HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-07-13 - Orange Coast PilotDledrieh Case
•
' '
.
e $50,000 Blaze mts Mesa Shop
• Dome Riddled by Klan Gomnen
e Mistrial Ruled in DB Killing
• · Parents Sue Over Woll Attack
DAILY PILOT
* * * 10' * * * .. ~ . . . . .
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 13, 1977
VOL. 70, HO. 1'4, 4 5ECTIOIU, 4 PAO ES
'Woman Seonaed'
J11rors Hear
Aide's Story
By GARY GRANVILLE
Olt,_ DAiiy Pilot Sl•ll
Secret grand jury transcripts
show that the testimony of a
woman scorned was vital to the investigation leading to the re·
cent indictment of Orange Coun·
ty Supervisors Ralph Diedrich
·and Philip Anthony.
The woman whose testimony
wrapped a band of circumstan·
tial evidence around Diedrich,
Anthony and their four alleged
co-conspirators in a purported
plot to undermine state cam·
palco reeulalions is Donna
Doughty.
Mrs. Doughty was indicted
Fullerton attorney Michael Rem-
ington's chief secretary and 0£-
fic&managef for 11 years.
In testimony before the erand
jury, emlneton adntitted hav-
lnl a "cloee relationship" with
Mra. Douahty that underwent a
dramatic change when he mar·
rled another woman last Oct. 1.
Thus, Remlneton said, "a few
months a10" thin1s becaQ\e un·
ce>mfortable around the office and, by mutual agreement, Mrs.
Doughty left hls employ.
On June 20, Mrs. Doughty was
before the erand jury aa a wit·
J\IS.S into an eight-month probe
hi\o county political practices
that would end in 11 days with the indlct~of Diedrich, Anthony,
Retnlngt.oft and three othen.
The 42·year-old woman bad
been before the Jury two weeks
earlier.
In tbat appearance abe
r8'poaded t.o qlleJtlom asked her
about bookkeeptn1 operaUons In
8emln8\0ll'I office with a Stan·
dar.cl "PrivUeaed/'
By privileged, Mrs. Doughty
meant that. as an employe of
lawyer Remington's she was
bound to keep her boss· dead.lings
with his clients, including
Diedrich, confidential.
But in her appearance before
the jury June 20, Mrs. Doughty
had been relieved of compulsion
to remain silent by a Superior
Court judge.
Then, for more than three
hours she answered Assistant
District Attorney Michael
Capizzi 's questions.
Mrs. Doughty's replies to
Capizzi's questions clearly linked
Diedrich checks to Remington
with Remington checks to
various political candidates, in·
eluding Anthony and indicted
(See WITNESS, Pa1e AZ>
KKK Report
Cit.es 3 Dens
ln~Diego
Mistrial
Ruled for
HBMan
Oranee CounLy Superior COurt
Judge Everett W. Dickey was
forced to declare a mistrial Tues-day in the three-weeks-old
murder trial of Daniel Ray
Buyber of Hun1ington Beach.
The motion by Deputy Public
Defender James Brustman was
granted when it was learned that
clerk Marion Burgman had in·
eluded with the evidence banded
to the deliberating jury recorm
related lo Buyher's prior felony
convictions.
Judge Dickey had ruled during
the trial and in the absence of the
jury that Buyher's prior criminal
record had no bearing in the cur-
rent case and could not be re-
vealed lo the jury.
Judge Dickey discharged the
jury after learning or his clerk's
error and set Sept. 6 as the new
trial date. Buyher will be re·
turned to the same courtroom
Aug. 5 for pre-trial action.
The jury had been asked to find
Buyher, 23, of ~l Hendricksen
Drive, guilty of first degree
murder for the alleged killing of
his mot.her-in-law, Mrs. Muriel
Ethel Norton.
It is alleged that be shot and
killed Mrs. Norton, 50, in her
home al 1Sl61 Davis Lane, Hunt·
ington Beach, last Dec. 6 because
she refused lo reveal the
whereabouts of ber daughter,
Buyher's estranied wire, Linda.
Begin Plan Backed
JERUSALEM CAP) -Prime
Minister Menahem. Begin lOOk
hla proposals tor a Mideast ~ce
settle.raent to bis cabinet today
abd emerged with what be called
unanimous approval t.o present
bis secret plan to President
Carter next week. Usually well·
infotmed 1overnment sources
said they had no details of the
Betinplan.
o.tlty l'li.. &c.ff ~ ...
COS1'A MESA FIREMEN PROBE CHARRED RUINS OF DOWNTOWN ELECTRONICS SHOP
Marvac Electromc.· Blaze C•uan $50,000 ~ D•m•ge; .r. Origin Sllll Unknown
Fire Hits Mesa Shop
Officials Probe $50,000 E'lectronics Blaze
Firefighters were still slfting
through a building full of melted
electronics equipment and
smouldering lelevis,on sets this
morning, three hours after
flames were discovered shooting
Crom window• of an electronics
shop in downtown Costa Mesa.
Battalion Chief Ed Lewis said
the blaze at Marvac Electronics,
1870 Harbor Blvd., caused an
estimated $50,000 damage.
Deoo .Vaccber of Fullerton, owner ol M'arvac, told fire of.
ficiaJs that be and several other
employes were remodeling the
larce-electronJcs supply building
at •bout 10:30 p.m. Tuesday
wben.tMflaunes broke out. 0 Tbey tried to put the fire out
themselves," Lewls said, "but It
cot. way beyond tbtm with all
tbat plutlc wlrinR."
Lewis said cau5e of the blaze Is
still under investigation, adding
that be expects an analysis of the
fire later today.
M arvac employes were in the
process of expanding the large
electronics supply st.ore at the
time of the blaze. Lewis said
carpenters had removed a fire
wall between Marvac and an ad·
jacent building and were work-
ing late Tueedaf when the fire
broke out.
"Flames were shooting out the
windows and extending way
above the top of the building,"
Lewis said.
He satd firefighters from two
en1tne companies and a truck
comPa!\Y played water on the
fire and cut holes in the building
over the fire t.o rele.ase heat.
"There was a lot of black
smoke cominl out of there, aod
1'011get ~~hief
Fa~Loss
that stuff turns into fire really
quick," be said.
Lewis said that, had the fire
been able to get into the attic or
the building, it could have easily
spread to other offices attached
to the structure.
"We would have lost a lot more
if that had happened.'' he said.
He said an Edison Company
cre w, working in the neighbor~ood, saw tbe flames
and quickly cut the power to the
building.
Lewis said fire damafe to the
building it.self was abou SJ.S,000,
with the remainin& $35,000 al·
lributed to the contents of the
electronics shop.
Coa';•
l\eather
tl2 DAIL V PILOT s WedoHoay Ju•x 13, 1911
Al' Wlrepllolo
CHILDHOOD HOME OF JACQUELINE KENNEDY ONASSIS FOR SALE
Mrs. Hugh D. Auchlncloas Sits Outside Hammersmith Farm Mansion In Newport, R.I.
A Cottage for Sale
Famed Hammersmith Farm Put on Arretion
NEWPORT, It.I. (APJ -Jacqueline Ken-
nedy Onassis' childhood home where her
romance with John r'. Kennedy bloomed, has
been put on thl· auction block because the
former First Lady's mother needs the money.
c ·aroline Kennedy was here Friday and Satur-
day and I never know when the others are
coming."
Her youngest daughter. Janet. 31. ex-
plained over a hamburger ut Bailey's Beach
the feelings the children have . .. 1 don 't want you to sell 1t," Janet
Auch1ncloss quoted her famous daughter as
sayin~ when she broke the news that the 58·
acre Hammersmith Farm was for sale for
$989,000
"IT WAS MY HOME. I grew up here. ll's
where everytlung happened to me. lt's home.
and everybody thinks your home will always
be there.'' .. All my children hate it. and I hate it. but
it 1s absolutely necessary," Mrs. Auchincloss
said Tuesday.
She reminisced about her life with Mrs.
Onassis, who is 16 years older.
SHE EXPLAINED that her late husband.
llugh D. Auchincloss, devoted hts personal
fortune to try to save his Washington
brokerage firm, Auchincloss, Redfern and
Parker, before his death in December 1976.
"The year 1 was 18 she showed me how to
lie." said Janet, remembering that she wasn't
allowed to dale then.
Jackie, she says, told her to tell
Auchincloss that her mother said it was all
right, while telling her mother that her father
had given permission. "l was very proud of him for doing it," she
said. ·•even though I knew it wouldn't work." "l never saw him so mad in my life -oh,
well, she was married lo a president -I
should have known better,•• Janet said.
Hammersmith, one of the oldest working
farms in Newport, is alive with memories.
The children called the cottage The Castle
and the name has stuck to this day. Mrs.
A uchincloss now Ii ves in The CasUe.
LEADING A REPORTER on a tour of the
grounds, Mrs. Auchincloss marveled at bow
well they are kept. She has had to make do
with four gardeners on grounds once tended
by 32 workers.
MRS. AUCWNCLOSS SHOWED her vis-
itors through the 18-bedroom main house
which largely has been dismantled. It is no~
home to members or the Swedish yacht team
here for the trials of the America's Cup, which
will be run next month.
She showed the bedroom where Mrs. Mrs. Auchincloss says that her daughters
by her first husband, John Bouvier -Jackie
and Lee Radziwill -and her children by
Auchincloss were reluctant to see the place go
because they liked it "to be here for whenever
they happened to feel hke dropping in.
Onassis spent the last night before her wed-
ding, a third·floor yellow and white room with
windows looking out to sea.
She also showed the room that Kennedy
• used as an office when he stayed at Ham-
mersmith Farm durine his presidency.
Jurors Hear ,
Manson Tape
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Jurors
have listened to two tape record-
ings, including one by Charles
Man son, to help reach a verdiclin
the retrial of Leslie Van Houten
for the 1969 slayings of Leno and
Rosemary LaBianca.
Jurors were to resume de-
liberations today.
Monday they listened to tapes
of a psychiatrist's interview with
Manson and a 1969 tape of Miss
Van Houten discussing the Tate·
LaBianca murders with an al·
torney
Doctors Return
FRESNO (AP) -Forty chier
doctors at the county hospital
here returned to work today 12
days after they walked out over a
contract dispute. Contract
negotiations ended in a com·
promise Tuesday night when
county supervisors agreed to
grant pay increases ranging
from zero to 7 percent.
Infant Succumbs
SACRAMENTO (AP) -A
13·year-old girl's newborn child,
found in a garbage bin with bis
throat slit April ts, has died In a .
hospital, coroner's deputies say.
OAANOECOAST S
DAILY PILOT
l Suit Remains
College to Accept
Architect Payment
Saddleback College trustees
have agreed to settle one of two
pending lawsuits against a
former campus architect for
$28,000. The original suit, filed
three years agt>, totaled about
$700.000.
The Mission Viejo school re-
cently filed another $728,000 sUJt
against the same architect,
Donald Ramberg, and a half.
dozen other defendants in con-
nection with faulty construction
of the science and math building.
The damage action trustees
have agreed to settle stemmed
from damages the college claims
were incWTed when Ramberg's
architectural firm declared
bankruptcy jn the midst or
Carter Talks
With Schmidt
W ASIDNGTON CAP) -West
German . Cbaocellor Helmut
Schmidt received a warm White
House welcome from President
Carter today .and said German·
American friendship is atroqer
now than at aey time ov~ the past 30 years.
At a cerem<lf\Y on the White
House south lawn, Schmidt
pled1ed West Gitnnany's "f\lll
coftb1bution" in maintalnf.n& the .security oCtbe Weatem alUaoee.
Carter, ln tum. balled SchDlidt u .. one ol tho world's foremost
le*dtrs, • • and ••Id the cooperative relatiouhlp Mtw.en
the two OOUDtrlee II ''u 8t.roa1 u ever."
several campus projects, includ-
ing the library building.
The board was told by ad-
ministrators Monday night that
the $28,000 settlement is about
the best they could hope for, con-
sidering the state of Ramberg's
finances.
"It is better than nothing,
which is what we started out
with." said Trustee 1'·rank
Greinke.
Though the action was filed
three years ago, it was not due to
come to trial until next summer.
The bankruptcy court has been
m eetlng with Saddleback and
other co-plaintiffs in an effort lo
resolve the matter and clear the
court calendar. ·
"We feel this is a good settle-
ment in face of the reality of
what's upon us," said Roy
Barletta, district business
manager.
lfhe other suit naming Ram-
berg, filed only recently on
behalf of the college, stems from
the discovery of inadequate
laboratory venting in the science
bulletin& that caused a buildup of
noxious chemical fum"s in
classrooms.
It will cost more than $200,000
to repair that problem.
~lChUf
Ami.tls l ssue
Fro.a Page AJ
WITNESS •••
Anaheim City Councilman
William Kott.
Wllb former pohce informer
Gene Conrad thrown into the
middle ot aome ttansactl011S, the
balls for the felony conspiracy
lndktmettts wu formed.
Tbal'a because Anthony, Kott
and other candidates showed the
Remington money coming into
their campaigns as personal
loans from themselves.
And neither Remineton nor
Diedrich filed major campaign
donor statements sl\owlng their
alleged financial role In lbe cam·
paign.
But Mrs. Douehty's testimony
tended to indicate the ink wa.s
barely dry on Diedrich checks to
her former boas before the
Fullerton attorney passed
similar amounts on lo the can-
didates.
Her words also coincided with
bank records either seized by dis-
trict attorney inves tigators
armed with search warrants or
surrendered voluntarily.
Significantly, Remington's
former office manager said she
had no knowledge of a so-called
Diedrich bank trust held by Rem-
ington except what she had read
in the newspapers.
In the end, the grand jury
thought enough or the bank
evidence and linking testimony to
hand down its felony conspiracy
indictments.
State Jobless
Rate Falls to
6.9 Percent
SACRAMENTO {AP)
California's unemployment rate
fell to 6 .9 percent in June, the
lowest in three years and the first
time in seven years that the state
has been below the national rate,
om cials said today.
The jobless rate had been 7.8
percent in May. For the third
straight month, total employ-
ment set a record, nearly 9.3
million, up 136,000 since May.
The national unemployment
rate, which has been running as
much as two percentage points
below California's, was 7.1 per·
cent in June, up from 6.9 percent
in May.
State Employment Develop·
ment Director Martin Glick said
employment records were set in
numerous industries, including
construction. which has gained
16 percent 1n jobs over a year
ago.
He said the figures were
"further indication that
California is outpacing the rest of
the nation in speed of turnaround
from the recent recession."
But he cautioned that they
renected mid·June totals, before
President Carter announced that
he opposed development or the
Bl bomber, a move already caus.
ing layoffs in Souther n
California.
Rent Strike Called
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -An-
gry tenants of the "Pink
Palace." the public housing
project twice visited by Gov. Ed·
mund G. Brown Jr., have called
for a rent strike until a 24-bour
security force is provided for
their crime· ridden home.
Busnaper
'Robbed'
Children
OAKLAND (AP) -Some of
the 26 Chowchilla school children
k1dnaped nearly one year ago
lost glasses, sneakers and
trinkets to their abductors, it was
disclosed in a pretrial hearing.
Attorney Ted Merril 1,
rettresenting one of the three
young defendants in the case.
read a portlQD of the inventory in
court Tuesday.
The items were· found in a
black bag several miles from thl'
Portola Valley estate belonging
to the family of defendant
FrederickN. Woods, 25.
Merrill, attorney for Richard
Schoenfeld, 2-t, said the bag con-
tained items belonging to some or
the children and bus driver Ed Ray.
Ray and the youngsters were
abducted at gunpoint July 15.
1976. and transported 100 miles
north to a rock quarry wherl'
they were kept captive in a
buried van. They dug their way
to freedom 17 hours later.
Merrill said the bag contained
"white socks. baseball caps, ten-
nis shoes and even an Evcl
Knievel motorcycle, a toy one."
The defense is attempting to
have the search warrant of the
Woods estate thrown out and the
evidence suppresse<i. lterbert
Yanowitz, lawyer tor wooos,
argued that (I> authorities ii·
legally obtained evidence for the
warrant, (2) it was excessive in
scope and execution and (3) it
contained "substantial errors."
Woods. Schoenfe ld, and
Schoenfeld's 25-year·old brother:
James, are charged with 27
counts oC ltidnaping and 18 counts
of robbery, mostly dealing with
the children's personal items.
No court session was scheduled
today but the lengthy hes.ring
was expected to resume Thurs-
day.
Superior Court Judge Leo
Deegan of Riverside, called out
of retirement to handle the
bizarre case, dampened hopes
that some of the mountain of
evidence now secret would soon
become public knowledge.
Deegan said pertinent in·
~ormation he needed to rule on
the defense motiops could be ob·
tained through witnesses, and
a trip to the Santa Rita jail facili-
ty to see the physical evidence
was likely to be unnecessary.
"Why I have to sec those things
at this point escapes me," he
s aad.
No Pot Rap
For Principal
SACRAMENT<:> (AP) -No
charges will be filed against the
principal of an intermediate
school for having marijuana
plants growing in her back yard,
Sacramento County Authorities
say.
District Attorney John Price
said Tuesday there wasn't
evidence that Dolores Ward, 46,
was aware of the small amount
of marijuana found in her home
or of the plants that were covered
by vines and other shrubs.
Miss Ward, principal of John
Barrett Intermediate School,
was one of 36 persons arrested in
a raid last week.
....
APW1..._10
HEARING KIDNAP CASE
Judge Leo Deegan
Bl Funds
Cut OK'd
By Unit
WASHINGTON <AP) -The
Senate Appropriations Commit·
tee voted today to cut funds for
the Bl bomber from the defense
appropriat.ions bill.
The vote to supoort President
Carter's decision not to go ahead
with production or the bomber
was9to5.
The vote came after Carter
asked the Senate to carve more
than $1 b1lhon from the Pentagon
budget because or his decision
against producing the warplane.
Carter asked for a reduction of
$1,017,400 for the 1978 fiscal year
beginning Oct. 1.
The appropriations bill. passed
by the House before Carter an-
nounced his decision, included
$1.5 billion to build five planes.
The bill is scheduled for action
by the full Senate later this week.
Backers of the Bl have indicat-
ed they will fight to keep funds
for the bomber in the bill in an ef-
fort to force Carter to continue
the program.
However, Sen ate Majority
Leader Robert C. Byrd and
House Speaker Thomas P .
O'Neill Jr., have said they would
support the President's decision.
O'N«!lll, who supported the Bl,
predicted after Carter's an-
nouncement that the House would
reverse its decision to ap· •
propriate money for the plane.
The Whlte House said scrap-
ping the Bl and an associated
SRAM-V air-to-ground missile
would produce savings of nearly
$1.4 billion.
The cutback, however, will be
partially offset by C?rter's com-
panion decision to speed up
cruise missile programs and up-
grade the capabilities of the B52
born ber fleet.
Carter caught members of
Congress by surprise when he an-
nounced at a news conference
June 30 that "my decision is that
we should not continue with
deployment of the BL"
Most members of Congress
were predicting that the Presi·
dent would decide to order pro-
duction of at least a limited
number of the bombers.
Instead, Carter said he decided
in favor of the older 852 bomber
armed with cruise missiles.
Orange ~east
EDITION
Today's Closiag j
N.Y. Stoeks
! v0L. 70, NO. 1~. ~ SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JULY 13, 1977 C TEN CENTS ~:~
I
I J11ry Hears 'Wolllan Scorned')
By GAaY Ga.A.NV1LLE .,. ... Deltr ~ t\Mt
Seem srand Jury transcripts
show thal the testimony of a
woman scorned was vital lo lhe
invesU1aUon lead.in& to the re-
cent indictment of Orange Coun·
ty Supervisors Ralph Diedrich
and Philip AnthoQy.
Witness Links · Checks in County Probe loans from them.selves.
And Jleither Remin&ton nor
Diedrich filed m.Uor casnpaien
donor statements showing. their
alleged fmancial role in the cam·
paign.
The woman whose testnnony
wrapped a band of circumstan·
tlal evidence around Diedrich,
Anthony and their four alleged
co-conspirators in a purported
plot to undermine state cam-! palgn regulations is Donna
Doughty. 1 Mn. Doughty was· indicted I Fullerton attorney Michael Rem·
' li··."11'!' ~~~~~~
,~ ~
,.
I I
I
lngton's chief secretary and or-
fice manager for 11 years.
In testimony before the grand
jury, Remington admitted hav-
ing a "close relationship" with
Mrs. Doughty that underwent a
dramatic change when he mar-
ried another woman last Oct. 1.
Thus, Remington said, "a few
months ago" things became un-
comfortable around the omce
and, by mutual agreement, Mrs.
Doughty left his employ.
On June 20, Mrs. Doughty was
before the grand jury as a wit·
ness into an eight-month probe
into county political practices
that would end In 11 days with the
indictment or Diedrich, Anthony,
Remington and three others.
The 42-year·old woman had
been before the jury lwo weeks
earlier.
Jn that appearance s he
responded to questions asked ber
about bookkeeping operations in
Remington's office with a stan·
dard "Privileged."
By privileged, Mrs. Doughty
meant that, as an employe of
Deity PlleC S!Mf l'tloto
FRISBEE CHAMP CttRIS JOHNSON (RIGHT) SHOWS COSTA MESA KIDS HOW 1rs DONE
Fr•nk Werner, 11 (left), Tim Holley, 12, Pfck Up Some Tlp1 From the Master
N-M Schools
Trim 2 Cents
Off Tax Rate
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
OI t• Oalty Pllet St.ti Trustees of the Newport-Mesa
Unified School District agreed
Tuesday night to shave two cents
off the district's tax rate in an ef·
fort to counteract the nearly 19
percent increase in assessed
values in the district.
"The increases ln assessed
valuation are going to cause a
great deal of hardship among
district taxpayers," said Trustee
Marian Bergeson, who asked for
the rate cut. "This ia a good way
to provide some relief.•'
The two cent.a wlll come off a
portloci·of the tax rate known as
U.e civic center tax, a tax of up to
10 cents that can be levied ov~
and above the eeneral fund taX
witboutpermlaaion of voters.
The mbney raised by the tax
pay• for community-oriented
projects such u recreational
facWties that are used ln elty
proaramsaftet~choolh~un.
(See2C£NTS. Pa1eAJ)
Coast
Weather
Low clouds tonicht
through mid-mornlnc
Thurlday. Sunny Thurs·
day afternoon. Lowa
tonl1ht se to ea. Hl•b•
Thursday 70 to 74 at
beaches to 11to I& liiland.
At 16, Frisbee Fun
Flickers, 'Fades'
By STEVE MITCHELL
01 t• O.lly Piiot SU1tl
What does an aging Frisbee
champion who came within a
flick of the wrist of becoming
world champion do alter retire·
ment? . Chris Johnson, last year's first
runner-up in lbe world cham·
pionships held in A~lanta, ~a .. is
coaching other Frisbee flickers
for Costa Mesa's recreation de·
partment.
The 16-year-old Corona del
OCWorkers
Get5.85%Pay
Hik~, Ceilipg
Mar IDgh School senior says he
can't compete in the Whammo
Company competition anymore
because he's too old.
"They don't want kids who
have placed before in their con·
tests, either," the saucer expert
shrugged.
So he applied for a job as assis·
tant recreation leader in Costa
Mesa last month.
"I told them I thought I had
something to offer them," he
said, scratching the middle
finger of his right hand. That
finger has a callus near lhe top
joint which comes from constant
Frisbee tossing.
"I probably should have a
piece of tape oo it." Johnson
said.
He's been coaching kids at a
dozen city parks foe the past few
weeks in preparation for Costa
Mesa's ninth annual Frisbee con·
test which was held today at
Te Winkle Park.
"It's just t.akes 8 lot or practice
and conftdence," J ohauon tells
his students.
He Unea participants up for
Frisbee relays, giving them tips
in the ei&bt categories for com·
petition, lbclutling itraight
throw, right and left curve, skip
flight, disl~ce, ac.:uracy. and
catching the <I.be behind the back
and bet•een the legt.
(8ee FRISBEE, Page AZ)
Plane Crashes
In Silverado
lawyer Remington's she was
bound to keep her boss' dealings
w1tb b1s clients, 1nclud1ng
Diedrich, confidential.
But in her appearance before
the jury June 20, Mrs. Doughty
had been. relieved of compulsion
to remain silent by a Superior
Court judge.
Then, for more than three
hours she answered Assistant
District Attorney Michael
Capiui's questions.
Mrs. Doughty's replies to
Capizzi 's questions clearly linked
Diedrich ch~ks to Remington
with Remington checks to
various political candidates, in·
eluding Anthony and indicted
Anaheim City Councilman
William Kott.
With former police informer
Gene Conrad thrown into the
middle of some transactions, the basis for the felony conspiracy
indictments was formed.
That's because Anthony, Kott
and other candidates showed lhe
Remington money coming into
their campaigns as personal
But Mrs. Dougbty's testimony
tended to indicate the ink was 1 barelY dry on Diedrich checks to
her former boss before the
Fullerton attorney passed'
similar amounts on to the can·
didates.
Her words also coincided with
bank records either seized by dis·
trict attorney investigators
armed with search warrants or
surrendered voluntarily.
(See WITNESS. Page AZ>
Jobless Toll Dips
Lowest June on Record for County
Orange County's unemploy-
ment rate djpped to its lowest
point since 1972 last month when
it reached 4.4 percent, according
to figures released today by lhe
State Employment Development
Department (EDD).
An EDD spokesman said
June's unemployment rate was
"the lowest on record since lhe
department began its labor study
series in 1972.''
The 4.4 percent unemployment
rate is down from 4.6 percent in
May and from S.8 percent in
$50,000
Fire Guts
Mesa Shop
Firefighters were still slfting
throqil a build1ng full of melted
electronics equipment and
smouldering television sets this
morning, three hours after
flames were discovered shooting
from windows of an electronics
shop in downtown Costa Mesa.
Battalion Chier Ed Lewis said
th~ blaze at Marvac Electronics,
1870 Harbor Blvd., caused an
estimated $50,000 damage. Deno Vaccher of Fullerton,
owner of Marvac, told fire of.
ficials that he and several olher
employes were remodeling the
large electronics supply building
at about 10:30 p.m. Tuesdat
when th.e names broke out.
••They tried to put the fire out
themselves," Lewis said, "but it
got way beyond them with all
that plastic wiring.''
Lewis said cause of the blaze is
still under Investigation, adding that be expects an analysis of lhe
fire later today.
Marvac employes were in lhe
process of expanding the large
electronics supply store at lhe
time of the blaze. Lewis said
carpenters had removed a fire
wall between Marvac and an ad-
jacent building and were work·
ing late Tuesday when the fire
broke out.
"Flames were shooting out the
windows and extending way
above the top or the building,"
Lewis said. .
He said firefi&hlers from two engine companies aod a truck
company plil)'ed water on the
<See FIRE. Pa'e A2>
June, 1976.
"Unemployment always rises
in June because of graduating
high school and college seniors.''
said EDD labor analyst Alta Yet-
ter.
"However," Mrs. Yetter said, "the increase this year was far
less than anticipated and lhal is
why the seasonally adjusted un-
employment rate is so tow."
She noted that county amuse-
ment parks and restaurants
added 4,500 workers to their
payrolls last month.
* * *
.And, Mrs. Yetter said, Orange
County's construclion boom con-
tinued when 1,300 workers were
added toconstruction payrolls.
Mrs. Yetter pointed out that
the county's civilian work force
reached 875,000 persons in June,
a record high.
She also noted that private
fi rms within the county
employed 658,800 workers in
June.
* * *
California's Jobless
Lowest in 3 Years
SACRAMENTO (AP> -. California's unemployment rate
fell to 6.9 percent in June, the
Jowat in USree years and the flnt.
time In 17 years that the state·
has been below the national rate,
officials said today.
The jobless rate had been y.s
percent in May. For the third slraight month, total employ-
ment set a record, nearly 9.3
million, up 136,000since May.
The national unemployment
rate. which has been running as
m ucb as two percentage points
below California's, was 7.1 per-
cent in June, up from 6.9 percent
in May.
State Employment Develop. ••
merit Director Martin Glick said
employment records were set in nu111eroua industries, includlna
consttuctfon. which bas gained
16 percent in jobs over a year
ago.
He said the figures were
''further indicalion that
California is outpacing the rest of
the nation in speed of turnaround
from lhe recent recession."
But he cautioned that they
reflected mid-June totals, before
President Carter announced that
he opposed development of the
Bl bomber, a move already caus·
ing l ayoffs in Southern
California.
IDts Brick Wall
Cerritos Man Dies
A.f ter Mesa Crash
A Cerritos man was fatally in·
jured when his car slammed into
a utility pole and careened off a
brick wall in north Costa Mesa
early today.
Charles Jasper Jones, 28, was
found by a police officer shortly
after the motorist's new
Chevrolet left the roadway on
Sunflower Avenue near Fuchsia
Avenueatl:lSa.m.
Trame lnfestigator Chris
Morris said Jones died an hour
and a half later at Mercy General
Hospital in Santa Ana after
e mergency treatment at the
scene by Costa Mesa fire and
paramedic crews.
Morris said Jones was ap-
parenUy driving at a high rate or
speed when he failed to negotiate
a curve on Sunflower. His car
struck the curb, and the left side
slammed into an Edlson Com~
panypc>le.
(See CRASH, Page AZ)
\2 DAILY PILOT c
Senate to Approve
Neutron Funding?
WASHINGTON <APl St-natr
Mtnontv 1.e•dt-r tlowud 01tJwr
pr-4kted today the Sen \.: will
upprove funcb for t"ontroverslul
neutTon weapooa whtch Prealdont
{' arler HY• are nHd~ for the dt-
f en!le ot Wea~m Europe
Neutron warhc11ds ur dt·
s1gnl'd to kill ent'm)' Jo11>ld1~r:. with
rad1at1on while 1nfl1ct1n.i
m1n1mal explosive destrucuon in
tho blast area.
Opponent.a of the weapons led
by Sen Mark O. Hatfield ( R·
Ore ), planned to carry their
hghl to the floor or the Senate.
wllere a vote was scheduled late
today on delet1n1 funds for pro·
duction or the weapous from a
pub!Jc works appropriation bill.
Baker said he had not taken a
formal head counl of how the
Scnak wtll vote, but added, "It 11>
my auess thitt tlatrleld probably
would lotc "
Before the vote, Senate leaders
met to de<:tdo how to limit debate
on the weapons. which critics 11ay
would murk a dangerous leap in th ti a rms race.
II at held bas said the funds
i.hould not be approved, at least
until Carter bas provided a leaal·
ly required assessment of the
ne utron weapons' impact on
arms proliferation.
One Senate source said today
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey <D·
Minn.), attempted to work out an
agreement with Carter under
which a Senate decision on the
Fro• Page A J
FRISBEE FLICKER. • •
Johnson picked up his <'X
perienrc over six -.ummt•rs at the beach.
He said that wht•n the city
championships are over he'll still
be working for the city's recrc<i·
t ion department.
"I'll mostly be hauling around
-?q u1pmcnt to the parks and doing
maintenance things .iftcr the
rontcst," he said
From Page Al
2 CENTS .•.
The district currently levies an
eight-cent civic center tax.
Now that he's all washed up as
far as Whammo competition
goes, will he still toss a Frisbee?
•'Oh, sure. r entered a pro-
ressional tournament last l\pnl
at UC Irvine, but J didn't do too
hot," Johnson laughed.
He said he almost hroke <i
Junior record for distance. "but
professional Frisbee is so far up
there."
All th.is modesty from a kid
who was 1976 Newport Beach city
champion. Southern California
s tate c h a mpion. Western
Regional Open champion and
runner.up in the world event.
You'd think be just picked up
his first Frisbee, the way he
talks.
neutron weapons would be put orr
pending the arms control study.
At a news conference Tuesday,
Carter urccd the Se!iate to ap-
prove funding for further de·
velopment ot the weapons.
Neutron weapons, implanted in
artillery s hells and Lance mis·
siles, are designed to kill with
concentrated radiation rather
than exploaives or heat used in
more conventional nuclear
armament.
While Carter urged continued
'1evelopment of the weapons, he
lert open the question of actually
deploying them.
"l have not yet decided
whether to approve a neutron
born b, but I th.ink it should be one
of our options," the President
said
ln a letter lo neutron supporter
Sen. John Stennis CD·Miss.),
Carter said the weapons ••are in
this nation's security interest."
Carter told Stennis, •·we are
not talking about some new kind
or weapon, but of modernization
of nuclear weaoons
The Preside nt said the neutron
warheads might be needed "for
discreet application of force"
against NATO enemies. Neutron
weapons, he said, would keep
potential adversaries in Europe
uncertain whether nuclear
weapons might be used against
their "forward.echelons."
Carter s aid two detailed
studies on the weapons are due
Aug. 15 from the Pentagon and
the Arms Control and Dlsarma·
ment Agency.
Once he has received those re·
ports, Carter said, "I intend to
make a final production de·
c1sion ... "
Front Page A J
Ollty .............
RESCUE CREWS TRY TO SAVE DRIVER AFTER CRASH IN COSTA MESA
But Cerrito• Man Succumbed to lnlur1•• Following Accident Early Today
Bandit Gets
Prison Term
For Robbery
One of two men who admitted
they used a rifle and a revolver to
threaten an elderly Costa M esa
woman durinJ? a robbery that
netted them $600 in cash and a
ruby ring has been sent to slate prisonforfiveyears.
Orange County Superior Court
Judge H. Warren Knight order~
the prison term for Patrick
Jackson Lanning, 19. after the
defendant pleaded guilty to the
armed robbery of Mrs. Ruth
Swope, 82, of 1842 Park Ave.
Lanning and Jack Victor
Hughey, 23, both transients, ad-
mitted they forced their way into
the Swope home last Jan. 17 and
threauned her and her niece.
Huehey aJso has pleaded guilty
to charges of first degree armed
robbery. He will be sentenced Ju·
Jy 25 by Judge Knight.
Fro•PageAJ
CRASH •••
The impact ripped the left side
car door from the vehicle as the
car careened into a brick wall
across the sidewalk.
Morris said Jones' car then
rolled over coming to rest near
the roadway on its left side.
Jones worked for a year and a
half for General Motors Accep·
tance Corp. in Long Beach. Com·
pany orficials said he once was a
m ember of the Buffalo Bills pro·
fessional football team.
Investigator Morris said police
believe there was a lone witness
to the early morning crash who
left the scene shortly after of·
ficers arrived. He as ks that
anyone who m ay have seen the
accident contact the traffic
bureau at the Costa Mesa police
department.
Employes at the Long Beach
firm said Jones was married and
bad a young son who is visiting
relatives in Buffalo, N. Y. •
Autopsy Due
In Death of
Fairview Boy
Coroner's deputies were COD·
ducting an autopsy today to de·
termine what caused the death of
a handicapped boy, age 10, in a
ward at Costa Mesa's Fairview
State Hospital Tuesday night.
Investigators said it appeared
the child strangled when he
became entangled in a r estraint
harness that was required to pre-
vent him from falling out of a
wheelchair. ' '
Costa Mesa police, coroner's
deputies and hospital Executive
Director Dr. Francis J. Crinella
all agreed there was no evidence
to indicate any foul play.
The child appeared to have slid
down in the wbeelcbair-possjbly
due to an epileptic seizure -and
was choked by the restraint de· vice, authorities said.
Superintendent John Nicoll
told trustees he believes the total
district lax rate -$4.23 in ~la
Mesa and $3 93 in Newport Beach
last year can be dropp~ by 66
cents "under the ex1st1ng rules of
school finance "
But, he predicted. the 66·cent
drop may be whittled down by
pending finance lc1oi1slation in
Sacramento
PROBE WITNESS LINKS CHECKS ..•
The ward personnel had its
usual required number of stafr
members on duty when the child
was found about 8:30 p.m ., Dr.
Crinella said.
Those lax rates consist or three
types of levies a $3.60 general
fund levy, the cighl·cent civic
center tax and the remainder
which goes to bond debt and
building loan retirement.
No aclJon will be taken to re-
duce the general fund tax rate
until Aug. 9 when the ~ssessment
figures have been finalized.
Preliminary figures showed the
district's assessed value is up
about 19 percent, but public utiJi·
ty assessments aren 't complete yet.
Nicoll told trustees the 66-cent
drop in the tax rate would equal
nearly 18 percent, thus offsetting
most of the increase in assessed
,·alues.
Trustees decided to take action
Tuesday on the civic center tax
rate as "an act or ra1th~"
demonstrating their desire to
keep tax bills from rising by meet·
mg increases in assessed value
with decreases in the tax rate.
The district's $49.4 million
budget includes $900,000 in ex·
penditurcs for civic center proj.
ects. By dropping the tax rate two cents, trustees sa10 tney Wiil
take the $216,000 that tax would
have raised from the district's
capital improvement fund to
make up the difference.
The move received the
unanimous support of the seven
trustees who termed 1t ''ap-
propriate and a "step in the right
direction."
Mesa Man Jailed
On Pot Farm Rap
Police arrested a Costa Mesa
man Tuesday on suspicion of
cultivating more than SO mari-
juana plants in his back yard.
Officers said Patrick M.
Moore, 22, was taken Into
custody at his home at 225 Ogle
St.
Moore was later released from
Costa Mesa City Jail on $1,000
bond.
Of'ANOl COAST c
DAILY PILOT
._,.,_
'\ "'"""' .............
-.,.,.J.:':;t::,..._
--.:.,., .....
"'::-:t=t"
O..IC..... --..~ .. _ _... ........ ......
C.-..... OMle ... ""':=ns-.t-=:~ ... .._ .... "~E'-ICU!otiillllllli .... 11. ,,,,.
' ...... lY•l .. J l II.a ...... ...... °'"" """"'"'
Significantly, Remington's
former office manager said she
h<1d no knowledge of a so·called
Diedrich bank trust held by Rem.
ington except what she had read in the newspapers.
In the end, the grand jury
thought enough of the bank
evidence and linking testimony to
hand down its felony conspiracy
indictments.
Jn the closing Stages or the IO•
vestigation, the Grand Jury
heard from some of Orange
County's m ost controversial
political figures, including
former county Democratic Party
c hairman Richard O'Neill,
political consultant Arnold Forde
and lobbyist Frank Michelena.
O'Neill figured into the probe
because of a $100,000 loan
guarantee he and Dr. Louis Cella
posted in 1974 at a Santa Ana
bank for Diedrich.
When Capizzi on June 28 asked
O'Neill about the background of
the guarantee, the self-described
''financier· ranch· restaura-
teur" testified:
.. Well, Mr. Diedrich requested
a loan. At that particular time he
told me he had high interest rates
-having a little trouble re·
financing some property and re·
quested a loan to hold him over
80. 120 days at the most.''
"With whom did you discuss
From Page A I
PAY •••
place next year's raise on the
ballot died for lack of a second
but Sc~t said he would bring it upagam.
Affected by the $52,()()().a.year
pay ceiling were Adrian Kuyper.
county counsel; Robert Thomas,
administrative officer; George
Osborne, direct.or of the Environ·
mental Management Agency;
David Odell. director of the
Human Services Agency; Dr.
Ernest Klatte, director of the
Mental Health Department and
County Health Officer J . R.
Elpers.
All other high-level bounty of.
ficialt except for PJobatioo Of.
ficer Mar1aret Grief, received at
leaat the S.85 percent raise.
Mias Grier, whose raise is aUU
under review, wu taken a at.ep
up the salary ladder but ber p~
for ~presec.t will stay at $3'1,UIO
annually.
Seven eounty offlclals received tbe S.85 percent hlke plus
mon~ 1'aD8inl lroDI SlOO to MOO~
"Cancel the ad, reaponse wu
so •ood we sold the dJ•h•uhe.r." ,
B,..,d new Oaffen and
Satt&et dJ.lhwahr. sun ln
cart.an Sl.50. !>bone UX• ••••
the continuing guarantee?"
Cap1u1 asked
.. Dr. Cella asked me to support
to go along with this loan.·'
"And it Is with Dr. Cella that
you discussed the loan '!"
Capizzi asked O'Neill.
"Yes," the financier·rancher·
restauranteur answered.
As lh.ings turned out on the
Sl00,000 Cell a ·O' Neill loar.
guarantee.
-The bank made demand for
payment from O'Neill when
Diedrich initially failed to repay
the loan on time and to respond to
dunning phone calls and letters.
-The lM>. 120 days turned out to
be 16 months before Diedrich
made payment in two install-
ments.
-Diedrich was indicted on per·
Jury charges for failing to show
the loan on economic disclosure
statements filed in 1976 and 1977,
though 1t did show on two earlier
statements.
Political consultant Arnold
Forde testified June 28, the same
d ay O'Neill appeared before the
Grand Jury.
'Yes, Forde s aid, he and
partner William Butcher bad
managed Anthony's primary
campaign in June, 1976.
"ln the general election, An·
thony was more.interested In run-
ning the campaign himself,"
Fordesrud.
·'So what we agreed to do in the
Anthony campaign is that he
(Anthony) would be in charge of
ll ..
''He would be in charge of it
and we would be in charge of de·
veloping a direct mail package,"
Forde testified.
The political consultant put
more distance between his firm
and the general election cam·
paign fundraising for Anthony
when he said:
"That wasn't our responslbUf·
ty any more. We aJmost came to
a total parting of the ways in the
campaign because, In one sense,
Anth~ wanted t.o do that ... he
was going to be totally in charge
of the campaign."
Had Forde told Anthony that it
was okay to accept campai1n
loans as penonal loans and then
to show the money comiu~lnto
the campallJl aa loans from the
candidate?
''There was certainly no talk
about a third party living money
1urr•P!Uousl)' or an)'lb.1n1 like that,' Jl'ord• teaUfled.
Michelena 1pent mott ol hil
tlm• before the Grand Jury ex-
p!aln.lna 1Vb)' he had pro'flded. member ol tb• CXNDI.)' Aaeu-
mat Appeals Board with the uae
of a leued Cadillac and on.Ume
&•publican state aenate cu-e1ldate wttb ..,.800.
MJtbeleM aakl the auto and
1u011M credit card provided to
Newport Beach attorney Frank
Watera wu, iii effect. a ret.lner for Waten' 1emces .
And bed.med that be or .ADY of
bl• cllfnt.t had butlnett before
the board.
A• for the money . paid then ceadldate Norton, Michelena
said lt wu tor 1nvt•U••ilve
Hl'Vicet. Tb checka were made p11abl.e to Norton'• (Onller Cl'OQJ Gary
Newm7er because lllc.btlena
believed the two •tr• col1abor•
ln1 U. tbelr tn•eattJ•tin e4vc• tures.
Those adventures ended in
April with Norton being indicted
on perj ur y c harges and
Newmyer acting as the recorder·
equipped turncoat that gathered
the evidence against Norton.
Drifting in and out of the secret
transcripts leading to the indict·
ments is testimony centering
around the Las Vegas casino
trade.
Frank Watts, controller of the
Riviera Hotel, testified that hotel
.records indicate Diedrich lost
$30,000 in 12 hours last Oct. 1 and
2 while testing his skill at two
crap tables.
And, Watts added, as what the
casino calls "a good player,"
Diedrich was given compltmen.
tary rooms, meal s and
beverages dunng his Las Vegas
stays.
It is Diedrich 's alleged failure
to list the value of the purported
Las Vegas gratuities on his
economic disclosure statements
that resulted in a second perjury
count included in the indict·
men ts.
The transcripts' most colorful
reading comes from a written
record of a tape recorded con·
versation between Conrad and
Las Vegas showman Joe Agosta.
In conversation liberally
sprinkled with four·letter words,
Conrad bragged of the inroads he
had made into Orange County
political circles.
TONIGHT
CO AST COMMUNITY
COLLEGE BOARD -Regular
meeting, 1.370 Adams, 8 p.m .
MUSIC OF AMERICA -Free
concert, Big Band Era with Stan
Freese, South Coast Village 7:30
p .m .
"JACQUES BREL"-SouU>
Coast Repe rtory Theater.
Tuesday.Sunday through July 30,
8p.m.
TBURSDA Y, JULY 14
COASTLINE CC LECTURE -
.. Making It As a Single,"
Mariners Elementary School. 7
p.m.
Ex-Mesa Officer
Gets College Post
Thell E. Glascock of Costa
Mesa has been appointed
chairman of the Department of
Crimlnal Justice at Cal State Los
Angeles.
The former Costa Mesa police
officer joined the university in
1971 as an associate professor of
criminal justice. He is a former
president of the Orange County
Peace Officers Association.
· He said the youngster was
checked just shortly before he
was found dead and appeared to be au right
The patient, unidentified by
state policy, was t he son or
parents living in the Los Angeles
area. ,_
Fro.. Page A J J
.. , ' 1 FIRE... '
fire and cut holes in the building
over the fire to release heat.
"There was a lot of black
s moke comin~ out of there, and
that stuff turns into fire really
quick." hesald.
Lewis said that, had the fire
been able to get into the attic of
the building, it could have easily
spread to other offices attached
to the structure.
"We would have Jost a lot more
if that had happened," he said .
He said an Edison Company
c rew, working in th e
nei&hborhood, saw the flames
and quickly cut the power t.o the
building.
Lewis said fire damage to the
building itself was about $15,000,
with the remaining $35,000 at·
tributed to the contents of the
electronics shop.
Lynn Hart HART'S John Hart
SPORTING GOODS
538 CENTER ST. • COST A MESA • 646-1919
Warm Up Suits--25'5 to 391s
Plain Acrylic Jacket only 1495
Plain Acrylic Pmts Only 11 ss ..
V·neck Acrylic Sweaters 515
Runninr Sbifts-..320 to 91~
Duck Feet Fins 1295 & 1595
Water Wonder Kick Boards 415
Morey Booleg Boards 23'5 & 399s
Swim G
Sbte Boards & ·Parts
, Racquetball lqJets
Racquet 8*
Handball Glaves & Balls
Tennis Ramm
O.P •. Swim Trunks -900 ti 1300
Speede Swim Slits & Trtiks
Baseball Pants 101s .. 12•s
Sattball Jerseys-32s to 71s ·
Tennis Shirts & Shorts
T ennls Dresses
(idles Tennii Shorts
Tennfs$1118s
T 1nnis 8illS
Raclet Sbingin1
Baseball & Softball Mlttt
BaseballS' & Saftballs
Basnalf & Softball Bats
Soccer Balls &
-· . , r
w.on..d1y. July t3. Uln * DAILY PILOT .43
OC Tax Money
Earns Bundle
Bobby Pays Off :
Lee Designs Merlin to Set Records.,
By ALMON LOCKABEY whichever bo•t is fini1hlni."
quipped Lee. Oelly,....e..tl ... WrlM
HONOLULU -Thirty-four-
year·old Bill Lee has come a long
way since be rtrst s tarted "mess-
ing around with sailboats" as a
13-year-old Sea Scout In Newport
On the serious side Lee says it
is simply more fun to sail a fast
boat.
d.icap oo lJLDBa. Nevertheless. a
similar boat. Chutzpah did wt.a
lhe race two years in a row. ln ta by Orau1tC«mty
Tu C.OUedot·'l'rMaucer Robert
Citron MrMd "3.a mllb for
c01J.Dty ernmeot. clU•,..cbool
d• lrina 8IJd other tnl 11•-
ciea lut1ear.
CUl'OCI told al.1P9rvbor1 TUes·
day th•t durlns lh• tt'lt-11 tbcal
.vear hl• department •u
responsible f,,.-STl2 S million ln
t a~ money raJacd by varto1H
asmch.'3 through property laxes,
J n Increase over the $665 J
1n1lllon a year earlier
And interest earned by invest·
ments was up $1.2 1n1111on over
the previous year, Catron said.
Citron, dress~ In a bnght
yellow Jacket and white t.rousera,
said, "As they say in Napa Coun-
ty, this has truly been a vintage
vear m lhe treasurer's office."
· Catron also told supervisors
that his investments for county
government earned $2 million
more than the $3 million he had
estimated for the year.
In addition, he said, invest·
mcnts in the 1977-78 fiscal year
:.ire expected to earn $4.5 million
for county government, rather
than the $3.2 million he estimated
earlier.
As a result, supervisors will
have $3.3 million more for county
expenses than expected earlier,
Citron said.
Since one penny in property
lax now raises $974,709, Citron
continued, the extra investment
earnings translates to roughly 3.3
c1.1nt1
ratt!I.
' . on county property tax
The taJC colleetor·treaaurer re-
ported thal Moneyrnox, A com·
puterlzed Investment tradtns
ay•tem be ln5Ututed, earned $1.9
rnlllion the put yeu.
It a110 drew an averaee in·
tereat yleld ot 6.4 percent while
aveuae rat. available to gov.
ernment shorl·term investments
during the year was S.4 percent.
The Moneymax system ls now
helng used by three other
California cities, he said, eight
other California counties. the
Arizona , Michi gan and
Washington state treasuries, a
city in Arizona and a county in
Maryland.
D•llY ~119( St,tll PN4e
'A VINTAGE YEAR'
County Treasurer Citron
LA DA 'Criticized'
For Closed Files
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
statewide citizen's crime-
fighting group has criticized
Dist. Atty. John Van de Kamp's
office for refusing to provide data
from criminal files. ,
The founder of the Oakland-
bas ed Citizens for Law and
Order, which has five other
branches in the s tate, said Van de
Kamp was not cooperating as
other county district attorneys
have. A Van de K amp aide said
officials d eclined to open
the files because they contam
confidential data.
Beach.
Lounging on the deck
67-foot record-smashln
Merlin in Ala
Wai yacht
harbor, the
bea rd e d ,
bespectacled
designer r e·
lated why and
how he came
up with a
v acht that
would be first
to finish in the
2,225-mile Los
Honolulu race. t o
"After missing out on the
dockside finishing parties in the
last two Transpac races, I de-
cided I wanted to be in on all the
parties. To do that I had to be
here first."
In the last two races Lee sailed
on one of his original ultra-light
displacement yachts designed
for handicap victories.
"By getting here first and stay
ing aboard. I can attend all the
parties. All you have to do 1s
listen for that loud Aloha and gel
up and join the party of
* * *
"This Is an age o( progress and
it is a good feeling to know that.
yo u have built a better
mousetrap," be added.
And Merlin is certainly a faster
if not better mousetrap as she
proved in setting a new eJa~ed
lime record or eight days, 11
hours , one minute and 46
seconds-a mark expected to
stand for a long lime.
Lee. the son of Orange County
Judge William S. Lee of Laguna
Beach, came to Newport with his
family as a 13-year-old In 1955.
After messing around with
sailboats at the Sea Scout base,
he attended Newport Harbor
High School and Orange Coast
College before earning a degree
in engineering.
Arter graduation from college
he worked at Mare Island in sub-
marine overhauls for the Navy.
''Designing sailboats has
always been a hobby of mine:·
said Lee. "My first real design of
a large fast boat was Witchcraft.
the 36-footer that won overall
handicap honors in the 1974
M a zatalan race. It was con-
ceived to win handicap honors in
t he Trans pac. but the rule
makers imposed a heavy han·
* * *
"Thl.s year they placed all of
th• lilht d1aplacement boats U. a
separate divialoo rather than im-
pose further time penalties."
That., explained Lee, was wheo
he came up with the design of
Merlin for one specific purpose--
to win on elapsed time and set a
new record. "Besides the ela~ed lime~·
ord in the Honolulu race we
were aiming at the record set by
Eric Tabarly's 73·foot trimaran
Pen Duick when he sailed unoC-
flcially in the 1969 race and made
the crossing a day and a half
ahead of the monohull fleet.
"We beat Pen Duick's recard
by more than two hours ...
Lee said there were no exotic
materials used in the construo-tioo of Merlin.
"She is just a good, strong
fiberglass boat, and there was no
attempt lo strip out her interior
to save weight. In addition lo the
eight pipe berths, Merlin has, a
double bunk, a four burner stove
with oven and two coolers. One of
the coolers holds eight cases of
beer. I know.''
Lee said the boat 'could be
sailed easily with a crew oi eight
as opposed to the 12 to 15-man
c rew needed on conventional
yachts of a comparable size.
Trial Advance d
Earl Huntting, a retired Army
colonel, said his 5,000·member
group uses computer Hies and
court records from district at-
torney's offices to examine the
s entencing r ecord s of trial
judges. The organization then
uses that information to give
"unduly lenient" judges negative
publicity in the news media in
hopes that voters will ous t them.
Phantom, Sorcery
Arrive in Hawaii
From a performance stand-
point Merlin was easy to band.le.
Lee said. "There were times
when we would plunge into the
back or a wave ahead at 20 knots
and come out on the other side
still doing 20 without anything
worse than a flood of white water
coming down the deck.
Celia's Attorneys
Close Long Case
Pretrial action that has kept an
Orange County Superior Court
judge busy for nearly a year
moved to its climax Wednesday
when attorneys for Dr. Louis J.
Cella Jr. closed their case.
Judge William C. Speirs im·
mediately scheduled Aug. l as
the date he will hear final argu·
mcnts on the motion to suppress
prosecution evidence despite de·
fense appeals for a later date.
Judge Speirs' ruling will clear
the way for the trials of Cella, 52,
and fo rmer hospital ad -
ministrator Stephen Robert
Evans. 32. on multiple felony
counts conlamed ID a grand jury
Indictment.
lt 1s alleged that both men
were involved in acts of fraud
that cost two Orange County
hospitals controlled by Cella as
secretary.treasurer an estimat-
ed S2 million.
And it is alleged that a s ubstan-
tial portion of the hospital funds
was used by Cella to subsidize
political candidates.
Judge Speirs has indicated
during the marathon pretrial
session that the eventual trial of
Dr. Cella and Evans will be
moved from Orange County.
Sport Goods Taken
Sporting goods valued by the
victim at $783 have been stolen
from an El Toro home. Orange
County sherirrs officers s aid an
intruder, who enter~ via the
garage door, took golfin& equip-
m ent and tennis racquets from
the home of food broker J ohn
Christopher Sausser, 31, oC 25301
Cinnamon St.
The judge has agreed with de-
fense attorneys that heavy pre-
trial publicity in the county has
ruled out the possibility or a fair
trial before jurors drawn from
local communities.
Delay Sought
In Trash Bag
Slayi,ng Case
RIVERSIDE CAP> -The
Riverside County pub lic de-
fender says be will try lo delay
Friday's scheduled preliminary
hearing for two men accused in
the trash bag murder case.
Public defender Malcolm Mac-
Millan said Tuesday he wanted to
postpone the hearing until mid-
August. to give him time to file
motions challenging search war-
rants used to obtain evidence.
The two men, Patrick Wayne
Kearney and David Douglas Hill,
are being held in Riverside in
lieu of $500,000 bail on two counts
each of murder.
MacMillan is defending JUll.
who was unemployed, but said
Kearney, a former Hughes
Aircraft Compa ny engineer,
probably will be represented by a
private attorney.
Riverside Deputy Dist. Atty.
Daniel Bakalski said he would be
ready for F riday's bearing
berore Rivers ide Municipal
Judge Phillip LaRocca, who will
determine if the men should be
tried for the slayings of Arturo
Marquez, 24, of Oxnard and John
Otis LaMay, 17, of El Segundo.
A spokeswoman for Van de
Kamp's office said lbe crime-
fighting group requested access
to computer information about a
year ago.
"As rar as we can determine.
we didn't let them see the com-
puter files because the informa-
tion there is incomplete," ex-
p 1 a in e d C ·arol Welsh.
spokeswoman for Van de Kamp's
office.
"We thought it was unfair for
the group to see incomplete rec-
ords when they could see stan-
dard copies of court records over
at the court. Also, the computer
has confidential information, in·
eluding previous criminal rec-
orders of the defendants, which
we can't release.'·
The citizens' group, which was
forme d in 1970. r ecently
established an office in Orange
County and plans another in San
Mateo County and Los Angeles
County.
He said the group's aims in-
clude supporting law enforce-
ment agencies. monitoring the
news media, and lobbying for
stronger criminal justice legisla-
tion.
Most of the 5,000 members, ac·
cording to Huntting, are senior
citizens, primarily because they
"have the time to devote to the
organizaUon and they are the
prime targets of assaults."
Fall Fatal
To Chutist
HONOLULU -Phantom, a
66-foot sloop sailed by co-owners
Tony Delfino and Charles Phifer.
and Sorcery, the 6Hoot sloop
County Okays
$30,000 Noise
Suit Research
•·we built her comfortably
skippered by owner Jacob Wood. because we want to keep her
finis hed the Los Angeles lo around a long time for some
Honolulu Yacht Race Tuesday. cruising, snoozing and boozing,"
They were the sixth and seventh Lee said.
boats to finish the breezy About the name Merlin! "A
2,225·ntile crossing. merlin,•• says Lee, ''is a bird, a
Phantom lirnshed at 9:59 a.m. little falcon, of northern latitudes
POT and saved enough time to which devours birds twice its
place her in third position in size."
Class A and fleet standings in He paused, grinned and re.
Division I. Her elapsed time for minded his listeners that his
the COW'se was nine days, 20 Merlin had just eaten up yachts
hours. 59 minutes and two five times her weight in crossing
seconds. 2,225 miles of stormy ocean.
Sorcery finished at 5:06 p.m. "But we actually nam ed our Orange County supervisors with an elapsed time of 10 days. vessel after the Firth Century $3ag;.~ t!~fr~a:P~~a~~:;sdt~~r~ and four hours and no chance of Merlin, a so-called magician wbo
picking up any hardware. was actually a very talented pare for two lawsuits filed over Yachts expected to finish today engineer of his day and who ai~erts':::!~e.set for trial in Oc-were SWlSet Boulevard, Solution. helped King Arthur run England
....,. Native Son. Shamrock, Panacag, for a number of years." ' tober, are filed by John and Lois Outrageous. Natoma. Bravura Lee also recaJled that when .'
Sours and Patricia Ann Simmons and Loco Viente. Rolls Royce built engines for the
of Newport Beach. They arc Yachts not reporting Tuesday P-51 airplanes In World War II
among 950 suits filed in 1968 and were Free Spint, Typhoon and they named them Merllns.
1969, according to County SummerWind,butnonewascon· Despite his casua l , ap-
Counsel Adrian Kuyper. sidered to ~ experiencing any pearance, 34-year-old Bill Lee
Kuyper said information more serious trouble than weak comes on as a clear-thinking,
gathered by the appraisers will radio batteries. Typhoon is pro-even-talking sailor who is com-
be useful in those and other suits reeding to Honolulu with a jury fortable with all the numbers or
still pending. d d. ht d I · I di th The Sours, of 2215 Golden Cir-rag rudder an no ra 10 power. yac es gn, inc u ng e com-
e le. are seeking $20,000 in proper-She was spotted two days ago un-pRluic
1
ea.ted International Offshore . s· r der full sail. ty damage and Miss ammons. 0 What's more, he has shown he
2223 Golden Circle, is seeking knows how to beat the old adage,
$10,000 in damage, both alleging "you can push a block of wood
that airport noise devalued their 'Wrong Way' throughthewateronlysofast."
property. Lee is pushing his blocks or Kuyper said the plaintiffs may f'b I thro h th t t amend their suits to seek hi~er Al,• Se• d 1 erg ass ug e wa er a
&" -.n-n" 1,•n faster speeds than was dreamed damages s ince their orlgmal .,.;;;•so ~ of not more th an a decade ago,
claims were based on property SAN DIEGO (AP> -Sixteen and making them hold together
values eight years ago. Mexicans trying to slip farther under extreme conditions.
Another Newport Beach resi· into the United States aboard a Lee brings his designs to frui-
d en t. Harry Rinker, was circus train were unloaded with t ' i hi I t lied Bill a warded $305,000 ·1n damages by ion n s own p an ca the animals and arrested here. Lee Yachts Inc. at a lilUe town anOrangeCountySuperiorCourt The train delivered lbe lied Soq l · t •~id Sant HA y w ARD (AP ) -A Jury in April for aircraft noise Ringling Brothers, Barnum and C~uz. ue JUS ou.., e a
California National Guard damage, a decision the county Is Balley Circus to San Diego on If you want a Mer lin·type
pa rarescue s pecialist, is dead appealing. Tuesday from Barstow, where yacht, Lee figures he can build
after failure of his parachute to The supervisors' decision to the illegal aliens apparently you one for about $10 a pound. At
fully open in a training jump. hire appraisers came just three climbed aboard. thinking they 22,000 pounds that figures out to
A guard spokesman s aid it hap-days before the 25th anniversary were headed north. be nearly a quarter of a million
pened Tuesday to Senior Airman of commercial airline service "It was like a three-ring circus dollars to be first to finish in tbe
Lawrence Zimmerman, 26, of from Orange County Airport. right there along the tracks, Transpac and have the op-
San Diego, at ajomp site ~5 miles Hughes Airwest, formerly known roundmg them all up, .. said a portunlty to get in on all tbe
east of Oakland. as Bonanza Airlines. is celebral-U.S. Border Patrol spokesman.I' dockside finishing parties. The spokesman, Maj. Michael _ ing its silver anniversary Friday. ____________ -J11_L----------";..:._ ____ _
Teilmann, aald Zhnmennan, a
student at Sall Diego State, was ir
t he second or two men who
jumped from a C130 rescue
plkne . Gem
. F18hing Boat Talk
·Bailed Out E:S
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The Miss ;1,;: ~--r--~ a 53-root charter fisbing bo~t
owned by Jack Montgomery, as
back to port,,thanks to the Coast
Guard.
The Coast Guard said the boat
radioed Tuesday that it was tak·
Ing on water about 55 miles soulh
of Polnt Loma.
A betlcopler and the cutter
Point Brower, were dispatched,
with the aircraft reaching the
scene first and lowering a pair of
portable pumps to the stricken
boat. The Ml.as L then limped
back to port with a cutter e.scort.
Secretary of Navy
Plana Coast Tour
SAN DIEGO (~P> -Navy Sccr«ary W. Graham Claytor Jr. wlll make bla Orat inspecUon
tour ot Navy and Marine Corps
ln•t•llation.1 •Jone t he West
Cout&mday, lhe Navy safd.
Cl.,ior l~o arrivo at El Toro Marine CO !a~ on Sunday
mrd a1lo wt l vlslt Lol'\I Beach
and Camp l>endlcton .Marine
Corpa Ba*' betl>ro nytne to
Bt-.tan, W~h.1 to vlsll the Trldeo& •ubcnUJA& ou.e.
"
~
DIAMONDS IN THE ROUGH
and Ille mt11 who makt them tmoOlh
A "di'-mond in the rough" is a
classic example of basic quality
which must be improved to reach ita
potential.
Diamond cutters are the special
breed of men who bring diamonds
through the metamorphosis from
rough to ready. There are about MO
of the world's best work in what. hu
beeri described as old·fasbloaed
swealsbol)IJ in a two·block area of
Manhattan. They rent apace •t
workbencbea In manu facturlna
planta and pay theJr ront by tumioi
• out a certain amount of work for the
landlord. Most have no frln1e
benefits of any kind. Yet. they have
been classified M bolng among lhe
world's great arllaana. Cutting •
rouah diamond la among Uie most
exacting feats on earth. A tiny mis-
take coUld cost thousand• or dollans.
JIRTQIRVED
The fashionable
wedding ring ~C1
SJ20 00
A rtCr aved wedding rings. Distinctively
styled. Arranged In fashion collections,
from contempora ry to antique. Let us
help you choose the ring that's r ight for your love.
I DAILY PILOT
Record
Viewed
.. ,A UINGTO'lif 1Ar 1
AumeMI t•oulc1 Nl'I aoml' r11l1e(
(tofn ruant (ood 1)1 lt'I'~ nt•x l Yl'lll
1[ • 1ovt•rnmrn\ prcdlt•\100 for u
~nrct urn ('01 n hu1 vt·~l holtb
lrUl'
'1'he i\1u H'UllU1 I' 1>1·11.11 ltni•nl
uODourwt'tl Tu"sd ay that the um
<'Qt'n han ei.\ muy bt• 6 33 hlll!I"'.
hel • two pe1 rt•nt abovo lu1il
HORT J
fllfi. erop ol 6 22 b1lhon bw.hcb,
t existing rt'l'Ord
ut the departml·nt., Croµ
R9'>0rt1ng Board l'IJUl1oncd that
f01'ee as ts of J plt•nt1ful corn
hWvest will depend l,1 rgcly on
the weather The late ... t crop pro
Jecllons werl' ha ... ed on J Juh I
survey
C.rter ldfiu Reje~ted
BEIRUT Ld1anon 1J\P 1
T b e P a I e s t 1 n 1• I. 1 b e r a t 1 o 11
Urgan1zation 1 l'LO I rl'Jl'l'led
President CJ1l1•1 s statem<.•nt
1hat any Pall-st1111.111 krriton
establlshch b.~ a :\>11d1ll1• 1'.:asl Sl'l
tlemenl should Ill• tH·d to Jordan
and not 111deµL•nde11t
'Wt'! insist on u IOO Pl'l't'l'l\I In
dl·pl'ndc11t Palestinian stall' on
cvcrv v.ird of l'alL•st1111an soil
rreeci from b.rJ1~1 by military a1·
tion or d1plomatv ' said a PLO
spokesman .
Oil Priefi "'rev:fi Hit
STOCKllOL~l . Swt•dt•n CAP>
R a d 1 c a I ., t a t e .., w 1 t h 1 n l h t•
Orgallll.tlllln of l'l'lrolt•um £,
portmg Countrtl's fOPE<.:1 SJlll
todav tht•v would r<'"''"t un;, at
ll·mpt:-. led b) Saurll Arab1i1 amt
Iran to frt'l'/l' thl' price of 011 Ill
1978 al curn·nt ll'\ l'I.,
L1bva s rnl m1n1stl'l· E.u.l•d1n
Mabr.ouk. said. ·'Then: will prob-
ably Ix-a new s 1>lll 111 the or
~an1tallon 1r llw "i.111111., rn.11nto11n
this 1>0:-.1t111n
An J\lf(crian "'IHll..l· ... man .,,1111
he felt lhl•n• mu-.t hl· ·:-.oml' ror
rections" on till' t·urTt·nt Sl2 70
pl'r barrel l"ll"l' bdon· t hl' t•ncl 111
the ~·i.'ar Algt·n.111-. reportl'd
Vcne.zucla w;is :.ibo against a
h o 1 d o n p r 1 l' l' .., . .1 l t h o u g h
Vencwda off1('1all\ tll•l'11nl•tl tu
comment
LIU \i'ega# ,..ir.-"ilb :1
LAS VEGAS 1/\1'1 "This
bu1ld111g was n 't >o11µp11:-.t•d to
burn ... a fire om<:ial :-.airl afle1
the second blaze 111 lt•ss than a
'Yt'!Ck killed thret• pen;ons and 1n
1u red 23 others m a h1~h rise
Jpartment 1·umpll•x Bul th1·
m1null' you bnnf! 1n 1wupll•
WadnHd• . Jul 13 1911
Town Evacuated
Truck Crash Spilh Deadly Chemical
ROCKWOOD Tenn I API d1cm1cal. · "JIU Col Russell "Once we''e &ol it over there
orr1c1ul11 uhl thl.') huµcd the· "lewman or the Notional Guard. and we have all the sareties on it.
!I ~~9 t1varuull•d rf' ... tdl'ntll of this ~hen the fumes were al their I'd say you could bring the town 'li~el mill town 1·11111<1 return i.t rongest 1''orty persons were back." Barnes said
horn(' todu) ai. lht· duni:,l'r began 1reJtcd at areu ho::.pitals and re Steve Webs ter , a Civil Oerense
pu1111ln11C from 900 gJllOns of leased fo:low1n~ the spill Tues o fficer rron:i Knoxville who
potcnttully dt•adlv 1·hem1t·ul that c1a:v helped _coord1~rte lh.e evaeua
Wlllt>d from a \Het·ked tan!. Ttu: NEW Lf:i\K d l'n:loped in tion. said t~e bromine can be
tru(•k th<: llumagl•d portion of the fatal when 1t vJporl2es, and 1t
As <·1ewb 1u1 m•i.l the truck up truck's 30-foot-long tank as 1t was vaporiz~s un~er no,r.mal at
ral(hl toduy. 1t ~prung a small being placed on another trailer tu m.osphenc cond1llons. I ho hqu.•d
1ww leak of l1qu1d bromine. but be taken lo a more remoll' area will burn and the vapor can kill
offlc1uls s aid res1dt•11t11 should be or the county, Newman said you " , . .
ahlt•lureturnartt'l'tht'!truckwas ••rt 's JUSt t•oming oul Ill B y ea rl ~ _morn~ng , C i vil
n·moved and s tall' air quality of droplets now," he suid "We"re Def ens~ .offic1nJs s:ud. the gas
flt·tals took sample~ to make llure a pi>lying arnmoni<i to the leakmg was rising to t.he u~pcr at thcareawa~safe h r omine lo neutraliie the mosphere and dispersing. T.he
l'hemical " cloud that had covered.th~ enl1re NATIONAl. Gl'AKOSMEN
finished l'\' acualmg the last uf
Rock~ood's resident!> early this
morn111g. including 55 patients in
a hospital Some l.500 people had
refused to move and had to bt>
fore1bly eva1:uated
Officials said most or lhe nox
1ous fumes sp11lctJ 1n thl' crash
"hi ch lulled thl' drl\ er had
been <lisper ,ed by morning
breezes and that there should be
no toxic resrdue in the town
· I can't overemphas ize lht:
d<rnger i1wolved in brt•ath1ng this
3 Poisonings
W A Barnes natwnal sales town late Tuesday d1m1nishcd
manaccr for Dow Chemical Co . during the night into i.everal
which owns thl' tanker. said 1l small pockets
~ ould be mO\'Cd to an isolated
J r ea al the Rotkwood airport.
sealed, and the remaining hqu1d
hrom111c would be transferred to
another lrut·k
BARNES SAID the ongmal
leak wa-; through a \al\ e sheared orr 1n the wrcclo. I le said tht·
truck s t.ink had been bent 10to
the shapl' of a banana hut did not
rupl un.• 111 the t•ra ... h
THE TRUCK CRASHED Tues
day afternoon during a thun-
derstorm on Interstate 40 over
looking the town Its driver. Sue
Simms Thompson. 43, wa::. killed
Ht'r husband, Robert. 42. was 1n
the 111tens1ve earc uml at a Knox
\'tile hospital suflcr111g fro°'
acute respirator~ problems as a
result of inhaling the fum es
Cancer Vnit
'Agonizing'
Over Laetrile
WASHINGTON (AP) The
•
Two Nurses Guilty
In Patient Deaths
DETROIT 1,\P 1 Two f:o'1llprn;1 nur'>t's Wl'ft' each round guilty
tl\ a federal court Jury today or poisoning three patients at a
\'
0
cterans Admmistrnt1on hospital m 1975 Om· of the two who had
hl•en thargl•d with murder wa ... found mnoc<•nt on that count
National Cancer Institute 1s ··not
near" a decision on whethe r to •
test the controversial substance
Laetrile on human \'1Ct1ms of
cancer. federal ht•alth officials
!ii.I\'
br Guv H \;ew(•ll acl111g
director of the federal ins titute.
said today that the :igenc·y ,.,
"still :igon111ng' over the ethical
C(lll'St1ons lll\olvetl 1n lt•.,t1ng
Laetrile on humans
The two wnml'n l'at'h fat•1• .1 po-.s1hll' lift• Sl'ntcnce on the pmson
111~ com·1c-tions
Hoth wOml'll wen· also found i.:utll) ot u1n.,p111ni:: to (Xlt son lhl'
patients at thL' Ann .\rbor hosoital with lhl' PC•Wl·rful muscle·
rel .1 xing drui: Pa\ ult•n
:'I/either fo'1llp1n.1 '\.11 t1 ... o. :JI. uf Y1>sllanll .
nor Ll'orH>l'<I l't'ICI., :I:l. or Ann Arbor, di'>
pl.1yl'd any n·:1t·t ron .is till'\ t•rd1ct!-. were reurl
in the r11u1t111om In I Ill' JUdl!t' ., ckrk
:\11'>s Narciso w:1s l'ciunr1 rnnoccnt llf one
diarg<· of munll'r and .il-.11 of onl' t•harge of
).lOISOnllll{
MORE T ll,\N 50 lin·athmg failurt.•s hit the
ho:-.µ1t al during July and August or 1975
PEREZ Several Of tht• VIClitns died, hul il Was never
dear just how many deaths wNe c.lin•ctly attributed to l'a\'UJOn.
U.S. Distncl Court .J11dgl' Philip Prall allowed the nurses to re·
mam rrcc nn bone.I . l k ':1id ht· would .,l'l a date for sentencing after
he rl'C('i vcd a prcscntem·1ng rl'µort I
The nine women and three mt·n of the jun·
hart di.'libcrall•d for more than 9:1 hour'i over 15
da\·s smce gelling thc <'a't' 011 .June 2!1 after a
13-week trial
The r :lst' 111 \'II" l'U mnnths or leg a I
maneu\'cnng. Jur~ scll'ellon took almost a
month and nl'arl~ 1:rn persons were 1n "'
terv1cwed lwforc the 1iam•l of 12 rt•gular JUron.
;rnd four .1lternat1·s "as 't'.1tt•d
:\10RE TUAN b,000 page ... ol tt•,llmon~ HA1tc1sco
~<·re eompilc>d from 100 w1tnesse ... l'<illcd during the trial More than
;;o exh1b1h Wl'rl• 1•11tl·rcd a., l'nc1cnn·
Rut. he quitkly addL•d "Wt0 0\l'
got lo stop <1gon1l1n~ ;.1nd make .1
d cc1s1on '>oon ·• In ll•st1mon~
Tuesday bd ort• a Senate sub
comm1tlcl'. opponl'nts of Laetrilt•
agrecd th a t go\t•rnmL•nt
s p o nsort·ll l'11111cal tests an·
needed to '>C'l tlc the rag111g dis
pute O\'l'I' the substancl''s valut•
in the fight agarnst tanccr. Roth
sides said they would abidl' b)
the results of such government
tes ting
Newell. howc\ er. said a de·
cision on whether to sponsor
human Laetrile tests still is a fc\\
months :1wa) "But 1f we're go
ing lo move in this direction. we•
should do it as soon as possible."
he said.
t.~w1 ... ,....
TENNESSEE TkUCK WRECK SPREADS TOXIC BROMINE GAS
Investigators Wear Breathing Units to Examine Site
McDonald's Suing
Health Department
BOSTON IAP> -If the McDonald's hamburger chain resumes
selling decorative promotional glasses. 1t would be a "clear v1ol;i·
lion or the law," says Massachusett' Public Health Commissioner
J onathan E Fielding
THE CONTROVERSY over the glasses ha'> alsCI moved mlo rourt.
McDonald's and glass manufacturers filed suit m U S. D1str1et
Court here Tuesd ay against the state Health Department. wht<:h has
warned that children eould be poisoned from lead pamt used on lhl·
outs ide of the glasse::.
THE SUIT WAS filed tht• .,amc day the\.: S 1-'ood and Drug Ad·
m1111stration s aid it found no evidence that lead from lhc deeals on
the outside of the glasses can contam1nak hqu1d ins1dc them
However. the FDA said it i!-. contmuini: tests of these and other
glasses to sec if there a r e olh<.·r possible health haz:irds. 1nclud111g
the possibility of children gnawing the paint oil' as they dnnk
FIELDING SAID the state llealth Department would order Mc-
Donald'stoeeasedistributionofthe glassware if 1t is resumed.
"We were never worried that the decals would contaminate the
lood that comes in the glasses." FicldinJ? said. ''but that they be
gnawed off or chipped off and the chips fall into the: food."
F IELDING SAID the presenee of lead in thl' decal pa111ts 18
times what the state allows -could combine with other leaded ex-
haust fumes or lead paint in the home to raise poisonous lead levels
111 children.
"!am ver\' concerned that this 1s a potential problem for kids,"
Fielding said. :.It's an unnecessary kind of exposure,"
Firemen said 200 1a•r.,11n., \\l'rt'
e\•acuatt'!d .. .., ll.1ml''-... hot
through thl• l'lf?hth floor of the
15-storv Marl. I ,1pal'lmcnts
Tuesda) !\1on· lhan 15 JH•rsons
were rescued from their apart.
menl windows by f11 cmcn usm~
ri re truck I aduer.,
Fire department sµokesman
Kit Bell said the lashionabll·
building. about a mile south of
the Las V('gas Strip. had bt•cn
touted as immune to fi r e.
Mo-;t 01 the n•:-.p1ralory .irrcsts occurred 111 the intens1Ye c~re
ward. where M iss Narciso and Mrs Pt•rez worked on the evenmg
sh I fl.
Thi.' women had ongmallv bl't'll t•harged with two counts of
murder. se,·l'n t•ounts ol po1son111g a nd one l'Ountol consp1raey But
the ,1udgc granted u l11rt'l'lcd Vl0rd1cl or aequ1ltal on some of these
charges m idway through the tnal , say in$( ,the government had failed
lo present enough evidence to submit to a Jury GIVEIN
Coaarf OK# Na:I March
C lllCAGO CAP\ Nazis muy
march m Skokie 1f they leave
behind the ir s wasttkus. "a
personal affront lo every
m ember of thl' J ewish faith." the
Illinois Appt>llatc Court has
ruled
Rulmg on a lcmµorary orclt•r
issued by a lower court. tht•
three-Judge panel said Tuesday
that dtsplaym~ swastikas con-
stitutes "fighting words" whlch
would "provoke a violent reac·
tion" among the large Jewish
community 111 th(' northern suh
urb of Skokie
GOVERNMENT ATTORNEYS said their case r.cs~e? o~ two
questions: were the breuthing failures. c~used by a rapid lllJect~o~ of
Pavulon and if so, who was therl' In 1n1cct the drug at the critical
time''
Assistant VS Attorney Richard Dl•lonis said \estimony pro\'ed
the injections were rapid.
The prosecution presented tcstimom· placing one or both defcn·
dants near each victim '<; bedside minut<''> before ihey stopped
breathing
But nu witnesses e\'er testified seeing e1tht•r of the nurses ac-
tually inject the patients with PaYulon
Assistant US. Attorncv Richard Yanl..o said the two wo!!len
never rntended Lo kill anyonl• "Murder "'as not lhc1r obJect, he
said.
"ON EACH OCCASION there wa!. a safety val\e. a cheek. a pre·
caution. a means to pre"ent death. and usualh lhe preeautions
worked."
Storm ·Activity Wanes
Texas Tornado, Dust Stonm RepQrted
Teneperai.ur~•
Hlq" l ... Po. Amerillo 'M Mt
AJ.he¥1tlt q, ..
A11an1~ " II Rirmmcan~,,, 07 H
RotSfl ., ~1
Arown1"111-Q\ ,.
AulltlG •1 'I OS
Cl>•Hl"lon " c ., ,.
Charl,.ttM w "" .., ,,
Chtt•Vo ., II OS C•MIM\.tU M 11 01 Clntl-Ill •• °' Oellfl l"l Wof'lt> l('l!l II °"""«' •1 ., Oe•Mol,.., •> 11
0e1 ..... 1 .. ., 01 ........ II ~) ,,
-IUN " ,. OJ Hou II Of\ \\ '° lftcll-·• ~ ,,
.J•CllSOIW1ll~ " "' K•t>tetClty " IS
l•t\t .... IOI ..
LlllM "•' •I ,,
\.outlYlll• •• " Mtmptws •s 71 Mllllf1\t .. ti
Mllweu-ff
Mnpf•.·SI, Paul
-~ N"° Yotll l4 Oiol•-C1ly o .........
Orlenclo
Pf\11-111111-.11
-.. 1. ... 11 ........... ·°' Porlle ..... OA. "'"'"'-.11
• 3.1
""v" -OWoG lflViliMttl•ri" KllYUy ol lll!t ~ ~vet•I dn& 1,..... 11141 CarOllMt ..,, ..... ,0 lllftutll .... •ll•nllc fffO at•lft .,_, 'I
•-lln 11nt1 ...,., G~t LAI-. II t •11111111.,...~MdiY ... Ai.< .,.. ,...,..,.,,...,~_.
In Will TnAI\ T ... ,. .._ "Ct I"'•
"'"'"~ ,,,,.,.., °' d~ ~-" T ... "' wtr•duJI •term\ Ill i... P"""I' .....
Cerly mornlnt l•"'"'•tvrn .. .-o ll'lt ...... Oft ,.,.d ,_ ., ..
H~I••, Cel1I lo U et 11.0lftOfld, Ore
Sull-,_,.. Miii -11'1111> cterstarf'M -• •ICP9<teO ewer ~ i.n• ellCl_.lhwftt ~lltlodty Miid temper•tllf'ft ...... p..Ol<l•d
IOI' th• Pf!Cftl( ~\I ff\twtfll Ill•
le lflHIJltf'llMOlllll>ll.
C•Dforttla
Cltv•H whl 1""• O\lff 11111 tin• Tl>un • ••\I •llHmllll, IWt 11>11 ''"' IU•rKltCI
1n out up" oood t10"1 itnd w•rm t,.m. D•''"u""'" .,,,, nr• <11t1fllld aoa1n fnr
4\ouUWrf'\(.,11tnrn1.,
._.,oh' toct,w '" ,,,,... ro.i~t•I ._11,-r,..,
, ,tn~d trom In to , .. _,, tht' ~A<t'tfl'4 lo
-~ tnq) Ovf'r IN" 1,,l.ll\d v.,11,.V\ tn• N,_
llMAf W~.tff'Y'r 'V•n.11cn , .. ,a l OW'
1nn10"' trnm ~ tof.j • .,,. 1·1oectEdM•I"
'"'' nc• ·'" w,,,, -. '"°"'"'llf""' Otoe> fl•"U ti' '\1nv. r lht ,,,1,1nttv.1t1,.y
MOUnM•n r-1t;.tn~ """""' tro,,-. fl. tn '' ~1IP\ IOW'\ ,,~IA fn ~ IOt'ftQf'lt Tfl'm
tw ,,, .. ,,,.( '" 11'\P Antrfap(" VAllPy w.r,.
lf'(\M _, M ·~ 4'I fn t()'i in ~ Mo1.1•,. Of>'"'' •'"" '\"' '" •U 1t1 fNt \4hH~rn
Cocutal Weatlaer
low t_t,,.\\ n.ql>I lhl'OUlln nHO MO'"'"' "Our.. O•~..--·~· IVM\~
Thundey
l 101>1 v11rofl)I• w1,.ch "'11"1 ~ncl
mornlne "°"" HIQl>i Tl>urW..., lft tM
·-~ "' tl>t _,., •ncl .... '°' lnllncl
C~•l•I ,.,,.pouture• wut ren~
bflwHn 60 •nd 11 tnlet>d t•fl" 11tre111,.. ..,.II ,_,. tielw..,. 60 end
IO Th• WAltr "'""""'tllif't wlll IM''6
S-, lflOfJtt, Tide•
••OHUDAY ~conn low U STP m. 1 ~
SetonOl>IQlll 7'UP,M H
THUllSDAY
f'lritlOW 1111 M. 0)
l'lrJl1>10" l•St.i."' l •
s..ono l<wt 1 J•p.M t.J
,.-<Of'O l>llh 1 41 p,11' • 0
• ~.,,.,, .. ,, '74J" ••tO·tt.11"'
M"!Hltn) . .te• m ~tU OOP <" S•rta..,...r.i
Hy111tnqton -H••l"W' '"'""' .. •• ~. -ta U•O 1""1 lt<lffl Ill• ~ll!Wft( (-·~ ltlr •I M•"4• ~•1•11 h•<I\, llvt r•IH Mflt at Ht•-1~"'"
.
There's temptation everywhere
you tu rn at sale prices
\
'.\ lo,,
DreYli!I R... He~V
Drexel and Heritage Furniture
Reduced up to20'*>
Why hf> '.hi 1100~ I A1 lhl'W pn< t'~. you c.tn only prof ill Drelel •
~nd Ht•nt.'lgt'' upholm~ry up 10 2°'9 off. Superb~ OI
cf11i1ng room. ~room ;ind ocu-.oml furniture lsigoifiantlyJ
tl'dU<.ed. Comt' bf' 1rmp1t'<I . .and c~e ~ l,.....tt¥ horn!-.
~our IOVl'l1tr hom4!-1
I
3 lnniates Die • m Clash •
'Tense' A.trrwsphere Prevails at San Quentin
SAN QUENT! 'II (A p) 81ack
MuaUm and N1&u tnmalct battled
with dut. and knlvc.-1 In ractaJ
claah• lh•t klllC'd lhr" convlcu
aod Uljured flvo an an honor block
at San Quentin prl1on .
aut.hoftU• aaJd.
lnellOI "1"9 conflrtod to their
cella ln a prlaoa-wld• lockdown loci.,.
· 'Tbe Ud'• n1to1 urC/' Mlkl'
Luxford, actlna priM>n anlorma
tion otncer, nld after the conllkt
Tuesday.
.. The hospital looki; lake a but
llHround. There wui. blood and
people ev4lrywbere It's an ln-
t'redlble me1a."
rrlr.c>ner. aro being kept 10
th•lr c:ella. ln a lockdown that of·
tlclala tH~Y will probably last a
WCt!k.
Luicford 1&ld thet'o have have
b•en three lllaJor racial fights an th~ l11t 10 years &t tbe prison.
"But when three people are
kJlled, lt'a a preU.y large-scale in·
c1deot .. ,Anytime somebody
loae1 their life over the color or
their skin. tfobody win~." he said
"The c:llmale here as all tens1on."
Inmates attacked each other
along corridors In the prison's
north and west wings with
makeshlrt knives and clubs
before guards firing rifle shots
quelled the disturbances.
The deaths and injuries came an two separate attacks by mem-
bers of the American National
Soclallats on members of a Black
Muslim prison. sect. officials
said. The fights took place in the
prison's west wing "honor
block." which houses 364 men, as
Kidnap S1JSpect Nabbed
Hypnosis of Hostage Aids Arrest
SANP'RANClSCO (AP>-Acluerecalledunder
hypnosis by one or two young cousiris kldnaped and
taken to Mexico two weeks ago led to the arrest of ct
self-proclaimed minister, the FBI reports.
FBI agents Tuesday night surrounded the sub-
urban Hayward home of Louis Adolfo Barbosa, a
JO.year·old Mexican national, and made an in-
cident.free arrl'5t
abdudor made a stop in Southern California to fix
his ear-. air conditioner.
