao daoct Ii rap addlDC macb. wllllot to New PC>tltlona are avallabl• at duties, advancement <n4)955-.CASH. Homeownerloau DowntownH.B.538-0711 aess1ioaa York JCJm-e oterllm•. Mc~~ Alttonautlc9 com. avall. to auto rental CASHCARDCORP. CUhlerfordrvptott arrUlfedfut .w...-..... Will train. SSOO/mo io peny tor'*"'°"' experttnced In Shett ,.._ -"rd Borrow $1000, 1100,000 FOUND: l Hiify bicycle. _!S.~ll~~~m 1lart. Call for app't. , Mttal Aeeembly oe>eratlona. counter·imn. Good driv· • W. P/C..._ IDOdM . .,..p pn llu.lbJA.. terma, pHt Owner' ldentif)' by Siu, R r.iuoo ""IUllWCI 752-1212. ~ -~ rea. 131-2480 mi:. t:rr ~nt 673-25.50 cndit llO ~ Call -oakt. • -. "' :w~ ..,.Hrdl...,. -:r:-:---~, ~ ~. --fi·-· .,.._. -. ""'-~ _,..&<r.HfR ~ ::-.:':'_l • .a-6--L ......... ._ ......_._ _ ! • .........---.............. 9'( ..... NAO fn W -»w-~ 7'r--:_ .,... --~ ~ w • -----Acd:DI ll_bJD( f._ of ~ .....-.... ttnO OUt •= AU'IO ~-,_ '.• riUd.&alfy Nq---ct. II 5 dQt JIOCl·f'rl .. 3AM · , n•Ja.~cs ~Call BBPD. •;1vu1~ _,____,.~ :'4 " whit ra iliiltebtt to youl · ,_-u5mCAl MMn.23. tl:aoAMOdlier:iill:ticau f'lAl RIAi w ·--""-.I ... to ~ <: --MICHAMIC '7DTUS PllYATIPAllfi haDd 2 IMP reel mal• Ilea la~ ~~ leakll11p1r~Allht. •-------- haa tsOOO to *50,000 to &~!: ~!,cea~~a. • 71WUI. boott•••PlDI aHICI• any CZ :.~·M= ':"= OPPOITUMIT'Yl &:.:.J0,,U:p~l: ~c~~~r~cd~ losD ca JOU' real tllltaW • ~ • -<., ' menta. Wori ~ION tO S.tUtday between a Lm. and 4 p.m. U JOU an loiOkina for a upv'd A11llt. Bkkpr. !2em Schidlatrict. ~.::-~=~~=;: LOil~ med alJe SballJ MASSA.. ~;t. b:,m:,: I!~~ Wt !<><* fonwtttt to ...,ng you. JOb 'ff/a iood ruw.r.. ln· Tot> pay. Pd partl~. '"''783/m.31188. pertf. C,..dlt not .... :::'::!:'~!' ~ ...... MODILS tuu nteded tbruout =I~ ~1c!t =r.~·l.'9:utTno~ Cblldcar~ p/t Uu·ln qW-ed.~J~f·A&t· 545a3 Dr • I J:=~, ~~.:: MCDONNELL DOUGLAS ., 1 :i~.~u:1.:! ~~ll4~~1,o~lcbelt ~~j_:>·r~;~ ..... , ttotpm7daya. LOST: Wbl loo1·bal"*9 m-· ' ~---... •stRON·UTIC8 co. 1 .. t."1-ucenae.You'U ........ t -•I•"' '"""~ ""·' Sbib·'hu. J', Bluffa area •·-t llll08.Maba.St.a50l "' "' Wat ~t of companJ Bookteeplna clerll: to ban· ews .trl'm'" T...t 5031 A.nawera lo P.-nklp: 1-2140. ~~~= ,_ _ .,..., ..... A-. beatltta, tbt p1 .... 11. t di• payroll. po1t1nf'_au __ kl_c_are-fot_T_ yro-ld-~-,. ....................... K1:\;~1':~. pet. 8tudaOl DMd8 • rlct. t.o ' 11'/m-410I Ha11•••n ....,.., CA..., WOltdnc CODCIWona. Wb) acct ' ucehable 4PM to 8 PM Mon·Ttlu~ ~ii. LOET .. _... Cldco .,, .Aus 21 . l wiU . • • DOl d»me In and check tce'tt payable.. lO hy sue hr. Vic Ptularino " Lea •R.ewanS• _ ..._...-, !whit wt bawe tb ~r. bJ&oucb.A.P~lnpel'IOll Babb~M1·31Ga.IU 1 ~SlaJMMJ(.: :vk PQS-~""''.PaY'ble i'-" 1.-..LIOof ~Utt Exlttt. ~/ ·• ·Apply~ to Paul Caine. ~Udo !IQi> Ya.rd to0 Lldo Wawlt..... Oii• St Cll ._.;Uf; w~: A.Ui l'emalel for 1mall tltctroellea ..... ,..W ·~•&. 1 '.WI.UM>" P'()R.D. 11151 ~Dr.NB _ Cltcula\on·PtUUon•. latT.D:.,, ..... ...-.· J ...... ,__...,~ .... --.a,•1'tt9~~I~· Buch Blvd, ff8 . llDnfamUMia.rtfetUq •• br. "•"'cub • a..T.D.&.e.lo , , ,.u.em.-...... ac«a .C' _ t ,,.--..1.,. , lhe camp., "bQs" &his d.allJ. P'uU or p/U.m•. ,...._.,.._.._.uel IMI: 1 Jr old r .. aJe • 11111·_, Ne· ..., ta •• .. .._ 1 rear. It rou bu• a Stan~ M~ be l&. ...,._.Ce. ~ _...... eaL ,,._,_w,..tor ~ .,...,,..., a.e; ...., n. ,__..,.. lD UM -..erlMt'aeotpU!q •-.-.1"1-·t. _, ...,.11 ~.-.. ...... Ytt; lab6......_lfll ...._ ••• .....,"1.•W•J1ta.1A•TM v _ L 1 _.._,. ~• D!!!J .. PUot .................. u.. __ ___ ..__ ________ ,1 ,--.~--'1~f.M. . -• •Ill .=;11-: -·";,1'~ •:.::: ~ ~ • --:..., -· -, ---'__ --,.aH 'ChctM ' ; .,,._.,._._... ~ ~ ·,~ --~ . ' . ---.. - ,· ,.,___ .. ; ... :> ,.,..,..,, • •' "~ r..n1 ,, " , .. ~ I / - •, .. IONNQ MILL · 120" a 4r 0.Vlleg ENGINE LATHE • 20" A"*'-' with T,_ GRINDER • C"'9f9 MOdll t10 JIG IOR£ • 11 Moen a II SIP 1111.UMG~· v......a...._,.., TUMIT LATHI • ................... , •• $ vmmcA1. TUMET LATMI • we--.•....__.. ...... « 12 ft. ..... RIBTAURAJtf COOKS & APPLY TODA YI ·- c.-aca•• r.11•11 We a.ave lmme4lat I openlnp Oil all ahtfte fUl1 ud part-tho• pCIU ·1 tiona. Startlna P•1' i $2.85/bour for swine llblft. end P .00/boar ri I araveyard. lntenlew! . are betna held datl)'. ' M.uat be 18 and over ~apply in penoo: JACllM THllOI 315 I I 711Slrftt C....MeM '3f·f47f . ... -tou.._· HUMnl..roN·· .. CH -.• ... EC{u.U Opp !JmJbr llJF a..;;.;;;=..:;;;..=.~,__--i.. .... 0,,....,..•/f ~- RESTAURAN'r JACllM· THllOX R.ESl'AUBANT ' • JACICIM THllOX FAMILY . RISTAUIAHT · MOWHlllMGI . · ia-Trhnnpb BOtanevUle; _._______ , 65GOC. nu paint. .-io. 8*1288.· '971 J.»PtCIUfl $7395 <JIAUP'Nl4046') -Fl& 100 . •MLOMS6AS wltla 1"1ft~... of HY --------· -wltbtldl coupoo ;· WIWl.LllAT .: AMTVtWll•*' OMIMYMIW .. WIAll ovmtSTQCIB 21511 ....... Blvd CGl&all .. 714/HN023 us. 4X4 YAUm trn Cbe•'°let Blaser tPtlOI, v ... auto. air. Clltyeone. Ult. Im· mMUI~. 2 yr, ~.000 mUewarrant.Y •vailable. " 11m lfrl<lwn'Qlet ~Ton PV tP1131l, v ... auto. air. 2 ''" at,000 mile warranty. S7tH 1115 GMC ~ too <PIG• Y·I, air cond. power ~~~~!.!!!~I l&eeriq .... apeed . 1'76TOYOTA PICl•WITH C...-SH&I. 4 ........ radio. beater • -27,000 miles. Ukf Nf!'Wt Lie. U>e805C SUf, i.AT. • S3t79 THEODORE ROBINS FCWf) I ~ " ' ' i ,.. • < ( 'f, ••• '\ • • . ltnlOIO ~""'"' Eacelleat tbruout 1 (KXmt. OM.Y.St7H ...... ~ 215DffiiiW Jllvd., C.M. MW700 .. \ l .,7flOU ...... Y-1. automatl tre-•> r' q 1;o jlO'ftr dll brtbl. (1..-i) ...,. m.cacrn ...... SA 5liWeOD aa-1 .... ya TleMC ··~·-04 V • •~ a ut o m 1 t I ti I 'fl' I, fedory :.,~~!. : cfd:'~, ~ roed*-•wt.eeia. TmCICITY ab6 Hsbor, SA .... ClllMllllDdaJ'I " •••MIWttJI SNIMf..al . UITPllCI ....... IA ft ''·'" 56495 ........... ALL 1·977'1 SAU PllCIDI • I IUY Olt LIASI ·You&lt711MW MOWl Exceileot 11lectioa ol all modell DOW iai&oekl c~ IODYSHOf ·MOWOPIH C O«;TA MESA OAT«;UN JMtlLUUIOR II.VD. HI 641014MJIJ '7t 4-dr 1800. FM rldio. SIM:ri&e. llOOO. MMZl.3. ?SCIVIC AalomaUc trans .. stereo. (9DllYN} 12'118 HAllOURVW 11711 Beach Blvd .• H.B. Call 8G-443S SH MOW!! ON DISPLAY FOUR BEAUTIFUL MERCED~BENZ a.~cs '732.204 DOOR Automltic tram .. power steering. air cond. <378NRX> '70280SE Automatic tram .• power steertna. air cood.. 6 cyl., fuel injected. (:52Q8U '73220 Automatic trans .• power steering, air cond .. 4 cyl. (838HJ>K) '73280 Sunroof. au tom a tic trans.. power steering. air cond. ( 181fl8) HAllOUIVW 1871l Beacb Blvd .• H.B. Calllf.2.'435 1975..Z280 SEDAN. Complete wttb aumoof, stereo. cruise control & lo• miles. (927NXR ). BuY or lease. HOUSE Of IMPORTS, INC. Authorized Mereectes Benz Dealer llST 58.ICTIOM IMlHIWISTU HOUSE OF IMPORTS, INC. .213f921.a588 714/523-7250 ~ ~ --------------' - : "'10 911 T coupe, or1gtnaJ •thruout, s apd, alloys, S ~ 699 spoiler, Dir <t92BIN) ~ blue/black,53&-78118 --------• .. _____ _. • .-------11111111 '7' White Subaru 2-dr ....--~~~~---t aedan.gdcoad.Sl800. Pristine or Huntinlton 675-0283 aft 6. Beach is orrertn1 lacquer paint, metal finllhlnl & "78 auto. w1gon, snrr. as- fender fiarint to Porsche aume loan + $700. owners.535-7888. 6'5-7067 "'--........... •oiel 01ffl ToJoh .................. "-•IMr•$Utl .,.... . Lia. 11Mlllt '61 Ccmvertlble. xlnt nm· T.,..e. 9765 ______ ...,.. Dina cood. very clean, ••••••••••••••••••••••• l5800.1--.3'110 74 CBJCA 77POISCHI s speed trans., AM/Fii 1UDO c••••• r.&. <~> ·Black. Blauphmkt stereo HAllC>Ua YW le •tr condUtontn1. l8711BeaebBlvd.,H.B. (800&M) cauaa HIS SSS.185 ~-~~~~~~~·· HAllOUR YW llFOal YOU 11711 Beacb Blvd., H.B. SILL YC>Ua Call MZ-4435 TOY OT A. "74 914. AM/FM rad.lo, spd, apr grp. $4950. ~l • SEE US! 5 1999 52199 MdqUIS TOYOTA .._ MlSSIONVIEJO 1---------• ui&lperCabCoov, ivory, lll..UIO 495-1210 drt brwn top. immac! 497-1.337. 'Tl OeliCI, gd COlld. '74 914 2.0, new paint. $1250. 759-937917~-lW 47,000 mi, blaupunk ..;..for;..;....Bobert...;..;..;.;..;.... ____ 1 AM/FM cus, mags, xln "JO Toyoll Pickup, 40,000 cood. owner transfe mi's, Sl69S/bat ofr. ~.500. 752-2058 548-2887, 646-752& '58 Poncbe 356A. xlnt • ....-.. ..... cccid, must sell. best of --"ew fer, 673-2386 eves. •••••••••••••••••••••• 1977 924, all black polished wbls, alr. AM/FM cua, anrf, 4 spd. Like new! Bu.y o just take over lae. Wkdya . 640·5142. Eves/wtenda, 581-o71N. '67 912 Tarp, fane cood, must sell. 645-8719. '66 911, rebll eng/body, low ml, alloys, AM/FM, . mint cond. t6200/offer . . ...., .-f67 Porsche, B•b•m orange, s apd. Orig. Very clean. 644-4887 eves wlmda. WE.RE DEALIM(i!!! t7s Porsche 1121!:. black/black. 1unroof 811•~ ttereo cua., mlnt cond. su.200. -...1 OVER I 00 HOMDAS ' [ H UJf 'l nu 1 r · 1 f ' r 11 \ 1 ~j MOW IM STOCK! :&s0;.wntPl~~~9GID~D:-llllc::"na~lt-!==~~::::::~ TT a& Yellow rran, allon, po;::::;;;,__-..;,= M SC red elec. aWlrOOI All/Fii stereo. Ali serYlce records. Xln ecnd. '1JOO. 1»1712 • 645-59 :rt7 TABGA. Hint cond. Anthracite 1ra1 w /blk .trim. AM /Fii caaa stereo. Lowered. A/C, $1000 take over lH. OF ACCORDS t'OO! ':DONT PAY TOO MUQH" Dunton Ford •·, ,•. J\ 546-7070 COllllU. CHIVIOUT 2128Harbor Blvd. OOSTAllESA 546-1200 lt741UT '"-BNutlflJI orange with bllCk trim. 5 speed, R I H. Lie. IOeeNOT. 13995 ltnlllAT 114- IVorv With ,., trim. mao wheels. low mlleaoe IJ'larpie. t220e. '4995 Im RAT 124-0.rtc blue with tan trim. aJr conditioned, IS •P••d. tugo•oe rack. stereo. Lie. -.04TBa s5995 lt74MT 124-Bubbllnq burqundy exterior wtlh blllCk vlnvl Interior. IS-speed tran1. & 1tereo r•dlo. Lio. "49LJU. 14195 lt'71 MT llllmAM Gu rmw. Mint con-dition. (723FFM). 1 1295 lf7HIAT 11/t 4 speed, 8t"90, mag wheels. A 1911 cutie. Lie. t733NIZ. '3995 lt7UIAT '"-Racing red with AM-FM ......,, m1g wMelt.. Locll doctors Cir. Uc. "42l\tW. 13950 lt76111AT 124-DHhlng red with biKk ~ trim. This air I080IO wtth flWllY extra llti ontv 215.000 mtt-. Uc. "'58NZB. •5495 ltnlllAT llt • IP"d. rnllQS. Red with dart( brown ln-tertor. 33.000 mllea. (733NIZ). '3995 DICK MILLER MOTORS 120WestWwwr Smta A11C1 557·2132 \ SHOP & COMPARE OUR LOW LEASE RATES 0 BARWICK DATSUN MISSION VIEJO IMPORTS MARQUIS MOTORS ALLEN OLDS-CADILLACGMC 714/495-1i00 .. e e 0 0 SADDLEBACK VALLEY IMPORTS 21~2 MAIGUBlff PetWY , MISSION Vl(JO .......,..., ' .... ht. f.l;~S.. 0 ~@ ottfl • sal_es \b@ • leasillCJ Marquis MotOrs . 831-2880 .;5:!='-r 495-1210 ~ IUPERBUYSATTHESCJPERDOME! VQRA"GI! COCJ,.TY'S LEA81"Q SPECIALISTSt Qtte"!V ~VDAV OP£N£VtRYDAV ,,. ,,. 49S.ot00 13 t -0800 f ft ._ -... __.. ,,. • ft, ,,. ' • .,_ ,._ I• h A • -. ,. h • .-• •• ....._.,.,.,. • ...,,_, -- I • l 971 CHIVROU1' NALA WAfiOM 2600 Hartior Blvd. V-1, automatic trans. Cosca Mewl. 54<>-QIOO factory air condlUoning. ~-----• poWer steerin..J. power -· ·u dllc b rakes. AM /FM -1;;...9-7-6 -C-HRY_S_LIR __ ndio, beeer, whitewall Olwlt~t='f' tires<BllFC> <P8888> COIDOIACOUPE ·~ $3499 V-8, factory air condi· Uoning, power st.eerin1 • • TEST DRIVE ADllSEL SEVILLE • Dunton Ford • • • ... t ·' I • A 5~6-7070 power dis c br akes, power windows, AM /FM radio, heat.er. whitewall tires. tan Landau top, Wt wb•l, cruise control, opera lllhta <960NYH > •=======::! (83951) $4799 .. XiDpwood Stn Wgn, A/C. R It H. orig owner, gd tra ns car $49S. Jaguar • 1RlNPH - BUY or LEASE FROM THE PROFESSIONALS MIW ~ V6La .. SJOCll 6M-40tO; /640-8064 Dunton Ford . . ~ ,.. . . . ·. ;" ,,. llaftaoa-thing you want Make y our s boppin1ISELL idle items with • to sell? Claaalfied ads do easier by uslng the Daily l Dally Pilot Classified At, 546-7070 It well MN678. Pilot Classlfled Ads. MZ-5678. ------- ~-~!':! •..•.•. !~!4?~.~:! ..•.... !~!4? ~.~::! ....•.. !•~o Mtos. Mew 9100 ........................... 13 Cpe deVUJe, take over .,mta, m a clean, full p•r. see t o a pprec. ---1n1 CAM• •c COWIDIYIUI c.llriollt top. leather' ln· tenor • stereo tape player. C51SllWK >. SPECIALATONLY $4"9 Nabers AUTOCIMTIR Dlv.of Naben Cadillac 14HIAl8ST. ACIOll FllOll FEDCO ,..C:OSTA...S. 14MIM '75 Sedan De VWe blue, 109ded. abarJ>, is.750. l'P . ...-afttPM , It" CADILLAC 'COWIDIVIW Thia one bu full power a UIUKENEWI (7.SA.li61). 1 $1599 ;Nabers AUl'OCIMTllt Dlv. of Nabers CadUlac • 14211A18 ST. ~CROSSFROll FEDCO COSTA.-sA 14MIM "7t Eldondo. 31,000 mi's, ... /red lu&ber. $.1500. ml/ ... TJIS. • : lt7J CADILLAC • COWIDI YIU! ~ powm-, Wt wheel, cin1iae ecDl:rol ~ stereo. t15G2). : S32tt ~Naber& ·Mll'O CIMna DIY. cf MaW. Cadlllac: -14211A19ST. ACJI08S no11 r s:oto : COSTA..S. 14MIM '7C CAD SDV, loaMd. .. /beat olr. Owner ;,:.::.111 . an ·OOH. ,...me. VflfY clean. AU 4*tz'H. ..900. WkdJS ......... m-nn DRIVE HOME ANY NEW '78 Z·Z·Z.EPHYR '78 MONARCH '78 BOBCAT IN OUR II~ STOCK FOR JUST I WEUEND SPECIALS 1 19nLINCOLN TOWM llOAll.. l9c1. llr. f.t ,._, AJt.fll -· "'Ir°· i..-...,, • .................. u....nMJI $ 1976MAAKIV , ........... ,.... ...,.......,_.,,. ............... ......... u..ml'lfDll •7288 • 1971 MONARCH ............................ ,.. ................... "" .-ii . 'A288 1917UNCOL .. ¥IJIUA4U. 111t.llr.M1~,_.. ...................... .... ........ UL.-r111. '9288 . . . . Al . ORArtlE C•llTY HEADllARRR OYER ! 135 llEW . 1971 •nllas ' Readf Fof DellYe,y ••• , PRICES START Al I ' 1 • -.... . . 8J4 DAILV "\.OT 2 oq OLX • FAC Ate •Ol')~r; 2 OR. OLX. · FAC IJC •t&A~-.,. STK/SERIAL • 2 OR. SEO .. FAC AIC ~H~1<1f.4 2 DR. SEO 2 DR SED-AIT •·qQ d,.~ t ,,,, 'OR SEO A/T .. "" ...... , HB ';P£ .S SPO HB CP£ S SPO 54798 54783 54238 54238 S.A.O. PRICE s4549 '4199 s 479 '4361 '815 '4591 '877 '4579 '844 s4579 '809 '4579 '844 '4579 '447 '5191 '1000 4999 '957 '4879 '1271 '4899 '1103 4999 '1234 ~5149 s1249 ' . ' . ' I AlllM. Mew 9100 Mtot. Mew ....._ UMCI • ..._Used Mtol. UM4 ..•.................... ...................... . ................................................................... . IUNlri FORD'I LOOK FOR ME? What's Missing! .ttt.S..IMete••••• ...... Pwp. ''WILLY THE WHALE AND Hiett PRICIS" DISCOUNT I SALE LOOK DllCOVMTI urro • • • FIESTAS COURIERS ••• PINTOS ••••• FAIRMONTS • . '400 . ssoo .s400 . '400 R.V. VANS ... '1500 DOMT MISS THIS SALE IF YOU'RE IM ntE VAN MARKET Selected Vehicles In Stock - Subject to Prior Sale 5440 GARDEN GROVE BL. WESTMINSTER (213) 598-5588 (714) 636-4010 Tll• ......... ..,...._.,. nte Of ..... CNtl DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS %. OVER DEALER . INVOICE OM ALL DODGE OMMIS, COLTS & CHALLENGERS! (Ooes not Include factory hOldbaek or factory 1ncentl"8S.J NEW 78 PICKUPS!! Qi,....,. 9925 ~ •••••••••••• !!.~~ ................. !!.~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• '11 COrdoba. blk w /bUc Ith Inter. rwl e_wr. ma1 whla. Sl.000 ml 1. $.'5000 firm 14'7-67'7 I '71 00001 '73 Gran Torino, 40M mi, DART Z DOOi A/C, auto, V·top. new ($43CYI > radl Uru, dol cond, $1699 stereo tape. $1 ,995. m.m• < Cber)'lW> is Cordoba fully equlp. PHIL LONG "74 Pinto (auto). Low mlg. Whlte. l400Q/bet orr --Xtra cln. '1600. 758~111 t"'VRV •-2••• '3AutoCenlerDr. _.. _,. C-t 9'27 S.D. F'rwy .. Jrvlne 71 PINTO PONY ••••••••••••••••••••••• 761-1111 l9M. decent body. fair . 2 DOC>a •AM tlrel. ma OK. No current '88 Coronet 4 door. 318" Dark brown metallic. rtclt. A.I ls. S12S firm enifne, loaded & clean. 4-speed. front disc Pit. MM995. Fri aft 5. f150. ~. CM. brakes, rack and pmion wk ndl bef l steer1n1, 'bucket seals. e Font 9940 tinted 1laa1. <Stk 531 Cat tlltentlll 9930 ....................... U62648> ••••••••••••••••••••••• • $3177 '08 4 DR. 11 .000 mi's.. l super cond .. 2nd owner. 00G ~.&4M979 D '72, 83.000 ml, oril owner. ~ Dunton Ford •1.100.1ca1h &51-37811 '119 Mark Ill. aood Int Ru na well. S'l500 4H·M44 C..eth "32 ••••••••••••••••••••••• I '77 CHIVIOUT coavma Automatic. AM t FM stereo 8 tt1ck. aJr cond . lutber lntertor. 1auge1 . m1g whetl1 and low mllel. IOCleRYW I S.AOOLllACIC YAWYIMflOITS IJ f ·2040 4tMt4t ~·~~ •o0 .... ___ _ l ... ,.,... .... ._ ....... , ..... , .......... c:..... ,.._ •• 1... • t • i ' ' , • ' 546-7070 7 7HAMADA 4door. (IMSRXG> $4150 1973 FOID SUNSET FORD GM.AXIi 2 DOOR 5440 Garden Grove Blvd. U~7R Vl.J I Westminster 63&-4041 SI 399 1tnF01DLTD WAGON PHIL LOMG V·8, automatic trana. l'OID rectory air condltlonloc. '3Autoc:enter Dr power ateerina. power SD.f'rw)'.·lrvtne dltc brake&, AM/FM 761-1111 radio, whitewall Urea. Ca .. ., "33 -------1 wheel coven. <0'188.501 ............. •••••••••• Granada Ohla. 1976. 4-dr, CP960l I lt'17 couaar XR7. Im nu tlre11. AM /FM r1dlo. $4999 m 8 c u I a t t• , b I k Luxury car . $3!500/b1t. wtchamot. Int" trim. _845-6293 __ . ---- All ~ulpmenl + lo ml. 1974 fOID 8ee W. one tat! P P TOIJMO 2 DOOi ~. 549.s:l35 Ul99LEP l '13 XR7 . every fact oPllon. 44,000 mi's. perf cond '2950. 873~187 /548·5501. 19811 Cougar. Xlnl cond f150 or make ofter. Call 963-2821 aft 7pm. Dodge 9935 $1989 PHIL LONG FOID 43AutoCenter Or. S.O. Frwy..lrvme 761-5111 Dunton Ford ,, ' I I •I >i 1 • f 546-7070 UIGO Ford Convertible. !l.tnllner. l owner. 44.000 ong mi'•. Ally realistic offer conaldered. locaed ln N.B. 71"87S.3292 71RESTA ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~-~-~~--1 '118 LTD stn wen. AIC. l.DoorH.acM1ct 1975DODGE CHARGlll With sunroof. fu11 power. air cond. & stereo tape. 1671MGQ>. $2999 Nabers · AUTOCIMTIR Div. of Nabers Cadillac 14251AICllST. new tires. brks. great 4 speed. rack tr pinion cond. 1675 /farm 499-4139 ateerinJ. disc brakes. Michelin sleel·belted 7 7T·-llRD full power & more! t317SWDl $4150 SUNSET FORD S440Garden Grove Blvd. Westnunster 636""°41 71COURIH radials, and Ghia group extru. (2605) (1.39283) Retail Price s.5593 Sa1e~S4993 . $600 DISCOUNT ounton ~Ford ACROs-5 FROM FEDCO COSTA.MESA 540-9109 1 ECONOMY PICICUP /}\(" ·.~,.,.,.ff tlf ,11 If" ~ .. _ 546 · 7070 . 106.9 Inch wheelbase. 1800 cc· engine. bright '68 Dodge Polara, 440 orange with tan interior .• 78 Fiesta, xlnt cond. magnum eng. S395. disc brakes. WSW tires. AM /FM cass lo mj •s 714 /557·3'188 ISGTATD870891 (8670) .....,,.. ' """" .;,86 $3177 ' .._,., ~ . Little is Big! ! Classified ads are really small "people to people" sales calls with big readership and big results! To place your classified ad. call today 642-5678. Dunton Ford . : '·" . ' ~ ... , . 546·7070 '71 LTD Sta Wgn, ,rlnt cond. $1000/best offer Sti-1700afl6PM '71 LTD. 4 door. Gd t.lre5. "' brks. Gd trans. S60011>f r . 561·2'70 ''°° \ I . I I I f p , .. . . . . . ., Dunton Ford S ~G · 7070 7f Ol.DS c• •l•n• -------• Cabriolet &op, full power, ~~°P' •11lr.rr4tiEW ! 'mJOT). Attt Nabers AUTOCINTll Dtv.olNalNn CadUlac: IUIMl•ST. ACR09 FIOll f'EDCO COSU.-SA 140-tlot '11 CutJus Salon. Full pwr. · T-top. A/C, tape, belie. S5 ,950 . ~/64().80M ,. '7 BCHIYY COlfii id MAKE ~ -"""'WIClullN1e. 'AC9 • OFFER '76~~~::.::s 3695 '77~~~·--·S3295 •cm•'""'' mtOI OMLY . ,. 1972 CADILLAC COWIDlftU MO&eA) 51699 "' . , • 1914l'Oll PIMTOWAeOM t711SLSl $1989 PHIL LOMG . flOID 43Aldo0eld« Dr . S.D. l'rwJ. ·Irvine 761.1111 I ...._.UMd lt76MS1a ~·· 1•111 -~...w.. 'llf'IVI• ..... '7""801 1tt 41ftl» '7S Nntac Grand Prix. lmDwc. f\ill power. new p.ant6drea.M2·4lf4 '12 Ventura 11. eUver black. S2,000 mi. auto. aJr. nau areal ltJOO. \ *"1'11 tf 70 • T I M4 ....................... 77T......, hll ponr-• moret (3l3SWDI $1775 SUNSET FORD 56.o Garden Grove Blvd. Weatmipster 63M041 $1.&2 per DAY 'lbat'a ALL you pay fora 30~ad DAILY PILOT SEIVICE 111£CTOIY '76tCn •JDC.. s3155 :=:•c.:= I 4 CADIJ.AC SID.AN DI VILLI Copper exterior. CA974A) 53799 • ... ECONOMY CARS 74 Fm ""' .......... s1n1 20-·------...... IN3IC8Ct • 7& CHEVY CHEYEm ............. s2111 ____ _. __ .......,, '1& DAlSll Fll WICOll •••...•••• sg ...... _ .............. ~ '1& TOYOTA COROLLA llCIN •••••• ~ ................. ~ '1l All PICO I •............... 13333 ~ ....................... -IUllO-....-n. 'Tl r.AZIA 11.C 2 ll. ...•.......... '3444 ·--·-·--· ........ ~ '76 DINI£ DART ••...•..••......•• s SI& ~-···---·--3:1000-~ '11IAlSlll1218 ...............• '3117' ............ -..... ~ '16 YI Ill.SIB ..•••••••••••••••• Sml ·------·---....-. ~ INTERMEDIATE CARS '73, PLMITll ilUml Cll£ ...... '2222 ~-.---...... -....... --... .... . , .. '7S, MEICllY ...at ........... . .. ...,,,.. __ ....,. _______ ...... ~ '16 POll11IC .. LE llllS •••••• '3999 ............ ..-. .... ------------'11 Fm lllSTAIC ••••..•••••••• '4444 .-. ..................... .....- '1& lfml CUJm SE .•.•••••.••• s4555 ........ ~-~ '1& MEICUIY CMAI D7 •••••••• s5555 ... ..,.... ...... ~ '11 CllYY CIJIAIO •••••••••••••• s5n7 u.. ... ....., ........... 11 FORD tm SGUllE •• •••••• s51a , ..... Ll9---..i llt'7M'Wl '11 BIRCI If.CAL COUPE •••••••••• s 5999 --~.-.--~ '78 CHM MAI.ID ClASSIC •••••••• s5999 '--ehe·-11 .• ..,..,._,._.m1lN'll LUXURY CARS '13-ClllllAC COIPE IOl.l£ ...... s 3333 '. l*NIW~ ............ ~ '75 BUICI ESTATE WAGON •••••••••• S4&1&; ,_ ........... u-. I '74 CONTINENTAL MARI IV •••••••• '6444 ......................... ~ '1& CAIWC COUPE DOllE •••••• s1n1 ............ .._.~ '11 uta.N VEISAILLES •••••••••• '9999 U..NlW_.... .... ~ '11 CllU.AC COUPE DE.Vllll •••••• 19999 u.._ .... _,_ ... _.__.,....,,... '15.-MEICEE BBa 45ISEl •.•••• 117,11 ................ .._ ....... ""'~ I I I. ., I I I f J> t . FABULOUS YEAR-END VALUES ON ALL BRAND NEW.1978 MODEL CHRY$1 ERS AND PLYM0"1HS • • • -~MISSM ON GIANT YEAR-END SAVINGS •w1 FOR FLEET SALE OR LEASE INFORMATION, CALL IR YAN ·H·ESIETH . YUR·END CLOSEOUT ~1934 ON4LLFINE iiiiiiiii-.:~ USED C4RS~liiiiiiiiii 70DATSUN WA90N 4 c11. engine . • •P••d transmtsa1on. /uQQage rack, r11c110. heater ~ Yll/e/W tlr•. (4428EI). '77 PLYMOUTH YOlAM51DAN VB. •utomu1e trana .. •tr cond1tlonlng. cruise control. POW&F ateenng, P0wer btakea, Vinyl t0p, f"8CHo. heater & 'WIS/Vt t1181. C782RSV>. · '7 4 CHEVROLET C4'11c1 IST4TI WAffON V8, automauo trana.. PO•er steertn~ ' ~ M\'FM f'ldo. ~ ... ' elect. door locks, I~ rack. air conci., ,_,.,a _,. t"-. C0051<Ju). ·s1995 \18, •utomauc tran,.. Power ateerlng & brake,, air CC>ndlt1on1ng, radio, heater & WIS!w t1n1e. C&aakPJ). s1495 '77CHRYSLa s3795 Automatic frlnamf111on. P<>wer brakes. aw CIOndltionlng, root~ radio & heater. C423H11(). s1495 s3995 '78 CHRYSLEA C"-3 OM COW. LllAIONW4~ ve. •utom.tte trana.. heater, VB. automatic trans.. 'P41t PWr. ~ ~ a brakea. Wlllw tear. t>Wr. Mnou.s, P'lrr. tteenng. ,...,. ~fnttrb'.' POwet-Wfndowa, Pwr. brakea, AMIFM stereo • fiPlft~ .... wt tape, cruise eontrot. air AM/FM radio & v1ny1 top, conditioning. wla/w hrea & Cl88SONJ. heat4!'. Cite1TXR). s5495 s7995 '76 FIAT W490N va. ~ .,.,.,,lilkwt, ~ • cv•.. s ~ frlnenwa8k>n, fteertng, OOWer-~ air COnd., luggage '1ICW. ~ ...... Vtnyf luggage l'kl(. raa10. heater & "de~ (385R.JR). w111w ffr-. '873PXuJ. s4195 $2695 f MANU..A,"'1UPl*esCAP>- A boll\~ w.t off ia tbe l.ollet at a Pbllippt• ai~at 24,000 feet today. a ........ y blowinl tbe bombfr ou& ~ a bole in the fustl••• aocl WOUDdiQI three paasacen, Official aou.rces ,. ported. The airline said Use plane landed at Manila International Airport 15 minutes after the ex· ploelon. lt wu tbe second bombint aboard the same airliner, a British-made BAC·lll nown by Pbllippi.De Alrl~. In 1975, a band {P"eft8de exploded ln one ol the lavatories, killing the man who brought it aboard and wounding '5 passengers. rrraek~r Arrested .Huntington Cyclist Killed in Accident Roberta Agnes Fisler, 32, of Huntington Beach, died Thurs day from btjuries suffered when ber motorcycle collided with a compact pickup truck. Police arrested the pickup truck driver , Romaldo Hermoslllo, 32, of 6122 Ar- rowhead Circle, Huntington Beach, on felony manslaughter and drunken drlvlna charges. The 5:17 p.m. crash occurred at the intersection of Golden West St.reel and Ellis Avenue Officials said Mrs. Fisler, of 1729 Lake St., suffered internal and head iAjuries even though she wore a protective helmet Funeral services for the victim are pending. Poli~ Sgt. Ed Groom said the Ocean' View School Names NewTroste& Maxwell N. Sudakow, 38, bas been appointed to finish the Ocean View School District Board of Trustees term of Dr Margaret Stark, who resigned. Sudakow. 15842 Maybrook St., Westminster, wa1 ebosen Wednesday night from among a field of etaht appllcan4 who of. f ered to finish the remaining two years of the term. An electronics engineer, Sudakow bas been empl<>yed by Hughes Aircraft Company in Culver City for 101ean. He also taught marketing for one year at Cal State Long Beach and for the past slx years bas been an instructor in an af. ter-bours management prograrr at Hughes Aircraft. The Sudakow family bas lived in the Ocean View School Dis- trict, which includes portions of y.restmlnster, for seven years and their children, Sarah, 9, and James. 8, attend Star View School. He served on the school's ad· vlsory council for two yean and la a member of tbe ,UStrict's master plan committee 'Stay Awake' Drive Slated Ht1b sebool-aee J0811tel'S at Saints Simon ad Jude CatboUc Church in BuntlnetOD Beach are look•nc for spoaecn f~ • cbarl· \1 turid ralJIDt 0 ttay awake snaratbolL" crash victim was thrown into the air when sbe collided with the truck as it was turning left. Paramedics rushed the victim to Pacifica Hospital where she died later that evening. The driver, Hermosillo, was treated and released from Pacifica Hospital with facial cuts. He was booked into Hunt· ington Beach Jail and released on $2,500 bail. Police said the death was the fourth motorcycle fatality this month and the seventh this year in Huntington Beach. Of the 16 traffic deaths in Hun- tington Beach this year, seven or them have involved motorcycle riders. Five of the seven motorcycle crash victims wore no protective helmets said police Lt. Tom Patton Traftlc fatalities are up 35 per- cent from the 19 deaths that oc· clln'ed in Huntington Beach last year, Patton said. Nune Faces Hospiial Death Raps BAJ,TIMORE <AP> -A re- gistered nurse bad been indicted on four counts of bomlclde in connection with the deat~s or terminally ill patients at a hospital here, authorities said toda)'. William Swisher, Baltimore's state's attorney, said the deaths at Maryland General Hospttal occurred between December 1977 and March 19'18. Swisher identified the nurse as Mary Rose Keisler, also known as Mary Rose Robanczynski. He said she bad been taken in· to custody and would ~ ar- raigned Sept. 6 in criminal court The four-month investigation started after rumors circulated at the hospital that a former nurse diaconnected a respirator from a terminally ill patient who later died in the special care unit. Swisher said the investigation indicated that no one else was involved and that the deaths of the patients were isolated incl· dents. Maryland General, a private non-profit hospital, bas 486 licensed beds ln downtown Baltimore. The youtb hope to find ID· cllvldu.UI Ud c:ompanlea_who. •111 Pl4ldli .....,, 19" .. ~ bour ~,.w.atrocn:~ .• '° tr. ~Tiie tundl --msed·to ·.ut-+--ahe parilll ~Your Nelcbbor No" <LYNN> Oiler, a unit tbat belpe needy peqiplt. Fot more or atlOD. call ...... . The IOUJ"Ces aaid a political motive for the bombia1 had been ruled out, and investilators were looldna lnto the posslbltity that the bomber bad been trytna to destroy the plane or somebody aboard for lnsuranee money. Philippine Airlines said the explosion occurred in a rear lavatory 50 minutes after the BAC·lll Jet took off from Cebu, in the central Phillpplnes, for Manila with 84 persons aboard. The source\l said a man was la the compartment at the Ume, apparently plant.inc the bomb, and was blown out over the Sibuyan Sea 120 miles south ol Manila. Airline spokesman Enrique Santos would not identify the missing man but said military investigators believe it was a one-man operation. ·'We left Cebu with 78 passengers but we deplaned only 77 in Manila," he said. There were six crew mem· be rs. The airline's statement said the passengers were having breakfast at the time. It said three passengers were wounded by flying splinters and the others panicked. .. Quick action _ by the oilot. Capt. Antonio Misa, in bringing the plane to an altitude of 12,000 feet as it lost pressure inside a ve rted a disaster, tbe state- ment added. l'be pressure im· balance, comparable to a punctured balloon, could have c aused further structural damage to the fuselage. And tbe lowered cabin pressure at hilb altitude could b•ve harmed tie passengers. M isa was the 'Pilot of a BAC·lll that was hijacked by student radicals to Canton, China, In um, • ..f! Valley School Board Backs New Budget Fountain Valley <elementary> School District trustees ap- proved a $18.9 million 1978-19 budget Thursday that includes $814,000 in cash reserves. The budget total la about $300,000 less than fiscal 1977-78, said Deputy Superintendent Glenn Hardy. The 1978-79 budget does not in· elude any cost or living pay raises for district employees, Hardy added. In a related action, trustees voted to save $55,000 by eliminating all 38 noon-time playground aides. School principals will decide which employees will fill the v• cant playground aide posts, Hardy said. Attempt Blocked SACRAMENTO <AP) -By one vote, an Aatembty commit- tee blocked an attempt to pre- vent '52.2 mlWoa ID state aid from bein1 spent on court- ordered school bualnl in Loi An1elea, Su Dieccr and San Bernardino~ tion was freaen here with a telephoto tens from the pier. Lifeguards said surf was nwa~ with some six-Coot sets tnday •. Fails Wurl Denies BUI, w Quaa1& lndietment •'The day after itib& didiet co.art of appeal ~ Juclp Schwab this indictment came down," Morgan arped. "Here the district attorney bas been found to suffer a COD· met of interest and be 1oes through tbat·and I think the en- tire process is tainted, .. Mot(an continued. "Now is tbe time to cerreet this and I tbink It can OliJ.J be corrected by dlamlsslnt this in· dictment," be said. Deputy District. Attorn&y lllehael Capi11l argued tbat tbere were diffeffllt sets ot facts surrounding the Schwab ruling and the motion . before Judge Flynn. He Mid nynn already ruled OD the' question of di!Jtrict at· tomey prejudice wben he re- fused to take tb,e di.strict at- torney otr tbe briber)! case. Rose's attorney. Sy I-van Al'ODIOD, araued unsucceasftiliy that tM lndlctmeDt against IW client is baaed on specu1atioa ancl conjecture aloq with flDe "ambiguous, misleading ~tat,e.. m•nt" allegedl~ made by Diecarlcta. ·~vou can't tie this, thlD& · to1etber with glue and striq tin Mr. Capbli ls'Ut1iD& ~do," bellld. Arc>neon also arcued r that a three-year statute Of limitatiom for prOMeution of consph:aey bad expired. ' Caplal contended sufficient 8Yidetlee eDD-io lbow. ~al- 1 .. ed ~J fell trltbin 'the UarM-,... tie.. limit. .. 11 ' ' • J J I t ' ' ......... INFANTS llOOY REMOVED FROM SAN JOSI FIRE Six Pe"8h trl City'• Worst Blaze In Hl8t0ry 2 Men, 4 Kids Die ~In San Jose Blaze SAN JOSE CAP) -Two men and four c~n were killed early today when a two-alarm fire swept through their townhouse. Dead were F1oyd Brown, an unldentifted friend of the family, BY'own 'a three children and an 11-year-old cousin, accordini to Capt. Larry Salo. San Jose Flre Department. The names of the children White Shark Survival Questioned SAN DIEGO <AP> -Sea World officials say they are wor· ried about the survivability of a rare 1reat white shark captured Wednesday off the Ventura ooast "Al the moment. this is the on· ly tiving great white shark on display In the world," fish curator Ray Keyes said Thurs· day. "But its survival depends on whether it will eat in captivi· ty and cohabit with 20 other sharks in our live shark exhibit." hibit .. Now. the great wblte is a somewhat smaller version of the monster flab portrayed In mo~­ ies. fl'he 4-foot·9, 60-pouhd shark, less than a year old, was caught in the net of Ben Henke, a com· mercial fisherman 'who notlfied Sea World Ron and Valerie Ta7lor, shark -experta involved in ~ produc- :'.tion of "Jaws," were at the park ·,fUmlng a television special when lhe 1reat white was brought In. "Park officials named tt "RoP," in ..Taylor's honor. were not immediately released. They ranged from six months to 7yearaotqe. Brown's wife, Deborah, escaped by jumpin1 out a second fioor window of the smoke-filled building, Salo said. She was taken to Alextan Brothers Hospital in San Jose, where she was being treated for first and second-degree bums on the upper part of her body. She was in stable condition in the In· tensive care unit, the boapjtal said. The fire broke out at 4:38 a.m. in the Browns· townhouse, which is part oi a SO-unit condominium near Tully Street and Highway 101. It was broug .t under control by firemen about half an hour later. No other injuries were re-ported Priest Facing Sex Sentence UNION CITY <AP>-A Union City priest will be sen. tenced Sept. 19 after pleading no contest to sexually molesting a parochial school boy. The. Rev. Stephen Kiesle, who was a teacher and the director of youth activities at Our Lady of the Rosary parish school, wu released on hJs recognizance after appearing in Municipal Court. Police said a formal complaint was filed against the 31-year-old priest. aft.er three parenta com· plain~ to the school about games the priest played wltb their children In the school's rec· tory. 'Slaeer Logie' ' I ·- VERNON <AP> -Em~ It a ocmmerelal ..,.... bl V•l'DOft ea.am tMl' wen ,__ at p_apoAm& to lel e..t bUlMI• on ftre -on tbe blelt ot an -. nounetmHt tbat tbe ~·1 11ren1tun may not NI to alarm• be1lnnln1 Saturday momlq. The elQOloyeM, about ei,bt of lbem, refuMd to identlfy tbe peraona wbo aUeseclly forced them to 1pread 1uo11ne on tbe w arehouae floor and set lt aname late Tbunct.y nlabt, Nld a •l>Ok•man for tbe Loe Ancelet County Fl.re Department. Tbe em~::rrees aaid they feaTed for aafety If they cooperated in the lnvestllatloa. wblcb la belJll bandied by ~ Vernon Police bepartment. The blue required assiltanee from fire depart.menu in nearby Montebello, Lynwood and tbe county because of a ahortaie at Vernon ftreft1htera due to pro. teats over PropoelUon 13·relat.d layoffs. About 25 flreflghtera knocked down the blaze within 10 mlnutea. But lt took up to 20 minutes for the aasiaUng depart- ments to respond, said Ron Cummings, sPokeaman for the International Association of Firefighters Local 2312. There were no lDJuriea ln the fire, and no estimate of damage was available. Cumminp aald be gave the ci- l y notice Thursday tbat firefighters may take a "safety and job p~ action" after 8: 30 a.m. Saturday momlng lf there are too few firefighters available to safely put out a fire. That means, Cummings said, that firellgbtera may not answer calla. .. As far aa we're concerned. anftblng goes after 8:30," be added. He denied reports that it wd proteati.na firefighters who may have allegedly · coerced the warehoqse employees into start- ing the bl8'e. "I can't believe any firefighter would do that." Relatlons between the city and the firefighters deteriorated three weeks a"Jo when city of· fic1ala 8MOQDced that 17 of the city's 101 firemen would be terminated ln September and· October. Those 17 men are fully trained firefighters but filled other posi- tions, such as dispatchers and mechanics. said Milte Bower. ci· ty lnfon:nall°'1 ~ftcer. • As of Thursday. 17 'Otbef firefighters were suspended temporarily because of various disputes with the department A normal 24-bour shift is manned by 24 firefighters, but only 13 re- ported for work Thursday. Bower said that Vernon, a 5~-square mile city that borders Los Angeles on the southeast, baa made mutual aid pacts with the county and neighboring cities to asslst ln fire ptotection help. Mayor in Lea~ CLEVELAND CAP> -Mayor Dennis J . Kucinich's slim mar1ln of victory over a recall drive has slipped to 303 votes after the first day of a recount Like its nei1bbora in Sea World'• tank, Ron will be of. ~!red different types of fish ·uiree times a week. : "Most of the other sharks are tf.rom F1orida waters and they .Jlon't know that Ron la a great Yiblte shark," aald Sea World 'pokesman Bill Seaton, "But aa he 1rows to 20 feet or more, he •ill gain considerable respect." Judge Denies ~are F>or Viejo Rapist ·Game PostpOned. : BAGUIO CITY. P.btllpplnes (AP> -The adjourned lath :iame of Ute world chela...."'4ch11.1auimw•..__.....,.~=-"'~~~::...;;;~~;;.;;:;;;:;.;=~--, pfonship his been put oil unW ·sunday at the request of challenger Viktor Korcb.not. DAILY PILOT f Pollee Lineup in 1'alleg DIMY .............. About 100 men and women lined up at Fountain Valley City Hall Wednesday to apply ror two open jobs as police officers. Some rolks queued up us early as 8 a.m. City officiuls only hud 170 application puckets to hund out for the Sl.333 a month jobs. Burglary Foiled by Cool Moves Seal Beach police credit an an- gry woman who kept her cool for the fact a man suspected of burglarizing her bome ls lan1uisblnginjail. Richard L. Koblscbeen. 32. of Long Beach. was arrested within three minutes after al- leged I y fleeing the victim's College Park East home with $500 in jewelry. Koblscheen is held without ball as a parolee from a pre- vious burglary conviction. in ad- dition to beini booked into Orange County Jail on the W edneaday burglary charge. Officer Ross Smith said the victim and her sons arrived home to find a window screen cut and spotted a figure lurking in tbelt' house, whereupon they yelled at him. The intruder. who had the audacity to park in front. ran out the back door. but bad to run back around the house to reach his vehicle. police said. One son ran in to call police and the calm lady homeowner stood and jotted down the fleeing man's car license number and a near-photographic description of him and his cl~s. police said. Seal Beach Officer Mike Vas· quez stopped the car within three minutes on Seal Beach BouJev.,-d near t!I• San Dteso Freew4t. '"With help like that, we can do a better Job," said Officer Smith. He said $500 in jewelry was round in the suspect car. GlJARD DOG UJSES JOB SPOKANE, Wash. <AP> - Hubert Marsh bas a new guard dog. His old one was stolen -along with $1,100 worth of cbaln saws and other items the do1 was sup- posed to be guarding at Marsh's store. The dog, once valued by Marsh at about $300, was found playing wtth some children a few days later. The chain uws were nowhere around. . ~ Julie and Daughmr Go Home Saturday Julie Nixon Eisenhower and her daughter Jennie will be go- ing home on Saturday morning, a spokesman for San Clemente General Hospital announced to- day. David Eisenhower. the baby's father. bad said earlier that bis wife and daughter would prob- ably be released on Thursday or Friday. Yeggs Grab $1,700 Cash ' From Theater Hurglarsmadeoffwith$1.700in cash from a safe at the Fountain Valley Twin Cinema theater ear- ly today. A passerby called "police about 3 a. m .. after noticing a front window of the two.theater com- plex at 16149 Brookhurst St., shattered. Police U . Carl Lawrence sajd the thieves gained entry and then opened the theater doors and trundled the rollaway sale to a waiting vehicle. lnvestieators said the actual value of tbe sale Itself la nol yet known. Agency Shops Bill Defeated SACRAMENTO <APl -In a setback for organized labor, the Senate Thursday defeated a bill to let local government employees form "agency shops." in which all non·union members ~ust pay a fee. The measure, AB 2744 by As· sem bly Majority Leader Howard Berman. D·Beverly Hills, was nUected on a 14-20 vote. with 21 votes needed for passage. But supporters won the right to take another vote at a later date. In an agency shop, workers who choose not to join the union that represent.a the majority of empl oyees must pay the equivalent of union dues as a fee to support . the union 's opera· tions. t.bough not its political ac· tivities. But the extension of Mn.• Eisenhower's hospitalization to Saturday should not be in· terpreted as an indication of any complication in her recovery, said hospital admlniltrator R. Hannan Jones. Both mother and daughter are doing extremely well, he said. The decision to postpone the new motber"s retum home was reached by Mrs. Eisenhower a nd her obstetrician. Dr. Eugene C. Cun.on Jr., according to Jones. .. A typical stay at our hospital following childbirth is three to four days," he said "Mrs. Eisenhower and her physician simply agreed that Saturday would be the best time for her to go home." Jennie Eisenhower was born at 1 ·32 p.m. on Tuesday;'-with her father assisting with the natural childbirth . The dark haired, blue eyed baby girl wa& 23 inches long at birth and weighed nine pounds. four ounces. "Big and beautiful -she's JUSl bi& and beautiful," the ob- viously elated Eisenhower told reporters. The baby's proud grandfather, former President Richard Nb· on. pointed out to the press th8t Jennie is the first chUd bom in the United St.ates with relatives on both sides of the familf who were presklents. As well as being Nixon's first grandchild, Jennie is the great. grandchild of former President Dwight D. Eisenhower. No Close Encounter? LA MESA CAP• - Twe'ntY·fiv.e citizens telephoned police to ex-c re !l s ala,.rm about a right, red Jlght in the sky. "The light moved and then stopped and. when it stopped for a second, part of it dropped from the sky ... one callel' said. The sightings were Wednesday night. Police said somebody apparently attached a Oare to a helium balloon. Too Much? I.ittle? DON'T BE MISLED BY DISCOUNTS, DEALS. SALES AND GIVE·AWAYS. THE COMMON LAW OF BUSINESS SAYS IT BEST - IT IS UNWISE TO PAY TOO MUQi, BUT IT IS WORSE TO ~ 'tOOJ.ITTLE. _.:_ -----~--s-OU-PA\' TOO MUCH, YOU L.()6£ ~c_MONEX ANO TRATIS ALL WH_EN YOU PAY TOO LITTLE. YOU SOMETIMES LOSE evaRY"nilNG BECAUSE THE PRODUCT YOU BOUGHT WAS INCAPABLE OF DOING WHAT IT WM PURCHASEO TODO.. • . YOU CAN'T PAY A LITTLE AND GET A LOT. I J I • J 1 • t ... Barry and Friend "Barry," a seven-foot boa constrictor, winds himself around Val Kuber, a lab technician in the natural sciences department at Saddleback College. Barry re· mains at the college, but "Peter," a python who once re· sided on campus, has been sh'uffled off to Lion Countr.> Safari. College officials unceremoniously declared Peter "surplus property" when. they said, he began growing too fast and eating too many rats. .,, Bay Says Pressure ·Eoi!c~d CODfessiOn WASHlNGTOM <AP> - lames Earl llaJ conceded today u b.,cl made a detailed and ~ Q\lalUied confesalon to the biurder of Dr. Mart1n Luther lting Jr., and would do so aaam 1lDder the same circumstances But "all guilty pleas are not Viejo M8:J1 New Trustee At Sadaleback Saddleback Community College trustees have picked John C. Connolly, 33, of Mission Viejo, to fill a board seat vacated b) DonnaBerry Connolly, assistant general manager of the May Company department store in Orange, will assume his seat Aug. 28 and become a voting member of the college board Sept 17. Trustee Berry resigned because 'she ls moving to Northern California. Connolly was selected from •mong nine candidates. "Just a cut abovJ. I peas you Vtould have to 1-.y." was board fresldent Larry Taylor's com- "1ent. Other trustees cited Con· made 1n heaven." be 1ald. • Ray. lD bi• third day of testimony to the House Aa· aasslnations Committee, wu questioned tim& and aeaiD about why, lf be were innocent, he re- peatediy affirmed in a Memphis court March 10, 1969, that be "fired a shot from the second floor bathroom in a roomlng house and fatally wounded Dr. King." Rep. Harold S. Sawyer, R· Mich., pointed out to Ray that hls trial judge, ln accepting a bargained guilty plea for a 9!J. year sentence, offered Ray many chances to recant the Con· fession and the defendant re· fused each time. Moreover. Sawyer noted, Ray told the court that "no one used _pressure'' to convince him to ·forego a full trial. But Ray said that wasn't the case, regard.less of what he told the court. He claimed his at· torney, Percy Foreman, pres- sured him on the plea. that he bad suffered mistreatment in jail, couldn't sleep, and his health had degenerated. Sawyer asked why Ray had not raised those issues befo.re his sentencin&. "Did you make any complaint at all about Mr. Foreman?" he <See RAY, Page A2> ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Teday's Cl .. lag N.Y. Steeb 1"~ TEN CENTS~ Bill Seeks Tax Relief Measure Would Aid Irvine LeasehOIAmrs A11emblyman Ron Cordo•a (D·El Toro> bas introduced le1i1latlon that will atve homeowners wboee bouaes are on land leased from tbe Irvine Company tbe full property tu benefit ol Proposition 1.S. As things stand now. the leased land for which tbe homeowners are obligated to pay taxes was assessed at Its value in July of 1977. That is when ownership of the Bomb Rips Airliner; 83Saved MANILA, Philippines <AP> - A bomb went off in the toilet of a Philippine airliner at 24,000 feet today, apparenUy blowing the bomber out t.brougb a hole in the fuselage and wounding three passengers, official sources re- ported. The airline said the plane landed at Manila International Airport 15 minutes after the ex· plosion. It was the second bombing aboard the same airliner, a British·made BAC·lll flown by Philippine Airlines. In 1975, a hand grenade exploded in one of the lavatories, killing the man who brought it aboard and wounding 45 passengers. The sources said a political motive for the bombin1 bad been ruled out. and inv~gators were looking into the possibility that tbe bomber Ud belD UyinJ to destroy the plane or somebody aboard for lnaurance money. Phillppine Alrllnes said the explosion occurred ln a rear lavatory M m""11• after tM BAC· 111 ;et took alt frOm Cebu. in the central PbWppines, for Manila with 84 penons aboard. The sources sald a man was in tbe compartment at the time, aJ)parenUy plantina the bomb. and was blown out over the Sibuyan Sea 120 miles south of Manila. Airline spokesman Enrique Santos would not identify the missing man but said military investigators believe it was a one-man operation. ··we left Cebu with 78 passengers but we deplaned only 77 ln Manila," he said. There were six crew mem- bers. The airline's statement said the passengers were having breakfast at the time. It sai4 three passenl(ers were wounded <See BLAST, Pace AZ> Offices Looted A burglar stole an electric typewriter and a calculator from the Irvine offices or Broad· 'f.loor Homes Inc., 17500 Red mu Ave., on 'lbursday, police said. Employee Martha Page, who re- ported the crime, valued the loss at $1 ,200. Police were unsure how the deed was done Irvine Company changed bands. Consequently, Asaeuor Bradley Jacobs and his staff were obligated to value the land at lts worth then rather than roU its value back to what It was shown at March l, 1975, as pre- scribed by PropositiOJl 13. Cordova said Thursday that, as a result, tbe hoJ!leowners have been deprived of tax sav· ings benefits because of a transaction <the company's sale> in which they bad no benefit or interest. That is why be introduced tbe legislation tbat has now cleared one Assembly committee. Cordova said. In the county assessor's office. Webster Guillory estimated there may be u many -es 5,000 homeowners affected by "the peculiarity" of the company's sale impact on this year's tax Hablllty. £aaeer ·Agent? Dye Ingredient Removed NEW YORK <APl -Clairol, the nation's largest prOducer of hair coloring products, said today it bas removed from its products an ingredient suspected of causing cancer in animals. Clairol Vice President Jack Shor said most Clairol products on store shelves contain the ingredient. 