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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-08-21 - Orange Coast Pilotr I , I ~ l 1 . Boa Strangles 11 Market Chains ·Entertainer Struek; 4 Sign During Show ·interim Contraet DAILY PILOT urf * * * 10< * * * M ONDAY AFTERNOON, AUGUST 21, 1978 VOL. 11, NO. m., HCTIOMS, 16 ... oas __ _..-.oast ers Dollar Up , GoMDOwn LONDON <AP) The dollar rebounded sharply on the world's rore1gn ex- changes today. buoyed by the Federa l Reserve Board's increase in the discount rate from 714 to 7a4 percent But dealers said trading was nervous. They were waitin~ for the Carter ad ministrntlon to do more. The dollar gained nearly 4 yen in Tokyo, 2 pfennigs in Frankfurt. nearly 5 cen· times in Zurich and Paris and 7 lire in Milan The price of gold plunged in London and Zurich but was still abovt! $205 an ounce Boa Strangles Nightclub Emertainer 'Snuff' Case Ended By GARY GRANVILLE Oftllt o.lly .-tlet Staff Orange County's sensational snuff movie case ended almost in a whimper today when Fred Berre Douglas of Costa Mesa pleaded no contest to a single charge of soliciting assault with a deadly weapon. The no contest plea meant that Douglas neither denied nor ad- m 1tted intending to solicit an as· sault with a deadly weapon on another person. The plea also meant that con· sp1racy and murder solicitation charges against Douglas were dismissed and his second tnal on those charge~ ended before 1t 1>egan. With that plea . state charge~ that Douglas hauled two un· dercover policewomen to the des- ert in Jul~ 1977 to film their torture. murder and dismember- ment went out the window. LA TUQUE, Quebec <AP)_ A And Douglas. who spent four Dozens Rescued On Coast Harried lifeguards were "pllll· 1nJ? swimmers lrom the water hkc fish from the pier" al South Coas1 b l!uCht·~ ovt'r lht weekt>nd. ai< six· and e1ght·foot surf slammed the shoreline. Laguna Beach lifeguard rec· ords showed 146 rescues on c1t)· beaches Sunday. mostly of unex· pen enced sw1mmerc: who "en· t ured out into the surf hne "We tned to warn swimmer~ not to go in unless they were wearin~ two !>Wlm tins ... said L d~Uni,i lifeguard s upervisor Tom Redw1tz The city c: staff of 50 lifeguards watched o"er 26.000 beachgoerc: each day th1!-weekend. ana responded to ~5 re~cues or Saturday and 4! medical calls over the weekend 25-year-old nighl·club enter · months in jail before posting -----rmi?iflT""'"tn.tt t 1 .. ?" ,_.... $100JIOO, »'as a {[re man -con 1"' or. adJ w Wfu accepi>ling Ole DurTVy San Clemente lifeguards said 30.000 v1s1to~ swarmed to city beathes. and another 25.000 bas ked 1n the sun at county beaches over the weekend. .J.li~Qi..JUU.Wl 30...~; mers from the water onatUr· day and another 40 op Sunday. boa constrictor in his act, and the s nake strangled him before Costa ~esa Qlaq's guilty plea. f 1 I Judge Mason Fenton gave him a n audieq~e Q 50. peop e. 'c r e dit for t'he . four months J ean·Guy L ecl a ir, who served in jail and placed him on performed under the name of three years probation. Grand Melvin, died Sunday at Judge Fenton also said Club LaTuquois. 130 miles north Douglas must see a psychiatrist of Montreal. m connection with his probation. "He seemed to miss a reflex. For t.fie 51-year-old furniture and the boa wrapped around his refinisher the guilty plea was a vindication ot sorts. neck." said Gaelan Grenon, the Earlier this year an Or .. noe manager of the club. - Bedded forlfl Sudden· Stop .. ... Balboa's nasty old Wedge lived up to its earned reputation over the weekend as huge surf provided challenges for body and boo~te board wave riders. Surfer in middle of this wave Js barely ahead of a real "'all of wa ter. "Sunday's surf was s poradic. wh1.~h ~as mo.re dangerou.c: l<' "wi m me r -.. -.a id lifeguard super visor Ken Casper 'The surf would ~o down a bit <See SURF. Page A21 Coast 1 County Superior court j~ry was Leclatr-gotbtue~~·~~~iii!iie~~i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~§!!~~r!~~~~~~~~~~;_t~~~~!~~~~s~~ei -Greaoa said fte .cAlla1::the... --- As he and four police officers women e took-to the desert for 10 Mi•l I.! ~R So••• L J __ J Slwp_pe.ct ~lffiected -- I s t rug gl ed with the s nake. the film sequence. ~ '"''""'""' • 0 n Grenon cut off its head with a "If I bad done any of those knife. things or even thought or doing "It's wasn't a pleasant thing <See SNUFF, Page AU to have to do. bllt I had little choice," he said. "Unfortunate- ly. Le Grand Me lvin was already dead." Leclair. who lived in Mon- treal, wore a vampire's black Cllpe and rangs during his act, walked on broken glass and pierced bis skln wtt.h nails. 1.17 ,000 Repaid • ATLANTA CAP> -Sen. 1 Herman Talmadae. D-Ga .• wMM Clo ..... deaUap bn• Mee Q•dtoMd durba1 recent ................ dlKl for •ore 'tllaa U7 ,tff to tbt ~.., .. ~ .. .... .......... , ... . ~--..... . II eM C4R RUNS FASI', SELLS FASTER ··1 sold my car fast.er than I ever drove lt, and l got exactly what I asked for tt." That's the story told by a sut· cessful one-time car salesman who put this ad ln the Daily Pllot: ii LTD ~ door Gd lira brll11. Od t r an a . SIOO o rrr XXX·XUX u Yo.a eaave. car Y'OU •ant to ~u. call ICZ·51Tl. OW frieDdlJ ad-•._. wta ...., roe wrtte a MU«. LOS ANGELES <APl -The first day of a superma rket c lerks walkout affecting to million Southern California shoppers ended with four chains breaking ranks and si1ning in· terlm agreements. Eleven other companies dug in by cutting hours and hiring temporary help. Some 5 000 to 6,000 clerks at . BO)'I, Atden-Mayfair, Hughes and Smith'' Food Ktng were called In by the Retail Clerics Union after the a1reeme11ts were sl1ned Sunday. union spoke1man John Sperl')' said. But the rest of the 55,000 clerks who walked orr the job earlier ln the day at l, 100 sto1'tS were expec(ed, \0 remain out pendtq lurtber neaottatJoos to- day. 11ld uolon 1potl1man Jrrry ne ltrike. arfectiftt stores I • , from Bakersfield to the Mexican border. came just as serious food s hortages cropped up in some San Francisco Bay Area markets followlng a month-old s trike-lockout involving Teamsters warehousemen. The retail clerks' strike began as stores opened Sunday. The t t s upermarket c hains s till affect- 81,2~ Rug Gone In Lppna Theft Thieves entered a La1una Beach home tbrouih on un- locked kitchen window over the weekend, tak.11\1 a Penlan rue from the Uvlnl room noor Paw K.noph, ot 3f7 Pearl St . •ald he retumed home to (ind the ll.300 rue rill lnC \ .. ed by the strike are Albertsons. Alpha Bela. Certified Grocers. A. M. Le wis. Luck y Store ... , M arket Bas ket. R a l ph ~ Safeway, Stater Bro~ Thrtf tlmart and Vons. "FOQd will still be available to the publi c ... on e uni on spokesman said as the walkou1 began. "It will just be harder to flnd ... A brother and sister were ar rested by sheriff11 deputies m Whittier during picketing Sun day evening at a Stater Bros market. Fnnk Bird. 22. of Lakewood. and his sister. Victoria Porto. 23. of Hacienda Heights. were on the picket llne ubout 8 40 p m when Bird be1an h arassing customers who were entenng and ltavtna the market. said Lt Don James c FOOD. Pace A!l N 1 $lht thro u iz h m 1d mor n 1n ~ lo"' <'loud -. otht'rw1~t· f;11r through Tuesd ay A httlt <'OOler Lo~" ton•jZht SS to fl4 lllJ?h' Tuesda:r tn upJ>t:r 60~ at beuches to upper 70fi inlond area11 I NSIDE T ODA \'' f'v ~Vt!' a q i.arrd ho 1o marred 19 year., 01 marn agt' for ,,Ooh and MartJ Bar'lt-11 t'tJen thougft Noah ~ molht-r /tared 1t would nol last S«'t' Page 8 4 .. .42 Mond!y,A1.9ustl1, 1111 'Grandpa' Dies to Save 4-gear•old1 LOUISVILLE. Ky. tAP>-P'Mr·year.:old ltiVMr ouver wa rtdinc hl bike alOQI tM .Qmet relldnlial 1\Net 8Dd d•dn 't notice Ute ca~. FriM Dohrmann, lmOW1l to the kkb on the block • ··Grandpa,•• did -and 1ave hla life to ave hilt y frieDd. · .. Kl ard the i bbon holler. 'Stevie, stevle, Stevle.' " He Sl wu n»na acl'Olll the treet. '• tald SLev '1 ' ' mother. Cvnlhta. , DOllBM~ • u. A DING TO n l1hbor1 who \'iev.ed tnddem, nmbed Off bis porch and pushed Stevto out of tM path ol the oneomlal car. Thent was a aqueul of bru~os. ··All l could thtnk w thit Stevie aot run over.·· ald rs. Oliver. '"'lben l w his little whlte head. 1 wos Hfrald to tum .net look. I thought it wa bne or the n"&&hborhood k1 " 1 • lt-. "Graodpa" DobrmaM who had been htt llfllfeBo .. ~Case Drug Adviser Not Charged WA SHINGTON CAP> -A suburban prose('utor decided today not to file criminal charges against former White Hou ~e drug adviser Peter Bourne for wratin1 a prescription with a fictitious name. Paul Ebert, the prosecutor in Prince Wilham County, Va .. where an attempt was made to rill the prescr1pt1on, said . "I don't think V1rg1ma law applies to a drug v1olat1on outside the ::.tale .. In Washington, Carl Rauh. s peaking for the U.S. Attorney's office, said, "We originally deferred to Virginia authorities to decide whether to prosecute or not in this case. They've made their decision and as far as this office is concerned. that's the end of the matter." Bourne quit July 20 a s Pres ident Carter's chief adviser on drug abuse just 36 hours after public disclosure that Bourne had given a prescription for the much-abused sedative Quaalude lo Ellen J. Metsky. has assistant in the Whale House. To keep secret the fact that the e motionally troubled aide was getting the powerful s leep-inducing drug, Bourne w rote the fictit io us name. "Sar ah Brown .'' instead of Metsky's name on the lS·ta blet prescription when he issued it July 7 Four duys later. Mets ky's friend and former roommate. Toby M Long, 26. was arrested near her JOb in Prince William County and charged with trying to fill the prescr iption. Ms. Metsky said later s he had not had enough time to fill the Seeond Time prescription in Washington and had asked Ms. Long to fill it as a favor. Ebert said that based on interviews with Bourne, Metsky and Long, be concluded that .. Bourne had no knowledge that the prescription was to be passed in Virginia.·· He said that th e police h ad given poly graph -or so-called lie detector tests to the two women and found no evidence of any similar prescription being passed by Bourne either m Prince William County or in Washington. The prosecutor explained ln a telephone interview that he considered charging Bourne with a conspiracy outside of Virginia to violate Virginia law. But he said . "Our gene r al cons piracy law was revised in 1975 and does not apply lo drug violations. though I think they knocked t h a t ou t unintentionally ... Ebert said that he would bring no c riminal c harge against Metsky. Long is scheduled for trial in September on a charge of seeking to obtain a controlled drug '"by fraud , deceit or misrepresentation." But Ebert acknowledged there is a possibility that the charge against her may be dropped. The prosecutor said he had taken particular care and some time researching the law before making his decision because of the attention the case had gotten. "If someone violates a law, I like to take a shot at him. But there is no point in bringing charges you can't make stand up, .. Ebert said. Millionaire Faces Murder Plot Rap FORT WORTH. Texas <AP> -Two years to the day after he was charged with murdering hls stepdaughter. millionaire T Cullen Davis was accused or m as t ermi ndin g a murder·for·hire plot involving a "hit last" or six names. Including his e11tranged wire, his brother and two Judges. ..... D.a"1s \VJS.. arrwrtg Sun<!l:l~ an'acnargoo wi\'fi n11\'Ybn r capital murder for allegedly trying to hire a "hit man" to kill l>i,s~r)C1!JUdge Joe Eidson, who· is presiding over the oilman's biller divor ce. He was a lso char ged with ca rr yi ng a prohibited weapon a pistol with a silencer District Attorney Tim Curry OAANOI COAST DAILY PILOT _.,.,..d MtMIY I -,,., ,_ (0\11 =' v~:,~:" ~'::C 9::.~':a;:, ..__ .. s.wt~CN>I ,,....,..........,...,. ..... " ..,.,.,..,,.. s.1 .... ,, -~ .... -;~-~=v.::;:..,~.:,. a win• 11<o, ._. ....... ~· .. -• •ftd ,,_,_ Joo• c.rt.. V•ff> tlT•\tdet'll •flO 0tflf'-' MitN91" n.....,•tc•n" U llOt TMIMtA~ MAMOl"O 15Clitor CllllfteO " LMt ... -~ ""'" A\\l\t..,t Mointt1"9[lllk!O Otflc9• C.ltl'OltM U·-tleft!-l _ .. e<h ,, .. o........,..",... ~:.. .. ech •111•--•·e llY•llfy Ul'OIUt,._I_ et""'O'"°~'- T...,floM (71•)M2-4'21 a...in.ct .WV•rtlllng .. M.11 -· ,, ..... -att .... 111"310 ,.,_ ~ °""""" ...... --0r-c-.o.n-.i1 ... Mo.ttJO C."'f: ltll °"..!.'P!. ~ .. ~:.~=. er ... ., :::rn'"~fl ....... "' .... , .. ~~r.-·--··· _ ... , ....... . ~=.:.~·J:::~~r.11:."'.:' .~::. ~~ -~9y -· "',. -· ......... , ... ···-"" said he will recommend today that the 44·year·old Davis be held without bond in the Tarrant County Jail. Speaking through his attorneys Sunday, Davis called t he charges "some kind of frame or setup." Davis was arrested moments after driving from a nightclub parking lot where police said he m et""lhf....ni M-~~,. ..,. employee of a firm owned by the Davis family. Davis is a partner in ~enOJivi~ Industries, a conglome rate that includes Mid-Continent Oil & Gas Supply. Curry produced an afridavil signed by McCrory. saying that McCrory had several meetings with Davis the past four days in preparation for the alleged contract killing. McCrory was wired for sound by federal and local authorities Q,yr~ lbe meetings~ officials ~ ~menL...so.urces anne 11gm • McCror y s howed Davis a snapshot of Eldson's "body" stuffed tn a car trunk and the judge's drtver's Ucense. Eidson, said the sources who asked not to be identified, agreed to pose for the photo. After be saw the photo. the so11rces Sllid, Davis produced a manila envelope containing $25,000 in $100 bills. Davis, the star defendant in the state's longest and costliest murder trial last year, was acquitted of the Aug. 2, 1976, shooting death of his 12-year-old stepdaughter:. Andrea Wilborn, at tbe '6 miluon Davia man&k>n here. Thal same niaht. Davis' estranged wtfe, Pristllla, 37, was woWKled Her Uve·ln lover, Stan Farr, 30, was kllled. Gus Gavrel Jr , 23, a chance visitor to the mansion was left partially paralyttd from a bullet in his spine He died a few minutn later. ~neaes told poltce tbe car ten the scene Saturday night, Jefferson County police arrested Mickey P. Trusty, 20, or LoulavWe. He was released on hil reco1nizance today on a murder cbar1e. with a hearing set Oct. 12. DOHRMANN, WHO BAD BEEN WITH the Army Corps of Engineers before retirement. is to be-buried Tuesday. He lived with his daughter. Mrs. John Cowley. and three of her children on Guy Drive, and Mrs. Cowley said be wu fond of the nol~hborhood kids. "He liked them all. and they all seemed to like hUn," she said. "Ji. lot of times I'd peek out the window to tee lf he was :ill right, ~d I'd tee little Stevie ailtlnl out there talk· Ing to him." lt was from hlS familiar vantage point on the front Pitcher and Grandpa Angels' pitcher Nolan Ryan chats with former president and new grandfather Richard M. Nixon at Sunday's Angels game at Anaheim Stadium. Nixon sat through the 14-inning game that ended with a 1-0 Angels victory. Players comment about him in Sports, Page B3 . Fro•PageAJ SURF .•. and people would go out in the water," he said. "Then it would come up and suck people out to sea." "We were pulling them out like fish from the pier ... State lifeguards, who watch San Cle m ente State Beach. Doheny. all of San Onofre and the Trestes, said they pulled 90 swimmers from heavy riptides along state beaches during the weekend. · ''l'hey would get about waist deep. and then they would be drawn offshore " said lifeguard co t Stml"fr. The only serious injury during the weekend was to a Covina man whb injured his back whOe body surfing at North Crescent Bay Beach In Laguna. Lifeguards placed Brian Not- ti nger. 20. on a backboard and sent him to South Coast Com· munity Hospital Saturuay, where he was treated and later released. Tht only good ractor to come Crom.J;be. week~es-lb&L Laguna Ba'Clt-~ OP- 24th annual Brooks Street Siiri· ing Classic . Nixon Blamed In Tape Gap WASHINGTON <AP> -Leon Jaworski. the former Watergate s pecial prosecutor. thinks former President Nixon caused the 18~·mlnute gap in a tape ma de three days afler the Watergate break·ln. Jaworski, interviewed in Sun· day's Parade ma1aiine. said, "Nl1'on was the individual most likely to have erased the 18\4.a minutes" of the June 20, 1972, tape. The recordln1 contained a converaaUon between Nixon and former Attorney General John Mitchell ~ Burgkus Hit WgunaSlwp Burglars used a glass cutter to break into a yogurt shop In Laguna Beach sometime Satur· day night or Sunday morning. taking $600 from a canister hidden in the store. Operators of the Great Pacific Yogurt Company. 154 South Coast Highway. said they dis- covered the theft when they ar- rived for work Sunday momin~. I ' porcb that Dohrmann beard the nellhbors Yellina for Stevie to warn him of the 8.PProachina car. : "When he heard tbe name 'Stevle,' they said be tOok off down the driveway," 111'8. Cowley aaid. • • DANNY SP~ A NEIGHBO&, said be saw the ear swerve along the street. missing hla daughter by only. a few feet before sliding into • aravel driveway. 'lbe car backed up and on th6 way out struck DohrmaM, SpeaJ'S said. "He wouldn 't bave gotten hit if he hadn't been thinkillg of Stevie'ii life," said Mrs. Oliver. . .. He was a aweet man to have around tbe neighborhood," she said. ''Re loved all the cblldreo. 'Ibey took him in as a crandfater. ''Stevie would say. ·rm goinJ over to talk to Frank. Me and him ts buddies.' " SBnterree (!KDeath l!Jplwld -NEW -ORLEANS IAPl -A federal appeals court refused to· day to block the execution in Florida'a elec:tflc cllalr of coo- demoed kUler John A . Spenkelink, Buena Park. An appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court is expected In the legal fight. part of a continuing baUle over whether the state bu a right to execute killers . Tbe 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rejected 9'>enkelink's claim that anyone tried for murder is entiUed ta have *>me jurors who would re ject the death penalty no matter what the crime. Aho rejected was a defense clalm that Florida '1 death penalty ia racially applied because most people on death row. black or white. were coo- demned for kllllng whites. "Arter CQDSiderinl each of the petitioners' contentions and find· inl them to be without merit." the appeals court said, "we up· bold -fbe district co~rt Judg· ment." ·On the· racial i1111ue. the ap- Pe a ts co u"t".t s • t d t h a t Spenkelink's own expert witness testified "he round no evidence of intentional or purposeful dis- crimination." As to the argument that Florida's method of execution is torturous and wantonly cruel. the 5th Circuit said Uae U .s. Supreme Oourt bas already de· cided that the electric chair is constitutional. Florida's death penalty law was one of three which the U S. Supreme Court ruled to be con· slitulional in 1976. Spenkelink was scheduled to be executed tut year but his ap· peal canceled the event. with no new date set. Flash Flood Kills Five WHITE SANDS MISSILE RANGE, N.M. CAP> -Four members of a family and a military policeman who ap· parentJy tried to rescue them died in the raging waters or a nasb nood. an Anny spokesman said. Maj. John Neiland said a car dri\'en by Capt. James Maret, 30, apparenUy was blown off a bridge on U.S. 70 late Saturday. The bodies of Maret and his 6· year·old son. Christian, were carried nearly two miles from the car. Military police found the bodies of Gall Maret, 30, and the couple's 2-year-old daughter, Amy. next to the demolished vehicle. ,,....P.,,eAJ SNUFF ••• them I wouldn't be walking out of here t.oday," Oollglas said. •' lt lt not .,ainst the law to take pictures and I certainly did no bann or intend to do any harm to anyone." Douglas faulted the system that charged him with attempt. ed murder and solicitation to murder as well as 'his ex· perlence in the justice system. All but forgotten as the once accused porno film maker walked from the courtroom were the horror stories connect· ed with his arrest last summer Those stories included tales ot his intention to force the police women to pose for lesbian bond· age type pictures and to ·end the picture taking session with their murder and dismember· ment. Tb~ arTeSt '11 Doualas led to a muaave ~rt search for what la"". enforcement officials belteve were prior victims burled in the Yucca Valley area. No bodies were uncovered and durtna the trial it wu shown that other women wbo had ac· companied Douglas to the desert for the fllmiq of porno pictures had returned safely. Fro•PageAI FOOD ••• Fewer customers than usual for a Sunday were reported at most stores. A s pot check of managers showed some stores had closed for lack of staff and · that most or those that remained open were training temporary workers. ·'Some people see tbe pickets and ~ust don't want to cross the line, ' the manager or Ralphs market in Hollywood said. "But a lot ol people stocked up on groceries early in the week in anticipation of the strike ... The walkout came several hours after las t -ditch talks between the union and the Food Employers Council broke down Saturday night. Neither side was otpomlstic about a quick settle· ment. Bob Voigt. a spokesman for the rood employers said : "We've never had a short strike. They usually last four to five w..eeks." "It looks like it will be a long strike ... said Kenneth Edwards of Los Angeles Local 770. ··we are still far apart ... Under the interim agreements signed SWtday the chains are to pay whatever contract terms are negotiated. The union was demanding $2 20 an hour in pay increases over three years, while the com- pany's last offer was $1.65. Average wage for clerks is $6.92. fun:tional outdoor wruJr ey "'~J jackets ere aiz.eT~na with comfbrt arxl wormth in mind. shc.wn ie our light,Q,r- 'IW.i~ht poplin with cotton tdrt.Bn 1im~ .. .. IJ JM.".KJS BY114N ............. Staff short...-, ~ ....... n- nov•Uons. a wattlu list Of pa. tlenta aad cond•tToaat •tale Uc•nalJll. are ...._. cbal.._... tadna rtbe ••1 cUaltel director at Fal~ Slat Rolpkal ln COsla If-.: R.K. "Rod'' NUburo. wbO bu worked Oft tbe Fairview talf for 15 Y .,.,, took Off.I' the job this montb. He replaeea Kera lleLala. wbo ., .. ~ ts· e-cutJve director ll ~WI Stale ~·a MW ~ lDVOIV .. .upervplq p~amt ror Ute bo1pltal' · 1,450 p•Uent.a. wbo suffer from retalilatl~D and neurOIOlial bUdiupt. Pro....., be la ret~lble few. la ~ wit.h,bo.pttal Esecullve Director Freak Crlaella. lndud• both ed&aea· iioftaJ onea and retld.ntlal aervt~. Ht• moet lmmedtate task. Milburn said, li putUna tocether data •o that wortr can belln on state·fun~ed conattuctlon chanaea. Some of the work will involve dlvldina up larte wards JO that patients CID Uve ln smaller, ''more normal" rooms. Other work wUl toct.¥ on improve· ments in fife safety. ' "One ot my other goals Y1ould 50,000 Cler1" 0#1, SupermBrket Strike Enters Second Day By KATHY CLANC'Y oe .. o.i1y "-...., Clerks al major supermarkets urving 10 million residents ol Orange and eight other Southern (;allfomia counties stayed ofr their jobs a second day today. 'No Contest' Federal mediat«s were ex· peeled to m~ this afternoon with union and auperm•1ket oe.ioUators in efforts to bring 11e sldes together on wage dif. ferences. . Some SS,000 market clerks in the nine-county area went on strike against 15 major chains as stores opened for buslness Sunday. By the day's end, however, about s.ooo clerks were called back to wol'k wMI\ Smith's Food King, Boys Market, Arden· Mayfair and Hughes Markets signed interirn agreements. In the meantime. supervisory Snuff SuSpect and non-striking personnel were manning markets affected by the walk-out. A spokesman Cor Safeway markets, which has 16 Orange County markets and 164 in the nine-county area, said operating hours were cut from the normal 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. weekday limes Enters Plea to 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Except for a "little confusion'' the first day of the strike went o.lly f'llet , .... Plletl PLEADS NO CONTEST Fred Serre Douglas By ·GAn o9ANV!ti.z • amoothly. u.. apoit6a!*an said. •• ~ ""Mlf Safeway employa 8,800 full· Ora·nae County's sens•Uoaal and partAime clertca, b8"i said, snuff movie cue "t!l)ded almost and at least 2,000 non·union in • whbl\per today when Fred worken bllve beeb hired to help Berre Douglas ol Costa Mesa during the strike. pleaded no contest to a sinale Officlala of AJ~ertson 's cbar;e of soliciting esaault with markets. which operate 23 a deadly weapon. stores in Orange COUnty, said Tbe no contest plea meant that the strike fMced a cutback in Douglas nelther denied nor ad· normal 24·hour·a·day opera· milted hateftd1nc to aoJieit an &s· tions. sault with a deadly weapoo oo The markets are operating another penon. r 9 to 9 10 The ..iea also meant that con· rom a.m. 11 p.m. or a.ro . .,. to 7 p.m. depending upon k>ca· splracy and murder solicitation tion, officials said. charges against Douglas were John Lench, spokesman tor dismi&sed and hia second trial the Retail Clerks Union. saJd un· . on those cherges ended before ion negotiators are prepared to it be1an. · meet "round the clock' to help With that plea, slate charges resolve contract differences. that Douglas hauled two un-He described picketing at dercover policewomen to the des· markets as peaceful. ert in Jul~ um to film their Albertson's spokesman Marv torture. murder and dismember· Robertson agreed, saying prob- ment went out the window. lems have been minor, mostly And Douglas, who spent four in the area of "hurt feelings." months in jail before posting Lench also predicted some $100,000, was a free man. grocery items could become W.hen accepting the burly scarce if the strike drags on and Costa Mesa man's guilty plea, Teamsters continue to honor be • to retain our llcenstns • certlflcatlon." said Mtlburo. Fairvlew. along with several other ata.te JM>tpltaJ•. lost thet certiflc1ti0n and. with it, 'Medi· Cal f\anda frojn Ute federal IOY· eminent lut summer. · r ·Ltce.-... WU testored COQlli. ~t um ~ after adcli-tloaal~i.-er• hiNSi:dl aoiae Pl'O<*haru changes wera made. . M..e °'9' complexiUes in-J 'f 'J votffd -.. ~ lieen.stnc st.ft· datds, 8bd the fact that maQY ot Fairvievr'a bWldinp .re e>Mer. Milbum. noted. '11ie way thinp are ---da)'s. w~ probably be co.ndWouJ forever. • One of tbe contlnulnc pro· blema ll A shortage 'Ol trained O'Y•lcaUberapilb. "lt '.iUlt oceuJ:s tbat tbe de· man(-.Xoeeds the sup,ply," Milburn said. '"The poeitiOna are bQcl~. We have the money to put them to work rt•t DOW,•• Amooc tlle dl4Uen&es Milburn 1ees in the fut1u'e .. ls betq able to provide aenieee for an ever· tncreaaiq communit1 ~ We know t.ba"e'a sun a 1.,.. ~ '° the popalat• tbit 'a IOiAa f.O require Mrvice&. •• 1'be ~ is that Oraqae County. Oooulatioa Is ~. wblle f~Jk{e. fW the retarded ll1'e limttecl• JiUburn Hki. <See1'~ Paae AZ> ....., ................ INDMDUAL SCOTCH WINS PRIZE FOR INOMDUAL EFFORT. IN CHARAC1'R' IOAT PARADE Tom Johnaon Of Hantfngton Beach Pllota Hla Aun.bout, Juat for Laugh•, During ~v•m . 18th Running of N~ Event 'B~gest' . ~ " "" ' , . ' ... ~ .. Prom. a 110.year-old saU boat 'the Best Decotated Ill· Escape. enfec:•d' by Da'Vid to a •leQP 8ressed out with divldu~. the Jutt For Lauabis. WUUams of .NOrco. ''!>antW At W' to· a fioaUng deeo..elt Iii I bottle of ~ · -bottle ol scotch. the character Sark, entered }>~ Tom JohDsC>O 'the ~;(.., lJhlbacle Award. boats bad a routinely unusual of RunUniton BeadJ. NatbaaseliowditCb, ente"?d by paracl.e Sunday ' tn Newport T~ Beil Decorated Club, the Ben C. Oeue and '1eet White. Harbor. DeeP. Sb. a · u.g aod barse en· Tbe Best Morit.ec;ey • Guano A chamber of .commel'C'e tereei by.t})e Balboa Bl)' Club. Packer. entered by Bill Nle&M!a 1poltesman said today that tbe The ~Y Sailor Award. the and Hank Hill. t8tb nmoing of the annual event Eye.taltao Navy, a gondola en-Tbe Wheel. Steam and ~I attracted more boats than ever. tered by Paul J . Mqnoae or Award for steamboats, the Well T~e parade "'as staced Newport ~b. Stacked, entered by Chanwell witlaout 8 fhe.ne this year, lead· The Big Toot Award, the O'Connor. ~& to some, unusual entries. in· WaftUs, ~tered by rormer city ol.udlna one prize winner that coU11clJJnan Pete Barrett. \Vas a dr•gon and another that The ~wM?~t Swab Award for was a bolt1e of scotch. best ~.JDlS Baccaruda, entered by Janiie StarllQg. Kett is a list of winning en· The Character .Boat Belt, the tries: HMS Baccaruda again. Sweepstakes Award, the The Loose Screw AwMCI for Pleasure, decorated on the best animation, the Dragon en- theme Dames At Sea. entered by tered by R.H. Kimball. the Bahia Corinthian Yacht The Twarted Thwart Award Club. for best bay launch. the Great The Drippy Stutrmg Box for best work or tug boat. the Archibald J . Kley. entered by Jackson Brandl III of San Jose. The Oldest. Boat, Little Noneman. registered in 1868. entered by Paul Davis or Newport Beach. Tbe decoraie<I boat bell was won by the P1easure, the entry rrom tbe BCVC. • Did Mesan Get Funds? M WT Judge Mason Fenton gave him picket lines. e88 W Om8D credit ·ror the four months Robertson said, however, sup. served in Jail and placed him on plies aren't a problem and lf LOS ANGELES CAP> -SomeofZuber's eodefendants untillastweek.Bythattime,all three years probation. T d • i k b bout St too f •'--F d D d eamsters on t cross Pc et Police believe a sell-employed in those cases have been linked ut a . o urc: money 0Ull ea When accepting the no contest lines . non-strik lng store bookkeeper accused or disap· to organized crime figures, had been. withdrawn. plea, Judge Fenton said he I unl d ban A · t /1 i ti t• ..1 would make a finding of owlty emp oyees can oa mere · pearing with $927,000 mistakenly Heisdorf said. warran 1or nves ga ton"' In J • e dise. credited to his bank account Zuber may have been one ot a felony irand theft baa been is· acuzzl based on the testimony and u i k id d f R. t 1 h Ii evidence in the Douglas trial n on spo esmen s a gave some of the money to a dozen or so people through sue Gt: 11 o • w o po ce Id C M that ended with 8 hun" verdict. journeymen mar1'et clerks earn prison lnmate rrom Costa !'fesa whom the bookkee~r, 52·year· believe ,may have left tbe st.ate A 50-y~r-o osta esa ~ ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~B~w~~Q~~~f~W·~~-•-lliilli'i~~=-~MnfMll8*Jlillt-~'*,..--....""•rlHli'lellst!Oil•oclll'ls,...,ailM<llM ... "'Y1'C'ilrP'"'t""f.'9etralM~~-rew cterKi eafnToiiTheymen organi-...a .. rime. Covina, .11. ...... ......tly laundered the vestiga ave requested 85· thi morning at the bottom or a not know if Douglas truly in· M:U " ~""" ,,_ 5 tended to harm the women and wages since many work only Sgt. James Reisdorf or the windfall that was mistakenly slstance uvm Interpol, the in· 100-degree jacuzzi at the Hunt· predicted any 1·ury that would part-time. police bunco squad said that credited to his f;:,sonal check· ternaUonal law enforcement ington Beach home of.friends. · t I t agencv F r f hear ~he case could not reach a Edward A. Zuber, 39, who is 1ng .accoun as ay. ., . Nancy •tMir •ng. 0 2024 ... \.ln-·am"'•a d-lsion." .. Dollar lJ servirt" a 6th-year term at Zuber was.named last spring The Securities and Exchange Phalarnno CoUft: was found at au v..., ..,... p e · ... ~.. G I ..E 11 C ,.,.,· .. __ -1--"'--ailed ........... Judge Fenton said the first ' Terinlnal Island. received Mme 1n A-...-ne.y enera ve e omm._aon..., cuav ~o c 12:20 a.m. today in a wooden trial cost an estimated $30,000 of the money. Younaet's list o( Californians into the case because of $40,000 jacozzi at 8452 Oakstone Circle, and the state should be spared a . Zuber w~ convicted of ·'t<m· with ties to organized crime. in payments from Jtistol'a 8C· Huntington Beach. Residents at similar expense in a case prob-fl -1-' Dimm, .splring. to bilk tbe_Aladdin Hotel B..1nk auU1orJtiea sa·id the eount for stock ec,mch~. • the OaksJooe address were not ably-beyond a Jury1 s coDective ~ (ft IA8 Vee.as out oC $250,000 in clerical em>!' was not detected ~ identified. abUitvtoreachadeclslon. LONDON <AP> -The aasn~!.°J chips and for stoC?k PQJice reports indicate the 1 d II _......·-ded "' l d f ud ""-ln N woman may have died of a heart <See SNtJPF, Pa1e .\%) 0 ar ·~· suarp Y •n ra sci11emes ew attack after enterin• the hot on tb• world's foreign ex· York and.San Diego. • changes today. buoyed by water. PoUce also indicated she the Federal Reserve tiac1 Mellilnnk.IQ IM?IYilY-l th _ lut-Oran_1e-Coun!J. ColVnw Board'& lncrtaae d e -urftrildr:::H todiy-1.he, :las" dtlcount me from 7\i to ,.._ 7~ perual. Usted the death as a possible But dealen said tradlna drowlling. -waa nervous. They •ere An autopsy was scheduled for waltbic for the Carter ad· today. F\meral services for the mlnlstratJoo to do more. victim are pending. C4R RUNS FAST, SKUS FASTER "I told my ear faster than I ever drove it, and I got exacUy what I uked fOt' It." That'• the story told by a SUC· ceaalul one-time car salesman wbo put this ad in the Daily PilOl: '7J LTD 4 door. Od Orea bric . Gd. trana. s e o o 1 o r r r XO•XUX • If you llav• • cer you want to sell, caD to-.5Sll. Our friendty ad-vlMn will helJt )'OU write a ·be•t seller. l '' Tunks Named Newport Man u.s. Record TOPEKA. Kan. <AP> -John Marino of Newport Beach ls on his way to New York City after pedalling across the mid·pol.nt of his tran1·cl>11Unental route Sunday. Marino. who Nached Topeka durtn1 &he aevtfttb day at bis trip, a. tryt.q to beat a ~of 13 days, ab bours and 20 minutes MC by Paul Comlab ot Tustin ln lt13 on the 3,000.ml)e rdute from Santa ,Monica ~ ~w York Cll)'. Mart.o ha• been av9'aafN l40 mUes•a 4-Y. but will •~ to lncreaM hla averaae to 2IO' cnilee lf be wanta to me.t hll 19al or reacblna New York ct(1 Hall ln Uday1. He wu met ln Tqpeka by Mayor WWlam McCormick, wi.> rOde l b(ke a thort. diatuce with Marioo and a•ve him a medal. Nill'bt tbroueh mid morntJ\g Jow clouds. otherw1se 'fair through Tu~day. A little ClOO!h!r. Lows tonight 58 to 64. Highs Tuesday in upper 60s at beaches to upper 70s inland areu. ' IN818ET88AY •il!liu:i9l!•• ---~ •• .ti DM.Yfl!.QT 0 M••MM!IJ•l!?I RofllJer filven 'S'IOm Death Seutence' oa MOINIS. 10wa fAP> -C1'ar1es Watts. a ll•)'tar old mu1Uplt aclero1i1 victlm who robbed a •rocery 1tor• to pay ror an •rllkln Wt ---ould end t1ahl ye rs ot lm • a ••qW« man ...-Jwt wantod to think UM Jury •• 1tven bJm a a low death Hntente." the ln,ye-r. John Wenman. uld 1tt.r a Polk CoulY D .. trict court Jury r.,..a Walts aWJ\J ol two~ of rObbery. WM&a. wt10 admlUed tut Lbe rollll•-rJ" '°'* ~ .......... '*'°' .., ...... ol tatnponry lnunlty. Iowa ·a mand1tor)' mlalmum J>rh.on a ntenco for robbery .. nve yean At the trlal, a PtYCholoalat W.tJfled lhal Wa&&I waa ao ob- Mlffd wttb hla Impotence that It '"virtually cont.rolled hll waklna •omeftll " W attl, an unemi>lo~ eemttat flnllhe1'. t.eltifted that be bied un1ucceufully to a•t llnandal u1latance for the sa,ooo ..... Uon from !t:J.ovemm• and added, "It be U • *"te on trial here, aot me." Wetl.f l~ained of th4I opera· UOa. Plied~ l*llle transplant. wblle ••!'?'Mt a local televlllon talk tbOWtD lliiU March. Dr. Jama 0 . StatUn11. a Des Moln••Jlaatlc 1ur1eon and author "A New You: How Pta1tlc SurterY Can Save Your Llfe." was 6eln• interviewed on the program. Watts IDHe an aPDOlatment to see stat....,. lmmedlalel)' a~t Sbtll VP Bealg•l•ll 469Saved TONIGllT COSTA MESA CITY COUN CIL -a.,ular m"'1fta, Coundl Chamberl. Cltv Hall. 1.ao o.m. TUDlD.\f, AUGU&Til NEWPORT·M&SA SCHOOL BOA RD -Re1uJar meeUna. Council Chamben. City Rall. 7:30 p.m OCC LECTURE -"Overcom· Ina laotatlon" -Audltoriwn. 1: ao p.m. Admiuion free LA TUQUE, Quebec <AP> -A 2S -year-old night-club enter- tainer lost control of a 7~-foot boa constrictor in bis act, and the snake stran-1ed him befOC'8 an audience of "° people. Jean-Guy Leclair, who performed under the name ol Grand Melvin. died Sunday at Club i.ITuquois, 130 miles north of Mont.real. "He seemed to miss a reflex. and the boa wrapped around his neck.·• said Gaetan Grenon, the manager of the club. When Leclair got blue in the face, Grenon said he called the police As he and four police officers s truggled with the s nake, Grenon cut off its head with a knife. "It's wasn't a pleasant thing to have to do, but I had little choice." he said. "Unfortunate· ly , Le Grand Melvin was already dead." Leclair, who lived In Mon- treal. wore a vampire's black cape and rangs during his act, walked on broken glass and pierced his skin with nails Panel Kilh Carpenter' 8 Police Bill SAC RAMENTO <AP> -An Assembly committee has killed a bill by State Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter. R-Newport Beach. that would have made It harder for criminal defendants who claim police brutality to see polioe files The bill. SB 1436. which had the backing or law enforcement. ~as defeated by the Assembly Criminal Justice Committee on a 3·4 vote. Law enforcement groups said 1t would have protected oUicers from relatively unrestricted searches through police files, which may contain unproven ac· cusations of brutality. But opponents said current ~-· ........ ..,....._ contended the bill would have made it practically Impossible to get. needed. records of office.rs; past conduct In order to substan· tlate a clahn of self-defense. The measure would have t ighlened the law on "dls· co very." the procedure by which defendants can obtain evidence held by the prosecution. --... <" M"'°'lftQlan ~ ,_ 1.i11 If••••• ,,.,,,.. ~-· v.,..., • .,. :-:: :::=~~:r,:r::i;:. ;::.i.etca':°'~~'l:.::..:~ DO WMI ... ._, .. _ ......... -~·­ J tdllewtn "'" "'" ....... ..,-.. ,,,........ _.,._.. ,..,.,. ~··~ ......... 1N .... l1141ldl• ~ ... ~ ............. . . , .......... ~ ... ....... Ii-vine Company Managers Slwlfl.ed By JOANNE &EVNOLDS Ot_......, ......... It was more than a yeur ago that the Irvine Co. was aold to ltl CWTi!Dl ownen. Since tben. eilht members of the company's top management have left tbe development firm, alon• with an unknown number of middle management and at.aft members. Frank Hughes became the sixth vice pretldent to end bis Irvine Co. career when he gave his reshtnation to company President Peter Kremer more than a week ago. As have the other departed members of tbe corporate leadership, Hughes says he's leaving to go into the develop- ment businesa with an Indepen- dent firm. The rll'St departures were an· oounced in June urn al the time of the takeover by the new owners. Raymond Watson, Tom Wolff alMl Lansing Eberling re· signed their respective posts as preslclent and executive vice president to set up their own de- velopment company. About a month later, Douglas Gfell~r, vice presidecat of the company's residential division, announced he was leaving to go to work for a residential de· velopmenl company. He was followed in October by Albert Auer. vice president of the commercial division, and William R. Watt, vice president of the multi-family division. Wall and Auer also formed their own company. At the time of Watt's de- parture. Hughes was president of the company's homebuilding subsidiary, Irvine Pacific. A month after Walt and Auer left. Hughes' vice president at Irvine Pacific, Ken Agid, an- nounced his resignation. Hughes was made vice pres1· dent of the residential division. which encompassed the multi- family division. At that time. Kremer said the company ex- pected to phase out Irvine Pacific and "gel the Irvine Co. out of the homebuilding busi· ness." That decision has been re· voked but the company has no appointed chief for the sub· stdiary Warren James, who served as Irvine Pacific vice president un- der Hughes, will be acting presi· dent' until a new president is selected. The company, however im· mediately replaced Hughes at the corporate level, appointing a former associate of Kremer irom Newhall Land and Farm· ing to the top spot in the residen- tial division. Seeond Time In addition to all the de· partures. the company has taken on a vice president to head a newly-created governmental relations department. Robert Shelton, who bas been a governmental relations consul· -tant for the past seven years. joins the corporate staff that lo· eludes 11lomas Nielsen. Hughes' replacement in residential; Richard Reese. who heads plan· ning; Tom Wilek, who heads public affairs; Richard Cannon, who is in charge of the com- mercial and industrial division: Fred Keller. head of agriculture. and Warren Fix, in charge of finance. The overall effect of the cor- porate shuffle. in terms of the company's operation, hasn't been noticeable on a larf{e scale. Company officials saY. the firm has turned In a record financial pe rformance since tbe new owners took over. as witnessed by the fact that the $240 million mortgage was paid off within a year by a combination of re· financing of existing assets and income from company projects. But m08t company observers generally a.sree that financial change has come about because of the business decisions made by the board of directors, not necessarily because or the change or names in the com· pany's roster Millionaire-Eaces __ ·.Murder Plot ·Rap ,." FORT WORTH, Texas <AP> -Two years to the day after he was charged with murdering his stepdaughter, millionaire T . Cullen Davis was accused of masterminding a murder-for-hire plot involvlng a "hit list" of six names. including his · · capital murder for allegedly trying Lo hire a "hit man" to kill District Judge Joe Eidson, who ~ presiding over the oilman's bitter divorce. He was also charged with carrylna a prohibited weapon -a pistol with a silencer. District Attorney Tim Curry 1aid he will recommend today that the 44-year-old Davia be held without bond In the Tarrant County Jail. Speaking through hi s attorneys Sunday, Davia called the cbar1es "some kind of frame or setup." Davia wa1 arrested moments after dr1vtna from 1 nl1htdub parking lot where police said he met David McCrory, an employee of a firm owned by the Davia fatnlly. Davia la a partner In KenDavla tnduatrtea, a con1tomerate that lncludea M•d·Contlnent OU It Ou Supply. Curry (Produced an &flldavtt signed by McCrory. saying that McCrory had several meetings with Davis the past four days ln preparation tor the al1eged contract kllllng. McCrory was wired for sound by federal and loca·l authorities during the meetings. officials said. Law enl ro snapshot of Eidson's stulfed ln a car trunk and the Judie's driver's license. Eidson, s11ld the sources who uked not to be ~Wied, agreed to pose for the photo. 'Cliff Fall' Kills Man LA JOLLA <APl-A puaerby dhcovere4 the partly - decompoMd body of a man who apparently had f alien to his death from a cliff at Black's Beach In the Torrey Ptne1 State Reserve area, otnclala 1atd. Deputy County Coroner Susan Barnett aald iM man hid been dead about two days. He la the aec6nd recenUy reported incl· dent or a person f alllns . to hi.a death from eUtta overlOOklnt tbe beacljlbeuJd. • • • Fro,_iSurf In Newport Newport Beacb lifeguards said they can use the breather given them today by declining surf to recover from a weekend filled with rescues. But Lt. Logan Loekabey said that at the same time. guards are watching a storm system off the Mexican coast that could produce more bl& comben by Tueada)'. <Retaledatory,A3> It was the six-to 10-fool surf that gave lifeguards their troubles this weekend. Guards had lo rescue 280 people ou.t of a beach crowd ol 65,000 Saturday and lat people from a crowd of 80.000 Sunday. Saturday. a Pomona man. 24-year·old Terrence Tenove. drowned In the s urf off 14th StreeL Saturday,· Lifeguard Greg Fults cut his hand severely while rescuing a swimmer at 44tb Street. Another guard, Marc Degan, suffered a similar injury during a mass rescue off 18th Street. Lockabey said no other in· juries were reported on Sunday nor were there any major rescues Sunday. New Clerk Assaulted A non-union supermarket clerk told police a group or striking workers at a Huntington Beach store parking lot pushed and shoved her and flattened all rour tires on her auto as she left work Sunday night. The 6 :42 p.m. incident occurred al the Alpha Bela supermarket in the Five Points Shopping Center, police said. Police did not identify the woman who said she was harassed by people on the picket line. No formal criminal charges have been filed yet, police said. 81,000 Vase Taken In Newport Theft Newport Center lawyer George Rodda Jr .. has reported the theft or an antique oriental vase valued at $1.000. Rodda, who serves on the Coast Community College Dis· trkt Board of Trustees, said the eight-inch carved milkstone vase was stolen from his offices at 610 Newport Center Drive sometime between Wednesday and Saturday. , J tMpfOCl"UD. I• an lat.nl•w. Stallln11 deacr\Mid tM procedure as an lmplantaUOD of a cyUndrtcal plec• of "bith grade medical plastic -lbe 1ood kind of autcone." StalliDp. wbo appeaNd u a witness in the Watts trial, saicJ he hu done 3C such operat1ooa, but that few people know about it outside the medlca1 prO· ftulon. He said he yned to the DMftr .......... FACINGCHALLENOU FMRtew'~ f',....PageAJ TASKS.•. "We generate waiting lists," Milburn said. "That bothers us as professionals." He said he hopes to see more programs for the retarded of· fered in the community to help serve those who are still living at home or in nursing homes. And the problem may get worse. because the subdividing of Fairview wards wlll decrease space. Milburn said. Some of the current occupants will have to be ··mainstreamed.·· or moved out into the community. usually with supervision. ·'We find tbe servicet and we provide the transportation," be said. Milburn, a registered nurse who bas qualified as a family nurse practitioner. is reticent about his specific plans. 'Td rather have you come back in six months and see what we've accomplished. rather than talk about what we'd like to ac- complish.·· he said. Guard Halts Art Theft SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -A little bit of muscle and a securi· ty guard's quick trigger finger stopped a grubby-looking art thief from stealing more than $1 million in paintings from the M.H. de Youn~ Museum. Security guard William Blackwell, 50, told police he ar· rived at work Friday night just as an unshaven man in sneakers was reaching for three valuable paintings -Rem brandl 's "Portrait of a Rabbi." Jan Brueghel's "Vase of Flowers·· and Franz Pourbus" "Abrahm Grauphas.·· Poiice discovered later that the gun-toling, would-be thief had ordered two other guards in· to the men's room where they were b(>und and gagged. But Blackwell refused to follow suit. lDteniew beea-..e M--&k that few ol tbe ..Umated _. adlllon men who tufter from unpotenc:e related to multiple 1derosla or diabetes knew the operaUon ex· isled. SUWnia Mid be ll Mtlina l.Q> • "foundatioa. tQ be fed by toll· lnbutlona. to help otben who cannot afford pl•tic: auraeey. •· Watts will be aenteoeed neu month. Wellman uJd be "18)' appeal. ,,,.._ Pflfle A J SNUFF ••• Jud•e l"enton also Hld Dou1111 mtlll see a paychlatrtst ln cOllbedioe with bia l)l'ObaUon. For the ~1-year-olcJ furniture refinilber the auilt1 pte&..JJ• a vtndlcatlon ol aorts. Earlier t.bia year an Orance Co\lnty SUperior Cowt Jury was unable at the end of • stx-weet trial to decide whether or not he intended to murder the police women be took to the desert for the ftlm aequence. "If I had done ~Y of those things or even thought ol doing U.em l wouldn't be walklna out of here today," Doualu said. "It is not asatnst the law to take pictures and I certainly did no harm or intend to do any harm to anyone." Dou•las faulted the system that cb&f'led him wtth attempt· ed murder and solicitation to murder as well as his ex· perience in the justice system. All but forgotten as the once accused porno film maker walked from the courtroorc were the horror stories connect· ed wtth bi& arrest la.st summer. Those stories included tales of his intention to force the = women to poee for lesbian . age type pictures and to end the picture taking session with their murder and dismember· ment. The arrest of Douglas led to a massive desert search for what law enforcement officials believe we re prior victims buried in the Yucca Valley area. Rima Quits; Board Seeks Applications The Costa Mesa Sanitary Dis· trict is seeking applicants to fill a position on its board of direc· tors. Kerm W. Rima , who has s erved on the five·member board for the past 12 years. has resigned effective Sept. 14. Resumes from interested resi· dents may be mailed to the dis· trlcl, P.O. Box 1200, Costa Mesa 92626. The appointment will be made by the district after qualified ap- plicants are interviewed. The board meet-s once a month. its members receiving $50 per meeting. It is in charge of setting trash pickup rates and levying taxes for new sewer lines In Costa Mesa. Protest Dampened CARNSORE POINT. Ireland CA P I -About 5,000 nuclear op- ponents sipped soup and tea to keep spirits up here as rain turned the site of their combina- tion rock festivaJ-demonstraUon Ullo a muddy bog. i\.J.rdJional outdoor vnarbylv&iQJ ehcwri is our light<z.r wei~ht poplin with cotton ldrt..on limn~ -. , ' 0 - r.' -· L' ••. \iii - ' ... J ll di • • I'! ' ( I ' Pitcher and Grandpa Angels' pitcher Nolan Ryan chats with former president and new grandfather Richard M. Nixon at Sunday's Angels game at Anaheim Stadium. Nixon sat through the 14-inning game that ended with a 1-0 Angels victory. Players comment about him in Sports. Page B3. Execution Order Upheld by Court NEW ORLEANS IAP > ~ A federal appeals court refused to- day to block the execution in F lorida's eledtic chair of con- d em ned killer John A. Spenkelmk of Buena Parle. An appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court is expected in the legal fight, part of a continuing battle over whether the state has a right to execute killers. The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals reJected Spenkelink's claim that anyone tried for murder is entitled to have some jurors who would reJect the dt'ath Pt:nalty oo matter what the · crimt• Also reJe~led was a defense claim that Florida's death penalty 1s ral·1ally applied • because most pt."<>ple on death row, black or white. were con- demned for killing whites. ·'After considering each of the petitioners' epntenUons and find- ing them t-0 be without merit." the appeals court said, "we up- hold the district court judg· ment." On the racial issue, the ap- p ea I s co urt sa id that Spenkelink's own expert witness testified "he found no evidence of intentional or purposeful dis- crimination." As lo the argument that Florida's method of execution is torturous and wantonly cruel. the 5th Circuit said the U.S . Supreme Court has already de- cided that the electric chair is constitutional Florida's death penalty law was one of three which the U.S. Supreme Court ruled to be con- stitutional lo 1976. Spenkelink was scheduled t.o be executed last year but his ap- peal canceled the event, with no new date set. 'Grandpa' Killed Saving Friend, 4 LOUISVILLE. Ky. <AP)--Four-year-old Stevie Oliver ·-WAi ru:t1gi b~~-~ ... a.Wna 11¥h~'ietsJ'~~..­ didn't notice the car. Frank oO rmann, known to the kids on the block as ·'Grandpa,'' did -and gave his life to save ... his young friend. .-.: "He heard the neighbors holler. 'Stevie. Stevie. Stevie.· He knew Stevre was coming across the street," said Stevie s mother. Cvnth1a l WASHINGTON CAP> -A .uburban prosecutor decided today not to me crhnlnal char1es aialnlt former Whlt.e Houae dru1 advlur teter Bo u r n e (or w r ll l DI a preacrlptlon wltb a fictitious name. Paul Ebert, the prosecutor in Prince Wllliam County, Va .. where an attempt W8' made to fill the prescription, said, "I don't think Vlrginia law applies to a dnag vlolalloo outside the state.0 In Washington._ Carl Raub, speaking for the U.S. Attorney's office, said. "We orlginally deferred to Virginia authorities to decide whether to prosecute or not in this case. They've made their decision and as far as this office ls concerned, that's the end of the matter." Bourne quit July 20 as President Carter's chief adviser on drug abuse just 36 hours after public disclosure that Bourne had given a prescription for the rnucb-abused sedative Quaalude to Ellen J . Metsky. his assistant in the White House. To keep secret the fact that the emotionally troubled aide ¥185 getting the powerful !>leep·inducing drug, Bourne wrote the fictitio.us n ame. ·'Sarah Brown." instead of Metsky's name on the 15-tablet prescription when he issued it July 7. Four days later. Metsky's friend and former roommate. Toby M. Long. 26, was arrested near her job in Prince William County and charged with trying to fill the prescription. Ms . Metsky said later she had not had enough time to fill the prescription in Washington and had asked Ms. Long to fill it as a favor. Ebert said that based on interviews with Bourne, Metsky and Long, he concluded that "Bourne had no knowledge that the prescription was to be passed in Virginia " He said that the police had given polygraph -or so-called lie detector -tests lo the two women and found no evidence of any similar prescription being passed by Bourne eith er in Prince William County or in Washington. The prosecutor explained in a telephone interview that he con sidered ch arging Bourne with a conspiracy outside of Virginia to violate Virginia law. '10() Reward Offered in Laguna Arson Arson investigators in Laguna Beach are hangmg up posters in the fire-plagued Arch Beach Heights community today, ask· ing informants to call if they have information concerning a s pree of arsons in the hilltop area. Investigators Mike Davis said a reward of up to $500 will be of- fered to anyone who has in- formation leading to the arrest and conviction of arsonists who have torched 10 homes in the building stage in Arch Beach Heights in the last four months. "We're working through the ..staJ.e·~·w~~.-.. .... aT[empt to capture our arsonists." the Laguna Beach police olficet" said today . o.lfy ~tuft ....... IT COST ALMOST $5 MILLION TO BUILD THE BLIMP HANGARS FOR MARINE BASE IN 1942 Structure, Shown Here Under Construction, 11 300 Feet Wide And More Than 1,000 F-.t Long Marine Hangars To Be Dedicated The huge blimp hangars at Orange County's U.S. Marine Corps Air Station. Helicopter, will be dedicated as national his- toric landmarks in a ceremony Tuesday al 9 a .m . The Lighter Than Air hangars were built in 1942 for blimps as part of the anti-submarine effort in World War II. Since then. the Marines have used the spacious structures for storage and repair of militarycrafL One of the large Tustin build· ings has been used periodically to moor the Goodyear blimp for repairs. A host of local governmen• dignitaries and Marine Corps of- ficials will be on hand for the ceremonies. which will also In- c I ude the h angars• design engineers. The two buildings. each nearly 300 feet wide and more than 1.000 feet long, cost nearly SS million to build. They were dedicatedooSept l. 1942. The hangars were home for Navy blimps th;it patrolled the Southern California s horelin e during the war Th<? 'giant cran. we& e fam1har sights all along Southern California as they plodded to and from their track· in~ m1ss1ons over the Pacific. The war ended and LT A main- tained a housekeeper role ror several years. serving principal· ly as a training base for Navy Reserve units. It was officially deco11missioned in 1949. But then came Korea and the dawning of a new type of warfare -vertiul assault. the Marine Corps called it. It meant the use or hehcopters in combat. The rugged, mountainous ter- rain near the air facility pro· v1ded excellent training for helicopter pilots and crews. The base·s proximity to Camp Pendleton helped develop and train the ground troops that went with the vertical assault warfare principle. Development of the principle. begun in Korea, came into its own In Vietnam. and LTA in tandem with the Marine Corps Air Station El Toro housed a total or 3.000 men attached to seven different SQuadrons used to train in and maintain the helicopters. Motorcyclist Dies After Freeway Skid A motorcyclist who fell and skidded 300 feet on the Garden Grove Freeway late Thursda~ nig ht died Sunday 1n Palm Harbor Hospital A coroner ·~ investigator 1den· tified the v1ct1m as Robert Ftgoni. 20. or 834 N Harbor Blvd . Anaheim. According to an accident re· port. Figoni was driving has motorcycle east on the freeway near Euclid Avenue in Garden Grove .al 10 p m Thursday when the motorcycle went out of con- trol and spilled Figona on the freeway. He reportedly skidded 300 feet along the pave ment and was taken lo Palm flarbor Hospital in critical condillon. He died of injuries shortly after 9 a.m Sun day Hundretls Rescued From Surf Harried lifeguards were ''pull- ing swimmers from the water hke fish from the pier" at South Coast beaches over the weekend, as six-and eight-foot s urf s lammed the shoreline. Laguna Beach lifeguard ret'· ords showed 146 rescues on city beaches Sunday. mostly of unex- perienced swimmers who ven· tu red out into the surf l\ne. ··we tried lo warn swimmers not lo go in unless they were wearing two swim fins." said - Laguna lifeguard s upervisor Tom Redwitz. The city's staff ol SO lifeguards watched over 26,000 beachgoers each day this weekend, and res ponded to 75 rescues on Saturday and 41 medical calls over the weekend. San Clemente lifeguards said 30,000 vtSitors swarmed to city beaches. and anothe r 25.000 bas ked in the !>Un at county beaches over the weekend. L1fej!uards pulled 30 swim- mers from the water on Satur- day and another 40 on Sunday .. Sunday s surf was sporadic. which was more dangerou!> to s wimmers." said lifeguard supervisor Ken Casper .. The surf would go down a bat and people would go oot In the water." he said "Then it would come up and suck peoplt-out to sea · "We were pulling them out like fish from the pier ·• State lifeguards. who watch San Clemente· State Beach. Doheny. all of San Onofre and the Trest~. said they pulled 90 -.wimmers from heavy riptid(?:) alon~ stall' beaches during the weekend ........ ., • .,,._..,u-..nil.&.Jl11t1•'••nl••• ... • ,., .... ;r.•• Posters will be dis played throughout the community and ~ t,....,... tt:! ~... t will llst a toll-free number for 1rotn our l..IV,Y;;;) U(l,p . ~~~~n~h:~~formatio~ re-back-to-schaJl with Opoceanpaiific Callers will r emai n DOHRMANN. 83, ACCORDING TO neighbors who anonymous. The toll free ~print hawaiian shirts m viewed the incident, rushed off his porch and pushed Stevie number is 800-472-7785. tlw, softizst JOO"-' cotton sat<l.<Zn . out of the path of the oncoming car. There was a squeal of The offices of We-Tip are open assortn.d colors. Si'Z.ll8 B· 20 brakes. :~~~~~~f:ro~m~9~a~.m~.~to~9~~p~.m~-~w~ee~k;da~ys~;__:~~~:.::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ . and from 9 a.m. to s p.m. on "All I could think was that Stevie got run over," satd Sat.~ Mrs. Oliver. ·~Then I saw his little white head. 1 was afraid to tum around and look. J thooghl it was ~ - neighborhood kids.·• Instead. it was "Grandpa" Dohrmann who had been hit. He died a fe w minutes later. Witnesses told police the car left the scene. Saturday night, Jefferson County police arrested Mickey P. Trusty. 20. of Louisville. He was released on hi s recognizance today on a murder charge, with a hearing set Oct. 12. DOHRMANN. WHO HAD BEEN WITH the Army Corps of Engineers before retirement, is to be buried Tuesday. He lived with his daughter, Mrs. John Cowley, and three of her children on Guy Drive. and Mrs. Cowley said he was fond or the neiJthborhood kids . "He liked them all, and they all seemed to like him," she said. "A lot o! times I'd peek out the window to see if he was all right. and I'd see little Stevie sitting out there talk· lng to him.'' Jt was from his familiar vantaae point on the front porch that Dohrmann beard the neigbbon yelling for Stevie to wam him of the approaching car. "When he heard the name 'Stevie.• they said he took oft down the driveway,'' Mrs. Cowley nid. ,, months. and we're offering a re- ward for that information." Davlssald. Nixon Blamed In Tape Gap WASID.NGTON <AP> -Leon Jaworski. the former Watereate specla1 prosecutor, thinks former President Nlxon caused the 18~·minute gap ln a tape made three days after the Wat.er1ate break·in. Jaworski. Interviewed ln Sun- day's Parade magazine, said, "Nixon was the individual mo_,t likely to have erased the l81i41 minutes" of the June 20, 1972, tape. · The recording contained a conversation between Nixon and former Attorney General John Mtlcbell. \ 44 fasNon island, newport center 844-5070 t .'-· " . ........ ~-11,1171 r:.;·. .J•R •· ... "';~ .. •ting I ~f' ' Q Wldi ·~ 1'•-~'~'~' M .... •hle Pots and Politics SOIDON&'S IN 1'IR Uit:a&H Wl'l'll .•• Onnse eou.au·• Democrat.le FaJt.bfld p:t.Mnd to break breed lut ol&bl at tbe llOUJ'U BaJ OU In Lquna Nlsuet wlt.b Goy. f!dmund O. BroWD.. Ir. • Thia litUe d1a1q edft!l1lln Wll reoorted to carry I tab ol 11,000 pW pqte. I WU U.. but J cfJd not pony UJ>....,. crud Date. I WU LD tM klteheli. Do not l.Dq\&lre u to wb,J I wu lD the tltcbn. lt't just loo ~-But u.r.J wu, btck amid tbe acvtTJ1DI c1tenn, walten, wattrnsea and bartenders H lbe Democndc l"aitblUJ cat.bered out frcmt. We bad a number ot lntenllt1nc IQelll ln tbe kttcben. For ooe. t.be noted 0Tant• County Supervisor Ralph Dl~cb. . so•llBODY BAD &AftBD to Ralph LUt I wu lkulkinl around back there. He came to ltt'Ve me a chUJed otaott1at 1lu1 of wtoe. and seemed to vutly enjoy the fact that he'd cauthtme. For Diedrich. being at the Monarch Bay Club was al.m01t like l"ttUmina to the scene ol lhe crime. He eot hit with bil infamous l>Ukin& ticket Just a stone's throw away 11 Salt Q;eell Beacll. But be vowed he'd lesally parked for the aovemor'a vtait. Brown's chief of secur- ity. a plainclotbea state policeman, a~ived back with the pots and pans, in- quuing as to bow many ways there were to get Into the beach clubhouse? Only three: By land, sea or air, iC you had a parachute. T~ GOVERNOR WAS late. The gatbenng began to gather, the band How• struck up and the dinner courses began to move one after another out of the catering truck and through the kitchen lo the Democratic Faithful out front. A young man in shirtsleeves arrived in the kitchen aod sat down .to chat. about Orange County housing problems. He i~enl1.fied himself as J?r. A~drew Safir, the gov- ernors director of economic pohcy, planning and re- search. Why he was doing his research in the kitchen al a $1,000 a plate affair is unclear. But he seemed to be a nice enough chap. THE GOVERNOR WAS still late. The caterers were poised to serve the chocolate mousse when, abruptly, the band struck up, "California Here I Come." The guest of honor had arrived. Brown's driver, a California Highway Patrol veteran of 16 years chasing speeders, dropped back to the kitchen to visit. He explained his theory as to why the CHP doesn't really need radar. "We catch 'em anyway," be noted. The only moment of possible panic came to the cater· ing service when the governor ordered dinner. The cry came to the kitchen: "THE GOVERNOR WANTS a plate of noodles: the governor wants a plate of noodles! '' Then, like a culinary miracle. six plates of noodles poured forth from the catering truck. The g~vern~r h.ad come late but he stayed late too. huddled with Diedrich and Orange County's Dick O'Neill and the Democratic Faithful. 