With that clue, investigators linked the re·
paired car to Barbosa.
Mcl{innon said-Barbosa lured Norma and her
7-year·old cousin, Christina Alcorn of Reedley, into
his car at a Fresno shopping mall on June 28.
prisoners lounged oul61dti their
cells after meals, officiall> s.a..ld
THE fft.sT fight, two white In·
mates attacking a black
prisoner, was broken up tn the
morning when guards spotted
them and fired a waroin& shot..
Prisoners were ordered Into
cells. but Charles Jack Captain.
31, a black inmate from San
Francisco, was stabbed in a
stairwell.
Captarn. serving a two-year-lo·
life sentenee for assault with a
deadly weapon, died a few hours
later of wounds in the back and
side. •
Some nine hours later, at about
5:30 p.m .• members of the Nazi
group "made a move against the
Black Muslims, who were
superior in arms and numbers.
Violence resulted,'· Luxford
said.
A WIDTE inmate was hurled to
his death from a third-story
prison tier and a second was
stabbed to death. Neither was
immediately identified.
Feeling for Furrows AP Wl,.pl!Oto
BARBO~,\, WJIO TOI.[} agents he 1s the
minister of the Zion Apostolic Temple ne•l to his
home, was schedulcrt to he arraigned today on
federal charges or kidnap and tran:-.portal1on acrol>s
United Slates boundarlC.'!>.
. According lo Charle!> M(·Kmnon, speci-al agent
tn·charge here. J5.ycar·old Norma Milligan of San·
ta Cruz remembe red under hypnosis that during
her 96·hour ordeal. during which she was raped, her
Norma told police their abductor told them her
mother had been been hurt in a traffic accident and
that he would take them to tile hospital. They ac·
cef)ted l\ls ofrer.
NORMA, SENSING SOMETIUNG was amiss.
after Barbosa drove them around town. asked him
to tel th~m out. He <iisplayed a knife and said they
were being lQ.doaped. Ho said he wanted to drop off
the younger girl, but Norma refused. Fresno police
said Norma was raped during the kidnaping.
Two whites and three blacks
were injured, three of the m
seriously. One injured black.
identified as Jimmy Louis Hunt.
24. of San Francisco. suffered superfieia~ slab wounds, Luxford
said.
The prison by San Francisco
Bay holds 2,308 inmates, about 33
percent black and 4 l percent
white, Lux ford said.
Aaron Keith, of Pasadena, is blind. a nd his wife.
Margaret, is partially blind. However, they have a thriv·
ing garden of squash, tomatoes, beets and cabbage.
Keith feels the furrows as he plants and fertilizes the
crops while his wife waters carefully with a sprinkler
"I've got a cabbage that weighs 12 pounds." Keith says 1
proudJy.
2 Fall 35 Feet
Froni Park Ride
_ . LONG BEACH CAP> -Two men were seriously
1n1ured when they fell 35 feet from a ferris wheel-
type ride al an amusement park. offlc1als said.
Both men were taken to St. Mary's Medical
Center her.e, where one was reported in cnlical con-
Cops Kill
LB Sniper
LONG BEACH CAP>-
Police fatally shot a 26·
year-old s niper, John
Barr, after he exchanged
shots with them Crom the
roof or bis apartment
building for five
minutes.
dition and the other in
stable cond1t1on.
Na mes of the men
wer e not immediately
released
Officials said the two
men fell just after taking
their scat on the Double·
Wheel ride at the Nu·
Pike amusement park
here
THE RIDE
operator. 18-year·old
William Fedel. said he
warns all nders not to
rock their seats when
they enter, but he said
the two men ignored that
warnin~
DIVORCI
SI 00.00 ,_..,._.._
Roter C. ~.RI.
AtfvnMy
00737 or 545.o487
ER?
BIG SAVINGS OH
• HOMEOWNERS
• AUTO lnswanu
IF YOU QUALIFY
• INSURANCE
541.5554
1914 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
THE
f>LUMllHG
HUTIMG
AIR COHO. .. , ......... .. __ ,
~rvk• In VO\W Arf".t -Call MISSION VIEJO
Witnesses said Barr
fired wildly Tuesday at
buildings, pedestrians
and passing cars. No one
was hit. When police ar-
rived. Barr shot at their
car, they said.
"As soon as I started
the wheel. I saw them
rocking hard." he said.
"I told them to stop and
stopped the wheels -but
the gate on their seat
flew open."
~ CMT>lno C.1>1•lr•no IS.n Ot-fcrwy . .t """''Y P~wy I
Neighbors said Barr
was despondent about
his unemployment and
family problems.
495-0401
COST• MES&
1UbN-181Yd
642-17S3
SI lie. : JllUI
YDURSELF FDn SAVING AT DANE DF NEWPDnT
OPEN A TIME DEP0Srr AND TAKE HOME A 17• SONY COLOR TV OR A
LITTON MICROWAVE OVEN ONLY AT BANK OF NEWPORT.
Choose as your REWARD either the 17" color
Sony or Utton microwave In lieu of Interest.
Take It home lmmedlately or have It delivered.
A great way to REWARD yourself. All Bank of
Newport In lieu of lntere~t Time Savings Programs
are based on mllJClmum allowable Interest, and we
can also arrange to have your funds transferred
from other financial Institutions for you.
SONY KV·1712. Spectacular viewing Is
your REWARD with 8V8f¥ ahow. Sony's
KV·1712 features ab1g·11" diagonal
screen, famous Tr1nlt1Qn COIOf', and auto-
m$t1C fine tuning ..• superb ctaftaman..
ship In a handsome, trim walnut cabln4t.
LITTON "20 MEMORYMATIC. Conve·
nlent meals are the REWAAO with
Utton't "20 Memorymatlc m~
oven. Tooch controls aet full and varlable
power t~tures for up to 99 mlnutet
of~lc~lng. mn IOI' open a Time Certificate of Deposit at Blink of Newport using tll"IY of
I theM 3 Pl8C'I •••
1 ~tS1.IDO 2 o.a0.tttZ600 3 Dtpolllt'6.00Q e7mon~•t7Jf5% 30-monltlute.5~ 1amonthaats.O%
Subait"tlat lnt•reat pena1u .. requl~ fortttly.Wlthdrawar"
Stop by, phone, or wl\te .• , Bank of
Newport, P.O. 8qt 17•7, N9wport S..Oh, ca. 92980, We OM open )'OUrTltn6 Certlfl·
oat• of Oepotlt tcc00nt ln' .lust a few
mln1.1tes. ln4 )'OU can c!llm your
REWARD. CALL "1·$110
And whatever shows, costs.
Here's one simple solution. Keep your indoor temperatute at 78°
instead of 70° and you could cut your cooli11g costs up to 30 percent.
Air conditioning is supposed to keep you comfortable, not cord.
By the way, maka s\lre all your doors and wlndCMIS are closed
Why pay to air condition the neighborhood?
Again, .remembet Indoor temperature 78° or hJghei:
It's another way you can help con~Mtion. And lt will definite~
pay off-next ttme your 'l'eter reader shows up.
'\
I
l . l
l
• r
I
I
I \
PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Sign. Report UnfEJir
Several Cosl4 Meu buslne:Jsmen have called city
hall reR•rdin.& an unsJanod noty beln& circulated in the <"ll).
, The nolc. bordered wp und bottom wlth the worc1 ~·ura V' suy&. an part, ··At lhi$ very moment your
~ity planninc departmenl has u proposal that was Jwit
TecunUy approvt..'<i unarumOOJly by your planning
C'Ommlsslon to lake down your sign."
The n?t.e says lbe clly council will revjew lhe pro· posal next Monduy night.
The councU is go mg to m~~l Monday night, not for
the purpose oi "taking down business signs," but to
daMcuss a method tor dctt>nnlning the value of noncon-
forming signs in the city.
nus is not a surpnse move. Costa Mesa's sign or -
l:ance has been in effect for more than three years.
· e council now is trying to determine a schedule of
mortization for nonconforming signs -based on ~lue -in order to place.deadlines on businesses that
onotyetconform with the law.
. An anonymous note raising the specter of signs
emg tom down by the city is misleading and unfair.
usinessmen with nonconforming signs should attend
onday night's meeting to find out where their signs
might stand in the proposed schedule.
Water Warning
The Cosla Mesa County Water District has made
it dear 1t will not tolerate water waste during the cur·
rent drought.
The five-me mber p anel approved the district's
first -ever ordinance earlier this m onth which places
~1 1 ff penalties on district water users who waste it.
The tough, four·step enforcement procedure al-
lows wasters m any opportunities to mend their ways,
and as .such, 1s a n ecessary, equitable and fair or·
rtinancc.
District officials said they hope there will be
widespread voluntary compliance by water users, but
quickly add they are r eady to step in when customl!rs
flagrantly ignore the law.
Violators face initial warnings, then fines and,
finally, complete water shutoff under the ordinance.
The district is relying on water.conscious
neighbors to report offenses. which include washing
down sidewalks, sprinkling lawns in the heat or the
day. or allowing water to run into the gutters. . ,
Asking Too Much
Older Costa Mesans, especially those on fixed in-
comes, should get all the breaks the city can afford to
give them.
That goes for older golfers loo. And the city coun-cil is considering a resolution which would allow
senior golfers to play on weekday afternoons on the
city's golf course !or only $15 a month.
Considering a golfer could spend $90 a month in
greens fees if he played every weekday, that is quite
a saving.
But som e older citizens are still not satisfied
They want to be able to play during the morning
hours, when the course is the busiest -and want to
enjoy the reduced rates also.
That is where the city staff would like the council
to draw the line. R ecr eation officials claim the course
is b arely breaking even this year. and that allowing
senior citizens with reduced rates on the course in the
{
(• morning might chase off those paying the full $30
monthly rates.
The purpose behind the proposed low rate lor
,..... seniors was to ins ure that those with Ji mited incomes '11 d . ..,, coul play.
It isn 't unreasonable that the city stipulate the
hours those low rates should apply.
,..
' .I.
•
c
.. ,_.. ,..,
, r I
.,.. J. , .. ~
'!I .. ... ,
•
~ .. fAstest he~ moved in months."
..
..
Dissident Groups·
Create Prejudice
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Refugee Flight Goes 011
The Tragic 'Boat People'
To the Editor:
l wish lo reply lo Mr Feldsott 's
kllcr· to the editor of July 7 in
which he took umbrage wi.th my
June 29 letter, concerning the
Anita Bryant-homosexual dis·
sension. Al no time did J imply
that anyo ne should be denied
housing. employment or educa-
11on, nor did I once side with
Anita Bry:mt on this ridiculous
issue. My point in writing my let·
1 er was to state how I (and many.
many more) feel concerning any
grou p of people bandin g
together. parading the .streets
with placards, demanding their
so called "rights." <The tax·
payers pay for the policing dur·
ing, and cleaning up after, each
'<1emonstration. >
l too have felt what he refers to
as prejudice, when I was denied
housing during World War II
because I had a sm all child. The
difference between us is that I
chose to call it the landlord's pre-
rogative to rent his property to
anyone whom he pleased. As to
education, I attended schools
with Chicanos, Blacks, Orientals,
de., and they had the same
teachers as I and were assured of
th e same learning procedures.
As to employment, I have
worked and am working with a
conglomerate of colors and na-
tionalities. But we consider
ourselves Americans, not in·
dividuals looking for personal
causes to champion.
AS FOR homosexuals not be·
ing able to receive equal op·
portunities in the above men·
tioned categories, I have yet to
s ee where any application to
enter school, rent or buy a home
pr obtain employment asks for
your preference in s exual
ipartners. That definitely would
be an invasion of privacy and in
that they would have a legitimate
ta use for court action. ·
1 He says enlightened people all
r>ver the country should .run
f
I
( MAILBOX ]
Lett.M from rHd~ •r• welcome. T.,. ritllt to
condtnse lolttr• to flt •P•C• or OllmlMto 11 ... 1 hr•· '
wrwll. Lotton ot 100 word• or In• will .,. 91••"
pretereM•. All tttttn must 1Mlude t•grw1tun iind
m.altln9 atddren ltut nam•t mav be witt\Mfd on'*
qw.t II •ufli<lt•t rtUOft ts •-Mt. Poelry wllt
"°'"'"""'""""·
scared every time a minority is
threatened. I say we Americans
have one great big problem on
our hands if groups of dissidents
continue to chip away at the very
foundation of our country. They
are the ones who are dividing and
separating the people, causing
prejudices to be born and
nurtured where once there were ·
none.
MARYO.MdORE
Surf er• War11ed
To the Editor:
Surfing is a great sport and we
are happy to see so many
youngs\ers e njoying it. We also
realize that it is best in the very
early hours of the day.
One year ago, we bought a
duplex on Seashore and since
then we have not slept past 6:30
a. m. because of the fun sport that
others do at 6 a.m. The surfers
squeal the brakes coming around
the corners. ..rev" the engines
while checking the surf and yell
and talk so loud that everyone
a long Seashore is awakened.
IF THE homeowners and the
renters decide to park all their
own cars along Seashore and not
Quotes
"I hope history treats me right
for it." -lodge John Sirlca, on
his months spent as the judge in
tbe complex m aze of the
Watergate trial,
All the talk about the torn·
up streets -but what
about the mess in
TeWinkle Park where we
like to take the kids in sum-
mer'.' What a time to be
tearing it up :
M.B.
•:
use their garages, the surfers are
rn real trouble. Do the surfers
realize that there would not be a
place for them to park and
therefore they would soon be una·
ble to surf
It mig ve the surfers to
think abO pie living near the
beach befo~,the people tbat live
at the watei"s edge organite and
subtly stop them from surfing. A
little consideration· on the
youngsters' part will keep every·
onehappy. ' ·
Walk and talk softly and con-
tinue surijng or watch out-the
older generation will start ex-
ercising their rights.
NAME WITHHELD
Abortion Tragedies
To the Editor: The .. Hum ane Choice"
editorial of July 5 receives m y
s upport. As a Public Health
Nurse and past government hospital R.N. I have seen the ter-
rible tragedies resulting from ii·
legal, unsafe abortions.
You are absolutely correct to
assert that the abortion issue
does not belong back in the
political arena. Abortion is not a
politically negotlable issue!
The right for any·w9man, re-
gardless of her financtal status.
to have an abortion if she so
chooses definitely sb9uld con·
tinue to be the rule in our state.
JUDITJIS. CURRERt
WASHING TON -President
Carter and the State Department
want the United States to bring in
more Indochinese refu gees, especially the ·'boat people."
stranded after escaping their
homelands which have become
Communist.
Oppression by Communist re·
gimes in Vietnam, Laos an<t
Ca mbodia ,
plus the hope
of a better
economic life.
moved scores
of thousands
of people to
flee to Thailan~ or :. put to ~ea jn
pitifully small·
boats, hoping
·' f
~hat a ship would take them
aboard.
'l'he plight of the "boat people"
is particularly sad because many
sl'\ip captains. wanting to avoid
inconvenience or even trouble
back in home port, ignore the
U'aditional law of th._ sea, and
don't pick up the refuge~s.
Since the U.S. leacjership in
dealing with the problem <which
Jargely belongs to us) has
lagged, other nations which
might be receptive have also
turned the Indochinese away.
Hence, the Carter Administra-
tion's tentative move td actoutof
a sense of duty and commitment.
to human rights.
But there is strong opposition
in the Congress to increa&ing the
number of lndochlnese allowed
to enter the United States abov~
t he present figuce or 100 ~r
month. Some 145,QOO have come
here since the faU of Vietnam,
Laos and Cam bodla tn 197S. · .
· r: 'Good English' Not All Rules ·t~
THE MOST neg~thre reaction
lo any proposal to adnlit more ref·
ugees c~mes from Re~. Joshua
EUberg (D-Pa.>, Chairman of
the Judiciary Subcommittee on
Immigration. lk is dead set
against allowing' any more Jn4
dochinese ·refugees, without
special Jegisl~tion, 11ometruni Ile
knows Congress probably "'°1\'t
pass.
"It is ooe thing for the Justice
Department to allow these peo.
pie to c:,ome in on an individUal
.basis." EUberg says, "but large
groups, s~ 400 ot 500 a month. or
the 15,000 mentioned, are
something else. We have un.
employment in the U.S. and a
problem with illegal aliens. Addi-tion al Indochinese refugees
would impact on our welfare
system. health services and
schools.'' ..
( SYD'.NEY HARRIS)
used to be a sign of learning and
social status. Bad teachers of
•·good .. English have 1>robably
done more harm to our language
habits lhan 3ny other single class orpersom.
IT IS astonisbiisg how many
Jetters I get adanoaiSMQ.c me for liavt#c ended a sentence irith a 1>1'«~, -thfs tt ono« tho two ~ U.ree footfJb rWd people
"'.rem.ein* from thlk sc®t>UA(. .. 'a11d Uley ·tmatll>.e it has
$Omelhlrtf to do with proper
11n.tu. whlcb it doesn't.
( &.,.yone recalls the atorY ot
is by doing 10. They also dislike
slang, ima1ining it ~o be de·
basing to the language, when in
point of fact slang continually
revivifi es and animates a
language ..
BY OBSCURING the dir-
ference between what is
important and what is
unimportant in grammar, the
prigs and pedants bJve suc-
ceeded bl making most people
uneasy about their' speech. and finally indifferent to real lapses.
as opposed ·to merely formal ones.
Who bot a stuffy ~marlan
would ever HY, 'It t.. we." fnsteacl of .. It's us"? the tint la
tecbolcally correct, but
indefenaJble ln '"*ll: wbile tba' Jetter bu a noble Unease dallng
back to 1489. Robert Louis
St.evenson, *ll e~ant •11"'-iC there ever TIN ow. w~: ~11t's us muat bdlat P,le ~tt ~ the tJme-C00191. •
Now, Joshua Eilberg is a prac·
ticing Jew. He is sensitive to
what happened to Jewish ref·
ugees from ffitler'a Europe and
from Concentration camps. who also aet out in ships to find aanctuaries somewhere.
ON'E SUCH Bhlp. t•tcr called ''The Sph> .of the Datnned, ., ac·
tUally t'Nhled tho blah .... Jat
as World War n broke out, •ncl
was tumed awa,y by the U.S. aov·
~rnmcnt. of President Franklin
D . .Roosevelt. 110 las. The ship
wound "' In HDUand, and a third of ltt J>HlfllJtra enRtuaJly
perished in concentration CU'IOS.
.Don't con.st.rue this, by any fa 19'1, anothtr: ship loaded wlth
means, as a CletenH ot the Jewifb nfutee.s ••lltd ,1.ttto Ttl Tlie same people also fr t ifoppy, lilinl·arltculat. EngUah .A•iv. was t.urnod back' by·tbe
abont ~~n& inO.nltives, when moet. ..,... use todaY. But it's Brltlah and Jiad to dock at
h&"11VZtllli' tlillt. They wero t Cyprus. ~at inclden.t btcamo ~-Ch'~soW11tbat., t the"~'"stmy. ' ~_._aq,tbtj~dcueJcss. .. Tbero Is a rouab pa.tallel •
pimps. prostitutes and
gangsters. Somehow, the brown
people of Indochina suddenly
became very unpopular. ( THl~CHJ Well, they are not low-life peo-
between the Jewish refugees and pie:· They are people who went
t hese. peopl e," admi ts through years and years of
Congressman Eilbe rg, who bloody war,sawmanymembers
might still change his mind. of their own families killed. and
Recently, an Israeli freighter feared the tyranny that moves in
rescued 66 Vietnamese refugees with communism . Llkeallpeople
floundering around the Pacific in jn such a fix, they fled. l
a leaky fishing boat. They had been turned away by several THEY DIE on the high seas. ,
Asian nations, but the Israelis ac-and they die in refugee camps. '
cepted them. Ironically, it was a When they do manage to get tC>,
German Lufthansa plane whicn the United States or France eventually landed with the 66 (whfchis generous>. they live. It
people in Tel Aviv. t akes a while to adjust but the In-
dochinese actually have made a
"J EWS· KNOW what it is lo be fairly good record here. Some 86
a refugee, with every door being percent of the breadwinners in
closed in one's face/' said Prime Indoehinese refugee families in
Minister Menahem Begin. The the United States are working.
Israelis deserve a salute for this full or part·time. They organized
one. 139 Indochinese associations, try
So here we are, big, fat, U.S.A.. to help each other find jobs and
with a Congress ready to tum maintain their culture.
away suffering people who are The United States should
refugees because of our actions guarantee the admission of 15,000
in Indochina. The war had of the 80,000 refugees living in
scarcely ended there, when all poor -conditions in Thailand.
manner of selfish people here Bringing 15,000 Indochinese
began protesting any plans to refugees to our country will not
bring refugees to the United break us. It will make us
States. stronger in the long run. It will
The Seattle City Council even demonstrate our integrity. Are
passed a resolution against ad-we a nation of peoplt' who sit up
milting Jndochlnese refugees. late watching refugee sh1ps be-
Cartoonist P at Oliphant, himself ing turned away in World War 1£
an Australian emigrant, drew movies. ~md remarking how ,
scathing cartoons depicting the awful that was? How about that,
Vietnamese as a collection of . CongressmanEilberg?
Memoir of America
0 ~MElllCA: When You And I
Were Young. By Luigi Barzini.
Harper& Row. 329 Pages. $10.
In 1925, Luigi Barzini was 16. It
was the year be, bis mother.
brothers and sl~ter "crossed the
ocean to join my father in !'iew York:•
In 1930, Barzinl left the United
States tp return to his native Ita·
ly, where be was to have a fme
career as wri ter. editor.
publisher and politician. But for
the purpose of this fine ~t
that was in the future. • 0
America·· is a thoughtful.
charming memoir .Of what used
to be, the years Bjrµnl spent in
the United States.
As Bariini lakes bis long .look
back at the days o( !11$ yoatfi. be notes, pointedly, tb¥t. -'•I think l
was lucky to be elCposed to
American life when both tho
United States and I; were YOlll\I
and lbll of stupendous illusiom..
We have both qhanged. 11 .Americana as I b&w them In
tbe'20s bad bot yet been really
tested by spiteful &nil sardonic history: .
THIS TBEN ls tbe &tory ot ~Jlat it was lib for a. young
ltall1U1 to Uve lo the United States
tor a few brief yeats betor it -and the world -were to bo tested
by hUtory. Tho.cie years wert, for the most part, l{ood OtJes.
The tlOI\ of a Doted journallst
wbp b.att cpme to the Unltecl
State11 ·to tttrt an lt4lian· la~uaae newapnper. the young
Bonini also wanted to write, and
he drove himself t~ accomptbh
1lia 1oa1. Hewenttoc:olleae-"6
d ulbes bJs experle-ncru> on
campus iJl aomeUmH touctwJg,
( THE BOOKMAN )
sometimes funny s tories
gradwW!d, got a job on a small
newspaper, and did well at bis
work before deciding to return to
Italy to pursue his career m his native land. .... I
Barztnl's ttcollections of ~ J
America he knew as a ycuUl •
tompared to Amerlca D.QV11 are
often af.fectionate but ttever
dewy.eyed. He sees clearly
aC't'O~ the years and what ai. bas
tosayismos\ab$orbing.
PHtLTHOMAS I ~BOOUUltor ~
.
I
QUEINJE By Phil lnterlanai
"You can't leave ju.t 1et. I found one more behind the
l'\lbber pl&nl." I
Outside Fai th
Moonies Find
Hard to Cope
SAN FRANClSCO 1AP) Four young
"M oonies" whose parents battled m court I ast
spring to pry their children from the Unification
Chuttb are struggling today to cope outside the
strictly regimented faith.
A fifth, 24-year-old John Hovard Jr., is back on
the streets, selling flowers and seeking converts to
the controversial fold of the Rev. Sun Myung Moon.
LAST MARCH THE PARENTS OF Hovard and
four young women initiated a courtroom fight
which pitted their right to protect their children
from brainwashing against the Moonies' call for
freedom of religion.
A Superior Court judge here decided in favor of
the parents., who based their argument on a tem-
porary conservatorship law.
Nineteen days later, an appeals court tentative·
Jy stayed the lower court's decision and freed the
five. The court has not made a final decision on the
case but the tribunal indicated it is not likely to
alter the decision. ·
FOR TH E FOUR YOUNG WOMEN -J ac·
queline Katz, 22, Leslie Brown, 24, Janice Kaplan,
2-t. and Barbara Underwood, 25 -the 19 days away
from the church was long enough for deprogram·
ming.
Only Hov:.trd returned to his Moonie ways. His
parents spent nearly $10,000 during their fight to
deprogram him.
"Mostly, I feel sorry for them and thty feel
sorry for me," said Hovard, whose status in the
church has risen because of publicity surroun<ling
the case and his return to the fold.
.. I TffiNK THEY <THE FOUR WOMEN> will
be happy initially, for the first two or th'ree years."
he said. ''But I don't think they'll find really deep
meaning in their lives. I think people all want to live
by ideaJs and when they find they don't have the in·
spiration. I think they will become unhappy again."
The four women. who view Hovard as an inno-
cent but confused follower, spent a month together
after the trial at a Tucson, Ariz .. deprogramming
center. They then separated.
Today, the four have unJisted telephone nul'T}-
bers because they fear Moon followers will harass
them. Miss Brown's father was even afratd to say in
which city his daughter lives.
DR. T01'1 BROWN SAID Leslie was so ac·
customed to working 20-hour days after her years
as a Mooni e that she at first found life outside the
church slow. She gradually is settling ''into a
normal routine" and works part-time for the state
of Washington as a physiotherapist, he said.
Miss Katz is back with her family in Wolcott.
N. Y .. but her parents have noticed she has trouble
making decisions.
"We would take her out to dinner and she would
try to decide what to have. She couldn't," said her
mother.
.. :
Bear Facts
Toddlers Turn to Teddy
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -There's said children often take to blankets
aood news for mothers and the because they encounter them shortly
makers of teddy bears: it's "perfectly after birth and are soft like skin. ·
normal" for toddlers to cling to
aecurlty objects like blankets and SHE SAID UTl'LE boys tend to
atuffed toy animals. show a greater amount of stress and
That's the word from Dr. Ellen regressive behavior than little girls.
Gay. a clinical psycholt>gist who. but that lt may not mean that little
after studymg young children and girls are less upset.
their treasured objects. concluded · "It may be that they just don't show
that children who tote blankets like it as much,'' she said. "After all, girls
Linus in the cartoon strip "Peanuts" are expected to be nicer than boys."
are simply takin& a helpful anxiety She said most youngsters seem to
break. give up their fuzzy friends by age 5
"A TODDLER'S PROBLEMS -an because by tben tbey"ve learned to
affront from a playmate, inability to handle most of their stresses mentally
)]laster a new toy, a harsh word from rather than physically·
mother -may seem minor to an ASKED WHAT ADVICE she had for
adult, but lo the child they are terribly parents with toddlers who hugged
upsetting," says Dr. Gay, who wrote blankets and teddy bears, she
about kids and their fuzzy friends in replied:
her Ph.D. thesis at Bryn Mawr "A child's desire to be atttached to
CoUeJe. them (the security items) should be
"Contact wjth something soft and accepted and even encouraged. It al-
comfortjng, something that may have lows the children to become indepen-
origina\}y been a. substitute for dent of other people -to use the
mother's closeness and warmth dur-blanket instead of holding on to
ing.infaocy, can help the childlceep an mother all the time. They can go off
even steel through his difficult times.·· by themselves and be independent."
sbe says. ''It's a ehance to rebuild his Asked at what a6e a child should
4'0nfldence. It's perfectly normal." give up security blankets and teddy
IN HER RESEARCH, Dr. Gay, who bears, she replied:
worfcs with Delaware Guidance ''IDON'TTHINKyou shouldputan
Services for Ghild and Youth in Wit -age on it. However, if a child appears
mington, found that "stress indica· to be using it too much, and pulling
\ions rose sharply just before the child away from people, or not playing with
'wenttohisblanket. other kids, this could be a sign of
"While he held it, regressive maladjustment. If a child 1s 10 and
behavior dropped sharply," she said. still wants to sleep with, say, a
"The child was refreshed and ready blanket, I'd say that's okay, but if he
once again to explo~ and master his drags it to school. there's obviously
world." · going to be problems ... It depends on
In an interview, the psychologist the child and the situation.'•
, .
. .
Wednesday, July 13, 1977 DAIL V PILOT" A l
Drexel Heritage
Summer Sak ~
J
UP
TO
, "'if ~;'.· '• '".
~ i • ' ,
-, ;. " I
\· '.
\ .. · ..
WORTH OF DREXEL AND HERITAGE FURNITURE OF YOUR CHOICEl
NOW DURING OUR DREXEL-HERITAGE SUMMER SALE SWEEPSTAKES
Nothing lo purchase. All yoo have
to do Is c;ome In during this sala
perl()(j Sllll register. U's the Drexel
Heritage Summer Sale SWaepslakes
••• wtth a fabulous Grand Prize or
$10.000 worth of supero O<eiter•
and Horltago~ home hJrnlshlngs! 1
Two $3,000 Second Prizes. tour' _...,.. ..-..!-··-;. --...
And the values are
wond4Hfull Yoll'll find
your favorite oollectlona '
tll81table el really
1lgnlflcant 68Vings..
Vtslt soon. Enlcv
excellent redUC11ons \
and enter the eKclling :! S1,0001hird Prizes ... PLUS ~ l. · f_..-.. '1')
a special Fourth Prize of a . •· " Drexel Heritage
Summer Sale l
Sweepstakes•
Herita~e"' charr and ottoman L --~ ......-1.
1us1 for one ot our customers• ~. Y-: J.
1-1.iGL\f{l{tj"{ 'f~~if URE ~~· --·"""'6"'
P~OHSSIONAL Open MOii.,
INTEl\IOR OESl<:INERS Th"''· l Fri, ~ts.
I
Leave
... ,,
\
Three ways fD SM 20-473.
United leads the way to Chicago
with 3 daily Night Coach nonstops,
includi~ the only 747. And each one
has the same great Night Coach
savings. 203 off for adults. 47% off ·
· for kids under 12.
No NStrlCtions.
Just leave after 10 p.m. There
are no other restrictions.
The only nonstop Night coach
from Ontario Airport.
The frif!ndly skies feature an
exclusive Night Coach nonstop to the
Windy City from Ontario Airport. So
you don't have to drive to Los Angeles
International to save in your sleep.
7:50a.m, CDC·10) ,.:J.:5Sa.m. (Ontario)
1 0:20a.tn~ (747)
10:25 a.m. (Ontario)
DAJLV~Of wednNd1 Jut 13 1e11
''Got o probl#"(' Thtn u '11r tu l'al f>Mnn l'al au1ll
crJ red lo.pt, urrranu '"" unaiuer1 a1ld octaon yo14 nnd
to •ul"" ffl«'qL11l1n m "'"' ''"'mnat ond ~u. MaJJ ~' qw.11""'"' to /'al l~unn, Al Your Sntnc•. Oron9•
Coo11 OaJI" l"llot. I ' (J Hoz l!l(i(), Co.ta Muo. CA tm' A• mon11 Mlrts us pou1b4c will be ontwcTed,
but phclM'd mqu1m • ur t.th>r i l\CJt Including th•
rcOIUT 'a full f'l(lmr. oo.ctrd1 and buiinc11 ~"·phone
riMmM ca.nt10t lw nnutd1T1d Thu column appeari doi·
J~ r ttrp Salurdo111 ·
f 'ro:'u O ut u n R efrl gerufftr BUI
DEAR PAT. 1 purt•ha~ed a General Electpc
refngerntor freezer from Bay Cities Appliances
Santct Monu·a. on Nov ll, 1972 l'vt-enclo:,ed copies
or numerou!> :-en ice t: <.111 l"h<Ar~e:, <Jealrng mainly
with freezer problem'>, dating from May 7, 1975.
One "seal'' warranty charge was covered, but only
arter I pur~ued th~ matter I m still having trouble
J J . Newport Bectch
You have bad your '>hare or problems. judging
rrom the lnvoJce me )'OU submitted. Edward F.
Richardson, customer relatloo.s manager or G.E.'s
service facWty In Santa Ana, reviewed them and
said that compensation Is In order. Richardson says
G.E. wUJ supply a new Ice maker to replace the one
installed this March. A $47.65 check wlll be malled
to you. Richardson added that parts are normally
warranted for one year and labor for 30 days. Let
A VS know tr things don 't !>lay cool for yoa and your
refrigerator.
Wh e r .-to Buy Wh a t '• Lett. -..
DEAR READERS: H's not. .. handy IS it use•
to be for Jeflies to get tools and ~ccessories ~peclaf
f y designed ror their "backwa.rd" world. The Len
Handed Complement store In Saata Ana, listed in
an A VS column last month, Is DO loliger in business.
The franchise was moved to Los Allfeles.
Persons who want a calalog o mercbandise-
scissors, sports equipment, kltehen utensils, knit-
ting Instructions, etc. -t.o make Ille easier for left·
handed people should pbone (213>-471.·2462.
Purs~ P a•p o r t Promptly
DEAR PAT: I plan to travel sometime in 1978
on an extended tour or Europe and the Far East.
Would 1t be too soon t.o apply for my passport now.
and what is the best Ume t.o apply? I want to avoid
last minute rush in gettu\g visas, but need the
passport f1r~t
E. M., Laguna Niguel
OF.AR t:.lU.: You are wise t.o apply for your
passport as early as possible. Early in the day
hPfore 10 <t.m. b the best time, and from October
through February are the best months of the year In
which to do this. March through September are the
peak months during which crowds are largest at all
acceptance facilities, a nd the volume or applica·
tioos extr('mely heavy.,
If you are applying for tbe Orsi lime, you will
need your certined blrtb certtn cate (If born io the
United States), two passport photographs (2112 x 21.~
inches>, your current ldemtncalion•anct tbe$1l rec.
Deaths Eueiphere
\
~! AL I BU <AP) -visiUDI a son in Buck-Ha rry W. Case, 68, a · b---'-•-'l:"M. .. t~-d 1ng ~, ll>JU6M""' • UCLA professor and ao
autho~ily on driver CINCINNATI (AP> ......
behavior and safety, Geologist Geor 1e B.
died Sunday in his home Barbour,. 86, died here.
following heart failure. He was known for work
LOS ANGELES CAP)
-Dr. Leland Stanford
Chapman, a Los Angeles
physician who at age 83
still worked 18 hours a
day, died Monday from
injuries he received in a
traffic accident 1ast
April while ma~in~ a
house call. His patients
included Howard
Hughes, Error Flynn,
Jean Harlow and other
celebrities.
SAN DIEGO (AP> -A
memorial service was
held today for retired
Rear· Adm. Thomas T.
Miller, who was on the
carrier Wa sp when it
was sunk in World War
JI. Miller, 68, di~ while
'•C:lfltC •• ...,
MIMOl14L 'AH Cemetery Mortuary
Chapel .
tlSOO Pacific View Otf\ie
Newport,
California
84 ... 2700
Me C:OIMICK
WOITU411H
Laguna Beacl'I
494-9415
Laguna Hills
768-0933
San Juan Capla)rano · •
495-1778 ' I
14LTl-lll•tto ..
FUMUAl.H0"4l Corona del Mar 973-9450
Costa Mesa 846-2424
IB.I. •OADW4Y
WOITU.HY
110 Bro.dway
CoataMeu 842~9160
in China, contributing
geological knowledge to
research on Peking Man,
humans who are said lo
have roamed China
some 650,000 years ago.
ANN ARBOR. Mich.
tAP) -Col. Leonard
Goodsell, 59, execullve
director of the Great
Lakes Commission. died
Sunday.
BREMEN , West
Germany CAP> -A
great-grandchild of
Kaiser Wilhelm, Prince
Louis FerdJnand Chris-
t la a Oskar, 32, of
Prussia. died Monday of
injuries received durmg
a military maneuver. his
family reports
OC lnsuran~e Buy . Hit _Pu_nc_h ___ ____
Premium to Cost Govenunent $585,000
Sy KATHY CLANCY
0t ,.,. o .. 1y ~ .... "'"
It will cost Orange County &ov·
ernment ~.000 in the coming
year to buy what amounts to a $1
million deductible liability In-
surance policy with a $5 mlllion
hm1t per claim.
"IL is an awful lot," County
PersoMel Director Bert Scott
told county supervisors Tuesday.
"It is not;_a govd buy
year while om~nng reduced COV·
erage.
SCOTT SAID hablllty in·
surance settlements run roughly
$600,000 a year, and the largest
claim In process now is for about.
$500,000.
But he said It would lake only
one or two calamities to send
claims upward.
County Administrative Officer
Robert Thomas noted the pre-
mium's cost represents about
one-half cent on local property
tax rates. But he said the pro-
I• I .. " . ..
""I .... • t .... ' "
,J.J ~ ~~:~.. ~u• '-.•: ::\ .
,JI'
',:_ ~ IU.L.lrLl. l.KJ,._.,
--.
...-"C-:7-~,_..J ---
·•But ~e solH·1tcd dozens.
literally dozens, of companies
and only one submitted u pro
posal," Scott said "The only
alternative we have to this is just
to go completely self-insured and
I think the problem with lhal is
obv1ou.s.''
ORANGE COUNTY blem is one the county shares -~~
with local government in -~
general. '----------..:....----~~~~~_. "It'• ... ,.. AD we hue C. do i• le1p eat a.ad ... die 11...t
,_.. t. walk byf"
SUPE&VJSOBS agreed un-
animously to pay for the in-
surance premium. But they also
called for a study of past liability
claims to see what new ap-
proaches might be tried.
higher setUements of uv to $2
million per clal1D.
.. , HA VE little to recommend
today other than acceptance of this," Thomas said. "But this---------------------
In Orange County. county gov-
~mment pays up to a certain
amoun\ per liability settlement.
then purchases a policy lo pro-
tect the county from extreme
claims.
Last year, for example,
supervisors agreed to pay for set
tlements totaling up to $500.000
per claim then purchased a
$275,000 insurance policy for
OC Polic ies
Booklet Ge ts
Formal Okay
The Orange County League of
Women Voters and county gov-
ernment will join forces in de-
veloping a booklet describing the
county planning process and how
interested citizens can become
involved in decision-making.
County supervisors Tuesday
approved the idea of a 55 to 60-
pase booklet and also agreed to
spend s.1,200 to print the first
2,000 copies. Supervisor Ralph
Diedrich cast the lone dissenting
vote saying he was not convinced
of the need.
George Osborne, director of
the county Environmental
. Management Agency, said the
booklet will describe housing and ~om munily development
pplicies, the transportation plan-
11n.g process as well as methods
used for approving housing
tracts.
BUT TBA't i.Dsurance policy
with Federal National lnsUrance
Company expired July 1.
And the only new offer county
officials could find was from
American Home, requiring the
county to finance settlements up
to Sl mjllion each and offering a
policy for $585,000 covering set·
tlements between $1 and $5
million.
Supervisor Ralph Clark noted
the new policy arrangement will
cost 113 percent more than last
san:ie situation eannot be repeat-
ed next year and the next without
forcing us to go completely self.
insured."
Scott said insurance carriers
simply are not interested in writ·
ing policl6 for municipal gov-
ernment.
"Orange County is a rast-
growlng area wtth a lot of ac-
llon," Scott said. "Underwriters
back East look at that and say
·see you later.'"
lie said he still 1s negotiating
another policy covering claims in
excess of $5 million up to $25
million.
'Pro Patria'
Pageant Planned in SJC
Fight scenes, a colorful fiesta with lots of singing and
dancing. and a re-enacted 19th Century pirate raid on the
old mission highlight San Juan Capistrano's "Pro Patria"
pageant this weekend and next.
Last year, the pageant was presented for the first time
since it was written in 1921 by local bistonan Don Meadows.
TIDS YEA& WILL PROBABLY be the last chance to
see the show, according to organizers.
"We're doing the pageant this year mainly to raise
money for the Pryor House restoration project," said Mrs.
Thomas Schauwecker, president of the historical society
The Pryor House dates back to the 1880s in San Juan.
Money raised from the pageant will help restore the outside
of tbe structure and help turn the inside into a library.
TIG; PAGEANT WILL BE staged in an open-air. 300·
seat amphitheater designed especially for the "Pro Patria'·
production. The theater 1s localed al 31871 Camino
Capistrano io San Juan.
The pa&eant will be performed each evening al 8 p.m.
Thursday through Sunday and July 21 through 24. Tickets
are available~ calling 493·8946 or 493·8444.
Admission.ts $4 lot adults and $2.50 for children.
Worst County
Fires Feared
Orange County firefighters are preparing for
the worst this fire season and hoping for the best.
''H we get some tropical rain it wiU ease the
situation," County Fi re Chief Carl Downs told
supervisors Tuesday
"But if we don't Wl' are going to have to appeal
to everyone to be very careful to avoid a disaster,"
Downs said.
AT IDS suggestion. the board unanimously
adopted a resolution urging citizens to be cautious
with fire this summer, particularly in wildland and
brush areas.
In a written report to supervisors, Downs said.
"This prolonged drought is producing a potential
fire season that perhaps hasn't been equaled in 100
years.
"After two years or drought, the forest,
watershed and grassland areas of Orange County
and the state of California are la a very critical an~
extremely dangerous condiUoo, .. Downs wrole.
Parks Grants
Request OK'd
Orange County ap-
plications for $2.6 million
m federal parks grants
won the unanimous ap-
proval of county
supervisors Tuesday.
If granted, the federal
funds would be matched
by county dollars for de·
velopment of Fairview
Halfism.s
R.ORIST
546-5528
u.o ...... 11-..d.
C-. .,_.. 0,. D.ily
Regional Park in Costa ,.----------..., Mesa, both El Toro Com-
munity Park and IglesJa
Neighborhood Park in
the Saddleback Valley
and Yorba Re&ional
f.Jl'GIMDMft
i...J(
A great
Park in Oraqe. place tor kids.
Official Status
Slated for SACC
Summer
Day Camp
Approved
If Arnold flanzer was an attorney,
The Saddleback Area Coordinating Council
CSA CC> may soon be officially recognized as what it
always has been -the liaison between Orange
County government and Saddleback Valley resi·
dents.
he could advertise
his prices.
NIMALogicii:;;~ ~, ... ,.,,.,J
l
Wednesday July t3 t977 DAIL V PILOT A 9
No After Effects to Heat Exhaustion
8) OR. STEIN<.:ROllN
Our Ur. Strlncrobn: My Un
1 It• \\ .u. murchlng in u PVade
nurln.: a 1 cat period he got cliz.zy. ruint~ ,md ~us removed to tht.>
ho-.p1t.tl It wu11 u hot. humid duy
.\I r11 st \H' thou&ht it might be
11 hl'urt 11lluck But studies
'>hvwcd thul hl• wus suffering
11 um hi:ot t>Xh11ust10n Tht.>y d1fl
1 huriil·tl him l"'odayli later
lie ha" bN·n all right smcc
Will you cxpl:.un heut cxhau1'
111m'' Wall 1t lt•ave anv artt•r ef
tt•th" Mr.V. •
l'OMM ENT As 111 your uncle·.,
case. extremely hot wcalhcr and
humidity contribute lo heat ex
haustaon Primarily it is due lo
excesi.ive depletion or sail and
water
Symptoms vary The common
ones are fainting, d1zz10ei;s,
headache. weakness, cramps in
the muscles of the belly. pall'
clammy skin, rapid and weak
pulse
MAINLY, TREATMENT l'on·
s1sts of removing the patient to a
cool environment, giving fluids.
and allowing him or her to rest
Once recovered, such patienl.S do
DOCTOR IN
THE HOUSE
not suffer from after effects
Recenll)'. somc slud1ci. in·
dicate that some symptoms may
also be due to a complicallni!
hyperventilal1on Sueh patients
breathe rapidly und produc1•
what 1s called a res pirator~
alkalosis This exacerbates to lht•
problem . Uut 1t is soon overcomt•
with the s1mpll· measures I havt·
suggested
MEDICALETTES
Dear Dr. Stelocrobo: I don't
know whelher 1t'i; coincidence
or not. but ['ve been losing my
hair since I went on a crash diet a
few monlhs ago. Arter I lost 30
pounds within six weeks there
was definite hair loss. Can lhis be
possible"' -Mrs. U.
COMMENT. I have always
believed that some part of the
body must show its resentment
when deprived suddenly of its,
normal food content. The scalp is
no exception.
According to a recent report in ·
the Journal of the American
Med1C"al Association by t~
military physicians in Lettermu
Army Medical Center, Snn Fran-
cisco, rune patients lost most Q(
their hair two to five montM
after beginning a vigorou:;
weight reduction program.
•••
Emphysema Is a stealthy dis-
ease and rarely attacks sudden-
ly. says Or. Slelncrohn In his
booklet, "Emphysema: How To
Live With It." For a copy write
him at this paper enclosing 50
cents and a s t amped , self~
addressed envelope.
'· ·~
Roy Rogers&
Dale Evans
".1111ril.o\ luh th
-;,in.I.I\, f11!\ I 7
h\.' ~Iii<'' I' \I
'•
Hudson
Brothers
l ,.,.1.1\
'"" !~
Jose
Feliciano
itb : ~·~ unl Ronald
_(':\.McDonald
George
Benson
Juh· :1'
::1'\.' r.m ·
''"'I'·"'·
Boos
Brothers
and
Rain
.'
CostaMesa
4 '
Kenny
Rogers
S.tcurJ.,,
J11h 1 I
Motorcycle -..--_.....,
Races
fri1fay, J11h I\
rrnfa,, Juh ;; ,..,l'I' I' \I.
Eepsi
Challenge
Daily
) "
.
~ •
Rodeo
Jim
Stafford
\\l-d11c..J.1\
July !•'
Thrill Show
Demolition
Derby
1 hur-d.1,, Juh 21 IH'I.' P. M .
, .. l.1••ttl
I
ft '
/~ -j
A •• DAil v PILOT Wldnetd1y. July 13, 1977'
MARMADUKE by Br1d Anderson BOOMER
~A ~ ,,.,,,._ ......... .
"He finally graduated from Obedience
School."
w 'WU ~e A \
1ALL, OA~". ~
HMJl7*>M£
MArJ Wlff~
A ~WI~ 6Mk
ACCOllNT IN
Nl f"LJ'f VSZ~?
MISS PEACH
';
'TOMMY'S
.Af:!~AID ro
COME INT'O rHE WATE~.
t Gue~~ He·~
100 'IOU.NG!
--
by Wm. F. Brown and Mel casson
W~L W~A1 go 'OJ ( M0w A8C()f A Lrff££ GUI Wrt'l4 (:(£· '~6~ ? ~ MIO A ft'Cttr (.AJ.lJJLAfOf 7
~ . ;,
? ... .. • ~ . ..
by Mell
IT'~ JI.AST ,.HA,. WHO
NEED? A
ltUSTY
DIAPeJC PIN .. '?
,.~. ( i .,.,,
' I . • • ,, , • '. • ~ I,,,
;'f~~ '-4 ,,,~
PEANUTS
0
by Charles M. Schulz
THERE'S NO EXCUSE
FOR MISSING A eALL
LIKE THAf!THERE'5
A650lOTELV NO E,(CVSf!
I IAK'E IT BACK ••.
TMAT WASN'f A
BAO EXCUSE •.•
FUNKY WINKERBEAN by Tom Batiuk DOOLEY'S WORLD by Roger Bradfield
I CAN'T BELIEVE 008000
CALLEO A DOCTOR FOR ~15 ~I
WHAT DO "IJ.lEQ EXPECT ME
10 DO ... SU€ MOmER
NAlURE ;;.J
TANK McNAMARA
MOON MULLINS
J.AM·MuMr LOVELY
,AGeD Cf4EESE ...
TDDAY•s CIDSSIDID PUZZLI
ACROSS
1 Wnsted no
time
5 Communists
9 Dull finish
14 Flat
receptacle
15 Cry of 1evel1y
16 F1-lder·a
mls11ke
17 English river
18 Elfisted
19 Grt11-·
20 Number
21 N. Ametlcan
bird: 2word1
2l Applepl9.
e.g.
2S Cordage
ft\lllflll
28 Out of the
· onllnlfV
71 On1who
cio.t: SuH1K
29 Com unit
32Na•
35 .lfrlc.ln tree
Je Adv1n1Jge
37 Reverber11te
38 Ont-night
39 Eur. cOirt '*0 Mwtcut
48 Bodyol
w1te1 Yeste1d1y'1 Puule Solved:
48 Scattered
52 Record
collectors
56 Bt11t11ge
S7 FHt
SS Ina line
I ~ c
I Cl(
A I~
8 r
Al~
I A
E M
C" A
,J I A MIEI S IC M IF IN
IAll llJI> : p IR ~ In 1'1 c /ol I T E : ~ 10 R I A
l .. Ill 1111 AIC: i J s
IC IE c A DIA
S9 On the crut
of
S A C. r • ,CA II •<; l" IN ,r n
ll G t E ~R A ISI P " T R f
60 Sports
p1l1c1
~ Q I ~ llN G ,MIA IH ii Nlr
t< E I'. IOIV f RA-:>10 It I 0
61 Part 1bo111
tht shoulders
62 C1m1mb8f.
lo1one
5 E NT lllT• E IL IK I 18 IE < S
63 Brought into
the open
T II
( E
AN
L 0
l R V c: y
L S
E T s s
n E L 10 5 s u Ml S E C T
OP EN ti E AR
F E NC E T 0 ,. s T 0 R 0 T
64 Tranatflf
PfOPf'TV 65 Trtnslt 12 Young 'uns '4 Gadget
damege 13 lrish·Gaehc 4S Unsobe1
lllow1nee 21 Grve up 47 "Old Pal
22 Get···· "
DOWN 24 Wise min ~ Hibtde
I '1 ahoulcV1 'Z1 NYSE unit 49 Most of
·-111 btd" 28 Camping eenh's
2 Otltd fruit item sur1ace
3 leutn1 30 E. lndial\ 50 Marry
0 R
T "
T '-
OE
4 Halt oolllletlc urpet Informally
5 Be>nus 31 Au1hen11c SI Where trains
6 Occutrtnee 32 Honduras come ii\
7 Olclt1n1 port 52 Arrest
~~-33 lm11ge: Prefi1t 63 •••• a11ls:
8 Progeny 34 Onion~ln:2 Unique
9 Bu.in.. words person
GORDO
by Jeff Millar and Bill Hinds
DR .SMOCK
MOTLEY'S CREW
(
fl Ii .. ..
41 Overly terw
42 lllUNICh
43 Femlnlno
Ufllon 35 Stupefy 54 Part of the
10 "--With• 36 C1eemofthe body TUMBLEWEEDS
• 111m1
44 luropttl'I
'*5 Rt!Mll\
lnac1lw
VWHI' ' crop · 65 "Dies····":
11 etlttrfd In• 38 lndl11\ Dav of Wrath
body: 2 trophy ol old 69 hactly
~rd• '2 T11ff sultablt
10 II 12 IJ
t WANT YOU
TO MAIL. THIS
IMPORTANT
LETTER·--
NOW P<>N'T
t:OAGET IT
OR LOSE IT
PRO!'A9lN '<OUR FORM.... t~
IN 9A1'ft..E YOU ML.151 SWING
il'IE WAR cw~ IN A G«l!A1'
SWHPIN& ARC!
Wl4ATCUA BEE~
OOIN' LATELY!'
NOT
MUCH ·
ACTUAL.l.Y
IVE BEEN
KINDA
BORED
by George Lemont
by Templeton and Forman
.lf
"'This is tbc start or Henry•s vacation so ~·re er\joyina '
ourselves."
by Tom K. Ryan DENNIS THE MENACE
r •
· Auxiliar y Honors Planned
Harold L. Gano, ex
ecuttve directof' of Sad-
d hi b ac 11. f'nmmunlty
HooltaJ. will pre.4•nt
Mrvlce l>lna to membera
of the Odd• and Enda ~ l'll•d• ln the doctors'
aux1haryatthetdlntan· dlntn1 room or the
nual Dw1arch ce>remony hospltaJ located at 2 .. st
Thundoy at 10 a.m . Via Estrada, Laaunu
'fhe pr~acntaUon wlll HUia.
S•n ...
BETTER
SALADS
WILL
BEGIN
IN
LAGUNA
HILLS!
---------~-:::-:: L · urt m Is /ocottd-tU
d. ·ng roo ou'rt 1n1 0 Btoch No mat1tr whtrt Y Lakt fortsl. LaB""
Id Mission Vitjo. El Toro. . Lb rin(( communltlts-Wor • h ting nt•S" o . .r tilt othtr ""c an d t -beginning in or any UJ lads -an mor
'II soon tniOY bt'tttr sa you
Lag1.ina Hills!
In
Your , '" :"': Best ...
Interest
Higher interest than commercial banks pay plus the
assurance that your savings are safe, insured by a
Federal Agency. A deposit of $1000 or more in a 6 year
Investment Certificate yields 8.06% annually. Or, a
$1000 Certif 1cate of Deposit Account for only one year
yields 6.72%. Of course. interest 1s compounded daily
at Los Angc>les Federal Savings. Investment Certificate
and Ccrt1f1cate of Deposit savers qualify for a safe
deposit box, JUSt one of over 20 most wanted services
available. It's 1n your best Interest to start your savings
account today. One minute and one signature la all
1t takes
. All Interest Compounded Daily
Annual Yield Annual· Rate
a:o6% $1000 for 6 to 10 years
6.72% $1 000 for 1 to 2 years 6Va%
5.39% Paid day-in to day.out 5%%
ft!M•al ••OulahOf\a Pt•m11 MllY wllhdrewal from ttrm accounl• ,..b,KI 10 aubst•"""' .. ,.,
ftl lt<luelh>n
LOS ANGELES
FEDERAL
SAVINGS
Newport Beach
3201 Nowport Blvd. -across from City Han • 676-4500
ONN ... MON.· 1'HUftS. • ... FAl
Head Office: Loa Angel a Fedora! Savlnl)i and Loan Asaoqiat10t1
One Wilshlre, Los Angeles 90017 • Othft olfiott 1nr0ug~tl,,nrn
Wednffday. July 13. 1977 s DAIL v PILOT A J J
Pair Charged in Kidnap ~ay Camp,
lndi t J B S f I . . . S1gnups c m e nt ust eats tatute o,1m1tations
From AP Dispatches South next week will feature a town meettnc and an
Two men have been indicted In the $1 milllon . overnl&ht stay in Yuoo City, Misa., White House
Vlralnla Piper kidnaping of 1972, Just 16 days before sources swd.
the statute of limitations would have expired on the The sources sald the
Minnesota caae considered the most expensive un-town meet 1 n g a p · ( =J solved kldnapmg in the country. pearance will be pat-PEOPLE
Only $4,000 of the $1 milljon ransom was re-terned after the one be at-
covered. t e nded for two hours --------
A federal grand jury in St. Paul handed down a when he visited Clinton,
one-page Indictment that named Donald Floyd Mass., in March.
Larson, 51, a Stillwater Prison inmate from Willow Carter also is expected to stay overnight on
River, Mann., and Kenneth James Callahan, 52, a July 21 at the home of a local family in Yazoo City,
carpenter from Cumberland, Wis. as he did at Clinton, although details were not an-
Mrs. Paper, 5-j, was abducted from her home m nounced.
Orono, Minn .. by two masked men July 27, 1972. She
was released unharmed two days later in woods
near Duluth after her husband, Harry Piper J r., Dald the ransom.
Piper is board chair of Piper. Jaffray &
Hopwood, a Minneapoh!) brokerage firm.
• When Howard Cannon <D-Nev.) sees the movie
"A Bridge Too Far," he reacts cliffereoU
most viewers. The movie tells
the story of Operation Market-
Garden during World War II. the
airborne Allied assault on Nazi·
occupied Holland.
The assault took place Sept.
17, 1944, and involved more than
5,000 fighters, bombers and
transports, and more than 2.500
gliders. One of the pilots was
Maj. Howard Cannon.
Cannon's plane. was shot CANNON
down shortly after the paratroopers on board b:uled
out. Cannon and Lt. Col. Frank Krebs bailed out
behind enemy lines. Cannon and Krebs who is on t~e senator's staff, evaded rapture for 4°2 day~ and
finally reached Allied lines.
• Ron Pallllo, who portrays the exuber ant
Horshack in the .. Welcome Back Kotter" · -·
series, made an inauspicious en·
trance in New Hampshire sum-
mer stock theater.
He was scheduled to arrive
in a seaplane for a stint at the
Lakes Region Playhouse but
ended up hitchhiking with two
dogs and two co-stars the final 10
miles to Laconia.
Hundreds of fans bad been
waiting for Palmo to land on
Lake . \~innipesaukee when his •L•LLO
amph1b1ous plane developed engine trouble. The
pa lot landed 10 miles short and the Pahllo troup de-
cided to fend for themselves.
The pilot, however. repaired the plane quicklv
and new on to Laconia. He arrived before the passengers
* President Carter's two-day trip to the Deep
A North Carolina judge dismissed a license
plate mutilation charge ag~t a well·read travel-
ing salesman who folded bis plate to conceal the
slogan. "First In Freedom."
The salesman, Victor Graham Jefferys. 23, of
Burlington, said he folded the plate because he
didn't lhink "North Carolina has any monopoly on
freedom, no more than the other 49 states."
He told Judge Lacy B. Tbornburg in Asheville
he read recently that the U.S. Supreme Court ruled
that states have no authority to require citlzerus to
display slogans or mouoos·. . . ...
Miner John Ford, the foreman proclaimed a
hero for fmrung a boml> in hls western Kentucky
coal mine then accu.Sed of planting the explosive,
has been found innocent.
"It's been one hell of an experience, but a lot of
people were behind me," said Ford after a federal
jury announced its verdict.
Last December, a £ederal grand jury in
Louisville indicted the 32·year-old Ford about a
month after he was called a hero for having dis-
covered the bomb in Peabo<1y Coal Co. 's <.:amp No. 1
mine near Morganfield. Company officials credited
J<'ord with preventing the deaths of at least 12
miners •
Prime Minister GluUo Andreotti of Italy will
make a two-day official visit to a hin on Jul
26·27, the White House an-
nounced
The announcement said An·
dreotta "will have an opportuni-
ty for talks with the President
and other United States govern-
ment officials on an extensive
range of issues in the context of
the friendship and alliance
between Italy and the United
States."
ANDafOTTI
Gov. and Mrs. J ames B. Edwards of South
Carolina wtll spend the first two weeks in August in
South Africa as the guests of that country's govern-
ment, his office announced.
Accompanying Edwards will be aide John
LaFitte and his wife.
It's kinda nice for us at Showtime to hear some of
the comments ftom people we talked to recently.
'
1/t's ~t to see movies without interruptions by
l fl commercra s. MR. BILL GREY ''J:he terrific advantages are you get to see th,e full
moules not cut to smithereens like on regular 1V
MR. BASIL DRAKE I
These are people who now have Showtime In
their home. With a simple lV cable hookup. you can
have ShO\.Vtime and watch first run movies like Dog Day
Afternoon. Shampoo, or ROOert Redford in Three Days
of the Condor. Movies that may not appear on regular
1V for years. And with no editing or commercials.
And it's reasonably prfced. You can get a month of
Showtime for what it costs to go to the movies. Once.
ShovJtime. It's just fantastic entertainment at a
fantastic price. And you can quote us.
Planned
Reciatratfon Is cont
tinuin& for aummer day
camps sponsored by San
Juan Capistrano'•
recreation department.
The camps are one
week long and are locat-
ed at Dana Point harbor.
The aesalons are for
children6 to 12.
The sessions are
scheduled for July 11-lS,
13·22, 25-29, Aug. l·S, 8-1%
and 15-19.
The camps will Include
parUclpaUon ln nature-
orlented activiUea, camp
crafts, outdoor cooking,
swimming and outdoor
education.
For further inform•·
tion, phone493-1171.
ThriftSlwp
Sa/,e Slated
A bouUque sale will
take place Friday and
Saturday from 10 a.m. to
4 p.m. at the Saddlebaek
Community Hospital
Thrift Shop, in Sad-
dleback Valley Plaza, El
Toro.
Sale items will include
dresses. suits, evening
attire, s portswear and
accessories. Additional
mformation is available
by calling Rowen~
Gordon at 8.17-4500.
Zoo Train
Trip Set
A train ride to the San
Diego Zoo on July 29 is
being offered by the San
Juan Capistrano Recrea-
tion Department.
The train will leave the
Capistrano Depot at 8:30
a.m. andreturnat6p.m.
For more Information,
phone 493-1171.
~ \ '
-~ ..
f;olkge Student Aid Getting TtJl;!ghe .
I
declared Independent, .. Voigt said .. ., grants, "1hicb cannot exceed halt"tl!.
"There is a general unease among ."' student's~aleducationcosts.
, those in financial aid that parents and Under the proposed· revislo~
students are planning •.ahead not to which would go ipto ~f(ect ·for~t&
decl~re the student as a dependent so 1978·79 year an fudepeod~nt·stud
that'lle is eligible tor more aid." he could not ~claimed aa a federal lll
said. -1 come tax deduction by plLf'C!Dta!or t
The rewards for being declared ln· ,1. years prior to .appl)'inl lcir ahL Tbis
dependent and in need can be-substan· one year longer &ban tbe·current«
tial. Under the federal basic grants emptionrule. •
• program, funded for $1.5 bilUon dur· Current regulaUons limit resldsle
mg the 1976-71 school year, a stud~nt of an Independent student wJt
can get up lo $1.~ a year depending parents to two consecutive weeks
uponfamtlycontribuUonstobisorber yearly. Under the proposal, Ute atu·
education. dent could not have lived with parents STUDENTS ARE classified either
financially independent or dependent
on parents to participate in federal
aid programs for postsecondary
school. If classified dependent, a stu-
"IN SEVEN YEARS in a number ol
areas or the country, particularly the
~oasts, there has been an increasing trend in the number of children being
for more than a total of slx ...U dur·
DURING THE LAST-acJlool year, ing any year in which aid ia request.eel
1.9 million students received basic aid for the prior year. 1 .~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~--~~~~--~------~--~--------------,
1 .Be's Spfdennan
Beneath webbed mask of "Spiderman ".
right, is face of actor Nick Hammond, who
will star in CBS-TY television pilot series.
Pilot is ~ed on comic strip "Spiderman."
Where woulcl a banker go
Heart Attack
'. Rx: Aspirin?
NEW YORK (AP) -·A medicine that may be
used to prevent heart attacks in the 1980s probably
, is sitting on a bathroom shelf in your home today. It
is commonly called aspirin.
"Studies published to date are favorable
t toward aspirin, or unable to rule it out," says Dr.
I Stephen Scheidt of the Cornell University College of
Medicine here.
I CORNELL CONDUCTS ONE OF THE 30
' clinics around the country involved ifi $17 million
1 federal trial of aspirin as a heart attack prevent-
ive. A totalof4,500patients areusedinthetriaL
The notion that aspirin has something to do with
r preventing heart attacks began to appear in
medical literature about 20 years ago. But there j was no laboratory work to back up the educated
, guesses of physicians.
Dloreon
his
savings?
U he's a sn1a1 t saver,
1 ( J "Part of the reason 1
1 MEDICINE we are able to begin the aspirin trial with some
I confidence was that re-
l cent theoretical work
~ seemed to be pointing to aspirin," says Dr. Marvin
Segal of Mt. Sinai Hospital in Minneapolis. i
RESEARCH ON HEART AITACKS bas led to 1 a complex description of cause-and-effect. A
chemical substance in the blood known as a throm-
' boxane causes blood platelets to clump together,
leading to blood clots which in tum contribute to
heart attacks.
Aspirin helps block formation of the thrombox· -anes.
However, aspirin also helps block formation or
another blood substance, a prostaglandin, which
. bAli already been found to balance out the tbrom-
' boxane by breaking up platelets and preventing
I clots. . The two discoveries have researchers wonder-
l ing what role aspirin plays in the complicated I process. •
"OUR ASPIRIN TRIAL IS NOT interested in
; explaining why aspirin works," says Dr. William
1 Friedewald of the sponsoring National Heart, Lung
1 and Blood Institute. "We merely want to see if it works. The explanation will ultimately be provided
~ by workers in the laboratory."
1 All the patients in the federal experiment have
~ had heart attacks. They are divided into two
I' groups: one that takes the equivalent of three
aspirins each day and another that takes a placebo
- a substance that doesn't do anything.
For everyday ach,es and pains, aspirin sub·
he'll
sututes are dispensed. Because he kno\.VS Home Fed-
' THE PATIENTS, RANGING IN age from 30 to
69, are not told which group they are in. The doctors
who examine them at least three times each year
are not told which of their patients are taking
aspirin and which are getting the placebo. The
technique Is called a "double blind."
eral pays higher interest on
most•• savings than any bank-
including his own!
Even our regular passbook
"We are very proud of the way in which the
trial was set.up. Monitoring is very strict," says Dr.
James Schoenberger, chairman of the study's
steering committee and a researcher at Rush
Presbyterian·St.r..uke'sMedicalCenterinChicago. account pays you ffiOre: 5JA%
******************'******* dt th 5% et *I____ ot • as compare o e you g * ~ • •I : frommostbam.
: • Before you invest, take a * • • : look at our chart. Then comi-
* ** * : pare our rates with the rates * • • • your bank pays. ,.
••aanks are allowed to pay Interest comparable
to ours only on IRA and Keogh accounts
And we make transferring your savings as easy as it.is profitable. Simply bringyour
bank passbook or certificate to your nearest Home Fede~ office
and '-W'll make the transfer for you!
l
DAILY Ptl.OT •I
~' Bulling Lueky to Be Alive After Skootlilg
BycaAIG II ... .. ....,, .. _ .... ,
~ 'Tbree 1 a~o Terry t Bud> Bulllna did.o t know If
he'd e\cr/laybu ball 1aa1n.
Ho ha bttn 1hot In lhc
atomtth in an accld nt Ju.t
two weekl after reporuna In bta tint pro! 11onal HUOl'I
He h.cl apenl lhtto day1 In In
tt"ns\ve care and anot..her nlnc
days lr)'ln& to act hl11tronalb
back.
But tnday h• l• • member or
the MinnNOla TwlnJ.
/\ nd the bullet rem alna
lodced in hia pel vlc bone.
The sbooUn1 accident CK'·
TERRY BULLING
Fi dry ch
Side line d
With Injury
DETROIT An All-star berth
'.in1shl"d for Mark F1drych
rlut more s1gn1f1cant arc the
v1<·tones and !tpectators that
m .. iy disappear from the Detroit
Tigers if the shoulder inJury to
"The Bird" 1s really serious.
F1drych -the greatest spec ·
tator draw in the history of the
American League team -left
25,000 fans dismayed Tuesday
night as he exited the game
against Toronto in the first in
.ning with the injury.
"The doctor said it's jusl <1
tired shoulder,'' Fidrych said.
looking and sounding somewhat
discouraged.
Sta rs Cool B e a t
Newport Beach product Bob
Stafford 1gn1led the Orange
County Stars to a 3·1 victory over
the Phoenix Heal in an Interna·
tional Volleyball Association
match before 1,693 at University
High (Irvine) Tuesday night.
Stafford's hitting. aided by the
setting or player-coach Dodge
Parker, led the Stars in game
scores of 12·7, 0· 12, 12·8, 12·6.
The divison-l eading Orange
County club 1s 8·7 now, and
travels to Santa Barbara for a
match against the S pikers
tonight.
B~11 Get B oryl a
TAMPA, Fla. The Tampa
Bay Buccaneers signed former
Philadelphia q\olarterback
Mike Boryla to a. (CiJ.lr·year coo,
tract Tuesday afler a trade that
gave the Eagles in undisclosed
future draft choice.
Boryla, who s pent the last
three se;uons with Philadelphia,
said he aslte4 the club in
DeCNnl>er U> trade him. "I did
not 1'fant. to pliui for the Eagles. I
would not have_p'8yed there this
year,'' be said.
1t1~• S lpe d ?
LOS ~(f8LE$'-The L(>s
Angeles ~rs t)ave call~'dat
they l4lrm j mlijo,i' press .~On·
ference tor today ~id specula-
tion that they'\16"sfzned Jamaal
Wilkes, star forward for the
See Briel• Page BZ
curred at Wl1Conaln Rapids,
Wisc., whUe Bull1QI and tome
of hie teammates were 1lttln1
areuod ln an apartment On ot the youlha wu 1bowln1 the
others a aun, thinldn• lt wu
on 1afety.
l l wu not, it went off and the
bullet at.ruck 8ullln1, w~ was
•IU.lnt oo a couch between two
otben.
Jt hit him ln the etomacb,
damatln1thecolonandtheln·
toatJnes. lt nurowly missed
tho main arterial trunk. lode·
Inf In the back portion of Bull·
ing'a pelvic bone.
The bullet is still there. To
remove it doctors would have had to ilhatter the pelvic bone .
"It doesn't give me any trou·
ble at au and the doctors say it
won't," says Bulling, who Wall
called up Crom the Twins' AA
Orlando, Fla. team las l
month.
· Bulling, who prepped at
Lynwood High, then played at
Golden West and Cal State
(LA) and now makes his
home ln Westminster, sat out
the r est of the 1974 season. but
camo b ack to Wisconsin
Rapids a year later. He hit
.260.
La s t year, again at
Wisconsin Rapids, Bulling
hiked his season mark to .310
and was placed on the Twins'
40· man spring roster.
But there were three other
catchers at s pring training
this past March-Including
Butch Wynegar, called by
some one of the top young
prospects in the game.
"I got a pinch hit single
against the Yankees and I
caught two innings against the
Astros, getting a hit my onJy
time up. So I had a pretty good
spring," says Bulling.
But not good enough. Hewas
ticket.eel for Orlando's minor
league club.
Then last month Bulling was called up -quit~ uoexpect·
edJy.
Second string catcher Glenn
BorlJman tore ligamenl.s in a knee and the Twins• triple A
receiver bad just broken a
finger. BUlllng got the call.
"I waa really, really
shocked wtJen they told
me .•• I thO\l&bl they were
teasing me," recalls Bulllng.
•'We had just come off a long
trip &Jtd 1 bad gotten to bed at
6:30 in the morning. At 11 they
knocked on the door to tell me I
was called up and that
flifhl waa at 1. When I
there 1 rushed r1gbt to tll• b
park," says Bulling.
Tbus far the 24·vear:9ld right-bander has seen action
in Just two sames.
But Bulling isn't worried
about not playing. He believes
. bis lime will come.
"All I've been doing ii
warming up pitcher$ in the
bull pen and eMng lots ol
moral support. When the
doubleheaders corpe around,
they told me I might get in.
"But I'm not worried about
it. • . my chance will couie.' •
Ryan Still
Seeking
Whiff Mark
Robinson Scrutinizes
Weak Angels Hitting
By a Dal!y PUot Writer
Nolan Ryan will have to wait at
least one more turn before he
breaks the next all·timestrikeout
record held by ex-Dodger Sandy
Koufax.
The record he'r; after now is
most lifetime games with 10 or
more strikeouts. Koufax had 97
and Ryan has 96.
The California Angels right·
hander could have tied it Tues·
A 11geb S late
AllG•meson KMl'ClhOlo Oltl
J11lf' 1J M1nn--..ota #t Otfforn1•
Jvlv 14 Se.lit• ~t C.tlll0<nl•
Jvlv IS SHllle •t C•lllomte
' 151> "'· 1 1S1> m,
11SC> "'·
day night against the Minnesota
Twins, but his usual strikeout
form deserted him until the late
innings. A flurry of whiffs In the
final three frames enabled Ryan
to finish with eight strikeouts.
His teammates didn't provide
much hitting support, bul two un·
earned runs in the first inning
and an insurance run in the sixth
were enough for the Angels to re
cord a 3·0 victory over the Twins
before 19.139 fans at Anaheim
St ad1um.
"I didn't give the record a
thought," Ryan said. "I knew I
didn't have many strikeouts and
my stuff wasn't too good tonight
I didn't have command of the
fastball, either. I guess control
was my biggest asset."
Ryan's win was his 12th of the
season. tying him for the league
lead with teammate Fronk
Tanana. It was also manager
Dave Garcia's second straight
win since taking over for Norm
Sherry, who was fired Monday.
"I didn't do anything but sit
there and chew tobacco,'' Garcia
said ... 1 sat back and watched
Ry an pitch, just like you did.''
Although Ryan struck out four
in the last three innings, Garcia
says the fireballing Texan ad·
mitted to growing weary at the
end.
"In the seventh he said he was
getting tired and suggested we
get somebody loose in the
bullpen," Garcia said. "But he
ended up throwing only 134
pitches, which is n't much for
Ryan."
By DAVE CUNNINGHAM
Of the D•llY PlleUU.11
Standing behind the batting
cage before Tuesday night's
game, Frank Robinson was
studying the California Angels
hitters. He was making mental
notes on stance. stride, swing ...
the little things that can mean the
difference between a slump and
a hot streak.
Robinson is the newest Angel.
hired Monday at the same time
manager Norm Sherry was fired
and replaced by coach Uavc
Garcia.
Garcia bad served as a coach
at Cleveland when Robinson was
manager, and Garcia's first re·
quest after being handed the Angels' managerial reins was
to have Robinson hired.
"Specifically I'm a hitting in-
structor," Robinson says. "Ac·
tually. Garcia has given all the
coaches a free hand to work with
the players as we see fit. My job
is to pass on the knowledge I've
gained with my 24 years of ex
perience.' •
Carcia could hardly have
picked a man with more ex·
perllse in the art of hitting.
Robinson's achievements fill
three pages in the media book.
Among the more notable
milestones were MVP awards in
both leagues (the only player to
APrMto
The Angels scored their first
two runs without the benefit of a
hit. Gil Flores led off with a walk
and Jerry Remy reached base
See Ryan page BZ ANGEL RANCE MULLINIKS FLIES OVER GLENN ADAMS. .
"• <I ·,~ #I •'/. ...., I t
Rau·Goal: World Series
t Dodgers Lefty Baff~ Astros, 8-0
HOUSTON (AP) -Particlpat·
ing in this year's All·star game
would be a pleasure, says
Dodgers pitcher Doug 1lau, but
praying in • World Serita is his
eoal. ' . Ra11 handcuffed Houstoo on
four hlts for bis fifth straight vie·
tory as Los Angeles belted the
Houston Astros 8·0 ·Tuesday
night.
·'There are a lot of good
pltcbera ln this league,•: Rau
said. "I'm not gQlnlt to predict
whether 1'11 m.ite t he All-star
team ~l playing ln the fall
classlCj UI my ~!lip Joa!."
Rau, 10-l, s~cl( oyt five and
allowed only Orie IfoUliloD runner.
to reach third as the bodgers
snapped a three·game losing
streak.
' A first tnolnc fbi sinele by Ron
Cey and a third loping, run·
lScoring dc)ubje by !rill Russell
D~Slaie
AllGUllHO"KAllC(7'0I
J~I'; IJ l.OlA~••tHl!u\IOll
.iutv " LM A,.irttt Mov~tOll
Jvlv !Hos AnQtltUt s-1 Oi.oo
5'301>"' LJO.,.m.
6 sso.m.
staked Los ~eles to a 2·0 lead
olf Houston starter and ldser Joe
Sambito. 4·3.
Run·producing sln.gles by Ted
M.artln~ and Ruasell, Cey's
aacrlf.lce tly and two·fUn error by
Houston second.· baseman Julio
Laver Leads Friars
tiebreater to 8-6, lost the match
and •am• lorth IM>eters.
Gonzalez: fueled a hve·run
Dodger explosion in the fourth in·
oing.
John Hale's solo home run into
the right field seats in the fifth in·
ning oU Houston reliever Joe
Niekro accounted for the final
nodgers run.
"I turned my ankle earlier this
year and I have to have it
wrapped befo're each garne,"
said Rau. "The tralner wrapped
it tighter than usual tonight, and
I think that helped because it
enabled me to pitch in more of an
upright ~ilion."
The shutout was the seventh or
the left-hander's career and
Houston bas been the victim in
four of them.
"That's tho-best game Doug's
pitched all ynr,., said Los
Angeles manager Tom Lasorda.
"We really needed a good effort
from him toniaht to order to rest
our bullpen."
LO;t AllOELH
Merllnrztl
Auis.ltn
G••••Y lo
Ct't'JO
8•kHlt
~ ....
tt•terl llvrhcl
Ye-.i••c
A•UP
allrllll
J J) ' J 1J1
s 0 ' '
• 0 ' 1 s 0 '0 101t , ' ' ' _,I I 0
'' '0 llOO
.. OVSTOH
a111r11 M
J Go<1ule1tl> • 0 O O
CADtllJb JI Io
C""'°cf f • o o W•tliO" Ill 3 I I 0
l't•llll-C ' a 0 0 0 J.~f1111i ) 0' 0 l'vllt r 1r J It II Cl
"1111111 O t Ot llMfll .... H J t Ot
$.tmllllllp 1 0 0. J,Hlt•rop ' o o t Sotfltloiift 1 o o o
Mcl.a.,.i11,. 0 0 0 0
ever ~ t.bat) and a triple crown
in 1966 ~hen he had 49 homers,
.316 average and 122 rbi.
Robinson also holds a major
league record for homering in 32
different ballparks. He ranks
fourth oo the all-time homer list
behind Rank Aaron, Babe Ruth
and Willie M•ys.
This is Robinson's second time
around with the Angels. In 1973
DAVE BROWN
he was traded to California by
the Dodgers after spending one ~
season in a Los Angeles uniform.
He !tit 30 homers and had a .266
average for the Angels but was
dealt to the Cleveland Indians
midway through the 1974 season. Brown Quits
As Barons
Cage Coach
Al Cleveland Robinson made
basebalJ history by becoming the
first black manager in the major
leagues. Aftec two seasons at the
belm, Robinson's club was still
playing mediocre ball and be was
fired this season.
"I enjoyed the two years I
managed," Robinson says. "I
left with a good reeling about
managing and if the right offer
came along I would get back into
il.
"Sure, I'd like to manage the
Angels because it would be like
working at home (he lives in Bel
Air). But you can't select a club
to manage. They select you,"
Robinson says.
•·Right now my thoughts are
not on managing,'' he continues.
•'I just want lo do the best job I
can as a hitting instructor and try
to make this a winning ball club.
I want to help make Dave Garcia
a successful manager.''
Is the job too big? After alJ, the
Angels a. e 8Y.l games behind
dtvlsion-Jr tding Chicago and ln·
juries continue to plague the
club.
"We've had a lot of injuries but
a good ball club can pick up the
pieces." Robinson answers.
"You can't go around feeling
sorry for yourself.
''The players who are in there
just have to go a little harder,
reach for that something extra.
Nine games isn't too much to
make up at this point of the
season. If we can stay close until
some of our guys get back, we'll
haveachance,"
Barber Captures
Medal Play Title
David Barber, a 30·,Year-old as·
sistant golf pro at Bakersfield
Country Club. shot a one-under-
par 70 T~sday at Mesa Verde
Country Club in Costa Mesa to
win the Southern California PGA
medal play championship.
Barber totaled 215 strokes, two
better than Chuck Montalbano of
Griffith Park.
Barber, Montalbano, Paul
McGuire, John Ruedi and Dave
Sheff earned starting berths in
two or the three Southern
• California ~nter tournaments--
the LA and San Djego qpeos '8nd
the Bob Hope Des>ert Class~
By ROGER CARLSON
OI the D•1ly Piiot St•ll
Dave Brown has resigned hb
position as Fountain Valley Hi&tl
basketball coach to assume, a
s imilar job at David Douglas
High in Portland, Ore.
Brown, 36, led the Fountain
Valley Barons to six CIF playoff
berths and three league cham·
pionships in his eight-year stint
as head coach. ·
Chosen Orange County co~h
or the year after guiding his
Barons to a 26·2 record in 1977.
his quintet was eliminated in the
C I F 4·A quarterfinals by
Compton High (and All-
American Purvis Miller),57~,
His overall record is 145 wins,
64 losses. No replacement has
been chosen, but sources close to
the FV scene indicate junior
varsity coach Dennis Timmer,
who has had ftve JV cham.•
pionship teams, is firs t in line for
the post.
"It's an area that I 've always
wanted to locate in and an op-
porturuty I've been looking for.''
says Brown. "You reach a point
where you've accomplic;hed most
of what you set out lo do and now
this presents a new opportunity."
Douglas Hi~h. with an enroll
ment of 2,400, is one of the largest
high schools in Oregon and has
been noted for a strong athletic
program, although basketball
has suffered In the recent years.
"It's terribly hard to lea\fe
Fountain Valley.'' says the El
Toro resident, whose wi(e, Janet,
is an Oregon native.
Among the standouts at Foun·
tain Valley under Brown ha•e
been Dan Malane, Scott Ryder.
Bill Maller, George Barrios and
KenSh.ibata.
A Redondo High, El Camino
College and Cal State (Long
Beach> product, Brown assumed
the reins at Fount.In Valley
where the three prevlous years
netted 31 wim, <43 losses.
Carew Tops Voting
~
For All-star Game
11:1 DAILY ,.IL01
,
Dickmann's Final Goal: Alainitos
C . '80 G Racing ompete m ames · E 1 . n r1es
a, aOGCll (•.\Rt.SON
............. twitf
Tbe 1'" A.AU NaUOMI w•tcr
polo champlomb1pJ unfold UU.
wMkend at Newport Harbor
la,Jl wtth action be1&lnnln1 l"ri =and amonc the 1quad1 com-
1 for honors la Newpor1
lne-Mt1a AquaUcs under UC
lmneroacb Ed N~wland.
And lf NIMA, Indeed. rlnd11
ltaell atop the heap when lhl·
waves subside Sunday. one or thl•
real keys to 1uccea11. 1f not the
player with the actual combanJ
lion to the lock . 1s Jack
Dickmann, a 6-4&,.,, 200 pound
21-year-old Dana Halls High
School t.eaclser.
Dickmann . who i s also
aquatics coach at Dana Hiiis
m1b in addition to dutJes a.s a
science and math teacher, 1s a
UC Irvine product under
Newland after prepping at Whit-
tier's La Serna Hlgb and he ad-
mits there are thin.is beyond this
week's endeavors that also oc·
cupy bis mind.
The United States railed to
qualify for a berth at the 1976
Montreal Olympics-but
Dickmann wasn't involved, he
was sitting things out with a
broken eardrum.
It h appened 10 a U S
Hungarian match in 1975 and as
Dickmann recalls, "There's no
question, it was deliberate. l was
set up. I was coming down on a
man-to-man situation against a
pick. The Hungari an player
simply moved out and let me
have it in the ear with his foot.'·
JACK DICKMANN
Dickmann is not the type an the
water polo tank that does a Jot of
scoring-rather he's called on for
his defensive prowess and he
says he enjoys that aspect of the•
game.
.. My game is the counter al
lack." says Dickmann. ·· 1 have·
size. strength and speed (h('
swam in the 48s and 1:48s in th\.'
100 and 200-yard freestyles while
at UCI) and there are not a whole
lot or people who can stay with
me the full 30 meters on a
break."
Another top competitor at
Newport will be Jon Svendsen of
d efending champion Concord
and Dickmllnn rutes him as bis
toughest competition among
American poloists.
"He's as blg as me and really
fast, almost in the high 45s in the
100 free. Quick and strong,
Sveodisen is a tremendous all-
round player."
Players from the tournament
w i 11 be selected for the World Stu.
dent Games, but standouts such
as Dickmann, Kruse1 Baba and
Svendsen won't be considered-
already committed for the na
t1onal Learn.
St11l, Dickmann says the com-
petitive edge will be more than
JUSt a national team title on the
line . ··Gaining a berth on {he stu·
dent games team provides
tremendous developmental ex-
~rience," says Dickmann.
Dickmann, a Laguna Niguel
resident, was at his competitive
peak in 1975 when be lost out to
the eardrum injury, but he says
although he may not be as fast or
strong, he's a smarter player
with Moscow and 1980 ap-
proaching.
"It's the only reason I'm still
playing," says Dickmann. It's
not just an ambition to compete
at the Olympics. I don't want to
be there as a lokcn e ntity.''
Dickmann. however. seems
unlikely to be considered a token
entity regardless of his en-
deavors considering his size-and
ability.
And H good example of his
worth will be in full view Satur-
day-when NIMA's A team col-
lides with Concord Aquatics (and
Svendsen).
Dickmann, who'U be 29 when
the Moscow Olympics are held m
1980, concedes this 1s
the final goal: To compete and
compete well at an Olympic
Games. ••This is al." says
Dickmann. "It's strictly a make
or break situation now, although
even at this point, I realize l'm in
a year-to-year s1tuat1on "
SPORTS IN BRIEF .•.
Followin.it this AAU aclaon. Dickmann, Jim Kruse lforml'r
Corona del Mar High athlete and
current coach>. ex·Universit\
High (Irvine) ace Nick Baba and
11 others, along with nallonal
coach Monte Nitzkowski of Long
Beach, embark for training 111
Yugoslavia and Romania, then
the pre-World Games at Berlin in
early August and a bit more com-
petition in Amsterdam.
1 The World Championship
Games, which will qualify teams
for the Moscow Olympics, are set
for Berlin in 1978.
Four Stars
Gain Honors
Four players from the Orangt·
County Stars -more than from
any other team have bffn
selected lo play in the first In
ternational Volleyball Assocaa
lion <IVA> all-star match Sunda\
in Denver. ·
Orange County's all-star selec·
lions are Wilt Chamberlain, Jon
Roberts, Hilary Johnson and
Dodge Parker. The Stars• Mlles
Pabst was chosen as a co-coach
for the Western Division all-stars.
AU-star squads were chosen by
vot.e of the IV A players, who
could only pick players from
their own division.
The all-star match will be
taped for a broadcast July 2.1 on
CBS. The a ll-stars:
IVAALl..·nAlt SE\.ECTIOMS
Wt>\IP<n Otvt!Of\ ··Jon qOl)orll l0r.on9" (°""
,., •• W 1U Owmbert•tn COr.noct Countv•. H1lt11ih
J-\Ofl IOr.-.C-IYI. Dodoo P••U• (()r....,..