4- methoxy-m-phenylenediamine, but that new ship- ments will not contain it. · The Federal Food and Drug Administration has proposed warning labels on products containing the ingredient. also known as 4MMPD. but has not is· sued a final decision. Shor said Clairol believes the ingredient is safe. "but we feel it's a proper business decision to not have customers face that kind of warning label." The FDA proposed the label after the National Cancer Institute reported the ingredient. when fed to rats. appeared to cause bladder cancer. SCAGl•sue Irvine city roundlmen, ~ are ponderl.ng withdrawing ctty membership from the regiGnal Soutbem Callfomia Association of Governments, are scheduled Tuesday to bear a mayor who'll tell why bis city dropped out. At the request of Councilman Arthur Anthony, Don Hudson, mayor or Cypress. which seceded from SCAG last February. has been invited to appear at the 7;30 p.m . council meeting. Also invited to tell what's good about SCAG is the organization's executive director, Marc Pisano. SCAG serves as a clear· ingbouse for federal grants in· volving planning on a regional basis. and while it bas no power to enact binding regulations on members, without its approval such grants are doomed. SCAG comprises some 125 city and county governments in Im- p e rl a I. San Bernardino, Riverside, Orange, Los Angeles and Ventura counties. Cypress dropped out after a dispute with SCAG about low and moderate income housina. Mayor Jfuc:bon said the SCAG ' plan failed to tab into ac~ exlstlng boUldnl patterns. In htl city. he said, the community already was almost fully de- veloped, and the only way it could have met the SCAG re- quirements would have been to tear down exisUng houalng and rebuild IQwer coat homes. The City of Irvine also bas been unhappy with SCAG alloca· lion models of low income bous· ing, al)d that bas been partly the impetus for the council reassess. ment of itsrole in the body. Hudson complained that SCAG was .. usurping local responsibilities ~rerosatives of government." In additlon. he said. "there's no one to appeal to" over a SCAG decision. Hudson minimized the value of membership in SCAG with respect to federal grants. The o~aniution ls required by law to review local plans, be &aid. whether or not the aaen· cy is a member, and without taking that into account. Most of the parcels involved land beld under 99-year leae9 camna for the homeowner te pay taxes oo the leased land. Cordova said be favors ex· pandin& his Assembly bill to in~. elude business property as well as residential. He also said the wontin& of the meuure "needs cleaning up" to help narrow it down to apply on- ly to tl)e circumstances involved with the Irvine Company leased land. Oil Pact To Assure Terminal? LOS ANGELES <AP> -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr., Standard Oil Co. of Ohio and Southern California F.di8on Co. announeed today a long-sought agreement that could clear the way for aa Alaskan oil terminal in Long ~acb. The agreement would require Sohlo to spend S78 million on an· ti-pollution equipment at an Edison power plant. Sobio would also spend another $3 million to $5 million on environmental con- trols at dry cleaning plants. ·'The contract signed today by Edison and Sohio guarantees ·an improvement in Southern · 'California air quality and will also help reduce America's de· pendence oh foreign oi!.L' Brown told reporten at bis omee here. "Tbe net result will be an air qulltJ ~emeot." ye~ ~toC0::.4:0= plans for tbe Long Beach oil ter~1 which would receive cnlM ou ~om a ud then p11•J1 It t• T sd aatl tbe Mid... a a,._m of iria r P he Selllo pro1ram. wbJcb would dean up far more bolhl- Uon than it generates, would re- portedly also leave the Long Beach air about nine times cleaner after the project is in operaUon. The plan is believed tbe first time on a significant scale one company has agreed to pay for curbing pollution created by other companies to win approval of its project The SohJo project Is reportedly lmpofilmt to President Carter's enera program. But lt wbuld still ~ to be approved by the Internal Revenue Service, the California Air Resources Board and tbe South Coast Air Quality Management District. It must also be approved. by ..Long Beach voters, who will de- c ide in November on a referen- dum asking whether they want the terminal in their city. Opponents of the project cite he• ftb studies ,.that claim emlulon would harm residents and point to the possibilities of on spills and tankerexploeions. Brush Fire Halted TWENTYNINE PALMS (AP> ' l nolly 's "innovative ideas," ·•analytical mlnil" and "un· derstandina of tbe comaiunttyo:--...._,--"""""""'I' lOJiege~ Connolly 1aid be aouaht tbe .. tiliC, ---Jenni~·'FB:e'~~ Besides Cypresa,..recent SCAG dropouts have included the cities of La Palma, Garden Grove and Los Alamitos. ~·mt•= Beacb Ctq Council bas Wt let paypumt d this year's membership dues because it. too, is conaldertn& -Fire offtclals said they expeet to ha\'e a brush fire that bas .. charred more than 6,200 acres ot rugged de8ert terrain at JOlhua Trft N-...w ....._enl , .... -_._, __ complete controf by Sunday morn.ln«. · seat as a w-.y of &ettiD&·lnvolved in bis community. "l donl know enoulb about football or bueball to be a coach for my cblldren, but being a trustee I know, and tau. la a QY a can aerve my comtnunlty," be said . 1 ~gradua Im from W•ern State Ualv~ Julie Nixon Eisenhower and ·her da"'lht«. Jennie will be p. ing home Oft Saturday morning, 1..=::v+~~~a-..~~ia.lGlllMd:Nemllb'-:-::.:;n took bll 9tate bar exams. e hu a bachelor's ctesree ln political sch nee from St. Jobn '1 UnivenltJ lo New York. He wlll repnNDt· GM ol tile largest areaa lD IM SliddlebMk ~strict. Connolly'• area ln· cludea Mlllkln Viejo, parta ol Bl l'oro, Tra'-o cu,en, Sia.,.... Oaplstrao aild Lquia NI ..... witbdr.awiq. • l BAILY.Pit.OT Frtd!J, Au!Ult lit 117! j Energy Bm Moves Carter Natural Ga. Plan to Congress WASHINGTON tAPl Prell· dent Carter ha• acored a breakthroush that sets '"' •ooc· sulled tmurn plan movina aaatn ln eon,ren, Vke Pl'eU· dent Walter F Nondal and con- t;rna1oaal eneru 1 .. den Mid today After meettnc 1bunday nlpt with four m..-mberiJ of a Hol.lff St'n1U~ contf~nce t"ommlttee. Carter obtained aareements nect!aaary to Cd tbe natural I portloo ol lbe eoenlY Pf'O«ram plan up f« acUon before the full HOUH and Sea.ale. The last two conferen to attn the natural 1u conference re port were Democratic Repa. Charles Rangel of New York and James Cormu ~ C.Womla. ~n lledry M. J ackaon, D· Wuh . chairman of th Senate Entrgy Committee, aald the blf 1eat fattor an t.'h•n1in1 their mlnda was C1trter't1 appe1ll that fajlur«' ol Conareu to pa .. an ener1y bill would aerlou1ly Bomb Seare Prebe Newport Cops Book Nareotics Suspect An invesU1aUoo that started Wednesday as a bomb scare at the Neiman-Marcus store in Fashion Island. ended Thursday with the arrest of a suspected narcotics dealer Newport Beach poUce booked Harry Edwin Vaughan, 30, who lists a San Diego address, as he returned to the department store to reclaim a missing briefcase. That briefcase touched off a bomb scare Wednesday morning when an unidentified woman brought it into the store, put it on the nearest counter and told the clerk, "Somebody left this in the parking lot... The woman immediately left the st.ore. Because of the circumstances and the fact the1 case was heavy. police called lo the scene said they were fearful It might con- tain explosives. The Orange County Sheriff's bomb squad was summoned the deputies found two dozen $100 bills, te n tabs of LSD, several sets of identification, a ledger and a set of airline tickets for Karachi, Pakistan. Narcotics investigator Mike Hietala who was given the case for investigation, decided his first step would be to check with store employees to rind out ir the man pictured in the identifica· tion had returned for his case. "I went out there Thursday morning and there be was," HietaJa said today. He booked Va ughan on s us picion of possession of LSD for sale. Hietala said Vaughan bad just been released recently from pro- bat ion in connection with a federaJ conviction for smuggling 1,100 pounds of marijuana. woraon t.ho condltlon of tho U.S. dollar ovel'I«!•· J•ek1on pHdleted an ex· trem ely cloee voc.e oo tho com- promise when lt comet to the Senate noor. He aaid Senate ac· lion on the compromlae would probably be held off until after the congreatlonal Labor Day re- c"111. St;n ate liberals have threatened a filibuster to block a fina l vote. but Senate leaden believe they can 1atber the eo vote• neceuary to end debate. Obtainil'\I final approval on the compromise itself is expect- •d t.o be moncWflcull. B ecause the House bas alremdy recessed for its own 20-day Labor Day receu, failure t.o aet the aareemenu Thursday would have most likely meant collapse ol the natural gas pric· int compromise. The compromise would lift rederal price controls on natural eas by 1985, with gradual price increases In the meantime. Carter sent his energy legisla· lion to Capitol Hill 16 months ago. Without the signatures of nine senators and 13 House members, the natural gas compromise would have been blocked from final consideration iil the House and Senate. Besides Corman and Rangel, Carter called RepubUcan Sens. J ames McClure of Idaho and Pete Domenici of New Mexico to the White House Thursday night and obtained their signatures on the conference report. Appearing on NBC's Today Show. Mondale said, "We had a breakthrough last night on the long overdue gas conference re- po r l." He predicted the breakthrough would give momentum to the long-stalled energy program. .............. INFANT'S eJC)DY REMOVED FROM SAN JOSE FIRE She Perish In City'• WOf'St Blaze In Hlatory 2 Men, 4 Kids Die In San Jose Blaze SAN JOSE <AP) -Two men and four children were killed early today when a two-alarm fire swept through their townhouse. Dead were F1ovd Brown, an unidentified friend or the famlly, "'rown 's three children and an 11-year-old cousin, according to Capt. Larry Salo. San J ose Fire Department. Tax Cut Supp,Qrt Seesaws SACRAMENTO <AP > -AB· sembly Speaker Leo McCarthy launched a last-ditch effort to save hil p~l to abolish the homeowners property tax today while two tneome tax cut bills gained momentum. At the same time, a proposal to clamp stringent spending limit.a on 'state and local aovem· menta tbrouJbout CaJitomla was threatened by the te1iatat1ve in- flgbtL01 over rival tax cut plans. < Relatedstory. M > Just 13 days remain before final adjournment of the um session. But in spite of the near· ing adjournment, the Legislature made little progress Thursday toward agreement on . any m~or tax issue. Instead. the Legis lature stumbled from one deadlock to another amid bitter squabbling a nd the fresh memory of Propos ition 13's tax revolt message. The key obstacle to both the property tax cut plan and the spending Umlts proposal was the state Senate's rejection of a bill drafted in the Assembly which would extend until today the deadline for placing constitu- tional amendments on the Nov. 7 ballot. McCarthy's plan, which is a major revision or Proposition 13's tax cut provisioqs, and tbe spending limit, are both con- s tit u lion a I a m e ndm e nts . Therefore. both could be dead for tbe year unless the twice- defeated extension bill is re- v1 ved for a third fime and passed by an increasingly balky Senate. J ' The case was taken to the sheriff's bomb disposal area and opened. Instead of finding explosives, He assertedly told Hietala he had the case and several packages in his hands when he left Fashion lsland Wednesday. "He set the case down to put t.he stuff in his car a nd just drove off and left it," Hietala said. t Trial on Abortion Ordered for Student Water Employees Plead Not Guilty f he names of the children were not Immediately released. They ranged from six months lo 7 years of age. Brown's wife. Deborah. escaped by jumping out a second floor window of the smoke·ftlled building, Salo said. She was taken to Alexian Brothers Hospital in San J ose. where she was being treated for first and second-degree burns on the upper part of her body. She was in stable condition in the in- tensive care unit, the hospital said. Horse Center BidOK'dby Fair Board BOWLING GREEN, Ky. <AP> A 22-year-old college student has been ordered to stand trial on a charge of performing an il· legal abortion on henelf wltb a knitting needle The case ls believed t.o be one of the first In the nation ln wbJch an ex1_>ectant mother, w1th no in· volvement from physicians. has been charged with aborting her own fetus. Trial Is scheduled lo start Aug. 28 for Marla Pitchford. If convicted, she could be sen- tenced to 10 years to 20 years in prison Anaheim Man Dies as Cycle Runs Into Car Miss Pitchford, from nearby Scottsville, Ky., is a psychology major at Western Kentucky University here. Authorities say she apparently was 20 tq 24 weeks pregnant at the lime of the J une9 abortion. She was taken to Bowling Green-Warren County Hospital. where Dr. Roy Slezak treated her and caJled police. Miss Pitchford was indicted June 14 by a grand jury on charges of firs t -d eg r ee manslaughter and performing an illegal abortion . The manslaughter c h a rge was dropped at a pre-trial bearing this week by Circuit Judge J. David Francis on grounds that a fetus is not legally a person. At the hearing, publlc de- fender Flora Stuart maintained that the abortion statute under which Miss Pitchford is being prosecuted was intended to pre- vent quacks from performing abortions. The law was passed Timothy Perez,28,of Anaheim, after the U.S. Supreme Court's w a s k i 1 l e d i n S a n l a 1976 ruling that restricted the Ana late Thursday night when power of states to interfere with the motorcycle he was driving abortions struck a car. Santa Ana police said Perez Francis ruled this week that a was driving south on Harbor statement Miss Pitchford gave Boulevard near Hazard Street police al the hospital may be ad- shortly after 9 p.m. when his milled as evidence when the motorcycle crashed into a north- bound car making a left turn. trial begins Aug. 28. Francis .Pe rez. who lived at 1630 ruled that police photographs of Michelle Ave .• Anaheim, died in the fetus may not be introduced, UC I Medical Center about an but that a picture of the knitting hour after the collision, police needle is admissible. said. They reported the victim was A number of women's rights not wearing a helmet and re-organizations, including the Na- ceived massive bead injuries. tional Organization for Women, Police also said the driver of the and the American Civil Liberties a uto, Robert Royanagi, or Union have offered to support An aheim. was cited. ______ M_i_ss •. ~¥ird's defense. °"ANOE COAST Four Moulton Niguel Water District employees pleaded inno- cent today to criminal charges stem ming rrom allegations that e mployees under their supervision performed domestic chores for them on district tit\le. District Manager Carl KymJa, 44 , of Newport Beach, bad earller plead~d not guilty to charges contained in the same Orange County Grand Jury in· .dictment. Kymla and the four defen- d ants who appeared today before Superior Court Judie F,.._PageAJ RAY ••• pressed. Ray: "I can't see how I'd do anything any differently, based on the position the prosecutor and Percy Foreman had me ln. There's really no big'deal about maneuvering a defendant into a guilty plea. All guilty pleas are not made in heaven." Earlier, Ray threatened to seal hia lips in a diapute over ac- cess lo decade-old dotuments, but eventually agreed to con· Unue alter receiving a promise that he would receive copies of the evidence. Ray's threat, al the urging of hls attorney, Mark Lane, prompted another delay in the hearings while committee me01- bers huddled to see if the docu.· ments including copies of Ray's handwritten notes about his travels, could be prOduced. Stokes was pursuing a line of questioning aimed al showing that Ray had stalked Dr. Manm Luther King Jr. acl'OQ the COUD· try before the civil rights leader was shot lo death on April 4, 1968, in Mempbia, Tenn. DAILY PILOT 2 Bowling Leagues Slated f Qr Irvine . - Irvine senior citUens who like lO , er on iiOOOen anes· -or mrgras.r,mtghrbe tmerete4 -in aetivities--UMHlity ts-oFtani ing. Two bowling Jeaeues Cof the indoor type> will begi._ Sept. 6 and 8 at La Hacienda de Los Boleros, in the Moulton Parkway Plua in the Laguna Hills. The bowlin9 alley la th• closest available for Irvine retl· dents, aceordina to city offtclala. Team.a are welpted. In favor of wome ith•r two women and one man to a team or three women. One leatU• of about elaht teams plays on Mondua, the other leque on J'rlctaJa. both at l p.m. • The boWlinl ...._ nana ulitll May, Cost to participate II D.'° per ..,, . -. . person per league; a bowler may play in both Jta,fUel, tor $'7. L• Hacienda _also is off ertnc bowling l•HC>&~nl-o citizens who don't know the game or need to brush u,p on their handicaps. LesaoQ, on Monday and Friday rnominp, are $1 per. More informatlOQ la •vallable by ea111Da tbe bowllnl alley. at S86·BOWL. or contacBna MU> Bush at Ure clty1 f1$4·3819. For tboee wno like to take their ltc>wlln1 outdoors, tbe t"lne Senior Citbenl COmmll· tee ls IOlletttns support for It.a application for dt,y land apace - in parka or on the 1roubdl ol UM new Senior Ceater in RuCbo San JoequlD -for a ~ green. - Potenllal k>bbjljU may coa- ta ct R . Austin Jobntoa at 111 ·S!IG to tel iJlYOlvtd. --. Robert E. Rickles were ordered t.o return to court Oct. 13 for pre- trial motions and the setting of a trial date. Free on their promise t.o ap- pear are Kymla, John Perry, 32, di rector or administrative operations: his brother. Chuck. 28 , a maintenance yard foreman; •nvenlory control clerk Vemoo McKown , 34, and maintenance yard supervisor Kenneth Krie~er, 38. Charges or misuse of public funds, grand theft, destruction or public records and misap- propriation of public funds, are t-ontalned in the indictment. 1'he grand jury indicted all five after hearing testimony to the effect that district workers al- legedly mowed lawns, repaired cars and carried out mis - cellaneous home repairs for the defendants on district lime. Outposts Added TEL AVIV, Israel <AP> Two more Israeli settlements on the West Danit of the Jordan River have been dedicated. But lhe settlers and Israeli officials say they are not new, apparently hoping .to blunt criUcism that the outposts are obstacles to Mideast peace. The fire broke out at 4:36 a.m. in the Browns' townhouse. which is part of a 50-unit condominium near Tully Street and Highway 101. It was brought under control by firemen about halt an bour later. No other injuries were re· ported. From Page Al BLAST ••. by flying splinters and the others panicked. Quick action by the pilot. Capt. Antonio Misa, in bringing the plane to an altitude of 12.000 feet as it Jost pressure inside averted a disaster. the state- ment added. The pressure im- balance. comparable lo a punctured balloon, could have caused further structura l damage lo the fuselage. And the lowered cabin pressure al high aJtitude could have harmed the passengers. M isa was the pilot of a BAC·lll that was hijacked by student radicals to Canton, China, in 1971. The Orange County Fair Board approved a Sl.3 million construction bid for the initial phase of an equestrian center on the cowity fairgrounds in Costa Mesa Thursday. Construction of the horse and show facility is the first step in • the rair's planned $!8.7 million expansion effort. "We plan to start c.Jonstruction ln two months (pending final ap- proval by the state> and com- plete the equestrian center by C hr istma s," said Fair Manager Kenny Fulk. The initial phase will include about five acres or new parking, a show ring and 10 barns with 220 horse stalls. Valley Crest Landscaping Inc. of Santa Ana will construct the new facilities on undeveloped fair acreage near the intersec- tion of Arlington Drive and Newport Boulevard. The new horse stalls will be built by Port -A-Stalls of Calabasasatacostof$332.000. After fi rst phase contstruction is comoleted. the fair will tear down existing barns along Ar· li'!jton Drive to make way for added construction. The fair's master plan calls for space for 500 horses. train- ing areas. three training rings and a new show arena that will seat 2.000 people. The overall project should be completed in three years, said Fulk. Too Much? Too Little? OONT BE MISLED BY DISCOUNTS. DEALS. SALES ANO GIVE-AWAYS. THE COMMON LAW OF BUSINESS SAYS IT BEST - IT IS UIWllSE TO PAY TOO MUCH. BUT IT IS WORSE TO PAY TOO LITTLE. IF YOU PAY TOO MUCH. YOU LOSE A LITTLE MONEY • -ANOTHATISALL ~E=~:~~~11'"~~.,~~~~. WAS INCAPABLE OF DOING WHAT IT WAS PURCHASED TOOO. YOU CANT PAY A LITTLE ANO GET A LOT. f Lag11na/South ~oast .. .l VOL 71, NO. 230, • SECTIONS, • PAGES ORANGE COUNTiY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, AUGUST 18, 1978 I TENCENTS 1 . Sparks PerJU1-y Pro~ Dropped .hy DA a1 STSVS lll1Ql&U. .............. An in~llkle Into ebars• Uaat ~ lle9da PolJce Cbief Jon Spub committed Ptr1Ul'1 under oaUt durlna ·an ad• mln11traUve be.nu nearly two 1•an qo. bu been drooDtd by the Oranp Count.y District Al· tomey'a omee. Deputy Dlatrlcl Attomey Rm Kreber ~bo beaded lbe probe lnto • mlacmduct bearlna held tn Oct. 1976. uid today be wUt not me a complaint a1ainst the pollee chief. . The dlatrlct attorney 's ln· veali1aUon wu prompted by 1 request made by La1una Beach buslMllman Joel Snyder, who deulled lbe aUeced ch1rce in a letter to District Attorney Cecil Hieb last week. He chafled Sparks Ued to an I appeals board when be said be bad never been disdplined dur· mg his career as a police officer. The hearinf resulted in the dis missal o Laguna Beach police officer Carroll Bush who was charged with alleaed 1ross misconduct . misuse of a city police car, and for conductioa personal business durina on· duty hours. During the hearing, Sparks was aimed lf he had ever been disciplined durina bis career The poliee chief said be had not. But according to Snyder. the cblef was ordered to take two days off by former city Manaeer Al Theal after he was alle1edly stoooed for drivinR under the in· fluence of alcohol on La1una Canyon Road inAUIWJtof 1976. Tbeal has repeatedly refused to acknowledge tbat disciplinary action. Deputy District Attorney Kreber sald today that tbe ev ldence collected by bis ln· vestigatora does not warrant a formal complaint. ·'Our investigation shows that after the question was put to Sparks. there was an objection and the question was withdrawn." Kreber said 'Blast • ID ,!" Jet Blows· Bo 17 I ,\ Diedrirla lndirt•ent Judge Denies Dismissal Bid By KA111Y CLANCY otllllDelty N•tli.tt Another move by Orange County Supervisor Ralph Diedrich to have lbe bribery in dictment against him quashed ended in failure Thursday. Superior Court Judge John H~raNew WgwwCoach Walt ffamera has bet!n selected varsity football coach at Laguna Beach High for the upcoming sea so• Hamera, who was graduated from Purdue Universitr, will be replac- ing Dennis Haryung, wbo was relieved of bis duties after admitting he falsified some track and field marks. See aporta for further details, Page B7. Flynn denied a motion by de- fense attome) Marshall Morgan to dismiss the indictment on the contention that lbe district at· torney was prejudiced in his handllng of the case before the Orange County Grand Jury. Flynne aslo denied a motion to dismiss a bribe conspiracy charge a gainst Fullerton architect LeRoy Ro se , Diedrich's co-defendant. Flynn said he would rule next Friday on other motions to dis· miss the Diedrich and Rose in· dictments. Their Superior Court trials are scheduled to begin Sept. 18. Thursday's court appearance was the fifth in a round of pre· trial motions by Rose and Diedrich defense attorneys. The indictment alleges that Diedrich in 1973 solicited bribes from the Robert Grant Com· pany. original developers of Anaheim Hills, In return for a favorable land use decision. The indictment alleges that the money was funneled tb:N>ugh <See DIEDRICH. Pace A%> Water Employees Plead Not Guilty By TOM BARLEY OI .. 