1 'm sure their conversation was interesting. We did pretty well in the kitchen, too. 'Terrible Blunder' Cited in Chess BAGUIO CITY, Philippines (AP) --World chess champion A!'aloly Karpov took a commanding 3·1 lead over challenger V1ktor Korcbnoi with two stunning wins in one day. The boyish-looking 27·year-0ld Soviet champion woo the ad· Journed 13th and 14th games Sunday th Jess than three hours of pl.ay. giving him half the six games he needs to retain his title and win the $350,000 flrst-prize money. · KORCHNOI, A 47-YEAR-OLD Soviet defector who lives in Switzerland, had time trouble on the 13th game that forced him in· lo what British grandmaster Michael Slean called •·a terrible blunder." He conceded the 14th game after only 45 minutes or play. The 15th game is scheduled for Tuesday. Before the 13th game adjourned Thursday night, Korcbnoi had taken 40 minutes to decide on his sealed 4lst move with which play was to resume. This Jeft him only 20 minutes lo make his next 15 moves, and after his 52nd move he bad only four minutes to make four critical plays. . ' ... NATION I WEATHERl laRetallatlota Israelis Strafe PLO Centers TEL AVlV, larael CAP> -lll'ffli planes attacked two Palestinian centel'I 1n Let>aoon at dawn today In retaUaUon for a PaJestlnJan 1renado and aubmachloe·aun attack oo an JaraeU airline but In Loa· don lea &ban 24 houri befor.. The Pal Une Liberation Ortanlzatlon satd three perrillu were kUled and 14 were wounded ln tbe laraell attack on the BurJ el Tbe Jaraell alr force atruck Barajneh refuiee camp oo the back at daybreak. aouth alck ol Beirut. Tbe com· "Aa a response to the terrorist munlque aald the vtllase school attack oa the El Al bua in IA>n· In Damour, 11 miles south of the don, Israeli aircraft attacked Lebanete capital, also was at-two terrortat b&NS ln Lebaoon tacked, but lb ere were no this momlng." an Israeli army casualties there. spokesman said. IN THE LONDON bus attack. an Israeli airline stewardess and one or the Palealinlan attackers were killed, and two other stewardesses and seven British bystanders were wounded. One of tbe injured stewardesses was in critical condition. Shah Foes Blamed in Fatal Fire TEHRAN, Iran (AP> -The government blamed opponents of Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi's reforms for the arson fire that killed at least 377 persons in a movie theater in southwestern Iranian city, and the local police chief reported 10 suspects have been arrested. An Iranian newspaper, in an unconfirmed report, s aid 430 died in the Saturday night blaze in Abadan, an oil·refinery city. The paper, Ettelaat, claimed 728 tickets had been sold for the show. It did not explain the dis- crepancy between the number killed and the number of tickets sold. The paper said only 200 of the badly burned bodies have been identified so far. Two Jets strafed and rocketed the refUgee camp, a atrongbold of Dr. George Habaah's Popular Front for the Liberation ot Palestine, and three others bit Damour, witnesses reported. PALESTINJANSPOKES•EN in Beirut claimed anti-aircraft fire hil one of the raiders, but the Israeli spokesmen said all planes returned safely. Palestinian sources said Y asser Arafat, the chief of the Palestine Uberatioq OraanlJa. lion, ordered all clvlllans to evacuate refugee camps and other areas inhabited mostly by Palestinians. Banning Again1 Pre~ident C~er won't even teU his hometown folks in Plains, Ga., his plans for 1~. but he showed his run· ning fo~ in a softball g~me there this weekend. He and his family then beaded to Idaho. Police ·Re-enact Kennedy Shooting It was the second time this month that the Israeli air fon:e retaliated within hours for a Palestinian attack on Israeli civilians. A guerrilla base ln southern Lebanon was bit on DAU.AS <AP> -Dealey Plaza was sealed off and empty. No Aug. 3 after a bomb explosion in crowds packed the sidewalks. No motorcade sped along the a Tel Aviv market killed a 71. streets. year-old man and wounded 49 Then gunabols crackled, from a rifle and a pistol, bullets slam· people. ming into aandbaga u police mark.amen positioned in the old Tex· A splinter offshoot from a.a School Book Depository and on the nearby "grassy knoll" Habash's organization, the helped acoustics experts investigate the 1963 killing of President Popular Front for the Liberation John F. Kennedy. of Palestine-Special Operations, claimed responsibility for the at-THE RE-ENACTMENT project was ordered by the House lack in London's swank Mayfair Select Committee on Assassinations after the recent re- district, the first by Arab ter· examination of a police recording. rorlsts against Israelis in the British capital. The recording, made accidentally during the assassination when an unidentified motorcycle officer's J:Qicrophone stuck in the FOUR MEN OPENED fire as "open" position, seemed lo indicate that four shots were ftred. the bus carrying 21 El Al person-The Warren Commission report claimed Lee Harvey Oswald, net pu!led up outside the Europa acting alone, fired three shots into the presidential motorcade. Ex· Hotel. where the airline's crews perts generally agree that a fourth shot would mean another gun· stay during London stopovers. man was involved. OFFICIALS SAID the toll Les Pearton, 37, who was bav-The Warren Commission had the motorcycle officer's tape stood at 377 killed and 10 in-ing a noon drink at the crowded during its investigation. but police spokesman Bob Shaw said it jured. They said 20 to 40 persons Barley Mow tavern next door, was only "recently" that the possible fourth shot was identified. "I escaped without injury. reported: "Suddenly a shower of can only guess that the reason might be because they didn't have bullets came through the wtn' the tecbnolo0 v until recently," Shaw said. Cinema Rex, in a working-· -dow. Tbey went down the line of class section or the city, was bottles behind the bar like 8 AN ITALIAN RJFLE SIMILAR to the Mannlicher·Carcano showing a Persian-language scene from the Wild West. that the Warren Commission said Oswald used to shoot Kennedy film and no Americans were Everyone dived onto the floor." spat out the first shot at 7:10 a .m. The round struck one of three believed among the victims. The injured included drinkers plies of sandbags placed at the approximate positions where Ken· - Gen. Reza Razmi, the Abadan 'tt' t t bl t 'd th nedy was bit. Police chief. said "anti· -re~orm s i mg a a es ou s& e e 1 tavern. The firing lasted two More shots followed from a sixth-floor window from where radicals" s plashed gasoline minutes. Oswald is said to have fired. aroundtheoutsideofthe theater ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ and set it aflame. He named no particular group but said "pro· vocative elements. and those who wear different masks to fight the Iranian revolution were responsible." OTHER THEATER fires in recent weeks have been blamed on ultra·conservalive Moslem fanatics who oppose the shah's reform programs and demand that all public entertainment be shut down during the religious holiday now in progress. The police chief said several of those arrested were carrying explos ives when they were picked up . He said two employees of the movie house were among the suspects, and the owner also was arrested for "negligence," because to save money he did not heed police In· struclions to hire more atten- dants and guards. All the country's major re- ligious leaders except one issued condemnations of the massacre. A SEMINAR hylnves·t IN A IND TRUST DEED 1 D What are the risks? D What yield can I expect above 1 QO/o? D W~at about liquidity? Complete answers to these and any other questions Mneh· of ··Nation···Basks by a team of professionals. We are limiting our discussions ____ _..:t=o only 20 ~ople enablin ou to become fully educated in Trust Deed investments-:- Shinoo.:.S · sCottered Across South, ~England Albu'que Atteni. e.111more "'""'noMm ..... ll05tol'I ..-llWI 8vlf•lo NI Le "c:IJ ... ~~ II •S ,.. n p~ n 11 .. . es .. t5 11 n n Tempereturt\ •round t11t1 nttlon ••"99(1from46 In Br4Klfons, P• to 9J inNtldlH. c.a1 • .....,. PIHHl'lt, sunny divs -•llllOUQ!I JOMewllat cooler -.,. In ,,.,.., ,.,.. 5out ... rn ~ltoml-tl'Wwell TUH• ....... IM NellOMI WMtller S.rvlct M id. Be our guest for wine, cheese, and refreshments. Wedneaday, Augult 23 from 4 p.m. to 5:30 p .m. Velvet TurUe -59 FHhlon l•l•nd -Newport Beech Thursd•y, Augult 24 from 7:30 p.m. to 9 p .m. Alrpot'ter Inn· Skyffner 2·18700 M•cArthur Blvd •• Irvine ---oiedllttltK H 191\t wlll lit 11'1 tht IOw IOI. SUn- 111~ A _Mo' o.r~ 0.- °''""' Mel- "°"°'"'" ... -.Hcll• 'Yllle 1Ce11'sOty L.atV .... Little R.ctl LOSAfltilla Ml-I ,,,.. ........ ~t-U,., N•tflvllle ..... onMl>t -Yott Okla.OIY ~ ~-- .. !... _ .. . ,. n ,.. IO 41 • 7S '1 .0 '" 11 p .. IOl 71 '° •7 G 61 .. a 7• ,. ..... es •2 .. 7a I.JO G •7 nn 11 ... 02 .. 7J l'tllled'pltl• .. .. li'tlMfll• 107 15 1.1• ,.1ttit1v'9h 14 n "9rtlefld,Or.. •J ,. .2' "-11 .. It. L.oul• ., jj SI."· T...-ti 11 S.ltL.ah '° .. s.n Ole90 1' " S.. l'r•n " 57 SMttle t6 U ,OJ TUIM 0 71 wet111nown ., .. CAUf'OIUllA ...... ".... 101 .. ,.,,,.,.. , . ·~ ......... 107 .. 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Suite 107 (714)83().5700 SanDl-vo 480 Camino Del Rio South, Su11e 211 (714)297-7100 \ r.· ...... .. . ... ,. l'•"• ... 1ll~lu.•···'••lll ,,, l 1as Propesals ... , , 1 , •• I Smog Cleanup Plan Backed L08 MfO&U:S <AP> -Mon U.. lOI pro- pae.ala aimed al remoytq blmdredl '11 tw '11 !Ocd.b.-n callforn1a •mac tJlrouab maDdMor7 ear poola. an tnereued 1aaollne taa •114 ot.Mr meu:ur. were ~ co be d1ldoMd todQ b7 tttloaal i)lULDe.r&. Tbe 12S propoub.,.. Ccw a stale cleaDQJ> pro. 1nm required b9 UM fedenl Fvenu:neal. the Loe An.&•l• Tlmee nported ln tod.u'a edttloaa. 1'bl plan m\Wt be appn>\-.d by tbe it.ate Air RtlOU?ffll Board. II' Tll£ PLAN MEETS the US. ~· t.a.l Pl"O&ec:'Uoa Aaency'a April dHdllne, tt could IO anto effect next aummer. Amoaa other tbinp, tbe SouUmn Callfomla planner1 have uaested req&&lriAI amaU bust· oeHee to install expensiwe ut!Polfulioo deYle.t. reducl.na bus fares, reatridiftl partiq and Im· pJemeolin1 a ··congeitloo•• tax on jammed freewa15. AlthoU&b rosts for the proposals could not be determined unUI their adoption, the newspaper said the final Southern California proeram could cost Crom $1 bUlioa to S2 billion. THE PUBLIC WOULD 8£ tdfected by many of the recommendations, which range from traffic controls t.o energy-saving home improvements. . Under the park.iog proposal, only one third or a lot's spaces would be allotted for single passenger vehicles. Other strategies aimed at reducing traffic are the gasoline tax and the morning and evening freeway "congestion tax" from cars lined bumper to bumper. It bas not been explained bow the "con- gestion" tax would be collected. ANOTHER SUGGESTION would require homeowners to install insulation, solar heating, or gas-saving devices on pilot lights before selling their houses The proposals were made by the Southern California Association or Governments and the South Coast Air Quality Management District with the belp or 168 agencies representlng business and public lnterest groups in the South Coast Air Basin 'Heart Transplant Patient a Father VAN NUYS CAP> A 20-year-old Granada Hills man who underwent two heart transplants in 1976 ls believed the first such patient to have fathered a child, a hospital spokeswoman said. Robert Dodge, who received the transplants at the StanCord Medical Center due to a disease that led to heart failure, became the father of an 8- Pound, lJ'h-ounce girl, Dorothy SuUon of Valley Presbyterian Hospital said Sunday. His wife, Susan, 23, and daughter, Sandra, were reported in good condition following Saturday's birth. n,.. Destrop Plani CARPINTERlA <APl -A S3 million fire destroyed the bloek-square plant of tbe Santa Barbara Lemon Association here, fire officials said. More than 50 firefighters from Santa Barbara and Ventura counties ( ) battled the fire, which Sf ATE began about 9:23 p.m. Sunday, said Norman '---------Vincent. Carpinteria Summerland Fire Protection District assistant chief. Councllnaan lolled Agala SAN JOSE IAP l -San Jose Councilman David W. Runyon has been jailed for the second time in Jess than a year after a brawl with officers. police said. The 42-year-old born-again Christian and real- estate broker reportedly slugged one officer and kicked another alter police responded to an early morning call Sunday from a citizen complaining about "a stranger" in bis car. The stranger turned out to be Runyon, Police said. He was charged wtth being drunk in public and with interfering with • and assaulting a police officer. Sft!t Vnlt Taz E.rn9pt. LOS ANGELES <AP> -The International Society for Krishna Consciousness is entitled to -----Y&.&.:·:.a::x.e.Dlllt. ~atus on about so percent of the Culver City properly if owni, a sui;en~t \}dbrt ~judge has ruled. Judse Julius M. Title ruled that the Krisbnas' publisbfug division was a valid non-profit, re· Ugious concern eligible for tax-exempt status. lfllnfl GUder PllfJt Die• SYLMAR <AP) -A hang glider pilot who forgot to rut.en his safety harness tumbled so feet to his death near here, sheriff's depulles sald. The Los Angeles County coroner's office iden- tified the man as Leon Williams, Zl, of Oxnard. WUllams, wbo was flying l.n the May Canyon area Sunday, was taken to Pacoima Memorial Hospital ~ ~ wasit!ad on arrival,deptlt.le& Hid. ---- By BU Keane ~'Can ,Wfl go bodt to Disneyland to UM up the : c~wehove left?'' 1 . , ~-· "--- A,,.,..... DAILY PILOT SIBllllo• Income Tax ·j . Cuts Studied SACRAMENTO <AP) -A $1 billloa paeka1e of ~roposed state income tu cuts topa the LegtalatUff'a aiencta tbi1 week followtn1 defeat 1ut Friday of major property tax ao4 el*ldlua Umlt proposals. Auembly Speaker Leo McCarthy, Democratic chief of the krwer house, endoned incOme tu cuta "at leut in tbe range of '1 billion" after the state Senate kllJed hls plan to abolish homeowner prope.111tues by .-uatnttoglveit a beartni. JI~. A SAN FaAN08CO Democrat, said be wu ••deeply disappoin~" tbat tbe Senate killed tbe spending limits and property meuures, but aald be still felt it was urgent to enact a 1lpifi· cant tax cut before the urrs Leglslature adjourn& on Aug. 31. He said be would concentrate on leeislaUon which "aiCDlficaotly cuts into the issue of income tax collectioo." He said Proposition 13, which he vehemently opposed before its landslide victory on June 6, was caused in part by public resentment of the huge surplus being accumulated by the state. I FANTASY BATTLEFIELD USED IN FILMING DCM;UMENTAAY OF WORLD WAR II Dan Ral9ton Po••• lntlde German-occupied French Vlllege on HI• Redding Ranch. THE STATE MUST ACI' NOW, be said, to cut tax rates to prevent the same thing from happen· ing again as tnnatlon pushes workers into bleber tax brackets. The income tax provisions outlined by McCarthy are contained in two Assembly.passed bills which are before Senate committees this week. WWU: Battle Re-created One is AB 380'l by AMemblyman Lawrence Kapiloff, D·San Diego, a $900 mllllon tax cut scheduled for a bearing Wednesday before the Finance Committee, last stop before the Senate floor. Miniatures Filmed for 'F antmy Documenlary' THE 0111ER IS AB 2Zl8 by Republican A'S· semblywoman Marilyn Ryan of Palos Verdes Estates. which ls one stop behind the Kapiloff bill with a bearing pending before the Revenue and Taxation Committee. BELLA VISTA CAP> -Dan Ralston is a grown man who loves to play with toy soldiers - two acres of them spread across a fantasy bat· tlefield and village be bas built. The Shasta College art instructor uses the French castle, village and World Warn German army division be bas assembled on his 10.acre Northern California ranch for Intricate war games and an animated "fantasy documentary" be is filming. IN HIS CLAY BA1TLEFIELD, the shell· shattered French village is being occupied by the 21st German Panzer Division, a tank division. The village bas about 30 houses, a dozen castle towers and a crumbling Roman temple. The 21st, which he said ls not yet up to full strength bu about 1,000 two-inch soldiers, 40 tan.ks and 30 assault guns. Ralston, who teaches crafts, film-making, jewelry and sculpture, is also a military history buff who belongs t.o a group of nine Redding-area "war-gaming enthusiasts." THE NINE SPEND DAYS at a time playing complicated military strategy games with the model armies on tile two·acre game board. Like commercial war games, these have defmed rules, based on actual weapon specifications and combat capabilities. The games, "can get a litUe insane," he said. "They <the soldiers) become really alive when you are playing a game." To avoid crawling around in the dust, the game-players view the battlefield through a real tank periscope. llM.STON SAID BE HAS been filming bis documentary. a history Qf the 21st Division. for four years. but is only about 25 percent done. The filming is tedious, taking an afternoon to move a tank about six feet. "Tanks are neat to animate," be said. He likes to do most or the shooting during the spring, when 17 varieties of wildflowers are in bloom on the bat· tie field. Ralston, who caught tbe military history bug about nine years ago, admits be is asked about his preoccupation with violence and bis choice of the German army. "I do not see it in the violence aspect," be replies. "You have to decide between the Politics and pure military science. I chose to ignore the en- tire political aspect." THEREFORE, BE DOES NOT use the German swastika, only tho German cross. Some modeling purists have criticized him for lack of re- alism, be said. "I do not want to ~et involved with that whole Nazi train of thought," be said. He makes many of the troops from com- mercial kits, but some are made Crom scratch. He figures the entire collection is probably worth about ~.ooo. "It's just an interest,•• he says. "It's really no different than somebody who is into hot rods or sailboats." Jarvis Planning NatiolUDide Drive WASIUNGTON <AP> -Howard Jarvis, an author of California's Proposition 13, today ex· panded on bis nationwide drive to force the federal government to cut taxes by SSO billion over four years and spending by $100 billion. Jarvis plans to campaign for candidates who supPort the plan in the Nov. 7 elections and to campaign against those who oppose it. "When the wind blows, politicians go with it like autumn leaves," Jarvis told reporters. CAUFORNIA VOTERS earlier this year ap- proved ProPosition 13, which declared that the state must Haut property truces to 1 percent of market value. The measure, which took eCfed July l , cuts property taxes an average of 57 percent. Speaking in front of the Internal Revenue Service headquarters, Jarvis said most or the pro- posed tax cut would be in personal income taxes. He said he proPoses a tax cut of $12.5 biJlion per year for four years. The House has approved a $16.3 billion tax cut for 1979. The Jarvis·propoaed tax cut would be accompanied by a spending cut of $25 billion per year in an attempt to balance the budget. ASKED WHAT PROGRAMS should be cut, Jarvis said. "The only way to cut spending is not to give them the money in the first place." Some money could probably be cut from virtually every program, but the only service that could be con- sidered essential is defense, he said. His new American Tax Reduction Movement will buy television time Sept. 26 for a nationwide program promoting the tax cut, he said. Kapiloff's bill would increase state income tax credits from S2S to $100 ror single taxpayers and from S50 to $200 Cor couples. It would also give the aged and disabled an extra $200 million worth or tax cuts. The Ryan bill is identical t.o tbe $300 million in· come tax cut proposal by Democratic Gov. Ed· mund Brown Jr., who bas taken a low profale in the tax battle after proposing an income and sales tax cut two weeks ago. IT WOULD ADJUST TAX brackets annually with any tnnation ln excess or 3 percent, so that most taxpayers receiving cost-of-living raises would not go into higher brackets. Among other items facing the Legislature this week are: RENT CONTROL -AB 2986 by Assemblyman Tom Bates, D-Oakland, would order landlords to reduce rents for the remainder ol this year by an amount equal t.o 80 percent of their Proposition 13 tax savings. The Assembly·passed bill is on the Senate floor. CRIME -An Assembly floor vote ls due this week on SB 709 by Sen. Robert Presley, D- Riverside. It would add two to three years to the • prison terms of persons convicted of major crimes such as rape, robbery and assault. PRISONS -Also on the Assembly floor for a vote this week is Presley's SB 1342, which would appropriate $7.6 million to continue planning work on new state prisons and to study the feasibility. of replacing Folsom and San Quentin prisons. MYERS -Brown's new appointee as director of health services, Beverlee Myers, is before Senate Rules Committee for confirmation of her apPointment. Myers became a controversial figure after news accounts of a memo she wrote about California prepaid health plans last year, when she was on the staff or U.S. Sen Edward Kennedy, D-Mass. Critics say the memo contained ·•un- su bstaotiated allegations" against several persons, including Lt. Gov. Mervyn Dymally. CHERTKOV -Another controversial Brown appointee before Rules Committee this week is Agricultural Labor Relations Board general counsel Boren Cbertkov. Chertkov's apPointment is questioned by growers, who have voiced skepticism that he might be biased in favor of labor due to his past employment as general counsel for the AFL-ClO Electrical Workers Un.ion. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ State's Top Justices Listed 'Highest Paid' BW ANNOUNCES AN ANTIQUE SHOW: BEAUTIFUL PIECES BROUGHT FROM ENGLAND IN OUR NEWEST SHIPMENT SACRAMENTO <AP> -California's top 1ustic!# .._ seven on -the Supreme Court and 56 on the appellate courts -are the highest paid in the SO states and Dis- trict of Cohlmbla, says a survey reported Sunday. The survey by Wilfried J . Kramer, member of the board of the National Conference of Appellate Court ~ alBO sbow5-that the national average ts nearly 49 opinions. He eald only five\.small states rank oelow California. His survey, r~rted in The Sacra ento UILion, sai the California Supreme Court costs taxpayers about $3.1 million a year, with Sll.9 million a year going CO the five appellate dl.strictl. was $44,724. But in California, ef- fective July 11. Chief Justice Rose B rd began receiving $70,212 a year -an increase or $3,343 over the previous year, ev~n tbou_sh the salaries of other Callfomla state employes were frozen. The other California justices began receiving $86,082, and the ap- pellate Justices $61,952. Through the epd of this month we feature small furniture, accessories, trays, tea cups, Staffordshire cottages and anusual one-at-a-kind pieces, gifts of ell kinds! See them and select from them in our Gift Gallery. WEEK FOUR, AUGUST 21-26 MORE EXCITEMENT THROUGHOUT BW . Special exhibits: 18 kt gold Italian jewelry and heirloom estate pieces; the Indian Pichwais original adaptations of mlniatun~ paintings depicting court life f t ~' ' I . I t f· • l t. ·supreme Court Justices are near the bottom ln productivi- ty with only 21 written opinions per justice per year. ~or t97rand the ftScat )tear 1976-77, the survey shows that the average state Supreme Court salary ln the 50 stat.es Ma. Bird ud .some of lh H~Uat. ~~ Justice!· waJCf thafirr ffie wake of Proposition 13, that they would not ac· cept the increase, the Union reported in lndia: a rare sea shell exhibit from the Bowers Museum.. iii=-~~§ (All below with informal modeling 11:30 to 3:30 unless note THURS-special envoy presents the Ratph Lauren coltectlon: KRAMER, WHO is also clerk of the state's 3rd District Court of Ap· peal in Sacramento, aald Man Sentenced FRESNO <AP> -A Fl'esoo Comtty man bu been sentenced to 15 yeara tn federal prllon for a convietlon of rob- bing $I08 from a bank ln Kern County. Stephen Craig Brown of Selma, ~. al~ known aa Cral1 Herrtsoo, pleaded luilty In U.S. District Court here. ca11142-1111. Put • ,.,. WOf'd9 toWOft t VICTOR B. SIEW, M.D. INTERNAL MEDICINE Anf'Wl'QS The Opening Of His Otta At Warner Vllage Mldlcal c.tw -Wte 117 10900WamwA"""9 Fountain v..,, C'.alfM*i f'DOI (79') "'-257' I Designer Sportswear FRI-Trunk show hosted by Wllroy representative; Playdeck and Townleigh Knits. And Todd Ruta presents the Norman Todd collection; BW Nowt And BW salutes night dressing in a formal fashion show of evening looks, 12:00; The Salon Fri & Sat-Envoy presents a trunk show of Nastrix watches; Fashion Jewelry. And Mabel Julianelll presents her fall collection of shoes: Salon Shoes. BU llOC~t WI lS~ I~[ NSYPORT f ASHION ISLAND .. . Orange Coat Oa•lv P1tot . Rape Case Could Unseat Rose Bird 1be cas was ~alled ~ Peol>le venus C.udlUo. n ,.oould be the cu~ lh•t unseated tM chief JU!tlee al the Catitomta Sup~m Court. The case h.ld to do -.th a man who aceotted a woman ln the el valor other: apartment bulldlfta, fatted her back into her apartment at k.nllepolnt and raped her repeatedb. Atthough she bad knJ.le "'OU.Dds on MT MCk and became Ph>' call.y di durlna ber ordeaJ, tho hl'11 eourt rejected her contcnUon that the man did her freat bodlJ)' lnjury. 'The kldnappina cbarae wu aLso rejected, on grounds that the di.stance between the elevator to the apartment was not arcat enouah to consUtute such a ch r~e. The courts.aid it could not recocruze the m~nlal and psychoJoslcal harm done duri.D.g episodH of sexual abuse as "great bodily ll\Jury." A convtct!on on such a charge carries a penalty or life imprisonment without tbe possibilll)• or parole Chief Justice Rose Blrd voted with lhat deci.slon. "Last ume I heard. the m.lnd was still part or the body," grunted arch conservative state Sen. H. L. Richardson. It was just the ammunition Richardson wanted. As organizer of and tireless worker in a well- flnanced campaign to oust Bird in the November elect.ion. he had found a new point of vulnerability in the chief j~tic~ . She had enemies to begin with. Many key figures in conservative California legal circles did not like her ap- pointment by Gov. Brown in the first place. Now those op- ponents have been joined paradoXlcally by WOl'tlen·s rights groups who view the decision as an affront to all females in the state. Even Secretary of Stale March Fong accused Justice Bird of being "disgusting" and "hypocritical" in tbe de- cision. Both occupy high-visibility positiQDs for t~' e"' sex in the liberal Brown administration. No doubt Justice Bird voted her conviction. t would have been more in a character, actually, if she ha voted for the ultimate punishment against a criminal ho had so violated a woman. But she didn't. And the right-wing forces that were against her in the first place have new allies from another direction in the November election. · nandoDI Viewpoints A Jew views on the news: Greedy landlords who took advantage of Prop. 13 lo gouge their tenants deserve the scorn heaped on them. But one explanation for rent increases despite the proper· ty tax rollback is found in this revelation by an officer in one of Southern California's largest savings and loan firms: From 95 to 99 percent of the apartment buildings purchased in the past two to tree years have had zero or negative cash flows . . . .. Comes word from Sacramento that a nine-foot Gran- ny Goose character got the red carpet treatment from Secretary of State March Fong Eu as the two launched a voter registration campaign. Mrs. Eu posed proudly with the potato chip mascot in a conference announcing that voter forms would be distributed with chips sold in the capitol area. Gov. Brown was edged into the scene. but fled in terror on spotting Granny. Webbed feet are the wrong image. * ••• The National Institute of Health reports that some low-tar cigarettes are safe enough to permit smokers to put away a pack a day "without apparent risk." The tobacco industry, elated. orders major campaigns pro- moting the "safe" brands. Elation is somewhat negated by a scientist in the field who says the truly dedicated smoker -the one who finds it really hard to quit --won't be able to stay with the brands that have such low tar content because they also have a very low taste content. •••• Is it lack of originality or is the target inescapable? Five of the last cartoons submitted by the Daily Pilot's four editorial page cartoonists have dealt with the slip-ping image of President carter. • Opinions e)(pressed In the space abOve are those of the Daily Pilot. Other v1ewfl expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment Is invited. Address The Daily Pilot. P 0 . Box 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321. Boyd/ Gestures By L.M. BOYD As previously reported, those who read sJgnilicance Into physical gestures claim a man who repeatedly -stJ-.ai1hteos~ Ue.in.1he pres- •lalale. cmnpauioo tbe au re or a amorous activity. Now a client asks, "How does a woman indicate by gesture the same sort of desire?" Most typically. say these ex- Dear Gloomy Gus Who'• feel1ng sorry for Geor1e AJlen? After all, lbe Rams will be P•Y· Ing him full 1alary for 2~ more yean -for dolna nothtn1. lf be waot.s. S.T. P. perts, sbe tousles, fluffs or otherwise ficdles with her hair. Tb at dessert preferred most by the Greenland Eskimos is watermelon im- ported from Israel. Q. "Whal are my statistical chances of survlv· Ing a car wreck?" A. At 71 m.p.b., one to one. Al 51 to 60 m .p.b., 31 to one. At 40 m.p.b., 97 to ooe. Q. "Why were German submarines called ·u boats'?" A. For · 'unterseeboot' • meaning ''uoderseaboat." Q. "What's a 'dactylo- gram'?" A. A fmgerprinl. Only about one out ot three of the caves In this counlr)' has been explored. .. I Jack Anderson :. Forest HerbiCide Hazard Cited w ASHJNOTON -Not Iona a10. ab an1ry Minnesota bom•ttuder Damed Harmon Seater look a 1bot at a b lteolMI' that*•• 1prayln& the forHl near hl1 farm. The berblctde wu almUar to ~T. wbleh haa been UMd routlnely on th oat.Ion '1 fleldl and forests for30yean. But S.avttr claimed hla family bad aufftted headaches, nausea, dlutness and diarrhea arter tbe aprayln• H~ was acquitted o t a I I criminal Charan br • Jury wh ch ruled he was merely acting in defense of his home and property. As part of our continuing re- ports on the poisoning of America, we have written bow toxic pesticides and herbicides are seeping Into the air we breathe and the water we drink. We wrote Jest April about 24.s-T, wblch the Forest Service uses to kill forest brush. BOTH THE government and the chemical industry thought lhis herbicide was safe. But a growing stack of scientific re- ports indicates that a deadly im· purity in the herbicide, calJed TCDD (dioxin>. can cause sick· ness and birth defects in people expGSed to the spray. Citizens like Harmon Seaver, with homes downwind from sprayed forests, are complain- ing of fevers, rashes, intense belly aches and general ill health after the breezes pick up a whiff of 245-T. The Environmental Protection Agency has responded to the com plaints by placing 245-T on a danger list of suspect chemicals. We have also examined disturb- ing new reports from Oregon. which indicate eight young women exposed to the herbicide are having miscarriages al tri· pie the national rate. Earl Waters IN THE PAST four )'ears. they have repolUd to mlecarria1es . and 13 hoalthy blrthl. The abor· tionf ... .C~lns to the women's awom afftdavtts. always c~ wlthil\ a few week.a after they were expoeed to 2.U-T These reports dovetaU with laboratory evidence that ln· dlcate minute traces of the TCDO lmpUrity can cause mis· CIM'i.,M and birth defects in laboratory animals. For the paat 11 years. Dr. James Allen ot the University of Wlacoum hai conducted ellperi· meob oo tM effects of TCDD on rhe1u1 monkeys . Three monkeys. fed tiny morsels of TCDD. became preanant. But two ef the trio had mlscarrtaees. "We have not yet found a dose in non·human primates whlcb ls not toxic," Or. Allen has report· ed erlmly. A spokesman for the National Forest Products Aissoclation said that ~T is an "absolutely sate. absolutely essential .. chemical for the Umber ln-dus try. ··we haven'\ seen anytbl.DS that convinces us 245-T ls responsible ... he aaid. (or lhe ill etfects that have been re- ported. BUT THE Food and Drug Ad· miniatraUon warns lhal dioxin is "100.000 to a million times more potent" than the notorious drug thalidomide. which caused widespread birth defects in Europe. According to science re· searchers at tbe Library o( Congress. one medicine drop of dioxin bas the potential to kill 1.200 people. The dioxin impuri- t)' can enter the human body through the skin or can be in· haled. We contacted Dow Chemical. the sole manufacturer or 245-T, for a corporate response. Dow's environmentaJ research direc- tor. Or. Etcyl Blair. saad be did not think the women's com- platnts were Justified. "I ha~ no reason to belleve. ii MS-T used the way that il i5 planned . . . there WOUid be any problem with tt. •• But Dr. Blair said he was aot familiar with the .. particular ca~" of the Oregon women. He blasted the Wisconsin monk_~y studies as being ··very suspect.·· Despite Dow's vigorous 4e· fense of 2'5-T. press~ is &row· ang on the Environmental' Protection Agency to ban its use The argument has been raised that the public should not be exposed to 245-T a5 long as there is any ·reasonable doubt about its safety. But EPA in· side rs told our reporter. J . Todd Weber. that the industry would take the case to court and would probably wtn the dectsion if the government moved prematurely to ban the chemical. There's Better Way to Run Grand Juries A format for grand juries which could go a long way toward reducing inefficiencies and waste in local government has been launched in Sacramen· to County. Conceived as a watchdog of Jocal government. the grand jury in prac· tice ha s generally been ineffec- tive in carry- ing out its function. This is largely beeause il is composed of members lacking in ex- perience in the ways of govern- ment and ls often dominated by a district attorney who uses it principally as a tool to bring in criminal indictments. In some counties the grand juries spend aJmosl all of their time considering evidence in criminal matters. When the juries do get into their watchdog roles it usually concerns only county government. Even then Art Hoppe the direction is not one of general review but rather con- centrated on specifics mapped out by the district attorney. BUT ntE grand jury, because it stands as the only official arm of the people with authority to investigate the conduct or local government, has vast powers. It can delve into not only county government but into cities and school and special districts. It has ample authority to subpoena witnesses, demand books and reeords. and engage auditors, in- vestigators and whatever other staff it needs. ll can also require the attorney general to assist in its investigations. Whal makes the Sacramento County Grand Jury difterent this year is the appointment of a foreman well versed in the powers of the grand jury and with wide experience In govern- ment. He is Ardell Watlen, an outspoken World War fl veteran who is at the peak of his career in stale government as an analyst for the Department of Finance. He has spent years fer- • I . , reling out governmental weak- nesses al the state level. WALLEN SEES in his grand Jury role the opportunity lo bring about some long overdue changes in local government in the interest of economy and effi- ciency and "just to improve things." Ignoring the usual ten· dency or grand juries to confine themselves to county govern- ment, Wallen has zeroed in on city government. He bas announced the jury will spend little time on criminal matters. "I Intend to make the district attorney do his own work ... Wallen said. "The grand jury should not be h.is rubber stamp; I don't want the jury hamstrung by a lot of busywork. Instead I hope we can get into the meat and potatoes of government operations and point out better ways of doing business ... CITING a basic weakness or grand juries -the mann~r they disclose their findings. Wallen said he will not wait until the ~nd of the term to issue a report. "In the past, such reports have not been filed until just before the jurors go out of office. The resuJt is lhe report gets momentary headlines and is promptly forgoUen. I will issue reports as we go along while we ·are still around to prod officials into taking action on the recom· mendations ... Wallen is realistic. He knows grand junes have no power to order cham?es but be also knows public pressure can compel them. By releasing the reports piecemeal he feels each point will get wider attention rather than being buried in an all in- c lus1 ve report at the year's end. Whether Wallen's term as a grand Jury foreman results in measurable success in reform- ing local government or not. he 1s dehrut.ely pointing the way in which people can get better con- trol over city and special district governments. There is not.bing more con- ducive to good government than shining the sun on the records. Woody Allen Has ·What It Takes to Be a Hero The seeds for radical change magazines as Newsweek. Overnight. as was its wont. America had created a new na· tlonal hero. But never had it created an odder one. Here wa.s a 42·year·o1d comedian from Flat- bush who pro- jected the im· age of a shy, gentle. fumbl- ing. sweetly runny. tncredlbly scruffy incompetent. who was Incapable of dealing with tht com plexitJes or modern Ufe or mastering hls more virile ftllows. Vet here aoo was a man who had achieved fame. riches and the adoration or beautiful women who pursued him every· where. driven by longing to comb, CWT)', pcl, cuddle o'r God- knows·wh&t him. lo truth. THE FIRST small sign of social change was an ad in the June issue of Six Oun Western. It showed a tall, square·Jawed. heavily muscled bully standing alone on a beach and wearing a hang.dog expression. In the fore· ground was a scrawny little fellow with glasses. He was sur- rounded by young maJdens ln blklnls. . • "I used to go around kicking sand In guya• faces." the latter was saytna. "But after only alx weeks in the Woody Allen Nice- ness Tralnina Course, 1 am to- day a 97·pound weakllna." Acroaa th~ land, American males threw out their Drut, their paddded 1houlder11 and their Man Tan. Elevator shoea were &till popular, but only the kind that lowered you to make you appear aborter. Croquet. ~placed football In the naUon'• Uvlne room1. The Hell's Angels renounced motorcycles for one-speed bicycles with un-needed but lttgit~l~~Mn~~ ~-New-Yoric.~ the doors for passengers. ul even offered to help elderly women carrying any thing larger than a steamer trunk. ACROSS THE land . American males no longer vied to beat. clobber. stun. humble. tear apart or kick sand in the eyes of each other in order to as- sert their masculinity. For the first time In human memory, machismo was out. Niceness was in. This drastic cultural change affected not only the economy <the sale, for example. of horn· rtm med glasses to men with 20·20 vision soared u American males strove to achieve the ntw "Koala Bear Look" I. but th~ political system as well To no one's surprise. the vtc· tor In tho 1980 Presidential elcc Uon was Hector Goodbody, a 44-year-old usher al a drtvt·ln movie who had achieved lame T fact. he delivered his lnaugur8.I Address through a crack in the door or a White House closet and. was never seen again. CONGRESS didn't want lo bother anyone, nor did the IRS. the FBI or the Bureau of Cups and Saucers. So. ror the first time In half a century. the Gov· ernment left the people more or less alone to do what they wanted. What thty want~ to do was bf nlce -the men because they no longer needed to prove tbetr manlln<'SS and the womer. because they never had relt l}Qjt need In th first place. OC course, America. having lost its matho drive. was no longer the stronge'lt . most powerfu.I nation In the world But It was the very ni~st Aod this made ll lbe very nlceSl place tn which to Jave. , I I " ' • I , . • . ' i .ORANGE COUNTY I POLmcs I OBITUARIES Moltdly, AugUlt 21 . 1978 DAILY PU.OT A 7 QUEENIE Hopefuls· Backed PUBUC NOTICE PUllUC NOTICE Manhall Group Eni/Onea COnlova By O.C. HlJ ING8 ................... Tbree Oranae County office attk•r•, lncludln1 two In non-patttaan elecUona, &ave a.nnowiced venous and aundry endonem~ll. Auembl.yman Ron Cordova, D·El Toro, who'• runnlni for the *h State , Senate aeat betna v•c•ted by ln~um­ be.ot Dennil Carpenter, says he ha• the bu~ ot the Ma.r1bala ~iAll· Uon ol CaJllornJa. Two Police aroups. tho Santa AM PolJce Benevoltnl Aa&oclatioa and tbe Plaefftta Police Oftlcers As· aoclaUot\. are reported to be bacld.na Lauren Rusk. who'• seek.Ina to un- seat Brad Ga.tM aa Ora.nee County 1herltf-eoroner ty to JIC)ltpone t.beir to percent pa)' ralaea. 1be Senate rejected the bill 20-17. Paul Carpenter, 1).Santa Ana, vot· ed tor the amendment. while Dennis Carpenter, R-Newport Beach. voted nay. Sen. John BrillCI· R·Full..-ton, d.ldn 't vote on that one. • • • CANDIDATES FOa THa!!E le1i1laUve offices from Orange Coun- ty have been lnvlled to speak at a Legislators' DQ Program at noon Sept. 14. VICE CHANCELLOR Dr. John Whiteley Hy~ ..... ,.. WHl lO IUICh buiJball• Ttt.y'tt~ Cot OM • rau cm the play-by~. GM maa ®'DI the color, and 1rie man hlndJLna U. clicM. .. And Lee Branch. who's hopift& to be elected to the county recorder job he now ftlla oo appolntment. bu an- nounced that be l! supported by the Republican Club of Lelsure Wotld. Tbe $6-per-person event will be held at ffwit.lngton Beach Inn, 21112 P1tcific Coast Highway. Reservatk>n.s can ~ made before Sept. 8 by send· Ina checks to 18582 Beach Blvd .. Su1te 224, ffWltington Beach. Tickets will be held at the door. Whi~ky Promoted At lroirw For the Record • • * THE ~EULY RAS approved and sent back to the Senate ror ·ap· proval of amendments a bill by Senator Dennis Carpenter, ft. The Orange County Coast Aasocia· tion is sponsoring the event. Speakers will include 36th Senate District rivals John Schmib and Ron Cordova. • . Also to speak will be Republican SMl'TM-'f'VTHIU,.l • Ml MOUUAaY WISTCUff CHAP& 427 E 17th St. eo.taMesa tMM888 '9Cl•OTNMS wnt'S MOnUAlf 827 Main St. Hun~~eacn SHU I A MOITUAIY 976 So. Coast HwY Laguna Beaoh ·'494-1535 t 633 N. El Cammo Real San Oemente <492-0100 .... , ..... l., COU>M.A.L fUMllAl Moe. 7801 Bolsa Ave Westmmst81' 893-3525 3600l"ilclfiC View Dnve Newcort Beach 644-2700 McCOl...cl MOllTUAlllS Laguna Beach .. 94-9415 L8Quna Hiiia 768-0933 San Juan C&piatrano <495-1776 HAUOILAWM. MOUMl'OUYI MOITUAIY_, ~,AU Mott~meterv erematorr 1825 Gisler Ave. Colt• Mesa 5-40-555<t IALTZ ... OM N•A&tfo.. ~424 Co.t•Mela t 87~!50 _. ..... llO.t.DWAY .. ~y 110~ ea.a ...... MM180 Deatlu ElBewhe,, LONDON CAP> -Sir Mn Mallowaa, 74, one of Britain 's great archaeologists and former husband of the late thriller writer Dame Agatha Christie, cJied Saturday at his Ox· fordshire home, his Lon· don publishers an· nounced. Sir Max mar· ried Agatha Christie in 1930 after they met while he was excavating an ancient site in tlie Middle East. LOS ANGELES <AP> Lloyd Perrin, 56. anchorman for KNX radio in Los Angeles, died Saturday night in has sleep at his Van Nuys home, a station spokesman said Sunday. He broadcast from late night till dawn on the CBS affiliate. Newport Beach. SB 2127 would make anyone wbo disregards school sa!et.y patrol in· structtona guilty or an inlractioa, Marian Bergeson and Democrat Dr. John M. Whiteley John C. Harrison who are running in of Irvine, dean of stu- tbe 74th Assembly District, and As· dents at UC Irvine. has THu.ou,:~.:,.<Ht•woa ir1CT1nousaus1Ness. PUBUC NOTICE semblyman Dennis Mangers. D· been •rcpointed vice EU•t• of SONIA c. WAL.LEA, N.AMESTATllMSNT ff t. gton Bea h and RepubJa'can o.c .. Mtd. Th• 10110.1119 o-r1011s .,. A1119 un In c . chancel or for student NOTICEISHl!ltHVGIVENtotttt tlldAMnat: Charles Gibson. foes in tbe 73rd As-affairs at UCI. cnc11iwsot1t1t..,._...~-t CINNAMON cituic. u. wn1 Sembly District. Illa! •II ...-nt "-"111l<l•I-eo-l1t1t """Street, CosleNIHe/'CAmV I ... s.ld dKHtllt -rwQUll'td Co II.. Sll•r°" IC•Y Spr'9g, f1t Tr.lloft • • * He succeeds John c. tMm, "'"'' ltlenec.e_., _,,.'I, l1t W•v. Cotl•Mese.CAt2'» with a f.ine or $50 to $250. • • • ASSEMBLYMAN RON Cordova, D·El Toro, combined bis birthday celebration with a fund-raiser Sun· day at the home or John and Joanne Carson. 2921 Setting Sun Drive, . AN AMERICAN Civil Liberties Hoy who resigned last 111eott1cetD1111ec1etttot"'9eoow-•oei.rt 1E1Us Spri9I. ,,. Trt11tofl -llled c_,, •to,._ 1tiem, with W•v.Cott.Meloa,CAm» Union fund-raiser will be held Sept. spring to become ex-111e .,.<"""' _...,.,, to 111e -. "'" °"'1-•scondUCt.d 1>y • "" 3. in Emerald Bay in conjunction eculive director of the dtf'sltNCI • .-Wllillk't 111vc1 •• Lot 01vld!N1 ~i.s, Clllltonli•. wtll<ll I• Ille plec.. ~It s.w19' with the drive to defeat Proposition 6, New England Board of ol ""'"-.t Of Ille ~ '" •If Tllis ,....,,_, -tllect wltll tlle Corona del Mar. the John Briggs-sponsored plan to Higher Education. m•tttn~ne10111eni.1ufs.Jil ColMly Clet1! of 0r.,. 0-tr Oft bar homosexuals from teachin$C. ~-:=~r!"~";:'l:•'-'t"-A.,..i, im ..,.... The event will cost $7.50 for adults IN ANNOUNCING the 0.1.o~:':~'!N~~! A.:~.'~~,~~710..sc o.itr "'roe. and SS for students. Refreshments appointment ucr Chan· EllilaMtollheWlllof 1'~1· For the record, Cordova is 32. • • • ORANGE COUNTY'S two state senators named Carpenter disagreed on a constitutional amendment that would have given legislators autbori· will be served. cellor DanJel G. Aldrich o&vio~i:-=.":""Oecedeft' l f U be bt · ed b J r . • .s a id t b at Dr . un11i.Mre ...,.,, w.. nc n orma on can (I am Y Whiteley will oversee ~~~..,, P'tcnnounuS1NHt- PUBUC NOTICE callin2973-0344. campus counseling 'lnw..v1.,.,,.,. NAMISTATWMeNT Pul>lllhect Or~ Coast Dally Piiot, TM lol-•nv --IS dOlng !Mm-s er v l c es. he a Ith Auovs12r.21enc1~~4• 11.1'7• MSus. UC/ Med Center Seeking Scanners Ph13icians at UC! Medical Center have failed to convince locaJ health planners that they need to buy two diagnostic scanners to assist in treating patients and teaching students. A commlttee of the Orange County Health Planning Council. instead, is recommending that UCI be allowed to buy just one scanner for uae ln diagnosing head Injuries and problems. UCI officials are hoping the full council nut week will endorse the hospital's plan to buy both a head and full body scanner at a cost of St.4 million. WITHOUT THE EQUIPMENT, UCI officials contend, student training and research suffers and patient care is seriously compromised. The final decision on UCI's purchase plans will be made by state health officials after they bold bearings of their own. The health council staff reported the county already has too many scanners for efficient and economical use, with 15 currently operating at various hoepitals. THE SCANNERS RELY ON X-r~s and a computer to diagnose health problems. The equipment ts said to be superior to regular X·rays *auae tt not only examines bone structure but explores tluue and aids in detecting tumors. tumora. Medical Center San Diego Eyes Fee services, student pro-..OU.7• MARLO~ COUNSELING, 304~~ E -----------18all>Ot 11..cl., BAiboa, C.IHomt•tM• grams, learning skills. PUBUC NOTICE P11,1111 .....,. 1tube1c.oe, JCM~ £. student orientation and -----------·••1t>0t eivct. eett>oe, c.111om1ati..1 the Orfl. -of fm' anc1' al NOTla TO CltEDITOltS Tftl\ bvMMSS Is <-..Clect l>y ... In· "~ SUl'EltlOlt COURT 01' THIE ctMctu•L aid. housing, career STAT•O~CAUl'OltNIAl'Olt PllylllS.JffftRutNIC.O. Plannl. ng and placement, THI COUNTY oir OttANoe T111\ ,,.,_, •es mec1 *"" ,,,. NO. A-"251 County C'*'" of O.enot C.O..nty on F Lib relations with schools E•l•I• of EVELYN w FRANCIS, AuguU 10. rm. or rary and C~Jleges and t.he De:~~~E IS HERE8V GIVEN to IM PuCHosh<l<I 0t•'91 eo.\I 0•11~~~1t~ educational opportunity crtHlflon o1 t"8 above,,."*' cte~t AUQu\1 ''· ,,, ?8-s.111, •.me SAN DIEGO (AP) -program. 111a1•1111tr10RS1M1 .. 111qc1•1m•eo11nst ~t.1M IN wlct ~ •n ,_Ir.ct to Ill• I~ the city enacts a S6 Or Whiteley J"oined tfte<n, ••t" t,,. N<nwrv •ou<11ers. 1n I b rd fee San ,,,. o111c~ of 111e cter1t ot ,,,. •bo•t •n '· rary .ca . the UCI administration tltltct cour1, Ol IOprnenl lllem, wltll NOTltaTOC••DITOltS Diego . will ~ the only in 1972 as dean of stu· .,,. Meus.•y .. ouc11e". to '"" ..,. suP11tt01tCOU•TOFTHE municipality m America . d••slond •t 11 Emt>erudero. STATIOflCAU~NrA l'Ott that Charges its citizens dents. Before coming .to o.~1 • ...,,c.i1forn4•,w111<"1'c11e111•c• TN•COUMTYoflo1tAN01E · bo k UCI he served as ass1s· o11>.n111tu o1it-.-t10Mct1 .. •" NO.~ for bo.rtO~lng 0 S, lant Vl·ce Chancellor Of m•tt•r,,_,,..nlf\91o!Mttteteofw.d E\lalt of HENAIETT4 HYSICELL Says Ll. branan L . Ren· student se ..... "ces and as-cteuc1en1, •1t111n '°"' rnon111, et~ tM .-. MARY HENRIETTA HYS1<E1.1. • • y 1 11"1 wl>HUlllon ol ttM• notlc• Oteu'9d netb Wtlson. •1'stant lo the chancellor O•lecl Auoust•. 1'1' NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN.., Ille "' Rolleft M Fra1t<t• c•.Olt« ...... , .. ~ ,,_ dlK-1 Wilson noted that at Washington Universi-E.--o1.,,.w11101 • 111e1.11 _.....,iftQc1a1ms_.nst th it' St Lo · Ille_,....... Oeuotnl I,,. wkl --required Lo me man Y 0 er C I e S ty in . WS. ltOlllEllT T. NAltHUGH rrwm. wllll 1t1e ~ ¥OU<lwr$,"' charge non -resident fees -;;::;:=.;;;;;~:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;111 IEll'tN~w.st. • •• 111e °'"<•of 1,. <te.l of 1,,. •bo,,. ....,. but none Charge resj. J Oft!MW, ~...., lllleo <OUr1, OT lo cwewnt lllem, w1tn ftlM~Al UTA Ttt:l41Jl~~ Ille ,,.<eswo .. ouclle", ro CM un· dents. '"""'~' Anen.ey ter E-....r o.rslon.o •I 6111 HOllrwood Blvd . All OlJCHTDllJ(f PulHIS,,.cl O.•~ Co•U D•llv Hollyw-. C.lll001i•. wlllcll ,. Ill• Last month, the City Pltot. •1191111u,21. 1'Mld *' •. ,.,, 111..:. o1 t>wness o1 ,,,. -MgMcl •n Council approved a $6 ,,_ ~ Ledwe ~ •II m•lt.ers Ptr1einono lo 1114! ftUIW Of h I hwy We& IJ -ft e,. selct cteo<1en1, wllMn lour monlht library card fee w en t T..M. c..Nr. • PUBLIC NOTICE •ll•r ,,.. "'" Pullllc•hon OI '"'' adopted the library's ..._, .s.. •~ "°''o 9 bud et tendl. ng l 1651 C...t ""-J• --.--NOTICS TO Cll•DITOIH Daleo ... llQUSI I, lt19 197 g • COD ,.,. lillfo. 4ff-Z7lf SUl'HIOllCOURTOf'TH• P•Jrkl• Travo• the fees are needed to STAT•°" CALll'ORNIA l'OR ElecUlrl.Ofl~ Wiii Of Support city services in THll COUNTY ol' OltANo~ 111e -~ nemtci 0ececi.n1 NO. A"'5M JIESSIE MILLIER the wake of Proposillon E u•r• 01 RoeERT JAM ES onH011r-•1w.,s1H1• 13 MIT c H E LL ••• ROBERT .J. Hollrwooo, C.llfw"4•t01211 • Ml TCHELL. Oe<a.-ct. T .. : 121Jl .... ,,., T h C a I . ( ' a NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lo IM Atl-y lw •JMClltrla e I 0 r n I crectlto" of Ille .oove named de<ecte11t Pul>llshecl Oranve Coa\t 0<11lv P110I. Library Services Act. t"4t•llPtnOnstiavinq<1•1mt•o••ns1 11uous111,11.?8enc1Sl!p1 •,1911 p a s s e d b y t h e 1111 ••let clKecltl'lt .,. required lo Ill• ~,. Chem. •1111 ti. -v _,,.n, In Legislature, expressly ,,. owe• o1 n.. c..,,. Of c11e • .,.,,,. •n prohibits Charging teSi· llllect court,« IO prewnt ltltm •1111 dents for library USe, tflt M CUSM .. VOU<lle", IO Ille un lt441U ctt"lqMd at i)S City p-...... W•at. NOTra TO Clll DITOtlS Wilson said. But the un-O••noe. c.i11or111•. '""''" 1• ,,.. p1~• suP1E1tr011 COURT OI' '"' d t · · ol bvtontts ol tne unctu~onect In •II PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE answere QUeS lOn IS m•ttuSPtt\MnlllQtOlllent•teofwkl STAT&OFCALll'OtlNIAl'ORTHE VOllDlleers Sought whether charter cities o.cec1tn1, ••llll•n '°"' "'°"t"' •ff•• 1,,. THI c:ou,::~::=,:ftANOe SU Ch 8S San Diego are 11''1 llUllll~lon ol lllls nollce In 111• M•llu ot the Esl•le 01 O•lect AUIJIAI II, 1'1• HERBERT SA LAMONT, •Ito It,_,. covered by the acl BLACKWELL'S ~1,..£ Mllc,,.o .. HERBERT suGAR At.LEN Orientation sessions will be held Thursday for Wilson said he is seek· ~~.:'.:.=s~:,.n, '-",,,~~<~1.,°:;::'9,.,.n 10 crettitors ing alternative ways to .&.PPLI .&.NCE 1111u" DOSTAL "•••no ,1.,~ ~·nst ,,,. wict ct«•· people Interested in volunteering at UC Irvine raise money A A • ,.,.,.."-' c..r,.w~ c1oon1 10 111e .. .., e1 •• ...,, ,,, 111e o1110 01 Medl·cal~-terin0range. . C-dr'"'-2 t-. MS City "-•YW..I riw uer~ of IM .i0tf'...a1ct court or to VC'll ....,..~-_., "' Ot•"'•· ~ n'6e pr-wnl ll>tm to Ille uncttrsiQnect •I Ille Reservations can be made by calling 634-5541. Tel: IJS-"24 Olll(t ol NORMAN RASMUSSEN. · •·"'11 be h Id A i d also Sept W nk N ed GARBAGE Attw.e' * a..c.tn.1 R•msey •net Rawnuuen, U4 W Oc:Hn The sessions WI e ug. an on . e e am . Pul>llSllect °' ... C:O.sl 0.llV PUol lll•d . Suite 1703, LOnQ 8Ncll. C4 12 from 1 to a p.m. in Bwlding . Classroom Bat AUQU<l21,2'-s.pte ...... ,., II "'' tOIO?, wll•c.lllMleroffkelsti..oreuol the m,.,.'cal center. p J DISPOSAL ________ 404_~_,, 1>us111tu °' ,.,. """-'"'9"ect •n •" m•1· ,.;\Al To Bar ane [ ,.,\ pe11 .. 111ne 10 Ylcl eslat•. s..r. .. Volunteer opportanlties include positions in PUBLIC NOTICE c1•1ms w1111 111e nec~rv vouc~ h d. tn"cs mental health R-W·&Sales muslbellllclOl'twewlllecl•$•IOttWld COLUMBUS, Ohio t e emergency room. pe 1a • • William F. Wenke of ....-----•. -M11t------1 .. 11h1n rour month• •lier 1,,. ur\1 <A p > -c. WlllhlD interpreter service, gift and thrift shops, book cart Santa Ana has been ai.c. ttll NOTiceTOc•eoiT0tts puD11u11ono1c111sno(1cc . f d l uid If(). ..._.~ Oatect 4UO-'· 1'11 O'Nelll, chief justice 0 an our g es. elected to the California suPHlo-tCOORTOl'THa HenryS..r the Ohio Supreme Court ard •All.,... STATE°" c:AL1l'01tH1• FOR e.ec111oro1111t•111 I O"'' t M6 l 1FJ:•11 R • Bar bo of governors •Al..._... TNIECOUNTYOtJOHNoa otse1ctc11Kacttn1 and the On y wOan O ''.J08 eTnS ,,, .,, ernai. n for a t ·Year term • C.......-cW 111 111• M•Uer ol Ille hlet• ot NOlllMAN lltASMUSSIN bold top positions in the beginn g pt. 13. • 0....-.C f'RANC&S HARTMAN ICINC, ••• All•r1teyetuw S tate's ,.xecutive, NEW DELHI, India <AP) -Thousands of FRANCESH 1(1Mo •k• FRANCES "•110•rM1•.a--,. th · ilgri lo Wen ho was 1971 N. KrNo. o.cnte0. · ;:,:;~ .. ,. 1'""· legislative and judjcial Moslems from India who made ear P mage presiden the Orange 119 5 B • tol Notl<• ,, nereoV 0 1.,"' 10 tr.011on 1..,..a.~11,CA.., branches died Sunday Mecca are staying In.Saudi Arabia lo work ln oil County B r A•eociatlon, • ns llavl119 cl•llM •lnlt I ... telcl cteC~· Publlsl!ect Or_t19 C:O.st O.llr Piiaf, Of an app'arent heart at-fields, {...tian offi~fals anno. unced. ~ """ Santa .&.na cttn110 "'*...., c1.im1 1!' 111e offlG• 01 AUQ u .11. ,., s.ot •. m1 '"' s di bi .defeated l-1 J Cru "' Ille tl ... M of IN •for"'9tcl courl or lo JO~H• tack :·O 'Nei1l was Ofl8,00Q·lndans.who~ntto au ~a a.as~ S ~Pa ; th 543-SOOS pre1tnt11>emto111e1H1cten1onect •11~ chairman of the Na· pilgrims last year, 7,000 failed to return. ndlan of· ~!at. an a a or •••••-•••-_. r.•;:1,:i:~:~:.. ~:c:r~'~:,';0:~~ PUBUC NOTICE lion al Conference of ·ftcials said. '°'°2, w111c111.tt..-Off1u1,,,,.P1eceo1 Chief Justices. ------------------------------------------..----. buslneU ot tlleuncten'OMct If\ all m•I GUTHRIE CENTER, Iowa IAP) -Claarlle Nelson, a former mayor of Guthrie Center who was reputed to be low a 's olde~l r.esiden~ -die.cl . .._ __ _ ~ ·.._.._;; .. _ G-u ' ftll. c AP> -1ohn Flscller, 68, former editor or Harper's MaHzine. died Friday . A former Rhodes scholar, Fisher became editor of Harper's book division In 1947 and six years later became edltor-ln· chief, a post be held un· tU 1968. SALT LAKE CITY <AP> -Mormon Apo . tle ~lbert L. S&.pley, 81, a former Arizona businessman, died Saturday or a cardiac orrett while walkit11 near his home, a church spokesman said. LOS ANGELES (APl -.lea• At .. r, 85, a allenl 1creeu actrHt who bee•tn• Rudo)pb VaJenLlno'• rtm wife, dJed Wednelday a1 tbt Klng1 Cerpeta. ~28 Fet'dowsl AYa.. T.r.an. Iran We have been instructed by the above. and otherl. to recover all various cnarvea. lreiaht, duty lnturara . etc.. and to Houldate •O blll" ol n,,. hand knon.d Pet11an and Orient• ruga oonatstlno of fiM t111<9 end wools. We will aell eech 1>1ece indlllfdutlty, tlllN ranoe from 2 x 2to 18x 12. Auctioneers note: Thi• I• • once In a lifetime <>PPortunlty to purchaae •uch • l.wge NtectlOn of Oriental l\lgt. Thia .uctlon lhOuld not b9 mltaed. AUC1'IOM WILL •H&D W•t'ISDAY. AU.UST JJ AT MO •.M. ....... : fl HOL9AY• IOU1M M 1llOOM JUHLAP.U•. LAeuNAHIU.S.~ Clt1F ...._... ....., .... ,, .... ............. UCL~MedicalCmter. "-----~--------------------_,. t Particular People Select JOHNSON & SON Home of tbe "Golden Touch" "Courteous salesman. pltaaant surroundings. excellent 11rvrce". David Dostal ... .,port hactt, C1HI. Or1n91t CouMv'• OldMt Llnooln Mercury DMltr .JOHNSON a SON ~ [it , I 2626 Harbor Blvd • Costa Mess • 540·5630 I ren oe11elftf11Q 10 Mtct "'~'• Suell clelms wltll l1le _..,,. .. oucllot" mun be tllect • pr~ect •t atortwlct •llllln tour montllt altar '"-llrsl !NOllUUon of ltllS llO(feo. 0.IM A-' 10. li79 OIMie. _,,_ H••nt-111 IElllQMr oo ... Wiii of Mid o.c.dirnt '•"A. SMlnt cmn ..... PUBUC NOTICE "CTITIOUS IUSINHS NAMIESTATIEM8NT The tollooiri!IQ ""°" I• dOlfl9 ~· ....... SOUTH COAST 0£SIGH GROUP. 4602 CNrl'Odl, 1n.1ne, C.llfornl• mu Ao .. .-1 "''""" W•tkl•1, .... Olart•oO. 1,.,,ne, C.llloml• tVl4 fllls bvstness l.s ~ t>y Ml Ill· c11 .. 1c111.1 Aallltt A. W•ttlM ™' st.i-t ., .. ''*' wtu. Ille 'CiiOliify OtrnfClr .. OiuMt .. Jvfy" . ..,.,_ PUBUC NOTICE 'I . [ • ,. 8eries Under Way lbree &eedinl rOund . The wlnnen in the aeedlg round wlU mett tbe loeen 1..., ln tM week In the com- oeUtloJt round• The re1au1 la acbeduJed t.hrouah Thursday. Tb ~of Wal match raclna ch1mplon1hi p 11 one of HveraJ USYftU ehamplon1hlp1 wbieh ln· voJv~ enU1el from Heh or Uw el,ht areaa. Otben are the Sean Cup or BOATING Slll••erlllg s ....... 8 ... le BOATING Got c; probWrr. Tl'tr: wii1t tu l'ot Oltnn f'W 1L·1U cad rt'd lQJM' ~tllnfl 1he-a!UWf'?c ona OCllOn ~., rirt'd 10 'olut M#qtdllf't in oovtrr.rienl and l>t1Ain«':r1 A.foal yo&1r qwsi~ re; Pat ~nr '" \'oor .~rtnC't' ~ COQJI Dot111 PllOI ~Ci &OJ i s&! (O!!IO Alf'«l. CA 91626 AJ m411)1 lttltH Cl,) p<)IS'Oft "-Ill hf• 0"'1Ut'Tt'd but phorWd mqumt-.. O' •l'tln • Mf mchm"u tlar rrodt' .~ /t4t namt addutl and bwmt'.•r 1wJur11 phonf' numbertonttot bi· COtitJdtrtd Tiu:· to4umnaweor~d4•· 'JI tzcept Sa11.mJayi wbO me~ ta.. •f'ft<'l? W1io ~&eta st'lea•ifl<'U. ly coatroned'! WJtat elw mt~b& ttne <'•"5td &'9 cure. aJMI wtlo madt tbt di•fDOele. ! · • Junlora, the Adams Cup ror wom n. the Mallory CUp ror men and the ..:. .,...; O'D•Y Cup for 1tnalehandera. t..JllM'efarruner DF.:AR PAT: Last year about tbls time )'OU publlsbed a recipe for homemade sanarta wlne. I've used It many times and we enjoy It. bu\ J mis- placed the clipping from your colwnn. Would you please repeat the recipe? J.J .. Mission Vlejo Some pttyalHA coadtUoa..~ lt•n mHHrable ti: leas. fat'b aa .... mla or t.wef'. Otbe r tlalmed d · feds are subJedl\'t and llOl·mtasurabte, sutlt •• "mott eaero:· or ·•reel better:· Wbett l'lalms 10f the effkac1 of :lJlrtkuJai dietary t'hH«ie ao; b1Hd oa clalma oon · meanrabw ff ft&, <'M• tloD la lndkated. Conteetant.a In the Prince of Wal Two.um winner Ed Trevelyu, with Jamn Mt.Arthur and Rod Davis u c,..... ls out to retum lbe lropby to lt.a current hold r. Cof"Ol'lado Yticht Club of San Dt~IO for lbe thJrd and the yacht clubl and a,..a, they IF~no ""••.,. repretent: WC.. aa .I. ·........., Tbls recipe Is from •'Tbe New McCalJ'1 Cookbook." It calla for l 'i'a CQPll Spaalab Nd wlDe. 1 to z tablespoon1 sugar, 'i'a allced oraqe. 2 table· spoons Cointreau, 2 tablespoou brandy, l boUle <t oa.) cbllled club soda. CoJllbtne wine ud sqar In a pttcber. Stir antU 1u1ar dluolvet. Add oraa1e sltcet. Oolntreau and brudy. Add soda ud sUr right before ~rvtag over Ice. TMs recipe mues •••pee GNfle• C.n1rel •F•1• tnl•bt ~ ar He v.oo the USYRU'a Area G <Callfom1a> utle in elimina· Uoo ra leadina up to the n.uaoat nnall FlasT MATCHES 1n the ladder- t.ype comp('lltion &ot under way at noon lod~ wtth a best two out or Ericson Race Winners Told Seven classes of Ericson yachts showed up at Pacific Manners Yacht Club, Marina del Rey, Saturday and Sunday for the annual championship regatta for the various classes. The regatta was sailed in light 6· 10 knot breezes. The Ericson yachts are manufactured in Costa Mesa. The winners· M<~~.P',.-.J~~=-1T~'.':cr~=i/~.~. Spirit, Don E·.M I. J\#WlyMO 0oo. Oofl A ... ms. PMVC- E·U '· 11 ... SlrNlt. G•left WHl.,,.. •• OPVC. 1, Permlu lw . W~ .. y/~0...-.UMll«-. ),Mlml8,8111WllSOI\,~. E·2'-1. 5«-. Doti llM-Mlk• ICenMOV. OPYC; 2. Fo•'I' YcfY, l«1 LO<~~»"'~~!: °f::'':z.,~:.O~p~1CftQ.2~ Fred Taylcw, UMI· le<-. J. Erk The 81 ... .Hrrv Anci.rlOfl, ~-E·,. -1. Mao-,..1. Hl<k OI•.,.-· uMttac-. 2. Gal«••· Jim Hont.uMt· .. -. J ~1.SemLOstut1er.unetta<...., E·»-1C-.1C1_,,51.-...a,u...1~. Host Yacht Tops In Bogart Race Animal Farm. sailed by Bruce Hansen of the host Voyagers Yacht Club, was the Class A winner Saturday in the sixth race of the Bogart Series for Performance Handicap Racing Fleet yachts. Class B winner was Howlin Owl. skippered by All en Stewart. VYC In a makeup race for race No. 3 on Sunday, the Class A winner was Cat ·s Pajamas, sailed by Carl Last. a nd the Class B winner was Bob Darnell's Bebo 111 from Capistrano Bay Yacht Club. Summary. RACE 4,SATUROAY Cl.ASS A 1, At11rnet F.,m ' Nuo• Too. Jrm NUQefll. eve, J. v.,,11111e. Oo<k S.WMI. LSF CL.ASS B I Howltn Owl. 2. AIOfM II, 0....., AMC!, SSVC. 3. Just Pl•on c,.,, 8..c1161M1n/Kro11e. WHI Wind vc RACE J, SUNDAY CLASS A I. een P•I•~ 1. Sir-. Johtl T •lvm, 8CYC. 3, Anlrnel F•tm CLASS 8 t. 8eOO Ill 1. W1n<1sw1tl, OeorQe Chitlfont, BVC· ), 8 r .. ker. Oou9 Ttull•. eve 'Triangle' Safe? MOSCOW <APl -The Bermuda Triangle, a patch ol Atlantir Ocean located off the eastern shore of the United States famous for ship and aircraft disasters. presents no special dangers to navigation, a Soviet scientist said. The news agency Tass quoted Viktor Neiman. a me mber of a fi ve.nation expedition studying the area, who said It is subjected lo whirlwinds which cause Increased waler speeds, but pose no great danger t.o ships Vita Vita Takes Titl,e Vita Vita. skippered by Howard Ludwig, King Harbor Yacht Club, was the wiMer of the Colum· bia Challenger national championship held at King Harbor Ya cht Club Saturday and Sunday. It was a KHYC sweep m the 17-beat fieet with second place going to Keith Angel's Minda 11, and third to Challenger. skippered by Fred Cottrell. If Old Ships Compete In Balboa Seven of the aging Rhodes·33 sloops were on hand for the annual championship regatta out of Balboa Yacht Club Saturday and Sun- day. The winner was Gayle Pos t in T h erapy , followed by Mistress. skippered by Bill Taylor and Maruja, Bob Ket· tenhofen, all of BYC. Most of the Rhodes-33s were bulll by the old South Coas t Co. or Newport Beach prior to World War II. A few were built alter the war but none has been built in recent years . The boat was designed by Phillip Rhodes of the East Coast. Among the seven en· tries in this y e ar 's championship r egatta was Rhodes No. l , who se owne r Dev Devlan sailed it here all the way from Morro Bay. 23Enter Regatta Thirty.three s k 1ppers m three classes turned out Sunday for Lido Jsle Yacht Club's All Girl Regatta. Largest class was the Sa bot C won by Betsy Ross of LIYC. Trophy winners in all three ;:lasses : LASER A & 8 01 I, Su1•n,.. S!MnQler NHYC SABOT A & 8 ' c ...... d•• Smeltzer, NHVC. 1, Crndy Beek, BVC~n ~I s"::.'