C°""IYI, Luf\ AYm.ttCI lS.ftl• B•rb.tt•I. Lindo
Fer".nci.T ls.nl• lletl»tel, 8111 W.,<lrop fs.tn
0 1-1. ~y "-n IS.n Di.oe>I RO'SffM W•
qt'ICI> IS.an °"'9111, P""kl Roberto ·a.c.w ~
FreilM ls.tit• Betbllr•I Co CotC"-t ~
P•rk~ 10r ... Countyl•llCIMll"P•"'tl0r-
C-IYI.
Etnlllm ~ 5'.,ley C0.-1, .1p11
~ cDtft-1, Lucy '-"" co.n...11. #!Odteg G•-••lc (Plloefll1I, SIM OoKlftl• (,._.I, MellllOl'I J"'-MI CT-I, Vl~r
Vekltr C"-1• ~C.-. GonuNt CT~l.
IEd S.onlt (!'1-•J...-O, Slwiron "''-IEI "-·"*91l.<D<wc:Mt1.-sa.--i.v co.-1 -·YfOOO~(fllUOftl.
Continued From Page Bl
Golden Stale Warriors
Lakers owner Jack Kent Cooke
who called the press conference
would not talk about Wilkes, but
Warriors' s pokes man Goldon
Starling said a Wilkes-Lake rs deal
· · 1s certainly possible.·'
··It 1s <:ertainly possible 1t couh.1
involve Wilkes," Stirling said
from Chicago. "It could be. We
have negotiated with him, of
course. But I assume he has
negotiated with other people too.
T here have been continumg ref-
erences about his going to the
Lakers, so like I say, I suppose
it's possible."
Wilkes has played out his op-
tion with the Warriors.
Sololflon Ad.,a11ce•
CINCINNATI -Harold
Solomon and John Alexander ad
vanced without difficulty Tues
day in first round singles com
petition in the 90th annual
Western Tennis Championships
Solomon swept past Francisco
Gonzalez, 6·1, 6·2. while Alex
ander downed Zan Guerry. 6-3.
3-6. 6·3.
Roscoe Tanner defeated Bill
Lloyd, 6-4, 6·2. Ismael El Shafei
ousted Peter Fleming, 6-3, 6-0,
Mike Cahill stopped Byron
Bertram, 6·2, 6-0 and Andrew
Pattison upended Tom
Gullickson, 6-0, 6-0.
Hank Pfister eliminated John
Powers, 6-1, 6·3. while Tim
G ullickson defeated John
Bartlett, 6-2, 6-0.
f'oew s...,.ended
RIVERSIDE -Cal Baptist
College has suspended four
basketball players arrested last
week in connection with campus
burglaries, a school official says.
Cal Baptist president Dr
James Staples said Tuesday that
Michael Jackson, 20, Rommte
··Buddie" Rogers. 21, Stanley
Oldham, 24, and Clarence
Brown, 24, would be suspended
rrom the school. All were
st.art.en at Cal BaptUt.
Jack.Ion and Rogers were
charged in burglaries of the stu-
Baseball Standings
Boslon
Baltimore
New York
Cleveland
Detroit
Milwaukee Toronto
Cbtcqo
KUlalaty
Jliu.ota Teus ~
• .540 4~
.512 'l
AM~
.A3S U\\
• .Cll 11
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
W L Pct. GB
Chicago 52 33 .619
Philadelphia 48 36 .571 4
Pittsburgh 47 39 .547 6
St. Louis 46 41 .529 7~
Montreal 39 46 ,(59 13~
New York 34 51 .400 18~
West Dlri.IJon
Dodltn
Cincinnati
San Pracisco
Hoastoo
SanDteio Atlaata
57 30 .855
48 38 .MB t~
40 49 .449 18
39 4t ."3 181h ae 52 .mao ~1 "' .aeo 25'\>'!i
dent store and a dormitory, in
which $2,400 in goods was taken:
Oldham was charged in the
burglary of the student store and
Brown was charged with receiv-
ang stolen goods.
Parl«?r fJp•ef
PITTSBURG If National
League batting leader Dave
Parker has told the Pittsburgh
Pirates he wants to be traded.
''I'm not happy in Pittsburgh,"
the 26-year-old right fielder said
in Montreal, where the Pirates
were engaged in a three-game
series against the Expos. "I don't
want to be playing there next
year."
Borg StlU Bot
RICHFIELD . Ohio -
Wimbledon champion Bjorn
Borg picked up where he ten off
an England last week, leadicg the
Cleveland Nets lo a 2S-18 World
Team Tennis victory over the
Golden Gaters Tuesday night.
The young Swede eased past
Tom Okker G·2 in the men's
singles. then combined with
Cleveland player-coach Marty
Riessen for a 6·3 triumph over
Okker and Gater player-<:oach
Frew McMillan.
The crowd of 8.312 was the biJl·
gest hometurnoutin the Nets' bis·
lory.
RYAN •••
Continued Fro1D page Bl
when Twins pitcher Paul
Thormodsgard mishandled his
sacrifice bunt.
As Bobby Bonds struck out,
Flores and Remy executed a dou-
ble s teal. putting runners at
second and third. Then Tony
Solaita grounded to first
baseman Rod Carew, but he tried
to nail Flores at the plate and in· stead threw the ball into a pho-
tographer's wen. allowing Remy.
to score behind Flores.
Bonds drove In the third run
wltb a aingle in the s1'ttb Inning to
score Fiores from second.
Carew, who e~red the series
as the center of con.slderable at-
tention with Ida .400 b~tting
averaie, bas seen it dip &o ..393
during the two g~mea at
Anaheim Stadium. He went O-
for-4 against Ryan and struck out
twice.
l/olNNUOTA
H•"uf C•rew 11'1 A,,.,,, •• I
WyrteQ•rc c111 ... c11> C~Jb
...... 119YH ,..,,, ri
Wlllonqt.
Mr ft Ill
•000 4000 • 0 1 0
• 0 0 0 JOOO
1 0 I 0
JOOO
1 0 I 0 lOOO
1' •••
C:Alt..otf"tA
Flt>< ... Cf
Atmv111
llonclll"I
SOl•ll• lb .. .., ... .,
........
11 I 0
, 1 0.
4 0 1 I
l 0 I I ,.oo
)00 0 JOOO
tOOO
10 I> 0
Cf\f!ll)b ,.-vlllllihH
Ro.Je<tr-Cll ......... .,..,....<
_T_..,
,.1n1,...1.1 o
,.lltST ltACE -lJO yum I yur
olch C•••tn."'9 For m••cttM Pur'\e
\2200. C 1 .. m1no po"" "j()O
T1\My 0.YCC•lll '" MIU Kelle_.. CllOUQlll '"
MIH TIPOVT•-CCh!-1 '" T .... Ju ... ln I lltoOUI I ..
To••A•mCTrNw~I IU \.IQUICIA-l~lombill tit
llalnElt-l~llsont 11•
Wiiii• NelM111 l\.lphtml IU
wnowcv1r!Hertl 01
Four FO<ly PrlncH\ICMdot•I ltt
SECOND ltACE . .clO y•rdl l YUT
o•CI• & 119. C•••m•nQ Pu••• ~1100
Cl<l1mlnqpo1CH1000
Straw P•rr7 IROUQl\I 127
MonGo'\CNrQflr f(tt'dc.Ml'f 1 \11
P.tlh-O,, 8.J' (C.uctoM\ '11
l 1o.1>"Ci Bauv tL1J)hdrn' \11
"'•n<l \ Citnyon <W.iro1 1"
Ol<11•~111Gooch•l0t-O.I 119
Oanely'• ~1¥ (ICnoQnll Ill
THI lltD ltACE -..00 vard• l vr•r
otd\ & uo Clct1ml"9 Pvr-"t-\1100
( l.t1mtnQf)ftCf' \2500
NrvlK!a ft\"f'rCTr-Nsut• • 1n
G.O,O•".h-l (Ad.>lrt ...
1'1n•Ml lR°"91'I 112
Mo\t Royal IAlll'°"I In
GoC•1unlP_,11.,.1 tit
Color&c1oJo.llCn'9flll 1n
C~1f'Mj Roc•~t tW•ro• 11• f •nY Noow (llroolm Ill
FOUltTH ltACIE -JSOyMCli , yp., o•o rnai-. O•lml"il. Purw \1100.
Claimlno r><•<U.5000 Miu IC1~y Doo 1.-.r11
Flunfort~ I Dom1nQur11
S°"OY fWl!)gV ICrr<><;ier I
Binky Ber llU\ter lMvle••
uncte-Rocco t Rooon1
C·O Ut\dauf'\tfd (t(f'\10tll 1
W.'1(aV\(U""lllMl
r,.o 0oro\.10tAll1\0n1
rruly A r"r1nce C Ot•IOfTll>fi
0f'c41nf t Trr•\~rto 1
I It
"' 119
:~~ ' 111 114
111
111
111
Fi FTH RACE ,\0 yMO J ,._,
•;Id\ lo up, c1~,m1nQ Pur\P \]~
(l411mtt'IQ pr1<P '6WJO
NPwWorlOCOf'ton~I ,,,
I' a\I BY• I Rouonl 119 01c.,•y~f\.ar A (,old((drO<J1•l 11} !"""'-....:....:'.":
M1dnitfl SoKi..I fMylt-\t It•
Qonit"o Slr•P' kn1Qh(' In
Tn.Jew"1 lL1pMml 119
NtolllS-(""""' 1n
Silt TH llACE -3!o0 Vlt•<l• J ¥Par
old\ & uo FllllM I.""""' Cl•im1nv Pur~~ Cla1ml1>91><Ke\IO.OOO
Wild Cash lACl.ll<rl I It
Pe-Ht<lt_l...,O "' A.s.''tCCIP'(JeylC.-.-1 tit Out..-~(Alli-.1 1111! P-ep Ml•~ Aul>y P«: lCMClo1•I • • I
ICll>IY-•IT~uttl 110
Cagers Battle
M•n AtJW•rd8-" t8rootr\t 11•
Autl'IAllc• IMitcr..lll 11•
L°""AGo(~omc>a 1 llt
SEVEN'Of ltACE J!oO 1••0• l
Vr lJr Olds ' VO. Allow•n<• PUf''t#
'16SOO
Ee! Off ITrff\ur•I
F~>Untam Valley's Chris Mack (3) shoots as Huntington Beach's
Rico Tho~pson (25) de.fends during HB s ummer basketball play
Tuesday rught. Fountain Valley won the till, 58·56. Both teams
came into the game with 7-0 records •H ________________ .....::,: ______________ ...::..:..:_;_.=:_ __
Jet Sov I"°""' ...
t m A Surfil' rtm141 fM11C' rn-11 II'
(;o B .. ovGofl11)1\dml
Mr C•prt Of<"• ( Ot•omo,t' r wotoGolWarCll
( nartf'r Pany CCttroo1.1•
r.,. Amt.. ... d<lor IMyl•<i
I j)
•11
•II Los Al Results Nationals
EIGHTH lltACE -'600 y•r<l\ 1 yur
01<1s Clo\im1nQ. Pur~ '-1l00 C•••rn•no
F0t T~•O•' ,.llltST RACE JIO YMO' J vrM
Old\ Cta1rnmQ Purn• '1100
Hurtb<'u• K.O I Tr~•w•rl
111 • • 7Q • ~ J 40 in CtM~•tt181rno1Cr~-rlJ«1 l •O
or•Cf' isooo.
Cut• N r .. I My I" I
Mr. Cult Guy IClerl•W I
G•veEmTl,...lDeloml>dl
Luckv 1S CROUQl'll Tumbl•n Tumbl-
117 T rlPlt Boom ll.1pn•m I 10 Ml
l7' Tlmp-1815
18,ookllf4dl I It
Fl.tYLff<lfrNlntlHMll U11'ronl P-
Sl•r I BrOOl<\1 11~
OC .. W•fllCr-lC:.Cloltl 171
h•Ctoe•C--1Ct .. 9"r I 111
NINTH ltACE -lJO Y•rdi 3 Yt•r
o•<H. Cl..,.,,1"9. P\lr\O UlOO Cl6'm1no
Al\O R"' Tin•·~ Rott. Tl'lill" Cl•<S, Mr. Pr.ir .. Wind. 011\olll Mo. War
Cnlcl Aockl'I. J<l~I O..,.,y, Too fleet roe .. 1
S< r•IC!led -S.-.y Said Sl~HlnQ
Jon". Hf'VIMU Roy•I. I'm. S,.int n Euct• 1·-r11wff• 1<1d a•· C."~•111• &l-. "4d lK ....
or1criSOOO r allmPOl>mY lC.,Clor~•
J1,.,1~ (C::;>->~I
Rari1r\kv (M-v""'•
llO SECOND lltACE 400ya<ll• lYN•
119 nlCI\ • uo. C"l••m•no Pu~UOOO.
II• l t c,,me 0" (IMll>tr fH~ril
117 •10 •OO 160 ~ ttlhOtnGotltOf\4tnl
S1r ... •t Ftahlflf' C8roo•''
Jott1n JM' {AUl\Of\t
0.tr•n·, Di.mond(Af'MH·'
ron-r'\to-nf"fH,-,.tt
(ft,..<01f'\ ForM I Tr••'"'•'
I 1111 C•1un Dftv•I rr,.,nu<•• ) IO l '°
I I\ ~f-0 !HMIC>f" (-d.tl P t I fliO
I It To""f' -M .. \ At"O P .H\ roN" M•n Cro t•""' A :~ \~ Ch J,.I 810.,., f\tHl'f' 0on \ C'-o
M.
Sports
Calendar
--...,,u111ru1
\.ao.-Lff9W bMlt.etbell IMln1°"
ll1e;o vs L.eQUN lie.tell et S·JO, S.n
Ct<'mPnte vs ,.00111111 al 6:.S:
Caolstr..., VeOpy "'El Cimino ti I ;
Estancla'llSOeneHlllUI t; ISi.
Fulltrlon Coll•O• llH~•lbell
1eaoue: ($.odlelleu Colle9P "' Southern Ctlltornfe ColleQe •I• I.
Open baSltelbclll '"'°""" et CosM M .... , ESIMl<i.. Hiott: I~ T...,k\
on Build & (;<ow at 1; !>out11Prn Col
Au1ov\ FC~•.
!>.>Ma Ano) Ht(lfl O.•l<l't ... 11 IHQu•
IN•Woort Hartlor "' S.xldl-o. Ill •
SAl\la AMV..,ll''(V\Un1¥efiofty•t ,.
Am•rlcaft L•OIOft 8 ••,.b•ll
-..1ss1<1n VlP,o ~ S.rv•i. 111 L• Pal"'•
Stadium 17 4!1 NPWOOrl el CYP''"
M1qn CS tSI ,,.A<flonl1.t ill (Mt•,.,.,.,,.
Hton u U L
H•rbOt' Aru fNwNll U-AIBan"
C.r•n<l• "' w .. 1m1nt1.,. at FV Fl«
Cir ti s· JO, Co<Otl• ci.t llo•r v
HHY-1 HMl>Or at f• Wintle P•rlt
S 30; Cosle ~w "' L• 0u1n1.a ii TeWfnl<le P«I< I : ECl<SO! vs HUii!
•lli!lon 8Hcf> •I Lloftl Pe111 (0.vt>
Ff .. dl S;JO; EU-la vs F°""ltln
V•11eva1UGMP•f'll CO.vlsl'l•ICI fl•.
T"°""'9M1rad be•bell fHOW • West G-.. Ot0,.. ~ ,.o.,..leln
Vet,_., ~ et ~'V Rec. cir. e
p.m.; &.•Al-.. OcNwt V-•• ~INHla!IS:a.
<., r•trf'W'd ft"lpMoon Soort
fMIRO ,itACE "('I '"'<I' 1 vr~,
olO\ Cl••ft\lf\() Fn< m411•~'\ Pv'Y
UIOO. r-o \u(Wf",..,,... fH"'' I
7 I!() J llO ) 00
H•llon Gr"'""y C ,,.. . .,,u,r• •..O J IJI')
!>oo,11r19Son 1My~1 S IO
TtmP-'6.10
A•~ R11n .... VtklnQ Ann•. Act-'\
ACJ•tn, Otoe.on Dan, D•virn Oofl, H•n· < y Watcl\. llMY\111 Doo.~tts Larry
S<r•tctwd -T1nta AOC.tl:Pt, B•t
'four w .. 11.1. O..•o!c• .. County • .,.,.
fortR~Uf'\I u e oeci. l.()e s--a , ..... ,.
Oraftfty,~ld SI OS.SO.
,.OUltTH AACE -J50y•rCI\. l ¥Ur
olO• • 111> Cl&tm lnc:i Pur,,. U100,
R•<k On,.,..,n IC.relol~I
J 70 2.60 2.70
l Im I h RI>< ••II lrP.twrP I J 00 1 •O
Go0ota• tClf'rl\\.e't 1 AO
1.,,,. -11 fl
Af\O "~" -Df'flP O tYOI. Mvn,.rnt••\\U< J::1ck•eCoun(
\(ratc""d -l•Ulfll f1n~ Go
Fi ,.Tit ltACE -\50 v•rd• J 1••'
l'ffd\ & UO \lil'f"IH f11l0WM\(.I' Pur r
U•l>O
OuPt' ••\tf"t• • l f f,..t\UH·) no 1 •O 1 o0
Mr Ooly 8"'\18-hl 1 IO 1 W
Pr•n1Melto1•1 (Ci.rot.Ml , 41)
Ti,,,.. 1'.,
•1c.o PW\ Ttny M 1(k. JIM RNI
w.~.Wtt·~·,.F-tw. Tap~r
l'fOKr .. < ... >
SIXTH llACI -330 Yard\. 3 vN<' 016'.All-'C•. P1irw U-.
LOIM\.totk(~tl
S 40 J.OD 1M
OkM"._ .... ,~. uo 2t0
Hefw-.1Har11 2 80
Tl--11.11
Deep Sea Fishing
Also Aa"' -A~h1<"" .._,,''"" M.11
8dc•. Rov•I M1nt0fl Moc.lrt '"..,'"''• F1~\tV lrt~. 0;)n(fy FrO\tV
S<ratcl'lf>d -Fltatll IONOWtl .... u Eaect• -111-1..o1 .. Lucky a •
OICUJt H• .. 1-, ,..,Cl Ml.Oii.
SEVl!NTH RACE -SW '""'' ) Y""' Olds a. UQ, AOowan<t• Pur\1•
"6500
Mike'' Jri (Adi.,. l..,delrl
fUa1t'n H1 fMUc~nl
R•llC'sJ~ IAlll'°'11
Time -11 \iii
Nos.cr..cc,,..\
i.0 JMI 1•11
i 10 , eo
HO
£tGHTH RACE -110 ... ..,,,, J Y••'
f'td' & up ClMm."9 Pur\• '1 »>
Ntth~·s lild fBt"ook< 1 1\61 080 ) •0
Judv ·s M-•n. f(a..-ncuA 00 J "'>
WH> Ritt,.... fH.trt 'I)
Ttf'T\f' -.t6 9't s, f'f111Ctw-cl E'9'JW I ;tf'W111'W
U EW•C:tA ... H•ttte-' L.ld & l Judy'\ -"·,.Id Sl>4.40
NINT ... RACE )Yt v.or.h i """'' ttlG\ Ct.t•"'•"9 Pur...,.U'IOJ
M1dw•1 ( .. \ f( ntltiOU l
l140 l\hO • ......
5011<1 V•lur (A-rl J 80 7 811
V'11una Emore'\\ cc..-ocu• • ) .0 r,,..._ 19 n
S<:rat<hed -T0<n~ I 1m1t
U E•~CI• ~ay C••. I. ).Solid
V•lue,,.....m1.oo ...... _ •• 6.•1~.
Women's Golf
LAGUNA IEACH
Eclrctlc 1ourt1tv-A flooM-•.
Laur• Bl•IW.11 o11 : 1. llirl B•llv
GellaQllPr anci Mara•• O"•lson o . •.
M<'!rlt.a -monl ••. B lllqnt-1, P~I
WoUI JB: 1 Ruin LaPorl• •O: 3
Tt1rlm1111 foom<"y 0 , • JPf"n -ba•'"n
•J C thqi'll 1. Vanoi_. Chrf\t1an-..·n
11 1 GHV\'f' Bfo~•~•• J ( "'"" 0.Lono .-no Btlhf T~khoul 0
LO* qr~$ fOf" f'Ntntn A f11Qhl
Fran Rl.,..fl 12. 8 fl•Qf'tl P4'f C'·u••< •
88· C fltohl -V•noiJ1C'tu1•.h~"wn"
Puu.-r C•' motilf\ ,,,., f P\Om.t4\. Ill)
PU1h
f tlnd ~ fOVl'R"Y /\ fl1Qftt •I V4'1
... orion 1' .. 1 Marme 0 .. .,1\on l1. J
l\\ur• 8ttU\.Ot'41 l) '· f\ fUqfH-1
nw1ma :r~v J• 1 J,.an •o.11•n
lf" C lllQl>I I Cathy ~l ono lS 1
Brllv 81,os,,...,..,.,. JI
lnresArea
Divers t
Five Beach Swim Club
divers have qualified ror
the National age-group
championships July
30-Aug. 2 at Bloom-• mglon, Ind. following
competition at the Zone l
meet in San Diego, which
concluded Monday.
Among the athletes un-
der coach Larry Bren-
n an are Ke"in Mack.
Gail Usherwood, Kelly
Magee, Bridget Keneban
and Manon Gelbaus .
Mack, a 16-year-old In
the boys 17-18, was third
an the one-meter (352.35>
and fourth in three-
m et er (348.SS).
Usherwood, also an
Edison High (Huntington
Beach) student, was
second in girls 17·18
three·meter (327.90) and
one-met.er (321.00).
Costa Mesa High stu-
dent Magee was fourth in
the three-met.er (310.85),
while 10-year·old
Keneban was third in the
12-and-under girls three
one-meter (212.85) and
fourth in the three-meter
<217.90).
Also. Gelhaus was
third in the three·meter
for 13-14 girls (279.15)
and fifth in the one-
meter (272.95).
Halliday's Summer .
SALE
. ' ...
Starts Thursday
July 14th
Mari~r
Entries
Sought
AU kiadl Ol Dl' ··~in 111\
1n1 1•chLa ur.-l'h'lni:
•OUtbl for lh annual An·
c1enl Mariner Race to be!
h•ld Au1. 7 In I.on•
Beach und•r tht.'
llpOnaorthlp Of lhu
~hOoner >Utod11llon of
Amuka
Deadllnt> for 1•ntric~ 111
July 23 Entry form1 ur1.i
available Crom a\1104.:la
hon prt-~1dent Joseph
Minney, 2S2J W Corull
H 1 i h ,. a y • N t' w JHH I
Beach The entry fee 1"
SlS
Thl' rac.-e. \\ h1ch will be
held inside the l.ong,
Beach harbor. 1:!> open to
} awb. keteheb. bloop'
and cutlers as \\ell JS
:.chooners. Classic ocean
racing yachts which
were dei.agned pnor to
1952," are also ~elcorne.
Minney said.
--------
Capo Bay
Winners Wi11ds11rfi11g
Listed
Winners of the Sum·
mer Regalla sponsored
by Capistrano Bay Yacht
Club this past weekend
are:
An un1clt•ntified com pelitor tunes up for the
North American championship regatta for
the Wmdsurfer cla~s. to be held in Ontario,
Canada. July :n through Aug. 6. Preliminary
raC'l's will be staged Aug. 1 and 2.
PHRF Class A-l. Fan-
ey; Dave fo~renl'h. Dana
Point YC. 2. Monica;
Larry O'Connor, Capo
Bay YC 3. Eros: Curl
Hurley. Capo Bay YC
Bogart, Laughlin
Results Announced
'PHRF Class 8 -I
Starburst. Pete Tilden,
Dana Point YC 2
Jawbreaker : Bob
Melville. D;,ina Point YC
3. Honzon J ob. Joe and
Craig l''letcher. Dana
Point YC
PHRF Overall-l
Starburst 2. fo'ancy :I
Jawbreaker.
No Spinnaker Cla<,s I
Bold Forbes: Ed Cum-
mins;. Capo Bay YC . 2.
Winsome. Gary 1''oster,
Capo Bay YC. 3 Wan
drin' Star. Mike Walhl'll.
Capo Bay YC
Cal-25 One Design I
Obsession ; Bob Gates.
Capo Bay YC. 2 Tan
quaray; Jack Bdben.
Rose City YC. 3. Bo·
jangles . Carlos
Williams. Cap<> Bay YC
Results of the fifth
race 1n the seven race
Humphrey Bogart and
L aughlin series
sponsored by Voyagers
Yacht Club last Saturday
are
P HRF Class J\-1
Leumaran: Rill Rohrs.
Voyagers YC. 2 Thrill
Seeker: Bill Filsinger,
Bahia Cormthian YC. 3.
Different Orummer :
Louis Spruance'. Bahia
Cor1nth 1an YC. 4 .
Enchantres: John Lee.
Voyagers \'C 5. Stroker.
Mike Kirhy, Rahia
Corinthian YC
PHHF Cla!-.s R-L
Pussycat. .John S1.ala).
Voyagers YC. 2. Tiger
l.1 I ly . Ron Deacon.
Voyagers YC 3 Bebo.
Bob Darnell. Capo Bay
Canadian Siooeps
World Soling Title
HANKOE. Norway IAPl
World Championship was won
Glen Dexter Monday.
The 1977 Soling
by the Canadian
The last of seven regattas took place in ex-
cellent eond1lions, with u !>Leady soulh·westerly
wind blowing four to five meters per second.
The 24 year·old Dexter has had the same crew
for five years. It cons ists of the 2S·year·old Alex·
ander Mac.-Milland and Andreas Josenhaus, 26. who
emigrated lo canada from Germany In 1958.
Before coming to Norway for the world cham-
pionship Dexter ;ind his crew won the regatta at the
.Jlelerwoche In Germany. They finished eighth in
the Olympics in Montreat.
'litle Spot Sele«!ted
YC . 4 Avant1, Fred
Masino. Balboa YC. 5.
Viking ; D;,in Pike ,
Voyagers YC.
MORF-1. Wildcat:
Peter Schoonmaker.
Bahia Cormth1an, YC 2.
Andale . Gordon
Graham. SSYC. 3. Bold
Forbes, Ed Cummings,
Capo Bay YC
France II
Tries Out
The Water
NEWPORT. RI. <A P >
-Franc.-e ti, one of two
French 12-meter yachts
bidding for the
challenger's role in the
America's Cup competi-
tion. took its first sail in
U.S. waters Tuesday
The yacht. owned by
Baron Marcel B1ch.
made practice runs for
over an hour in Rhode
I sland Sound. A
spokesman l;iter said the
boat requires only minor
tuning and should begin
regular practice runs
Wednesday.
The crew has been out-
f 1 t ting and rigging
France Ir since 1t and
France I arrived in
Newport last month.
Top Cats Eying Coast
~nday. July t3 19n DAILY PILOT 83
SumTner Boat PUBIJC NOTICE
fllOTICllTO(a80tTOll$ SU,..111~ COUlllTOl'TII• nn• ~CALI l'OtlNIA POii
11lBUC NOTICE
..on~TOgt•OtTO:M
tUN11109tCOVllTOF Ttle
•TATSCMtCAUrotlNIA l'Olt
THICOVNTYOfOltANOe ...... ,,.
PtJBUC NOTICE
Htlotlt
SU"[ lllOOI COUllT O' THll
HATf Ol'CALll'OltNIA l'Olt
TM•COUNTYOl'O•ANOE
Info Available THI COUNTYOPOlllAN•I
-A·•1'•t
l'U•tt of MllDllEO fUNICK.
Dt< .. wcl NOTICE 1$ H(Rf8V GIVl'N IO I ...
""'"°'' ol ""' -.. Mmed --· '"" •" ...,_ 114111"9 (I.Wm\ ••n\I
t ll•tt ot NOAA 8 POWER ~ Oe<.••"" ..OTICI 1$ ~EllC9V GIVEN lo""'
<..clltorl., --,.._., ~-"' 11\61 •II Off'tor\> ... .i,.. clotllft) _,,,,,
M•A·•~ NOT!(( O' M[AltlNGO, .. fTI
1'011 .. ~ATI Of WIU. ANO
Ll'TTlltS TUTAMll'TA•Y Al
'Olt AUTMOlltlATION TO It
M INISTt.• UNOCll THI
IND!" .. IND(NT AOMINISTllATIOH
01' UTATf.SACT Expected summer flowis on California's major
recreational stream s are listed in a new brochure Is-
sued by the Drought Information Center or the
Calt!ornla Department of Water Resources.
The brochure listings include mileage of river
reaches, desirable nows for boating, and exlatlng
June nows
The lastings will be updated monthly through
the summer lo helo boaters, kayakers, rafters and
other water recreationllsts.
The brochure was prepared in cooperation with
the Department of Navigation and Ocean Develop·
ment and may be obtained from Drought lnforma·
tion Center, Room 16·17, Resources Building. 1416
9th St Sacramento.
,,.. ••l<I .-1 ••• ,....irtd to Ille INM wllf\ !Pit _.,.. .. ,.y vouc,..f\, In
, ... ofll(t ol , ... ( ..... "' '"" -... -lllled (tur'I. O< IO pr-1 thtm. W•Th IN
"tOtt•ry vouc,,.,s. to~-wtHCI
•1 111e Office o1 ~o AHO GO\.P. Al·
IO<'nev• •I Law, Act1.-GkWI• "''""', 14' $<)\llft Be .. rly Ot'I .. , 54111• 602,
Beverly Miii>. C.1110<'11 .. '°211, Wfll<h It
IM Pl t<t ol bU\tMH of ti.t l.V¥lt "IQMf
In •II m .. teruitrtelnlnq totlleHHleOf
w lcl cle<-nl, wt"'ln tou.-1nw1111t •'*
the fl"IPllOllOllOllaUllltMllO.
011ed Junon. 19!7 A061RT M. TUNICIC
Ettfl<ulOOtlftt Wlll•I I ... tboY• ,,.m.0 dt<~t
001.0ANOOOLO
Atlet'lltfl al uw
A II•" Oltria Mlo!Nf
144 SOl!ffl le•tr1Y OH,,.
SVl1Ml2
•nttlYHllfs,CAtolll
Tel: nmtn,..u
All.,MYtforf--PubU....., Orenoe c-.1 D<M•y PH°"
!NI Wld 40<.-..t .,. r..w<•ed tO lolt
,,..,,., ""'"' lhe -nury vouc"""· 1n ""' of Ike o1 Ii.. <Wrll OI ,,.. _"°,.. tft· tlttflt<~.,IOPfO..,llhtm wtllll,..
.-•MMYWl.ICMO, to tlW """'<\to-cl
lll Ill• •fllU ol O'Mf;LVENY 6
MYERS, At101Mn •I L•w. All,,
St11•rl P. T..,_,., .. , w .. 1 ~1.i11 ,,,...,, u1o Aflftftt. ca111..,.. .. '°°"
"!flltll tt •Of•t of bllsl-Ol lllf Utl
OitnlOM<I "' •II Moll•" -'••nlnO 10 !fie nltl• ol ..W ~I. w11111n 10\I•
mon111s .afltf ti. first l)Wlllc•llon ot lhh
llOllU.
Oaltd J--14. 1•17
VIAGINIAOIETERICM
E-utrl•ollheWlll
ol thl! •t>o•• nemeo ""'"°""' o ·M•LYVIY "MY•1ts
Alt«MYI 81 Uw Antl:St-P.-......~n
"' wntSlldll.._t LM A ........ CA. tOl11
Tell IJU>••m•
A-...yttwE••wtnll
Publl"'*d Or-Co.o11 D~•IY P·lol
f t•I~ nt l PWAAO f CRAIC
0. .......
NOftCE t~ >i(ACRV (.IV(N '""' STfV(N (OWAAD CA&tG Mi lllrO
~'""'"" r-MH>n IOf' ProtNh· 01 w ot .tnd
tor lt•lt" T""''•mtttHAry •"d lfW' A\.ll"°r11..tktif~ to l.ll<k1'Hf\l\h·• v.Wr u-..
•f"U.Oif"Ntfnt Adrn1n•\I'"•''°" ot l \tt\~ •ct , ..... H•nt'f'! 10 wn1< n •• m1wht fOf
tv•t1'•r Hrt1cu••"· •nd th•t tJV 1•"'9 •"° 0'"' 0t t\f'e11no 11w wm• n4 ... bur,,
•ti tor Awu•I 1 1917. bl to· 00 • "' • I• tntt cour•room at O.ii..lrlrN·n• Nn, J •'
\wud lOUrl, dl 100 (1v1c Centtir Ortw
W•·'i ,,.. '" .. <Uy o• S•nt1• An•
( (lllfatfthl,
O•t1·~U11l'i'I 1~11
WILLIAM C SI JOHN,
fouMv (lrt~
MITCHELL & MITCHELL
J H MIT(tl(LL•nd
OAVIO L. I'll! RCl
-----------·--------------IJulv& tllO.ll "" Jww n. 19, -Juty •. u "" l10H1
P•ftl.,._ S<Hlt D
noow11.,..1eBlvd
LMA.,9ffH,CA
All ..... ~'°'; ... 11h0fltt
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS auSINfSS NAME STATEMENT
r "' tot'°<N""O "'""son-. •rt 001no t>u~··
f'lt'\14\
WAll STREET 11111 Forl)('f> Rel .
l•9u"• NI-I CA "1'11
Wdlt & ~ .. \CX •4tl9". tn.c 4(~1.1orn1i11
corpot•l•Ofl, 11•• ft"P'T\Ole T•n•cr.
L•ovn• llc-.c ~.ca qz.s1
ff\1\ bY\ilV\~ 1~ <-onc:IU<ted bY • COi'· c-c»r ~lt0n
w 1111I & A\..OC i•tt'\ 1 nc
Wtlh•f¥tG W•ll Pr,-,
PUBUC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS IUSINUS
NAME STATUolENT
Tht lolloW•l'IQ --ll 00.nQ DwM•
,,.~,.~
ANOV CAPS 1)50 Superl ... Aw., e,.,.t• M<ts•. CA. ti.t1
L•••o lltn19,,1, 14601 AllM SI ..
_,1m1~•r. CA '1tolJ
Thi\ buWr"'u" <-ltd Oy •n In·
OIYldu•t.
L M o 8t1\t9!'1
Tl\I\ st•temenl w.s ,.. .. Wtlh , ...
County Cttrk ot Or•nQtt County on
Moy,., "71.
PUBUC NOTICE
~ICTITIOUS IUSINISS
NAME STA'l'IMU4T Tll~ lol-t19 l)fftQMOl'tdOll'IQ "'61·
f>t\\a\·
THE FROSTING HOUSE, ?>I' Newporl 81YCl.,CMll~ CA 92'V
Ve•-L. T ylff. )Of R-n HOOd
l1t., Co.I• ~w. CA . .,.71
Mt<ll'f'\ O. lylff, l09 POO•n HOOCI
Ln ,C9'1•-W.CA.tnt1
PUBLIC SOTICE
C-11 sun•tOll COU•T Of' THE
Sl'ATeMCAUf'OtlNIA l'Olt
THI! CIOYHTY 01' OltANG£
No.A·tntJ NOTICE 01' HEARING OF
.. ETITIOH FOR ,.ltO•ATE Of WILL
ANO FOR LETTEltS TESTAMEN
TARY ANOAUTHOltlZATION fO AO·
MINISTER UNDER THE
tNOEPENOENT AOMINISTllATION
01' ESTATES ACT
Publl\Md Otct"Qr Co.· t 0•1ty Pi•<•'
Ju•v 11 tJ 19 1917 JOll I
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICI! TOCRl!OITOllS
su .. E•IOlt COUllT 01' THE
STATE Of CALll'OflNIA FOii
THICOUNTYOl'OllANOE -A•'"' f •l•I• ot t AOISL A DO l
RESFNOEZ. 0«1'•» o
f .. W \l .. h,tn(t'f W•\ ftlfO W ttr'I lf\t'
<'OU"t" (11-rk ut 0f'df"Qll" Countv on Jun"" fl"1'1t1
1, t'1J PublO\lw<I Or-'°"'' O•llY Piiot,
f~ll OU\IMU ,, conduct•d ov •
91M••• -•nenlWP. E~ldtt ol IRMA H J'1Jr H .i••
IRMA HOUSER FITCH O.r"d" ~
NOTICE tS HtRE8Y GIVEN IO It>
crtOltOf'\ Of It' dbO~ rtdM"O dt!< tllCffnt
t"•I ell O-·f'V>n" n•V1nQ <.l•lff\\ •Qdlll\t
0'9 .... d Met•C't·nl drP re"(tUirf'd to tlh
'""'"' with'"'",....,, 't\dry vf'\u<~r\. lf"I
tNo otti<e of tNt <''"''" ot tn .. •DOYtJ ,,,
t1t1t-<1 coun. or 10 on.·~··fll tht·tn, w11n ''""
fV"Ct\\;\rV You<"'''"' to fr\t: undt<r\1Qnt"'f1
•I 111~ Olh<t nt C,RAY, WHY TC ANO
RU RI( IT f ,&Unrnf\y' •tt l flw, tiOO
Mvtu.tl °>.JVH'IQ\ Uu1tt1tM, JcH [d,t
(C11CJr4'dO Ulvt1 • Po"'1d ·n.t. Cttlltorn"• cu HH wnu n ,, "'" oht<<' o• ""'•nu~) ot
tt"le ur.cttri.19n('(f 10 au mettrr\ ~r't~tn
lnq lo 1~·•,l1t(,. ol ~,,,d~<•·ft·1nt, wllh1n
tour month\ •ll1•r ow f1f\t pocH1taf10f"
F11t4t Junt'22,1'.•••<lJuly6, IJ, HJ1 Vtmon l , fvlt•
Th" •1•1..,.....,1 "" fllf<I wlll1 llw
Cou.,11 Clerk ol 0r""9fl COullly on J"""
NOTICE IS HERES>' CtllEN 11\111 WILLARD E. FITCH~\ t11...0 "lit:,t>•t'lel
C)tl1llO+"I tof Prot\dff' of WtU ofnd tor 10,
iUJn<f' of lftter'-fe,lttm• nt(try tO lhi.•
p,.11t1on"'' Jnd dUlhori1Jt1on lo ud
mtftt\tf'r t~ P\fdltt UN'I''' '"" t!"lrh·Pf'n o~nt Admlni~trat1on ot f · tJI• 'I ~! t rt*
fPrfnct lo """" h '' m.,OI• lor 1ur lf"t r
ot1rtlt utar~. <lt'ld lhJI tht-0 t1rn• dnd f'l.irt
o• t1edr1n.g rn.-~M'T\e n.J bo'·t,, ... t tnr
Auou•t '· 1911 ••• lO on ·' "' H"I tht•
tourtr'oom ot 0<>1).i;lrtrft( nt No i C'lt "-l'f•d
court ot/OOC1v1((t.'nh.•r 0f1v11Wt~t. 1n
Int> (llY of Sdr'l.t Ano Cul1tr.Jrn11J
Puo11,nipo Or4tn0' Co.t .. t (Mil'/ Pilot,
Jun< 1< ~"" Jv•• ~. IJ IO. 1~11
1801 ,,
PUBLIC NOTICE
"CTI TIOOS &USI HE SS NAM! STATEMENT
T t-1• t0How1r"f9 Ot'f\Of'\) an~ 001no bu~• ..
nto'\\ tlfri r R .. l/El C.UllO 'IOI Oo•t SlrPtl
".>viU US N11wpa(t Bw•O'", C•lltorn•• ,,,,.0
OOVE T R"VEl... INC.,• Cehlorn•a
C"Of'OOrihon 901 Ool/t' ~tr"'l Suite '2S.
Nt"NOOrt AfM.,.., C•ht0tn16 •?MO
TP\•' ~ntu 11' <ondu<t.,ed b' • COf"·
p0r•teon
DOVE TllAVEL,fN(.
Bv H£R8EATF
Pllt£LMAN S.cty
Th•\ ,,,,..,,,'f""' w• .. h1rd with ow
Coun•v Ci.r~ ol Ou1t90 C°""ty o., J.,,,., .... ,, F17M4
P\lbh~tJ Or.tf\f)r" (04\t O••lv P11ot
Julf71 >'I .,,.,Julv•. •J. 1•11 1100-11
PUBLIC NOTICE
)404
plOTlCE TOCllEOITOltS
N• Al1'1!
SUl'E lll()jl COUllT OF THE STllfEOFCALIFOlllNIA FOii
THE COUNTY 01' OltANOE
r,1n1t1>t ARTHUR A ROCSFR.al\O
•Mwn d' .. Rf HUA Al VIN ROESER,
t>toceood
N ot 1Cf , .. l"l('trtbV (Jtvf'n to
r rN1tt0'' flf thf• dtlit1Vf' f"drT'(ld ttt'C."fjfo"N
tP\At ~111 Pl''"°"' tii.1v1n9 CJl1m\ i'lgt.11nit
tt\4· '•Id di'><f"IC)<.nt Mt• rr-autr~:d to tite
thMT'. w 1tn tf\f' Mleu~r'f vouc~r", 11"
'""' ofl1t,. of'"" CIMfli. of thA •bo'-'t' t•n t1t1Ht rour1 or to ort·~nt tnt>mwiunee-
"' ,,..,,,.ry YOU<~,., \0 tht' Uf"ldfr\IQf"td
J I 1t. ollor• at JOSEPH C OU ROSS. II•• Mdn ... ll•n f\U(h B••d • M•nt..11
'"" 9..,1cn (dl1torn1• 90164. wi"''" '~ tht> pltl<f of tM.r.1nf'\ ot tl"K' und!!f \19nl°'d
tn ~111 ru.ill•r\ r:w-rt41nlnq to trw-f''l•l• of
wtld df'c~nt w1rh1n four montn'\ •'1tr
tM 1,r,1 put>h<.tUon 01 ''"''~ noticf
o~••d 1 ...... ,. ,.,,
SC CURI TV PACIFIC
NATIONAL BANIC •nd
JOSE PH A JONES Co [ •f <UtOf"\Of ,,..
Wlllol~•ddt<-
JOSfl'MC OU llOSS
1116 M•flMtta" .... ,, lllv•.
M•nl>•ll ... leaclo,CA-
Attornevfor(.efE a.<lllen
PUOll\htd Or-C06\I Oalty Piiot
lulv • •l.1'>.1' ••11 ,.,.,,
---------'-""710)-11
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTt TIOUS llUSI NESS
NAME STATEMENT
Th• tollOWll'IQ pu -.. dolf19 bu\I•
"tl~\.OS
JO, 1911 F11DS
Publl"""" Or-Co••• O•llv P•IOI,
July b, IJ, lO, U , 1911
PUBLIC SOTIC F. O.S. EOUCATORS REAL'"'· H11
G•l••Y O< .. N~woortBUch, CA. Ol>OO
Anlollo 0 Crt.-:1, 1112 G•l<l•V Or. -S-
Nowporl 8UCh, CJ' q7W) SU .. ElllOltCOUllTOFTHE
ln•• bwnhS .. conovCll.., bv •n In STATE OFCl<l..IFOllNIA FOii
dl••du•I. THE COUNTY Ol'OllANGE Ainit:llo o Crts<i ,. • .a~mil
Tho> Sl•lemenl w•s toled wflfl lhe NOTICE OFMEAlllNG OF Pf Tl Tl ON Counl~(lefkotO<-CounlYOnJun FOii .. 1109ATE 01' WILL ANO FOlt
.l0, 19'1 LITTEllSTESTAMENTAllY .. , .. t f\ .. l~olCALVINO JOY °"'uwd
PvDhS...., OurQ(' ,.,.., Oatly Pilot, 'NOTICE IS Ml!REBV GIVEN ,,,.,
Julv•. •l.I0,17,1911 GERAIDC JOV"OSlll•ctl..,rel,,•pell·
Oaltd Julv8. 1911
WILLIAM E. SIJOl'H
(Ounl't' (lftrlt
WILLIAMV.SCHMIOT :i..s•" Ml-I Or .. Sut1•JOO
Newpert-lo, CA'2MO
Ttl: 1114) ... .f?ll
Alt .. MYfor: P~hh-Publh'-<1 Oran91 COd\I 0°111• PllOI,
Ju•• n. 13, •~. ttll 1'1'·11 hon ,.,. ....-~of ... 111 •"" '°" 11•11ers -----------''~1•Mfl'wt.,v r«t•rlncf' to wt1t<.f'I is PUBLIC NOTICE ,..•« ,.,. ,.,,,,.,, 1><111oc11•••s. """that 1-------------
1hf> Um• •ftd P•«• of M•rtno ow~
FICTITIOUS aUSINEU ~\ C>Hn ~t IM JUlV i., 1911' al 10.00
NAMESTAT(MINT "m , I,, tt... <""'1,_... ol Oe!Mlrl,.,.,,11--------.,----:
TIW foUOWt"9 00,_ •S oor"9 bus• NO .) o4 W•d <OU<I a1 100(••1< Ct,,lor flCTITIOUS&USINESS
PUBLIC :'tOTICE
ot '""' "~•1ct Odltd Jun~1'1. 1q11
l!;MArL Rf SfNDl l AdM4t'l1\trdtoro• 1tw-E ,..,,,,.
ot tt°' • .ionvt• n•mf'dck'ceo ""1
Oltl<Y, WHYTE and llUAICITT
.. HO<'MV-al LAW
llOO MUlllAI S.v1"'1\ lluoldi"'I
>Ot Eut ColM-lllW
P•udn~, C.lttOf'f'I• tt 101
T•I fttll ">-ll44, .. t-o.4}
AH°""'I" '°' Aclmi1t,.lr•l0<
PuOll•ht>d Ordl"lf' COdil O.•lv p, .. ,
~Uly&. I) 20. 11, 19JJ
PUBLIC NOTICE
~S'•• Ori•• w ... 1. In IN' (1ly of $41'1• An•. NAMESTATEMEIH
CONCEPTS •N DESIGN ""l C•11forn1• r,. '"''°"""9 "'~""' •s "°'"" """ 1'1CT1T1ous11us1NE5S R~ll"tr ~rffl, F-•··" Vallty CA OalvdJ ... y1 •• ,, ,,e\\aS NAMEHATFMENT •2I08 · WILLIAM£ SIJOHN. CUTZ INTEPIH•TIONAl HAIA T"" loflOWl"IQ ,,.,,....,. "OOlnQ tw'.•
Roi Al\"f' H~'1IOCJ t1ttl Atin\f't (oUf"lty (It_,_~ (>ESIC•H J.04 Vt• Ooor•o SuHP 7"!>11tnd ,... . \. ,0 Str~t.Founl••nV•llt'Y Cll •1roe JOMNW l>O'IAN IO)A N-00'10t¥t>.Cal1fom1•'1hl INTERNATIONAL 8IOC-.Pl\PM ''"~ bU\.•tW:\~ ·~tonductf'd by •n ,,.. JU eMMnA... •1trf'do V1N:f"(lf Son9u1nttt• 1bll 1NSllfUlE ,, u ltMC, 1oei1.,)..,,,,.,,
d1v1du.tl LO'"J ••ff.tl.CA.toltl "8 .. IO'flll'1 Str~t t (O)'cl M f'<:..t m9ton Nt"WOtW'1 Bt-M'°I (A ~#»C)
Ao.AntWHar1109 AttWftol'Yf.,, Peht~ C•ffft)4'"nia•16,. Fred Pfotrr BMJnor •Pt c, 10!' '°'> Ttu~ \t.aitf'f"n*"f W'tt\ f1tttd w iU't t,,.,. P1Jbl+\>"'td OrJf\Qf COl"1 06Hy P iiot. Ttu~ bu1.tnn\ 1~ condu<ttd bV an in Sh,.rlnQJon NC"~pOrt l' .. .ten (A tJMlO
County (1trk of°' dftOf County onJun JtJfV n . u, 1', 1911 d1v1du•l lf'u't bu\ln.\ ...... <-onductt"<I ov I n "'
1J. lffl/ 111'11 .. t -JOt6·'1 '"'~ :C~,r=t !.!::u;~.!:' w•lt' lrw O•Y•dUlllrrt'dl\e-dndr
Put>U\""" 0r•"9" COOi 0•11• P1101. PUBLIC NOTICE Covnlv c•er>. ot Oran<!P County on Jun• Tllll ~····"""'' "'"' t•l•od W•fll ....
Jlme N, dndJuty•, IJ, 20, 1'11 -------------· '·
1911 ""°'' ~:~~',"; Cl~rk ol 0<""9C Counlv on Ju"'
116S-ll NOTlCI! INVITING •IDS Puhl•\hl'tl Or~n'"' (Oil<t Odtlv Pllof, • , F174'•
PUBLIC NOTICE Notice ll hfftl>Y 9lvM lllal tlle Bo.ltd Jun• 7'I nnd Julv&, tl, lO, 1917 Publl""'d Or~nQO Co.t\I D•llV P1lol
of TrusfeM ol ti. Co.t>I Commun•IV ?Ja)-7/ June 27, l'I Md Julv •. 13, 1q11
·------------IC:olleqt OlslrlCI of Or•ngP Counly, 710J 11
FICTITIOUS•USINESS Cnlltornle, wlll re<0I•• , ••• ,,d b•os UP
NAME STATEMENT lo ". )(). m . ,.,,day, J11ty 11. 1911, "' Tt>t IOllOwlnQ DC'•M>n •• doln9 bu>I ,,,. PurtM)l"IQ 0..1)1, ot Mid s<t>ool "'''as· d!llrltl IOUl"CI •• 1310 AO•m• Aveni><', ~UPERIOA POOL SERVICE, 1011 Cott• ,,,..,1, Calol0<ntn, •I wlllrt> lime
l tlltrWAy,C.,..on•dl'lMdr.CA 92•H wtd t>I"' woll br pubflCIY 00o•n•O •nd
Jam.., Wiii•""' M<Kff, 1021 T•ll•r rud lor
Wav"orona<lelMdr.CA '1US EOUIPMENT MACHINf TOOLS,
Tt>I\ ~"'"'' .. conducltd by""'" MANUFACTURINC, Tl!CHNOLOGV
d1vu:1u.-I. Atl but~~~ 10 hi> '"' ,ac:c.orddnce wlfh
J W Mcl(tt thf' Bid S:orm 1n,trutt1ott\. •nd
Tht\ 11.tat~t Wd\ tilf'd wrnth lM Concho~ "nd St>4"<1h<•llon~ which
Cou"lv(lffk.ol0t-'1f"OICOUt'lt,on are"'°"' on t11r ~ """" t>t-..-.c~d tn
fl1t11 '"" o111cr ol !ti" Pvrc....,,1nq Aoem ol
Put>t•-.t Or•,_ Co.it O•llv P1io., wlO '1<'-' dilfrlct
JuM n .-Julv6, 1J,20. '"' E~h b<dlltrmus""°"'''"''"'"''bld 113' 11 e u,fnpr S <IWO (ffl•ll<il ct>ttk, Of
·------------11uddtr'> l>OftO ~ ""'°'•"'• to ,,..
PUBU C ~OTICE Of'dtr of II-. Coa•I Com....,,,1tv co11-
0htr1c1 &oMdot Tf'v..t~t"•"•mourtt
1-------------lnol 1.-.> I....,. fl.., ot<'<fftl IS••.) of, ...
"''" l>ld". 9"4•.-.t .. "'"' , ... tH<klff wllf _.,,,... "''o ,,.. cw~ Cotllr«t 11
tf'M W'9"11 ... •wM"""1 to "·""· '" '"""' •v•"' of t11tlluu· to •nter ,,.,.o \u<h
cOf\1rM 1, t,. oroc•f'Ch o• O•• <"'f'<k will
bt to-ttolt'Cl,or '" 11-. <• .. of•"°""·,,..
lull ~um""'''°' wlll bt forlcllf'(I lo S410
M:l>GOI 0•,trl<I.
No bl-•,,....,""'"""'"'"'\ bid for• period of tony live •4Sl dly• •ttrr I,_ o,.~~,,..,,,,._.,1"91,..,..,,
TllP Bo.rd ol Tru\lfff> rr\<'fVP$ ....
prlvlt""° °' "''""''nq env•ncUll Di<lsor to ••Ive-dl'IV 4r rvou1a,.11tc~ Of
.nformtlllles In eny blO or In trte
bldd•n<1. '-•CM"lfd!
NOP MAN F WI> "0N '-"t wtAr-Y flo..-rd'lt '• u• ,,, ... ,
Open : Friday, July 72, 1911, II 00
a.m
8 1dNO :70ol Publl,..." Or•nQ!t Co•~I O•lly PllOI,
July6, ll, t411 1911·11
PUBLIC' NOTICE
PUBLIC ~OTICE
~
NOTICE OFTllUSTEE'S SALE
T.S No 111-11
OnJuty11 .. n &I fl·OOA.M Ttlll
ifHvr•0<• -TrvsC C""'9'1tW, •• ou1v ape>01nt~ Tru"t-e urid-r ~nd CNr\Uctnt
lo Otto ol Trv\t r~cordH Auqust JI
1916, a\ IMI, NO. 43911, 11\ l>OOa 11811,
1>119• 114, of Ofllcl•I llt'<Ords '" '""of flee ot tn@' County Aecord~r of
Oran9e County, Ciil•lor,,1.t. Wil l
SELL AT PUBLIC AUCTION TO
HIGHESf 8 100ER FOR CASH •Pav•
t>t~ ~t time of Joale '" tawtut mon-y of
'~ u .. 11e<1~••-.• •• t~5oulh lronl~n
tranc.ti to '""' old Or•noe Cour"v
Courli-... 10 .. ltd"' llW 200 l>toeo of WHI S.nl• AIW Blvd. uonn.-1y w.-.1
.ill StrMI. Senta A,,., C•htornl•I. dll
'HJ"t tittto.nd tmere\t cortv•vf'd to.-no
now twl<I cw ti.,.._, w.c1 OttO of Tru•I
1n tt't<t l>f"OCJltl'f'"IY \Hu.ttf'd tn w•d County
and Sl•l•clr.cnllecl .,,.
Loi J 1n l>tock JJ of t•rsl -Ilion lo
N~P0'1 M-.Qt'I.\, •t ~r rn.i> rt'COf'drd
tr\ 800fl 4, ~ ~ QI M ts..t•U.ll\f'OU11i
Maps. in t~ Oihc~ of tf'M co1.,,uy ff'
corder of s.tdOral\qe County
S..1d .. ,e wlfl ~ m-. bUt ''"'"°"' coffn.Jnt or w•rr•nlv • .,_o,.e\5 Of' 1m
Dhfd. rf(f6f.,."9 tlfl•. Po\W>-\\.lon or .,n
(Umt>rancM. IOPIY thf' rema1n1nqe>rin
dpat sumof fhe_f'K)lelsJ '-•<Url'd by '\4t1d
Oet<I ol TrU\I, to-wll $1S,OOO.OO, wlln
fnterest '""''°"· as orov10td 1n '-"•d not!tfsl,. advanc~'· If e~v. und.,r tntl ....... of Wld O~d of Tfu~I. teP>.
cn•r9f\ and e•P@f'IY'"\ of ow Truitt"("
and of'"" '"'"~created bn•1d Otod of
Tru\t,
Tne .,,.,,.,.,c.arv undf• '"'d Offd of Tru~t hMe-lofor,. <'ll'e<uted tilnd dP
u...,,.d 10 ""' ~~ 11 """'"" Otc larahon of ~taun and Ocmaf\d tor
Sale. end a •"""" HOiio ol o .. 1.u11
and E 1-c:tton lo Sc!ll Th-under"9"""
caused w10 NOit<' of Oet•vU ""° E•f"f ..
lion 10 s..u to i.. -°'""'Int"" county
wri•re-tJ\e' ,.NI orQODrty '' toc•tl'd
Oale. JuM lt t971
Ttltt! •murance•nd Trtnl
~y.a,\ttld Trv\.l!'>t
By JACK MAGNESS Aul hOtttect S1on.1tur
PubhSIW<I Or•r>Qe Coast o ... ,, P•!oi.
July•. tJ, li). 1tn
PUBUC 'SOTICE
PUBLIC ~OTICE
CPHtl
SUPERIOR COURT OF fM£
STATE OF CAL.,OllNIA FOii
TMECOUNTYOl'ORANGE
NO A·I?! ..
NOTICE OF 14EAAINC OF
PfTlflON FOii PllOllATE 01' WILL
ANO FOii LETTfllS OF AO·
,_.INtSTllATION WITH WILi.. AN
HEJCEO ANO AUTHORIZATION TO
A0MINIST£A UHOfll TME
INDEPE NOE NY AOMIHISTllA ng,..
Ol'EUATESACT f• i.tP Of .-AA•J1 f OE OfF R ... .,
F llAN .. r orHrFll -••FPANkOr
BE£ P °"""~vo NOTICti IS HfPfOV GIVFN '""' JAMES P. OURt"'"1AN t\,f\ t1lt"f'f t>!t·rt 1n d
o--t•tfOr. tor PrOfMI(' etf W'tll •"'1 tor ''
u.tnt1· of l """' r• ('f J'C1M1n1"'''"~
""'''" Wtll 1'nl'lll-~ t1 to''°" P~Hl•Of"Pr 4nr1
tulnC\4"•11111-t>n 10 Mf,,..1not,..r •~ .. \'•'' 11~r tn.· ·~~no. n1 •d"''"'""''•t1~ ot f. ~IAtf"\ fa t ,,..,,,,.n, t• ro wn1cn '
'"1'dt• tor fuftho, Nrtir utctr'\ 1f"ld '"•'
tn•· t1m1 ..tNf ~,h•• nf t\tl·drtnn t,...... \..•'"'
l'td~ b''"'" !ii t t11r Julv 16. t411 . .,, '" nu
,. m 1n '"""" cnu,.tr·ortrn nt Of·C"•''"'' "'
No ) <'f vld rood 11t JM C '"'' (flntr
Or1vf\ wr I 1n 1n1 C 1tv of ~•"'~ iAn ••
(.,111orni,t
0,.,1..cj •01v 6 1~11
WILLIAM E SI JOHN
C""'11V(ltr~
JOHN E SEIOEL
0'1 81rcl>, S<l•l•?OJ
NfWP<l'I ~<"·CA •>MO
hi 1110 7SI llJI
Allo-nty few Potrt•Oftff PuOlt\~"i Or.•,,.,_. Co~··• Da1tv P1tn1
Jul• •l 11 ••. ••11
PUBLIC ~OTICE
SPS-<ttott
NOTICE 01' TltUSTEE'S !>ALE
NO S.-l 14,.
On Julv 7''. 1'71, <11 ti 00 AM , er S
<;£PV1Cf' CORPO AAltON
C..tt•orntff corpor•1t0n ~ d11I• at>POl"t
• n Tru .. 1f't u~·r •"Hf QiVr'-i..-tnt to Dr•~
ot f ru\t r '('Of'otd July 10. 191S. ft l~tr
f.IO 95"', In-1 UU -I~, of 01
t1<••' q,.,,Of"d\ '" t~ offk• of the Goutl
ty Rttor-ot Or-C""""· Slat• o•
C••llo<n••. W1l L SELL AT PV8LI(
AUCTION TO HIGHEST 8100&11
i2.7uf~J~~:;;: :.~: ~~
·~ Soul" lrO"I enlran<• fO IM Or•n<I<'
Count 1 ok1 Cour lftOul•. cnv ot S.nl-
A,,. SMI~ of Calif-a •II rtQM, 1111
•nd •nl ... ni ,.,.. •• ,,.., to -now l'lf'llf
t>V II un<t ·r ••od Dffd of Tr111t tn '"'
prot>«'rly >lli>elt<I '" ~•Id COuMy IJNJ
~l•l•MM:t-A>
TM LHsel'OIO Esi.te •S Pf'• Illa! Cllrtoln L#-.S.ffd No......,,i,.r 75, 1'169,
bY •nd l)('fMtn llw 1rv1M Com~ny."
WMI Vltqtnl• C.O.poutlOfl, ....... .,,
<)nd Robert T. Or.Cw•, 4K'\ vnm•n1('d
m••· "' '"''°°· s.10 tvase t>t•no •• \19"~c! IO Roe.rt A. 8vc•t11, fl mKri""
m•n. 10 record <on<lH'rmlly ntr•wlln,
'"·•nd to; LOI~ ol Tr.tel No ..... "'$!>ow,,
on o1 m.ap rN:orO.d In 800lt >tO, ~ • ~ ••• 1, en4 911'<111\fYe of MltctllAnt10o
M~Pl. "'<Ord' ~ Ore1tve CoYnlv C•lilor11le, IOQ91~r with .,. ~,,.
n•nt nt>n4J<CtU,IW Mtf1ftl'nt for '"
or"\ ""d t<O•I'" ,,,,_.. IOI ll of ""tl tr•ct
T~,,, ... ~,...., ..... r<Ot"nmC)n
ti.llonetloft, """' et 1119 rNI proporlv
ot~rlbHlallO .. •UN'-ltOIOIW ~
Viti• Otl Oro, Newport 8e•ch
C•fil(W"I•
1,,.~T-Cflvlolm• ... ¥ lllOllll't ,.,, .,,., lftctfNCllW ... ot
""' .,,_ -"' .... attwr ,_ ""'~·-.. ··-·--·"· ~If WI• w\11 '-,,,..., M ••t"Wt
CO-ftl W •¥•-'f, e~\ .. '"' 1111..S .............. , ... ~ ..........
<llf'llOl'-ft.IOMJl,..,_NlltOtlft
<IHI •um 91 11111 no!t ~\Ind .., ,.-., o... .i Trw, •-•: M1 IM...U. ""'" lnlf'l'.,t .._.._, ot ~ fll WICI
flti• • ..,,.,..~. H MY,..,., lhe 1••m'
Clf .. 1c1 ~Vf Trvst. '-'-tl\ef'9"-••~•• Of ,,,. TrvM .. ..,_ ol l,,..
ln1'h ,,.~ff IWwlcl OtMtA TM!.
nt. .....,..ltl.,., -NICI .&>ttcJ nf
Tr11tt ,._,°'°'. t>t<ll\"' MCI elf .... '"' ........... ~ • wn.,.,, 0t<l~4"~0I Oeft11tt _ O.,,._ ltr
$•hi. "'"' • -~'"' .._., ... .,. o.i.1111 fl'll ttt(li<l!I ",..,, Tftt ~lenH u..-.d~ .. ~IU.. ltllll~llf<
11 ... IOlftl lllMl'k ...... lllll'llPC ...... Y """4•• lllf tMI "'9P"I~ fJ ltt•locl 0.to, ,_2f,IV1
Cl'l'9"VI~ (IOll~AtlON ...,.... ....... .. ~A;-..... ~ r::.~"7.:.~~-·
Plllilt9'1fi!t~t~~ "''" t...,..,... "'''" WltJ:lt Coo Otlil9 f'll t • IJ II. "1t ,.., I
l
,f
8 I DAILY PILOT Wedneld•t. July 13, 1177
-,
•
Voice Spans Country S•oke· Eater
Invention CIBan Air
CHJCAOO <AP> No1 bert Klrk, a former v•cuum dea.ntf' 1al man, h•• t>.ico lnvenUna lhln1a tor JO years
aod tb.lnb ho fU.aUy hH a bJt hit -'" ub lr-.Y that eat.s smoltt
'Bits and Pieces' Add Up to Full Bell Message
The uh truy. am all enou1h to ftt 1nlo the plllm of a band
.and cw-r1ed In pocket or purk. ha. a liny, allent mot.or
powered by two 1mllll battenea.
CLEVELAND CAP) -When
Oblo BeU Telephone Company
worktts walked off tbe Job foe a
few days last year. one woman's
voice worked on, handling
lhouaanda or oils 24 houn a day,
answering each with the same
impeccable voice:
WHEN A CIGAat:TTe 18 pl•ced in it, \be amok• ..
druwn Into and throuch a replaceable nJtertni pad made ot
act1vat4td charcoal und a polym .
The filter deodorlzl'" ua wt>ll u filters the smoke and ex·
pela the famt, lnoH"ns1vt! r"mialn~. A 11Udlnai cover activates
the motor when opcnt•ll. Thu u1hes are contained wheo It is
t'IOat"d
I thoufht up lh1· ldt•u wh,·n I was eating in a restaurant
and smoke rom ,1 burmn.: c11ta.re.tt\' In an ash tray was get·
tlOI an my face." ~Jld Kirk, a i..1lver·hafred man of SO who
once wu a boxing ani..tructor at Illinois College.
•'The number y ou have
called ... has been changed. The
new number is ... Please make
note of lt." Or one of a score of
other messages, coupled with
precise, instantaneous inlorma·
tlon on the number you dialed.
IF YOU ARE A normal
telephone user in a Bell
'We Sholl Survive'
Safari Sees 'Black'
Lion Country Safari has finally
driven the wolves away from the
door.
and faces the prospect or ending
1977 m the black. made arrangements with its
primary creditors -Security
Pacific Bank and Bankers Trust
of New York -to dissolve re-
malningdebls. Shareholders were informed
this week 1n the wild animal
park's annual report that t,he
facility is out or de bt for the first
lime in more than three years
"REPORTS OF OUR death
were not only exaggerated but
premature," exulted Lion Coun·
try Public Relations omcer
Jerry Kobrin.
''We haven't been able to
breathe here since 1974 because
of the burden or those bank
loans," he said. "But now we
shall survive."
Lion Country paid $700,000 in
cash, Issued a $1 million interest-
free note and unconditionally
signed away some of its revenue
in exchange for lifling of the
debt.
Hughes Officer
Sets PRSA Talk
Lee Pitt, staff vice prei.idcnt or
Hughes Airwest in San Fran ·
cisco, will speak at the July 21
meeting of the Public Relati ons
Society of America . Orange
County chapter.
Kobrin noted that the corpora·
lion had to dispose or "some very
precious holdings" lo get out
from under debts of more than
$4.8 million accrued during Lhe
firm's expansion activities.
LEON UNTERHALTER.
gener al manager, said that for
accounting purposes, elimination
of a liability such as a large debt
must be considered income.
Addition of the park's $46,800
:>perating loss on $1.39 million of
revenu~ during the first part or
1975 yields a net income figure of
$4. 75 million, Unterbalter said.
Dinner will be served al 6.30
p.m. al the Saddleback Inn, San·
ta Ana, with cocktails at 5.30
p . m Reservations may be
telephoned to T erry Garza at
759·5996.
WHEN THE FINANCIAL pie·
tu re began to sour, Lion Country
executives were forced to dispose
of holdings In the midwest, on the
East Coast and in Florida, chan·
neling all available resources in·
to the Laguna Hills facility.
The amusement park also
The shareholder's report noted
that the park has a positive net
worth of $1.47 million at present.
compared with a negative net
worth of $3.28 million last
December.
PUBLIC NOTICE
s M0)4
SUP'EAIOA COUllTOI' THE
STATE 01' Clll l l'OltNIA 1'011
THE COUNT VOi' ORANGE
NO A IOU6
NOTI CE OF HEARING OF
PfTITIOH FOii OETEllMINATION
OF ENTITl.l!Ml!NT TO
OISTll18UTl0H OF ASSETS 01'
OECEOENTHElOINTllUST E\141~ 01 Jl\NlT l l(l'>fl£11 ,H.1
IANE T l'l<tTl f II ,1k• Mii\ F llAN~
I( I') TL ( R 0,.,,.._. 1_1d
PUBLIC NOTICE Pl'BLIC ~OTICE
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS CP 0'7
NAME STATEMENT SUPElllOI' COURT OF THE
tht· 1ouow1n1l pttr\On lift do1no DUSI· STATEO,CALl,OlltHIA.fO"
n• '.1 THE COUNTV 0 1' OR ANOE
NOllTHWOOO REALTV. 1101 No,A·tUO
Oovc olrt" Ptntl>OU" 5u•te, Ntwoon NOT ICE OF HEAii iNG OF PETITION
8•~<" CAq/W) FOii l'ROIATI OF Wll.L ANO l'OR e .. rnMd J l«>••r.,..ln•Mn I.Jo Wt'I LETTEllS TESTAMEHTARV ANO
V•lf lOOD, ,,.,.,~ Ca111orn1••llu AUTHOlllZATIOH TO AOMINISTEll '"'' """'""'S •S <ondU<l•d t>y an '" UNDER THE INOEPENDIENT AD·
01v1du,1+ MINISTRATIOHO" ISTATISACT ll•rr•MO J 1(04:r\•lmJn F \IAIP OI FLOllENCE J. MllULOIN, '~" ,1;,1~,.,,..n1 w .. , 111..i w11n '"" ,, ~ • Flo Re N c E Jo H N s o N
Coun•v C+~r• Of Ora1'9'1 C<>unlv O•' Ju+v MAUlOIN. ••~ MRS. RICHARO C.
I WI MAUl OIN •~dMRS R C.MAULOIN,
"1"20 o ........ o
llElllOltOJ KOERSElMAH.INC. NOTICE IS HEREBV GIVEN li>al
11010oves1 .. io.ftt.SI•. FllCHAllO c MAULOIN .,., hl•d
N•wport Bl'•<h, CA •2..0 ,,. rt>1n" 0t'tlt•0t1 for ProCMtfl ot Wtll 4nd
Pubth nt'd Orctf\9C Co.nt D•tlv Pttot tor h"JoltJl\{t"Of Let1t r') T•''•"'""."" to
July tJ.10.ll.ctnd AupoHJ. Fiii '~ Pf'hh~t .tf\d 4lUitnc>f'•l•Non to ect
PUBLIC NOTICE
l'ICTITIOta IUSINIESS
NAMe STATEMENT l ne lollowl1'19 DC''°"' •re doinQ l>USI·
n~u•~
D E SI GNERS' MANU FA C·
TURING CO .. llllO Oc~.in 8+rcll Or.,
Coron• dol Mar, CA '1HS
E tu•IM!lll l •VQl\111', ll~O Ocun
81r<h Ot,. CorONClol IMr, CA 9,.IS
Ron•IO &Mon, 111:i. l .• H ln<trwood,
Irvin•. CA
ltil• l>V\lnttn •• conclucled t>y a
Qtneral p.trtMrSlllp
Erl1abe111 W.U9Mln
This s1.1....-1 "'"' lllod wllh •~• Counly Cler-ol Or.n91< Counly 011 June
17. 1977 ,,,, .... ,
Put>tlsllod Orf~ Co .. I O•llV PllOI.
Jvntn,,..,.,,.,July6, tl, 1'77 •
11'0"11
NO fl(l IS HI RfAV C"IVfN ln•tl
If AN CRl\IC. ll l\8UNE ~'" 111"'1
hf rt'" d Pt"tlf1on tor °"''"'"'"'"'''on o•
r """'"""'""'to 01\lrit>ul1nn of J\\ •• , nt Otr•d•nl n.ld 1n tni\t WHt RE: ~011£.
P(>ttl10n.t r Or4y~ INJI IN' Court rn.t~ ... d-.
ordt-r tftat 118 \hdrflti. ot Ne..-VMll v,.,..
•or-e F"vri<t Inc •nd d(td1t1on,,I u,,1 '1.H·O
'\l\drt~ ~ 1r•n\tf'orrtO •a J~ctn C'
l=lc4Dun•. lhf' Ot'r...On 1 nhtltd to tf•Ctt'lf'
'\t1'•d oroQ"rt¥. rtftr•n<,.. 10 """'<" ,.,
rn .. d• for furl,_, o.ott(UIM\. &llid 1 ..... 1
tl\t> t1mt tlnd otl!Kf' of ht'.-nn9 trwt Wml
l\tt\ bt'4"n \II t '°' •uou\I 8. tQll. •t • 00
It m 1n tr-cov,-froom of O.o.,.,,,...,"
Ho Jot ~1•d tK1rt •• 100 C1v1c (•1"11 .. r
Qri.,,t Wt\1. 1n trtie C•h ot S.ctt'tl• Ao"'
C••1torn1•
301'·1/ ""'"•~f1•r ,,... hh•tt un~r tntit lftdto'"°'" ...
Octt• d Jun_.11 ,,,,
Wil li.AM IE SI JOHN.
(Olif\tv (l•rlt
fl HODES. IAllNAllO,
MAI.OH EV ANO HART
A Profe,Mon.elCOf'oor.tllon
'9H IE n1 WuN.,..on 81•d
!.utt• 1010
lo•A~9•IH.CA
AttorMy\IOf'P1'litlontr
Publ•""""' Or..-i0t-Co111 t ('t1dv Piiot
Julv ll 70. 21 •I'd .auau,1 I 1111 JO•• II
PUBLIC NOTICE
·---------C1t•nt Adrntnt\lr•t•Of'I of E\1•11' Act., ...
PUBLIC NOTICE lfrf'n<•• to Wf'l1(h '" m.ot •ot furtrwr
Oi"lf't1Cul•r •ndt"-.U t""'tUT"IM\dpl.c:t
------------ol ,,..,. .... I,.... ....,.,... ~•• i-... w1 101 NOTI C E 0, PllOl'OSl!O
AMENDMENT
TO l'lillMIT A .. J.76
HOTt(E IS t'EllE8 Y GIVEN '"•' lh~ aoohc•nt Sou•" E•">t Rf'a•on•I
Attt•m4'tton ~u1hof'1tv ~" rtovttttf'd •oorov•I ol •l"N>nd,,.,.,,t to ,,,., abov•
( •P•·o~illf .,_,,,,,,11rta1 Wd\ O+"Aitlftd M•v
\ '"'· tOt" Int' COl"\fru<t•on o• an O<f"~n
Ovtr•H M'C.1 1ntncf'otor i~•r ~''"1n9
lf\P IN-'\fflWnlf-r trfl'.tl""fl"t 014f\l •t
\Al)> °""'Ob• 00 StrMt Tftt> prooo\f"d
.. ,....., nd"'f'nt h to t l"1""0vtt • <ond1hon
.-f't1c" Of"Ohlb1ts thf' hoO•·uo o• •.ctnO"> w"''" ton1i11n C'''' I or It soil\ to v·w•r l!tw\ urit~\ mttntl'd • oit,.mh to
Ju•v '16. ••11 ._,, tO oo • m .• ,,, ttw
courtroom 01 Oro.trtn"e"t No l of !lit•d
cburt _., IOOC•Y•C (f'f"ll{'r Or1"'-¥ft\I tr\
,,,~ C•t'fot S..nt• An•. C4hforn11
O•ted Jutv 6 19//.
Wll.L14M I . S\JOHN,
CO<MIV C'-<~
Wlll.IAMV K .. MIOT
M~,.M-10..,SIHI•*
N•w..,rt 1H<a. CA. ti ...
Tt4: f110M4-l?U
Atfor,.otor; io.1r11-
Publl•......, Or-Co•\I O•llY Pllol.
Jul• 11 •l. '' 1971
eta O hy l~CO.t\\t•I (0,,..n'll\\IOf" 1-------------r f\p OrOOO\l'd dm .. nd mrf"lt I\
\th, du'rod fM • Potthc f¥At11'\Q Mfort PUBLIC NOTICE
•~ ''die CO""l'T\•Ueof"I -' ,~.,. riaoult!r !-------------
------------mttl•nQ ol Julv "· 1'11, a t'"" .Al•Porl FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT
Tn~ fo11ow1~ e>UM>n •~ do1n; b~al·
""~~ii\' •
A CTI ON PROFESSIONAL
SE'RVICE, 6AOI W•rntt Ave .. Hunl·
•ngton 8f<Kr.. CA 976'7
G•<N!l Tolt•I, 6AOI W•r~r A .....
HuntlnQton 8ucn, CA. 926'1.1
Tnh bu>lnu' " conduclod by •n In dlv•OU•I
C.ernet Toltn
Tl\1< \141~nl ,..., llltd Wtlll Ill•
('ou11ly Cl<lril DI Or_,11" Cou•IY on Jun• ''· ,.,,
M.Jflf"ld Hotf"I. "°' L ln(OI" 8oul,v•rc.t.
lo' A,,.,.,.,., TIV' mc.hl'o I\ .cnedul.O
10 b<'91n at 1 oo P.M
For turf,.., lnform•llon contacl Ille
\t~lt comml)\lon otllce di (~151 SSI·~ t••
JOSl'PH E 8000VIT Z
FY~Cu.t•vf' Dlrtctor
Publls~d Or•nqe COd)I Od•IY Pllol. July IJ, 1'17
31138·77
PUBUC NOTICE
1'1140 NOTICI! OF INTINTION TO Pubh~ 0 U"11t Coa•I 0•1ly Pllol I! NGAGI I H THI! S A I. E o ..
Jun•11, H. -July6, IJ, lt71 ALCOMOLICBEVl!RAGES
110.,, 1 11·21 --------------------------iTo Wnom ltM•YConc ... n PUBLIC NOTICE
~ secure.
For 16 years,
individual lnvutora. as ~II es trust and profit
sharing plans. have
earned 10.12% on their
money-and sometimes
more.
The money h111 been
lnvuted In 2nd trust deeds
on du>lcle California
ru.I estate through
A. A. Al6x Co.
In 16 )ldl1I. no one
has ew:r IOtlt a cmt or
faJaed to ea.m at Ja5t t•
«~-noone. ~aloan11 pc,..w Wor. mablrt(y.
JIOlt recet\111 up to • six ~tnt.niltbonuaon
... of the loll\ w..c..
,..... ... ~the ~fafcl up to~ rw • ...._.
liroclnri;~~ • can:
~ut>l"<l IO ts•.,.nc• of,,.. l•cen<e ~
~htcllcw l'fDllCe ",,....bvgl-.nlhdll"" -------------
uf'd•rs.10'\td oropo\#1 to wit •tcOf\Ot1c
Of~,·~ •t tr.e Of'N't'\l!t~. de!ttr1bfid
•\ fOUOW'\ t,, ll'W t.()l<f> orOYtdf'd bittow ·
.. ) W. !'th Sirul, Co\I• M•s.t,
C•ltlor-"'• Pursuattt to SUC'ft tnt~UOf'I, lh~ ""
ci."•O,,.d •• •oolv•"ll to 1,,. ~o.rl· _,,,of AIC-IC &n.r-CofllrOl IOr •'OU•"<• ot "" etcohoflc beY~r•CM 11e~n-. lor lte..,_1 for ll'lfH on mi .. s
~\1011~:
''41'' 0.. S.te GeMr•I
19-Fldt ""1bllc E•tl"9 Pl.u I
HAl El. E. SARGEN Tl Plll>ll~l'lff Or ..... Cotst 0•01' Piiot,
July u. 1t11 34n.11
PUBLIC NOTICE
lflCTITIOUS IVSINUS
NAMll ITATIMINf
T,,. tollOWll'Q persons ere dol"ll ""'' ,,.,-' .,.
l'OUNTAIN ltEAI. ESTATE, IOS.OI
Elli• Awnut, F°""I""' V•llrf, CA '2/M
FOiml•"' llHI Ell<ll• ln<wPGt'•I
fd. & C•lllcwnl• C.0.-•llotl. tOS-t Ciiis
A"'!-. F<>un1.i .. v ........ (.41 '"°' T!>ls bl.!llMU Is COl'dutltd ltY • <or·
..... 1o ... "-t.i11 R .. I Etlete Ill(,
Ntwtor\0 .... .,. .. Pr"to.f'll
T"lt ttet-1 w_, lllfd wllll tlW
CoU1'IY Clm ol 0t9"9e CouMy ... JlllV 7• ,.,,, 1171611
Pull.llllltd Ora11911 Co.nt OeHy Pl,_..
---.-,-C-Tl_Tl_OU_1_1•u-.-,-.. -.-,-,---1 July, .. 20. 27 • ...0 ~.J, 1971 29'0·11
NAMaiTATl#~NT •
T hf' lollow1"9 --ere 00!119 b\1$1· PUBLIC NOTICE ,... ... ~.
PORSCHE PARTS OBSOLETE. -~~~~---~-~-·1
HJO llM!dt>IPI> frl-. Coi'ht Mn&, CA
t1t16
Cl\lcle Iver~. 111e.. • Callfornl• corper•llo11, •O e. Cont Hwy .. Newf)O(l S.41t!!. CA,, ... T~1\ M lrwu 11 <onduett<I by • cor. PO<•llOl'I • ~ICIC llll!'R!ION INC. ,.A 0-.rlten "*"'· s.c-r .... T~I• ''-''"""" ••l lllfO wlll\ ,.,_ c-1, 01ottr °' 0r a.va Collflly .., Jlllv
1.1•11.
,:ic TITIOUI IUSINIH
NAMW ITATIMINf ....... lollowt119 Ml'-.,. dOll\t _,_
"*''es: AMl!' .. ICAH ~,,.. SUPPOIU
CORP •• an> Wttl Warf'M Awn .. , S....
I• A,... C.llf-aUlot
U.S. DIVl!ltS., CO., • C:•ll"""e (.,_,,_.,
'"'' -· "-.c ... bf. nM'• -et Ion u 1. Dlwn ca.
..~ .... ._.... ,,.... Viet~··"'~. fllfflf.,,._ QnllOa CM~ b<lttp Pllqt, Tit!• ........... "°'" llltf rill lllt Jvly, ~Jt.tr.~••1191•U, 1tn ~l't lfOrMt+U:lllut1•1ef'.My
)f».n '·th>. • l'1lllP ,._IW. Or-., Ceut o.tlt l'llot.
lhltr IJ,IO, l~ ""'°'t" lt?f ,..,,,
PUBUC SOTICE
l'ICTI TIOUS IU$1NESS
NAAl.STATU4UfT t~· IOllOWll'O a.roon• •••001"9 buSi· ,,.n .,
THE PLUSH PUPPV PE T SHOP,
..,. Wntm111>1tr A~ •• C..r<Mn Gro•t,
CA
Oet>r• Ettr .. l>ein G1eoon, & ,,.,, .... ~, M GI-... , a. ... Avo .. w.,,,.,,,, .. .,. CA t~
l "'' b\lt.JMSI ., COftdv<ttd DY .tn In• d1vodual.
Nll<,...t4M Gluson
T nl\ \t•t..,.,..t\1 WM fllfd ~t" the
Counlv Cl.,k OI Or-County on July
1, .. ,,.
FllSl9
Put>H~ OrMI• COdSI O•llY Pllol,
J uly IJ, 10, 27, ... d AuqU\IJ, 19/7
3011-11
PUBLIC SOTICE
CITVO" FOUNTAIN VAL&.l!Y.
CALll'OllNIA
NOTICE INVITIN0810S
l'Olt TMI lllCON5TltUCTIOH ANO
U,.OATIHO 01' THE TllAIO,:i(
SIGNAl.S AT THI! INTIERH.CTIOH
0, WAIUll-.AVINUI ANO IUC'-10 n1111r
PRO.II CT HO. JUO
Telephone system almoal
aoywbere. the aame voice speaks
lo you relUlarly, when you dial
nonworking numbers.
Audlchron Company, AUuta,
Ga., makes the recordlnp for
telephone and other systems.
The firm says lhe same voice
talks to more people in one day
than any other human fn the
world.
She is Jane Barbe, an AUanla
housewife, and when you talk to
her on the telephone she hu the
same charming manner that
comes through on Ohio Bell's
Automated Intercept System
<AlS) or the "time al the tone"
mess~ used by hundreds of
telephone excbanees around the
country.
IN ADDITION TO makine AJS
recordings "in bits and pieces
that the computer puts
together," she said. she does
time and temperature r ecord-
ings, commercials and service
information recordings for other
agencies, including one for
television.
For t he AIS system put
together by Western Electric, the
Bell system's technical arm,
Mrs. Barbe records Individual
numerals. one lo iero, plus a
series of message fragments
such as "in the 614 area." "in the
Canton area," and so forth.
These are recorded on elec·
tronic chips mounted in two 20·
inch computer drums.
MARTIN SVENSEN, WHO
watches over the AIS In the Ohio
Bell equipment center in
Cleveland, plugged a phone in
one or the chips.
"One, one, one, one. one ... , "
Jane's voice says over and over.
He switches in another chip that
says "one, one, one," but with a
dropping inflection -used when
the numeral 1s at the end of a
phrase.
The heart of AIS is hous ed in a
a cabinet the size or a household
• refrl1erator. Svensen says the
memory in the aygtem bas about
600,000 telephone numbers ln the
northeast ObJo area tbat require
lnformaUon kom the Intercept
system.
BEFORE THE SYSTBM was
installed six years ago -the
tbjrd to go in around the country
-the job was handled by
operators. Now, when you call a
disc ontinued or chaheed
number, your call ls switched
automatically lnto AlS. It finds
the number. and keys lo the
magnetic chips in the proper se-
quence faster than you can say,
"look in the book."
And it does it so smoothly, It
almost sounds as though Mrs.
Barbe is on the phone talkln& tl>
you. The only th.lng missing la the
Southern accent, which s he
doeso 't let creep into recordings.
Ohio Bell public relations ex·
ecutive Charles Day said Mrs.
Barbe's voice provides all lbe in·
formation a live operator could.
"IF YOU STAY on the line, a
live operator will come in," he
said, "but all she can do is look in
the records and give you the
same information that's in the
AIS memory.
"You know," Day observed,
''they say ir the telephone com·
panies hadn't changed from cord
boards to dial phones there
wouldn't be enough women in the
country lo handle all the
boards."
The spread of AIS -eliminat-
ing hundreds of intercept
operators -can be measured by
the amount of work Mrs. Barbe
does at Audichron.
''l'M RECORDING messages
for new installations constant-
ly.' '--she said.
Svensen said recordings in the
AIS drum here have been revised
only once since they were in·
stalled m 1971.
Over 1,he Counter
NASO ListirMJS
Jit•. 101·~ Pltftllt" lh p·, Po•.,tS Co 14 ?•' ·, Proorp ~ ~ Put>"> NC I,, P St'n~•
1• S PulO C~o Uk 12 OuM lf\t'I' '8 7tl4 J1acwn Pr
I) ' 1.1' p~,,4411 c ,, ._ ff.a R,w<~m
• A A(l"Mnd 11 II"' R"°" Ea •J· 41~ Aodd E • 16' II'" llltt)ttln M 11' • 2• 11o'ttolon
I 1h ROV!t"' 161 • II'" P u\ Slov
11 11-l S•dl•tr tl•', 19h· $<dn Oit
11 1 41'• SUM' f'I t • t ftMf OC
P'• 11 • f41moa1 11-' • 11' • f f'Ch PuD 1~ J}J·, Te-c urn P
11 1 7' ~ T.-nn•n•
)• .i' I '''"" (O fl\• 1• .. ro\ro(o H' .. 191 .. f'r.-nso 0
111 1l.t Tl't(O PO
/1'l • 1JH, fr•t" OG d· .. 'J•• Ty>0n F 30', )t Uf\ A.Ar('.11
''"' n""° US Suro 2,._ Jl-'° US Tr .. lr'' 6~ , • ._ UVA (tk\ UJ' 1)t 1 UOPPn P
1:a.. 1"'-""""" c; ...