0Mtr "91 le.ft Four Moulton Niguel Water District employees pleaded Inno- cent today to criminal charges stemming from allegations that Viejo Man New Trustee At Saddleback Saddleback Community College trustees have picked John C. Connolly, 33, or Mission Viejo, to fill a board seat vacated by Donna Berry employees under their supervision performed domestic chores·for them on district time. District Manager Carl Kymla, 44 . of Newport Beach, had earlier pleaded not guilty to charges contained in the same Orange County Grand Jury in· .dictment. Kymla and the four defen· dants who appeared today before Superior Court Judge Robert E. Rickles were ordered to return to court Oct. 13 for pre· trial motions and the setting of a trial date. Free on their promise to ap· pear are Kymla, John Perry, 32, director of administrative operations; his brother. Chuck, 28, a maintenance yard foreman ; inventory control clerk Vernon McKown, 34. and maintenance yard supervisor Kenneth Krieger, 38. Connolly, assistant general manager of the May Company department store in Orange, will assume hls seat Aug. 28 and become a voting member of the ---eoU~$Slldief;t~,.. .,. • uo ... "' Trustee Berry resigned because she is moving to Northern California. Charges of misuse or public funds. grand theft. destruction of public records and misap· propriation of public funds, are contained in the indictment. Connolly was selected from among nine candidates. ''Just a cut above, I 1uess you would have to aay," was board President Larey Taylor's eom· menl Other trustees cited Con nolly 's "innovative Ideas," "analytical mind" and "un· ~ ol the-eemmuni t:olle e concepC' ~ ~ IOUIJl!""lbe' seat u a way or getting lnv01Yeef 1n his community. •'I don't mow enough about football or baseball to be a coach for my cblldren, but belnt a trustee I know, and um ls I way I can serve my comtnunilY," he lald. Connolly craduated tn 19'7'7 from Wlltem State University of Law ln Fullerton and recenUy took b1a -.ie bar exams. He bu a bachelor'• delf" ln polttlcal 1clence from St. Jobn'1 Untventty In New Yon. • He WW NPrlR!ld one of tbe Jarpat an• la the SadcUeback district. Coue1Jy'1 area In; ctUdel ••ee&ce VMJo, parts o1 a Tero. Trimeo c.n,,oa, Su Jun ~a*Uillio iilil taPDa Nlpel. The grand jury indicted all five after hearin~ testimony to the effect lbat di1trict work en al· legedly mowed lawns, repaired cars and carried out mis· cellaneous home repairs for the defendants on district time • No-Close EntX>Ulller? LA MESA <AP > - Twenty.five clt11ens telephoned police to ex· press alarm about a bri&ht, .red Uaht ln the sky. "The llabt moved and then stopped and, when it llopped 10.. a Hcond, part of lt dropped from the 1ky." oae caller said. Tbe 1l1ht1n11 were Wednetdayrucht. Police aaad somebody apparently attached 1 nare to a tMUum balloon. Oaurning Into the Turti Surf er operating near Huntington Beach Pier today was even creating some white water with his right hand as he cranked his burn at bottom or this wave. His ac· tion was frozen here with a telephoto lens from the pier. Lifeguards said surf was running with some six·foot sets today. JUlie, Jennie 'Fine' Mother, Daughter to Go Home Saturday . . Julie Nixon Eisenhower ·and her dauabter Jennie will be go- ing home on Saturday mofllinl, a spokesman r.r San Clemente General Hospital announced to- day. &avi~ the:4>aby!1 father. bad said earlier tbal h1a w1 aiia Cll~ter would-prob- ably be releUed ·on Tburiday or Friday. But the extension of Mrs. Eisenhower's bospitaU.1aUon to Saturday should not be in· terpreted aa an lndlcatlon ol any complication in her recovery, sald hoeprtal administrator R. Hannan Jones.· Both UlOU»r and dau1hter are doing extreiliety well, he said. The decision to postl)OM the new mother's return homt was reached t>y Mrs. Eisenhower and her ob1tetr\ctan. Dr. Euaene C. Cution Jr .. accordlne toJon . "A tfptcal 1tay at our hospltal ronowinc cblldb1rth ia °'"" to four Clays, ' be aald "Mn. . Eisenhower and her physician simply agreed that Saturday would be the best Ume for her to go home." Jennie Eisenhower was born at 1:32 J>~m. on Tuesday, .wtth el' lier anistfiij wltll-.tn.---H~· natural chUdblr::th The ark hail'ed;-blue-eyed baby ,Sr w--- 23 inches lona at. b.lrth and weighed nine pounda, four ounces. "8\g and beautiful -she's Just bit and beautlfuJ," the ob- Train Derailed CARSON <AP> -A 1poke1man for the Soutbero Padllc ~ tbe two tanker can holdlnt toxic cblortne IN ln· volved ln a dliratlwa~Diobably can't. be moved unUJ SiatUrd.,. Tba fNICbt tH1n WU bound for Loa A1114'lt1 wlMn a raU apll\, caualftl a -.., ears t.o leave Ute track,TbUilcla; Krebll' ul4l SNrb was ap. parentb' under a.th at tbe time the question WU Nked. "He anawered t.o the neaatlve. and wu actem~ to make another atatement when the question was withdrawn,•• Kreber Hid. Kreber aakl he baa called City Manager Fred Solomon to alert him to the Dtatrtct Attorney's Office deciaion to drop the mat· ter. Airllner "' I.andsO& I At Manila MANILA. Pbilippines CAP) - A bomb went otf in the toilet of a Philippine airliner at 24,000 feet today. apparently blowin4 the bomber out through a bole tn the fuselage and wounding three passengers. offtcial sources re- ported. The airline said the plane landed at Manila lntematlonal Airport 15 minutes after lbe ex· plosion. It w• the second bombins aboard the same airliner. a Britisb·made BAC·llt nown by Phillpplne Airlines. In 19'15. a hand grenade exploded in one ~ the lavatories. killina the man who brought it aboard and wounding '5 passengers. Tbe/IMIUJ'CeS said a polWclll motive for the bombint bad been ruled out, and investigators were looking into tbe possibility that the bomber bad been tryin& - to destroy the plane or somebody abeard for lnaurance money. Pllil_._ \lrU.. NW the explosfm OttUrred fn a rear lavatory 50 minute.a after tbe BAC· Ill Jet toot off from Cebu. in CJJe central Philippines, for Mallila wkb M persoaa aboard. Tbe~aida ..... ln die ~ at th time. app&l'eBtl)'. p&aDtiq the bomb. and was l)fown out ove,r tbe Slbuyan Sea 12IO miles IOuth ol ManllL Airline spekesman Enrique Santos would not identify lbe missiJlg man but said mWtary tnvestjgators believe It was a ene-man operation. '.•We left Cebu wUb 78 pusengera but we deplaned only Tl ln M8DUa.," be said. There were .six crew mem· be rs, The airline's statement said the pa,1$en1ei:s were having breakf at at the time. It said three passengers were wounded by flyina splinters and the others panicked. Brosh Fire QueUed In San Juan Area Firemen quickly doused a small brush fire lbat Oand up about 10 a.m. Thursday ln an un. Inhabited area on Rancho Viejo Road ln San Juan Capistrano. Less than ooe-fourt.b an acre was affected and the blar.e was handled by one engine company. a cOUbty fire official said. Tbe cause of tbe fire bas not~ de- termlDed, be aaid. Coast CN u DAIL y PILOT use NEW YORK tAP> -Clairol. the naUon'a 1ar1"t l)roducer of ha r cok>r1n1 product.a, aaid tOda,y lt has r-.moved fl'WD lta producta Ill maredlent 1uapeoted or caualna cancer ln animals. Clairol Vlcc Pttsldent Jack hor said moat Clairol producta an store helves contaln the in&redlent. 4· nHtbO•Y·•·Phenrleaedl•mlH. but that new 1blp· sn•nta wlll aol contain'*' •. The Jl'9d nl Food and I>rus Admlniltratlon haa f.roposed wamln1 labels on product• contalnlnt the n1rec:Uent. also known as 4MMPD, but hat not la· sued a final dedslon. Shor said Clairol believes the inaredlent 11 1afe, "but we f-1 tt's a proper bultnelt dectslon to not have customen face tbat kind of wamln1 label." The FDA proposed the label after the National Caneer Institute reported the iqredlent. when fed to rata, appeared to cause bladder cancer. llttit• Fa~ Dela11 Bot Water ·Perils San Onofre Plan Diacbqed water too warm to meet slate standards niay force Southern C.llfornia Edison Co. to del~ two new San Ooolre power units for up to thNe years and spend ,an estimated S2 bilJion to build a new water in· take aya&em. it wu revealed to- day The problem ia that a coastal marine protection clause in White Shark Survival Questioned SAN DIEGO <AP> -Sea World olllclals say they are wor· rled about the survivability of a rare great white shark captured Wednesday orf the Ventura coast. "At the moment, this la the on· ly 1ivina great white shark on display in the world." fish curator Ray Keyes aa\d Thurs· day. "But its survival depends on whelher It will eat In captivi· ty and cohabit with 20 other sharks in our Uveahark exhibit." hlblt .. Now, the areal white la a somewhat emaller version of the moniter nu portr~ed ln mov· la. Tb• 4-fool·li to-pound shark, len th8ft a year old, waa cauaht in the net of Ben Henke, a com- merclal ftaherman who notified Sea World Ron ud Valerie Taylor, shark experta lnvolved In the produc· tlon of "Jan," were at tbe part tllmln1 a televlalon special wben the 1reet white was brou1ht in. Park officials named it "Ron," in Taylor's honor Like Its nelthbon In Sea World's tank, Ron wlll be of· fered different types of flab three times a week. "Moat of the other aharlca are from Florida waters and they don't know that Ron la a treat . white aha.rte," Hid Sea World . spokesman BUI Seaton. "But u he crows to 20 feet or more, he wlU 1atn considerable respect." state Water Resource Board rules require.a tbat water dla· cbar1ed from power planta not be more than 20 de1reea hotter than the water lt'a retumed to. At San Onofre, offtclala HY, an apparent error occurred wben tbe water wu calculated to be no more than 20 depees hotter than at the point from wblcb tt ls taken. However, the water la dis cbarcect at another point farther from abore where the water is about nine"-'"* cooler. Ut1Ut,y olftclall said in a letter to the water board that dealcn cbancea would force them to build a coolinl water Intake system a mile anct• half lone. They said they believe the ma· jor changes aren't needed under terms of the permit given the San Onofre plant by the Regional Water Quality Control Board. Edison officials said they think the problem Is an overly strict Interpretation of rules by the state board. They also sitid that If the rules are rigidly en· fbrced they may be forced to seek an alternative, such as operating the plant at lower effl· clency. This would allow the water to be cooled to the proper tem· perature, but at the expense of lost 1e.nerat.lq power. Priest Facing Sex Sentence UNION CITY <~P>-A Union City priest wlll be aen· tenced Sept. 19 after pleadln1 no contest to aexuaUy moleatinl a parochial aohool boy. The Re\>. Stephen Kleale, who was a teacher and the director of youth acUvltiea at Our Lady of the Ro&ary pariah school, wu releaaed on hla recoanlzance after a)>pear1n1 1n Municipal Court. Police aald a formal complaint was /Ued qalnat ~e 31·YHN>ld priest, after three parenta com· plained to the school about games the prleat played wtth their children in the 1chool'1 rec- tory sex 0ffender Facing Prison lb TOM BAaLEY .................... W arnn OU. Clewell of Mil· 1lon Vle)O WU declared a DUN\• tally dleordered HX offender Thureday, but an Oran•e County Superior Court Judee refused to return him to Atucadero State ment•l R0tpltal. "It'• juat aheer loatc." Judie H. Warttn Knl&ht commente<t. "He had nve aria one·balf years there before th.ta lateat crlme oc· curud and the treatmeot doean 't seem to have done much 1ood." Clewell, 28, left Atucadero in March after recelvtn1 treatment u a mentally d110rde"'4 sex of· fender for crimes committed in Loa Angeles County. Two months later be picked up a 13-year-old El Toro girl as she walktd home from Serrano In· termediate School and drove her to Irvine where she waa raped, savagely beaten and left for dead. Clewell has pleaded &uilty to seven felony counts which in· elude kidnap, rape and attelQPt· ed murder. Judae Knlcht explained to cte. Bill Proposes Irvine Land Tax Relief 'A11emblyman Ron Cordova <D·EI Toro> baa introduced lealllatlon that will 11ve homeowners whose bouaea are on land leued from the Irvine Company the full property tax benefit of Proposition 13. As things stancl now , the leased land for which the homeowners are obligated to pay taxes wu assessed at its value In July or 1977. That Is when ownership of the Irvine Company changed hands. Con sequently. Assessor Bradley Jacobs and his staff were obligated to value the land at Its worth then rather than roll Its value back to what It was shown at March l, 1975, as pre- scribed by Proposition 13. Cordova said Thursday that, aa a result, the homeowners have been deprived of tax aav· Inga benefits because of a tranaa~tlon Ctbe company's sale> ln wblch they had no benent or lnterelt. That la why he Introduced the le1l1l1Uon that hu now cleared one A11embly committee. Cordovaaald. In the county assessor's offtce. Webster Guillory estimated there may be u many as 5,000 homeowners affected by "the peculiarity" of the company's sale impact on UllJ year's tax Uablllty. Moat of the parcels Involved land held under 99-year leases calllna for the homeowner to pay taxes on the leued land. Cordova said he favors ex- pandlne bla Assembly b1ll to in· elude bualneaa property aa well as residential . He also aald the wordlnt of the meHure "needa clean1n1 up" to help narrow tt down to apply on· ly to the circwnstancea lnvolved with the Irvine Company leased land. fense attorney Terry Giles that the three peychlatrlsts who re- eently examined Clewell were divided ln thelr opinions on hla amenability to treatment. The Judge said he concluded from reading all three reports that, whit~ Clewell miabt be easer and wllllna to underao further treatment at Atascadero. the odds are in favor of the conclusion that. auch treatment mllht be poinlle11. He ordered lhe crlmlnal char1ea a1ain1t Clewell re· instated and set Aue. 24 u the date be wlll determine the length of the defendant 'a prilon sentence. Deputy Dl11trlct Attorney Paul Meyer said be will ask Judge Knight to impo19 the maximum term of 20 ye ars and four months. Meyer said there ls no reason why Clewell cannot receive the psychiatric therapy he needs at the state's Vacaville facility and he repeated Judie Kni1ht's ob- servation that treatment at Ataacadero had proved to be polntleaa. Giles and Clewell'• father, Ml11lon Viejo printer Robert J . Clewell, commented outside the courtroom that they were dlJap- polnted with the court ruling. However, both men Hid they felt sure that Judie Knl1ht, while orderin1 a prison term for the dlaturbed defendant, would enaure that Clewell 1ot all the psychiatric care necessary for his type of mental condition. "We don't want hlm In there for 20 years and four months. of course," Gllea said. "But I hope and pray that. when he does come out he can be returned to society as a useful and produc- tive citizen." F,....PageAJ DIEDRICH .• Rose and former Diedrich at- torney Michael Remington, both or whom provided services to the developer. Diedrich defense attorney Mor1an argued Thursday that the district attorney already had been found to suffer a confilct of interest and "appearance of prejudice" a1ainst Diedrich whlle the bribery indictment wu bein1 pursued. ~e waa referrlq to Superior Court Judie Philip Schwab's ruling last November which aald the state attorney aeneral, not the d letrlct attorney, abould prosecute Diedrich on an earlier indictment chargln1 alle1ed vlolatlon of state campal1n finance laws. "The day after the dlatrtct court of appeal upheld Judae Schwab thla Indictment came down." Moraan ar1ued. "Here the dlatrlct attorney has been found to suffer a con· fllct of interest .and he 1oe1 throu1h that and I think the en· tire proceaa la tainted,·• Morgan continued "Now is tbe time to correct this and I thinJc lt can only be corrected by d11mi11ln1 thll In· dlctment." he saJd. GlJARD DOG lLXES JOB Vernon Warehou8e Deputy District Attorney Michael Capl11I ar1ued that there were different seta ol facts surroundtnt the Schwab rullna and the motion before Judge Flynn. SPOKANE, Wash. <AP) - Hubert Manh hu a new cua.rd .·dog · Hil old ODG wu stolen -atone with Sl.700 worth ol chalD aawa and other ltema the dol wu l\lf.: posed to be tuardln1 at Manb 1 store Tb• do1, once valued by Marsh at about SIOO, WH found .playtn1 wtth 10me chtldren a few daya i.ter. The chain aawa weN nowbere around. DAILY PILOT Arson at GunpoinJ Told by Workers VERNON <APl -Employees at a commercial wa~bouae in Vernon claim lhey were toreed at gunpoint to set the bulldlnt on fire -on the heels of an an- nouncement that the city's firefighten may not respond to alarms be1lnnln1 Saturday morning. The,employee1. about elaht of them, refused to ldeaUfy t.bt persons who alleaedly fol'C!ed them to spread 1u0Une on the warehouse floor and Ht tt aflame late Tbunday nltbt, aaJd a apok•man tor tbe Loi AnaeMI Count)' '1re Department. Tlle employee~ Hld tbt)' feared.-.IOt ~ ~ tt:'Uily cooperated ht \k Jnvettltatloft. wbfch la beint handled &y ~ Vernon Police Department. Tb• blue NQulred ual•tanc• from ft,.. d9partmenta lD nearby Montebello, Lynwood and the count1 becaUM of a ~ ot Vernon ft.reftlbi.ta due to pro. te1t• over PropoelUon ta-related layoff•. Abo• • ftren,htera tnocktd down thJ ,Jblaat wltbtn 10 mlnutet. l9t It toe* UP to • mlnut• for the Utlatfnt d9Part· menta to rnpobd, aald llon CUmmlnO. ••t1111• for the ~t•!n,uonal 1 A11ootat1on of ~LonJllU. There wen no lQJvl• lA tbe flre, and no ..umat. ol dam•a• . ... . was available. Cummings said he save~he Ci· ty notice Thursday that fireflJhters may take a "•af•lY and Job protection action" after 8:30 a.m. Saturday mornin1 if there are too few firefi1hter11 avallabl• to safely put out a flre That means, Cummings said, that firefijhtera may not anawer calla. "A• far u we're concerned. anything goes after 8:30," he added. He denied N~rta that it was prQteatln8 ftnftilltlf'I who m11 have all•J•dl1 coerced tb• .wanbOUH 9111plo1 ... ~tnto ~ ~ ----~ ean',t believe any flreflthtir would do that. .. Relations between the clty and the flrefl1ht.ra deteriorated thr.. week• llO when clt1 of· ftel1l1 announMd that tT of the city's 101 firemen would be termlnated In Sept.ember and Octobtr. Th0te tT "''° ar. f\lfly tr'1ned flrell1ht.er1 but tllled c>th•r Poll· Uona. aucb " dll~tohtn ....S mecbanla1.~d Mlk• Bower, cl· t) lnlorm•uan otftcer. Aa of Thundaf, 17 other • flrtrlthtera were 1upendtd temPol'M'tb' ·bteaute of •8"oul diaput.t with t11e•detutment A normal ........ lldfMi }mlftild by a.