~1~C"°'· NHVC, 4, ~BOT "t -"' 8etly !toss, LIVC; 1. Teri Moon. 81;.YC. J, Corey Crooll, uvc. ~L car~. Heusner. BY ecvc. S, Muir Pel,.,.,, LIVC Plans P888ed SAN FRANCISCO <APl -Plans for a $5 mill ion landscaped pro- menade between San Francisco's Ferry Building an d the Oakland-San Francisco Bay Bridge have been approved by the Bay Conservation and Developme nt Com ~ mission. Races SunJammer. s kip· pered by Mike Drade. Little Ships Fleet, was the Class A winner in both races of Huntington Harbour Yacht Club's Bolsa Chica Series 2 and 3 Saturday and Sunday. Saturday's race was over a triangular course and Sunday's race was t o Fish Harbor, Los Angeles. CLASS B WINNER on Saturday was Match Point. skippered by Phil Lupton, HHYC, and the winner on Sunday was The Force. sailed by Paul Rustigian, Seal Beach Yacht Club. For the three race series. Sunjammer was the winner of the Bolsa Chica Perpetual in Class A and Ca vi-Yacht. Bob Alberts was the Class ~ winner SATURDAY'S RACE CLASS A I. SunJ•mmer, 1. Frolic, Ed Feo, CBYC. J, Bluetierrv Muffin •• J•v Lynell. LBVC. 4 Reel a..-. <>Ill Hertv-. HHYC ' CLASS 8 -1. ~Ith Point, 1, IC•tt•v Eleone. Hu9h Wernock, HHYC, l. C.Vl·Y.cht, Bob Alber'1~. HHVC. 4. Top B•n•n•, George Moore, HHVC- SUNOAY'S RACE CLASS A -I, Sunt-mer: 1. Red B•ron; J, WOflll Del. Jen ICln, HHVC, 4, Blu.berry Muffin. CLASS 8 -'· T~ Force: 2, C.Vi· Vtcht; l. No name. 8111 l<•ltv, ~:~f 4. INr V.ce. Brown/Merr1t1. aboat z.,.. cups. • Oaneer 9rete B.,,,_ D••flf"S DEAR READERS: Waraha11 not to mJx alcobol and dnlgt or drlnkl.DI wbeD d.rlvtn1 are common. But t'omblnla& one boalettold cbemlcal wltb another can be Jut u daagerou. MJsta1 bleacb with an acid comPoUd, 1ach as a bowl cleaner, wlll produt'e deaaly cMortne 1a1. Otller polsollOWI 1ases will result from tnnoeeDtly mhllll bleachlnl agenll with hoaaebold products sach as rust remover and oven cleaner. To help prevent these unn.ecenary pol.lonia1Cs. the Kemper Insurance Companies bave pablbhed "Siient Menanee In and Around \'our Home." The booklet aids In recopldn& and p"veattng tbe misuse of bouaebold cbemlcal cleaaen. ldeatlftes poisonous planll and ll1ts aadckMs and nm aid treatments. Request up to five free copiel by wrttln&: Communications & Public Attain Department, Kemper lnsuran<'e Companies, D·l , Loag Grove, m. 60049. TestiR1011lai. 1t'orih.,lllle1 DEAR PAT · Do you know of any way a person can judge if personal case histories abou\ nutri· tional cures are really on the level~ Some of the ones I've read sound convincing, bu\ sometimes I wonder if these stories aren't just a sales lactic . J .W .. Costa Mesa Personal stories and anecdotes aboal nutrient "tures'' are orten used as evidence by nonsden· ttrlc promo&ers. Keep these questions ta mind to help e valuate these anecdotes, and t'Ontact the ad- vertiser for the answers. Was the person's diet adequate or llladequate before the ture? Was the effect measunble. or sl~ply a change in the way tbe person feels, and DEAR PAT What real dlfrtrenre. lf any. ~ there between shampoo~ lot ··dry. normal and 01~ ly " hair and what maker-bab:; stutmpoo mo~ ··gentle" than regular shampoo" A J . 1rv1~ Shampoos Jabeltd tor UH on norm•I. dry or o • ly balr att rormaJated by coatroUlna the su~n&d( or amoaot of the 1yntbetk detergent, whoM-"ckot· fatllDI" •edoa ~on~ oU from the ttalr. aad of the coadltloalag addltlns lbal •llevtate or off~Ol tbil acUoa. -:· Coadlttoaen lD shampoos art' llOl oor11tallf .1dtqaa&e to conceal balr dam•J• from dye,,; bleadaes, wavta1 or 5&rallhtetal.Dll anhl,ure~. or trom IJateDle beat uaed to curl or 11tratgbt.e" balr. ·Setampoos lal>eled for bable11 lllld youni cblldren auume that their hair ~ •ot subjttted ~ rreqaeat deposits of hair spray" or otbef produtt..;, Baby sbampoo6 asually att made ''°"' ctw am· pboterk <bavtq boU. .add Hd base p~per1~l •yntlletlc deterpnt.s, some of which are comi: paratlvdy st1.D1leu and nonlrritalbt~ TbHt-•"am-· pooa normally don't contain added ln1rHlenttt aacb as perfumes. which ••Y tm\att-tht-l"yes, aad tbey an formulated to havt mlntmtall' lrriu.~ lion po&enilal. · ·: DEAR PAT a·rr. planning u 1r1r. lo Euro~ next year and would hkt' to h.s\'t a touplt· df foreign pen pals in the m eantime it would b4> fllf\ to write back and forth so when i vmt theu coun· tries 1 ·11 already know at l<:ast one or l wo people. Any suggestions., J H Cost~ Mesti Send a self.addressed. s•amped eo\'elo~ io the lnlenallod,I Friendship League, t2 Ba\. terymarc:b, eo.ton. Mass. 02109. ID return you wl~ retehe a registration rorm and explan1tory brochure. For the $3 reglstra&lon fee you wm ~ sent tbe names and address or pros~ctl\'e pen P•ls la two forelgn countries of your choice. Etchells Standings rQld Here is the way they fini s hed In th e Etchells·22 world cham- pionship al Newport Harbor Yach\ Club. Scoring was based on tbe best five of six 10. Teel Mun<oe N-part Be.ch, as I I Dennis Ouro•n, Newport ... <"·" tS 11. John Fr-. SVOM'I'. Austr•ll•. IJ. RKs MacDllMld S~y •u 14. Fr-Tol!lunt, Sl'dfte'I', tt.7 u . llollfft SNttudi. West LOftO ISlanel ~ N. Y., IOI iot'i Don dlw. Newport IN<h. 11. Tim Wlllllfl. Sydney, tot races. 11. H•Mi ~. s... Fr-11eo. I. Oevlel c:.u.tll·ltolleft M<GMfl, 110 ~'\'~~. 11 oQ.A "· J.t • ..___.~. llt.7 1.....,Godll'W.~.46.7 11f' & ... WK.t v-r-. SfftU., w.tft.. ~II ~11 CJNlilolf, .....,.,.. ~. ti Mere HotleBK1!, Detroit, c • -Mk~ttt.7 -• -s... 11 .. 1 lroolle, MeUtovr... n;~~-fll AU1tralle " 2J WlllleM ~ ~v no • C.rl SUiew. SHttle. Wesll • ff 1 ,4 Pllll R-·...._i llffch 1. Tim~. Newpor1 llHUI," r 1n.1 • • • a.oroe 'twl.tt • ....._, llMch. 11 ». SIM s.icer. 5\'dlle'I'. 111 t. "kflard ~. 5en f'•-lt<o. U. Lolli1 Plana. Wnton1 Long lll•nd Sound, 1)0 27. O•vld T•ylOf, Svontv. 1J2 14~· Saymour ..._.., Hew!IOft Be.ch • 2'. John~r.SYonev. , ... ,:'· Oouolas R-11. Sall f'r•MIKO, 1S:'· Jcwl ~. T-*'L CanaM, 12, Vito lialle, Safi FrenclKO, ISS It/In. ROOtrt SNrlet, Hew110t1 lekh, U~ Pel« TOVNlll, Sall f'r-lt<o, JS Wellw WMel«, Lone 111...0, N.Y.,la 3'. Den 1(1-s..m., "' J7. JOlln R;;fu~. Safi f:'r-1 e 1tt.. .. ~ .... ~~ 3'. Jemet evme. Metiloum9. 21U 1t!. John S...0.. Sydn9y, did Mt 41 AIM £mat, Otlro4t, Midi.. CllCI not •l•rt GEORGIA DRUG HUB? ATLANTA (AP) Georgia 's invltlng coaslllne and wealth of unmanned rural alntrl~ make It a bub for drue lmpor1.1 to the Southeut, the state 's Orcanhed Crime Prevention Council ~an. MOVING SALE In a f'ellOrt, the council Hid at leaat 10 marl-J u an a 1blpmenta of 80,000 pounds each were unloaded from boata on .tbe Oeor1l1 coaat in im. wbtle c1rua acent.a sehed about 50,000 pgynd1. Drastically reduced prices on all picture frames llMuMllftl palntlnos, prints, framed prints, mirrors, metal sectional frames. THE THINKER BOOK & FRAME SHOP 2300 Harbor Blvd~ Costa M••• (Behind Thrifty grug Stew.> Mon. ttwv Frt -1 O:IO to 5:30 Sat. -10:00to1:30 She,s crying for help. Are you listening? She simply can't handle her probJems by "killed coun~lors help people sort out their own herself anymore. She needs help before ifs too lives. Here people fl&in new re ources to handle late. And.she·s not alone. Every day, eo_.e!e ~o-the problems they thought were too bi~ to rehltionship. Someone may hecome <;o despondent .,ht' grows fearful or nervous for no apparent reason . She loses sleep over insignificant thinjlS. She explodes over trivial matters like the car not starting. She can't carry on with he r family She needs help. Professional help. The only real hope for regaining a normal, productive life. The kind of ·help available at the Problem Talk Sho{>· A professionally staffed cQunsellng and referral service for people trapped in an emotional crisis. At the Problem Talk Shop we care for people. Probl~m Tlllk Shop Is a free '>ervice which provides a warm, friendly environment whe r<' ·-··-·-·-···--· .. ··· . I emotional c risis. t' l'foblem 1 a ~ A trained counselor wall be it tht' other end of the line. Readv to help Rt!ad' t0 onswer an~ questions you ma' ha' t· Please make tht' call thut wall .. how her ~omebody care~ enou~h to li~ten (714) 997-1831 1110 East Chapman A~nu~. Su ite 100 Orange. Callfom1a 92666 (il4) 768 .. 3831 25283 Cabot Road. Suitt• 104 Lacuna HUis. California 92&3 .· .. . . 1 •Comics •Movies •Televlilon , a,JCmfUYANO If pi~~=-to detkle lb• outcome ol u.e Amenran Lea&•'a • ....,,. DI~ rwe. lbea U. ~ Aa .... are senbal DOtke UleJ ban wNt tt l•k• to *1 at &M top. Tb• Halol-Oft tM tomblned el· fo)'ta of Nola• Ryaa ~ Dave LaRocla• aad Tom Griffin. clipped tb• wln11 of the Baltimore Orioliel for 14 = Sunday In wlnn1nC a bard f. 1·0dt<llkm TBS WIN, before 20.m at the Bl& A. fave tbe Aqels a sweep of the t.Jne.pme series with a BalLimore and lt alto k~ them witblD one perceac.qe polnt of Kaaauaty. thJnk we are. Maybe now we'll start be.lrevtna in ourselves and start \Utnl the came to the op- Potltion mon." The Aqela, "'ho dld almost everythlna wron1 •l•inat More important to the Anceb tJiMaCb 11 tbe victol'1 retur8ed IOllle Mlt rwpect Iott ln the pre- vioua .......... BOiton. .. Anytbne you beat anybody A~S'-'e thrM pm11 la a row It baa to ., ............. ..cn1 1lve YO\U' club a lift,•• 11y1 La8oebe, who turned in five fn· =v ::,.,..,. .. Qllfoml• 1:~s0.m. Nl\81 ~ allDCJK ftawltu relief WfdMl&ly New Ve!'UtQllfGf!IN 7•Up.fft. pltc~lg. ••Tbe fact that It's • 8al\llDCll'e, wlth all their tood Boston, did everything right in pttchiq and blUl.QI, makes it winning the series and Sunday's thal much nlffr. ~·me with Balttarore. They bustled. got great. "THE WIN SHOULD prove to pitching, threw to the right us we're a lot better than people bases were superb defensively YOU'RE OUT The Angels' Don Baylor puts up a mild protest as second base um· pire Larry McCoy calls him out at second on o.l11 " ... ,......,, ·~ --a stolen base attempt. Baltlmore's Mark Belanger made the tag. The Angels won the game in 14j.nnings.1-0 Tapie Wins 89,930 His Best-ever Golf Did It for Elder . HARRISON, N.Y. <AP> -Lee Elder will never play better. He said so himself. "The last two months I've played the best golf of my life - probably the best I'll ever play," the 44-year-old Elder said Sun· day an.er an almost errorless round of four-under-par 67 bad p_rodJlced a one-st:rake victory in the rich Weilehester Clasiic and what Elder called "the most gratifying moment of my life. "l'LL NEVElt FORGET this moment. I'll cherish it as long as I live." be said. He ranked Utls triumph, bis second of the year, ahead of the e motion·packed victory at Pensacola, Fla. four years ago which enabled him to become the first black to play in the Masters. "This is a litUe more signifi· cant-to me ~y.•• be said: been wanting for a long, long time," be said. FIRST, BE SAID. the victory gave him entry into the World Series of Golf at Akron, Ohio this fall. He will be the first of his race to play in the World Series. "And it puts me ln position where I have an opportunity to help represen&..~United States on the Ryder Cup team next year.•• he said. If be makes it . and he's ~most certain to do so -he alsb would be the fil"$t black to play in the bieMial matches against Britain's best. ..Tb at 's somethl.n1 that has been on rny mind for a long time." said Eld~r. who won the Westc~r Classic! with a 274 total, 10 shots under par on the billy Uttle6,803-yard course. IBVINE aESIDENT Alan Tapie, wbo shared the lead with Gibb~ Gilbert &oing into SuQ. DAil. Y Pit.OT and got the run when they needed it. "Look. I've said it once already that this team is going to win a Jot of l{ames. and at times they're 1oh1g to blow some." says Manager Jim Fre1osi. ~•TODAY, WE got supec pitching from everybody.'' Ryan and the Orioles' Dennis Martinez matched each other stride-for.stride in the early go· tng with both pitchers scattering five hits. Ryan. who was in the midst or one of hi s strongest perf ormanc,. of the year. bad to leave in the eighth inning though when he suffered ,. rib separa· lion warming up. AT FIRST. the injury was believed to be serious. But upon closer examination. speculation was Ryan may miss only one turn Ill most. "l don't know how 1t hap· pened. ·· said Ryan shaking his head. "I was throwing the ball real well when suddenly J felt a dull pain on my left side warm· ing up. On my next pitch the pain got sharper. .. It reels fine now but l can't make any s udden or quack moves." . Ryun will bl' ta ken t6' •t hospital today for X·rwys. ;' 1 "HE'IL BE ON a day:t<>-~• basis wltil we get confirmatea• from the X-rays:· ~ays An_j91\ trainer Freddie Frederlco. ''tllt, 1 don't belteve the injury is a.At bad. He'ti got (ive days to f"t9u , before his next start. At most..;.lte may mw one tu"'." •: With l\yan sidelined. LaRo6e and Griffin picked up the slaek. Together they retired 19 o ~~l ~aUers, allowed only two lajts and-struck out eight. r ·•1t·s great £or us to have Grif· fin come odt of the bullpen .W Sff ANGELS, Pace BZ • Pennant P-ressure~ . ~ Too Much for LA7 . . ~ NEW YORK (AP> -"Pen· nant pressure." Don Sutton said Saturday. ·•is largely in the minds of you guys with the pads and microphones." But the facial bruises and scratches on Sutton's face Sun· da-y cast some doubt. on his statement. Sutton and All·star first baseman Steve Garvey were in· volved in a locker room alterca· tion before the Dodgers defeated the Mets. 5-4. Both players re· portedly fell over stools while wrestling each other to the ground. capping an emotional weekend that saw confrontations ln each contest of the three· game set. "THEY'RE IN a pennant race. They know 1t." New York·s Tim Foli said Saturday. "Maybe their nerves are . . just shot because of the way they have to play every day.·· Saturday. third baseman Lee Lacy dropped his glove and rushed Foll after a play at second. Both benches cleared but a fight was averted when Sutton. th~ &tarting pitcher . bear-hugged his teammate and wrestled him to the ground. IN THE SERIES opener. tem· pers Oared when the Dodgers· Reggie Smith stole second and slid hard into second baseman Doug Flynn. The two exchanged words before a dozen or so Los Angeles players left the bench. out again a fight was averted. ·we have a lot of love and espect for each otl\er. Our philosophy is togetherness and this will be rectified." said Dodgers Manager Tom Lasorda. who scheduled a meeting with Garvey and Sutton. The Garvey·Sutton scume had been brewing for a few days. An article in the Washington Post quoted Sutton as saying. "All you hear about on our team 1s Steve Garvey, the All·American boy. Well. the best playEV' on the team the last two years -and we all know it -is Reggie Smith. As Reggie goes -so goes us." THE ARTICLE also included a reference to Garvey's family. which lives only three houses away from the Suttons in Calabasas. "Probably ir something bad not been mentioned about my fa mily in the conversation. nothing would have happened al all." said Garvey. who sported a small abrasion above his left eye ... As far as I'm concerned everything is cut and dried and clear.·· Garvey said he went over to · Sutton's locker before Sunday's game to find out if the pitcher bad been quoted accurately. THE TWO TALKED for several minutes. "l expressed my regrets that something has come up lthe Post article> that is totally irrelevant to what a team stands for.·· said Garvey. "If there are any differences. they should be kept in the clubhouse a nd not outs ide. Tha t 's the way m y life 1s oriented.·· · Sutton reportedly pushed Garvey and the wrestling match ensue d be fore four or five players -including Davey Lopes -separated them. Sutton·s only comment was. ··1 know you won't believe this. We had a slight disagreement. I couldn't convince Garvey the Southeastern Conference 1s a5 good as the Bitz Ten ·· GARVEY ATTf:NDED M 1ch1gan State and Sutton iit from Alabama "There was more clawintt and scratching than any puncbes be· ing thrown." said .1 sourct', who requested anonymity. Gatvey continued: "A cou~ of things are very important to me in life. The J•rst 1s my fami· ly. the second one 1s my integrt· ty a nd the things that I stand for and the third 1s the Lo~ Angeles Dodgers and the rest of the team and the way they are treated. "I DEDICATED myself to win a champ1onsh1p. 1 ·ve done ever)'· thmg -on and orr the field - 10 !'t'l an t·xij mpll' To set· something written ltkl• that. I felt it was tnappropnak. ·'f'm only human and there comes a time when one step i s completely t aken too far and again the most tmportant thiog 1s my ram1ly and any limt.• they·re menUoM<i tn u situation like this -although it wasn't 1n See DODGERS. Page 82 What's On the Inside CdM's Matt Keough Charges Umpire .... Page 82 llMTT KEOUGH MV's Jenni Chandler Places Third ..... . Page 83 Jfl'Oll CHANOLElt Penn State: Natron·s No. 1 College Graa l earn? O.J:s Knee Strong. but 49ers Humbled . . . . Nixon Sits through 14 Innings of Angel Game U.S. Water Polo Team Loses to Romania .. . Page 02 . Page 02 Page83 . Page 63 14th lnntng Sunday and makes a spectacular catch in the nanlh off th~ bat of pinch·hltter Andres Mora. , I DALYPtLOT "' OAICLIJ'fD <AP)-In a 8o11U1D Red Sox Daeap 1willlllllo1 wltb •l'*&t "· lllll• ::. ..... _..nr 88'>' aeldom has • cbence to abow prufO\a .-'7 It batl Ulla MUOI\, rell behind o.z and appeared to atrl.ke out oo a alb.ktr doVfft and away. tho bates, the pttcbff walked to the plate and conUnutd araulq wtth the umpire • flB al the plate. : • SUDday. ho \:er. the ttond baHman ~mm cen~r •tast roUowtnt. con· trovel'Sial pa., that \C'd to•' 2 B06t«I vie· tol')' o~ t.M M1lfn1 Oakland A ·a. who But plate umpire !:d MtrrUl ruled the ball hit tho bat ror 1 foul ·Up ind when rookie c tcher Brue. Robinson couldn't bold onto the ball. Remy waa •lven another chance. "I'm not mid at blm <Merrill) or lbo other umplre1:" a calm Keouab said after the 1ame. "but It bother• me that an effort waan 'l made to have tho rl&ht call. • llave dropped el1bt ol their laat ntne 1am C•rttcn P\lk ·a I.8th homer had staked wlnou Denn1s Eck ... ley. 14·5, to a 1..0 ad o1«ina the ftftb. Loser Matt K~Jh. He promptly bc!lt.ed hi• aeventh mljor luau homer ln 2,U4 1t blta -a three· nin ahot that bar~ly clHred the t~ ln rlthl for a 4.0 l•ld. Hom ra by MJtct..ll Pa1e and Wayne Orou accounted for 01ldand's aconnc . "The other nl&bt, an umplr. wu out or poaltlon on a foul e1ll and he wu over· ruled." Keouah noted ... Tbll wu a tou1h pl1y for Merrill. The other umps bid a better vtew Ind they ahou.ld beve over· ruled him. • 'Ml. bAed one-out walks to Butch Hoblon ~ Ud RJdl Bu.r*oo. brtn&lna Remy to the f~' Dl•l•. ' Remy. wllb Oftb one home run ln hi Keoup. a former Corona del Mar HIJh at1r. lftfuriated by Merrill's juqment. chnsed ~bo umplre ..nd hid to be realralned by RobinJOn. Al Remy clrcltd "The guy. <Remy> aw1n11 walat hilh and the pitch ls low and outllde, ao It doeln 'l lake much deduction." Keough reuoned. "This ls N!ally fruttr1tlng -we hid a chance to 10 Into third place tod1y." APW~e TEMPERS FLARE Oakland A's pitcher Matt Keough. a former Corona del Mar High star. is restrained by catcher Bruce Robinson a~ he charges umpire Ed Mer- rill. Keough was upset after Merrill said Boston's J erry Remy hit a foul tip on an O 2 count Remy then followed with a three·run homer. Picture Perfect Comwrs Overpmoors Gidlibon STOWE. Vt Gullikson. 6·2. 6·3, tournament From AP Dispatches Jimmy Connors overpowered third seed Tim Sunday in the final of a Grand Prix tennis Connors treated a near sellout crowd to picture-perfect tennis wath driving baseline shots. slashing cross·courts and a strong net game. Gullikson never seemed lo get his strong-hitting game together lie had trouble ~ettmg his first serve in. When he did con- trol his service. at was an effecti ve weapon, setting up strong play at the net Gullikson salvaged a share of the glory as he teamed with his brother Tom for a come.from-behind victory In the doubles finals over Mark Edmondson and Kim Warwick or Australia 3·6, 7·6, 6-3. Dibln Colle~•• Canadian Tit le TORONTO -Eddie Dibbs won the Canadian Open men's singles tennis championship, but he felt like an old man doing it. "I feel like an old man." the 27-year-old Dibbs said Sunday after beating 20-year-old Jose Luis Clerc of Argentina 5·7, 6-4. 6-1 an the finals for the $32,000 first prize. In the men's doubles final Sunday, Tom Okker and Wojtek Fibak beat Colin Oowdeswell and Heinz Gunthardt, 6-3, 7·6. In the women's doubles final. Regina Mars1kova and Pam Teeguarden defeated Chris O'Neill and Paula Smith. 5·7, 6·4, 6·2. Austin TriUMplu Again PHILADELPHIA-Tracy Austin, 15, or Rollmg Hills Estates. defeated Pam Shriver , 16, m the rinals of the U.S. Girls' 18-and- under tourney Sunday. Austin captured a 6-3. 3·6, 6-3 decision to give her back-to-back titJes in the event. Joining a select circle. l'ro•Pa~BJ Post's Hex Is Buried In Playoff DETROIT (AP> -Ten years ago people told 19-year-old San· dra Post she would continue to win on the Ladies Professional Golf Association tour. She had just defeated Kathy Whitworth in an 18·hole playorr lo capture lha national LPGA championship. The perky Canadian won a lot of money since then, but she didn't win another title until last April when she took the tour's richest prize. a $36,000 P?t· in the Dinah Shore·Winner s Circle tourney. "I had gone so long without winning that after I won the Dinah Shore people said. 'Well. vou 've ~ot that under your belt so you should win some more'." She'd heard that before. But this tame It didn't take a decade to take home another first.place check. Post. who almost bowed to the pressure ot leading nearly all the way. regained her form at the end Sunday to capture the $150.000 LPGA event a t Dearborn Country Club and a $22,500 check. O.J. Strong, But 49ers A Question SAN FRANCISCO <AP l -O.J . Simpson says hla knee 11 strong. But what about the San Francisco 49ers who looked ao weak against the Oakland Raiders? • "Communications lJ the key," Simpson aald after making his playing debut with the 49en. whose offense sputtered badly Sunday ln a 31·14 pre-season loss to tbe Raiders. "Right now. we haven't played long enough with each other to get the reel or things ... he said. "We're going to start communicatang t>etter and play- ing together." The 49ers are 0-3 and have just one more exhibition test. against Denver. befor~ opening the Na- tional Football League season Sept. 3 at Cleveland. Sunday's game was the first for Simpson since Injuring his left knee midway through the 1977 season. his last with the Buffalo Bills, and he said, "I felt great, I really did. I wanted to stay ln the game longer." The $733.000-per-season star left early in the second period after carrying six times for 12 yards, losing the ball once on a furn ble and dropping a perfect pass from Jim Plunkett, who had a luckless and frustrating O·for·ll passing day. Three touchdown passes by Ken Stabler gave Oakland an early 21.0 lead. it wu 31--0 aft.er three periods and the talent gap between the two teams appeared bigger than the 49ers' offensive communications gap. San Fran· cisco got two late touchdowns as Young Steve De~rg scored on a quarterback sneak and passed 21 yards to Freddie Solomon. seotta aY QU& .. TI H O.••-,. 1 10 ~' ~" Fr...clsco O O O 14-14 0.11-W'llltllngton J4 ,,.u from Stalllet !Mam 11101 0.11-Brar!el! IOl)ftl from Stab!• IMafWI llklll 0.11-0lfStw 1 paM from Stalllw (~ llklll Oall FGMaMC1 0.11-Br~ 22 P<ISS ft'Ofl'I Slablw IAMM kl<l<I SF-DeS...Q I run CW.n<,,ll'ICI lll<kl SF-~ JI INU from 0.BerQ CWenl>lllQ klcll I A-SS,S13 Flr\I-\ Aullle"'Y.,cb Petll"9 Y.,cb Retun't yard!. PU'91 """'' Fumblft·lost OAMa STATISTICS Pellelll ... yMO• ................ 21 .. .... 200 IJ·IOI 145 Ill ti u IMO·I .. JH .... , .. .. J ll u~s HS INDIVIDUAL LRAOf"I ltUSHING-Oakland, Ro411•111t 11.n . Van Ee9,,e11 n .so. ltUSMll .. 40. San FraMIKO, Wllllem• I~ .... "" ... " 2·22. Ferrell HO. PASSING-Oalll#MI, St.ICltef' .. U-4, 14'; R<H 1-.).0, 40; Oougteu 2·J.I, 20; Humm 0-1-4. 5.., Fr•MIKo. 0.ller9 .. JO.I, 140; Ph;nttett 0-IH, 0 ltECEIVING--Oeklano. Whltll"1JIOfl 1.0. Br•l'<ll J.10, Stewert l·St. Sal' FratKlt<o. So'°"*',.._ 5Ht J.H. Chiefs Lose To Patriots ELDER WINS TOURNEY. Post smacked a four.wood second shot 200 feet onto the green at the par five lllb hole and tw~putted from 15 feet for a FOXBORO, Mass. CAP> -birdte-four-to-wllt'on·the second Thl'~t ~1·1tlte totn:hdown bo~. • • hole of another sudden-death includlng one-yard plunges by board early ~nd put the pressure Luhrs and money w1nr11n91 '" Ill• playoff with Whitworth. aod Pat quarterback Steve Grogan and on Elder, who didn't make a :::~==~~~.:.603,a<tt,....·n Meyers. , ftdlback Don CaJhoan on New· bogey over the final round, LMEkM•.t60.000 11~1-..14 Le.-..'""_, wlftrilnes ... "'* 11M1 England's fi~t two possessions. missed only ooe green, the eiahth, Mtork "•""· Dl.200 7a..7.n...s-2,, '°""° °' 11W I.Miies PnlfftlteMI Gell &uociailoll lift d the Patrt~•e to their thlrd b de tb " Hubert G,_,, \21,)00 7°"**70-t7• ewnt at l"9 •.All y.,-CI, P«·1t 0.8"1ont Goufttry e """' utma ablrdie ere,chipplng e1111<ratzert,,1.,100 11-12•1•1-m C1uo.Pott-wddefte1Nt11p1aYoffonMCOftel straight Na~lonal Football in from 25 feet, "Good fortune o.nstooton.l'.m , ....... m otrei.oi.; <HIMt"-.'' League exhlbltlon victory, a 24·7 aaiUesonme,"heaaid. ~'-:.~~~ .•. ao :=~= =·~2.seo !::!::~~~::::: whipping of the Kansas City Still he trailed by one shot un· 01'*' 011111W1. "·m .......,,,_,m f'•t fMyen, '1Uoo n.1~ Chl .. fs ,c, .. -..... tll drop.Jnn an ei .. "t-(oot blrd1'e llOll Murplly, 5'.'lO 11.n....,._,,. HOllll Stacy, '1,700 7S.70-7H~m T .. h P.,......tri,.:: dded d .,....._ .., L•rrv N••.son. 56.uo ''*"*-"' e.1" klno. M.912 1t.n_.1s.11-ttS e a ""° a a one-yar putt on the 13th end went lo the o.vH10f~s..1» .,.....,...._m Ge11Tov1Mn.M.t12 ,.71.12,n-m touchdown bunt by rookie 18th, a par five, needing a birdie fi!rw":_~1::, ~-:~~ ~:t.=;,.~~.ttt ~:::~:::::: fullback · Most Tatupu In the to Win. His tbree·Wood Second Jacll Nl<kl-. a .no '7*71-,MJt .. tty~. M."1 1J.11-11·1t-tff fourth quarter to go with John .sboLal.Umed...2!f.the utUng sur· Roe1G111t.5'.uo 11·7MM1-m e.,wra....,.,.,p.-,,.,,.,,.,,_,.. Smith's 34·yard second period lace-to the MUD an ~iae:r:-_ ~~~~~~=-~~~:...~·:~.~~-=-.=•=-----~~~~~~~~~~~~=r---mfS :l~~~Y BUBERT GREEN, w'ho mlaaed 3-4 foot putts on the 15th and 16th, was third at 70.276, Collowed by Blll Kratzert, 67-zn. JTllHl'I,.,....._, A.• 89" Cr•MIWw. A,900 Fraftk Bffl'CI, U ,900 11 .. C.."'-11$1,. Tom•rn•.~• Doft J....,...,, UAO fOS.bo,~ Gii Mof'9MI, U,4'0 n . ... n .... 11-• 71 ....... ,,_. .,.,,....,,_., .... 10-1~ •1·'1·11-71-al ., ... ,~,,_., 71-47-71-12-211 11.1•1,.n-i. ,,....n.,.._,,. '"n.Jt..n-m , .. 1W~ "*'"' ..... "' Jt.7).7).7S-2'7 '•"·n·,._m Penn State: Best in the STATE COLLEGE. Pa. <.\Pl -Penn St1te's Joe Paterno once turned down 1 million dollar ~ offer to coach a pro footblll te1m partly because bis 1011 u a • colleae coab had not been reached. Tbla may be tbe year he achieves that goal -to make Penn State the No. 1 tum in the • oat.loo. "' • • "I'm not worried about rank· • "tns1 or any of that aturr:· Paterno lnllsb. "l just want t.bll • football tum t.o be u food u It • posalbb' can." ' But obvlou1ly, the coach ' belttves the urp Nlttany Lions can be very good, yes, even No. 1. "We should be better than last year," P1temo says, aware that the 1977 tum was 12·1, including f'OUl'BALL PRB\'IElf a Fleala Bowl triumph over· Arlzona Sta~1 and was ranked Orth In the nauon. "We have the kind of schedule to show bow 1ood we are," Paterno noted 11 he carefully debunked the oft-repeated char1e that Penn St.ale feutl on Eaatem 1>1talea. Tb1t•1 why the lh1rd 1ame of lbe season !£at Columbut, Ob.lo, against perennially powerful Ohio State. Kentucky. ranked sixth lut year, also la on Penn State's road schedule this season. Penn State has 32 of ltl top 44 pl1yers back from tut year, and tested player11 ready t.o r.place tho1e lost vla graduatlon. Depth alw1ya has been a Penn State hallmark. Quarterback Chuck Fuslna la Paterno's blagest offensive atar. The senior already holds or abaru nlne Lloo.s' pusin1 rec· ord•, ahd Pat.emo r1tes Fuslna the. belt. at t.b PQllUon in Penn State'• tlilt.ory. plays by the Patriots' aerense. managed only a 21 ·yard touchdown Jaunt by fullback Mark Balley In the second quuter. Nation? Scott Flt.ikee, a split end who punll Ind returns kicks; flanker Tom Donovan, and Irv Pankey, a S·root-4,,... tackle converted lnto a Uaht end, all AN top l'ftelven. Paterno ls loaded wit& run· ner1. He hu Junior Mau Subey. senior Bob Torrey and sophomore Boof<er Moore, Wbo could be the best ot \he trto. Th~re alto ls Mike Guman, a JUnlor wbo led the Nlttany Lion• ln acortna throuab. the tint five sames last year before belna switched to the defensive b1ckfield. Ouman ls back on Of· tenae this eeaaon aod will aplll tallbl'ek duties with Moore. BASEBA\.L /TENNIS I GOLF I FOOTBALL A C..,.ule Report ''°"' ttM World of Spcxta 352-inning Softball Game Completed in 7 2 Hours II -MONTICELLO. N.Y. <AP) -The Bend·N· Elbow tavern team belt the Sullivan County Volunteer Firemen's Asaocl1tJon, S4MSO, ln 352 tnnAn11. 72 hours, 40 minutes and an un· dertermlned amoW'ltof ~r. A spokesman for t!Hs 1<>ftball team 11ld they bad also raised about Sl0,000 for a bum treatment unit at Albany Medical ~ter. Last year. the volunteers from Sulliv•fW' Oran1e pnd Ulster eo\lntles raised •bout SS,000 for a Mon· tlcello bolpttal In a M·hour. 9-mlnute 11me. Hundreds of players took part in tblJ year's game. wblch a~ at 9:30 p.m. Thunday. One of thl'm, 26-year· old Bob Roche, reporiedly played for 39 consecuUve hours, reated for two hour11, and came back for more. Another member of the flrefl1ht.era' team, Jack Halchak. saJd one reason hla team lost IJ lbat many or the Bend·N·Elbow players were "used t.o 1tayin& up au niabt .. at the area tavern. 0.•••• arena•• ¥ta.,.. MILWAUKEE -For a tired old race car • that had been retired for UM I.ft tetev .. lon ~m· merclala. u a d .. play in •hoppln• cent.en and trade abows. and 11 a source or apare parta. Danny OngalJ' Parnelll acquitted tUelf well. Ongala never was serioualy cball.en~ed ln roartna to an eight·second victory with lt in Sunday 1 Bettenhausen 200 for ladlanaPoU• cars. Rick Meara flnllhed second. followed by Gordon Johncock. A.J . Foyt and Al Unser. The car has bc!en raced three times since It wu pressed back Into service lo June. 1be result has been two victories, .and three track records. In the other race. Ongala. a Costa Mesa resident, led two-tblrds of the way until dropping out with mechanical trouble. "It is actually the first car t ever drove in championship racing ... Ongais explained. OMNY °"°"" If that's the case. it ·s the car that on,als nipped the entire length of the backstretch at On- tario Motor Speedway in 1976. Unser and Mario Andretti are bellev.ed t.o have driven It before that. So it's already seen plenty or action. .,_,~ ol CM Da11 "We have a lot of love and respect for each other. Our phUosophy ls togetherness and this will be rectified." says Los Angeles Dodgers Manager Tommy Lasorda following Sunday's altercation between Don Sutton and Steve Guvey. ~in Sport•··· II Left·hander PHI SpUUorff scattered eight hits and the Kansas City Royals capitalized on an error by .1411 M1tlack to push across the win- ning run in the fifth inning in their 2· l victory over the Texas Rangers ... Mike SctunJdt ripped three hits to lead PhUadelpbla past the San Francisco Giants, S-3, before 51,088 in Philly ... Dave 81c1er•1 bues·loaded twCH>ut double in the nlnth bm1ng rallied the Chie1go Cubs to a 2· t victory over the Ctneinnau Reds . . . Cral' Reynold• an4 Bob RoberUon cracked run-scoring singles in the seventh inning to lift Seattle to a 5-4 triumph over the New York Yankees . . . Ed OU bit two home runs and .Jerry Rea11 earned his first pitching victory of the season as Pittsburgh grabbed a 3·1 win over Houston ... Toronto pitcher Don KJrkwood checked Min· nesota on three hits over six innings to win bis first game since April 14 as the Blue Jays downed the Minnesota Twins. MIU satMIDT 6-2 ... Bea 0,Uvte'a eighth-inning double scored CllarUe Moore to give Milwaukee a 2·1 decision over Detroit ... Broderick Perkln5 lofted a sacrifice fly to score Dave Win· Oeld with the Ue·breaking run in the eighth as San Diego defeated Montreal. 5-4 ... Ted Simmons' two·run double snapped a deadlock in the seventh Inning and sent the St. Louis Cardinals lo a 6·4 triumph over Atlanta . . . Johnny Grubb drove in five runs in Cleveland's 10·1 rout or Chicago. The Baltimore Colts plan to continu e negotiations ror a "famous" running back even if holdout Lydell Mitchell returns to the Na· tlonal Football League team . . . Paralyzed football player Darryl Stlngley of the New England Patriots will undergo surgery Wednesday in California to fuse the fourth and fifth vertebrae of his spine. The sur- gery is not expected to give the receiver any marked im- nrovemenl of his t>aralvsis . . . Quarterback Dao Fouta is nursing a bruised shoulder, and the San Diego Chargers' trainer says lt might take Fouts out of action for a while . . . The Stanford football squad got a one-day headstart on Pac·IO rival California when it opened preseason prac· ti.ce Sunday under coach BUI WalBb. Misrepresentation passed the tiring E favorite. Kamehameha, in the tum for home and went on to win the Del Mar Derby by 2\AJ le~l)oo1ld Pierce aboard. Laf· nt PlDuy continued hls hot riC!i'Og streak wlln four other winners Sunday. l!I ·Shaking off a .first-hole bogey, Lanny Wadkins stormed back to win the Cabadian Professional Golfers Assn. championship by 12 strokes. finishing the 72 holes in 18 under par at 270, two sbot.8 off GeoJge Knudson's 1968 record ... Pittsburgh's ladWI Oliver lost the 18th U.S. Women's AmateW' eoU cba.mplonsblp to Canada's C1tby Sherk in a 4 and 3 decision . Australia's Al•• lones drove his Cbapparal •• Lola to a convincing victory Sunday In the Can· Am eertes at Mosport Park in Ontario, Canada. • George Follmer or Huntington Harbour finished _ Davtd Pea1aoa won---------.... Jun rell Waltrip by 0.32 seconds. O'nlEll SPORTS -Boxer Bobby Halpern celebr1ted his release from 1 hospital and began preparaUons for a comeback despite eight bullets still ln bis chest and lbe loH of most of hb Leeth. Halpem, 45, ls an ex·convict with more than 17 years behlnd bars. He was aunned down • er t.bls year by men whom police beUeve were former ates trying to settle an old prison score . . . Kenyan Bolt turned In bis best time of the season with 1 2: 15.98 ln the l,000 meters at Nice, France. Wllaon Wal1wa of Kenya won the 5,000 meters In 13:34.t ... The Fort Lauderdale Strtken defeated T1mpa Bay, 3-2. ln the first aame or their North American Soccer League semlfin1I match ... T1ndem riders Oeuld Alla and Lel11t B1rcaewald are the first American men in 10 years to win a sliver medal 1t the World Cycllq championships ... P1lmer FalljNa took 1 30-pln lead lnto today's flnal two rounds or m1tch play ln tM Buffalo Open protesslon1I bowling tournament. ....... T~ .... RADIO: Tonight -Baseball -Oodters 1t Montreal, KABC ('190 >. a o'clock. tv: Tonight -Baseball -Dodfen at MoolreeJ. Channel 7, s o'clock , ' .. MOTOR SPoRTS J BASEBALL I AQUATICS Checkered l'l•g WITH HOWARD L. HANDY He wu a II.lab acbool ballultball&:::•r at HuntlDltAln Beach and spee1 one 1 ar al Oraap t COllel•· Bu£ llll (int a always ••th automobU• HclA& Ud be t'lnted to that sport rather than eonUnae h1a collqe buk tball career. Jlm SPowart f OW>d lbat auto racmc ... peclally u an amlleUr OD the apocU car ctrcult, t.a U))eft.llve. · "IT .-for a a« ol tlret and the enatnet are M.000 each," he uy1. But he la bappv In hll aceompUah· menu to date. Re la current11 leadJnl the Cal Sportl Car Club In E Production Clrt by 21 polnta and lJ hopefUl o1 Ondlna • •PoDSOr and movln1 oo to the Can·Am circuit In the f\.lture. "I've alwaya liked last cars and racing,·· he aaya. "A friendof mine had a race car but be wasn't doing lOo well and I fi&ured I could do better so 1 atart. ed at Willow Springs in Oetober of lasl year." HE ftNISllED FOURTH in • his first race and bas won the last two. In fact, he haa won two or .HM IPOWAltT four ra.ces this year and blew an engine m another. He and a partner not only build and maintain the car but have two other sports cars they are preparing for dif· rerent drivers. He doesn't figure to go to Road Atlanta this year but is counting t.he days until he will be able to go next year. All he has to do is finish third or better in bis class. Keep the name or Jim Spowart in mind in the future. °"flak A .... ., O..iarlo W Fa1'et'ltn Costa Mesa's Danny Ongals will be among the favorites in the California 500 at.Ontario Motor Speedway Sunday. Sept. 3. He was the winner of the Datsun Twin 200 earlier this year at Ontario and in 12 USAC championship car races to date. Ongals has six pole starts and Tom Soeva six. Sneva holds the track record for one lap at Ontario with a blistering 202.384 mph average. CAUFORNIA 500 activity gets under way on Tuesday. Aug. 29 with opening practice. It continues Wednesday from 9 to 6 and again Thursday morning from 9 to 12. Qualifying will be held Thursday afternoon and on Friday from 10:30 to 12:30. Car'buretion tests are Friday afternoon from 1 to 3 with the Mini-Indy race practice from 4 to 6. Bobby Unser Jr., the 21-year.old son of two-time Indy and California 500 winner or the same name, ls expected to ~ among the entrants in the Mini-Indy race on Saturday, Sept. 2. Before Rick Mears started this season making history as a rookie on the USAC championship trail. he was well-known in these parts as one of the Mears brothers from Bakersfield who participate in off -road races. OLDER BROTHER ROGER will be seeking his seventh title in the sixth running of the Riverside Interna- tional Raceway SCORE off.road world championships beginning Friday. Rick will not compete this time around ber.ause USAC has a rule against it. Ironically. Roger hopes to follow suit. He hes been of· fered a ride ln Dick Bel&b'a championship car for the California 500 at Ontario. Tripp Logs Pair ol Vldorle• THE GREEN FLAG -AfleT a slow start this year. Costa Mesa's Ron "Sleepy" Tripp scored his 31th and 38th career USAC midget victories recently .. Tripp drove his Rimco Miller VW lo wins at Indianapolis and Rockford, Ill. He is creeping up on second place Steve Lobhaw in the point standings but has little hope of catching leader Rieb Vogler who is 237 ahead or him. Duane "Pancho" Carter could add his third USAC championship to t he list this season if he continues at his present pace. He already is the only man lo wln both the midget and sprint car crowns and is now leading the dirt car division. " Gary Bffk, of El Toro. will unveil a wedge-shaped top fuel dragsler al Spokane Raceway this weekend. Jim Tice, American Hot Rod Association president, calls the car "a full-bodied dragstcr with the wing mounted down behind the rear wheels. It'll look more like a Grand Prix car." Del Mar Race Results ..... ~" (2JnletU4Ay,.,.., ..... F1r~I r•t.-G-"""" Doc R•v IMt H•rO.,.I II 80, • tO. s 20. H•u TIM CNrver (ROHIHI ., 40. 17 20. Line Officer l&aH.tt•r> 13 20. Se<onCI rac.-Goll.t• 1P1ncev1 U oo. • 00, S.40. Rlpple R111er IOlei> 4 00. 3 ..0. E1rly Collon ITorol S 60, O.lly Douo4e IH I paid IS 20 Third rKe-~ IPlnc•vl 10.0, 390,, 60 Proo•react IMcH..-guel 290, 220, Noelle '"9fo (Moreno> J.tO; U euel• (~2l 1w110 SI SO. Four111 nKe-Ler•v IVeleftruel•I 7 to, l 40, .2.lll-RllHL~.J~Hl!:l)le} •.00, uo; Fl•I Steven !Pterctl 00. Fiith rac.--Nemeq.-IMCH•rou.I 3.20. 2.IO, UO; Pl•efl•ll !Monnol •.IO, 5.60; Arouno We Go ((.heprn•nl S.OQi..S~&!'«la (5-41 paid69.00. I $1•111 ,_.~ Olol~ I Diaz I • 60,,U O, 3.00; Prlorltv l~I po, 4.0e. To 8. Or Nol (Pler<el 4 00 s. ..... 111 ·~· SIStflf IPlnuyl 4.«), , 60, 2 .0. Foll' JutlaM (CMU!Mdal 1 60. S 00. FA!IC.11 Aow IToroJ e.AO. U •llKta 12 .. 1 !Mid tJ 00 El9'1th race-Mlsnprnenl.ttton IPlwcel II.ta, Physicals Set Physical examina- tions for all potential boys and girls athletes at Laguna Hills High -wnt:J:te L'O.Oducted Wed· nes School, located at 24642 Jeronimo in El Toro. cost is $5 and alhJetlc physical examination forms, insurance forms and parent permission form s should be ob- tained at Laguna Hills High prior to the e~· amination. .. MY ENGINE RAN WHEN IT WAS OFF r4 twlkll tt. ""'* '" w Ille .. wwWrl'I al• la~ II •ltd, rtCW tM c..,W. 1lien I 4li<"*-' wnan• SPIT·flRL Mow 111r troables m tftt; Wriles • htppy \ISCf Yn. t119fnt ~efltt fVIJ" WI ~ not Oftly H· uper1tln9 llvt downrltht ....,..,, mt~IJ. So be killd It rout cer tlld rou11tlf AM • "' or WYMll'S SPlf.flM It rour oas IW '*'· '' ~ et 1~41:r•n-1 • 5 20, 4.00; Slnoultr IMcHarouel • 00, loo Wayside Sta11on IPltKtyl s IO. Ninth race-Eqva IPlnt•Yl I IO. 3 to. 2.IO; SIHI " llil«Ch (McH1roueJ > 20. 2 60; C:.Chlc .... I Cast-I 4 «>. Ue•.Cte 14-21 !MIO U .SO. AU~e-21,601 Sonshine Wins S ACRAMENTO The California Sunshine m (f V"lftt t11 t 0 a tte-w i th the Los Angeles Skyhawks in the American Soccer League's Western Division Sunday with a ' 4-0 victory over the Sacramento Gold before 2,943 at Hughes Stadium on the Sacramento Clty College campus. Angels' ·No. l Fan Pays Visit By JOUN SEVANO .... .,..., .......... Only a mlnute bad elapsed in the Orioaea• televiaion broadcast to BaltlmoN belo.,. a special al)-' pearance was 01ade by tbe An1els' No. 1 fan -former Prutdent Richard Nixon. "Dor,?'! get to come to many games." asked one announcer. ''No. not too many," answered Nl:xon. "but I listen to a lot of baseball sames on radio. "Look, I know the Orioles are dolQI well," smiled Nixon, "but let's let the Angels win today." With that, Nixon excused himself from the booth and re· turned to his seat to cheer his team on. and be had plenty to cheer about. The former President sat through the entire 14-inning marathon staged by the Angels and Orioles. He cheered, ap- plauded, led a standing ovation on a great diving -catch by Rick Millet, sang "Take Me Out to the Ball Game'' during the seventh inning, signed auto· graphs and watched the Angels win 1·0 on Don Baylor's bloop double. The fans cheered loudly when it was discovered be was in Gene Aut.ry's booth, and even the Angel players couldn't con- tain their emotions. "I got an autographed ball from him." said Tom Griffin. the winning pitcher. "That's probably the greatest thing I've ever done." "He told me to take those wins any way you can get them." said Baylor after meeting Nixon in the training room alter the game. Starting pitcher Nolan Ryan was the former President's long4:St visitor as he Joined Nix- on in Autry's booth after retiring Crom the game in the eight.h in- ning due to a rib separation. "He was very concerned with what my problem was," said Ryan. "Mr. Nixon is a good Angel and baseball fan." ··I just tried lo console him," said Nixon. "'This is a ROOd team , and l think the Angels are going to be in the race a ll the way." If the Angels do remain in con· tention, Nixoa almost assuredly will make another visit. F.-..PageBJ DODGERS. • • the print -then I've really been pushed a little too far." Though the Dodgers had a rough weekend in New York. they fmd themselves with a two- game lead for the first time since May ~ in the National League West. The triumph e nabled the Dodgers to extend their lead to two games over San Francisco. which lost to Philadelphia 5·3. and to three games over Cincin- nati -a 2· l loser to Chicago. LOS ANOl!LIH NEW YOtlK .. rllM •brllbl Nortll <f Ruswll n R.Smllhrl Ger.,.ylb C.y lb Monday If Houonp o .Be•er 11 L•<Y II Forster p Ferguson c Raup OavalltlO p11 Raulrh•np LOPH1D • 0 l 0 E Meddo• cl 5 I 4 I • 1 1 O 8 .Valenllnt1b 1 I Io l I I 0 Ferrern O O O O • I 2 I s Hender..,,, II l I I 0 ' I 7 I Montenel ID ' 0 I 7 l O O 0 Sturns c • o 1 1 0 0 0 0 YOUnQblood rf 5 0 l 0 1 0 O O Randle 3b 4 O 1 O 3 0 0 1 Flynn ss • I O o O O O O Swan p 4 o I o ' 0 I I LO<-WOOCI p 0 0 0 0 1 O 0 0 O.Murr•v p o O o O I I I I 0000 7000 Totels M S • s To1als M • 17 • l osAnoe1es ooo 002 00)-S New YOf'll 200 000 110-. E -GMwy. s Henoenon. OP-LO\ A1l99 .. \ 1 LOB· LU Angeles 4, New Yor-12. 28 S.Henoerson, Youn9blood, Fero uson HR-Oavallllo I ll. S-8 Valenllne. SF-Montanel, Lecy. R•u ReulrlHln Hougn IW. S·31 Fof'Sttr ,.. M .. E• ea SO LOS s s . '"" , 1~• J I 2 NBWYottl( , • I I I 0 ' ' 0 I 0 0 0 0 Swen e t 10 Lockwood (L. 1 lit "°' o I D.Murr1y "> o o o o I sew-ForsMr '"'· H8P-S.....M ,.,, " .. " l'ernr llPt .... 1. T-2:J7.A-J4,7'5. • THAT SMARTS · Pitcher Nolan Ryan heads for the sidelines with manager Jim Fregosi and home plate umpire Don Deck- inger after suffering a rib separation while Oeltr,.... ,......., •'*"' c.-..r warming up in the eighth inning. X·ray" will be taken todav to learn the extent of the injury. although it ·s not believed to he of :1 serious nature. Chandler Third In 3-meter Diving From AP Dispatches BERLIN -Mission Viejo Nadadores star Jenni Chandler became the major disappoint· ment of the day for the United Slates Sunday at the World Aquatic Games as s he lost a lead in three-meter diving and fini s hed third. The graceful 19-year-old. who placed second in Saturday's pre- liminaries, led lrinia Ka lima or the Soviet. Union through most or the five required djves. But in the five optional dives. Chandler chose easier dives which earned fe we r points. while the Russian tried high.risk and high point dives. CHANDLER'S CHANCES of catching the Russian ended on the eighth dive. when her knees * * * MEN 100 FrM -I Forresltr IU s I I 51 02 1 G••nes IU.S.I, I 51.10. J. l(opll•kOY 1uss1u. I 51 JJ. 4 5lmod1 ICctn..S.I. I \I ... S G1MrduCu lllalyl, I 5212; •· l(rylov tUSSRI ' SJ 25. 1 Mckeon IAuslr•ll•I. I Sl.U , I . Schmld1 (WHI Germ.tnv>. 1.Sl.48. 100 8.Ck -I Jackson IU s I SI>"· , R«c• CU S.I. SI> ... ; l. ICutnelsov <USSR!. SI •I '·Hur r1no INtw ZHlancll, 5113. S. Ar•nll\ 18ru111. Sl,01 , •· P.atdlll'IQ (All\lr•lla l, SI 44, 1. Eeltlr>Q lHOll•r>OI. S'.10,I Porla IAr~nltMI. S• 1l 100 Breasl -1. ICU\Ch IWHI Germ•r>yl I OJ SI>. '· Smllll ICctn.Oa>. I 03 60 l Moerken CWe\I c;.e,....nyl, l :OJ•7;4 GoodMW ICrNI '.!rt l••nl I Ol 71. 5. Nevtd IU s I I OJU " T•hllnn• IJapMI. , . .,, ... 1 lurlOQUt\I •US I 1 04 II, 8 II«-•• IE•Sl ~nTIMIYI. I OS•• WOMEN 100 lnOO .• I T. C.Ul-•M IU s I 1 I• 01 \world record. 010 ,... ..... , 1 15.11', T C.ul-tn. 1'711 1 Ptnn1noton cu.s 1, 1 14 "9· 3 T .ouber 1En1 Cerm•nyl. 2 15 'l'I. ' IClevOon• IUSSRo 2 11 60. S Sctww!!Oflf IE.st Germanvl. 1 1161 • D•v•' IC,rul 8rll•onl, 1 18 IA 1 G•r•Pl<k •C•n•O•I, 2 •9'0: I. smtth tC.nao•>. 1 20 4J 400 Medi.-, Relay -I. United SlalH !Jezek, I 02 19. C.Ul•lns. 1.10,00, Penn1n91on, s• '1 Woodhe.l<I, S5.151. 4 oe.21 CAm.rlun recoro old .,,ark, • · 14 SS, National IHm, 1'7', 1 EHi <icrm.tnv. •·O'I u. l USSR •• ,. "· • WHI Germ•nv, 4.15 2S. S Holllncl, • 1& o , • C•n..O. 4 11 lO. 1 Swedef>. 4 19 37, I At.1Sl,.lo.ll. 4 11 SO buckled and she,Jost control. Her 10th dive was even worse. and cost her second place. "I don't know." she said when asked what happened at the end. "I Just don't know. It just hap- pened." Kalima won the ROid with 691.43 points. American Cynthia Potter was second with 643.22 and Chandler ended up with 63i 41 * * * 3-2 Polo Loss Costly for U.S. BERLIN-With a disputed 3·2 loss to Romania absorbed Sun- da v. the United States· national water polo team has lls back to the wall at the World Aquatics Games The Amer icans. under Coach Monte Nitzkowski. a Huntington ·Beach resident, filed a protest against an officiars ruling after the loss. which cou ld be the de· termimng factor in whether the lJ S. can finish sixth or better in these games to quahfy for the 1980 Moscow Olympics A Greek referee ruled that form('r Newport Harbor Hi gh star KeV1n Robertson had taken too long to make a -;ucces~ful . penalty shot that would hi.J\ e tied t he s core 1n the final quarter. The U.S. needs a victory today against Mexico to stay altve in the quest of finishing among the top SIX FrGlltPa,,eBI ANGELS •.. do a job." pra1s~ ... aRocne. "It's super when you can pick up a win like this from someone you don't count on a lot.·· "l,aRoche was a tough act to follow." said Griffin. returning the compliment. "I was just hop· ing we could win it_.in nine.·· THE ANGELS DIDN'T makl' It in nine iMings. but they did 1r 14 as Rick Miller scored al! the way from first base with two out or ..1 misJudged bloop double to cen•er by Don Baylof 8ALTIMOllE CALtl'ORNIA .. "'el •• , ,, )4 -4.ulow<f l 0' II L•ndr•au• lt ft 1) , " l -tcl 'tj '"' A M Hler ct . t. t' Sm11n 7b e I) 0 ft BoSIOC• rt '., 0., O.uer 11> •.o 11 '' BnlorOh "'0 I t Kellv 11 )tl1JI) Rl.ldlll I fl 1 0 Mor• If 7 0 I U L•nstor4 lb 'n ' 11 So r>Qlelon t • • 0 'ti Down1nQ l " • u E Mu•r4,. ID \ 0 I II Cll•l• '' 'Q ' u OeC1n,e\ )b .. 0 ' •• J Ander"°" •5 f 1)IJCJ • M4von \ 0 I) '1 'lol•ild 1111 f () 1) If OemCKe• c \ 0 0 ) Oro<" 7t: t 1)1.)1) ~··noe• ,, \ 0 I •I TOl•O. 0 0 I U Toi•" .. 1 I I B•ll•mor• 000 000 000 000 OO-t1 C.h,ortt1• 000 000 000 OOC O• -• T <NO OU1\ wfWn WIMlnQ run. \(.Med Or ttt111tmor~ lt1. C•flfornt• C:'• L08- 8•tf1mor11 • C.lltorn1• / 18 B•Y"tor IP H II Eit 86 ~ aALTIMOltE O M ort1ne1 11 \ 0 O t • St•nllou\w IL )1>1. 7'• I • • J CALlfOllHl"'I qy.tn \ 0 0 • ti L•Aocnr-t o o o "' Gr111.,, <W. J.. 1 • 0 0 0 I H 8 P RUOI lby M•rllMt I I J• •l A -lC.171 * AHGEl. NOTES "'•nlr T,;n•11.a 11&·1• ,.11101> Po~ J•m ''Clttltlt'" HVf'lt•r .11 •' •" the '~'e' ooener woln 1"" Y.onktt~ tu~da• Ed Fl~ '17·81 .. \CllPOUltd lo l•c~ 0... AH• ••. ,. \Ill"" ,,....,.,,on'"" l•n&I~ A Crowd of 10.11) ~" •Ml"" W•!oon dll-0 IOl•I IC l.~I ...... tU\1 t J'O ~l'tv of llt\I Y9.lfr \ rfl(Ord TP\it A.rlqeh ~¥t won t~ of thftr l•sl •~ ~~ ond ,,.,.. ol IJ •I rw>m• They r• 1t1\0 4.) 1n ~lttr J 1nn1ng c;«nf°" Prior 1(1 '~~r . "",,... • CotllHI i.1-n Ju DiM.t'ltlo'\ All ''•" • •nd • ••mou• J•O•f'tS• gul\ lf'l•m -.nown ... th• ""ft • "•"-'"\ .. wlll 14111.t Ol•to Tiie qame ""111 \~rl •I \ 30 •rid "bo!lno te•~v•ud ,,..., 10 Jap.,.. Some o• 111e Pld•~" Al OIMllQQto•• d•\POUll .tre Don llufenl, WH Parker ... orm uner, Joflll Werll.t•, A ... r lletMr. 111<111• kllelMl""1, Jlm ,, ...... Yotl ••rr• <1t10 l!lste11 How.,d .• An901 p1tchlnQ ""' •II-oniv IA t•rned runs in )4 ·~ nor19s on 1n" l'l!>me\1-•or • 2 14 ER• J-...&Son PRESIMT ••• -Baseball Standiitgs Offer expires 8-00-78 BUYA MEW ZEPHYR ....... ......... AMERICAN LEAGUE West Division e•• GB Kansas City 67 SS .549 Angels 69 57 .548 Texas 60 61 .496 6'~ Oakl and 62 64 .492 7 Minnesota 56 68 452 12 Chicago SI 71 418 16 Seallle 4i 7i .379 21 East Division Boston i8 45 .634 Milwaukee 69 53 .566 81~ New York 69 53 .566 8~2 Detroit 67 54 .554 10 Baltimore 64 ·ss .525 1311'l Cleveland 54 68 .443 231/2 Toront.2_ 4'i "'71r-:3SZ -:JI SUiliirs JcMft Cl.,,..liNI IO, OllUIVO I Toronto•. MllWl91>0I• 2 MltWlulc.et t. Detroit I K•nw1City1. Ttaas I soi.ton •. Oellttnd 2 SHI lie S. Hew Yor• • T ... ,·.o.-· , .. ,. 11!111\~5> at Toronlo !Moores o Otlroll 19illln;Nm IJ" •I MonneS04• IZ- • 111,., 8.tllimore IFI~ 15 111 •I O•kl•nd IHOrrl\ 0 II, 11 Ollly QtmH KlleOUle<I 1\MltC,ty ., 0."'•' Htw York•• A"'911. n Tu as •I Toronto Cltllfllnd ., Mllw<tukff ll·n ooublth•IO•r I IC•llWI Clty •I Chic-. n Del roll et MlnnesOla. n 8•ttl,._t et Oe•llncl, n lloston al SHiii•. n NATIONAL LEAGt;E We11t Division w Dodgers L MPct. GB 73 3: San Francisco 7t 53 Cincinnati 70 54 San Diego 65 59 Atlanta 56 6i Houston 56 68 East Dlvlsloo Ph1ladclph1u 65 5.S Chicago G3 59 Pittsburgh 60 62 Montreal 58 66 St. Louis 52 72 New York ~ 73 ,_,,.,., ._ DectMi?J; New YO<-4 ftttt,J f.J, HOiiil Pllll•delpllt• \, S.. Fr...c1Ko J T-.,'tOemet .58tf .573 ... c. .565 l .524 I{ .455 161~ .452 ·-.. .542 516 J .492 b .468 'I .419 15 .407 161·'1 DMttn (WOtlCll ).GI •I Montrut IGfifTl\leY U-••,n sen D•t90 '"""' 1•s1 •I Phll-1111"• •LArtl\ 1·11 n S•n , r•nc1uo t 8•11• It ., •I N .. , Yo•' •ICoosm•n J.lll n SI Lour\ IAMrllnu M l •I Cln<lllNll cs ..... , 11 111." ~~~~(.~ <RtutcNI 1110 111 Hou\lon IAKherO OnlY ll•~«heCIUltO T._...w'•o.mt• Sen 01990 at ~11-ll>N•. n Pltl1bur91' et Allitnla, ro s.tll Frenccsco et New V0<•. n St Lou•1•t Onclnnat•. n Chl<'90 at -..ton tt Onlv ~ \C,_.llCI Orange County s Oldest L1n_coln-Mercurv Oaalersh1p I 0 SPEED BIKE .,.... .......... z.,.,,.. to dlooee ..... ALL AT YEAR END PRICES ! .JOHNSON le SON !·it I 2626 Harbor Blvd • Costa Mesa • 540·5630 - • .. DM.Y flll.OT NATION I BUSINESS Love Storg: 78 Years ·of ltla~age . 'Never a Quarrel' Splits Noah and Mary Barnett By EDDIE ADAllS Al'lllCllllC.ii I ' TOMAHAWK. Ark Noah '1 mom feared lt ml&ht not lut. and cUdn 't attend tb•e wedding. But Noah Barnett and Mary have been married 79 years now. They have 161 grandchildren to prove h.ll mother wrong. Her objection to Noah's marria1e was his age. 0 YOU SHOULD marry at 36, a man ain't boss unW he gels to that ctge. he ain't got enough sense to boss a woman before then." Noah remembered his mother saying. ''She was the prettles!ilrl l ever saw. and was we a pair of red tap boots wt bn&bt ~ toes. Her hair was braided and bung down to her walat." SO ON FEBRUARY, 2. 1899, the year the Spanish American war, ended, Noah and Mary were married here ln Tomahawk. They were both 19. Today. they spend their hours quietly together in the frame house they built 71 years ago on their 40-acre Arkansas farm within sight of Pilot Mountain. 'NEVER BEEN OUT 0, llOHT OF PILOT MOUNTAIN' Couple Mo• Mod"' Plana tor IOth Annlveraery But Noah said that he had been in love with Mary from the age of "5 when he saw her playing in a barn. Holdin~ hands often, they are making modest plans for their 80th wedding an· niversary next year. THE BARNETTS HAVE five children, ranging in age from 66 to 78. The couple love to talk about their life together . "We've been married almost 100 years and never had a quarrel." said the 98·year-old Noah. His formula to prevent an· gry words? "Don't say nothing when an argument starts. Just turn around and walk off by yourself, saying there ain't nothing to get mad about, that she didn't mean no harm. Stay outside a little while, then just come back like nothlng ever hap- pened." Noah said. THE DAY BEGINS at 7 'MARRIED ALMOST 100 YEARS;' AT LEFT ASTRIDE HORSE 'BOB' ABOUT 1963 They Fell In Love at Age 5 and Married In 1899; Photo at Right I• Dated 1905 a. m . Breakfast is supervised by their 72-year-old dauJlhter Dorothy. At mid, Good News, Bad· News In New Tax Cut Bill NEW YORK <AP >-The middle· class man lay on the beach reading the newspaper. Being a midd.Je·class man, he read the baseball news, the money news, and the tax news. His favorite baseball team, the sports page informed him, had won yest~rday 's game, but was still somehow lower m the standings than the last time he looked. THE MONEY NEWS was on Page 1. "In nation continued its surge," the headline reported. "In twin blows to consumers, the Labor Department said yesterday tbal retail prices during June rose 0.9 percent for the third straight month. while worke rs' buying power dropped 0.4 percent, the second decline in a row. "Thal meant that despite pay in· creases averaging 0.5 percent in June, the average wage earner was unable to keep pace with inflation, which the government said would be 10.4 percent this year based on price rises during the first half. "FOOD PRICES WOULD leap nearly 18 percent this year based on their performance during the first six months, while housing would rise 11 percent." He turned to the tax news. "Listen totliis;-'Y'Jl'e's afcJto his wife, who didn't care much about the baseball news and was smart enough • not to spoil a day at the beach by reading the money news. " 'Tax bill would aid the mid · die class; .. he said aloud. "A close look at the bill," the story ~iclr.."~ tbJlt 62.5 percent or the net '"'tax cuts would go to whaf Congress, ln these aays of high lnfla· lion, views as the great middle class : Those w1th incomes of $15,000 to $50,000 a year." man began reading agafn. 'But the cheery news he was looking for proved bard to rind ,,. the rest or the story. "As wtth most tax·cut bills, this one would result in a slRl\ificanl re· duction for only a relatively few tax· payers -the average net cut would be about $139. "Some, in fact, could wind up pay· Ing higher taxes becauae of some of the provisions. "Nearly 2S million couples or in· Gas Checks DD:e W ASJUNGTON <AP) -Govern· ment inapecton are lootlnc for service stations that fall to post federal cetUna prices of 1uollne on the pumps• requlred by law. The Depanmc.nt of Enera utd tt Is making the lnspectlons because 5-cbecu tb.11 1umm1r found that out ol eveKJ four 1tallom viait· ed I led to pC>lt celllna prices. dividuals would lose a favorite lax deduction that is worth an average $39 a year. It would no longer be possible to deduct state and local gasoline taxes. "THE 11 MILLION accustomed to claiming a deduction for medical ex· penses would see a change. No longer could up to $l50 in heallh·insurance premiums be deducted uncondi· lionally. .. And even if the proposed tax cut becomes law, the federal tax bite for all but a few Americans will go up next year because of inflation and higher Social Security costs, accord· ing to congressional figures. ''The reason is that although federal income taxes will go down. the reduction will be more than offset by inflation. pushing taxpayers into higher brackets, and by increases in the Social Security payroll laxes ap- proved last December." ON THE EDITORIA L page, there was a congressman blasting the bill as a "millionaire's dream" and a col· umnist lamenting that it would ig· nore the needs of the poor. Since he was neither poor nor a millionaire, the middle·calass man had some trouble seeing where he stood in this debate. Probably, he de- cided, somewhere in the middle. Aircraft Makers Warned Against Overs_et;is OTP _gyoff s WASHINGTON <AP> -Three large U.S. aircraft manulacturers, accused of bribing foreign officials to get o".erseas business, are open to identical consent orders released by the Federal Trade Commission, agreed not to make bribes or give kickbacks when competing with other American companies. IF THE ORDERS are broken, the companies are open to fines of up to Sl0,000 a day. The complaints do not specify the amounts, dates or recipients or the alleged payments. The FTC said the agr1.-ements are the first uses or antitrust laws to at- tack allegedly Illegal foreian pay. ments by American firms. LOCKHEED AND, TO a lesHr ex· tent, Boeing have been prominent in report.a during recent years or huge payorfs to win foreign businesa. By one account, more than 400 U.S. com- panlea have admitted payinl foreign officials ln excess or $700 million. In its proposed complaints, the FTC alleged the three firms made u. leaat ~menu between mo and 1975. ~OtWNGE~M ~~~~~(!®~ A~ A11 .. uace C'Uetlts Area advertising and public relations agencies have announced the following client assignments: -CaJculated Industries, Newport Beach, has selected the Cox and Burch AdvertlllDa Co. to pre- pare national advertising and marketing pro· grams. The company will introduce a new calculator. -Gloria Zlgner and Associates, Inc .. Newport Beach. has been named public relations counsel for Voll Temporary Services. Anaheim, which pro- vides business and industry with temporary employees. The agency also bas been retained as counsel by Bernard's Restaarant. Corona del Mar. -Joe Leighton and Associates, Newport Beach. has been assigned by USC to design and place the university's fall ad campaign. -Bozell and J acobs, Newport Beach, will handle advertising and sales promotion for Com· merceBank, which will open its initial branch in Newport Beach. The agency also hu been hired by Snow Skate, a recreational product developed by Pan Western Enterprises. Irvine, to create an ad campalgn. T~e product is skis that can be at· tached to skateboards. -Moxon. Inc., Irvine, has named Marlredng DlrectJons, Inc., Newport Beach. to handle ad· vertising and public relations. Moxon manufac· lures and markets electronic a nd digital test equipment. WTC'Rqort• Galfts WTC Inc., Newport Beach. has reported im· proved operating results in the seeond quarter and first half of 1978 compared with year.earlier periods. For the three months ended JWle 30, revenues increased to $33,259,000 from $25,393,000 in the second quarter or 1977. In this year's second ~after, tbe.'~y had-net Income of Sl41,000, or 7 cents a share, cotnpared with a net loss of $132,000. or 7 cents. in the three months ended JWle 30. 1977. For the first half of 1978, revenues rose to $63.304,000 from $49,042,000 in the flnt 1ix mooths of-twn. Net income in the~ ~8 wu $191,000, or 9 cents compared with a net Joss of $463,000, or22cents, in the flrstbalf ofl977. The net loss in the tint quarter or 1977 was retroactively increased by $176,000, or 9 cents. to ln· ect on ears prior to sidiarles ln air freight forw , surface frelabt forwarding and leasing activities. A.a an alrfretcht forwarder, the company maintains 34 terminals ln major metropolitan areas and as a surface frelabt forwarder maintains 40 terminals. 'EVE.N NOW SHE IS PRETTY .••. TO ME SHE IS' No8h Touche• Mary'• Cheek; They Hold Hands Often morning they have a short nap. then lunch and another afternoon nap. By 7 p.ll" they are in bed after an evening snack of ice cream. The couple love to recall their courting days. Mary was born in 1879. the year Thomas Edison invented the electric light, and Noah was born a few months late r . At the local Methodist church one Christmas, Noah pinned a large candy heart on t he tree with Mary's name on it. In school they wrote poems and notes to each other using code num· hers instead of letters. "E.\RLY ONE morning I went to Mary's house and I saw her sitting all alone ... Noah recalled during an in· terview. "She ran out to the porch and gavE.> me a hug. and I tell you that was the s w ee t es t hug I t.•vt•r got. .. Every timl· I would see her l wanted hl·r a little worse than befon· She just kept getting pretli<>r a ll the time . Even no\\ ~hl• 1s prel· ty. not ot you. l :-.uppo:-.t· But to ml.'sheb. ·· '.'ioah says with pndt·: ··1 have never s moked . chewed tobacco. been drunk or ar, rested. We hetve lived on these 40 etcres all of our liv~s ;md h ave been out of the stall' only once for only an afll'r· noon across the border in )lissoun. "We h<.1ve really nevt·r been out of sight of Pilot ~Iountain :.:II our lives · · eel Ing ood the focts abotlt a MCllllHus ............ p opt1 ...... fHHs1 ... .... _ ...... A Naulllus memberst\1p is designed fof' people on the go. People who don't have much time to stay In shape. but who want to be tit and feehno good. Studies have shown that long hours of strenous e~se can often do more harm than good. and that no matter what form of exercise you use. programs of short. but intensive exen:1se are best That's wtiy. over the pa.st 30 years, Nautilus has pl<>neefed and developed a new and advanced concept in total htness condit1on1ng. The concept is based on a patented cam which is used exclusively on Nautilus exerctae eQuipment. This un1Que cam is de81Qned to instantly and automatically vary the resistance in d irect proportion to available muscular strength thrC>ughout the full range of e.1Cercuse movement. ·"f' ~A N'<J-NON~NS~ APPROACH I , 11eleriSion TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS .... "2 -----...... ,0 ........ 