• 7 • I 11-16 t IS 16 V4'"0 Jur v,.,.,.., s
Vf"lr,.o
V;,H 8r-Wed• Pu W>f\ NG "',.Nl Q,. Wr•oM W
iN••d lfn
1• t&.I. S<rto~ H JI .,.
• 1l t• S.•t Or11 •'• St_. lo JI"• S# ... CM F J"> -6 • ~~ S.w~nUo 16 ' 11'~ U'' U' ~-'w Co 11· • 1" • •I•• 11 ~"o Tl 16 76J • 18 11• • ~••OSI S< o I
11"-II ._ ~ C!lllWdl tl'°'• u•.,
'16 26'' SwG\ <o 11i. 11J\ 1' 1·" qwf'1 ~v 11•,, 18
1' -. n1 • s'-'"""'" :is--. 7S'~ 2 • 1 ~•d R'~·s n 1J•, n· 1 ,,, • Sr.tn ... Po IJI. u•:. ~r .. ~~~. ~:~;':., ~r. 7~:: 1r · ,.,_ 4\ ..
11 •IP• 16'1> 111• '. t ,,,~ 11• ..
• I
5 $'"'" IS 16 11J~ I)"°'
t)J~ 14"• )i .. ~, ..
4.l'..t , • ., •h , ... u•,. ... ,,.
"'•""0 "' ~·tt C.M W\tl" M tu "'''-'""d Wdw'll l W'rtOwff"I
Wn af\f W z1onu1 B
APW~•
VOICE OF BELL
Atlanta 'a Jane B1rbe
Long Talkers
To Pay More
SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -Tbe
California Public UtUlUes Com·
mission has approved a plan to
charge long·winded residential
telephone customers extra for
the extra minutes they spend
talking.
The new r ate structure, called
s ingle m essage rate timing
<S M RT>. arrects a ll Pacific
Telephone Company customers
except those with lifeline service
or residential customers who pay
a flat rate.
THE PUC SAID lbe con-
troversial rate structure "is the
rnost equitable way to price
telephone service.•·
SMRT has been in operation
since last year in Orange County,
the east San Francisco Bay Area
and San Diego. ·
Under the SMRT plan, residen·
lial users pay a flat rate tor the
first five minutes or a call and 1
cent a minute thereafter.
IJp• and Doaeiu
UPS
ld\I Cr>n ,, • • >.
I • t ...... '• ,,. . ...
J • t ,
I .... '•
Ill. -1· .. ,. . . ..
t ~ I ,,..,, . , ..
1'• ••••
)1, • '' ... .. . '·
) • • ~ t
Jh • '. 7J.t. .... II t• •
•'• .. '• ,,. • I o \'.. . .. J .. ) . . .
I"' .. e • ,..
DOWNS
P<I
llo l!I • Uo 2t 1 UD 16 J Uo ISO uo "J llo u J Uo Ue> Un tU Uo IJ J Uo 11 s uo 111
l•o "" uo 100 Uo l~O llo 10 o Vo 100 Uo 100 Uo ti
VO •I Uo ts uo • J u o •• Uo t 1
uo 8• UD 8 S
11'' n 111\ 111't
"'• 121••
i\'ASDAq Sutn1norf1 Ne,...
I Arcf\,.;E" ' .,~,, °"" J " .. ol Inc 4 Poo\ tf"v
L~\I Cfla Pel
'"' • • Oft 1S • "" '" Oil tJ J '° "°''' 10 1cµ.
flJ-"• '°''· 11', lilt.
JI l'"' 12•-, ll'"" 11 11"•
l1't 11• qi .... tO
7' ))'""'
H JS• : L
t' t U I ,, ',,.
U • U 1•
l.t • 1J' 42• .. 0 .• 11~1J'· 51• sr.-,.. • 301,
71'"" ""'
NEW VORIC (APJ -MC>\! 8<11•~ n~r '~!~:'" s~~~~ sugr~1td ,.,~~d Nt~ 0.-!lr~r • JM 000 J 1 •~ J ~ lb Mc Mom 1~ 100 t 1 • u • • '• Pan~OrQ 2'11 lO 1, 1~ l '> t& • • t• PnflOC"; t16 ,,._, '' • u .. AO\.lrhdr 100 -.tOO 1 ') • • 1 NO.ua c~ qo 100 6 • , .. Rvrm.tO ~S 100 1 11 •
P"tll. T 8f "10 &'• • 1\ t6 ~ t 16 f.-rll('-o l'(l()(\n 1 1 ••••
Polar A' 11 inn t t • ... •.
Adv•ncf"d
Of'cl1N"d
Unc"•-Tot•• •i....,..'S _ Mrw .,~
NE w 10'#\. ....
TolM YIP< •
0 0 JSJ I 163
1.U. 100 17 •.013.100
\ ~"'"' M • ltnltt> lf 1 N uro 1-ilr
' '°""" q Fl•ttf'lf u Ill VoCI .... I ,, w ..... , c
t) P~yro fl tJ A~nPr :; ii~~
t& llirrOWAut II T••l"t A til 0101 Lou ,. o~~ ,_
10 '>8E IM 1' ACC•lr tn 12 CllMI t'o lJ (Oft (lllt
1• "'"° '"' 1S Rel« TO
J:: :: g:: :gg 11 I t. OU 100
• • 011 10~ \•• OH I 1 IJ • I', 011 8 ~
'1'1 f' 00 • .J
11• '• Off It l t t • ()ft I r
J ', 8" I t ~... ti 7 0
.... 011 ·~ I Oii 6 1 I 011 • T \ho (>lf • \ P• •, 00 •l • ~. Off s.
I '• §l" St 1'' •• , s. 1l I' a f ~ t 76'" 11. Oft S• ,,i., -'' OU i t .... Oii s.
MUTUAL FUNDS
Wednelda1•1
Clolinl Pricea
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTlONS
t/N 85
-. -Spen~ Tally:
Food Costs Fall
87 ·SYLYIA POJl1' a .~
True°" f •11•: At tbo eosta otlood. .,ave etn:oc:ttltea._ °'°
share ol the l1m1ly'1 budae\ &~ to, tbta ltem bal ~
too, and a creater propoJ1I6d cl 11W"-tax dollan II 1peat t~
food tqdayttlanlattlepllaS. 'l'btsimttrend~U~tohealtll
care, wblcb ls ablotblo1 a lt.rCe abare off lncom.,. .J .
Falle. Astoundµi, u l1 mtaY seem, t.be aie,t fama~
&pending ft&Ul'ft• taken h'om Census Bureau aurveys and
publisMd by the Bureau of Labo!' Statistics, underUnt ~
point. Todocument: i
-PROM lt5t to 1980·61, THE relaUve importance ot
food in the American family's budget declined from 29. 7 ..,
24.4 percent, and kept dropping unUl il bad reached 20.1 pet'·
cent at latest reporting date, 1972·73. Even if the explosion
in food prices in 1974· 75 raised the percentage a blt, it co.,..d
not have lifted it back<o.tbe JntpOrtJdn food took ~n 1950. r
-In 1960-61, the 11bare of Uving expenses going~
pertonal care and health costs was 9.6 percent. By 19'12·7!,
that was down to &..4 percent; (Some explanation follows.)
-:-Meanwhile, the p~rtiOQ of a typical famUy's
budget going for
clothing bas dwindled, •
from 11.S percent in the
early 1950s to 10.9 per·
cent in the early 1960s to
7.8 percent in 1972·7l.
Simultaneously, of
course, other essentials ,
Money's
Worth
and luxuries have been taking larger shares.
Homes and utilities have been eating more and more il\·
to incomes. The proportion going for shelter and utilities
has jumped from 15.6 percent in 1950to17.0percent10 years
later to 21.3 percent in 1972· 73.
IN MORE THAN ANY OTHER single category, spencf.
ing for transportation .-particularly ror buying, maintain·
ing, financing and fueling our cars -has rocketed. Tbe
climb has been from 15 percent of family spending in~
1960s to 2J percent in the 1970s. 1
The average family spent $5,054 on consumer goods and
services in the early 1960s; the same family spent $8,282 at
the opening of Ute 1970s.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics says it shows a decrease in dollars going to health care, because medic~ costs r&
ported by the surny refer only to out-of-pocket family ex·
penses. The do not include health insurance premiums pai~
by employers or the U.S. government. · •
FAMILY SPENDING FOR KECllEATION and eduj:a·
tlon has remaifted virtually unchanged for decades, witll.a
shtft from 9.3 percent of living expenses in 1960-61 to9.4 per-
cenl In 1972· 73.
The following chart sums up major changes in basic
con~umer spending patterns between the 19605 and 1970s.
Note that less is being spent fot essentials and more for lux·
uries -tbe key sign of a continuingly afftuept ~iety.
ITEM 116&-61 1972.73
Total living expe~es .,., 100.0% 100.0~
Food 24.4 20.1 .: I Shelter and uUlities .;. ~ 17 .o 21.3
Clothing (cost and upkeep) 10.9 1 .8 l Transportation 15.2 21.4
Medical and personal care .11t'• • 9.6 8.4
Recreation and educ at.ion 9.3 9.4 .. •' . .. ... •" .
J ,4.' }; j : ,:·
Dow 'Index ·stides f ,.U
Around 900 Level ~~
NEW YORK (AP> -The stock market, which has re. cotcled slow but steady losses all week was off again today '
as tbe Dow Jones industrial average m~andered around 900
The average of 30 industrial stocks was down 0.42 pointS.
to902.99. Earlier, the average dipped to896.29.
The setback followed a drop ot 4.58 points Monday and
Tuesday. The average last closed below 900 on May 31 when
It finished at 898.66, a 16-mooth low. '
Losers took a 5-4 lead over gainers among New York Stock Ex.chaDRe-lis&ed Issues. " Big Board volume came to23,160,000sbares. Analys~ said traders were indecisive. waiting to see if ~
the Industrial average would fibd some support at lu'ound j
· the 900 level and awaiting Thursday's release or money. ' supply figures. 1
I ~ 111
Wlaat Stork• Did l
Nl!W YORK (API
I
j
I
'
I
Wedne-'•1'•
Cloilns Priee1
NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSA(iTIONS
-v-v -'""Cit 1.10 • 21 20 ~ ~ VS!Corp '.IO 1 I ?l .. • Ill V .. i.-tfn .AO 11 6' l lll. , v ... i.n 2' u 101 ,. • ._ • \'f V-llC .JC» S tl 11~. -, s~. =•il!'~ ,; .~~.·...; Vw1<o .lOl20 1'1 ,.,,_ ~ Ylecom .101J l4 ~-._ Victor<: .201J I• 11~. " ~=~::-;,:·l: ' ~: m::... ·~ VeE.P pO .72 • 11000 tOV. + "' VaEP pit.JS 120 107\fo-'Iii vaE~.tO • l ''-· . VIE J 1.12 1110 "',.,_ 'h VIE pf1.20 &1000 li-l~ i,1~1.~ l10 .. L -n• v llSt ....... WcnM I tO 1 6 H-11>-Ill
-W-'lf-M CllOY .~ t 14 16'•· • w.d\a5iUO I ~ + V. Wacll It Hh "' Wllf .11 11 • ,. -\'f Wal9m t.IO 1 .. 1..--~ Wlti,. , .... 1 10 ""'• ft Wlillklt ... • .. ""'· ... Wlf~ 120 4 2t 2l't+ Ill W•I I.AO t 11S J2\.'t-1 w.1\J I , tllO 1214,. ... WllU 911..0:. ta JS!'>-._ Wltrcl"4 .47\. ,, ,~. w ~ . '"'····· 5 21
• i
·' HN DAil V Pl..O! ••
ii .
Spending Tally:
F()od Costs Fall~
81 8YLTIA fO•TA . '
Trueorf'1ae: At tbo eostaol'looclbavH~. l1'o
share of tbe f amily'a budi9' aotnJ fOf' Ulla ltem bas ao~
too, and a creater propordod f:ll ~t.u clOllan a. •peot tqr
food t4day U>an ta tb past. The sallit tioeGd aPP119' to ballh
care, wblchit ebsorblnJ a Iarsesbareotlamllylrleomet.
Falte. AatoW»dlq .. t1 ml)' seem, tho latiut f
ependfitf ftlUJ'et. taken from Census Bureau SUTVeJ'9' and publiisbed by the Bureau of Labor StaUstlca, undetlin• ~
point. To documenl: i
I
· -ROM ltse to HIO .. l. THE relative importance 4t
food in the American family's budget declined from 29.7 t>
24.4 perceot, and kepl dropping unUl il had reached 20.1 per.
cent al latest reporting d•te, lt72·73. Even lf the exploslon
ln food prtceaedinl bl974k· 1'S rthaised tbe ~re~¥!.~ bl lt1,9i!,_c~ not have lift t ac <o e-~Olhvu.. .,.,.._ n ""· -p-
-In 1960-61, the -share of Uvint expense& aolng,o
personal care and health cOlts was 9.6 percent. By ltn·73,
that wu down to 8.4 "rceat; <Some explanation follows.)
-Meanwhile. 1he pewortloo ot a typlcal family's
budget going for
clothing has dwindled, ·
from 11.5 percent ln the
early 1950s to 10.9 per-
cent in the early 19608 to
7.8 percent in 1972·73.
Simultaneously, of
course, other essentials
Money's
Worth
and luxuries have been taking larger shares.
Homes and utilities have been eating more and more ifl-
to incomes. The proportion going for shelter and utilities
has jumped from 15.6percentin1950to17.0percent10 years
later to 21.3 percent in 1972· 73.
IN MORE TUAN ANY OTHER single category, spencf.
ing for transportation.-particularly for buying, malntaln·
ing, financing and fueling our cars -has rocketed. na,
climb has been from 15 percent of family spending tn ~
1960s to 21 percent in the 1970s.
The average ramily spent ~.054 on consumer goods and
services in the early 1960s; the same family spent $8,282 at
the opening of the 19705.
The Bureau of Labor StaUstics says It shows a decrease
in dollars going to health care, because medical cosLs r&-
ported by the survey refer only to out-of.pocket family ex·
penaes. The do not Include bealt.b insurance premiums pallJ
by employers or the U.S. government. ·
FAllJLY SPENDING roa REC8EATION and edUS:a·
lion has remaiaed virtually unchanged for decades, wtt.b t
shift from 9.3 percent of living expenses lnl960-4Sl to9.4 per-
cent ln 1972·73 .
The follOWing chart sums up major changes in baste
col'l&umer apendinlJ patterns between the 1960s and 1970s.
Note that less is being spent for essentials and more for lux·
uries -the key sign of a contlnui.ngly attlueJ>t soclely.
ITEM lMt-tl 1112·73
Total livinJ expel)Ses -.:. 100.0% 100.0'1:
Food 24.4 20.l
Shelter and utilities :... 17.0 21.3
Clothing (cost and upkeep) 10.9 '1 .8
Transportation 15.2 21.4
Medical and personal care M"· 1 9.6 8.4
Recreation and education 9.3 9.4 ..
i I
I ll t • ~
Dow Index Sli~
Arowul 900 Level
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market which has re·
corded slow but steady losses all week, was ~fl again today ;
as the Dow Jones industrial average meandered around 900 The average of 30 industrial $tocks was down 0.42 pointS
to902.99. Earlier, tbeaveragedlppiedto896.29.
The setback followed a drop of 4.58 points Monday and Tu~ay. The averaee last closed below 900 on May 31. when
lt fbmhed at 898.66, a 16-month low.
Losers took a 5-4 lead over gainers among New York Stock Excha.Dl(e-listed issues.
Blc Board volume cameto23,160,0001b.ares.
Analys!-5 said traders were indecisive. •ailing to see tr ~ the industrial average would flod some aig>port at around j
the 900 level and awaiting Thursday's release of money. s upply figures. ,
! i /:
Doaolone•A .,•rage• What Sto~k11 Did I j Ht"I Yorlll,.PI Flntt ~ •-119" JTOC•S ~ ~ ~; m.!' mn rt''t.: rJ 1J VII 117.11 ne Ol 1)6.SC. 117,aS+ O.~ u kit Jiit.ti 111.n 308.GS 3M.»-o. tnd<is ••• • ••••.• •• • • • • • • • • •• •• '"I!. Tra11 ·-................... l 5'.tOO "''~ ••• ••••• ............. .cl~ .S SHI • • • .. • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 2,607)00
A..ertea11Leaden
el!~W YOftl( ("Pl· Siii ... 4 p,m. ~ a.. .. ""' "" ..,,... «1"'9 IMf In .. St!IOL l!K~ I._,
adl"' ...ctlMllY .. --SI. =:·::::.:· :~ .... :•v.
IM.,r···• l int+~ ~··.':::.-:· g,. ~ ;'-........ ., ... f1A······ w. M ...• ,.. .... :.:'.::· . m i" ....... ai.i..... . Sil'··~·
HEW YORK (.t.PI p~ .!~' ~ 10S 1« ..., .,.
117't ltCIO 107 •• » JI
MUIS
~ =-: .. ~.:~ .. ~~.~'£-i.. °"' ~ ... ~,7, ....... ~·.::·:;t,.Jt:oi
wvt191> ••••••••••••••.•••••••• 2 •• .m Mottttl ............... ,........ ; -~ ~··::::~~~:::::::: ~M.JllO J:;;'\·.-~ .. ··············~:m mt~..,.. ::::::::::::::::: UtOMIAAO
I f
I
.. DAILY PILOT Wttdnttdty, July 13, i m
Bach Concert Splendid
Jobann bullan Dach never Intended that h1a
· The Pualon Accordlna to St Mallh\iw" be
fk;rformtd In an o~ air aetUn1 but thi11 writer
bellov• the muter would havo looked with lavor
on the Hollywood Bowl offering last weekend.
Robert Shaw'a sensitive direction and busy
baton never allowed this rendition under the stars
to be anythmg other than a moving, 1raciously de· ---------------------livered ofrerine that captivated an absorbect au-
dience.
A \\IL LIAM FRllDKIN Flt M
~tr~£R
~~ff<.-,.,.,.,., HOV ... CllrtDEH
11111 ...,. > I HI \U I( I H \" l...C 111( \H \I .\ \111 IOI H \'Ill' 1111 HI
h11ttm ttt.n l>.· .. 1111\ '0 tl' UO\ °"I• n·rf'l~L1\ \.\ \1 0 '\ C.Hf I '
\. ···~ .,.,,. f'11ufw .,, IU I• "'ti I ti f)t,1,tn .. t 111.ttt .. ~ l-'NGlRl'I URf A't
""'' d ,,,, 11,.. ""',I I h1-\\ .... , ... ul I 1•.u h\ ( u•o,.,...-,. A rn.t\t1f
l ti1., -..,1 dn;l l1t•11lm ,.,1 h' \\H 111\'1 t Hll l)kl' ~D~.-1\,~~,:i
\ l'.tJ.illlflUHI' 01~ .. , ........ h .• 1 .... u~u .... 1111111ti1•
\ MOl<l!<l 1 ltUllOll • IRV.1,,.1'1..IUI t• ..... .,~ \ \l\HI"" llll'i ..... .._
LlZA MINNEU.I ·ROBERT DENIRO~ ··NEW 'rORK. NEW YORK ..
°" ""'1"""' f.., • \Ml \\..\C R.,-\l.l ... -1 \1 \kJ Joi~ \I \k fl'
... \Ill '"' IC \\I It ,,,. ..... p. \1111 I I"\ .. 01<'4.'4
1• ..... ~"' 11N I'"'" l'._I IJI ... Hl>lll IC I C 11\111 t»I
"'•""' ........ ~. )<JI" ., \ "" .. ....t 11'1 1111411
\1 ••'"""'f'O•-_., -J.::1-• tt\lf'llklH'°' • l'-1-'-~fitt~t,,......,
l\...,1.,,-4 rt.. •. .,~. I• t~ .,._""'-•" ,
®-"l.,..Mfl=• ... ~~,~.,.~. s-=--= .... ,.,.,,,,..,,..\!1"..lril A.lol ToU>\ '"' ..... 0-.;;UO•l•tS 'll(COlf'OS I
V:I~~~ T~~~~~·~.
The 0nc and only re.I lift Enl Knievel
in his first dramMic motlc rot,.
And it should be noted that 1t was a splendid
13-erformance that survived the loss of an eagerly
anticipated and gifted principal In our Los Angeles
Phllarmonlc Orchestra offering.
THE LOSS DUE TO ILLNESS of soprano
Felicity Palmer was a blow that could have upset
the balance of a carefully rehearsed rendition of the
Bach classic.
But her key role in the work was most capably
taken over at short notice by Penelope Jensen who
IW'S
SO. COAST PlW
Ctlll lllU ••• *""
Ull'S so. com PUZA
Ctlll 11111 Mllhlll *""
un·s
SO. COAST PWA •s..... W.DU
Ull'S
CllEUWD
MMS.. ..... ..... --un·s
CllCllAWID MIU•..,_ ...... m.•
"THE DEEP"
CPGJ
I :l0-l:40-5:SO.l:OO. I 0: I 0
nu
'"THE (PG).
SORCERER"
DAILY I :lO·l:l5·5:40·7:45-9:50 --·
"ROCKY"
'"THE DEEP" CPGJ
WB>. O .. L Y 6:00-1: IO· I 0:20
DAILY I :J0-):40
5:50.1:00-10: I 0 --
"ORCA THE WHALE" CPGI
WIO. OHL y 6:30-1: I o.t:so
I: 30-l: I 0.4:50·6:30-1: I 0-9:50 --llUl'S "BLACK SUMDA Y" ClalAUID 3:05-7:45 W.cl. Only I: 15 MM.:...... "SLAP SHOT"
.-1111 1:00-5:35-10:15 W-4. Oflfy 6:05·10:45
TOM BARLEY
Music Box
gave us flawless airings of arias that thoroughly
test the mettle of the concert soprano.
But then Shaw had fine principals to work with, headed by Seth McCoy wh~e ringing tenor voice
gave brave dimensions to the challenging role of the
Evangelist.
WITH HIM ALL THE WAY were meno
Florence Qulvar, tenor William Harness,
bass-baritone Simon Estes and baritone Richard
Stilwell.
Equally faultless in this long and exhausting
Bach work was the University of Southern
California National Workshop Chorale, which
responded nobly to Shaw's vigorous direction
Those harbingers of doom who predicted that
the public would not flock to the Bowl for a Saturday
night of Bach are eating their words today.
TO BE SURE, WE DID not get a capacity au·
dience; but the attendance must have delighted a
busy box otnce just as the final ovat ion must h.a~e
brought joy to all those connected with this splendid
performance"
Without a doubt, this Cine "St. Matthew" was
the jewel of the Bach Festival
DONALD MAY HAVE BEEN DAFFY
BUT HE NEVER SCORED LIK£:
~ ------:.-
Miii# WrillH •# ~ t,
MA~K IOI.MAii •# lllWA~I KAYUll-11.I AKI Ell/I
Wffltwl. Allltwt# -»«tH ~ ClllllU IWllt#ll · ~., Jlll1 Hll
I MllllKIMI Wftl lltll,ltTllll · I NU#llll' lfCTllll
t.t.r•11""''w' @110 ONE UNDER IUDMITTtD
PLUS
LA MIRADA
ORIVE·IN
13"3 4LONOAA BLVD.
SAHTA FE SPRINGS
523-9310
SM!u11 1 A~ ''"°"''A ~ 14-~i, Sltloll/Mojer .........,..,.
BURT LANCASTERMICHAEL YORK
,..,,..... "'"TH( ISUHD OF .1J«. MOUAU" .,. _.,.
NIGR OMENPOIT • IAQA .. CAHEU
' llCHAtD WEHAIT •-., .i"' i..-• ...., ..,-..c ... -IOllll l'lnw<ft
bKWot Pl" .... $AMUll l .&lllCOff .,. w.oT HOWAtO
...... .,. lht -'r llO Wiil ~ br ,QIN HfUWI SllAHll
Md Al 1AM1VS • Ml)i;i. 11r IAUlltHCt lOU.NlKAl ,,_.., JC)NN
lU#\1.iMITN ... SICJ' $1{\0ff • 0.-.. "r DON !An.at °"'* Ul!ll!I., JIWO IOl*S. I 1.-..--1 ..,._.., At1 toql$ ", PG :-~""-""::.::.r.-. CMlilf----·.\0--•
"A BRIDGE TOO FAR" PG
Ho"-
"ANNIE HALL" PG
"YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN" PG
"NEW YORK, NEW YORK" PG
No P-
"SILVER STREAK" PG
"FUN WITH DICK & JANE" PG
WAl T OiSNEYS CHll.OAEN 8 PRICES ~THE BOA TN I KS" G"GNOMEMOBILE"
"ROCKY" PG
'"HUSTLE" A
"ANNIE HALL" (G
"YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN" PG
"The Other Side of Midnight" R
"ONCE IS NOT ENOUGH"' A No~
"EXORCIST II: THE HERETIC" R
"RABID"
LA MIWA 4 • WEWOOD 4 W~A·HI -l'tl!Ct t i iO
lllC)tlOA'f 11w SATUllOA'f If..,.,...-.,.. '2:IO IO -
LA MIWA 4 ONLY IUNOl\'f16 ltOUOA'f111-ao 1e 2'il0
RICMAU MAntl 411 .u.: I ORCA THI ·~~ WHALl(Nt \.!..1._%,_ ..... 2400 , THI DOVI ll'OI
I004t llCI ICllllOU9WI
noflll THAT nMI fOIOOfCNt ~"' WIZARDStMl
'"nll OHi ANG ONl.TI"
VIVA KNllVILI IH I IM.UI
LOOAN'I RUNCNI
"Tiii OHi ANO OHl Tr
VIVA KHllVllltNt """ LOGAN'S RUN I">
. lt!AW e MCIQUaM Ill .. ::F!ro ) PUN W:::.' OHP:' MNICNt
IBI ~J,· r·~.:!fi~~ ....
A Ong time ago in a galaxy Tony Randall
P,faifN.!ey... Slww Altered
-,., ._1 .
rt~.~.·· .
·.~~Qt. '.
~l••toOllOn•C SOund ~ PGj~l!C.CIMSllJ . 001 OOlSYSYSTEM I L&IJ.
COITA 11UA UA SOUTH COAST · 540-059"
ORAHOl ~UTT CrtY CfNT£R • 834·9282
NE'MIORT MACH EDWARDS NEWPORT· 644~780
FOUNTAIN VAUIY FOUHTAJN VALLEY Dt • 9112·2481
rt A Iman prl•.,t.·nh
W~il>L.A.
Robert Ai!ITIOn prt1•n11 W.-.co""~ 'O l A 0 I.I"!\ t>\' A•~n R.Jllo.pn ~I01•1no ~e11n Cot•OOlnP 'iolly Kfl'""'WI C'-.e1ald1n~ l'h~p n HOl>!V Ket•el
louren Hul!on S+,sv 5pncei< Jon~ Con\111nP V·•~·~ l •~" -,, ll•0 M•1 00'.<1n
O&nv9' Pv•~ mu,oe onr.i 'ICl"Q'. O( Ric110ra Bosk1n P'M ea tlV riooen A •mon
"'""en ono a1t~110 ov Alon ll110l>lpn r 1rnM in p,1M• '-on Unttld Anietl
fRl
CINEMA CENTER
HARBOR AT ADAMS, COST A MESA
MESA VERDE CENTER 979-4141
. :.~-
,-
~ .--.--..-f "f 4
LOS ANGELES CAP) Switching networks
can cauae strange lhlnas to happen to a series star
Tony Randall acquires a father
nnd turns an his daughter for a
new model
When "The Tony Randall
Show" switches from ABC to
CBS in the fall, Hans Conned, a
noted character actor, Joins the
ca1t as Randall's liberal-minded
Cather. He considers his son, a
Philadelphia judge, a stuffed
shirt.
uHoA1.1. Permy Peyser. daughter of
Rep. Peter Peyser < R·N. Y.), will appear as Ran-
dall's 18-year-old daughter, Bobby.
She replaces Devon Scott, daughter of Geor ge
C Scott
ENTERTAINMENT
Fisherman
Now Actor
LOS ANGELES (AP)
-Robert Fortier is a
sailor home from the
seas. !------------------A commercial fi sh·
SPECIAL PRICE
AT HUNTINGTON AND
CINEMA WEST
.25 'TIL 2:30 DAILY
HUNTINGTON CINEMA
HACH AT ELLIS, H.I.
848-0388
CINEMA WEST
WESTMINSTER AT GOLDEHWEST
WESTMIN. CENTER 892·4493
HARBOR TWIN·
HARBOR AT WILSON, COSTA MESA
646-05 7 3 646-3266
CINEMA VIEJO
S.D. FREEWAY TO LA PAZ
MISSION VIEJO 830-6990
''The Year's Best Movie
~iw":.~RT~~N~~A ANTo:0o~A~~:
LARGEST SCREEN WEST OF NEW YORK ••.
. 75 FEET WIDE BY 35 FEET TALL -2925
SQUARE FEET -
PRESENTED JN FULL 70MM AND SIX
TRACK STEREO -DOLBY SYSTEM -THE
MOST BEAUTIFUL PICTURE AND THE
FINEST SOUND QUALITY EVER
REPRODUCED IN THE THEATRE.
MORE AVAILABLE SEATS 1252 LUXURIOUS
MOHAIR LOGES -50·100% MORE SEATS
THAN ANY OTHER THEATRE.
1F you HAVEN'T seeN STAR WARS
AT EOWAAQS NEWPORT CINEMA YOU
HAVEN'T SEEN m IF_.\'0U'ftE PLANNING
erman in Hawaii for 15
year s, be ha s been
s igne d to play a
gardener in "A Wed-
dlnc," Robert Altman's
look at the marriage
rites of the upper crust.
11\tl~'f
190\l .... _ ..... , .. _ .... _,
SOl"Tll COAST
fH(AfH(
l.AC~U NA IH Al.H 'f49 f\U . . y
............ S.t. -s-. 1:45
-lHEATRl I
'ANNIE (PG1HALL'
WI .. Woody AN41ft --~---1-
(R)
WHl .• JUlY 20
"FANTASTIC ~IMATION nomVAL"
TO S~I! ST AR WARS (ANO YOU
REALLY SHOULD) YOU'Li. GU THE MOST .... -....:;
. AT EDWARDS NEWPOffT: oaANT SCtlEEN
-70 MM -DOLBY f8Tl!RIOltHONIC SOUNO-LOTSOF~TS. ,
Wedneeday. Ju!Y 13. 1an * DAILY PIA.OT •'I
ABC Leads Rating•
'Scalphunters' Top~
NEW YORK CAP) -ABC b1i-9dlly
won the ratings race last weel by
placing five of lt.s programs as the top
five prime-time shows, according to
A. C. Nielsen figures made available
Tuesday.
The first amon1 62 rated programs
was "The Scalphunters," ABC's Sun-
day movie, Which was seen In 15.3
m illlon homes.
NIELSEN SAID national averages
for the week ending July 10 gave ABC
a 13.6 rating, which represents 9. 7
million households. CBS was second
with a 12.8, or 9.1 million homes, and
NBC had a 12, or 8.5 million.
The top lO ahows In order were:
"Scalphunters." a 21.S rating:
"Charlie's An&els," ABC. a 20.9,
r epresenting 14.9 million homes;
R StRR IS BORn
"Laverne & Shirley," ABC, 18.6, or
13.2 millloo; "Barney Miller,'' AB~.
18.2. or 12.96 million; "Happy Days, '
ABC, llU, 12.tS mllUon; "Dark Vi..,
tory " NBC'• Monday movie, 17.8, 1z. 1' mUUon ; "Faot••Y lsl•'1d,'"
ABC's Tueaday movie, 17.7. or 1
mllllan; ''Barnaby Jones," CBS,
"Fi ah," ABC, ~ach 17 .6, or U
mllllon. and "BJc Country," C
Friday movte, 11.2, or 12.2 million.
THE NEXT 10 shows were:
"Westside Medical,'' ABC; "Tb
Secret of Santa Vittoria." CBS:
"Hawaii Five-0," CBS; ''Baretta,''
ABC; "M.A.S.H." CBS; '"Wh at's.
Happening," ABC; "80 Minutes,";
CBS: "One Day at a Time,''. CBS;
"Quincy" NBC; and "Never Gave a
Inch,'' NBC's Saturday movie."
"Islands In
the Stream"
stReSAno
KR~ edwards MESA CINEMA STARRING
OEOROI! C. SCOTT
CLAIA! BLOOM
GILBERT ROLAND
HfWron IUO. AT anH ST.
COST;. MfS>. Mt-5025
(IN THEAT'ltl '1)
SYLVHTEA STALLONE
Pl.US {N) TALIA ~RE·
"Islands in
S the ,, treom
~HE KILLERWHALE!
The killer whale is one of the most
intelligent creatures in the universe. Incredibly,
he Is the only animal other tt'an man who kills
for revenge.
He has one mate, and If she is harmed
by man, he wilt hunt down that person with
a relentless, terrible vengeance-across seas,
ross time, atross all obstaoJes. --~~
. ..
.. OA.ILY OT W9dn!!d!y,Ju!y 13. 1977
City Tries to Get Girl's Goat PtJBUC NOTICE PVBUC NOTICE ,
NOTICS lllVITl"'O e1DS
NOTICE IS Hl!RE8V OIYEN ~I
lh• Soard or 1!1h1cat1on QI '"" ,..__._ Unilllod 5<1-1 DISlrlCI
04 0.a-C....iy wtll re<e•W ....... "'°' 111> to 1 t 00 • "' on,,.. 1'11> "' 04 J111v 1'11, ., ,.,. 011"• or •••cl~
Neighborhood Backa Teen in Her Fight to Keep Her Pet
ONCORD lAr> Youn& Michel• The Woods dec,ded not lo let c1ly hall
set their ioat llnd took the matter to
court. They circulated a peution around
the neltbborhood In 1rn attempt to
1hepberd aupport In the wooly battle.
on their .We. the Woods hope to resolve
the Plltfer befotot their nexl coUJ!l •P·
pearaoceJ.sa early August.
Oi\trlct, '°''"" •I llSI Plaunll• Sir.el. Co\la ~••. C•ll•~"la, •• •lllCll lllN Mid b<Cli will M puellcly baa • llttlt' 1oat with fleec:o u
Jte u •now Cit{. orflchalt have ln
twmtd her the 1oat a1aln1t lhe rult1.
Mlrbelt>, a ts year.old al\lmal lover, ''There isn't a law in lown that
restricts the f\WDber of dogs a fllJlliJY
can own," said Michele'• mother, Helg~ w~. "which means that some
people can own 20 Great Danes and
another tamUy can't eve.n own a goat -
it's diacriminatory."
-""trld....Slor
POOl..WPPLll!S
All bielt ar• lo lie In aceot...,nc• wllh
Con41lliOM. llhlructi...l. al'CI Spec ill<•·
llOllS wltlCI\ ere-... Ille In IN Olli<• ol IM P'\w<f\Klnq Director of wld Sc'-1 OIWltt, tlS7 Pl~la Slreel,
COStaMtM,Celli.mlatlllJ7.
Pl her purebttad Saaneo 1oat named
Kfema on her family'• q'*•rtof·ICN lot. recently rMel ved word trom the
Ctncord city attorney'• otflce that
&aUona ntq\dre a minimum of one.
Some ~ peoplo have slaned the pcU·
Uoo and Michele said Concord M ayoT
Richard LaPolnte has expressed his
bacldnl.
Wlth tbo m~ and the neighborhood
A P~ 9afld MP'I' be ,...
a11lredatlNdlKretloltof IM DIJ!rkt. No 8...,,,..., wlll'*_ 11 .. Bid fo< a
oeroocl of fOfty.flw ~ 101 ''"" -d•I• Ml for tN openl1>9 tlllreof. acre to r&iM Uveatock.
Chnrch Wome PUBUC NOTICE
"1CTITIOUS 9USINBSS
HAMllttAT•Mt!NT
TM folloWlllO ~ IS d0!"9 OUll-
Tll• 8Nrd ol l!ducelloo. of tM · N•wport-IMW IJnlllM ~ Dlftrkt
reMrnt Int' rlahl lo rtfecl any or au
lll<h •ncl flOI nKllSWrll'( a cCtl>( ll'tt
IOWMI Bid. encl 141 walw ..,Y lnlOf'mell-
ly or ltTeQUl.,ily In .,,Y Bid r•~lwd.
Daled July 12. 1•11
Nf WPOAT·MESA
UNIFllEOSCHOOL 01$TRICT
otOr-Counly, CalllOt'nl•
Doro!"" H.,-.y l'I~. CPM,
P\ir<n.~lnQ 0.-IOI'
r.1.111•1 ss.-neo
KTLA 0 8.00 -"Li'l Scratch." A
camper-photographer and his dog adopt
an orphaned grizzly bear cub 1n this
documentary from 1974 filmed in the
mountains or Wyoming and Montana.
CBS 8 9:00 -"Made for Each
Other." Renee Taylor and Joseph
Bologna star in their own script as two
urban misfits who meet on Christmas
Eve in this 1976 movie comedy.
Said 'Pushy' MSS llS: BRITE·WELO SALES, 1101 SMy PtrkC•rl<•. :::t•·D. lrvlne.CA921U
Publl~ 0r""9t C.,.sl Dally ~IOI
Ju"' 13.10, "11 ,...,,
Jeue R. Car'lfllt, 412 eo.~-. -
INltW. Qllfome'711• PUBUC NOTICE
This l>llS"-11conduclfd1>v -In '1-----------SALT LAKE CITY (AP> -CbW'ch leaden say c11t•ic1..a1. .-1CTmoose1111Nns
they organized Mormon women in 10 stat.es and the T"'' ;::.:.,~,"filed '"'"' ,,.. . H.t.Ma'.STATBNNT District of Columbia to auend Intenational coun1yo.noe0r,,.Cownt, .... J...,. ,,.::'::~1ow1ng119r-•er•c101..,11us1-
Women's Year conferences and vot.eto •11treag\ben H.mi. """' 111 COMITAS ASSOCIATES: m the family... . ~ltohed 0r-. CO.ti 0.11'( P1I04, IMAGE ASSOCIATE$, .. JI Antrim ""'-~ ........ ._ ..... wo--were.~-·-• ..._ ... .lulyll,l0,l7,trld~ll.1f71 Clrc .. MUfWl~0<\8eK".~'2 .. , •"" .UV.&UVU au..... ,.,_~ au -30lt.1I LucnC.Comi(M.M21AnlllmCW~
stat.es aft.er last weekend's conferences of t.akiQI ------------.... ~~:::.. <:;~ .... in"'
NBC I!) 9:30 -Comedy Time.
Magazine reporters Robert Foxworth
a nd Christine Bellord are competitive on
the job and friendly off it in this comedy
series pilot.
over the meettnas and rorcine throu&b reM>lutiou PUBUC NOTICE ccr .. M BH<i..CA.m.i, against abortion qd the Equal Rtghts Amendment. r1111 1>us1 " h c°"11uc'" •" ..
tioth ot which are opposed by the Church of Jesus 111:;.~::::~!1:,::s 11tfte••
1 :2~""
Christ ol Latter-day Saints (Mormon). """ toilowHog "9'110n b dol119 llllM-Thi ··-· w•• 111..i .... 1 .. -ness.as: County 0..11 of Or.,pe Coul\1"°" Jul"
M E& INVESfMENTS No. 70. 7, 1911. CHURCH. SPOKESMAN DON LeFevre ad· 1.,To •• 3723 ain:11 St.. :m, ,.. __ , , ,, .. 11 mitted that the Mormon women bad been sent to the BN<h. CAw660 . Published °'-coau Dally P1101. • MICl\MI E. B~. 31lJ Bln:h SI., July U,20.27.-AUQUlll, lt11 ~onfere.nces ~ut denied that lhe 3.8 IX)iUion·member .,u. Hewoorte..ach. cA ,,~ )(M,.11
'(TV DAILY LOG]
ch~ch was trying to orcbeiitrate tll.e me.etings. ~ rnis ow~s 1s ~uc1ec111y • lt,.,11.
"There is nothing. wrong with being or-M'~'1':1~':.'!;1 E'.e._ · ·ganized," he said. This st•t-nt was llled wl1~ Ill• t---F-l_CT_l_T-IOIJ_S_a_U-Sl_H_e_S_S __
"The first proph4?t and president of the church, Counrv Cl~•k ot °'""~Counly on Jun~ NAMI! STATEMENT
Joseph Smith, said it is our duty to concentrate.all 1'· 'q11• .. l'1eo12 .w!::\~oii .... 11>11""',....1' dOl"9 1>us1-
A,.w•..,...1• our influence to make popular that which is sound Pu1>1lshe0 Or•-co...i 0 ••1v Piiot. LAKev1ewRe,,.LrY,1s11Jc•110• Dad's D9•i/C]//j H~e ulylJ.10.21_.,.,A11911sU.••11 Rd IOJ ~ H llS C"' 9'.S3 ~ vr••• aridgoodandanp0pu1arthatwhlchiaunsound.Tbat ,...,,.,, ··;,•noa ::::1\'. i3~i Av .. 10. \
PUBUC NOTICE
(wEDNESDAYf
EVENING
6:00
D CD CCllJ CV> Q.ll News o lllJ oo CIGJ m News O Voya1e to tllt 8oltAHw of the Su
( & Gomer l'ylf o r3, ca CL> Mewi
0 GullSIDClle m ~1rtnd1e hm1ly
6) Ahn Smrth I Joftts m CbSSIC Country
26 Aztec Socur Cont'd from ~PM
Los Angetu Az1m vs. hmpa Bay
Rowdies m Elect11c Companr
fD Or1mahc Serles
Cl> Makins It Count
-6:30-
0 GLADIATOR EPIC * THE CBS 6:30 MOVIE fJ Mowle: (t) (90) "011111trlus
and Ille GbclialDl'S" (dra) ·~-Victor
Maturt, Susaa Hayward. M1chul Raan1e. rn m A11c1y Griffith
Oll MtlY Griffitt Show
((ll) (J)) My 11lfll Sons m Z00111
(121) (()) Bewittlled C3lJ (})News
£l) Man Builds, ..,ft Destroys
7:00
0) Emtrltf!CJ OM OfJ @Clle>fll>Ntws e Lian CluO •
()) My 11lt1' Solis CU To TeR Ille Trvtll O Conce11tr1tion m I l.fte l»cy
Q') n.. f1I
(11'7l (})) hlllily Att11r
fl} Korun u111111ce f'tocrJlllS
~ Ma101 Le1cue Bueball San
f nnC1Sco Giants vs San 01eeo
Padres fD MKlltil/lthrtl Report
(~I( e •) Partrid11 hl'lilr
Ot Crou·Wrts
Qi) Real utate I You
-7:30-
0 m Name That Tune O Love Ameriun Style m The Ocld Couple
fJ Mitch Game re• muoo Question
0 The Joker's Wild
C1.QJ Wild WO!ld of An1rqls m Bewitdltd ( l1l Q,) Pop Goes the Collfttry ol> ({) Celebrity s-P5b•es m Qunllll ZI TtmPt ( tt1 (()) 9fa4y lul!Ch
l)i Lian Ctull
£l) In llttclubech festJYal
1ecru1t Mignone is usin& a llairdryer is precisely wf&ilt the church and Its member:s bave •-----------TGP-<1"'9•.M1u1onv .. io.CA.<n61s
m the barracks in violation of the Mrs. G. Gordon Liddy and her son, Tom. been doiJl& in regards to the International Wo~~·· PUBUC NOTICE This bllllnfts 1, conc1uc1tc1 oy -i...
rules. he orden itconllsc.ated. 14, register their feelings .at their Yearmeetina ... " •-----------•c1'·"1-.a-...,1s fJ Cil ® (9 CJ)) Barett.a (R) M 1 d h aft 'vin th -F'IC'T1T10US9USllllS$ &rett.1huntsfotthek~1etofapolice ary an ome er recei g e news LE'rl'ERS WENT TO LEADERS of the -NAMHTATaMeNT c~~Y~_:·:Jr:.;::'.:c;:"J::;
ot11Uf s1to1 down byinc to stop a that their fa th er. mastermind .of the Mormon women'• auxiliary. the Relief Society. ID ~':°'_... --15 c1o1,.. ...,,._ r, 1m. "1156J :i::: •~117:,'ue:ut:"~ h ~,i;::,: Watergate break-in, will be paroled Sept. Utah, Alabama, Florida, Hawaii, Indiana, Kansas. ..,.:,::~~.!!ci~'~!1;:.~;.,':: Pub11s11ec1 0t•n~ c:o.st o.uy P .. 01.
planfltcl mwder. 7 after being in prison. Mississippi, Montana, New York, Washington and OetWs C>.i• Gr-. 1m VU11on Ju1v u,20.21. ":"' ~usil, 1m J020.11 m MelY Crilfitl Show the DistrictofColumb1a,LeFevresaid. ,, or .. Munl"'910ft81ra<h.CAm.ta ,, ...
• Tltls bUSlnes ls C»<tllUC.ted b'I' en 1n-t-----------m lifut remi-es • .. The states were those which had not already dlvld11t1. PUBLIC NOTICE Cl> In Perfonn&11Ct at Wolltrap held lWY meetings, which were held to choose de-0tmisO...c;r~m T • An ? 1 • :This~--was llltdwhh lhe i----:-:=-::".":~~:--~~--9:30-emus yone. egates to a Nation<>t Women's Conference lD CountrOerkCllOrangaco..ntyenJUIV f'ICTITIOOUUSINl!SS Ti H thi N be~ NAM4! STATEMENT D l21l CI> m Qfl Comedy 1111e oust.on s ovem r. r.1m. • .. · ~n• • ,~ tooow1ng __ 11 00!"9 ..., ...
Susan and S,m" Robtrt Forwor1h Utah's stale conference, held the last weekend PuDll-Ot-Clbst Delly Puoi, ne•u.:
and Ch11sllne Belford play a pair of LA Ma h Off d in June, was attended by 14,000 women who over· Juty u 20 21 -A'*' \1 •tn SUNDOWN seRv1ce ceNre11. reporte!l on a slick ma11az1ne-he's t · · · \." 302,.11 191'1 8PKh e1,,., •• Munllnotorl'9uc:h.
the top invest1ca11ve reporter and c ere whelmingly voted against abortloo, the ERA and CAttW
sjle's tile risin1 star-who are lovers all IWY activities. Local Mormon leaders were told PUBLIC NOTICE voidLn~"~ tcoe,.•tr, ma Mulberry.
1way hom the !Ob, af least unlll the before the meeting to send at least 10 women from TM llu5illff1 ls conouc1ee1 by an •n·
comoe111ion starts to iet tough. A trip to World Team Tennis ia being offered by each congregation. sAoOLuacK VAL.UY 01.1011~•
'""Mod ~-Uld the San Juan Capistrano recreation department NtF11oscH00Lo1sT111cr r~i· .';~1 !..~ 11,~ _,,~ ,~-...,, ..,.10:00 SOME WOMEN IN UTAH ALLEGE the " m>toi ... ~1... .. • ~··~·~· -·· -, .... ·-Thursday from 6:30p.m.to11:30. · . co.,,..1-; c1er• or Oran91couro1y o" Ju1v
0 9 Cll m Clll IUnistot1: The mat.ch wUJ feature Ille Nastase and the Los Mormon delegates voted according to dictates of .. ~.~~'19c.Cf::=.-,~~-" •· '"'·
"-·f c1 1· t 11· • · t Angeles a...i ..... s bat+u .... five Russian players. church leaders. Ti.. Sedctret1ee11 V•et•r un111ttd
...,,,,,
Published Or-Co.nl O•lly Pooot. """ I tn " inaston s IUOCla e, ...... U"6 ·W&l.06 Feminists in Wasbinttt--state complained of a Sc'-l District wlU e<.uCJt bids• lo: Tony Marino, rulizes that his life is For more information, phone 493-1171. &....... J:oo P.M.. Thuf'os0ar.J11iyn, 1m ., ine July U. :ZO, 21, -Auou.i J, •917 m .. 11 in danger aftt1 his aadelwm inns-"':::=========:::::.------------Mor moo takeover at their conference. Some Mon· e11'51 ... ss Service 0111c•. 25631 Oh•no
hptioo reveals that a rieht·wing. [. J tana leaders said Mormons jammed the meeting, orn1•.MM!Oftv1e~.c.i11om1atorttw•-----------
r11tist or11niz1tion ls pf1rrn1 for Pilot Candid commentaries, with leaders using walkie-talkies to tell people what 1urn~~~·HliLMETS PUBLIC ~OTlC& :ps.0 ..__ Logbook to do. Jn New York, similar efforts were less sue-Acooyoft11eblcl.111vl .... _,_... FICTITiouuusiNEss -...,... ful and ""RA d borti l l t 1a11._ t-lllef wit!>• tull -ric>l10f'. lll Movie: 'C> "llH RONld" (dra) cess prt)-.r. an pro-a oo s a emen s U>Klfkal1ontenc1utae.-ntot_,.,.-.,AMUTAHMa"T
'74-IUm Hunter. SaJtt JICO!Jy. exclusively In the • were approved. ' 1~~""u.1>to,,,...,i.M<u•H ,,.!.":,'°'1ow1na PHtan '' Oo"'v lllnl-a ~~(~(I)) ~~~ .-~--------------------------------------~~--~~~~~~~~~ KEN'SAUTOSALE~ff»t ~ "Aniet Traci" (R) Sabrioa . SADOLEllACK VAUEY ~~~ -81od •• GM-. Grow.
poses IS Ille llistrts:s of ont of UNll'IEDSCHOOLDISTRICT IC•ivwlh MU I\"" W""'9ie.. ~~
Charlie's dttnts 9'lo WMS ht i> ~::Z':~~tN MIH>tl"!llon8Ncf-.CA.m47
tht "'" ¥idim cf an assassin who PubllSIWd o--. Cotst o.tly Pltoe, T11•1 111n1ntn '' <OfldUC1td w ... .,.. !mtlfudy l.IUll the IMsof sefttll July ll, lO, "1'J dlvodu•l~-ttoH°""
fonMr ntllllt COllllllde$. 301 .. n This •la..,_,t wn flied wltft '"" :::-Mr ALPHA BEii .~BUCSOTICE ;.~~~c...-ui0r-.c.ouncyonJuty -10:30-~" m m m 11ews Pllt>llVled 0r-coa,, o.11y Pl•or...
fll»oPiccMillyo~1.r. ~,._ J.,r.u.10.21.--usu,1t111022.,,
WV VI _,_.., PUBUC SOTICE 0 (31 (I)) lM Anlerlu" Style
IJ CI> @ (I) lhws
0 lrOllSidt m Look Out MtrY, Mih * And Johnny! Hetere 's
"fERNWOOD 2NIGHT" m rerrrwooc1 2"1ctit
Q') Matt111 Welby
(.11) (})) n.. blldl Show
12'J M That Glitters m OrllMlc Serles
~ lbdfeil/ltllm Report
-11:30-
0 c@ CIJ> ()) cas utt MoM: ~ Cotu•bt "The Most Crucial Game" -o @ rn m ®W.... Cn111 (]) Mlwle: ~ .. Dlll(tt"
(dta) '43-'-.. lt!ft Petet Lorre.
8 Cl) <II (QI Cl)) Roellti/ :la*"...:!: ...
iHl n.-700 QM
12:00 • Twilitftt z-
• Iii MfM: (Cl "T1lt "" " 0.-... (wtS) 'SS-Jolin W~yne.
... MM: "Olt " .. Ft(' (clla) '38-tc!a Lupino, Thomas Mittlleff. m ..... an "litlit fmt" <m>
'SI-Mm StMllS. botlcla fleniin&. m~:i,:""'""'
OOnpet
1:00 D D~QIT..-~ D ~UI t siw,:· .. U11faltlilul Witt," • hl.Wblt Wo11~a,"
"Whit Ille Wier Sn" -..1:JO-
.., ,.... "l\e s., " Mtllf r
("'1) '50-Ju11t Ha*• Jolin Russell.
t 2~ ..... .......,..,,,.: "81ttlt
F: .. ~ ...... ----= ., . ., A Mall -·~ • , -2:05.:= e-.: "Ill'"-..,. (drl) ••l-~ .....,., Ale.-Smftll.
COSTA MESA
17th ST. at ORANGE
~ SU,.ERIORCOUltTOflTlll~
STATE Of' CALIFORNIA FOlt
THECOUNTYOFORANG£
NO. A·Ml1
..
Keeping Up ·With Jones?
Know Your Fiber Facts
a1 BA&Mli GJVS.llOWl!N
... 0.lly,,.... ......
Jeanne J~ hu • cate for fiber. Juat
like I.he baa a cue tor heaJth a.ad lonsevJty,
~•c• ol mind and body throuah COOfC1ous eaUn1.
Sbo could be, for some, the Julia Child or
hHhh food 1ourmet11, and her three
cookbook&, "The CalculaUne Cook," ''Diet
for a Happy Heart" and ·• Fabuloua Fiber"
seem to remind its readers that their cause
celebre is, as she puts at. "simply a matter
of toowll\& the nutrient values ol foodA."
Hence. abe has included m aU the books a
breakdown in termi. of caloric values for all
known natural foods - a handy kitchen
iuide, lndeed.
In her latest book, "Fabulous Fiber,"
Ms. Jones extols the benefits of an ade·
quate, fiber-rich diet that would include,
for the average eater, some ~even to lS
grams ol fiber a day.
She aJso includes in her list of foods and
caloric equivalents, a breakdown of the
fiber grams they contain; and a seven-day
diet of fiber·filled menus, allowing no more
than 1,000 calories a day. (It works, she
says.)
Born Jean Castendyck in Newport Beach
-40 years ago, she admits but doesn't
show -Ms. Jones says her interest in
dietary fiber grew out of awareness that she
never seemed to feel "deprived" in order to
keep her weight at a happy minimum.
"When I was growing up. my family had
a fabulous cook who fi xed meals on our boat
in the summer and at home In the winter. I
grew up on elegant. dining, ate a lot of
natural foods, lots or vegetables and
homemade, whole-grain breads, cereals
and salads, then later cooked a lot of them
myself."
FIBER, she explains, is a shorthand
term for a family of complex chemical sub-
stances known as polymers, which include
cellulose and non-cellulosic polysac-
charides.
"Fiber acts as a tough, natural protedion
against obesity m its ability to speed the
transit lime of food waste in the body," Ms.
Jones says.
Since it cannot be digested by human
digestive 1u1ces. fiber accumulates as
"roughage" or .. bulk" or what she calls
"softage," swelling with Liquids and waste
products as they travel through the in-
testine unlit dispelled through the colon.
"People don't like to talk about anything
that relates to bathroom habits, yet then
they spend millions of dollars a year on lax-
atives," says Ms. Jones. "A flber-ric.h diet
is really all they need, and that means a
common·sense dlet, no drastic changes in
lifestyle or gimmicks."
Like anyone who has successfully made a
transition from processed to natural foods
can attest, she says, "There is a certain
transition time for the body to acclimate to
' taste and texture. Then, after a while, icky
white bread and overcooked vegetables
become repulsive."
Still, Ms. Jones says she's amazed by the
numbers of shoppers who seek out refined
foods in preference lo those with greater
high fiber content.
"Everyone had a high-fiber diet until 1870
when the roller mill was invented," she
. said. "Only recently have doctors and
nutritionists finally got their heads together
in attnbuting the causes or such diseases as
colitis and gallstones to an overconsump-
tion of refined sugars and cereals."
WHEAT BRAN, which forms the outer
shell of the wheat berry of the grain, is one
of the richest known sources or fiber and is
u.1ed widely In recipes throughout her book.
The wheal aenn, she explains, contains llt·
Ue fiber, but la considered hardy. for lta
n~trlent value <It also contains fat); the
atuff around lt, from whJch flour is bulled,
sbe says, la "worthless."
She draws an example: A breakfast or
two three-inch pancakes made from white
flour or commercial pancake mix provides
a trace of fiber. Pancakes made from a re-
cipe she bas devised for "Gingerbread Pan-
cakes" uses whole wheat flour and provides
1.4 grams of fiber in a comparable serving.
An added bonus, she says: "Wbatever's
left over from breakfast can double as
cookies for lunch. You get inatantsnacks in·
stead of wasted batter." (Tbe recipe is
given below.)
But Ms. Jones takes her case beyond
breakfast. While a half.cup or unprocessed
wheat bran (sold as miller's bran) contains
3.2 grams or fiber, she says a person should
also become familiar with other foods that
provide fiber and slack off the relined foods
that don't.
In "Fabulous Fiber," she shows bow
bran can be used in making sauces and
gravies, delicate pie crusts -even salad
dressings.
"THE ADVANTAGE of using bran in
salad dressings is that raw bran acts much
in the same way as croutons do. It absorbs
the flavor, so it takes much less dressing lo
flavor a salad and dieters can cut way
back," she said.
A few years back, Ms. Jones was
diagnosed wilb a diabetic condition, and
was placed on a restricted diet. "It didn't
take me long to learn that a diabetic diet is
nothing more than a perfectly balanced
diet," she says.
The recipes she devised in order for her
to continue to entertain in a gourmet style
became the basis for her flrst cookbook,
"The Calculating Cook," which was
published in 1972.
A new. revised edition of the book Is
scheduled to be released later this year, she
says, and will include recipes revised ac·
cordlng to the American Diabetes Associa-
tion's new dietary exchange list, and
eliminates all uses of sugar substitutes.
··instead of sugar or saccharin, I use
fructose. which is sw~eter than sugar. so
dieters get an automatic caloric reduction
because they use less."
THERE IS NO LOSS in the quality of the
food she said, adding that fructose ac-
tivates yeast and contributes to the texture
of baked goods just as refined sugars do.
In Fabulous Fiber, the majority of re-
cipes that call for sweetening use date
"sugar," a form of fructose combined with
pulverized dried dat.ea.
• 'Tbe reason I use date sugar is that it
contains half a gram of fiber per tables·
poon," she said. ''You could use fructose or
anything else, i( you wanted, but you
wouldn't get the benefits of fiber."
At the present time, fructose and date
sugar can be purchased in health food
stores, however. Ms. Jones predicts, that
with the banning of saccharin, fructose will
soon become available in supermarkets.
•
ITAUAN FIBER DR~ING
l 1h teaspoons salt
l/.a cup red wine vinegar
14 cup dry red wine
1h teaspoon date sugar
lh teaspoon oregano
·~ teaspoon sweet basil
1.4 teaspoon tarragon
~ teaspoon dry mus ta rd
14 teaspoon black pepper
J
% teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
1 garlic bud, cnll5bed
~ cup u.op~essed wheat bran
'h cup corn oil
Dissolve salt in the vinegar and red wine.
Add aU other ingredients, except com oil,
and mix well, then slowly stir in the oil.
Pour in a jar wllh a tight-fitting lid and
shake vigorously for a full minute. Store
tightly covered in the refrigerator.
Makes llh cups; 2 tablespoons contain .2
grams of fiber and 96 calories.
GINGERBREAD PANCAKES
1 cup strong brewed coffee (or use 2
teaspoons instant decaffeinated coffee and
1 cup hot water)
~ cup date sugar
1 cup whole wheat flour
~ teaspoon baking soda
~ teaspoon-around ginger
·in tea.spoon ground cinnamon
14 teaspoon salt
'A teaspoon ground cloves
1 egg, beaten
4 tablespoons butter or margarine,
melted
• Combine coffee and l1ate sugar and allow
to stand for 10 minutes. Combine flour. bak·
ing soda, ginger, cinnamon, salt and cloves
in a large mixing bowl. In another bowl.
combine t~e beaten egg, melted butter or
margarine and coffee-dale sugar mixture.
Add the liquid ingredients to the dry in-
gredients and mix just enough to moisten
all dry ingredients. Batter should remain
lumpy. Drop by spoonfuls onto a hot
greased griddle or skillet. Cook until the top
of each pancake is covered with tiny bub·
bles and the bubbles begin to break. mak-
ing little holes all over the top of the pan-
cake. Turn pancakes and brown on the other side.
Makes 12 pancakes, each containing .7
grams of fiber and approximately 125
calories.
PIZZA CHICKEN
2 cups tomato juice
2 tablespoons red wine vinegar
1~ cup unprocessed wheat bran
1.4 teaspoon salt
1 medium onion. thinly sliced
1 teaspoon oregano
4 whole chicken breasts, boned, halved,
skinned and all visible fat removed
l tablespoon butter or margarine
Salt
Ground black pepper
1h cup chicken stock
l cup grated mozzarella cheese
Put the tomato juice in a large saucepan.
Add the vinegar, bran, salt and onion and
mix thoroughly. Bring the mixture to a boil
and reduce the beat. Simmer uncovered for
1 hour. Add the oregano and continu~ to
simmer uncovered for 30 minutes.
Preheat the oven to 400'. Put the chicken
breasts In a baking dish large enough not lo
overlap them. Rub a little butter or corn oil
margarine evenly on each piece of chicken.
then sprinkle salt and freshly ground black
pepper over the tops. Pour the chicken
stock in the baking dish. Cover the dish
lightly with a lid or aluminum foil and
place it in the preheated oven for 20 minutes.
Remove the chicken from the oven and
pour off the liquid. Spread the tomato sauce
evenly over the chicken and place it back an
the oven. uncovered, for 10 m inutes.
Remove from the oven and sprinkle the
grated cheese evenly over the chicken.
Place it under the broiler until the cheese is
melted and lightly browned.
Makes 8 servings, each containing ap-
proximately .6 grams of fiber and 293
calories.
In her latest cookbook, fiber fan
Jeanne Jones of La Jolla, formerly of
Newport Beach, shows how gourmet cooks
can replace refined products with wheat
· bran and other whole-grain foods in making
soups, sauces, even salad dressings.
..
BARBARA Glus.BOWE.N, Food Editor
Wednesday, July 13, 1977 Ct
Papayas: Sweet Luxury Anyone who has ever cut a calorie knows
what bliss it ls to find something that tastes lux-
urious, velvety smooth and sweet, with a mere 78
calories for a good 7 ·ounce half papaya.
This same size serving also provides 3,500
units of vitamin A, 112 milligrams of vitamin C,
468 Dillligrams of potassium and is an excellent
plant source of calcium.
enough dressing to moisten. Season to taste with
salt and pepper.
Carefully cut each pa paya half lengthwise
into 2 flat slices (not quarters). For each salad,
arrange 2 papaya slices side by side on salad
greens. Put a scoop of chicken salad on one of the
slices. Top the other with cheese cubes. Garnish
with egg slices. Serve chilled with remaining
Louis dressing. Makes 4 salads. While all these nutrients are necessary in the
day-to-day scheme of things. the papaya also of·
fers in rich abundance something that many
foods do not -fiber. One-half provides about l .S
grams.
Papayas can be served hot or cold, although
most people prefer them cold, sliced or halved
and aerved with a squirt or lime Juice to bring out
their natural sweet flavor.
' PAPAYA·CHEESE SALADPLATE
2papayaa '
1 pint cottage cheese
1 tablesi>oon chopped green onion
~ teupoon dill weed
~cup o~ge juice
2 tablespool'\5 oll
2 tablespoons vinegar
1 teaspoon papaya seeds
1 teaspoon prepared mustard
in tea.spoon sugar
lceberc lettuce leaves
Small rolls of ham (optional >
Cut papayas In halves; ~J and remove
. seed.a, saving 1 teaapoon seeds. Mlx cottage
cheese wltb onion and dut weed.
COmblne oranae juice, oU, vinegar, 1 teas·
poon pa~ya seeds, mustard and su1ar In
blender jar. Blend unW seeds are finely chopped
(Of ~rush aeeda finely in mortar with pesUe and .ur irttb oranae juice mixture).
Place papaya half on each of 4 let.toce-
carnllhed salad plates. Heap center With ~ cup
cotta1e cheese mixture. Garnlth each servine
wtth 1maJ1 roll1 of tbln-sllced cooked barn or
other luncheon meat, If d~lred. Serve with
dre11tna. Makes 4 servtn11.
CHICKEN PAPAYA LOUIS
2 CUJ>t cooked, chopped chicken meat
11, ~up finely chopped celery
'fl c@1eed.lea11rapu
IAuiJ Dl'esalng
Salt and pepper
I H.awaJlan papayas, halved and seeded
Romaine lettuce ~cup cubed mUd cheese
1 bard Cooked et1. aliced
Jn bOwl, mix cblCkea, CeletJ and arapes -.Ith •
Louis DresalDc:
Blend 1 cup mayonnaise with If.I cup chili
sauce, I teaspoon Worcestershire sauce, 1 tables-
poon lemon juice and .,. lea.spoon each salt and
pepper. <Makes aboutl If.I cups.> -..
GINGERED HA WADA.N SALAD
lfoApaya, cut in half and seeded
orange, peeled, sectioned, de-
membranec:t .
l cu*> fresh diced pineapple (or 1 small can
pineapple chunks)
1 teaspoon grated Ume peel
1 teaspoon lime juice
14 cup sour cream
1 teaspoon confectioners sugar
1 tablespoon minced preserved ginger
Place papaya halves on to plates. Fill
cavities With orange sections and pineapple
chunks, using all the fnUt. Mix together sour
cream. linse juice, lime rind, sugar and pre-
served gi.ocer, Top each papaya half wttb sauce
and serveimmedJately. Maka 2servtn,s •
CUJt&Y·FILIJED PAPAYA
1,rbolepapaya, cutinbaltandseeded
1 CQpMedles1 irapes
1 cup cooked chlcken
1A cup cbopped celery
\i~walnuts • .a ta mayonnaise
lttt116pooft lllde Juice ~ teatpoon curry powder
1 teupootl dehydrated onion Oakes
2tabl•pc>olM chutney
Salt .and pepf.cr to taste
In &mall -bow , combine chicle n, cut into :.-
blte-siie pieces, •raPtt, celery, and walnuts.
Mix to'elher mayonnaise, llm• juice, curxy powder. onfQD fi&kes and toa With chicken mix·
tu re to bind. AdJu•l acasonln~ wkb ult atid J>tl>-per. ,
FW 1>11e-Y• ca'1tl• wttll tltbl rmX\ttrt ud .. Ht In aaalloW baiting dfi ~:J IUc Olf ~e "
bOtt.omClletl<!b toa9ofd w ...... ;)N•MIUdth -: a~ ot c1Uae.ne,.1w ·11D iillilit= ! .. dee. P. or wUl c.bldt• *WJ• Ii ... -· Serv•Z.
g DAILY PILOI WednHd•r. Juty 13, 1977'
When in India,
Feast 'ti I Noon
By TOM HOGE .,, ........ \W ... ,...,
1 Wan Ind.Jan brealtlut ~ othcr d.ay, il 1ou can call a ala<OUrM banquet breaklut.
T'9 mu1 wu prepared for mo by ~ Kapotra. ..ta• ebef ll'om lhe AJllan aubcoaUnent, boura before be
beau Ida ca:r coollln1 al New York'• Raia Reateur"1t.
ltlpoCra bu been chef In many kitchen.a over tbe paat ~decildea. tncludln1 tho JndJan Pavlllon at the l9M New
Yon World'• YaJ.r and Canada'• Expo '47. He tiu p::garect
dellcacl• for Indira Gandhi, Jacqueline Ooaaai.I Brt-
taln'• Prtnceu Mar1arel.
Kia love of 1ood food amounts to a passion and the
dlabes be described made me realize that moat Americans
know very lilUe about India's cullilne, except for the curry
and rice.
Of coune, moat Indian. .. do not start their day with any
such lavish fare, but l was I.old a surprising number of the
more atnuenl fo. ln fact, some morning meals whipped up in
thebeydayoflberajahsfealured30ormoredlsbes.
Centerpiece of my breakfast was akuri, a mixture of
scrambled eus. earlic, gmger and other spices. This was
accompanied by Alu Bbaji, which consisted ot potato bits
swimming in liquid curry with tomato and onion slices.
Tbe UWe room waa left on my plate for Channa Bindi, a
rich mixture of clUck peas, turmeric and other herbs. All
three dishes had a distinct curry flavor.
Indians accompany this rib-sticking meal with two
kinds ol bread -Bhatu, an inflated globe of thin cru.sl and
fiat d1sU of Aloo Pratha.
When I fmlshed, Kapotra served me portions of picllled
apple and carrot topped with a dollop of yogurt. Then came
a serving of pickled chicken bits plus more spiced carrots.
If you are sUll able to eat alter this, an Indian host will
probably ply you with a multicolored assortment of sweets
with a heavy accent on shredded coconut.
The food is usually washed down with milk or but-
termilk Indians are great tea drinkers, but don't start on it till midmorning.
lobtained this recipe for Akun from Chef Kapotra.
Ori.ion, minced, 6 ounces
Tomatoes, diced, 6 ounces
Ginger, chopped, 1.5 ounces
.Glll'llc. minced. (1 clove)
Green pepper. chopped (~cup)
Butter, 3 ounces
Cumin seeds, ¥.a teaspoon
12eggs.
Paprika to taste
Sall to taste
Black pepper to taste
Heavy cream, 2 tablespoons
Fresh coriander, a few sprigs, chopped
Chop finely the onion, tomatoes, ginger, garlic and
green pepper. Melt butter in frying pan, add cumin seeds
and saute first 5 ingredients. ·
Beat eggs Wlth paprika, salt and pepper-and cream and
set asid«:. When vegetables are light brown afler being
saut~cd in the butter, add beaten eggs and whisk over
medium heat ltll lhey are scrambled. Garnish with chopped
coriander and serve. Serve:; 6.
I/
Fresh plum halves perk up morning muffins.
GfiUMBLE FUMBLES
Plums Are
Bun-derful !
Down with the qiorning grumblles. Up with sweet starts, like
this one, made in a jiffy with the help of nature•s plums and
refrigerated bl!cult dou1b.
~-BREAKF"8TPLt1MBUNS r;~ ,..... 8 Cresb plums, halved and pitted
1 ~ ~cup brown su1ar
l package (11 ounces) quick cinnamon
Dan.lab rolls or plain cinnamon rolls
~ eup sour cream
• Preheat oven to f90 degrees. Toss plums with brown sugar. Setulde.
• . Place roua on areued cookie sheet. 2 inches apart. Pat out
each roll to a 3-incb round, kees>inl edge thick and forming
depreaicn in center. Spread a tables}ioon of sour cream in each.
PJace 2 plum halves to1ether and Ht Into depression. Bate 10 ·
minutes. Serve at.once. with additional sour cream. Alates 8
.. plum bum. ~ ·
, . 'lt'I a &aCtt UM• bll tun ol fresh. snety pulpy fnrlt to
lnUe lt. Bene after dlnner or u tlm course for Sun4a1 brunch.
.. Pass tbelOWeream.
• nU11PU11180VP 3\t cops dJc.cS ftellb plums••
Iqua.rt. water
lcupaupr -"' ~ teupoon lrl'•ted lemon rind Wiler~ ""'lJ'Olll cornata.rd Cblencted .tth 2 tablesPoOU cold
l>Mb11lt
Iri • *•• aaucepan brtni to boil the J)lum1, water, supt' ana ~ lemon flad; Ollllt ...Ul lruit ii IClft uMl •uaar 11 diaol~ StralD ~•lllillH s blftveotcbeeHtlotb. . , ...... ,...to ••ucepaa ud 1Ur in comatarch ml1ture and • 8* 8lrrtnl ~. brln& a&aln to.a boll Ud boll 2 minutee. QUJ.11.iUi•~• "' I -
,.
RECYCLING CHEESE
._,,
'f.\ ·};
'· ~
,.
Look for a Whey With Wine
.
Af'Wl,..llllOM
Technician at Foremost-McKesson lab
in Dublin checks·three stages of whey wine.
By JORN C. EAGAN
DUBLIN (AP) -It won't win
any blue ribbons in judging
against fine vintages, but fruit-
flavored whey wine compares
favorably with the ''pop wines"
that are growtni in ~pularity.
And that's good news for
dairies across America which in
July will be banned from usinlt
sewers to dispose Of.)16 millio~\ gallons of liqui9 whey, the
high.protein res idue from
cheese·makiog.
In large dairies, about half of
the whey in America's cheese
industry is already converted to
a dry powder which is valuable
as a nutrltlonal additive to many
food products, raniing from
bread to ice cream.
The ban on disposing of the
balance in sewers is being
lmpo1ed by the U.S.
Environmental Protection
Agency because whey overloads
sewage treatment plants. To help
dairies. the EPA bas financed
research on turning the problem.
into profit by making whey wine
cheaply and easily.
Dairies can use ordinary plant
equipment to tu1111 some of their
whey into wine, says Gaylord M.
Palmer, head of the EPA
research project being conducted
at the Foremost ·Mc Kesson
Research and Development
Center in this Oak.land suburb.
Palmer said the work is
incomplete. but it appears
certain whey wine could compete
successfully with pop wines.
Dairies could use the profits to
help pay for pmper disposal ot
their unused wbey, be added.
Whey wine production
remained a laboratory curiosity
unUI EPA-financed research at
Oregon Stale ·University
indicated on a small scale that lt.
could be made with equipment
common ln the cheese industry.
The $113,458, two-year
research project here, begun in
the fall or 1975, is aimed at.
proving the concept on a
production scale that wouta
.apply at an actual dairy plant.
Palmer said he expects the
project will be completed and the
results published by next?.~~· when the details will be av · e to any dairy.
Meantime, the berry.navared
wine Foremost bas developed
will be tested on several hundred
people, to see bow .they Ute It
compared to Annie Green
Springs Berry Frost, a similar
product that is already one ot the
top seven selling pop wines.
Like other pop wines, whey
wine will have 8 to 9 percent
alcohol, well below the alcoholic .
content of grape wines.
The only additional equipment
a cheese plant will need to make
whey wine is a special filtration
device and an ion exchange or
e lec trodyalisis device for
removing some of the whey salt
to improve taste.
savexoe
and experience
the incredible
C ssen pickle ~ M .\
~ Ab'.-. ~ i : ( f 11
-. . •• . '\ ·~. ( 1.t" ._<.. ' t ~~~ ..
( ( ~ Dr. Q.Cam1'as Clauaaen's Conclusive Crunch
Measurement Macblae) Many pickles make claims about
crunch. But a claim is not the same as a fact. And the fact is: when
put to the conclusive crunch meter. ordinary pickles.plainly fail to measure up.
Jndeed, most pickles are simply squishy. A few pickles · _
are quietly crunchy. But only one pickle has the quintes·
sent crunch-the Claussen pickle crunch.
Because it's the on:ty pickle kept in
Claussen's completely clear brine. In
the continuously cold refrigerated sec·
tion. In your favorite grocery store. In
other words, to get the
Claussen pickle crunch,
you've got to get the
Claussen pickle.
You'll love'em
o~ce >"OU find 'em.
. -:· . • .
I . ' ..
l ;.
•
Treats Take
To the Trail
No IOOnl'.r than they'r('
homl' frorn 1chool. tho 'youna onca arc oH to
aummneamp.
W h tb•r bound for
lenWf:by mountain-darin1
trek• « 1lmply da~ In the wUderneu, th~y wl 11
appret'iate op•n1n91 •
home-stocked lunt·h or care package filled with
Cananas (banana-chip
bretd baked In small
cano and "Hi There"
Cookies, complcto with
smiles.
Remember, whe n
baking, tbe riper the
fruit the sweeter the
finished product!
CANAN AS
Bako in 375 dearees F.
oven 25 to 30 minute•. or
until cllk~ te11ter Inserted
tn center of cakea comes
out clun. Cool JO
m1nute1, remove from
cant or muffin cups and
cool completl'IY on
cooling racka. Yield : 10
can cakes or US muffins. ·
••m THEil£'' COOKIES
Y.t cup soft butter or
mar1arlne
1 cup packed Ugbt
brown sugar
leH
1 ~ cups mashed ripe
bananas (4 medium
bananas)
1 cup whole wheat
flour ~:t cup :,oft bulll'r or I cup uncooked oats,
.margarine · quick or regular
. 'a tea sµ o on ~Hea.spoonsalt
cinnamon . •2 teaspoon
J,4 tea.spoon ginger cinnamon
1 egg . 11. teaspoon nutmeg
1 ~ cups sifted all-1 banana, sliced
purpose flour ~ cup raisins
3 teaspoons baking Jn a large bowl cream powder b ·
112 teaspoon salt utter. and brown suga.r. H~ cups mashed ripe Beat m egg. Blend JO
. bananas (ab o u l 4
m ed1um bananas)
1 package (6 ounces>
semi-sweet chocolate
pieces 'z cup chopped
walnuts
In a large bowl cream
butter, sugar. cinnamon
and ginger until tight and
fluffy. Beat in egg. Mix
flour, baking powder,
and salt;-blend in
alternately with
bananas. Stir in
chocolate pieces and
nuts. Half fill 10 greased
6-ounce juice cans or 18
greased 2-inch muffin
cups.
What's
In It?
WASHINGTON CAP)
-The Agriculture
Department is requiring
more detailed and des·
criptive labels on food it
buys for programs such
as school lunches, and of·
ficials say they hope the
move will help other
consumers as well.
Assistant Agriculture
Secretary Carol Tucker
Foreman announced, ·•we are taking this lead
because consumers have
told us they want more
than simply a list of
ingredients by order of
importance. They also
need to know how much
of each ingredient is in
the product and why ad,
ditives ar e present,··
said Ms. Foreman, a
former director of the
Consumer Federation of
America.
The new rules specify
ingredients, tell how
much of each is present
and explain why ad-
ditives are included.
As an example, Ms.
Foreman said the dep-
artment will shortly be
purchasing turkey rolls
for the school lunch
program. An acceptable
sample list of
ingredients would read:
turkey, more than 94
percent; water, less than
2.6 percent, dissolved
added ingredients: soy
protein concentrate or
isolated soy protein, less
than 2.5 percent, binder;
iodized salt, less than 1
percent, flavor; sodium
phosphate, less than 0.5
percent, to retain juices
and soluble nutrients:
p epper, less than 0.3.
percent flavor.
·~
Happy faces greet hungry hikers.
bananas, flour, oats.
salt, cinnamon and
nutmeg. Drop by
rounded tablespoons
onto a greased baking
sheet and spread with
the back of spoon into 2-
to 2112-inch circles. l·incb
apart.
Cut banana slices in
half and arrange with
raisins to make a face on
each cookie. Make
eyebrows, nose aod
mouth with halved
banana slices and tise
raisins for eyea. Bake in
375 degrees F. oven lS to
20 minutes. Yield: 2
dozen .
Wedneeday, July 13, 1977 DAILY PILOT Cl
'New' Crustaceans
Your Future? Krill • In
By SWRLEY CHRISTIAN
SANTIAGO, ChHe (J\P) -There is probably
some krill in your future.
Thetln,y Antarctic crustacean, now on sale in
Santiago supermarkets' as f>readed krill sticks, is
supposed to be good for your health and
pocketbook and plentiful enougb to feed much of
the world.
Chile's Institute of Fishing Promotion dev·
eloped krill sticks, which are packaged similarly
to fish sticks in the United States, and launched a
six-month tryout on the Chilean public last May.
Assuming krill is a hit at the dinner table, the
institute plans to find a private company to
market krill products around the world.
Besides krill sticks., tbe institute says it bas
invented krill soup, krill cheese, krill pudding,
krill pate, krill salami and more. Krill flavor is
usually compared to shrimp and some other
local shellfish.
The Soviet Union and Japan have also been
fishing the Antarctic waters for krill and selling
it to the public as paste. •
But Roberto Cabezas, director of planning
for the fishing institute, says Chile is the first
country to dexetop commercial products ready
to put in the skillet or on the plate without mixing
them with other thlngs.
Three tons of krill sticks -12,000 boxes -
were put t>n sale in the stores of one chain on the
first day of the trying. They sold out in less than
two hours. The institute says there will be a new
supply tbe 15th of each month.
The sticks are breaded, precooked and
frozen. The instructions say to fry them in a little
cooking oil for three mlnutes.
A box or 10 krill sticks. weighing slightly
more than half a pound, sells for about 80 U.S.
cents.
Cabezas said the institute is still studying the
price factor but that any change will be slight.
The price outside Chile would also be affected by
transportation costs and any tariffs.
A krill is basically a tall about 111.t to 21/ll
inches loog. It is an off-white color and has two
black eyes. Many krill. eyes and all. go into one
stick. Krill was the principal food of whales until
m·an nearly wiped out whales. causing an
abundance of krill~ The largest known mass of
krill extends from the southern tip of South
America east to the tip of Africa.
Chilean fishing officials say it is possible to
harvest 200 million tons of krill a year without
causing ecological damage. By comparison, they
say all of the world's fishing fleets now talce a
total of only 70 million tons' of fish and seafood
from the oceans annually.
For this reason, a number of international
studies have concluded that krill is the "food of
the future."
The studies say krill bas a protein content as
good as or better than any meat or fish, that it
contains all the essential amino·acids, and that
the two black eyes are pure vitamin A.
•
When you make a hamburger, do you think about the bun? Or is it just a
device to hold the whole thing together? The Roman Meal Company thinks
that the bun should add a taste and. texture all its own. Roman Meal
Hamburger Buns are made from a unique blend of natural whole
grains that are combined with other nutritious Ingredients tlke en-
. r
riched flour and pure golden honey. light brown In color with
the delicious taste of Roman Meal's natural whole grain good-
ness9. Once you try Roman Meal Hamburger Buns, you'll
see why we say they make more of hamburgers.
aakedby.~eberS
I
I
y I
..
. . -
Cf DAILY PllOT
_Wednesday. July 13, 101: \
LIQUID
PUREX
BLEACH
.. h/~-~ Gallon
/( _ ~~ Bottle . .
un re . so e ' ~ Yes, hundreds of ~
ecla S speclals ... plus
THOUSANDS OF
• ""EVERYDAY LOW PRICES!,.
. ~VePyday.~. )JOU. 'II find
•undPedsof SPECIALS
11/Z-lb.
Loaves
LISTERINE
Includes Mouthwash
at Safeway!
He,.e aPe just a few!
Yes! Something big is always
happening at Safeway. We can
only show you a few of the
special price reductions in our
ads, but there are hundreds
more in the store. Bright red or
yellow Safeway Special arrows
flag attention throughout the
store. Look for them!
ALL SAFEWAY STORES
OPEN 8 A.M •.
MON. THRU SAT.
For Your Shopping Convenience
LARGE 'AA' EGGS
LIMITED TIME SPECIALS
EDWARD'S COFFEE
limited time speclaJ1 are our feature
Items reduced from our regular prtoes for
not more than a week. Some are adver-
tised-some aro unadvertised In-store
reductions.
SUPER SAVER SPECIALS ·
Super Saver Specials are savings we can
offer because of manufacturers
allowances, discounts or spoclal
purchases. Those nnluctton1 tram our
regular prices are In effect for three to
six weeks. Some aro advertlsed-hun· dreds aro not.
c
· --· Bottle "Fresh" Carton Can
3oe Off \ o-;;:~-. 32-oz.$14 9 Lucerne 1-dozen 6 6 (: ~:rim ·~ .Hb$319
• l 'Zl~~~ Deodorant· Arm 8-oz. ggc :.· Liquor op pecial . B•...:AL Bounce Fabric C:_J'!!!~~f' In Arm Can ;;~_;,, GIN or Eff;·;~~~~ce~; Safew$ays6 7 9 C::. v Softener
Pkg. s1sa.
of 40 :
~ Ch .. '(i\' so Proof M . ~, eer1os "J:::r 1~:~· 79c ,~ . VODKA . v 1.'15-l1111r .. ayonna1se Piedmont 32-oz.79c Jar
.Spar:klin_g Safeway Produce
/~'" "€?_~. PEACHES
Natural
With
Ham.
Dellclousl
c
ZACKY FARMS, FRESH
CALIFORNIA GROWN
FRYERS
USDA Grade A
Fryer, Whole Body.
Hear that Sizzle!
Sniff that Aroma!
You're about to
enjoy the sweetest,
most tender
chicken In town! lb.
LEG·OFLAMB
USDA Choice,
Frnh American,
Slrtoln on. lb. $1 39
,. -
J
..
'UMB SHOULDER
USDA Choice,.
Fresh American,
Squse Cut Roast lb.99c
SMOKED HAM
I>
I
I
.\
Junk Probe Readied
' .., l''HAN C ISCO
1 \I' 1 -The n~w t'h1et of
th~ F ral Trad&: Com
1n1ulan ha." thrt-olcmed
In put the l>1tt• un urt
\ t'rtl nu-nll whir I\ l'n
roura1e chlldrt•n to rob
bl~ cucxt1ea whtrh rnn
1.11n l&fllt' qu1uittl1t•... or
'uitar
M lch~I Pt-rtJlrbuk , in
""" Francisco Wcdnc•"
tiJ\ to confer \\tlh tun
'umt•r t:roup.,, 'Jtd
t.u k ling nutritionally
ti ue-.111mdblP Kd verllsini:
.11 nwd .at t•h1hJn·n wti...
Balzer
To· Give
Class
thtt t•omm1111111111' "No l
priority·
T tt I t• v 111 I o n t' 11 m
morclul~ for 11u.:urcd
vrodurt!t .11 t• • 'lhl· 1110:.t
11bJ••t·t101i..1hl<'. • ~a id
l'l•tbl'lluk, ~ho wus up
po1nll•cl b\ Pr ei.1dtnl
l'wr1t•1 h1 .. 1 A1111l
A 11 .a Hh'. T h t•od 11 r l'
('I Oil, liUld I hl' i'~f(' "' p
porh·cl ~1111111•-c h\ 1h•111 ul
ablWl'lllll<>llb UlllW\I Jl
f 11 (' U I\ I II .: II II I I II k ll
twlw1•t•n d11hlr1•11 s <il'll
I al 1n11bh•ms ;111ct .. u~ill\
food11
"hi 1L 1<111 I 11 ;uh L'rt1se
heavily aueared food to
children who ha ven't the
experienre to make con·
s umer Judeemenlt.""