~ Mt oely UN- ~or. '1')~. '-'~ . .. ., e. ,. I ... - .,~ -INFANT'S BODY REMOVED FROM SAN JOSE FIRE Six Perish In Clty'I Wor9t BllH In Hl1tory 2 Me"' 4 Kids Die In San Jose Blaze SAN JOSE <AP > -Two men and four children were killed early today when a two-alarm fire swept lhrou1h thelr townhouse. Dead were Floyd Brown, an unldentifted friend of the family. Brown·s three children and an l l-year-old cousln, according to Capt. Larry Salo. San Jose Fire Department. The names of the children were not lmmedlatel)I released. They ranged from six mon\b& to 7 years of age. Brown's wife. Deborah. escaped by jumping out a second floor wtndow of th~ smoke-filled building. Salo said. She was taken to Alexlan Brothen Hospital in San Jose, where she was being treated for Nurse Faces Hospital IJeat,hRaps ' t;rst and second-degree burns on the upper part of her body. She was in stable condition in the in· tensive care unit, the hospital said. BALTIMORE <AP> -A re · gistered nurse had been indicted on four cowtts or homicide in connection with the deaths of " term in ally ill patients at a hospital here. authorities said today. WlJUam Swisher. Baltimore's state's attorney. aald the death& at Maryland General HosptW occurred between December 1977 and March 1978. Swlsher Identified the nurse as Mary Rose Kalsler. also known as Mary Rose Robanczynski. He said she had been taken m· to custody and would be ar- raigned Sept. 6 ln criminal court. The four-month investigation started after rumors circulated at the hospital that a former nurse diacoMected a respirator from a terminally ill patient who later died in the special care unit. Swisher sald the Investigation indicated that no one else was Involved and that the deaths of the patients were isolated incl• dents. Maryland General, a private non-profit hoapltal, has 486 licensed beds in downtown Balli more. The fire broke out at 4:38 a.m. in the BrownR' townhouse. which is part of a 50-unit condominJwn _ near Tully Street and Highway 101. It wu brou1ht under control by firemen about half an hour later. No other injuries were re· ported. Strike Ends lnMemphU MEMPHIS. Tenn. <AP I -Striking policemen and firemen voted today to re· turn to work by evening under terms of a two-year contract that would end a walkout which kept the ci- ty c lamped under a curfew for a week. The 1,100 policemen and 1.400 firemen voted ir. separate meetings to ac· cept the agreement. reached early today in negotiatiorui between AFL· CJO and Chamber of Com- merce. Union leaders said the contract guaranteed no penalties ror the strikers. Too Much? Too Little? DON'T BE MISLED BY DISCOUNTS, DEALS, SALES. AND GIVE·AWA.YS. THE COMMON LAW OF BUSINESS SAYS IT BEST- IT IS UNWiSE TO PAY TOO MUCH. BUT IT IS WORSE TO PAY TOO LITTLE. IF YOU PAY TOO MUQi, YOU LOSE A LITTLE MONEY AND THAT IS ALL ..., • ' WHEN VOU PAV T~E. VQU-SOMETIME8'1.Uet1~:----!r--,1 EVERYTHING BECAUSE THE MODUCT -VOU BOU-. .. -. WAS tNCAPABLE OF DOING WHAT IT WAS PURCHASEO TODO. YOU CAN'T PAY A LITTLE ANO GET A LOT. DEN'S :;;;;111Jitiaa :·castom d11p11i1• hnOleum' • wOod floOr Orange Coast · Today~s Cleshag N.Y. Steeb t. t VOL. 71, NO. 230, • SECTIONS,• PAGES ORANGE COUNTY,,CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, AUGUST 18, 1971 N'£ TEN CENTS~ I 106 Cut FroDl Newport-Me88 Faculty· BJ Ml(BABL PAS&SVICH ............. There wW be alJl fewer lld· mlnlst ratora and 100 fewer teachers ln tbe Newpon·Yes.a tJnUied Scbool Otstrld when school opens lh1I rau beca use ol Proposition U and dropa in stu- dent enrollment District otncialJ estimate the reductions in admlnaatratave ataff. olftcer worlten and five maintenance supervlson wtll 11l~ the payroll budaret by about ~.ooo . On tbe te1chln1 1tde, the eUmlnaUcn ol 100 teacberl <•1 temporary> eombtned wlth 35 resltutklnl or Ntlrementa and 211 teachen wbo an ~GI on leaves al abHace wilf cu( the payroll an estimated Sl. 1 mUUon. 'lbe diatrict bad about 1,!SO te.eheft lut year. An uailtant aupertntendent, one elementary school principal, a career education coordinator and one aaalltanl hllh school principal are amona the six ad· mtnlatraton who wob't be ~ turnln8 to the diatrlct this fall Dltlrict spokeswoman Jean Harmon aaicl some of tbe ad· mlnlatraton bave retired but tbe dlatrlcl la not seeking replacemeata for tbe poeltioaa. These aalarlea amount to about sm,ooo a year Tax Cut Sought Leaseholder Relief Bill Pushed Assemblyman Ron Cordova CD·El Toro> has antroduced legislation that will give homeowners whose houses are on land leased from the Irvine Company the full property tax benefit of ProposiUon 13. As things stand now, the leased land for which the homeowners are obligated to pay taxes was assessed at its value in July or 1977. That is when ownership of the Irvine Company changed hands. Conseque ntly, Assessor Bradley Jacobs and his staff were obligated to value the land at its worth then rather than roll its value back to what it was shown at March 1, 1975, as pre· scribed by Proposition 13. Cordova said Thursday that, as a result, the homeowners have been deprived or tax SaV· ings benefits because of a transaction Ctbe compa ny's sale> in wbicb tbey bad no benefit or interest. That is why he introduced the legislation that bas now cleared one Assembly com mittee, Cordova said In the county assessor's office, We bs ter Guillory estimated there may be as many as 5,000 Canee~~ent? . Dye lngredi.ent Removed NEW YORK <AP> ... Clairol. the nation's largest producer of hair coloring products, said today it has removed from its products an ingredient suspected t>f causlnJ( cancer in animals. Clairol Vice President J act Shor said most Clairol products on store shelves contain the ingredient, 4· methoxy·m-pbenylenediamine, but that new ship- ments willnotcontainit. The Federal Food and Drua Administration has proposed wamlng labels on products containing the ingredient, also known as 4MMPD, but bas not is· sued a final decision Shor said Clairol believes the ingredient ls safe, "but we feel it's a proper business decision to not have customers face that kind of warning label." The FDA proposed the label after the National Cancer Institute reported the ingredient, when fed to rats, appeared to cause bladder cancer Bomb Blasts Jet, Killing Terrorist MANCLA, Philipplnes <AP> - A bomb went off in the toilet of a Philippine airliner at 24,000 feet today, apparently blowing the bomber out through a hole in the fuselage and wounding three passengers, official sources re ported. The airline said the plane landed at Manila Jntematlonal Airport 15 minutes after lbe ex plos1on It was the second bomblng aboard the same airliner, a British·made BAC·lll flown by Philippine Airlines. In 1975, a band grenade exploded ln one of the lavatories, ltllllng the man who brought it aboard and wounding 45 passengers. Coast Wea&ber Sunny through Saturday but some low clouds dur- ing early morning hours. The sources said a political motive for tbe bombing had been ruled out, and investigators were looking into the possibility that the bomber bad been trying to destroy the plane or somebody aboard for insurance money. Pblllpplne Airlines said the explosion occurred in a rear lavatory SO minutes after the BAC·Ul jet took off from Cebu, in the central Philippines. ror Manila with 84 persons aboard. The sources said a man was in the compartment at lbe time, apearenUy planting lbe bomb, and was blown out over the Sibuyan Sea 120 miles south of Manila. Airline spokesman Enrique Santos would not identify the missing man but said military Investigators believe it was a one· man operation. "We left Cebu with 78 passengers but we deJllaned only 77 ln Manila," be said. There were six crew mem· be rs. The airline's statement said lbe passengers were having brealtfP.l lt__t.M time. It said thrff en. were wounded ...... -.-.-, It nten and ~ othen l*nlcted; Quick action by the ollot. Capt. AntonJo Misa, lo brt.qing tbe plane t.o an altjtude ol 12.000 feet as lt lost preaaure lnsict. averted a diU1ter, the •late· ment added. The pressure lm· balancre1 comparable to a punctuna balloon, could have caused further structural dama1e to the tuaelaae. And the lowered cabht pl'9Mure at b1lh altitude could tiave harmed the .,... ....... Mtaa WH lb• pilot of a BAC·lll that WU hijacked by student radlcaJt to Canton, ...._--. ...... ~..;;.--.;_.;..;..,;. ....... ...,~.-China,, Jf11.' ..> homeowners affected by "the peculiarity" or the company's sale impact on this year's tax liability Most of the parcels involved land held under 99-year leases calling for the homeowner to pay taxes on the leased land. Cordova s aid he favors ex- panding his Assembly bill to in· elude business property as well as residential. He also said the wording of the measure "needs cleaning up" to help narrow it down to apply on- ly to the circumstances involved with the Irvine Company leased land 'Boinbing' leads to Drug Bust An lnvesUgation that started Wedneaday as a bomb acare at the Nelman-Marcu store in Fashion Island, ended Tbarsday with the arrest of a suspeded narcotics dealer. Newport lleacb police booked Harey Edwin Vaqban, ao, wbo Uata a San Dteao addrea, aa be returned to the department store to reclaim a missing briefcase That briefcase touched off a bomb scare Wednesday morning when an unidentified woman brought it into the store, put it on the nearest counter and told the clerk, "Somebody Left this lo the parking lot." The woman immediately left the store. Because of the circumstances and the fact lb, case was heavy. police called tO the scene said lbey were fearful it might con· lain explosives. The Orange County Sheriff's bomb squad was summoned. The case was taken to the sheriff's bomb disposal area and opened. Instead of finding explosives, the deputies found two dozen $100 bills, ten tabs of LSD, several sets of identification, a ledger and a set of airline tickets for Karachi, Pakistan. Narcotics investigator Mike Hietala who was given the case for investigation, decided bis fir&t step woµld be to check with store emplo~ to find out if the man pictured In tlle identifica· lion bad returned for b.t. case. "I went out tbel'e Thursday mornln1 and there be was," Hietala said today. He booted Vaughan on su~plclon of possession of ~D ror sale. Hietala said Vaqhan had Just been released recenUy from pro- ba tlon in connectlon with a federal conviction for smuggling 1, 100 pounds of marijuana. He aasertedly told Hietala be had the case and sever.al packages lo bis hands when be left Fashion 1.sland Wednesday. ''He set the case down to put tbe stuff Jn hla car and jUll drove off and left it," Hietala Hid. NIGHIH4RE snu IUlflVIS FAMILY Five maintenance supervisor posltiom were elimlnaled Aua. 1$ for an estimated savings of $78.000 A total of 14.S offtce worter positions have been eliminated. but the exact saviap to tbe dls- trict ls unknown because some of the workers .. may be wertana somewhere else lo the district at lesser salaries.'• saia Mrs. Harm Gil. One adqllnistration poalUon. that of data processing director Dr. Paul T)"ndall, wtll probably be reinatated. offlclals noted. Tyndall bad been earnln1 sas.ooe per year unW tbe district set up a non-profit data process. ing corporation with TyDdall u director. Ho"::;. the corporation is being · ved because of fiQan. cial problems that have led to 1 Ouwning Into tlw Tur•· lawsuit and Tyndall may return to his rormer district dWiea. DJ1triet trustees are now mov. Jng towards flnaliratlon or a lt78-79 budget of ~.2 miWOll. The district would be left with reserves ol about $800.000. Last fllcal year the district operated on a tetal budget of $54.9 mllllon. a figure that in· eluded reserves of more than $2 million. Surfer operatmg near Huntington Beach Pier today was even creating some white water with his right band as he cranked his bum at bottom of this wave. His ac- tton was fro7.en here with a telephoto lens from the pier. Lifeguards said surf was running with some six-foot sets today. Equestrian Center Work Bid Approved OlllrgeeJlemajn OAKLAND <AP> -A Judie t bu refueed to drop cbar,_ ol kldc>applng wltb bod.Uy barm 11alnst William IDd Emily Ran11, rulinl that a~ 1DU1t dtttrmtne whether l'atrtcia Hearst ... physle&Ur . &bqmlld ckli1iuihli'll'4UdUcUoia. ' ' • A.I DAILY PILOT Nie Flood Pact Denied NeWport Sttilla on Newport. Beach caty coun. cUmen h.lve m\aMd to n d an emersency ordlnanc. related to th• federally mandated nooct in· aurance pracram, chooalna ln atead to lllold a public ~artna on the matter Ill thtlr A.a1. • meet· ins. Coundhnen uve been duebol wlt.h tM hd«tral ln.aurance Acf m in11traUon f<H" more tban two years over the ~t:y·s st.alu. ln lhe flood tnlW'ance proc.ram. The dbpute centered on the aovernment '• contenUon that vlrtuallY au ol the walerfroal .,.... ol lhe clt:y wouJd nood dut lq a l~)'HJ' storm But cit)' Qftkta&a aucOMlf\&lly cot ... 8'W1 to ,.. ..... "" calculallona which llmUld cMs· t1naUon of the flood h11ard areH to Balboa laland a11d N WIM>rt Sbora. SUucturea built le lcleaWled nood huant ara1 an '1)Clulnd to carry federally·llitued ftood anaurance ln order to q_uaUfy for any financlnt from federally in· aured lendl.na inlt1\uUon1. The ordinance IOU&bt )CoocUly mu1t. be eoact.ed by •pt. l inor· der fof' tboee flood buard ., .. property owner1 to 1et that. In· 1urance. But eowacilm• balked at tbe llotll Del•ll Fine Julie and Daughter Go Home Saturda Julie Nixon Eisenhower and her dauahler Jennie will be ~ Inc home on Saturday morning, a spokesman for Saa Clemente General Hospital announced to-day David Eisenhower. the baby's father. bad said earlier that bis wife and daughter would prob- ably be released oo Thursday or Frida.)'. But the extension of Mrs Eisenhower's bospit.allutioo to Saturday should not be in Long Beach Oi,l Terminal Pact Signed LOS A.NG~ CAP> -Gov Edmund G Brown Jr .• Standard OU Co. ol Ohio and Southern California Edisoo Co. announced today a long·sougbt agreement that could clear the way for an Alaskan oil terminal ln Long Beach The agreement would reqmre Sobio to spend $78 million on an· ti-pollution equipment at an EclilOD power plant. Sobio would also spend another $3 mlllioo to S5 mil1ioo on environmental con trob at dry clean.ina plants. ·'The contract signed today by Edison and Sobio parantees an a mprovement In Southern Ca\ifomla air quality and will abO help reduce America .. de- pendence oo foreip oil, .. 8n>wn told reporters at bis office here 'The net result will be an air quality improvement " The agreement comes three years after Soblo announced plans for the Long Beach oil terminal. wbicb would receive crude oil from Alaska and tbeD pump it to Texas and \be Midwest through a system of pipehnes The Sobio proaram. wblcb would clean up far more pollu- tion than lt generates. would re- portedly also leave the Loq Beach alr about nine Umes cleaner after the projeet la lD operation. The plan Ls belie•ed the fim llme on a siloifkant scale one company has agreed to pay for curbing pollution created by other companies to win approval of ita pl'Qject. The SolUo project is reportedl7 important to President Caner's energy program. But it would still bave to be approved by the Internal Revenue Service, the California Air Resources Board and lhe South Coal Air Quallt;J Management DistricL terp!'t!ted as 'aD tndieatloo ol any complication in ber recovery, saJd balpital admlnlatrator R. Hannan Jones. Both mother and daqhter are doin1 extremely wen. be 1ald The decision to postpone the new mother's return home was reached by Mrs. Eisenhower and ber obstetrician. Dr. Eugene C. Cun.on Jr .• accord.ina to Jones. ••A. typical stay at our hospital following cbildbbtb ia three to four days." be aaid. "Mrs. Elsenbower and ber physician simply agreed that Saturday would be the best time for ber to gobome .. Jennie Eisenhower was born at 1:32 p.m. on Tuesday. with ber rather assisting with the natural childbirth. Tbe dark haired, blue eyed baby girl was 23 inches long at birth and w e ighed nine po-unds. four ounces. ''Big and beautiful -she's just big and beautltul," the ob- viously elated Eisenhower toJd reporters. The baby's proud grandfather, former President Richard Nix· on. pointed out to the press that Jennie is the first child born in the United States with relatives on both sides of the famllJ wbo were presidents. Aa well as being Nixon's ftrst grandchild. Jennie is the great. grandchild of former President Dwight D. Eisenbowe.r. Davld Eisenhower ls currently writinc a biography of bl• grandfather, the former Presi- dent. He is raearcltinl and writ· ing the book at bis Caplatrano Beachbome. Tbe new father baa intemq:it. ed bla 10-bour·a·day writing -acbed.ule to make extended vis- its to bis wife and dauahter in the bo8pltal. He described Jennie's birth as a high point of bia llfe. Illa wife was .described todaJ by a boapltal spokesman u belq "oo top of tbe world ••• Suspect Blaster? HAYWARD <AP) -Polle~ believe the tbWlderous dynamih. blast which rocked a quiet neighborhood here Tuesday was the work of Mark Vargas, 24. of Sacr amento. an accused anned robber trying to intlmldate wit.· nesses scheduled t o testify against him. ordinance. a ltaDdard meMID"e Hq-.lred b7 the flood ad-mlnl1tr1Uon. Councilman Don Mcinnis sue· IHted the hearing alt.er citing a few pauq• ol tbe Pl'OPOMd or- dinance and •tac for ela• lflc• lion or revlslonolt.bem. He cited as an example one pasaace that reads; '!The City Council of the City of Ne~rt Beach find• tbat the flood haserd at•aa of tile City or Ntwport Beach are subject to periodic inundation wlalcb re- sults in property loss, bealtb and safety huardl. disruption or commerce and ,to;.ero.mental 1ervlce, extrao ry public expenditures for flood protection and relief llDd impairment of the tu baM." ... for one would have ooe bell or a time VOUAI for that... be declared. llayor Paul Ryctoff qreed witb Melnail. u did Counellman Paul Hummel. who noted the 20-pa1e onHndce la dotted with similar ''peculiar paaaagea." City Building Director Bob Fowler told councilmen they could still get the measure enacted as an emergency or- dinance to meet the Sept. J deadllne after their Aug. 28 bear· ing. although be noted the insurance administraUon of· ficials "are geWag very nervous aboutthia." Strf,lw Ends lnMemphiJJ MEMPHIS, Tenn. <AP> -Striking policemen and firemen voted today to re- turn to wort by evening unde r terms of a two-year contract that would end a walkout wblcb kept the cl· ty clamped under a curlew for a week. The 1,100 policemen and 1.400 firemen voted in separate meetings to ac- cept the agreement, reached early today in ne1ot1atima between A.Fir CIO and Clwnbet' of Com- merce. UnM>a leaicters 4Jid . the contract guaranteed no penalties for the strikers. Stereo Theft Foiled as Victim Wakes A pair of Central Newport Beach residents sUU have a stereo system to enjoy today after one ol tbem awoke to chase off buraJara wbo were trying to •teal the IOUDd system; Gary Newman ol UO 4lst St. told poliee be awolle just before mldnipt Wednesday to bear somecme wandering around the home be abarel with llidulel Sherman. Newman said be got up to chec~ on his roomie aoo instead tound the stereo out. of its shelf and sitting oo tbe (rOUDd by a side door. Nearby stood two· young strangers who took off running when they sa\lf Newman. He sakl be chased them for a few block a but gave up in favor of securing the house and the $1,650 stereo. . , It must also be approved by LOng Beach voters, who will de- cide ID November on a referen- dum asking whether they want tbe terminal in tbeir city. Newport Mayor Hits Opponents ol tbe project cite hea ftb studies that claim emission would harm residents ad point to the poalbWtles ot oil spills and~exploal.ons s DAILY PILOT ... Traffic ButtQn Plaji A S45,ooo i>rWeet. to tnata11 trat- flc control butlms for blcycliata bas drawn tb• opposition or Newport BMch'• Mayor Paul Ryckoff who1&19 lt'a lDeoGllltenl with tbedty's traffic policies . The~ Wlf recommended for appmval to ctJtv COUDCllmen th.ls week by their 81c1C)e Trails Citizen Adrisoey"Comllllttee. Coandlmen, in spite of tbe--mayor•t•""ll•,wmill¥ plyan. ror.:a :stat. tranl lo pay a portion ol the project's cosl 'lbe balance is to be paid with 1u tu money. AP ..... Tax Cut Suppqrt Seesaws .. SACRAMENTO <AP> -As· aembly Speaker Leo McC~ launched a laat.-clltcb effort _, save bis ~ to abolish ~ homeowners property tax todll)' wblle two income tax cut bil-galned momentum. At the same time. a pl'OJ>064) to c lamp stringent spendi"ll limit.a on state and local aovem· menta throughout California was threatened by the lealslative id· ftghtlna over rtval tax cut pllUd. <Relatedstory.AS> ; Ju11t 13 days remain ~~ final· adjournment of the lWf session. 8ut In spite of ~ neat· tna adJournment , the Legislature made little progress Thursday toward a~meat $ any major tax wue. Ins tead . the Le glsJaturt slum bled from one deadlock to another a mid bitter squabblinl a nd the fresh memory ol Pro position 13's tax revolt message. INFANT'S BODY REMOVED FROM SAN JOSE FIRE Six Perl1h In City's Worlt Blue In History The key obstac&e to both the property tax cul plan and the spending limits proposal was Ure 11tate Senate·~ reject.ion or a biU drafted in the Assembly which would extend until today the deadline for placing constitu- tional amendments on the Nov. i ballot. · 2 Men, 4 Kids Die In San Jose Blaze McCarthy's plan. which is a major revision of Proposition 13) tax cut provisions, and th' spending limit. are botb COil st i t utional amendment~ Therefore. both could be deaCI ror the year unless the twic»- defeated extension bill Is re. vived for a third time and passed by an increasingly ba1kJ Senate. · SAN JOSE <AP> -Two men and four cblldren were killed early today when a two-al~ fire swept tbrouah tbear townhouse. Dead were Floyd Brown. an unidentified friend of the family. 1.-rown's three children a nd an ll·year-old cousin, according lo Capt. Larry Salo, San Jose Fire Depa~t. The names of the childre n were not immediately released. They ranged from six months to 7 years of age. Brown 's wire. De borah. escaped by jumping out a second noor window of the smoke-filled building, Salo said. She was taken to Alexian Brothers Hospital in San Jose. where abe was bel.ne treatecJ for ftnt ind ~-de#ee buma on the upper part ol ber body. Sbe was in stable condition in the in· tensive care unit, the boapital a.id. 'The ft1'e broke out at 4:3$ a.m. in the Browns' townhouse, which license Plate . Thefts Told Several license plate thef~ have been reported in Newport Beach. Police said today. . According to J>Olice reports, Mitche Hunt, or 113 Baywood, Richard Bush. of 4210 Park Newport, Gregory Herbert, of 121 44th St. and Frank Lloyd, of 920 E. Balboa Blvd. have reP,Prtect the thefts since Tuesday. Police are lnvestigaUng. May~r in Lead CLEVELAND <AP> • Mayor Dennis J . Kucinich's slim margin or victory over a recall drive bas slipped to 303 votes after the first day of a ~t. is part of a SO-unit. condominium near Tully Street and Highway 101. rt was brought under control by firemen about. half an hour later. No other injuries were re· ported. Four Plead hmocentto Work Fraud Four Moulton Niguel Water District employees pleaded inno- cent today to criminal charges stemming from allegations tbat e m p loyee1 under tbei r supervision performed domestic chores for them on district time. District Manager Carl Kymla. 44 , of Newport Beach . had earlier pleaded not guilty to cha rges contained tn thP !Ulme Kymla and the four defen- dants who a ppear ed today before Superior Court Jud.ee Robert E. Rickles were ordered to return lo court Oct. 13 for pre- trial motions and the setting or a trial date. Free on their promise to ap- pear are Kymla. John Perry. 32. direc tor of adminis trative operations; his brother, Chllck, 28 , a m a inte n a n ce y a r d forema n1 inve ntory control clerk Vernon McKown. 34. and maintenance yard supervisor Ke nneth Krieger. 