9400 ,.._ entnittM to '*" Ind "*' ... UJBE TOPPERS M)'ml. IO llW eel\ ~ I lflOf ... atlOW ......... ~. ... ··-n:u. .... ~ ,...,. -.......... ~ -•1 1 .:=om f: ~IMM CW ................... ......... • llTOelGH'f LOI Ano••.. O•lll•I Nllhlni.f .. OMn, tltttt • AIMrlCen ~ 10 Wiii flrtt OtlH el M0900W'• ll'ltemlUOnel Tdllll~ ~IOfl ..._Vin c..im. II Inter· ~ w fmllt Aellcft. menn . NBC 8 9 ;00 -"Sergeant Matlovtch vs. the U.S. Air Force." A dramatUaUon ol the court-martial of a Vletnam veteran who at.9m.ltted he was a hommexuat. Brad Dourif plays the ti· tle role fsee review below>. • • lllJIM'OOOIHIGHT au.ta: Mr. Mlt8hall ~ jCCWpOtll ~ In 1Choo41), VlaetWn refugw Miii\ Co TIMI, ...... tloop.. lllt ~ Wllhlngton, lllld • @frttt OllMIM lllld laule. • '*'K CAVITT Guell: Oany MulloM. I~ . KCET 8 9:00 -Great Performances. Sissy Spacek stars in Paul Galileo's "Verna: USO Girl" as a stage struck dancer with limited tt:tae(I) C.LATWMOVIR ••'+ ''TN hen" (ttM) Choe ~. Alec Quin. Mee. ... -.0 ... ... ....,,.. ...... ............. ..... ,.., .... ...,. ePMOta.. .. ,. In Mew*'• Qottllng'' (A) ·talents. 8 TOMGHf --.....-~--a-=:..oan .. T e:ooe THaAJOC~ LOulM hirne emal6Vt ~ '° And OU1 wtiy Oeoroe .. Ml'CflnO money end~to·~ oue~t~ ABC 8 9:30 -"The Chairman." au.t tlot1: loO HewNl1. Gueet1: JUdtth ..... Mwll)'ll MoOoo and 8llly DIHle "' .. Don Alell .... l'NI~ ..,..~ ...... ~ • ltWt8C.IAM MUQWC A ..... p.I~ .............. ~ • LITTLE tQMBON ntll'Ml9 Gregory Peck stars as a scientist sent on a mission to Red China in this 1969 movie drama with Arthur Hill and Anne Heywood. • TWIUGHT lONI Adem °'*" ..... Mnce4 10 OtMtl ,., the elac!trtc d\llr. ....... out lfllf ..... ""' ...................... ~llleH-.perleld. • °""' IAl't ..... Goullt; .. to .... ... .., .. dlllltl of • ...-: w•••• °" the .-..::r.0.. tluy 4ftl I• 'B11.:aat1 .. , "llno All'l~lce 8•1'10 · 0.:. &rMct·a eutoc.o- plllPl*M .... Ill wNcll .. Ind John ...... star, l.liC*S It the ~ F Ken. nedr Center kw The Pier· tormlng Atta In Septefnber tt75. Erin Gray, a top commercial actress and model. is featured in a dramatic role tonight in the concluding segment of the TV movie "Evening in Byzan- tium" on KCOP. Channel 13. at 8 o'clock. Cl) Ql8NNS l:30. &'IB'U "'· Loe ~ Oodgert al Mont .... Upol t:OO 088 NEWS I TOTUL THE TRUTH • MYTHMEIOMS ~ ~ help tlleif -In a ec:ftool '*· but St-t ... Emte thll he't onhllown • M9CHA!l JAa<SON au.t: George SMering. blwld pilnllt end compoe.. N8CNEWI t.Wl8CUJ8 90WUNOA>A OOUAA8 • ILOVELUCY Lucy hOj)es to b< .. k Into lhOw ~ oot mu1t loM twelve pounds fltal. ., THEF.8.1. lntpeetor Erlklne mov• aaa ... (11 Lu••••• e KNlCT (CBS) Los Angeles a KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles I KTLA (Ind ) Los Angeles KASC-TV (ABC) Los Angeles Cl) KFM8 (CBS) San Diego G KHJ-TV (Ind.) Los Angeles (fl KCST (ABC) San Diego I KTTV (Ind.) Los Angeles KCOP·TV (Ind.) Los Angeles e KCET· TV (PBS) Los Angeles G) KOCE· TV (PBS) Huntington Beach Dakota Visit Angie Finally 'Comes Home' By GORDON HANSON FARGO, N.D. <AP> -Fresh from shooting TV projects in the South Pacific and getting ready to make a film in Montreal. Angie Dickinson took a moment recently to chat about her girlhood on the North Dakota prairie. "I was definitely a tomboy," the energetic star of NBC's "Police Woman" series, which began in 1974 and will not be continued by the network this fall, recalled. "I enjoyed playing toot· ball. As I remember, it was mosUy with boys." She mulled that memory over, then lau~hed and -said kiddingly: "I had an early eye for the male. I think I was a little flirt, even at the age of 8." Angeline Brown was born "in the 1930s " in Kulm, N.D .. a farming town now populated by 625 people. She was 5 or 6 when qulcl(ly 10 held Off • gflnfJ- lltnd killer who 1188' mgen. k>\18 hOmemlde bornbe 10 <lllP<>M of hit "oontract" llictknl. • MACNEll / LEHAEA R!.POAT al) TIWNS, TRACKS ANOTM8TU!S "Fine Oetlill" ()) JOHNNY CASH Yount 8PEC&AL "Where Hew All The Cllll· oren Gone?" A penetr•t· Ing loOif Into Ille hCJ98I end <lrNml Of children II pratented. Oue1t1: Mreheel Landon. Carol 8CHIWtt, Roy Cialll. Ct\ld Everett, Debbie Boone, Roger Wllllafnl end Biii C09by. 1:30. as.ooo PVRAMIO CON8UMEA 8UVUHE NEWLYWED GAME • JOt<iA'8 WIU) t8THEOOOCOUPLE Felix flndl 09cll' moon- llQlltlnQ 11 a countennan In "' young b6IC* runeny (Todd lridgel) °""9 to be Chef* .,..... ~ jn ~ for en ectuc .. tlOtt. (A) • MOYIE • "Dellroy All Montteq" ( HUii) AkltO Kubo • Monet ... hltded IC>Qelller on en ~ on Eerth. .,. relNMd by ellent. end begin to cleltroy tl'8 WOftd. (21WS.) II MOVE * * ·~ "OeYll'a Eight" ( 1969) Christopher 0-ge, f.t>len. A 19derll llO'fll .. "plllna.d'' In • 8outMrn toed ~ to er'OI'*' the eecepe of lbt convlc:t9 with llfe -.teno- ... (2 In.) • HOT art De9CO The nott• .,.,,_ "' the wond of dleco will .,. ~. tinging the .... dllCO 11111 wtllle the Hot City Dencera mow emld a maze of pun.ting laler bMml, flUhlng atrobes. mirrors end ll)8dal en.ct•. • EVINNQIN BYZANTIUM Cf'8lg eftempta to stop the uploltlltlofl ol "" llCl'!Ot. end 800ft rMllzM thel rnC>C'8 .. .. .... tllal\ • mere m<Me. (Pert 2 of 21 •• ANNA KAAENICA Vronlky '*"** AMa to Uk for • divorce; eount.. lvlnc>Yn• ctom1- n11t• IC.arenln (Pert 9 of 10)(R) e:ao I :T1ME8 Grandpa Even• and his ladV frtlnd find their "*. • ,. .. hindered by the Soclel Security .. em (RI t:008 M•A•t•H Ctlan.. ft'lll!.. • ,..,. reconflnO contllninQ his views on both the 111ua11on and the per1on11111aa of the 4077th.(A) 8 NICMOVE "Sergeen1 MatloYlc:h Va. The U.S. Alt FOfOI .. (Pr- lere) Br8CI Dourlf. Marc Singer. A WW 'f9Wan flghta to ,.....1., the mili- tary llter ~ dlnlm tt '**-of Illa homolex· Ullty. • MIRY OIWf1H "Modlllng" au.ta: Nini BIMcNrd. MlcflMI IMrlg, Meud Ad1m1, David Young, &Ille Coelho. Erin Gray. • OAfAT PERFOAMAHCO "Peul Oelltco'• Verna: U.8.0. Girt" A dfamattz.. tlon of a.llco'a 'Verna." , .. turlrlg Slely Speoak, s.-y t<elem'len. Howlrd O&Sll\ll end Wiiiiam HuO. G UVE FROM WOt.f TRAP "Tl• Beneke. Helen O'Connell And Bob Ebertl" T• Benek• end Illa ~,. perfonn • concert of~· l'llUllc. lllllttl 1~111 oueatl Helen O'Connel Ind Bob a.te. 9 HOU.VWOOO tQUAM8 9:30. ONEDAYATAT1ME ~ llMI• AM and S.· .'4 her family moved to nearby Edgeley, population 888. BRAD DOURIF (RIGHT) PLAYS SERGEANT MATLOVICH With David Spletberg •• Attorney at Court·mertf al THEY LIVED ABOVE the Edgeley Mail, a weekly newspaper. her parents, Leo and Frederica Brown, were printers. Angie was about 9 when the family moved to .Jarvis Gets Show Burbank, CaHf., and she never returned to North LOS ANGELES <A P) -Howard umn. which begins next Monday. Dakota. Jarvis. the crusty co-author of IC Jarvis agrees to do a radio sbow, She said Edgeley city officials once invited her California's tax-cutting Proposition O'Connor said, "he'll talk about the back for the town's 7Sth anniversary. "I was preg-13, has heretofore talked of his tax tax revolution in general, and about nant and just didn't feel I could make the trip. fi ght for free. But this fall he may be situations cropping up around the L'Jckily, l didn't try because my daughter was doing it on radio for money. country. where people are initiating born prematurely by three months. That's the word from Harry O'Con· efforts to set limits on taxation." nor, bead of a radio syndication fll1ll "BUT I NEVER CAN forget those Noflh that distributes recorded commen-THE TAX CRUSADER. who lives Dakota winters," she said in a telephone interview tary by such other notables as here, gained national farne in June from her Los Angeles home. Ro n al d Re a g an and former when the Proposition 13 amendment "There was ice skating, sledding. climbing Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz. he co-authored was approved by trees 'k:CY"'""'" but no such n .... ~ as sJdjng We "'C.n. ........ says he's bffn negetial· California vote.tS hY a.2·1 margin. . ' WC ~ wu.ue ' V-..,. .. ...,. Jt trimmed property taXeS in slid down $nowbanks on shovels. ing with Jarvis, 75, lo do a 21h·minute California by an average of 57 per· "AU those things are very, very nice program on taxes and government cent. put limits on future tax in· memories." five days a week. If no snags occur, There were four daughters and no sons in the he expects to sign him up by the end creases and works out to a $'7 billion Brown family. "My poor rather," sbe chuckled. or next week. property tax cut. It went lnto effect last month. "But we did have a male dog in Edgeley. Blacky, J ~Rt; ),l'Jl• . led O'Connor says he approached a mutt buJ.!.d.o&, Uoved.bim-Writ~ a eekty A~tum~~~t t~ ams Orily last week •bout ltOtnf a SHE REMEMBERED THE time in Edgeley Grass Roots, H which is being sold to syndicated radio show. and "he bas "when J was thrown in 8 gymnasium class and bit newspapers by the Inter-Continental great enthusiasm for the project. my bead on a hardwood floor ... and 1 remember Press Syndicate in Glendale. Calif. He's very interested in doing It. a baton•twirling class in that gymnasium. I did John Kearns, sales manager at "He also volunteered that wbere a well enwab lhM-when I arrived in eattfonlia;-J-th.a t ri rm. says: t b:v-s f.ff~·s~ --1»&t8wttioo wants-ir.t,-1h:lt!ef.!J':ltt-I .Jli~IHllNK--Rilt-' wa&-~ ~new-moves m twin· =newspapers c:::-amoi(ftJlennmpers m tien~s cily ~ ...;__.;;;.;,.,,, __ -IW.._-li~nn sco:-mt?Qlt and halt n1eeting and engage in a de 'Her memofies ol Kulm are few. "I recall our nnadeJphia -have bought the coT-on the tailssues involve(!.~ first car and trying to get it to not slop, and getting to ride on the running board if we were very carefut.•• Angie Dickinson got info the movies "by sheer luck.·· She said she entered a beauty contest "not thinking I was beautiful, but I had a personality lhatgotmeby." Bank Sues S~er . In Wrong Credit LOS ANGELES <AP>-A bank trylnl to re· cover nearly$30,000 lt clalma wu mtatakenly credit- ed to the account of Tlna Turner's corporation bas suedtbepopa1nter. Uruon BanJt filed the suit ln Los Anceles Superior Court. = credited SZB.948 In the form of • German Check to the account of her corporation, Tina's tlon Oops, at Finl Lot AnJelea Bank last Febl'ua.r)'. The suit, also asttn1 seo.ooo ln damaf,es, clalma Miss.Turner ~pitted tho account and re used ti re· ttm the f\mdst .. blra IO'* MW 1p1rtme11t for dlflner, (Plrt 2 of 2l(Al • MOYIE • *'-" "The Cttalmtan" (tH9) OreQOfY Peck. ArthufH• . 9 'MllWGIWAN "MoOaling·• au.t•: Nini ea.na.o. Mktll9I IMng. M1ud Adem1. David Young. &Ille Coelho, Etln °'llY· 10:00 8 LOU ORANT Lou ...,.,_ 11e llN oanoer end hH to 11ndergo 8'#'glry. (RI I • NEW8 ONMTIOH MMAN)l8• ~ ~ *"' lnMt· Yiewt from ""* t:Onfl- dlfltll encl oowi-•t V.l.P.'t .. incorpoiated to ,..,.,.. die man enct the thinking behind OM of the blggllt end tllOOdlaet bit· tlel INt epelld the encl of EurC1119'1 domlnace In 10:3011nt-==-affllrs . TOM ANNOUNCED U:OO 8 8 (I) 0 Hf:WI LOW, AMENCAH 8'M.E "loYe And The Pulltler Priz9 Blbf' A mo-M ster. who wmltl IO llew tM per. feet beby. 11181 to get a ~ Pru. writer to be tllefllMr. G MOVIE **'h ''The Tloer And Tiie Puuycllt" I t987) Vittorio OlllWMll. Baetlor Ptwker. • 'ntEOOO COUPl.E Felix penuldee Oecar to releeae hll Ner .. lry, eoecw ~ 22 *"' 231.-. 11oe and ci-ter T1te, alotlQ Wll1' th* butter er.on. teetlfy .. Jellice'• murd•r trl•I; and • ..pnee wit-~ .,...._II twouQtlt •~o. (Hetwoftc adllllee ~ dilcrettonl (Al • HOOAN'I ttEAOU HpgM ~ to rob a bank IO gel fhe CUii lie needs to bYy Merel lnfor· inatlon. " • OETIMN'f Smert Ind ... " t..n up 1fritti tfteir friend lnlpec. tor Herry Hoo to eolY8 • KAOS plOt on e delertlO PICtftc lllmnd. • CAPTIOHE>WOAl.D NIEW8 TONIGHT • MM::Ha. I LEHRER N!PORf t.CRNING 12:00. lWIUOKT ZONE Ml'. a... • hlc>py.go. ludcy lndlvldual. I08ll Illa lob. oet• evlctlO and ~ hll Qr, Ill In Oftl day. I~ T81ked Into taking their wMll to Ille Rtoccoon'1 corwentlOn. Ralph~ Ed ••• the wrong tnaln. 12:;30 e MOYIE •• "Yodetln' IOd From 0.-Ridge'. (1937) Gene Autry. ·~ •• "Shell Shoal" ( 196-tl 8elcfl Dlckeraon. Carl T.wada11'• Da11il-.1'1ol'fe• K>RNING tt:IO ....... "Good .._ Man" 1 IP501 Jade Cll'IOn. LOii Albrigllt. A "Good Humor" man end Ill• g1r1. friend beCOme lnvoMd In • ~. (2 hrl .. 20 """·' N=TERNOON 12.-00 G • • "The Aesttea er.ecr· 1195n Scott Bradv. Anne Blncrott. Alter a MCret ~ egent .. killed by a ganga1er, Ille m1n'1 ton an.mpta to avenoe hi• death.< 1 hr .. 30 min) 3:00 (fl • * * 1.'I "The Ameri- cenlzaUon Of Emlly" ( 10841 Jam•• Garner, Julle Andrews Romance grows between • Br11fsn _, wicl- -Md a non-heroic: offi-cer ..igrled 10 provide Ills aue>er~ llllith the IUXUllM of llOIM. ( t fir .. 30 min.) 3:30 8 • • v. "Cfoolcs And Coronall" ( 19691 Telly SavalH. Edith E11an1. Statat, Bri1ian menteon1 become Ille target of I group ot ltilevlng geoo.. a1en. ( t hr .. 30 min.) Gag Ainnan's Story Docudrama Dull • By JAY SllARBV'IT LOS ANGELFS <APl -Jn 1975. Tech. Sgt. Leonard Matlovicb, a decorated Vietnam vet, made headlines by telling the Air Force he was homosexual and righting the Air Force's bid to kick him out. It seemed inevitable his story would be dramatized for TV. It has . The result, airiQlilon NBC tonight at 9 on Channel 4. is an oddly nat two· hour movie called "Sergeant Matlovich vs. the U.S. Air Force." Brad Dourif. an Oscar nominee three years ago for his work in .. One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest." plays Matlovich, veteran of three Vietnam tours and a recipient or the Purple Heart. DOURIF TRIES hard to convey the torment that the deeply religious sergeant felt before reaching the con- clusion he told to a court·martial board: "I will not live a lie." But the movie, despite its admira- ble avoidance or sensationalism. is a listless. highly predictable one. Its worst flaw is a black or dramatic contrast that could have come had the film more strongly ex· plored Ute reasoning behind the Air Force regulation against hom~ex· uals in its ranks. THE PROCEEDINGS start at the court-martial, whe r e defense lawyers -played by Barra Grant, David Spielberg and Frank Con· verse. all of whom could have phoned in their sketchy roles -argue that: -The Air FOl'ce regulation is un· constitutional. -The sergeant's homosexuality "Hard l:Ude' Cast r;o ANGELES" tAP) -Richara Crenna aod Linda Blair star in "Hard Ride to Rantan," now filming at Glacier National Park. (TV REVIEW J doesn't affect his work, that asser· tion buttressed by a parade of Air Force colleagues who proclaim him a first·rate. outstanding airman. Flashbacks aplenty also ensue, starling when Matlovich tells his mother of his homosexuality and asks her to break the news to his father. She urges him to go to church and ··seek God's help.•· ••MAYBE WITH God's help I'll finally have the strength to be who I am and what I am." he says. voicing a main theme of-the show. You also see him wrestling with his conscience in Vietnam prior to his decision he is homosexual. eschewing girl-c hasing there and speaking of hi~ then·vague troubles to a Roman Catholic priest . The priest seem s aware of Matlovich's sexual worries and sug. gest s the ser geant is keeping something back. MaUovich isn't sure what it is. Whereupon the padre soft. ly says: "All right. my son. When you are ready, you'll tell me." BACK IN THE U.S .• Matlovich still is troubled. He finally reveals he's a homosexual to his best pal. another sergeant. The guy leaves MaUovich's apartment in shock, but retun151ust tn time lo stop his friend from com- mitting suicide with a sbot~un. Matlovich later visits his first gay bn. a quiet saloon called "The Wilde Place." then consults a psychiatrist. then tells the Air Force of his sexual preference and starts his fight to stay m. He loses the fight, and tonight's movie about it may lose your interest early in the battle. The mm is a sym. pathetic, well-intentioned piece, but It's also one-sided and dull. -a.1 ...... n Trcwolta Ollufa ?Nwton -John .. -tstbewoftl AfWW,O.Nf ~ m JJUl•l]llM-C11C) .... llMIE:::::::"IC:::::~(n'l IS7-0MO 4) awt11 ;.;:;.~~:ra=:.r~SD C) 11M271 ·-mM ' "You and your fou·lldclngf Com• bock with my •plolh.t I" FUNKY WINKERIEAN GERIATRIX OIO ™AT ~NP TD ')OLJ 1l-EY ~r ~USC L-tKE: A~ ~ING 9WAT TEAM~ FO'Z ON A 0UU..H06'N? ~PUe !.-'~ 000K5l IOOMEA MISS PEACH by Tom Batluk BOT r. 1HINK I'M REAU..9 (PANT) 6£1il~ A BU&~! 1 II JUDGE PARKER by Jeff MacNelly fM GIVING A PARTY FOR MRS. SMITH-SHE MADE A HOLE-tN·ONE AT THE GOLF COURSE TOPAY by Wm. F. Brown and Mel C.sson ~,rr HAS~ c;oop 1Jf~ GOING FOil IT. Wlt.L.1 YI~, IN A Dl~~1'1NG ~TOI' WAY.·.· DOOLEY'S WORLD THERE! uow'D YOU LIKf 1HAiiUNE:, Dool.EV? OR.SMOCK YOU WANi" -ro KNOW IF :X: CAN Rf;MOVe. A. CARRO-r" 'T"HA.-r'S <SROWIN<S OUT' OF YOUR L.f!FT' 5AR ? by Mell by Harold Le Doux ~Y Emit Bushmllltr I FIXED HER CAKE TO L.OOK LIKE A GOLF HOLE ,'C';tffl,,_ "41•· L• I • PEANUTS UJMAT 15 rT ~OU WANT, CAA-(LIE ~? so I eve UP! I AOMIT 1HAT il8€'5 NO ~If I CAN WIN~. ~ <:· by Roger Bradfitfd by George Lemont ' Yes, ~ ReA&..1.-Y ee1,1eve "THIS SPESCIA&.-lt;A'f"ION NONSf!NSES HAS <SONE! 'TOO FAR .' TODAY'S CBDSSIDID PUIZLB ACROSS I Room di th+> IOU 6 Youn(! ~111 "'"' 10 Lo.,don 'IP' 11on 11 lnwomrnl 1'1 P1111of)le 16 M~tal 11 MPnr>on1lt' QIOUP 18 Nect'!>S41V 19 APOellall()O 20 Allay 'l2 AClo•s mo he11 24 Crn<.Yrt ha• o•attncis 26 Change<1 11 Ph'(11Ci11 defect 2 WO•rtS 30 Es100 31 l>M.cenc1M 32 Annove<t 37 Gallooed 38 lfl!ef 40 Salutato<>n 41 Last eauem lfy 2words 43V~ '4 Bklrldot '5 lltql! -W(ll'll;lt\ .ca r ,.,,.,111,..00 llutd )l E1uooean shlM' !12 SPCrl'I~ rn•I~ !><! Fear 50llle lhtnQ\ SB Pav l•P 50 Ptt>pas111on 61 Endin9 lo1 eQO 62 Jac1i. f1os1. "'a sense 63 Autocrat 64 Cttv 1n t.lt<ntO(fS k•nqdom 65 l(ennl!l1v il"d w~ loams 66 SecMd s111n9e1~ 67 lnscubed \lab DOWN I Armatltlkl 2 ChKk SQeed 3 Rea• oa•• 4 Ooscernmem S Sttell 6 Baseball htt 2 wo•<ts 1 C1l•US dunl< 8Assemble 9 Smottng. &..9--2--- UNITED Feature Syndic1t; S.turdly'a Puule Sol\led MWdS 10 S1nget F1ank 11 Speec:M11 12 G#eet pOel 13 Outstandrng people Slanq 21 Bv <neV' ol 23 lJplth 25 OrtheStra sec1t0n 27 lJnplffsaot remark 28 Army •f'Q' men1. lur~ 29 Bl<l'N 33 Auto Pfrtl 34 Subdue oerlOlk 36 Haunt'I 38Conum J9 Screwbi!llr. 42 Assavetr. 4J 01aw 46 M1 l1nco1n 41 Sheti8' and lafm.ldge '8 Ha11 ll•a•d 49Cut 11110 "50 Ptawd a PM S3 Babvl<>nian moon god SiFonn.rtv &6 100 dlnals S1 M&1ou15 do • . . t -DAILY Pll.DT -..~21 .tm Tbe ri · · · .,. awbNN1• Mt NCOrd btts • ~n.An , .......... Cor lh• AU\lll • 11 U.., appear lD lhi•w••a.-ol .bOd ... US... BOTllNGLll l '·Gnue" Frankie Valli CU()) z. "Th.ree Tlmea A L-41" CommodorH <Motown> 3. ..... You" Rollina ~ ( ttolliftl 5'ooel> 4. ..&oioiM Ooli• ~" A Taite ol Hooey CC1pltol) 5. ''Hot Blooded" ~ (Atlaatle> I . "t.ov. Will Find A Way" Pablo Cnllae tAIJIO 1 "Hopelesaly Devot.Id To You" Olivia N6wton-John (f\SO) ' e. "Miper And StMl'' w~ £pn <Coham· bla> TOPLPI 1." 'Grease' Soundtrack" CRSO> %. ·'Some Girls" Rollinc Stooa <RolUq Stones) 3. "Nalural Hi&h" Commadorel <Motown> 4 "Doub&e Vision" Foret~ <AUaotic> s: .. ·~· Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band' Soundtrack '<RSO) EASY USTENING 1. "Three Times A Lady" Commodores l llotown) . 2. "Fool If You Think It's Over" Cbns Rea United Artists> 3. "You" Rita Coolidge <A&.M> 4. "Talldng In Your Sleep" Crystal Gayle CU ni led Artists> s. "My Angel Baby" Toby 8eay <RCA> COUNTllY SINGLES 1. "Talking In Your Sleep" Crystal Gayle tUnited Artists> 2. "We Belong Together" Susie Allanson < W arner·Curb) J. "When I Stop Leaving" Charley Pride tRCA> , 4. "Rake And Ramblin' Man" Don Williams tABC > s. "Rose Colored Glasses" John Conlee <ABC> ••r-1 .,_ ·-494·1514 cMBl·~~I &911.~.Jol JOHN TRAYOLTA CMIASll,., ._..,._.,,._JIJl.+.M SAT,......111...,......M'-11 .......... "' "HIAYIM CAM WArr' IP'GI .... , ...... ,., SAJl~l11'-lt1"4c1'-1'1-ll ~mMOUS .... OOPB"l,.I WDAn ..,._,_.»flM SAT/I .. lttl 11 U1__, TMINOUIMANINI ~ WM01l m» fttl IAINoo -""°"9. ~ ·-"°' UAD I COLD fllT 191 ~ (I') flt.UY FltOAT fe) _,., ...,_. • IAU\' ~ MOdll'laCNI -ODI 10 la&.T IOI'"! --•cw_... --~----.... ... -•m•,_ ... a1 aoa 1'HOllA8 HOLLYWOOD <AP) -Nowada,ya lt'a aa hard to l•l lntO UCLA abd tJ$C tuma tchooll u lt •• to ~ter Harv1rd MocHnal ScbooJ, and no wonder. FUm tcbOo1I are t.ho 1ar1eat aource ot new movt makers. Colin IDUlnl .. lbe latest to jOtn Franc .. Cop. p0l1 090r10 Lue11, Jobn MWua, Hal Barwood. Matthew JlObb(na and others wbo have 1radu1ted from tUminl Imm abort• on campua to 1pendlna mtWona on wide-ae...en features. For h.la muter'• thfll• at UCLA, HJacna wrote the 1cript ot 11Harold and Maude." and Uiat woul,d bave t>ttn enouab to ensure b.11 fame. Lut year • aurprlM 1mub, ''Sliver Streak,'' ~ti ... written by H1f1Jna. He ta responsible tor both '°" acript and direction of thla a}llllmer 's release, "Foul l>lay." 1tarrin1 Goldie Hawn and Chevy Chue. ALL OJ' IRGGINS' tums have been atront on plot, and be admit.I: "I like the role of story teller. t can imagine myself in another clvillaaUon telling . talea around the campfire and bavin1 others aay, 'What happened next'!' "J like the big entertainment. where the au· dlence can sit back and have a rolllcklna 1ood time. I also like to play cal·and-mouse with au· dlences, to let them get ahead of what the actors know. amt then -whammy: show them their clues were wrong." He does just that in "Foul Play ... Goldie Hawn is in possession of a roll or film that seems to be the reason the crooks are trying to klU her. The roll seems to be the McGuffin·Alfred Hitchcock form for the crucial evidence, but it comes to a surprise ending. THE STOUT FIGURE of Hi~cbcock is ever· present In "Foul Play," which owes ils climax to the concert·hall assassination in "The Man Who Knew Too Much." Likewise, "Silver Streak" had obvious overtones of "North by Northwest." Higgens readily confesses his debt to Hitchcock: "He wrote the book on the grammar of film, just as E . B. While wrote the grammar for writing. The only difference is that Hitchcock uses movie shots instead of words." Colin Higgins. 37. has bushy brown hair ~d the handsome face of an actor, which he was in (SJ «& """"'""'°". ~ OY DI ~un• Tl(l!HICOl.Oll• JDDDOL.9YSTIMOl C•••••-..... c ..... ,: •• l)i). NOW THE FORCE ISATA lHEATRE NEAR YOU a.:.41NIVE.RBAL. STUDIOS TOUR ... ANMCA ~'' Ol>l~lalalal lASllOOA600~ It WU tM Deltas -Inst the rulea ••• the ""'" lost! A UNM~ PIO\J\E lKWNICOt.Ol\9 NOW PLAYING mw-.·..,..r•1 Newpott 8Neh 644-0760 Cl .... WQTet Westminster 892-4493 colle1e years. He was bom on the French lJland of New Caledoola. where hla American f•tber worked for Pan American Alrway1. The JO"/ 1pe11t the war years •Ith bia Auatr•Uan mother In Sydney. and 1rew up in both C..ellomla and Au1tralla. RE GAINED ms ED\JCA110N from Stanford Universlt)'. the U.S. Army. the Sorbonne, blldq tb.rouah Europe and sbit>Pin& to t.be Orient u a seaman. Finally. be la.oded at UCLA. wortlq bi.I way throuab film school as pool and i.nall eourt cleaner and partUme cbaUffeur for prochacer Edward Lewis. For bis master's thesis, mggina turned out an audacious CC>medy about the love match between a free-spirited woman of 80 and a auicldal yO\JDI man. "Harold and Maude" not only won bis degree, but a $100.000 sale to Paramount -"it sold on a weekend to Bob Evans." Hiutns happily recalled. Bud Cort and Ruth Gordon starred ln the film. Hal Asby's second as director. On its first release "Harold and Maude" received almost intema· ttonaldisdain. "TIME AND NEWSWEEK refused to review it." HiRJtins said. "Most reviewers wrote alonR the lines of •a black comedy from a warped mind.· The only favorable reception was in Paris. Fran· cois Truff aut recently told me it is still running there." But the initial failure submerged Higgins' new career. After writing a TV thriller for producers Tom Miller and Eddie Milkis, Higgins left for Paris, where Jean·Louis Barrault commissiorieCI him to convert "Harold and Maude" into a play for bis wUe, Madeline Renaud. 1be play is also sUU running. "WHEN I CAME BACK to Hollywood in 1975." Higgins said, "l figured the w~ to gel back into the movie business was to write a comedy enter· tainment. In the beginning I decided to direct. but 1 realized it was beyond my expertise to start on a $6 million production. I vowed that if it was suc· cessful. I would refuse to sell my next script unless I could direct. Several years ago, I had written one called 'Killing Lydja. • I rewrote about SO percent or it and that became 'Foul Play.· "Fox turned it down. Paramount chlef Barry Diller had a moment ·s hesitation about my dtrec· lion until I said, 'J wrote it and I can see it.' That sold him." PE'tER FRAMPTON TBEBEEGEES ''SGT. PEPPER'S LONELY HEARTS CLUB BAND" A~m&All, ~· • ~ ""l:;s'.=;::::;=:::;;;::::-=f DD~~ fN'B•--~ "\QJ .. -·--•M.--.HilUYWCllt• ~Ps:s~ NOW PLAYING ClllDOME 120 lDWAROS CUt£MA orange 6~·2553 Costa Mesa 546·3102 fOUMTAll WALLO IMUVE·IN OaAy I 30·3 ·~ •6 00 Sun-Tllllt't t IM 15-41'1& Founr.a1n Valley 962-2481 & 1~· 10 30 Ft"'6al 3 lf>.7 IM1 ctnEnome Ei s cAe en ' 634 25~3 comPLEX MATINEES SATURDAY Ii SUNDAY "SGT. PEPPER'S LONELY HEARTS CLUB BAND ... {PG) "SMOKEY AND THE BANDIT"' (PG) "THE BUDDY HOLLY STORY" "THE SWARM" (PG) .. THE CHEAP DETECTIVE" rPGJ "MURDER BY DEATH'" "HEAVEN CAN WAIT" (Pu) - STROIUm 5 scRee n 639 7860 OAIVE·ln "FOUL PLAY" (PG) "FUN WITH DICK & JANE" "HEAVEN CAN WAlr' "AMERICAN HOTWAX"CPG) "THE DRIVER" (R) "SPEED TRAP" "BUDDY HOLLY STOAY" (PGJ "THANK GOD IT'S FRIDAY" "SMOKEY & THE BANDIT" (PG) "STUNTS" ALL OltlVC·INS OPCN 6:JOP.M.NfeHTLY Clllld UllO•r 'a "'" U11t•U • K ......... ,. .... lllld . { ENTERTAINMENT /MOVIES /MUSIC BOSTON <AP) -lt'a the nost&Jeta ot t.he * c.1 nd the aura of Hollywood: the ranle dazzle of Dino DeLaurentiis and Jhe m ystique• of mem,r)" 1ane -all ~rapped up in a fodr~a)" JaUcdon of movie props. emed as the nm -.>c· lion of tts kind on he East Coast. Brin) 's Produrbon.~ Ltd. Is '4ell· ina off some ?A>.000 ~ used in the Boston ntm· irt& of a yet·tO..be·named movte about the »so Bnnk '~ robbery of sdtne $2. 7 million in cash tmd bonds. ............. The antique cars used in the film went on "th~ block over the weekend. CAMPUS TO SCREEN Colln Higgins -.-... -.... HEAVEN CANWAIT m'cMf _, ~ ....... ~1~--HOTLUIJ LT 0 "'"' 1P01 'WARLORDS Of ATLANTIS" INSIDE: •Ann Landers •Classified •Livi~ DAIL 't' f'tlOT -~----_.,.. _. .. . .. Clutter Moderne Francie Hansen has a knack for proving that one man's junk is another woman's treasure. By DENNIS McLELLAN °' .... Deity ...... Sutt Francie Hansen calls it "recycling naturals." It's an apt description for what is essential- ly creating somethinx out of nothing. And that's preciaely what Francie Hansen does. By taking odds and end pieces of rope, baskets, metal, glass, wood, old spoons <bottle caps, brooms, nails> and just about anything else you can imagine, she creates wall han~­ iogs, collages. doJlS,h16sks, household items and assorted other objects. "I've been teased quite a bit," admits Mrs. Hansen. "I'm always trash canning. But I find there is a weaJlh of things people normaJly deem trash." With almost evangelistic fervor, s he believes in "ta.king what you have and working with it. I just think things can have a new life. We all have it In us." When not scrounging through other people's throw-aways, or going to garage sales, Mrs. Hansen finds things during her daily Jobs through the neighborhood. IN WHAT CAN only be termed "clutter moderne," her Newport Heights home is a veritable testimonial to her knack for proving that one man's Junk is another man's <or woman's > treas ure. A tour or the object-filled house is like rum- maging through a pirate's treasure trove: you never know what is going to turn up next. Jn the living room are baskets woven out or husband Bruce's bid ties and pieces of boat line. A table was made out of an antique Singer sew- ing machine frame <bought for $2.50> by putting a piece of clear Plexiglass on top. In the kitchen there is a metal candy rack IMrs . Hansen's favorite "treasure"> found in a liquor store trash bin. It is now a spice rack. In the bedroom is a dresser scarf: dozens of bottle caps covered with colorful pieces of cloth and s titched together. The king-size bed's oak headboard is made out of an antique single <See CLVTfER, Page C2> Oelly ~llet ~--... ·~ ·~ Wendy Mateja with her book 'Alana and the Dolphins.' For the D.c.Iphins A young author believes the animals should be given the same level of respect as people. By MARCIA FORSBERG CMU.o.llyl'I ........ The book, "Alana and the Dolphins." is based on fact but is incorporated tn a fantasy theme for ageless appeal, says M s. Mateja, 31, who lives in Marin County and often visits her parents, Burt and Shirley Kaplan, at their apartment at the Balboa Bay Club. She took up the cause in favor of the ceta- ceans Ct.he order of aquatic mammals including whales, dolphins, porpoises> in May of 1977 when she went to a seminar tn San Francisco tilled .. Dolphins, Dyads and the Deep Sell." There. cetacean expert John Lilly, founder of the Human Dolphin FoundaUon in Malibu, exposed the audJence to "facts relatina to the cetaceans that l had not previously been aware ot." Facts like how they are killed: "The)' <whales) are blown to smithereens with eiplod· lnl harpoons. Tbelr 1ut.s blow up inside. What a way to die," she protests. Dolpblna, she says, panic and drown lo luna fishermen'• nets. "Or, ~ey get t.betr ftna cauahl In the net.a and end up mutUAdnl themselves ... "Alana and the Dolphins" is the story of a UFO that comes to earth In the shape or a rain- bow, which stands for "universal harmony," says Ms. Mateja. The only passenger on board is Alana, who has come to teach the race ''to learn to love. and thu.s save, the dolphins and whales." Ms. Matega's love for the creatures ls evi- dent in h er conversation -·'The dolphins' 'natural ethic' doesn't permit them to retaliate against our violence, no matter bow much we provoke them. "The· 'silent areas' of their brains are larger than ours," she says, which indicates that dolphins are "actually more enllthtened, intelli1ent and spiritually developed" than man. Ma. Mateja believes the cetaceans "sbouJd be 1iven the same level of respect as people. In my opinion. one dolphin death ts too many " She la curttnUy involved In planning a cc:f'• sciousneu-raistns f esUval on the subject wilh Greenpeace Cthe "Save the Whales" iroup> and Uf\iversal Life Alliance 'a psychic and splritu.al 1rowtb ll"OUP l ' eaturitlfl_._.lllllllm.-=---C•.'. o.llY ............... &M~ Lois McNair. left, and Mercedes O 'Bryan do the bump. Th11rsday Morning Fever • ; I Disco is not confined to the under-30 set. About 200 senior citizens a week are learning how to boogie. By DENNIS McLELLAN Of tM Oally ...... Sc.If Outside, the sun was just beginning to burn off the mid-morning beach fog. But in s ide Maxwell's By the Sea Restaurant. it was going to get really hot. Fifty.two Huntington Beach and Leisure World semor citizens were about to come down with a severe case of Thursday Morning Fever "Hi. everybody." said Val Kurtze. Hunt· ington Beach Senior Center disco teacher. over the loudspeaker "Are you ready to disco dance today"" The group. mostly women between the ages of 57 and 84. let out an enthusiastic whoop from their tables. ALL CONCERN FOR how they were going to all fit on the postage stamp·s1zed dance floor were cast aside as the women -and a handful of men -flocked to the floor. Most had taken Val Kurtze's eight·week free-style disco dance and exercise class at the senior center and were rarin · to go. "They really love the music," said Mrs Kurtze. "Some didn't think they'd like it, but they became absolutely engrossed." The Thursday morning visit to Maxwell'!\ was an opportunity ror them to see what a real disco club atmosphere was like, she said . Despite the "Saturday Night Fever" youth cult. disco dancing obviously Is not. confined to the under-30 set. Mrs. Kurtze t.eaches about 200 senior citizens a week how to boogie. "Wlten I teach ·now· music. the more ex· urberant they become and the more they like 1t." she swd. "After all. 1t ·s all natural move- ment "1 KEEP UP WITH all the latest disros. We use 'Grease.' 'Saturday Night Fever' and Tm Your Boogie Man.· They know lht express, the bump and the basic disco.·· Being limber is not really the most 1mpor. tant requisite for learning to dlsco. sht says. It's Just a matter of letting your anh.ab1lions relax. And that was certainly the case on the packed dance floor as Isaac Hayes set the beat with "Strangers in Paradise." "It's the rhythm and the beat J like." said Charlotte Keeler of Huntington Beach dunng a breather in the action. "I> love it I can be ex- hausted and when I hear the music-boom." SHE SAID SHE had gone only to three of the classes. The first time there were · three men. The next time there was only one. "One guy knocked out his back doing the bump." she confided with a laugh. "But look, • he was up there trying, nght?" One record ended and the DJ put on "Disco Inferno. "Hey, put your hand~ together." be cried. "Let's burn this place down ... Kay Nelson, left, and Vi and Bob Land, right, boogte. ~ -. ANN LANDERS I HOROSCOPE 'I No Laughs For roday [ Borosr~ TlJESM ... ACIGWrU BySYDffEle.Aaa ) ARIF.S <Mar. 2l·Apr. Jt): CWIGlnl. collect what yOQ need. reinforce,....__ By toniehl. money picture will be ~-Key II to llav• data at band. to bave accma to ftlel. to de- lineate proepecll and to apalJ tram well of knowled.ce. .. .... Stocktng-faced DEAR READERS: U you are lookln1 for a lau1h i.>day tllll column . I• not ror you. SkJp lt. The questicn raised by tht• reader i• one that hH perplexed a ireat many people. I d41Clded it WU Ume to deal with it. DEAR AN~ LANDERS: This news item appeared ln the K ltchener/Waterloo Record -dateline, Mon· treat: About a dozen people watched a seven-year· old boy drown Saturday and refused to Jump into the Rlvtere des PraJrlea to eave him. Some said the waler wa1 too polluted. : dolls featured m nUfin bns. Police said Martin Turgeon of Montrjal slipped oil a wharf near a spot where witreated sew age is dumped into the river. '· I • ,• l. ••• Clatter Moderne "I'm not going in there -the wa\er is much too dirty," Wit· nesses quoted one on- looker as saying. Some people even left the scene as the boy's (i'rom Pa1eCU bed's oak bead and foot board. But it ia the bathroom that proves to be Mrs. Hansen's ultimate creative statem!nt. A WK.KE& FISHING creel bolds a box or Kleenex; a large white metal coffee pot serves as a waste basket; and a child·aize chaJk board collects graffiti next to the toilet. Nailed on the wall is a wooden plank from -grandpa Hansen's barn. It ia filled with vintage carvinp ol birds. a school hOUse. names and dates U911 > "I figured where else does somebody sit long enough to read'!" notes Mrs Hansen. The idea for the shelf above the wash basin was lifted from one she saw in Grette. The glass sheU is laid across two metal saddle stir· rups attached to homemade macrame hangers. The bed. noor and closet of the spare bedroom. or her "Junk room." as she calls it. is laden with old purses, baskets. slippers. driftwood. twigs. parts of old fur coats. . "They have good texture." she explains ·'I think they have potential " E HOLES IN muffin tms are covered w stocking doll faces and a homemade ·· ed-glass" window is fashioned from garage sales-Costa Mesa bas some of lbe best, father. a non-swimmer. she ~ays-she sets herself a limit. thrashed about in the "I won't spend more than SS a day. I refuse water and screamed for to buy things for more than nickels. dimes and help. quarters. There's no reason you have to spend A boater fished the oodles and oodles." boy's body out of the Despite the clutter effect of her house. Mrs river about 2S minutes Hansen has not been collecting ell her life. At later. the rate she finds things. she would need several "It makes you wonder warehouses if she had. about how human people It actually has been only about five years. are." a Police officer re- That is when the couple moved into their house marked. "The boy prob· and began redecorating. ably could have been They eliminated the yellow and wbite trim saved ... inside and out. opting instead for more neutraJ The boy's family said and naturaJ colors. They aJso did away with the they were too shaken up "vile" green shag carpet '1ld wallpaper "your to talk about lbe inci· dying grandmother wouldn't even have... dent. They knock ed out walls , rebuilt And that was the end bookshelves, repainted and had their hardwood or the news item. · floorspeggedanddoweled. What does this say But that is fairly standard rare. It is the art about lbe state of the or e mbellishment that is Mrs . Hansen's world. Ann Landers? J specialty t)ave searched my mind a nd my heart for some HER BENT FOR 1maginat1ve decorating a ns wers and finding c ··recycling naturals .. l grew out of a class in none. I turn to you. - spinning she took not long after moving into the YOUR NElGHBOR TO house. THE NORTH "f realized the possibility of what yarn was DEAR NEIGHBOR : pieces of old found glass and parts of a favoril~ ~ broken mirror. .;:· Mrs. Hansen holds up a fish net with pieces ~ of silver strainer attached She rattles it. "It and what texture was." she says. "Once we set· It aay11 hNllffereace to tied down it was an all-out go... · the sulfttlllg of o&ben ls Whde she and her accountant husband are lbe cemral sldmen of • .. ' , could be a musical thing," she says "It's just foolish. I really like to make things that are whimsical. I don't take myself too seriously." She also recycles stuffed animals by sewing on colorful patches over stains and worn spots But enough. The lesson 1s obvious: Mrs. Hansen saves 8D)'lhing that bas "any potential life in it" and gives it a second lease on life. "We're so plastic and Styrofoam in this world. anything with texture is the key." she notes . Althou~h s he rettularly vi s its .......__/ STOP SMOKING T"°"5ilnd5 have With juslone vls1t ... at rHISOMble rate I San Clemente HYPNONSIS CENTER Ste 126 CMedkal Plaza> basically opposites-"He's meticulous"-her our time. ll alto says husband has encouraged her. she says. He. m that fear and cowardice fact. bought her the old spinning wheel in the are contagioaa. li vmg room. All too often oae readJ "I started buying things and we round our In the newspapers of tastes were really similar." s he says similar lnridents, and It .. Sometimes he goes on a rampage and takes Is alckeai•I· Haa It down some of my ex<!~ss clutter But he is always beea &Jdl way! usuallyproudofeverything." No, It bu DOt. Does tile Recycling naturals for Mrs. Hansen who explana&loa Ile In Uae has sold at rairs and in shops, is really only a fact that there are more parttime avocation. She is an art, music and people, &beidore more dance teacher al a downtown Long Beach heartleu. macarblg and ele mentary school. crazy oaes aloe< wft~ the rest? la patt ~ a. But she carnes her creative ideas mto the tr a e. bat there Is classroom. evidence to •llPPO't tlae "l'M CONSTANTLY ASKING the kids to drag things to school," she says. "I refuse to spend the budget on art supplies because I think you can find goodies." One of the biggest "homemade" hits with the young students was an idea of her husband's. Old potato mashers. he discovered. when attached to wooden poles make perfect play microphones. "I now have a reputation at school." Mrs. Hansen says. "People are garbage canning for me. People I know say, 'Oh. Francie will love this' " Mrs. Hansen. who says she would love to he.Ip others realize the possibilities of recycling things, mWfed about what she can do with the hubcap she round that had been used for target practice. "I have things that will last me until I'm 80." she says with a smile. "So I look forward to being a very happy older person." theory that druUcaUy altered Westylea al.He World War II have caused great manes of people to behave dlf· rerently. The United Sta&es la now lar1ely a mobile society and Canadian trends are slmllar. 09e oat of every three U.S. famllles moves every tllree years. People DO lonser bve Ute feeling of "be'-&tac " 'l'llere r. a leuer aUempt to become part of the com-munity. 1bey doa..'t feel respooslbl~ for what happens-Ito their neighbors because they don't know them. An aclded problem: Bee a uf"e there a re ,..• .. D ---------------------------------------Mask made from recycled items. Get Rid Of Unsightly Bulges We...-Wlaela .. < ........ AcM • Dry Wit • Olly StiM Wri•let•U...••1.i-.. ,.,_ ... dMr ... ~ yo.ttiM ... 493-3332 • -Giid lfll01 lllillons of dolon -tti of ovU!afldino home 1at.lii1s. Thi ..._. 1Mo¥oliom for r-holN and garden. Yov'I Clho -30,000 .q.11. of ovhtondlftg ~and garden !how .. othet flof.& Hhlblh by mony So Colff. gorden club\, IO<i.ti.t c•1ter1Nfw......._~ $nmt{y SKIN CARE & FIGURE CONTROL CENTERS O CD•plete ........ ot OOUtttr ...,.,.. ..... -cmn and oourt1. e .. ,,., In the DAILY PILOT _,~ • l*ce Denclng ~ 1Mtrucll9M o.ttr * .-l F11nlly ~ Olt la.toe 1 . . . ~,111 .. MOllLI HOMI SHOW 100,000 '4 It ........... .i ............. "-t• o ......._ ""'-· o -"'"...,,... "'°"' -o oor""" w• oil 01 -low odlfto•.-prte• fWIH ~ ,... '""' 1 I• 10 r "'L '" ..,, .. ,,,,,..s.i,,,_,."-.. ,,,,. ,.,...,. _ ... ' '""' 4CJUl.lt » 00 ci.. .... o .. 16 " 00 o..i. ..... n....--.. A O..,..C"-is ~ "'1~.n .................. • mJlllou of IHI aad blYel ID lite ...... of everyW, ud uPeclY, people an afraid te In· &eneoe wm dleJ see a woman ~ nped or a ma• beln1 ma11ed. Wlleaever we read or bear aboat Ute fatal 11looUq or &Ille aabbla1 of IOateODe wbo ''tried &o llelp" It reblforcea t.M meuap, "Daa't set la· volved." Somebow we mat ln· still In oar dll.ktrea tile old valaea of concern and caring -the blbllcal coneept that we are ladeed our bntber'a keeper. Bat we cuaot band down to oar children aomethiag we don't •ave ounelvea. This means It must start somewhere -wltb someone. How about YOU? Wedding and engage, ment annotmcement.t run on Sunday in the Dally Pik>t. Fllrm$ ore avoalable at all Daily Pilot office& or by colbng the Features Depariment. 642-4321 To avoid d1soppo1nt. ment. pr08J)ecl1ve brutes are r~ to have their wedding atorie1. with a black-<Jnd·white glosgy Of the bruk or of tM couple. to the Feature• [)q)art. men1 one Wf!ek before the wedding TAURlJS (Apr. »May 3>>: Cyele mov• up -Moon enters your slan toft1lbl ftll wu a conflnial attuaUon wi1f evapwate. Y-. then wlll be treater fteedom of tboulllt • .ctJon. Gemini. Sagittart~ flcure prom.illlll&b'. GEMINI Ull)"'ll·June 20>-Aura of my1tery and 1l•mour become appaNDt - member ol oppe1tte Hx aemes and deUDeatee lt. Your pOlitlon ls eolld. Someone ii .U.mptiq to bluff you. Ride with tide. CANCE& <June 21.July aa>: Key ftta. door unlockf, yOQ're promoted! Gemini. Arte. and Virgo figure promJDeat!y. The number 5 tuma up more than would be explained by eobl· cidence. Accent on ambiUon, preltiae. uaum- ing responsibility. LEO CJuly 23·Au1. 22): Accent on dis· covery, communlcatlon. publication. aub· miasion of format, concept. brief. Taurus. Libra. Scorpio pel'IOOI play lmportant roles. Be diplomatic. avoid direct ~-Yes. the domestic adjmtment -or bome repair - was necessary. VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22>: Obtain hint from Leo message. Take rtng roads -direct courae now does not pro~e productive. Be cautious where legal papers are concerned. Rentals. leases deserve double check. Partner or mate may not have complete story. LIB&\ (Sept. 23·0ct. 22>: You're involved. relationship intensifies. personal and business commitments are emphasized. Capricorn. Cancer and the number 8 figure prominently. If married. play cards race up with mate. SCORPIO <Oct. 23-Nov. 21,: t;urrent 1te1Ct ot interest could lag. Yo1,1're getting ready for something more constructive. Review employ. menl picture. prospects. Good news due con- cerning health. Aries could play key role. Get second emotional wind. SAGfM'AJUtJS (Nov 22-Dec. 21>: Be confi. dent concerning your own style. Creativity ls emphasized: stress independence. personal touch. Member of opposite sex plays dominant role. Welcome new starts. challenges. chaMe to display unique abilities. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 191 : Low profile best suits ob~ive. Know It and act according- ly. Collect. plan. prepare -be thoroughly familiar with project. rrom ground noor to most elevated position. Take time -Caneer in· dividuals back you. AQUt\JUUS CJan. 20-Feb. 181: Test ideas in marketplace. Get off sidelines. take t.rip. make call. submit ideas and questions. Get into melee. into thick or "game.·· Gemini. Sagit- tarius and Aries persons play key roles. Social affair could'lead to valuable contact. PISCES <Feb 19-Mar. 20>: Get matenaJ in working order. Money and prestige could be on the line. Thoroughness wins -slipshod methods lead to loss. ~SUMMER SPECIAL REG. S1.95 For one 5x7 portrait or set of four wallets in NATURAL COLOR. (Additional portraits at regular prices; One 5x7 or set of four wallets S1 .95 each. 8x10 only S3.90) ALSO SAVE OVER $3 OH THIS $15.80 PACKAGE • One 8 x 10 • Three 5 x 7's • Twelve wallets Apply your 95¢ and pay ONLY $11.50 more for 16 beautiful portraits. Age limit 12 years. Select from HVtral poses and acemo backgrounds. Coples and enlargements avallabfe at higher prices. Extra charge Of S1 .00 tor 2 Of 3 ohHdren together. Spec .. I prtoM In effect tt... dlwe only: Tueedey, Aug. 22 & Wedne9day, Aug. 23 HOURI: 10 to 1 p.m. -2 to 5 p.m. JCPenney 2300 Hebor Blvd. -HARBOR CENTER NA TlON I CAREERS PUBLIC NOTICE R·_, SUf'ERIOlt COURT or THll STATE Of' ~l~NIA POlt THE COUNTY Of' ORANGE .... A-Mll NOTICE Of' NEARIN G Of' PETITIOff FOtl l'ROlaATI OP WILL AND COOfCIU. If' ANY, ANO f'OR I 1n11RS TIJTAMl!NTARY AND flOR AUTHORllATION TO AD· Mllltl S TER UNDl!R THE IND9 lttN041NT ADMINISTRATION Ofl aSTAT'SS ACT. Est•I• o4 EOHA P COONS. also • I<-M EOtotA PM.MER COONS. Oec•-NOTICE IS 14EllE8Y GIVEN t"41 ARTHUR <; c.o<>HS Jll l\.a. filed 11ere1n • e-tttMlrl lor Praoata of Wrll •N:I Codlclls, II ...,, ..., tor 1u .. •"<* of Lelltn Teslame.,t•r1 •no tor A\llllOrlrattclrl to AOmlnl\ter -,,... ,,,.._"' Admt1w1tr.ilon DI Estates A<I, rt'ff"MC• lo w!>t<ll " ..._ fO< ,...,,,., -1klllars, •ftd , .... ow llm. -t>lac• ol _,..., ,,... .,.... ,... -.. , '"' 5"11 ), 1'11, •• 10 00. ,.,. • in Illa <.ovr1room Of Dt-1,.,...,1 No > of wld courl, .. 100 Civic Ceftter Orlv• Wnl. '" Ille CllY Of Sant• ""• C.lllornl• Oat~ A~I I~. 1971 WIUJAM E. SI .IO+IN, C:O-v Clef"- A. RIC"AllD IUMaROVOH LAllWlll&Wdilns HJ Soutlt r-.r-SC. LM A_..,., CA "'1t , ... IJlll ~ttM Att-y f•: .... JllMI• PubllU•eCI Ot-Co.t\1 O~lly Piiot A119 11.11. n . "'' ~7 18 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC N011CE PUBLIC NOTICE NOT1tl INVlTtNO aU>S NOTICE 1$ HEAEBY GIVEN INI w aled pr_ .. , tor t.wnlthl119 •II labor, malerl•l1, equlpmtnt, ··~-Ion Mid W<ll otllet' lliClllllft "ICTITI()Uj•UStHllSS ., m•y bt requlreCI for Ille NAMaSTATEMllNT COHSTRUCflOH OF THE HTH STREET STORM DRAIN FROM SAN· bu~~.!,~o~~owl119 cierwns •re doln9 TA AH A AVENUE T 0 I AV IN E GRIHt™ ANO ANTHONY. At· AVENUE -PHASE I, wlll be re 10<,IMy\ •• Law ~Me~ Verdtt EHi UIWd by, ... City ot C°'I• Mtw ...... Sult• N c°' ... M..a (..olltornla 926~ ' Office of Ille City Clerk, 77 Fair Drive. Al•~ R ~lffltn' Attorney at L-Cost• ~,._ C..tll1)r1'!e, uttlll uw "°"' 011 Wnt St Andrew S.nta An .. of 11·00 e.m on See>temo.r I, ltrt, •I C.lllornle 91104 • • -kll time llleY wllt oe ooened e>ubll<· P1tr1<i. L. Anlllony Atlomo •I ly allCI rt.0 AIOud In Ille Counc:ll C ... m Law t4Dtl M•9no11, .. Sp•ct 91 Den. Sol@d ~'""•II bear tt. We\lmlMter c..itfornta ,MJ ' llfle °' the -k """ ,.,. ne"'4' Of rM Thh busl;,.n h Gondu<tt<I Dy • bld!Mr but no other C111U119111111ln9 veneral IMlrtntnhlp marM Any bid recelvM atter tf1e P .. rlcla L. """'°"" \Oleduled ctoslfto 11..,. lor IN rec9lpt Tiiis 1\a---flied wlttl IN of l>lcls sn.41 bt retlll"MCI 10 Ille tHdde< Countv Ci.rt of 0r-'°""'' <lo\ unopened II sflatt be Ille sole ""'i'"' u , tf1I. ..._,.slblllty ol IN~ lo ,_ !NI ORIPPITM AND AHTMONY 1115 bid It~'" Pf-llrM. A,.......,.atU. A wt Of p1-. Spkl•I ProvlslcH>t 1111t,...wv...w1n1 •"d •C1C1ll101u to '"• G•"*'•I s.1 .. N Provl11-Of the S~<t SQe<lflo· Cesta Mew, <:.tlllerMa f1ll2' Ll9ft\ m•y I» olllalNd •I l!w office OI fl""241 the Cth E1191""r. t1 Fair Ort,..., Publtl~ 0rMlgt CoaJI O••lr PllOt, Cost• Mesa. C.ltfoml•, •• "° C11¥99, AU9u•I 11, 2' ....i 5">1t!mbtr •. 11, 1971 or "pon CCl"taclln1 En91nurtno 40().11 Senkes et 1114> SS..»n. tlle PfK_,. PUBLIC NOTICE i "9 Hems wi 11 I» het>mt<I by mall • t Hdllional c~. Pl-. specifketlol\1 •rod other contr«I documents may •Ito be edmfned •' the Office of tlte City Cler It Ol 19't Oty of Costa Mesa E•cll bid sr..11 be m•de on tll~ P!"DPosel form, -" P· 1 lhr°"9f' l>.7 provlcH<I lfl n.e cOl'ttrec:t OO<u~h •nd sh•ll be •ccompanl•d bv a <Klllle<I or ces11a.r'• <!'Itek or a bid bond tor 'not l•U ,,,." 10"\o Of Ille AlftOUl\I of ttot bid. ,.,_ peyable lo Ille City OI Costa MeM. No _., tllall be contl«Mrtd unl.,u .c:compeni<td by well cu11~·, check, cash or blelcll!f's bond No bid lhall 119 t0ft\1~d unieu 11 is made on a blank lorm turnl\l\t<I by lhe City ot '°''•Mesa •IKI Is m-In accoroa .. ce with ttw PrOVISIOns of Ille Proposal l'"llql.lt'9""1"1' Each btclcler must aw ltC.,.Md aftd also prequaltfifd n requl,..,CI by law The City (.ouft(ll of the Clly of Cofl• Mew ru~ .. '" 1M rl91>1 lo ••Itel any or all blCls EILEEN P PHINNEY City Cter11 of '"" CllVOICmla M"'e PubllsheO Or~ Co.1'1 Dally P11o1. Al19U\I 17, 21. 1'7'1 '°",. PUBUC NOTICE P\1BUC N011CE PUBLIC NOTICE .. ,..,. SUf'a•1oa COURT Of' Tlll STATE~ CAUP'OllMA rc>R THI! COUNTY OP OtlAMOC .... ....,,, NOTICI! 0 .. M•ARINO 0 .. ... TITIOM POil "'°9ATE Ofl WI~ AND COOIOU,. "' ANY, AlltD POtl LETTERS T•ST~aMTAR\' ANO f'O• AUTHORIZATION TO AD· MINISTER UNDElt THIE INO.Pl!NMNT A°"'INISTRATION 0" IESTATUACT. E\l•lt! of M.t.R T HA M . NORTHCOTE, •ISO llnowft •1 MARTHA MAl'lte NORTHCOTE, Oecaaseo NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that $AMUf!L LOYD NORTHCOTE llH filed Mreln • petition for f>rolNI• of Wiii -Co<lk:ltl, II Mii', -for Lei· ten TH..._....,.., -'°' AV!tlorlr• lkwt to Adtnlnlller llftOer ~ ''*"*"' dent AClmlrthlratton Of EllalH 4ct. re- ference to -" h ~ tor furtflar -tlc..1..-s, Mid 11\al IM tlffle and DI«• Of --.. lht ~ IWIS tleeft wt for Saotamllff s. 1m ... 10:00 a.m • "' ,.,. c-1rwm of ~_,,.Ho. J of salCI covrt, .. 100 Ovtc: Cant..-Ori,.. We11, In tl>t City OI S•nt• An•. Cafifof'ftl•. O.te<t ,......., 11. 1m WIWAM IE. St JOttlll, GllYrtly 0...k RICHARD 0. TMOltM WARD & WARD & SANDE IU DI ..... Street, WW ZHI SM CHetie. CA mtf "'*-''-'~ P\lbllJlled Orat\91 C.0.11 0.llY Poot """'· 11, u. 21. ,.,. 406.>-11 PVBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE CP-IWI ITATSMaNT OF AaMIOONM•NT 0 .. US« Of' fllCTITIOUS IUSl ... SS llfAM• ~"" fOl-"9 --...... Abaft· OOMd --of -lktltlo<n _,..,. IWWM LINCX>l.H FINANCIAL GROUP •t •600 Oow Street, Suite 421. ~ 8-<h, CA "'60 ,.,. t1ctlt10111 Ml,..n ,,_ , •. fernd «o ..,,,.. .... f!Md "' Ore119t County on 1Nn111, 1'n 0....,, H. ~. •tOO o... s. .. s..tte GI, lffwpor1 BNdl, CA.,... Wiiiiam £. lt-.y, *10 e>o... SI , Sule. 421, ......_, llNcll, CA 921MO Tiiis ~ •-' c0ftd\K'9d W • o.tleral PM'l-1'Wc>. O...,N S<ftNr UGHTNING ONE DAY SERVICE The Daily Pilot offers classified advertisers 24·bour service. Call us at 642·5678 by ~O p.m. any weekday and your ad will appear in the next day's paper. 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I F I E ·o Mondly, Augu.t 21. 1871 OM.VPILOT Tw ........... 8 I .... 0....,. C- D All Y PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS heC:.. ... 11, .... , ..... 11878 1 o...c......._ ''-*..... ... .. -· .... c:-......... ::.,"::!~ ===~«<. ~tnl.ottft ~-·"'"" ...,.. ..... rn-. ANNoatc£MENTS. POSONALS& LOST & FOUND srmcts s.n-~or> fMPlOYMENT & PIEPAIAnOH ~ 11\Jlrwtioft )obWanled . lf<il>V.-.1111 •,.. MEIC1tAMDISE ~ ... ..-n ~ l:t..~ ...... f'f"•••-C•nwr••~P<Mnt C.b ~ P'rttlo Y°" "'""""" c.v...,..s. .... Marw.. -Good> t~~-111~· .. ......... .._. 111..-.l'-•V.""4..S "''""''"' '"""-r•h Olfttt f\I"' Ir tlqu1p .-.c. f'l.-lr Or~on• ~Mot nt<> 9t =ftl!Gnod• . Rttl-•nl Bar f:."d'!o1o, HI f).sterco BOATS & MARINE COUIPMENT C-.•I ""'-1~Maull ~f\>kt• &o.u.Ma<J"" f:qw11< 8tl.irt> ........ tto.c. Rtne Ouotbr eoao..s.11 ll!NtU.Shpo Dor h Bo.1~4Slll ~ 1111• TIAHS101TATJOM ....... .., ~ ... 11 .... ~C.n Mobow~ No&ot l Tri•• Sc'ooln "4olor Hm• S•i. 14tlll Tr•1k-n. Tt•"'f'f !'.:~~·'i.,,, AUTOM081ll ~-.i ~~~1::i:~1, ~ ~HM .. kl.'(J, litft't Un'e'!I. TrlKu v .... AU\Ul.o1.,n~ ""' .. w""""' AUTOS, IMPORlCD ~ ...... 1 Alf• H'>nwo". Aud• " .. ..,,~ult.~ llMW ..... ~tt o ...... n t'rrr&n ""' Hond.. Jia..:11i111r J.:-a•n Kar""'11<1 0ht• Mud• ..... ,,"<I\'»°'"' )10 !llGll u., •• P.A.ftttt• Pn.I ..... """'~"" : 1lGD ·-11110 1()1) ~ llCI:::. ll'l:ID oo:r, llMD .~ 11(159 !IQ!,) IOliD ll)g mlO am . .-m .., ... IOCI ... ..., l!O!ll WJ!IJ 161>1 lfOOI) llOl6 tl(>Jti "Jfjt \l).jJ "II>' ~H(/ 'CUJ .....0 ... ™ !l()ICI !<090 llJIC tt:'O Yllll 9HO ~1:.0 '"° ~Ill.I ., .... "'°" ~·· 'A."' . ...,, "'.:.. :r..:.. ~ i.:.111 """" ~ "101 lt11'. V7tl7 r.w ""' !RI~ 11111 V72» t'l',!:J ~ ... 'n'l'l !11.)1 ·n31 ill:» VHI ,,..., Vl'l ,,, .. in.-"1'1 'II• !mu ........................................... .14St•• ~ -SZ4t.IOO MIW DCLUSIYl-YllW The only .. Sea Breeze'' model o market ! Brand new and h 1gh1 improved! 3 Bdrms. family room formal dining rm. & 21..-'! baths. Hig elevation and view Truly dehghtful Fully la ndsca ped . automat1~ s prinklers. air cond. plumbed for'' jacuzzi. luxurious cptng. m1rrorecH wa rdrobes. beaut. light fixtures .· Security area. Call to see. : 5 JETTY HtVI OP8f TUIS l·S:OO s WISLIY M. TAYLOI co.. ltlALToas ~ 21 I I S. Ju•' ... IMd .: NIWPOltT CIMTllt. N.I. 644-4t IO ; EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY UASEOmOM Sl.000 Moves you in. S42~/mo. St>n s uou~. sharp 2 bedroom condo with private patio /· Jacuni. Call 962·7788. KEY REALTORS OCEAN VIEW 3 Bedroom . 3 b a th~ glass atrium, modl'I home. Huge master ,...,,....., Hottce: suite, w/(plc + slidmg door to pa v 1111011 All r eal est ate ad· Breathtaking view or v e r t 1 s e d 1 n th 1 s surf & Catalina Island newspaper 1s subject to Try $12.500 down. For the Federal Fair Hou.<; preV1ew of lh1s umqut' ing Act or 1968 which home. call 963-6i67 makes 1l illegal to ad 011"1 "'., .. , "V'"• ,., •. vertJse "any preference. I I ~~rr!f :;t11~~ • b~~edd 1~n '8 ft~ftJlll race, color. reltg1on. _ 'C!Ji' =--,.i::::··~ sex. or nataonal origln. or an intenUon to make LEASE on1AU any suc h preference. . ""'" Ii mlt at1on. o r d 1 s nus 11 a rare: oppor:tunt· crim.inallon." ty to invest m a hne 4 'nais newspaper will not knowinfly accept any advert san g fo r rt>al estate which 1s 1.n viola· tion of the law. bedroom Mesa Verdi:' home on very favorabll' terms. Lo<'a ted o n a wide tree lined street. close to a park. Full price only $111 9011 CALL 751·3191. tto..sforS. ~SELECT ••••••••••••••••••••••• T'PROPERTIES GtsMral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ftfPUX C.M. &aper cond. 2 BR, lrg den. I~ ba. frpl. bllAs. cpt.s/drps. 2 Br. 1 ba. 1 Br, l Ba. tB30 income. No qualifying. SlS.000 dn. $150,000. S-48-5777 Owner1agt. IALIOA ISUMD Sharp d\lplex, 2 BR. 2 ba units. steps to North Bayfronl. Reduced to ao..ooo. MESA YEIDE 5 BR faouJy home. Mov •in cood. Good schools le close to everything. ms.soo. EASTSIDE 3 IR+ POOL + IEACH Sltf.900 Spaci~ 1arden home. large II v1ns: room w/fplc. gourmet kltchert + dine. S2500 down or S2l5S per mo. assumabll' paymenta. Call 963-0767 nPf N lrt 11 • U \ I tJI• tO ,_., I\ IRAMD Mew S IB>ROOMS Seller will pay-for ( your new crpt in thtli exciting ne ... 2 s ton' home. 5 bdrms. 3 ba & a huge fmly rm w trrplt· Try ltasl' opt 1011 . 7~1501 COSTA MESA ~~ 85~i!rs~ ~:~ (Qt1Wfili!41mtmi quaint well maintained Real Estutc street. Owner will con i---------- s1der 2n<1 TD. '95.750 POOL HOME 0 Redwood decking, pool. Jacuzzi & much morf' t:- what this 3 bedroom, l bath home rn Co~t a ':' P.r..&.a~~-Mesa h a s to orrer ~ Owner 1s motivated & .... wants fast sale. Hurry . Balboa Island Rtahy make an oHer CALL ~"""""' .. '"'-·" $21660 673-1700 . . C:SELECT MESSY MAHSIOM T' PROPERTIES Spacious 4 BR hxer mi--------=::... Newport Beach' Larg<' VA TERMS! lot! Remodel & profit' J bdrm 1 ~~ b ;s Can't last! Hurry! Call townhouse 0n g~eenbe1i 64S--0303 near pool. Only $64.500' Call t od11y rot CIPPl 545·9491 FORESTE OLSON ... . ...... , ... , *VETS* ODOWN·'OCLOSING Homes mall areas or ORANGE COUNTY VET I.GT . Cal 541-0800 Also. if you call by 5:30 p.m. on Friday your ad will appear In the Dally Pilot delivered Saturday morning or, place your ad before noon on Saturday for Sunday ..m &J>aper. Our friendly ad-visors make It easy to place an ad. And. you may charge your ad or have us blll It to your MasterCbarg e or BankAmericard/VISA. 6 --4 lk<t•llll Mollo Koytt ""'"' ~o s..-.. T~ ', :· •. T ............ ~··~ v.uw ............ VWIV\i • ~ 1'1:A m1 ,,,.. ~HEtGHTS ----~ 3 BR with hardwood ~something vatuabl~" floors and bltns. Low Place an ad in our Lotit down al $111.SOO and Found <'olumn:-JACOIS llAL TY That's wherf' people look ~~~--.aJlm!•'10 ~hen they've found an tlW """" ~ wrr--amt. wtW SIS(&-A a .. .,,,., It only takes a few words ln the right place to attract a buyer. Alonf the· Orange Coast the r gbt place to advertise ls In tbe DAILY PILOT 642-5678 2 • 5 6 7 8 "'°' AUTOS. IJS(D C.:t"f'K.·r.-1 .i.AJI o\lfl. \,_,. 11111<1< JlllU l"itd1U•t .. 1. C.mttn1 ,,,,, l""""''~ ~"~, Lb<'> ..... W!> ....,,_ W."l ~'-"'"' ""°" t..:urvtu ... w:lJ ~:r tNl:I ,,~ -'"''"'"' "J4.J ~· ,;o,u N•"•f1t·fl llt>ll =""'"'' . -1111~ W6J \!:.. ... -we,; ~-II IMlll .... ~ "'" ..... ''"rd Wl\I V.t1• Wll STOPt l Take Ucne to relu_ and shop al bome. It 'salm~ with Dally Piiot Cluslrled Ada. And II >'V'.I bave aoQMUUna sell, call a friendly Cluaifted Ad· Visor i to.51'79 S S A V T H I V A H T H E T E R R 1 8 C l G l 0 V 0 H U 0 0 G S t R 0 8 S A ~ A T E E H H J R E H 0 1 0 S U 0 k l ~ A T G 0 t A A 0 r Y P A U l Y V 8 S l E 0 H 0 I A M K 0 H A 1 A H E l V A 0 R A Z E Y C H 0 U Q R H C H U 0 H S l 0 A P R R C H 0 R T C E C V K N A N R 0 J £ l B I R R E T E H T H A V J N LOTOMCHHMO RSOERKL r 1 E W E H E W E E L 0 H l U C A E R H P H S 0 l U 0 0 S R l A K 0 T C 1 E E i GTlANAUSHAMM8S£ARll " A M V M l H k R S £ V Y H T E H U E CiOOOHET AUT S H R K R M 0 0 R E R T H S C M 0 V E U 8 ''" . ...... , ........ ~Of ~1\1. find..,. IJl'CI bo• it 111 • twn Tht Teniblt 1.1n1n Oemeuiul ~ Oona Goduno¥ M n Titeooor1 ., Kii~ ftwttt C.tfltnnt Maltnkcw Allna Nicftol• ~ HOITllllO't ,,._. Al .. 111\dtf T OITIOfT'llW: hntl ~ I • Mondlr1. ~"" 11, tf71 .......,.,.w. .......... Wt Hoaetflot-W. ........ ..,w. .................................................................................................................. .... -.. .... We ..._.,_S. ......._llwW. •••NI tOOZ GtMttl tOOZ C.-.. Mw 102 C:O.Mtle 1024 c.e.w... 1024 ....................... ....................... ·••······•·····••·····• ....................... ·····~················· .................................................................... . tota e111r.. ltoJ ewrel tOOJ -----1111111~~~111111111~~!!!~~ ..................................................................... mt NICI '°9 A C-. MftD P'or l:':ra.•. here's wtaat )'OU aet: A 2 1 bath froat unlt. with brick llreplace; A larpr a bdrm. t bath rear un t witb Ben n-antUn fireplace. pha be 1• carpets; A ~ guest room with c,ill beth: A locatiao near shops, Youth Center and U!nnb cowts. All r<r Just 1179.900 a.ad owner wUI consider secondary financ:lna . Give ua a Calli U~l()lJ t1()M S REAL TORs+, f76 8000 13' IAYFllNT, lllPllT . Ell:EPIHllll OffE&i N•wpon'1 ftneet candomli1lum on fee land. Spacious. luxurious &i rlch11 appolntect. Private brick enclosed 1arden entry. Sweetn1 ea· deck, w/ba.y view from aU Uvlq areu. M aater aulte w /fireplace. French doou • wll)dowa. Imported waltpapen. band painted ceramic Ulea. Decorated in exqulatte taste by one ot Newport'• ti.nest dealpen. For the diKrtmlnaUnt buyer. n11 ..,,,., •• i_g~ COATS & WALLACE 'T:P REAL ESTATE. INC. \ ,IJI 1111 Uf\Nt \• I 11"'11'·"'0 ',H!~lt\l, 1111 '.'1111 tt 1 u.>.I .\l\l .1 \INI I I'll. i MIMI flOlll1 -Beblnd this lovely 4 Bdrm home ln Mesa Verde area. Room tor kid&, garden, pets. play. Cloae to churches. schools. tranaportatloo. abop&. Priced at. $86,950. Ctl MMl41 A HIAYIML Y IDllAT -Waterfront home witb apectacwar view of the harbor from the sheltered seclusion or your f Bdrm retreat. Live in an unCorgettabJe atmosphere. We think this ii the most beautiful place in the world. c.1640-6161 ',,., wlr'q ( '' .1.1 l\llt" .. t 11 v1r11• t1u11!1r1qh r1 [!, 11 h N"wpurl Lit'.H h ~ VllDI to CorJma del llu. J BB. l BA w/hpk. ln from. ....., '° bid ed· dJtloeal ult ln rear. Owner aDJlloua. Prl« nducedtoP.000. I / 11'! t4 H 11\I RI Ali 1 --2443 E.u1 Coat H1ghw.y, Corona d I Mar •lso m Mesa Verde "' 546 5990 NIWU~ OM.Y $17.900 = .~:-.. =:--: V.cant, aharp 2 le 3 BR !!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!I room for pool -new condoa. new carpets & kitchetl . plus 3 bclrma. ~~!1~:._~~!er anxlou.a, ________ , • deo. 2'oili batha frpJc .....,.an....,_liili._.ir.i._..r.m~• REDUCED TO $89,000 Attractive 4 ~;: 2 ba. home in immac. condition. AlDt loc. IActl IAY 1m.-..M\!'!--. _ .. _ ... 6 mo'•· new contein · porary, 2 aty bome. Nr bcb. 3 Bit, 2 BA, fabu.loul kiU.bea 1Dclud- ln1 microwave, luab camel carpet.inf, cea· tral A/C, auto . sprink)en • a very au· ious seller. Price re- duced to -..00. CUSTOMHOtm ONMDA&Y 341 I. JW St. C.M. ... ISlU UIXUllOUS ,...... Ideally located, thta triples .. in xlnl coadj. Uco. wtUt two 2 bdrm. unba 6 om l·bdrm. wt· it. Juat l·blodt from the bQ • beach. $LS0.99S WHY-• del Piao tJle 'enit>'. lfliBtijil§illiWtq can\ 10&1 Clod s bdrm•.. S'M9.900 . 962-4471~ ln Newport Beacb, for lllloe tey Prop. leu tbu $190,000 ? •••• Became. you haven't * 67•70,0 .6. called Harbor Realt;y. r .. So, call us · we've 1ot it --------•I --------WTSIDE Fine 4 bdrm .• 2~ bath family home on quiet cul d'e sac. Oversized pool, playhouse, extra storage. $169,000. IAYROMT Several fine bayfront homes , with pier & slips BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR & LAYISHI Luxurf la Cameo Sbor9. i.arse aechaded front patio, fouatain fl pool I SDaclou ocean· view If vln1 room Is family room. Formal dlnln1 room. Chef'• Only 4 left ol tMM T new cmt.om bollNI oa a quiet eul-de ... ac. Each w /4 bdrm1, 3 ba\b.t, wetbara, 2 fplca, Ii much IDOl'fJ, Come It see for 1(IUl'lelf what lovely homes lbey are ! Owner /aient ~ or 60-218' or sn.cna. ~II. macnab I Irvine ?" realty THI ILUFFS TWOUMITS On R·Z lot. ~ block to beach in Newport. $139,SOO lncludlng the land! 673-3663 associated BR o ~ £ 11 ·, R r 11 , ' • • ~ s l f : • ""'" ti •t , • , IOMUSlOOMI Separate entrance to teen or In-law area w /bath. Other area of W1 condo bu z bdrma, l~ ba & garden kitcben. Only $68,900. Call now! ~M91 ~ Walker f; lee QUALITY BUILT s Bdrm 2 bath, larce family room. used brtck flrephrce. shake roof. newly plalnted in /out. New carpel. Hurry! S85,000. Call 540-1.lSl -4_:#-HERITAGE . • REALTO RS IMf.RALD IAY! HELP! PROIATll Reduced thousand.a.. ex-ecutive estate, steps to ocean! Breathtaking 'view. Low price will s urf riae you! Hurry! Cal today Cor details. M$--030S j. i l ·~, )' . 