Cron a!>ked
Pertschuk 11u1d SO·
called JUnlc foods to be
scrutinized Include some
breakfast cereals, can·
daes and soft dnnks.
Cb1ldren, elderly, poor
ptmple and persons who
(•an 'l Spciik English well
are all •·vulnerable" to
harmful j unk food :id
vert asing, according tu
Pertschuk
Wine and food t•xpc.•rt
Robeat Lawrcntt• Oalzar
w 111 present four two
hour sessions on "Great
Restaurant Or shes·' al
Lawry's Ca liforn ia
Center, July 20 and 21
~·--· ~--
Ba lzer is food and
beverage ed1lol' of Holt·
day Magazine. I le rs a
former restaurateur ;ind
will share recrpL'S for
some of h1s favorite en·
trees from New York's
Four Se ason s
Re s taurant , The
Windsor Restaurant in
Los Angeles and the
Farmer's Daughter
Restaurant in Chicago
Enrollment in one ol
the four classes, set for I
p.m. and 7 pm both
~f~~-.....-
" Blade Cut
d avs. can 1>e arranged '" T s· I . S k ad~·a ncf.' by sending a Op Ir Oln tea
pa y mt' n l of SfL SO to &ONocoocu ROo;(lt ~
Lawry's f'nodl; Inc Small End R"1b Steak Public Pro~nims Dept
Box 298.1, Los Angelel; eoNocoem
9oos1 .Add1t1ona1 in Top Round Steak
formation can be ob soNut~sooNoEo~rH
tained by l'alling (2 13> B I y· St k 225-2491, exlcns ron 299. one ass IP ea tlONDCO llH< AOUNL
Porterhouse Steak 80HDCD 81 H I OIN
, .,
. , ""' . . . .. __ ........._ -
10 191 7 ·Bone Chuck Steak
ttOhOt Oflllr
LB 178 Filet Mignon
8QN0(0 IE H lflHDli"l <l'Nt
lO 151 E-Z Cut Cube Steak
UJ 111 Rib Eye Filat
~l'lNc;fA 00N0(0 Ollf llONfllS~
18 2°1 Flank Steak 80"DfDllHI
IU 89~
l8 348
1e 111
18 281
l8 118
Bottom Round Steak
ltClNOU>ttfl'
Blade Cut Chuck Roast UOHDCD Ol If
Large End Rib Roast OONOE08lH
Cro&s Rib Roast
80Hfll~~ UONOl.O en• (;HIJC~
Oscar Mayer Sliced Bacon
Wednesday, July 13. 1977 DAILY PILOT ~&
Gas Goes Off,
But Temp Rises
uel Presti, an irate Ohio pizza
er didn't have many kmd words
the local power company when
they turned his ovens orr while he
was making 180 pizzas and mixing
dough for 1,300 more. Obviously a
prolific pizza peddler, Presti lost a lot
of dough during hi s s hut-off. Here, he
watches 500 pounds of it go to waste.
18 148 Boneless Rump Roast
80N0t09E[,_ S1~lOtto1CVT
lfl 68C Catfish Steaks
•AOllN
18 138
ID 1••
l6 131 Ground Beef Patties
H80A() 229
1~PAl11ES
LB l2' Beef Spareribs
\fl sac. fRO/l~ DCFAOSllO
Rath Blackhawk Bacon
tTHIN!>ll(fQ I/ 0 / PKO I 4!J) 1 l6 PK6
149
SUC.£0 t •8 P•h 139• Brew's
Future
At Home
Games and giveaways won't fill your cupboards. ·
' )
Instant beer may sonn
be a reality
' Packaged & Conned Packaged & Conned Health & Beaut~ Aids
Produce Harvest Day ~1~!~ Salad Dressing .,oz :::. ggc Prell Liquid Shampoo .. m~ lg' Th e Wall St r eet
Journal has reported
that Global Marketing
Services '" pet1t1onmg
for hcens1ng d1 stribut1on
of p o wde red drank
mixes. m ad{' by
encapsulatin g l1qu1d
alcohol within particles
of the navoring agent.
Beer. wine and other
cocktails are among the
mixes offered by the
firm . which reports that
all you have to do for a
brew is add water
'Artisans '
To Meet
Large
Tomatoes
SLICING SIZE ..
Hawaiian
Pineapple
LARGE
Honeydew
Instruction and recrpl' Melons formulas for using thl'
Cuisinart food processer ................. . .
wait be presented Thurs Orange day at noon. at tht>
Broadway, N e wpor t J I
Beach and at 3 p.m. at U Cl
LB 39c
EA 59c
.LB. 19c
~he Broadway, Hunt· TROPICANA mgton Beach. 64-0Z. BTL.
Classes are fr ee. Graen Plants Demonstrations will be conducted by Grayce "'sso .. Ho
F lannagan.
... ··--·-.. ..o,98°
----Delicatessen
*ANAH,IM
120 W, U ,Al.MA AYINUI
rt
f
.c~~~~~ ... le-oz. B~ 43 C Lady .. Laa Tomato Juice •60l ~ 4 7c Prall Concant~ate Shamp~~.~ 1 H
Harvest Day Frozen & Dair~ !!~ .. ~!~A~~~:~n Deodora~!.,, ~ ggc
!.°.'."~~°.~~oz c~ 39c 8Fr8ineqduCeht ··ckan ~, 98 ~!u~A~!A!,~pthpaste Secret Anti-Perspirant
Crushed Wheat WHOLE .................. 32.az. PKG.
'' .• tuHr 1°3
,,, ... 111 .
BreadHA~~~ST · 2~t49c
ROUND TOP OR SANDWICH ..
.~}A':!~~~e Sandwich Cook1i.!~ .~ 79c
Underwood Deviled Ham •. .();:N57c
Ranch Style Chill Beans t>OZ ~ 2ec
Lady Lee Cake Mixes
t• VAA1' I (~·
Lady Lea Frosting
C:llf>"V Cl10COUI If Oii CflO"°' "H<Tl
~!'!'!~~~~!.~~~~pars • ~ .. ozC:: 59c
~Pc~table ~.~~~.~ c.o~~.a~I .~~ 51c
.~~-~~st Da!_~ppla~au.~~1~0L~ 29c
Cncker Jacka
3·-.C ........ ,, . .. ..•
"""""ltlll(I ... -....... --,,_,,._ .. _____ ....... . -·-·:-""'
!!~ .. ~~~Appia Juice 120~AN ·.67c
Lady Lee Whipped Toppi~09 Cl .. 49c
Liquoc Beer & Wine
Scoresby Scotch
WH·51C1 .... PflltOO'
E~~!~l~.Mist Whiska~,w .. ~ 11•0
~~!!o~SL!~Y. ~!~~ MtH•et s m~n 199
l•OVOA lV AVA lAA\I 0 ... 1..,.. Af ~to.-c~.,. '~ llOtJOft O(P'T
Househdd & Pet
Comet Cleanser ..... .II.OZ.~ 35c
!!:~t~~.E~n liners .................... ~::.=0. 1"
Fo!. .. ~.~la. ~09 ~Pr,.ay C~.~~~lr ~ 79c .
Purex Detergent
POWO(A[O
Orchid Paper Napkins -.c,'(a. 111
,~!!~~~~Cat Food ·-·-· . •MJl~N 21c
Br1vy Tnln Dog Food HU IAG 522
.... ,,..,,_,....,..._,_ ... _ .. ......, _,,,.,.Tlloltt ,,.,1t.11rr
Luck~ Discount (e(}t~r
ltEMSbhl"lV'1A~A11'\PU•f r"'\ -.
OoSCOONl•:l" O"" 1• '.f /1.' .
-r ~~I ··u ~~ .
-~· u .. rew 89'ftlllAflMfte_n .,.,..._c"-.,.. ....
~,..c~
~~ Structo Snapwagon
Battery BBQ
336 SO. IN. COOKING SURFACE.3 97,
S" EASY ROLL WHEELS SEE-4
THAU GLASS. MODEL 7503.
BATTERY NOT INCLUDED ........ .
Enamel
Corn Pot · ~:~~~fr~A~~~ ... ~ ~-~.~~.~:. ......... 3 7 7
!~E~~!.~~~~c•~~ ... 95c
!JT~~"!!~' Coffee Mugs -... __ 490 ~
Rockingham Bowl
Yl ..... fll( •OflU6141AC:tllfA• 490 I ~~~.... --··---·-:~J:i=t~!~~oast•r3~• •
Plutic Pttcblr
*OAlllDIN OAOft
,.,. IUOLIO AVI.
•HUNTINOTON HACH •14111tfftNG\'01t •IAC14
ttl\ AT&.AlttTA AVI NUI 1 .... IOLIA Ct4tCA AvtNUI ,
"'"''"o" fOIO KATILU AVI
•WHTMi .. ITlllJ •WHTMINI TU
AOO WH TMINITI" AVINUE 1I01t 8"1N®ALa tfflDT
(lJ DAIL.., PILOT WednHday, July 13. 19"17 . '
Know What You're ·Nibbling or Junk It
~a ll y. ~t •r <·h y.
r u n r h y food• have
l>e t'o m ~ ou r m oat
p o p u I u r c· h o I (' ~ f o r
sn1u·k•
Witness the <·on11ump-
11on of potato t'b1p11,
p s t-ud o potttto chqHI
parkt>d In t•an1, corn
t'h1p1. tortilla cbll"'· ·
chel.'se puffa. pretzels.
p o pcorn. and a vut
\ a r I c I y 0 f " II IJ ,. k
,. r a c ke r s 111 v ,1 r Io u,.,
-.1\Jpes and forms.
Art' thest• food'> u Mood
nutrthonal value?
The chief mgredlenls
that you get arc rat.
starch. and salt. f'at, of
t•ourse, 1s J source ol
m any calories <2"• limes
more than from starch>.
POTATO CHJPS and
other types of chips are
~o· o fat Ten potato t•h1ps
ha ve U S calories -75 of
which come from tht· fat
-and ~ much as 20
milligr a ms of smhum
<from the saltJ
T he t ypicJI s nack
nacker ranges from 20
· to 30' ; fat. This means
l h a t 4 0 • s 0 r;. 0 r t h c
t•a lor1es in the se
crackers comes from
fat. Some examples
Ch c•esc crackl.'r'>
• , 2 1 •,;.fat 10 crackers. or
about l oz .• have 150
calories and 325 m1lh-
grams of sodium.
Yuu 1riJI hne to look
bard to find cracken
that have no uJt. but
thONt" thut have little or
no ult aprinlclod on top
or do not taat.e u lty wtll
have les11 1alt than Lhe
otht1r product.a
Why the emphu11111 on
ult" Rt?search evidenc~
111 dcvelopana which 1n.
dlcules lhat our hl&h salt
diets could be contnbut-
tna to the development of
high blood pressure m
sust•t•ptablc 1nd1v1duals.
and that Americans lend
l O cat t\.\O lo five times
more nit than they
need.
So cbooalne 1nack
food• wlt.h IM1 aatt is
probably a tood Jdea for
mOltolus.
Penon.t Qn low.IOdJum
diet.a, where intake may
be limited to 1000 mllll-
arams or less per day
should not include salty
snack foods tn their d iets.
Q. I've been l.ooking for
a recipe for whole wheat
bread, but the only ones l
can find have white nour
a11 well as whole wheal.
~~ . . Holly Farms Grade 'A'
Why do they all include
with flour?
A. White nour makes
the llptest , most tepder-
textured home baked
bread because ot its high
gluten content. Gluten is
the protein ln flour that
gives dough its elasticity
and ability to rise. Whole
wheat flour. complete
with bran, germ, and en-
d os perm (the while
part> has a smaller pro-
portion or gluten. Bread
made from just whole
wheat flour has a much
more solid, heavy,
"Round" crackers
21rn fat -10 crackers
weighing about 1.2 oz.
have 165 calones and 357
milligrams sodium
One inch s quare
··wheat " cracker s -
21r;. fat -10 crackers
weighing JUSt over 1 a
ounce have 52 calorics
a nd 112 m illi g r ams
sodium.
, , __ ~ ~~ole Body
. ,~~)Fryers
SALTINES 12'; fat
10 square crackers
weighing 1 Ol. hav<' 12:1
caloril's and :J I:.? m11l1
grams of sochum.
F.vPn the crackers that
;ire labclrd "who l e
·wheal" (';m be loaded
with calorics if fat 1s a
main 1ng red1t•n t. Read
the label lo sec if fat
usually in lhl' form of
vegetahlt• 011 1s pre
sent on tht• list of inJ::rc
dients 1 ln.i.:r<'d1ents ar e
listed m or der of pre
dominance hy weight
so the one hstt•d fi rst 1s
th e re in g r e at es t
a mount. and so on down
the list 1
By careful label n·ad
mg. you will find lhiil
there are some <'rackers
that have no fat or V<'ry
hllle of 1t. and a \'Cr} few
J
Frozen
Banquet Dinners
Except Him,
Haddock or Fiah
h~~:~~~~ltlhcse a re the I ~~~· _; •
we ll kn ow n "low ~'-· • t•alon e" c r::ickcrs. which ;{; ~ I
havt' b<>en fcaturt•d fo r
years on weight control
diets, m any resemble
the Swechsh hard tack or
rrackerbrod: som t• are a
very thin wheat or n ee
wafer.
11-oz.
P R E T Z E 1, S a r l'
a nother choi ('l' if vou
want to cut down on· fat
· most have only 2 .. 1•;
fat. Ten thin pretzel
sticks each 3" lonF( will
pave only 23 calorics: 10
of the ring type (three
nngs) would weigh five
times as much and have
117 calories.
Since pret zels are very
s alty. their sodium con-
.tent is high -101 milh·
·•grams sodium In the 10
thin sticks. 504 milli-
grams in the 10 three-
rmg pretzels.
Janet Lee Frozen
Vegetables
Cut Corn,
Mixed Y99et1bln,
Pell, PHI ' C1rrol1
•
20-oz.
Bag
Peaches, Plums
c
Cr1ap Solid
cbewy texture because white nour because-lt.
ol the lower propo~oo of 1 contains wheat germ.
sluten. Thus, ~t home The 1erm ls high ln fat,
recipes for whole wheat and this fat can become
bread contaln some rancid in a relatively
white now: to provide lbe short time -especially
necessary gluten 110 the U the storage place is
texture wilJ be lighter warm. Rancid fat gives
and more tender. the flour an unpleasant
Q. I had aome whole odor and Oavor although
wheat nour In the cup-it does not make it un-
board for a lew months safe to eat. To prevent
and when I got it out to rancidity. store wheat
us e it it had an un-flour in a cool, dry place
pleasant odor. What -e v e n i n t h e
caused this" refrigerator or freezer if
A. Whole wheat flour you don't use 1t very does not keep as well as often.
1-lb.
Pkg.
Albertsons Supreme Beef
Chuck Steaks
Blade
Cut
••
lb.
Fresh
Ground Beef
Alber11on1
Own
Fresh ~ t
Spread
A Fast
,.,One
or Nectarines ·Head Lettuce ·strawberries
Mix or
Match
--......
. ,,
.. : . ..
Which crackers, snacks
are best for you?
•
' •
-t
I
DIET a s1 SHAST·A FOR
Tuna~~-..... 33e
~uhd v.h1tt 11\l:ut Ill v.11ttor 7 0 1 lJl1
Briquets ow• .. s1 39
Hurd und they hum dt·1m' 10 lb bui:
Dressing 1 sw • • • • 49 e
\" 1va Jtol11m. Hc·rh & Sp1r1•: 8 01
Soft Margarine &9e
Hlul' B11nn1·t lor rt·nl vnluc' I Iii
FACIAL 59c TISSUE
Srnwe~-rolor~. wh1tC'! 200 l'l
Gatorade . . • • . • . 43 c
Citrus or Orange fla,nr :l:? 01
Wesson Oil .... s1 98
Rig 4R 01 hottll' Ja..,t'! longer
Kidney Beans . . 25c
Sprmitfield-plump ond red: 1\o 300
Heinz Ketchup . &sc
l<it h 111111 th11 ~ und l1hty'. :?n 111
Grapefruit
JUICE
Tu..,un pink unrt tnn11y ' 46 ·''
Grape Juice . . . . ggc
\\'rkh',. lur tnu• 111 .. lf'' Ill"'
Cheerios . . . . . • . ggc
Start I he dn\' riJ:ht 1 I "t 01 pkt-:
Zee Napkins ..• 5119
Rainhnv. 1 ntor, fomily pock of 360
Grape Soda ~r.:. s 119
HC'gulor 11r Sul(llr Fn•t·1 12 ot con,
LIQUID 59c BLEACH
Springfield-gollon plastic jug
Cat Food MOIST • • • • 59c
'\:inc Live~ -oil Onrnr' 12 Ol
Dog Food • . . . . • 25c
All varirlH'' 111 "M11thlv" fi ' 01
Boraxo .. ., • • • • 59c
With diApen~er-12 ouncr Im
Ivory Liquid •••• 79c
Di~h detcrgent-22 oz (10e •ff laMll
•
....
Any time is 1 sreat. time for chicllen -. especia,lly when it's El Rancho's plu!TltJ, fresh. tender King-size fryers! But it's even better on a
warm summer evening -after the days work 1s done, and before the sun has set. That's the time to enjoy the best of chicktn -El R~ncho's chicken!
lry1r lr1astsw1lll
Plump and tender and heavily laclt-n "II h 1-oweet while meat' Frt-:.h Gr11dt• .. A . -hon ct t.:Ut' (with rib cacel
lBgs 11 Thighs ~:~t ... Ill!
There's more nth JU•tY dark meat on part~ from El H1tnlh11-. Ing tryen.' Crude "A -hand cut
Fryer Wings ••• 59£.
llund cut! Fresh Grade "A" fryers! •
Chicken Livers • 89i
Jo reshnc's make& the difference!
Chuck Steak ~~T~R •••••••••• 69~
;\lMmade thr~e for o tn~ty cmnumirnl niok-11111 1 U.S.D.A. Choice beef
B f R t BONELESS $209 ee oas ROLLED • • • • • • • • • •
Sirloin lip-round cut of U.S.O A. Cho1n' htt-1'
G d B f BULK OR $109 roun ee PATTIES. • • • • • • • •
Lean! Drot', not exct'ed :?:?~; fot contrnt' r.reat for 'burger-.'
Ground B f OUR LEANEST $129 ee GRIND • • • • • • • • • lb
Jlnl'' nrot ~\l't•t•d 1;,r, tat (atoPPCll STIMS-3 per lb .• US lb)
low York Strip ~:arc~ ......... ~l 7l
Here'11 hearty goodness! l" SU A. Choice heef-tendrr JUICY loin cul ••• nutur.tlh aged. noturnlly na\'orful. naturally tender'.
Sliced Bacon ••. s1 1!
El Rancho"s thicker "rnnch 11l \ le"
Sausage ITWP sTYU • s 12!
\\le make 11 tn ht• 'urr 11'-. authentic'
Ground Lamb .• 79i
l l.S.D.A. Choice-western grown lamb
SHOULDER CUT
OioPs s 1.a~
Western · U.S.D.A. Ch01rr lnmh
New York Steak • s 39!
Loin cut of l' SD.A. Choict• het·f
7 Bone Roast. . 89i
I 'hurk rut ol t. "'\ Ti A rhn1ce heel
0 Bone Roast. . 99i
Ch11ck cut ol l ' S.D.A. Choice beef
WE FEATURE GENUINE
MILK-FED
VEAL
l.r>0k for the difference in value'
Super Fresh!
( Beef Roast =:ss s 14!
Shoulder clod chuck cut-Choice beef
Beef Rib Bones 69£
Choice! ~lenty'-10 bake or barbecue
Lamb Stew • • • • 49£
Shoulder and neck out-Choice lamh
ROUND BONE
SHOULDER LAMB$ 219
CHOPS ..
ll S.D.A. Choice Western lomb
C1&1/np111 ....... 15 !
T .ori:1• "17.!' fN J(r!'Rl!'r '11l11t· .. 'ine-npened for finer 011\l•r . ..weet and mellow lor sheer dehi ht'
TOMATOES .......... 39~.· fir,,..... ~
,mtrsal*
Florida
LIMES 10!
Fresh, tangy. zesty and large!
ROMAINE ·
=:::fr.... 19(
Urie balldl
FRrsH 69( .. TROUT
From Idaho water&! Nt. wt. 5 oz ea.
FRESH FILLETS
PACIFIC RED s 1 a 9
Snapper •· Try them on the b·b·q grill
Crab Legs ••••• 521!
Dehc1uu»' Meaty! from Alaskan crabY>
Fresh Clams ••• 79~
Cherrystones from New Eniland
Halibut s3st STEAK •
Center cut from Northern fish!
Frozen Food
ORANGE 69c JUICE
Minute Maid from Florido! 12 oz
Lima Beans • . . • 39c
Rahy or Fordhook-Springf1eld 10 oz
Pie Shells • . • • • 59c
.Johnston'<1-pkg of two-9 inch
Bavarian s 119
CAKE
Sara Lee Lemon, Chocolate (22 ti.)
Wheat Bread. • • &9e
Bridgeford high fibre (two 11 01 lones)
Macaroni ..., Ctllsc •• 59c
Von de J(amp'a big 20 ounce pkg.
-
TATER 69C TOTS·
Ore Ida's potato treat! 2 lb bag
Pizza Rolls a ·s • • 59c
Pepperoni or Sautege w/chee11e 6 oz
Juice cwum • • • • • 29c I
Minute Maid Ree or Pink~ oz
Delicatessen PriceR In effect. Thur. July 14
through Wed. July 22
Liquor Dep 't.
Jack Che.ese MONTEREY s·1 s~
• Jumbo cut.~ lrom Cache Valley! Smooth and creamy, hy \ht piece
Shrimp Cocktail 49c Taco Shells • • . . 49c
La11eco m 4 oz 11erving gl&1111 Alex'11-fill 'n' heat! pkg of 4
Sliced Ham . . • • s2•! Horseradish WCI • &9c
Dau for 1111ndwicht8, 1nacka! 16 oi Fiaherman'• Wharf ., . 8 ounce jar
Kosher Franks .. 1141 Ricotta aw 99c
Beef! from Hebrew National! 12 oz PNcioua-16 en (I ml m ... 5k)
()pen doily 9 to 9 Sunday 10 to i
No .~alt-.~ to dcalef'll
tDIZ a..a.Q SAUCE ••••••••••• 59c
l<taular, Hickoey, Muahroom-18 01
Canad .Ian SAVE $1.00 ON . s499 OUR LABEL •••••
Bott.led for F.I Rancho-our name on it-end it's 86 proof for value! Quart
Wh• k D. MD SJ99 1s ey sruJQllT .......
Six venr" old save iOc 1 filth
7 Crown • . . • • • • s52•
Seapem 's blend reduced 50e r.n.h
J & B Scotch. s1g•5
Now Hve UiO on the half.gallon
Wolfschmidt 5999'
·VODKA
You ""vo 1.0Q on th• hatt-prton Ii \
UQllD DOW: •••••••••••••••••• 79c
Dt~n (« di•h 22 ounce alu
Tanqueray •••• s1&11
Save 1.30 on tha half.gallon great gin . .
Vermouth •••••• s1 11
Paul Mauon Dry or Swee~firth
Los· Hennanos • s211
BW'l\lftdy, ChabU.. V!n &eel 1.6 ltr
COLONY $.~59
WINE A
......... ,.
('.. DAIL V PILOT wo11no•oo1x. Juty 13. 1en
Grub? Look
To Goobers
Two aoc>beriah outdoor
tdeas · OnC'·~ f o r
brHk(ut and om"i. fut
dinner, and both hold
•Pffial lnlt"r('lll for dud~
and kids w1lh tho lild
dlllon or crunch y
(IOObers
Thla pancake batlf•r
,·aa be-made ul vour
camps1de "1th o bo>.t'll
pancake m1" 1 u !'lt> i
t·up ~>. or pre1n1red
a head of lime to lott-
alon1 in your coolt·r
PEANUTllUTfER
PANCAKES
'• cup crunchy
peanut butler
2eggs
3 tabl es poon s
vegetableotl
1~ teaspoon vanilla
14. cup nour. 14 cup
wheat germ bran, 3
teaspoons baking powder
and h lea.spoon s alt OR, 2
cups packaged pancake
mix
Ma rgarine
Syrup
Stir togcth,•r 1wanut
butter. t•ggs and peanut
oil. beat w1lh \\OOdcn
spoon or lll'alt-r unttl
smooth Sl1r 1n mill-..
then add dry mi::rcd1cnt~
and Mir lightly until
batter 1s fairly smooth
<No need to remove all
the lumps.>
For each pancake.
pour about •,,. cup of
batter onto a hot, lightly
oiled gridd l e (use
margarine or oil>. Fry
until pancakes are bub·
bly and edges look dry.
Turn and bake other side
and se r ve with
margarine and ~yrup.
until oulo n i~
trun1 par~nt R•duce
he1l . ~l11 111 tomato
put l'I', t 111n.1lo SUUCl'.
a•rl11· po\\1lt•1, µt•pµer.
and rl·mu1n1 n g I
toaapou11 :.Jll Simmer
u n r o v l' r l' 11 " ho u t 5
min~t1·~ Mix 1n hruwnt.'d
m 1• u t " 11 rl <' h n p 1.1 e ti
®
0
Groceries
Dole Gr"n Bean•
8-ned 11 Oz Can . .
Spaahettl-0'• FrtN»~ 14 Y. OLCen •
... 29c
.... 27c
0 ~.'!!!t! !!":~t~!n ......... 45c
®
0
®
®
0
0
~!1~~11~ ~~~.~.~: .. 33c
~~·,~ ~~k~·~·'·'··· ........... :. 39c
!~~~ ~~~~!. .. . . . ..... 29c
Grapefruit Juice
T,_weel 46 Oz. Cen ... 52<=
Aaat. Beverages 6 ~ 99c
H8<118Q• House • 12 Oz. Cans"". • R
Lo-Cal Beverages 6 ~ 79c
He<ltage HOOH • 12 Oz. Cans..... R
@ GRADEar~AA'
LARGE EGGS
oozen 63C Carton
-.
Groceries
Q ~~f!~~ oz Bottle .......... _47c
.. PuiWta ure a •<>ctd
sollrce ot tood etlercy. furni~htn&: ubout. 170
c alortes per one-cuance
s~\"ying <A one·ounce
atr'\.'il"IJ ts a tidy
~ndful.)
But far from "empty calo~e19;• a one-ounce
serving <llso conlams 500
m11. or trude fiber,
a -vitaftlins and bosl or
necessary minerals.
ln African countries.
pean1,&ls, or groundnuts.
as tlley are often called.
are a priruary source of
protein, and are often
reature<J In soups, s tews.
bre ads. salads. rnain
qish sauces and desserb.
Groceries
PEANuTSLAW
2 cups shredded cab·
bage
l '~ cups chopped.
unpeeled. cored green
apples
·~ cup •.bredded
carrots ~ cup chopped
peanuts
I tablespoon peanul
butter
1 tab)e~po o n
vegetable oil
2 tablespoons lemon
juice divided
1 teaspoon brown·
style mustard
teaspoon poppy
:.~cd~. toasted
Pepper <and salt. to
taste. lf unsalted nuts
are used)
Combine cabbage.
apple chunks and carrots
in a lar&e servings bowt.
Cover with 1 tablespoon
o f lemon j uice. In )
blender combine peanut
butler, 011, 1 tabl~spoon
of lemon juice and
mustard and whir unUl
creamy·smootb.
Pour dressing over
slaw. Toes briefly. Blend i
1n chopped nuts and I
poppy seeds. Adjust
seas onin1s by adding
ground black pepper and
salt to taste. Serves 4-t>.
Frozen Foods )
r@ Heritage House ..,
ENRICHED ® ~.!'~~.:' 7~·~~-............... 4 'c I
® ~~~l~~: ..................... 79° SPAGHETTI
1soz. 29c Package
® ~~~:·~!9! ........... •111
® ~·:!'~~~~. -~!~~~~ ...... •125
® ~~~~ ~ J.~!~~ .~.·.~·~·~·~ ... age ... ...II ® ®E!~~~~~~ .............. 59• 2~!. ~.~~~.• .~~.~·~~ ·· ··· · ·· 77c ~ Q WESTWOOD 0 Llndaav Ollvea 27c
0 t;~s;.;;;~~2502 ... s1a1 ~~!~C~~.~~.~~~ ... 99c ..
100 Count Pacll•ge .. . @ Herb Tea Bag• ~."::..':" 74c
Magic Mouoleln 16 Count Pkg . . .. Q Macaroni Shella a~.. . 77c
~ll•oe HOUl!I :12 Oz. Pkg. • .
',-) ~-~~!~~~~,~~ .......... 4 7c .
\ ) ~~~~e ~~1~o ................ 59c
@ ~1~~~.~~~~. Can .... , ......... 45c '
, ® EVERFRESH
VEGETABLES
ClllCom. Peas. 4 Fs 1 Mixed V teblet,
Peas &T.rrOI• Q
10 Oz. Pkg. R
..,
. ..
CHILI BEEF WITll
PEANUTS
I'~ tea!>poons sail
l pound ground bCl'I
<·hurk
1 .1 cup chopped onion
•,a c up c hoppt•<I
1.! reen pepper
. . e
& azto refuses I•
'I• teas poon ,·hill
powder
l •" cups UO'h ounce
can) tomat.o puree
I cup (8·ouncc can>
tomato sauce
·.~·be ,.
14 teaspoon garlic
powder
l,8 teaspoon pepper
•,:i cup chopped
cocktail peanuts
and that includes Al~ ~ta. Lucky, Market Basket, Ralphs,
. -
6 warm hamburger
buns
Safeway. &nd,Vons ••• basket for basket. '\
'• .,
Sprinkle bottom of
l arge skillet with '1
t eas poon sail Brown
ground beef in skillet
over medium·high heat.
crumbling meal with a
fo rk as il browns .
R e move m eat with
slotted spoon ; set aside.
Di scard a ll but 2
tablespoons drippin~s
from skillet.
Add onion, g r ee n
pepper and chili powder.
Saute over medium heat,
stirring occasionally.
cocktail peanuts; heat
through. Serve hot on
warm hamburger buns.
Caution:
Water
Drowns
A frequently aaked
question is ho• much
nutrient loss occurs
when fresh vegetables are cooked. Some nutrt-·
tionists f,!Stimate that the
vast majority or cooks
(proressional and non-
professional) allow one·
third of the nutrients to
be Jost fn the cookini
water.
The truth is ,
vegetables should be
cqoked in as little water ..
a9d fOI' as short a time as
Deli-Dairy
~HERITAGE HOUSE
~BEEF FRANKS 59c
12 Oz. Pkg ......................... .
0 Sliced Bologna
Hentegc Houee-Meat, Beef. 99c
0 GarllC <>< Thie~ Stleed-1 lb. Pllg .••••••
~~.~?~1~1~~~~~-··· •........ 59c
0 !?!'!.::!~~on ............... 53c
0 ~!,~.!~~~c':~on ............ 27c
Health & Beauty Aids
0 ~;~~!;~~·········· . 9gc
0 ~~~:!~"!,.~~~~.~ ... 94c Q Pepsodent Tooth1N11te 73c
lnel. 30e Off Label F~ U Or. TllMr.
0 ~~! ~. 75's ••••••••••••• 98c
0 ~:.:!!!!'!. ~!~~ ............... s12s
0 Arm a Hammer =... 49c 811ilng SOcl• o.odortnt' .. Oz •••••••••••
0 Everynlght Shampoo
Astringent. Str•wt>erry. Lirnon. $117
MOlllurlmg-1 Oz. Slte .............. .
Wines and ~pirits
Groceries Groceries
® !~~'=°!:~~~,~-~ .... &1c 0 ~~a~~7~~~PT~~c~ 4gc
H
"
La n-I · Tor11tlll ChlpS, 10 Oz Cotn Ch•ps 0 • Y Wft IHlg $195 0< 7 Oz. Cotn NtbbleS • Your ChOl<:e ••
6 eu.Ml-10 eoun. Pkg................ Q W Oil s102
CORONET Pu<~~!~!. 24 Oz 811 .......... ..
@ PAPER TOWELS 44c @ ~~.OJ!!~,;doi.can ...... 32<=
z.:~::'~ .~ .. ~~~..... ... . . . ® ~~~?. ~1~~~.•.~w-........ _39c
·®
®
®
®
®
®
0
flci.I Ti.-150 Coun1 Bo• ..•.••••.•• 44c
~a~~~~~~ ................... 99c e
~c:!'~!~~~·~. s~ •........ 1138
~~!~!!YKJ~ :P..'.' ............. $174
~~~ ~~.!,-~~~~ ...... · ... •134
~'!-SI~~~.-~~~~~~~ ........... ssc
~!~~®'!~:_e ............. 59c
Produce
~NECTARINES, RED
'1!Y PLUMS or PEACHES 3 S :1
VCNI Choice • • • • .. • • • • •• • • • • • • • a....
® Cucumbera
F1'9111 crisp ........... •. • ••• •
@~'!~Pr,::,• ....... , ...
Repeated
by popular
demand
Meats
Delicious
Barbecue
Favorite
peaatble. Wben ther are SANGRIA ~
:;:
• t-tendertothepnckof ~ .~
a ~drain oft water-, ~ WINE ~fte. ·:· not down the drain! ........................... f~~ . ----------------------------
HIW9llln
Grown
Groceries
Meats
0 DRUMST~CKS
OR WINGS 39c Turkey ..................... , ••• ,Lb.
® !~~~~".'.~ ..... lb.'149
® ~'!.!'.~~~~-~.~-~.~~.~-lb.*147 J:
® ~!!.!>!!'.~~~~;~.~.~~ .. Lb.$1'9 •
GROUND BEEF Q PATTIES :~""':'~-..... 59c
Fresh Made In the SIO<e .......... lb.. 'j/
0 ~.~~.~-~!.~'.~~ ........ Ut.&9c
o S~lt FRvlNGeted
CHICKENS ..
U.S.O.A. 4sc Inspected · Farm Fresh Lb.
...
.Pork
Chops:
Choice
Ideas
DAIL y PILOT Cfl.\.) • Wednesday July 13. 1977
On The Grill ) ~auce ~f:icks tq ~ibs : T
Basket ·Holds a Catch"'
This recipe for pork s pareribs was in-
spired by the bottlers of Irish Mist liqueur:
but Galliano or a sweet honey or apricot-
based liqueur will do as well.
CAESAR'S RIM
3 pounds spareribs, cut into serving
pieces
l clove garhc. pressed
I 12-ounce Jar apricot or peach pre-
serves
:i" cup Irish Mist or other sweet hqueur
1·-i cup French·slyle mustard
2 tablespoons lemon juice
1 tablespoon lemon pepper seasoning
salt •
for S minutes in boiling waler, if you desire
-it m akes skinning them easier, but you
lose some of the nutrients). Slice them thin
ly into a large bowl and sprinkle with salt.
Divide into portions on square pieces of foll
and pull up to form a bowl around each
serving.
In blender. combine honey, liqueur.
orange rind and nutmeg. Dnzzle this mix·
lure evenly over packets. Top each with a
· pineapple ring and a pat of butter. Fold and
wrap securely.
Grill sweet potatoes over slow coals for
about 45 minutes. turnmg once to cook
through evenly. When ready to serve. open
packets to release steam. Serves 6.
t
J
t ~ .
~· . t
Honey-sweet liqueur flavors rib sauce. Place spareribs, fat s ide up, on rack in
bakiog pair. Sprinkle with lemon pepper
and bake at 3SO degrees F. l hour.
A wire mesh fish basket comes in handy
for grilling small catch, hke perch or trout.
T his recipe produces a crisply finished pro·
duct. Pork chops are nearly always
welcome at the d inner table, but
cooks are often at a l<>5s as to
what to do with them, except for
the browned-in-butter, salted-
and-peppered S AM E OLD
THING
Here are ::.ome supef·:.avory.
yet mexpens1ve ::.upper ideas for
two, and for four. or six, with ac
companimt•nts. You can mah
them more special by adding a
chilled glass of white or rose
wine. Pork favors light, fruit
desserts.
PORKANDSPINACll BAKE
l 10-ounce package frozen
spinach, chopped
l JO-ounce can condensed
cream of mushroom soup
3-4 very thin pork chops
\z onion, chopped
2 teaspoons lemon juice,
divided
2 tablespoons sherry or while
table wine
2 tablespoons butter or
margarine
1 2 cup grated Swiss cheese
Parsley
Nutmeg
Cook onton in butter until
trans parent. set aside. Add
chops to remaining butter in pan
"V1d brown on both stdC'> a total of
10·12 minutes
In the meantiml'. cook spinach
according to package directions
and drain. Mix with •f~ can
mushroom soup, cooked onion
and l teaspoon lemon j uice. Salt
to taste a nd a dd a dash of
nutmeg, if desired.
Lay chops in the bottom or a
-casserole dish. Top each with
about lf.J cup of the spinach mix-
ture. In the same saucepan that
you browned onion, stir in r e-
maining soup, 1 teaspoon lemon
juice and sherry or wine. Add
some parsley. Pour over chops
and top each serving with grated
cheese.•
Bake, uncovered at 350 degrees
F . until heated through, about 25
minutes. Makes 3-4 servings.
PORK CHOPS ITALIANO
3-4 pork chops, 1,2-inch thick
1 tablespoon salad oil
Salt and pepper
1 ~cup chopped onion
1 ~ cup chopped green pepper
1 small clove garlic, minced
l can (lSoz.> tomato sauce
I tablespoon Parmesan
cheese
1 teaspoon basil
1 bay leaf
Hot cooked rice
Brown meat in hot oil. Removt•
from skillet. Season ~ ith salt and
pepper. Saute onion, green pep-
per and garlic. Add ml•at. tomato
sauce and bay leaf. Cover and
::.1mmer 45 minutes or until meal
1s tender. Serve with ri,ce Makei;
2-3 servinas.
LEMON BEANS
l 10-ounce package frozen
Italian-cut green beans
l tablespoon butter or
margarine
2 te~poons fresh squeezed
lemon juice
1 teaspoon grateq lemon rind
Salt and pepper to t aste
Parmesan cheese
Cook beans in boiling. salted
water according to package
directions. Drain and stir in bul
ter, lemon juice, lemon rind, salt
and pepper. Serve immediately
and pass Parmesan cheese.
PORK RICE ORIENTAL
3{t pound lean pork, cubed 'I• cup chopped onion
lh c up s li ced fresh
mushrooms
2 tablespoons butter
11/• cups·chicken broth
~tablespoon salt
Dash pepper
1'2 cup uncooked rice
1.ttt cup each sliced water
chestnuts a nd bean sprouts,
rinsed and drained
1h cup celery, sliced inlQ 11.t
inch pieces
2 tablespoons each chopped
pimiento and slivered almonds
1 tablespoon cornstarch
l tablespoon water
l "'-'teaspoons soy sauce
Brown the pork, onion. and
mushrooms in butler. Add broth.
seasonings, and rice. Cover and
simmer Cor 20 minutes. Add
water chestnuts, bean sprouts.
celery, pimiento. and nuts.
Lemony green beans complete a plate
of Italian-seasoned pork chops. •
f1, ;l,
Singles, Duos Favor
..... ' t
Chicks· ' I n
Did you know that accortttnt td
figures released by the
. .Depa{tment of Agrlcu.lture .••
-Two· and three-person
hOU1ebordt are the lar1est per
eapJta consumers or red meats (beef, perk, lamb, veal).
-ne smallest households are the lartest per capita consumers
of poultry.
-One· and two~person
t bouaebolda are amon1 t.be
1 hllhest per 'Cap\t.I CODIUO*S oC
let ereun 1.1¥1 .. ~
ltvJna
Cheese
Combine r emaining ingre-
dients; sltr into pork mixture
Simmer three minutes, uotil
s lightly thickened. Serves 4-6.
PEA PODS WITH DILL
2 6-oOnce packages frozen
pea pods, or l pound. fresh
3 tablespoons melted butter
or margarine
Salt and pepper
I tablespoon lemon juice ,
I tablespoon finely chopf>t?d
fresh or dried dill
Cook pea pods according to
package directions; drain. Place
in servmg dish. Pour butter over
them; sprinkle with salt and pep-
per to taste. Sprinkle with lemon
Juice and chopped dill. Serves
4-6.
While ribs are bakmg. combine remain-
ing Ingredients m blender and whir until
smooth. Baste hot ribs with sauce and place
op grill about four inches above slow coals.
Broil, basting frequently with sauce, about
4& m inutes. turning every 15 minutes.
Makes 4-6 servtn~s.
Serve ribs with sweet polaLo packets. and coleslawr
SWEET POTATO PACKETS
21>9unds whole sweet poatatoes. peelect
Vs QUpboney
3 tablespoons orange liqueur
l. lO-OWlce can unsweetened pmeapple
rings ·
1 teaspoon grated oranRt' nncl
1 tea¥poon sail
1 2 teaspoon nutmeg
3 tablespoons butter or margarine
Peel sweet potatoes ( t>arbo1I them fil'St
CRISP BASKET OF FISll
4 whole pan-dressed perch or trout
I/, cup flour
·~cup sesame cracker crumlJ-.
1'2 teaspoon salt
18 teaspoon pepper
111 teaspooo paprika
1 tablespoon parsll'Y Claki.·~
1.i cup butter or margarine
Combine flour, cracker crumbs, paprika.
c;a lt and p epper and parsley
flakes in paper bag. Shake each f1i;h gently
in mixture to coat.
Grease wire fish baskcl with vegetable
oil and lay fish ms1de. Grill over hot coals
about 10 minutes. Turn and baste with melt
ed butter. Grill anolher 10 minutes, or until
fish flakes at the touch of a fork. Baste
again and serve hot. Makes 4 servings.
If you made a new
dry-food with everything
· · · a cat.craves,
r
lots of chicken, tuna
· ~d _niil.k· protein ...
What would you call it? . ..
. ~
..
i .
;
)
I
}
,• ,, ..
d
.,,
.!
, ..
r<
•• .. .,
;;
t,
~1
I? -... .,.
l
·o
~ ' .
II) .....
CIO DAIL y Pit OT'
Fun-do: Hot
Dogging
t.nok1n..: lu1 '111111 'u m m c r ml' J I 1 d , ••• ,
that are JU.St 1U1 fu11 a.• llh
ttmt' &pt•nt c.>utdoor' in lhr
"""" JI u ~ .t Ii o u I .1
family fondUl'"' lfrn• u1 ,.
I WO {'IL'\)'. c·h1•t'.'I)' 1d1•a:o.
fur pulto or latlgatf'
Complet~ your <'vtmlng's
worth of nutrition ~:th a
ht•lptn6t ei.ll'h or l:olc~•.1~
or ~imply a platlt·t 1.'
'cgetablt• t•utup!> Jrld J
'JSSysauce ford1ppmg
•',0 111..\' •'ONDUt:
10· 12 fr;rnkfurtcr.,.
1·ut upm2-mch pit'Ce!)
2cupsbeer
1 cup ketchup
1 ~cup bro~ n '>U~Jr
'• cup brown
mustard
2 tabll•spoons mi ntcd
onion
2 tJblC'spoon "
WorcestershJrc sauce
I teaspoon salt
1 1 ti:aspoon blatk
peppi:r c u t r I .i n k I u r t c r .s .
set aside: In fondue pot,
co mbine beer an d
rl'maining ingredients ,
:.1 m rnl•r OVl'r stov<' or
t"a nned heat 10 minutes lo
hi end navors
Add frankfurters and
simmer JO m1nutl's more
1roveredJ
Meanwh1 1t:, !>1mmC'r
rr;:rnkfurter p1Ct'CS In
boaltn).! \\ att'r ror 8 10
minutes Dra111 and
arrange on platter \\1th
µick5 Dunk into saun·
.mdmunch
GERMAN FO!'iDl 't:
or l pound imported
F:m ml'nlhalC'r chel'S('
' :? l l' a l\ p o on d r ..
mustard
t tablt'spoon flour
'" tca:,poon ground g111gt'r
Dash salt. nulm(•g
6 English muffins.
split. toasted
10-12 frankfurll·rs .
l'Ul up
I l'upbct•r
I cup c>v a rwr :tt t•d
mtlk
Shred t ht•t•sf' and
lO!>S in nour Combine
mustard. s1c<.'s and hl•at
with evaporated mtlk and
beer over canned hl•al
until mixlun• bubbles
Add chl'el\e. a handful
at a liml'. st1rrmg smooth
to mC'lt after t•at•h ad
rfit1on Toast muffans and
rli\·1dc 11110 pie shaped
II I t• I I ' ' .... I m nl l' i
f r.tnklu1 tt•r p11•1·1·-. 111
ho i I In 11 ~ .1t1· i K Io
m1nutt'~ On1111
Dunk l)i l'l't'l'I of mutf111.,
., nd ft ank furlt'r., 111 to
fondue altt!rnatlt•\. •II
IU'lt dip frank and t•al on
lolJ of toul\l trian~lt·.
St•rve~6
STATER BROS
MONU' BACK CiUARANTU
ON QUALITY Ml'.ATS
l\JUfP!l([OJ .,.14 f t\ 1J,..CO""C' t10,..•u • Gv••AN•11c
JO ll'lh·H ~OU O• tOU• ,_.0 .. t t w H U (Ht(ll OJH ' ti J.JflolOIC
"'G,H Y • #t(~(A$0R
BHf WIENERS , .....
IT4llAM• ~Vrrrll f ('IRth t
SAUSAGE
SWIJf c,,
SIZZLEAN •10: ••.
WllSO"f S
SLICED BACON "o: ....
Ratatouille: vegetable delight.
.. ,..-.. ,.,
'"*'''""". •IAl1 ,,.,.,
Stuff
Lean ! PORK & BEANS
Only a half-pound of
~round meat is called for
rn this easy, clcganl din-
ner for four.
STUFFED ZUCCHINI
2 zucchini, each '~
pound
Butler or margartnt'
1:? of a small onion,
minced
' :? pound ground beer
4 ltun slices (;~•-inch )
stale bread. decrusled
jnd crumbed Cl•., cups l
Se\'eral s prigs
parsley. minced
,. teaspoon salt
1 • teaspoon ~ppcr
12 cup grated ched
darcheese
Cover whole, unpared
zucchin i with boUing
water and boil in a cov-
ered saucepan tor about
6 minule5. Cut in half
lengthwise and scoop ouL
flesh leaving shells about
1 ~-inch thick; turn shells
flesh side down to drain.
Drain scooped.out pulp
and cut up fairly fine.
In a little hot butter in
a 10-inch skillet cook the
onion and beef, crumbl-
mg the meal with a lork
until it loses its red col-
or; stir in the pulp, half
the bread crumbs. the
parsley, salt and pepper.
Pile into shells.
lo a 1maJJ skillet melt
1 tablespoon butter ; ofr
heat stir ln the remain-
in g cr umbs and t h e
cbeese; sprinkle over
m eat mixture in shclla.
Bake in a very shallow
foil·lined pan in a pre·
heated 350-dearee oven
unW browned-about 25
minutes. Makea 4 aetv·
incs.
Nutty idea ror Sunday
breakfa1 ta : T o ast
wahu.tb, toH th em in
cinnamon and ausar and
UH them to top pan.
cate., wam or Ftencl\
"tout wttb melted butter
and honey or maple
·~·
. -
Dinner for 4 Germinates
The nu.tty flavor or wheat aerm minales
beautifully with rre h veeetnblts It is a bit uh·
usual !or a ratat.ou11le because lt's assem bled In
layers o( veaetables. wheat germ. cheese and
sauce Uslne md1v1dual casseroles makes for
fast heating and euy serving
Obviously this 1s a areal choice for warm
weather menus JI you wish, prepare the
ratatouille early m the day, then4ulckly reheat
at meal Urne. In addition. tl's a whole meal 1n
itself. For heartier appetites. simply accompany
with a crisp Rreen salad and bread.
WHEATGERMRATATOVILLECASSEROLE
4 slices bacon, diced
''l medium eggplant. cut into t,'2 inch cubes
1 medium onion. cut into wedges
l medium zucchini. sliced
~a cup vacuum packed wheal germ. regular
2 cups grated montercy j ack cheese
2 mectlum tomatoes. sl~ed
1 (8-ounct' 1 cun tomato !auce
'•cup water
1 ~ t.o l lea~poon un:~,tno lcaH~:.. crumbled
• 2 t.easpoon muqoram ll'U\CS. crumbled
1 •teaspoon ro!>cm .. ry ll•ave:i. crumblec.l
1 ~ teaspoon '>alt
Fry bacon in lari;c ::.k1llct until nearly cooked.
Drain exces.s grca::.c. Add eggplunt. onion and tuC-
chini. Sautc until eggplant 1 .. tender. about IO
minutes.
Place half the vegetables mlo 4 (l'h to 2-cup I
individual bakers Spoon wheat ecrm over
vegetable::.. Sprinkle with half the cheese. Layer
with tomatoe.s and rcmamrngvcgctables.
Mix tomato ~aucc wi th water and seasonings.
Spoon over vegctabks Sprinkle with rcmainirl~
cheese. Bake uncovered in 375 f'. oven 20 minutes
or until heated through. M akcs 4 servings '
IEEF f RISH
RIB GROUND
BEEF
lllOTTOUCEED 30'1t FAT
ANY SIZE PKG.
19 49~ LB.
c FRISH OL'YIRGINIA
BEIF BEEF
LIVER FRANKS
SLICED 12-0Z. PKO.
LB. 69~ 59~
'19C Ill'• I ONlLlU l lltll IONf '12•
<I ROUND •TIAK ·~II
.SC HH•llMALLlNDt l ltLI • 13•
u Ria •TIAK ~:~ct '"
99 C ICU• CHUC!\• IONCIU' '1 •• l• •HOULDIR ,.,,_. 1• •1 •• Hff • ~OUHD• IOHUHS • 1 'J• " Tiit •TIAK l•
PEACHES EXTRA FANCY • $Wffl • 'l'ELlOW MEAT
~9~
CHERRIES UCTflA fl'ANCY • LAlllOE NOflTHWIEST • Rl!D • l lNQS
r ...... -----·-·· -I ----. . Wednesday. July 13. 1977 DAIL y PILOT c 11
Formulas Keep Chicken, Beef ~eon
ft)' llARB-'RA '<1u111 t·~
GIBliONS '• lt'11 '1wo11 f1•11111·l
r~,,, ... r,., .incl ptn1·11~1pk ... t•t•cl:oo 01' ,lfltbl' l\t't.'t.li.
add f"'ol)n1•,1.in p111u11 O II l t 0.1~ JI '•
10 lo\\ l'.tlor 11• dur ki·n • h•1t,.1mm111 Ms<, ( m11noi.
t-'ut lh1s dt'h "" 11,1• odtu.m )llut :unalt'I
t h 1· l1•,1n 1·,t I"'"' < 11 111 h 1 11 1· ''I I
fJttenrn.: r hidwn thl'l l' ini.:rt•d1t•11i-. 111 .1 111111!-tl ic·k
I' h t111\'li•,..; ,j.. I nl''" '),. 111 t• I S 1111 fl\ t• I' Ill
~hill' mt•at l'Ulll'I' ('U( llllllUlt·!' .. ll lll'fl~t·rt·cl .
frum tht•hrt>a't 'I ou c·;in 11t1r1 lni.: 111 1 ,1,l11011llv
bu } l'h,1·kl•n r11llPI' until ltqt111i 1'\Jpu1.1ll•s
:ilri»t<h fHi•p;i ri·d "' int11 u lh1d. 1!l ,1tt· ~1·n1·
''t\ t' monl'\ Jllll nrnl-1· 1mm1.. .. J1utl'I}.
( h t' II\ \.' llllr "'I l f r II !JI
~h11h· th1C'l..t•1, Ul't•asl'
'" ~ou do. t ht ll'f\o\ er
boot'' <1t11 t 'ktn 1·Jn l•t·
MMmt'll'tl 111 l\Jlt•t ro
rn,11>.1' th•· l'11wk1·n t.n1lh
Called for It\ tl\1~ ell sh I
fo'ur cin 111tt•rt·sl 1ni,t
ff3vor note. w1• add a
l\inch of fennel or a nise
~eds . Both are sweet
sp ices \\ ilh a vague
licorice-like f1<1voc that
seems to boost the sweetness of pineapple.
l Fennel and anise seeds
;u'e sold m small boxes,
l~cated on the s pice s helf
•ti t ht> suµermarkd •
lilt• .31 wltfl COUpon ~·ftOHll Orange
Juice
601.
Cl ft
S" r v es two 21 S recipe, using leftover win e 1~ teaspoon fennel
l'Oloriei. each Rt.'clpe rare roast beef or l ean 2teaspoonsvihegar seedsoramseseeds
rni.y bu do~bled to 11crve stt'ak ... with cherry I/• teaspoon vinegar 8 cherry tomatoes,
four . lomaloes and pineapple 14 teaspoon MSG halved
W Ith lertovers I cup chunks added. (optional) N o t e : Us e t e a n
(•ubed cooked ch1l'kt'n or SWEET 'N' SOUR 6-ounce canunswe~t· leftover flank or round
t u r k e Y m a ~ b l' STEAK WITH ened pineapple juice steak or rare roast beef
1'Ubst1tuted Follow PINEAPPLE 8-ounce can unswe-round. \\ell trimmed of
prel·eding recipe. but For two servings: e t e n e d p In ea pp I c fat, thinly sliced against
i.tu· in cooked poultry at Leftover steak or chunks.undrained the grain . For two
the hist m inull' Cook rare mast beef 1 largeonion, peeled, ser vings you will need
•i nd s tir until lwalcd 2 t<iblespoons soy cul in chunks aboutseveuounces.
through !'tauce 2 gr een peppers, Combine thinlv sliced
II e r e ·:. a r l'1 a t t• d 2 tablt>~poons sherry seeded and sliced leftover r:.ire beef with
_....,...,.,......,c.,.. -',,.,. .. ,..we.~.
·--l~--llY14.7t •. 211 ... ·~1 ·~c .. .,
r.elpht·400 l.U Vitamin E 1~•C'· ·
Capsules ;~~==
POl.\'NESIAN
P EPPER ClllCKl-..S
Umit OM llem and~ c~ Pa< Cuslome<
Coupon Ellec1M >it 1 • 1""I Uy 20. 11n l1m11 One Item and One C°""°" Pt< CUllGmlr
Cowpon E~ .>Jt 14 tlvU Nit 20. 1tn
1 ~ µ o u n d r a '"
<;_hie-ken l'Utlet <~kin le!>
1:5ont'less breast 1 cul in
i; inch cubes
' '1 I l' U p 11 ll d ii U l l' d
denned or homemade
fat -skimmed chicken
broth
6-ounct> can 11ns11 CL
~t'ned pineapple juice
2 tublt·spoons so y
sauce
2 tablespoons sherry
wine
I large onion. peeled
and sliced
2 grren peppers,
~el'ded, cul in one-inch
Scheme
•
With
Beer
SUPER COUPON
.-111\ (:·~ •l'ld iK'IC-1'141•• of 1 v't .,,.,._,., ,.-< ..
l•mrt ~ llem ~nd ~ COUl>O<l p,. CU61ome<
COUl)O'l Ellechv• July ,. """ M 20. 1977
SUPER COUPON
Limit Ont Item IJ1'd Ont C""P"" ,,_ Cuslcma<
Coupon Elloehve JUiy 14 llwu M 20. 1977
SUPER COUPON
SUPER COUPON
USDA Choice Beet-Golden Premium Meats
USDA · CHOICE Al Ralphs Beef Roast cmcl Steaks Are UIDA Choice lxcluslvely
Btef
Ralphs
Wieners ·
1 lb. I pkg.
A1lpht ·D11iciou1
Honey 'N Wheat
Bread
2.4 oz. II loaf
Pantry Fillers
soy. sherry. vinegar,
MSG and 2 tablespoons
pineapple juice. Cover
and marinate 30 minutes
at room temperature or
several hours in the
refrigerator.
Spray a large nonstick
s kill et with cooking
spray for no-fat frying.
Add all remaining
ingredients except
tomatoes. Cover and
simmer three minutes.
Old Fashioned
Ralphs
Ice Cream
L1rge
Red
Plums
12 gal.
ctn.
Uncover and continue
to simmer until nearly
all the liquid i s
evaporated and
vegetables are crunchy-
t ender. At the las t
minute, stir in tomatoes
and sliced beef
<including marinade).
Cook and s tir until
heated through and well-
c oat ed with sauce.
Serves two. 360 calories
each.
II
'"'l Simmering idea for a
~ummer meal. Chickl'n
C a cci;Jlori with
spaghetti and a spinaf'h
salad smothered in beer!
S-Ound outrageous'' Try
It.
~o09·F~ , .. '0'· 33 can •
0 ffH b. Chp T09-I Lb Ctllo Pog.
~Carrots 2 For .29
~:· .15
C'fDCKEN
CACCIATORI
1 212 to 3 lb broiler·
fryer chicken. cut into
serving pieces
•~cup salad oil
1 cup sliced celery
2 m edium onion.
s.liced
' !! cloves g arlic·.
minced
1 can < 16 07.. l whole
lornatoc:s
2 cans (8 oz. each 1 or
I ean 115 oz > Tomato
Sauce
2 c hicken bouillon
cu bet
'~teaspoon ~ct It
l teaspoon crushed
basil
1 1 teaspoon pepper
2 T ables poon s
<·Ornstarch
'•cup w;.iter
Spaghetti, cooked
ahd drained
Brown chicken in hol
oil. Remove from skillet.
Dr a in . Saute c elery,
Qltion and garlic. Stir in
tOmatoes, tomato sauce.
b(>uillon cubes, sail, basil
and p e pp e r . Add
chicken; cover and
stm mer 45 minutes. ' ~1 Blend cornstarch with
ter; gradually add to
1cken. Cook. stirring
n stantly, until
ickened and
anslucent. Arrange on
;:
serving dish over
s ag.hetti. Makes 4 to 6
S VlDI(~
INACH SALAD WIT H
B EER DRESSING
Fresh s pinach, rfnsed and drained l S l ic e d fre s h
riushrooms Sm all pi eces of
ca~liflower
Sm all pi eces of ocolll (can be lightly
sf.ea med)
11 Pecan halves
•M ix all s ala d
l91redients and top wltti tte beer dressing and ~-~halves.
~-I ft (!Up m ayonnat.Se
'Aa c up Dijo n
ta rd
1 teaspoo n
neradb h
V. cup bee.r
Ix m ayonnai.se and
ta.rd logetbor -odd r 1era4 ia h a n d
•lluailb aur .ta*".
Beel-Blade Cut ,-Chuck
Steak
Pttf II lb.
BaefChuck
Round Bone
Roast
per II lb.
,.,..... ---Beer Aou.,d·80f\tl•11 ~.w,~ Beef Tip Steak ,,.,
lb.
,,-SDA lHn CubH ptr !y~Stewing Beef lb
Ou•ck ToF .. ~-We~ Cube Steak .,.,
lb.
WA' Itel Sl\1nk per tcwo1c1; Center Cut Shank lb.
USDA BHI CllllCk per l,£!!01c1 Flanken Ribs lb
~ c•UBeet Brisket pet IO.
~P'Oiish~~ ,,.,
10.
~~oitau ptt
tb.
Wines a Spirits
~~~a\'odka 150
ml.
0 ~1'1d&;, • peck D "'"'" SwietC~llntfllkl. a. or Pink Chablis Wine \" tlr
Prlcet Efftcttvt July 14 lhru Jt.1ly 20, 197~
W• rtt.,vt tll1 right to limit Of rtfuM Nlff
10 commercl1I d11llra or wllol"'ltra.
1"
1"
1"
.69
121
1''
1°'
.59
2"
.99
2H
Shanll Ot 8utt Porllon
Pdtt&-Leg
Roast
per
lb.
Beef To~ or 6ottorr
Boneless Round Roast
D P'~USteak
per
lb.
D C~ntry Style Ribs
o cu"';'&rti&~'-2'
D K~1Ham
f;zJ fi(;Mti;;g Chicken
~ a,nw ,1ece Pastrami
~&~cod Fit1et
~ FMh Trout •
29
48
.141 p.,
lb
,,., 141
' lo
219 per
lb
pet 111 lb
.,., .79 lb
1s• .,.,
lb. ,.,
to. 141
""' tb. 22•
Health a Beauty
~POiiih'R';~e; ··~ 43 btt. I
~Hi'~eU>sii'1iY'ormul1t 1'01. 79 c•" •
~a~'kshl; Uo.t. 111 btl.
D ....... _.,.., .... ..... C..-.•··-..... ~ ..... ...,,.. ........................................
,......
~&;~Je'sauce
~ iC:e'cr;;~ cups
~IC&"1c~a1
~ Mi:~ie·whip
~ M~y~1nnaise
~ Liq~ft:f oetergent
~ LiPi0i13i1~i< Tea
~ F~t:nch· Dressing
~ii;t;eq;) Sauce
Supet'De/I
D N~YMkCheddar D Mrtll Si119I• Shct food American Cheese
~ Ra1p.;$~iad
D a-:np~rk Franks
D Tiu;~k cheddar
Dvariitf P8Ck
CC01. 41 011 •
1'01. .39 ,..
2 1oll .43 pkg.
110 •. 59 bll •
pkg .59 01 2•
, .. .61 " ... , .... 67 , ...
qi .79 , ..
?101 .79 bll
llltg. .83 ol 12
16 01 .89 bll
2to~ 89 bit. •
pt• 191 lb
.64 6 or.
P'D
12 01. .49 P-11
1 lb 119 pkg,
.,.. 11• lb
Hor 137 pkg
~ 9;o;~ Onions
prr 10 II> I
Supw Floral
l;?J ce;;;~tions
~C-1P1ants
~ e':;gi~ 0M~ns
D ~;n;b~rg;~ Buns
~ c~ne;;·c~I<~
bunch ,99
.. en 329
Frozen Foods
~c~k°ki0oo~h
~ sf;Ck' T~ay Pizza
~e;nq;ty Dinners
1101 89 P•9 I
1 •Ol. 99 pog •
1101 53 pkg •
Home 'N Leisure
o~:O .69
l2g•l.1099 •ii•
•
w .... cn, .... 11 , ........... ........
-~ ....... .....
i '
GrPat combo: Peanuts. bacon and beans
team for a hearty casserole.
On the Road?
Pack With Care
Campers ran n •ly on a bag of
fruit.a and vegetabll':-. for many of
their meals. 1f they buy and pack
with care. And compact
packages of deh;drated salad
seasoning maxes can help make
them interestin~
For these two vegetarian
main-dJsh ideas. you II nee.'<! to
pack vegetable 011 (fell a plast1e
bottle with <1 sercw cap>, l
package of Italian cl ress1ng max.
2 grapefruit. 3 mt•claum sized zue
chini. 1 grN•n pt•µper , I ripe
avocado (pack et on to p .
please!). I onion, ... nct ..1 <'Lin or
garbanzo beans.
In your cooler. next to the beer.
pack a brick of Swiss cpcese <or,
if you hkc, cut 1t up into b1te-s1ze
cubes and pack an a plasllc bar.
before you leave) a nd a packag'!
of frozen peas. The peas will stay
frozen if kept an an ice chest or
ice box with ire, and add cold
power. too.
At home. Hot Summer Salad
can be garnished with chopped
walnuts. Come to think of 1t,
walnuts m ake good munching on
the road. too ..
HOT SUMMER SALAD
•:: package It ala an dressing
max
1 a cup salad 011
Fresh squeezed JUl<:c of 1 ~
grapefruit
l 1"Z grapefruit. p eeled, seeded and cut up
1 2 green pepper, chopped
1.2 onion. chopped
I cup SW'lss cheese, cut in
small cubes
1 package frozen peas
I avocado, peeled and diced
• .. cup chopped walnuts {op-tional)
In small saucepot, combine oil,
g raf)efruit j uice a nd s alad
seasoning mix. Bring to boil over
medium flame and add peas.
Cook until just done, about s
minutes: Toss in remaining in-
gredients. saving avocado and
nuts to add at the last minute.
Salt mixture and serve with
crackers. Serves 4.
GREAT GARBANZO SKILLET
1'2 package Italian salad
dressing mix
2 tablespoons oil
3 medium zucchini, washed
and sliced
1 2 green pepper, chopped
1 2 onion, c hopped
l 15-ounce can garbanzo
beans. drained
Heat oil in skillet over medium
fl ame and saute omon and green
pepper for about 5 minutes. Stir
an remaming mgred1ents mixing
well to combine spices; cover
and continue to cook 10·12
minutes. Servings can be topped
with Parmesan cheese. Serves 4.
Chocolate
Flip Over
Goes
Pears
Take a cue from the subtle
French way of combining pears
and chocolate. Results a Pear
Chocolate Upside-down Cake
PEAR-CHOCOLATE
UPSIDE-DOWN CAKE
6 tablespoons butter
i:, cup firmly packed dark
brown sugar
1 tablespoon h~hl or dark
corn syrup
3112-ouncc can flaked coconut
(or 1 and v.i cups loo!-ely packed)
29-ounce can pear halves.
well-drained
• :.i cups flour
l teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
1 2 teaspoon salt
''" cup cocoa
2 large eggs
1 cup granulated s ugar
l cupsourcream
1 teaspoon vanilla
In a 9 by 9 by 1 =%-inch cake pan
melt the butter; remove from
heat; stir in brown sugar, corn
syrup and coconut; pat over bot·
tom and s ides of pan. Arrange
pear halves in one layer, cut
sides down. on top; chill.
Stir together flour, baking
powder," soda, salt, cocoa,
granulated sugar: add eggs, sour
cream and vanilla and beat to
blend.
Pour over chilled pear layer.
Bake in a preheated oven at 375
degrees F. until cake tester in·
serted in the middle comes
clean, about45 minutM.
Let set in pan for 5-10 minutes.
Turn upside down on a serving
plate or tray and serve while still
quite warm. Makes 8 servings.
I
~ Shrimp Southern Style
G rl'et your weekend guests
t_,ilh a classic Southern J am-
balaya and Bloody Mary Soup.
for starters.
JAMBAL\YA
1 cup cubed cooked ham
1 1 pound medium s hrimp.
t:leaned
L 1.-2 cup chopped green pepper
1 medium clove garlic,
inced
2 tablespoons butter or
~argarine
1 can (103~ ounces) con-
densed chicken broth
1 can (16 ounces) tomatoes,
cutup
~2 cup sliced onion
2 tablespoons
Worcestershi re
lf.i teaspoon thyme leaves,
crushed
Generous dash cayenne pep·
per
. 1 cup raw regular rice
•
In skillet, brown ham and cook
shrimp and green pepper with
garlic in butter until pepper is
tender. Stir in remaining ingre-
dients. Bring to boil; reduce
heat. Cover; cook over low beat
30 minutes or until done. Stir OC·
casionally. Makes about 6~
cups, 6servings.
BLOODY MARY SOUP
1 medium onion, diced
3 celery stalks. diced
2 tablespoons butter
5 cups tomato juice
1 tablespoon salt
2 tablespoon s
Worcestershire sauce
14 teaspoon pepper
1 tablespoon lemon juice
If.I cup Booth's Vodka
Saute onions and celery ln but-
ter until light brown. Add tomato
juice. Simmer-a minutes. Add re-
maining ingredients. Strain and
serve. Serves 6 .
Cooks Use Their Beans
Pork 'n' beans never had it so
aood ••.
BEANS AND APRICOTS
11-pound can apricot halves,
drained, syrup reserved
2 1-pound cans por~k and
beana in tomato sauce
t,it cup bourbon
l tablespoon Worcestershire
sauce
1 teaspoon dry.mustard
1 tablespoon apple <"ider
vinegar
Salt and pepper to taste
In Ughlly oiled casserole dish.
arrange apricot halves. cut side
down. Stir dry mustard into
vinegar and add to beans. Stir in
Worcesters hire sauce and
wurbon. 3 tablespoons of reserv-
ed apricot syrup. salt and pepper
to taste.
Bake, uncovered 45 ·50
minutes, until lightly browned on
top. Servea8.
PEANUT-BACON BEANS
2 cans (1 pound each) pork
and beans with tomato sauce
lf.i cup chopped cocktail
peanuts
•As cup firmly packed light
brown sugar
2 tablespoons catsup
2 tablespoons dark molasses
4 slices uncooked bacon
Combine pork and beans,
chopped cocktail peanuts, light
brown sugar. catsup and
molasses in a l ·quar( cassero4e.
Mix well. Arrange bacon on top
IRIP 10 BOIH ~
ACAPULCO& MEXICO CllY! !
·------·---------·------· --· ...
of beans. Bake uncovered in
moderate oven (375 degrees F 1
15·20 minutes or until browned
and bubbling.
TROPICAL STYLE BEANS
l small onion, finely chopped
2 tablespoons butter or
margarine
1 can (1 pound) pork and
beans in tomato sauce
1 medium banana. sliced
.,,. cup shredded coconut
In saU'ccpan, cook onion in
butter until tender. Add beans.
heat. Sdr in banana and coconut
just before serving. Makes about
2 "2 cups, 4 servings ..
Variation: Substitule 1
m edium papaya, peeled and
cubed for banana.
I
'
.., .. , .... ,,., ....
piggj!1g Io:__ Nutrients?
Wedn~day. July 13. 19n DAILY PILOT CJ :J
• • • •• A Mine's Worth
Uncovered in Diet ~:::.~]?
M1nerah are elemenls
in our diets that are H
1e0Ual for good health
and arowlh Many or
them are needed In very
tiny amounts, and u ll
toaet.ber minerals makE>
up only 4 percent or our
body weight Their two
general body functloni.
are bwld.lng and regulat
mg
Their bu1ld1ng rune
lions affect the skeleton
and all soft tissues. Their
regulating functions an ·
elude stimulating
chemical reactioos tbat
affect heartbeat, blood
clottine. nerv e responses, maintenance
of internal pressure or
body fluids, transport of
oxygen from lungs to tis-
sues and or carbon diox-
ide from tissues to lungs.
DiHerent minerals
often work together. or
with other nutrients. But
some minerals are an-
tagonistic -an excess of
one can nullify the ef-
fects of another.
In some cases, excess
amounts of essential
minerals can be tC7l<ic.
Thus it is important that
we get minerals in our
diets in proper ly
balanced amounts.
Calcium is the best
known of the minerals
because of its role in
forming the structure of
bones and t eeth. It
makes up about 2 per·
cent of the body .
Calcium ia also involved
in the regulation of body
processes such as
bloodclolllng, nerve
stimulation, muscle con-traction -including
heart muscle -and is
necessary for good mus-
cle tone.
If sufficient calcium is
not supplied by food, the
body will "take it" from
bones and teeth. Long
term lack of calcium can
lead to osteoporosis in
older adults, resulting in
severe bone deteriora·
tion and high suscep-
tibility to bone fracture.
The main source of
calcium is milk and
foods made from milk
such as cheese, yogurt,
and ice cream. Other
sources are green leafy
vegetables (except
s pinach and c hard),
dried peas and beans.
Phosphorus goes hand
in band with calcium in
forming bones and teeth.
H's also an important
part of every tissue and
is necessary for the
storage and release or
energy. It facilitates the
absorption of many
materials by combining
with them.
Calcium and
phosphorus should be
present in the diet in
nearly equal propor·
tions. Phosphorus is
widely distributed in all
foods, but is especially
high in meat, poultry,
fish,· eggs, and whole
1raln cereal•. A hl1b· meal, low-milk diet can.
re1ull in exce11
phoaphonll in proportion
to calcium and thia can
be detrimental to main·
talnina healthy bones.
Sodium ia found in blood plasma and fluids
outside body celia and
helps maintain pormal
water balance inside and
outside cela. Sodium ia
responsible for nerve im·
pulses which maintain
constant beat of the
heart.
Table salt (sodium
chloride) is the main
source, and m05t people
get far more sodium
than they need. Excess
sodium intake is thought
to be a contributing
cause of high blood pre-
ssure and can cause a de·
ficiency of potassium.
Potualum is found in
the fluid inside body
celJs. With sodium it helps regulate body nwd
balance and volume. A
deficiency may result
from prolonged diarrhea
or use of diuretics and
cause irregular heart
beats, muscle weakness,
poor intestinal tone.
Potassium is abundant
in almost all foods -
both plant and animal.
Especially high are flsh,
meat, legumes, potatoes,
tom a toes, bananas, citrus fruit, dried fruit,
spinach, carrots, broc-
coli, and milk.
Chlorine is the chloride
part of table salt. It
forms hydrochloric acid
in the gastric juice,
which is important for
digestion of food in tbe
stomach. It is found in
meat, milk, and eggs as
well as in salt.
Iron is a component of
the hemoglobin ln blood
necessary for transport·
ing oxygen to all cells.
Cells also need It for
making use of oxygen.
Iron also is part or the
myoglobln in muscles
and a constituent of
some enzymes.
Few foods, with the ex-
cepUoo o~. organ meat!
Introduce your taste buds to Sc:hlrmer's
elegant Bavarian Braunschwelger with
Pistachio nuts, but be generous. This
brawny Braunschweiger is created the
slow, old-time way from delicately smoked
liver, combined with the lush goodness of
Pistachio nuts, then stuffed In a colorful casing
to preserve all that goodness. Ideal for
appetizers, snack~ and dips. Try It today!
,,
I
aucb u Uver, kidney,
and heart, are hiah in
iron. Good 1ources are
oyaten, elams, egi yolk,
bran and wheat eerm.
green leafy vegetables.
dried ~t. nuts, dried be~peas.
Co'"r is needed in storage and releue or
iron to form bemoal<>bin
-especially important
in early months of life. It
also plays a key role in
connective tissue
metabolism.
Seafood Scarce
Growing demand for seafood could lead to a
worldwide shortage within a decade, a iovern-ment report has stated.
A study released to Associated Press by the ~aliooal Oceanic and Atmospheric admlnistra-
hon says current landings of 63 million metric
tons annually are edging toward the maximum
world output of 150 million metric tons which the
report said, could be the annual bar'.vest in 10 years.
J~bn B. Glude, author or the report, says ther~ IS good ~tentia! for increased fish produc· tion an the U.S. if pubhc hatcheries are expanded
and private fanning of fisb and shellfish is en-
couraged.
Glude eslimateshat approximately 10
percent of the world fishery production comes
from aquaculture.
Public aquaculture of salmon, and private
aquaculture of oysters, trout, shrimp, catfish
and clams account for 65,000 metric tons, or
about3percentofU.S.production. ·
1160 SUHR.O'Wa. COSTA Ml5A
SUMR.OWH AT FAJeVllW 545-063 7 DAllY 10 A.M,..7 P.M.
:~::: Rlet ... S J 99 Wh~e~Stripper u.
GROU .. D I EEF SALE
WHOLE TOP SlllLOIH
s1 ~
CUT 6WliP'nD
PORK SALi i I JI
Pon C-,. lawter utl • . • • • . I.I.
c-try ~ ror11 u.. ...... s I "u.
s 121 Porla l• IOMt •••.•.•••••• •• u.
LH1mt ................... :99\a. R SH SALE ,2,.
89c Scaflops •.•.•..••••.•••••••. u. t.tr. L-. . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . u. s I "
,_ct~ Mohl MoM • • • • • • • • • . • . • • • • • • u.
:effit L 5 U.. loll ......... · · ... '4" lock Cod ...•• ••• •.• ••• ...... s I "u.
~==JF=s==.ft~~AYS.!_!_7---:~~--::::---. -. . -
Zlac is an easentlal
enzyme ingredient and a
con stituent of the
hormone insulin. It is
also needed for blood
transport of carbon diox·
ide. Deficiency can
cause Jou of taste, de-
1 ayed wound healing.
Found ln proteln foods --------------------m~at, fish, egg yolk, HIGH. PRO~EIN milk, oysters -and in ' I
whole grain cereal.
legumes, peanuts.
Iodine is a necessary
part of t he t h yroid
hormone which re -
gulates basal
metabolism. Deficiency
can result in enlarged
thyr oid (goiter); defi-
ciency in pregnancy can
lead to a child called a
cretin -dwarfed, men-
tally deficient.
Bones
Brittle?
LOW CALORIE
THRIFT
STORE
UMIOM MAID BAKERY
VI SIT OUR HEW LOCATION
SUMMER SAVINGS UPT050% ON
VARIETY BREADS•ROUS•BAGa.S
Up lo ~ SOYings ore yours When vou ~chOSe
PRESTO COMPACTOR BAGS at your lavorlle
~-
The$e bogi ore top quality, heoYV W9lohl plaltic
and designed to llt most atondard iMlome Trosh
Compact01$.
Olp this coupon and SOYe 25e toward VCXK next
purchase of PRESTO COMPACTOR eAGS.
Available at the folJowfng stores:
Albertlon"s
El R1noho Markets
Fazlo"s
Gelson's Martiels
Hughes Markets
Lucky Stores
Marllet Basket
Safeway
Stater Bros.
Treasury Food SlOfes
Vons
weve made our Catsup
7Ctastier.
r----------------------------------~--------, @ Save 7C on DeiMOilie Catsup14 oz. @
Take this coupon to your grocer. Worth
7¢ on your next purd'lase of 14 oz. bottle
of Oa Mo~TE Catsup.
Mt Grocer: Del Monte Corporation wlll redeem
this coupon fof70 plus 6c handHng. provided ii 1a
teoeM!d from 1 retan customer on tne purchase
ol 14 oz. bOttlt of DEL MoNTE Cl!ll&Up. end 11 upcn
,.quest. you aubmlt tn\'Ojeft pt0'11ng purchase
Witt*! ttie !alt 90 dlyt of•~ stock to rover
@ coupons 1Ubtnitt«t fOf ~tlon. COU·
pons may not be MllgMd or tnlnlferred.
CU9tomer must pay •ny ..... tax. \Ibid
whet9 prohibited. taxed or l"lllltrtcltd by
~--~-~-------
law Good onJy in cities or towns In USA wtiare
advertised. Cash value 1120¢. Coupon win not
be honored through outside agencies. brokers,
or others wti:> are not rotall dlslributora of our
merchand•se or speciltcelly authorized by us to
present coupons for redemption. FOf redampUon
ol property reoeived and haodled coupon, mall to
OEL MONTE FOODS. P 0. BOX 1460, CLINTON.
IOWA 52734. oner Umlted to one OOUpOft per
family, group or org1nlutlon. My appllcetlon
of this coupon, olhef tllan under the~
as stated herein. constitutes fraud. @
Coupon •JIPlrea s.,>tember *>.1977 1 Collpon Cod• 32117 _________________ _..
I
CJ,1 OAIL Y PILO'I' Wednead1x, July \3. 1917
Good Game Plan: Don't Play (Ann Landers OJ
DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1'hl11
ltlt• LI to t.b three 16-)'Hr old
&lrll 'Who l~od tll tbofr llPllTO
tlme fantul&lo1, "Whal IC we 1ol
preanaotT"
What kind ol roulotte are you
plt)'Ln&. strla? Tho llakN IU'C
hl1her than you tblnk. Abortion
11 now considered ufer than
ehlldbuth, but It la 1tlll 100 11.-r
cent raul ror the Cetua. Do the un-
born han a voice In the same"
Releastn1 • child for adoption
m•Y not be your declalon uJone.
Courta are now recoanillnc lhe
rlahta of the father. You'd better
ull In \he unliaoted players.
If you opt for rai•lng tbe child
alone. can you raue the
''bread?" Are you ready to take
on lbe responsibility for the dailv
care of another human belnf? o'r ore you ussummj that your am!·
ly or S()('lety will ptck up lho tab?
It ao, th-.;y too ~hould be consult·
ed. The ri11ht to "do your own
thlna" doe& not Include the riaht
to imPoSe 011 others.
Marriage may not be the
aam1wer either. If you are a minor
you would need parental consent
m 11ome Ettates . What 1s your
boytr1e11d's gut reaction! Have
you ronaulted him? Wiii be scut·
tie school and career plans for a
menial job to support you and tbe
baby? Or will he be a rabbit and
run? If he stays and "takes his
punishment," remember that a
c aptive mate often slips the
noose when he gets fed up. What
will you do then?
There are two waya ot ending the 1amble: Stay away from sex
alt.of ether or learn how to use
con raceptivea responsibly.
Ptirhaps these should be the
topics or your next gab-fest.
girts. -FANTASY CHILD'S
MOTHER IN DES MOINES
DEAR MOTHER: Tbank you
for some sensible advice. I
coaldD't have doae better myself.
In fact., probably no& as well.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My
boyfriend Hal and I just had a
fight over something stupid. We
have known each other for
several years and are now con-
sidering marriage.
President Carter stated recent·
Jy that he might start the "draft"
again. Hal says he will not have
to go becaU1e of his police record.
Five years ago be was involved
in burglary and grand larceny.
Six moot.ha ago be was arrested
for the possession of an ounce of
marijuana.
P1ease give us the correct in·
formaUon. -MAD IN NEW YORK
DEAR MAD: At tbis wrlLIA& a
new draft ls being considered bat
there I.I no draft law on tbe boob
at present. So quit fl1bt1n1,
already. <P.S. Hal sounds like a
real winner.)
DEAR ANN LANDERS: This
letter Is for "Tomato Face" -
the girl who was miserable
because the men in the office told
off-color jokes and used shocking
language -they loved to watch
her blush.
Honey, I'm a 33-year-i'ld male
who used t.o be a blusher, too. A
friend proved to me that involun-
tary responses can be controlled.
If you will do some pro gr am ming
you can prevent the blush
mecbaniaJn as I did. An ap-
propriate message to repeat to
YOIU'$elf might be: "CANCEL
THE BLUSH, I WILL NOT PUT
ON A SHOW FOR THESE JERKS."-V-8
DEAR V-8: In' &ecbnical
ltngqage your aatutes&ed ao-
oroach is called ''bJo-feedb1ct:.-
U It can lower one's blood pre•·
sure (and It can), i& eerta1n1y· I
abould be able &o aqueJcb a~
The technlqae mast be teunea
from a professional, bo•ever•
Check with a pbysiclan.
Planning a wedding? What''
right? What's wrong? Ann Lan.-
ders 's completely new "The
Bride's Guide" will relieve yow:'
anxiety. To receive a copy, aenc;l
a dollar bill, plus a long, sel(·
addresaed, stamped envelope(~
cents postage) to Ann Landers.
P.O. Box ll99S. Chicago; DI. 60611. .
Course lnf'ormation Pleases
Nonagenarian Fay Feed Christian
has "so much he still wants to do. "
OJ':Rockin, Chair
F·or Sell~ng Only
MOUNT CARROLL. Ill. <AP)
-At age 92 the only thing a rock-
ing chair means to Fay Freed
Christian is something to sell in
his furntiture store. He doesn't
have time to stop and rock.
Christian is a ruddy-
complexioned, sportily dressed
little man who has been in busi-
ness in downtown Mount Carroll
sincel911.
"I believe in mixing and agree-
ing instead of arguing," he says.
"Having a good thought of
others. That's kept me going."
In addition to selling and re-
pairing furniture, Christian is an
undertaker. He also frames pie·
tures under a system he patented
that gives a three-dimensional
effect, sells old-time sheet music,
enjoys his 61st year in the
Ma sons and corresponds as past
president of the Illinois Society of
Sons of the Revolution.
His only television interest is
the one hour a day he spends
watching the soap opera "As the
World Turns." which he began
watching before his wife died
several years ago.
Christian runs everything
himself. noemployes.
"l don't get much fu.neral busi·
ness anymore -don't advertise
or anything Jlke that. People
know where I am if th.ey want to
come In.'' he said.
"These days the high cost of
dying is really something .... I
always have looked out for
people's interests and will still
put on a dandy funeral -metal
c a s ket, embalming, hearse
service. chapel services -for
less than $1 ,000 .•• And I still
would make a little bit on it."
Christian finds much of his
pleasure with his granddaughter •
and three · great-grandchildren
who live in town.
He also enjoys walking. In a
parade last year, "I walked more
than a mile to the start of the
parade, then marched downtown
and back again. Arter the'
parade. I started to walk back
home. but someone stopped and
gave me a ride.
··I like plenty of exercise but by
that time I was starting to get a
little tired."
When he leaves his store he
selects from a dozen dif'rerent
handwritten notes to hang on the
door : "I'm at the fotmer
Grimm's Cafe on Rapp Street
now owned by Mr. and Mrs.
Ward Rogers;" "At Elsie's Cafe
on Highway 64 at Lanark, 7
miles. The food is good;" or "I'm
walking through Point Rocle
Park and then to the cemetery."
·'The whole clan is buried there
but me," he said. "My great·
great·grandfatb.er who was in the
Revolutionary War is there. So
are my great-grandfather who
was in the War of 1812, my
grandfather, my father and my
mother. Undoubtedly. I'll join
join 'em some day, but I never
think about it. I've got too much I
still want to do."
'
LUNG AS·
SOCIATION: Quitters
Are Winners, a new
manual available from
the Orange County as-
sociation, is a benefit to
·smokers, non-smokers
and smoking education
instruct.on.
It i.s a comprehensive
guide to organizing and
conducting smoking
cessation programs.
The pamphlet i s
available at a nominal
charge, and may be or-
dered by calling the as-
sociation office at 835-
LUNG.
Pl LAMBDA THETA:
The national honor and
professional association
in education will have its
biennial council meeting
next month.
Moderator for a panel
discussion will be Dr.
Helen Diamond of
Laguna Beach, Citrus
College business ad-
ministration Instructor
and first vice president
of the organization.
She also is founder of
Women in Management
and was instrumental in
organizing the campus
chapter of California
Women in Higher Educa·
ti on.