38. Charges of misuse of public funds . grand theft, destruction of public r«Orda and misap- propriation or public funds. are contained in the indictment. The grand jury indicted all five after beari.o$t testimony to the effect that district workers aJ. legedly mowed lawns, repaired cars and carried out mis· cellaneous home repairs for tbe defendants on district time. Police Probe Parked Car )'andalism Newport Beach police are ib-vestlgating a series of attacks dn cars parked in the lots of tl1e Oakwood apartment complex. Residents of the complex at Irvine Avenue and 16th Street have reported the vanda lis m over the past two days, officers said One nllident, David WestruP. - said be found bis car with nal- tened tired, a cut fan belt and trie wiring pulled loose. ! Another. Rick Martin, said be and his roommate have had their autos• paint jobs damaged in the past month. In the latest incident, Martin said bis newly painted car incurred about $300 worth ol damage when someone poured caustic chemicals on it Newport Cops Seek 1bief With Beard Newport Beach po.Ike are seek· ing a man wtU'I a full beerd who ran out. of a Lido Village shop witb a s mall decorated box valued at $150. The theft was reported Wednes. day by a clerk at Port O' Call, 3400 Via Lido. She told polH!e She showed the Russian-made collec. tor item to tbe man only to have him runoutoflhestore asabewas relocking the display case from which the box wu taken. Too Much? Too Little? OONT BE MISLED BY DISCOUNTS, DEALS. SALES AND GIVE-AWAYS. THE COMMON LAW OF BUSINESS SAYS IT BEST - IT IS UNWISE TO PAY TOO MUOf, BUT IT.IS WORSE TO PAY TOO L1TTLE. • ------JF YOU PAY l'OG-M.UQ:t.. YOU LOBE A LrmE MONEV-AND lHATlS ALE-- WHEN YOU PAV TOO LITTLE. YOU SOMETIMES LOSE EVERYTHING BECAUSE THE PRODUCT YOU BOUGHT · WAS INCAPABLE OF DOING WHAT fT WAS PURa-tASEO TOOO. YOU CAN'T PAY~ LITTLE AND OET A LOT. t>. ,, ,. • 17 -· I • • Saddlebaek Altera .. • N.Y. Stoek8 Jt VOl,.. 71, NO. 230, •SECTIONS,• PAGES ORANGE COUNTY; CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, AUGUST 18, 1978 TEN CENTSi ------------------------------.-..--------------------.... !lllm------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------· County Eyes Viejo 'lJpkeep' Legality 81~110DGS ... _ .......... Tbe ~portSons of more tban 500 vately owned lata boNeftnl VkJO streltl are bet~ Nlntalned at tu· payer ~ and county ol flclall Mmit tbe u~eep work may not be on f\rm lea•l 1round EuemeDt.a -the ri1bts to u:&e the land -were n.ver 1ruted to the ~. an atficlal aaid ''TMN WM a period of tJme when the county In ita 1ub· dlvlalon NqulNmentl did not llt up a proper pl"Oeedure for con- veyance ol euemenu when tbe lTaCt map was recorded." En· vironment.al Manqemeot Ac cy aaslstant diJ'ector Carl Ne aald Tbunday. "We apparently accepted tt:-em flbe s lopes> for main- tenance without proper con· veyance ol t.be easements." Aecordlna to Nelson, the t'CMlft ty·malntaJned portion of the tlopes la not dellneGed on tract maps on ftle at tbe county re- corder's otflce. • • W ben you look at those maps, the <property> llne l(>es rtaht down to the street." be ex-plaJned. "Even lf the slope is so feet, lt belontl to lbe upblll owner." The Iota are located primarily alont Marguerite Parkway from La Sierra Drive and Trabuco Road, and atoaa Jeronimo and Trabuco Roads between Marguerite and Alicia Parkw.QS. The lot.a were recorded prior toJan.1,1975. "The slopes were accepted by the county but no easements were being granted," Nelson said. EllA officials are worklni to correct the legal tecbnicallty, which, they say cannot occur again. "The subdivision code was up-4a ted in 1975," Nelson said. ''The updated version provides a mechanism for the landscaping and dedication of easements to tbe county." The slopes considered are roadside open apace that con· tributes to tbe community's at- tr a ctl veness rather than a backyard for the homeowner liv· Ing Immediately above them. Nelson said. He insisted the cost of main· talniog the slopes in question is "a small portion" of the $250,000 spent annually on manicuring Mission Viejo's slopes, road me- dians and parks. A solution to the slope ease· ment problem is being held up because county officials want an opinion from the Mission Viejo 'See UPKEEP. Page .U> Mission Viejo Rapist Faces Jail Caaeer Ageat? Dye Ingredient Removed NEW YORK <AP J -Clairol, the nation's largest producer of hair coloring products. said today it has removed from its products an ingredient suspected or caus~ cancer in animals Clairol Vice President Jack Shor said most Clairol products on store shelves contain the ingredient, 4- methoxy·m·phenylenediamine but that new ship· ments will not contain it The Federal Food and Drug Administration has proposed warning labels on products containing the ingredient, also known as 4MMPD, but bas not is· sued a final decision Shor said Clairol believes the ingredient is safe, "but we feel it's a proper business decision to not have customers face that kind of warning label." The FDA proposed the label after the National Cancer Institute reported the ingredient, when fed to rats, appeared to cause bladder cancer Water Employees P,/,eOO NO.t Guilty Four Moulton Niguel Water District employees pleaded inno· cent today to crimlnal charges stemming Crom allegations that Viejo Man New Trustee At Saddleback Saddleback Comm unlll College trustees have picked John C. Connolly, 33, of Mission Viejo, to fill a board seat vacated by Donna Berry Connolly, ass11tant general manager of the May Company department store in Orange, will assume his seat Aug 28 and become a voting member of the collegeboardSept.17 Trustee Berry res igned because she as moving to Northern callfomia Connolly was selected from among nine candJdates "Just a cut above, 1 guess you would have to say," was. board Presadent Larry Taylor's com ment. Other trustees cited Coo· nolly's "innovative Ideas," "analytical mind" and "un derstanding of the communit) college cancept." Connolly said he sought the seat as a ift'11Jfi!!i.!!SJ!lvolved employees under lhei .. supervision performed domestic chores for them on district lime. District Manager Carl Kymla, 44, of Newport Beach, bad earlier pleaded not gullty to charges contained in the same Orange County Grand Jury in· .diclment Kymla and the four defen· dants who appeared today before Superior Court Judge Robert E. Rickles were ordered to return to court Oct. 13 for pre· trial motions and the setting of a trial date Free on their promise to ap- pear are Kymla, John Perry. 32, director of administrative operations; bis brother, Chuck. 28, a maintenance yard foreman; inventory control clerk Vernon McKown, 34, and maintenance yard supervisor Kenneth Krieger, 38. Charges of misuse of public funds, grand theft, destruction of public records and misap- propriation of public funds, are contained in the indictment The grand jury indicted all five after hearln2 testimony to the effect that district workers al· legedly mowed lawns, repaired cars and carried out mis· cellaneous home repairs for the defendants on district Ume. Julie, Bomber Killed; 3Hurt MANILA, Philippines <AP> - A bomb went off in the toilet of a Philippine airliner at 24,000 feet today. apparently blowing the bomber out through a bole in the fuselage and wounding three passengers, official sources re· ported. The airline said the plane landed at Manila International Airport 15 minutes after the ex- plosion. It w'as the second bombing aboard the same airliner, a Britlsb·made BAC•lll fiown by Philippine Airlines. lo 1975, a hand grenade exploded lo one of the lavatories, killing the man who brought it aboard and woundiq 4$ paauq8era.. The sources said a poliUcal motive f'br the bombing bad been ruled out, and investigators were tooldnc 1nlO the possibility that the bomber had been trying to destroy the plane or somebody aboard for insurance money. Philippine Airlines said the explosion occurred in a rear lavatory 50 minutes after the BAC·lll jet took off from Cebu, in the central Philippines, for Manila with 84 persons aboard. The sources said a man was in the compartment al the time, apparently planting lbe bomb, and was blown out over the Sibuyan Sea 120 miles south of Manila. Airline spokesman Enrique Santos would not identify tbe missing man but said military investigators believe it was a one· man operation. ··we lert Cebu with 78 passengers but we deplaned only 77 in Manila," be said. There were six crew mem· be rs. The airline's statement said the passengers were having breakfast at the time. It said three passengers were wounded by flying s plinters and the others panicked. Quick action by the oilot. Capt. Antonio Misa, in bringing the plane to an altitude of 12,000 feet as it lost pressure inside averted a disaster, the state· ment added Jennie Barry and Friend "Barry.'' a seven.foot boa constrictor. winds himself around Val Kuber. a lab technician in the natural sciences department at Sadcjleback College. Barry re· mains at the college. but "Peter," a python who once re- sided on campus. has been shuffled off to Lion Country Safari. College officiJlls unceremoniously declared Peter ··surplus property" when. they said, be began growing too fast and eating too many rats. Supervisor Fails To Quash Charge By KAmY CLANCY Oft .. o.llyl"lletSi.ft Mental Custody Refused "1 TOM BARLEY Of .. Deify,...._ Warren Dale Clewell of Mis· sion Viejo was declared a men· tally disordered sex offender Thursday, but an Orange County Superior Court judge refused to return him to Atascadero State mental Hospital. "It's just sheer logic," Judge H. Warren Knight commented. "He had five and one·half years there before this latest crime OC· curred and the treatment doesn 't seem to have done much good." Clewell, 28, left Atascadero in March after receiving treatment as a mentally disordereo sex of- fender for crimes committed in Los Angeles County Two mQDt.bl •ater be picked up a 13-year-old El Toro girl as she walked home Crom Serrano In· termediate School and drove her to Irvine where she was raped, savaaely beaten and left for dead. Clewell has pleaded guilty to seven felony counts which in· elude kidnap, rape and attempt· ed murder. Judge Knight explained to de· tense attorney Terry Giles that the three psychiatrists who re· cently examined Clewell were divided in their opinions on bis amenability to treatment. The judge said he concluded from reading all three reports that. while Clewell might be eager and willing to undergo further treatment at Atascadero, the odds are in favor of the conclusion that such treatment might be pointless. He ordered the criminal charges against Clewell re· instated and set Aug . 24 as the date he will determine the length of the defendant's prison sentence. Deputy District Attorney Paul Meyer said he will ask Judge Knight to impose the maximum term of 20 years and four months. (SeePRISON, Pase .U• Another move by Orange County Supervisor Ralph Diedrich to have the bribery in· dictment against him quashed ended in failure Thursday. Superior Court Judge John Flynn denied a motion by de- fense attorney Marshall Morgan NIGllTMARE sr1u to dismiss the indictment on the 'Fine' contention that the district at· torney was prejudiced tn his llAUNTS F AMJLY handling of the case before the The crime against their Orange County Grand Jury. h Flynoe ulo denied a motion to daughter happened mont s. ago, dls~lls a bribe conspiracy but a Newport Beach family ls !IJffl.. u_ainst FullU12IL still living with the nightmare . ...---a"r..,cblleet LeRoy Rose, m~·~~aturing, Page Bl. Diedrlch's co-defendant. ''I don't ·lmow enough about football or baseball to be a coach for my children, but belna a trustee I tboW, and this is a way I can &el"W my community," be Flynn said be would rule next MotMr, Daughter ta Co Home Saturday ~"~ar..e°"n1~J1C:~!, ~: • dlctmenta. Tbeir Superior Court Coast said Julie Nixon Eisenhower and ConnoUy Jr•duated ln 1977 tier oaugbter. ~ will be ~ from eatern State_ llaiverait.y lng bome-.~y morniAC ofLg~ana netotl, ._. 1pok~~ his-ataW bat exama. He ftB" enerUllosp[taJ announced ~ vtously elated Eisenhower told trials are scheduled lo begin re rten.. Sept. 18. . tbab1'S pr:oud lf.llMffttW-ThllNCliY'r.;:eowt.. @iieer&fte!_ ;::..;:::::..:::;::::;:::..==-=--....-._ lm'llllt President' Richard Jolk. wu..tlie~:O :.lft-eailae .. :--.-1-11m111.,...-ir''1 de,ree ln polltlcal day. .___ rom St. John's David Eiseabower tbe baby's lhll\r tyin New York. father, had said earlier that bis Jennie Eilenbower wu born at 1:32 p.m. Oft Tuesday, wtlb her falber uslltlna wlth tbe natural chJldbirth. The dark haired, blue eyed baby tlrl was 28 Inches lon1 at blrtb and welahed nine pound1, tour ouncee. -ocr;-polntid 1>iC1o 1he preaa lhal trl a I -motl'Ons bJ Rose and Jennie la the ftrst child bom ln Diedrich defense attorneys. the United States with relatives The lndlctment alleges that on both sides ot the family who Diedrich ln 1973 solicited bribes were pnsidents. from tbe Robert Grant Com· Sunny through Saturday but some low clouds dur. ing earl)' mo1'11lna hours. Lowa tonlaht 62 to 65. Htaba Saturday 70 to 74 at beaches to M'to 88 inland. lie will represent ooe of tbe wile and daughter wowd prob- largeat arua in tbe Saddleback ablY be released on Ttiu.nda)' dlatrlet. CoDQolly'I area ln-or .-r;c1ay. eludes lllallon vi.Jo, Patti of El But the exteDISlon or Mrs. Toro. Trabuco Canyon, San Juan Eisenhower'• boepltalilaUon to Caplstnno and Lacuna NltueJ. Saturday 1bot.lld not be ln· ~TalkSet Saddleback Comrnunlty Hoeptl.al MWt D., care Center director Dr. Buth Zttnlk ls ecbeduled to 1peu on .the ''The AaQDy ........ ot Ow Flnt Yeu ID ~"' It a nooe • MMnt ....._.. ·Cl!D~· a 'JM" f111id·r...., ~ li'ti be-i.eW" at • ....., SeWlp Ud Loan 22111 ~ rON1t Drtn, ii Toro. terpreted aa an tndlcatlon !'f any "BIC and beautlful -lbe's just bta and buud.M," tbe ob-compllcaUon in her recover)', aatd boeoltal administrator R. Haon.nJones. Botb mother end deu&btet are lftiD Derailed dolnl Mt.remelJ well, be aaid. C A ll 8 0 N ( A P ) -A The cltdlkm to Pol\PoM the tPoke1man for ttie SoutMm new !Ddlbet'I return born• •u Paelflc M1I the two tanUr earJ • reached bJ lln. ElMnboftr boldtn1 IGaic ehlcii'tne Pl • and htr obaletrlel1n, Dr vo1ved ID• clentlllitllt!"I= Eueoe C. OarioG ,r., accordlq can't be moved UDUl BM--. tO'T~· ... ; --::-uw.. .,.. .................... ---"A tiPkW NJ at N' *'6tal .. LOI ·~ wbi11 a rut ~t< ·follow ... d1Hd¥"'1 II lbnt to ca•hul a..._-. to MiM die four. titan," be H'41 ... llln. ll'Mk 1'11•. Al weU aa betJ11 Nixon's nnt pany, orifinal developers of 1nndcblld, Jennie ls the ireat-Anaheim Hills. in return for a srandcbild ot former PresJdent fal'orable laf.I use deelllon. Dwtaht D. BIMnbower. Tbe lndlctment au.... tbat Davld EilelihOwer la current.I" the money was f\mneled tbroqb J ROH 8Dd tinner Diedrich at. writln1 a blo1rapby of bl• tomey Micbael Remtnston bcJCb 1randfat.bet. the former Prell· ot wbOm provided aervlce. to dent. He II rwearchlni and '"1l· the ~eloDer t':u':~ at Illa Caplatrano .. Dl .. rlcla ~~•f ·~~--8.,.l_!o"!'~! The new rather bu lnterruPt· · ib!"l:r:'IMCl '-..:= ; Id bll lO·boW'·•·day wrhiilt been ICMIDd == a =ct ot sebedule to man uteaded vii-l•tereet ud ••• ,.,.....nee of ltl tO till Wife Ud dalllbter la preJ\UI~" aiatut D\ectr•ch U.:.::lb.d lennte•s blru. as wblle tbl briberJ lndktmeat was I b1P ~ Of bll We. IOI Wife ~ ::.-=~ '° ...... •H dHertbed to••1•'1 • • OOMt ,...,.,.,...._ 8elt•eb'• llolpltal apok•meo u be6M 0 co (lie........_ ... ·--~~~~ ----~-~.~, IN91DIJ TODA W' Roso ponr of ClabMo ~ rh>GJrv 1*nCf /onh tn 'Z4of Sldl.' 1'or o MlNu> of lM ntta pla~ tn l.ol Angr1-•, Me Po,. Cl. •••x -----· t I 4J DAllV ptLOT SB And Now a_word From Our Sponsor •1 WIU.L\M llODOE ............. Thti Ma~ton Vie}o Oompan,y•a telephone Unea ire play· In& some new t&me1 lhele da.ya. The development company. owned by PhUlp Morria, lne., la ramoua ln the Valley for playina ~orded mUllc Lo a caller when he or ah• la placed on hold. Company ofticiall ti.ve 1pparenUy worked out a new 1.hnmkk fort.be musical interlude. Tho two laleSt tunes are the "Marlboro COW'ltry" son& and the "Mlller Hilb Life" aon1. Tbe Mlller Bttwint Company and Marlboro ciaaretles are owned by PblUp Moms. Inc ••• TODA Y'S WORLD of elaborate planning and conservation considera· lions has spawned some potential pro· test techniques that have become quite creative, or destructive. dependin& on your point of view. Lacuna Niguel residents. for exam· MOMC pie. are hotly contesting a proposed sewage treat..aient plant proposed for their area. Some homeowners. aware that developers are re· quired to conduct environmental impact studies, threatened to bury themselves on the treatment plant's proposed site. "If we went down there <to the site> and got buried," one homeowner suggested facetiously at a recent meeting, "they'd find our bones and the archaeologists would stop the sew age plant from being built.·' ••• CHAUVINISM ISN'T dead. It's just resting a bit. When a Mission Viejo busine3Sman lunched recently at a fancy Saddleback Valley restaurant with a local busi· nesswoman to iron out some details on a deal, the food or dering process started out something like this: "The lady will have. . . " The waiter, nose in the air and towel over his arm, jotted rapidly. And when it came to dessert, the businessman began the order with, "The lady will have .... " The aloof waiter finally lost bis cool, though, when be slid the bill·bearing tray next to the businessman and was told · And the lady will have the check. She's buying ' ••• BUCKLE UP, buckos. When 17·year·old Sue Ann Lin.sk of San Diego ap parently fell asleep at the wheel of her family's two·door sedan while driving south Thursday on the San Diego Freeway near Crown Valley Parkway, she thought she was dreaming. The car left the freeway,. plummeted down a SO-foot embankment, spun along a gully another 30 or 40 feet and smashed into a tree "It was like a dream," she related through tears. "I looked up and saw tbls tree coming at me." She and het 15-year-old sister, Trudy, who .. kl lbe was sleeping, escaped without a scratch -a surprise to paramedics and highway patrolmen who inapected tbe wreck Both girls bad buckled their seat belts. Probe of Laguna's Top Cop Dropped By STEVE MITCHELL Ol tlle Dell' ...... SQft An investigation into charges that Laguna Beach Police Chief Jon Sparks committed perjury under oath during an ad· ministrative hearmg nearly two years ago, has been dropped by the Orange County Dlstrlct At tomey's Office Deputy Oistnct Attorney Ron Kreber. who headed the probe into a misconduct hearing held in Oct. 1976, said today he will not file a complaint against the police chief The district attorney's in vestagaUon was prompted by a request made by Laguna Beach bu1nnessman Joel Snyder, who detailed the alleged charge in a letter to District Attorney Cecil Hicks last week was aksed if he had ever been disciplined durm~ his career The police chief said he had not. But according to Snyder, the chief was ordered to take two days off by former city Manager Al Theal after be was allegedly stoooed for drlvin~ under the in· fluence of alcohol on Laguna Canyon Road in August or 1976. Theal has repeatedly refused to' acknowledge that disciplinary action Deputy District Attorney Kreber said today that the evidence collected by his IR· vestigators does not warrant a formal complaint. ··our investigation shows that after the question was put to Sparks. there was an obJection and the question was withdrawn." Kreber said. Paa• P..,,AJ UPKEEP .... Mun1clpal Advilory Councll. County alftdala have Pree.st Id coueu membera tou.r ~ lnc1udlal: ' -. Atklna each property owner to 1l1n a form tru.af en1n1 h1I alope to the~. Declarirta the slopes the responalblllty of Individual homeownen. -Conlinuin& maintenance of lhe alopes and declarln• them county land because the county bas been maintalolng them ror years. Initiating condemnation proceedings to acquire the slopes -an action that might require compensation to affect ed property owners. Nelson said EMA officials favor asking each property owner to sign an easement con· veyin& the land to the county. He told council members this week that allowing individual owners to maintain the slopes could create problems. "There could be browning of slopes and a downgrading of community appearance because individual property owners prob- ably won't maintain the slopes behind their houses," be said. Council members have held off a decision unW they receive more information on tbeir 1978·79 county budget. They plan to take up the matter sept. 11 Miss,oh V~ejo Benefit Skate Marathon Set Registration is now being ac· cepled for the 12·hour Jerry Lewis Skate·A·Thon, sponsored by Mission Viejo Skateway Aug. 27·28 to benefit the Muscular Dystropby Association Participants are to begin skating at 7 p. m. Aug. 27 8:nd continue for 12 hours. Locker club privileges <com· plimentary passes to all sessions for one year> will be awarded to the skater conlributin" the most money in .Pl~ges and to the participant with the most sponsors. a spokesman said. Other awards include ten skat· ing passes <free admission to 12 sessions> five one·month locker club mem~rs.m.1>_~ and one pair each of "~r~ and "Jog. gers" skat.es. Those who skate the entire 12 hours will be eligible to win door prizes donated by lo~al. merchants anti amuaem~nt' parks. According to Mission Viejo Skateway manager Sylvia Day, more than UO 1katers participated ln ~ Jerry IAWil Skate·A·Tboo last year. · Registration packets are available at the Skateway, 2S410 Marguerite Parkway, Mission Viejo. Feeis$4. Hair Styled For Charity The King's Throne, a hair styl· ing shop in the Laguna Hills Mall, ls staging a hairalhon Sun- day from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m . with proceeds to be contributed to the Muscular Dystrophy Associa· Uon Hair styling. blow drying and all services for the entire day will be performed for the benefit of M uscutar Dystrophy. Also, a portion of product sales revenue will be donated lo the charity, spokes woman Betty Holden i,ald. The public will be served on a first come. first served basis Refreshments will be served He charged Sparks lied to an appeals board when be said be had never been disciplined dW' mg his career as a police officer. Ttnr-hearintl «'esulted ln tbe d&smlSsal of Laguna Beach police officer Carroll 811sb who • was charged with alleged l1'06I ·misconduct, misuse of a, city police car and for conducting personal business during on duty hours Irvine Company's Hughes Quits Post ~ " • • " • .. • .. • During the bearing, Sparks DAILY PILOT Frank Hughes announced his resignaUon aa Irvine Company vice president today in order to .wor'k for a new development firm. Hughes. who has been with the lrvtne COmpany since 19e0, had beell.Hr'VIM as. vtce presJdent of com an s resrcJinlial dlvlaiDn a pm ent onhe company's home build:l.q sub- aidiary, lrvine Pacific. He said today be bu ucepted the position of director of de· velopment and management ot a diversified real estate Invest· ment ftrm which will acquln a · portfolio of inveatmenll for German and Canadian interesta . The ftrm, to be named Aron Development and Manaaement, Inc., Will be bued ln Oranae County' be a.Id. In tdl early years with the Irvine ~omP.any. Hu,a.11 worked pflllW11' • • ~ and law .. ulMd plinntlta ., bulldln1 rt1PollllttlUUe1 for proJectt 1ueb H Saatbhaff, Univ~· Putt, TmUe Rock, Rancbo SID Joequln ud Ill Ca· n1oa. Tbe tnolt rac:.