1 • u' ... . ,.. • h fl ' ) ti l 6 l ldteblsl baa every CCID· IACIC .... v -· ....... vemence. Lavilh master -· "-- TWOUMm 4 Bdrm. + bachelor. Frplc., built-Ins: steps to beach . uu.ooo Including land! OCEAHFIOMT 3 Bdrm. + den home on 30x8S ft. lot; frpl., built· ins, patio, beamed cell· lnSI. S375,000 873-36183 6'2-2253 Eves associated 8R1..Jt-.(k5' RtAlT'(Jl-'S '' .. """ u I I •J • • ~ ' wtn1. Den or 1tudy. Eleg hm.b1e, 3Br. 2~8a 5ewin1 A Wmdry room. 2 sty end WlJl. upcrd'd 0 U R 0 w N lncludM pool table, bJto Must Me to apprec. Off S ELL Y ltereo system, fantaatlc cl Irvine/Santa babel ll9S FE~~~t in ads stora1e too. Private 1419-l4fl.'!. ... -,...,. Pr1,utliea fin. sales, escrow etc. beacbea-aod muc b .---__ .. ____ .... __ 1-5Ga30 ___ 1 ___ m-11 __ s_1 REALTY FREE more! For private pre· amucm hilt I 026 HOMF..5 "= ~ ~S, ~<1 ·· u;~:·~ !•IN".------· Be the fl.rst to see this RUSTIC a bl', 2 ba, frpk: lovely 4 ~ bome on = well deeonted. buge lot with a~ming uest boue. Sl53.000. pool Built to en.JOY in· By owner 141).7030 ·v. party wants to buy door and outdoor living. . . • br home in Hunt. Bch Call for appointment to ...... ~ qualify-Dramatic, nu from pri v . parlJ . see I ~t prl"'""' D c~u 2 1ty, 381', 2'1\ ba. Nr 548.31 .... . ~ "" ..... bt'h. 8K dn •129,HO. r---''"------2Bdrm, 1Ba ln front. 646-l03S • Sl&ldio ill rear. SUS.000. $7500 DOWN New beige cpt & sheer drps create cheerful background for your furniture in this lovely 3 BR end unit coodo w/fplc. Close to pool & tennis & ONLY $117 ,000 ! Rosemary Sietz 644-6200. <P-123} $60,000 By owner . ..O.'lllN. MESA VEBDE 3 BR. 2 Ba, new cpta. Real Estate Neal, clean le comffi By owner, 3 br 2 ba, drps, paint, Glenmar WATERFRONT HOME fmly home. Very we l PETE *DOI YllW family rm • .frpl, fenced home. Min from beach. FOR EST E OLSON .... flt .. •••J:•·· Dock for 38' boat. 3 BR •·~-~ maintained. Close to R yrd Reduced to 179 900 lJl carry ba,ance at _ _. ...... ----------1 schools .ti: shop.pin . 4 Bdnna., family rm.. :..~.:. · .1 .... 't~ N d . 3 Ba, y .. u . "6•· 6?3-7?3'1 Ma It e those good eenter. Make your fami· muslve lot: crisp Is as .._..... paso-e ... s7oo mo. 0 ere it th "2-5200 brlabt! Area'• beat 2980 Jacaranda. Call need.eel. 957·1991 princ If you're not reading e boasebold it.ems you're ly happy! Show them ·--------I value . .,.tl\,CIOO Or offer afters. 87H461 ~. liWe ads in Classified, not using available to this beautiful bome ! - 642-8235 644-6200 901 Dover Orlwie H•rbot' View Center Irvine •l campus Valley c.nter 752-1414 you're m!asing a lot o some other family by ad· 646-m.1 ~GS II CO. MESA VERDE 4 Br 2 Resale Spedallau. newsy information a ftl'tiaingtbemfOl'a&le in REALTORS ...sseo Ba, xlnt coad., tl2.5QO. 3.4 or s bdrm models "'~~~ wdlassomegreatbuys. Claaified.C..ll842-S6'78 ... __ , ""-t.a•-SELLING?. ~Sa~~ .2!112 avaJJ, aome w/pool• . ..._...... ... •lw OWMa .._ _____ ... ~Properties 3 Br, 2'4. ba coaido, fam r- tWtlOI VllW PALERMO Greatest location. close to park, one street from school, four bedrooms, two and one half baths. For $187,500. A c:a.DWaL ....... CO. 644·9060 . W aterf10•t Hom .. 2633 W.Coast Hwy. Newport Beach 631-1400 IT'S SO EASY 10 PLACE A CLASSIFla AD •You may use the handy order form printed below to furnish us with copy for your ad. • i:'lea&e note that the bottom oortlon of the COUPOO may be clipped and affixed to voor envelope. saving you the time to write our correct address. W• pay the postage! e tt you need more room for your message. just print or type it on another sheet of paper and mail 1t. •You may place your ad by phone. If you wish. Just dial (714) 642-5678 . ....... . ,,,,,,,,,, , '' ,,,,,,,.,,.,, .. ,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,., .. .,,,,,,,..,,,,,,,. , .. ,. ,., .,.,,,,, ' ,,, USE THIS HANDY ORDER BLANK. WE PAY POSTAGE! .. WORDS MAH OMl ~AD LISS 1MAM l UMlS a • 1 ,. ,... ,.... ,... ... ---- -~ --,, • .. $4.tl Sl.4S llJ.70 sn.n $6.10 llUO St7.U SJ110 u.n SIUS SZl.00 ..us P~Y~~ .E~Ct.OSED 0 SEND BILL 0 Charge: BankAmericard If ..............•• Exp. Date ....... . Master Charge 1' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Exp. Date .....••• Publish for ............ days, beginning ................... . • WANTED! Well cared for former model home in Orange needs new owners! ... so· meooe who wiU enjoy a beauillw jacuui year round ... someone who needs a lot of room with little maintenance. 3 Bdrm, walk·ln closets. office in garage. New paint, paper & much more. $112,000 Call 644•721 I /JD.NIGEL 131\ILEY & ASSOCIATES IEACH INCOME WITH VIEW One 3 bd. 2 ba & one 2 bd, 1 ba · both with siooe frplc, wood panel· ing thruout. Low main· tenance duplex w/UDlimited illvestmenl potential. Always rent· ed. Complete with sun· decks 4c ocean view. 64&-Tlll Our agaressive sales " din nm, pnitea de· l .... Z .... UMCJ)UI HOMIS lorce baa succeeded ill cor tbr&&out. 'Many double 1ara1e. patio, Custom executive depleting a large part of xtru. can ISl-1189 or fruit trees. aprinltlen, estatea, walkioa dls-our inventory of resale 77U500 $'19.900. --~ home.a; why don't you•--------lance to surf • llUN. give them the op· llVMTlllACI Roy~.• Featuringlge3br,4ba, rt 't to hel you 541-1729 over 2000 1q. ft .• den, po uni Y P Renet't leue $1052 yr ~~~~~~~~~!family rm. formal din get a fair & reasonable till 2J008 .• 2Br deSl 2ba 1-rm. 2 rr p 1 cs + 4 price for your property! U1J Sant•nel•a $1Se,SOO T'S COOL! lleu del separate patios. vie1r of ~esai~ ~ceo!eea 0wilh AIJ.. lf'l.5'17/t'4'991S Mar area. 4Br, bl& pool, ocean. Follow Beach a 29 year old com · -..,.. ~~~-·~~.a~~'!.,·_5-~·. Blvd ao. to ~poiis. · __ ... ffl W ·11 ..__ VWIR9" .,, ... .._..,. uuau-.... west lo Delaware, IO. 3 puten_.. o ce. e Brtn1 aome T.L.C. to Prln only. Call owner b''--to ---"-'. Open af. perform! ! ! DU • -.. '11 ....., IJJUUCI th1a P--..A • )'OU for •PP' ~7530 te r n oo n a or ca 11 BAY& BEACH 450 NE\WORT CTR. OR. 7011 MOVING 1 Get housing information from anywhere In U\e USA at no cost or ob· ligation. Call toll fr <nol on rentals> 1-800-525-8920, ext GU41 see a f o ten li a 11 y , __ ..;_.;...______ ReaJ•-Guild -- beautlfu 3 BR llome IASTSIDI ..... ., · ..r-. PLUS income from the ~S VIEW HOMI sep. 1 BR rear apt. Lc:it. 3 Bdrm., 2 bath, modern Lovely 3Bdrm,. Open of special features to home. with auumable af\n's tU sold . .-i,500. show you. Please call loan. Only $75.900 Owner. 19'1'2 Hamden 840-Sl12 ail· Ui. 96U100. I ' ' ' 1111 ,, I \ I I " ~f.1~~ ---+ Eilia99tfi~ .. • . . ...•••........ ' ............................. . ---.a..~~..,.,·~~·.* ............................................. . . -. Address .................. . City ..... . Phone ~ .· · • • · · ~ · · · ~ : : : ~ Ceox SERVICE ORooeo , •. ,,.,. , la *IQfll llt I llttfllllf't llll I 11111 f f lllfl oellllOlr 1114 '11111 • I II BUSINESS REPLY MAIL ·~·~ ...... _tHC) O)(Ofo1'"'U ~-- Oranc)e Coast Daily Piiot lox 1560 Costa Meta, Caaf. 92626 • ------= -------------- .. CE 110111 ILlllS CD. OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE llVIMI 1BIACE SPICW. 2 Bdrm. 2 Bath Home ln Corona del Mar. Could Be "Oh So Cbarmint". Owner Says We Can Show This Home Delore He Fixes It Up. Do It Younelf And Save Money. On Fee ~and Not Lease $188,000 111 DOVll HIVE 631-1800 , HERITAGE . . REALTORS ------- .. j • • •• ,_.,. , .......... S. ............. ...... .... ,. ...... ,.,.W. , MondQ.Auguat21,tt79 OM.V"LOT' ClS ' _ .................................. ~ ...................................................... ·········•··········•·· a-._. IMI Lillillllm.... IMI ..... VIM 1067 MR:aut.... 1"9 ... .,.., .._. 106' Ollw a...... OffWlHll ... Ott!lwlnl lat• l ~ ................ ~ ........................... i. •••••••••• ~-... ........................................................... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ...................... . --....... t:ao.•. 1 11t ...... ..._, ...._,,..,.,., aoeo hee1•1N&1 h aeoo blQDO GMIOPA ... -· • ,. .. ~-·at•• ... .~ ............... , ...... .......................... ....................... ..................... [ ~ ....... ~ .. v~ .... ~ I .... s. f 100 ............................... ~ •• zi ...... . "°'· ' !!! -..ii ON THE WI TEI ...................... . ....... Ole ti ta. -boo:tt ~.., .. aaave to ca.,.. A r•N 4 bdrm "Sae Ml1uet" model. Atr cmd.-, pnlwkltaallJ ct. eoraled httertor. Ill•· •v..Jo· .......... Redaoed to IUt,IOO. CIU ~ n"'7·tl500 Dock available, new 2 story custom bom~1 4 & ~ bdrms, 3 & • baths. formaa d1ninc and breakfast nook. 3 car garages. lar1e cloeeta, _pantry, 3 fireplaces, large decks on the water. UNJ'ldes tbni..out. Owner/Bldr. For le~only. c.IU.. ..... llMllO •EXCITING• l.all'y~ 1Wl$ MaditOn 2Br, 2Ba. 20sll llvln1 rm ln Oarden ParadlH for two, eqJoy the best for .... $Ill.GOO. c .......... lloblle Hocoe Sales ,. Harbor. St. -Gl9llD MU~~ IT1S YOUR TURN t to ,. ..... ., ............... ~ , ......... I f ':J'&ll W. ..... -......... ....... .,.. ......... ..... of ..... 41....., .. •1-,... ... • ... ,...c ..• , ...... _.._,,.. •• c• 1U.ltJO. 2. • ~P.w .............• Sllt,IOO J. • .sm. AM ••••••••••••.••• St6..IOO Two J'a. • ·Or.et ...•.... SI ...... , .. Qoice Baa ~ Condo. SUNSET Eze.ottonal dbl wide -If Z8r.lbe.~ar •/op-VIEW Park.lane. Sbow• like !!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!~ N rt ---..;.a. 1°'9 •·Solar bMUD1. wood· new, won't lut at ....._. •aie..,... bvra1.D1 frplc, traab La 1tlllllilil1 from lbl1 IM.880. (~) J ........... •••••••••••• 134~000/• 4. • .~a..... .............. SI H.000 4 •• -~~ •••••••.•••••• 1111.000 4f7·1JJI ....._... ...._ 104 ·-•rn; .. •••• ~ '*' StOO mo. mucb ao.cht after tri· ....... ..._ 5tar'9 -a...., o..n.ad _.................. * IMl'l.IX '* -.W ---------•level townbome . ~ .............................. ~ L •• ~-..... ............... Ull. 6. • .c:..e. ~ . · ... · .......• U I O.IOO I a I i..ur ~ ~ ae-Ateatlrw)', level ,_...,. 11 ... 1ve ma1ter 1mte. ---------1 ~ ~=-•!~~ tlll• 11 lot, •Hf eeuu to LovetY Nft))Ort Triplex. Pannal dininC room • EXCITING 6. : .c..e. ................... 1170-000 ~---N&ell. Need• palol ~ hdrm unite. "U" mlSt .. C" ••eel lent famllJ • • aed eoanatHl t• lh1lt ~ trs • ~ nipel.n; Ideal roi luLall~•r'°•"•.,l•1111&e ,.Oll11 The best ot Westcnrr. nel1bborbood. Tb it IO •• Jthw 111' .............. 1971.000 1 ''· • -~ •••••••••••.•••••• 161.1.000 fNe•IJ eeeeu aad b*m. I~ be. w l•P«· i... • t.ococDe. llW'1'Y. i ...... --Prt-me taven•t· 111aao1u -med 3 Bdnn pr I c e ii r I I b t a t Stl 0 P.tr a.t =• Call ...., f« _.. vt..r. '1bp qcaal cm.11 '151.IOO -.__, --si-.ooo. Call for details At t be be-a c b. 1 n ctp&I, drJll, lucbcap. lfi.m a ... .._ 4N-0'73l mtet. A•kllal only bome wltb beautiful e.5-7221 beautifully landscaped 32. •• Lal At I In Co ........ $110.000 32. • .S. ...... Co •••••••• S 1,000.0CML IWCHllALn u1.iooo WMATTA ....... , Price Nd..ced twice· DOW OlllJ •t.toO! 2 ~-=.~:f; ma. 111 old LuU bome.1----------""'---.,._-. ~ loee· yard. Near Manners "Sechaded adult park· 8. It 'l' v t n e I 0 c OCEAN VIEW MOO aq ft tianf c.u DOW 15a-1TOO •chool, 1bopplDJ, etc. ppoua dbl wide 197'1 O.W '"-ID«Z7 aft • New, Vld«ta bcb cloM OlllN 1119 • ''' lc.w ro" iwc1 • ~iJ:men& ool.Y • Call kinaatone top of the '-Sat/Su J.S bf~· mam tine. 2Br. 2Ba. lam rm THE REAL ~I ... lllOI Cte..,SSAU •THIS HOUlll ~ 1paclout Cornell Model ll perfett for the eotlr-e famllY · enter· tafDinC and livtai. POW' ~ . 2~ ba:thl + bc8ll room. 'I1lree com- munlt1 pool• · areat recreatioa part aod the CS ~la tbe price . red hill .-. vnc••• · ! .. HERITAGE £STAT£RS _ !lmletl. N..rer 3 br, 2•------=-=-=-=;;:;:::;;;;;-. . REALTORS " much more-II )'OU want to live ln th1s lap of luxury with a paupers pane tbil ta it. ba apllt·level. Gd flr plao. Attractive t.erma. At BICAM NOMI REALTORS 494-1001 494-7113 9UllT COMfOIT and eiou·ln conve· nlence i,; block to beach. 2 Bed., 2 Ba. adult apt. '85,950 NORIHSUALTY IYOWMll Nwprt Hila trs corner lol. 2 bdi 2 ba, family Duplex. l bouae fr r m + b on u a r ra Caiaall. S fn old. 1500 ..... 500 ,.,._,.1 0p • 1q ft ea. WW Mil both -· · ....... °"· 0 or ooe (\; lntere.t>. &uaday. '150,.000 eacb. a.o291. ~~~.~! ~~~= Bl«• bdrm, 2 bath. 270Sffartlor.Ste208 pool, Jae, waterfall ___ S_40oo __ S_9J7 __ _ Completely remodeled, -D new tbru·out. Owner "'",_ ~Tl $12,000 will finance. $159,950 Completely up1raded Do~ total price. Ad for FA. d b I .. i d e , R o y a I THlauffS "" a.erno.. M4·J455 ait. lloaarcb. AC. Fwy IBdrm. heated pool, llaay other bome1 clon only $31,999. lZ ....... ...., ......... Sl.UOMO 34. • .0. I ••.•.•.........• StJ0.000 71+ .•• °'911 C. ........ SZ6.U0/1& I 00 + ... S. Dltp C. ...... SS.H0.000 9UAIL PLACE PROPERTIES™ 10,. Tll 8:30 P .M.I zea88Q. A111~. lodoor aamet.enm. ~ .....__ • ·n-carry at--------....,_.,..~Store •uso11110. No credit--------148-8895 • • • • • • • 494-1057 '.>~2-7500 coantrJ kltcben. Spectolll IDAIW wiq. Co .. red paUo. Gu BBQ. TRA.NSrERRED SIU.fll llUST HAVE 1--------1 SPANISH SIU.000 Totally redecorated. P'amU)' n>om overloob fJaftr' lllJed. laUice COV· ered patio. Huie ~te muter suite + a more queen ti•e bedrm1. Don't wait, •nn =-9SMJ91. Prtn OUTSTANDING '58 UDivenal, 45'. Mex· €HIG€ + ¢ •Jl'ri-Mo .., __ .t.ul ScbooJ, bome arn. S ico, Colorado RJver. or HOM€~ Bu~wol oUtnr botbUlllh. W•ll IMllBDIATE SALE I BARGAIN HUNTERS CALL '15>-1700 F ASf I Ol'fN I# 9 •ti S '""' 10 111 IWCI • 1111 Executive Home S Bdrm .. 3 ba .. fam. rm. ~ Model in Woodbridce Place. Fan· tasUc patios and low ma.lot. landlcaplng. HOUSE With barrel tile roof. 4h!OO ·Lot. c.1 zooec1. Would IDUe aa ideal of· nee. Court7&rc1 and out· doer f'irepbce, tlZ,500 "· "' "t. Laguna Niguel Realty • O'fN Ill 9 •II 1II.IN1011 NI((' ~1[-' ":. THE REAL ~! ESTATERS _ DOVER SHORES Ownr /Bkr mu1t sell 48r, 3Ba, prof lndscpd, 4' decor&~ w{;jacuul & pool. Bltn m crowave, many other xtras $229,500. <>Dn Suodaya ~. ~1 Klgbland Dr. ~"' 833-1316. ~ bechoom, family room, local park. Xlnt cood . .,.~..__..._ ,1, ~ 2-Stf,. 3 bdrm., 2 ba.. dlnl.Dc room " eountrY Nu apt.. bot wtr beater ~ ........ RM'W'S muitatned • oceupled. ~ UJruout. Walle tttcbea. Harbor View. ctr at paint. Full lenctb '"•50J•,....., Cua Paclflcia Realty to ocean. pools Is tennll. Priced weU below other awning Ir wiod awmnp. 'T10Gl82 SllUOO almilar bomes for quick Aak:loi $2500. 631-2205, ll UNITS • • • • * • • REALi¢~~~1290 Ille. $182.500. Call -~~·-~;....1_-G89...;_;'....;.e_ves.:_... --1 Extra sharp! Only 8 yn Loh for Sate 2200 LAGUNA HILLS old. Ten.anti pay ut.U. 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • tWtlor View tto.1 Price slaabed. Dbl wide BBQ, rec rm. pool. 9X OMCI 11.DG $ITl Laree remodeled 21 Lancer, or beach. rock ~goo· Xlnt area . Huntln&tonBeach Portoflno model or ~ ~f a caped. S 19. O O O. ' 27,000 1q. ft. lot near Fubioo Island. 4 bdrm. CT 1 JI I 1 • (5$C42371) t• 1111o.1m Pactrlca Hospital. 5 ~ud , 4 ba & cedar ....._ rt c---Mobile"-Store • v" Points Shop. Cntr & fam rm. Bonus iWWpoP .,..._. All 2 Bdrm, solar pool. Cvt "-•·· ... ,. 000 6 .. ,.5•57 8t9..aa5 ~-wtu c c ~--· -· · rm & ba over 1ar. 2 ..,,_ • ---------• vwug arry con· Davld Bourke Rllr $11,000 DOWM used brick frplc's & ~~~~~~~~ REDUCED tnct wttb '75.000 down. 546-9ll50 •BY OWNER •BEACH white pid;~ fence. You S-a..... 1076 roR FAST SALE S3'7S,OOO Is Just 200 •lePS away. own tbe lanCL $214,950. ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• 1'11 Dbl wide Someniet, A P P r o • 1 7 2 Lo t s 3Br, 2Ba, frpfc, 2 car 1748 Port Maalelgb Cir ... .-. THI ••"'CH fully uparaded, fwy 3 ON A LOT Rlventde area. $1185 pr ln a Carmel-like ael· __ M_4_4040 __ 1840-8CM4____ ~.-.; .-cae. $32,900. <082616> Eastalde Colla Mesa. 3 per ac. ~112 agt. ~oo a pvt at. in Lido •UDO i.r• •• Ultimate RE EFG ATE ~~ $ton MP bouaea on corner --------~ -WEST condominium. _...._., !!>!.;,000Super localloo t•a• •• ._...___.... SUl,SOO 645-1262 Elegant Spanish ram Rarely available, now--------..... ··-• _..,... OUTSTAHOIMG bome. • bd, 3+ ba, at $139,000. llTIUD7 2 ON A LOT F\ve acre •Ith view. $1~000 OCEAN VllW! $I 0 000 formal dining. front BERTHA HENRY Don't pay rent·buy thia F..asilide Coata Mesa 2 year round. Asking 3 BR •IPOOI. xtra trc. ' court yard, pri• boat REALTORS single wide American aep boulea OD R2 lOt. $1S,SOO. Term• avaUa- NEW HO E WITH fam no. beaut l.Ddlcpd. DOWN yrd, $365,000 Owner/ Z1S Del Mar 492-4121 w/expudo " encl rm. $129,500. hie. S P EC T A C U L A R Owner buy1q a.notber I 8robr f13.3lm eves Ad I l Pk . $ 13 , SO O cauMMT ~ 40l[.IJ9~ fOl#J. OCEAN VIEWS : 3 must sell. Call to· Quietculdeaac,3BR2 BJ' Owner,condo. Reef (530ll4-64} AU Bdrm bath 1;C~Jt~-!!!~~Mf&S~ Bdrm, 2 batba, jacuzzi, day $Z2SOOO BA. 180 de& golf course EARnl TONES. lmmac ate West 155C S.C. ._.,. "-Sfon 1 2 • t un· • .....i1-.Z :a.. stained clasa, micro-49~Sll0 ·49J.9494 ~~:: ~e:.C::ub.J~':: 2Bdrm, den, 2Ba . ';]_1e~m:~e;:,r ~012~: ___ IMM895 _____ ~ =~ 2•~l c~ 1 £ ~ wa.ft!=~~ion 496-2413 110.5050 at 11100 mo., no credit =/·~·~·000· C-7764 from. Full price 182.SOO. 497·1'68 needed. 95'M.998 Prine. ._, ............,... 1tAMCH RIAi.TY IY OWN& only. ...w y8 .._, New Iota-ocean vtew ~far Sale 1200 tK-...a..~€HIG€ NIWPOIT LOT ~ 111·2000 2 Houaea, plu1 studio. 3 Bdrm, 2 batb East 4Br vn nu crpts xlnt u-~uttomR Ebomet. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..,...-1--1-HOM€~ -.ooo <>war. 5'U532. Ocean views. Victoria Nine Coodo. End unit on $8500 c:ooi'l. cQ n..aid; ___;.•ioo. PAien . . 861~ 5 A C R I S F 0 R --------•I bob, beamed cemn1s. El Ni,-uel goJI course. •t"' f ....-......0 •-...._ M,_,.. 3333W.COASTHWY. tt=Detert,2400 llST --,.... trpl-o-er ..,38"""" SIS f-' • ul,500. ee. wner, ---NEWPORT BEACH -· " ....... -.. . ... ·"""· re ...... compactor. TOTAL DOWN ..-u~1 c-••tr 1011 ,.. __ ,,._ lr d ~ ..... """'5 • .....,.. .. ·4 •o Level area reee-•10 de· I.VIM• ~.,....,. a e ... _......., -·1"-.... _·.Aut, Must ....., , .. ~ 1..1.. .. 1.. ••..s ... ...., _.,.. ..... u.,, R."' Sal ••••••••••••••••••••••• veloped property. Xlnt ,. __ Hale e BR 4 Ba home Cbann1ng English type 4 have fast sale. $95,000. Broad moor Sea vlew r... esperson, exper. BY OWNER ror country Uving, ,,.,00.1~-_•_-_•_•_~•-•_• _• _• _• ___ •_•_ ........................ inf'beR.anch.overl,000 B:r Cott.age, lormal din· Owner will carry a 2nd home~6 mo• old. preferred. PresU'e toe MUST SACRIFICE-derful potential ror --------HAWAII sq.It. Wlth garden room lug, beam ceilings, park TD. 496-7'198 lBdrm, 2Ba, rommun.I~ on Dover pr. N. · All Large 4 br, 2 ba, ror lot. mobile home or home. HEW COMSTltUC 'tJ~ t.be master bdrm. llJte aetting. By owner. Lme--l'onl--t---1-0-5-5• ~· Pool, Jacuzzi, te~. calls conf1dentlal Mr. To many xtraa too men· 11 • r. acres 00 the island or ..... ~ .. ~5880 for more Cons1der trade. $289,000. ••••••••••••••--••••••• 0 credit needed . Pussell, 63l·S2S2. Uon. Must see. 188,800. erms. FARGO T10M Kauai All or ~-rt. .._..... 494-2B85 Im med occupancy. ~ ... _ FOUIPLD · $9,000 DOW.._. Owner to carry balance. Prime Pen.in locaUoo. J VJ"" ...... e. 496-mt. <714> 876-5717 $17,000 per acre. er /4). C " 714-640-7778. hae from ocean, by 5-19 ._ IOIO OR 522-21*> Prime ownenhlp area. will carry with small ~'~f ~ HERITAGE . . REALTORS BEAUTIFUL BRENTWOOD 3 bedroom famlly home in Greentree. County charm, loh or al· moapbere, tn.hly palnt· ed, near pool and acboolt and prl ced to tell at 117 ,500. UMCHRIALTY Hl..JOOO ~ 0 Brand new 2 sty 4 BR, 3 ownr, 2 bdrm, dng rm, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 10 Ir 20 ACIES ~at ~j,e;,t~~~ro· down. Onty 2 miles from ..l ~ Ba, den, bonus room, 2 IA.CIC IAYl $115,000. 5S2·5446, -------•I Y· or · beach hotel. ~~(J)* \._---·~~ r::~:n~o~·u,.,~·~di~ ?:::~e~·1~lyo::u:,( _963-86l.3_______ 4 IDllMS $67,500 ~v:':>!~~:>!. I f•l rt! A PRE:HOH~(C ""' ~ , \ .b needed. 957-1998. Prlnc. Newport'• best areu. 4 LIVI WHal THIE 4 Bdrms w/kJtcben eat· sclent.ious buyers near _ _ ~ ~ /-+-~ n 1 ~ only. Bdrms •• 2 baths. formal ACTION IS }nrpk:g ~e-~:.t~ .. Sanbri~~ major town. Expanding ,a4~11 ... 71 -w ,, _ __.ff (...) ~ } BY OWNER 3 BR. z ba, din rm. & rumpus rm. Sbarp2 BR. 2~ BA con· Ana a.re;"Pri~ und:r area. Has all util 1~~~~-~~~~~ -. .....,... wy, NB ' Deane Garden Home. Qiper clean! call to see. do. Pool &jacuui. Walll recent aalea for Fas w/paved road&. Sl.20.000J . 64M646 , .Includes Sun • 8111 $189,000 . to beach. Reduced to Adioo & ~.000. Tenna. LAGUNA IUCH -------- REAL ESTATE Club. 1116.900. 955-1447 UST IUY! ~ C---. c4 6~721 I m~ ~:,~117 Larse C.l lot. Office Ir 3 01t of ,.___.. Newport Hel1bta, 2 ,_..,,rv•• ~·-rm apt on Cit Hwy c-a ~·,. 2550 WOODS COVE! Certain· MblioR VIAL.. 1067 bdrm. old•r home on ••.&.•'TY , .. Al112 OR 522-20llO • ._., nOf*t/ • ....,.. g ~ .. v-2 Br hm next to ocean. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ly lhe moat popular ... •••••••••••••••••••• lar&e lot with private s:asoooo ' area ln Lacuna! Thls -------1 rear yard. ltd Bdrm. or IAYROMTS A GREAT 'T UALTOI CHOICE secluded family home 0. Tiit Golf c_... bobby rm. wlt.h bat.b at· XTRA LOE PlER MIMI-RANCH has sparkling view or Senaatlonal 3 Bdrm tacbed to gara1e . &SLIP lH~ Acre wthouae & 49.._.611 PROPERTIES ~ t.hrouah towering twabme, plu1b camel Owner will finance. Open Sat/Swl l·S 3 Br. 1~ b1 home In ~~a1f:'y .iD2 M0~1·-------•I .6....._ y.._. · p nea on _ quiet street carpets, drapea, cllDing $110,000 815 Bayside Dr.. quiet pride of ownenbi ...___ d 11 ~ --, within walkln& distance room, lnalde utility, MEWPOIT IEACH Al.so, cbarminl 4 BR area 00 lge tot at end 0 ,........,, out bl gs, family ...., acre bone pro. to beach an euy 1troU. pa1io declt, top value al RW.TY 675-1642 3Ba, almolt new w/pier cul·de·sac. 12 yrs . fruit orchard. Only paties. Ready to build. Stained cedar exterior, Sl.10,WO. Call Kay now! & sltp. Welton & Co. $71,000. USA Realty U 5 • O O O · Terms . ~ wtterma. wrap.around tile decks. n4-83'7·9500 D u p L E x o N 615-6800 M6-0507 or 58l·S986 HURRY! " l'I• acres. Fantutic print• paUo .i& a~~ PENINSULA in quiet FARGO view & utllitJes to pro. rounded by extensive ·C&tlJlll aoo block. Completely MIWPOllTHTS. Wedrl IMr 109 (714)677·S&n perty l ine . 17650 Plant l n I & t re e • . • • I remodeled tnalde & out. UST IUYS •••••••••••••••••••••• OR-=«S30 w Jterma. Beamed cellinp in Uv· 3 BR & 1 BR w(l. patiol, 2 Bdrm., new lilting on EXTR LARGE• Br. 2~ c......,, Loh/ "2"' acres. Hone pro. Inf room and dining It 2 car encl gar. P\lllerton Ave. ror only Ba, in popular area. r~ croo perty In the beautilCll room, family room. $165,000. Owner would' IM.750 -Hu Iott of potential. -,,... 111 Marianni1s . HllOO bullt·ln kitchen, 2 like to claee ln January . Only $99,900. Bkr, ••• .. •••~•••••••• ... • WJtenn• '~ · bedroom 2 baths up-__._--.... --.. um. Flnanctng avalla· 3 Bdrm " d1n.iD '15Hi2182. Companion (2) Crypts U 20 acres. Nr '!Mpl & ltain; lower level ia ln· , .. -ntn. ble. ~ uk for Mr. cbarm~r • oak f 1~: $1390 F . P . Harbor schoW. SJ466 per acre. dependent runt unit; With everything but Don ht 1 Lawn · Mt 0 11 v e II DUPLEX. Out.stud· _....;._ __ ____;.-_ ___ 1 doubfe1arace,sepenite your pocketbook . Wl'OUI ron, country Olller._.Eatoh Memorial Park, CM lngbu)-rOC'tbeinvettol'. lallDdry 6 work room. Beautiful custom 3 ONE HOUSE FROM ~b~e,;£~e •••••••••••••••••••••• ~55Mor 540-8106 .,,...~.,..,~EQUALS 8 Only SZ'l..500. walll-lnmraieroom . bdrm, brl&bt and nlEBAY.:lbr,StJ0.000 · ~~· llOODouble Plots Harbor •a~.. CClll973.4626•wl QQ&llty eonstrucUoft by cbeery decor. added •ooo dWJS AGT au..-3 Bdrm •. i·•-"u ,._.. -T • u 01 M Two bandeome side by ................. • IP! 11-..... Lhll i famUY aJr nd. · • ......., rm., .-wn-... t. Ive em Ude fourplexes. Localed .._ --. npe~ ow:efot ~I~ 1 a D d.a ~ d a :°d ~ witb Iota of wood 411 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pk, CM M r . St a r to popular HWlUnston 1131 E. 17th St. S.A .. or add on VIEW! Mu.it be aold, UMt.beDaH1Pllot ...... !!l'ta.,':*~· •EXCITING• -.ouaevea Harbour area. Buy one INV!STOAS j e 1 s I I , a.o..o. (UDtf .. ., c . .-,._ • both for a sound In· Prtcel ... oeean view. 11~~~~::a~1~~~~~~~~ ms & fll1!S-Wlltmmt. cau now! French country-style directory, Your ._ ot"Tlnlle fiOin liiHfr!". 1{0::-~-----<• Nn1relaour -nt-tlHt-OlUn • cJGR'"to «mmr· -- room enauOflQr llOQ1 t! ! ---------• PfiUe c""llt'"!Or 'IJr"WIF t----potnt men t tod 11... . . .al!Ml!l!llJIWll,.._~• WOODlllMI New J Bdrm TownbovH. Mu1t Hll ... Ph S45«D •ft s. Univ Park S Br Chan- cellor model wltb land. Sl.21,0ln Call SSMnl. SbaJ1) 2lllOO aq. ft. ' bd, ram rm, trs Ill.tr at w I frple, A&t m.sm. . P11SCon fitOdbt'ldle Plate I, IU. 111111 OD euMMac -to~m_... .... mo,ooo 110. So. Coast ltlway 497.2497 LAO~ABEACB a..-.... ...................... ~~~ wooo·aMA.ss Soaring eoatemporary overJoottn1 the eatire Lasuna Coa1Uine. 2 bedroom. den, Cb.ris Abel deslp with artruJ wood tones. All beat quality tile1. fixtures and appUa.ncos. $229,500. A COLDWa1 U.... CO • 496·7222 831-0836 apedlJt.1. 3Br, 2Ba. too many wtretall ~ +'apt. or .. • Mariner's Cove H..EAL:J ·~· CaJI 8'2·$878 en. 322 atraa to mention, In ok .u.ume 1~ loan. Jaeuut, lo uplreep, aBr, most beautllul 5• Faml· ... a.000 ....... .,_,.. 3Ba, att 2 car ,.,., \ yr ly Part i.n Callfornfa, -· ~·· '"""2414 --------1 old. Pretent ownr will 1wlmlol pool, Jacuul, Prtme commerc. bldg. at New dupt • 4 l CC>Mlder leaH. Leate· 1a.inu, ebck»ed roller 8308 W. Cout Hwy, Npt.. 8Qy ~iom ·&i:•:: back for l yr. SU0,000 . 1kaUn1 rink, minutes Blach; can be used as 3 vek>per (Tl4~ !!!,~ (71() 431-3't6 fl'ocn Fa.abk>n bland & lndiv. offices or! Highly _---.....__· -~----_ _, the Pavtlllon & only 1ucce11ful real eatate looM to Mid --------sauoo. <D~T> luineta incl .. same loc. BASTSlDE CM, 4 re ..... ~ P9Cffk 15 yr1. Owner wlll 1ldeoce1 on a double ...................... . MobUeRomeSaJa finance. a1a.ooo . wide R·% Lot. All..._..,. lrlmf 270e =~fr 20I D,,._=1290~ llMllOO ~i;;.;•••••;io6 --------llOO C. M. DUPLEX •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• CMl•Y Yiu.AM an 2 R·l aou. May be 8 ALB 0 A 8Ul dbl wJde UTT •• , ......... ••••••••••• IPUt. Owner will carry IS LAN I> IADCm' OIX'll~ up. Lou Beacb. receQtly t• lit at t~41t lnterHt. ~.~-:S2~Rin~.' ,,_..,· <M4l•> f\liblabed. lQ Unlt1. sat.ooo;otrer. Aat. T• mcmh le .... w.wi.~ Sfwe ~~Q :~·~·IL•~ 6'1-tll8 PANORAMIC BAY ft _._ nt:4S5Cn 16 uwm octan vtew.. a BR. 2 ----------1 ~ BA. beaut. l\&nJ • a ran. WW WICIAL .._ ,,.,.rty 2000 ~I CO. t11tlc locatloo . Pl•J 'oll? Lov• tbe ... •••••••••••••••••••• ONLY SllOJt. Ceth to 11.aG/IDOaCA. t>.acb Super 1ln1le INVESTORS opportunl· oev toen. Prtitclpa1' Oii· EXtclJTtVE bome. :t wtde Atetnt w/Mw add· ~·" 2 8R lJnlt 4. 11 Won't lul 1001. BA+ cle. a BA, J cu on. ~ dtlll/Cl)W, ' C u ~ ......._ WORLD ,,.,.. . ••-~ Ylft. "*"' -000. (8Ptot'J.-Z> ' .... ..,_n ,.,.,., ._ ---~ ...__ • ...___ llcnt only Red to 541.olOO ctunlana. 4GOmootb. -~ ..._ $147.IOO. J L Yount R ........... ., 841.-s £..14S-l.2Z3 or IM.2-a40 Want Ad Help! 841-ltTI '7W7• "' ' ·- ...._ _______ ,DUPLEX. ~ I Ir. l .. ~,w.uw. "": :~.':~1 ~i~td M. tfia rm. 1rt1. Ho ~ • ,.._ , .... yw ...... IJ'Mml PJ. mt'-o.· ... ... llMTAU l llll. 1 ... . .. .. • .. '300 IBR.J Ba ..••• U/eO I Br, l8e .......... 117& aBR.Jbatm MIMloa\ta.Jo ..._ •1 ti Cr 1201 a n • tam rm, tole In •523 CMilfUsla:~ -·-··-.. ·-····· tra a. rm. bka ktteh. z Bdnn. a ba, uso "' t\. THE rm.-1n11 a.. .,..... _...,, ,, a~.,... l tar/nar. Ira b•ehd. tultabl• VIII••• 111, 1 B!l + f'tplc, £ne14ar. O/W &: .U .[fV"' ~.-llDO ... T/ ,,.r. ... • ...... '°' ,. vellJd• la bon&ll rm ·~ b• d.1a Cbarmlal J 1tory A· 0/1> • .,.5. Cla Verde. 111mu1nvE _.10 chbw hr. •l•P• lrom bo•t. V1cut. 14u. rm .• dbl. lar. Nr.'i.hop: frame, SBdrm. ZBI. wit l Br. J bi. ts'l5 yea~t1 754-al.8, f1t.lm N. UIM ,---------. ~ PIU. f&»,/fM 1611111 sinl. tcboolt. aas Mo. to beb. pooJ at tennis. sr.I TO llACH ,..,..,, deluu condo. Mo. lO mo . l'tt'l incl : -r::s 0.1. ~ m-.a Some tum. MOO/mo. 2 BR. l be .. or. N'pt. 38drm. trplc. crpta. R" c ''Pt · •"" v · • ewe.. .. ..._. Ull -• . Mo(bt. tlMm. Harbor Yacht Club. drpe f*' opar. Days penonaliucl ~ toV· , Macatf1Net .,.•dt _ .................... Z..Wt IB. 1315 mo. 2 Br lal• eot>do• .re~ Ytu11 • tcS 211;24 .~1241,1978: ---------• eraae. conf. rm. mad w.t NH.,.t ....._ N .. l deeotalfd JBr ...... m-w loci., ceot. air, Uc fbrbor View Knoll1. evtt m~. N\ce a&r 1>p1s upsuirs, *" , paitus1 • m~ Id.re, t batu ·~~ isl e • e c hom e: s er. c1m, a be. trotc. dbl ~·:;.~0~.1:-,u:t ~ "den. end unlt. =· . .:'~.a::tf3o an ~BCUTIVt: ~'1 Sl.$00 paaori•lc oco view. pr.•£, Bai Sl. tcO. 411' eves 540-T2JU • '312'70 I ale 1hoppln1. Lie. SUITE MO.SC70 :. an.a HJttllaoda. Pvt O..U Mam• Joan • · • · •eMIW c.redlt ref. ssoo mo. -------- Oa1'81l•I 2 BR. '" Kil. -mo.. CT5 7449 1 fncd a.ZAN• br. 2~ ba, 1ep. Udo tsle1.3 Br 2 Ba. lae 1 Bdrm IZIO _..., OISCOUNTI Adwta oeb. no ~ta D L X J 8 r • 2 '4t 8 a . ~·~I~~'" 1 !~Uy . = Y ctr!S:.' 1 t!, c i ~ ~· no peta. Adultl. no pets. • uoo ao. Til Jlaly OJ!UJXEFratdp&&.tU AvallSesltllL~/mo. st.Y cui-cte ... ac '~ie . a.tooeua Jbrpert 131£.tabsu.t =\: ':l~u~.Jlocpdk l1Wlll M•rl1old, 1525 mo. Dy1, 145·'812. Eves. Pata. Refli is depo.tt Gnib It! '133 frH utll. 4' turn. uui Pd. tsso: -..II No ldeb.•~ pets. J1 E a• . bloek to beac ~ t4MlM req'd. .-. MCM5'5 aft Frplc, pet•. beach! rno. Deya teBM: evea .Biibo• Blvd. S2SO per • a.blill StP. l to Otl S Btaf:E. exec home, 1~ Bdrm. 2Ba. yard, 5•wbdl· =· Sm•ll fee . I04l57I Garden like apu, adult mo. + aecurtty dep· .. .., ... free -.. ..._..ble. m-41 ar 10 courae, •Br. cute! l"rplc, 1ar. No ~llER'S GUIDE Winter Reat•l · lBr. Dvina. oo peb. 2 Bdrm. OaUSue 556-770'0 S bdnll. Iba detue eoe ::; t den I ~i~fc:· peta. tL\2$. MUIO'l. Llil!M INdt 3241 W 1 t2SO %br f I AL turolsbed, uUI pd, 7 =:.ta:~~ E. BCH DPLX 38r. ZBa. ..... ....... clD. l lftel -.mo conred patio Own; 3 BR OONDO, POOi, no •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• ..:cb. ..:ee Ut.urpiaUo doo~..!!'..?'!.,~ca. ~ . . '"*· pr. new cpta. no ,. ___ ,-.A. 11r1 Cooper 115-Glll (TH) '121-sitS • peq, ~Avail sept L 13QC>. Blue LalOOD Villa 2 K1dl Sml ree ~ · mo.,_....~· no ..... -Fronl 1ara1e •pt. l BR. pets. SJOO mo. yrly -·---. --1 5464lll + 2. ocntrnt on pvt bch. •coNsull£R'S GUIDE C'15.c19 lie Uv rm. kikbenetu.: M5-lt82 .... ~ 13MltJ • ~ 4 bd 3 ba cu.tom bl& new ao. of 2 Po o h l e n n t • • CHAR II ING 8 EACH 20th Nr. Irvine. $300 Inc ,... b1k to bucb 3 BR ., •e1'08• rnn pri0v beb bwy.1Br'. 2~Ba. formal ~~ ~ ~!!,'r· ~:!11~r TIA/49NZ17: 213/703-0230 CDI unr't ..... u COTTAGE .... blk to uUl. 548·l458: Hl-6196 BA. dowmt.JtrS bll·UlS~ CdM OFACIS 900. yt1;J WJ) 'J96.8'761 ~ r.c:~~-=· da::adyl m~. MSG. 3 Br,~ Great vtew prime 3 br before you r•Y some ocean, wlbter rental. Quiet MWIY dec!ora&ed 2 frpl. patio. garare. .._, Cla1"' "9w .......__, .......... BR wint • lk t Bl 9525. MU220 or640-oll4 2ba patiCIS frpl nr bc:b a I a n c Y o ~. the $325 . 12' 35tb St. bd, t ba. patio. tum kit. leaae. $500. 127 4Uh St SUJTl!:s. So. of Coast ~·--• car 1.,, w 0 I "RUNAROUND . Call S73-3056 closed car laundry tac &t0-6140 Hwr . Available Now! l'elWlll. Prom 9-~78 l Oal'ooa. $1.~5 mo. yrly. Sharp 3bd. 2 be. Mesa town.~ aft <tpm CONSUMER'S GUIDE. 1970 Willa«. edits. i SEE to appreciate. S39S. • g.~Tt, $6:50. John Va Tatln& applical.IOnl ror Del Mar. $HO. Aval\ Ocean side Emerald Many have and are glad Near pier Ir beach. teeaa1er OK oo peU NEWPORT SHORES-Call Landa 61S.23ll aianCo.'31.o&OO Sept 1 occupancy . roll Ba ho . 3 BR 3 ba they dldl! Save lime 2bdrm. 2ba. Pfrt rum $31.S 6*18S05"s-6W 3Br. 2&. yrly MS mo .,, ......, ....... CH. Decorato ~aft 8PM. wkdys 497·2288 . ::lwd. ':ckin~ French ,.. &: money 00 ree. • or uof, Yearly $400. · . m.1'05 ev~ CdM dbt SUlta. util pd. v•~ .u:.~ • I ooo~ of ................ '15-5484 202 21.lt. NB. ..__ A-&...& •126 OIY n A.IC. aU\ple pkng. from rurniehed 2 s tory, Av.U.ble 9/9. 3 Bdrma. 2 $l.3S ~ ac:re free uUl A doora. $1000 o. Agt. -I _.._ -r-• ~ No lae req m.-oo Bdrm VIEW. In bea baths. frplc, bllina. 1575. must See. Nice cott.ale. (N.ll'11 KJD6.PETS WELCOME 1'g rum duplex. ocean ••••••••••••••••••••••• l ea. view ot bay " . . ~B~mll~~· Drive by only 715 ~Ms..soo. . ~ta 3250 '4Mto0 vtew:l>1tepstobc:h.2 2 bd, new cxpta. drps. ocea~. USO/mo . ~llACM• " Nareluus. 673-7229 .coNSUllER'S GUIDE ... -.................. ()pea 'f days 9.7 • bd. lease $400 •• tl500. Pllt. balcoay. ear. $325. ISMllOO. f13.5206. llmlOOO sq. ft. Attract. SlJ p m;o yrly -'70llO • 8»9325 td of • .. Waterfrcat Homes Cape Cod Duplex. 2 Br. Circle this I $2lO. Nice Leisure World. new up· PLUSH· 2Br. 2Ba condo. WESTCLIFF 2br. l'laba ::S:: ~ s. A ai:f. 831-1400 f~c. patio. So. of Hwy. area Kids pet refrt• pd 3Bdrm. ,.,, yard. frplc, wthrldryr, refHg, t'•2 BDRM. AP1'S Super ocean view. New t.ownboule. Adults on.ly. .Ds er.bllv•d · ----------t ~/mo. No pets. Dave &mil fee ~ •· IOlf COlll'le & !Ue view. pool. J•cusd. 2 car Nr. Water FumUbed 1550 eq. ft. 2 br. 2'Yt ba. no pets. $395. 1728 Bed· w1aar. eco,:_. ~ All. 6'4-7211 •CONSUMER'S G.UIDE llN833 g.arage, nr bch. avail Agent -842·3331 M50. 844--5742 or 7»0706 fen Lo. Hl-7533 =~:::· Charming 2 BR. 1 ba.. lge 2 b kids ts &.....-....... 3252 Sept 1' *500 mo. 5S8-ISM Hull gtGa IHdt 3140 Part Ne...port. l bd. apt.•---------- frpl., patio. USO ~ fucd ~ CaU 'iJ: • ............... -....... q tw• ....................... sub·lea.&e. $370tmo spa. NEWPORT BEACH. · ...................... Agent 675-5930 i • ~ ay. Monarch Summit adull OCEANVIEW. 2 decks. U.fwNl•d Sharp, beach. 2 & 3 BR. total rec program. MARINERS MlLE 300 •HOMIFINDEIS• •roNSUMER'S GUIDE twnhee. 2Br & den. 3 bdrm•. 2'11 baths ........................ frplc .. d11bwuher. pooll, tennis cts. Call gqbath. ft. Jri>l.autiJ •• ~rpa.Ap~ .. .. LOW RENTALS Costa Mesa 1224 w/te4! aru usage. 1-3 yr ~/mo lse. .._. Ps I UN 3107 gar a 1 e Ir pat 1 o s . aft &PM 759-9"52 , • ~ · wc:ld. m call today· Move t.oda,y. 1.•.•.··.·.•.••.•.•.••.•.•.••.•.·.·.·•.•.•1 SUO. Has dehwhr + Iota lse. Owner/agl (93·0IM1 ON WATER. 2 bdrms. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •2358. , ple irt a. s.4-8671 557--082A J• more. See now. Small boat slip, S'150/mo yrly. SI'EPS TO BEACH &aper pad. 1 br. gar. on 350 sq ft c .M. dlx ofc +-lOOO's ol Vacancies MlSA VBDE fee. MS-«900. Niguel Shores, beaut. F\am or unfumiahed. Cute l bdrm. buge rant Townhouse •. lovely. •l'l!iC· ba)'front.. 3 bl.It to bch. wrtLw apaee All util pd Sl~ coUage free util. 4 BR. 2 ba, 2 story, cor· •CONSUMER'S GUIDE ~home. 2 br. 2 ba. PROMONTORY 2 Bdrm UW. pd. $295, yrty. & bocne-Uke. 2 br with UU1 pd. $34$. 873-6336 $1,26/mo 61~1 • Sl'IS bacb house tum. ~ ":e~ l~oR:;I~~:: Lovely 2 Sty, • br. 2 ba, Guard'edlk c!~~": ~t & loft Penthouse apt. 673-5"39 or 83M118 ::'u!~~tr::iC: !u~ S.. CS..• 1176 DelWte ~ta Mesa pro- sias lbr top this Jewel 548-7729 booua rm. din rm. frplc. tennia. adlts. no pets. t850/m0. Lovely lBr. 1 blk to bay garage. Swimming pool. ••• .. ••••• .. ••••••••••• ressional otrice. 48<. 1500 Sli52brkidspetsfrpl Fncd. landscaped, Gardeninl lncl'd. $56S. ON LIDO ISLE . or beach. street park· Jacuui. Tennis courts. i bd apt. walk to bc:h. aqft.S48-ZlQ.1. e!~rt:'..8!"den+e.!°al::gsee Big ..... aut .. br,2 ba,n•w many xtras. No. EHl. Aft6pm640-62'10. Beautiful 2 bdrm. den. Ing, S29S mo., yrty. 1 blk lo Huntington clean It rudy now.---------......, -.... • """ • .. Non smokers. $595. dining rm, pvt patio, 2 961·2.333 or 496-5660 shopping ~enter mall. S3SO. Also I bd S27S Detuxe office. 1200 sq. f\ S'JT.S •br kids pets patio Plus~ c Pl. M ah o 8 557-3781. 3 8.R, 2 ba bse, pvt park· bath. 9)0/mo. Adults. No pets. From •HI03 ~ M.iuion Viejo. A/C. SO< 1 fee then aervlce Is panel g, sprnklrs. elec like yard, playbse. or WatttfrOllt Homts 2Br. lBa dplx. cpts. "35. Seawlnd Village. _. aq. f\. Pnare.r '11ml Co. •FREE FOR LIFE• gar dr opnr, $575 /mo. 2 BR, sngl house. fplc, sbcls & bch. $500/mo. 631•1400 drps. garage. yrly lae 15555 Hunbngton Village q te .. •w'~llid .... ltdOO t714)83M444. Good in all 23 loc•Uons 2811 Lorm zo Ave. Call gar, adults. possible l 495-27"1 $475 mo. (213) 79!-0038 L a n e . H . B . or-••-All areas · All prices 7Sl-3696. child. No pets. S395. 0 V aft. 6PM (714)898.9961. ••••••••••••••••••••••• =iiiiiiiiiiilA-iiiiiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiji 646-11~· 548-31"3 The Shores. cean u. 111E EXCITING ' ' Guard gate. walk to Harbor View Hms 5 BR. C--del Mer 3822 2 Br cblklren welcome rALM MISA AnS. FUU. SERVICE DILUXE Offf<:ES Penonal telephone I re- cepUon is t . secr etary. coofettn~ room. coffee A COHVtNrtNT ~NC N'fLl.o.c:i- SlWING CUIOE fOft THE G.U ON 1lt£ GO. Seamed-To-Slim lat11ty Jacket! MESA VERDE-2.Br Con· b~a·ch, rec:. •rea. 4 great patlo, comm · -·•••••••••••••••••••• 00 Pee.. Starting at S2'7ci MJMJTES TO NPT do, avail now. l8e bdrm, 2 ba. all UP· pool~ incld, t850. mo 84S.e907 BCH. mo. yrly 540-8633 Glenn graded. $750/yrly lse. 644 eves · · Bach, 1&2 BR. NewCoUege Park Coodo, G2·29Cl8 Deluxe 2 bd twnhs ~ '" -~~:~~· close to =~0ap~ for rent or sale. $385. 2br, 2ba, view. pool. Jae, w/bloal s l.ip 2\.411 ba , '(l., '!~!::,~~ 8C'7·9939 lS61 Mesa Or. mo. Adults, n o pets. on grnblt. Lae avail. frp c. patio, db gar ~, •• """" <S 8llt.s East or Newport 4t boep1tallly services. _ Exceileot localioft. near fnieways. IAUltC&na 1714 )IJ79...2111 646-5945 Broker. $400. 557·4632, 831· :,t!U!!7o,?!ner, lease ON THE SAND! 2 BR. 2 Blvd.I 1190/eves ~""'· _. .-.. GARDEN AP'l'S ba, pool, uuoa. gym. 9 ~ 546-98&0 Choice condo. Back Bay. CORONA DEL MAR 1875. mo. Terri. 963-5657 am·..,.m Near O.C. Airport. 2 sm 2Br. 2Ba, dbl gar MiHIOlt VMfo 3267 2 Br Townhouse. frplc. or eves. 960-4995 ._ 4000 oles avall. realOILllble. w/opener. Solar heal· ••••••••••••••••••••••• S.. c::e..flh 1276 Pool, tennis. Some ... •••••••••••••••••• Doug 5tO-&tQ2 lng, woodburning frp)c, Sharp 3 br, 2 ba, cpts. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ocean & Cat.alina views. 1 block to beach. tbd, w/ kitchenette trash compactor, n frplc. dabwhr. klda & SHORECLlFFS 4Br. Close to Fashion Island S270 ·.2bd $350. Frplcs. t&Oweek&up. MrlD Jff( WATER pets, $400/mo. 631-lO!M pets ok. $46S. All. No 28•. on golf course. & rane beach. 844.2611 No klcls·pets. 208 t9t.h 548-lnSS nl.M 0... P-.t 112 fee. 964-• or 973-2971 Pool. bltns $600 m o. St.. Isl + l~t + S200. AmbassadOr Inn in Coeta ~---~-~--1 496-8033 aec.962-8840J1m. , ........................... .,... '-och 3269 3 bdrm, 2\.41 ba, new cpts, Mesa. 2Zl7 Harbor. Cen· Lrg house 4 bd. 3 ba, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 BR. 2 ba, rncd yard. dishwasher. pallo & SUPER 2 br. pool, gar. lrally located, 235 fenced yard. nr schools, NO FEE! Houses. con· good San Clemente. loc. garage . s525. L se. frpl c. trees. S325: room1 . MANY with 631 & 1750 Sq Ft $525. 548-2985. 847-7851 dos. duplexes. Rental Sf15/mo. SBJ.2048 873-7513. Agt. ~~ !!, t1s. 8 4 2 · 69 3 4 • kitchen. phone Ir TV. Paviu 67 ..... "12 B.. _._, Swimming pool. jacU%v, 2 BR. l Ba. ocean view, 00• ,,._ ar. S.. ..._ Froot cozy 3 bd or den and rec. room. Dally & no yrd wrk. brick paUo DRAMATIC nu 3 bd 2'11 ~._, ll71 rrplc dbl gar ~ mo: NEW DELUXE APTS. weekly rates starting w /bbq. $39S. 1/981-t.. 2 aty. 'FP. Nr bch. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~7SM/831·7'7H/873·32169 2&3 Br. family rm. rrom~aweek. ......... ~ 215 & 504 ~,. oc lf9il2.2108 Lg yd. $575 / $825. Beaut 4Br. fam rm, rrplc. 963408. 968·2720. 6U440 Charming 2 br, 1 ba hse. -.1035 frplc, 2~ ba, db gar, Beams & glass. (rpk. 963-8088. Lee sunny room lite kit Udo Mature 1dulu. no pets. .._ C•r• ,.,._. ~~Xlnt loc. ssso. ~.•..=m~~eJ~~ & NEW XTRA d1x twnbae idndr)' privgs.'Ref's re: MariM ... $350. Furnished S37S. 2 t: den + wet bar 2'11 apt. fl'OClt Ullit. Lg 3Br. q'd. 5'9-1S72 C.M. .......,.... 67M'6Z 496.-iM or 67S-81ll ba. lot& or storage ic ex· Btl1 3 Br. Mission creek 3 BR, 2 ba. ram. rm. 2V.Ba, formal din rm + ROOM FOR RENT 1200 Sq ft offi 8 Toro 1212 traa mirrored doors home. Fam rm. 3 car Sub. chHdren, no pets. bbfst rm. frplc. blt.ns, $30 Wk. t Bit fr HB bcb PCH ·N · e'C: •gao:t ·. •••••-•••••••••••••••• ~~111Y·tepoo. '7.lt~~l~ f::..r':,e,~~~r:_~· tli50. Agentm.5354 :~c~a~· ft7~o·u':!~ No kitcbm,9;°"35<&1/lv loc. RobJ!. ~57 9050 S1ZfS 12~22Y.z t,,, 1ff ,_,_i_ 1lf """- Beaut. 2 atory a br, 1~ '1 ~ ~A.............. ••so ba, rrptc:, dshwhr. klds Jae:. AaultaJ no pels. Luxury 3 bdrm, 2ba, Bedroom w/aome house - -.... ok $47 A N 1170/aome rleaiblUly. 3~ 1\.'a ba condo In 1800 aq ft! Lr& paUo. mock to Beach. 3 bd, 2~ privlle1es. Nr OCC. ·-•••••••••••••••••••• ~2566; ~~i. o 8WMS-'717Sd.aya. car·,!~~ ~:~bea~i bay &t ocean view. $650. ba. bulJt Ins. frplc. Jideal t'!>"1 '1tudle~_t.,Sl4lO Winaatect: l~!~bo~~ Aar..11 ..... E w•'TER Melinda, 49S·0394. or Sngls OK. Mr. Moore. enclosed gar. new crpts nc u I • s ... u . acttve Del-IUUUU f.omt• Valey 3234 VI" • n ,.. Violet. S.-0566, PIO mo. 673-7892 It pot throughout No 7S4-0ll&O. sbopc)lng center for ag· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Luxury l BR. bayfroat, pets. Vrly rental. $400. Set 8,, ..... 4200 greSafv e women ·s Lovely paUo home. 2 BR. view condo. AvaU now. WcatwMedw 3291 963-4993 842·4417 •u; .... ..r .. •t..e•........ clothinl store. 552..0155, attach far. pool, spa. ~. lse opt $159,000 .••••••••••••••••••••••• Lovely aBR. 3ba. fplc. Nwpr\ Heh. ISaysbores. mno.n04 Len Fox tennis acll, close to fW0.2981 Grab this! 3 br, lYI ba. balconies, pal. Wlk t In'-3144 Charming 28drm bme TAii OUT flOOD fwy, avaU Sept 15. Adil.a IMf Portofloo •BR 3~ fprlc. gar. kids & pets bc:h, huge mstr sulte. ••••••••••••••••••••••• w/lrg patio. close to 1000 Sq. ft. of prime only. $395. 838-9748 ba pool + sP. ~r ok. S435. 964·2566 o r •· «·1955 DDHlft NEW priv bc:b. Avail 8/26-9/9. Newport Beach area. HMlfMI• leodt 3240 upiraded, _,_ siso.1826' 973-297l. Agt. No fee . Cosfd Mna 3124 *DIUlftU * saoo.:;;59/1·676-4148. Permits approved. ••••••••••••••••••••••• . ..vail now' .. br 2 ba ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ad)' for nimodeling & For Lease Bag Canyon n · · '" • • Balboa Bay Club NB col OPEN HOUSE TwDbm...-l bdrm. vie,w pr, tncd yard. Kids & Adult 2 bedroom, super klaa1 view of b&y trOnt 2 ~ .. OCC\1"8-DC)'. ~308de0r New -et~ c:rn t r I . J l • ~ MU. AfCt. ~ tcR'11tto11 N-cr 17rt-s rrt1fr. b~unttvlty ..-.t veature ...... lxt r\n. -.:>. o bedroom + den ($575). poo • ac • tenn a tee. 9114.2$6 or 971-2971. $250/mon.llt. 5'68 w: furnished. Swnmer Sl'775 WH2Allf 0woer. ~ 0"'"'" Cedar & window home. -.W.tmo e44-87"6 Wilson lnq apt £ -mo, all·eeaaoo Sll7S. Call ..... at ..... 4500 S" Blocks lo b~acb . For leaae • BR ram nn 3~ poolF. Btwa GNG. I. .. • • • IUITAGE POINT Dr.Couturen•t~S300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~h 11110 this (!tat 1acktt toi Private 2·car garage. GREAT' VIEW. all re: • O 5 · w. Y • " ..,.·MAHCHA APTS N your com1n& traveh f\lU.y maintained yard. decorated, VACANT. crpta/drps. $400/mo. Laree 1,2"3 bedroom • ...._....,.. 4250 4 .ooo s q . fl . ew Spor1M stn!J'd 1ac:~t t~ Adults. No pet.I. S2518th Harbor View Hl1h, 213-868·0690, wkdys. cll'dea apta. Olbwbr, •"•••••••••••••••••••• warehouse st•ce. RB your fa.011te wparates Easy to St. (71") Q60.Q31 $1300/tno, yrly lie. Call 1 l 4 • 9 6 8 • 3 l 3 2 • bltos encl. gar. gas An apt community de· Bil Bear Clly. 2 BR lndusln•I Par · '1M·$S5l crochet '" 3-colOI combo of Carol Berry '7141'151.a73 evatwkenda. bbq. PoOl. Gu Pd. m slgDed with you In mind bOme.. Jlps. 6. SU Obi. Near new 2120 ft ind. && m.ch111e-wasllable. synthettc· N.W. H.B. 3 BR. 2 ba. 1i = Scott Pl 842·50'73 featuring a s pacious occup. Llnena furo. ofc. UI081 Redondo Ctr. WOisted Patttrn 7400 Sil~ RV access. eta to tchls, Baua. coec1o S BR. 2 ba •r== . lloor plaQJ. Furnlabed -..-IB. Hunt. Bcb 8'2-2834 1017. 1•·16 111tluaeo shop cot~. new drps, pool, ne.; cupeta:••d 3HS New 2 br, 2 ba, all bltm, or untunUabed I 2 " 3 $1.50 for .o patter11 Add crpta, paml ln/out. yd palQted tbruout. l Yr ........................ frpl(, encl. gar. p1Uo, bedJoocn apg. AvaUable ..... to ...... 4300 lrvtne Ind Complex. '°'•II patttft1 tor hrst-clas.s maintained, $485. Eves~ lea11. No chUdten or 3 BR 2 BA twnbse. 2 car lndry rm. $350. (or occupancy June ·-··••••••••••••••••• 1ara1e1warehouse1of· 11rm111 •nd h1ndtrnc. SeH tr. 962·3282 peg. Ava.l.l Aq. UiUJ. gar, beaul. ~ f trerf TSL M1mt 842·1603 20th. •• S&ICTIVI• flee 1400 aq ft. w /(,000 It's SEAlll(D TO-SLIM. TIM Mc:ll ... Go • tbls. 3 bt, 2. ba. S535 Mo. Agent 840-0020 MIO mo. . ep. o Gain •reliable S.P'. lnC'd yd. 558-~ =/ _ ~ lteraft Dept. tOS lrplc. dlhwb.r, kids 2 BR utt•••· Fl'ptc.. M -:;sq ft=M·l;::iraaLoF ...: 1llGlt nr• lO'U'" ttut Sta.. ._ peta ot1• ~ ~;2566 or Ndwd dadl:I, 11 ((c•&; lee c~~~OQL._ __,,_ __ wlfSt sum-my po!IQSi liM$. rwt, IY 11011. '1fllt ..,_, mzn n&A· '~ iee. Nwptlls '9001454125. • ............ ._•••••••• •Recreatl.onal facilities $520. mo. ~6·uvol or Ph ............. _n """-" u •• 1 ......_ l.ip, htttr1I llu111kf. ds • .............._ 1..a-..a • 3706 •Pool la Jacuut S<t0-9as2. 1240 unit N. "'""' ,.._, ~ ..., v••ur keel 1978 NECOLE Ki •pet&. Move in nowt 4 br 2 bed .......... ociean - -2 br, new clta, drps. '""' St. c M Sizei ms. mt .. ~. 18~. ...... pac Gar. frplc. dshwr. Ooly Yie:... laua_..d_ ..... '50• to ............ ·-········ e:ocl. back y . Kid.a ok . .Ou BBQ ..,..an . . ZO\+. 22l4. Stn 14s+ (bu\t 31) CRAFT utaloi Cll(W trom 1295 s i ~900 ... •J ~ 1 No e-tt,0 ....... -.. •Sp.rklint clean laun· t.m 3 311 wdL 4S·i•. Transfer 225 d~s11n\. 3 lret 1n~t<1e ~II • m ee beach $800 mo yrly 4 br, Z ba, ~Y v ew • pets .... · _........ dtY 1000 eq. ft. Orflce S... $Ut tw _,. ...... ~.!.~'~ .~~Stnd$i7~ •CONSUMER'S GUIDE ~5 days; e1a.e19i m.m:rown crpt. '525· a Br Condo w /Patio, gar. •Garden patio kllcben It Ute 1111. Coita .., •.., ..o .......... .._ • ..,_ .... S · CONDO On aaod 2Br, eves. l)OOI. CbUdreo. sml pet ~beam cetUn11 M••· 87J.$340 ...._ .......... ::. ~ ..... st~ 2Ba. 2 s ty, aecurily, EXECUTIVE HOii£. ~ 3 BR, 2 ba. furn. OK. tm. Ph5'5-5270 •KlnOl.rebedrooma Sia• 4HO . ' S. a Stilcll ~ .. Pttdl Q1111s:.:. US :'&f: ::una, '850 WATER V1£W. Avail m°'5 SSOO~~ll/6-l6. 2 BR, 2 Ba w/encl 1ar :=:=in~u ••••• .. ••• .. ••••••••••• -... ..n• c.:1111•-. ... · ·• · •· \mlun or t'-ll'.01 (J\aru 14• · $325. No' peta. '1912 Aceen1ed'w.U. Need 2 llDI bd.mu w/PVt oraa~ yard. ApproJC. P tt Dept 4'l °'*la ............ UIO Soect.acular 4br, l~ ba. lnel mald 6 1ard· .... r.nfa • 3707 Wall•ce 111.nu or • · bltll?!. tn 3 Br condo. 1oo~uo, rut auz O:u:'~uot . lllftyfift»Qlllb ......... 1.00 (rplc:, d.abwbr. klda " lwoato. fQm.) 3Bdrm ........................ 137.-S Near <*'Da' ol Wal:l\Y& NB. MS.a:la ~Blvd. szoo,. mo. _,... CMMl ........... l.OO PN oil. '505. Ast. oo JBa, library, bus• l br com.Pl. fUrn Avail • Jetter1 off S A ta-.., m ..... a, llllt ""9 Sew & llit ............ t.15 I-.~ or f73.21TI. Plamn. pool. Sl200 ._. ~· l WlOtAll' .,a., Yr· New 2Bdrt0, )S., priv Frwv <TH )1$1·'1000. ~ toCd~~ ,!1!!, l ~· ............. ----W--.a.....11---,.-.._0-0 If l•lt. Mtt ..... l11fly;st ........ · IM hr_,. fUOO tun . ··~·--· pr dlllwtbr $Z70/mo. "' ll i _... ... ut .... ,,.. ~-----.SS."'· SUI .. Stnl ""9~M.. 1.00 aBr. zaa, ebCIOled patio, ,....;,1941-dta. --'at-49111~. torry no pet.a. eot• mo.l'13-50Sl •••••••••••••••••• .. ••• _., .....,.c.w ....... l• ltplc iu BBQ ('114) Barf t l t 1 ••• cent.et open dal11 tam N Youa1 Pt.nale oeed1 ~ ~1 ~RC~ ==:·:· :: S*WJ. (21J>t3Mza1 Bltf' 'fl 'l'ft coado, -~·: ;e:l:S1llO'. ~ SfllMewet to1 pm. ~:::.~";:ant ·!it 2ut~{ tl\ldk> ~pt.~~ peMy up cl--. ~ *1S. '-...._...., W 11.00 Darlin 2 br 1 b ., " · ea Y to 1o. 2 Ba, a Ba, 1ar, frpJ, 2 Bdrm A den, trplc, ~ IHd 3141 llOO mo.~. to Sl.m/mo. ~ta eta • · " ~-1-M · oo .......... 1 1• _ .. •d· 144-ac>orl64-17$1 1...a~. IOl Ed1•1rater 111tvllcht. d•c k . up·••••••••••••••••••••••• are• Esc•ll•nl re· 1 .. --"E• P:mo• u."ii.ii "' ~f£· w,.14 · ~·... _.. ... r. 1ar. n"u Y · ..... Coro.u.do ""1 • _...:,._ COl.lntl'Y ettl 1 le Emplo)'«l rmtc to .tlare terencu. Ho Room· =" cou~Sefld 7u ~ .... -112 ... ~ Kida Ir peta ok. '395. IMt brni beaut Monaco. & _,..7 . DJOn Nhild e ! pe~a· l~t, "' bloc . to ftice •Pl Acttve. ret\a· matu. A1k for Patti. l-:-M ..._..~flt ..... ~., . •1 ~ AICl No fee. "4·2*: S BR, l'I bukyd, nr • .!.. c I) r n~ o~ '350 mo. ble, neat 1$1-1908 \v m.1• 842·104' bet 10 • m . \I ,..... w M ....:, W n ;;; man. ~/ rn b 1 l , uoo. C.-MeM 3724 :; ~~ .tM-32S3 r.m. rmmt needed. le• ? ._...aft to• m • ......... o.M ... .• 15 Q1118 r..., #l 75-WOOdbrtdce Eat. Super "••••••••••••••••••••• Grut \'4 acre aettln1. I 8r. l bl.k lrom bcb ~ ..,..,,.._ ... .SIJt ._.,,.Jiffy..., 75' 11lush Jeff. 28d. d•n BWJ111'S..38r, 2Ba, 1tOC)l. Stua~tn I br 1arden $280 mo . Lg 2 8 r . Br. trpl, l1e, prh•t•. bay. SUT so ~ulll M:avuomeUllni)'OU•a.nt frpl. lndac pd. $550. •lot tocatJod, l500 mo. aipt. • rt( area. 1285. enclOMd tar. adlta. oo quie t . c bfld 1pet ok. 81'-GM evea1wknd1 or to Mll! Cl ... tl\ed adt do Ul-.llllli ...................... -.19!1111f 144.-e 14Nl(I 110 . la,h St. pets, S48·MU aJ\ JOAM RGUlh. "5(>, ut•Z28CI 1$M714 days lt welt. 14.2,Jr,8 ' . ... ... -' .... w.-. 460 ...., ....... soua..tar.... 5300Pa .... HIO .... W.eed 7100....,W..eM 71MMlfpW...... 7100 HllpW..tM 71 ...................... . .......................................... -... ....................... ....•.................. ....................... ....................... . .................... . 2 pnl women w/ref1 Dd lit, 2nd Is 3rd T.D.'1. U>ST: Wbt lont·halred I•:~ & ' A IR DEFENSE t Atm>MOl'IVE Ba~/blkpr. ca...er BKKPR·TYPtsr C•l1rarC• W ... 2 Wrm. 2 ba, bl CdM credit DO problem. Sblh·Tau, F • Bluff1 fr...... BALLISTIC MJSSJLE Llgflf Mli:••cel ta ed Work with computer lmmed. ploy t · .,._Jan MN470 7JM271 ~ :ei:::1s ~o .. .!. ....................... CREW. lllCblY technical S.11l•att ~::;'Jper~:n t:'~:~: print oull. Some local c.11. "N~ . .,:.~~ft Ananled by -R*-ARDv 1 7_•'!!.J ku 7005 tralnln1. Teamwork. Bu11 <!bevy Service as.40 br wt in OW' home travel. lloa thru 'ftlrus. MM480. I ' r•~fllf/ Cout Home Loans ~· .r..w • ---·· 1181 atlow outdoor w or It • Dept. to ldd tecbDJc:iana tarift1 f« ow baby Ir work week. 1800 to 9>0•-------- R1 • u 00 YOU NEED CASQ? Loet: l yr old female •-.................. Women/men. Call Army f v 111 ht. q u I ck a11ume 1ome babld + beneflta I& car al· CASHIB --.. •••••••••••••••• bt. 2nd "3rd black/rust mottled cat. REAL EST ATE Recrultln& for detalla: me c ban I ca I • 15 A, dutla. Only reolY If you lowuce. Call Barbara , .. "-I · 111 . Homeowner loam Vic· 19tb &: Balboa NB Costa Kesa 540-1026 door~as allsnment, love cbldn· le can at <n4>955-CASH. Specialty drut store -~!.~.~'!!? .... ~~I arranaed fast. '15-D1' worlr, 87$-sim LICENSE =:'mh,Bcb =~ :-rkmana':r;. s>p'e~~ ~ ·~'Ri!~ CASH CARD CORP. located In Newport ..... ....._. Borrow SlOOOi $100,000 LOST· PO Reward for SCHOOL amt. varied le interest· 1580, C.M. Box 324 la " ''" F/Cltt Beach ~r aee~~ni· • TIAY& IUn:l"CY flex~ble term•. PH' yoepis F cat w/grey, AM XftA IMCOMI Intl Ideal for semi· Include appropriate Info Faah. l1le investment =o~me ,. •• e~c!,~ l'IANCt9SI ~ O:,~!!em. Cal w~t &: blk marklnts. OFFERS Hip comm w/preaU1e retired ~· OpportUDi· and phone no. firm. Xlnt oppor. E•per Fri on a permanent part 1be new way to own a STERLING FIN SVCS Shtbain4, anawers t lncome Tax Service ty for advancement. I& maturity req·d. Call time basla. Call Store 1 · .. p e p p e r ., . V I c ..... •---Complete TrailWlt $9. 50 I hr. See M r . Blnkint MM>lZJ. M to pt trave uency. Travel U4J955.1610(bkr) Broedwlf St, Eaat CM. Lectww ~ Tax Corp. ol America Trevino. HOW A RD MOTi Cl.Bl --------"" aet up •P · Network. Start your INTEREST ONLY 865-,JUS. $9&00, Ml-381!8 9-9 Chevrolet. Dove• Quail f\lll time ope.nJ.ni in our Bookkeeping clerk to TNI CIUU DIU.S ~m:i!~e ~~~f~ REAL ESTATE LOANS J'OlJND· Sh P ml M ~ub ~e avalla· A/Rec Gen'l Ofc Sll .• Newport Beach. NB omce for per1on ::1~ ~·:;:\l~.':.5!1°1 1610 S.. Mltll' loac term service pro-Arranted in pr1vacy ol brwn &. bl e • • •Materials frovlded. . I AUTOMOl'IVE with bank note clerk ex· att'ts payable .• 10 key1-_C7_1_4_1644-__ 7_l _JO __ vtded. call Mr. Charles, your own home. w . . •Small c as1es for F/time. Fine Jewe ry ... _ c•• per. Good ulary & by touch. Apply In n...._tat2. Ca~,.. 845-1508, aft •· store. Creatfve a t· v--benefits CASHllR$ B R .......,_. Shih Lb penonalized instruction. mmphere. Be nefill. So. M1CHAMfC · penon l.Jdo Ship Yard Fltime. Good Pa.y Purnlture strl ppln" · .. ..._.: · ·tzu or aaa ~own taste-day Coaet Piasa Call for Ll .... t --i.ant at wok .... • -SIOOUdo Park Dr. NB Growth co. 5 LocS\.lons .. AlllO (2) reddish brown & nllht claae1 · ... .._.... c r , -fnuicbile estab 2 yrs In l'llVATI PAITY Mf.8S29 « 848--0723 ' P1a t ' t 80% appt. 549-lUC. for MBZ u1ed cars. Immediate need for a BOOKKEEPER We lraln. Co. Benefits put Costa Mesa loc•· bas ~ to a:so.ooo to · ~=::-up 0 ART DEALER need Mature ln~lvldual de· part tJme bank teller. General construction METRO CAR WASH Uoo. For Sale at fa loan on your real estate llWARDll · sharp YOUD& &lrl·Friday sired for teneral all· Experienced as flexible Account a Payable.1_....;2960..;..;.;._Harbor ___ B_I..;... _c_M_ ~ coet. ~000 firm .• equity. Arrao1emenls Lo1t: 8 mo. old wbt Free 3 Week pert ume. Some boo&· ~.~· Contact houri necessary. Depen.-•llOIDe reneral led1er C8abien "Salesmen ---------• can be made at your Huaky, male, lu t seen Sales Tralnlng. keepina. 5'C).-080 a. ..,.... ......... ..,n.. dabWty a must. "computer input exper. Wea-Cal Nurseries GYll property. Credit not re· Fri PM, vie Heil &: Ctl For DetaUs •-~ .... -Send .-u.me ~: Sant.a Apply at 15640 BNt bqy in OrJQ.Ce Co· quired. Call T.D.(C, Ail· Shaer, 1t,B. Answers 131-1003 4fJ..0442 ,_....-"'=-~ Applicanll should con· llartarita Water Dia· Brookbilnt St. Westm. for equipment fl loca· 14Mll "KlmO.'. Please ~I Katella -·"-""-tact: trict. P .O. Box 2279. tkn $10,000 full price. 9 to 9 pm 7 daya. 8fM035 aft 4PM Real Estate School ASSIHll BS Mll'Y J. Msft. Million ~ 9281U. Cashier for drugstore Owner, 997..ass2, noon· ...._rt T t ~.....,. p _,___. bl 3 z o 3 1 c a m I n 0 Medical co. in llislton OPERAflON Ol'FJCER A.Un: P. · In CdM. Exp prfrd 9pm, wkdaya. "'iJ~ll, ,. 1035 .-~.Ya;~ ~~~·a1ur~: Capl.ltrano V\ejo la seettn1 exper'd AUTOllOl'IVE MAMIFACTUIB"S BOOKKEEPING AS· 613-2S60 ••••••••••••••••••••••• N.B. 844-0U9 San Juan capistrano assemblen workln1 ONCI IM A 1AN1 SISTAHT Ii POSTING care, after 1dlool Affaliale n....,.,n 'l'C! COUNT w/1mall components1. UflTIMI 1201 Dove St. N.B. a.ERK, rwi.tlme. some dally. 11 Yr old &lrl. ·PACK LOWEST Founch Boet.Oa Bull Ter ~u&.&"" Good eye sllht. manua orrotrrUMfTY 714 1S2-0llOO e.per but will train. Unlv Prk, Irv. area. My __ rt pe-famlJv lier, male. Vic : Lall' S.C.A.C. bu~ caused dexterity req•d. Xlnt .,...,. _,PERSON E o E • •tart S500 mo. E.O.E. home or yours. Dye uK • ...,.. ~ W....t .._ LD I& Adami. SU.7084 employ tor over 200 benefill. New bulldtna. ~ · · · ba.ndicu1oed welcome 6Jl.Wl6. evea:552-12:51 can turn •·10 hours lst T.D.•s... SJS members lo last yr. TV· ~~ependable bard for used car position Bantinl MM0.12 ifra. camp Child "are .... _r •~ aft weekly Into an excltlna r.1an• Comm'l , modeling, lndlviduall call wttb a domestic luxury 11LLa .. """ • and profitable general W T.D. ~ ...................... x.tru. We~ all ages· Perm. WOC'k avail only. car dealer In Orange P/lime eves 4' Sats for 111 .... r f[Ctta school, 4th grader. Cd.If merebandbe buslnes Fairest Term1 s toce ~ Jeidlf types. (114) 95'1-0282. Call Suun 581-XIO County. Free demo our So. Coast Plua ofc. Orowint co. Prefer Elian Scb1 '"-trict. t.batcan IJ"OW and grow. 1Mt 1815So. El Camino Real ... Wtmhd. 7075 plan. E•cellent com· E•per pref'd Call o Ider woman . &M-9'113/t'13-3988. No aelllnc. No vending. s.ltlll-MtCJ. Co. San Clemente FUiiy Uc ASSIMILB pany beneHts. A 11 Cathy . Amburiey at Noosmoker. Sal open. Chlld"'are p/t li ve· 'in. Blust be able to service MZ.2171 545-0611 Fvr appt. 492.7296 . ee·····,·f···d·······t········ 8.IGTlOMICS replil ,·es strictly conflden· 54CMOIMI. 831·3290. Varied .. hrs/days. Lovely local retail a ccounts rt e prac nurse 2 Yrs min exper elec· t a . Send resume to c• _._ that are Id.Up for yoa Retired couple bu RELAXING M~SAGE wan.ti rem'I patient. tronic direct ion al Box 321, care of The°' MG BOOKKEEEPER F/C home. care for 2 girls by professionals. No ex· money to lend. 11t & Bob James-Lie Museur 980-6'95 aystemi. oil industry. Dally Pilot. P .O. Box ,..., .. S..-. Permanent P /T . Hrs <2mo's "8yn> 540-"2S8 ~r i ence required . 2ndTD'1 Outcall9-9.~Ul WomanCompanioo ·l.Jte Xlnt benefltl. Orange 1580, Costa Me sa. 3333.BriltolSt,Cll AM 5 days wk. Call1_ev_es ______ _ ti~ or~\:e. Por!: __ A1-"'-e_n.....;t._l_-83'7_·:r7_44 __ 1 PREGNANT? Caring, house duties, etc. Ref's. Co. airport area. Call California. 921218· F.qual Oppor Employer 6CZ·l.2:5i. Cleaning girl wanted for play and merchandise 2nd T.D. made·boUlht. con.fldenUal counselin 84&a2'17 Ray Oilman. 557-9051. AUTO rARTS ~ foall ,_.e IP furniture store. P/f 12 ea ti 1 fa ct ion too% Luther Investment Co. =" referral. Abo111 rt Ion, H111t Wmihd 7100 COUMTIRMAH ea Person. Paste, dlSptay ~pp. lyn~blpee. ~0r,r1:;i pa.ran. teed or we buy 981-2510 & keep g. ••••••-••••••••••••••• A-UEMBLERS 'Experienced auto parts IAMK & reader ad copy onto ~ Blvd. CM back E 5C'7· AC~ CU/COST counterman 1M*1ec1 for flat.a. 2 Days a wi. Mon _ ...... _ .. .;;..._...,._• ___ _ cash required • na•cr••/ LbeA Ii YICIU for electron.lea manufac· BllW Dealer. Call Doug AMDIH' llam·9pm, Tues tOam· CUllCAL · ~S:::toii~:.11 C::1l't/.,. ~,_M• .. 1111 :a:-~t ~r~~·~: ~ =~c~e1:•:; ~ <{J4~~.r l:S: ~~~~~:~torr .f:{ :::ver.\~1 i1a~t!~~ =~'Jiff::1:C.:::~ FvrMlNl·PACK •••••-••• .. ••••••••••• ..._..._ It! data processing A/P 1a1ollne powered dleb9dt Valley fmPC>rts. '""'"""'~ • Ave.C.11 . olc.swttcbboardltsome Information CALL • •c••• 6100 Serving all Oran,ce eo. & AIR upr. beiprul. models for tbe bob· 28402 llarauertte Pkwy., ,_... d 11 t ~l TOLL-FREE ••••••••••••••••••••••• 835-7313 by/toy Industry Is now Miuion Viejo Must be outaoinl & peo-BROILER MEN <2> App. e very ,.Yf!r . nt ANYTIME! Type40wpm, lOkey by acceptlnt applications · pleori«lted. ty In person Josh benefill ......... tact Jack Calif: 1-80().232·2175 SCRAM-1.ETS ·~·AUTY touch. Salary com· forusemblers. ""'°,... ,.,.. ... Dept c.. Slocum• Restaurant G. Raub Co., 125 Baker Extension 402 ESCTWORTS* memurate w/e•pr. can Inventory control and ErUoY ~ball of Id 2601 w. PCH. N.B. St. CoUa Mesa, Ca Others: 1-800-423·~ 1~WERS for appt. Berkeley Con· PoaltJons In enilne as· stock orderln1 for small variety of~o~e f:nce 92IS2lS. <n4> 751-2510• ext Extemlon 402 IUN Pb for app'l 835-:r749 trol1 Personnel Dept. eembly and rtnal at· car dealenhip. lions. · IUS IOYS 31.L , Donut shop w/fut rood & ='-a=~:_ v J D E o M o v 1 E ~~~ 833-3300. Irvine. Hmbly require tood 14Z.0'7S loollk1tp1rs ••-'"' _... 1---EO_E...;.... _M_!F_!H __ GRrME P •a•.na . . finletdelllettty. and th Good c I tlo .... • --~ce;':ci\~"~:O~';in~ Pollution costs u s Free 20 ~lntroduc· Accountlng ~work with P•· Auto Radio " or CB skills e!::O~~f. ctear~ IMTllVllWIHG for Cl.atCAL Cente r. Xlnt growth m 1111on1. GRIM E tory visit. no purchase TIMBCE8'11 tieoce. ~ '::'~!· ~~c:'~ what our CRT can do. fllt ti• IH . '°J! Type opportunltd & pot.entlal,SIS.000 dwn, doesn't pay. req. Also dance & ra N.B. Hotel·tlmekeeper, 8eDef1ts Include clean In estab TV. Radi Ccal:tl ~CH l4ffl1 Ill pcnoa. challence offere to bal aeaumable. Net Loct a Fomd 5300 eeask)ns. Mon· Fri. $650 /mo . working environment bus. ssoo. Investment Cbecl flHnt le state· ... ,,_.., f to 10 resp. individuals ln our 12.000 mo. PP . ...ut.an •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• DAMCI Of RIM 844-1700, e•t see. Maeve. and automaUc pay pro--. ~17118 meat preparation. No +u & l *-5 rM. Newport P'lnanclat Finn ·• SP.., ~-· """"s E lid A ah I E.O E ...... _ _.~ -ta .... Som.. -"' located.-. iD F-a•ariv• ... ~ • Lost or Found a pet? _, · uc • n em · · areuloo. employee dis· .... .,.,... "...,._...,. .. _. " ~ ,.._, E~citln&. r e.cord!A:&. -, ~•--lff""r.:· .--_. lJJtlllle ualPmdli. Island. We have lmmed. MimoD v.i&ja_ beaulJ \<Sil Aniq~ :im; .__...,. •11<11-C'I Excellent sal Is benefits IUSIOY openin&a for: salon 5 ...., old, 7 Sta· 53r.22'13, DO fee. · ... ,...._,, Bilk-a vacation, boll ay, v-"' ~---,.. ~·· r-medical and dental ln MICHAMIC pac:tap, DI)' sb1fl avail. Union _.. .... tlona. ~Askins 116,000. FOUND: Blk German PIJVMAJES ~y 1Ul'anc~. comm'*nlty . SANnAcao IAMK benefill, PleaM call lor <2 Ollenino lam·Spm> Make dfer. Qwoer •rut· Sbe»llerd, female, nr 11 lleciater Today, to •ork recreation diacouo rt-POITUNITYI Penonnel Deot 2nd Fir appt. 145.5000 ext 520 Math •P Is ll~ID& ~)Ji;'~. lltmt eo. ccalll.ll.°'~~ .. Minnesota, • · llcertl/Modlh :::r:u-ir.,~.~·t~ cuds, plus more. u ~ an loOklnt for • m E.\i.t St. Tustin Mon-Fri 9am·Si>m o-rtl --731-3111 • m.uoo. E.O.E. (3 °'*'"'II lam-$S>m > --------• meiill. ork cloee to •...Ju In--..... to Job w/a IOOd future, ln· ~~~~~~~~ Ma.If room, ea•-level ~CESS Loil Sbep·Hu•k pup 1our home. Fl tu re "t'l"Y _....... : Wltipte We 1.reat op· .:.: IUSIOYS -~..,.,. oti"J.d. Jaua tbe lrpt Stereo tr <fem> ary/bmtblk, wh MASSAM Ciera to Sr. Accoun· COX HOllllS pcJfWldty! We are look· BA111ER le BBUSHER. HOSTISSU cllrtC.S•n o.,t f ' Sewinl Ctr chain ln the tip on talJ. Name· FICIUll MOD&S tant1 needed tbruout tnl for a pod u90d car 1>1ri-thn1 9•2 for dot 0 • .,. am.-. (lam.SpmJ warld no.-tO ~ • 9 Summer Vic. Ilea a ISC~TS · ()raue-0). _1.515 £.Warner Ave meehanh:, wtth a Claae troomlnt abop. CdM -· .......... Good'"""''"••--- lr tra~krec. w /nq wooers. Rewud546-0173 OUYC.L10...Y =~~ =0::-im~U:ir ~!~ t:.0~1:;:•:; IM-tOOO A'tte~lP:t°° atJOhy"°;Jui~ au-. We prov tum• Loll Blue polot Siamese, o,.. ""9 Ir 5008. llaln, 9'e 501 compan1 benent1, the 1't _..... Mmlnrer G-•11 CltMlaM• ~~operi,tin~toryd .,tra· II. • D. w. r. t 0 .,31 •140 No Tower Unkln Bank plelalnt wortllnl Conell· lll07 w. Cout Hwy, NB C2 ODealaa> mlted pa&mtia1 for wtlMls SanUa '1 "' ..,. _e .1.JJDeDfq w ........ ~~~~~n~·~·~ei-~~e~•~c~n~·~11!!.r!'i1un~e1~1o~·~·~T~r•~d~e~~~~ .. ~~~·~~~~·r~~t~·~..6~0-~ .. ~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~JL.5pe1.~...., or write: WOllLD W{DE STEREO It SEWING CENTER 3701 IDCbland Manhattan Bcb, Ca .. ftoftt paws de claw P aseo de Vale ncia Alicia Pkwy .. SlOO rew 710-13115. _ _.lt:alluD.....,..· -Ucio..km .......... Aecoa11ta PQaM• clerk Sol!)t pbotoarapblc Ell~ent wortinf con· tor 1mall electronlc1 Attend .a D t 1 0 l1..trM1tte know'l helpful. Appty, di. Co. btMlltl olrered. mlJ. Manuatept.mt&ll Quadrl~etlc p /tlm --------1 llanlcurial. U7~ ot Penny1a11er. 1880 Please •PP4' bl penon l>hua acct'• payanlt. Blbfaittet needed fOf 2 111"779. --~·• A c 11 at: Mia exp req. Apply In mama. ll M2-GIZ9. amall children ln my --------.... ..__a ve, · · ADP JeHn 11 /C VlH penon Data.power Inc. Automotivellacbln.llt home. 5 dy1 1wt. Beauty ulon In CK CAltmSALIS ,..SIOM _____ ......;...;;,__...;.:;.i UH W. lat Sl. SA Eaper onlJ. Gd paJ. 5CllMJM. need• balr 1t11l1u. Oranll eo. Commission J56.1100utJJl Top benefltl. Lrf . --1-.-.y-.