· VICA: Volunteers in
Child Abuse is a project
involving trained volun-
teers with parents who
need support. friendship ·
and role models to help .
improve their parenting
skills.
effective control of their ·Inn. SIDS: The week of Ju-this year from this dis·
lives, will be offered at A fashion show and Jy·25-31 is SIDS (Sudden ease, which remains the
7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Reservations may be lnfant Death Syndrome). leading cause of death
July 20, at the Newport made wilh Mrs. Francis Awareness Week. among infants one week ~e~~!~r Counseling J. WWJamaat675-176S. Carl's Jr's restaurant to one year ol age. It ts
It will be an introduc-R E T I R E D will sponsor the week by second only to accidents
tion for an eight-week PERSONS: The.1Hunt· donating five cents from ·1 i.1~he dbatbs of all
Effectiveness Training ington Beach Cnapter every order of super c 1 k~lS etween1 one
for Women course will meet at 1 p.m. scoop fries to the Na-wee yearso a~e.,
which will focus on as: Wednesday, July 20 in .tional Foundation for Furthe~ in~ormat1on
sertive behavior no-lose Murdy Park Center to SuddenlnfantDeathSyn· aboiul tbltbfe dlStheasSeIDlSs · ' · h Mi b 1 G t t d In ava a e rom e problem solving skills, ear c ae. er ner •. a . rome, c. F d t . 310 S handling values col-torney, ducuss tn· ?U'.1 a ion, . •
1. · 1 . g heri·tancetaxlaws More than 8,000 M1ch1ganAve.,Chicage, is1ons, exp ortn · A · b b' ·udi Ill 60604 strengths and setting SERIES: The British merican a 1!?S wi e · ·
goals. Consulate General in Los -------------------The course ls based on Angeles is producing a r------~:------------~
the effectiveness train-series of 26 shows, en-' SENIO.R CITIZENS ing model developed by titled "Focus on Britain"
Dr.· Thomas Gordon, for statlonKWHY, Chan· a · 1ocw Off All
author of Parent Effec-nel 22 in Los Angeles, 70 Parch••••
liveness Training. which w ii 1 al r 0 n SAVE ON All PURCHASES av BECOMING A L EGA L s E c. Wedn~a~_at2p.m. MEMBER OF ouR SENIOR c1r1uNS SAVINGS
RETARIES: Mak· A special. pro~ram PLAN•THocosTTovou.
ing the Most of Money is from the senes will be RENTALS & All Pre·P1lcl RX ProgrHll HOltrecl
the Wpie of the Harbor re~layed on Channel 13 ;;.•1 Area group's dinner Friday, July 22, at 10
meeting Wednesday, Ju-P·'!': tc;> ~elebrate the ollege Pharmacy
·110FAIROR COSTAt,11•,A ly 20, in the Seacliff Bnt1shJubtlee. .
restaurant, Huntington Anchorperson will be • NMClllmOHS Beach. Pat Nelsser of Newport • ~
I ''' '• ' +I •I • ' 'o ' ,
0P!l\1Pry SNv•r'.t' '>4!1 l.'11~
Lorain Petry, account Beach. ~~~!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
executive, will be the ELKS LODGE: The -------------------speaker. Ladies auxiliary of the
Mission Viejo lodge will
C H R I S T I A N have a potluck dinner at
WOMEN: The Newport 7 p.m. Saturday, July 23,
YOGA & CONTOURING
EXERCISES Beach club will meet at in the lodge. Dancing
11:45 a.m. Wednesday, will conclude the eve· • July 20, in the Airporter ning.
Weddings V'Q;
and Engagements
Reshaping • Reiuvenating •
•Relaxing
CLASSES MOW FORMING
Indra DevJ..Certified Teachers
Information meetings for interested volunteers To avoid disappointment, prospective
will be held Wednesdays, brides are reminded lo have their wedding Yn Studio July 20, Aug. 10 and 31 , at stories with black and white glossy
10 a.m. at the Orange photographs to the Daily Pilot People 1 County Library Head-Department one week before the wedding.
quarters, and extensive Pictures received after that time· will
training will be provided not be used. ·
in September for volun-For engagement announcements it is
tee rs se lected to imperative that the story. also accom·
participate in the proj· panied by a black and white glossy pie·
ect. ture. be submitted six weeks or more
Btltngual volunteers before the wedding date: otherwise it will
are ·esped;ally needed to not be published.
work with non-English To help fill requirements on ooth wed·
speaking families. ding and engagement stories. form3 are
Anyone interested is available in all Daily Pilot offices. Fur·
invited to attend the in· ther questions will be answered by People
formation meetings to Department staff members al 642-4321.
learn how to prevent_~iiiiiiiiiiii~iiii~~~~~~;;;::=:...1 child abuse. Further in·
formation is available b)C
calling the Orange Coun-
ty Department of Social
Services, 834-4703.
DOLLARS ~oa
SCHOLARS: Newport
Harbor Alumnae As-
sociation of Kappa Delta
will have its annual
scholarship benefit
bridge brunch at 10:30
a.m. Wednesday, July
1 20, at the Harbor View
Hills home of Mrs.
Richard Wa1tneight.
Proceeds are used to
. provtete wcbolarships at
several campuses.
CLASS: A free class
for women, introducing
techniques to take more
@re> ti!~
~411? Jl4~[)lf~S
• Hair Design
•Skin Oare
• Sculotured ~ails ~~•Manicure/Pedicure
t 120 lntiie W\fd.
Mewporthocli co ca 11141 64J..Ut4
HANGING
SHADES
fr-.
'7"' ..
'29"1
~ ·~-
2706 HAUOR BLVD.
SUITE 204
~
learnto .. be
CodaW..
54~5300
YQUr own
inter"_!>!.~~~· I
._ ........ c.... ..........
TOU CAtfDOn TOUR_,. 1
Leam hOw to out a room together llke a ~OMJ ••• tlow to decorate for your famllY'a etyte of U'llno, ••
hOw to get the f1'l9St for yOUr decomln0 dollar ••• hOW ,
to use things Yoll already have ••• how to -~ .. and
"make-do" ••. how. to mix fumiture ttvtes ••• how to select the right colOf'S • • . how to choOee tabrtca yau
can live wtth • • • how to avoid making expensive decoratlrig mistakes. • . •
YOU'LL GIT PllSOMAJ. A~ Your Instructor will be Mester 1 expert ASIO
Decorator/Designer Nancy Cartwright Sh9'11 hetp with your Individual decorating problems. and she'll tlfle yau on a colOr ciosed clret.1lt TV tour of over 400 beautiful
"Idea" rooms.
CU.SAS lfAIT MY II ,
And they'U be h~ld right In our downtown ttore. You11 attend one 2 hour CIUS I WIMtc for 8 weeks, The '
Qflrollrnent M la 135. Which Includes your Decorator's 1 Manual student WOlkboOk. Use YoUr Bank Amerlcard or Masterct\alve.
CHOO• TNI Cl.All
THATS COMYeQMr l'Ol TOU Mondaye at 7:00 P.M. Baatamante
ANTIQUES
Show and Sale SALE
Tuetdaye at 10:00AM.
WednetdlYS It 7:00 P.M.
Thul'ldaya •t 10:00 A.M.
.laly 14, 15, 18t 17 If
Yeelerday'• eleganC'~ for tocby't IMn1.
ExAJultlte C'reatlon.• by LaQ~., !fiffay
Sevret. nwnr nH1" )'OU bow from 80 of ~
tbe Weat'• lll)e.t clt'alt'n. Treat JOGl'Mlf
to preelout t-eauty al reuonahle prieea.
,
1
Party
In
Store
The• ru '' flullork 'I
\\ 1lsh1rl• -.tnrl' to 111n·11 111
0 r a n g e (' 11 u n t ' h .1 .,
jo1nt'd \\II h I ht• '\11•\.\ 1>•11 l
Hurhor \rl \lu~1·11111 1111
.t rhanl\ I'•'''~ pJ.rnnl·tf
for S.lturrt.1' .Jul\ .JO 111
thl" Ol'\\ :.tm t• 111 l-'a,1111111
l'iland ~1·11.p.11 1 Ht•uth
Thl" pJrt~ 11.111 tal...
plJre on both rloon, ol
l he ~tort' rrom 6 lO 'l
I' m . \\Ith .t<'ll\ 1111•' -.u<'h
as mus1c.i.l enlc1 t.i.111
ment. art pu.·cl".., on l'\•
h1b1t from the Ne"port
Harbor Art Mu seum and
a fashion show pre!>ented
by American de!>1gner.
Ralph Lauren.
Bullock's W1lsh1rc will
open to the public on
Monda>. Aug. 1. This
fall. the art museum will
open its new fac1ltl y
located adJ al:ent lo
Fashion Island.
f::q:•nl <.'ha1rv.om~111 1..,
;\lr~. Frank Rhodt•.., 11f
the art museum c·uunr1 I
Proceeds from lht• pn•
opening will bend it t h1•
museum
More 1nformat1on 1"
available from l\lr~
Uhodes at 673-8392.
D•••r Ptlol P""toby POlmkO'DOMOll
Mrs. Frank Rhodes, benefit
chairman, receives assistance
from Ross Manning, store manager.
.. • .. • p ...
Wedno,,<Jay. Ju! 13. 1977 OAtL Y PILOT Cl 5
·Virgo~
.Surprise!
JULY SALE
t_,RANCI0-0RR
fire stat(Jay coma del mar
THURSDAY, JpLY u
By SYDNEY OMABll
ARIES (March 21 ·
April 19): Make long·
range plans. Solidify
contacts. Accent on
home, family, property,
basic value -decision
regarding member of op-
oosite sex.
TAURUS (April 20-
May 20): Emphasis OD
close neighbors, rel-
atives, short journeys
You will be dealing with
one whose views are set,
settled -who does not
want to change, but is
willing to listen.
GEMINI (May 21.June
20): Accent on
valu a bles, personal
possessions, ability to
locate I06t articles. Be
-flexible, give full play to
intellectual curiosity.
Accept social invitation.
Change routine.
CANCER (June 2 1
July 22): Lunar cyclt
high -put forth views in
direct. frank, objective
manner. Emphasis on in·
dividuality, appearance,
personality. Trust judg-
ment, follow through on
hunch.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22):
tent, patient: negoti a . ..;=:;:;:;;;;;;;:;:;;;:;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
lions favor you as time
goeaon.
SAGITfARIUS (Nov.
22-Dec. 21): Reach
beyond Curfellt expecta-.
lions. Accent. on leases,
money of others, 4UC5·
tlons concerning invest·
ment, inheritance. Be
aggressive, not obnox·
ious. State case clearly.
CAPRICORN (Dec ..
22·J an. 19): Accent on
new deals, fresh con·
tacts, challenges. Be a
keen. shrewd observer.
Avoid making binding
commitments. Em-
phasis on partnership,
cooperation with one
whose views may appear
controversial to you.
AQUARIUS (Jan.
20·Feb. 18): Low key ap-
proach could bring most
constructive results.
Emphasis on work,
recreation, basic habit
patterns, general health.
PISCES (Feb. 19·
March 20): Highlight
versahlity, willingness
to be compatible with in-
dividual who is funny
and may aim humor at
one of your "sacred
cows." Creativ•ty i ~
stimulated. ~~~~s HALF-SIZE SHOP
Men .in Class by Selves
You gain access to in·
formation which h ad
been obscured, de ·
liberately or otherwise.
Result of "special con·
ference" could be a
change of scenery.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Scpt.
If July Htb ls your
birthday, you are
per ceptive, fond of
travel, food -,and mem·
bers of opposite sex. You
are creative, romantic.
restless.
FULLERTON
214 Oulltffllr Miii
LAGUNA HILLS
L ...... MilbllUll
HUNTINGTON ll!ACH
MMllM\ ..... C..lt<
COSTA MESA
111$ llt•"'1 11•0,
Take 12 men and put
them an a works hop
s ituation Toss out a
topic such as how do you
deal with female ag
gressiveness and let the
discussion bcgm.
That's the idea bchrnd
Are You A ThrC'aten1:d
Man , a w orks h op
s ponsored b:v th e
Woman 's Center 1n
Placentia. The !ii'< W('l'k
session. whirh began Ju
ly 11. meets fro m 7 9
p.m. at the center, 516 N.
Placentia Ave
"l don't feel men arl'
totally ready lo gl\e
women equal rights." having to deal "'1th
says workshop leader women on a ·'com
J 1 m Grant of Costa petitive'' basis.
Mesa. "It's hard to give Thus the questions
up things you've been many men arc facing.
t·ond1taoned with all your How do I handle female
life." aggressiveness? Jl ow
Grant. who counsels at does female aggresswn
the center, says many affect my mascultn1ly''
men have been brought Do I feel I'm in compet1·
u P l hi n king w om en ti on with women., Do l
should only be thought of like aggressive women"
as their wife. mother and The workshop will l>L•
partner . limited to 12 men and
Thal way of thinking will be for m~n only.
has been turned upside ·Grant believes .this will
down as the roles of allow the men to be more
women have changed, he open in expressing their ~ays, and men often are true feelings.
"There are a lot of
things they wouldn't ex-
press to a woman,··
Grant notes.
<There will be more
workshops if required.)
Part1c1pants also will
discuss male condition-
mg.
Grant says men have
been expected to be
"strong" and not cry or
s how emotion . And
they've been conditioned
lo s trive to be a "win·
ner."
Benk.AmfflcardtMa~ltr Ch4r9e
22) : Pleasant s urprise i;;;;;;=::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;~~~~~==~=======:===~ indicated -gift or
special occasion could be
featured. Your "home
life" is subject tc
change. Family member
makes fine gesture. Be
diplomatic, receptive.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct.
22>: Don't jump at first
offer. Someone Is serv·
ing as intermediary for
higher·up. Know il and
refuse to belittle your
own worth. Civic honor
could come your way.
WANTED!
CONTEMPORARY YOUNG WOME~
FOR
fRE£
HAIRCUTS
DOM ly Nty Uctnstd ~
SCORPIO <Oct. 23· AthftclhHJAdYcmtcedTec.._S.""8anForCuttincJ
These ideas are chang-Nov. 21): Plan for "stay· AU. WE IEqUIH ls YOUR TIMI!
mg and men are begin-ing power." You don't lyAppolntme..tOnly
nangtotakeonnewroles, immediately get every· GLEMBY INTERNATIONAL
Grant.observes. thing you want. but you
Troths Revealed gain strength. Be persis· Cal M-....,. Sat. -""" 11·I6. frOM I 0 ....._to S ~ Emphasizing that the Ask for lcrbwa ZeitnMM 759-121 I
workshop 1s not a------------.!~==~==========~~~~~~~===~:=::=::=::=::=::=::=::=:::::::~t he rapy group . he
describes it as being a
McDonald-Baker
l\lr. and ~lrs Rtrhard
D. :'tlcDonald ur r-:u~cne.
·ore. have ;mnotml "" tlH'
engagement of I hl'I r
,d au~htcr . ShJrll•nc•
Ma rie .l\lcDonald. to
Evan R. Baker. SOii or
the Wilham T. Bakt>rs of
lr\'inc.
' M i s s i\I r D o n :1 I d
graduated from h 1gh
. school in Newport. Ore
and now is stud~1 n~ al
the Oregon Institute of
Il er fian ce is a
g r ad uate of South
Pasadena High School
and attended Pas adena
C1t.v College.
r •••
Todd-Rosenberg
Mr. and Mrs. Carl
.Jacobson of Huntington
Beach have announced
the engagement or their
dau~htcr. Kim Michelle
Todd, and Jeffrey S .
Roscnbcr~ of Madison,
Wis.
An Aug. 14 wedding i'>
plaifned in Madison.
Miss Todd is a Marina
High School graduate
and also graduated from
the University of
California. ·Santa
Barbara.
Her fiance, the son of
Mrs. Iris J . Rosenberg of
Madison and G ii bert
Rosenberg of Sarasota.
Fla .• also graduated
from UCSB.
. ·'self-awareness and
se lf·learning" ex-
perience. The partlci·
pants will also do role-
pl aying.
Most workshops at the
center are co-ed. Some
arc designated for
women or men only. For
couples there are groups
in communication,
parenting. beginning a
new life-style . and the
arts. .
Technology. KI am a th-------:-------------------------
•Falls. where hrr fiancc
is employed
lie gradutl'lcd from
Corona del l\lar l11 gh
'School and the 1nslltute .
, An August wedding 1s
·b e 1 n g p 1 a n n t• d 1 n
Eugene • • •
Kelly-Lund' "
Mr. and Mrc; Douglas
~. Kelly of Costa Mesa
~ave announced the
engagement of thl'ir
daughter . Kar e n
Elizabeth Kelly, and Roy
David Lund, son of lhe
Evert Lunds of Hunt·
l ngton Beach.
An Aug. 20 wedding is
~eing planned in
~l ymouth Congrega·
tional Church, Newport
)leach.
Mis s Kell y is a
graduate of Coi;tn . Mesa
lUgh School. attended
prange Coast Coll ege.
flDd earned h er BA
lfegrec in social science
llt UC lrvme.
STATE FARM
A
HELD OVER
ONE MORE WEEK
SttU S.•INI Sty4ft
... Hlny!
.,
I r
I
'
~
t
c·oRNED
BEEF
LEAN s 1 ~L,B. BRISKET
FRESH GROUND
BEEF 49~
ARMOUR'S
SLICED
BACON
FOSTat OR ZACKY FARMS
LEGS AND
FRYING
THIGHS
Store Hours:
9 to 9 Dally -Sunday 9 to 7
rric" fffectl••
Thurs., July 14 thru Wed., July 20
rric" ~ .. Stec• M 11-4
We Gladly Acc.,t Food St.,.,
We R•Hf'n The Riqht To Unlit qu.titiu
Aftd Refllse Sole To Dealen Aftd Wholesalers.
VIVA PAPER
·TOWELS
FOSTat OR ZACKY FARMS
FRYING
CHICKEN
BREASTS
SI~?.
XTRA LEAH GROUND 9•c BEEF PLATE BEEF 7u. Short Ribs 49~
FRESH MADE
ITALIAN
SA USA IE.
L~~:ssl4!·
BEEF CHUCK
BEEF
ROAST
SEVEN BONE 99c
ROUMi
1
IONE · LB.
69!. .·BARMALLBEEF 119 HORMEL 98C KNOCKWURST ·u. Braunschweiger L•
ARMOURS I 2 OZ.
WIENERS
.iiTiiiiiiiG 69c :;·otiYiS 29c
22 OZ. S>/4 OZ. CAN
EGGS FRe;f}: 69DO~ (iii· 3~" 9c
KERNS SOLID PACK 49cMARYKrtCHEH 59c TOMA TOES c~::,ED HASH
211:z CAN 15 OZ. CAN
GREEN GIANT
: :~CORN WHOLE
KERNEL
303CAN 29c COiit FL~!!o! 59c
c·
..
j
f PALMOLIVE
SO~P
2 IAR PAK.
RAGU
Cl6 DAIL y PILOT * Wednesday. July 13, 19n
The etant ......... Oft the Olwwe COMt
DAILY · PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS
You Can Seti It.Find It, (842•5878J . One,_21tl•~ Trade It With a Want Ad Fest ""_,. ...,... .... -.. _..... ..~ ~ ............ ........ -htot. ........ ll)OC).2999 Ylt & ,._.. : •.. ~ .... .,_ llentala .......... ~ S.W.a I 1ti;11!ift • ~ lqllfpllllftf •• : ••••• taOMOft ........ _ .... , 1...-...... ~ . . , ....
flllMclal .•....•..• 5000-so.t Pnipa;llftlft .•.••• 1000-71ff ~ •.•• tloo.t9ft
Moan For Sale ...... For We -------............................................. .
GtMrol 1002 GtMHI 1002
ERR.ORS: Advertisers ••• •••••• •••••••••••••• ••••••• ••••• ... •••••••• should cMck tllelr ads COSTA MISA
dlHy -~ .... Ch sn.tso ron lw11aclatety. The a rm Convenienlty located o.n DAILY PILOT __..., this beaatllw street a 3
lltbllty for the first ltto bdrm lamlly bome. A re-
corncf IMerflon Ollly. !!::: f:h~ :::::: e~
G I stop renting and start a 0 re building equity. Shown
.......... , Motic.: . by appt.
All real estate advertised . -WATERFRONT in this newspaper ts sub· Beautiful 4 bedrm, 2'h HOMES
ject to the Federal Fair bath home. Quiet AEALESTATE
Housing Act of 1968 cheerful street. Ac 631·1400
which makes it illegal to quick on this genuin
advertise "any pre· bargain. 1--------rerence. limitation. or ()nlu OCEA"FltOHT
discrimination based on ~ DUPLEX
race, color. religion. sex. 21 2 Bdrms. ea. unit; + or national origin, or an ~™·~· sleeping rm. & bath in
intention to make any ,,..., r~ garage. Fumbbe4, re·
such preference. limita· SURF RE.ALTY ady for svmmer/Wlnter tion. or discrimination." 979•1050 rental. 12891500
associated We're open liJ 9 lor you This newspaper will not
knowingly accept any
advertising for real
estate which ts in viola· 1--------1 BRO K ER~ Rf Al TuRS
202', ~ li.iih IU C / 1tibJ
tionofthelaw.
HoeeNs for Sole ••••••••••••••••••••••• GeMrd 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
FIX AND SAVE
$36,500
Charming bungalow on
quiet tree lined street.
Fruit trees tool Prime
area close to schools and
shopping, don't miss this
deal. Call now 752· 1700.
OffN 1119 . ,, s IUN /Olli Nt(I I
[Wlllllld
SPYGLASS
BEAUTY
4 BR, 2'h BA. panoramic
view. Fee land. Brand
new. $279,950.
Mike ScttJo.ssman
RJtr 67).531 1
COURTYARD ENTRY
TROPICAL
LANDSCAPIMG
CATHEDRAL ENTRY
Quiet tree lined street
with wrought iron gate
that leads past a tropical
garden courtyard. Enter
dramatic cathedral liv-
ing & dining room.
Premium wall treat·
meots throughout. Warmly paneled family
room with natural wood
burning lireplace. aw.soo. eau 962·7788
Qi. KE:Y
.,.,. RE:ALTOP.5 H
4.PLEX
CHOICE
Carefree Living Atten~ets ~lwer 4 New carefree home with d · h · i d beautiful upgrades. Close be rm ome n goo.
to t . 1 b d 1 area. New crpta, won t enrus c u a~ poo · last only ~ 900 Hurry Near .transportation and cau'now. ' • • shoppmg. EnJOY recrea-
tionarn•ing a<ito be•tfo• Bile;.,;.. & IOL only $75,000. IHlty
640·6 I 6 I ~ ?Sl..Z060 · ~
COATS& WALLACE
REAL ESTATE . INC. 10 COMM. UNITS
$169,000
Gd. Costa Mesa location
w /extremely low rents.
Current income $1,175
mo. Buyers financing.
Agt.~ZJ.W
United Brohn!/
N. Loomis
MEWPORT CRIST
3BR Famrm2~ BA.
Only 3'h yr. old Pride of -------Gracious living &
seclusion
Outstanding Value
Below market
$129,000ACI' FAST!
Ownership units with
ove.r 4.600 sq. ft., all un-
der a heavy shake roor.
air conditioning; privi.te
pall06!
•NQuail l. liilPlac• Proplriitta ..
752•1920
1<l00 QUAIL ST. HtWl'Ollf HACH
<;OUMTIY CLUI
This Eastside Costa
Mesa charmer on quiet
cul-dwac across from Country Club bas big
value here. 3 ·Bedroom
with boat access & huge
shady yard. Offered for a
low, low price of $'14,900.
CALL 556-2660.
C:SELECT \
T'PROPERTIES
IRYIHI
2 BR, Arborlake
Highly upgraded
Huge tot
y Al.UY 640-9900
HIWPORT DUPLEX
steiie to surf 28R,&1BR, · Sl3S,OOO
VAU.IY 64o-tt00
$1.&2 per DAY
TERRIFIC
DUPLEX
VALLEY 640-9900
Npt. Hgts. area on quiet
tree shaded street. Lge
comer lot w /room for boat or trailer. Blfi area -------
with lots of privacy.
646-77ll.
MESA on MAR
Delightfully clean 4
bedrm, large lamlly
room, lots of paneling,
comer lot with roqm for
boat. 956 Magellan St.
546-4141
~
COATS&WALLACE
REAL ESTATE , INC.
CDM VICTOIUAN
IYOWMa
3Br + den •· enolosed patio Oil huge lot w /plen·
ty ol trees. New paint.
cpls/drps. Prin only.
894-9758 -Mcirilta HlcJhl•• You.r choice oC 2 homes-eaeh 3 bedrms, each baa
ocean view! One stnale
• stary, 1 two story. Eacb -1111•1G~Clll·-~·v•o•N-•I bas tptc, shake roof,
""" wood exteriors I& many WON'TLASTLONG.. fl.De leatures. "6.500 le 1 Beaut 4 BR+ Fam. Pool, 991,500.
Jae, conv pit, golf view, PETE BARRETT
lgelot. $305M. Open daily _Dl:AtT\1-•
1-5. See B. Combs, Agt. "~ ,.
#3 Cherry HUis Lane. Pb '4NMI 644.QU,640-m6
'!!!!!!!!!~~!!!~!I~......,.
1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••
~IL macnab/ trvrna ~ raalty
LI ST $7266.00
SAVE $1100.00
FACTOllY AIR CONDm Automatic rransm1ss1on ONIMG
power steenng, steel befr~~erdtront disc brakes. 351 CID V-8 engine fro ra ial ply wsw tires,
AM radio. tinted gla~s c~~ &Pl~~ar Sbumper guards, .11203169 e. lk. # 1008 Ser.
OUR
PRICE $4982
~~)----~ lE'•s1 .... ---~---, H ,,,, ·~EALD • COMPARE OU IREcr AND SAVE
FORD. GM~ COMPETITIV! RATES ON
·CHRYSLER A
CARSAND TRUCKS MC
WE LEASE ALL MAKES AND MO DELS
171 ME CURY
COUGAa Xll7
V·S. auto. trans .. factory air cond111oning.
power steering. power brakes. power
windows. AM/FM stereo radio w/cassette.
vinyl roof. lie #8830LK Stock #2952 52299
.,. LTD 4 Dll. •
V·S. auto trans.. factory air cond1t1omno.
Power steering. Power disc brakes. heat•r. ~ Motor #135142 Stock 112894
..
$2699
174 PIMTO
STATIOM WAGOM
4 cyt.. aito. trans., air conditioning, radlO.
heater. luggage rack. Lie. #528LXH Sloe
•1071A
SA VE WHEN YOU BUY-SA VE WHILE YOU DRIVE
4 speed transmission. front disc
brakes. rack & pinion steering.
bucket seats. cut pile carpeting, mi.ni
console, electric rear window
defroster. steel belted radial ~ly
tires. wheel covers. 2.3 liter 2V
engine. front & rear bumper guards .
Stk. #1060 Ser. #187325
Hardtop 4 •,pePd transmission. contourPd
bucket sea\ii cut pilP. carpetino sounn
insulation pa~kaoP oauaes. wheel covPr
wt<, 'w tirF1c; 00wPr rack -& p1n1on ,tPPronn
powPr front d1c;r hraH·•c; 11ntPd ala~ Iron•
& '"'"' burroN ouart1c; Slk :rQ929 Srr =1 31428
OUR PRICE
s3929
MEW 1977 FORD
PINTO
2DOOR
OUR PRICE
·s3292
NEW 1977 FORD
MAVERICK
2 DOOR SEDAN
Front disc brakes. carpeting. lockable
glove box, flipper rear Quarter windows.
bright dnp ratls. 250 CID 6 cylinder engine.
aut omatic 1ransm1ss1on front & rear
bumper guards. C78x1 4 WSW tires Stk.
::1011 Ser. #146034
OUR PRICE
s3755
•• , • ol ..,
NEW •77 FORD F-250
CUSTOM STYLESIDE PICKUP
300 CID engine, chrome front b~. full foam seats. folding seat
back. dome lamp, headhner. sutomat1c transcrussion. (4) 800x16 5 o
_ 8 PR tires PIUS spare Strt. #0992.Se<. JV42835
$4856
·
172 CADILLAC
C,E DEVILLE
V-8. auto. trans .. factory air cond1honing. full
oower. vinyl roof. Lie. #768FZU Stock :r865A
...... ~........, .......... .._........... ............... -•Mi;•.,.~ ...... .._ .. . . . .
2 DAIL 'Y PILOT * Wed~Hd1 . Jul ll, 1971
CONTINUED
FROM PAGE C18
w.-..~s• .. ~···················· ....•.......•••........ t11a•• IOOJGwr.. IOOJ
-·············································
IEDUCEO OVH SI 0,000
12;.!.~IOO 0\\ 11('1" h,1 \ l' ht111..:h1 .motht'r
T;.il..t· .11h .111la •1· 111 1111·11 ..,1l u;1t11111
Jl('ft•' \!Hlr' 1'11,Jlll'I' lo \\.d i-. J \\ ,J\ \\ tlh
a 'll'<ll <i nr ''l'llll" .1 hr <in ·1·11h1ouk
Gr.m.1cJ .a lot .11l'd 111 p 1 tllll' F ount.un
Vull1•y lm·at11111 l'h1' '' th1· ln,H·"l
prlt.'e you'll ll11d for .1 home ltkt• th"'
HACH SP!CIAL HEW SI04,500
New 4 bdrm. 21 • hath PUD. 2 blocks
from Huntington B1·at•h & pier . Wet
bar. lots of ttl<'. <'"'tom cpts. bltns,
less than 1 y<·~1r old. patio & fenced.
dbl detached gar.age . Will not last
Jong.
IALIOA PENINSULA. DUPLEX
SI H!I .!ll)(l
You can at'l11.ill v \\<tlk t o the hl1Jch
from this sum ml:r rental & thi~ duplex
has 2 & 4 hdrm rully furnii.hcd. Large•
units & reach· to go '. J>lc;.ise call or
drive by show111 i.:.
INVESTORS! OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS!
Het.eaFersat Howtes For ScM ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... ,.,_, I 002 • ....,._, I 002
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
TWO STORllS. OMI POOL
lkautifully deC'oruted and maintained
Mt?sa Vt.·rdc two story. 4 bedrooms
and a cll•n, plus a magn1 ficent pool
area an the backyard. This lloor plan
featun'~ formal dining, a breakfast
are<J. large living room and all four
hecirooms up~tair~
This home h as hc1.•n c·un·d tor. You'll
<'a re. too, espcc1 a lly ;.it 1ust $134.500
U,._l()UI: liVMl:S
REALTORS ' 546 5990
1525 Mesa Verde Drive, East, Costa Mesa
also in CoronJ lid MJ r. Jt 675 GOOO
I Gettenl I OOZ Ge1ter.. I OOZ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
THE GOOD LIFE
Jn this Harbor View home; 2 hdrms ..
dming rm. & cll'n , with pool, jacu1.z1 &
gre<1t \ i~•\\'! Total charm geared lo
candlelight dinnsrs & gn'at outdoor
Ii ving. !:il·l9.!l00.
OPEN DAILY 1·5
1812 NEWPORT
0
HILLS DR. EAST
Orange Coast
2600 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mu
REAL ESTATE ~ 644·4848
R-2 - 3 BR. -$64,500
Remarkably nice tor such a low price'
Space to add another umt A great
estate starter for the young inves tor.
4 BR + Fam. Rm. $72,500
Splendid f amlly home cl06e to Orange
Coast College, stores & churches.
Fi.uf ~
Gitw Wea~u '8Ug.
~~:'! .......... !~~~,~~~!'! .......... !~.~~
$PYGLASS HILL
Want a large 6 bdrm .. 41h bath home
with night light view & lots ot extras?
AnJ. the reasonable S299,SOO includes
the land also.
GeMrOI I 002 Corona del Mor 1022 ...•.•.•••••..•...••... •••••••••••••••••••••••
HAltlOlt Y1IW HOMIS-Sl7t,100
Beautiful near-new .. Palermo,. model
with 4 bdrms, lge family rm w /wet
bar & formal dining. Complete new
landscaping being installed in rear yd.
Near shopping, pool & tennls cts. A
#?feat family home. You own the land!
2239 PORT LERWICK Thurs 1·5
21 I I Son Joaquin HJll1 Road
NEWPORT CENTER. H.B. 644°4910
Gu.ral 1002 .•..................••.•..•.••••..............
PENINSULA home. 4 Or 5 BR, 3 ba,
all amenities. Lovely neighborhood, a
few steps from the beach. $195,000.
OTHER prestige waterfront homes
with pier & float from $385,000 up.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Rn y\1tlr· l>11v1• N B 6 75 -6 1t>l
CostaMeso I 024 Costa Meso 1024 ................•...... ······•··•···••··•··•··
~--------I L" 2Br, Loft Condo.
BY OWNER
C'harmmg clean 3 Br, 2
Hu, dininii rm. new cpti;
~ tir~. covered patio.
l~Ba, garage, patio. all
xtras , good toe. $65,SOO.
Uy owner /prin only
4~1·3735 -----
dbl car garage w /work:---------
SOUTH COAST Beautiful rustic duplex, 2 bench corner lot, tncd MESA DEL MAR BR. & l ·BR. beam ccil .. back yard. Room for Immaculate 3 Br. 2bn. SHORES garden patio. $149,500 boat or RV parking.
Dramatic 3 bedroom. PAUL MARTIN $63,700. 645·705' or
NIWMARINA
~pread out In lhl i. 11paelous 4 bdrm family home""'°' Clrulde 11vtm: room, b1deaway mu ler
bdnn. ~ncloaed ya.rd 41 patio. AaklolC SlOUOO
()pea bou.M Sat/SUD M
mllYacbtDr.
AMCHOIA•
IMYISTMIMTS
C71414t6-771 I
M•w °" Market! Dei.ignt>rs special in
establtshe<:l'area. Garden home with large pool. RV
~toraiie. rlose walk to
llarbor. bt•Jch. lennU1. &
H h o ltl ~ $ I 3 7 , S 0 0
llUUHY WON'T LAST !
493-~0 494 '7084
No Age_n_ta __
BToro 1032 •••••••••••••••••••••••
C.:OuntrysideJlomu
3br. 2bn, fam rm. Cen-
tral a Ir, upgraded -
move ln cond. Assuma-
b I e loan. By owoer.
$81.!iOO. 581-S!M
f-cwtaiftV~ 1034 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
SIHGLI STORY
P.U.D.·POOL
JACUZZI· TENNIS
L~e 2 bdrm patio home . z > r.. youn1. Back yrd & ~1de pa110. All on one
floor ne11r frwys, So
Coa:.l Pl:•za & Mile Sq
Park This is more like a
horn'· than u condo. you'll IO\o tl! Call now
£or m o re de1all s.
~·9491.
Lovely duplt':-. lot·alcd in prime an·:i
of Huntington lk ach. Has lot larg1•
enough for ncld1tional units. Situated
end of quiet cul·dt•-s ac. Room for boat
or R.V. Fint'sl in area Challeng es
comparison a l Sl 19.500. I OOZ GetMral 1002
prolessionally decorated cnxe:Ja;1u£,;tcaAtettt;o,;-644Vij·1g;~su~-~067~8~fo~r~a~p~pt~.~~~ townhome in one of Orange Counties fine OCEAN CANYON VIEW --------•I pnvatl' communities. 2Br & den. So or Hwy, l ........••.....................•....••••......
18055 MOCJ'tofia St.
blk to beach, $215,000 Amerut1es include large 0-...'Tler will rarry Shov. n
pra \'al t? lake. pool . by appt onl.>. Ov.n cr bkr
PAJMT MnaVet'M+Pool Decorators home. 4br PATCH 2ba. Super cln, trg lot Fountain Volley
963-8311 FAST
START
PANORAMIC 1a cuZt1. clubhouse &
nules of lush grttnbelts 673 5740 PROFIT beaut lndscp'K Custom --------
J BR. 2 BA . home drps&crpts $129,500 Byi---------
I
1002GeMrol 1002 VIEW Thi:. 2 storv home shows Allrat·t1'c Duplex. ca un qu<1hly lhruunhout 1-'ull ll 2bt. :?b<i. rrpfl' t•rpt'g
price SICJ0.000. CA LL Walk to IH"h, $200,000.
w ha rdwood floors . _0wn __ e_r_54_s..ii97____ POOL HOME
····••·••·••··•·••······•·············•······· J. a i:: u n a H 1' a r h . 1 &>clroom. 3 But h~ ~ DR + rumpu:r; L<>ok at th1!>
lor C'lpan~1on Fur m rormal1on and appoint
ment. c:all
751 3191 &10 7 IOJ
60i.150 R ·2 lot. Good $35.000 NO DOWH
\aluf:' al Si'i.500 Call ror 1'420 sqfl. J Br :? Ba V,\ terms on 4 bedrm, 2
important info! &iS·i221. mobile home 10 Costu balh home with pool &
COSTA MESA
C:::SELECT
tPROPERTIES VILUGECHARM Mesa'i. r1nc1o t park . spaonculde saclot.On-
&l2 4758 ly S82.!l50. Century 21 Sea
J<: X C 1'~ L I. E N T I': A S T S I D E
LOCATION ' 2 Bdrm:-. . 2 baths. den.
rock. frplc . s hakt• rool . s pac ious
garage. pool. SI 15.000
Cute litl h.' homl' un " t rel'
lined stre<.'t. $.>5,000 lkd l'<1rpct. 7S.I 1202'
THECOLOHY
PUM 100
$85,500
Cha rmin.: cul de sac
1-~~~~~~~~I :itrei!l '.'<ew plush carpet· I Ing. Brick firt>plncc.
Wel'kcndH or art1i.t '~
retreat 2 BR. 2 BA , with
room to grow . Sl22.500
May l<."asc option.
RUCKER REALTY Bret'1e9G3-6708.
/,,• . ., ~}:11{ l ,IDO KEAi.Tl '
c-K 3377 Via Udo, Hewpori IHCh
i 673-7300
Gefteral 1002GeMral 1002
········••·•············•·•·········••········
Built-in book s helves.
HALPIHCHI._,
REAL TOH
675-4392
CORONA DEL MAR Country kitchen. Ex· DUPLEX tcnsivl' use of wood & Costa Mesa I 024 wall paper. H uge •••••••••••••••••••••••
Lovely duplex. each unit separate master wing. OM GOLF COURSE
A
DUPLEX having 2 bedrooms each. Plus 2 more roomy IUCCOLA A mountain cabin in the }\'alk to beach. Priced to b d o B l' r I
city with soanng vaulted sel ~ d~':ks & pa~J~uc~v~r MESA VERDE
ceilings, used bri ck 117S.l overlooks manicured Ideal l11e 5 bdrm home r.replac cs and nc " gro und Call now for executive entertain <'arpets I Sl26.000. J i52-1700 mg & rmly enjoyment
FOOTHILLS MARINERS Bedrooms, 2 Ba th~ 111 ". • • , ., .... ,,,, Huge fml} rm w tlge
FIXER each unit. Call now' Red [ ml stone frplc. Separate Ii\'
SI os.ooo SCHOOL <.:arpet, 754-1202 ~ . • ·• rm w lgc rrmt din rm
DISTRICT ---' Spec.:1a l ~u 1 l e fo r Large Fam1h lloml.' HEW OH MARKET teenager!> or maid on h t
S~tled m lhl' Foothilb IRVIHE TERRACE noor. 3 gcncroul> upstairs
MESA VERDE
Jn lovely area. this
"Pacesetter" 4 bedroom.
2 bath with fireplace, has
wood fenced yard, pool,
double garage-All lhe
ingredients for comrorta·
ble ram1ly living at only
$129.500.
l~Quail~ liiillPlac• . Prap1Wlitra 7S2•1920 1•00 QUAIL U . HIW~f tlACH
Needs some TL<' Brmi.: $215,000 bdrms plu:. lge mstr YOU WILL
your loots & pJ 111 t bdrm ~wtc C:ill on th1~ brushl's & m.1k1· ss~ Ouhtandmg custom 5 br c 2 one now! SIS 94!11 HOT BE
Double door t•nlr~ Slq i 3 BR. 2•~ Bu Townhoml' " family room ho rn<.' • d r 1 1 v.i th 157 ft rrontagt· on ( DISAPPOINTED rgo"'::: .r~;! a Sl.'p'a'~1a~~ Brookv~e;;.:~:r· pnme slr('el. Bc;iulilul Newport Blvd. ·01wmern1rtuu1 For those of you who are
family room loo' Second pool and tiirge back yard looking for perfection & story hO'lls master wing. OUTe "'GEOUS with lush landscaping & 82'h' Frontage x 191' ___ R_e_a_l_Es_l_a_le__ excellence in quality &
There are three more ~ privacy. A perfect fami-Depth with mechanical TWO WESTSIDE craftsmanship, we sug-
MESA VERDE
W POOL
Charming 2 story. 5
bedroom home, perfect
for summer PoOI s ide
parties. Large open llv·
ing rm, big dining rm
graced by a ghmmcn ng
chandelier, breakfns;t
area & large entertain·
ing family rm opening
onto the sh1mmerJna pool. For appt. call
645-0303.
F ORESTE
OLSON
f'40 H ... ,,,,,. ...
The Price
ls Right!
By owner 4 Br 2 Ba.
Slll.900 dn & assume
~.000 In, $440 mo. Nr
Brook hur s l/ Hell .
897·7272 ------SPAHISH VILLA
Surrounded by towering
nnt1ve tr ees. topped
w /red life, desirable end
umt townhouse. Featur-
i n a a raised entry, spacious living & dlAtng
room. Senora ph~uing
Cant1na kitchen, king
i.11.C mJstcr bdrm suite, 2
J:lan d1do bedrooms &
much much more. Only
~73.0t>O Ask to see it
NO\\'
Sllor-ecrett
Realty
846-5573
•UMDER l'RICED•
S74,000 sharp Jbr. Fam
rm. nr schl11. Assumable
Gl loan, XJnt lt>Callon.
Owner. 968-84-06 bed rooms for your ----------"' .. price reduction! 3 ly home that shows garage and 2 rentals on ''STARTH"HOMES gest you see this beaut.
pleas ure Fix this into RARE DUPLEX Bdrm .. 2 ba. Dayshores "pride of ownership" by the rear. Present Income home for under 189,000. your dream & save. Only home, l"Omplctely redone one family. Shown by ~/mo. Full price Your choice of 2 darling The besl lhe market bas
Sl"c,ooo for lhi·s 2.•oo •q. In close in Bast.side in.side & out . carpets. appt. $135,000. 3·bedroom homes with toorrer. Call for appt.
You can't beat 11 for this
majestic home. Fountain
in rear, party patio.
Large rumpus room. 3 bedrooms or deo, eat101
area, brick fireplace. Lots more for $75.000.1---------
BKR, 540.1720. HlllltifMJton hac:h I 040
"" .. ~ Costa Mesa, 2-stories d b th & fenced ya rd ' 0 54n _3 666 • ••••••••••••••••••••••
rt. home. Call now rapes. a 5 li s . ne v-.iS2l700 and loaded with curb ap. landscaping. Cnn't last U1 ~-11. freshly painted in ond TARBB I
[ ijjjij.aif 11 *i~~q~f.7}.~i.;~ f ]~~~~~lo ___ H:_1_&~_,<l_)·'_,_~"o_io_A_~_u __ 1;~~~~~;ANYTl;;~:a;iM;;;11e~l:~;ase!uw~a~~ ••• ~~~~r·~~~ ---"=H=0=w=0=y=--· ·~~;·::~~ ~~~1;~;r~
.. This is a winner! 646-7171 H .. 'GHIOR' 3br CamHy room, lar1e bltn BBQ. S119,500.
Try S6 sooDown [a9,;:rv:;;o;v·;i I ESTATE SALES! cOROHADElMAR Executive Home ...... :~er.=:. . ~~J~~e~J&~~a~~o~ ~~~d~e·::eca.10~.~it:i ~161i!1lifYJ ~r~e~c3;rf~~:!::.~~ ~U!HJJ ~~~~~~~doen r.,a~~~: ~~aer~,n~,~~R~'ho~~:~ ·2 Story + Pool .. ooou•~ls,~·~:!~_, ... ," ~mn:sm:it2 ~~~::~~~ ~-~~~360~l buyl~~·~44~11~r.r.~·~546~~-~~
of lovely homes Now ac· near new 1 BR apt. + 4 MESA VERDE ~lrcet from one another' camper. bo:il. cl<' ce"'•"D tnittnl bi"~. ap· cargaraRc $185,000! Family room, bonus L' 1 f d S@"1l4}~ /l'CtrQ.• 163 750 Agt 5-40 ~ or Custom •:urt' .. ~ . ., u.-, lalbo lo I' Very good luck , Cu11tom r ami Y rooms, ence ~ -p v ".~,on "w''' -• prox value Sl00.000. Try a y rop. room. '4 bedrm. 2•~ bath. built home in th-.•·tesa yards & freshly palnled T#i ·""' """'' 31: Years new w -i r's, _,,000. R-...&.1.-.. formal dining room + "' " _, On of lntr1'9u'ng W rd G 'f'-Cit L/ --T-.. Verde section or Costa exteuors! ly $169,000. t o om• w1 n a uc~ e
MYSTIC HILLS d1nin1t rm A'liD ramlly · * 675·7060 • much more in this 4 yr Mesa. 3 Br. r~m. rm .•. and $67.900. Hurry -•~"'cu..,• rOUAw-----
rm Raised ule entry. 2 3 .,,_~-Zb lh ~~~~~~~~~~I old h o me fo r only .. °' h , P I"\., ,. hw I .,.,..,vum. a newer r """"Ible D•--t quart-rs. WT)'. • ........ _ .......... .... anoram1c v-:un vk baths, delx k1L, ge patio, home. Ocean view. On ·--------•I $123,900. Call or appt. ,....... •"""° ~ '°"' w:ro-bled ....,...,, be 3 BR.2 Ba + famrm. E·Zcareyard.Reduced Via Ballena. San before it's too late!!!~ $185,000 Agt ''·l~IUllClt~ ._.,,_,_ __ ,
po o l s t le d lot , for 1mmcd . sa le to Cl Bids .... AA11r....a11..1•GOLD 549-8655 "'~ . greenhousl', dog run. emente. now .,.,. -U"O ~ I W 0 P 0 E l I t16'9.500. By Owner/Agt Wl.960. • inf accepted. Approx BeauUru)ly decorated in A'8 THREE COSTA MP.:SA Prap~'--· I I I II I* 4~1•1973 53l-5800,eve5'43·63SS value $95,000. Try greens & golds. Nicest UPERB HOMES, priced rrom m-.r-·
WHthovet1 R•oifort 185,SOO. start.er home In HB. 3 QM ES 9).S,500 to $70,500. 3 & 4 woo oua1u1. NI ""'"
Want Ad Help? 642·56'7 tnti RE Metwon sunny bdrms .. 1~ ba, no lk tee paUo & yards. 2 I V U G E A ----""-----t ---------1 2 Bedroom, fixer on 3rd work. Just move In &1.;~~~~~~~~ wlbOat & trlr access. u,.,..., t I' I I I ! Gwral 1002 G...-nl 1002 St. Coronado Island. Uve .•. 500. r: Great Western R. E. osk mr;M . . . . . •
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• value Is in the land. forPe111Y 847 9832 V ...1-R tr f i
cae:
110181 BLllRS ca.
OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE
OPEN HOUSES
LIKE A ftEHTHOUSI "tLUFFS"
Two Story End Unit, Upgraded.
Overlooks Pool & Ramada. 2 Suites
And Large Fam Rm. $167,500.
2444 VISTA N06LEZA DAILY 1 ·5
PL4M 3 "'IROADMOOR ..
Turtle Rock Slnale Leve l 4
Bedroorn.4', 2~ Baths. Large Family
Room, Newly Painted & lmmae.
$129,500.
5q51 SIERRA BRA VO DAILY 1.5
HAllOI VllW "PORTOFIHO"
2 Sty With 3 Lrg BR. 2'h BA, f'am
Rm . Custom Shutters & Chan·
dolicrs. Rdrla lncluded. t59.ooo
2021 PORT BRISTOL CJRClE
~ED-THURS.f.RI 1 ·5)
131·1•
Estate may accept bid of % OCEAMFROHT . . . eruc e ea :J~~· super buy at this ;" u;~"'-~u-Gt .... r:c:r::"o~o.~v:~~?~Y SUPER IOMUS ~~:~. 2::~u;~o~ut~~~ ,, ,~ i Gt i 1 <d~' ::,:~ :;·!c~~·~;e~
Balboa flier. 646·4353.: Immaculate condition cornled , mirrors, .._ _ __.. _ __.._...._.._ _ __. . ..-J l1b81ble?rrUboginwl1hiht!
Super fixer 00 Ul st. in _~ ___ 1 _____ --1 h S . drape!!, lush carpets. ....,-N-0-8-A-T_E __
1
,10<y of -end -. ,..,,
Se.al Beach. 2 on a Jot. 003-67~ SS'7·7 t ruout. pncious 3 Wet bar In th<> family ~~.1~U!1 i,~d!dn!! w.o.111anc1 1006 !'~:!r,:~11:1~m.c+~~! ;:'::.:cr~~!~~~e~~ I I I· I I' e ~::;, :·~:::;~
being acceQted. Try COSTAMESA ••••••••••••••••••••••• ls the really neat,hirdto 2 flreplaces. Covered -'-lee>-.... ~ w-880 000 Lrn\.llSLA.MD find family home. See pntio s147 600 BK R PP•NT "'u·1~mo ll lfO S
World Wide Brokers I 3 UR. l \.'f BA Exlcu11ve CHI.RMB this before you buy. 540-1m ' · ' ;::::";.J ;'H:;r:;:·r;;\;')U:;;:u;"::::;;:::~::;::~:::;:~;:::::=*::::!
t73-454501ttreas LRCLOT,areatvalue ~ .. ofalot w/fixerupper, HWT)',callua .. t54CH151. ' 6 ~~;~Mett 1o•j I I ! ANol I I [ J
Propc.rty SpeclaUata 1 $137,500. ownr will con· TAllRL · · · · · · · -· V 640.9900 sider 2od. Call Bill 8?5-.s8 Ai\. SCUM-LETS Am wen la Cloutftcatloft SI 00
GeMNI 1002 GtM;.e 1002 "#1 S..CilfOrnle ..
•• .. ••••• •••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• COf'OIMI delM• I 021 ~~~~~~~~~ ---------v .._ TERMS! Weaulde a BR, z BA,1~::.:.!.!.!..,-.-_.,. .......................
llSTYAl.UI fMSPY~SS
Price WU -,ooo, DOW
,_,uced to 1289.SOOI 4 BR., oeean view, pool,
J•cuu11 2 ffl)ka. l'ae land. Won'tlatill
PAtlt.MARTJN1-_ Real f»tate ~., ...
"' NICf'I)' landscaped, 'Ult
L\STSIDE ~~lt:.r~
Newly remodeled home, ...;M-~7-4\...;4 ______ ,P"-=::o=.-i
hllt naM for a )'0Un1
lamlb, quiet ttte Unod iBr, J--M~aWNV_.j_ ..... alNtl, prOt. landlHplnl, tba M -uua .,
plush burnt oran.. owner. Op ea dally. 1!11.{1~~ ~arpel lltruoul. Lu1• 184,950. 2917 Royal PallJ'I. master bed rm w /dNSt· _~ __ Ul_ll_H_,t.n')'__...-... ___ 1 lnttm. All Ul11 and much "'orol Uurr11 Call
~
, l If II ' , I I
O L ~_,rJN
VA BUYERS!
W uve 3 Ir' Br homes
now avallablo. Hwr1 ! ~Y won't llUlt. To tee. t:All p,e:.:::.:::::::.:....i
....... ,_ S. ......_ ,_. S. "-" Pot' S. i::;::•••• •• •••••·j~44 ••••••••••• • ••••••••••• tto.e. Fer Sal. Hotilft For 5* Ho.Ms Pw S. HCMIMS Fof' ~
Houut Fors• Noutel For Sale e Wedneaday, July 13, 1977 * . bAILY PILOT D:J
......................... ~,...................... ........ Irvine 1044 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••• .. •••• ••••••••••••••• .. •• .... t' 8 ,, ....... 10•0 ~ ..... 1040 ... ....._;·i;;.d;·;c,4·0 ............ ~ ................................. L.og.ahoc:h 1041 leoclt 1041 ... .,..leodl 106t .............. 1069
........................ ,.._. ..... •••••••••••• .... ••••• .. ••••••••••• NewWoodbnd&•Condo 51...,,_'ING HOT ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••• ... ••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••• 2 Br + den 2 be Lse opt ~ Ual9ULIWAY BEAUTIFUL &Br, Ha, SHARP J br. Landmark, $U,50o: uo'o. /mo: 'l\t.rt14:.rockGardtnGlen * IWFfS * WATlltR~ . MODa tam rm, covltt(l() paUo, tlOr. lot. 183.800. Byownr. 6"-447 orf73.a2. <>wn. Upgraded Jaamine. &111 Originahrea. 4 BR. !ba. New 800 aq t obal
C8CT1t4.&.All manynrulM.3 lfla <>Pen 4-7 UJ Fri. 8121 Agt. view lot. By owner/prin end . Totally red Home, 2Br, tBa, $39,900 .
.. ,._...._ ... ,_ ........ l ·• M'oedordOr.,861-lOM only. $129,500. Ph : Mov!'t:~a.&u ... 49 ~· SpacerentS*)Omo . .4yr ~ ~m IUlunJ a-ho S-JOac,.i. 673-2012 ~ ~ _,., lse. 675-3835 ~wbowa.nia~ely WITrAIMTI AISOl.UTILY 2Br+dN. New San Joa· HASTIHGS&CO. 1--------
1auuc bome hl mtnl J\llt pmm.d la II 01.1t. flAMTAmCI quin model. Nr Bacq1.1et UALTOR5 640.5560 HEW OM MA.RICll'.
<'OD<llUoa. Manacund Caaua&l famUJ bo10e, 4 bdrm. a ba, hi&hly UP· Club. Beet aolf course REDUCED West.clifC 3 bd, fam f.111 ~~~:.~~~lDo~l :wtl.b•Br •• •./-:td.~~~o pacled1dtcoutor'1 do· vlew.Byowner.Sl07,000. TOSeLL B UDOblSLbl . w/frplc. Scb!~:.:O: ho ,., ... ~ h.11 Beaut cov'ed patio Pta73H725 411·2 IATHS 4 r. pvt c ·teoois. sbop'g, lowner. • • :~':;~ ':i).10:::. ~an b= .. ~ ls ;ully l~nd•cpd. yd, Broadmoor. 4 Owners mu.st acll this NORTH LAGUNA •M Owr,Agt.173-0289 Won't Jut. Callfor a~t.
pLu I• ~ hob• •G· l)t. No •mo1. ()pt<o every Marina HI Scbl. dist. Oo· br, reduced $500(> by &nx· lovely 4 bdrm .• 2 bath BY OWNER.. just reduced W. Mon, .\it. 6'2..o7SI ~ Vaulted reil .,..end. Ma·48M ly Sf(.!leO. iouaseller, moveln al on· home in Culverdale. A ;;:a, to1=~~ ~ wcwm OB a "Bayabores", J»oat tollJdolUXurJ· =~= ... ..,. 164.100 Ill WUTSIDI! <e. Anytime "2·1680. ~~':'.~."':," 3~~,;~ -~ ~.::-... ~.e,.~·l!:J Ope~:J>1r.1~~;.
~ Walkm J; lee
UALTY,INC. leave message. beautiful kitchen tile. .._._MW..--~ roof, 2 · ineid. 0 Guarded comm. 3F,AJt.175-8900. •
RIOUCIO NICI! ~ 14WJZ3 U8ed brick lireplace, plus dantcd~tok patfl 0. rmmacu1$ ,·.,· sco'"'""'o ng 6G-1ll24. $l'li,500. IE ... STILUFF VIEW ........ •Co•• a large dining area. ---1 en oy. • • • •. , _
Rea.I S.tate Now -.w0 Co.mer COD· locheiorrod Calif Custom Priced tosellfastatonly 497-2489 SPYGLASSHIU. By owner, Lusk Plan D. --------·do; pool, rec., a SH. 1~ ATTHI IEACH $B(,500 SOUTH LAGUNA DANA Brtu>d: new View .. Br, hugest 4 Br, formal din·
SIS w.--• ~~ b.l. 'Ibia cuatomized home is LAGUNA NIGUEL POINT library. Family Rm, iJlC, family rm, 2'°' Ba . ._.c ..,.....\allStl.. !, Wut.irfront studio with l the talk of the tract! The 499_4551 49s.1728 493..aa12 Dining Rm, 0Pen wkoda upgraded. 6'UO&S. Ope11 ~ors bdrm modm •Ytil, tJ11ib and aalley kitchen. atriwn entry and sunken 12·5. 640-1151 Sat/Sun 1·5.
M>CDO•/poola,96M802 759·0226 Lou of creative open living room are the first
Pamla&lon PropenM!s ~ ,1 i;pace and a labulous of many thinga to catch 116 CANYON BAL B 0 A PEN I N
SEAwtNDpoo&•Jacuua CCAllNASIOCllTDJ locabon!BJ(R962·S511. your eye! s Large ~~~~~~~~ILOCJUl'ICIBeoch 1048 •--NI--' 1052 Broadmoor home. Sbr, OUPLEXS13S,OOO.Drtve
Sl,.,."""' I ~=~~MJL~~!W~~I =~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; bedrms a11d family area •• --.,-... ,,_, 3ba. $325.000. by 415 Harding, then c:all v•.-. t-.......,... all with central air and $$$$ ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 21.3/:>47-4658 Soutblandera, Joan
R.E. PROFES.gONALS MOVE'" Better Than New the location near THEV.ALUE llST SELLER Howe,631·2133 ...,..,._7 ....... 1"'"" ••• ..were spent on thlS. 4 . "----•-Npt vu. Lrg d4-·--------,.__, _.. ....,. HER IT AG E PA R K is there. Over 10 Ac. bf '-"'-...... "' ,... ' -Met..-Gcrdtfts R.dll04Mll lOOO's and va· It• a on., Ye a r o Id make6 this Irvine's best bdrm., 2'1.i ba., fam. rm. R·l, undevlp'd land in 4 Bed~m. 2 bath, qwet luxe carefree twnbse. Harbor Vu Knolls cant now! Investor and Showcase Home. 5 buy! YALE model in VlLL. the city w/views. Use as s~eet ~n Pacesetter I 3br + ofc, 3ba, bl Cape Cod Condo. Fee
3 Bd by owner. Slli.SOO. bro t er in q u i r i es Bedrm, 4 bath, larae din-RED CARPET Ialrl I. dEvbeery tbding b.ta.s an estate, sub-divide or w1tdh vi::_. SOOMany up· beamed ceilings, sunken land. 2Br, den. Ideal loc
Sti-6520. welcome. Exec 2 story. ing & living rm area. ea Y en one; 1 s gra es • ......,, • !iv.rm wet bar. TennJs, .....,.. ··-• ---------• lm;nu1ve, double door Patio lutcben & family Realtors 833-3380 j~t like moving into a just watch it apprec. BOND REALTY pool. jacuzzi, sauna. Wlk ~~~~~~~~~
CUSI'OM HOME 5 ..... _ ·-encr,. Soa.rilli cathedral room. Just completed~~~~~~~~~ new h 0 me in an $160,000. a~ I ,.. • • to heh. Newport Crest. 11-bed
heh •. 2300 sq.'tt.S:il ceil.ia&:a. formal clinJJl1 patio and landscaping.1-PRJCE s• ·SHED established area. Call to· ZAGRODZJCY, Rltr ___ ._._ .. ____ , Mustsell! Byowner. ~.a~ JJ.~8Ph story, ovenized 4 car rm. Fa bu Io u s, Owner mWIL sell! Call -dayformoredetails. ___ 4 _94-1 __ 6_1_1 ___ 1 645-9322 . 646-2474,673-7366
gar, used brick fplc, & customized kitchen bas 546-5880 •DEERFIELD* Lake Fotfff I 055
Palos Verdes Stone fplc.. expeuive ceramic lile Custom upgraded Aspen A BIG ... •••••••••••••••••••• By Owner. Lrg cmr lot. HEWPORT HGTS.
Huge entry kitch., too fioor, bar, exira fine 3br 2lhba. Reduced to Lake front 4 bdrm ho.me. ~~~Je~!:l JiT~i~':l. Comer lot. 2Br, lba. de-many xtra features to wood cabinet.a. Cast.om a,ooo. Prill. call Agt at BEACH Decorator ~es1gn cab, peg & groove oak tacbed garage, alley.
hsL All tbia for under paneled famlly room 7~ HOUSE thruout.
1
2 P!1t1os, pvt llrs. $1J9,500. Opn u--$8!J.500 Prio only. $120,000. Agt. 714·960-3389 w I l P 1 c · L a r I e t--lliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiu----------1 dock 14 H b C t 450 • ....., :>48-3625 studio/study. Double MCQUET CLUB, 2600 Located a short stroll · • · 0 ie a• Sat/Sunl·S.642-4382 1---------u.~ sq. ft. tiled & cabmeted --------..-• PACIFIC SANDS Deane doors to massive master ,,.mugton sq. ft.4 BR, xtra lge ram· from the beach in gaine or bobby room. AU San Clemente
hme, up.n-aded 4 Br 2 Ba, suite. Plushest "sunllte" Hart:MNr I 042 rm & mstr bdrm, gas air ''OLDER SECTION OF ••••••••••••••••••••-• 1076
... in xlnt cond. By owner. 4 Br 2\.!ba home on fee heated filter ed pool. thick carpets. Walls of ••••••••••••••••••••••• cond, humidifier & air THE VILLAGE". Slrik· 0 Su • HEAR
Comer lot. $87.500. 8172 glasstowoodarborpatio WATERFRONT purifier, spmklrs. auto lf523 CAMPU5Da:IRVIME ing, contemporary fs~·~re~37·9~1f"!; land. Close to beach. RIVIERAIEACH Malloy, Open Daily 1·5 and colorful grounds. A Executive home with 54• gar dr opener. By owner. architecture. with de· 675-5949 Asking. $152,500. Call
Agt.645-9950 MUST TO SEE AT dock and patio. ideal for $120,000. 13702 Onkayba --------•I tailed exterior ofi---------i.646-~~74~1~4~or~631~·~3900~~~ Great 3 bedroom, 2 bath LACUESTA S91,000.Bkr962·55ll entertaining! Two-story Circle.~0734 CEDAR SHAKES & UVEOM.APARK 1_ home w/beautiful ocean
,.-------•living room w/Palos TENNIS ANYONE?. EXTENSIVE USE 01" Beaut. executive 2 sty i---------1 & canyon view. Short 4 BEDROOM. WALK TO AVOID 60/ GLASS WHICH AF· .__ · ed walk to one of San THE OCEAN. CALL Gardener's Dttani! Verde stone fireplace to 10 This elegant 3 br, 2•h ba FORDS SCENIC OCEAN ... .., neverliv in. 5 Lge SPLASH SPf.ASH Clemente's most desira·
REAL ESTATE BY Lush garden w/lots & ceiling, elegant formal Thia 4Br, 3ba Cal home home features sunken VIEW BR's,frmldin·rm,lotsof Jt's that time again. hie beaches. On 1~ Lots dining room, 2 wet bars, w/AC, din/den w/frplc c..-onversation p1·t & sep. · Sprawling 3 glass. wood decking, Customized 4 bedrm McVAY 842 9.,..1 Lots o{ plants. A lovely 3 BDRM •-DEN floor to insure view & privacy. • · "' · ooe in huge pool room, 3 nds TLC. Ownr /Agt. 5021 Jivmg rm. Each with · "' walk to the Jake. Asking home in Newport Beach New liating.
Sale by Owner. 4 bdrm, ~ l~a ho!';~ with bdrms, 4 baths, beautiful Dutcher. 559·8146, brick !pie. Bltn wet bar, plan, bilt on 2 levels. The Sll.8,000. with large sparkling
l'h bath view lot. close to g eo. '"' • · channel view. $337,500. 552-34111 inside laundry rm" cust ~:~e:i;~~ellif;~t~~~ LAr:~:VEST pool. And for your ·VIEW TO
beach. $72,500. 19422 NEWL'YP.AJMTED patio by Roger's w/FIREPLACE & LGE. privacy a slumpstone CATALINA
Barding Ln, HB. e· IQ -. S Gardens for that sum· ATTACHED DINING 837-6161 581)..4275 wall.Only$l:fl,500.lt'sa
963-4977. M a1t UDI yracuse 3 bedroom mer BBQ. C/21 Invest· SECT I 0 N • ALL ..... EWWOODS HOME beauty! Call54C)..11Sl Outst.an2 ·batbdinagd2ubedlt rcooomn'·
'-\. CAJ.l1'0aHL.t Place • bome in College Park. ment Div., SSS-3327. W/EXCELLENT SEA ..., GREEN ACRES PROtERtY EXCMANBE.111. Prop.-..&.i•• Wallt to schools. pools, Huge lot at end of quiet dominuium. Sauna, 2
Milelrombeach,clean. "1 ...,_ ;;f.~920 shopping and bus stops VIEW. The kitchen Is a cul-de·sac w/view of decks w/super ocean
Upgraded 4br 3ba. Super 963-673S • 557_7,,..,. 1400 OUAIUt. Nt , llACH for RTD. Easy access to Laguna Beach I 048 culinary deligbt W /ALL beautiful. wooded area. 4 view + lights of the city
floor plan. Lg Cul-de ,,_ freeways. ••••••••••••••••••-••• BlLT-INS. The entire br, 2'h ba, fam rm, 3 car1---------1 below. Call for more
·Sac. $99,900. 963·5451 EXCHA .... GE grounds are enclosed gar. $139,500. By owner. features. n BEACHCOTI.AGE with hi walled fencing. 675-1323 SEAVIEW! Thrilling BERTHAHENRY
W.ALK TO IEACH EVERYTHING H U N T I N G T 0 N LIKE w i t h i n c o m e This spectacular home is ocean & valley views. REALTORS i ::· 3m8:'ng:e~ ~~i:i:r; YOU COULD WANT ::r:>~t~=y ::~~ DEERFIELD? =~~:el~e:~oc~i~!~ ansllic,t,on:~"luu~~j:! Missbl Vltjo · I 06 7 ~~~ 4 b:;.o; b:.Pf r:;l~~; 21S Del Mar 4924121
features to list, won't lasl 4br, fam rm w/wet bar Equity $62,800. Need apts We have a very fine Open noorplan upper, SHOWN BY ••••••1••••••••••-••••• upgrades. $259,500. SEVEN UNITS
I on g at Sl 10 , 0 0 0 . on quiet Cul-de-Sac. with spendable. Not area ~ection of homes in the guest apt. lower & zoned APP'T. ONLY Madrid Del. Lago, brand 548-8614or168-7620aft.6 All 2 bedroom, l'h bath.
(7l4)96o.5244 or eves Decorator design thruout bound. great community ol R-1. Like new-stained MISSION REALTY new, beautifully Jndscpd, ---------• Some with ocean view &
(714 ,832.0496 OPEN including new custom THECAWSOM CO. Deerfield. POOLS. glass, Roman tub & 98SS Cat H L covered patio, planters. Completely redone Bluffs t.'entral courtyard. This
SAT/SUN. drapes & carpetiag. Realtors SPAS, PARKS, and just skyligbts.$149,500. Plate·4fto7Jia auto sprnklrs, air, pool condo,singJelevel3Br,2 newcomplexprovidesan
Private garden patio 2819Newport Blvd. great family living. 3 MORIMS REALTY sized yard. Upgraded Ba, w/f)>lc & sunken liv· excellent lax sheller for
By owner 4 Br 2 Ba, w/gastirepit. Must see NewportBch.675-4961 bedroom townhome at EASY thruo u t. Pb dys, i.ngRm,432VistaSuerte. the investor. Asking
$18,900 dn & assume to appreciate. By Owner· S89,900 to a 4 bedroom * 494-8057 * -833·1984; eves 758-1274. ()pen Daily l·S, $116,500. $365 ooo ec:c 000 l .... An N Prin nl $126 900 n--1ir• • i..10 UVl ..... G 2500 + sq. ft. home at ... beach access when By Owner. Prine only. Agt. 645-9950 ' · ......,, n, ......., mo. r o Y. • . ..,,...,.. ~..., " UNI"" IE OC .... VU you own tbis Woods Cove Brookburst/ Heil. Sat/Sun 12-5. 17122 4Br, 2¥.tba waterfront $118,500 ,,..., " cottage +a nearly new, 3 Br 2. Ba, Cordova, l80 UDOISLJ AMCHOliGI
897·7272 ,_Ca_m_el_o_t_C_ir_. 846_-4303 ___ , ho m e . C o n c r e t e IN MYSTIC HILLS ocean view studio apt. deg view, lge cu~ de sac Spacious 3 BR. den. 2 Ba, IHVESTMEMTS
deck +35' boat dock. Why CULVEROALE!!! Fantastic mtnside hm w I above the garage. You 'II lot, above tenrus crts. hoiue. 45 Ft. St. to St. lot. 17141 496-7711 ....... -. ............................ 1111 settle Cor a Condo? Buy f" d ul a Cam. rm., dining rm .. 3 love the bricks, beamed Many upgrades, VA or $225 ooo. 673-4239 ---===--===----=-c:::=""'-:1 this home for $229,000 A very me an pop ar 4 BA & even 4 BR. ceilings. 2 frplcs., hdwd. copventional. $72,500. • San Jumt
Wr~ Softly! Twin T abards !
7102
fxt~13~
Make ~Y look twice at both of WOii in talltrdsl Ltwely layen! Ilse · synttletic
wonted in 3 c:olol$ to knit
tasht0n's newest love -the tabard. Pattern 7102: one sue
fits Misses' 10.16; Cllild's
Sim 6. 8, IO included.
Sl.25 for each pattern. Add
354 t1th pattern fOt first{;'lass
airmail and handlin&. s.td to:
Purcell Rlty, Sunset Bcb bedroom family home in Whitewater view from floors & location! Asking Open Sat /Sun 1-4, PIUCE REDUCED! r-.Js"----I 078
2131592·1381, 7141846-2848 this desirable family both levels. Mature trees $2&5,000 581·1149 Expansive greenbelt & •• :::r..:'.: ......... . community of Irvine. 1r lot R h Ocean Hcrbor Vu Steps to the pool and on g. · oom enoug EL DORA Bay view. 3.B_r, lam rm, Casa Capistrano-, 2br.
0..kablo """°' •<hool. ld.,lly Joul<d. '"' -· Don't mW,..,. .wfulll'& DO HOME "°!'mod <••I '· ,,. ba. Condo. by owo. $52,000,
Pacifl·c. Call to see. chance. ImEUiln~ 3Br, 2Ba, fam rm. AC. Priced to sell. $1.SS,000. ·499-2756
$255 000 ~ fullylndscpd&fncd,new N rtR EA ·-·-------Bdr C d F , 499· 2800 ewpo . • ssoc. • -1 m on o. resbly beige cpt, PP. 830-0340or CalJ"'•c 6625 H. hJ d d 3 b deoorated. 2 Balconies. JACOBS REALTY Loguno ___ H_f_gue_l--10_5_2_, &17-1741 '""'' ~go~ u:g.ra o 0 0 ~
Pvt beach, pool, sauna, UVEON 675-6670 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..... EUl ........ ,.RID 671 Duplex; nr. Lido shops. neighborhood, 1 mi to
etc.Owner (714)963-5877 GREEHIELT ...... """"'"' Frpl.2/3BR. $155,000 ocean. Affordable!
in this tine 3 bedroom LARGE SUNDECK : M_.._ ..... '"RCH SUMMIT By owner. Spectacular Marshall Rlty. 675-4600 Owner, 493.3543 Weatherly Bay Condo2 Br home in University vnA unobstructed mountain 2 Ba, lge pool & tenni.5, Park. You will have an Overlooking 80 degree VIEW & goll course view. 4 bdrms, 2. ba. fam rm.
walk to bcb. $115,000, unobstructed VIEW of view of downtown lights, Fantastic location, 180' Min~ from Lake, Golf Owner ~ous. $159,950.
furn. Ownr. 114-846-4223 Saddleback. One of a mountains, & ocean. viewoC ocean, mountains Coun;e,. Rec Cnlr. Prof John Varuan Company Lovely 4 Br, 3 ba home. 1 548-8614 lrvtM 1044 Jtind. Qillforappt. $173,900 and breakwater. 2 andsc!aped. Beautifully
$5000 Below Marted!
Sun Hollow 4 br, 2~ ba
upgraded mdl. A /C.
$79,900. 492-4337 Bedro(>m.s, 2 baths, up· decorated w /all up·
UPSTAIRS {§ • LAOUNABEACH graded carpeting & grades. Aft 6 wkdys •st N. CST, HWY. landscaping, Communi· 837-.8260 OOWHST .AIRS ~ •M-4748 ty poOl. jacuzzi, -game•---------
And, all around the cor· ·-------•I room, etc. Close to shop· MADRID 650! ner lot; garden home in • ping&beacbes. $120,000 Lge bright go1.1rmet
Village Ill. University Canyon 0cffft¥1•w kit c be n . 4 lg e
Park. Enjoy custom 1\i yr new wood and Bdrms+fam. Pool size
cabinets & shelves in hv· RANCH REALTY glass beauty. 3Br, 2lh ba yard. Lush landscaping.
ing rm., two of the 3 551 ZOOO w/beams, paneling. 3MonarcbBayPlaza $1.25,900.
bdrms. paneled, 2~ ----·-----i View decks. Vacant. LagunaNiguel Bllln.o...,sonR.E
baths; community pools, DEERFIB.D $160,000. Own/Agt. 496-7222. 831·0836 495-1870
rec. center. tennis. ~7~59--0358;;;~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 S92,000 2 B d rm · • 2 If.a b a · tWwport Beach I 069
townhome; upgraded •••••••••••••••••••••••
552 7000 carp., we & countertop. Pn·ce Redu,.ed One Of A Kind
TH
.E . . . ·: .. _ mirrored wardrobe ~ doors; nr. community • $10,000!!! Cathedral cJg.s. in liv. pool &jacuzzi. $77,000 rm. & din. rm. Solid ash VILLAGE. · .: NEWPORT BEACH u looking tor a buy, this doors & cabinetry reflect
REALTORS nr.a.1yy 67r. 1642 is it. 3 BR• with tbe quality in this 4 ~ ..-whitewater view. New bdrm. with bobby rm. &
decor. Walk to Victoria lg. storage areas. <2«)
GREENTREE EXq\llSITEI! beach. Enjoy the good .-.44 950
BRENTWOOD A dramatic Marquette life th Is s u m mer. -'
3br or 2br & den, 2ba, townbome in Village Il. $149,500
Becks major greenbelt. ~ cowrt.ry kit. m.soo. As· c d 1 d sumable *55,000 1st. omp. remo e e ~...n_ 752.5331 thruout. Special features '-¥". ---------1 incl. cent. air, VanLuit di Cl R.S.J. 2 Br + den, San papen, plush oerpeting; jj ~ .,n?-'5 Carlos ModeL On golf dream ldtch. w /blt·in ~~ .,,.
,,_,. -!lak u *'"" 500 microwave 4' dbl. self· (1'\a.'tJil!I-!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ......... .. e v • ,..... .. , . .,., •
833-321.5; 547·70U clean ovens. Am~es 4br 2ba Executive home.. ----------•too numerous to men-•---------t tion. Call Lorraine to see. 816 2 STORY View. Redecorated.
552.7007 OCEAN VIEW DEERFIRD
••••••••••••••••••••••• •BLUFFS•
$95,000
3 Bedroom, end unit
new carpet & shutters
,; pwner/Agt833-8551
South LCICJUIHI I 086 •••••••••••••••••••••••
LAGUNA LIVING
4600 sq. ft. Panoramic
ocean view. lnHoor
jacuzzi, many extrlls.
$350,000.
. lrolcer. 831 ·0460
Harbor View Montego by
owner. Below market.
leased til 1/1(18 .• 4 Br 2
Ba, xlnt cond. By appt only. Wkdys Lamson, ustfn 1090
213.593.3207 eve/wknds, •••••••••••••••••••••••
213-433·2854 · 714-675·59'19 ONLY $89,500 • 3 Bdrm, dining rm. Ap-
PRESTIGIOUS prox v. acre of beautiful ,£a...t1l1t.1.SULA parklike setting. Top ...... " north Tustin a rea io
POINT Footbill Hi district.
Head for the beach, you Open House Sun 1·5
fun & s un lovers! 1091Foothill8lvd.
O>mpletely remodeled a AF.SOP Realty
year ago-new carpets, AskforDonorHelen
new kitchen, paintin and 731-4911
out! This beautifully Tustin Meadows highly
located home, steps .to upgraded Plan i4. 3 BR.
the Bay, has a family fam. rm., 2~ ba. Green· room, fireplace AND a belt&tpools $92 950
huge guest bedroom PAULM'ARTIN
PLUS full bath over the Real Elltat.e 6"-1383
doable garage! No need1---------to walt-'Us t:be SUM·
MERSEASONI $155,000. Othlrleal Estate • •••••••••••••••••••••• . Mable .... .
PRICED TO SELL
S,qper Ua1'p Part Home,
Plan 5. 4 bdrms, Torma! din1na room, •tep down
to beautl.ful tamily room.
L&e kilc:ben, breakfast
nook & 3 full bath.&. Prof.
landscaped.
EY&.YN COP&AND
HALTOll 833-3307
WI~~~-~~ ......... !!!'! •-------=--Pl BtiWU•a 2 Br, 54 Coovair; In ,--r;;;.l920 · adult park, suoo.
Call now.
PICTUU PRETTY
# I Wiiow Tf'ff La.
MOO ~Sl. MAaf se6173
BY OWNER 12 ILUFFS 11! •cH P •D Doll llouse-nte.m Loca· liA A tfoo < I FEEL .LIKE 3BR·TRlNAMDL Hunt.ingtoobyt.be&e4.
BARGAINING! ) 2 m~YUPGRADED Walk~ bloclt t.o beaeh. Bdnn. 1 bath, '7Gaq at $129;0000wn/Agt l0x60 "/Jge enclo•ed
R2 BUILDABL~ LOT. tm4IS.\l clYs, 64"2148 ev porch Is w / lge deck •d
Back alley, mi to beach. --------•I I a o c o v e r • d 1---------1 Bring moaey and start * IAYFIOMT * poreb+palio. Next !to yov project. $85,000. SW"'EPIN"VI.,.W Cl\lb_..bouae 4c po4l. I
OPEN AT SUH 2·5
WALI.S OF GLASS in um lovely bome open on· to2 pat.ios with greenbelt
& mt. view. Thill Gardea
be.-ia •flfT aultable fot cal1f.. h:adocr-ootdOor Jiv.
Jns • .. tertatntu. ~
Ba., fam. ~ ~ O..,,_,.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiml cenb'tl ab' Is YOU own1•
O.U.t.\ll.548-30!1 .,. u "' PRl"'ED TO SEU... Contemporat1·Big le 5JtmlorS51=!0!: : ~ Lwuary, Prime • Penl.osula. Sllp 4"ail. By LISS TO IUYl' RAMCHUALTY
H1·2000
the lud. Pdeed undel ';a~cOPIWI>
IMLTOa . llz.o434
RSTOP ...... D
I Bl", 2 Ba, QK. muter WrfD. 14~ ...., ~ tltchm fs paatry. Up..
fraded ·tbtouout1 ~ ~pado. q&deC cut-clHae, ~ bUc 1">ftr
1.....:i:..;,.-....... .._. __ _. ~-.,, ... :~
~al\7
If:'~ onb' '329,500. WS TO lllP
~~.u«t&:O in lldull/pet park. Ooly bocnew/~~9>.
$30001lwn. (0..A.C.)
K<t\=:...
; .... ~ .... -.............. ~~-... , ... . . . " . .. . . . . . . .. -. -
I .. ' ...... t
I DAil V Pl OT WtdMldat, Juty tS. 1917 HliUlfl URfurnllhN Hovsea U11f\1""5'Md HouMt Unfu""lhed • .__.1.0~(. .. ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••·••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .. " .. ' ~ _....,. OfMf' ••• •tet. "-"• U....,...._. Cotta Mesa 3224 Hurdinqton B.ach 3240 LQCJUr'la Beach 3248 Ho.ant UnfntMd ApertMtnta u..fwR. ~~~~::'!! ....... , .... ... .__ ....................... ·c·······~:,·M·······;::·2• ······················· ······················· 5;~;~··b~~·;·~h·;;;;,··2 ~;:···~·;;;.:~···;;~·, ~;:;~~~·······;~; eo ... ...._. 3124
"'c,...,. YVr ... 1200 OMt '~ 1000 Ot'Ofla u.. ar •• NWIYf flGTS-Newly de 28r, cpls, drpe. bltlas. 2 f'rplc, pegged floors, 41 • po ••••••••••u••••••••••• •••••••• .. ••••••••••••• .... ¥••• ••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'Otl:lt~. frplc. cpt., l'lr~. ci&r gor, fncd yard. $335. BR + den, 2 bn, l,;e • •••••••••••••••••••••1••;.;.;;.;.;;.;.;91i1i~-------•!11--
UMDIRTN1 fOll.AU ~ mn. lsl/lst ,+ tiep. s.16·76112 tr~c:;, ·~ blk bch, NWPTC:RESTCONDO
, , ,~ trHi Ulle )'ou'\'t flC'llll't. 100'1. ltuod rn 3 Br z Ba, fplc, yurd Fee '150 p/mo yrly. 49',·2791 teruus, walk lo bch. Yrly
010 OIJC TIU tlnl Wart•hou>-. Slor8 a1 ~ 2"l l6th Pl. Ml?·S722 -Pvt home $120. UtU paid. Northend. Sgl or cpl pref. 4 BR, children OK, Pool,
o.u•r •••• t<i\ •t tl\111 pnmo l~auon 12'_. cash l\p&ce. car. ·nr schools, Homennders 557·0822 LGCJUftG Hiiia llSO _ lll50_._640-_i_7_5i _____ 1
) 5MflSHIMQ/
rill• rollln1 s acn on " ah return for shopping, Westclifrarea. -••••••••••••••••••••••• BLUFFSCONDOS of:d~~n~~~~~~i,::~· jlatcf'I on 1)1\ed to•lh, ll30,000 down puyrnrnt SOS mo. S48·282S 3Br. l "'18a, corner _lot, Very sharp 3 br, 2 ba, Leasea starting at $.1()0 d •I Ulll~ avail. Term• Call tor appt. "JA.SMIHI CRiii(" close lo schl & shopping, h M • th A t 644 1133 with h.txuN aop0lntmenta an
ll)\.R 'LA.MIU SllOHOUSE! $WC>mo.962·261S cpt.S, drps. DW, fres ly on · aen • auperbreereatlonatapremlum
<l14)tn *' MA y 0 c K ~ lkdroom. a bath. faml Lee 2 Br. gar, many Neal & Clean 3 Br, 2 ba, palnied, frnccd yar~. COM lge 3 Br h.se lee Liv location. Tennlsogym•thef'aoy ')Rm" .. -rll,.•o•o""' 1u J I" t more avl Small fee lovey neghborhoo • Rm&SOO sq f\F~m Rm spa•swlmming•bllllardt • ,....., ttMl=lt.teli vroe>m. ncu.,.esuaeo · • ·patio. $37S m o. 6581 S395.963-4!167Aat.Nofee. 3 Ba.2 .. urg.ar,woodsy'. Jr.one Bedroom
•........ -....... c:lubhouae.pool &jac:uui !:~4E900E !l.lfa Serv. Edaemont.536-8754. ~~ -'1•.l\t "tt. si arr• Prufle -.,..., & tennla courts. Cull (or ,_,. New Twnhm. 3br, 2ba, ~. 673-1206 One & Two Bedrooms. °'1e Batl'I ~~
wU"'J>")\f'd farm lend If\ 11ppt. t8$Q/month. ••ConlUllWrt Gulde Spacious 2 sty twnhse, 3 tenni11, pool, club. $400. ~~o. · PAMc MeRA VillAA -
li11lh &kserl. lft •lf .. H:& DUC DUPl.IX - -Br 2~ Ba, formal dining Avail. 7 /16. 646·4546 G> 1;:::1ii"'" el -.. ._,,,. .. V-
1·n1r> On main h1H , • l'RfME EASTSlfJF. • SC>U1'1l OF H1WAY 3 SHARP! $250, util pd, rm fplc in living rm & S-ClemMt• 3276 IDOfla I rtnoA CoatoMtlO 761.fffS
'4 ~II. •k-rt11r1\)'. '"'"· COS'r A Mt:.sA iut home. Ila rd wood pool. won't last! Sml fee , mstr bdrm, many xtr'as. LCICJlll'O Nlpl 3252 ••••••••••••••••••••••• u ~-..!!~:.-....