~ be ~·~·ii ... t.be . -Of Harbor Bidie, tba lUUl'1 ..... d9wir41iDllll bl Newport leKb. Hqb• lDfonned ._,._, of. flclab OI. b1a rellpaUoa OM 4 ----· arw1,....... Ray Says F1.rst Plea Forced WASHINGTON <AP) James Earl Ray conceded today he had made a detailed and UD· quahfied confession to the murder of Dr. Martin Luther Klng Jr., and would do so again under ~ same circumstances . But "all guilty pleas are not made in heaven,·· he said. Ray . 1n his third day of testimony to the House As· sassinations Committee. was questioned time and again about why . If be were innocent. be re· peatedly affirmed in a Memphis court March 10. 1969. that he "fired a shot from the second noor bathroom in a rooming house and fatally wounded Dr. King." Rep. Harold S. Sawyer. R· Mich., pointed out to Ray that has trial judge. in accepting a bargamed guilty plea for a 99- ye a r sentence. offered Ray many chances to recant the con· fession and the defendant re· fused each time. Moreover. Sawyer noted, Ray told the court that "no one used pressure" to convince him to forego a full trial. INFANT'S BODY REMOVED FROM SAN JOSE FIRE Six Perish In Ctty'a Worst Blaze In History But Ray said that wasn't the case. regardless of what be told the court. He claimed his at- torney, Percy Foreman, pres· sured him on the plea, that he had s uffered mistreatment in jail, couldn't sleep. and his ...ealth bad degenerated. 2 Me"' 4 Ki~. Die In San Jose Blaze Sawyer asked why Ray raised those issues before his sentenc· 1ng. "Did you make any c.omplaint SAN JOSE <AP) -Two men and four children were kuted early today when a two·alarm fire swept through their townhouse. Dead were Floyd Brown, an unidentified friend of the family, Viejo Women Arrested on Sex Charges A pair of Mission Viejo women who allegedly offered Costa Mesa undercover police more than a massaee Thursday night were jailed on charges of solicit- ing prostitution, police said lo- dav. RoxaMe McKtnley. 23. and 36.year-old Marcaret Belle Moran. both of 22322Boltana. liUs· sion Viejo, were booked at Orange County Jail. Costa Mesa lnvestigator Tom Boyland said an anonymous male. perhaps a disgruntled customer. contacted police and gave a phone number for the freelance out·call massage parlor. Investigators set up shop in a local hotel and when the two women arrived shortly after 7 p.m., they allegedly offered sex for a $100 fee. Outposts Added TEL AVIV. Israel CAP> Two more Israeli settlements on the West 8'lnk of the Jordan River have 9*n dedicated. But the settlers and Israeli officials say they are not new. apparently hoping to blunt criticism that the outposts are obstac les to Mideast peace. at all about Mr. Foreman?" be Brown's three children and an pressed. ll·year-old cousin. according to Ray: "I can't see how I'd do Capt. Larry Salo. San Jose Fire anything any differe.ntly. based Department. on the position the prosecutor The names of the children and Percy Foreman bad me in. were not immediat~ly released. There's really no big deal about They ranged from six months to maneuvering a defendant into a 7 years of age. . , guilty plea. All guilty pleas are Brown's w.1fe. Deborah, notmadetnheaven." escaped by 1ump1ng out a Earlier. Ray threatened to second floor .w~ndow or ~he seal his lips in a dispute over ac· smoke·filled budding. Salo said. cess to decade-old documents She was ta.ken . to Alexlan but eventually agreed to con: Brothers Hospital an San Jose. tinue aft.er receiving a promise where she was being treated for that he would receive copies or first and second;degree burns on the evidence. the ~pper part of ~~r ~y. S!>e Ray's threat, at the urging of was m stable cond1t1on m the In· his attorney Mark Lane te~sive care unit. the hospital prompted another delay in th~ said. . hearin~ while committee mem· The fire broke out at 4 :36 a .m. bers huddled to see if the docu· ~n the Browns' te~ouse. w~.ich ments including copies of Ray's 1s part ol a 50-urut condomlruum handwritten notes about his near Tully Street and Highway travels, could be produced. 101. It was brought under control by firemen about half an hour later. F,....PflfleAJ No other injuries were re· ported. PRISON ••• F,....P~AJ DIEDRICH .. ruling last November which said the s tate attorney general. not the district attorney. should pros'~ Diedrich on an earlier lndietment charging alleged violation of state campaign finance laws. "The day after the district court of appeal upheld Judge Schwab this indictment came down." Morgan argued. "Here the district attorney bas been found to suffer a con. flict of interest and he goes through that and I think the en· tire process 1s tainted," Morgan continued. "Now is the time to correct this and I think It can only be corrected by dismissing this in· dictment." he said. Meyer said there is no reason why Clewell cannot receive the psychiatric therapy he aeeds at the state·s Vacaville facility and he repeated Judge Knight's ob· ~ervation that treatment at Atascadero had proved to be pointless. Giles and Clewell's rather. Mission Viejo printer Robert J. Clewell. commented outside the courtroom that they were disap- Pointed with the court rulin2. However, both men said-they felt sure that Judge Knight. while ordering a prison term for the disturbed defendant, would ensure that Clewell got all the psychiatric care necessary for his type of mental condition. "We don't want him in there for 20 years and four months, of course," Giles said. "But I hope and, pray that. when he does come out he can be returned to society as a useful and produc· lave citizen." Too Much? f Too Little? •' CONT BE MISLED BY DISCOUNTS, OEALe. SALES AND GlVE-AW"AYS. 7tttnx>MMON LAW onustNESS SA vs lT BESf -• IT IS UNWtSC"TO PAY TOO MUa-t. BUT IT JS WORSE T PAY TOO LITTLE. IF YOU PAY TOO MUOi. YOU LOSE A LITTLE MONEY ANO THAT IS ALL. WHEN YOU PAV TOO LITTLE. YOU SOMETIMES LOSE EVERYTHING BECAUSE THE PRODUCT YOU BOUGHT · WAS INCAPABLE OF DOING WHAT IT WAS PUROiASEP TODO . YOU CANT PAY A llTTLE ANO GET A LOT . Bat Reprieve? .. '13' Cuta Peat Control tly &ATHYOANCV ... 0.... ........ Orange County resJdent.s wtth rat and moequito J>rob- .. ms UUs "Bummer are eotnl to ha"e to do much of the ex· lermlnatioo work themselves. Gilbert Challet, manager 01 the Orante C<Mmly Vector Control District. said a 10 percent ~et cut brouiht on by Proposition 13 has reduced the district's home-call service AS A RESULT, residents wttb summer rat and mos- quito problems aren't getting home service calls within 24 bours of their complaint. Instead, they are being offeT'ed advice by phone and brochures to assist with pest control along with free ball available from vector control headquarters in Garden Grove. ChaJlet said when pest problems seem to be severe or neighborhood wide, technicians are sent to lnspect and o( fer in-person help. FOR EXAMPLE, a specialist recently was sent to a Huntington Beach neighborhood being troubled with too many mice, Cballet said. While mice fall outside the district's purview he said. the technician offered the residents advice on eradicating the rodents. An information worker also visited an Anaheim neighborhood last week to advise residents on ways to cope with rat problems, he_ said. PROPOSmON 13 left the district s120.ooo short or its Sl.2 million 1977-78 budget even with the help of special state aid, Challet said. As a result, 2S seasonal workers weren't hired this summer. he said. and the regular 32-person crew has been forced to concentrate on mosquito and fly control. Technicians spray known insect breeding areas every two weeks in summer. Challet said. BUT ONCE THE summer season ends. he continued. technicians will be able to offer more home service calls. chiefly concentrating on neighborhood rat con~rol. So far. Challet said, the rat problem seems to be about the s~me as the past few years and hasn't shown.~igns of growmg because of the curtailment of vector control service. The Orange County rats are a six.inch variety known as tree or roof rats and are found mostly in oJder parts of Santa Ana. Fullerton, Anaheim and Garden Grove. Those areas contain more vegetation along with old orange groves and other fruit trees that offer food and nesting sites for the nocturnal rats THE RATS ARE capable of carrying disea~. chiefiy plague, and can transmit it to humans through fleas he said ' .. Challet said. ~e has received about eight calls from citizens complaining about the cuts in service. But dis· trict officials also have noticed a reduction in service re· quests this summer, perhaps the result of announcements of service cuts. he said Woman Held After Wild Police Chase A 22-year-old woman who told count) sheriff's deputies she was in a hurry to l eave California was arrested for re<:k· less driving this morning after officers reoortedly clocked her new Chevrolet Camaro at speeds uptollOmph Booked into Orange County Immunity Granted WASlllNGTON <AP> The jail following her arrest on In- terstate s near the Beach Cities offramp in south Orange County was Kathleen P. Lawson, reg- istered at an Anaheim motel. Deputies said the woman's southbound car passed a sheriff's patrol car near Crown Valley Parkway at excessive speed and failed to pull over when pursued. Three additional sheriff's units joined the 4:40 p.m. chase before it ended nine miles south, an officehaid. Fares Increase? ~nate _voted Thursday to grant 1mmwuty from prosecution to Senate Ethics Committee wit· n~sses who testify about the financial affairs of Sens. Herman Talmadge-' and Edward • Brooke The panel's request for the granting or SO•CaJled "use immunity" was agreed to by voice vote SAN FID\NCISCO <AP> -A Bay Area Rapid Transit com· mittee has voted to raise the transit system's minimum rare a dime -from 25 cents to 35 cents. ' , ~ Pilot to Feature . . The Sanday Daily Pilot's fulJ coverage of Orange Coast hap- penings wm be aupplemen~ by Family Weekly mag&tine's I* bebind the scenes at Laguna Buch'• famed Pateant of the Mutcrs (SUND A Y'S BEST) It's work.inc. Tind C>Ul why tn You/Your Mone)'. · Our other arUcles wlll ex· l plore Wal1'1NC HIPOaTANT - Andy Rooney, WJiler and reader BAA,_ -uov• of lboft. teleYiatOft est~I, most ,, .. V'"-D naan a· .-A bQst. notably on ... Kin• .. -... , .. OUl nHI CODSWt.ant thinks then'a .. ._ a. ~ somethlnl to the "St.r wars·• to prove tbe written word 1tJl1 la idea of '"t'be Fotw ... He Lbi~a or aome ~uenc.. lt .• •t.teN. and that it can be a WAL&ING POil OPftCS ' potlUve part of mllin1 bu$1MSS CandldM.el In thi a.e,lulfti' ~ ! and pe~ Uv• better. • &.be dffadl medt M'n bJ' ~ ~ APPLYING SV<:CBSS-tbroup eountill bet 'llateia to PacUlc Mutual, a New~rt :,~ .~.A~r'•t-~"ftclap ne Beacb·bued maur~ ftrm • -• WV NM tlded to ~--lta ror!mer fHture tepott.a aoml.DHt are I.Op-JO nntlAa by dolril IDON of ~ .. lft ¥ia ,...., .... Md JrUl fl !Mid ... .,.Jcfoae bielL ·.==-~~:!~-c _ _. Resume LOS ANGELES CAP> N•sot.latora for lbe retail clerka unlon and tbe Food Employen Council were to resume talk.I to- day in a lut-ditc:b effort to avert a threatened weekend walkout al 1upermarkets in nine Soulbem Ca.llfomJa counties. The talks. which bad broken off Su~. were to be held •t the Loll An&eles office of the Jo""ederal Medlalioo and Condlia· lion Service, local mediator Frank Allen said Tbunday "We have until 6 o'cloc\: S•turday, so we bave a few hours left to salvage it. I an- Uclpate the talks will go round· the·~lock until the deadline." AJ· len said. The 70,000·member Retail Cletks Union in &outbern Calltornia earlier Thursday re- jected a suggestion by Wayne L. Horvitz. director or the media· tion service in Washington, that it ienore lts Saturday 6 p.m. strike deadline until there was addiUonal negotiation wilb other representaUv~ sitUng in. The union voted 7 -1 to reject the latest offer of the lS supermarket chains involved. ordering members to strike stores from Bakersfield to the Mexican border when they open for business Sunday. Both sides said Wednesday that most ~res probably would remain open despite a walkout, with supervisory personnel and newly hired people replacing striking workers. Anxious consumers this week began stocking up on foodstuffs that may become scarce if the strike Is prolonged. The s trike would be the first time that all nine locals of the union struck simultaneously. Involved in the strike would be 1 • 1 0 0 st o r e s ow n e d b y Alb~rtsons. Alpha Beta, Arden- M a y fair. Boys , Certified Grocers. Hughes. A.M. Lewis, Lucky St.ores, Market Basket, Ralphs. Safeway. Smith's Food King. Stater Brds .. Thriftimart and Vons. The union is seeking pay. hikes of $2.20 an hour over three years. while the FEC is offering ~1.40 an hour. The average wage is $6.92 an hour. ' Ki~ks Balrit for Sis Percy Morgan. 23. and his sister Carolyn, 19. are shown in their beds at Milwaukee County Hospital after Percy donated a kidney to his sister. His determination to aid Carolyn forced him to kick his heroin habit. Hanna Parole Set For September, '79 WASHINGTON c AP) - Former Rep. Richard T. Hanna, D-Calif .. will be paroled on Sept. 6. 1979, from prison where be is serving a term of six months1o30 months for pleading guilty to a bribery conspiracy charge in con- nection with the Korea payoff scandal. The U.S. Parold board ruled Thursday that Hanna must serve approximately 16 months of his sentence. The decision was an· nounced today. Hanna. 64, was accused of ta.k· ing part in a scheme to ply members of Congress wlth cash and other gifts to promote South Korean interests. The only other former con-~ressman wato has been charged m the Korean payoff scandal is Rep. OJ.to E . Passman, who is awaiting trial. Passman was in· dieted on charges he took $213,000 in bribes from South Korean rice dealer Tongsun Park. Hanna. who is at the federal prison at Maxwell Air Force Base. in Montgomery, Ala .. is eligible for parole on Nov. 7. His mandatory release date. if he were denied parole. would be May, 1980. The parole commission did not explain its reasons ror ordering Hanna to serve more than the minimum period. Anaheim Man Dies as Cycle R11ns Into Car Timothy Perez. 28. of Anaheim. was killed in Santa Ana late Thursd~y night when the motorcycle he was driving struck a car. Santa Ana police said Perez was driving south on Harbpr Boulevard near Hazard Street shortly after 9 p.m. when his motorcycle crashed into a north- bound car making a left tum. Trial on Abortion Ordered for Student Perez, who lived at 1630 Michelle Ave., Anaheim. died in UCI Medical Center about an hour after the collision, police said. They .reported the victim was not wearing a belme& and re- cel ved massive bead Injuries. Police also said the driver or the auto. Robert Royanagi, or Anaheim. was cited. BOWLING GREEN. Ky. CAP> -A 22-year-old college student has been ordered to stand trial on a charge of performing an il· legal abortion on herself with a knitting needle. The case is believed to be ooe of the first in the nation in whlch an expectant mother. with no in· volvement from physicians, has been charged with aborting her own fetus. Trial is scheduled to start Aug. 28 for Marla Pitchford. If convicted. she could be sen- tenced to 10 years to 20 years in prison. Miss Pitchford. from nearby Scottsville, Ky .. is a psychology major at Western Kentucky University here. Authorities say she apparently was 20 to 24 weeks pregnant at the time of th.e J une9 abortion She was taken to Bowling Green-Warren County Hospital, where Or. Roy Slezak treated her and called oolice Miss Pitchford was indic~ June 14 by a grand jury on charges or first -degree manslaughter and performing an illegal .abortion. The manslaughter charge was dropped at a pn·lrlal bearing thJs week by Cir~t Judce J. David Francis on grounds that a fetus ls not legally a person. statement Miss Pitchford gave police at the hospital may be ad- mitted as evidence when the trial begins Aug. 28. Francis ruled that police photograph4' of the fetus may not be Introduced. but that a pict'u~ of the knitting needle is admissible. A number of women's rights o.rganizations. including the Na- tion.ti Organization for Women. and the American Civil Liberties Union have offered to support Miss Pitchford's defense. Suspect Blaster? HAYWARD CAP> -Police believe the thunderous dynamite blast which rocked a quiet neighborhood here Tuesday was the work of Mark Vargas, 24. of Sacramento. an accused armed robbe r trying· to intimidate wit- nesses scheduled to t estify against him. At the bearing, public de· fender Flora Stuart malntained that the abortion statute under which Miss4:::':::~~~~f;'.:0:~iei;ii~i;iitiic;iii\1iijliriii:~~ prosecuted was 1nteQded to 'pre. vent quacks from perlor= Prowed by famous Un1V1r1t;f aafbot rti~•'paes. SUJaw was P• SM,_..falt. er wn:: u . preme Court's EASVI JultmlXWllhwar. . 1976 ruling that restricted the power of..statQ to~ "1th _____ Fir.__~ fM>9'I e!Ontl-_ ~ . ---lt ranetanled~-.lt~ ;-.-Wft.b.Sb la ~ 49- Rtg. •a» P.fic. .~ &. TtUd8 Slated Over 'Junket' JNSTANTLAWN lt4ltou1c1M·---.. .,_ C#Jltl wtUt ,....,. •od ,,_ ............ ~ a.nnucro . 1 ,. .......... ., .. ~ ........ ,:.· ............. . OlchQndro ••.••..•••••.......••.. , ... Tax Cut Support Seesaws SACRAMENTO (APt -J.5 , .sembly Speaker Leo McCarthy launched a last-ditch erfort to save his proposal to abolish th• homeowners' property tax today while two income tax cut bal~ gained momentum. . At the same time. a proposal to clamp stringent spendini limits on state and local govern. ments throughout California was threatened by the legislative in· fighting over rival tax cut plans: <Related story. AS I Just 13 days remain before final adjoumment of the 1m session. But in spite of the nea~ ing adjournment. the Legislature made little progress Thursday toward agreement on any major tax issue. Instead , the Legislaturt st um bled from one deadlock to another amid bitter squabbllnc and the fr(>s h memory of Proposition 13's tax revolt message. The key obstacle to both tht property lax cut plan and th' spending limits proposal was thf state Senate's rejection or a bUI drafted in the Assembly which would extend until today the deadline for placing constitu- tional amendments on the Nov. , ballot. McCarthy's plan, which is a major revision of Proposition 13's tax cut provisions, and the spending limit. are both corr· s titutional amendments. Therefo~. both could be de~ for the year unJess the twice- defeated extension bill is r~ vived for a third fime anct passed by an increasingly balky ~nate. After the 22·15 roll call on the extension bill, five short of the required 27-vote majority, backers of the tax limit and tu ~ut plans star:ted maneuvering mdependently m preparation for votes today on separate ballot deadline extensions. Meanwhile. the Senate Revenue and Taxation Commit· tee approved a $700-million state income tax cut after adding another $200 million 1n tax breaks for the elderly and dis- abled. The Assembly-passed bill. AB 3802 by Assemblyman Lawrence Kapiloff, D·San Diego was senl to the Senate Finance Commit· tee on an all· Democrat 6-0 vote. At the same time. a possible backup bill offering a $30& - million income tax cut was sent by the Assembly Ways and Means Committee tot floor of the lower house. That bill, AB 2268 by Republican Assemblywoman Marilyn Ryan of Palos Verdes Estates. is almost identical to the proposal last week by Gov. Ed- mund Brown Jr. to adjust stat·? in· come tax brackets annuau., to limit the impact of inflat.Jon on taxpayers. McCarthy's ACA 2. which m effect rewrttes Proposition 13 to give more of its tax cuts to homeowners and renters and less to business. Trannaal Daily (e.tllro) ~IQ,-to 5" IMollonll In "'* at...,., orongt. pidl. tollnon Ot roea. 8ol.. Sb bg. '2.te Sale Price '1.29 FOUNTAIN VAUEY " .,44 DAIL V Pt\.OT ~~. Juat .:··.~~~. ~··•ti1111 wldl T-M ..... t.e Shoot at Your Risk 8Cll.ulNG POil auam DEPT. -rn U..d111otpatt- PropoaitioQ U. it '1 clllftcu1t to 11*1 wber'e our local coutaJ aovernmenta will turn nutln theetfcll'ttopu.mp up munlelpal truaurtw.. n .• becomil'I& • daily1"'1'ftM. Lacuna Beacb 1'.