-...... ---1 Guarn + comm . Dlul tnlnlq allowa.Me. SIRVICIS __ ... l 1 oow'8I eompan7. CalJ ,._. ~• 18' ...;.M~Mte~·-----8end rt1wne to: Jobn 180Newport0ent.er Dr ____ ....;.;;..;....;.___1 Hut-..u/W fc edvtrt •· Jlm, MS•• needed '· 1r old 1lrl. Beauty Salon In C. M. C . p Into 1 J t O S . 2nd ftooc'. Newport lkb ~AutoSllpply llariHr 1 Scb1 Oi1t nnda Wlt StJll•l•. Aaailelm amt Suite 105 .:.'~-~. ~·a::· .. 2 to. ~· + tOIDID . !.A~nat-l~~·~·.!:CA~-~·~-' c&.me~ --HOS--,-.-S-11 __ ,___ . • .... , ca.m Ue~lO ke' ad· BeJt We .... lookina fot .... Of•• taMr der la • E.~. a IDll•re puaon to Bebralt m1 a actlve 'Wllllat to traio ID· meet and 1.rtet ou MM; .... t (CM ....i> dtllUtoUI, tllllture lncllv. IOl lldl at, NB eue&omen, No Hlllnl la I Obt ••ii> in caM. ~..\!.•~ ':C::t:-: tOmo requtreCI. Pltu• can Did.,. wtlrd ~. c.ta.•blnl. 40 Hr wit. nm ar ,..._.rot an ln· 'n. boys.-d you from AP11CJ WWII I It 8' Na· Connet interview t ·U, ..,..,..., Tbun Is l'rl UOnal &d-..catlon, 4401 l·S llon. tbru Wtd. OR Sat It Su• untll Blrcb St, !'f.8 . Equal MAllOUI YW scbool 1tart1. 5 min OpporiUnli.y & nlftv Your SUPIClt Dealer walk to btach. lluat mr;,uv Jn H.UO•• Beacb bl .. w ~ bu.mot • 1k11ds..,..., upet'd UVu ~~~~~~~~I 142-4431 own t.raaaportaUoo. ML la Pa,.,,&1 l"fPCll1· = t71·0t0t. mornlnt• • In 1 . M r ctr v I a • ...,. ~ •UIM. dfl. 11J.IJll. Wl&Ada.ds u .. \be Deity Piiot "Faat R....at" ....,kl •' dlf'td°'7. Your ...t~laour ...... CaU eo.1r11 a t; m Excellent opportunity ror a candidate wishing to work in a raat·paced and excitlnl depart ment (Sales Order). ETC CARPET MILLS 17141 546-5601 Cl.ERIS UTOTEM Opentnp Now Avallabl ror full or p/tlme clerk oo 2Dd It ard abil\s. N ~.~-···'"' .. .. . ... ......... Sl'Cl'Y /BOOIUCEEPCR P'/U'", ptrm pot tor aharp. m•ture pro· ,.....,.. ••' (over JO>. OIVWtna dlelO orielMd manur. to. • lv•rY pluaant atmoapMr•· 1mall oCe·to •Pm, lft. ¥06c:ia&, A/ Pay. A/Rec, payroll. Call for appt. Walton Corltwood, M.Wm. 914 w. 17\b St, C.M. • ..... W~ 1100 ...... W•tM 7100 ... W-'M 7100 ..................................................................... Dlattlbu&t a FRE! :;::r•• ot a major product bouM·to- boule. No SelllDI lllvolved Jut h&DS aample on door knob lh plaaUc bal- APPLY IN PERSON llcn·Frl 9AM·Nooo see 11.r. Sc:arborou&h DONNELLEY llARJ<ETlNO 1301 Oestnut Street Bldt F Santa Ana PBX A1uwering servi<'e operator full & p JT. eptlonlal/Telepbone cau ~1 .nswennc for busy ln· ---------• surance agency loc nr PIX Oper.tor Orange Co. Aarport. for telepboc)e anawerin1 Typing ~ wpm min & service. Exper or will lilbt clerical duties. train, F & P (r. Day A Connie Quinien 833-9650 evenln1 ah 1fu open . .,_bt_wn_lP_M_&_s_P_M __ ~-UCIPTIOMIST Permanent full time. p I e a 1 a a t B a I pu•l Ume Sa les fl w/tntttaUv~ to grow Cashier pos\Uon& a vail w/company. Handle unmediately. Apply in phonu. Hte typlnc. person. Ward & Har· gen'I ok Need car for ri"gton Lumber. 1275 occaslonaJ erranda. call Bristol. C. M. 92626 831-0902 E.O.E. 1-----------:-:-:-~-:-::---l:Receptj·onlst, p/tlme. Ap· PICK UP/ ply ln person. Regis DBJvaay Hair Stylists. 3333 •511' Bristol St. So. Coast DRIVER wanted for Pfau. C.M. auto parts store~ Must--------be over u w/Catut--------• :uv,ers,~:o"kg:o~C~ RECEPTIONIST area. Apply at Hub Auto Supply. 21 20 Harbor Blvd., CM 646-~ ask for Claud. ETC ~1'PITMIUS C714> 146-560 I J . .. ,_..,.~.,.._ ... ,......,.~~-..'941,.•-!!.~~ ..... ?!_. ~?.~!~ .. .?!!! !.~ ..... ?~~ ! & ...... ~:· t1111 CWL.Yl'l.O'r 0 llCllJAIY 'NllrMrM_.fl• 'i§: -•I •-IOH t•nl•n• .... ~.;. ---.....;.a~. llr9Mil ... A~ ttlltr. Xl•t workia: : •• ION ........... •-•••••••• ___ ............ .. -r-.IH-NI -P'Mmt. Amb, ~ ~ 0.U&aedla fl " • ••-.......... LU••..... ........ Heddmaa Head•ra for .__..!!!!!!!=!.!;!;.!!!l!!!!!:.. I • • t • 1 1 • ' • t mt N Cil.~ Hw1 Lq ....... • r· Ylvttar 411 ILO amm ,.... ,,...,. ....u bloc* a..v, '• ... .,..._,,,.,ram1111aa M · ' • ...,,.... :::'u ... M ca-. 11941 IX ._ fro• rour bHlae11 m... · ,., , ........ aUOD WIG ·-... -r. ..... • ld tard. s.d .. tanl tor ----------... a.-fl....._., D. ...._ °'8£ p 1 lta"!!r lll·410t for •a 1 le· .•':':o ~.: Neb tu pam GM apatt. ai.Ma uw 21", POulao. P."' .......... Wont ~rlocl, 1&eed1.. Id PM'Ne&--'8..:!'a·I PoliiiDi8 ... L telepboto S250/ofr ~~oentl1 II ode l t J 4 & SA . • --.-•• sr;11la1 ••P•r. ,.,,bw....,.,.,Cll ~·~ ..,. .. 11•/P 9MU ' . --..-~ tal 6. pw"daaMd JID 71, UMd All ""' to M ~ ._. wv• ~. •Htt•1 airline ~ at bn, °"' cctl • .. , ... ,.... ...... for fMltt ..... ,..... ..,_.. Nil• U> . ..,..,. ..... Pte· •n• 11una Uto . ....... ... x•at co Gd-c~ ~ fot w.. ... ._• • ca ... ~ ... Ir theftf ftw' • ..a . ----...,...---.1 -.tUa. Plaoee Ad· lt .. dy r .. pontlblt .......... -momll _._. ......... ,,_., ,....u.c1 lat ... _.. 1ea1e PaU•TINO ••mtrtUve ServlcH p.reoa. llu.t bau la rvlH area. Cal •••e~ • w11lp1_JJer, fal>rle or -· :.."t:.:·.:::~ ::::;t:,~!:9~ =~::.c·:~~~ .,...,...,. .... ,.. ~-=··..-=-~=·~= .. .., ....... ,.. ,., .. , ... ,, •• ,.,, ..... ... .... VleJO * -,. 'IRFI tact. Or tI7 two carda ...................... . .. .., --Wltrrt 6 tlalP· ~ 1 .._, ._u -..y 1a1ea !!!!_ I040 bDck to b9cJt. I._ AM AWt ...._. 11 t • • .... ..,..... W/lrUI. 'r,~~~ A:::;,.;;. ............ 1a ~aa. Es· '6.. 11.lllS ....... -...... ... ~D: PreterablJ an old (em6b netaw .... a& ...._ · -•• ... llldElal ,.... ••. ,...., , .. ,,,..,, lnvea· •• •-• OoWeo Retriever pup ••• or.,.., ftader Buemu, but =',.':.r.2j= llAt•l•I Xlirt ~ _.. • ~~lm!u~ =:'..:~; .. ~,,: :':.~~t~o~::'l ::i::::::: ~'=:'=ct ,. .. fft ttJ ....._, AaMrMlw ,_ ~dal ,., ... 111 aw ...,det .. back· to vnel U .. •aJor niMclwtrLC.XlatdJap IOormon•.40... flOI will do. Call :~• to4o C.'fll.C:L.~IAI· r=.•• 6 meela. ap· .-w~ut'MIJfln•s .Qll)Q5.Utl. ~~~t" m.-ieas:._.. Wtllll 1211a. w ..... ..!!!~!.!!.!!!:!!!!--I aJE ·•GD ~-~i::.a'~ AKC o.im.n Sbepberd Dhw ~ owa or send im Mutia !Ml Gmtar. C.-'*1 11 ~•WIMUtSH) ....,...t,....._..HO_;:-,_.ech'aaceddartu ~·=1~ cwne.~.~· IA9new, •. DM0'18 c er, TWlm . ..... ___ ~·.si:=·~ Ml-.•a111 ::i=c:elarc1per,_.a_a_na ____ _ -.W... Aft. PIX .. .., fa'"'lU"ri. llirbor M-.at be 1' or over. -.., ....._ leDd dleet or monef S,lmer Alto Sax~·· llllll M W'AIY I.Gal • lboft term U • "' .. •" ltDlle. well ,roomed It ..W.t"1 ..,to: • CJ1areucter.' tom· C.-C ~·. •. •"' ... • •utDIClu nrm 1lpmeDt.1. Holiday " :,:.:•:,:,,,:11 Mr· abfe to •tart ha mad. 1 • ~ twll&, PILOT PllMnue pJe&eJ1 rebl~ d1.2010 -··-~=·=--to iudlt v a c • t l o 11 p a 1 . For IDtervl•• ull: P.O. Bo• IMO ew.. -•.-..,. ~ •tratlv• • eor· ROlplUlhaUon pin »rs; r I/Pi•..... '4J·aol0 or ApplJ In AKC res U... ·• mot. a.ta-.. Ca. ... ~~~Plano. Player ~ ........ HIBi suw OPltt ~al avail. Diep(. lmllMd. o;eofng ~ Vloeee& Pltta at btfUl cHIPotlOoa. Paid PllONl:MATE .--._ • cue. nu~?, f..:'aett dlrdel. Esp. muat laeld for .., .U lltl Ai= .., '3."~=· ~; ~ ~:i,:'!1: Te .. ,boot aoawtrtns fully electr fiad Hile JACI.. w•1111i.W..,. ~"-:&:!C:r·--· ~~1M1~uwtr11.o~ 11AM·sP11.-.n.. ~te. aou. papen.:=•:'"· m . ~roUaSl.ocso.oo 1MI IOI C...Tr ••• lqe ~It.a. tor sf; . Lota of co. beaetit•. Wed oal1. Peruu Oya, tft·I032. Evu. ~ ~tl e"6I "9...... ....... PitlM coatad Deltronlc Cor.P~!!' welcome at IDIWltft 11154r& ' • OfJlce U. ... e a ... ......... c ah • llr . .,,. ·--input Drtve s.ka' St, c M ~ -\luck drt Dded GoWl9 a.at.ver ador c A R p E T .. I L L -dJ Fll.. aoas ~ emc...., Dr, lr¥lDe WllTMAll MM'lct • . ..,,.. ....:t'11 bleJICllliel. A.KC ~· CLOSBOUTS Prom .... }; ••••••••••••••••• ...., ._. 154 s. ~SJ!:. Meu & ASSOC. Or= ':::ott $111,,lll Cl/ &'e::li. ve to 11/f. ~ • • wq rd. 5't·l181 '::~a>'!ct~1~if. .... ,.. r.-m/f ... c•:f::Ot.aeau F.quaJOppor.Employer a.a-1'tllw Truck Drivan ••· Pkllull~'75. Pure ~.840-80t4 Nwwpart adl ,....,.. Tra uttJVt .,...cl ~ paf. ADDIY1 bloodllDe. Do P*""· 11ov1~a &ALE. Must ~ IOl7 e6IM..... 'd I GftW Towiei lHo ._, tell DininC Mt\ Dido, .--RH, 011rse Nune ~ crai.. App 1 1rvlne Ave. NB Ma.uu llvtnr rm. Prf'• bdnn ....................... . -. ,_. Wiiia cool .....Sa warm Sta••t•... mpenca Yelbblre Tenier w/KIDt comer grouping, nee Africao 1rey parrots. Squat ()ippolbaility laeert aolldlt by llOll ID-Jmporttnc co at l'aldoa *S.llarieS* ...,. .... ,.,... TWOTRAJNEr.s ~avail. for stud d •• t w t 3 c b rs . Xlnt talkin1 ability ~ 11/P ttil•fn.af SN1' w-vm, lalud bu opeaini tor G. Ofc/Btkpr/Recept 2101 Dove a , N.B. ta comumer aervlces. Mftiee. 21111171 Santi Ana t1pewrtter Ecc etc. Mexican rM beads " ~~~~~~~~ aU priv peeMmU to 1oY.-lal•• Seer. Involve• Employers Pay All Good Wiepbooe voice, Ila. 5l5tGIO all a. wrou1bt iron uaes .-------If I y _ be a e b com m • 11*1 &1Pn& • <111anl&a· Fi P'em•at wortilll condl· dlelp SM.azi n-...--. ..-l'\all/Part time. PM 6 Uooal atUlt, eye for Liz 1'emd!': SHOE tkm. a.laQ' tlOO to 9800 Toy Yorbbire Terrier Gas dryr • Sood tond . -..uun.1ivuu ob abifla. Tbe Gardena ealculatJoaa. Accuracy 4020 Blrcb St.~~ SALESPERSON + b •Def lt a . C a II < A KC > m a I e . 3 '1\ SlOO, cUltOm pool tbJ + Be a u t JI u I A I b l n o JACI( IN Call for appt. (710 Is att.entioa &o deUll a NeWpart Beach m-auo Aaht..e ....... Barllara ('71')t55.CASH. moat!aa old. $325. Pb acca. OfHle felt/1" OU~. w/cqe f15. THI IOX ._-..am _______ , lllUll. ruu bellef.ita In· eau for Appt/btab ... Eap'd. Pull ttme. Top CASH CARI> CORP. m.we ~:00/ofr. MMST48 a.o.1m FAM&Y .,..,.,_let t, 11·7 dud dlatal • xlDt lWOl'tr· commwtoa. Appll' tn n?tST •Jn-..... Ir Or.-IOtO eea9AUIAMT CounU7 Coav. Homa, ~ co.ada. Sal open. S. I Cllrtl con. Paul Allan lloo-PrL Aealanl work· ....... IOIO NWPJ' BEACH TENNIS ..................... .. ~~. -..n. Katie,19'Mll. n,b:~!<e1tatein· ~~~.lalud. tn1 CODd1.·0ood co·-... -............ CLUB. Full family ~••OND ,_.., ·--... SICalTAIY veator account.. Com· ,_.. ben.fltt. Apply. Pen· Membenbip. Make olr. SPINET Ol•AM We hue tmmedlat t.'\L!A~~~1::3; ~!tJ~~:!:rb~~"~:i~ mwaluUona. lY.PiDI" 1 mr-· 1'80Placeatla. **I IUY** l·28'1·Mie3SanDiel~ Model L·lZ2 wath OPell1no f01t a varlet bY n 8cboek 501 2ltb St. bus1neu math li111I •· SlTl'Ell. af:terDoooa, aor · Good U8ed 11\anliture & Slainless steel. link with REVERB Owned br a olposi&Qaonalllbtf\a. N'.-mediate open.lna for a aentlal. Pl'der exper'd 5 yr old boy nrWaltreu esper'd. Aooliwes-Oll 1 will larae wood ubiaet prol~musician& Must be 18 and over. In lit~ _. ...... _.1 ., ~~r.toPr':lc'f:11!e aun penoa. Beoeftta ~~ SdM>ol5p • C.M. P /time. Apply. Blue NU or SELL for You. baae. Drawers and in excellent Nddltlon. cervieWI are beinl held -~en~r lo SIR " typtni. xmt Is slnl location. Pbone · · .m. DcOlllD, w Via Udo, WASTllSAUCTIOM 1tora1e space UO. Astinl S750/best offer. dally. pleue apply la Newport area . ~/ benefits. PleUe call Mr. ~. Sloclt • deliver, full or N.I". · U6 Hl6 &IJMtts ~.essa ' Call 673-7185 eveohiga & penon. comm. E•per. req · Byrne.at561-1C Sec'y for adverUaing P/f. C\eaD le neat. App-w•-s Buuty salon equipment weekends : 646-Zl.58 days .... m.si ___ ·------• dept of fast arowing 1Y at 495 E. 11th CM. -·-f01t tale. Make orrtt. (Mon.·Thun. >. JACIC IN SALIS •Secreteltll• mfg co. Some travel Ask for Larry or Paul P'/tlllM for reU.remeot CASH PAID f73.28Sf Hamm 0 n d 0 r 11 n ..C.. IOI SeeldDc apes', aharp in· may be involved. Pref ....... r.n..n -...... , ,.__. bome. OllJ ..... 11. ~ d usf!d Curo. anti b f d n• L..r. •....... d1vichaal for FIT f>NI · advert11tn1 or mrkt'g &r;;;.n.r..n1#t!.:".,~ vcn WAITRESSES or \ Ir TV' 95'7 .. 133. Must Mll 10" jolnc.er tble w / ee e ·UP Lealh!. 1040 C• .. I u· )'OU werft't lookiQa lion with property ~ Depending Od 'fEACffiR"/EJem Expr ques C I .Ir rad U'ID law, Wood IWQO. Sl ... w !~.~~ c~:. you mwcemeot company. aotitude Ir aper. PGl'l· $3 c:o hr Middle a•e ww~· ~:. DICOIATOIS 650 ~ 250 Hnda refr1 8f1-o877 F.qual Opportwrlty .........., t.,.. tt-tJlb Nr O.C. Alrport. Muat liOn eoukl grow into 1 of .,, · . "' a.AMT ecc. .at-aallt• Hammond B·3 oraan. ~er MtF ~! ::n:a~ b=ave !~1~!...~"~.! 1::J:.~#4~fil~~ Call =e. Costa Mesa WAITllSm .....-nm SAU 7'6 Swallo.-ibape by Beefed 'fc.,~.Y· $1400. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~do , Uda ad •oWd eau•M-Pr _,, •Kh\!llEH IDLP Liv rm, dlnJns & anU· R.A. SSO. 22 callber1-------- --------not be heft. U you are• 75Z-OU5. •· ater, Service Sta. Attendant, Call aftoa MMm2 ques to be acid at ori1 pellet pis&ohew $t0. TV Old fashion upri1bt RESTAURANT career miJlded edult • --------1 exper'd. Full or p/tlme. Re1ean:b~v:•ot· WANTED: No. Laguna coat. 51 llonttelto =-~' 1ames $20. wlbencb. $275. JACIC IN wm tbe oppt,y to earn SECRETARY 1l2'• Arco Station, ::.S~ ln ac · Beacb. Older lady or <SPYGLASS HILL> · tu-2995 THI IOX three to flH hundred 11.ior sportln1 1oods 1 Irvine. CM gioeeria1 b~lldi~ng mott.olyounacbild '° ~:i.~~1~~:~o~~ CcJt.o de Caz.a fam ~· S.W..,M11tl It IOtl FAMI. y f':!1:<t) ~e::ia~~'H';'A db{ ill lnille lnduat Service SlaUon AU.en· IDedieal ~· Exper'd care for I& send my .... appt prefened benblp. Tennis, bUDtin& ••••••••••••••••••••••• _.. ..... ..,. ·--'--,._ ,-..-.11-.1 eomplex hu P09 avail dant, exper'd. Da)' & in meeh l enctneeriDS. 7-yr. o&d lo\'elr • well · 900/bst ofr 4N-9351 u.-1 P ,...11 ~·"'~' ouvw ........ """ ~VI~ tarwretaiy t>~ Eva. Full & p/tame. quality aaaurance etc. behaved daudl&er to El Sola. llU new 1' camel. _,_ 1 a w NOW IEUl8J ._, ... , a ~ ol c Apgly, Slaell Slatlon, Call a.a.an m.-. XJnt Moro ICbool. -Yoac home =Ii cont"'°1 loose 11 b1p of ready mi• Autocm&Jc zil·A-1 dial· SAllSIADY A: lntereatlag dut ea. 11tb •Irvine, NB. belleOts. Mtab.t VMJo or mine. -7·21112/evea. ·~· concrete. lf cu rt Ntildl. 917. Automatic P i Sbortbaod not req. SERVIC .. STATION .,... Refs. reqmred. $CID.--~ Whirlpool rru. a· bvy toucb·o·maUc 1 dial C.-.&C.....,. Exper'd I t me, "' alateae bed pool tbl, does all $82.SO. Ptna•il P /time . for ladies ~-8!'~.·g~r~..!~eny· man waated. 21?4 shift, 11C1•flCSAHt WareboUH·IDHnlory dl.neU.e let w /8 swivel AulomatJc selection Wl7 specialty s bop. Will "uwuuo: ....... mDlt be exper d 2800 Clerk for electronic Bed far a.ale. Ortllo dbJ din. c.um model. all auaranteed. We have tmmediat tniD. 7»-ll85l benefit•. tompet Uve · Immed. openlnp Is op· parts diatrlbutor, frame. brass bead· $102.72. sio payments openinr on all shift salary. Call Kathy at W.CoastHwyN.B. portunities In an f/Ume. Rn M. Apply bom'd. ~/or best of· 6' Stereo $125. 3 Step, accepted or P•Y cash. for ful and part-Um f1t.Oll3 •Senlce se.tloa• 0establlabedc co. iiD thet Avnet Electtollics, 350 far. 5'1·4111/115·5121 , taWes w/drawen, 25 Collectfon manager ~thow-~.J: SALESLADY ~Mtaaaon Viejo Full fl Put time aUen· rut• o. a rpor McCormick. C .M . Carri. c:olorTV w/rem<JU '200. <714>-.lMZ Is R.85/1 Wanted FIT, over 30 ...-~. rate cooaw· danta. Mat be over u. area. Appllcaots to 75UQ11 all maple. Blk le whtr--.-------lbill. and $1.00/bour i yn Beneflta 1180 wk .... """ .. _ ..,.,~ A lY 1 ...... 1 troubleJbool, repair Ir BtfuJ decorative furn. port tv $40. 1· black S,artlNg ~ 1094 araveyal'd. Interview Rei. . • tlllta to Real Eltate _,. AU• wage. 'l.p T ..... test eledroblc aystems. WarebcM&aeman needed Ital annoire. bas lite " sofa. Herculoo cmh ....................... . are beln& held dally 2113g~ 1~•~YC~upply, velopers auk qua I lnlae Bl\' · ualln 557·9051 utc for Busch. for IDlriDe diatributor. l)w abell, '500. Brwn Ndeabed $35 ea. Salw"· au.. n.hing •aide bavl' ltuat ~ ti and over.1--------secretary. Real FAtate 8-6534 Some boatiDa or 1Qarine HYI aofa. $200. BJk d 11 w d " P\ealeapplyinpenoa: ales t lhaaaameot ~utaeexpprfrd.U&bt VlC AUeod Telepbooeapptaedy. ex1;>erlence betpful. reclfnerchr llJO Lthr ay. or 00• e · ownbeaboat 4dishiog Trainee, Ale 18··'51 boo~eplng & word SER E Sta ant, Pleasant worlr. abort Warebome experience top pme tbi w/4 dirs & 645-3063.. gear. fH4.8108 learn all pbaau Of )ll'O(!iilljq exp. belp(u.1. Cult Ume. Salary + bn, P •$5. br dep OD necs.ary. cau 549-9671 ..... top lO Ot., $350. An· TV.~ JACK IM lumber Is buildlpg SIOO. to •tart. C714> comm. Chevron Sta., esp. For totervSew uJl for appt a details. Uq"e (aloUn& couch. LiWelliullutretutoaa tlA. Steno 1091 THI IOI material reta.11.ln1. Gd 'J'70.1'1115 3000 Pa.iniew,CM Mr. Louil »'7·1721 after E.O.E. M/F/H sUJr dama.k cov. $150. 3 Tuffet, alone came • ...................... . JIS I 17tlt 5'w'..t llCartinB rate. acb ..-Ve· SECRETARY. P /Ume SenieeStatlon noon. Wbsle a.pply bm needs Stained tlaH churc~ spides-and read in ~RCA Color Conaole . Co.hi MtM meat boou ln 12 for Orthodontilt. Will Looldng for a good job "Pe.a ~..._.E P tt paople oriented windows, $125 ea. Alita· Dally Piiot CJas11l1ed AM /FM stere o & 631 9479 months. American tra1D ~ opport1U1lty w /a pre-1 ........-""'" . q ue a e c 'Y de sk. aedion about Miss Muf· turntable S550 Fisher • BulldlDI Center, Mr. · stjp)ul NB service •ta· pence. Ownr831·~ <w/booilcue & desk>. fet'•~fetandbougbtit stereo A'MtFM. 8-trk E¥•1 Opp l•ply Howden, 962·3321. Secretary Newport tioD! If neat appearing, SALES WOii AT~ $2%5. Patio gla~s tbl for ts.95. You can sell c .. a, trntbl & Dolby •/f Cenler firm ndl sharp, auruslve. for In· =• Co .. ill Jrvlae, W/t;refJIJ wrought iron. 3 YoUr turfet and lots of $5(JO Soni TC830 reel·to -------.... Sale.=·Merv711s is penonable exp sec terview call 644-1155. 2 people lO work Pboneules, Blbt bub x 6. Odd lot of new other tbinga through red.$5()0 S46-"533 --------now applicationa Mat type f1i wpm die· AM for tum or Bob rr 0 m 0 u r 0 ff l c: e ! Call 530-SZ20 lumber. I x 8 Ir others. Daily Piiot Cluslfied •----· ----- --------for P/f sales "ttod. tapbone. Career oppo; . Qimplete ll'alnial pro-YAUM4M •81)c oaJt chest, $30. 8' Ada.CaUIGS&11 JobDsoo 2·W•Y radio. I RESTAURANT Daytime. evenlnaa &i with irowin• co Call Service ata. attendant. lf&Dl. Salary. + com· Rental b;. soHd oak Sooy AM/FM bue wlil, 2 mobUe un· JACI IN wtmd shifts avail. Alfli Diana 6'0·4059 ·days F/tlme. Exper'd. Ovr ml111lon & bonus. Co. 1 ~ 2 open. atereo CODIOle. $350. ill. $2100. 830-e005. THI IOI •ee88ll AdaD\SEOAEve. B M :30 !,!·._!utmloater . paid im. For iotemew, Me::wc~f no:i:ci~~ 175.J?JI. toe Harbor .____._ • ....____.___ FAMILY SICl1T•1y be1ptul. neat budwrit· &...&--a twn 10.2. . . . _..,,.,~. t>booe ~l and alk • la1IDd Dr. NB. $2 _. • -- SALIS "' Service Sta Attendants. for Anita. loi nee:. Weeld.ar olf. DREXEL Dining tabte/4 ·--:?:::::;; ••••••••••• llSTAUIAMT SZI 000.SSO HO Nat'l wholesale produce p/Ume. exper'd. Lile TILB1fOMI ww tnm. Apply, ID> chrs. Franee1u 11. G .. ,.. tOIO MOW HlllM6! wit.bins yn 1n'your company N B. airport mecf21 knowledge. App. Newport IUV'C( CM 0 p e D • t 0 c k . ·················-···· •-A n... area, needs sharp acty. ly, ~Newport Bl, CM SOLICITORS ._...___a.---..-Pecan/walnut. 3 mos own ""'uranc:e -Good t · 1 " dd _,,_ Must sell! Sears 17 · ,..____,,__ • c~ ........ ··~ lO s•--. ypan • . Servi C•·tion At•-d Exp. Only. Sell tbe Dai· old. •. 49f..588' c• ..... -molded olf .. _,5 -• _.-.--..-.""""'"" ... " macb. skills. Pleasant ce ~ ""'" . ly Pilot. E&ra SllO . S20I> ~.................... .,... •-er o.er -· ,., ,... ·~ eonu~iasklns workin& eond.' l alrl Full " pltlme. Hrly + a week Higheat com· -ti 0 II 100 e..,. S. 1055 Call Tues. SIM391 We bave immedlat •n""" tn.tniDI program ofc. Med. " dental comm. 673-3320. mission pa1'd. Your ••••••••••••-•••••••• .. ••••-••••••••••••••• $75 ~ oo all ,tbilt -<>range COUDt.J clfiees beaeflta. 5 Day wk . Serv Sta phone st home Over 21 llliac. and Iota ol custom 12' Alum.laum boat. oars. f0r ru11 aod part·Um Eve APllU Call Now Holiday•, vacatio111. Help needed im-l.D. c u • Antique llusK Boxea• jewelry, auper nJues, locb " aocbcll' S22Stb6l positions. Mu at be 1 ,_WI .... .... Muat be sharp, faat, med. FUJI or p/t. Apply D card. Ca ~. Sot Ma~ I . 8 / 21 st. JC l Ii 1 n · 9 ofr Ir 7 horse motor and over. Sla.rtinl pa · JOE CONNERS able &o deal oo pboae. • B. Ost lhry. N.B. 1 to 3PM oolJ. aocar Work 1 bop. 2 6 6 s 2 SlOO.tbst ofr 548--.s b SUS/bow for awtn Central 0C l70-'T740 Noa amoken. '150-.x> HUGE SELECTION Aracena Dr. Mtsalon ..... U•la •Ct/ sbift. and $1.00/bour i 131·181S to atart. Call Tim Jones ~ Viejo. •• it ..... h • s. wa ft20 &raVeJ•rd. l.lllerri S.lOllO ol~ or sa.-eo ....._ ----9lllAll t---=~-=-= ?!:!~~~~~~-;;.·~~~~--iiii.;.iiiiiiii~~ll s~um~1n1ng .~~~· ~;:-.:,-;·;:;·;~: P~~NY Salls' Persa•el ., m•> 'fM.im • ::0 do1 rood u lb w .... .,... s ....... ,.. . Men and Women 11~~~~~ f\"ee dellvwr open Sun· PINCHER ..,. ......... cull 1 a. Pbr s.lt: Antq s letied da1 ·several full 6 part·lime p01ltlons table/4 cbrs. Settee, O'l•efe'1 1Stt4 & immedl•telzau}Jable lo our ules K.taa'• le QD'• cbaln, Tea ~· ~ delltable. but any Today's Army offers training, ed· aacf otber aaUquH. 2SC4 Newport IUvd CM AD apUblde wur be ~ed. fir • ucatlon, ft-A pay and benefits 111111 aell. pn pty. <•trou from onn1e baterview pl...,. CODUct oar Rn manqer WV-6f5.201T O>unty falrgromdil) at plus choice location. Opportunl· '"*•r:• Ml -.w ........... a.!..•········~ Boat & Trailer Repair. Fi beritlasa · Electric a I .1\&ne Ups · Oil Chang· Ing Welding. Call Fred SGl.2349 9040 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1714> H4-I07t ties for actvencement. See what -·---... •crJ.t•tered Arabl•a •-j I flf f FROHT DAllAGED W Clwk. ~~~~~--~~~~~m~~~~~~~~~~U~"~·"~~~ ~-1~ ~~.~k•••••M•••••r. J-: W-W... ar llaiboi, VeruUl•~ .,.,_IMO -~ ...,..>.AfterlP•·· Pr"'•'• ~s can now sefl. Wrt Item or comb1Mt1on of +teftll f0f41hnt $75 or f991 wMt • a 11tte ect for 2 C:OOHCUtMI days fOt on1, S2 Each •dchtlONll fine 11 80t •or tht 2~ W SKJPJACJC 20, OllC ouldrive. complc_&.ely overbaaled. Ufl)' but fuocttonaJ tratler In-cluded. Depe n$1•ble Chevy V·8 eo1. g:1 CataliDI .. OsbiDI . $.'lli()O. 6'1547 .. 11' Formula Tbun. dSblr'd. • heavy equipment • artillery surveyor • administration/clerk •air traffic control• mechanic •truck driving • medlcat TALK TO THE ARMY INTERVIEW TEAM IN YOUR AREA. CAU COLLECT: FOR YOUR APPOINTMENT 014)551 .. CASHPAJD ..,...,,). Wsbr1Dr1ra1Refrta u n Gill spllM8d pld-...tmf or llOt 167.am lal. " ~ ~ f mot old, Sipat -*..., 111'19 fO{d gu wuber. ~ .S.aatur 1110 aacrtfiee for ~ pnce. -............... -. tl7S. 5lf.C'154. PAY CAlll for 6tearded OllDoertcae ~ ~. _, cmd. WW litiltielto~ ··--,, • .,.. ttu•••-,.. .,. ________ , ..................... .. Wullen. Dtyua, dis 8rwa~l table ....... eo11tp61~ •• ""'i1N7U nblt, r•flalthed, '/r --------• .......... Yoer dMlk.e P\ltabe ~ ndio coattoJ S&IO-.. 8a1i1 eada .. w1plaH 6 motor Ir L -. 0... A~ atntlat u1. $2IO. m.aca ...,. -~----~~· ••• for movlaa. aJI 0.1. W...,., Wle new poj)Ular 111.,, lowest _.. HllJ ._. ,_ dr1r pdell.Salilca milpriAt· flS. Kn• on Wllhr 1100. ell caNna. 10 .ata lf'I "1&eo .i.te 4-rJr $50. a.tJ •• ~ dlll.-:y °'mer_. .. Oelivtrnd (Wi.b • cw*r> (TlC) ..... -..ttAM .. IPM Charge your Penny PlnCMf Ad Of u.e yo.# Bankemerlcard or ..... 1..-elWge No com- fWClal .O.~ C4ll w1-r .. ,..., .............. ...,.,..,...,c .. ., __ ......,_ ...., ........ , 642-5678 DAILY PILOT XIDt CIODd. at-t012 Ba;oasible edult. ncmce boataman, blterated In reotini or 1ea.silll well equipped reeeat model power boat, 2S co 28 ft • fOr family boatillg "(ls. blaf local waters. ....... Bua. t4f.5"7 llrJme. •lllulltlllll(JI ••O...C41111 MILY Pl CLASSIFllD ADS .. JHtOflO~f ROBINS fO~n IXCUIMT SILICT10M Of IMWllSA&H maracfp Jl1c lLd ,l 1, ·-·- '"''• i • ' • ~ f ' We may bavt your next car ln our invetitory. CaU us today' ll 1·2040 4tMt4t CREVIER )., 14' HOBIE CAT. CONSl-'N NOW• GoOd ·cood. rrso: C.11 ' · a . 61$.788'1 N« G.70-AJO per week. We have 1.1 milHon 13' C)'clooe w ltrlr & cov. dollar contractual re · er, full ra~ rte. 9950. MrVatloos backing with <213) :m,2913 eves AAA U.S./Canada & the ~ 18' HoWe Cat w/tttr. f<>Powio& airlines; Unit· U 4 ~0 . S48 ·823t , ed, Delta, Wester n evea/wbnds. 870."" =· ~w~~; d)s. Swill Air, Lufthansa. 1'' .f11inc JUG&or •ltrlr •10~ iovutmeot tu Jd caad., 900. credit depreclaUoa de· ---..... &-~ ~~~----~--'! •W...J&.u ~"""'"',-..,..,....,...,--.,..+ Udll> l4 Am. ..lal1 : aieed. 3lt a<hllUoo Uni 'tlqUip. • .075 • b)' A'CW( JO. 17$.ZDI eSe.l.11.ni 4 Ster 22 minis al f~ iDvoice. OTV 2000, '1'. Superb' caad. Call Pat wkdys. ~. UDO M, ~ co sail. .. ar bNt olfet". C.l 171-eMO 1~ financing of in· '77 Datsun, AM /FM voice, sales tu and stereo caa. map, wide 1174 G1V. AM /FM. xlnt '74 124 Sport Cpe. xlnt liceme Uuu CROCKER. trk Utts, calm paint, mech. $3900. cond. Lo m i. A/C, 33' Sallboat at a 1112.0 APR, 1 year note. A/C. Still under fapc 844-!5MJ. :;:;:·le !1A':.;m~73·483s tb8t'a never bea warr, muat sell, P. . o f , v e r y c l • a 2 facllllies currently M epm; N8-32IS IMW '712 ...._. 9727 .. Wlldwlnd" Catama operallonal Irvine ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• w/man)' many xiraa. aaut. Colorado SDrinp: "16 El Camtno clualc, all 3201, '78, 10.000 ml'•· •-~ .... w 71 EwealDcl 511..aAO OJIQ, °"---xtru, mat sell, -5000. many xtrH. Dlr •P· .,.... " -._...;;-------1 54MGl2 pralaed SJ.UGO, askln1 HONDA C •t:-,:ffa./ OnDd open.Ina of lrd "18 Cbev, ~ Too PU. 8 "10,IOO. 412-1'22, l40·3139 an fadllty San Frucllco, cyl 3 Sp~. Tempo 1 1 MANY ·--............ ..-2!'.~00b LD'11 p... c•m. -alMll . 7$1·1185, '• 2002• ori1. ow m • To CllaoH Protw! ~ NewDOft sU JD ,.,_,.INY"I _,, ,... very c lean. 13200. lafander. tladere 'r.. TRIANOLI:'' 957 utl. OT·UU or aft. 6 , UNIVERSITY Cl1l s..i. l'or ~ info, contact '7J CH8VY LUV. '7M5lt oe..a.a. Kr.~ Sim. Xlnt CODd. IOI MCl.Al8rS H.-. c_.. • GMC •• Avalon moortn1. 1 frolll of Scart ., • • •• .,...., 115.000 . .,,. ... H:a.Pr Park••, tpac Dltded fOf' 51 la. pdit.P.P.~ ,., ~ rate. Cal ....... .. ,_ IY ._.. t.c. ea«m or 85W7t'1 IMW ,,.._ CJl 41 119-4446 'D Ford PU, reblt mot«. 850 No. Buch Blvd 2850 Harbor Blvd OliUkle ca.1.-...:GM tdr b!tch. ... La Habra a.ta lleu 540-9840 ('l'e&ea) D•I•'• m.aua <Conw 8HCh DUN e-2111 a.. WbJtU••) AUowtlif J way '72 (J)ffy Luv, &d cond, • -.._.to L:A. ndtmiaor work. *1300. 114/122-SlJl •:MT'7. OoMd SUi>da)1 . ·----~..-·-·· ·--. .-.- '75 s tn wi n . A I C . All t FM CUI, maa , wflls, cd cond $2750. lf7 .... " r t--rl"'W~11_..;,0UI" 'UCAI OF THE YIAR .. Good Inventory in stock. "::!;~!=~~ •Uif?rJlll·ll~llltlllTl~l·l~I 2150 Harbor Blvd. 2025 S, Manches1er' COSTA MESA ••s-1100 Anaheim 7fJ0-2011 R I C II I Swed l 1 h Vo I v o ea enau t arave e. Mecbanlca now at convertlblet hatd top. l van'•c 1.., .. Har bor Must seU, best offer .... 53S-6296 Blvd.. .M. ~1882 ltGll ... t75' Mod. 164, beat otter . .... ••••••••••••••••••• HI l!'lles, cood cond. •t DEALER IN U.S.A. 1M-OlllO ~~~VII ROLLS·ROYC£ 11 _ _.. IMJ""....._ .... ..,. ... ," \'----' ....... Cl05f0 WtfDAn • JEST DRIVE ~ DIESB. SEVILLE • Granada. • ctt. aa.ooo ml. Orta.~. mut aell imm.cliate.ly f'ul!y =·d, A/C •bl atilt lll&lt see CO ap· I pnciate. pp 9'19-2342 171 Galude sta •en. Great coad luide/oat. ll2A>O. llW70S ·• Ford 2·d JCT $750 PS/PB. A/C. AM/FM runs •Int. $YPT594 I ss1-. "16 Granada, 6-cyl, 4 dr . auto. P /S, low mile. AM /Fii. I trk. clean S»80 1911 Ford Countr y Squi~. elean 6 mecb.. o«. New tires. etc. lat SHOO. euJL 6'2·1298, 381 Osle. ---------'16 Courter, 5 spd. low• 13 Cpe deVWe. take over ml, &d cond. $3000. or pmts. xtra clean, full belt. Call Bob. aft. &. pwr, see to apprec. _87W& __ u _____ _ 8G9280 '82 FALCON WAGON -Sedan De Ville blue SACRIFICE SL50 ,., . . ·~31M . loaded. sharp. $5:"150. ---------PP.~ aft IPM Mlrweridi' tf47 T.J Eldorado, 39.000 mi's. ••••••••••••••••••••••• blk w/red leather. $3500. "12 Grabber. new trans. 54&-7S11J646.7793 tlrea. brb, A/C. Great ------· --coad. Sl27S. 213/'30-7022 '76 CAD SDV. Joaded. Mltwwwy ttso l89t0/best ofr Owner ••••••••••••••••••••••• anx aous . 847 ·0039. 8CMlll88 ORANGE COUNTY'S NEWEST 'Tl Seville ... Vtty clean. UNCOLN·MERCURY All extras. llllOO. Wll:dys Dealers h i p u now 975-0484. eves 675-7172 OPEN '77 SEVILLE RA y FLADEIOE Lo mi. all xtras. flaw· LINCOLN·MERCURY less. $12 ,000 hrm . 16-18 Auto Cent.er Dr. 752-1144 days, 833·2907 SDFwy·Lake Forest exit eves & wlmds. IRVINE . 4 Cad Sedan de Ville. ___ •_3_0-_7_oo_o __ Mint cond . Loaded, '78 BiaJt.cat St. Wgn . "200. P.P. 640-1716 Silveillfey extr W/Wood a..,-.. t920 grain. 14,500 total mi. ••••••••••••••••••••••• A /C. AM/FM. lg rck. •Cbe"". xlnt trans cus tom ca n vas cvr . • , SM90. Ph 640-9057 "°°· Call 6614198 aft 1 Mlnfmg '952 'SI ~ Stn w ••••••••••••••••••••••• A/C, R •H. oria owr!~: 70 Mustane V·8, nu gd trans ur s495 brakes" ra~lator. Rns ....... MUI\ ...... ~ ...... ~ greal. Sl1 95 . P .P . ..__...,, ,....,._ 6'n-3048. 'T3 4-dr Caprice. ad cond. --------new paint. ong owner. '70 Mustang. xlot. cond. PIS. P/B, P/W, P /D. blue. $2300/o(fer. P/L, A/C, S1995. P .P . 548·1313/559-6442. 833-3131 days. 982-8290 ·74 Mustang II. 4·cyl, eves Cr wltbds. orig owner. $2500. 19114 ~Y II. gd transp. 548·~. aft S. '550/or beat offer. ·es ecooomy 6 cyl. auto. 498-5858, aft 6Pm. radio+ 8 trt tape, new '71 Chev Impala. sport pnt. radials, dean runs Ndan. A!C. rad io. pwr prf ct 11475. 645-86!4 steering. Ult wbl. vry OWIMOIMI. 9955 sharp Sl.250. 6'75·2326 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1962 CH EV. Impa la '7.SCUJ'LASSSALON. Sedan. lmmac.. classic lmmac cond. Loaded. condition. 42.000 original $3795 or ofr. 586-8602 :;:1,:S· 1866· 673·~ aft '77 Cutlass Salon. Full ---------1tpwr. T-wp, A/C, tape, '65 Impala, A/C. P /S. b e i g t> • S 5 •. 9 5 o . P /B. a u to, AM /FM 844-4(M0/640-8044 sca-eo 8 trk. gd transp. , tuTLAss Supreme, 2 '151~ dr , Burgundy vinyl ~ 9925 brdtp., silver/ burgun. ••••••••-••••••••••••• dy, A!C:..AMI AM. PIS. "16 Cordoba. blk w/blk A/C. Y/8 , $3,400. Ith inter. full pwr. mag _645-321119 _______ _ wbls. 31,000 au's. $5000 rWo '957 firm . 8C'7~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• '77 Cbmler Cordoba, "74 Piliw. AM/FM tape, sunroof, fully loaded. new llres & batl. Runs. must sell P.P. 554-2650 looks id. SJ.500. 549-1735 Ca •IM•hll 9930 "16 wqon, low mi, V-6, ••••••••••••••••••••••• auto, pwr steering. A/C. '88 4 DR. 71.000 m1'11., ~tape, mag whls, SuPe-r cood .• 2nd owner. -------.,..--- $1350. 64$-4979 '72 Pinto. xlnt tranap, '72 62 ooo mi ori g 11ood r unning cond. . 'owner. • 1156/offer. Sll-0265 . -Sl.750./caafi' ,.._ 9465 557.:rlf18 ...................... . c-.1r 9911 '77 Fireblrd Trans-Am._4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• auto ~ /lrtras. l5500. YI tm Cougar XR7, •m· 842·6455• a nytime. m a c u I • .t e • b f It '73 Pointac Grand Prix. w/dlamoil tnl & lrlm. lmmac. Full powe r , All equipment + lo ml. new pa int at tires. See this one lit! P.P 60-4174 ...,. 5'9-8335. - ~ Oran Prix, gd COftd+ T.J XR7. every fact op. ~able. SJ.SOOtoffer. tion, 44,000 mi's, perf __, eves/wknda cond . S 2 9 5 0 .---------'7MJl7/~S501. fll••••iaifd 9970 ~,UIJO. Cle~b Out SB~rmarket S(rike miters Second Ba~ .... .....,..... MOM, SON ENDURE LONG LINE AT CHICKOUT STAND Val Sliva and Danny at a Norco Supermarket 11 Market Chaim Continue Walkout LOS ANGELES <AP> -The first day of a supermarket clerks walkout affecting JO million Southern California shoppers ended with four chains breaking ranks and signing in- terim agreements. Eleven other ~ompanies dug in by cutting h,i:>urs and hiring temporary help. · Some 5,000 to 6,000 clerks at Boys, Arden-Mayfair, Hughes and Smith's FoOd King were called in by the Retail Clerks Union after the agreements were signed Sunday, union spokesman John Sperry said. But the rest of the 55,000 (!jerks who walked off the job earlier in the d ay at 1,100 stores were expected to remain out pending further negotiations to- day. said union spokesman Jerry Lench. spokesman said as the walkout began. "Jl will just be harder to find." A brother and sister were ar· rested by sheriff's deputies in Whittier during -picketins Sun- day evening al a Stater Bros. market. Frank Bird, 22. of Lakewood. and his sister. Victoria Porto, 23, of Hacienda Heights. were on the picket line about 8 :40 p.m. when Bird began harassing customers who were entering and leaving the market. said LL. Don Jam·es. Fewer customers than usual for a Sunday were reported al most stores. A spot check of managers showed some stores had closed for lack of staff and that most of those that remained open were training temporary workers. "Some people see the pickets 81 KA111Y CLANCY Ol .. DlllY .......... Clerks al major supermarketa serving 10 mllUon residents or Orange and eiaht other Southern California counties stayed off their jobs a second ~ay today. Federal mediators were ex· pected to meet this afternoon with union and supermarket negotiators in efforts to bring the sides together on waae dif. ferences. Some 55,000 market clerks in the nine-wunty area went on strike against 15 major chains as stores opehed ror business Sunday. By the day's end, however, about 5,000 clerks were called back to work when Smith's Food King. Boys Market, Arden· Mayfair and Hughes Markets signed interim agreements. In the meantime, supervisory and non-striking personnel were manning markets affected by the walk.out. A s pokesman for Safeway markets, which has 16 Orange County markets and 164 in the nlne-cowity area, said operating hours were cut from the normal 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. weekday times to 10 a.m. tD 7 p.m. Except for a "little confusion" the first day or the strike went smoothly, the spokesman said. Safeway employs 8,800 full· and part-time clerks. he said, and at least 2,000 non-union workers have been hired to help dµring the strike. Officials of Albertson's markets, which operate 23 stores in Orange County, said the strike forced a cutback in normal 24-hour·a-day opera- tions. The markets are operating from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. or 10 a .m. to 7 p.m. depending upon loca- tioo. officials said. John Lench, spokesman ror the Retail Clerks Union, said UD· ion negotiators are _prepared to meet "round the clock' to help resolve contract differences. He described picketing at markets as peaceful. - Albertson's spokesman Marv Robertson agreed, saying prob· lems have been minor. most.ly in the area of "hurt feellnss." Lench also predicted some grocery items could become scarce if the strike drags on and Teamsters continue to honor picket lines. Robertson said, however, sup- plies aren't a problem and if Teamsters don't cross picket lines, non -s triking s tore employees can unload merchan· 'dise. Union spokesm e n said journeymen market clerks earn $6.92 an hour but said relatively few clerks earn journeymen wages since many work only part-time. and just don't want to cross the ffunt•nafnJj line.· the manager of Ralphs l.-e~R Aftel'll .. a N.Y. Steeb Deltf .......... CABIN CRUISER REDUCED TO RUBBLE WHEN LOST IN BOLSA CHICA SURF Renger David Ruo-r Exemlnea Largeat Pi.c. of Wreckage-The Ice Box Huntington Feud Councilman Says Documents Stolen A long·standing feud on the groun~ of a trucking and crane company owned by Huntington Beach City Councilman John Thomas has taken a new tum. Ttiomas filed a complaint with the Huntington Beach Police Oepartm~f\t ~ha~ a suspect de8cr1bed as •'possibly being "Thomas King" took doc"mllnts from 'l'homaa· ·beadqtJa11ers at Golden West Street and Garfield A venue SatW'day night. Thomas also claimed that dirt was stolen from one of his lots during a grading operation earlier Saturday at the slte of an oil well on the property. Thomas told police that the H11ntington Burglar 'Skunks' Cops Police got wind of a break·in at a Hwitington Beach .Central Park concession stand early this morning when a silent burglar alarm was tripped. But when police Officer Pat Casey arrived at 1 :06 a.m . at Huck's Hangout. 6622 Lake View Drive. the "burglar" turned out to be a mischievous skunk who had crawled in a broken Win· dow. The concession stand is being remodeled after a June 26 arson gutted the building and caused $40,000 in damage. Police said they plan extra checks to make sure no more skunk burglars get into the hangout. documents allegedly dealt with litigation between him and King He put a value of $1.000 on the documents. Thomas was found guilty of misdemeanor vandalism last June in the long controversy be~ \be tWQ Il\C!ll-Klug bad charged that Thomas removed about '3),000 Co. in property Sentencing is scheduled Sept. 15. The oil flrm shares the prem· ises wllh 11lomas· trucking busl· ness. The dispute has been charac· terized by au.OmeyS' for Thomas as similar to that between sheepmen and cattlemen for land rights in earlier days. Thomas owns the surface prop· erty while King owns gas and oil lease rights on a portion of the property. Sgt. Jack Bullar of the Hunt· lngton Beach Police Department s aid that Thomas· allegations are under i9vestigation. King couli:t not be reached for comment. DISCO FEYER IB'IS SENIOR,S Disco isn't just for the un· der-30 set. Huntington Beach Senior Citizens are learning how to boogie and catching Thursday Morning Fever. See Featuring, Page Cl. Heavy Surf Rips Boat To Pieces Heavy surf drove a 35-foot cabin cruiser ashore at Bolsa Chica State Beach in Huntington Beach Sunday night a nd pounded her lnto rubble while operators made a vain hunt for a salvage crew. Rangers said today the vessel was broken t.o pieces by the breakers within three hours after it was driven aground a bout 8 :20 p .m .. with two persons aboard. No names or owners or even the name of the Owens Cabin cruiser were available. The boat beached n e ar lifeguard tower 25, roughly along Pacific Coast Highway near the Huntington Beach bluffs where it drops down to the flats along the Bolsa Chica Lagoon. * * * Many Injured In High Surf In Huntington Lifeguards at west Orange County beaches said today that a bout 50.000 came Sunday to watch and wallow in thundering storrfl surf imported from the New Zealand region. A number of the visitors went home Sunday n ight nursing sprains. bruises and cuts as a re· suit of entering the water ··our lifeguard boat was prob· ably responsible for saving several lives." a spokesman for Huntington and Bolsa Chica state beaches said today. The strike. affecting stores from Bakersfield to the Mexican border, came just as serious food.. ahodases cropped.Ju> ill somEl San Francisco Bay Area rna.rk\ts following a month.old $'l.l'ike -lot!ko~l .involving rke.t in HolJ.ywood said. "But a Jot or people stoc'keo up on -TF7 i~-F-.1r.1~·:-t1H1~~~.,,._-_____ _ groceries early in the week in ,,, dL nl ie "CJiff Fall'. ' anticipation or the strike... . ' . 'Yokel' Wim The Spotlight Waves of more than 10 feet struck the shoreline in sets and visitorir; who ignored lifeguards' warntngs not to get their feet wet o. APJ -A !eWe61r,..-~so~m~e~u:m~. ~e~s~c~am~e~as;;.;Jii~6P!P.ei-:.s~o.;rtr.y:.,.;.~ Teamstef8 warehousemen. ~ The retail clerics• strike 'began as stores opened Sunday. The 11 supermarket chains still affect· ed by the strike are Albertsons. J\lpha BetaT" £.rtifled· Grocen, A .M . Lew~. Lucky Stores. Market B ask et, Ralphs .. Safeway, Stater Bros., Thrlf· tlmart and Vons. "Food will still be available to New Clerk Assaulted A non -union supermarket clerk told police a group of striking worken at a Huntington Beach store parking lot pushed and shoved her and flattened all rour tires on ber auto as she left wor-Sunday niaht. Tbe 8:42 p.m. incident occurred at the Alpha Beta supermarket tn the Five Point• Sbopptna Center, poUce aaJd. Pollet clkl not ldentJty the women who 1ald abe wu banued by people on the pick• UM. No formal criminal cbarae• have beeo Olld J'«, pone. uJd. \ 'rhe walkouc came ·several • · 1-· C · .. C · · h hours after last-ditch talks n ar ra,s Kill. 8 Man between the union and the Food Employers Council broke down A young Huntington Beach Saturday night. Neither side was woman en route back to her as- otpomlsUc al>out a q: ·ck settle· signment in the Women·s Army ment. --corps in Colorado bas been Bob Voigt, a spokesman for the killed ln a Denver freeway acei· food employers said: "We've dent. never bad a short strike. They Colorado State Patrol usuallylastf~tofiveweeks." spokesmen said PFC Maria M. Verdugo, 20, daughter of Mr. 1:AM~-ui~.;..m~:....K.elt e, ~renfi}' was killed lnatantly. Nixon Blamed In Tape Gap WASHINGTON <AP) -Leon Jaworski, the former Watergate special prosecutor, think• former President Nhwn caused the 181!,·minute cap in a Lape made three days after the Wate-rgate brea.k·ln. Jaworski, interviewed in Sun· day's Parade ma1asine, aald, ••Ntxon wu the lnd!viduat IJ\Olt likely to have eraMCI the llYt mlnutea" ol the June 20 19'72., ta~he record1n1 contJed a convenatioft between Nixon and former Attomey General John Mitchell. , Her paasenaer, Leanne Kucera, 19, ol GNnd Junction, Colo., also wu killed in the acci- dent Sunday on Interstate Hl1hway 70 at lbe Silver Plume offramp exit. Investigators theorized today that PFC Verdugo may have been speedi.na to get to her a a.m. assienment u a telephone operator at an Army tnataJlaUon at Aurora. Her rather aatd today that lbe bad a four-day leave and was prllHd for tlme ln teturnlna to ber duty station. Colorado State Patrol authorttiea aald the vld.lm lellt control on a curve and her car ran off the pavement, hit a 1uvdraU and new 91 feet. ftte car cruMd at tbe foot of a st'eep embankment, thtJ' bounced and 1kldcMd 31 feet, 1 ma1hin1 l11to another <See CllASll, Pas• At) . ' v~ LA JOLLA <AP>-A passerby discovered the partly . decomposed body of a man wbe apparently had fallen lo his death from a cliff at Black's Beach in the Torrey Pines State Re1ervearea,olft.cialssaid. t Deputy County Coroner Susan Bamat;saijf the meo..Jlad: beili.t deaa aboui two 4Jays. He is the second ~tly nported lnct· dent of a person falUng to his death from clllfs overlooklna the beach, she said. C4R RVNS FASI.', SEILS FASTER "l sold m~ car faster than l ever drove i\, and I got exactly whit I uked tor it." That's the story told by a sue· ceaaruJ OM·tJme car salesman who put this ad in the Daily Pilot: '11 LTD 4 door. Gd lira brkw. Gd lrtna. S 6 0 0 I 0 ( f r UlMCXltX U you ha~e a car you want to sell. call tu-""8. Our friendly ad-vlaen wlll help you write a beal 1eller. 71,. "COmmissioner from rural Utah "We had quite a few people in· stole the limelight at the eighth ju.red." said one spokesman. annual Vail Symposium on saying that bathers were often Western state problems. picked 'up by the breakers and · Provo Canyon S~om~ missioner Robert Redford ~ <See CROWDS, Page AZ> actor -told the 450 participants that jie was active in formins water and sewer districts for Provo Canyon and its 250 resi· dents for environmental rea· sons. "It ls unfair to assume that we can go looiud Without develop- menF.'' saUJl{edforfL. dreswt ln b4te 1ealll'. ··'lbe ontr.:prQl>leEl ls we come to the point Where I thlnk our teclmology in many cases has gone out or control. or out of balance with the natural cycle~ .. of things." Brazil Bans Hite Report RIO DE JANEIRO. Brazil <AP) -The BruiJJan 1overn· meot bu banned u "immoral" the local translaUon of the Hite Report, a 1urvey of the candid vlewa or Al!Mrican women on sexual ulkfactlon, and ordered poU~ to Hise the book from bookatofel. Th.e book topped the best- seller lilt here for Wffka and was in lta third priottna. Coast Weather Nlaht-through mid -morning low cl0-uds, otherwise fair through Tuesday. A llUle cooJer. Lows tonight 58 to 64. Highs Tuesday in upper 60s at beaches lo upper 708 inland areas. INSIDE TODA 't' N c ver o quarrel ho• morred 79 Jll!Ort of tn4rrlage /or Noah and MoTJI BaTMtt, ~" thbugh Noah., mother /Mrtd 11 WOWd not loat. Su Poge B4. 1 . , . N&W OIU.&ANI •AP> -A federal ..,._.. dM&rt ret\lled to- d 1 to block &M e eclalkm in '1oriia'1 eledrtt dMlk'" ot cm- d • • • • d lt01er JollD A . ~ol ..... Putl, Aa U9Ml to tM U s..pc..,. Cowt 1S ~ U. \M lepJ "-· r-rt rl .,~ ....... .. .,. ...................... . ftOl·to ...... tiltln. . Jn. llb U.S. ClftUit Couit of Ji A.,..... n~ $f)enkeliM'1 ~filia that ••1•• tried for mu.rder .......... to uve w 1uror. w9-Jwo..W r-Jecl the Cleath penak1 no matte?' wb \ Lbe cnm• Alto rdftCed •N a deff:nH c lalm that Florida 'a du th penalty i• raclelly 1pplled b«ause molt people on deltb n>w . black or White. •ere coa. demoed for tintq wbltea. "After cxmiderina eaeb of tbe pelilionen' coetaihOns and flM· me lhem to be frilbout merit." tht appeals court said. "we qp- hold the district court iudJ- tnent." On the racial issue, the ap- pea ls court sai d thal Spenkellnk's own expert witness testified ·'be found oo evidence ol intentional or purposefuJ dis- crimination." As to the ar1ument that Ftorida 's method o( execution is torturous and wantooly cruel, the Sth Circuit said lbe U.S. Supreme Court has already de· cided that the electric chair is constitutional. Florida's death penally law was one of three which the U.S. Supreme Court ruled to be con· stilutionaJ in 1976. Spenkellnk was scheduled to be executed last year but his ap. peal canceled the event. with no new date set. Boa Strangles Nightclub Enteltainer LA TUQUE. Quebec CAP> A 25-year-old nighl·club enter- tainer lost control of a 7"2-foot boa constrictor in his act, and tl'le s nake strangled him before an audience of 150 people. J ean-G uy Lec lair , who performed under the name of Grand Melvin, died Sunday at Club LaTuquois, 130 miles north of Montreal. "He seemed to miss a renex. and the boa wrapped around his neck:· said Gaelan Grenon, the manager or the club. When Leclair got blue in the face, Grenon said he caJled the police. t As he and four pol ice officers s c ruggted with the s nake. Grenon cut off its head with a knife. "ll 's wasn 'l a pleasant thing to have to do. but t had little choice." ht' said ... Unfortunate- 1 y, Le Grand Melvin was already dead." Leclair, who lived in Mon- treal, wore a vampire's black cape and fangs during his act. walked on broken glass and pierced his skin with nails Drug Adviser: 'No Charges' Millionaire Faces Murder Plot Rap· FORT WORTH. Texas <AP> -Two years \0 the day after he was cbarpd with murdering bis stepdauabter, millionaire T. Cullen Davis was accused of masterm·inding a murder-for-hire plot involving a "hit list" ot six names, includiftc his estranged wife, his brother and two judges. Davis was arrested Sunday and charged with solicitation of capital murder for allegedly trying to hire a "hit man" to kill District Judge Joe Eidson, who is presiding over the oilmen's biller divorce. He was also charged with carrying a prohibited weapon -a pistol with a silencer. District Attorney Tim Curry said he will recommend today that the 44·year-old Davis be held without bond in the Tarrant County JaU. Speaking through hi s attorneys Sunday. Davis called the charges ''some kind of frame or setup." Davis was arrested moments after driving from a nightclub parking lot where police said he met Davld McCrory, an employee of a firm owned by the Davis family. Davis is a partner in KenDavis Industries, a FromP~AJ CROWDS ••• . flung to the sand. Numerous strains and sprains were treated among the 25,000 estimated to have visited the state beaches. Some 40,000 used the Hunt· ington Beach city.supervised strand, where about 30 reacues were recorded. · Seal Beach lifeguards report· ed about 12.000 visitors Sunday, with 25 rescues logged in the normally calm waters protected by jetties at each end of the beach. Cuts were a major first aid problem in the area of the Seal Beach Pier. where turbulent surf whipped up broken glass and alqmlnum cans on or under the seafloor. One lifeguard spokesman satd today that when in the water it is always a good idea to wear some type of protective footwear. such as tennis shoes. conglomerate that includes Mld·Coatinent Oil & Gas Supply. Curry produced an altidavit signed by McCrory, s.ying that McCrory bad several meetlnp with Davis the past four daY11 in preparation for the alleged contract ldlliDJ. McCrory was wired for sound by federal and local authorities during the meetings, officials said. Law enforcement sources told The Associated Press that at the Sunday morning meeting, McCrory sbowed Davis a snapshot of Eidson's "body" stuffed in a car trunk and the judge's driver's licef'\-'e. Eidson, said the sources who asked not to be identified, agreed to pose ror the photo. After be saw the photo, the sources said, Davis produced a manila e nvelope containing $25,000 in $100 bills. Davis, the star defendant in the state's longest and costliest murder trial last year, was acquitted or the Aug. 2, 1976, shooting death of his 12-year·old stepdaughter, Andrea Wilborn , at the $6 million Dav1s mansion here. That same niaht, Davis' estranged wife, Priscilla. 37, was wounded. Her Jive-in Jover, Stan Farr, 30, was killed. Gus Gavrel Jr., 23, a chance visitor to the mansion. was left partially paralyzed from a bullet in his spine. Huntingto~ To Appoint New Planner Veteran planning aide Jim Palin is expected to be appoint· ed Huntington Beach interim planning director tonight by the City Council. City Administrator Bud Belsito said today that he will recommend that Palin be named to succeed former director Edward Selich on a temporary basis. Selich resigned last Friday to take a position in private in· dustry. Palin, ~. is ooe of three assis· A t V• 1. tant city planning directors. He WASHINGTON CAP> _ A U 0 IC Im has been with the plannin11 de· suburban prosecutor decided partment for 11 years. today not to file criminal Jd tif• d Mayor Ron Shenkman said to- charges against former White en le ; day that the city intends to ad· H d vertise throughout the state for DES MOlNES, Iowa <AP> ...- Cbarle1 Watt•. a 3t·year.ald multiple tcltrotla victim who robbed • 1roceey •tote IA> \)ay for an operation that would end ei1ht years of impotence, b. a "quiet man who Juat wanted to thlnk the Jury hu •lven bJm a •low deatb HDt.ence. ·• the lawyer. Jobn Wellman, aald after • Polk County District Court Juty found Watts a&dlty of lWQ Count. of robbery. W attl, Who admitted tbat the ro~bery iook pfaee, plnded ln· nocent by tealOQ ot temporery inHniQt. Iowa's mand•tory mtnimuin prison sentence for robbery la five years. At the trial, a psycbolo&tst lelttfied that Watu was so ob- sessed with his im~nce that it "virtually controlled his waking momenta." WeQman told the court that W atta knew the difference between right and wrong but fell th~t this concept didn't apply to thts ease. Watts, an uneinployed cement finisher, testilied U)~t he tried unsuccessfully to (tft financial assistance tor the $2,000 opera- tion from the government and added, "It should be the $Uate on trial here, not me." I , Watts learned of the opera- tion. called a penile transplant, while watching a local television talk show in early March. Dr. James O. SlallJngs, a Des Moines plastic surgeon and author of "A New You: How Plastic Surgery Can Save Your Life," was being interviewed on the program. Watts made an appointment to see Stallings immediately after the program. In an interview. Stallings described the procedure as an implantation of a cylindrical piece or "high grade medical plastic -the good kind or silicone." Stallings, who appeared as a witness in the Watts trial. said he has done 34 such operations, bot that few people know about it outside the medical pro- fession. He said he agreed to the Interview because he fell that few of the estimated one million men who suffer from impotence related to muJtiple sclerosis or diabetes knew the operation ex· isled. , Stallings said he Is setting up a "foundation, to be fed by con- tributions. to help others who cannot afford plastic surgery." Watts will be sentenced next month. Wellman said he may appeal. Dolku Up, Gold Down LONDON CAPl -The dollar rebounded sharply on the world's foreign ex· changes today. buoyed by the Federal Reser ve Board's increase in the discount rate from 7 Y• to H '• percent. But dealers said trading was nervous. They were waiting for the Carter ad- ministration to do more. The dollar gained nearly 4 yen in Tokyo, 2 pfennigs in Frankfurt, nearly 5 cen· times in Zurich and Paris and 7 lire in Milan. The price or gold plunged in London and Zurich but was still above $205 an ounce. Thermostat Blanied for , t Valley ·Fir.e A fln! possibly caused by a faulty thermostat was under ha· vesttgation -by the Fountain Valley Fire Department today arter causing an estimated $11 ,000 damage to a central city home. No one was injured In the blaze that gutted a portion of the Shirley Lowe home at 9154 La Colonia A\te .. about to p.m, Sun- day. Her 19-year-0ld soo was ln a back bedroom. Fire Chief Tom Felerabend said today that flames and smoke were boUlng out the front door or the resideo.ce when his men arrived. · A neighbor reportedly told ffremen lhe Lowes bad men· ' ttoned having trouble With a faulty thermostat J~ated in the area where the fire brok~ out. near a front hall cl()set. Feierabend said be and Fire Inspector Lynn Ml~haelis checked the home's wirins to de· termine tl it was aluminum. It was copper. Durtng the past nine years, Huntington Beach Fite Depart· ment Capt. Carl Duncan has crusaded to eliminate the aluminum wiring Installed in many local homes. ljls efforts have led to a federal government lawsuit asainst 26 firms that wired homes on the Orange Coast with aluminum wiring instead of cop· per conduits. Fre.P~AJ CRASH ••• guardrail, flipping over it and colliding with another car. the patrol said. Investigators said the Verdugo car skidded another 21 feet on its top before it stopped. The victim was a 1977 enlistee in the WA Cs and attended Westminster High School. By GA&Y GSANVILLE Of .............. • Orante Count,y'1 MMalioG-1 snuff movie ease endelC. allDOlt tn a whimper c.oday when l'nd Bern Douglas of c.ta Mesa 1>1t•ded DO Cl9fllest to a UMle ellarp of IGflc:JtiDI Mwik "1th a dudly wapon. ~L·!,.lf ; The no cOlltelt .,aea meant tlult Douglas neit.ber denied DOr ad· mitt.id intending to sollctt II) u · aault wiU-, a deadly weapoa on .another _penol\. The "Plea also meant lbat eon-sptracy Ind murder l'fOlicitatJon cbar1es aiaibst Dou•JBJ were dlamla&ed and bis second trial on thOle charges ended before ltbeaaa. With that plea, 1tate cbaqes that Douala bauled two un· derc~ policewomen to tbede:s- ert In J~ 19'17 to film their torture. murder and dl1meMber- ment went out the Window. And Douglas, who spent four months in jail before postlne Sleo.ooo, was a free man. When acceplin1 the burly Costa Mesa man's guilty plea. JUiefae Muoo Fen1on aave him creait for the four months served in jalJ and pla<*f him on three yean probaUoo. When accepting tbe no contest plea, Judge Fenton said he would make a finding of guilty baaed on the testimony and evidence in the Douglas trial Jha~ ended with a bung verdict. _ JQdge 'Fenton said he . could not know lf Douglas truly in· tended to harm the women and predicted any jury that would bear tb.e case couJd not reach a unanimous decision. Judge Fenton said the firsl trial cost an estimated $30 ooo and the state should be span!d a similar expense in a case prob· ably beyond a jury's collective ability to reach a decision. Judge l"'f'nton a'so said Douglas must see a psychiatrist in connecti~ with bis probation. For the 51-year-old furniture rerinisher the guilty plea was a vindication of sorts. Earlier this year an Orange County Superior Court jury wa:. Unable at the end of a six·week trial to decide whether or not hr intended lo murder the police women be took to the desert for the film sequence. "If I had done any or those • thins,s or even thought or doing them I wouldn't be walking out ol here today.·· Douglas said. "It is not against the law to take pictures and I certainly did no harm or Intend to do any harm to anyone." Douglas faulted the system that charged him with attempt· ed murder and solicitation to murder as wetl a s his ex · perience in the justice system. All but forgotten as the once accused porno film maker walked from the courtroon~ were the horror stories connect- ed with his arrest last summer. Those stories included tales of his intention to force the police women to pose for lesbian bond· age type pictures and to end the picture laking session with their murder and dismember· ment. The arrest of Douglas led to a massive desert search for what law enforcement officials be lieve were prior victims burled in the Yucca Valley area. o u se rug adviser Peter a full·time planning "irector as B o urne for writing a Dri ff Jd . Y .. -----"'~~·~i~ i•h ~~c•it1nu~~~::~~'V'~e~r~f:~e~~~~-j;soo~n~as~~poss~~1b~le=.~H~e:s:a~jd~th~a~t-f---~-:::;;iiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiii .. liiliiilllllllll!IJl!l .......................... E""------...:.·:Jl name. • -• w.-~ .-Palin is invited to a l for the A l.&-year-old Westminster JOb. - Paul Ebert, the prosecutor in woman who died in a three-car Any decisjon lo name a full· Prtnce ·William County, Va.. aut,o stnash,up ln Huntington time p)8Dlllng director appears where an attempt was made to Beach has been ldenttfled "'"as-to hinge-on a reoreanlzation plag fall lhe prescription. said, "I Gayle Jeanne Foster. that may result 'n the merger of don't think Virginia Jaw applies Miss Foster, of 15731 But-the planning and building de· to a drug violation outside the terfield St., was kiUed Saturday partments, officials said. state." night when her compact sedan The City Council and the Plan· was struck by a sports car on ning Commission will bold a Golden West Street between Joint meetlttc tontght at-6180 to OAANCHCOAST Hlf' DAILY PILOT Garfield and Clay avenues, teview an amendment to the ci· police said. ty plan. Police arrested the sports car The business portion of the driver, Lisa May Hanna, 22, or meeting will begln at 7 :30 p.m. ~ · Ir e un · ~-·~. ~.::.;; ~SWt11~°""..::s..c'1111"•"'9'11a. ,..,_.~,,L1M11t..,-.:-1--u:m~•Ulnsi:wlau:n1111'tll!ter~_.·111niad..«:di.rnurnrukL.Qdt1rill(vlnUlll:.-..!!.JUIS» n.. """"'-~ -~ T... cbargM. ~ .,u released OD =~~~'.t.f:::..z.:a.m -.. ~ her own teoognizance. "-"·-Funeral servlcea for Miss ,. ... ;____ Foster are scheduled Tuesda) al ,,., ....... J.~.!,C::::.,__ 2 p. m . at the Westminster ,._,ic_.. Memorial Park. ""'"' Miss Hanna was treated and "'::::!,';,,,, \•/:" released from Pacifica Hospital. °""'" .. i.--~ ... Two passengers In Mias "'"":=':!:."""" Foster's auto remain in stable ._.,°'.,...c-t!Tl.dl• condition t.od•Y· ttuntlnaton•Hc:t1~ One passen•er, Monique ,,.,r ..... ~.. GI d C 0 iM•• .... -· ,.o_,._ a ys leary , 19, of ome.e Westminster, ls at Paeifica ~:04:' =~~ Hospital. The other, An1ella ~~·:=.:~ ... ··-Gall Hardenbury, 20, of Garden T...,._1tt<11•>....... Grove, 11 at Hun\ln1ton In· ~ .......... ea..,. tercommuntty Rotpltal. ,__°'..,..°"""'c.--'" The drtver of • third auto, M0-1at Mary Dianne Slivers, 19, of ~"'C: ;::, °'=. 'r.f.:!.,".::"'""':\i c... Cypress, escaped Mrioua Injury, .... 1,., ., .. _.,._" i-":l:.' _., "t officials said. ~~,,....,. -··• ,..,..,,... .. Miu Sllven swerved to avo d s.t-..... _._ ""' at C:.~• ..,.. ltriki""' the other ............ _ ... --t Catlltrftlt ~lltcdPt .. ft ~ t11<rl•• O U ... .. ..... &UU ... u =~":, ~~,:O "*''"'' ,, .. ,n.,, her own sedan cra1bln1 thJ'OUlh a chain Unk fence, police said. LOS ANGELES <AP> - Police believe a aielf-empJoyed bookkeeper accused of disap· pearing wtth $927,000 mistakenly creditff to bis bank account 1a ve some of the money to a prison inmate from Coeta Mesa who ii a~ of having ties to orcanized crime. S1t. James Heiadorf of the police bunco squad said that Edward A. Zuber, 39, who is aervlnt a fJ~·year term at Terminal Island. received some of the money. Zuber was convicted of con· spltfnc to bilk the Aladdin Hotel In Lu Vqaa out of $250,000 ln t•mbllng cblpa and for •tock and mill fraud sct<err"1 tn New York and San oteao. . ,, .. " . t ' ... J rur ch::>ice for al! outdoor act1w. 'YJl'l.ar. wco1r1ch shown ie our lightar ~i~ht poplin with cotton tdrt..dn 1imng • 7 •1Ml1 1P&OlllA&IN ............. It lriWit ~ ~Uwomaa llar1 • QAAIO wrtl• tbrft of· ndaJ hitter. to IMr •Wlld.-J ~~•tlt\Mllley. wtu Oouncalaan Oavhl :sau. 'be IGtttd to mmter with &lit to bO Ml name bibw tMP\lt&! In lllllllv aelf ~renae. "'111 Nayw BW V~ nre a bw1t of nine nalel. Co.t-Umao I.Any Acran a "oltey of 11. <*aft. ''JltYMw fJI Praed~ fteP~ Let~~-(!tty ~ In a memorachun oa die aub-Jeet to otber memben ot the council. Vafdocalia urcea that eounetlmln wrUe letten oaty in dt~t rtlc>tiDM to olftetal eor-real>ODdeoce, or at the direction o( tbe Nil. OI the council. Otherwise, he wams ~ "Whal l f oreaee happenlna 1s an escala· Uon ln letterwrlbnt which. when carried to an extr~IJ\9· will . o.i1y~1...,,.... MARK SUGARS, ORANGE COUNTY HIGH SCHOOL'S LATIN HOTSHOT, TRIES HARDER National Academic Cornpelltion WJnner Sh'Okee His Cat, Arlatoclee ~~~~~~~~~~~ ' . 5 Fa"'ilies 0ustedby Sewage Five Irvine famiUes were waiting today for their homes to be habitable again after a blocked sewer line caused raw sewage to back through their toilets and showers on Friday. At least two of the families were advised by Irvine Ranch Water District officials to spend the weekend out of their houses. The rest of the Yearling Avenue families posted their bathrooms off-limits and de- pended upon understanding neighbors. Ao IRWD spokesman said the California Homes incident was caused by a two-by-four piece of lumber that lodged in a sewer line. A resident or one of the homes eaJred the fire department when she noticed water seeping from under her bathroom doorway. The IRWD spokesman theorized the lumber was mis- chievously dropped through a manhole; the sewer system is closed, the spokesman said, so it was unlikely the debris &ot in another way. The county health department was inspecting the homes for possible health hazards. Coast' otherwise falr f6rougli Tuesday. A liWe cooler. Lows tonight 58 to 64 . Highs Tuesday in upper 60s at beaches to upper 70s inland areas. INSIDE TODAY Nev•r a quarrel hot marred 19 rears of mornaec /or Noah and Mo111 Bomett, eomt though Noo.h'a motlln f~red ft ~ "°' Ian. Sn Page 84. .... ""''-"'""'-M ..... '"' a ....... M"-U.-Cl LM....,. M......... ......, ........ ................... ~ MO....~ a..... C>•..._,.._ .. ~· ., """' .,.. ==. :~ J ~MCJ?Wv I .... ....., M ......_ Ct.I......... Al By PlllLUP BOSMAKIN DltlltO...,. .... SWf .. I tfy~·bard:u -Mark Sugars strokes bis cat Aristocl~s and e"plains why he's the bigb school Latin hotshot of the coun-try. Though he may be a hit with the ladles too, the Latin hustle he's superb at is of the amo. amas,..amat variety. In national academic competi- tion .Cor second-year Latin stu· dents, Sugars, 17, a senior at Univenity High School, Irvine, won two first places. a fourth and two fifths. He read Latin lib a-Roman, conversed about gods and god- desses as though they'd been neighbors. l(l.nd knew more about Roman daily life than Claudius knew about Messalina. And all this Romanizing was in Texas. · Sugars was in a contingent of four Urµversity High School stu· denta who convened this month with, 1.200 Latin students at <See LATIN. Page AZ> lroine Company Managers Shuffled By JOANNE REYNOLDS oe ... Delly l'W IUH It was more tban a year ago that the Irvine Co. was sold lo its current owners. Since then, eight members or the company's top management have left-the de.velopment firm. along with an unknown number of middle management and staff members. Frank Hughes became the sixth vice president to end his Irvine Co. career when be gave his resignation to company Preaideot Peter Krftller more than a week ago. s As have the other departed members of the corporate leadership, Ru1hea says be 's leaving to go into the develop. nOimc une a of the takeover by the new owners. Raymond Watao~ Tom Wolff and Lansing Eberlins re- signed tbeJr reapectlve poets as president and executive vice president to set up their own de· velopment company. About a month later, DoucJu Gfeller, vie• president of the company's reetdentlal dlvialon., announced be was leaving to 10 to work for a residential de- velopment. company. He waa followed in October by Albert Auer, vice president ~ the commer-clal d.lvlalon, and Wlllf am R.. Watt, vice praldent of the mulU·famUy dlvlaloo . Watt and Auel' also formed their . own company. At tbe time of Watt'• de· parture, Hughes wu pretident ot the company'• bomebulldf.ni 1ubtldlary, ltvloe Pactnc. . , .. A month after Watt and Auer lert, Hutbes' vice president at Irvine Pacific, Ken Acid, an· noW>ced bis retlpatlon. ff q1hes wu made vtce preaJ. dent of the NSidenUal dlvlslOn, wbleh ~mpaaaed Ute multi· tamU1 divtalon. At that time • (See 8TAJl'f', Pafe .