11ho'nr lo 1 .lll lH!l'11t fUCHTftEAl.TV floon., brick fireplace unt.645-4900 $W0 mo. 834-0243; aft 6 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3br . 2ba, 2 b locks tol~~~~~!!!!~!!!i!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! f'ri~ t() :.('II qutrk St:too 979-ISJJ Sltuate<l un ,·urner tot. • •ConsUnMrt Gulde 848·2496 Lovely 3 br home, lge beach. Ocean view. l.ov·
..Mr IH're By u~oci 8y1&ppt ~50,month. yard. View. Avail. Now. ely Cam.rm. new, 11vail Apartm1tnbfw'lli11Md CoataM.sa 3114
"J:B.M3 t'ti~ta Mus..i 4 Pltix 2 Br house w/(rplc, gar, lmmac3Br l'l4 Ba, over· ~7S1mo. now.$850mo. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
..._ .. ~.__.__,.,, SUMMJo:H RENTAL enclsd yard, greenhouse. sized mstr bdrm & bath, Rlta Myers Reel Estate AA REALTORS492-2100 ,.._..._..leach 3769 Fo""hollow VI~ ~ il:J9.ooo Lari(" unit~. One block from China Couple prer. no kids, entry kitcb w/dshwshr. 494·5420or 960-t701 .....,.._,._,. " for~• I 1 00 new µamt l'nm" tn\'(•:.t I> et s ? S 3 2 5 I m o , Nice view. ~25 mo. Agt. San Juan ••••••••••••••••••••••• 621 W. Wilson 6'6· 10 t 1 t ·1· Cove Beach tn Corona ,... "'RN OR UNFURN ••••••••••••••••••••••• mt•n O<'a ion r y delMar. l:i.ttla:.t+.dep.642·2584 No fee. Call Curt is, ParkLlkeyard.beautiful-Capbtrono 3278 WATIJtFROHT f.,
l OH A LOT $!.5,000down COL"' OF ""'IW,ORT 963 0867 ft 7 960 5865 ly decorated. 3Br, 2Ba, ••••••••••••••••••••••• And water view IUXW'Y •2br lownhome w /frpl Alsv 5 "' SJ.85 Util pd Pvt home. · a · · ram rm, Lse $525 mo. wtr IM CHARMING •Lge patio 4 enc. gara ge ·~~~~~~~~ft~~ 2 Tr1 Ple>.es. good self REAL TORS fee. Cul de sac 3 Br, 2 Ba, nr incl'd, avail Aug 10. (213) S ....... JU",.. apts. l ·BR. $1200 mo., 2 •Adult.a. child 16&over
5.SO·til71 l\upporttng units. One 3 6 75·5511 llomefinders 557·0822 beach, FR. grdnr, $425 541·8178 or (213) 378-3693
0
,1 _.,,1",,,. b_.,,l,...h d BR .• SlSOO Mo. Pool & jacw:ai avail. BR with fireplace & Two mo. 675-8340 3 "'rm., n a con o BILL GRUNDY *-i-h-opetiy 14 00 2 BR townhouse type un · Lge unrurn duplex w I 4 Br, 2 ba. W·S1de. Lrg LOVELY, Jmmac. 3 br, f o r r e n t . REALTOR · 67S·6161 $pac. new tnhse, 2br, 2ba, i:;;-;;!! •••• ••••••••••• it11. Ea!>l Santa Ana. frplc & pool. $350. Lease. yard & patio. Dbl gar. 3 Br 2 Ba Condo, pool, ten· l~• ba home w tfncd . yd. Upsta irs/downstairs, 2 1 Br a...t 1 blk from bch many xlras Incl f /p, yd, .. ""-------•I S87 SOO each (J.5<"'o down No pets. 64().7030 Fresh & clean. $4SO. mo. nis, park, c108e to beach. No pets . .$425. Ellen. c11r garage, carpeting & *"' • aar age, lndry rrn. E·
S' U p E R _payment ) A«tS40·0S55 Kidsok.673-7794eve.s. $32Smo.536-2990 Charles Davis.son Rlty. levolors, b uilt·ins & yrl)'rent8J3os side.Only$32S.642-1603 ·---------1CdM, lge 3 Br hse, lge Liv 496-9352 . patio. Won't last lone! 673· eves.
HELP' Rm, & 500 sq.ft. Fam Clean 2 Br. Adults, no Clean 4 br condo facing Call 648.215a day s ; 2 br, lge, S27$. Adult., no . MARKET . Rm. 3 Ba, 2 car gar, pets. Garage. $240/mo. tennis courts, pool & 493.0588 evening t& STEPS TO llEACH pets. 64l-0671, 6'6·2087.
Needfastescrow.lOun· woodsy.~.673·1206 773W.Wilson 6'2·820.S playground. 2 mi fr?m OCEAN VIE W, 4 Br, weekends.U noamwu, 2BR,2ba .,..,"'vrly 1981 Maple Ave
f G I i I E. ·d CM beach SUS mo. 536·1389 F R f 1 d' ·ng _, 12,400sq. t. rossannua lh + poo_. asts1 e ' . Spyglass 4 Br view hm . 2 br townhouse. Pool, or751·63SO am m, orma am • pleuekeeptrylna. 3 BR,2ba $SOOyrly Shar p 2br, cpts, drps,
:.ales Sl.250.000. Liquor ~9K, princ only. Agent. $1250/mo. Open daily by patio. stv & ref. Garage. ~/~av~ t~~ fa~~l.co~: New -3 BR, 2 ba., pool, bltns. l c hild OK. No ~e fop~o~~~o Call l.. 645·568_1__ request. 2S Half Moon W D hkup. 642·4610 3 br, 2 ba. Drive thru dbl ten n i 5 • S 9 0 0 Crplc., etc. $375 Wkda_ys pets. S2a(). 574 Joann St,
"' rat, 4· · LotsforSole 2200 Bay Dr. 644-6397 or -gar. All new in & out. 714_1.49.,5888 mo. 63S-72l0, ext 6447 Eves. AplD.645-30 7,832·3448 associated
:'4Ui1 SHdd t?~
R£ALTORS
~-1395. 10031 Kam ue I a Dr. ..,,. 494 9635 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dana 'oint 3226 540·6174or642·7743 -· ----llllO KEll'> Il l ALTOflS
IOI, W UalbnQ •II JHJ BUILD 2 Br 1 Ba house, w lfplc. ••••••••••••••••••••••• MO ...... RCH SUMMIT Lease 3Br 2 Ba, rourt SUS mo. AND 2 Br 1 Ba ADULTCOND03 Br, 2ha. """" h VIII S YOUR OWN "Pl • ..,"" mo. 67"·7200 or Clos~ .to Dana Point clubhouse, pool, nl'w cpt. Outslanding new2br ,2ba omc. in age an ----------i " .,.,.,., ., k1 · N 3 & 4 bd h i DUL"' Juan Gar, ds bwshr on this prime R·l lot on &tS·0260 "anna. ew , rm S3301mo. Avail Aug S town ouses n A 1 &IS 8042 ' 23' TraUeron bay. All utll. Lge 3 br, 2 ba, cpta, drps.
I Adult 2 bedroom, beam
ceiling, no pets $210. 568
W. Wilson, inq. Apt F.
11 cul·de·sac in ·beautiful -----homes for lease. 2000 to 968-3680a(t5:30pm C 0 MM UN IT Y · pd. U&e oft1ailboat. $225 carport. Avail. now .
;.Jesa Verde CounlryCameoShores4B~.3Ba. 2200 sq.ft.Nopets.SSSO. w/clubhoose. pool. &2 Br l Ba. wshr/dryr, per m o . 644 ·1059. S2001mo.546·Sl20
C.•teryLots 1500 Clubarea!$87,500. ·~n Vu , pvt .bch s. Y.rly (714)752·8511 Huntl-on Jacuzz1.,0cean & moun· pool.aircond .. $27Sunf. SS2·5033,S28·1S70
Crypts • lse. Aug 1. $950. 675-6..563 2 Br 2 Ba. 2 sty, duplex, ..... _;,_~:-3242 tain views. ~furn. 998•9651 (7l4> -2 br, util. furn. Children "•••••••••••••••••••••• ,.._._ S390 $450 Bachelor Apt-Utll pd, ok. No l)ClS. Mar apt 6.
Cry P ts .La s t Su P • lb .Quail ~Lease attractive home, 2 bltns, refrig, gar, cpts, ••••••••••••••••••••••• T•at & Babcock Sc9tta Ana 3280 near N.B. Pier, S\75 mo. l960Wallace642-84'7
·per·Dl5tl6 Plac• . br, stove. Couple. No drps, S.325. 499·2360 Lge 2 BR Cond~ .. mint ••••••••••••••••••••••• 121 24tb St. 673·2058 or
West.Mem.Park p 1:1 pets.442Dahlla,675·3300 Lux d 3B 2 b g cond.Manyamemt1es.•,~ Reoltylnc. Vacant2br l~baCondo 963-5452 BAYMEADOWS Sl7SOf~rm .. Wrile rap~f.19~· Costa Mesa 3224 & cc~:rl~ p~'1, t!~n~~ Mitobeh. (213>430-8247 493-0331 499-4797 in fa~ily 'are~. Highly ~:h~e.4sp~~.zf&aa~;
R. San\•1lle 1400 ou~,L~r. Ntw..oa ""'" ....................... Avail Aug. $400. 498-1453. Mission Vi~jo 326 7 upgraded. S275. BKR At>-hueftfs apls. Avail, Aug. i.t. for ,
, 1752 Calle Ponient~ l Br. (pie, ranae. large l"IM 3244 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 962-447l Unfurnls~ a t ab I e a d u I la . No
S;mta Barbara. Ca 93101 AnEHTIOM BUILDERS yard private Adults no Fountain Valley 3234 •••••••••••••••••••• ••• Super 3 bedrm• 2 bath B h di •••••••••••••••••••• ••• k1' .. • 1pe•-. ...,,,,,. to ........ 60 R 2 d f ' · • ••••••••••••••••••••• •• '" 3 r. 2Ba, super ti arp x ~ .., .,,._., ....., I~ Property 2000 140. " • •. rea Y or pets. S290 uttl pd. 642·0lW Ver ri vale executive RIMT ALS w /fam r m, A tC, cpts. Condo, nr So. Cat Plata. Generol 3802 646.0073 ••-.••••••••••••••••••••building. Prtnc. only. or-646·6423 hoy P 110. 11 Sb 2 2BR 2ba $410/425 d rps Io v e I Y Pool gar 2 wka free •••••••••••••••••••••••---------20th & Chur c h CM me w wa s. r, ·BR · · · ·2· ·b · hb 'h d s385 · ' Large 2 BR 2 Ba frplc ---------1 $65,000. Owner' May lnatClltf Move-in ba, family r m, bltns. Jor 2 '+D. a .. $525 ne1g , or oo . . rent. $360. 640·4462 . D/W, garb~ge diaP. encl BEACH 4-PLEX Subordinate 5't8·0137 Centrally toe .. Costa washer /dryer, re£rig., 3 BR. 2,Ba ....... $395/575 963·4.567, Agt .. no fee. Mlle Square Park, 4 br, 2 Bdrms. Never lived m. gar. prestlaioua l\fesa
fUnitsw,fireplaces neor Mesa. Nr new Twnhse. A/C, extras. SSOO/mo 3BR,2 ·~Ba ......... S4SO CASTADELSOL i ed S39 1 ml to beach. Also de· Verde, i\Croas from
Btat'h & Adams. One Mountafn,DeHrt, 2br, Hfl ba, din /rm, 968·4737orS40·0Sll 4BR.28a ........... $495 2 Br. 2ba Condo. Spec· ju.stpa~-7866 5/mo. lu;<e new studJo. Open Park. SJOO. 751-8888 or vear new. P r ide of RHort 2400 ANAHEIM 12 ·5 daily .• 1407 759-0761 0. wnersh1p. <'>25,()()(l ••••••••••••••••••••••• patio. gar. air cond. $335 Super sharp 2br 3BR,2Ba ........... $<150 tacular view! After ti Soutt.L-lll'la 3186 Delilware. Huntingt on ---------.... bltns. lndscped, only $315 lownhome. 968·4520 or wkdvs 837·8260 ~ Be h 960 G 2 b d I t mo. Small pet, child ok. · ••••••••••••••••••••••• ac . 642· l 846·182ti L . r. en. c •· o
PALM DESSERT 3Br. 1921 Anaheim St. Call 962·7757 Newport Beach 3269 2Br, den, 2Ba Cnndo, or Agt . Harbor Blvd. No pets.
2Ba, pool, SS5,000. Mgr. lo see. 645·46S5 2 Br 2 Ba Tiburon. pool, ••••••••••••••••••••••• great ocn vu, SSSO mo. lse S3SO mo. 644·6537
adj. avail. Sngls, kids. Clean. large 3 br, 2 ha, 2 (7141 499·1720 or (213 ) VIEW OF OCEAN &
EXECUTIVE 110 ME VACANT 3 br, 2ba .. Cpts. pets OK. $380. 962·1182 bnck fplcs. located on 79().1392 Balboa lslond 3806 CITY. 2 br, 2 ba, frplc,
3Br, 3Ba, pool, jacuzzi drps, dsh /wsh, dbl gar. Cine upper b. ay cul·de-Wastmln·t-3298 ••••••••••••••••••••••• beam rell., jacuzzi, REAL TY INC. $128.000. (714) SS9-6138 546-7780 ....,.lngton hach 3240 G hbo hood .. • .... $395 714/846-1371 art6PM ••••••••••••••••••••••• sac. reatne1g r . ••••••••••••••••••••••• l Br, BayCront w/view. garage. S315 • . -----~---·l·---------1 CClftSUMert l•ware! $195/mo. l\gent646·88ll. 4Br, 2Ba redecorated, S3SO yrly. Mature adlls. 64S.a256or979-3376
I•
-----~-------~-----1 Before you pay some •AVAILABLE• 4 Br. Newport Shores, 2 bltns, s m children OK 673·8079 an 5&wknds New 2 br, 2 ba, all elec.
Real Estat• agencies for the "run .. 523 CAMPO,l>l:IRVINE blks to brh. pool & tennis. ms mo. (714) 968-9174 bltns. garage & yard. 4UNITS
, '1'icc buy In
Alamitos. $149,500.
4UHITS
Exch~ 2800 a r ou n d ' ' ca I l •NOW* 673·22.53 COftdofnl 1 1 lalboaPenl11wta 3807 Gardener. Walk to shop-
L o s •••••••••••••••••••••••CONSUMERS GUIDE Houses. condominiums N ew W o od b r idge . -----U turni'.:d 3425 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ping & bus. $325. 321 1---------•1 Many have and are glad and townhomes. Month s y ca mp r e p I a n . *511AmReBrOseRt v5t4F.0·":'164
5
4 B0Hr ••••~•••••••••••••••••• Exclusive Penin Pt, Joe. Ogle. 548-3365 T d U ? they did. lOO's or hse's, to month rentals starling Landscapctd , draped .. 4 ° · Lge 2 Br 2 Ba apt, adults, ---~------ra e P plex's & apt's avallable at~to$800.Localedtn f>r,3ba,$.52S mo.7S2·288l 548·2873 New1Jort Beac h. 3br, nopets.SSSOmo.Callfor AdultE·sldel br roltage.
We have listed a number NOW! At Beach or ... Up Hunttngton Harbour and 38 5475 316 Cedar St 21hba, greenbelt. Pool & 3 ppt bt wn 6 &7 p M Dshwhr, frplc, pool ,
of properties, In different to lOO's of NEW listings Huntington Beech. Call TURTLE ROCK VlEW 3 N~'wpori Shores Webb jacuzzi. Lse. $4SO mo. 67J..882S · jaruin. encl. gar., laun -• pri<.'C ranges. up to $2 and each d ay . S m a I I us for more details. Br, Fam Rm, 2 Ba, lgc Realty Sll-2170 • 646·2700; 631·2546 dry. S300. 644·0878
$ 3 m i 111 on m I n i fee/FREE life service. yard. nr tennis & pools. ·
warehouses. Lel us tailor 645-4900 Sl4S mo. Agt. 752-0!88 Beaut. 3 BR, ram. rm .. ex-Costa Mesa /Santa Ana Capiatrano hach 3818 2 br apt $225/mo. Adults.
anexchaqgeforyou. ••Con1umttr1Gulct. i ~ m ~ras galore! Grn blt , area. 3 BR, l~ Ba Wf/. ........................ r.fth';~~M~~s:hops. 313 C~ry2 1 Sparow BluHsS600 AJ:tS481~ ~~~5a:fi..7s:~o . mo. STUDIO Apl.$185.mo.1.11· ---------Investment Division 3 Br. Large yd, children A ~ Two Bedrooms cld. util. Secluded. New· S U Bd A $350
963·7866 and pets OK $365. mo. 904 RanthoSan J oaq $465 Walk to Beach Condo 2 Br. ly remdl. 6Gl·0621. ma Al~ uttfi'::~s :!id. · i--------•I Dogwood 675-4912 REALTY INC. ,..l!ancbo 21, Ba. gar, pool, jac, Apcatm•nhFunaiahed 838 742 714/846-1371 ~anJoaq $465/495 sauna. $450/mo. 552-4449 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·1
"• LAND
.J. c o m . B a r s l o w t o
,Oceanside.
Many diUerent size
\)arcels a l different
pnces. Century 21 Sporow
Investment Division
963-7866
RARE OPPORTUNITY un Pk. VIU.111 $4.SO . 8c6oo ldand 3706 C0rona ct.I Mar 3822 2 Br cpt:;, drps. bllns .
tolsetbis MesaVerdeex· Peter'stownhomes $525 ; Bdr m on Peninsula •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• pali~. t'nc gar . Wtr pd. ecutlve 4 bdrm 3 bade· PATIO HOME w/easy walk lo Bay & corator home w/2 frplcs. Ranc~SanJoaq ss25 Beach. Woodsy & warm Small l Br w/Wshr/ttryr . S310 imo. Ph: 63'1·3350 or
3car oaraoe,lgecut1tom Brand new 2 br, 2 ba. Deerfield $375 in prime location. &gar,$330. Dys83S-2200 993·9977. Chldm & pets
designedpatlo.S725.inc.l. wet bar, upgraded plush . ree rooms S650/mo y rl y lse . <ext >:w n s · J · • .. brick (pie, woven woods. Th Bed 273 k d 494 1836 rS """ ok
---------·gardener. SS7·8717 or cr ptg, pool, sauna, UruversstyPark $460 Waterfr ont Homes '"--ta Mesa 3724 '(/,, ·tores Large 3br , 2ba upstairs. 644·3545 University Park $4.SS 631-1400 ~ ~ jacuzzi, $475. 963-7866 Deerfield 1475 ------__ ••••••••••••••••••••••• <'Pts. drps, no pets, nr.
Village JU $475 NO 1'~EE ! S40.00 WEiii( & UP CORONA DEL MAR OCC. l009 Mission, apt D,
ChanceUor Homes SSOO Nwpt Beach & Cos ta •Studio&l BRApls 2 Br Townhouse, fr'plc. 5290•751'3696
Campus View $500 Mesa duplexes, condos, •TV &MaldSer v A\'ail Pool, tennis. Some ocean F.astsid~. Cost a Mesa
Vlllagelll $.525 houses. •PhoneServ,Htd pool & Catalina views. Close New 2 hr, 2 ba. pnv
Turtle Rock $575 Rental Pavilion 2376 Newport Blvd, CM to shopping & tine beach. pullo, !>par1ous, garage.
----------• RanchoSanJ oaq. SS95 675-4912 S48·97SSor 64S·3967 644·2611 A\a1l now. SJIO. per mo.
----'------1 Four Bedrooms Back Bay, fum or unfurn SUS CASITAS ~6~sk for Larry.
Culverdale $475 JBr, 2~ ba Twnhome Neatly furn. lanre & MESA VF.ROE, 2nd fit . 2
University Park $600 w /pool. 631-1806 aft 5 or small 1 br. $225 fo $260. Ok:I Corona c:J.I Mar Br, 1 Ba, gar, adlls over
Univ.Park $525 wkncls. Adults, no pets. 2110 Deluxe2bedrm.ll\4bath 35 . No pets. $2SO.
red hill ~ ....
552-7500
H.8R VIEW KNOLL
Charming Cape Cod ext.
2 Br & den. 3 Ba, w /view.
Bltn applic. Pool, tennis.
walk lo shops. $600 mo.
714·H93·5888
Newport Blvd. apt. All bltns. Enclosed Eve /wknds 546-9926
patio. Walk to shopping NOW RENTING Lite.
2·2 Ir Trtrs & beach. Adults. Refs. airy new apts. Open dal-
S175 lo S19S. $10. tltil. $WO/mo. Agent, no fee. ly.11-5:30. No childreQ or
charge + lights. No1••646--392B-•' •ev•e•s•'6•73.-4S_77_1 pets. l br. $265. 2 br. $295.
cruldren, no pelll. 133 E. Pvt. patios. encl gar. 332
16th St. 64.2·1265 Deluxe 2 Br 2 Ba, F P, Victoria. Mullan Rily. •h..tlful Home• deck. beam ceilgs, 7181h 6'6·3436or540-2960
3 Br, den, Fam Rm, 2 Ba. BLUFFS Condo, 3 Br Dona Point 3726 J aatn ine . $420 m o . 2br 2ba, drps crpis, pool.
Ba, l level end unit. Fur •••••••••••h•••••••••• 644-:N05 Adults, no pets. $210. ---------1 or unt. Super toe. &40-4933 'super neitt vllJa. l hr, Year~ S32S. Cute 1 Br 673.()884, 646-7319
Sl?O, FURN! ~?url yd, pv t. $200. house. Small pet OK. 2 Br, refrig & stove, no
Larae 1 Br many more Smgle.496-5293;673-2332 875-3063eveebr wkod11. pets, adults o nly .
avl. at bch. Small fee. Newport hoch 37'9 ~ U~talrs, beam clg~. $225
FREE/Life Serv. Unt. ,...................... SUrlRCdM _mo_._968_·8064 _____ _ ~.-4000 ~ LOCATIONS
••ConsumenGuJcle 1,2&3Bdrm.Apta. 2 Br, 134 ba, 4'1)lex. Cp\s
only. No ,~Ud. ~. 810
Joann-st. 548-7638 Wcrterfroftt Cowdo CALL: 67S.2311 Dys. ------------1---------·--------i 40' DOCK, lovely 2 st)'. lt...-Reatty
Br, 2~ Ba, fplc, $800 yr
ly. 675-6775 .
(,
L;Je. 2 BR. encl. deck.
bltns. Acfults, no pet&.
Aaent 644·2212
' Reftfoltfo5honr 4l000fflc•R&ntaf 4400 14niMu Wednesday.Juf"l3,1977 OAILYPILOf 0~,
• I •••••!.,••••!.•!!••••!.•••• ~ It 5005 -!. ~ 1 •HuMt:·:slli\fUNli* ••••••••••••••••••••••• ._,........un Y ~lrtt ""'-". ~.,. .. h """"'"'-Apartmenh ~ Ntt-tl • :. EXECUTIVE SUITES :••••,••••••••••••••••• Lo•t & Found 5300 75 HAio. W.twcf 7lDO ••••••••••••••••••••••1••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• "'-1 ultMmmuh · Do d ff• Stron° lnvt'11tor 11eeded ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jobt Wonted, 7o ..,.. , nee li.l ng Jklerrlll, )'OU neti an 0 1C(I • r • , , • ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••"O•e ............. l+od1 ll40HwwfinqtH hoch 1140 ScMiHt ~ 3116 9'Jm-8pm 530 24\M Wllh personalitl'tl phnnt' 01 IT)1&~n1Ctt·1ent ntw I'<~ Puppy. rem Nr
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••"••••••• roveruge, st•t•n•tarlnl chur11ct1•r rf·llt.iur •nt Jkn lirowl\li 111 LlllCUr\u Lovin~ care of ptt& &
------------------L..:,•, qwet. luxurlnu.s. ex· AVOID INCOMPATIBLE •rrvaces, & easy 11ccess ~cept.7Sj·O~ -Beath Wt!lm11raner pl11nts in your homu by Ban.lnng
MAM.AGER!
r V/;1~1~ifa re i br, 2 l>ll apt ROOMMATES! tofwys?Yo~runfindall ln•fltment 497·741~----Mary.Call64S·39l4
l!:lt•v1tor to ~rcnH· priv . h1.,,Js;·Mot~\8.l2-4134 lhas P LUS u warm, Oppor+wtity 5015 Found: J uly llth. White Cook/Housekeeper Exp CHJIF TllJ.StS
TB.URS 1 ,.., .. nm. h\'h t•urty & gamt• room, fukes fhc Guesi.wo1·1t frttm<lly ulmm1phcrc at ••••••••••••••••••••••• Shepherd Mix, blk hpt; on resp. hone3t, fem. di! lot.ii nrnrlty. Pt•r(('rt Outofl-'lndang 666Buker St.C.M.NrO(; Fri di & t' d sires pos in private
LUXURY APARTMENTS
flv111.: ur wl.nd N'lrcut for TllAT RIGllT I' EllSON Alrport !714) !>46·2982 ~~·~. n10c~edPhiemnmomeden'°arl ~a;~·ta ct eno/a n 0 e1rc 0 home. No t:hlldca re. Thebt-arc career poll
tht• 1ulvcnl1.1rou11 11dull S $Sb Sh rf --" "' " p ( M v de ti I h h I "-·• ove y a "CJ Improved oft: spuc", 3 Rl!.i'URN. Short term! AnimalShelter .634 730\ re er c11a er . ons wt c: ance o • ...,.
I •2•3 llDIOOM UNrn
St11rt1n11 ul SS l~/mu • " Costa Mesa. 7S1 ·42S2 vuncement. Pleasf.tl t'l9·~ /\vi 4! lltra Ddrms 111 3 Br r ooms. all or purl. 673·0359 FOUN'D: 2 dogs, German btwn9AM·4PM working conditions. ,,..
ht11t.>. indds katch, bath & Rcrept. arcu. 125 114· ft. E Shep & Irish Setter, vie cellenl benefits.
Aparftn9ntt Fvndahed i:cn'l llVln(l arou Lots of Room 1, 224 sq ft. Hoom ~nergy San Diego & Nwpt Fwys. Http Wanted 7100 Varied Hours • FUTUllHG •
UHICf)Ul AHO DltAMA TIC R.OOlt PLANS
Cu-;tom rlt•:.1~1w<I "1th t'Xl't·ptlonally
l:ir l.(1• rnorw,, d1·11ni:t1H· 1·ntry wuy:.,
anti luxunou-. <11t11•111tw:-throu~hout
or Unfw-nl•hed 3900 ~toru11e. LaJC Ills nrea. 2; 321 sci fl RoOfn :1 50' Discovery 545-4&15 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l''or Appt. C;all: ••••••••••••• .. •••••n• Presently ot•1•upied by per !IQ. ft • Ind ulal. Nr'. Patented /m(g & market· ----ACCOUNTING CLK UM I I
TllEf>:X<:l'rtNG yng bach 830·6253 ov11; 0. C. Airport Butl an~ investment. $20.000. i''OUND: Red Irish Set· Mortg!lge banking firm SydlteyJ •son
PALM MESA APTS. M6-07S4 dy!I , A5k tor Pnes:.. 540 78008 5 Sc:r. Mr Robertson. ter, male, vie Catalina & ln Orange Co. has an im· l2 I)) 917·2450
Lot·att·il 011
11.\RROH BL\'Ff'S crncu:
MINUTES TO Nl•T Mutt Ol"FJCE SPACI'.· avail, 213 2'78·6333 Hrookl!, Laguna Bch med. operung Coran ae USLIFE U<.'fl 49-t 147•1 I · ·•nr. l4l!lla , M 1" 25.35 <·entratly localed an CM. Money to Loan 5025 ctng c erk w/t.>xper. 10 SAVINGS
1 Nt•111 fiolsa ('ha('a :ind War·rw1)
Jll"\'T l '\GT<>N Bl: \t'll
llul'll, l&:.! BH $1:J7 Nr S (' Plaza ~ per sq. Cl Contact ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOSr 5 mo. old male <'ltl bank ret·oncilialion&
tromS211>.&up 5-IO-!H26 Corpurule llealt y . lst,2nd&3rdT.D.'s purl Stamest.', vu• Pleast· call Cathy t:Qual0pportun1t)' ,\1tu1t~. No Pl.'l:. 71".ccu.1101 II IL & 8 '·h 'l'humpson, al Unical EmployerM/F~ ~ M I -----.. ""° l,OANS AVA ii.ABLE am a on roo.-Ur).l
l 1 · csa >r Male or female needed to ''r'·"il not a·m""lrtaiit "-<'Mlllg white flea ."ol l\1•11 IJlage, 714 / 963·71l73.1~~~~~~~~~~ I~ Blk~ Ea~t of Newport bhare l'O:tY 2.bdrm hom .. Executive oHH·e s pace, "'"" ,... 1 ...,0 R 1 """ c 9 IWE 1-UI d ~ 950 ( £ ' Broker. 673-4883 .>r ~ ewim · ,,,;., o1.P. II ,. > 111 NB w 1young pr o sq. l .50' P t. 6 mo" \l 'C'l)U .. ''l'IN<'• CLE"K.
xu; 1:J28 or K 10 11~:$
-.!(
Co1to Me-so 3824 Locpano IHch 3848 ~lll!ll!liO ressaonal Vegctallle lease w/opuon tu renew Personals Sl50 •• "
garden. <'ovt·red patio. _496-~759; 4!JS-48S8 Mort~5. Trvst ••••••••••••••• •••••••. l>ulws anl'l process acct
Banking S&L
TS.LER ···••········•····•··•· •••••••••.•............
IHSTAHT·IH
YSl1>1de lge 2 hr. 1111t111
lk>drn retl Small 11t•t
'mall !'hald ok lltal pd
S!iS mo 36:! E. 20th SI
\li:r &16 -1387 11r 642·028:!
\'1t•w "' l't l11okan.: n'·ean &
\11ll.1J:t> l.d,1(1111.1 Apt on
'l.u ~:nd "' :! UH, :! 1111,
tl•·n + I ,l(l' t t·r r.i ,.,.
lk:.1K•ni.1ble Jdull:.. $1511
mo I'll ~.:1m her !lprn
LA CASA ILAHCA FHO~ S250to s:l35
loch., I & 2 BR lCICJUrla Niguel 3852 5 !kaut dlJl plans avail.
Avail.·~· 1st. •:•••••••••••••••··~··· rum or unfurn. Buch, l
All utils pd., l'pb., drps, ~ondo on~golf 1·ourbc. 3br. br, 2 lir, l ba. 2 br. 2
pool. lndry. fltc'b. At.IUlb <!ba, A C .. ava_al. ,Aui:. bl baths. Beamed hv rms.
on ·r 35, no prts. Call $125 rno f·IO ~IJ d1u1n)! ureas. storage, patio s, decks, Sue. 556-7777 ur ~·all l>elu~1· 2 IJJ :ipl bcaul landscaped grounds,
llcnry · 6-12·9137 loc:.1twn. dose l~ Llt-ach. cov prk~. lal?hled tennis,
t;ASTSIDF: 3 b;, nl'" ly Poo~'... rl.'t. r•~rn. 11. l·hald ,, o 11 e y ha 11 , 2 s l y
uelOr'd uppl'r w nHT ok. ~JO. up 11:11 .n~. l'iubhous1•. hlll1<1rds,
view. Students prcf'd, :>w1mm1ni,: l)ool. pang
53.15 5-15 ( 01 5-lfi 5? 3869 pong, hydro ~p.1, I:) m • • -1-1 • Mll·t Newport Beach Sorry. nu IJt't!>
~. Na(•e 2 Bf<, crpts, •••••••••••• ••••••••• • • Southwt.>s l Corrwr
drps. pauo, car·1iort, 11111 PARK NEWPORT Edmgcr,Nt'wlan1t
,\lonteVasla.5-15.:1050 Ba1:helors, l or :~ K-IUUl::danger,1111.
-----Hc·drooms & Townhou~t'~ 17J.I )8'17 !lllO!\ New dlx 2 br. 2' ~ha Con From $2;,!).SO OPEN 9.5 OAH.V do. Hltns Obi J!Ur \dlt l &IO OO!Ki Spectacular spa, tol•tl Rooms 4000
f smopc 5
· · · rccr1:1·at1on proJ(ra1m . ••••••••••••••••••••••• AVAIL HOW ~ocaa program. 8 poo s. II ~ . · tenms courts. At l"ashion ROOMS S2S wk up with :!hr. Illa w /enc lust.'tl Island, Jamboree & San kitchen. $37.50 wk up
patio, carports. ~35 tsl & Joaquin Hills Road. '!_P~S. 548·9755 __ _ last + deps. 7S2-0160 dys, (7141644•1900 tH2·5673evcs Room in lovely, quiet
-, . . home. No drugs, pets or .\lobale home for sale: Steps l~ beach._4 Br 2 Ba, smoking. Kitch. pravgs.
qwet adult prk S49SO. Sp fplc, (pls. drps, s.550 yrly Fem a J e . s 15 o / m 0 IDS mo. 645-J.')81. 731·40.M _!_se. EHZ·34-i3__ _ 963·8233before10::10 am.
ga r 1 0 ft 5 Dffds 5035 l!nnkua)!prnblem ' p;iyahll· w)romputer t~rio19rp · ays · · {)(flte swle'. 3 pvt rms, lgt1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call Alt•ohnl u~·li>hth' ·'~ ~l~•u & a~st. chief , · or eves come on recepl. rm, formally use hk11r l'll'rical exp., ac-
hy 327 Snug Harbor Rd. by lns Co. Avail. Aug LOANS 9% .!I hr» 11 d,iylCl5 :iR:ln 1•ti.: uil', 10 key by touch
NB.Ron_. __ ~-Isl. Call Saunderson at Abo 2 ndTDLoans l'llE<.iNi\NT" & lflllnl! rcq'd, Apply an
"I F 1 dnp OK 3B 21 Western Busin ... ss l'.1r1n" conf1 denl1 ul J.H•1:>1111 ill Heeves Rub· " ' · ~ · r. ; Se · w Fairest Terms sanre l:M9 " I I A p· ba Condo w ipooL Na rnces, 563 est Jllth l"1111ni.t>hng & n·lcrral. >t·r Ill'. 415 ve. 1co,
631·1806afl5orwkncJs. St. CM. L>ays 642·02\Z, SattlerMtg.Co. Ahorllon. adoptnin & SC EOF.
---eves 546-2277 642·2 I 7 0 45·0_6 l_I kl'<'P•ni:. Need someone to share ----Al'C,\l'L: ~,-.,~.,.,1---------furn.2br11pt. Starting lst Deluxe ore w SCt''Y. Sl'r~. PRIVATE PARTY H -,, I_ ...... AcctnqClk $550
wk of Aug. 646·2651. xerox. Near O.<.:. airport Will pay more for your LINDA & VICKI FREE POSITION
S2SO per mo. 752·5626 2nd T IJ i;.12.3573 Outcall Mouone Goldt•n opp<ir to JOm top l''inanrially stable person -: ----~ 1•0 & learn A Payable.
to s hare btfl 3llr RJ<.NTREDUCED ll.li. Ai;k us ulloul bl. 2nd o1 FortheFvnofit! 1') ping & adding
twnhome. nr ocean 111 Exec,prof/medofc ncw :11dtru~tdcedloans.t" .. ·11 ServmgallOrani:t•l'11 mathme abahty StJme
NwpL 644·8020 remodl $100-$300 mo UH: t 11 r y ~I In\' ,,s t nll' n t S:JS-7:113 account 1 n i.: l' x IH' r .
N!!;WPORT BEACH
Position will provide ell.·
posure to new accounts
as well as regular Teller
duties. 6 Months Teller
experienee preferre._
but will consider ' h\·
dividual with stroi\g
cashiering backgroullif.
For further informat)Dn & an mtervaew appdlnt·
ment call John Laun,
(714 ) 675--4500
Los Anqeles
~al Savings
Equal Opp Emplyr m tr
ftoommllte Wanlhd lO Uttl !ltiJ·l243; !)6().JU·I l>l\'ISIOll !lliJ iX\il; helpful. {;real atJvance· .. Spiritual Reoder r 1 --------share 2 Br 2 Ba apt in orrart.> ror lease s1r1u menl Top bcm• lls A so .J_
F I V l N k ., "---·-t Hll5 So El c .. m11111 1t1-.i1 Ft.>l' Jobs Beauty Opr Rent sp~e y. on sm r . p 1mo. necepllon aru11 _ .. ......,ce~n' sanClementr Vullvlai· Cull Sally s4o~60SS MSperwk.Hazel'sit 961!·8714 Pvt ok w bath & "'t•t Penonals ~·or appt. 192. n!H> l s 1 21040 -----bar Ai.:t. G44 7211 Lost & found Coastal l'ersonnl'I Y a on. Cutdow \gcncv Blvd. HB. Need ,
n ••••••••••••••••••••••• •MICHELLE'S• . ..,,w.1•arboruic·M clientele. 536·1738 r LivinnEx.-nse1! BusinessRentol 44so "--·--·-nts "'100 -··~·' v • · · c""·821Saft5pm. ·• "2 r-~....... ~ Outcall :>lu:;sai.:t• .,,,., Share a home or uplmcnl •••••••••••••••••• ••••• ••••••••••••••••••• ••• • lo \:\·1·21\f\.1 ;:U-4·Hi2
Qwst-<J)Aru UNu.~rw 4 DELUXE OFC'S SCRAM-LETS J\clnun t~i st2.ooo lleauty stylist. Must· db
• Conr rm . seat 25, a ll A.._.SWERS MASSAGE a-rations Trne new trends. Very busy l_ll.c ..;« ~ ~t"('h<'R paneled. sm. whse 111 rt.' "' . r-. , • salon. Top wages for w::ll~h • .i""'""'i ar.lor2yr.leasc.Lakc Plowed Vague FIGUREMODELS Mi:mtixi:-..a\aiLwmatl r ight person Lakt-
For ovcr Syrs.832·4134 Forest area. Kent Mange -Butane -ESCORTS farm. Col degree. Call Forest 837·4250 S37-8779 llarkans t::Vt::und /\l>i\M Ball Macey, 833·2700. · •
Male seeks human1slH' 711.581.9393 Is al true that next year OUTCALL ONLY Dennis & Dennis Person· Bookkee per restaurant
fl'm 30--10 to share 2Br. ----- -we can expect to set.> a 63 I ·3811 nel Service of lrvme, 2082 exper. pref'd. So. Orange
2ba apt. $200/mo Jnl'l UESK s1>ace at 1787S Woml'n's Lih llihlf''' It'll _Michelson Dr. Co. area. Resume re
uul, furn. lst/last+SIOO Beac h Blvd" near began with lht• story of •KARE.._.'S* Adverti5i.-Soles quircd.586-6866 sec dep req. 11:13 -04<!1 Talbl'rt in Huntington EVE: and AD,\;\! ~ .. 7
days, 5-19-9530 eve for Beach. sso per month. ----OUTCALL MASSAGE If you are a sharp, ag. Bookkeeper/Office MIU'.
appt.Ask rorTerry Jkingownfurnilure.Our Lost&Found 5300 tiPM-2PM 973-0893 gressave, ex p e r 'd 3-Man Pediatrics. Jn
receptionist will answer ••••••••••••••••••••••• salesperson & want to quire49S·l380.
your phone for SlO per Lost: .Tabby Manx l'al •SHARON'S* make at least $20.000 per . month. Daily Pilot office, Bunny tali. Wht hind OUTCALL MASSAGE yr. as an account exec BOOKKEEPER, A&sis
----·----•DELUXE• Super neat condo 3 br, l Dano Point 3826 l DR of 3 br house, els. to ba, frpl, pool. dbh!>e
••••••••••••••••••••••• Eastbluff 3 br. 2 ha ht•h. Pvt. bath, lndry. N k
SI SO FREE RE.._.T Ll•ase. Incl. spac. master yd. s.i50_ neg 960.5300 _o_n_-s_m_o_e_r. 673-2332 &12-4321 feet. 540·8263 or 537 ·2273 -199· 1224 for local pubticat1on Call tant. Includes payroll. ---759·1S31. cash receipts, accou.nb ,.. l>Ultl'. din rm & dbl AM &eves. -"' t h 'bd 2 b Brand new 2Br. Iba & garage Auto door - --.-cm os r 2 a apt NWPRTBCH STOHE
3Br. 2bu. $275 to S.1-10 opener avail. Pool &~rRe11tof5 4200 Recfac.NB.Sl8S inculll 26:1UAvonSt.S300/mo
2-1551 Alla V a ~ta . recreation urea. Atlutts ••• .. ••••••• .. ••••• .... Maureen 0 ·!!97·8233 J erry Wynn (213M77·7701
'714 >400·3:15 1 only No 1"'ts. From S.167 SA.._. CLEME,..TE E ·752·29oo ---- ----.-~ "' " G-<lrs ---Store/officetshop, 4 rms B Toro 3832 up. Beach homes. condos. "'' ... 300·2100'. 20<·40< sq. fl •••••••••••••••••••••••--~AmagosW~y-_ andapts.Heservenow. for ent 4350 Ample purking, xlnt
l)eluxe 3br. 2ba. Bltns, Nwpt Shores area. J 1~ HERTHA l-IENR y ••••••••••••• ••• • • ••••• C.~1. locataon. 646-2.544 ;
I • f "h'ld blk 2b lb d I REALTORS G:aragl.' nl·1•dt·cl lur "Jlort:-. 548·8333 aun11ry ac ._ 1 ren socean, r, a P x .. _11s "'··I Mar •92 .• 121 --------OK. 554·1083 Yrly Lse. 714 956·S871 V<= ___ ._, •• l'ar StClrnge I yr. ti73·U7!141 -
bd alt 6 PM. Huntinqton Beach 3840 Cozy lbr. Iba, steps to l&2 rms. Newport ---------
••••••••••••••••••••••• beach. Shores area . Beach. Garage. Steps to CD:\! ~arage avaalabll' lr•r
IRAND NEW! t714J956-5871 bch 54-1-6899: 67S·7S98 <'a r. s torage. Ca 1 l
Cii3-3617 aft 7 1I6. morn :!&apt.c:. From $:.110 /per llUGHES LIDO AREA. NPT. BCll. on Peni.n. 1 uigs.
mo. Hll De!aware. HB XtramceZndflrlge2 br, blk.toocea.nor_bay.2br, ----
Open 12·S .n?1ly: 1 Mile to 2 ba, f /p, d tw, gar, pvt newly furn d., sips 5, wk· Garage for rent East Side
otean. 642·960\ Agt s.IOO /mo lse. inc, util. ly rental $27S J une & Costa Mesa. $30. 645·2679
Cannery Vill04Je
Small store for n·nt on
Newport 81 vd. N w pt
Bch. Only $225 mo.
Burr Whi t~ Realtor
2901 Newpod Blvd N.B
(714) 675·4630 536·1808 Adullsonly.673.0844 Sept. July & Aul{. $275. orS48·~
----_ ----64S6392ask forSandy. Offf R 1 400 CM 1600s rt · d .....,5 ] Br 2 Ba. SJSO. 2 Br 2 Ba. 2 Br. hu~e deck. w /vacw. . ce ento 4 · · q. m -.... ., · S290. Garage Rc•c area. lge Liv Rm. 1 blk to bch. Dana Poml-Furn, walk to ••••••••••••••••••••••• Also 300 sq.f~ ofc $95
19071 Holly.848·8311 $36.5 673-l260eves. ocean. 3Br. fam rm. WESTCLIFF.AREA 646-2130;679·3709
------------· ---pool,$200 wkorS450mo. NEWPORTBEACH Approx400sq.ft.C-2,A/C,
l.g ZBr • IBa • enclosed BAY VIEW. Slunnmg 2 493-6736 \400 Sq. fl. two pvt. at 13 o E. 17th St. ga.ragl.', .2 blks lo h_ca1·h, br. 2 ha studio. Frplc. ---b h $1•c Do I 548 168 walk to stores & bu..~, $260 Patao. Pool. Eastbluff Beaut 4Br home w /beach at s · 5400 per mo ...,/mo. Ye ·l
mo. 960·Sl31 Mature adults only. No out front . Completely &l2·0200 lndatstrial Rental 4500 I so furn. Fabulous view. $750 2Br, tBa, gara gt'. patio. 1 _pets. ,seat 54· · 640·0349 wk July, $'800/wk August.
1·h1ld no pets. S215 mo 2 Br, l'h Ba townhsc. Nr WATERFRONTHOMES
847·6182 Hoag. Ad lts, no pets. 631·1400
I Br, patio. gar. nr S. -~--·-64_G_-8_7_lO_.___ H.I . Waterfront
65• PER SQFT
1617 WESTCLIFF-NB
AGT. 541-5-032
150 I Westcllff Dr.
Newport Financial Ctr
• ••••••••••••••••••••••
1140 sq. ft. Xlnl loc. 3
doors off Placentia St. al
782 W. 20th. Call Saun·
derson days 642·0212,
eves 546-2277
Lost filigrrc zin· ran11 . SF.EKING Witnesses. . . payable, with compute•
17th St an C.l'll .. ulso Lidr. Anyone observing an ac· A~de to elderly couple in e_xp. & heavy construe
bdwk. Senl vnl. re\!. l'ident atMesaVcrdeDr. C .M. L ite cookin g, h on e~per. 833·2287 ask
645·8953. West & Adam,, Ave .. m1mmum housework, 5 forAmla. 101'~1. Thurs. June 30th day wk, (714)540·0329afl ---------
LOST Whall' Samoyed . 1977 Pis contal'I Donald 6PM or all day Wed / CARPENTRY
malt>,'''<" l1;1rb\Jr Wilson E . s m a 1 1 w 0 0 ct Thur or Sun. Journeyman framer
<.:.M.51117\ll!ll 7!~·644-11224 w /fin i s h ex p er. ------ -APPLIANCE References requi r ed.
Lost, fH:WAl10 Blk Lab MARILYN I N l-:Eo TECHNICIAN Newport. Beach 759·0213
V1t· "T" St San Clem THE Kl'M'Y CAGK l Our appliance lechni· Tony , J 49!1-1915 492 :1929 A l\I G N G N o I , o caans earn $16,000 to CASHIER-Stock for ,._
FOUND, whale male Do~. _VACATION_. -$20,000 per yr-5 .day wk-quor .&: market. Exper.
6 wki.. Shl'p Samoyed, Sf:AMAN: A B .• 2 yrs xlntfnn~e benefits, must pref'd. Apply in person
bm c•yes V11· Orange & exp . wants to work on be .full·hne, openings 10 bef noon 3041 S. Bristol
23rd.CM.833·1112U yat:ht or around N8 Whittler, Fullerton,C.M. SA area 559.()58.1 Certified Appliance (714) 1--'--------
FO UNO ; rem Min . -. -521-2274 CASHIER
Schnauzer, Blk & wht. DRI NK Pure Spring----------·• CREDITCLERK
Vic. Mr Fadden Park. Fresh \\,1tl'r for less than APT. MGR. Mature C?U· Westminster. 531-40114 I<· r)r gullon No bottles or P}c needed for 25 units, Immed . opening for ' a --· · Costa Mesa area . I/time pos. Varied ofr F O U N D · G e r m fail<'rs . Pure Water Peo-64S·l260 duties. F in e j e welr)
Shepherd, yng. fem Var. pie fi·I:! ~-__ _ store. For appt. call
Magn~lia & Edinger, 2ti yr old male to share Assembly JoyceTipton,549·1379:
Weslmanster.893·1179 H.B. apt nr bch w/fmle
FOUND: Predatory-Bi;.d. 18 to2Syrs. 96S-6S4l
Vi c. Mariners & WOMAN WouJd like com·
Highland Nwpl Bch. To panion to accompany her
identify 548·0782 lo Europe. Must pay own
F 0 U N D : M a I c wac y. ~IPPI>: to Box 976,
Weimoraner2 whtespots 10 Dai Y Pilot, P.O. Box
on chest. Beach & Ellis 1560. Costa Mesa, Ca.
HB. 963-4914or962·l402 _9262.6 ________ _
MECHANICAL
PRECISION
ASSEMBLERS
We are a small manuf co.
CHILDCARE
Des ire local maturt>
woman to care fot
children in my Harbor
Vu home. Wkdys, 9·1i
now. Sept 2 ·6 pm.
644-7095aft6:30PM w /job opportunities for ---------
predsion mechanical as· CIRCUU TIOH Diego Fwy, adlts. no THE BEACH ALL YR. 3 Bdrm. fully furn.
pets. ~Sm tm 673·0289 Attract. 3 br, 2 ba duplex. Washer /dryer, free boat
N<!w 2 & 3 Br in S-plex, Cpts, drps, 2 car prkg. dock. sleeps 10. $400
view walk to beach 509 St95.67S-~S wel'k, $1500 month.
Leasing Office Space Stor. 4550
Call on Site Manager ••••••••••••••,•••••••• Found: Afghan 4 mos. old Personal Services 5360
t714)642-3lllext246 R. V. S torage Orange puppy, blk. &. tan; vie. •••••••••••••••••••••••
semblers w/6 mo's ex-CLERK
per. You will have the The Daily Pilot ha:, an
chance lo move up to ful· opening for a desk crerk
ly qualified machine tool Monday through Friday,
builder . We offer good 10:30 AM to 7·30 PM
benefits & you will work Situation consists mainb
on a variety or PCB drill· 0 f ta k i n g p h one
ing machines, adjusting, messages and diti·
trimming & fitting to patching, Requires prtHi-
tolerance. ciency in typing and 10
I){>la~arl'. 536·6962 ' 774-4384 or Eves 675·6169 ---------Nice 2 Br apl, w tlge dcC'k.
NEW 2 br, 2 ba. bltns, $300 avl now on yrly basis. Comfortable 2 br home
mo. Garfield /Beach 5350 mo. 675-1>775 or Laguna Bca<:h. Walk to
554-7210 673·6279 beach. Avail. July &
Aug.
Rita Myers Real Estate
494-5420 or 960-170 I
2br, l'':!ba. Frplc, crpts, 2br.nr.oceanunfurn.
drps. No pets. $285. 711 S325yrly.Nopet,nucpt
Delaware. 962·4832 128'~_46.St :gar;G4S-2117 •--E-M_E_R_A_L_D_B_A_Y __
BLOCK FROM BEACH Back bay area, available Laguna. 4 Br house.
:l Br. view balcony. Aug 16. $250. 2 bdrm. Whitewater \'U. Pvt eom
dshwshr, frplc, gar. No draperies. carpet, lrg munity, blk to bch. ten
ix..ot.<>. 205 15th St 960·'1140 patio. Mat adults only. rus, pools. Jae. frplc. July
•>r 536·1718. _No pets 642-2267 :w th r u A u g 21 s l .
~each apt. nr Golden SanCle,...nte 3876 m4>494•0092
West & Westminster ••••••••••••••••••••••• N.8. OCEANFRONT
Sl40, all util pd .. no pets. OCEAN Beaut. 3br, 2ba, sleeps 8.
833-8974 VIEW Aug & Sept. 642· 1603
SPACIOUS Br and new .2 b rs• Newport Beach near
3 br. 2 ba, lge pvt yard SZ7S·S325. Near Pico Bch. ocean. Lge 3br, 2ba, gar.
Nopets.1 child ok. $325. l OS Del Reposo . Avall.now!642·1603
8122 Michael Dr, HB. _1_14_!_4_96_·527 __ s _____ ----------
Days !Bank) 847·3S41, OCEAN FRONT A PT Newport 1&2 br a pts .
eves SJS.3638 Fi t . d It 1. . N · Steps to bch. From SUS
Beach condo 3br. l "'2 ba,
dbl gar, clbhse & pool.
Steps to surf. S37S. mo.
Call Bob, 963-3311
nes in a u 1vmg. o wk. Seashore R . E. pets please. 2 Br. 2ba. S7S-5800
S37S/Up . Dhhwshr. ---------
frplcs, caf1>0rt. All gas Balboa apt, sleeps 6, $15-0.
paid. 492·4178 or local wk & up. or mo. rate.
Anaheim 995·1123. 675-5810;or&U-0393 Hwtfi~CMI ....... 3142 New be.fl Dplx. overlooks Nwpt Bch, 3 houses from
••••••••••••••••••••••• golfcourse. 2Br. 2~\Ba . ocean., weekly or mon·
HJ.HOUR LIGHTS ~.0';~is!~~1~6 S.175 mo. thlf. 642·0095 .
Offers elegant adult Balboa Island' 4 •.Br &se.
apitrtments. Located in 2Br. 11-.Bu, JSO yards av1July26, $300.
ucluslve Huntington from he11t•h. S26S. Call 673·4461
Harbour. The flarbour~s s:.l 6725 onJyopartmtlntcomplex. ---------Ll~JSLE Sp1tcioW1 1 Dr 2 Dr & 2 Lovely upper duplex, 2Br, Lgcstud1ow/sundeck,
lir + den. rioer plana lba . S~ueaky clean. avlwkly.675·6401
rrom $250, are com · ocean view. gar. no pets Vocation Rtnfals 4250
plemented by enchanting $260. 493-7231,493·3589 •••••••••••••••••••••••
gardens & s treams. a s.ta .Ana 1880 l block to beach. t br apt be autiful clubhouse ••••••••••••••••••••••• rum $100 week or~
w/sauna, eym, jacuzzi. . '1 u ti ' '
Doun OFFICES Co u n t y I n tern ' I Irvine. 556-696-0/Mark ~ . Raceway. 7Sc per ft. per DIVORCE Comml & mds tl spaces. mo. Complete service Found: Marmalade color 200 lo 2000 sq . ft. As low dept. 714-675-1.290 Persian type Cat. July Legat Typing Sen·ire
as35< sq. ft. Lag Niguel & lOt h -B i g Canyon . Type-Serve-File
Mission Viejo ar.eas . Rentals Wanted 4600 644~U40 Complete Guaranteed
Handy to S.D. Frwy. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------1 645-9580 Call 831 400 Found: Male Samoyed. : ·l LOOKIHGFOR Harbor&Fairview,C.M ~
ATTENTION Artis t & RESPONSIBLE Call546-3540. ----
Craftsmen. SSO to $400 RENTERS?
mo. Ulil incl. UNIQUE Solid. mature cpl. want FOUND: Young Abyssi
rel. studio "The Fae-to rent 3 or 4 br hse. nian cat male w /flea col
tory" 425 E. 30th St. P refer Mesa del Mar lar. vie Chrstnut/Spr
Newport Beach or call area. Educated, refined. ingdale. GG 892-8198 _
Creali\'e Wr1tin~.
Apply In Person
ADVANCED
CONTROL
647 Younq St
Santa .Ana, Calif.
key adding. Permanent
position with regurar
raises and full fringes
Telephone 642·4321, Et't
Z76 for interview. Equal
opportunity employer.
CLEANING LADY 675-6181 or673-4271 adult family of 3. No FOUND ~ 3 mo old kllll•n
DESK space ul 17875 pet.s. Transferred to area Manx. gray wht murk
Beac h Blvd., n ear by company. opt to lse ings. vac Broudway
Talbert in .Huntington ~~~ke moving! Chestnut. S.A. 5i:l·~l3
BBe.ach. sso,. per mon0lh. Lost : MAN• s c; o L
Equal Oppor E mplo!'er
"Roots". fam biog. ad
vert is. brochures ,
whatever you need.
527-3927. 5 Nights a wk. 6PM-
llELP! Nu maintenance ---------2;30AM. Bondable. N.B
1nstrur t1on o n o lde r ATTENDANT for ofc bldg.40 Hrs.Ste!dy
Duugh-Doy pool 848·3814 paralyzed young woman1_wo_rk_._644_-0606 __ . ----
Sat &Sun. 10-3. 67S-S652.
nngown umature. ur NEWPORT BCH area. 1 WEDDING BAND CdM Ernplo'f"l!rtt& recept.ionist wm a nswer or 2 br apt. w /pool & ten· Reward. 581.0938 Preparation Automotive
your phone for $10 per nls for mo. of Aug. · --••••••••••••••••••••••• New Detail Shop needs month.DailyPllot.office, 213-275-TI19 LOST: 7 /4 , s hagg Schools& help.
6424321 . wht/blk male ~eepdo lnstructf 1005 Top wages paid. Engine
AirDOrl Offices Gif~~~~o.!'o~~:~~~~r~; ~igxu'na·~~g~~l~ 4~1~J1c ••••••••••~•••••••••• ~(~r;: :!8s::~~.teu":'.
1 ~ONTH FREE apt w/garden/pat10 un· Swim Lessons. Pvt. All holstery shampooers,
CLERICAL ,.
Immediate opening (w
part time clerk /typlst"to assist in the legal ad.
vertislng department. • f\IU service. No lease re-der $300. for an artistic LOST : Blk & wht. fem ages. Your pool or apt or check out, pick-up & de-
q'd. 200•600 sq. fl. Plenty employed, quJet, genUe Siberian Huskie. 40 lbs mine. 545-1359eves livery. Apply at Must be capable typiit
of parking. 2082 S.E. lady pis call Betsy Sun. PM on Via Li~o. JoblWanted, 7075 ~HarborBl,CM wilbIBM.selectrk .. •
Bristol St, Newport 675-4476eves. Reward $.W. F. Nyqu1s ••••••••••••••••••••••• ___ ..... ~_S._1030 ____ ,
Beach. 557-7010 Prof. working cpl seek 673-8499 tit•iont. 5cittne• Ability to work well wkh
THE EFACIENT
ALTERNATIVE
home to rent in area. LOST: Reward! Weddln Recent grad seeks posi· AVON detailed material im~·
Xlnt refs. Needed al on· ring. nr. IHeg uard hd lion in government or tant. Ability to meut
ce. Call 897-0312, 498·3868. qtrs. in NB. 213-966-6287 private sector. BA, MS work deadlines is essen·
Ask for John Chase Environmental Science: HEED EXTRA C.ASH? tial. Lost. Male Chamoi
Month to month rent in· n.-· 1 t eludes; recpt. service, 11V>tness n••s
personallzed phone cov· Ffnonc~
eroge, oonr. room. mall ~·••••• •• •• •• •• ••
service, under grour:id n....!...._'6..
5005 prkg . & mor<:, 1n ._......., .... ,,
Newport Beach. ••••••••••••••• ••• •••••
THE EXECUTIVF. Real Estate office tor 11111e
SUITE or manage w /option.
640-5410 Broker Ul. 540-1996
Automobile required f.or
occasional drivlnl(.
miniuturr poodle, vie. Position desired in relat-Earnings are good-hours
College View Schoo ed fie ld. Write M . areflexiblewhenyou're
Answers to "Bourbon" Mirkovich, 1104'AI S. Bay an A VON r e pres en·
"Ploka". Reward! F ront, Balboa Island tative. Call ~7041 or Salary commcnsur~te
&42-3845 _92662 __ • -------l••Ze•ru···th•7···13S9-•. ----•with past wnrk e lt•
Lost: Wht Mixed mal HOtU~ESI ITtTJN~·r!,eyed ABY ~ence. .1:
dog. Irv /Tustin area, pe "'Pan care · '7'I r B SJTI'ER, my home, Red collartlO. Reward. old yrad student avail $00 per week. Aug 15 til Contad Mike Tinsley-at
s.59-Le'7t July $. 544.a802 schl. start.'!. 8-1. Man thru ~~·a:C:in~"~~~ r~~T large """'l~best of all rno. year1y. t . m . ,....., ' 87Nl471; 833-2105 wonderful . pie. We in· ••CdM dlx 2 rm sll)te, Hardware store, ~wport vlt~ you to v~it Harbour SUHfUlW£R NEW 2 br, 2~ ba luxuey utiJ pd, A/C, am~le pka, Be ll ch . 6 7 5. s 8 o o.
-n .... _I I A'lr .. I f Frl 6'HMS • .~ FOUND Min poodte male. ,....c: • .., on • 8"" ve, e · ---------• Cream W/ rn• Blue col ncteot. lntelllgent, in· BA8VSJTTF:R for l ·G yr. 'DAILY PILOT .•.
1 , dso ,....; • ....., , dustrio'" young wom•n old boy. Moo thru Fri., IAJhlt . P11c1fic: CoHt rurn. condo. Laguna, $1&5.rno~mo.6'1M900. Seubore ~Estate
Hllf)' to Warner, to Allroo· APTS oceanvl&w. Walk to bch. ciuln or off San Dioao "°°/Wk. Adultt. 5'4-6899 a Pvt Otflc:ca, reception & AUTO DISIGM
Fwy exit Bol•a Chfoa to 2 restrooms. 720 sq fl Wholt .. Je E¥terior.
Warner to Al~onquln. ' 1 Br Condo In Jocke~ Club t.otal. Fnt Valle1962..a200 N ... -'""" ooo w .. • fful th ...-L "'"" ...,, . yr. or .. s 16'100 Saybroo Lane. ... on hmPltl H eras. • With eoo c:ar ..tealers lo
114.M$.3341 1 • • 3 "* maid setvtee oU:. Wiii .-... ""'lit -l>o -t '""JuE • ••ooeftS trade rental time tor hKllfl•• Suites 75'H400'19 wn. ~ "' ' "'Ont SZ60 & Up beach restderiee. Call om-av•ll. Ov•rJ001<1 1--------Vlait our Crlendly rental (?"") ...,., 0023 ..... • "' "'UTO 01t· "'IL Jl(IOplO &t r•1ervo your -_. • 1 \ airport 4r mountains. "' ~
apt l'fOWI We have s rum Hae CD)(. a bd Airl)9rt/Re.alstry area. Greatloc/f!d business
poola, Jacuu.I, cenlrlll W ffJ. t bl" to beacb, wUI 2QJ2 MJchel~n, Irvine. Out.t&ochni ()pJllOr. iUr,manyextra11 sh•r• with m •turc, 752--0234 lrw!Alpcont.ractoite.rms
I C M .. ... MetroCarWHh 'f ott9 fl4I ret~Jblt M IF 2(HO. 2950 Hat'OOt BJvd, CM ID m.atst.m• ;S4M4U.
S.teMli
~ll W. 8uftf1owtr tbt"n Orlelol ftlrvltiw)
arw,atu ,.....,."" deslres houeecltattln1 days , your home. """W B j~i.. v.-.. ·* _, . ay St. FOUND: '118 iie tan mal v-. A.Un rcia. 813-8228 546·3895 days, 675·181' Costa Me,,a, Calif.
Germ. Shep. mJlc, Vlc. OVEnNESSI COOK eves Equ.l()pportunlty •'
North or Meado'i/ar ~ EmnploY"'~~rr
G lf C 8 AVI,, M11t1Jro fem., Mid 8abyalller needed for.-------'------~JG4 ° u rs e • · ; !IO's. reap. honest, tnnr. d4)'$ &uon\e •*-Pbooe ricaJ
eleitt. te•chtr. SEEKS betwnH,49"7222. ~ $70• FOUND male neut. dog RM/B~D W,/pvt qtra. p ,,,,. "' blk/arey /wbt, Poodle So?M aat rN EXCHO. Babyglttfo1: matuNt de· ro1" maw. a pos., lot · ... F 0 R C 0 OX • G a. Ptftdablo woman t.o care perlOt\ Mektng Pl'etllatl mix. -hta Ana Are•. W 0 l\ 1' 1' W H 1 L E lor infant. ' mot old, 2 eo. Call Marion Monh.
54().0583 CJQLJ)CARE. A&<'.a a,p-daya a week. 645-20$4 ~. Dennis & D~d-
P">•· .. U. Ttt"ml l'ef. n1s .PerM>nnel Service 4
<Ul,day1. traveh. Write Banklng . t:inc. 208! Mtcbela~~ Boxm. Oat.It PJlot, P,O. TEUER 1-AINU __.:._. _ _ ~ ~---~• h 1680, Cnata Meta, M.ari nera Savi nae c• aa111 l • QI 926311 ~idO Br1Mh ha• Im· ....,.. 1 IDIMt. opening for P'/tlme FUlt-PMme; S/B lt~i
Toller. TyJ).init ao •Pl'I ~P>' C~l•r. L••
Xlnt bendlla Ir ... "'. llUlll --.. CO:::u1l',.' •l~J!~ ll'ltid -~l '® ., ill W Dr. N.B.. JW.L DUO PitGt CIWtfMi111• •
-
11
I
ILI
I'
I
I
.. -· ··-·mwi··....,
f)6 IJAll V rtLU f WttdnMday, July t!, 1871
"ff''-'
..
-..
• l
Add it •• B.uild ii .. 01upt·r 1t...Hummer It ... Car~t SERVICE DI REC'JORY Plumb 1t. •• Patch 1t ••. Plpe 1t...Remoae1it-·1 lt .C:cmenl 11. Wirt! 11 .. Hoo 1t. .Clean 1t. .. Move Roof it ... Landscape 1t ... THe It... Trim 1t .. Sew!t. ..
11 ... PrttssJt ... Paint 1t...Ndd 1t...Plaster it .. Fix It... Haul It ... Add it ... Ptant 1t ... Alter tt •.. Learn it ...
""•~• .. ,. c.,..t Senlce 8ectrfc.. GcrdtnfMJ HcN. c.,. S«Yice HoYMc~ Palftffftg ,...,..._. r-.....,,f'.,."-9 !s.wlftg AJtwatloft1 ...................................................................... ······················· ..•..........•...•.••.......•••..................•................••. ·······················k·•····················
\Pf\.&AHCt= IO'l'M II ISl\ampoo ff 1luam rlHn t.:LE<."l'RJCAl.. Sl::RVICE Profi G• dlMr C ARPET ST .I!: A M Want a Rt:ALLY CLEA!\ Plllllt 41 Papertna, 24 yrs OCOYE. Exp colhtudenla Ladlt'll Druainultln.: ·
'111 rvu C'\·1111 Color br11hl•nen. wllt CALLS SLS br, 41 SMAW. Act nuw , for com P CLEANING llOUSF.? Call Olnghanl 1oerv'1 U.rbor area. St will palot your homi:. Alterations. Real)'llnai.
1 "•ll 17U 1 ~ .:1.:i cpU 10 min bl\•ach Cle11n JOBS'42·123S malnt of lawns, ihrubs 81¥ SQ FT. WINDOW Glrl. f"rffl'sl 64$.-5123 lie 1113281. Refs furn. Very reas. rate. Int/ext. Patter o d r a fl 1 n I ·
.... .....,.. hv, din rm, hall llS Av1 ~ -& R & washloa. F1oorwulnc 1 _ ..... -'--MZ-23.58 Quall ty pa Intl n 1 1_541-:..=...:IMOS.::= _____ _ I ... rm f7 so. rOUt'h 110. chi ... b .. d Electric tr~ es. comm <pute-wu) 642·383S. --c~., w/PRlDE! Free eat. Van 1... , Orl 1 0 •••.,,.•••••••••••••••••• IS Uu.tr dun pct CJdor lJc327131 &tSllV1t ~kWt.~nt.·y,6tS·5l2' •••••••••••••••••••••••Knowles Palntin1. ~197 1vlckl1 f1nas re5s ~hrre fl '1l·(l('t1<l1hl1• t.h l !Jt "p111r U yn HPJ' --~ S... le HouMcleanilMJ LandscaplJll, 30 yrs exp. lot /Ext. commercial Shop la closed., but have
hum• t"M I 111·•1 rl'I• Du •urk rnyaell. R1:f1 ...,. .. ,,..... ............ ~ .. ~~ ............................. Free est. Licensed . apta, resldentlal Ii MashtrPaa.tera some8.10& 12 s left. All ra.l' ... n I '11 ' a"' Ml 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 645-81'9 c 27 1072 moblle homes 831-1120 . reduced. Expert desicn· ·.u 1067 _ 101 Nemodellnll. room aiddl llA NOY~~AN llomt-s & Wmdows ~Houseclean· • · · · • C\lstom PaiJlUnf, com· t0C,tailorio&4'tt111.Yling.
Celllltp.A..-Hc lion. plnn rlaecks & ~pli. Coni1c1entlous ing Mator.-y Point Your Castle petitlve prices. lot/Ext. Also see finished styles .
......._ S4tririce ••••••••••••••••••••••• t·n111neer1n1 drawln•i. uuftsm.in. Ph 645-0302 Good rates . Good refs ••••••••••••••••••••••• Avera"e Extr ls•-...ao: ssz..o57S Vicki, SM-&540. ••••••••••••••••••••••• . , ,. Call Mr. Lynnn~36-7711 " w1..,..,.., 1:::---:-:-:· :--:----1....:..::::::.:..:=.:::.::.:.----l h • ~ , \I u'Clnllm)'At:flU'J,ICI " Qual htteraon F.nglneo('nn1i: Oeneral Hand y man F·lreplaces-Plantera ;!S(Ory$4M lntr~rm Plater Repair :Tete•llkNIRepolr ~· 1 •4 ••·~l1'....!' 1
1,;. 1pr11y1d c111illo.ia, re Co.1142·0666 cleaning rupalr point Alice's Housecleaning Blick Concret.e Patio Prices Incl ~atr'l·labor •••• .. ••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ll~~~:al •:~~. h7;::,·:n1t. rr:~~:,.~~\~ • 32MIS, Gw•nincJ - -1n11. wull'paper, gen'l lix fleas. reliable, refs. Own Block Walls liBQ Pits Guar tlnsrd. Free est. VERY NEAT PATCK CANOPY TV SERVIC£
IUK<M,•ml f"b' •t'lr••m•• _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• up.J . WatJ&h,642-060_1_ trana.646-4811anytimc ~· Ests.646·0464 TedM2-0l34or636·7085 JOBS&TEXTtJRE lstRATESERVICt-:
(JuaJ1ty work h\ rl'l1mJ C.,_"t Concrete Reliable Expr'd Javunese Handyman. Drat n 8 Housecleaning by reliable Free Est: Block walls, Comm'l & Residential. No Free est. 893-!439 At Fair Pricee 960-163:1 _
-~rt tltrffl<u =-1 H ' ,.,,, •••••••••••u•••••••••• gardener & lundscnpe. cleared, etc. Reas. Sun-couple. References Call s lum ps tone, bric k . job too big or too small . ........ilMJ Tilt ~ 11 '•' ~ .., t 11 •I 1 o C>n.· M.111 ~·tl'W. ~ )r:. 11x. ~easonable, free est days. Call aft 12 noon. 963-5813or1·62G-6l26 Res/Com'I. Reos, lie/· 20 y r s expr. Rooms•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .t• •9i 21'11 111:r1~n L l' p11ur1nlo( & 00-5230Mlke #331>#32 646-5167 bond. Bob 7S0·93S4 . Sl5/up. Fully lnsrd & Uc. Repairs /Repipln .. CER MIC TILE N
I h , c.t -----Housecleaning. Mature, ""·"·9177 OddJ'o .. ·too a..., """'c "· A . ew or Cei-t Mc*lncJ m1.11 tnR .,,.. your own • '"" uo • ........,.,..., Drains cleared, water remodel. !o'r c:.t, sml Jobs ••••••••••••••••••••••• !;:[ ~!~ i. 11 Vl' money W~~~~~f;i~~:O~~c~S ~•~•••••••••••••••• ~~~~=~~eliable Brick, block, slabs, frplcs. MASTER PAINTER htn, etc, a~I pipes. Reas welcomeS36·2426 all S.
)o'nrm1r1 i c;,.n I L,1qwn ----Freeest 642·9901 H.aull 1 stonework. 20 yrs expr. S yrs experience in all rates. Dic k Morrill try, f1n111h1ni.: AvullCEMt;NT WORK. All ng.mov1nf.ceanup IMMACULATE CLEAN· Reis ests 586·-0358 phases. Call Greg. Tfill.7'962 Ceramk Tile, nll type!.::
d u VERYLOWPRI''ES• S71up,Treework.Rea11, ING.YouDESERVE• .. e •• . S"'""'en•-·s "'r•><•es•-~ w~n ,, Ir ··~h .... .irk K.mJ., Hl'llbonable. Free . ... I t I t842 ..,.,.., UI p~ 979-9621 HOMESAVE. RS. Plumb· .:;;.~expe~r".962. r.1""'883 .... 7Sf.t3<>4.SS7 'rt72 ~t C...11750-GGiS on gardening main as· reees . ......,, BEST. 759.0377 ~·...-,Papering J•~ --lenance. George 549-2015 ••••••••••••••••• •• •• •• AGAPE FORCE l.ni & Healing & air con· C..,...tet" f'hil11ps Cl'ment Co HAULING. Odd Jobs. The Moppets Cleaning PETERSPAlNTlNG PAINTTNGCOMPANY ditioo.inf. Free est, $10 TrMStrvlce
••••••••••••••••••••••• Pahos, room Jdd1t1ons. Complete ~.Saint, cln·ups. Law student needs work. Service. Call us ar you Expr'd. Reas Rates. 3GENERATIONS OF br. _Honest & reliable n••••••••••••••••·~···
Carpeotq JOY typc. <..-On\rt:ll' ~urk 751.5657. spnnklers, rotolll, new Jim4!M·!>llS4 need a good job done. Free Est. Call Gene Painting Excellence service. BorA. MIC OK . Removing, tramming.
Pa.gel, dour' de Ab(l Call lO AM Lo 9PM. !Jc/· lawns, free est 545-3385 Sonny & Jer Free haul-Referrals. 546·2393 5S2-0ts8 Lie .• Bonded • Insured. 751·3150 topping, Ir est. Llc/lna. !"
eo.t;'m'I hr e:.t Ml 5 bond_1ns Gardening Service. clean mg. cleanup, etc for us~· Are you tired of spending . Refs furn. FREE EST. Remodef & Repolr area 14 yrs. Tony 6'5-5124 ~2719 , ... 0 c· II h up & hauling weekly ble items Fences, bldg s your wknds being a slave BNngbt~n upp theh House! Dan839-58Sl ••••••••••••••••••••••• Removals. tra mm an". --><>< onerete A p ases removed 557.2005 orm s aper ang1nf. . . " Ccrpet Set-vie• concrete, block & bnck m"anlenance. Reasooa · __ ---to your home? _L~t us do All kinds. free est. State PROFESSIONAL Paint· Add-ons, pat.10, skyU&h~s pnaung. !rec est. Llc:'d,
••••••••••••••••••• •••• 14ork Free ests Lic & ble rates, free estimates CHEAP EST hauling in 1t f<?r you. Spec1almng in lie 330986. 835-3705 or ing. Inter /Exler Reas. & rprs. Res1d & comm I fully insured642-2624
\'Jrpet Man will lav ~uur~ bonded67S-9720. After 4:30 ask for Ron town. 1-'r e~ts CllEAP! a.ntique furn, crystal & 67~ work guar642_0386 ~~ 962·'217 Lukay, II
ur mine ll l'P~t.r:. & .• - -&15-7588or548·4987 __ GU·2995or&i5·)390 salver. 544·~ for free ~
deaning too• C:ut1r worl.. SELi. 1dlt-t~cms ~1th a est. Ref avall. PJ\JNTlNG Int/Ext. Ex PAPERHANGING
al bii:ger s:I\ in.::. Fre~ IJ~tly Pilot <.:la:.s1f1ed Ad Y .ARD CLEANUP Find "hal ~ou want in Sell things last with Daily p'd .• honest. neat. Reas. Any size job OK ~-:.t: 6-15·3&16 h42·51o7K -~ 9288 &645·0309 U:.11ly 1'1lol (.;l:.u.~1f1eds Pilot Want Ads. U 1:"d. Dave 964·1045 Al Smith, 151-3241
Have something you want
to sell? Classified ads do
it well. 642·5678.
People" ho need people
:.hould alwa)s check the
Service Directory In the
DAILY PILOT
H•lp Wanted 7100 He-Ip Wanted 7 I 00 Help Wanted 71 oo Help Want•d 7100 Help Want.ct 7100 Help Wanted 7100 Help Wanted 7100 Help Wanted 7100 H.tp Wanted 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• CLERK TYPIST DELIVERY-Neal ap. , JANITORIAL -Carpet NIGIIT AUDITOR· Port· E:.1q1<1nd1ng ~long:Jgl'<..'.o pear. Gd trans nee. Min. DRIVER ll ENERA L OF,11'JCE· cleaner & hard surface. time, will train. Apply in RE.AL ESTATE SALES
in Orange County h.is an S.1 hr + mileage. Ph Clearing House In <.:osla ~art-time, mornmgs or 640-2700 person Ambassador Inn. SA' ESPERSO.._.S SUPPLEMENT 1mmed1:itr <>Pt·ning for a 77'.l. 0126 M~a. Driver w I full size afternoons 840·299'7 ---------2277 Harbor Blvd. C.M. ..., " YOUR INCOME
recepttoni,l,l'lcrk typist ---------1 auto to do pickups m So JANITORS COUPLES OpPortunily now availa· ~lll!>t type ~5 60 wpm DELIVERY Calif. Must be familiar Girl Friday. !!harp & Pili.me office cleaningl•--------• ble f or licensed SSSSSSSS
PlcaH· call Cathy <.:ounerlulltime. wiarea. Must be bondu-mature. <.:all 979_7550 & eves. Hunt. Bc h & NOW Recruiting sharp, salespersons to Join a PARTTIME
Tomp1'>0n .it Uni Cal Must have good drivinE ble. Some s hi p /r ec ask'orMrs.Vanllorn. Laguna areas. Exper. ambitious man to sell progrcsslvcomce. TELEPHOHEWORK •1 l 71 1 96" 7"73 n•rord for dell veries 1· ,, hard t I •· h Causey & ~y ·•or ga~c. .,. 0 • " duties. $3.50 hr + 14< a pref'd. Must have car & ware. oo s "' 5 op HOUSEWIVES E 0 E. Orange & L.A. counties. m1. Call Millie. 645-5800 GIRL FRIDA. Y home phone. Ca II equipment to industrial lUM So. Coast wy. -Age 111 or over. $2.50 hr. LAGUNA BEACH COUIGE STUDENTS
Sales lady for jewelry
store, permanent posi-
tion. References re-
quired. 548·3270
SALESMAN Hardware
Mulure-rctl~. P /time.
Mon thru Fri. 5.9 PM.
KERMRIMA
HARDWARE
2666Harbor, Costa Mesa COCKTAIL Call8333030 ---------•r Exec.willtramtobepro· ~-6558or applyatl23N. accounts. Avg $280 per 497 2457 Guaranteed Hourly
WAITRESS Engin~nng I es s' o n a I secy . Olive.Orange. ~:9~~-exper. nee. Call ----·-----Wage Plus Bonus. S:30 SA.LES ORGAHS777
l.eJrn in 10 hrs the most l.>clner.> Dm·er, mature. MANUFACTURING Telephone personality *MAIDS* RE•LEST•Tf pm to 8:30 pm. Call •--y ..... -..... ...__ i:ood dnung record essen. Neat appear. Th ~ ~ 64&-4223orcometo2SOE. ATW _,.,..vn .. •·\clltnt: i,:lamourou,, F ttme 96.'Jlii02 ENGINEER Reliable 556644510 12. elnnatLaguna SALES We are looking fo r
highly pi11tl profe,~ O:Jy ------i For production develop· 21 t N. Cst Hwy, Laguna Nurse. Reg. p rr., <3 Day We have an opening for a •1•7•th•S•t•.,•Cos-•ta•M-es•a•.--I several high energy level
or eve 'l'''m"' l'IJce DEHTA.L ment of small electro Go-Go Girl:. & Combo Maintenance I-painter. we e k ). t o r bus 'I self-motivated & ag-individuals ror an ext'it·
mcot J~:.1:.t Good JOb op \1 any tlenta I po~1tions mi>chamcal assemblies Dancers. Good t1 p:. & Saddlcback College. Mis· Ped1atncs, J.M an Prac· gress1 ve sales pers on Sales mg career In the music
por. JVJll thruoul Orange Exper. in documenta· wages 94-l 6&l4 51on VaeJO. Salary range lice lnqwre 495·l380 who would like to businus. We are the
Call714 751-9194 Co. For more mforma· lion. production line s872.sio97 per mo HURSESA.IDES become more involved ~ OrganExchangelocated
So c; a I 1 f Cot· I.. ta 1 I tton please cJll troubleshoollng & cost GUARDS 831.9700, ext 302, 303 btwn w /investment pr 0. .i _.__ in 110) So. Calif. regional \\'i11trt>i.~t''· Int. li!J22 DR.PERSOHHEL reduction . Degree CostaMesa&Ccrritos 8.5 &ORDERLIES p<:rtles. Draw avail. ~,,-·,1 shoppmg malls.Weoffer
Sk v P" rk Ill . M1• C J:.'Ol w. La Veta, Ste209 prefd. Permanent. Full & Part· All Shuts. Wlll tram tn· Professional ofc. I a prcst1g1ous career, xlnl
In.me. Ca 927U Orange 633.9140 STACOSWITCH IHC lime. Phone & trans p re-Maintainance terested mdiv1duals. R.C TAYLOR CO I'\. I train l n g program.
-Frce&Fee llJ9BakerCostat.1l'sa q'd. Retired welcome. C 10 l..idoConv.Cenler • • • i::·;su lQ K highest comm/guarn. & Collection Rep ---c.iu 546 021 1. olc hrs 10.2. Ofttro perator 1S55Supen or Ave, N D 955-0350 ~ . "'.'.·, l ( 'S many fringe benefits. We
L. d ~l ,. 549-3041 Cl ...... , for Rio-Medical Corp c 116467764 l f I · .-.xp;m '"~' t•rt.:ai.:t· '-o J>t-~NTAL Group Practice Equal Oppor Employer ~ n ednesdays.__ Upkeep or laboratory. ____ a __ . ____ RECEIVING CLERK, for v:_, ': .•. ·~w1 lS~ IR[ req. pro ess1ona ism an 1n Orange Co. has Jh 1m rn Npt. Bch. needs front G Production and ad. ........_ _ _. __ tic .. •sist Huntington Bch Drug !J , the art of selling & a mcdullc l'll>t•mnl! lor :JO olc. help for accl ·8 con----------uardJ ·Irvine vrTnuvun ~.. Store, regular hrs. Mon· stron~ determination lo rndiv1tl11al to tlo t•ollt•c· Lrol & dental m s Musti---------•I lmmt'<l purl lime & full mrnslrative areas: lab .. Rct?istered or eligible. Fr. . lOS Al>lOElES suc ceed . Some organ
t1on work 111 the f1llld huvc recc·ntcxp. S.10-1122 Engineering time openings. Uniforms an d Pr 0 du ct i 0 n Top wages. fo'/Part time. 1' mm age 24• 847•2561 PAlM SPRINGS keyboard ability is req'd.
FHA. VA & C'unvL•nt1onal DESIGN & equipment furnished . glas~ware proceedings; l..:ig Bch 49-t-8555 Reecptlonist wooolANO HILlS If you are lhe one-<:all
mortgagt•s Cont:Jcl DEHTAL RECEPT ENGINEER Above avcr:1gc wa11es. upgrade & assembly of VeterinorionOfc NEWPORT BE•l,;H DaphneJett,588-7300 Cathy Thompso n . Full time. Costa Me sa. De Must be over 18. Apply or production supplies/raw PBX Opcrutor. Relief 5 i H 96371173 Equal Op· Rkkpg. phones. 548·7074 velopmcnt. design & c all Loomii.-Smith materials. $3./hr to gravey:ird&F1llrnc.Ex· incerc animal lover SALES p/time, noexper modification of new pro· start. Apply at 1601 per. pref'd, but will sought for busy practice. BULLOCK'S n<.'C. Will train. 5·9PM. 1>0rEmploye~ forappt. ____ duct lines. devices & ~cur~ty_. 3532 Kl atella, MonroviaAve .. N.B. tram. Good eo. benefits. Call Mimi Parker, Mon)o'r1S3+hr.S3l·081l
COLLEGE DROPOUT 1.>cnt.11 Cha1rs1dc Assist. equip. for a prcc1s1on. ';"'1lcr. 216. Lo~ A am1tos. EOE. &168000 833-2700. Dennis & Oeo· WILSHIRE electromech 'I ~witch 213>596·l6'IG EOE MANAGER, exper'd or ---------nis Personnel Service of , Cbanceorallfcttml'' l rv1nc 4 1'1 Day wk. ·• , ________ _
R d. 1 l man. ufacturer Position H •1RDRESSER will train. $800-$1000 peri-lrv1·ne, 2082 Michelson a leading fashion special S.ALES P TitM Long tu mt•et people" cwar mi: anvo vemcn "" p 1 d req s knowled"e of mo + benefits to start. ersoone Or. ty store will open its Clrst rooamb1ttol1•l11•.1t•l1ll? for l!\"'"r· RDA . $800 ,.. Some f1illo"·1ng pr~r·d 1-a"une 111·11~ Mall. ,, ~ ' ~ ·~ •Solid Stale Devtcl'h " ~ Apply in person. Me 'n Se Orange Co. s tore in · " " 1• .. r~r oi1pnr 1n 1~·r·on Sal CJll Hetwn !1·4 Re"l N B loc l'o p cretary RECE...,.IOHIST Retail Mon thru Fri • ....., n ~ ~ • Pnnted Circwt:. " · E<l-; Pizza Parlor. '110 l::. ,.. • NEWPORT BEACH on ~~,'1 ~!~«;° .. w~ooi 0~·8339 ---•Color&L1ghtUi.i>s i·omm u.io.7s7o __ tithst.<.:M Personnel Asst The Wilham Lyon co. Augustlst,1m.weolfer ;!·~r~~h:~~1i~t!~7;. ~ndhng &Snellmg or .!'nta I ro rft ho di a sis t ~n Displays I llAJR DRESSER wanted. -M-anagemenl trainee NB ~ldw p/Deo r ll Be a ckb an <?~portfwuh·~y Lofjom adn ranged. Male/female. 18
, .. u port u ..... h ,\""n•·y ,-lime ur nrn ) . o" •4~ •ears exp pre 'd some clJentele preferred F m er ve oper see s exciting as ion orwar y~. up 586.a.44 "" IX°U• ,.. • f RD ST COS IC astgrowingMailOrder "d t · t .. Tbefll •. , ""' u10Cam11u~ DrtH' pres:<>urc o c A or A WT H IHC for Laguna Beach Salon, farm seeks shipping Career op por lo r elx per .:.ecehp ionis ' ~aruzauo,n. bi oh ow----------llf>A ehg1ble Sal:ir~ 1139 BakerCosta Mesa t!W2720or494-3464 . qualified indiv Should peas1ng...,ep one man-mg areas or w c we ---l"ombo Cuunlt'r Girl. ba,cd on 1'xp/ab1ltt) 549.3041 rJooobmrsuepequra.\'riseor ltramee have a mm. of 5 yrs ner , some typing, no SH are accepting applica· SALESPERSON
d h • k I 559 0777 fl 6 HOSTESS C •SHIER s yping r""'w·red. van"ed ofr1·ce •:...-r • ..... str ng ell S.in wtt· .•IJ l'r pl nmc · · a EqualOpporEmployer A knowledge, some lifting. secretarial .exper. :JI d~ut ... ies. Call 0 ,..."""" Ask WVI"' reqw... 0 5 • ApplJcations now being Fa~l l>l'r~tLe ltandwtch ~64~0-~429~2-------1~~~~~~~~~~1 Exper'd, I/time. Apply, purchasi'ng •. · g management le\"el, be ...,,.."""" ingbackground: taken for openmgs in
h (• II b & 3 -B B • "' receivm · for l\lrs. Grigsby , up i1 ct" n 8 DENTAL ASSlSTANT e n r o w n s inventory control, record proficient in spelh.ng & , ____ _,,;;_______ Accesson·es sales & debvery in lrg
11:08919 "~"per. pref. Benefits ENGINEERING Re.staurant. 31106 Coast keeping. hiring & firing principles or grammar. RECEPTIONIST sporting goods chain.