• cate ln point toc1a1. Tbe elty fathers b•v• a new law be1q prepared that bocMltl the fee f« tak- llll m~ctuna wit.bin the ett.y Umlta to SIOO per d11. Laauna to char'I• *35 per day. Jr t'LnaJly adopted, thla new ordinance will put U.. bite on all motion plcture eompaniea. videotapin1 operators and commerda1 photouapben who want to uae the Art Colony u a backdrop 1or t.bealrical efforts or deodorant commercials YOU SlJSPBCT TRIS hiked photo fee business la all part of what oftlclaldom Ukes to call "Propoaftloo 13 Sptnoff." When it comes to searchin1 for dQillars, the bureaucrats seem to be spinning in all directiotW. Well, YoU have to hope Lacuna's new city pkto fees Another Swimwear Ad Being PltoCogrophed in L.oQuno won 't chase off all the motion picture companies that have frequented the area in the past. The Jantzen swim suit people were in the Art Colony just the other day, for example, to shoot a commercial. Some rather lovely young ladies were stars of this epic. The swim wear is for next season. This year's beacb ap. parel, if you want to call it that, is already outmoded. When news photographers showed up, however, to ogle what everybody else will be ogling next summer, the Jarttien people beeame enormously nervous. No photos please. These designs are Top Secret. AFTER CAREFULLY STUDYING the threads adorn- ing the model for the 1979 beach season, however, the newsmen were unanimous in agreement that really, with that suit on, nothing was Top Secret. The suit could barely be classified as Bottom Secret. Anyway, you have to hope that Laguna's new flJming fee won't drive away all of the movie companies that bave added all this local co1or in the past. You have to hope they won't abandon the Laguna lifeguard tower for a back drop in favor of cheaper shots at Santa Monica Pier. If the commercial-shooters go away, all the wide-eyed newsreportersmighthavetogobacktowritingabouttaxes. Soviets Drop Suit Against R~porters _MOSCOW <AP> -A Soviet judge dropped the civil stander suit agaanst two American reporters today, saying the widespread publicity given the case made the retraction their papers refused to print unnecessary However, Judge Lev Almazov said he would Inform the Foreign Ministry that Craig R. Whitney of The New York Times and Harold D. Piper of The Baltimore Sun bad not attended any of ·the legal proceedings and that he considered their behavior dis-respectful to the court DURING EARLIER court sessions, a prosecutor asked that the Foreign Ministry remove the correspondents' press accredita- tion, In effect expelling them from the country. Piper told other Western reporters be doubted similar action would be taken against other correspondents "too often." "If every time a correspondent writes something that the autboriUes do not like be is brouaht into court, it would end up 'making the Soviet Union look ridiculous," be said. WIDTNEY SAID it was important "that a Soviet court baa failed to dictate to American newspapers what they may print ln the U.S." '28 Pereeat £at' Jarvis Attacks • .. Tax Strlicture FORT WORm. Texu (AP) -Flushed with hla Proposltloa 13 vic- tory h:• Calilornll, tu acuvtst Howard Jama bu fired h1I first voU•1 at the naUon1J tax atruc:ture, advocatlq a JO pereat cut lD penonal income tax. Over• fOUl'-year period. Jania said Tburadar. bla ftve·point pro. po.11 would cut federal taxes by S50 bU&n and expe11ae1 by $100 However, he aald he was con- bllHon, ellmlnatina the natisimJ cerned about creating Jobi. bud1et deftctt. • 'Tbe capital 1atns tax ham- pers investment and prod\aetlvt-..TB E PEOPLES' plan to ty and stit1es \b• jOb-ereatina limit taxes wtll reduce the tax ability of our economy," be aald. burden for all taxpayers. stimulate economic growth and most importantly. It wm virtual- ly wipe out inflation," tbe 75- year-old Callfornlan told a crowd of about 2,000 at a local convention center. Part of his flan to slash federal taxes an spend.Ing is to abolish capital gains taxes on in- vestments. Jarvis said that.,J>ro- posal mi&bt be seen as .. a scheme to help tbe rich." Terrorists StnTender, Belease 6 CHICAGO <AP> -Two armed Croatian natiQnalls ts who threatened to blow up the West German consulate released' six hostages unharmed after heed- ing 1001-dlstance telephone pleas from the imprisoned man they bad soupt to free. Authorities credited the brother of the prisoner for the terrorists• peaceful surrender and the hostages' safe release after a IO.hour drama. POLICE SAID Ivan Bilandzic was summoned to the scene and there spoke by telephone with his brother, Stjepan Bilandzic. 39, a Croatian nat!onal im- prisoned 1n Cologbe, West Germany. Bilandzic is the 39·year-old founder and chief or the Croa- tian PeoPTe 's Resistance. A Cologne court ruled last week tltat bis extradition is permissi- ble bttause ol evidence that be was involved ln a 1976 assassina- tion attempt on a Yugos lav diplomat, s muggling stolen weapons to Yugoslavia and other terrorist activities. His supporters say he wilJ be killed if be is extradited. Ivan relayed Stjepan's pleas to release the hostages and sur- render peacefully. "ALL HOSTAGES are sale and unharmed," Chicago police · spokesman David Mozee said Thursday shortly after 7:58 p.m. CDT. The hostages and some family members who had rushed to the scene were whisked away by police without making any state- ments. What had appeared to be an explosive device and hi&b ex- plosives carried ln attache cases by the gunmen proved to be harmless, poUce bomb squad ex- perts said after investigation. FBI sPOkesman George Man- dich said the terrorists, iden- tified as Bozo Kalava, 35, and Mlle Kodzoman, 32, wUl be cbaraed with violation of the federal ProtecUon of Foreign Of. ficials statute, which carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and a $10,000 fine. THE PIAN alao includes: -Cutting the penonal income tax by 20 percent over four years. -Allocating 2 percent of ~cb year's federal budget to reduce the national debt, lowertn« in· terest costs the United States pa)'S. -Indexing all taxes so they would not l.ncruae for anyone whose pay raiae waa not greater than the lnflaticu rate. -Placing an unapecifled absolute llmJt oa the pereeataae . of tbe gross natioaal p~t which can be collected in fedeial taxes. ClJTl'ING TAX income by 20 percent will not affect vital servlces, Jarvis said. "Many Americans didn't belleve it before Pro))Ofiition 13, but the fact.that while death and taxes are inevitable, Wing taxed to death ls Mt," he said. PROPOSITION 13 p8S4ed in California by a 2·1 marsin. 1be state conatitutional amendment put a ceiling oa property taxes and limited the amount by which they can be raised. Jarvts plans a nine-city tour to publicize his American Tax Reduction movement. Plague Suspected DENVER IAP> -A pre- 1 i mi nary diagnosis by a Colorado Springs hospital in- dieates a 1.5-year-old girl died or plague, the state Department of Health said. The state Center for Disease Control at Fort Collins i~ exp~ted to report on the pre- liminary diagnosis early next week. Storms -Diminis~g WindJJ Lilah Minnesota I Two imitators of the Jate Elvis Presley appeared on stage together at the Silverbird Hotel on the Las Vegas Strip. Hotel says it's the first time Presley imitators have ap- peared together. Bill Haney of Memphis, left, ctosed a three-night stand, while Johnny Harra opened his regular engagement at the club Thursday. U.S. Balloonists Plan 'World' Trip PARIS CAP> -Elated over their conquest, the three Americans who made the first crossing of the Atlantic by balloon said today tbey waottoballoonaroundtheworldin30days. Ben Abruzzo told a news couference tbet a round-the-world balloon trip would be expensive, but it would be cheaper tban climbing Mount Everest. . · · ··wrm THE RIGHT BAUOON, we cauJd set to bllbet' altitades and go round the world ln 30 days," be laid. AbruuO. 48, Maxie Anderson, 44, and Lany Newman, 31, all ol Albuquerque, N .. M .• droPDed down to a tumultuous welcome ln a wbeaf field 60 m ties west Of Paris Thursday eveniJl8, then ~lebr1ted late Into the night in the French capital at a party given by Count de Saint Sauveur. secretary of the French balloon federation. PRESIDENT CARTER congratulated them by telegram and invited them to the White f{ouse. The French Minister ol Sports awarded them goJd medals. Media representatives besleaed tbem with offers. And they drew straws for an unofficial prt~, ng the nj,gbt in the single bed Charles A. Lindbergh occ at the U.S. Embassy residence after he made the fint solo across the At1ant1c 51 years •IO· Newman and bia wile of five months won. Air France offered to fiy the trio bome on ita Coneorde, and tbe balloonists said tbey already bad planned to travol on the · supersonic jet. "We came the slowest way and we're going out the fastest way," saidAbnwo. .. OM,y Pl&.OT ""c1a1'• NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS 2 p.m. (EDT) Prieee ....... .-.,.. ........ M.~--tttc. ........ Dtftlt ... 0.CIMatlMMtt .......... ._.w., .. .,..._.,.,_~ffll«Mtltl~ ... _.lftn. • STOCKS I BUSINESS Bus•IsOn Gold Lures Conaumen 11.J SYLVIA POllTER Wben Um prite ol cold 1mubed throuth the l200-an· ounce barriec' earlier this month, tt heralded an acceter•t· tn1 world ,Ole' rush baaed primarily on mlstruat of lbe dwlndllnl dollar. conlldence that told will not bo b•niabed froan tbe lntetQaUonal monetary •ystem und t.be centuttes· Qld ttadlttoo that toJd ls a haven for resources In thud ot un~rtalnty. But tbe average American need not bother to try to part)elp1te in tbe lntern11tlon~l currency and metal markets. You can cet 11 sense of the 1lltter of aold by buy· lng &Old jewelry. Tftat la obviously belna done on u mount. lng scale. Sale& or gold Jewelry are estimated at 50 to 60 percent ahead of 1977 TUE GREATEST BOOM IS IN GOLD jewelry ror men. it ls attributed not only to the appeal of gold but to lbe retum of an era of elegance in men·s attire and roman· tic ism. But a would·be buyer cannot go safely into lhe gold dewelry market without some basic knowledge. I 1 > 1be karat mark identifies the percentage of gold in an item. It an item is marked 24 K. it is made ot 100 per· cent gold. with each karat representina 1/24 parts gold. Pure. solid gold is too soft to be used by itself in jewelry. IL must be al· Joyed with other metals for strength and hard· Moneys Worth ness. Nothing less than 10 karats can be called .. gold." or ··karat gold." under U.S. regulations. England allows the sale of 9 K ··gold" jewelry. <Z> AN ALLOY IS A METAL COMPOSED of two or more metallic elements and it ls used to improve tts prop. erties. MOit allo~ are obtained by fusing a mixture or metals. Gold is a versatile metal. and many shades can be made by alloying it. Karat golds are available in yellow. red. pink. green and white, with the color variations made by varying the proportions or copper. ~ickel. zinc and silver ln the alloy . The proportion of pure gold is un· changed. <31 Fashion jewelry may be gold plated. •old elec· troplat~ or gold washed. These items are defined by law. according to the percentage of real gold In the jewelry People who are unfamiliar with the terms could wind up beguiled into paying "karat gold" prices ror gold plated ;ewelry. c4 1 Gold filled jewelry. also known as "gold overlay·· is rated between karat and costume jewelry and ls made by mechanically bonding a gold layer or layer.; to a base metal such as copper. It must have a fineness or 10 karats or belle!': the outer layer must be at least J /20th of the total weight. Thus. lf a l4·karat layer has been used. the jewelry should be marked "14 K gold filled," or "14 K G.F:· <5> ROLLED GOLD PLATE OF.SCRIBES hlgb.quulity costume jewelry. Manufactured by the same method as gold filled jewelry. the gold layer is less than 1/20th or the total weight. Look for the markings that tell you the ratto or gold to the metals used: ··1140th 12 K Rolled Gold Plate," or ··1140th 12K R. GP." < 61 Gold electroplate is jewelry that has been elec- trolytically coated with ut least seven millionths of an inch of karat gold. If the gold coaling is thinner. the jewelry should be labeled "gold washed" or "gold nashed:' If it ii; a thicker karat gold label -at least 100 millionths of an inch-the manufacturer can mark the product "heavy gold electroplate.·· Fine jewelry or 18-karat gold. representing 75 percent pure gold. is preferred in this country. As for durability. the more karat gold in a piece of jewelry. the longer it will last. Jewelry with a very thin layer of gold is designed to have a short lite span. Stlite Deadline Pronwtes Permits Fluorocarbon Gains Tbe Fluorocarbon Co .• Anabtlm, hu reported record 1econd qua.rt.er net Income of S498,m, or 58 cent.I a abate. up 34 percem trom lhe '372,872, or"2 cent.I, reported ln Lb~ llkt qua.Nr •)'ear •CO· Net Income for lb~ flnt hall. whtcb ended July 31. wu $1'5,72$. cw 83 cenu. up 2A PfJre.nt trom the aet.m, or 11 CHta, reported in lut year·a-perlod. Rnemaea ror th~ Meonct quarter were • .... , lCM, CQlQ· pared WiUt $7,5113,tU I.ft UHi 1m quan.... Re•en'* for the nm ball wtre •1••• ~ '° tit.011.111. l'haorocerbOe auadktini -.-..aaue . Pl'Odlldi mMle ot ~ --~ _,..._, llllttri&ll. TIM com,_°'**' 11 •s 111 11&-_.....ta uae u...a ......... tlD tlae-...a; ................... .... u.M:a.~ •••ell ...... ......._ • . .. .1 :~ •I • ' ' ·1 ' Business t Frid9y. August ta. 1m :':'· DAILY 4>11.0T 8:J Nete B .. da /tlede l This Automoll\le Ne~ drawma reveals th~ general confi~urauon of a 2x2 sporty coupe that lion du. a J npsnese auto muker. wlll luunch 10 the US and Japan m the spnng or 1979. The new model will be til!ven inches shorter than the Honda Accord. but will s hare many o! the mecharucal features of the latter. Overseas Trade Urged County Finns ToM of Foreign Markets By TOM BARLEY OtfJ!-CNl!y ........... Orange County-growers and manufacturers are being urged by stale government to make their products available for overseas markets that are eager and wiJling t.o expand their California trade. Richard C. King, director of the state's Office or International Trade. issued the invitation this week during a meeting or the International Law section of the Orange County Bar Association. AND KING MADE IT CLEAR to local lawyers and businessmen that his beefed-up office will be only too happy to offer advice and suggestions to manufacturers who feel that their products might contribute to what King hopes will be a boom in California exports. "There is no shortage or markets," King told the OCBA meeting. And he pointed to Japan and the members or the European Common Market as being among the most eager nations to trade with California. "And then there is the Middle East and Latin America," King said. "They offer splendid pro. spects for exports and I think both our volume and variety or products can be expanded if we look to these areas " BROWN SAID $2.S BILLION or California's annual $10 billion agricultural production is devot· ed to exports and that can be improved if growers will look overseas to the nations that are anxious to buy California crops that have always been re- garded as top quality. King said many overseas nations are eager to buy chemicals. electric machinery and construc· tion eqwpment which is readily available from California companies ··And then they are always looking for know- how," King said. "We have a chance to export the people who can provide overseas countries with financial and technical management services." KING, A REPUBLICAN PLUCKED by Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. from private industry to give a shot in the arm to the state's international ' ORDER YOURS NOW • • 1000 BEAUTIFUL STICK-ON l!*BEl!S~ STYLISH TYPE: ONGOOO QUALITY WHITE GUMME~ PAPER • PERSONALIZED •EASY TO USE • FOR YOU O R A FRIEND r --~------------------, I flit on n.couport, clip Md 111111-h S1 7$ • 2$ Pottl!Oe 10 I PHot Printing, Label Ofv. I Post Office Box 1580 • 330 W. Bay St. I Costa Meea. Callfomla 92626 I t I I I I I I l l I ' I PllOT PRINTING L~~------~---~--~-----~ trade bureau, said there are ample opportunities for California firms to break new ground. '1Solar energy development is the coming thing," King said. "Here is a great opportunity for California firms to go out into the third and fourth worlds and show these people bow to harness the sun." King said Gov. Brown realizes that California can vastly expand her exports even though 14 per- cent of the state's product goes on the overseas market as compared to 1 percent of the total Unit· ed States market• "Even so, we still have a trade deficit," he said. "We export $11 billlon in goods every year but we import $15 billion worth of products." KING SAID TIIE DEFICIT could be quickly eliminated if California firms increase and expand their export trade. King said Gov. Brown bad become increasing- ly concerned about what often appeared to be "ex- port apathy" among many manufacturers wh<>Se products would be eagerly snapped up if they could be shipped overseas. "Our office wants to counter that kind or think· ing," King said. "That's what we are here for. We want business to go after the trade and the markets that will create jobs for CaWornians." KING SAID ANOTHER AIM of his office will be to ensure a "better presence in Washington, D.C." "We want to work with the federal govern- ment while we are making sure the government knows that California is eager to expand her over- seas trade," he sa\d. "We intend to gel proper treatment at the federal level." Industries Eye Baja California TIJUANA, Mexico (AP> -A company in Spain is negotiating for the right to m&.ke cham- pagne in Baja California, while Chinese and South Korean firms want to build electronic plants in that area. A boat-building company in Poland has asked to open a plant in Ensenada and negotiations are under way for other enterprises proposed by com- panies in Poland, the People's Republic of China, South Korea and Spain. FREE ZONE STATUS IS ENJOYED in Baja Camomia, the northernmost Mexican state with Pacific ports. That was extended recently to 1985. A spokesman for Tiguana businessmen says the present s ituation, in which 9S percent of foreign investments are U.S. owned, is changing. ··As a result or our free-zone status, we can buy California goods or items from anywhere in the world without having to pay federal taxes on them ," said Zozimo Mora Perez. president of the Chamber or Commerce. In an interview. ANOTHER BUSINESS SPOKESMAN, A.E. Armando Lara Calderon. said increasing foreign investment is expected lo reduce the 18 percent un- employment in Tijuana, where 144 assembly plants are located. Mexicans are forbidden by law from moving foreign-made goods outside the free rone. Inteltron Gets Audio Magnetics Isadore Phllosopbe, chairman and owner of In· teltron Ltd., Los Angeles, announced be acquired the controlllng equity position of Audio Magnetics Corp., Irvine, a manracturer of magneUc 1\ldfo' tape. Phll050Pbe acquired Audio Magnetics from Sun Ventures Inc .. a wholly owned subsidiary of -6waJ;,t,.O:__.,~.QllCo. ~-PL Alldlo Magnetics manuJactu~aiid lntirt'ets audio cassette t ape and in dustrial lubricated tape from facilities in Irvine, Mexico, Portugal1 Canada, Swilztrland, Germany. France ana England. Terms of the transacUoa were not disclosed 19e a Mlle Car Coat Listed WASHINGTON fAPl -The American Automobile AlloclaUon reports \bat It cost 19.64 cenl.8 a mile to own and operate an Intermediate sized car in the MCOnd quarter of thja yeat. That wu up from 19.80 cent.a ln the first three 11\0nlhs ot 1078, renec:tlna a sllahlincreue In the coat or sasoUne. The eotl, for an auto driven the averaie or 10,000 miles ~r year, Includes tl,.o:2 ln fixed cOlta and runnlnt coell of ~. Association E~ JUcbud L. Jackaon, vice preaidt'nt of Callrornl1 P\nt Baak, bu~ eteeted p"9ldenl ol UM Or-.e eou.ty ~ omcen AnoelaUae. Jack E. Rtllly, vice priltdmt ol ~ aau. wlll ~ lkl'ftarY·tnuww I 1 • ·GM Optimi,stic for '79. Auto Firm Sees 1 5.5 Million -unit Year NEW YORK <AP> -Arter three aood years in a row for the a uto industry, there is no shortage or optimism emanating from General Motors Corp. headquarters. GM Chairman Thomas A. Murphy, known for upbeat busi· ness forecasts. s taye d in character this week in his as· sessment of the outlook for the 1979 model year. COMBINED deliveries or cars and trucks in the United States. including imports, will reach a record of almost LS.4 million un- its for the 1978 model year, Murphy estimated. In the year that begins next month. he pro- jected a further gain to better than 15.S mJllion. Murphy based these figures on an equally bright forecast for the general business outlook. His script calls for the Gross National Product to grow at a 4 percent annual rate. after ad· justment for inflation. through the rest of 1978 and into next year. Firm Plans Mesa Center The J .A. Stewart Construction Company or Westminster bas been named to build a warehouse and dis tribution center in Costa Mesa for Stanley Tool Works, a Connecticut-based company. Stewart Vice President Ford McKee said the one-story struc· ture will feature tilt-up construe· tion and have 90,000 square feet of jnterior space. The project is valued al $1.1 million. The Cacility will be located on a fiv e -acre site at 1580 Sunflower. and is expected lo be completed by mid· November. NEW V~ CAPl CollnGn .. o ... lnlermk ~~ lntmlG\ "THAT TIIERE IS a strong economic base ror further ex· pansion is supported by most of the principal indicators or current performance. and there is little e vidence of the excesses -most notable in the inventory area - whlch usually foretell a reversal of trend.• '.he declared. ·'The consumer sector is lUtely t.o be a sustaining force deriving continued supPort from rlsing real incomes and further in· c rea ses in employment. Moreover . des pite record in· creases in consumer installment debt. consume,r debt repay- ments have remained in llne with rising income." GM 's projections naturally command attention. It is. after all. the nation's larges t In· dustrial company. as measured by sales. and the second largest in terms or assets and employ- ment , with nearly 800,000 workers on the payroll at last count. BUT ATTENTION IS one thing and agreement another. Many current economic projec- tions call for a substantial slow· ing in business activity soon. and the auto industry is normal· ly expected to follow the trend of the over.all economy closely. By traditional Wall Street measures, investors are mam- tainin~ a cautious aP,proach to GM 's stock. The ye1ld on the shares. based on dividends paid the last 12 months. is a lofty 10 percent. and the price-earnings ratio is a modest six to one. Aflalysts who follow the auto industry also note that Murphy's earlier pro~clion that l l. 75 million cars would be sold in the 1978 model year has proved to have been too high -although some or them also acknowledge that the forecasts they made at th e s ame tim e w e r e too pessimistic. Over The Coun te r NASO Usffnqs IP!o I•~ ~e>.R 2• u SOltdStS tv. IO SC.IWlr 70,, IS FOR um. PETER 0 . Zaglio. auto analyst for the brokerage firm of Loe b Rhoades. Hornblower & Co .• said "I tl\1nk he·s being a little optimistic.~· After the solid gains tbt in· dustry has chalked up since the industry slump in 1974· 75. ZllcJ.io said. another strong sbowlne in 1979 mi~ht be "a little too much to ask.· GM 's capital spending pJans suggest that the company 1~ backing its view wtth a COIJlmil· ment or dollars to new plant and equipment -to the tune d'f "SS billion in calendar 1979. OBSERVERS HAS1E~ to note. however. that those plan~ are not solelv a matter or GM's judgment. They are d ictated to a considerable extent by laws selling future safety and tuel· efficiency requirements for the industry. With t.ho6e large capital needs. auto executives hke Murphy would seem t.o have extra reason to hope his optimistic sales pro- jections are on target. United See ks China Route SAN FRANCISCO <API Un•ted Airlines plans to apply lo the Civil Aeronautics Board next week for routes linking elJhl American cities to mainland China. according to a published report. Th~ San Francisco Chronicle quoted a spokesman for Unj(ed as saying the airline is seeklng permission to fly to Peking. Sh a nghai and Canton in mainland China. as well ~s Hong Kong, and the Japanese cities of Tokyo and Osaka. The starting points in United's proposal were San Francisco. New York. Chicago. Denver. Seattle. 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