\2) parallel the arms escalation where every couacll member wiU be wrtttq to nearly every- oae in tbe elt.Y. fol ~.000) oa a retularbula. · '~bis will result in a new 9ty ball ruled 1rlUl aeeNtarial lielp and typewrtten to bandJe letten from council members and .i taxpayers' expense;• VardoUua predicts. Vardoulis claimed putillcly that bis concern for the writing By KATHY CLANCY Of .. o.Hy ...... Sutt Clerks at major supermarkets serving 10 million residenta ol Orange and eight other Sout..bern California counties stayed off their jobs a second day today. Federal mediators were ex· peeled to meet this afternoon with union and s upermarket negotiators in efforts to bring the sides together on wage di.f. ferences. Some 55,000 market clerks in the nine-county area went on strike against 15 major chains as stores opened for business Sunday. By the day's ~d. however, about 5,000. clerks were called back to work when Smith's Food King, Boys Market, Arden· Mayfair and Hughes Markets signed interim agreements. In the meantime, supervisory aod OOIMIUiklr\g ~el w~ m9.ll.Dinl runets ~ted bt' the walk-out. A spokesman for Safeway markets. which bas 16 Oranee County mark& and 164 in tbe nlne·county area, said operallq boun were cut lrom the normal 9 a .. m. to 9 p.m. weekday tJmes to 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Except for a "little confusion" the first day of the strike weat smoothly, the spokesman said. Safeway employs 8,800 full· and part-time clerks. he said, and at l~ast 2,000 non-union workers have been hired to help during the strike. Officials of Albe rtson 's markets. which operate 23 <See STRIKE, Page A2> Permit Asked For Irvine Art Center Supporters or a proposed Irvine f.me arts instruction and rehearsal hall have moved into a high-stepping lobbying effort directed at the City Council. Irvine Cultural Center Inc., a coalition of non-profit culturaJ groups, is seeking a conditional use permit to occupy a warehouse on Daimler Street, near....J.be.~ that would be converted to the hall. . Councilman Arthur Anthony bas ·appealed P1lfftnh11 Com· mission ap~roval or the plan, on grounds nolSe problems weren't fully investigated. The cultural groups claim the appeal has endangered the pro- gram through delay. AdvertJs. Ing brochurea and even a listing in the teJepbooe book can't be done unW the plan is approved, they say. appeai'M- before the <!Ouncft tO try to per. suade Anthony to withdraw his appeal. They did not get to speak, on a ruling by City Attorney James Erickson that because a bearina already had been scheduled ffor tbls Tuesday >. ea,ly tesUmony could not be heard. Also, Erick$on said, Anthony could not legally withdraw his appeal. At that. the eroup left the hall to the cla~kety·claclC of tiny dance·aboetaps. They've, or1amzed since, dia· trlbuttna llandbllts wfth the tnch. tall salthtloa. ""'Hl!l.PI!" and ur1tn1 ~le to write letten or use appended postcards. • AliO lnchlded ls a su11..UOO for what letters·writers mtabt say, lo cue tboy ha un't (See AaTS, Pace AJ) ·. ~ I habits ol h1s. feC&ow eowfcfl..,_ did l~ f« '*1UeaJ. or so'e Qt.lier WH pNalpted ·•u * ,_.,. Of var'tet)"Of. ~e. j Councilwoman Gajdo•s • &fftll• Vardouli&. •n lua defense. aaid t.k>iis reglll'dlD.g ID)'-1ettet1J?lt· be Uses the ~al form oa1y m1... • . ln correspoadence ln reply to let- Two 'Neeb aao. in a • '°"8cll t~ra or Inquiries directed mfftio.I. Mrs.. Gllido c"96ed penonally at blm. VardC>ulls for what sbe ~ ··wheai MDdina .a letter on la his preference ~r ~ the bebalf ol tbe COUDCU\" states personal •'I" ratb'1' ttld,al tbe his memo. ·•t m• it clear tbat editorial "We'' In letters~ it is tbe council'• posillon and at- on behalf of~ couneil. . tempt to use l1nt ~raon plural The implicaticJa· was .that be ' (Sff £E'M'Eas. Pa~ .U> .. \ •• ( ,1 l • t J ": • l/t' e I ... , " I • ~J. ... -.,...,_ MOM., SOH • .£N.ftJR£.ti~ LIN£ AT CHECKOUT STAND Vat Silva •nd Danny at a Norco Supermarket . . s. . ... . 11 .Marhet Chaim· Continue Walkout Les ANGE~ <~P> -r The first day of. a s\lpetmar'ket clerks walkout alfect1ng1 10 mlllion Sout.bern Calil~u:nla shoppers ended with. four· chains breaking rank~ and-sigrlihg'" in· teri.m agreements. Eleven other companies dug. in , by' cutting hours and· hiriOg terhpocary help_ --:..-...--· I I \ 0 Some 5,000 to ,,000 clerks at Boys, Arden-Mayfair. ~usbes and Smi~h 's Food Kipg' were called in by · the ~eta ii Cl~ks Uhion after ·the agre~ents were signed Sunday. union spokesm.an·Jptin Sperry said:· But the rest o( tbe 55,000 clerks • walked off tbe"1job earlier in the <lay at-1. loG stores were ex.peeled to 'remain ~ out pendin& further negotiatioll)s to- day, said union s pok,una n -~~ ffiffiLHiiiffililiilUO:Cll< border, cam~ Juit as ~us food short8g4!s ero-Pped u rn some Sao Franc!iato Bay a marhts (ollowi.Qg a motitfl-old ~ t r i k e • lockout i o v o l,v"11 Teamsters ware~. • · 'Mle retail eletks • ~rtke-t>e&ari as st.ore& opened Suriday. Thell 11upermarket 'chains still ,affect• -eel by ttie strike a~JAl~s. AJpha Beta, Certlffe-t Gnk?en. A.M .'' Letfti, · i.uci~1 Stor a. Mark e t Bas k et ,' Ralplts.., Safew,y, Sta~r Bros .• T-.nr· ti~art 8dCl Vons. • "Food will lt1U beo•vall,able to tbe pubH~~'~ · ope ltriion apokesman MIG u the 'walkout be&an. "lt wtn Just h bl.J'de>t to find.. .. A brother aad 'limr. were .,. rested by ahetttt'a dep~ 1n WftitUer dunq piCkeUn1l Sqn .. . day• evening al a Stdler· Bros. market. Frank Bird, 22. of Lakewood, and his sister. Victoria Porto, 23, of Hacienda Heights. were on the picket line about 8 .40 p.m. when Bird began harass..ng custome~s whQ were entering and leaving the market, said U . Don James. FeweT custome~s than usual_, for a Sl.lf)day were r"ported at . mo~ s~orN. A spot check of manageni showed some storea had c losed for Jack. ot stalt and that most of those that remained open were training temporary work ear. "'Some people see the picltets , and Just don't want to cross Uae Une... the manaier or Ralphs rnarket,Jn Koll.ywood said. "But C4R · RUNS F.4HI', . . SEU.S FASTER "( sold my car raster than I ever drove it. and I got. exactly · what J asked for It.·• Tha~'s the story told by a sue· cesdul.. one·Ume ear salesman who put tbla ad in the Dally Pilot. '71 LTD 4 door. Gd tires brka Gd tr•ni. s1 0 0 1 orrr l(ltlt-JlltXX JC you have a car you want to sen. call ~5678. Our friendly ad·vlsen will help you wrlte a be1taeUer. ·- j . Carpenter Cop Bill Defeated SACRAMENTO CAP> -An Assembly committee baa killed a bill by State Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter, R·Newport Beach, that would have made It harder for criminaJ defenda nts who cla1m poUce brutality to see police Illes. The bill, SB 1436, which bad the backing of law enforcement. was defeated by the Assembly CrlmlnaJ JusUee Committee on a 3-4 vote. Law enforcement groups said it would have protected officers from relatively unrestricted searches through police mes, which b'lay contain unproven ac· cusatlons of brutality. But opp0neots said current restrictions are adequate and contended the blll would have made it practically lmpoulbte to get needed recotds or olfieeta' past conduct in order to substan- tiate a claim ot self-defense. The measure would have tightened the law on "dis· covery, ·•the procedure by which defendants can obtain evidence held by the prosecution. Under law: a person who claims self-defense to a charge of assaulting llJ>Olice officer can inspect portions of the officer's personnel files to see whether there ,is a history of brutality, under certain conditions. l'be defendant must persuade a judge that the information is needed. for the defense and can· not be obtained elsewhere, and that those needs outweigh the public agency's interest in keep- ing tbe files secreL Cat'penter's bill would have required the defendant to list, in addition, the full details of the records sought, and show that the files were actually held by the agen cy, adm,isaible as evidence and relevant to the case. Opponents said those restric· lions would virtually have Umit· ed defendants to the information they already had. Other provisions said only complaints in the last three years could be obtained, and dis- covery would be limited to cases of assaUlt on a peace officer or disorderly conduct. Japanese Parade LOS ANO~ <APJ -About 85,000 people turned out to watch the 36tb annual Nisei Week parade in Uttle Tokyo, J>Olice said. DAILY PILOT -·-,.__,...._ ""' •• Cllrtlf VIU"'"*"'-0.-" ......... ---..... ":"~A.,,."="' a.-... ~ .... ~ ..... AWflMI blton 0.0.. ~,,.. .. ,._.., __ .,...,... .. "'"' ""=~ ~8HCll1 711i,.c~ ,.,, .... , lDlllA---.. s.o-..-._ Tel111tloM (n4t~ Chl•"'•f Alhettl ... ~'ll•tltf-O!IK• At.a10 ,.._-Ot~ --er11::.::.°'~~~ ~-:t"'.. ' ............ s , ·-... -~ -· •-"•u .. nm NMI 11 c..i. ""'ft C..ll,•tnle ... Kt •ti.ft W cer•lff U =1'.~ ::::,::.r _...., ·"'- ~ it -cwt_~ .:.·=~;, ..... _..:IL::.....;._;_a. iea .... today .... c'Prild ..,,,. DoM .. "' Calta .... ...... .. , ...... ..... ..... ol -·· ........ ... ·~··.,.. ......................... Doal•• ~ ..... DOI" ... ........... to .... ... ud·wtdt a dilMM1 wa••• ...... ~ 'l1lie pita ...... tlaM ... _.ae,andaurdet~ ..,_.. , ....... Doap ... dilmlued _. Ida _.... utal oe CMle ~ ..-S blbe itbeaan. F ... P.,,eAJ Witb tbllt plea, at.ate char,_ that Ooualu ba-.led t-o UD· dercover policewomen to U.~ • ert. in .rutx tm to fUm tbelr Kremer aa1d the company U · torture, murder and dlsme.nf>er-pected to phase out Irvine meAt went o.l UV> window. Pacific and ••eet the Irvine Co. ADd Dot11'}:j who apent four 08' of the bomebullcllnl buai· mOlllM ua Won "*'• best .. · SJOO.• .,.. • fl'et mm; That deel1Jon ha• been re-Wlten aceept~• tlle barl1 ·voked but the company has QO Costa Mesa man • fullty plea, appointed chief for the aub. Judie Muon Fenton gave bim sldiary credit fo_r the four mC?ntbs Warren James, who served as served in Jail .and tC::ced bim on Irvine PacUic vice preaidebt un-th';t:U-ac:::, ~ 00 contest der u~. will be acting ptesi· plea, Judge Fenton said be dent until a new president is would make a finding of guilty selected. . based on the testimony and The company, however. im· evidence in tbe Doqlu· trial mediately replaced Hughes at that. ended with a bung verdict. the corporate level, appointing a Judge Fenton iald be could ~ormer associate of Kremer noi know if Douglas truly in· 1rom NewhaJJ Land and Farm- tended to harm ttie women and ~g to ~ top spot in the residen- predict.ed any jury that would t1al dlVlSion. bear the case could not reach a In addition to all the de· unan1mousdecision. partures, the company bas Judae Fentoa said the first taken on a vice president to bead trial cost an estimated aao.ooo a newly-created governmental and the state should be spared a relations department. similar expense in a case prob-Robert Shelton, who has been ably beyond a jury's collective a governmental relations consul- abllitytoreacbadeelsion. tant for the past seven years, Judie Jt•enton aJ 0 id joins the corpol'ate staff that in-s sa eludes Thomas Nielsen, Hughes' Douglas must~ a psychiatrist replacement in residential; in connectloo with his probation. Richard Reese, who heads plan- For the St-year-old furntture ning; Tom Wilek, who beads refi~aber the guilty plea was a public affairs; Richard Cannon, vindication of sorts. who is in charge of the com- Earlier ~ year an Orange merciaJ and industrial division; County Supenor Court jury waa Fred Keller, bead of agriculture, ~able at the end of a six-week and Warren Fix, in charge of tnal to decide whether or not bf finance intended to murder ~the po)lce The ~veraJI effect of the cor- women be took to tbe desert (Of' porate shuffle, in terms of the the film sequence. • company's operation, hasn't "If I bad done aD)' of tboee been noticeab~ ~n a large scale. tbinga or even tboulbt of doing Company offictals saY. the rum them I wouldn't be walking out has turned in a record financjaJ of here today," Douglas said. performance since tbe new "It ls not against the law to take pictures and I certainly did no harm or intend to do any harm to anyone." DoogJas faulted the system that charged him with attempt· ed murder and solicitation to murder as well as his ex- perience In the justice system. All but forgotten as the once accused porno film maker walked from the courtroorr. were the horror stories connect· ed with his arrest last summer. F,....PageAJ LETTERS ..• <such as 'we'>." owners took over. as witnessed by the fact that the $240 million mortgage was paid off within a year by a combination of re- financing of existing assets and income from company projects. But most company observ#!rs generally agree that financial change has come about because of the business decisions made by tbe board of directors, not necessarily because of the cbanf.e of names in the com- pany s roster. Ex-Newport Mayor Added To Riley Staff Former Ne wport Beach Mayor Doreen Marshall was named volunteer executive as· sistant to Orange County Supervisor Thomas Riley. . 'Cha~aCter' BOab f ., • . . Feted in Ne~rt , From a UO-year-old 1all bOat of BuntlltltM ......_ to a sloop dressed out wttb 'n. ._ ~ Club. lbe "Dam• At Sea" to a no.tlDa DMp lb, a··wa~'lild bu•a'.•· bottle of acoteb, the chand.er tered bL*r Bal1aN Bay Clilb. boat.a bad a routlneJy un•~ The y SalW Award, tbe Jl,lrade Sunday in Newport Eye-Tali.ID N~J. •r-• •· Harbor. , . t«'ed bf Paul 1~ ~ ol A chamber of commerce Newport Beaeb. • spokesman eald today that tbe Tbe Bil Toot A1f•~· .)Ile 18th nmntna of the annual evmt Walrus, entered bJ rwmef•eity attracted more boat.a than ever. councUmaD ,._ auNu. The parade was auaed without a theme th1a year. 1Ud- in8 to some unusual entries, in· eluding one prize winner that was a dragon and another that wu a bottle of acokh. Tbe Swav\ea Swab Award for best costumes. RMS Baccarada. entered by Jamie Starnna-' Tb' Cbaracter Boat Bell. tbe HMS Beeearuda .,ala. Tbe Loole Screw Award ror best animation, the Dragon en· Here ll a list of winning en-tered by aH. Kimttan. ri The Twamd Thwart Award t es: tor best bay launch, the Great Sweepstakes Award. the Pleasure. decorated on the theme Dam.es At Sea, entered by the Bahia Corinthian Yacht Club. The Best Decouted ln· dlvtdual, the Just For Laueba. decorated as a bottle of Cutty Sark, entered by Tom Jobnaon F,....PageAJ STRIKE ••• stores in Orange County. said the strike forced a cutback ln noTmal 24-bour-a-day opera· tions. The markets are operating from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. or 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. depending UJ)On loca· lion. officials said. John Lench. spokesman for the Retail Clerks Union, said un· ion negotiators are prepared to meet "round the clock" to help resolve eonlracfllifferences. He described picketing at markets as peaceful • Albertson's spokesmaa Marv Robertson agreed, saying 'prob- lems have been minor, mostly in the area of ·'hurt feelings.'· Lench also predicted some grocery items could become scarce if the strike drags on and Teamsters continue to honor picket lines. Robertson said, however, sup· piles aren't a problem and if Teamsters don't cross picket lines. non -striking store employees can unload merchan- dise. Union spokesmen -said journeymen market clerks eam $3.92 an hour but a.aid relatively few clerks earn journeymen wag~s since many work only part-time. Eacape; entered by David. Williams~ Norco. The Bl(gy Binnacle Award, Natbnaiel Bowditch, entend by Ben C. Deane and Fleet While. Tbe Best KGDterey, Guano Packer, entered by Bill Nielsen and Hank Hill. The Wheel, Steam and Bell Award fOt' steamboats, the Well Stacked, entered by CbanweU O'Connor. The Drippy Stu.ff"mg Box for best wort or tug boat, the Archibald J .. Eley. entered by Jackson Brandt Ill of San Jose. The Oldest Boat, Little Norseman, registered in 1868, entered by Paul Davis of Newport Beach. The decorated boat bell was won by the Pleasure. the entry from the BCYC. Dol/,ar llp, Gof,tf Down LONDON <AP> -The dollar rebounded. sharply on the world's foreign ex- changes today, bµoyed by the Federal Reserve Board'• increase ln the discount rate from 7'1'• to 7144 percent. But dealers aald trading was nervous. They were waiting for the Carter ad· miniltration to do more. The dollar 1ained nearly 4 yen in Tokyo. 2 pfennigs in Frankfurt, nearly 5 c~n­ times in Zurich and Paris and 1 Ure tn Milan. The price ol gold plun1ed in London and Zurich but was still above $205 ·an ounce. Vardoulis also, however, lashes out obliquely al Coun- cilman Agran, whom Var~s privately bas criticlzed for b1s habit of routinely penning letters of congratulation to city resi- dents wt¥> have achieved some sort of accomplishment. Riley, in announcing the ap· pointment today, said Mrs.--------------==========:::::::=-------------- Marshall's experience in public service will make her a valuable Again, the Implication is that there is political gain. Thee ma'°" said there is .. an unwritten ruJe" that letters wrtt. ten at city expense "be confmed to diren respanses to ma'U wa receive and to agreed-upon councU direction. " "In my opinion," VardouUs aald, "either the council should comply with thla unwrltten.,We or we should estabJiab guidelines." • • maraballed their own arguments or haven't beard about tbe problem, To m•ke thin~• easter for "but,. busy (()I' U)') people," the andblUs advise, people could •'=Y cut out the suM ... edtex.t, ueittotbepoatca and slanit. Arent. in favor of the ware /hall, for inltructJon and rehearsal ln dance, drama, mualc anddance, lDcluded: -Tbere is no cultural facility in Irvine. -Tbe cloH·to-tb•·•lr/:rt locatloo Is the only one avaJ able to the rroufe -Noile vel• from aircraft. sounds aren1t a factor because acUviU. .Ul be indoorl. The council meetina be&ina 1\ 7:80 p.m. , asset to bis staff. She wlll work without pay. The volunteer asaistant served 012 the Newll(lrt Beach City Council from 1962 to 19'10 and ~ was ••>:or from 1968 ~970. She atao has serv4!d on the California League* of Cutes' Revenue and Taxation Commit· tee, the NewJ)Ort Beach Plan- ninl Commission and the coun- ty's Citizens Direction Finding Commt&siorr. Mrs. MarabaJJ also served as foreman of the 1971 Orange County Grand Jury. -seue8-- Reported In Newport Newport Beach Jlfesuarcla said they can use the breather •lven them today by decl= surf to reeover trom a wee ruted wtth rescues. But Lt. Logan Lockabey said that at the same time, auardl are watch.ins a storm system off the MexJcan coast that could ~roduc:e l'QOl'e bla comben by ueaday. • It WU the Six· to lO·foot surf that save IUe1uard1 their troubles th1a weekend. Guardl had to rescue 280 people out ot 1 beach crowd ot 6$,000 Saturday and 180 l*!Ple from 1 crowd of I0,000 Sunday. ~ • • 111 ·• fun::tional outdoor VRarby~ • > Solom• fotao.tq a tMated de· bat. lil tounctl ~amben Jut week. .... • A caauna BHcb recyclin1 firm oWMr dw'ltd the city last week With competi.ftl with rree enterpriM dUrinl a di~'-'lllon or 1 oew eonltaet betw~n lhe city and ~ 1'.nvlronmenlal Coallllon of Oran,e co.uilty. toe Tliiat aoa~l Jroup baa been worklnt an conJuncUon with Lapna &tach since April Jm in recycUn1 effort.a in the Art Colony. The joint program has shown a dearee ot success. eapeeially in 1 new procram whereby resi- dents put newspapers al the c\ltb for pickup once a month. The city and coalition netted more than $2,800 in its first year of operation. But John Leensv11rt. who operates D&J Recyclin1 on Laguna Canyon Road. charged $0,000 Clerks Strike By KATHY CLANCY Of .. Oillty l'flet S\llfl Clerks at major supermarkets serving 10 million residents of Orange and eight other Southern California counties stayed off their jobs a second day today. Federal mediators were ex· peeled to meet this afternoon with union and supermarket negotiators in efforts to bring the sides together on wage dif· ferences. Some 55.000 market clerks in the nine-county area went on strike against 15 major chains as stores opened for business Sunday. By the day's end. however, about 5,000 clerks wer~ caJled back to work wben Smith's Food King, Boys Marbt. Arden· Mayfair and Hughes Markets signed interim agreements. ln the meantime. supervisory and non-striking personnel were manning markets affected by the walk-out. '"..,, ......... MOM, SON ENDURE LONG LINE AT CHECKOUT STAND A spokesman for Safeway markets, which bas 16 Orange County markets and 164 in the nine-county area. said operating hours were cut from the normal 9 a.m . to 9 p.m. weeJcday times to 10 a .m. to 7 p.m. • Val Sliva and Danny at a Norco Supermarket Except for a "little confusion" the rirst da) of the strike went smoothly. the spokesman said. 11 Market Chaim Safeway employs 8,800 run. and part•time clerks, he said, and at least 2.000 non-union workers have been hired to help during the strike. Continue Walkout Officials of Albertson's markets, which operate 23 stores in Orange County. said the strike forced a cutback in normal 24-hour·a·day opera- tions. LOS ANGELES CAP) -The f1rst day of a s upermarket clerks walkout affecting 10 million Southern California shoppers ended with four chains breaking ranks and signing in· terim agreements. Eleven other companies dug in by cutting hours and hiring temporary help. Some s.ooo to 6.000 clerks at Boys. Arden-Mayfair. Hughes and Smith's Food King were called in by the Retail Clerks Union after the agreements were si~ed Sumtay . union spokesman John Sperry said. But 'the reS'i of the SS,000 clerks who walked off the job earlier in lhe day at 1,100 stores were expected to remain out pendan1 fUJ"ther-negotiatlons to Coast Night through mad morning low c louds. oth erwise rair through Tuesday. A little cooler. Lows tonight 58 to 64 . Hiehs Tuesday in upper 60s at beaches to upper 70s inland areas. INSIDE TODA 'Y day. said union spokesman Jerry Lench The strike. affecting stores from Bakersfield to the Mexican border. came JUS< as serious food shortages cropped up in some San Francisco Bay Area markets following a month-old strike-lockout involving Teamsters warehousemen. The retail clerks' strike began as stores opened Sunday. The 11 ~upermarket chains still affect· ed by t~ strike are Albertsons. Alpha Beta, Certified Grocers, A. M. Lewis, lucky Stores, Market Bas ket, Ralphs., Safeway, Stater Bros .. Thtif· timart and VoM. "Food wiU still be available to the public." one union spolteaman ~d as the wt:Utout began. "It will Just be harder to find ." A brother and sister were ar. rested by sheriff's deputies in <See STRIKE. Page A2> 200 Witness Brooks Street Surf Chrssic City officials and a crowd or 200 screaming s pectators watched the conclusion of the hastily organized Brooks Street Surfing Classic in Laguna Beach • ..yhile wave riders scorched aix· and et•ht·foot tubes at the popular surfing beach. Winner in the men's finals for the 24th annual contest, the I n .st conaecutivel held surf._ ma~--- ---wana Franlt Bifl!; 22, WtltreWOOd. liftl\lUd"""Wbo .pmered enouah and his sister, VJctona..Porto. 23, points on Saturday to place first. of Hacienda Helghta, were on Second p1ace honors 'Kent to the picket Hoe about 8:40 p.m . Jim Palricota, and a third plice when Bird began harassing win wu recorded for Richard customers who were entering Deal. Fourth place went to Gary and leaving the market, said Lt. Suffia. Don James. In the senior men's finals - Fewer cuswmen Utan u,,uaJ for a Sunday were reported at most atoret. A spot check ot man•een showed some stores hatl cloeed for lack of at.a« and that moet ot thole that remained open were tralnina temporary workers. "Some people MW th• plck«a and ~uat don't want to Cl'Oll the line. ' the mana1er of Ralphs market in HollyWOOd said. ''But a lot ot people stocked up OP groceries early tn the week in anliclpatioo of tbe strike." The walkout Clme several .t>oun after 1 .. t.ditch talks between the union and the Food Employers Council broko down Saturda,y nlJh sarfera between 24 and 29 years old -Lennie Foster. Newport Beach, won ftnt place. Brian Bulkley took .second and Ian Stark placed third. Dtv• Abbott won fourth place tn tbat dlvlak>a. cny recreauon leader Doui Allen laid the turf was a conail· tent auc to eight t• for the con· tut, cmtom·m•de for tbe met>'• and Mnior men•1 dtvtllona, com· prlted ol the better wave rtchra. Several competitors wowed the crowd by taklna oft on perfectly thaped t'lbes. sometimes d111ppearina behind the waU of water, only to reap- pear •t•ln further down the line. The other dM1lons tn the com- pettUon W.re held ~ut month. tbe city tut week with "takliie my tax money and beallna me down with ll." Lffnlvaart has OJ)erated hi• newspaper and aluminum ,. eycUn1 IMlllne6a in town for the p11t live years, working out of an 800-equare-foot warehouse at 1901 Laaune, Canyon Road. The b'tslnessman has stx newspaper ~ion bins scat· tered UlrOUl!Jout the city and 1•11 be collects between 2S and 30 tons ot newsprint a month. He claims the city i.s compet- lna ti•th free eJlterprise. and says \hat in Ulhl of ProposiUon 13. tti• city i6 tettina a raw deal on its recyclina efforts. He fJid he would prefer to see a partnenhip between hJs firm and the city. under wbi~h ~ blllinessrnan.. wouJd provide the tabor without the usista.oce ot federal~ f.uaded emplQyees. ,..I'd Uk~ to worlt wtth the ctty A:lteroooa in taking Uus olt » tax los:. basb ancl putting it on solid f ootana " Leeqsvaart said. . Leensvqrt claim he can pick up · • 10 times the ~mount of pa~r the city p.cks up .. 1itdd1ng that he and two part·Ume employees "move more paper m a month than they Uhe city and the coaUtion1 do in a year ·· But city em,ptoyees say the~ provide ptckup ·:;t:rv1ct: <See aECYCLE. Pa&e A2J . Homes ·Torched In Area Arson invest.agators in Lagunea Beach are hanging up poste~ in the fire-plagued Arch Beach Heights community today. ask· Ing Informants to call if they have information concerning ~ spree or arsons In the hilltop area. Investigators Mike Davis sa1<1 a reward of up to S500 will be of. fered to anyone whG has in· formation leading lo the arrest and conviction of arsonasU: who have torched 10 homes in the · building stage in Arch Beach Heights in the last tour months. "We're working_ through the state's ·w e-Tip ' ptogram in ait a tte mpt to capture our arsonists ... the Lctguna Beach police offi~r said today Posters will be dlspl&yed tbroughout the community and wiU lilt a t.oll·ft~ OWJl"r for -those who have tnConbaUon re· gardlng the al'80"5.' · Callers w lll rem ai n anonymou:;. The to!! rree number is 900-472.nss. The offices of We· Tip are open from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. weekdays and from 9 a.m to S p.m . on Saturdays. ·'Some one up there must have seen something in the past four months, and we 're offering a re· ward for that information. Davis said. * * * Anon Probed lnSe~te Wguna, Fires Pltelaer and Grandpa Laguna Beach pohce and firemen are investigatm~ two fires that occurred within an hour of each other early Sunday morn- ing. pulling fireCighters orr one to extinguish the other Angels' pitcher Nolan Ryan chats with former president and new grandfather Richard M. Nixon at Sunday 's Anaels game at Anaheim Stadium. Nixon sat through the 14·inning game that ended with a l·O Angels victory. Players com.ment about him in Spotts. Page 83. Police ~uspect arson l1\ tne torching of a paclting crate at the rear or the Lippe·Waren crystal glassware shop 3t 30\ Forest Ave. shortly after mad night Sunday Laguna Li/ eguarth Make · 146 'lleBcues They believe someon~ mten· tionally set the crate on fire. Tht- blaze ~corched u rear s tairws-y at the bultdin,, c au111ng an esumated S250 m damage Whale firemen were cleaning up after that fire. the.v were called out to an unoccupied apartment at 641 GleMeyre St .. where ...a clg3reHe was l~ft mloulderin.g in a coudt. Harried Ufesuards were "pu)J. in' swimmers from the water Hke-flsh from the p\er'' a~ South Coast beaches over the weekend, as six· and elght·foot surf slammed the sboreline. Laguna Beach llfecuard tee· liii'Ches perienCed 11 ecs lured out tnto Uie surf line. "We tried to warn swimmers not to go in unless they were wearln,g two swim fins." said CAR RllNS FASI', SBUS FA.STER "l told my car ruter th~ I ever drove tt, and I got exactly what t uked for it." That's the story t.old by a suc· ceasf ul one·Ume car salesman Who put thlS ad In the Dally PUot. "7t L 'rD 4 door. Od llrts brk Gd tran' S600 1 otfr ltlC l(olUUC IC U )'C)U have a car you want to Mii. call '4a·5618. Our (rtendJy •d·viMrl will help you write a be1taell•r Laguna lifeguard supervisor Tom Redwitz. 1'he dty'ntatr ot !O lifeguards watched over 26,000 beachtoers each day this weekend. and responded to 75 rescues ·on Saturday and 41 medical calls The smol<e and nam~ caused an eslfmated $2.000 damage lo the lower i;tory apartml'nt o~ned by Mur~el Moullot of othtt="ll~ 30i00()~~ity -done-~uch firrmrn :ia.t beaches, and anoth~l" 25.000 tod:ry No one wa~ living ln t~ basked in the sun at count~ a partmenr at thf: time: or the beaches over the weekend blaze and firemen do not kno"'1 Li(ef'U&rds pulled 30 'I Wlm who Jett tht' <"rgarettt-1.1n~t mers frotn the water on Satur tended day and another 40 on Sunday "Sunday's surf was sporadic. which was more ctanierous to 'Cliff Fall' swlmmera ... said lifeguard supervisor Ken Casper. 1·The 1urf would 10 down a bit Kill M and people would go out in the 8 an water," he eaid ·'Then it would come up and suck people out to '"•· '' "We were pulllna them out IUte flab from U.. pter " Stale Ufe1uarda. who watch San Clemente State Bench. Doheny. all or Sen Onofr~ atnd the Trestes. said thfy pulled 90 swimmers from be1vy r1pUdes aJon1 state beach.. durln1 the weekepd "They would get about watlt de.p. and then they would ~ drawn otl1hore."' ~•Id llreJulrd Scott&uart LA JOLLA CAP>-A passerby discovered the partly decomposed body of a man who apparently had fallen to has death from a cliff at Black ·s Beach ut Uw Torrey P1nes State Reserveareo1 olfltfal!I said. Deputy COiillY Co~r Sunn Barnett said tile. man had been dt!ad about two day' He Is the second rC('enl\y rePorted lnct· dent ot a person ralllnt to ht11 deuth from cliff• overlook Ina the beuch. she»ald ·' -( RECYCLE ••• thrOU~ t,owll, a beoel\t th.It 1MuYUft cailaOt. and admk· tedly w\U Mt, 'att lnvolvtd in. aolo...-wa .,. ta mtenst.M ln Leenavaart'1 proposal, but added be bas not aeen any fl•uresyet. ,'Thls man <Leensvaart> bu made some statements tbat be will provide the nme .er.See, and Uw It will co.t tbe dty nothln8· rm lnterelt.cl la tbM ropo1AJ." P Solomon utd be ls waltlng for a wrltt.en Pl'OPONl from tbe bull· neaamao Ind' Will provlde c:oun· cit members wtth tbose atatlstlct. "There 61 more tb•n a money con1lderitton here," Solomon added. •'The current program ts an attempt by the federal govern· meat to provide trainlna and ln· crease the job matket for un· employed Americant.'' "lf it can 'WOrk through free enterprt:se, and the same ac· compllshments are forthcoming in terms of employment. then fine.'· Solomon said. , 2 Lagi1nans Headed for a Stldilea Stop ~Id in Dr• Raid Bust Balboa's nasty old Wedge lived up to its earned reputation over the weekend as huge surf provlded challenges for body and boogie board wave riders. Surf er in middle of this wave ia barely ahead of a real wall of wats. Millionaire Faces Mur~r PWt Rap FORT WORTlt, Texas <AP> -Two years to the day after he was charged with murdering his stepdaughter, millionaire T. Cullen Davis was accused of ma s terminding a murder·fOr·hire plot involv.ing a "hit list" of six names, including his estranged wife, his brother and two judges. Davis was arrested Sunday and charged with solicitation or capital murder for allegedly trylnJ to hire a "hit man" to kill District Judge Joe Eidson. who is presiding over the oilman's bitter divorce. He was also charged wlth carrying a prohibited weapon -a plstol with a silencer. District Attome)' Tim Curry said be , will ~mmend today that the 44-y~ar·old Davjs be held Wi'thoot !)(>pd in the Tarrant County Jail. Speaking through his attorneys Sunday, Davis called the charges "some kind or frame or setup." Davis was arrested moments after driving from a nightclub parking lot where police said he met David McCrory, an employee of a firm owned by the Davis famil y. Davis is a partner m KenDavis Industries, a conglomerate that includes Mid-Contlnent OU & Gas Supply. Curry produced an affidavit signed by McCrory, saying that McCrory had several meetings with Davis the past four days ln preparation for the alleged contract killing. After be saw the photo, the sources saJd, Davis produced a manila envelope containing $25.000 in $100 billa. ' Davis, the star defendant in the st.te's longest and coatllest murder trial last year, was acquUted of the Aug. 2, lf'16, shooting death of his 12-year-old stepdaughter. Andrea Wilborn, at the S6 million Davis manaion here. That same night, Davis' estranged wife, Priscilla, 37, was wounded. Her Uve--in lover. Stan Farr, 30. was killed. Gus Gavrel Jr .. 23, a chance visitor to the mansion1 was left partially paraly&ed rrom a bullet in bis spine. New Clerk Assmdted A non ·union supermarket clerk told police a group of striking workers at a Huntington Beach store parking lot pushed and shoved her and Oattened all four tires on her auto as she left work Sunday night. The 6:42 p.m. incident occurred at the Alpha Beta supermarket In the Five Points Shopping Center, police said. Poliei! did not identify th~ woman who said she was harassed by people on the picket line. No formal criminal charges have been filed yet, police said. l ·aguna Hills Man, 83, Dies In Car Crash A Leisure World man is dead and a Laguna Beach woman in critical condition foJJowing a two-car collision in Laguna Hills Sunday. . Dead is Howard Armstrong. 83, of 642 N. Avenida Seville. Laguna Hills. California Highway J>atrol of· rtcers said Armstrong pulled on· to Paseo de Valencia at Avenida Sevilla at 3:20 p.m. and• was struck by a car driven by Debra Huggins of 513 Emerald Bay. Laguna Beach. Paramedics and fire fighters worked more than 15 minutes to ftee llle victims fn:>cn accident wreckage, an Orange County Fite Department spokesman said. Cause of death had not been determined. The Laguna Beach victim was listed as criticaJ but stable this morning by a Mission Commun•· ty Hospital spokesperson. . Bwglm-s Hit LagunaSlwp Burglars used a glass cutter to break into a yogurt shop in Laguna Beach sometime Satur· day night or Sunday morning. taking $600 from a canister hidden in the store. Operators of the Great Pacific Yogurt Company , 154 South Coast Highway, s~id they dis· covered the theft when they ar· rived for work Sunday mornin~. McCrory was wired ror sound by rederal and local authorities during the meetings, officials said. Law enforcement sources told The Associat.e<1 Press that at the Sunday mornmg meeting, McCrory showed Davis a snapshot of Eidson's "body" stuffed ln a car trunk and the judge's driver's license. Eidson. said the sources who asked not lo be identified, agreed to pose for the photo. Sl,200 Rug Gone In Laguna Theft Execution Order Upheld by Court Thieves entered a Laguna Beach home througb an un· ~ 16cked kitcbeti window dver the • weekend. t.ak.iog a Penaan rug from the living room floor. Paul Knoph, of 361 Pearl St., said he returned home to find the Sl.200 naa misslna. DAILY PILOT NEW ORLEANS <AP) -A feileral appeals court refused to· day to block the execution in Florida's electric chair of con· demoed killer John A . Spenkelink of Buena Park. • Supreme Court ruled to be con· stitutional in l~6. Spenkelink was scheduled to be executed last year but his ap· peal canceled the event. with no new date set. -An appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court is expeeted in the legal fight. part o1 a continuinc battle Ni· ...,.,00 81.amed over whether the state hu a ~ right to execute killers. 'l'.be 5th U.S. Circufl Court of 'In T ' G Appeals rejected Spenkellnk's ape 8p claim that anyone tried for Two Laguna Beach residents were arrested by federal narcotics omcers and Laguna Beach police Friday night after officers allegedly found marl· juana and narcotics In the coupte's home. Leslie Ruff, 26, and Estee Ann Bulnik. 25, both of 563 Park Ave .. were arrested on warrants issued by a federal narcotics of· ficer. Police said they found a quan· tity of hashish. marijuana. a blotter substance they believe to be LSD. and some mini-bennies in a search of the home. The pair were charged with possession of marlJuana. possession of concentrated can· nabls, possession of a controlled substance, and cultivation of marijuana. Miss Butnik was released on Sl 000 bail and Ruff was turned o~er lo federal officers and transported to Orange County Jail. STRIKE ••. The markets are operating rrom 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. or 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. depending upon loca· tion. officials said. John Lench. spokesman for the Retail Clerks Union. said un· Ion negotiators are prepared to meet "round the clock" to h~lp resolve contract differences. He described picketing at markets as peaceful. Alberuon's spokesman Marv Robertson agreed, saying prob· lems have been minor. mostly in the area of "hurt feelings." Lench also predicted some grocery items could become scarce if the strike drags on and Teamsters continue to honor picket lines. Robertson said, however. SUP· plies aren't a problem and if Teamsters don 't cross picket lines. non ·strlking s tore employees can unload merchan· dise. . U nion s pokes men said journeymen market clerks earn $:>.92 an hour but said relatively rew clerks earn journeymen wages since many work only part-time. " . murder ii enUUed to have some WASHINGTON <AP> -Leon jurors who would rejed the Jaworski, the former Watergate ,deat~altx,noJ.Datter wbal the__..._!'# «a~~~=~~~~=a:;~~~~~ ctlme. .for.me I Also ujeet.ect :wu ~ "clefenH the-~ PP-In -&-tap& clalm that FloTfda's death madcr three days-after the penalty Is racially applied Wateraate break-in. a,.cauae most people on death Jaworski. lntervlewed in Sun· row, bJackt or white, were con· day's Parade magazine. said, demned for killlng whites. "Nixon was the individual most "After coaaiderinl eacih of \he likely to have erased the 18~ petitlonen• contentions and ftnd. minutes" ol the June 20, 1972. Ing them to be without merit." tape. tbe appeals court said, ••we up-The recording contained a bold the dlstrlct court jud1· eonveraation between Nbon and ment." former Attorney General John On the racial isaue, the ap-Mitchell. peals court said tbat Spenkellnk'a on expert witness t.eatlfled •'be found no •vtdence of tnteotklaal or purpo1efw dis· crlmlnation." A• to the arcument that Florida'• llMthod of exeeuUon is torturoua anC! wantonly cruel. the 5th Circutt said tbe U .S. SupNWM OcMan bu already de· cldH that the e1~trtc chair la conatU.utlonal. ' Florida '1 death penalty law was one of three which the U.S. • • 4 MosleDl8 Slain KUALA LUMPUR, Malayala <AP> -About 10 Indian Hindus hacked rour youna Malay Moslems to death and wounded another one seriously when they cau1ht the Moslem• br .. klna statues in a Hindu tempi• at Kerlln1. 3S miles north of Kuala Lumpur, government sources reported today . ~ ,. By GUY GMNVILLS .................. ~ Orance County'• aeuatioul a;naff movte cue ended allMlt In a whimper today wberi Pred ~ Doullu of Colt& ..... pleaded ftD C(lnte3t to a •inale .char&e ~ IOlk:Wna wault with adeadi1~ · CMlfyNll .......... PLEADS NO CONTEST Fred Bene Douet•• 280 Rescues Reported In Newport Newpo. rt Beactalifeguards said they can use• breather given them today by declining surf to recover from a weekend filled with~ues. . But Lt. Lo&an Lockabey said that at the same time. guards are watching a storm system off the Mex.lean coast that could produce more big combers /'Y Taesday. It was the six· to lO·foot surf that gave lifeguards their troubles this weekend. Guards had to rescue 280 people out of a ~ach crowd of 65.000 Saturday and 189 people from a crowd or 80.000 Sunday Saturday. a Pomona man. z4.year-0ld Terrence Tenove, drowned in the surf off 14th Street. Saturday. Lifeguard Greg YuJts cut bis hand severely while rescuing a swimmer at 44th Street. Another auard. Marc Degan. suffered a similar injury during a mass rescue off 18th Street. Lockabey said no 'other in· juries were reported on Sunday nor were there any major rescues Sunday. Dolku Up, Gold Down LONDON cAP> -The dollar rebounded sharply on tbe world's foreign ex· changes today. buoyed by the Fede ral Reserve Board's increase in the discount rate from 7114 to 7 :i,-• percent. But dealers said trading was nervous. They were waltlng for the Carter ad· ministration to do more. The dollar gained nearly 4 yen In Tokyo. 2 pfennigs in Frankfurt. nearly 5 cen· times In Zurich and Parts and 7 lire In Milan. The price of gold plunged In London and Zurich but was still above $205 an ·ounce. .. Tbe., ...... meanttbat Douclaa DeWatf' d.med DOI' ad· mlued ln~na to aoUctt a •· uull WlU\ a deeclly •MPOG· on anotbw ,.,_, 'l"be plea mo pManl that COit· splracy en6 murdel' tolleitadon charces asainlt Doug.lu 1""ft dt.amlased and hb lecaod trial on those cbataes ended before ttt>egan. With that plea, slate charges that Doq1u hauled two un· derco~er polfcewoa1en totbe des· ert in Jutx tm to fil4:n their tonun. mW"dlr and diamember· ment ftDlput tb&wlndow. And Doualas, who lpent foqr months ln ;an before post.inc $100,0QO, was a free men. When accepting the burly Costa Mesa man's aullty plea. Judge Muon F.atoo cave bim credit for the four months aerved In Jail and plaoed him on three yea.rs probation. When acei!pting the no contest plea, Judge Fenton said be would make a finding of guUty b.Sed on the testimony and evidence in the Douglas trlaJ that ended with a bung verdict. Judge Feot.on said he could not know if Douglas truly ln· tended to harm the women and predicted any Jury that would hear the case could not reach a unanimous decision. Judge Fenton said the ftrSt trial cast an estimated $30.000 and tb' state $bould be spared a similar expense In a QH prob. ably beyond a jury's collective ability to reach a decision. Judge trenton also said Douglas must see a psychiatrist in connection with bis probation. For the 51.year-old furniture refinisher the guilty plea waa a vindication of sorts. Earlier t.bil year an Orange County Superior Court Jury was unable at the end of a six-week trial to decide whether or not he intended to murder the police women be took to tbe desert for the tum sequence. "tr I bad done any or those things or even thought of doing them l wouldn't be waiklng out of here today." Douglas said. ''It is not. against the law to take pictures and t certainly did no harm or intend to do any harm to anyone ... Douglas faulted the system that charged him with attempt· ed murder and solicitation to murde r as well as his ex perience in the justice system. All but forgotten as the once accused porno film maker walked from the courtroon. were the horror stories connect· ed with his arrest last summer. Those stories included tales of his intention lo force the police women to pose for lesbian bond· age type pictures and to e.nd the picture taking session wtth their murder and dismember· ,ment. The arTeSl of Douglas led to a massive desert search for what \aw enforcement officials believe were prior victims burled in the Yucca Valley area. .. ' ••'' ,,\,.. furrlional outdoor W<IA.rby~ shown is our li~hta.r ~i~ht poplin with cotton t1Jrtan 1inlaj • ay KA'IRY CLANCY ..................... Clerks at ~ aupermarteta servltlc 10 mlllioa ralftnts of Oranae and eiahl other Southern California counties stayed off Lhtir jobs a second day tod~. Federal mediators were ex· peeled to meet this afternoon with union and supermarket ne~ot.lators in efforts to bring the tldee ~r on wa1e dlf· terences . Some 55.090 marlet c&erb in the nl~c:ounty area went on 1trike qabllt 15 major chains as stores opened for bu.siness SuQday. By the day's end, however. about 5,000 clerks were called back to work when Smith's Food King. Boys Market, Arden· ~tit VP Rntgaiag Irvine Compaliy •. Managers SM/fled By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of ... o.lly ...... SUH It was more than a year ago that the Irvine Co. was sold to its current owners. Since then, eight members of the company's top management have left the development firm. alon' with an unknown number of middle management and staff members. Frank Hughes became the sixth vice president to end his Irvine Co. career when he gave hi~ resignation to company President Peter Kremer more than a week ago. As have the other departed members of the corporate leadership, ffulbe• H),'11 h '• leaving to go into the develop. ment business with an indepen· dent flJ'm. The first departures were an- nounced ln June 1977 at the Ume of the takeover by the new owners. Raymond Watson, Tom Wolff and Lansing Eberling re· signed their respective posts as president and executive vice president to set up their own de· velopment company. About a month later. Douglas Gfeller, vice president or the company's residential division. announced he was leaving to go to work for a residential de· velopment company. He was followed in October by Albert Auer. vice president of the commercial division. and Willlam R. Watt, vice president of the multi-family division. Watt and Auer also formed their own company. At the time of Watt's de· parture, Hughes was president of the company's homebuilding subsidiary, Irvine Pacific. A month after Watt and Auer left. Hughes' vice president at Irvine Pacific, Ken Agld, an· nounced his resignation. Hughes was made vice pres1· dent of the residential division. which encompassed the multi· family division. At that time. Kremer said the company ex· peeled to phase out Irvine Pacific and "get the Irvine Co. out of the homebuilding busi· ness." That decision has been re· v.oked__ but..J.he COIDPllDUM no appointed chief for the sub· sidiary. Warren James, who served as <See STAFF, Page AZ> Coast erwtse a 1\lescJay-:-A ~coo et. • Lows tonight 58 to 64. Hiabs Tuesday in upper 60s at beaches to upper 70s inland areas. INSIDE TOD" 't' Neoer o quarrel haa marred 79 )leOra of ma~ Jor Noah and MOTJI Ba~. ~ thourgli Noah'1 mochn /tJGred. it IOOUld not km. Sn Page 84. .... a -2 "' .. ..... .. .. ~ M 469 Rescues ' ~ported In Newport Newport Beach lifeguards said they can use the breather given them today by declining surf to recover Crom a weekend filled with rescues. But Lt. Logan Lockabey said that at the same time, guards are watching a storm system off the Mexican coast that could produce more big combers by Tuesday. <Relatedslory,A3> It was the six· to 10-foot surf that gave lifeguards their troubles this weekend. Guards had to rescue 28Q ~pie out of a beach crow o ~tuntay and 189 people from a crowd of 80,000 Sunday. Saturday, a Pomona · man, 24·year-o1Jt Terrence Tenove, drowned In the surf off 14th Street. Saturday, Lifeguard Greg. Fults cut his hand severely whlle rescuing a swimmer at 44tb Street. Another guard, Marc Degan, suffered a similar injury during a mass rescue off 18th Street. said no otber in· C4R RUNS FAST, SDLS FASI'ER "I sold my car f uter than l ever dr<we It, and I got exactly what I asked for it.'' That's the story told by 1 •UC· ceasful one-Ume car salesman who put th1a ad ln the Daily Pilot: '71 LTD ' door. Gd Ures brks. Gd trina. S600 t offr X ICll • X lOUt If you have a car.you want lo sen. call 64.2-5818. Our Mendly ad·vlaen wUI tielp you ,rrite a beat seller. Mayfalr and Hughes Markets aiped interim a~ment.a. In \he meaf\Ume. supervisory and non·strildng personnel were maMln& mark.,ts affected by tbe walk-out. A 'Spokesman for Safeway markets, wbjch has 16 Oranae County tnarkets and 164 in the nine-county area. said operatine houn were cut from the norfnal 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. weekday times to 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Except for a ·•uwe confusion" the first day of the strike went smoothly, the spokesman said. Safeway employs 8,800 full· and part-time clerks. he said, and al lea.st 2,000 non-union workers have been hired to help during the strike. Officials of Albertson's markets, whJch operate 23 stores in Orange County. said the strike forced a cutback in nor mal 24·bour-a·day opera· lions. The markets are operating from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. or 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. depending upon loca· lion. offtclals said. John Uncb, spokesman for the Retail Clerks Union, !IBld un· ion negotiators are prepared to meet "round the clock" to help resolve contract differences. He described picketing at markets as ~ceful. Albertson s spokesman Marv Robert19n agreed, saying prob- lems have been minor, mosUy in tbe area or "hurt feelings." Lench also predicted some gTecery ifema could become scartt \I the ltrtllt .... on a~ Teaspsten cootinue to. honor picket lines., Robe,-., said, however. sup- plies aren't a problem and if Teams\ers don't cross picket lines, non -strikln·g store employees can unload merchan· dise. --... Union spokesmen s ald journeymen market clerks earn $G.92 an hour but said relatively few clerks earn journeymen wages slnce many work only part·time. Panel Kills Carpenter's Police Bill SACRAMENTO <AP > -An Assembly eommittee has kiUed a bill by State Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter, R·Newport Beach, that would have made it harder for criminal defendants who claim police brutality to see police files. The bill, SB 1436. which had the backing or law enforcement. was defeated by the Assembly Criminal Justice Committee on a 3·4 vote. Law enforcement groups saitl it would have protected officers from relatively unrestricted searches through police files, whic!h may contain unproven ac· (usations brutali . S-ut opponents sa current restrictions are adequate and contended the bill would have niade ll practically impossible to get ~ ~rds of officers• past conduct in order to substan· tiate a claim of sell-defense. The measure would have tightened tbe law on .. dis· covery," thepn)cedGre by whieh defendants can obtain evidence held by the prosecution. Under law1 a person who c:laim1 aelf-deren.se to a charge er an :pen;ouel -lihs to see there Js a=llistory"ibf bl'utE!ty. - under certain condit.Jonl. The defendant mut persuade a judge that the information ls needed for the defenae and can· not be obtained elsewhere, and that those needs outweigh the public aeency's ln\erest in keep- ing the rues secret. Carpenter'• blll would have required the defendant to list. in addition, the full <ktalll of the records souaht. and sbow tbat the mes were actually held by the agency admiulble aa evidence ind relevant to the ~ase. Other pro\'l1lons said only complaints tn the taal thret yean could be obtai~1 and di.- covery would be llmli.a to cuet of at••h on 1 peace orncer or dt.o('derly conduct. ~Ell.Braeters' Parade . 18th Running of Newport ~ve'JL 'Biggest' From a 110-year-old sail boat to a sloop dressed out with "Dames At Sea" to a floating bottle of scotch, the character boats had a routinely unusual parade Sunday In Newport Harbor. A chamber of commerce spokesman said today that the 18th runmo, or it.be annual event attracted more boats than ever. The parade was s taged without a theme thls year. lead- ing to some unusual entries, in· eluding one prize winner that was a dragon and another that was a bottle of scotch. Here is a list or winning en· tries: . Sweepstakes t\ward. the Pl,....,,. •• ~t• on th &bente Dflmts At Sea, entered by the Betita Corlnthlan Yacht Ctub. Ti:'e" Best Decorated ln· dlvtdual. tbe Just For Laughs, decorated. as a bottle of Cutty S~rk, entered by Tom Johnson of llYntington Beach. The Best Decorated Club. the Deep Six, a ~ and barge en- tered by the 8;llboa Bay Club. The Saky Sailor Award. the Eye·Talian Navy. a gondola en· tered by Paul J. Magnone of Newport Beach. The Blg Toot Award. the Walrus, entered by former city councilman Pete Barrett. The Swaviest Swab Award for best costumes, HMS Baccaruda. entered by Jamie Starling. The Character Boat Bell. the HMS Baccaruda again. The Loose Screw Award for best animation, the Dragon en· tered by R.H. Kimball. The Twarted Thwart Award for best bay launch. the Great Escape. entered by David Williams of Norco. The Bilgy Binnacle Award. Nathnaiel Bowditch, entered by Ben C. Deane and Fleet White. The Best Monterey. Guano Packer. entered by BilJ Nielsen LA TUQUE. Quebec <AP>-A "'·Ytar·old nJabt·club enter· t.alH~ last oontJ'QI ol a 1~·fO()t boa ~ ln hls act. IOd the ~ ttraDcled blm bet<>tt ,, . . A.H.1 KIMBALL, WON ·ANIMATION AWARD FOR' DRAGON • Bea•t Was. One of 80 Boen fn Boet Parade and Hank Hill. The Wheel, Steam an<t Bell Award for steamboats, the Welt Stack'ed. entered by Cbanwell O'Connor. ' The Drippy Stuffing Box for best work or tug boat. the Archibald J . Eley. entered by Jackson Brandt l1l of San Jose. The Oldes t Boat. Little Norseman. registered in 1868, entered by Pau\ Davis or Newport Beach. The decorated boat bell was won by the Pleasure. the entry from the BCYC of Monuut. ..He .eemed to miu a rd1ex . aad the boa wrapped around hj~ neck ... uld Oaetan Grenon. the manaaer ol tbe club. Balboa's nasty oJd Wed1e lived up to ita earned reputation over the weekend as huge surf provided cha,,llenges for body and boogie boa.rd wave riders. Surfer in niiddle of this wave is barely ahead of a real wall of wat~r. Former Newport Mayor Appointed •• ,, DMfr ............ Ra&.EY VOLUNTEER OorMn M9fstlall Mesa Woman Found Dead In Jacuzzi Former Newport ·Beach Mayor Doreen Marshall was named volmrteer execuUve as· eutant to Orange County Supervilot Tbomu Riley. Riley, in announdng the ap- pot ntment today, said Mrs. llaraball'a experience in public service wlll make her a valuable aa1et to his staff. She will work without pay. The vob.mteer assistant served on the Newport Beach City Council from 1962 to 1970 and was m&)U'from 1988to1970. She also bu served on the California League of Clties · Revenue and Tuatlon Commit· . tee, the Newport Beach Plan· niDI CommiaP>o and tbe COUil· _ ty'a .Citi_.. Direction Finding Commislion. Mn. Manball also served as foreman of the 1971 Oranke County Grand Jury. She add ber husband, Robert, live on Lido I.ale and have been Newport Beach residents for 25 years. p,....p~AJ STAFF ••• Irvine Pacific vice president un- der Hupes, will be actiq presi- dent until a new president is selected. A 60-year·old Costa Mesa Thi company, bo•ever, im· woman was found dead early mediately replaced Hughes . at this morning at the bottom of a the corporate level, appolntlng a 100-degree jacuzzi at the Hunt· former associate of Kremer lngton Beach home ol frieocfl. irom •Newhall Land and Fann· Nancv Fetterlin.,., of 2024 ingtotbetopspotintberesiden- ., e tial division. f>halarope Court, was found at In addition to all the de· 12:20 a.m. today in a wooden jacuzzi at 8462 Oak.stone Circle, partures, the company has Huntington Beach. Residents at taken on a vice in-esident to head the Oabtooe address were not a newly.created governmental relations department. identified. Robert Shelton, who has been Police reports indicate the a governmental relations consul- woman may have died of a heart tant for the' past seven years. atlack after entering the bot joins the corporate staff that in· water. Police a\sO indicated she eludes Thomas Nielsen, Hughes' had been drinking heavily. replacement in residential ; Millionaire Held in Death Plot FORT WORTH. Texas CAPl -Two years to the day after he was charged with murderiol bis stepdaughter, millioaatre T. Cullen Davia was accused of masterminding a murder-for.hire plot involvtna a "bit list" of six names, including his estranged wife, bis brother and two judges. Davis was arrested Sunday and charged with solicitation of capital murder for allegedly trying to hire a "bit man" to kill District Judge Joe Eidson, who is presiding over tbe oilman's bitter divorce. He was also charged wilb cJartYin" a prohibited weapon -~ pistol with a silencer. ~ District Attorney Ti Curry said he 'MU recommen · today that the 44.year·old Davls be held without bond l.n the Tarrant County Jail. • Spe aking through his attorneys Sunday, Davia called the charges "some. kind of frame or setup." Davis was arrested moments after driving from a nightclub parking lot where police said he met David McCrory. an employee of a firm owned by the Davis family. Davts is a partner in KenDavis Industries, a conglomerate that includes Mid-Continent OU & Oas SuppJy. Curry produced an affidavit signed by McCrory. saying that McCrory bad several meetings with Davis the past four days in preparation for the alleged contract killlng. But Orange County Coroner Richard Reese, wbo beads plan- officiall u.id today they ba~e Dini; Tom Wllck, who beads .. ~.~ death as a pouible public attain; Richard Cannon, McCrory was wired for sound by federal and locitl authorities during the meetin1s. officials said. Law 'hforcement sources told The .Associated Prep that at the Sunday morning meeting, McCrory showed Davia a snapshot of Eidson's "body" stuf(ed In a car trunk and the judge's driver's license. Eidson. said the sources who asked not to be Identified, agreed to pose for the photo. wuuoe· wbo la in ~of_jbe_eom· ---l\a-"aUt .., .... scheduled few """ merclir "Uil 1Ddillltlir cllvllloftr;::---=--,.... today; Funeral services for ~ ...Fred Keller"" huctotqrtculture, Ylctlm arelM"""ni. and• Warren Pis. ~ charge o1. ' finaJl~. ~ Japanese ~arade Tbe overall effect of tbe cor· •p .. -... p_orate lhufOe, in terms ot Ute LOS ANGELES (n > --c'ompany's opet"atlon, hasn't 85.000 people turned out to watch the 36th annual Nisei Week been noticeable on a larie scale. ..parade in UWe Tokyo. police Company offidals saf tbe ftrm wd. . baa turned in a record financial OU.NMCOMT performance since the new ownen took over, as witnessed by tbe bet that the $M0 million ~~~P.lllB ... paid off wttb.ln. DAILY PILOT ~~!!5Sa5~5!!5~~~~~~::i- lnCollse fi'OID eompany proJedl. ............ ~-........ w.-.-.--.=.= ....... .......... .... ., .... 0 • .,,., ..... Q .............. .... . 'Cliff Fall' LA JOLLA <AP}-A paaMrby d!a~overed the partl1· deeompokid bod7 of a mad who apparently bad f~n to bis death from a elift at 8Jack'1 Bneh in tllii Torrey Plnel State Reeerve sea, olftciala said. ~ Oountr Corafter Suan Bamett tatd the man bad been dead about two daya. Newport Beach police con- tinued tbe1r iDvestl••tJoD today of the robbe.ry ol '82 from two YOUDI West Newport residents. TM t.o vidima, agea 8 and 1. told police the ~. who ap- peared to be between the .,. of 18 and .. forced them to head oier--tbeir cai(i:rricfay ri"eaing bl tbe ~lotoftbe ~ center at West Coast HiY aad Balboa Boulevard. The bon said they bad been ln the mmbt buyfna caDd1 and U..1 ... tM IUlpect tbeN bay • ,_.lee. " 'Jb91 Mid tMt .... tMJ -to die ~ Jot; tbe mu ac-cotted tbelD ......... tWr moae1. Tbe ~d tried to run • ...,. but tM man ea..Ot hlm, kaoelth11 blm to tlle ;round. At that poin~ two cblldren banded ovet mone)' and \Htchecl tbe robber get into a van .tth two other men ancl drive away. Firemen Suspended VERNON <AP> -A total ot 10 Vernon ftreftOte.n n have been IUSPfnded t.ndeftnltel1 after fall• in& to report for work, Cd ol· nclat. predict that atx more will rouow tult by todlY. ., • LOS ANGSltJ:S <A'l>, - Police betlew a Hlf.employed bookk~ acculed of di.sap-. peutnr With wzr .oo& ,niltakenly credited to hit but account 1ave-~ of the money to' a prison lnmate from c.ta Meaa who ta aecMt<d of bHm, t.111 to ~ni&Mmme. t. , .... IWMiif ., the e.,.. ~ 1'1cl . .-t ward A. Ztlber, ft. ~ is aervlna a 6'11-year term at Terminal laland. received aome of the money. ZUer was conYkt.ed ol coa· fpirtnC to b'1t tb8 Aladdin Rot.el in Lu Veps out CIC $250.AIOO in gambling chips and for stock and mall fraud schemes in N~ York a.ndSan Diego. Some of 1Alber'a eodefeDdants in U.O. eaeea have .,.... UMed to or••nbed tttme ti1ares, Reisdorf Mid. . Zuber may have ~ oae ol a doaen or so people ~rou1h whom tbla boott~. ~y•r· old Arne Ramon Jll*>I ol West Covina. MlegedJy laundered the wtndfaP tbat ••J m~enly eredtfed to bis }M'nonal ebeck· tng aecount Jastlfay. Zuber was named last spring in Attorney General· Evelle Youngers list -of CaUfornlans wttb ties to orpnbed crime. Batik auU1oritlu sald die clerleal erTOI' was not deteeted until last week. By that time. all but about $1,100 ol the money bad been withdrawn. A warrant for investl&ation of felony ll'llDd theft bu ~ is· sued fOr rustol. -~ho po,Uce believe may have left the state and posa\bly tbe eountry. In· ·vestigators. have requ~ Rs· sistance from ~l •. the in· ternattoaal I•• epfor~erpent agency. . The Sec~ and 2xebange eo121m1sslan.hu mo ~ c;atied into' tbe case because of uo.ooo in payments from Ristol's ac· count for stoctJ putthasea. D011,ar Up, Gol,dDmm LONOON CAP) -'Die llollar relMlmcW ·UarPiY on the world'• foreip es· ~~:n\ri::i,v, ~~rf:~ Board's illcrede tn t.be discount rlle from 7\41 to 1% pel'tellt. . But deaJen said tradiD1 was nervoua. They w...e waiting for the Carter ad· ministration to do more. The dollar gaJued nearly 4 yen In Tokyo, 2 pfennigs in Frankfurt, near)y 5 ~­ times in Zurich and Paris and 7 lire in Milan. The price of gold plunged in London and Zurltb but- was sWl above $205 an ounce. 81,000 Vase Taken In Newport' Theft New~ort. Ceqtei: Uw,1er George Rodda Jt .• )au ..reported the theft. of an antique orleiut vase valued at,aooo. RQdda, who SQt"iea ,on, t.be Coast Community College Dis· trict Board of trustees. iaid the eight-inch carved mUkstone vase was stoten from \ii oUlees at 810 NewPort Center Drive sometime between Wedoaday and Saturday. TOPEKA. Kan. (AP)·-John Mari• d NewM't 'BMcb i.s on his way to-N• York City after l>edalliDe across tbe mid-point of hla trna·continental route Su.nda1 · Marino. who nacb~ Topeka durbtg ~ se.venth day of bis trip, is tr7tn1 tD beat a record of 13 days. six fte>urs and 20 minutes set by Paut Conlilb of Tuatln In im on the 3,000.mlle Mite from-Santa Monica to New York City.· Marino bu been avera&ing 240 miles a day. but will have to increase his average to 280 miles if be wants to meet bis toal of ~aching New York City Hau· in Udays. He was met In Topeka by Mayor~ llc:Cormick, who l'Ode a <bike a Sbolt cllstan~ with Marino and aave h1m a medaJ. -c&. L ·turd HB1ts1 Art Th~ft ~ · SAN FRANCISCO <APl -A U\tle bit of m\llcle and a aecuri-tY guard'• quick trtg1er tmger •'opped a '~l~·lookln1 art~ tlienrom ste more than $1 QJUllon I.a palntlncs hon) the M.H. ~ YOUDJC MUleUID. Security guard W'Hllam Blackwell, 50, told police he ar· rived at work Friday night just a8 an ~haven apan in sneakers was teacl\lnl tor Uiree valuable paintings -!lem brandt 's "Portrait of a Rar:.bi," Jan Bru~gbel's "Vase· d. Flowers" and Franz Pourbus' ... Abrabm Grauohas." Poflce discovered later that the gun·totma. wo\lld·be thief bad ordeNd two other 1uard9 in- to the men'a room where ~Y were bound and 1agaed. But Blackwell relused to follow suit. He knocked the aun from the crook ·a band and fired his own .32-caliber platol at the fleeing man. ,, • "It is not against the law to take pictures and t certainly did no harm or intend to do any harm to anyone." Douglas taulted the system that charged him with attempt- ed murder and solicitation to murder as well as his ex- perience in the justice syste~ All but forgotten as the once accused porno film maker tvalked from the courtroon: .Vere the horror stories connect· eel with bls arrest last summer. Those stories included tales of his intent.ion to force tile police women to pose for lesbian bond- a1e type pictures and to end the picture taking session with their murder and dismember· ment. The arrest of Douglas led to a massive desert search for what law enforcement officials believe were prior victfms buried in the Yucca Valley area. ~.-at WlifanlUt1. ··We'll be rwomlMildlnc that the Board ol ~n Mop( a wrH~ cQde,• eot&nl)' rtcre•· Ooo f"lll'•nw manactr Larry Leamu Hid. ..They could. howt\'91'. ructa U.. coricluaion that dl&nat feel for dtfterent patu.,. w.uw .. T .. • eouaty &nvtronmental Maaa1e1Mnt Aaency official wUI pnllllelll lhe park-fee pro· 50,000 ClerkS· OIU · poaal to auJ)tJ"Vllon ln two to rourwffks. Th' tee issue Involves Crown Vallev Park ln La•una Ntgu~~ Alicia Park in Mluton Vlejo ano Rossmoor Park ln Los Alamitos. •'The Roesmoor residents . . . want park maintenance paid totally out of county service area funds," Leaman aaid. But ~idents in MiaslM Viejo and Laguna Niguel bave backed ::~u~~ltet Strike . . . Enters S~Cond Day .... ~ MOM, SON ENDURE.LONG LINE AT CHECKOUT STAND V•I Sflva and Danny at a Norco Supermarket 11 Market Chaim Continue Walkout By KAntV CLANCY Of 11i1t D.tll.-l>llet SIMI Clerks at maJor supermarkets ser~ing 10 million residents of Orange and eight other Southern California counties stayed off their jobs a second day today. Federal medjators were ex · pected to meet this afternoon with union and supermarket negotiators in efforts to bring Ute sides together on wage dif· ferences. Some 55,000 market clerks in the nine-county area went on strike against 15 major chains as stores opened for business Sunday. By the day's end. however. about S.000 clerks were called back to work when Smlth's Foo4- King. Boys Markel, Arden· Mayfair and l(uahes Markets signed interim agreements. In the meantime. supervisory and non-striking personnel were manning markets affected by the walk-out. A spokesman for Safeway markets. which has 16 Orange County markets and 164 in the nine-county area. said operating hours were cut from the normal 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. weekday times to 10 a.m. to 7 p.m . Except for a "little confusion" the first day of the strike went smoothly, the spokesman said. Safeway employs 8,800 full · und part-lime clerks. he sajd, arid al least 2.000 non-union "'orkers have been hired to help during the strike Offic ials of Albertson's markets, which operate 23 stores in Orange County, said tht-strike forced a cutback in no rma l 24 -hour-a-day opera- tions. The markets are operating from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. or 10 a.m. to 7 p. m. depending upon loca- tion, officials said. John Lench. spokesman for the Retail Clerks Union. said un- ion negotiators are prepared to meet' "round the clock" to help resolve contract differences. LOS ANGELES IAPl -The llrst day of a supermarket clerks walkout affecting 10 n'lillion Southern California chain& breaking ranks and signing in- terim agreements. Eleven other companies du~ in by cutting · hours and hiring temporary pending further negotiations lo· day, said union s pokesman Jerry l.A!flch. The strike. affecting stores fJ'om-B auralield. to tbe Mexican border, came just as seriOus food shortages cropped up In some San. Francisco Bay Area • markets 1oUawtng :a month-old · s trike-lockout i nvolving Teamsten warehousemen. He described picketing at markets as peaceful. Albert.son's spokesman Marv Robertson agreed, saying prob- lems have been minor. mostly ~eaeL''hMd Ces'inas.·· help.· · Some 5,000 to 6,000 clerks at Boys. Arden-Mayfair, Hughes a11d Smith's Food King were called in by the Retail Clerks Union after the agreements were signed Sunday. union spokesman John Sperry said. ; But the rest of the 55,000 clerks who walked off the job New Clerk A&smdted A non -union s upermarket clerk told police a aroup of striking workers at a H\D'ltington Beach alore parkln1 lot pushed a nd shoved her and flattened alJ four tires on her auto as she left work ~ay night. The 8:42 p.m. incident occurred at the Alpha Beta su~nnarket in tbe Five Pointf Sbopplnt Center, poUce .aald. • Police did not ldentlty the woman ~ uld she was baralse.d ~~le on the picktt line. No 1fdQnal crlmtnal cbargea hav~ been filed )'el. poUc aald. The retail c:lerks' strike began as stores opened Sunday. The 11 supe:-market chains still affect- ed by the strike are Albert.sons, Alpha Beta, Certified Grocers, A.M. Lewis, Lucky Stores. Mark e t Basket, ·Ralphs., Safeway, Stater Bros., Thrif· .., ¥U .. -•?'lkeeman said aslhe watk(Kl{ b<'g:.an. ' It w!ll just be harder to find .'' A brother ar.d slste, were ar- rested . y 'beritf's depuues m Whltth~.-1 ... -i'lg picketlnf s~·"'· <1ay eve tilln clL a Stater drcs. market. F·runk ~1rJ, :?2, Qf LaJrcwood, and h '' si.n~r. Vu.tn"'fl s>orto. 23, rcle;.: •• !-'tights, -.ere ~ the pick<" l.me aoout htO p.m. •.vhen 8: d 1'egan bun1ln1 customer wh'> wet~ entering :1nd leaviJ.~ the market, sa!d Lt. Dt., James. Fewer ~:>met!! thaa usual for a &a .iay w.,re reported at mut Ito:-.,. A •pot cheek of mauasel'l' abo\JI~ some atores bad clc .. t ..i tor !nck of 1tafr and that molt of tboee that re1ma1.ned open •ere trainlnt temporary workerJ, "lt lJOlta Ukt lt wlll bo a lont a&rtkc," aald Kenneth Edwams or Lo. Aqeles Lotal '770 .. .......... Deadline.Set ... Friday for 'Miss Viejo' Friday ls the deadUne for sub- mittln applications for the first VJ' Mission Vie Auoc at1on. The Sept. 4 contest ls rest.net· ed to lake association members bet ween the ages or 14 and 20. Arpucations are available ln the (lS&Oclat.ion office. a spokesman said.· Contestants are to be scored by a paner or aeven Jud1es on polse. talent and verbal response to random current event.a questions. A $100 scholarship; an ex· penae-pald. two·day trip to Magi~ Mountain and Dlaneyland for two and a S200 alft certl/lcate are amon1 the awards. a spokesman said. At 1 p. m. on Sept. I , lake llte1uard1 are to compete tn event• designed to teat their pbyslcaJ ntneu and abllily to handle emer1eoclet. Alao IC.heduled ate a three-d•> li1bin1 derby, beach sames,· kayak races for children and a saJUn1re1atta \, '"' rOf' r1cUlt.y me and two 1roupe, M1Aion Viejo's Parks and Recreatfon Committee and Youth Athletic CoordinaUna Counell. have supported fees for sports ftt)d PreJ>aration. such as ebalklne hue lines and provtd- t.nc umpires. "Tuesday we asked the board tof supervlloni> to accept volun· teer servtces." Leaman said. "They were .a little bit uncom· tortab~ wtlh tbe propocat Ud aaked. ua to eome back after further atucl)'." The proposal superv1sors balked •t involvH an ad- ministratOr .t.o would schedule 1port.1 game5 .. al Alic:ia Par~ and provide field preparalioct if re- quested. "They <auperviaors > were a little hesitant about a private ln· dlvidual making money ore a Afteraoea N.Y. Stoeks cow.ty t ty." l.eunan Aid • The Altc'ie. .Park ad · ioinlatrator'a tal•~>' would be paid tJriulh field pre~ration '~'· . "We're tryin1 lo draw i. ' I t parallel betWeen this situation and a. ~ reception where .-caterer would come into i. .. county-owned comm\folty center." Leaman said. (See FEES. Pace AU Oelty ~ Mllff ~ LAKE 'PAYS OFF' FOR MISSION VIEJO COMPANY'S RESIDENTIAL SUBDIVISION Waterlront Lota Bring S7 MllllOn Whll• L•k• Only Coat S6.5 Miiiion Viejo Lake Proves ·Sil11nd Investment .. By n;aay CLAUSEN °' .. o.ii., ...... ,..., Lake Mluioo Viejo. carved in the Oso Creek Valley that once remained dry most o( each year. is more than the largest recrea· tional lake in Orange County. It's a money maker for the Mission Viejo Co .. an investment on the way to paying for itself. A company spokes man an· nounced this week that four custom-built homes under con· structlon on the lake's western !Shore have been sold for approx· imately $2 million. The least expensive went for $425,000. The most expensive for $600,000. The cluster contains the first single-family residences -except for company president Philip Reilly's -to rise at water's edge. The homes are built in Mission Viejo ·s exclusive Tres Vistas subdivision. The subdivision 's other 59 custom-home lots were auc- tioned on June 24 for $7 .534,500. Lake construction cost the company approximately St l million. said Jim Hewitt, direc· tor ot business planning and re· search. "Because water orientation is s o unique i n Southern CallComia." said Hewitt. "the lake has a favorable impact on t~~ "But to what extent it will in· nuence values in future years is unknown 4l~d will depend on future eeonornic conditions and other available housing on the Orange County market." So ap~aling Is waterfront recreational living that nearly 300 prospective buyers ~athered before the auctioner's podium to bid for the Tres Vistas custom home sit.es. PotenUat buyers bad inquired about the lots for months before W1n11tng bids for the lots. tanging in size from 5.732 lo l•.280 square Ceet, were between SM,000 and $196,000. Though protected by walls and a gu.rded entrance, Tres Vistas can't oe considered secluded. To the notth. t.Mmhouses are rising from aoother p('lvate beach up the hill toward Marguerite Parkway. Across the lake. Tres Vistas owners· will see hundreds or con· domi.niums making up the Ftnislerra subdivision. whose units sell ror around s100.ooo. Hewitt said t he lake con· dominiums sell for no more than comparable units In other parts of Orange County but that he believes the lake's proximity has doubled the sales rate While lakefront subdivisions were not a part of Mission Viejo Co. ·s original master plan. com- pany orficials began talking seriously about the benefits of water in the late 1960s . "Ev~ though we were sue cessful. we believed we needed a focal point," said G H Lodder. senior vice president. Marketing studies supported that decision. concluding \hat water-oriented living has strong appeal. Most of the l .2 billion tzallons of water that s ubsequently flowed into the lake conatructed tween r from the olorado River. fSee LAKE, ,-age A2> Viejo Driver Jailed After Hit and Run -:u~~~~~~~~-~ So keen was interest. he sild. drtvbf¥wtd~~ that the company didn't bother Police alle~ be drove over 3 to advertise the auction. . ped~strian tn a crosswalk late rrtday. CAR RlJNS FASf, SEUS FASTER "1 sold my car raster than I 'ever drove ti, and 1 got exacUy what 1 uked for It." Tbat'a lhe-story told by 8 SUC· ce11fut one-tJme car salesman ..tho put this a& \he Daily PUot: '7t LTD -' door Gd tires brks. Gd 1rau . se o o 1 ~1rr :c '"' '"""' It you have a car you want to sell, till 142·5671 Our frtendly f ~d·V1lef'I wm b Ip you wrtt• a tiepJ S!J!ft. Listed In fair condition at the hotplUIJ is Milford Gibson, 65. 22802 La Quinta Drlve, who al· legedly ttruck a car at Jeronimo Road and Montilla, Mission Vie· jo . bounced olf a nd hit ~destrlan Dennis Newman. 26, of 23591 Marsala St .. La1una Hills. California Highway Patrol of· flcers •aid .ntneaaes saw Gibtoo drive from the scene of the 7·40 p. m. incident, chased b1Dl tn another CU'. atopptd blrri and held him for otflcen. Newman la rep0rted in a&able condltloct at Mlsaion Comm\lnlty Ho..pltal with a broken let and possible lnttrnal lnJurtea. of - ricer• laid. OlbaM'• bail wa• tel at 12,500, a Jail spokesman eakt \hls cnon'I· lnt. Man, 83, Sireeumbs In Crash A Leisure World man L.; dead and a Laguna Beach woman in critical condition following a two-car collisjon in Laguna Hill!' Sund av Dead is Howard Armstrong. 83. of 642 N. Avenlda Seville, Laguna Hills . California Highway Patrol or f1c ers said Armstron{i! pulled on· lo Paseo de Valencia at Avenida Sevilla at 3·20 pm ~nd was struck by a car dnven by Debra Hutlgins of 513 Emerald Bay. Laguna Beach. Paramedics and fire fighters worked more than JS minutes to free the victims from accident wreckage. an Orange County Fire Department spokesman said. Cause or death had not been determined. The Laguna Beach victim wa:. li sted as cnhcal but stable tlui. morning by u Mission Commun: ty Hospital spokes~rson . ~7 .. 000 Repaid AT LANT A 'A p ) -s~n· Herman T3lmad{i!e. D Ga . whose financial dealints ha\tfl months, has sent a c eek for mo re fha n S37 .000 •.o \ht> secretary Of the-Sen~ as reim- bursement tor excess fundR col· lected by hl21 office. it was an· nounced today Coast mor ; ITf! J lTW t !Otrd5. othtrwlf'e fiur through Tuesday. A litth-to0ler. Lows ton11tht S8 to 64 H1ghll Tuesday in upper 60s at beaches to uppe~ 70s inland areas. IN8JDE TODA 'W LA TUQOE, Quebee fAP> -A 25-year.oJd oJ•bt-elub enter· Lalner at coaau of a 7~foot boa comtrictor ID hia act. and the ao.aU stranaled bim before an audimce of 150 people. Jean-Guy Leclair, wbo performed under the name of Grand Melvin, died Sunday at Club La'l\Qloia, 130 miles north ofllontrem. ··ne seemed to IPiH a Niies, and tbe boa wrapped around 1Ua neck," aald Geetan Grenon, the manager oft.be club. When Leclair sot blue in the face. Greooo said be caUed the police. As be and four police officers strugaled with the snake, Grenon cut olt its head with a to lie. .. It's waan't a pleasant th1na to have to do, but I bad little cboice." be said ... Untortunate- Jy, Le Grand Melvin was aJready dead.'' Leclair, who llved ln Mon- treal, wore a vampire's black cape and fangs during bis act, walked on broken glass and pierced his skin with nails. Nixon Blamed In Tape Gap WASHINGTON <AP> -Leon Jaworski, the former Watergate special prosecutor, thinks former President Nixon caused the 18'h·minule aap in a tape made three days after the Watergate break·ln. J aworski. interviewed in Sun· day's Parade magazine. said , "Nixon was the individual most likely to have erased the 181h minutes" of the June 20, 1972, tape. \ The recording contained a conversation between Nixon and former Attorney General John Mitchell 4 M08lems Slain KUALA LUMPUR. Malaysia IAP> -About 10 Indian Hindus hacke d four young Ma lay M091 ems lo death and wounded another one seriously when they caught the Moslems breaking statues in a Hindu temple at Kerling. 35 miles north of Kuala Lumpur. government sources reported today. Pitcher and Graadpa Angels' pitcher Nolan Ryan chats with former president and new grandfather Richard M. Nixon at Sunday's Angels game at Anaheim Stadium. Nixon sat t~rough the 14-inning game that ended with a 1·0 Angels v1ctory. Players comment about him in Sports. Page 83 Froa.PageAJ FEES ASKED. .. The user will then have the choice between being on bl• bwn or contracting with someone else to do it I prepare the field )." A •p<>keeman for Mission Vie· Jo's parks committee aaid com munity organized sports lea1ues support the concept of a park ad - ministrator and are willing to pay preparation fees. Leaman said Mission Viejo is the only commuuily so far seek- mg an administrator who would be paid from preparation fees. Fees would be paid at the Municipal Advisory Council of- fice. Al Crown Valley Park. located on Crown Valley Parkway west of La Paz Road, fees would be paid and facilities reserved through a county park ranger at the facility. Fees at Crown Valley Park, if approved by supervisors. would range from $3 a day for picnic shelters to S160 per softball season for diamond use. S wimming at the Laguna Niguel facility would coat. 25 cents for children under 14 and 50 cents for adults. Baseball field use would be $3 an hour without lights, SS with li&ht.s. In Mission Viejo's Alicia Park, • • located al Coronel Drive and 'AU.cia Parkway, fees would be figured on a per-acre hourly basis. The area designation evolved because a soccer/football field overlaps the lwo baseball diamonds. Fees for the soccer field, for example. would be $3 an hour. If only one softball diamond is used, the fee would be $1.SO an hour. if the other diamond can be used simultaneously. Users would pay for electrici· ty charges. Rossmoor Park. located off Los Alamitos Boulevard near Katella Avenue. 1'as no proposed fees. The three parks are scheduled to open within the next two months. Eight So/,ons Vi.sit Hanoi WASHINGTON <AP> -A suburban prosecutor decided today not to file erlmlnal charae-aaalnlt former White House dru1 adviser P•ter Bourne for wrltlo.1 a prescription with a flcUUoua name. Paul Ebert, Ute prosecutor in Prince William County. Va., where an attempt. waa made to fill the prncrfpt.lon, Hid, ''I don't think. vtrllnla law applies to a dt\11 violation outa1de the state." tn Waabtnaton, Carl Rauh. speaklna for the U.S. Attome.Y'S office. aald, "We orltinally deferred to Virginia autborttles to decide whether to prosecute or not lo this case. Theyrve made their deciilQn and as far as this offlce la concerned. that's the end of the matter." Bourne qult July 20 as President Carter's chief adviser on drug abuse just 38 hours alter public dlsclosuFe that Bourne had given a prescription for the much-abused sedative Quaalude to Ellen J. Metsky, ht. uslstant ln lbe White House. To keep secret the fact that the emotionally troubled aide wa s getting the powerful sleep-inducing drug. Bourne wrote the flctittous name. "Sarah Brown." instead of Metsky's name on the lS·tablet prescription when he issued it July 7. Four days later. Metsky 's friend and former roommate. Toby M. Long, 26. was arrested near her job in Prince William County and charged with trying to till the prescription. Ms. • Metsky said later she had not had enough time to fill the prescription In Washington and had asked Ms. Long to rm it as a favor. Ebert said that based on interviews with Bourne. Met.sky a nd Long, he concluded that '"Bourne had no knowledge that the prescript ion was to be passed in Virginia." He said that the police had given polygraph -or so-called lie detector -tests to the two women and found no evidence of any similar prescription being passed by Bourne either in Prince William County or in W ashinl(ton. The prosecutor explained in a telephone interview that he considered cha rging Bourne with a conspiracy outside of Virginia to violate Virginia law Dollar Vp, (;old Down LONDON <AP> -The dollar rebounded sharply on the world's foreign ex- changes today. buoyed by the Fede ral Reserve Board's increase In the discount rate from 714 to 7~ percent. But dealers said trading was nervous. They were waiting for the Carter ad- ministration to do more. Laguna Lifeguards ake 146 Rescue HANOI. Vietnam <AP ) Eight U.S. congressmen. the largest such grour to visit this Communist capita since the late 1950s. new into Hanoi today and were welcomed by Vietnamese officials who said the mission "wm open up a new stage in re- lations between our two coun· tries.·• Rep. G. V. Montgomery. D- ~lllliiiT."=, lfte"'lmfer '-of ~delep; lion, said the trip could help smooth out U.S.-Vietnamese re- The dollar gaiped nearly 4 yen in Tokyo. 2 pfennigs in Frankfurt. nearly 5 cen· times in Zurich and Paris and 7 lire in Miian. The price of gold plunged In London and Zurich but was still above $205 an ounce. Harried lifef(uards were "'pull·· ing swimatel's from lhe water like flab (rom the pler" al South Coast beaches over the weekend. as six· and eight-foot surf slammed the shoreline. Laguna Beach lifeguard rec- ords showed 146 rescues on city beaches Sunday, mosUy of unex· ORA'9QaCOAIT SI DAILY PILOT perienced swhnmers who ven· lured 01,lt into the surf line. "We tried to w·am swimmers not to go in unless they were wearing two swim ~." said Laguna lifeguard s upervisor Tom Redwtll. ~~~!~;· c~t m~ke policy or negotiate bul we come with open minds and we will take back what we learn to the president and the Congress.'· Montgomery told Phaa Hien. Vietnam's vice foreign minister. The city's staff of 50 lifeguards watched over 26,000 beachgoers each day this weekend, and responded to 75 rescues on $.ltwda_y and 41 m_ed ___ ic_a_l_c_a_ll_s _ _.,,..~..,-~_. ........ ., ------1--oye.t:;t.bi~ikii~~ ~:;..,;;:....;::;;;::;,.=:;:..=--=========:..=:::.--==-.s=..-==..:.a:=== -Sft Qenrenhi! Jif.,,uanl:i Hid 30,000 vilitQra •wanned lb ell>' beacbea, and another 25,GQO basked tn the l\lft at count.y beaches over tbe weekend. Lifeguards pulled 30 swtm· mera from tbe water on Satur· day and another 40 oo SUnday. "Sunday'• surf waa sporadic. which was more daoteroa ta swlmmer1," Hid llfeauard •uP,:rvis« Ken Cupet. 'The IQl'f would 10 dbwn a blt. and people would go oat in. the water,'' he said. "Then tt wOuld colhe up and suck people out to sea." "We were pullin1 them out Uke fiah from tbe pier.:· State IJfel\W'ds. wtto watch San Clemente State:~ 8Hch1 Doheny, all of San Onofre ana the Trest.est. aald they puJle4. 90 •wtmmen rrom be&vY ripUdes along atate beachel durlq the weekend. "They would 1et about wa.tst deep. and thefl they would be drawn o(fabore." said lifesu&rd Scott~- RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil CAP> -The Bra:tilian govern· ment has banned as "immoral" the local translation of the Hite Report, a survey of the candid views or American women on sexual satisfaction. and ordered pdllce to leite tbe book from bookstores. Tbe book lopped tbe best- teller list here for weeks and was in its third print.ln1. Ju1ttce Mlnl1ter Armando ll'alcao 5ld,cl it "runs counter to l90d bebavk>I' ltandarda .•• Gu Injures 37 NORnt LJTrLE ROCK , Ark. <AP) -A lOO·PoUQd can,ster of chlorine exploded lD a tralh can durlna a toftball 1ame Sunday nicht, and the re1ulUna c'®d ol toxlc au sent 17 peopfe to area hoapltala, police aaid. (' o.lly "'"' ........... PLEADS NO CONTEST F...ct 8erre Douglas $fi(JO Reward Offered in Laguna Anon Arson investigators in Laguna Beach are ban&fng up posters in the fire-plagued Arch Beach Heights community today. ask· ing informants to call If they have infennation concerning a spree of arsons in the hilltop area. Investigators Mike Davis said a reward of up to $500 wUl be of. fered to anyone who bas in· formation leading to the arrest and conviction of arsonists who havle torched 10 bomes in the building stage in Arch Beach Heights in the last four months. "We're working through the state's 'We·Tip' program in 8n attempt to capture our arsonistS." the Laguna Beach police officer said toda)'. Posters will be displayed t~ U>e comm®n)' and wtU tist a toU-fTee number for those who have lrtformation re· gardlng the arsons. Callers will remain anonymous. The toll free number is 800-472·~· The offic~ of We-Tip are open from 9 a.m. ro 9 p.m. weekdays and from 9 •.m to 5 p.m. on Saturdays. "Some one up there must have seen something in the past four months. and we're offering a re· ward for that information." Davissaid. 'Cliff Fall' . Kills Man LA JOLLA <AP>-A passerby di scovered t h e p artl y decomposed body of a man who apparently had fallen to his death from a cliff at Black's Beach in the Torrey Pines State Reserve area. officials said. Deputy County Coroner Susan Barnett said the man had been dead about two days. He is the second recently reported inci · dent or a person falling to his death from cliffs overlooking the beach. she said. ,. By GAit)' GllANVnis otllllltO..., ........ Oraqe CowU.y'a Mmllticnal uurt movie cue eDlled ahDalt ID a wblmper today whea Fred Berre Doqlu of Coat. Mfll& ple1de4 no CGQtest to a sm,le cbu1e <If eolicltln& aaaawt wllb a de•db' weapon. The no contest plea meant that Douclu neither dented' aor ad· mitted INMdina to soil.cit aa •· ..Wt wi&b a deadb weQOD on aoothef person. Ttie plea allo meant that tUI· splracy and murder soUcitatioo cbar1a a1a1.nst Do~u were dlsmlMed and hb setond trial on thole cbarges ended before ftbesan. With that plea, state charees that Douglas hauled two un· dercover Pol~women to tbe des- ert In J~ 11'11 to mso their torture. murder and dismember· ment went out the window. And Douglas, who spent four months in jail before posUng $100,000. wu a free man. When accepttna tbe burly Costa Mesa m~s guilty plea. Judge Mason Fenton gave him credit for the four months served in jail and plated blm on three years probation. Wh4!0 acceJ)tin8 the no contest plea, Judge Fenton said he would make a finding or guilty based on the testimony and evidence in the Douglas trial that ended with a hung verdict. Judge Fenton said he could not know if Douglas truly lo- t.ended to harm the wonren and predicted any jury that would bear the case could not reach a unanimous decision. • Judge Fenton said the tint trial cost an estimated $30,000 and the state should be spared a. similar expense in a case prob· ably beyond a Jury's coUectlve abiUtytoreach a decision. Judge Yenton also s aid Douglas must see a psychiatrist in connection with his probation. For the 51-year-old furniture refinisher the guilty plea was a vindication of aorta. Earlier this year an Orange Count)' SUperior Court jury WN unable at the end of a six-week tdal to decide whether or not be' intended to murder the pollc& women he took to the desert tor the film sequence. "If 1 had done any of those -\ things or even thought of doing them I wouldn't be walking out of here today." Douglas said. "It is not against the law to take pictures and I certainly did no harm or intend to do any harm to anyone." Douglas faulted the system that charged him with attempt· ed murder and solicitation to murder as well as his ex- perience in the justice system. All but forgotten as tbe once accused porno film maker walked from the courtroon: were the horror stories connect- ed with his arrest last summer Those stories included tales of his intention to force the police women to pose for lesbian bond· age type pictures and to end the picture taking session with their murder and dismember· ment. The arrest of Douglas led to a massive ~rt search for what l aw enforcement orficials believe we re prior victims buried in the Yucca Valley area. .. fun:tional outdoor wrmreyl1'itl shown is our li~ht<tr ~iqht poplin with cot.ton Uirt..en 1iniaj. • 1Wty ..... 149ft....._ IT COST ALMOST $5 MIWON TO BUILD THE BLIMP HANGARS FOR MARINE BASE IN 1942 Structure, Shown Here Under Construction, la 300 Feet Wide And More Then 1,000 FHt Long Sixth Resigning lroine Company Managers Shit/fled Irvine Pacific. Ken Agid, an. nounced his resignation. Hughes was mad4t vice presi- dent or the residential division~ which encompassed the multi· family division. Al that time, Kremer said the company ex- pected to phase out Irvine Pacl{k and "get the Irvine Co. out of the homebuilding busi· ness." That decision h as been re· voked but the company has no Averts CrtU1h PALMDALE <AP)- A runaway boxcar loaded with salt cakes careened through 18 mlles of tracks here ~fore a rescuer jumped aboard and pulled the brake, aberiff'a dep-. utlea said. Deputy Lynn Cliffton said the Southern Pacific Transportation Co. boxcar started rollln1 Sunday afternoon from lta depot and eoattDued for 2S mlnut-. aJowiDc at tbe Loa bo";1~ea-Kem Coun· ties . At tbat potnt, Clifton a.aid, an Wlldentlfied man cUmbed aboard the, car and ap'phd ~brake. ~~ who is ln cbarae ot the cbm· mercW and industrial division: Fred Keller, bead of agriculture, and Warren Fllt. ln charge of finance. The overall eff.ct of the cor- porate abuffle, in terms ot the company'• operation. hasn't been noticeable on a large scale. Company officials •ax tbe Orm has turned in a record financial performance since the new owners took over. as witneaed by the fact that the $240 • mllllon mortaaae was pald off wlthlli a year by a combination ~ re- financlna of exJatina ...ets and income rrom company projecta. But moat com(>an7 obaervera aenerally qree that financial cbanae hu come about beeauae ot the bUiineu ded1lon1 made by the bo&rd ot di.red.ors, not nece11arlly because of the c nae ot nama bi the com- Y '1 l"Olter. • Boat-car ·Visits Catalina Freeway Skid A motorcytllst who feU and skidded 300 feet on the Garden Grove Freeway late Thursday ntaht died Sunday in Palm Harbor Hospital. A coroner's investigator idea· tllled the victim as Robert Flgonl, 20, of 8M N. Harbor • Blvd., Anaheim. Acc!Ord.inl to ao accident re- port. Flaoni w.aa drlvlna bl• motorcycle eat on the f\'eeway near Euclid Avenue ln Garden Grove at 10 p.m. 'lbund.,-whea tbe mototeycle went out ot con- trol and aptUed Ft.IC>Oi oo tM freeway. He reportedly skidded JOO feet alon1 the 'pavement and wH Uken to Palm Harbor Hotpttal ln crlUcal ~. He died of. lnjudea abOrtly after 9 a.m. Sun· clay. The huge blimp hangars at Orange County's U.S. Marine Corps Air Station, Helicopter, wlll be dedicated as national his· toric landmarks in a ceremony Tuesday at~ a .m. The IJ&bter Than Air hangars were bWit in 1942 {or blimps as part of' the anti-submarine etrort in World Wac JI., Since then, the · Marines have used the spa.dous- structures fo( storage and repair of militMy craft. One ol the large Tu&tin build- ings has been used peti9dicaUy to moor the Goodyear blimp for repairs. A host of local i<>Vemment dignitaries and Milrine Corpe of· flciaJs will be OD band for the ceremonies, which will also in- c I u de the hangars' design engineers. Ttie two buildinas. each ne.arly 300 feet wide and more than l,000 feet Jong, C08t nearly $5 million to build. They were dedicatedonSept.1.1942. The hangars were home for Navy blimps that patrolled the Soutbem California shoreline during the war. The giant craft were familiar sights all alone Southern California as they plodded to and from their track· ing missions over the Pacific. The war ended and L'I'A main· talned a housekeeper role for several yean. serving principal· Hilda Hubbard, 83, of 2804 W. 1st St .. Santa Ana, died early lo· day after being struck by a car late Sunday night. According to Santa Ana police, Mrs. Hubbard was crossing 1st Street ih the 2900 block when hit by a car driven by a 19-year-old man. The car's driver was not cited. The woman died In Palm Harbor Hospital at 2:30 a .m .. the coroner's report said. BELGRADE. Yugoslavia (AP> -President Joslp Broz Tito. 86, • and Chat rm an Hua Kuo-feru;e embraced in front or the presidential palace today as the Chinese Communist Party chieftain arrived from Romania. Jy as a \fabling base for Navy Reserve \Jnits. It was officially decommissl«led in 1949. But ttlen came Korea and the dawning of a new type of warfare .....:. vertical assault, the Marine Corps called it. It meant the use of helicopters in combat. The rugged. mountainous ter· rain near the air facility pro- vided excellent training for helicopter pilots and crews. The base 's proximity to Camp Pendleton helped develop and train the ground troops that went with the vertical assault warfare principle. Development of the principle. begun in Korea, came into its own in Vietnam. and LTA in tandem with the Marine Corps Air Station El Toro housed a total of 3,000 men attached to seven different SQuadrons used to train in and maintain the hell copters. ·Coast Crash Kills County .Woma-.i, 20 A Santa Ana woman died ear· ly today less than half an hour after the car she was driving slammed into a light pole on North El Camino Real in San Clemente. Linda Lea Fain. 20. who is also known as Linda Lea Smith. of 412 North Baker St.. Santa Ana. died at San Clemente General Hospital shortly after 1 a.m. of injuries suffered in the single-car accident. Her passenger. Linda Lee Al· lison. 23. or Tustin. was ap· parentlv not seriouslv injured in the crash, which occurred shortly before 12:30 a.m. in the 1500 block of El Camino Real. Police Sgt. Craig Steckler said the vehicle mig_bt have been traveling in excess of 55 miles per hour in the 35 mph zone when the crash occurred. "She left 240 feet of skid marks before hitting the pole." Sgt. SteclcJer said. Her passenger was treated at San Clemente General and then transferred to the base hospital at Camp Pendleton where her husband is stationed. She was reported in satisfac· tory condition by hospital or. ficials in San Clemente. Carpenter Cop Bill Defeated SACRAMENTO CAP> -An Assembly committee has killed a bill by State Sen. Dennis E. Carpenter. R-Newport Beach. that would have made it harder ror criminal defendants who claim police brutality to see police files. The bill. SB 1436. which had the backing of law enforcement. was defeated by the Assembly Criminal Justice Committee on a 3·4 vote. Law enforcement groups said It would have f)f'Otected officers from relatively urlrestricted searches through police files. which may contain unproven ac· cusatloru; of brutality. But opponents said current restrictions are adequate and contended the bill would have made It practically impossible to get needed records of officers' past conduct in order lo substan· liate a claim of self-defense. The measure would have tightened the law on "dis· covecy. · · the procedure by which detendant.s can obtain evidence held by the ptooecution. Under law, a person who claims self-defense to a charge or assauJting a poli~ officer can inspect portions of the officer's personnel files to see whether there is a history of brutality. under certain conditions. The defendant must persuade a Judge that the information is needed for the defense and can· not be obtained elsewhere, and that those needs outweigh the public agency's interest in keep. ing the flies secret. Carpenter's bill would have required the defendant to list, in addition. the run details of th~ records sought, and show that the files were actually held by the agency, admissible a s evidence and relevant to the case. Opponents said those reslric· tions would virtually have limit· ed defendants to the information they already had. Other provisions said only complaints in the last three years could be obtained, and dis· covery would be limited to cases of assault on a peace officer or disorder!} conduct. • fmn our OOys da.pt. back-to-school with Opoeeanpulftc ~r.9tl. ~ hewaiiBn shirts in the sof't.e.at 100~ cotton sat<i<m. aseortlld colors. siZ<ZS S-20 SOMB80DY BAD IAftED to Ralpb that I WU skulltiQI around back tberi. He came to Mn• me a ddUed oe1Ht0t alua ol Wbi9. ad teemed to vastly enjoy tbe fact that hi'd caqht aw. J'W DMdlicb, beiq at the Monarch Bay Club was almotl DD ret...., to the scene of the crime. He 10t hit 1 with bla lDlamouA partina ticket j1.11t a st.one's throw away at Salt Creek Beach. But be vowed he'd legally parked for lhe aovemor's visit. Brown's chief of secur· ity, a plainclothes state policeman, arrived back with the pots Jnd pans, in· quiring as to bow many ways there were to get into the beach clubhouse? Only three: By land, sea or air, if you bad a parachute. TUE GOVERNOR WAS late. The 1 .-• 1athertog began to gaUier, lhe band UQllnil struck up and the dinner courses began to move ooe alter another out of the catering truck and through the kitchen to the Democratic Faithful out front. A young man in shirtsleeves arrived in the kitchen and sat down to chat about Orange County housing problems. He identified himself as Dr. Andrew Safir, the gov· emor's director of economic policy, planning and re· search. Why be was doing bis research in the kitchen at a $1,000 a plate affair is unclear. But be seemed to be a nice enough chap. THE GOVERNOR WAS still late. The caterers were poised to serve the chocolate mousse when,~abruptly the band struck up, "California Here I Come." ' The guest of honor had arrived. Brown's driver, a California Highway Patrol veteran or 16 years chasing speeders, dropped back to the kitchen to visit. He explained his theory as to why the CHP doesn't really need radar. "We catch 'em anyway,•• be no~. . The only moment of possible panic came to the cater· ing service when the governor ordered dinner. The cry came to the kitchen: "THE GOVERNOR WANTS a plate or noodles; the governor wants a plate of noodles!·· Then, like a culinary miracle. six plates of noodles poured forth from the catering truck. The governor bad come late but he stayed late too huddled with Diedrich and Orange County's Dick O'Nelli and the Democratic Faithful. I'm sure their conversation was interesting. We did pretty well in the kitchen. too. 'Terrible Blunder' Cited in Chess BAGUIO• CITY. Philippines <AP> -World chess champion Anatoly Karpov took a commanding 3·1 lead over challenger Viktor Korc~oi with two stunning wins in one day. . The boyish·looking 27·year-old Soviet cba~pion won the ad· 1ourn~ ~h and 14th games Sunday ib less than three hours of pl_ay. gJVUlg him ha tr the six games he needs to retain his title and wm the $350,000 first-prize money. KO&alNOI. A 47·YEAR·OLD Soviet defector who lives in Switzerland, bad time trouble on the 13th game that forced him in· to what British grandmaster Michael Stean called "a terrible blunder." He conceded the 14th game after only 45 minutes of play. The 15th game is scheduled for Tuesday. Before the 13th game adjourned Thursday night, Korchnoi had taken 40 minutes to decide on his sealed 41st move with which play was to resume. This left him only 20 minutes to make his next 15 moves, and after his 52nd move be had only four minutes to make four criticaJ plays. TEL AVIV. llrMI (AP> -Israeli planes attachd two P1leM""•n ~rt lri Ltbanoli M d1q today la :retallaUoD few a PahltlDI•• aneade 8nCI tubmacti.bM·PD attack OD an Israeli alrllae bul 18 LGA· doll llu &ban at houra before. TM PaltltlDI Liberation OrPGbation "Id thret Plfltllal wwe kUltd IM 14 w.re wowided (n - tM lii'iiiU llttack oo Cite 8urj el The llr..U air force struck laraJMlt NftMIM -eamtt ~ • the back at daybreak . .-... tldi:i''of Betrut. · n.·eom· "As a~ to the terrorilt m~ &Ill vW.,e achool attack OD Ei Al bua ln Loll· IA De~. mu.i.u&boftbe don. larMU aircraft attacbd Lebel,ll!lt earttal· aliO .. at· two l•aortat .,.... ln LebaDOll .&aokei, bu tltere were no this ~ ... an laraell arm)' eaaualtlee there. spokaman Mid. IN NS LONDON b\il attack • an flll'atll airline stewardess and one of tbe Palestlnlaa attackers were killed, and two e>ther atewardesses and seven Btitisb bystanders were wounded. One of tbe lnJured stewardesses was In critical condition. Shah Foes Blamed in F iital Fire TEHRAN, Iran CAP> -The government blamed opponents of Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi's reform1 for the arson fire that killed at least 377 persons in a movie theater in southwestern Iranian city, and the local police chief reported JO suspecg ba~e been arrested. An Iranian newspaper, ln an unconfirmed report, said 430 died in ~ ~turday night blaze in Abadan, an oll·refinery city. The paper, Ettelaat. cl,Umed 728 tickets had been sold for the show. It 'did not explain tbe dis· crepancy between the number killed and the number or tlc)(ets sold. The paper said only 200 or the badly burned bodies have been identified so far. OFFICIALS SAID the toll stood at m ~Wed and 10 in· Jured. They saJd 20 to 40 persons escaped without inj~. Cinema Rex, in a working. class section of the 'eity. was showing a Persian·la.nguage film and no Americans were believed among the victims. Gen. Reza Razmi. the Abadan police chief, said "anli·reform radicals" splashed gasoline around the outside of the theater and set it aflame. He named no particular group but said "pro· vocative elements. and those who wear different masks to fight the Iranian revolution were responsible." Two jeta ltraled and rocketed • tbe NfUiee camp, a stroqbold of Dr. Georae llabaab•s Popular Front for tbe Liberation of Palestine. anct three otben bit Damour. witneues reported. PALE8TINIAN SPOKBS•EN ln Beirut claJmed antl·aircraft fire blt one of the raiders. but the Israeli spokesmen said all , plan~a returned safely. Palestinian sources said Vaaaer Arafat. the chief of the Palestine lJberatlon Or1aniza. tion. ordered all civilians to evacuate refu1ee camps and other areas tnbablted mosUY by Palestinians. It was the second time this month that the Israeli air force retaliated within hours for a Palestinian attack on Israeli civilians. A guerrilla base in southern Lebanon· was hit on Aug. 3 after a bomb explosion in a Tel Aviv market killed a 71· year-old man and wounded 49 people. A splinter offshoot Crom Habasb's organization, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine-Special Operations, claimed responsibility for the al· tack in London's swank Mayfair district. the first by Arab ter· rorists against Israelis in the British capital. FOUR MEN OPENED fire as the bus carrying 21 El Al person. nel puUed up outside the Europa Hotel, where the airline's crews stay during London stopovers. Les Pearton, 37, who was hav· ing a noon drink at the crowded Barley Mow tavern next door. reported: "Suddenly a shower of bullets came throu,h the win· dow. They went down the line of bottles behind the bar llke a scene from the Wild West. Everyone dived onto the noor." The injured Included drinkers sitting at tables outside the tavern. The firing lasted two minutes. • lllllnilng Again! President C~er won't even tell his hometown 'folks in Plains. Ga,.. hlS plans for 1980. but he showed his run. n~ng fo~m m a softball game there this weekend. He and has f anuly then headed to Idaho. .. Police Re-enact ' Kennedy Shooting DALLAS CAP> -Dealey Plaza was sealed orr and empty. No crowds packed the sidewalks. No motorcade sped along the streets. Then gunshots crackled. from a rifle and· a p1stol. bullets slam· ming into sandbags as police marksmen positioned in lbe old Tex· as School Book Depository and on the nearby "grassy knoll" helped acoustics experts investigate the 1963 killing of President John F. Kennedy. THE RE·ENACl'MENT project was ordered by the House Select Committee on Assassinations after the recent re· examination of a police recording. The recording. made accidentally during the assassination when an \al.Identified motorcycle officer's microphone stuck in the "open·· position, seemed to indicate that four shots were fired. The Warren Commission report claimed Lee Harvey Oswald. acting alone. fired three shots Into the presidential motorcade. Ex· perts generally agree that a fourth shot would mean another gun· man was involved. The Warren Commission had the motorcycle officer's tape during its investigation, but police spokesman Bob Shaw said it was only "recently" that the possible fourth shot was identified. "f can only guess that the reason might be because they didn't have the technology until recently ... Shaw said. AN ftALIAN &IFLE SDlllAll to the Mannlicher·Carcano that the Wal'l'eD Commission said Oswald used to shoot Kennedy spat out the first shot at 7: 10 a.m. The round struck one of three piles of sandbags placed at the approximate positions where Ken· - nedy was hit. · More shots followed from a sixth.floor wmdow from where Oswald is said to have fired. OTHER THEATER fires in recent weeks have been blamed on ultra·conservat.ive Moslem fanatics who oppose the shah's reform programs and demand that all public entertainment be shut down during ttie religious holiday now in progress\ The police chief said several of those arrested were carrying explosives when they were picked up. H e said two employees of the movie house were among the suspects, and the owner also was arrested ror "negligence," because to save money be did not heed police in· structlons to hire more atten· dants and guards. IN A IND TRUST DEED 1 Alt the country's major re· ligious leaders except one issued condemnations of the massacre. D What are the risks? D What yield can I expect ·above 100/o? D What about liquidity? Much of Nation Basks Complete answers to these and any other questions by a team of professionals. We are limiting our discussions to only 20 people enabling you to become fully educated in Trust Deed investments. HI Le Pc• II •s " 7J u •l ., 71 .. 41 IS .. ts 7t ..u n st ., 1t 7' • 71 SS ,. st Mil " • 5' t • Be our guest for. wine, cheese,. and ref re&hments. ·--...._ __ Wednelday. Auguat 23 from 4 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. -=-· -V91Ht ~ ilFahJOfAjlincJ. N.Wpe)rt Beech · Thuract.y, Auguat 24.trom 7:30 p .m. to 9 p.m. Afrporter Inn· Skytlner 2 ·18700 MKArthur Blvd. -lrvlne , THERE IS ABSOLVfEL Y NO OBL1(3ATION · n 759-1001 Newport Equity 'Funds, Inc. Licensed Brok.u Newport B•ach 620 Newport center Duve, Suite 2 t t ('7 t 4) 6<44-8824 UgunaHllls 25283Cab0t Road. Suite 107 (714) 830-5700 San Diego 480Cam1noOe1 R10Sou1n Su11e211 (~14)297·7'00 l 1 c. -ot-"litoun~ View, caut., wa.a challenged b)' the Justice Depart· ment ln a.n antJtruat auit filed ln federal court. The government aeeks to have the mercer declared unlawful and Spec. Lra-Pbyalca ordered to divest ltaelf of all asaeu acquired from Laserplane. The court aleo wu asked to pro. hlbit Spectra·Ph)'ltcs from acqu1t1n1 an)' flrm involved ln machine control Jaate~or teD years . .......... 11,, LOS ANGELES <AP> -Carter Hawley Hale Stores Inc reported that net earnln11 \n tbe aecond quarter end~ July 2t were J7 .7 mUllonlnup U ~rcent from 16.7 mllllon &be aame period lut year. Earniou ~r abare were M cents compared. to 30 HOU In the MCOad quart• ol ltT7, tbl compan>' Mld, wl\Ue sal• were M24 mllnoa. up U percent froila sm m1W•· & DM.YPl10T U By SYLVIA PO&TEa If PNISdeftl Camr'1 NaUooat EMro Pia~ •ver as lran1lated into rt all~. llDOl\I lta key 80lla will be lnlula· lion of 90 petteat ol America ·a bomea by lllO. Positive thou&h this objective ls. lt er.ates an enormous potential for consumer traud. VNLE88 A CONStlMB& IS ALEaT to the danaen in· herent ln selectlu the type of lqauJaUon. the contractor. ftnanctne and compart.eon sbopptna. the loll from in· aulatlon errors coulCI' more than abeorb any savtn11 from co111ervaUoQ. Vital pldes have been prepared by Samuel A. Simon. prosram director for tbe Federal Trade Commwwn's enero e>rocram. and 17 otheT experts from etiht •&encies. Aroone the Ups : -Before deckline on htcb·prfced losuJaUoa plant, take such ~ve and tftect.lve steps u caulllJ01 and weatherstrippln1 doon end windows. AtU~ lnsuJatJon la .a 1l8nlflcant enero·nvi°' Improvement that a1lo can be ~n Inexpensive do·•l · yourseU project. Proper insulation of a three· bedroom ho.use could cost up to Sl.000. Qualicy materials and good workmanship do not come cheap. . Money's Worth -While acoustical tiling, cBJ1>eUnt and aluminum siding are energy.sa vers. insuJatJon experts warn that they are only marginally useful. -AVOID OVER·INSULATING; COMPARE •P· praisals. Send for a Commerce Department booklet. "Making the Most of Your Energy Dollars In Home Heat· lng and Cooling," available from the U.S. Government Printing Office. Waahinston. D.C. 20402 for 70 cents. IL con· tains climate maps. fample cotts and worksheets to calculate the amount of energy <and money) that can be saved, depending on location, type of home. local fire costs. etc. Most pebple can expect to recover the cost In sav· ingsonfuelbillswithin lOyears. -The etrecliveness of Insulation materials is measured in "R .. value. a number Indicating how much resistance the insulation presents to heat flowing through it. The higher the material's "R" value. the better its in· sulaling quality. The Fl'C has proposed • regulation requiring uniform disclosure of the .. R .. value or insulation. The rule also would restrict use or such dollar· and energy-saving claims as "you can sc.ve up to 60 percent on your fuel bill:· -EVALUATE THE PLAMMABIUTY OF the insula· lion materials. The American Society or Testing & Materials has set flammability standards for insulation products. but materials sold to consumers may not be re· quired to meet these standards. So be certain prooucts meet local fire safety requiremenls. Never install insul~ lion near beat or exposed light fixtures. I f ; : • ! " ' • • • . • • • • • • • • • • t • .. i : • • I I t I -To avoid poor installation. make sure the contractor Is reputable. Some slates require that they be licensed or bonded. Have a specific contract written and sign It only when it details the entire job. Consider withholding tht- final payment-until a city building inspector has approved the work. I' -Insist on warranties that are of sufficient duration to permit examination of utility bills over a period of months and judge whether the insulation has truly cut costs. .. ' -Get the .. Home Insulation Safety" fact sheet No. 91 available free from the Consumer Product Safety Com mission. toll·free hotline C800> 638·2666. Also "Insulation· fact sheet OOEICS·0017. free. from the U.S. Department of Energy. Washington. D.C. 20585. --': Leveling Eyed In State Ecorwmy . ~A resurgence m conltruction dwint tbe seconcF ,- quarter ol im. coupled wJth an expected return to trend rates of growth during the aecond hall of this year, wlll te· .... suit in approximately 230.000 new housing permits In ·"· 1978," Parry said. Permits for construction of stn1le·famlly residence& '·:: are expected to decrease durtna 1978. he added, altribuUng the prediction to moderation ln demand ror new homes after the strong production ln 1077. Increases in prices, interest ratea and buJldina cost.a · :1· also contrtbute to reduced con.strucUon In lbe slate Fu-st American Gains Flrat Amerlca.n Flnanctal cOrp.. Santa Ana. hu nt· • port~ a 16 percent lncrtHt ln ll"OQ revenues for the flrlt ll six months of 1978 from the correapoodinJ p4rtod of last • year .,,, o roes Income wu l50, 129.m and '43.m. 103 ror th« .• • 1 six·mon1b ~rlods ended JUM 30. tm and um. reapec· • · Uvely. Tbe f'lrm 's principal 1ubaldlary. Pint Amutcan nll• Insurance Oo •• operates throulbout &.be United St.at.ea alWI on Quam. • ' ' ' - l•'B9:aatl .. ' Erin Gray. a top commercial actress and model, is featured in a dramatic role tonight in the concluding segment of the TV movie "Evening in Byzan- tium .. on KCOP, Channel 13. at 8 o'clock. Ola•llftLbflag• e KNXT (CBS) Los AOQeles a KNBC(NBC) Los Angeles I Kn.A (Ind ) Los Angeles KASC-TV (ABC) Los Angeles (I) KfM8 (CBS) San Diego e IOU-TV (Ind ) Los Angeles III KCST (ABC) San Diego • I KTTV (Ind.) Los Angeles KCOP-TV (Ind.) Los Angeles KCET-TV (PBS) Los Angeles • KOCE-TV (PBS) Huntington Beach quiellly 10 hMd off • gang- land kill-who UMe tnoen- IOUI llOmlmlde bombl to dlSpOM of 1111 "contract" llic:tlms. • MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT tlD TRAINS, TRACKS AHDTM8Tl.18 "fine Oetalll" ()) JOHfltilV OA8H YOUTH 8PECIAL "Whet• Have All The Chil- dren Oone?" A penetrat- ing look Into the~ and drMml of children It preHnted. Gue111: MIChMI l.~. Carol Burnett, Roy Clat1c. Chad Everett. Debbie Boone. Roget Willllml and 8111 COiby. 7:ac>l 125,000 PYRAMIO CON8UM8' 8UYUHE NEWl.YWED GAME JOt<EA'8 WM.I> ntE 000 OOUPt.E Ftllll find• Olcar moon.- llohtlnQ .. I eounlemian In .......... ,... ............ .., ,....., .... • •TOt•lff Lo• Ant••.. cell •I Nein..-"°9illl, llf•I ~~· to win flftl ptlff •t MoMOW'• lf\--~tlonal TcMlllowtllY ~ tlltOt V11t ClltM'n. II .,.,-. ~by~~ "*"'· e.....ct4ow .. ,. '" Mell*'• Clotlllng'' (A) 1:00. M MNMONI "°"'" lurft• ~•ltur ~ to ftnd out Wfly Oeofge " ~ moMy end,,..,.. to.~ oua---.(A) e LrnU"°'*OH _,,.... A VoUl'O lllilCtl ~ (Todd lttdglt) oftlrt to be CNrtM tngellt' lleW '" ucNnge '°' II\ ~ Hon. (fij • MOVIE ... ~Al MontWI" ( 11181) Aklto Kubo. MoneWs. hll'ded togelllet on en lllend on e.ttt, .. ,......, by...,,., and btgll'I to dMttoy 1he wortd. (2 "'1.) .. MOYie * •'~ "DeVll'I Eight" ( 19191 Cllrl11ophar Qeofve. Fabien. A fedlrll agent .. "pllltted" In a Soutllem rOld G11'1Q to engineer the eacape of ... eonvlctl with fife llflttflC• ... (21n.) • HOT cnY DISCO The hottllt '*'* In the world of dJtM;d wlU be gue9tlng. """""' the iet91t dltcO llltt wfllle the Hot Cl1y o.no.. ""°" amid • mue of pulUtlng i... beerM. ~ strobes. rnlrrof'I and epeclal effects. • lva.G .. 8YlANTlUM Cr.ig lttMlpts lo atop the explOltdon of his ICript, and IOOn r..az. tr.et more i. at ltak• than a mere moYle. CPart 2 of 2) e tlD ANNA IWIEHIHA Vr""'*y .,.__,.. Anna 10 alk for • dl\'ofCe; Counteaa lv8"<M1& dornl-nat• KMenln (Part 9 of 10)1A) 8:30 I =TIMES Grandtla Evena and Ilia ETOPPERS · NBC e 9 :00 -··sergeant Matlovtch vs. the U .s. Alr Force... A dramatization of the court·martial of a Vietnam veteran who a(hlttecl be was a homosexual. Brad Dourit plays the ti· tie role fsee revfew below>. · KCET 9 9:00 -GTeat Performances. Sissy Spacek stars in Paul Gallico's "Verna: USO Girl" as a stage struck dancer with limitea talents. ABC 8 S.:30 -"The Chairman.·• Gregory Peck stars as a scientist sent on a mission to Red China in this 1969 movie drama with Arthur Hill and Anne Heywood. t:oo8 M•A•t•H CMrtM "*'.. • tape ~ contAllnlng "" Ylawl on ~ in. ahuatiOn and tM l*IOllllltlat of tlle .ontti.(A) 8 N8CMOYIE ··s.ro-n1 ~tlcMctl VI. The U.S. All Fotce'' (Pr9m- iefw) Brad Oourtf. Marc Singer. A wet wteftn fight• to ,._tar the mli- lary attar being dlamlauit becellM of 1111 llomoMlc- Ulllty. • MERVGIWFIN "Modlllng" Oueltl: Nini Blanchard, MldlMI lrvtng. Maud Adame. David Young. SuM Coelllo, Erin Orey. • GREAT P£RFONoWCf.8 "Paul Oaltlco'• Verna: U.S.O. Gin" A dtlrnatiza.. tlon of Glllllco'1 ''Yem.," feet\Mtng S6tly 8'**'. Sally Keflamlatl. ~ OeSlfv• and WWam Hurt. e UYE FffOM WOLF TRAP "TH B•n•k•. H•l•n O'Connell And Bob Ebertl" T• Benalla end his ~ pet1onTI a concert of ~·· ""'*· Witt\ 1pecl1I guett• Hale11 O'Connell and 110b Eblfle. 9 HOLLYWOOO 8QUAAE8 HO 8 ONE Do\Y AT A TIME Julie Invitee Atlll and BM· beta to'* new..,.,,,,_,. '°' -...1Pa12 of 2XR> .MCMI **It .. TM C""""'9n" f1H9) oreoory Peck, Al1flur Hll. 9 timNGNmN "ModtlllnO" OueMI: Nine Blandl#d, Mlctlaal froftng, Maud Adam•. Dold Young. Sulle Coallo. El1n Qrey. 1H08 LOOORANT Lou ~ tie hit cencw and llH to undergo ""Ort. (A) l .... OPIMTIOH MMMOll~ unique fOotaOe end Inter- ~ "°"' Hltlet conn-ct.nt• lltd gGW1nme11t V.l,P. '1 are lllCOfPOl'llled to lltultra1e the man and the INnkfnO batllnd one of the blggett and bk>odialt bit- ti• that IPllld .,.. and of Europe'• domlna<:e In ~.ln-=-.rtalrl. TO•AHNOUNCa> ,,. ~~ 8TYU ''Low Altd The PIAitzer PYtz9 Bab(' A movie '*· wllO ... lo M¥e the per. feet belly. lrtll to get a Pulltzllr Prtzia writer to be thetatller. G MOYIE ..... ·'The Tiger Al'td The ~ .. (111$7) Viftorlo Galaman. a..ior Partier. eTHEOOOOOUPLE Felbl perlUedll a.car to reletM 1111 HC:rettry. . . T.,..da9's . ........ ,, . ., ... t.«>RNING n•• • •'!\ UOood Humor Man" I t9$0\ Jedi Cen9n· Lofe Albf1gtlt. A "OoOd ~·· """ lltd hlS do- trland become ~ "" • mut'der. (2 In.. 20 m'"j) AFTERNOON \l:OO •••• "T\)a Fleltteaa l &Ned" C 19571 Scott~­ AM& Bencroft. Ah• I a eecret .-vice agent .... kllld by • DlftOlt9'. tM man '1 eon •ttemof• 10 a-. Illa deatll. ( t ..... 30 min.I ~ 9 •••• .-. .'The Amari- ~Of Etnlly'" (111141 J•ITI•• Garner. Ju lie Anchws. Romane. grows .,.._ • 9rttllh -otid- ow and • non..-oc otfl-cer aatlgrl9d to prewlde 1111 auperlon will! the lullurtaa Of home.Ct tw .• 30 m1n.r ~. * • ~ "CIOOlta Al'td Cofoneta" (19691 Telly s11111a1. Edllll Evans. Stately Britlall mantiona become the lergel of • group of lhlelMg QMD- atera. (t "'·· 30 min.) Dakota Visit Gag Aiftllan's Slorg Angie Finally 'Comes Home' By GORDON HANSON FARGO. N.D. <AP> -Fresh from shooting TV projects in the South Pacific and getting ready to make a film in Montreal, Angie Dickinson took a moment recently to chat about her girlhood on the North Dakota prairie. - "I was definitely a tomboy," the energetic star of NBC's "Police Woman'' series, which began in 1974 and will not be continued by the network this fall, recalled. "I enjoyed playing foot- ball. As I remember, it was mostly with boys." She m~led that memory over, then laughed and said kiddingly: "I bad an early eye for the male. I think I was a little flirt, even at the age of 8." Angeline Brown was bom "in the 1930s" in Kulm, N.D., a farming town now populated by 625 people. She was s or 6 when her family moved to nearby Edgeley, population 888. THEY LIVED ABOVE the Edgeley Mail, a weekly newspaper. her parents, Leo and Frederica Brown, were printers. Angie was about 9 when the family moved to Burbank, Calif .• and she never returned to North Dakota. She said Edgeley city officials once invited her back for the town's 75th anniversary. "I was preg- nant and just didn't feel I could make the trip. LJckily, I didn't try be<:ause my daughter was born prematurely by three months. ••BUT I NEVER CAN forget those North Dakota winters," she said in a telephone interview from her Los Angeles home. "There wu ice skating, sledding, climbing trees, bicycling, but no such thing as skiing. We 1'tkt down snowbanl's"'olf111lovers: * "All those things are very, very nice memories.'' · • There were 'four dau&hter& and no sons in the .. Brown farnUy. "My poor father," she chuckled. "But we did have a male dog jn Edgeley. Blacky, a mutt bulldog. I loved him. SHE REMEMBERED THE Ume ln Edgeley "when l was thrown in a gymnasium class and bit my head on a hardwood noor __ . and I remember a baton-twirling class In that gymnasium. I did well enough that when I arrived in California, I was able lo teach kids some new moves in twirl· ing." careruT." Angie Dickinson aot into the movies "by sheer luck." She said she entered a beauty contest •'not thinkit11 I was beautttul. but I had a peNOnallty that got me by." Bank Sues Singer . In Wrong Credit LOS ANGELES (AP>-A bank trytna to re- covernearly$30,000ltclatm1wu mJstatenJycredit- ed to tbe ac:eount of Ttna Turner's corporaUon baa aued the pop al.Deer. Uruoa Bank filed the1ult ln Lot~-Superior court, 1Qtn1 lt credited •.948 ln the form of a German dleek lo lbe account 'of her corporation, Tina •1 Ogerat.loa Oopl. at Pint Loil An1eles Bank lutFebruaiy. Tbe ault. also ukinC SI0,000 in damafes; claims 11111 Turoer depleted tbe aceount ud Ntuied to re- ~urn th• luadf· . • - Docudrama Dull ~ ByJAYSBARBtJ'IT LOS ANGELES tAP_> -In l9'7S. Tech. Sgt. Leonard Matlovich, a decorated Vietnam vet. made headlines by telling the Air Force he was homo5exual and fighting the Air Force's bid to kick him out. It seemed inevitable his story would be dramatized for TV. It has. The result, airing on NBC tonight at 9 on Channel 4, is an oddly fiat two- hour movie called "Sergeant Matlovicb vs. the U.S. Air Force." Brad Dourif, an Oscar nominee three years ago ror his work in "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest," plays · Matlovich, veteran or three Vietnam tours and a recipient of the Purple Heart. BRAD DOURIF (RIGHT) PLAYS SERGEANT MATLOVICH wtth David Spielberg •• Attorney at Court·martlal DOURIF TRIES hard to convey the torment that the deeply religious sergeant felt before reaching the con· clusion he told to a court.martial board: "I will not live a lie." .Jarvis Gets Show But the movie, despite its admira· ble avoidance of sensationalism. is a listless, highly predictable one. LOS ANGELES <AP > -Howard Jarvis. the crusty co-autbo_r of California's tax-cutting Proposition 13. has heretofore talked or bis tax fight for free. But this fall he may be doing it on radio for money. That's the word from Harry O'Con- nor, head of a radio syndication flrm . that distributes recorded commen- tary by such other notables as Ronald Reagan and former Agriculture Secretary Earl Butz. O'CoMot says he's been nea,oUat- ang wlUi arvfs, 7S: to do a~W:mmute program on taxes and government five days a week. If no snags occur, he expect.S to sign him up by the ehd of next week. JARVIS ALREADY has signed to write a weekly column, "At the Grass Roots," which ls beina sold to newspapers by the Inter•Continental Press Syndicate 1n Glendale, Calif. John Kearns, sales manaaer at that firm, says thus far 25 newspapers -among them papers in San Francisco, Detroit and C.llM2-H71. Put• few word• to work for ou. ----umn, which begins next Monday. If Jarvis agrees to do a radio show. O'Connor said, "he'll talk about the tax revolution L1 general, and about situations cropping up around the country. where people are initiating efforts to set limits on taxation." Its worst flaw is a black or dramatic contrast that could have come had the film more strongly ex· plored the reasoning behind the Air Force regulation against homosex· uals in its ranks. THE TAX CRUSADER. who Jives THE PROCEEDINGS start at the here, gained national fame in June court-martial, where defense lawyers -played' by Barra Grant, when the Proposition 13 amendment David Spielberg and Frank Coo-he co-authored was approved by California voters by a 2-1 margin. vene, all of whom could have phoned It Trimmed Y,rop axes Ht in ~~&hat: California by an average of 57 per. -The Air Force regulation is un· cent, put limits on future tax In-constitutional. . creases and wor'ks out m a..fJ billion -T~~raean~s .bomosexuallt¥ property tax cut. Jt went into errect last month. O'Connor says he approached Jarvis only last week about doing a syndicated radio show, and "he has grnt eotlfuslaem fot the project. He•s very interested In doing It. "He also volunteered that where a station wants It. he'll go to that sta· Uon 's city and participate in a town ball meeting and engaae in a debate • 'Hard l:Ode' Cast LOS ANGELES (AP> -Richard Cnnna and Linda-Blau star in .. Hard Rtde to llantin.~ -jio}v filming at Glacier National Park. (TV REVIEW 1 . doesn't affect his work, that a&*r- tion buttressed by a parade of Air Force colleagues who proclaim him a first·rate, outstanding airman. . Flashbacks aplenty also ensue, starting when Mallovich tells his mother or his homosexuality ~d asks her to break the news to bis father. She urges him to go to church and "seek God's help." .. MAYBE WITH God's help I'll finally have the strength to be who l am and what I am," he says, voicing a main theme or the show. You also see him wrestling with his conscience in Vietnam prior to bis decision he is homosexual. eschewing girl-chasing there and speaking or his then-vague troubles to a Roman Catholic priest. The priest seems aware of Matlovich's sexual worries and sug. gests the sergeant is keeping something back. Matlovich isn't sure what it is. Whereupon the padre soft· ly says: "All right, my son. When you are ready, you'll tell me... · BACK IN 111E U.S., Matlovich still is troubled. He finally reveals he's a bomo$exual to bis best pal. another sergeant. The guy leaves MaUovich 's apartment ln shock. but ret'J"lS Just In time to stop his friend from com· mttain~tide>'Wtdras1MJ1tgt11t:-.~--~ Matlovich later visits his first gay bar, a _autet saloon called "The Wilde --paaoe-.-· then con§urts a psychiatrist, then tells the Air Force of bis sexual preference and starts bis fight lo stay in. He loses the fight. and tonight's movie about it ma~ lose your interest earfy1n the battle. 'ni°e"Tllm-ls a s).in· pathetic, wtll·lntentloned plece, but it's also one-sided and dull. · -