<:ump for i-;.z lo t arr for Newport Beach 6'4-9211 DRAFTSMAN Hwy, So. Laguna. o I Shi PP in g room & have min: skill&s of 70 Insurance agency seeks lntimod .. Apparel bEaxckppearc.kinagn. stcknini1·sn g.: Exper'd Street plans H I 1 • · personel. Start $3 hr. wpm /t yping 100 41LU "" elderly lady Prc>f. non Dental Secretary /Book· Design. Tent Maps A.,;_ ousec ean n1 11erv1ce ana ... <7 wpm/shorthand bright & energetic girl retail. Over 19. x Int smkr&dnnker l 1vcan . · · ,. needswomen2Sup.P /F .,.,.,..,..., · forreceptionistnncition. &f dati beneri·t s. Ask for · . · · . • ' keeper. Mature~xper. & ply m person w /w~rk t Im e , own trans p . Duties Include ';.~ri'swer· 0U0 00$ ha\eref :;. 642 2237 _ highly motivated. 4 Day samples. Robert, Bein. SJ&.952:2 MARINE FUEL P e r s o n n e I Manager, 834·1006.
COOK, e"lpencnced for "'eek. 546·3000 William Frost & Assoc. DOCK OPERATOR responsibilities will in· ing busy switchboard, Lun-nge brkfa~t. lum·h & dinner. DE ...... T"'L 140tQuailSt,NB. HOUSEICEErER For permanent position elude recruiting new freeting clients & some ..... SALESPERSON, Tue
APP I y. R 11! I( er. I ti " "' Large Bay rront home. in Nwpt Harbor. Must employees, maintaining h~fp~~I. tJ:u~ ~:6. ~:O: Mt.fft'nery thru N Sat. for CeBouliqoe,
Fashion bland. NIL i\si;islant/Secretary. Escrow . b h E have local boat exper. wage & salary pro· Fr1".CallLlndaS49oJ61 200 ewport nter r. Escrow S ... c-tnrv pnv. room w I al · ng. Prnfcr marn'ed over 30 ara-e, J"ob analyses •· .., CWl0 Stvllsl exp) Nwpt Bch. 644·6671 Bt WO 91\ M. 11 l\ M & r ltme. l::xperienced·all ...... -F speaking REFERENCE " .,.. ..... ... .. J
:iPM 5rM pha:<>t's. llours & sal Im med. Ope ning for REQUIRED I l • yrs, mature mal e . descriptions, processing REC,T. TO $600. Sh w m ' orvon. """1130 Escrow Secy at our N.D ....... U>Nt • x n pay 673-4300 personnel changes, UP· oes-0 ens SALES ,~ ,,.,.,. ""'"""' d Lin r I Progressive Animal ---ofc. Min 6 mo's exper. re· '"' •Rl""'E p •RTS a g po icy manua s, llospl offers excepu·onal W~ are als~ accepting SLAP A SMILE COOK DENT.A.I.LAB q"d.Xlntsalary.workinn HOUSEKEEPER. hvc-in "'"" " A keeping abreast or cur· . appli ca tions for \lusl be exper'<.I Appl}'
rn per~on. 141).I S Const
II\\ v. Lag Bch 4~1 2528
" B i IU & k I I u •· future lor versatile, take <;d opp. for dexterous. conds & benefits includ or out for 2 young uy ng, se ng sloe · rent aws, regu a ons ex h BEAUTICIANS in our . V . h 1. nd 1 1 c arge, mature person. ON YOU ~ n.:. high school grad. dental. Apply. children, ref's n must. 1ng. accit1on. ene its. 1 ustry pr act ces re at· M Beau.ty Salon • R fACf l\.!:Jnufacture rubber or· Mariners Sa\'tng~ 714-&W-824A 644-4545 for interview ing t o personnel ed· in. 4 yrs. ofc. exp. re·
thodont1c a ppliance . lStsWestcbffDr ---appt. ministration & handling -q'-'d_._N_B_.64_4·_5460 ____ Ta1J
0
ororurMFen1!fer & A BULGE <'OOKS. BARTI::NO~:RS.
l>IUVERS P ltme On•r
~1 }r~ lmme1I openinJOt~
\pply tn JK'ri.on. !111• ·n
Ed~ Pizza P~1rlor I Ill lo~
lithSt . C1\l
Long term, fJtime NewportBch EOE HOUSEICEEPERS MAT U R!o; WOMAN routine personnel mat· RentalSlore .-.,
emplym1. Irvine/CM -Full & p/time Po!litions p/lime to welco me ters&services YA.llDMAN AlterationOepl. IN YOUR WALLET ar~::i 751·4442 "'--~ ~--'y to SI SK avail. Bayview Conv newcomers & contact Mechanically inclined. ~ ~ Hosp, 20M Thunn. CM Call for appt 546-3844 p . 6 D k Wkd DESK CLERk FEE PAJD 6'2·3SOS merchants. flexible hrs. GRISWOLD CONTROLS /lime. ay w • Y
lnqwre in ""rson to Surf Strong on orgaruzatlon & Need car' lite typing. 124 E Oyer Rd, S.A. o«. Mus~-beb neat in ap-
COOKS ~ public rclaUo .. •. "'---to HOUSEKEEPER, S days 547-3095. ~-ualOp-Employer pear. • ave neat & Sand Hotel, l.5SS S. ""' r ·~ k lddl 1 d IAt ,..,. handwriting. Will train. ~:'(pr 'd only. Saut e . CoastJlwy,LagBcb.Aak travel.AlsoFeeJobS. a wee · m eage ~ Y Mature women wanted Apply 1930 Newport broiler. pantry Bay forMr. Wilhams. lrvinePersonnelAgeacy for mature couple. hght for hseclng service P-lControlservlccman. Blvd.CM 488E.17tbCoslaMesa cook101. Must like Ca ...., ---------:\lane Restaurant 2371 Suite224 642•1470 Poodles. 673-6556 days, or p/t.ime. r nee. Top f Exper. preferred, neat n-a1 ""·ta•-Sal-Peo le
So. El Camino Real, San DISHWASHER _ _ _ 1131•3551 eves. ~123 !lppear., good ref & driv· nc .~ ""up to ... ...,.11P ....
Clemente. Apply In person ---Mee>ICAL tng record required. Mls· wano.eu. 11 N..., o·,.. "'"--&.-& wau........1 .... s Muldoon's Irish Pub Expert vinyl & tile In· HOUSEKEEPER sion Viejo Pest Control comm. sp t. ewport
-..-. nnir ... N C Dr NB Willer. Call Bob or Don, 2 Davi, Mon & Fri. Xlnt Many medical pc»itiona 586-2.847 Beach. 548-8614 Top pay & ~neflls. App· 202 ewport tr • 1 avail. thtuout Orange ---------•
1 2 5 D · S'"" al~2700. local refs. Own trans. Co. For more lnlorma· P EST C 0 NT R 0 L 'I · pm, enney s, '""' Olsbwos her, Mature. E 11 h k ' \ d P l Se n -" .. •LE VOC "'LIST n g 5 1 Pe 8 IC Lion please call SERVICE REP wanted. 'veni a ~n. Bayview Conv. Hos p. rao.~ "" Newport. $60 /wk . p EL Clemente _ 20SS Thunn Ave, CM to join duo. lnteretled In 644·4&5 DR. ERSOMM So. Orange Co. 831-1024
Restaurant
COOKS
KITCHEN HELP
for new restaurant in
F~!e~~~~~-
We ofter an excellent
compensation plan In· cludini a liberal discount m store merchandise.
Please apply in person
DAILY 10..12 & 2-4
83 FASHION
ISLAND
Equal Oppor Employer
COUNTER Help. fem. p/1 642·3505. professional career. At· 1201 W. La Veta, Ste 200 days, 831·0220eves.
&f.t.Day:i&eves.App· t r actlve-18·22 yrs. HOUSEKEEPER Orange 633-9740 ,..,.. ... i"OOI( 675-2089 for rather & young son Free & Fee •-._ Corona del Mar. 7$2~ SALES
for Info. ly, St.ax Bur11er:.. 8!J!J W. DRIVER Pleasant bcachfront F/time. Nights. Apply,
19th St. Costa Mesa SUNDA. y OHLY Furniture Stripptt home. F /time. ll\'e in. Medical recept. Opbth. of-Slavro's, 5930 W. Coostr---------ELECTRONIC
CUSTODl ...... S D··llver Dally Piiot Repair experience pref. D r I v c ' I i I c flee. Lile typing. Send re· Hwy, N.8. RETAIL ~,... w w r fl ta · It thl ti N sumc to: Ad #943 c/o ORGAN SALIS lmmed. openings for ex· bundlea to earners. Re· ages+% 0 pro t. 785 secre na 3 e cs. 0 Daily Piiot. P.O. Box Quality Control Inspector. H 1 G HES T COM
pcr 'd c us todian s quires van or 1arfe W.l7tbSt,tJoitAzCM. ~=1.J~:111'~~~~~· If 1560. Costa Mesa, ca. experlnwood flnlshJn1. CLERKS MISSION/GUARANTE·
Hospital ex per. pref'd. wagon and a good drlv· General Office 921626 night 1hlfl. 3: 30· 12 : 00. E/FRINGE BENEFITS.
TIME/LIFE LIBRARIES
Has both fuU & parl tame positions avail
4 Fun loving artaculate
1ndlvidu.al1 who are
eager to learn how to Make Top S$SS$U
W•<>H.r:
Howty Salary
GMarw. Conwnl1tJcNt1
ltteflntf •• lonuw•
CALL US TODAY
AND START
SMILIN
833-8095
TIMI LIFI
LllRARIES. IMC
Equal Opp Emptyr m tr
Good benerats. Apply 1n Ing record . Phone D--t to $700 Housekeeper. wanted 714-~ UTOTIM SellJ.n b.lgb tra/llc abop· person, Personnel Dept.. 642~1 aak for Harry ---r" 11 ·I Lit d ti Medical Tranacrfbe.r, exp • pin• Us So e ab"Ut Son Clemente Genera l Seeley. 'Equal opportwtl· CIH•Y pos · for en· ve n . ss~~70e.s. In Rdlolot1. froot ore, C:0.•••11c.t Msbfl to Pt:atne or:'an r~·l sales
llo1pital. 6S4 Cammo de t)' Employer lhusiastlcpersonaeekltaC full time. 495·'700 fl Real Eltate!Ala Pol!UoN open lit. 2nd" ""vl.ous ules uper. WO!ifEN Ir M£.N E.am toemaresSanClem funco.CaUKateBaktr, JNSTALLERTRAINEE 831.()7.0. 100% Jrd •hllt.a Jn San Uldlll,butwewUltraJn SIOOOawlr.ldlln••llat· ' ' DRIVERS 833-%700. Oenn1s " Den· I _._.., t '-U ...... couu15••0...a Clemente Ir L11u1u I Custodian II (4 positions) SCHOOLIUS n1$ PersontJel Sttvice O( Ot ,.. ..... ow lD na. a .... n MOTOllOUT! '"""' ~ " Be•ch. OtbvU'Ptbaff you. Call Mr. Lynn, 111 mobJle bomea. No
SaddlebackColleae,Ml1 Ucw wffi t.rabt. 4 Hrs Irvine, 2082 Michelson ~~·;~li~tozi~t!'~ The Da.11.Y Pilot bH a Deak-telepbone-~allo.NoUPlf. 893-GL ~x:.~.=it.ralft.llr.
lliOD Viejo. UPM ,uar. suo b..r to •t&Jt. Dr. A •eat. Veblc1• req'd, larce route lft MIA&Jon ~~~~~:::: req"d. Appl)' al •llY"' SAi.iS
7:30AM. G5 Sh1tl dJ! &O.E. Call 1»4811 or hfm• helpfuLMH4M Vlejoatea, IOOdfor b1ali Realtor. "5-ll70.or iva our'ttorel. &xperwdtd SALES WOMAN, matun. ferct>llal Salary ranee CB1.2. GeCMALOfftCI ;;;;;s;;. schoolortoftegutudect. 131.om 2S88Newport1llv4 STOC1CCLEllC For C.M. buerr, r1.1.u
t171-t8'71 mo. 831-9'700 Entry poalUoo In IJ'OW· lMSUIAMClelll Appros~m>per CoetaMeaa N2·710:l Witllpridnteicper ttme.548·303lor731'°317
C'xtJ02,I0.1btwn8·5 DRIVlaS ....,.... Ina New]>ott Buell Pereonal llnu uo· moaUL Calt:IG..ull &Ad -·· _ .,...a.3 Dcllvery Home dtllveey NeededforlocllmoYiq. Phll'm. Research co, derwrller. Expr nee. leneumeandplitoot. ,. -• -• -""''-P P Id =~~~~~.~i:i of1'h4 Register In \ho er C.UM1·ml • for a ptnoft who ttll .Fred S. Jamu " Co. UAL lSTATI IOINSO'-fl ~ te • PJ\imeJob 645-01'5 ttmoon. Good pay for 8 DRlVERS needed by L.A. WO t le w I m In' m"' m Lasuna Bt'h. Con la ct. MOTOl aom CAR• IN I ' Sill + c--+ c.. .._. ____ . ----
('OUpl of hl'I each day. Ttmu for part·tlme 1upenilllon, to do copY· Mn. SlUoo. 494-lOIT Ol' DaU1 Pilot route 10 Stc:urhy, independence, ... ....,. a.ech Field luder ln t.'Ontlrue· SIECllTAltY
Approx *300·1400 mo work. wbda on•" to lnJ, fillna. lnterofhe. ~~31058. An E.O.E . Newport Buch, after· \09 lricomtt Ora v•c•n· •.....-:-t1on ~'°f. olftrt .. iab'l Dellrhtl II dlff \
Must have dependable IWt! Mut have tr.;;k or ~LI: 1rraftdt, peel vi.I· r.1o., o~er ooons. Monday tb~lh cyforllcemw, achooHor 1~,~~.applleanb So. C&ll : le.rr. to atlf d1oam1: ~uoa~)1ry:
. .. _
c:ar+bllckup.&e().3009. va11. a110 ltablUly lb· l~a.typtni Prtvlous JANl"'O.. Friday, plUI Saturday unllc~. See Oeorte. M.:~~:..1ri::.-.1 start.er. Also Ii' Jobe. P11t11. ums fs .,l .. •J ---...,..;;..----t .urance E 0 b'4 ··~ ofOt• l•Ptr h1lpfel. I &I nfl W&andte dl to and Sun~ ... momln~ Davt1, Red Carpi& "•''"''""~ C 11 Ba b llht Tblt ls old DellYeryDrtvff SPM 5.Ns4it "'i"tl~. 8•1•0' cocnmcuur•tr manta n rt oc tan Dl0119r,.,.,._aro-. -Realtors San JuaCI c~ ~00. n.:.~·. oen: .OOup... Ill oppoc'.
·-
Depe.ndabl , conaclcn• ~ .•. ~ ~-_ .• W/f!1..~· Ap,ply •l 1590 ~wrk. Un.lonaCJil ·See cub desi-lt r~i.dred. Capbtta~m.-ss. AIPb'P.,.....M a.II Peuon~'Servlc of JW.li"'o&tu M0-500"' tious delln dr'l.Vti' to !lloitrovt• A\!c N 8 r. llapp, gr Rancho Call~. tome tn • .__..._-~ I In 2083 llJ h LI .,
,-• bt"" ~rfar11 "1,6',...iDR.IVIE·R~.,,.,.. . .,l:~· •. lN rHoa,sHa.p>on'Ju'. rtct •• JU? Newport 1,and nu oat al>Pl. Muat j ~ea*!!",,..~ , rv o. c. e oft ScW1lllq•SncU1a1af ... ~,..!WCMJIO.~ '/L,· ~·';'.lit "!.)'.,._ .i .,:+:!/ J!l~d .• NB ,.. • .. l·.a.nbr.Ooodfciittetlttd ' ._wpeh_. Dr. " Newpor\Be.aeb~dcy -..-...., y p11vm• '• P~M~~ 11...«r't."!1 .. lrtlOW .. ~ 1 ,,.,,~1 J~~ Ois '" n~ ~-·~.-., ~ ·~ dtcuta· Dail~'~ff:~\:.~g:til/.• lciualO,,liDPt#ml'f SA L&s . !':A 8 n '1 c 1> .a40Cam.Pua lvo~7 & O WOI '"'V· .,..... ••· .. lil;'i....-=-~ = "..., ' EX.PER. M P/11m• Srx:Y/R!CPT,P4lft,dmc. -.....:. t ueed.,uswt• •SSW Idle ICt-fM -.llll • Pr1a-.. I • Of ~. ·v-f y lot ClaulU cl A ·"'"~to ..U'I' l~<.'M sro.a~. 0411 lihey llartJar ~!:~M:o;s of· ~'"~~·tcu::m,_ 1'D&Uf Pt.l«ClmlfltCIAit. J'LmUlrZ. M:i.t: .. Ciiill&dMI 1 64H8'7I .9hoill~. L ,.a.uarn.dad.al"ottwtL ~ nc..r.xp_prwr.MMSaS •
' -< ii ... ' • ~-
,,
-J I 1 ·1 " L
_,.... .,.·-·-----·· ......
• ' ., Jte.lp Wanttd 7100 lkildhtCJ Materials 8025 f.umltu,.. 8050 Wtldntisday, July 13. 197! DAIL V PILOT 07 •.•.....••..•..••...... ···•·········•·····•··· ···········•··•········ H4fpW•hd 7IOO]Ht4pW ... ted •71 w~ 7100 WunH•n W~lll~(· 111 1 t.·~,>dLumlJor.4 '1(1:.t"xlll' (;t;W11sherdryr11ct$7~.<! MIKtRan•ou• 8080 .lutow•lce,Parb AutoSentlc•.rorh
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• i10Ubll11hrn11111)11>t<rv1t·.-. 1:!:!),.J '111o·x11>' 1'1>. crib:s. ~·1<'kc.·r dresalng •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• &Ac:chM>nff 9400 lr.Aeutsorftl 9400 Salt':\ }"ull or p.art Umti S3 ~ 2"x1o"x14't" (432). 'f. tbl966MW4 WANTED ••••••••••••••• .. •••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
TRAINEE l•l 11..-r hr Mu:it lwvt-own brarkeb (261,644 08711 2-0-1 1-S t S P
HHICALTYPIST tr M90:a7 ----n ns es: c. TOP CASH DOLLAR .
A wav for u high rcrhool s:rnduatc
lo mll•r th~ n<•wr.puswr hui.lnt>?.:.
an.a. - -CarMros & Danish 1'eakwood, $2SO., p A I o F O R y O u R rUT A unL1 SUto4SHtNI 1)1 Youtt LIFf ...._ Typl•t lor h•chnt<'ul 4' WOODWORKER Equipmtrd 80)0 Drexel· F~. Prov. set JEWELRY. WATCHES,
11tiall1tlral do{'umt1nlli •••••••u.t••••t•••••••• $350. ~2·4062 aft, 5 ART OBJECTS GOLD M1Ml tyre M WIJnl Will for i.moll boata. Must Pentax r;:; el~·c. ro~lc 35. SILVER SERVI CE'
train on wurd prooc1uun11 hav\l working knowledge New Aui;iat 71l. With 50, Unique decor ator mlr· FINE FURN & AN'
11qu1p. Protichrnt•y In of powcir tools. Apply 1n 105. 200 lense1>, bellows & rors. 3rumensional. P /P. TlQUES 645 2200 · DAILY PILOT 11rnmmor req'd l''ol' pt•ri;on, 788 W. 16th St, an&lc finder. $495. 170-1262 · '
appt. t:onhd Carol <.:ut.t11 Mt111a (Rear> 67~1323 MOVING SALE-New 1,---
Thi!'> hli:hly SUC<'<'llll lUI IOc.'lll
newspaper ha'J an opt•n1n.: for a
truaneo an the c·1rculutwn sal~f> ~rt>a
St-ICN('d applic-ant will rt'N'lvt• a
hbernl !'>\artin.: t'U lar~·. n·~ulurly
2'chl'dulrd ratM•i.. bonus opportuniliel>.
and munv l'rtn~t• ht•ndtt.., xm•h ui. pnid
vacauon~ paul i;:roup lfl),ttran<·t• nn<l a
<'l'<'dlt ur11on. flt· \\ 111 also he 1>rov1llcd
u cumpanv ,·ur \\ ith 1wrsonal ust•
prl\'tlf'J:<''-
Smith, Avco to'lnt1nrlal ---------------
Services. (Tl4> 64·1 ~. Work p /t1me, earn t ,tlmli 50".t. off on lirand Na,Ut'ii. couch & lovese1tl, &tereo,
t;.qual Oppor Ernploy1•r oo t:otnn11ss1on & lnt:i'O· A l I b r a n d n e w misc fum1ture 2240-210 ~~~~~~~~-•j ltvcs. 1-:xr1tin~ new uwv w /gaurantc•t'-!' /P. ~arkNwpt, N.B.644·0494
··--------.. ! "' i.t:r\11'~1• for Lai;una _67_5_·_94_9_5 ______ 7 pc din.rm set + buffet ,. url'u lid 1131·3242 ask ....._ 8040 TYPISTS for Mtkt' ~kCC1rthy. _ :::?: ••• ••••••••••••••• ~:~~al~~r~/~~;!~~e~
l.>on't<il'll..11y'' \ H\Y TF.Cfl female, AKCPoodlcpupp1cs.tlny 11hapedcomerbooth.51~·
Rummt'r .,1 s1111,.1 lvr n1·<'dt-c1 1mmed. !or toy,allshots. formicatable&4chairs,
WOl'lllnl( h•mporar) M• ll.1<hulo2.v 0Cf1t·e, lor. Ill 530-0455 ideal for fam. rm, den or
. 0 . , ;o..,•"1~1rt 11.:al'h J\lu-.t be kitchen. 2 M atrh1ni: sal(n."?.t nl' , n• •11 ni::-Altl<T CHf 642·641M for Old English Sheepdo~ Ch.mb lamps & tables. ":1°w I >f'1"l" 1-' XII" fllTI ilfllJl Pups. AKl'. shots S100. Single boxsprin~. mat-~crt'litrit-,. Mj.: <.. ard &15-6625 & &15·71:184 tr~'Ss & frame & head·
LUGGAGE TAGS
from your business card.
Send one card for each
tag plus one spare. We
return permanently
sealed atlraetive tag &
strap, meeting airline
l.D. reqwrements. Pre·
\'ent loS!! & theft! For a
personalized tag enclose
wallpaper. fabric or
"Day Glo" paper & we will back & trim your
tags. Or try two cards
Have fun, install a factory glass
sliding sun roof in 1 day.
Financing & Terms Avail
Catalina Auto Sun roof
,\ ppltc .int-. mw .. 1 lw lH. lwvt• u dt•Hn
dravm~ rN·or<I . h;1n• a high .,dl1>e1I
<t1ploma llours arl.' 1-!tncrally 11 A l\1
to 9 l' !\t with '>ome Saturd'"
Opcr4'l.or11. (. .111, C1111w I 11
& Wvi k Arouiul Your Mwchondls• Free to You 8045 board. Swag lamps, 19"
!'\tun mer ~t·htdulto ••• ••• ••••••••••••••• •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• heavy duty g;Js po\\.·er
AnfiquiH 8005 l"EMALE kitten, 8 weeks, ~d~-~atcher, 1 yr
back to back.
PRICES:
$2ea or 3/$5
4/5tags Sl.60ea.
6/9tags $1.50ea.
1646 Superior, Costa Mesa
642·4040 ovrrt1m<>
H you an• qualified and are mt .. r('!;tC'd
in learnin g more about wht.•re lh1:-
training leads. tom~ to the OAJLY
PILOT office. 330 West Bav StrC'et and
ask for Milan Leavitt in the
Circulation Department.
An Equal Opportunity Employer.
"-0~ off ice •
~OJ overload
SS7·0061
.1723 Birch St. NB
••••••••••••••••••••••• Black. fluffy, trained
548.2958 For quality furnishings & IO or more Sl.40ea.
access. for \.'.I to ~rd less Sales Tax Included Of Antiques! .fREETO YOU: Baby kit· shop at Judy's Consien· NO CARD? TV. Radio, loah. Sail 9060
tens, please give me a m ent Boutique l95l Draw your own or send HIA, Steno 8098 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ti U G E warehouse home c .. 0 ."""" name address p'"-ne •·
Wonderland ---------
....., """" Newport Bl. middle mall • • •sv "' ••••••••••••••••••••••• crammed with over 500 'II k d CHALLENGER 32 1---------•1 behind La"una Sea we ma e one car per "·· . I •L music boxes, nickelo· Blklabrador ,3yrsold. " tag.Add2S<eech. .,..per Stereo-will sel ..,., 1975, Diesel, VHF, · v I bl Sports. Consignments pri bst ofr TYPIST deon pianos, circus or ery ova e. Send check or money or· ceor · shower, ped. sleerin&. g ans. w a 11 clocks . !157·0901 Days. acceplt.'<i Mon thru Sat derto: Call 645-8583 depth (ndr, slip & more. Nwpt. Bch. Adv Agency grandfather clock:;, from 1·6. 642·2686 or se..·ks xlnt typist w 1i:.atei:. Special do~ for special 55t>-7645. PILOT rRIHTIHG Panasonic Amp,tumtable 6"15-8280or 675·7884 fa:.c1naling antiques. o · Mai-W_..._... 71 H-.1 .. W t d 7 I OO at>i!Jty. Comm1si;ion r><>S O\'er Sl.000.000 Worth fam. Sml spde fem. Very P . . Box 1560 + 4 speakers. $100. Call . ~-.-_._ .. .,. H• in•·ludesout.s1desalt•sor loving.8-t2-0S"1laft7 WANTED by pvt. ply. CostaMesa,Ca.92626 after 4:30PM.642-8062 CLASSIC Columbia. 5.S-_ • ' Amenean International Mod d 1 & bd US ')(l XJ t d /5''-••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••• typesetting servu·cs · m. iv rm rm .. ...,. n con . w .,,,
SOUP &Sandwich maker. followed by the actual Galle~ies. l802·T Kelter-German Shepherd. male. furn. J\ft 5:30PM 644·7844 a.rs Porta Potti, used Dyna Stereo FM tuner, HP O/B. $8000 firm. •SECRET"RIES*' M1'ss1on V1eJ·o. l\1ust tic t tt. IE'" ing St.. Irvine. Tel. 3 yrs Gd w 1k1'ds needs once, 4 gallon holding t •. 2 M k 675·256Sdys Mary. -· YIX'lle mg on our "" -~· 1777 O W d th · Solid Oak k1'n" bed set. :> ereo pre-amp"' ar • 3 y I I A e"p'd & over 18 A k for I '."' Pt'n e ru good home 979-8630 .. tank. fifty flushes. $.SO. 11 · 75 rs ega exp. <:cur ~1 11
5 e ectronic selertnc c·om-Sat. !I ,\~I to 1 l'!'.1. V1s1t' -----btfl. sofa + loveseat. 840·l244. 11 amps. A 4 items $l · 23' Clipper OB, trlr. knot.
typing. $800-SlOOO. · gr lorn. 58t-0.t7o pos n I 8 M tr a 1n1 n g Adora hie ti wks old pup. beH•led j.!las~ coffee tbls, &IS· l530 days. sips 5, all safely. bottom
Nlll'I co. Type 60 "nm 11va1I. Wntc Classillcd ad BRASS BED P 1 es . p 3 r t G c r rn lamps, pet'lln din rm + Expert Clock repairing, Boats & u.....in• paint PP. 633-6163 i:.h 100. $700·S800. SENIOR no. 974. e ,o Dally Pilot C h h 11 ood bl l b & ,.._ • • Oppor to learn lt•i:;il LAND Pl.AMMER PO Bux l!'it>O , Costa FA TORY .S~£_he_:d. 9ti8~86 __ -utc . wa units. w reasona e, a so uy Ec,llpnwnt CAL24 f. Id .,.en tt•.n M C t.i: ~l·lt«·t11111 uf purl' game set, den turn. sofa sell clocks. Peterson's .......... ••••••••••••• . 51. 1e . ...,.,.,Wh . ....,.,., t;xp'cl., career minded esa, ·:i.92ti2ti llHASS Ht•t.ls llr•as Pree Sdrn:1uzer Mix tx'<f. vdvet chr, 770·1262 493·4088 "-----al 9010 W1thNewport 1p. Janey eaton 540 5001 w /creall ve design & -------m<1lc ·I'; 1111J~ 1Jld, loves bunks . 11 ·•mo •Id ~ S8750 642·009S
" II' &S II f T l/G I ()ff pnt•t•:-lluv iltr<'c 1 & k1ds. ''all ".L' '3·72'7 . .. il ., .t MOVlNC.· SALE 2 b\vrn. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------Sne mg ne 111,;: 11 mgmt. abilities. Applv in yp1s enera 1ct-~.11 ,.. .., "" -..
NewportBeachAgcucy personw/rcsumeto:Mr PART-TIME Tlll·;WA,\GUJ.;D ---8-0-5-0 GarageSal• 8055 dressers,lpwrmower,4 Folboatcanoetypew/alJ lSLANDER 30 Mark II,
4340CampusDrivc Fuentes. RBT. BEIN, 12·5PM. light aecur1.1tc.> 3 t\ HI Fumiture-••••••••••••••••••••••• dining rm chrs .. record accessories Nu cond. laWlched3n5.Xlntcond.
WM F'ROST & ASSOC t · g & I off :! :~t ' 1>wport · •••••••••• • ••• •••••••• • Gar a g er. D 1· v a n 1. player, 1 couch, l boo .. k $190. c:•o.74()8 Fu 11 e I e cl r o n I cs Secretary Fee Paid · · ypm generll icc. fil 2 :!71<! ""° paJ $27 000
Plush N&w Offic•s 1401 Quail St .. NB ~:~~~~. de~~•.csNaft\l~~~j OAK Holl Top U('Sk. Hall N~X~Ru~~l?!;'.;Aarp;l's, mhatch~i:?k blue ;'ngbatl< ~~~!Ni.s~-~ Qns1ze 9' dinghy, Cbrgls, gd cond. ~{.~er eng. • •
Regional operalaon of· STIMULATING JOB Asst Insurance Co. located m Seat w;be\'eled mirror & rmsc. Wilson's Bargain c r , 1
1es pai r s&, $125. .,.,. ,.._ t Rhod SI fers Unl'que pos Also Fee for o ... of k1.lche re Nook. c.15 & 814 W. 19th, games, awn too s CITRUS Trees bearing 673·1282 ..., -..vas es oop. · wne, n ·Newport's F1nand;il S1cleboard + m.1nymore .,.. h S /S 85 NB · ·1 J b call Sally Cla k mod de ·gn •ho oom ('M."'"2·7930&548·3262 muc more. at un · · fruit. 4' to 8 ' ta11.1----------mooring avaa • o s. r • si " wr · Plaza. Mrs. Lammeri:., antqs. Xlnt c•ond. Low "" 3 6 E 2 d S NB SCHOCK 2 d 337 • ..,. ,,.81 f• 833-2700, Dennis & Den· Helping customers. or· ""' ,760 pn··e.-, J(),\,'.•'"S ,.<ll'" ---------7 · 2 n · t ., · Sl2.50·Sl6.50. 548·2046 man ory, 1714) -6515, ._....,... a .. · P · f d · · .,......., ' ·' ·''' " ' I BUY !>i8416Sor675-8918 partially set up for rac· 8pm. rus ersonnel Service o enng matenals. some '!'rtY 1-:MPOHll'M llll:!O * * * * Two series seats for four ing, great for fishing.1----------
Jrvme. 2082 Michelson typing helpful, simpleOpholstery-Le;id Person Adams ,,.,. ,11 Good used Furniture & Garage&YardSale,fur:n. German language W/trlr. $1500. firm. Lidol4.wilhtrailer.
Dr. math necess., any age. fam1ltar w ruphol.. cut· Brookhursl. 11 u OOJ 6DOO Appliances-OR 1 will & hshld Items. Westchfl operas in Seattle July 18• 494·2669 Many extras. Like new.
Full or p /Ume. but perm. tinf(. sewing. stapling -:,ell or SELL for You. area. l Day only·Sat. Ju. 19, 21 and 23. Will sell al ri 552·1596
See's $800-$1300 mo
LMjot.Gen'l-R.E.
Employers Pay AH Fees
Liz Reinders Agenry
4020 Birch SI, Ste 104
Newport Beach 833-8190
Call for appt /estab ·65
Costa Mesa. Please call F /lime. Steady employ Instant 1·a!>h 11a1cl for mm 1 16 (8 m 5pm) 1111! Boats Ma ne '"5 IV797 (499 ·'015 ) · o 1 t MASTERS AUCTION 't · 8 • cost. Reply to Box No. •. 14• LASER Xlnl. "ond. IM ·v• ... evs w/growanq co. 5-t ·l IH. p t'k anllqut':.. 10)1111\'t•n ~m rs t Ln NB D ·1 S:.-.1--6 9030 " . ,.. I D S • ' I l I 64L8686 & 833 9625 c e . . . 929 P.O Box 1S60, ai y ...,...,..,_.,. Raee-w'p'd. """'". 302SS.n.t son r, •. ,, torit•:.. lJ ,Jr r ~ o-• -PtltC.M 92627 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ .. -"" STUDENTS-JOBS Morg.11111 11>s-10.:1!155 Furn, appl~, a~d many 0 • · • SAVE lo 253 on a ll 548·5709PM&eves.
FORSUMMER Utility person l'ASlfPAID m1:.c.578V1clona.Apll,Biofeedback Alpha rnarlneelectrnc's VHF 1 8 ' WINDROSE P/tl·mc for .,114.40 per maintenance:-.S.a<l ·OAI\ SRt>ll top clr~I>. ForgoodusC'dfurn.ilnti· CMThurs9·6 b . 8 ·tor .-.c: RDF d h d: • "' di b k C II 1 I & 1 TV' · ramw ve mom ....,. · pt sn rs, etc. SAILBOAT, 1976-xlnt mo.Growi'ngro.Mustbe ~ .ac _o egc . 1s!;1on 51"1\n•11l10nal c·cm1 . qui·~ co or s. F1 ii tb V S I '"" 1 h 9!•1111.,., l\•OVING SALE-New oor to ce g ca ouse Call556-6200. cond, Volvo OB •ooo, lll+. Call lOam-lpm, 1e~o .. a ary rani.:c nu!. t-:>.t.-pllona orne " .... ,, S15.83J.09()5 •
7141751.8285 S83-·$1048 pC'r mo Sl-150 tJlr 631-<I~ ---------couch&loveseat,sterl'o. ---------Sextant. calculator, & 1714 ) 540·7175, (213)
. 831·9700,ext302,30Jbtwn ·---------Furniture Stripped & misc furniture 2240·210 8'SlidingGlassDoor. other miscsailingequip,._43'_•_·35_19 ______ _ r -f H-' 1 o 5 Rerint~hed by Ex perts. p k N t N B 644 0494 •. .-ere ory· 1np. SwHchboardOpr _n_·________ 752 so.sgdys.G4S-6S26eve ar wp · · · · completew/header, jlb&winches.631·3658 Santana 21• trlr, O/B, 3 Business & Financial l'i'.lime eyes & wkn.ds. VALETS. for Newport Consignment Ltd. t.fOVlNG-12'.Marine $100.646·9193 Boats,Pow•r 9040 sails. quality extras.
Consu l t. de s ire s Will t~ain . S'!per1or Bch Restaurant. llrs Antiques EARLY A:Ocr. Sofa. gd flywood folding boat Kingsi:iemattress&box· ••••••••••••••••••••••• S3500.842·0S63 versa t ile, capab,le Answen.ng Service. 250 4pM tit 2AM, exper prC' lnv1tcyoutoseeourw1de cond .. 3 match'g, Maple SlSO Lg Oriental Mung · N $225 Person Contart Ray al E 17thSt St l c•,t 11 $160 b t f · · ·· sprangs. cw · :rt'trro1'anCrulser Rac1·ng Sabot. P erfect · · · e · " f'd. Interviewing 4PM variety of antiques, t 1 s. or cs or. Dog lamp, 6 pes 4x8x1/2 768.8494 Twi 8. d d 979·7919or546-11640 d ·1 Bobb MG . f l & ·e 957-1&5 sheet rock, new $1. ea. n v s,ra .,soun er cond. Best offer. Brian ---------Telephone Tool Room a1 y, Y c ee s, AW1ll ure aclr:shsocn s. --------R"d1'0 alar m c lock, GOOD IUYS Painted, tuned. ready Ross646·S031 ---------•I Sales·Earn to $20.000+. 3.~ E. Coast Hwy. NB. nexcepliona lot ent Span1~h IJcxagon table u k 't h .1 $7500 AY646·9000
llLocations.OrangcCo. BnanWlutc Country Frcnch "6 rhrs, ehandeliC'r, '!lany 1 ~en 1 e ms. Twoelephantwickerend SABOTmade byScbock. SECRETARY Armmn•. t.'ollcctwn °1 1·ah1net tdry bar. rll·:<k & S(•rne ~nliques. m_uch lahles, w /tray tops, $12 24' SEA RAY Dbl hull, nu sail, xlnl & LA. Great . benefits. Waitress·exper'd. Appl) n 0 " ,, I O o u I t o n mnrc Sale to contmur T s 't d Chall g. gO t 't secunlv & rapui advan " rhr. s1•w1n" cabinet . . ca. wo amsont c car Sundancer brand new cond . ...,"".536-6754 en '" ppor um Y • • C 11 R bl'· m person. Bob·s Famtl) f1guH1nt>s, l!lth Cl·nt " until l'\·crythmg 1s dis table & chair sets. S20 & w/trlr. ""'S,OOO + invest· ___ ,,..,.,.., ______ _
To Work With cl)emcnbl. a I cpu •11c Rest•iuranl. 1·109 So El Cradle, Oriental l\t1rmr. w stora~c & top t•-<pands posed of. Save this ad. ~. G1': Amplifwr, 11 lrk ed. Boat"""loaded, fr•"' 100 •COHSULTA.MTS* Engineering Manager istn utors, nc " r Cam 1 no RC' a I . San Unusual Sailor';. Wools. for cutting. Smgk bec1. 7 !M6 S l St C M '""' 0 ov 714 /834 9088 dr<iwer dresser & m1r-ena e · · · player & spkrs .. $60. nal of fuel. Priced to sell. If you're in the market • " ..,. · · Clemente Stiver. China & Muth c:•u 0581 p Ex M · .. Experienct>cl Typist ror. 2 end lbls. 6 lamp::., .,...,. AM 1 c r o 8 5 7141833-2575 afl 7, days for a yacht let us help. Shorthand Preferred Tel•phon•Sal.s WAITRESSES More• l7?Ri\ersic1cAn• 4!l31303aftG 30PM amplifier, recorder & 7 14 15 46 -4300 . 1 D . Expert advice, not ex-
ff you Ii k e ma k 1 n g Exp. Only . over 25 Newport Bcarh Cbehlnd DOVER SHORES spkrs. S75. Balboa Pen in, Mar.;ellus pert salesmanship. We
Good Salary money. having fun & 428 E.17th5t. the Post Officel t>4Z·l2SO Dinette tbl, synthC'tic 278 yds used carpeting, 675·1567 •----------•are not brokers, our
And Benefits t a I kin g on the -Open MondJy lhru Thurs bulcht·r blk. seats 4. $35. draperies, twin bed & ------.--.--138'x14' unfin molded function is to consult
For Appt. Coll
17141493·930 I
9AM·4PM
AMF INC Po~ & brvmfi•ld
Di•ision
26181
Avenida Aeropuerto
San Juan.Capbtrano Equal Oppor Employer
Secretary, stock
brokerage office'. Pref.
experience. Pleasant
wor king conds 1n
s timulating en\ iron-
ment. Cont'1l'l SJndra,
&10 1460
phone .. call us. Pitime & Waitress ror. Banquets & _1ur _ Corner bed end tbl. chest, bedspreads, Ladies wetsuit., diving, fbrgls power boat hull, wiyoutodetertninewhat
· t p wa tN hui.hov · I ut ~JS Port· blc wardrobe doors . new S50. Accordion S120. cabin & flybrldge. Deep d be ... _~ r !-'/time ~hifts av~tl. se ·_ul 111 I'd ·I · Square Oak Table. Sl75. "an ' · a barstools. lamps, El B $90 548 7277 woul .,.,.,t or your Great ro. benefits. F asl pos1 ions .. o 1 ay nn Walnut Dining set & Buf hlk wht TV $10. 830-4477 ase • · • V popular design. $12.000 needs & lhen to search &
advan cement. Snl + Laguna !hits . Contact fet. 5185. Also. Misc lift IPM ~f:~. ~~e:s~l~~~~~~~: 540-6646eves. ortradeforsmallerboat. recommend to rill that
comm while lr.a10ing. personel586·5000 newer furn. 646-7t>!H ..... t • .,..J•---··· _67_5_-807 __ 4 ______ need. 631·3658; 642·6980 Phone 540·ti-091. Couch, chr. mahogany 1624 Antigua Way, N.B. -~ ... --·
WAITRESSES tbl, iron patio tbl, good Wanted 8081 21' DAY CRUISER, Olds as• WJNDROSE, trailera-
SIDEWALK SALE cond. bsl ofr 499-3224 Hors.s 1060 ••••••••••••••••••• •••• powered. Jacuni pump. ble. w{Newport sUp. Xlnt Telephone Sales Now interviewing daily FINEANTIQUES ••••••••••••••••••••••• SS.995.54()..7063,963-5059 cond. Asking $5500. . at lOa m for Cocktail AFFORDABLE PRICES Brand new beds, king sz, For Sale: Quarter horse $CASH FOR$ 761·0871 (714)
\\•irkptime.Earnextra Waitress & Food TideWaterTradingCo. qnsz&fullsz.~lsowtr Mustang mare. Very Good used fum/re!rigs lB' BAY Boat I/B, new ---------
cash in our rlrculation Waitresses. The Beach 2720E.ConstHwy,CdM beds631·3860Mano gentle & well trained. Freezera & stoves valve job & tune-up. COLUMBIA3'
siilesroom. Flexible hrs House Inn, 619 Sleepy Btwn Fern leaf & SPECl""LSALE English/Western riding. 546-0768 Many xtr as. $3100. 1973Die~I. VHF. RDP'.
AM or PM. Men, women Hollow Ln, Laguna Goldenrod -Call Mary Bali& 640-1995 642-5583 A /P , roller furling. or students, 18orovr. Beach. 494·9707 ----Inlaid wood coffee & end or Madeline Blinder Baby things. Hl·chr. play Avon. slip & more. :>t()..0301 Li\ Times•----------Appllanc.s 80 I 0 tbls. reg $340. Now only 640-8277 pen. crib. chest drwrs. WELLCRAFTNOVA 250 675.82800r 67s.7884 WAITRESS ••••••••••••••••••••••• S18S.StartingSatat child's dsk. rocking chr, 24'. twin Mere. 888's ---------TELLER TRAINEE
Lots of excitement in PR
pos. w,bu~y branr h. Call
Willa Carter. 833·2700
Dennis & Dt·nnis Person
nrl Service or lr\'lne, 20!1:!
M1ehel<,on Dr
. Washers, dryers. Clean TH£ FURNITURE Pure Bred Appy colt. tbl &r chrs, picnic tbl. I/O's, cuddy cabin, cov-Aquarius 23, trailer. xlnt Exper d waitress wanted late models. SJOO, 1 yr CONNECTION Joker bloodline. SlOOO or 8-t2-8531 er, tandem trlr. 675·8280 cond. Must sell! $5000/of·
to work at health r:xxi guar. Free deli very. 7351 H~il. Unit L. H.B. bst. 557-4122 Carolyn or67S.7884 fer. 963·8212
lunch counter. 5 Oa}s a l\tstr Chg. Will also buy. &12·1244 Mullcal 1~ C'ISHJNG J\•AC'·I Jeff1·res T ---port--~--------w k . No Su n . work . 6J6.2S40 Sorrel Gelding, approx 8 lns..,...nb 80 ~ • • ' ' unvn
Untform furn. MC'diral & -· Custom made ornate yrs. Paid $1000. Can be ••••••••••••••••••••••• 24' twn screw, Jo'B , rans
hosp. benefits. Pleasant FRGllT OAMAGl!:D furniture : 7' Sc1uare seen&lestriddenalonitconn Ma·n·O-Matlc elec. fight'g rhr. Rad, sndr, •••••••••••••••••••••••
Secrl'lary. Medical Teller, Sa\lngs & Loan. etc. 751·1610 ""'-raff 91 I 0 workini: conds. Apply. HOTPOINT SALK 3308 glass top coffee tbl, 2 sec· be~. Will neg price. Call organ. excellent condi· -.no
Lindberg Nutrition, W. Warner nr Harbor, tion hreakfront. 7' high Daisy Davis 552·8145 o tion,a!OO,P.P.532·1259 -17-,-0-B_G_la_s_s-pa-·r-'?_0_85_H_P_'••••••••••••••••••••••• Tran~cribcr. exp 1n F'l'. exper. Must type
Radiology, front ok. full 50wpm. Phone for appt.
time. 495-4700 & 831·07·10 Mrs. Baldridl(e 586·8900.
-Keystone Savings &
SECRETARY Loan E.O.E. M tF.
for Art Gallery t:uud
typing, light bkkpg, lull
time. 5'19·9l!ll
1-SECURITY
GUARD
Fcnhion laland, HB
Weekly pay & paid vac.
Xlnt fringe benefits.
Above average wages.
U nilo rm & equip.
furnished. Car & phone
req'd. Call (2131 573.9150
lor local appt. E.0 . E.
~·y p/l. Nr OC Airport.
TEl.LER
Bank Exper. Required
Irvine National Bank
Contact Bob Creighton
833·3700. E.O.E .
TEl..LERS/
NEW ACCOUNTS
Permanent Cull time.
typing req. req'd, pre-
vious ex per desirable but
not necessary.
Mutual Savings & Loan
2867 E. CoastHwyCdM
Mr. Kull 675-5010
Equal Opty Em pl M /F
bC'tween the Carrousel & Santa Ana. 9i9-2921 king,queen style chairs, S.'12·0095 J ohnson trailer. excel New hangers for lease,
Bullocks In S. Coast -------low cabinet bar. Make J _, Gulbr ansen Rialto. Corona Air port, hurry
Plazn Shopping Center. CASH PAID ofr. tw4·:!8118. ew~ry 8070 cadillac of organs. Anti· cond. Sl550. 642·9334 eves ·only limited number still
Costa Mesa. Apply al For Wshr/Dryrstllefrig -----••••••00••••••••••••••• que wht. 2 external orSunday. avail.633-6817&544·3197 V1tam~n C~untcr -~ork111g n~t _957-8133 I.a me table. 4~hairs WANTED Leslie spkrs-piano-)O'CHRIS CONNIE 67 c~ Sale
Wll b f " S250 rhythm Perf. s3995· Flybndge, twm screws, •~ 9120 Ware-house to $12K 1 . uy some re ri,.s, 6-IO·ll4leves TOP CASH DOLLAR 492-0658, 498·1133, '"""
Mgmt oriented indiv. appls. working or not· : PAID FOR YOUR 631-3443 canvass r m, bristol,••••••••••••••••••••••• soughtforallaroundpos. alsoscrapmctal675·525~ King size bed. box spr-JEWELRY. WATCHES, • (714)4~ Overhead ca mper,
C II R M' 11 833 2700 mgs, matt1frame. Clean. ART OBJECTS. GOLD, Offlu Fwnitur. & lB' Deep V Tri-Hull 165 beautiful custom int . .O:nnis°l~ne~~P;ri1on : ~~~0;1~w~s~e~i~c~~J S75.557·2005 SILVER SERVI CE. EqulpmHt 8085 Mere. 1/0. Trlr. Like $800. Flexible. 54s.t076
nelServiceof Irv me, 2082 . 11.000 BTU $125. Burke's Green 96" sofa &2 blk S50, FINE FURN & AN· ••••••••••••••••••••••• new $4500 968·5935 _a_f_l_6:_oo_. _____ _
Michelson Dr. Applianres 546·8672 naug arm chairs. $2S ea. TIQUES. 645-2200 Office dsk, 4 drwr. gd · · ·
WAREHOUSEMAN Dishwasher. port. Waste 491-1825 aft 6 pm. Unstock 8075 cood, bel~~~al $35. ~-l~~~fu~~~~rtm~~~ 8 ;,c~~n~& e ~In~ ~:n~
&WEIGHER King stainless steel. 3 MOVED: 2Dbl beds,matt ••••••00•••••••00•••••• + extras. Must sell! $375orbest.536-0772.
Mature .... rson .A weigh cyl. Butcherblork. near· & s p g s c o u c h Reg. Morgan mare, broke l'eh 8087 5500.. 213/243-5831 , "'· C.. V ......
& war';'hous'; bu lk lyncw.SlSS.640·6978 w/ludeabed: misc hshld to ride & drive, blk ••••••••••••••••••••••• 71.,.. nevy an/ ••
items. 548-0426 parade Morean geldlna. WANTED Stud for at· 1960 16' Glaspar boat & cruise air conv, alps 4, vitamins. Some lifti.ng. HOTPOINT Gas Dryer. Eng, Weste rn (714) tract. min. rem. 'Ooxy. trlr,50hpEvlnrudemtr. ref'rigtroofcooler,'733$0 ' ~ust be neat" conscien· Good condition. $.50. 4 Maple bar stools. S12S. 3311-1011 WUI pay fee or allow pick Xlnt com!. 543-5532 cu in Chevy eng, AC, t1ous. Apply 8 AM-9:30 675.fi962 l1Xt4 8 ·d d ug ..,5 c litw N .... e P b mags, AM /FM cassette,
AM. Linwilco Labs, 2148 --847.7670 rni e r ' •• · Mf5cellaMous 8080 ~115. E~~4=3."~~jc Y loah, Soil 9060 bike rack etc, $3100.
Newport Blvd. CM. Amana froslfree refrig.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••··~··••••••••••••••• 6754884 aft5PM
Gd skills, nexible hr11.
Write Ad #938. Daily
Pilot, P .O. Box 1560,
Costa Mesa. CA. 92i126
Warehouse & vehicle 19 cu ft. h~:;t gld, nr nu Wrought iron tbl w /mar-Queensize boxspring mat-Beautiful green talk· SOUTHWESTERN Camper Shell, Fits stan.-
c hi mal.ntenance,deliveries. cond.$175644·4695 bletop&4chrs$100.An· tress &frame.newS175. ingpar akeet w/gold y:a.cHTS""LES
18 =· A~~lye~fter good driving record. licyeles 8020 t1que loveseat $40. Sea Dbl boxspring mattress cage.$22.540-0208 Fltjl~.3S.4S.':sMKII ~~4~.{a~~ or Chevy
1:30pm, So. Coast Plaza heavy lifting. Tues-Sat. ••••••••••• •••••••••••• chest 535. Wlng back chr, & frame SllS. also twins Plcmt0t & Organs 8090 M g 28 eq , t S22 5 ---------
N k Start $3 + brwn plaid 140. 498·1500. 768·8494 •foanr.noenr Jl lowadPP.d ....... 800· Motori--.. l 1Lff 91 '"0 Theatre no. 1. (acr011s on smo er. NEED 2 i1m11 IJ bikes --------••••••••••••••••••••••• " .,.., ...,.. "' ,.
Service Sta . Attendant, from s. Cst Plaza Shop· overt ime · W i 11 do w 13· 15 " with couter Pl N BALL MACH. 4 PIANO. Knabe 1882 up-Col. 34 Super $32,800 •••••••••••••••••••••••
cxper'd. Full or pl\.im~. ping Ctr. On Briston Design, 3195 D Airport brakes.· Reasonable . * * player. complelely rebll. grand Cherrywood. Conn CT41 Charter or $76M Jawa 40 Moped. S230 in·
Appl.Y Arco Station, 17th Loop Dr. Costa Mesa. 536·3645 PUBLIC 770-1262 Organ ELE Minuet Ma-Chartens/Cruises Avail clds helmet, chain, IO<'k & Irvine, C.t.J. TRAVEL Agent. min 2 yrs ~1 pl 640-1Z75 2220 Newport 673·9211 & Moped oil. 548-0118 exper. Call Millie Harbor ---------1 Girl's Slingray Schwinn Air Conditioner. window e. •,
Service Station Atteo· Travel 67H311 "Fair Lady", Like new AUCTION installation. $350 new, Wurllher Funmaker LID01' , ~-
dant, exper'd. Day & WILLIAMS $40.644-8275 ~If rSl75.S86-2008. Oraan.~.O('best. Trailer.Extras r Smohn 9150 Eves. 11\111 & p/time. Ap· Travel Agency expand· Late Model used , . Evee, 645-8557 $2 lll5 642·67 00•••••••••0••••••H••
ply1 Shell Station, 17th & lfli, needs out.side 11ale1 Yellow Schwinn 20" boys FURNITURE Genuine Ma.pie 8utcber s • '10 H.O Sportaler. Xlnt
lrvme,N'B. personnel , travel SONOMA bike, '25. Good cond. Block, 30il:30x15. Brl-tig Superb oldupi:'t ht1raod '68 CAL 25. cust om cOM.RebuUtena,lrans,
benefit4 etc. Exper pre· 96S-0123 APPLIANCES eorneone to belp m~v~ al. piano, made by Cable, ialley. LPR, GEN. semkbop. Sl750orpaue Service St.II Attendant,••· lerred. Located N. B. ANTIQ,UES $300. ~ morn111gs. 1750. 646·7604 SPIN. Dingy J.nel'cL Good ol(er. St'MM5 • per'd.JulUtpltlme.Ap· nhr Airport. (TU) AGowiMt Forsalet 10 speed bib. d S?&OO / 1 PiY,NewportShell,2800 S49>t3SS Cooki1119Stor. xl lnt co ndi tiortn, WED.6:c:IJ>M PLANTSALI Gulf_:rr~e1L~t.o~rs-~~· !!"....1·1 or 0 r. BMWRe0/5P'•trioc, ); W. Cit Kwy, N.B. .. ... V& "'G•~ 1 ahtwe.lght. '9'·5125 a 8 So. Coett >.uctto.t Over 125 planll. no r•· 2 . v ..... e cawn...... ._.,._. b111, mint condiU011.
Sttvtce Sti. Attendant, •~ ~ -=n• Nowtntu\•lewlnJFor: PM. 2202S. Motn St. a:iopobl• offer rtr~. Ph®e~G. Ertc. 2,.ss COMMOTION1 546-9583.
parUif/Ume. WUHraln. wiUu'1east 1yr~ucpr41 •.Aalt. Manegef' The futeit.l draw tn ih Santa Ana 50• lo $50. 646.83 4 TV 9'iidlo one d tho fottat .9' t>eatl:~~;;~;~;;~;;;;:;;;;;!; ...
N • 1 t a Pp e 0 ,.. 1oocl client folio=. •\Md s-. Wost ••• a Dally Pllot 1 Blk No. otWal'nM sr.mc· 161 Meia Or, NA, Shreo 8DH ~8035 avalJable,r 75 'f AMA)tA' 121 lae t
handw'1Uftt. A~ply, 2S80 ... Tclp.-:;...;.•_aJ_a_ry:..._CaJ_1_7_5'l-___ 1 •lWcldofStodl Ctoulrled A(l1 •Phono BftlntenJ\aLeS•40$ -•••••00••••••••••00•••• dlwo. LeSi ,_ 4 000 • •
NcwportBtVd, M TlUTOPPERS wScHa ~·Mm. ,.._...n91507r..Sln1s~33 0~ MATTRESSES: Mat· NEW Jt" Quuar Color 30'YAW1.. mites $lfl Cell • .
vps. .. tttsau~ Kinf aetl, Sl'9: TV, pert. cONS. $.'100. AA cabln, new motor. • . • • &.ftlUNH.S 9AM-GPM 11ty 1!een se •; U19 ; ~,8116 $11995. AY.846-9000 '71-3622 .....
Pftte work. Full or 'part OFFE~ ~~VICE? CON~EG~.f iks ~J~ ::ip~'·s~e CAL 20 w /?rlr .• hp 0/8. g:iJ· i~~O:f(t~i Let the p~bllc know witb Ol>.LlltS '#IL~OME 20,-0.40~: Bci•utyr•at, f'iew SONY TC24FA lJ> V11F. Ssalls. evr, utru. lfonda Jf70 3SOCL. onl~
6'ts.tl1B evu MOG tbru 81\ ad ht the 'D.ail1 Pilol AS ISAPPLlANCts Sena, Sprin& Alt\.~aly. dlltb A~1/l'M C4it11cttt 1'5815.~ ' 2'aM ml. Oood eonditlon.. .1 Frl, 7pmtot m. Service Dlrte\or:Y 1t Ob SALgSTARTS BankAmericanf. Muter cu at~. Usl Sl'f..JS, tiUJ. Call art :r PM~_..
ec»l )'OU at little! 011 ll ~s IPMSHARP Cbu14. ''Tb• Lfmey·· J\ilantle Xu.sic' .. l. '""'x........ MMJlf. •
ptr day Fqr mort ttJ· AU.ITEMS ~ lilau.rtal Wareho11u," price ttl)&, Atllnl e SllSOPYtptt IU·UOI '111trii,JoWJD11 el~ ~tlCVI ncf mntptete UST BESOLI> nc• .._._., SL, aur M111lc 445 . 11th St. UDO HwJtrMr SIOll, Ocl ltild.tt'OMcleie, .... ...a
r call~.af1f. it ~· °""-·Maa, o.u11 ... c.. cond. fCur Coron. COll4. • or W '.'tlr.
J (TW).... .. -.DD
~ ...
I
-. . .
r Ba DAil Y PtLOr WednHday, July t3. 1977 Auto1, lmport.d .Autos, l"'p;rt.d Autos. Imported • ,. T . --•• • • • • • •• • • • •• · •• • • •• •• •• • • • • • • • • • • • ••• ••• ••• • • • • • • • • • •• • • •• ••••• •• •• Aufa1 ur;cf Auf'Os. Uud · .A.fol U..-4 ' ...
M.forcr::le•/ ....... :l/ Trwcl&.1 9560 IMW 9712 J-9730 Toyota 9765 ••••• .. ••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• "'-91 110 Cl 9520 ••••••••••••••••••••••• -...,--•• • • • -
00
" °' '' ••••••• ••••••• •••• ••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••• •• • • ••••••••• Well 9911> .... _ 99•5 twt-9952
73 llnnda ~1~1 yl
Pil:Rrt; f!
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• STOP SH 4 door 4 20. t..t()(' .... ~1. • ,.OR l J A\" I t Chrys.....-• -...,,
excell cond 1-'tr!ll ~ 71 ~ O • • .. gn, x n ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• DOH'TIUYTHAT takes15367904 cone.I. 10 mi. AM t l-'M 19671UlCIC '75Cordoba,loml,loaded. •• Autb 289. S'l,000 one IU 7123
'7• lklnda new.•,,,.,,,. n111
t 000 ml, •llh ~ )r "'llrr
SI 1iW lllO 37111
STOP!
DOH'T IUY THAT
t41WTIUCIC
buy 1ny l~ 811 wtndo~
Yord pic k up. 1111
1n1u ul•ll' with nl'I~
1•n1i1Wt, hrMkH. vr1nin1t
1-tr m, l:4 Tbla trul·k
u1n only •PJl.NClll\• In
,, tJMW R7!'.' 1700 "' v1'1u~ WW or ofter.
m •ke .in olf1•1 l .ill mu.\ '" to app ... chtlC!
1)1 2101!11lt ~ l'\1 813 Ev•.
BS.\ '62 MOft \ Ill M'lll''• ~ DrfYel 9550
n•blt c·n,:: ut •ti: ~~> or ••• • •• • ••• • • •• • • •• •• • • •
r-t 67~ i144 1976 CHIVY
l:f7h K,. ...... ,1 .. "~• ~.11
oluro. IUOH 111 I •u1·11t11·~
'l'i!AI ~ ·1 10 IU> >.117 .ill
·, !Wi3 ..:en
.11 ~(ll( I ()'I l'u11lllldndo,
lnoi.., run, ltkt• n1•w
$1.\CI u11 I'll 11 117 ult
11'\f
Motot-Hott1n. Sal•
Reftt Stor~ 9160 ......•..•.•••...••..••
\10 I OH 1111\H :--.
~UH I< ... :-. I
1-rom $lj11 ,.i.. , .o OM I
fkut 23 t'IR E.ll \LL. ~.l
loJ1.h of wancJuw,.. &
• ounl<'r '>PJt·c IH$ 22113
SO.CALIF'S
LARGEST
I lt'cl of "NI'" \tutor
J lome f<t-nt;;h th t•r 110
1977 m1Kl1·I' tu 1·h1>0:.t.•
frorn. IK' t11 :1:r
ln~ur.1nn• 111l'lud1•d
l>.ik'l> llV lknl;;I-;, Int·
1714 )~9 4116
. 7 7 1-· 0 U R S T A R 2 3 ' ,
bunk bed:-. /\!\I , FM tape,
1· r s l' l' o n t r o I . /\ IC
+.oth er xtras. PP
:SH.000 8-12 t81K
WANTTOBUY:
4X4 IL.AZER
i\utomt1tll', pw1 i.tccr1 ni:
& ltrak1·~. rud10, lwJt11r.
111r t'OJ\d , nl·w orr ruad
tlr e11 & lllPukc whli. .
Cheyenne pkg .• till
-.heel. l'rUl!oC l'unt. " mor~' 11367611>. 1-:z
ll:rm~ 0 I\ C.
NOW $7295
MAIERS
AUTO CENTER
1425 Baker St . l ' \I
540-9109
AMC-JEEft
#I inCoUf.
WE Ol'TSELL Al.I,
JEEP DEALEllS
IN THE STATE
HUGE INVENTORY
\II Models Nl'W & l:'>t'il
Lca~ml{ A' :u lalil1·
Costa Mesa
AMC Jeep
252.t HARBOR BLVD
Costa Mesa 549·8023
JEEPS "77"
C J -5's, C J ·7's ,
<.'hrrokee:., Wagoneers,
Pick-ups, up lo $1,200 dis
t"Ounts. 5 yr 50,000 mile
warranlys available.
Cope-land Mtn Inc
2001 E 1st, SA 558-8000
l.i::e used moLorhoml' '71 GMC ~.ton, 4 s pd,w19·
t 'nmpl :.l'lf l'Onlatned. Cahf. Camper. loo many
t»t>~I xtras lo list! Very clean.
SS.850 540·7023 Trailen, Trani 9170 -------1
••••• •••• ••••••••• ••• • • '66 Bronco Roadster. ocr.
11;· Shasta 3 beds. ~hower. roac.I C<'IWP'd P t P. Best
101let. sto\ l' w oven. offt•r. 546-~ __
rdng, '' ater htr, pre
-~ure watrr l>)S lcm
SJ500 962 4633
Auto Service, Paris
&Acceuories 9400 ........•••..•••.••.•..
71 G:\1C Jimmy, lo mt.
rl<'an, trlr h1tth, w t>lec
brake hkup. 53,!lOO
s.is 1989
72 Chevy t•ampcr shl'll
350 l·sl)d t;d rond Must
S \VEWITll ~<'II ,\lake ofr 511J·09J9.
.._.!W TaUCK at~reo. I u U rec k U S.A.111 5'96$/Sest otrer S81"54M ml. i own~. Xlal rond.
t>u,y my 11158 811 w1ndow 1 IT • ltOAOWA'I' •••• ••••••••••••••••••• Automatic, pwr. steerini " & 1Cart111111n Ghia 9735 S'Z700tor be 1 orr 673 3181 "'es SllOO. lll·U4
•'o rd pl c: k up. Im. SAHTA ANA l961 Karmann Ghia 1-'ully '76 CEUCA AM FM, S + brakes. &. only 43.000 1969 lm1>4!rtal Le8aron "70 Mustan~ Lo milt's.
macuh1tc with new 835·3171 recondtlloned in lk out spd. M~!' .. t1c1~.~...... onl(mal m•lf'S Carts like 4-dr H 1' All options Good cond. PS/f'B . t>n11n~. brakt>11, -.1111n11 tw1vLTttt•1f oNv1HO MACH1>1~ E:xcellent.$ltl00.546·4321 ~ ""'~ brand new! (UOC64U. Neb mll'lor brk ttpair. $1600. Pb 552·1112 or
etl· 2119. C.t. Thi• t.rurk D IMW' .... _...._ 9731 '72Corona Mark 11 Grt>.it Youmuslseetl\l.sonefor $.'li9:S.6'4 '7873l-v«:!I ~ t•wn only 11pvrcl'l1&tl.' In •USE I* ,,_.._. ONLY SI Jt5
vulul! s:.!7~0 or offC't . '74 3 OCpe S R 7461.WD ....................... t'<JOd si495 MAIERS Cofttfwt• ttJO '74 Mustan& 11. P tS. P /B,
mW'l !IN' lo <1P1>r1!c111lc '762002 .&spd S R 950N t,~· 675 9628, 673 7298 ••••••••••••••••••••••• A/C, vnyl rf. spec: patnl, b73~ EVl'!\ '711$30! 4.sp Alys 570PQM AUTO CENTER .73 MARK IV. loaded. 4 tpd, 4 cyl. Like new.
'1112002. <bp Air, ZKG 1:1K 9767 1425 Baker St., C.M. Xlnl. c:ond. Priced for $2900. 644·0591 VMS 9570 '73 3 o CS Cpc 4s pd Tri...... S40.9109 1
••••••••••••••••••••••• 220KMT ••••••••••••••••••••••• sa e. 552·9134 '70 AUTOMATIC, P /S,
\/;in Cunv1:1rs1on Co M'll Clos.d On Sundays 21 SO Hcwbor llYcl Loaded. xlnl <'ond 7000 ·n RIVIERA, loaded. l Cornth 9932 P /8 , air, new Ures. Clo.
111.: 2 de m o:oi I 77 Costa M~ 645-5700 m1. $57!15 Mo.rscllus, ownr. XlnL rond . .Mus t ••••••••••••••••••••• car.673·3434or67S·3302 iu.~tom Ch.l!v • IJuy wm ORANGE COUNTY'S Mercedes Benz 9740 bus;5464JOOhm; 833 2575 sec lo appreciate! Make 1976 Corvette In beautiful '73 Mu stang Con v . 11"""· A:«Ul'ho & many •·~ OLDEST ••••••••••••••••••••••• Volksw-n 9770 ofr. 542_·4t05 ~~0.4277 condition & with low Loaded, xlnl cond. 44M 11 i" Loni( whl busc 2. ·77 -.,.-I p d
l;.\1(' ~n<lrt whl l>a~c. l>tl' • .. -Cadlll 9915 mags, stereo. air cond & • .... & L•a•• ••••••••••••••••••••••• m1 es. wr. win ows, m.i. $3900. Ph: 497.2041
wl11duwi1, U bed. manv Hew. Used '76 VW CAMPER ••••••~••••••••••••••• Plll stnping. (~WT 1. '66 Mustang v..a. auto. 2nd
t•xlra!>. 957 11 267 & OVER IOO i\utorna t 1c, AM /FM it For sale-asking $799S. owner. mlntcond. $1200
t>l2 2334 Dir. radio. hcal!!r & 1m Cort Fox Leasing. Call 494.~ Sult·~ Scmce·Leul>rng MERCEDES maculate thruoul ! Pop 645-3661 ---------
'72 1-·ord. Xlnt cond rl.tll Roy Carver,lnc. ON DISPLA y top modd w1lh awning & • __ -Oldlmoblt. 9955
mtr, rrpt'd. Ofr Make Kolb ftoy1·e BMW alm05l every 1·on ce1va 'Tl Corv. loaded: 1otereo, •••••••••••••••••••••••
l!l7 2791.837·6lOO IS40Jamboree House of lmp0rts ble extra available 1974 CADILLAC alr, t!Jt wheel. & extras. '7S CuUus Salon. Comp.
.73 Jo'ord Custom Vun. PS. Newport Beach 640 6444 AUTHORIZtD (003PPM) COUPE DEVILLE Buy or assume lease. eqwp. lmmac. thru-out,
l'H, t·ustom paint. m·~· .7130c:.s.immac,loms . .i MERCEDESDEALER OMLY $6495 Full p ow e r as.,1sts. Da)sll-5,634·2019.Ron lowner.SSl-0082
t 1 l $4000 lit' t f 6862 Manche!>Ler, . MAR"'UIS TOYOT" leather 1ntenor. AM t'M ----tn • "' n • !> o r 1opd all t!'tra!> Buena Par I.. ? • l lh i pe I yer & '70 Olds Della 88 ~-Wi:J____ ' 7147528211 MISSIONVIEJO sercowi a PK~RJO r--9933 goodcondlt1on
523-7250 831-2880495-1210 Cllbnolettop.030 . ::::;.-;•••••••••••••••• &i.9S 968·21S7 '76 1 Ton Ford Van. C~lm ·;;-R~I w Mint cond On the Sant.a Ana F~' $5988
'xir;tr. ~:;:: bbr~~0118'{ .. ':,s Sunrf. i\M FM -.h·reo 8 .75 4SOSEL~ s~,-·e_r_g-ray, i5 SCI ROCCO JSK ml, 1974 MERCURY Pinto 9957
• nt ...,.,.,., l>l "" ""_ tr tape <Jeck. 23M m1, nt t-•M 8 trk. Pvt. Pty. COUGAR •••••••••••••••••••••••
Dodge 75. 8 200 custom
van, windows pan<'I,
rs;ts, s wivel s eal1o.
drnette. rack. air, lTu11oc.
/\M /FM 8 lrk, 28.000 ma,
bc•st offer 673·4388
ii.ooo mi. s un roof, fully '"'' Nab mag ~his Burgun loaded842·9371 S31SO.Evesl735-69Z2 ers Automatic, radio . '76FORDPIMTO
dy creml! $7500. Ph ---------healer. pwr. steering . Automatic, air c:ond .•
640 1683 '68 MBZ 250 SE Cpe. Xtra 70 BUG· Xlnl cood. c d·11 brakes·seats. vmyl lop w/s w ttres & custom in -
97 I 5 rlean, elec. sunroof, new Porsche seata, low mi. a I ac (295LEB). Wholesale tenor. A super nice car! Capri brks,Justtuned. Wooden Movine . Beal of r . bluebook 1s $2975; our (084P AU. EZ term:-;-••••••••••••••••••••••• inter. EVt!S & WkncJs (1) 644·13119 .:hll!l II 1111111 Blvd price IS also 0 C
l976 Crc<'n Capn II V 6, 993.7579 I '"11 \k,.1 ~ hl '11110 0 .._.LY $2975 A ONLY 52995 1!'63 Ford Econolmc Van. 2.900 m1 Ddul\e det•o1 '67 VW IUG "
roof rack w/roller1o, trlr itroup, i:rn & woo<l in 'W . Joo.SI. l'p<' Hcbtr, rl'd Exrellent condition MARQUIS VOLVO MAIERS
hitch, lool l>hdves. Ol'W tenor. ~lll'k, ~nrf, AM lacqul'r hlk llhr Con· ru5(1 499 2769 •73 El Dorado. Lo ma. Ask-MISSION VIEJO AUTO CENTER
Wmstont1res.runspl•rf FMhtercoKtrk. Xlnt rnurs qlt) lli:!7!1598ur 1957 VWBUG mgLowBlueBk.$3900. 831-2880495-1210 J425BakerSt .. C.M.
Autos Wanted 9590 Datsun 9720 '69 280 SL .\lclalltc
Ua\ H' 552 171:1 cond Sl.!IOO 554! 7175 I 627 9566 11.19 !)534 aft 5PM 540·9109
Call Petcr645·00<15 ---·75 Cougar, s ilver, lo mi. __ --------
·72 El Dorado. Beautiful! xlnt cond. 759·4005 or '74 Deluxe Wgn . Auto/air. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• guld /choc. llhr 4 Spd. 68VW.sanglcowocr,
WE WILL BUY DRIVE A • Ou~~~dini: ~75·<~151 $900 499-3469
YOUR DATSUN LITTLE ·5~ MHZ l!IO·A I Dr S<'d '75 VW BC'cllc. A /C .
PAID FOR OR NOT ••• Xlnt cond. S354JO ur bl>l AM FM !>lereo r;.id10.
TOP DOLL.AR SA VE A LOT ofr. Call 549-0109. clean. runs well. New FOR To• C ... RS llres. & well matntamed. .-• SllOP&COMPARE 71280S,sunroof,a1r,...,hilc Su... S3,0001bsl ofr 586·4117 BARWICK DATSUN BARWICK DAT "' on bliu·k. J:reat 1oh..1pe .•
SanJuanCap1slrano San Juan Cap1slrano Offer.673-5957 '67 Bu~. Xlnt Look1o
831-1375 493-3375 831-1375 493.3375 .66 2505-; dr S~ ....,ht, sharp. runs good. rc•hll
WE BUY
CLUNCARS
&TRUCKS
CONNELL
CHEVROLET
~Harbor Bh c1
COSTA ML.5A
546-1200
NEWPORT DATSUN
SPECIALS
1976 DATSUN
710 2 Door
\u\nm11lle with air cond
<359NX M l
A C, very clt!an body.
~XX) bl.Lofr &12·1212
l'ng RJO()f1rm 497·3195
l!nl-lll VW I door sedan
$1200
96382S9 '65 Mercedes Sedan. I
door, s:rnoo Offt.'r.
1~0·8&17 ;;fl 6P~1 ·70 VW St-dan xlnt rond
1-·snanc1ni: d' d 11. :\Juke '69 280SL, xlnl crind offer 531 U70
thruout, Sl0.750.
536-7256
67 2505. Orig. owner Air,
P /W. s tPreo tape
lk>t ofr 714-626 334-1
'70 VW Hug, gret•l tond1
lion go1 ni:: O\ l' rM• as
Makl• oHcr 196·~i71
Col'O w 1Lan int. Ask 673·161~-__ lugrack,xlntcond,$249$
S3750 Call 1135~ PP Or Bcsl ()(fer. 645·7221 ,
1970 DcVille gold ronvt Dodge 9935
w 80.000 ms. S3,200. •••••••••••••••••••••••
6428223mom.orevesaft '63 Dodge Dart. Good
7 cond. $500/bsl ofr.
eves 536-6859
'72 Pinto Runabout. t
owner. Mags, A/C, auto.
Lo mi 960-1559 ----------673-8746a(t9PM
19i0 Coupe UeV1lle All -----'71 Pinto. Pvt owner. AU
pwr, llhr seats. Only '72Cbarger 318, 16+mpg xtras. Nu pnt. 31,000 mi.
SHiOO 714 1644-0665 eves Greallooks &Cond. Sl200. 751 ·1~
i 14 752-2377 days MUST SELL MY BABY
~1AKE OFFER. 645·1369 '71 Pinto, runs good. 197 I CADILLAC needs body work. S700.00 DEVILLE 4 DOOR ·73 Charger. Xlnt cond. or besloffer. 968-SS.9 aft.
llardtop. Full power. air S1500 cash t ake over 4 pm
tond. & many. many pymts.5467lllaflS -"--------·73 Pinto. ndials. lo other extras. IS33DBZl. Ford 9940 mileage, $1450. 58Ui824.
I:;Z terO\S·O A.C •••••••••••••••••••••• • 731·2992 ONLY $1795
NABERS • PH IL Mov1ng-Mui;t sell '73 Pin·
AUTO CENTER LONG lo Runabout. 1 Owner. J.1.500 mi's. Xlnt cond. l SED & HEBUILT s.is 3.177
FOREIGN CMl l'/\HTS WE PAY TOP DOLLAlt •Engme~ 9560 FORTOPUSEDCAllS
HOW $3895
1.1118 uon;sTRl':ET
jl/p;ir ~lal' \rthur
& J Jmborcl' Hoad~
833-1300 MG 9742
'fi7 VW Bus. xlnt c·ond.
Nl•w tires, Sl500
li73 1615
1425 Baker St .. C.M FORD New tires. $1700. During
540-9109 working hrs 551-7310,
·oo OeV1lle~C-o-n-vert. :,hite ~...... _e_ve_s/Wknds 552-4436. • Transm1ss1011-. Trucks FOREIGN. DOMESTIC
•Rear end~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• orCLASSlCS
TOP BUYER
SI'<' us firs t. & la~l' Top
dollar paid for 1niports
COSTA MESA
••...•...••..••...•.••.
Zippy little MG Midget. VW ·1:1 Bus I Pvt owner. ~ • ,,,,_,,, w 'redml.$2500.oroffer. ~· •"' ---..... 9960
, Tires 13 Toyota P · U. Locally If your ear 1s extra cll·an , Fenders o w n e d . A M I F M see us first.
V!.!ry clean Inside & out.
Low miles, runs like: a
clock. Racing lire:. w .
w1blark convert. top.
Below bluebook al S2650
586-4417
Xtra ch•an 9 I' ass H&H, 1173-0512 •••••••••••••••••••••••
auto. air. ne w 11r<•s. Camaro 9917 '65 Plym. Fury. Wag. $450
.,. Door~ rad1o+extras. Gd cond. BAUER BUICK , llumP<'r:. $2200 firm. 499-3105 DATSUM S3350 <193·:1566. ••••••••••••••••••••••• or best orter. Must Sell.
76 Camaro LT, Rally t•••• .. ••h•~ ... o. ......... , P IS, P /B. runs well. ~25 llarbor Blvd IMPOllT • "' rd R h A. 79 <•·1 ·\UTOSUPPl.Y H ... o anc ero. tr, Costa Mesa 9 . 25" :!8-15 11;.iroor Hiid
Colola Mt•sa S-10 f>.110
'75 VW Habb1l. xlnl t•ond.
lo mileage , AM 11-'M
:otcrro 67:1·5679 ufl 6 PM.
Sport Package. 19.000 .,. • ..., •• _c_.. , .. _ .'.!_9Hl351 aft.5:30.
nu. A C. AM 11-'M stereo, -----------•
P , 8, P , S, rallcy ''heels. ·75 Gran Torino Broghm
SSIW or bst off 751-8913 A~l /FM stereo tape, ~•ft 6 A IC, PStPB. new tires.
101 N. Manche1otcr. PS1PB. radio. With s hell. ---TOP \nllheim 776 9900 Xlnl cond. SHOO or ofr.
• 646 3213 or 833·9199 DOLLAR 1971i 1>.1Ls un 280Z, air,
A~1 1-'~1 ~lereo c·assellc.
.,.1vcr.1·ust snl • !131 391;7
'70 MG Mi~get. new radial ·ro vw f·a:.tba ck. ~nod
ttrC!o. paint. trans .. '<?P· ('Onc.ltlson C;;ll ;1rtl•r 5
cri:>Ls,reblteng,AM f.~1 P~l Ktm586·4030
'71 Ply mouth Sa lelli le.
NEW ·75 Dix Luv. A~t/FM t ape. Tuneu~ at your home en. a cond. shell. sun
Guaranteed & hren~cd. roof. mal(s etc. S3200 or
1140 ~21147 6076 _ oir. $48·3839
PAID
FORCLEA;o.l
£500. or bst ofr 631 2611
'75 280Z. 1mmac c-onrl or&t()..5898 ·10 \'an Walk thru. fold
Musl 'ell Air. 1\M F~l out ht-<l. icebox. rbll cng stereo Ldpe, ma,::s, new ·75 Midgl't w carriage Sl!l'l5 5.59 6688
brks, shocks. Sharp ---------Chevrolet 9920 S3W5. Call btwn 9•113m 1971 Plymouth Satellite
••••••••••••••••••••••• or7:30-llpm.548-4788 Sernng. P IS. P.B. ;ur,
1975 CHEVY V-8, $1100. 581-8996
Lo males, $1700.
646-8629 aft. 5: 00
llrel> & brakes l'P Call rack Only 10.0oO ms Autos for Sal~ 62 Chevy •,T PU Good S3800 Xlntcond&t2-0311 li6 VW Cl\MPJ-:n
••••••••••••••••••••••• s hape, $500. Beller afl GPM 1132 27$9 o r ----GOOD ENG INE ~ Mo,....ECARLO ·m LTD P'S. P /B. AIC. "' runs well. S550/o(r . MUST S ELL! 1975 Automatic, pwr steenng 497.2255 eves Du.'ller. cust cpe, 6 cyl.
675-0-132 MGI 9744 Antiques hurry.846·6S33. Sl500 492-8191
Classics 9520 . .,, El Camino. good conds· '73 Datsun 610 Sta Wgn, •••••••••••••••••••••••, ,
8
d
18835 BEACH Bl VO
HUNTINGTON BEACH
842· 7781 -540·0442
& brakes. till wheel, air -auto. air. PS, PB. lo m1.
rnnd . vm) I roof & low ·73 Cooner Pickup. mags, S?.650. P P. Dys 831·3253.
nuleage. C585LWAI. EZ steel belts, FM Radio, eves836·1121 ~ ~lereo, new llres. xlnt. MGB-GT '73 AM /F~ 73 DELUX E us. g ••••••••••••••••••••••• bon, sacnf1ce. 6 cyl, HD IMPORT CARS PP. 5511989 an SP~1 stereo cassette. Air. xlnt cond .. Jo mi., new Mic h terms·O.A.C. custom interior, trick P-onti--.------9-9-
6
-5 1956 T·Btrd. P s P R. clutch & transnuss1on. A "''LL MODELS -cond. must sell 548·4750 radials $3400. 6-16·7521
:iuto. both lO!>l> llet·ond classic, first of its kind.1 __ "'--------'67 Datsun 1600 roadster. n......i 9746 afl6PM __ _
NOW $3995 pa.mt, air, shocks. Shows ac
MAIERS loving care. CaU 646·5850 ••••••• •• ••• • • •• • •••• • •
"WSO 675-02~ ~7-l182 11ood cond 11700 Or oHer. -,..... WE &!045'80 Exl 308 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '7S VW Bug. Fuel lnJ, new
AUTO CENTER after&. Sac. '68 Fi r e b.i rd. ------·----t Reduced. PS/PB, air. Gd '68 ISO Rnolto
I 1loor &'<Ian. Yellow ,\II
'66 1 ~Ton Step-Van. w 1'73
eng. Xlnl cond. Many
xtras 645 3269 lh1• rx tra s S c•r
::u112001s '73 DATSUN $6689
MOTORCARS
D'ELEGANCE
1i:.!6W.17thSA547 9257
Ask for Ron
Pkup. $'ZIOO. 546-5520
For parts, 64 GMC. long
lx'<I. ~lep s1d<', call Leo
675·8576 or Jack 549·2100
1 66-176 Buqs
25 to choos• from
GOOD SflECfl()N OF All /1 vw.
SMALL CARS.LOW PRICES
We're ,.,..1.c to VW1
Ml we'll ,.,. other !Mlktl for lf'tt.
'7 I Toyota C.tlca .............. ,1111
• l'Ot•d •AdiO n..., O.f\I ,,,IK'l9 off"I 1h1P9 1rt1 •
'75 MG MldcJff ................ $3481
., '0• '·"""°'"" Jfloi"O , 111~ 1a • oup Stlti • 1010
'72 MGI •••••••••••••••.•••••• $2418
'71 Toyota Mk II 5. W-. ........ SIHI A\j00 lrW lotlflfV••--f11tio l~lfCX'tl
'74 CIMv. VMG GT ............ $UH
• od ,_,_......,r.11,,,..,.1•1~11
'71 MG Mlclmt •••••••••••••••• SI 711 -..... ..;.,;;w-;.~:.11110fc1
"1 I T oyde CoNle ............ S 1211 ·-·-'---...... __ ,,~ .
'72 Dtrtmt P'ldltiili .............. $1611 4...-__ _..,.......,. , .. ,M
'H Towot. 2 or. c__. ........ S 1211 • _.,-.•,.__,~ .......... l•OQOJSI
?2 TtMhi C_.... •••••••••••.•• S t7•1
AlllO. 1;.i,/.~ 111~
\
MEED --------'730pel Rallye2dr,4spd. ltres. $!400
'75280Z.air,stcelradials. ai r . Pvt ply. $1800. Ca11496·0460
1125 BakerSl .. C.M · '68 Country Sdn Slat.ion cond. Try $800. 640-6759
540-9 I 09 Wgn. Ong owner. Xlnt ---------
CLEAN t11pe derk. xlnt cond. 557-8862. cond. S875. 493-7030 1968 Pontiac Gr'.Jnd Prix. '63 Chevy Nova. wagon. ---------1 new steel bell tires. $700. USED CARS 559-3121 ----Pantera Volvo 9772 Guod trans. car. New '68 Cortina, 2 dr. good 6'4·2778
NOW
CALL PAPPY
9747 ••••••••••••••••••••••• brakes.!>48-4116.$290. t ran s p, good ml ,1----------1971 120!) Rhll enR. Xlnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1961 VOLVO S550/Best ofr. 546·0577 Convertible '64 Catalina.
S40-5630
eond SIOOO. 547-11448, aft 5 '74 L. Mint. While, rarely 4 DOOR SEDAN 1970 CHEVY bfr lOAM Runs good. Make it a
543-3292 dnven. $16.000. MAUIU COUPE classic. S350. PhS48·5354
IOllXSOX & SOX '72 240Z. auto. air, FM.
magi;, new shol'k-., brks,
tires. paint. 59,000 ms,
$3995 53G 72.'i6
551·4038 This Is a superb classic' ·59 Ford 352 + C4 trans, --,--------
(PLG278). Automatic, radio, pwr. running gd, nds work. '67 LE MANS 1 ownr. 2 dr
• LINCOLN· MERCURY Porsche 9750 OMLY $1495 steering & brakes. 642·2721 nfter5PM. hdtop. V-top. Auto, P IS.
••••••••••••••••••••••• h eater & air cond. ---------1 xlnt.cond.644·1490 2626HARBOR ILVO.
COSTA MESA
WE PAY
TOP DOLLAR
FORMIFTY
IMPORTS
MARQUIS MOTORS zAso-l Marguerite Pkwy.
Rat 9725 .•...•.•......•...•.•..
'72·914·1.7, Oranite &
black. AM/FM radio,
xlnt cond, 673-6230
'15 124 S PYtJER. Xlnl '76 Porsche 914 2 o Xlnt
cond. 5 s pd , AM ·FM cond . ver y low ma .
cass • xlr11s Bst ofr. many extras. 552 7422
548 7150 E"es
;51, 12.1 S PYDER 5 spd, ·59 Porsche. 1600 Super
AM FM, xlnt. cond. Best Like new lhruout. S3450
CXfer $48·7129 41M·2130 -------MISSION VIEJO
831-2880 495·1210 12 Fiat 1.28 Sedan, xlnl '77 924. A 1C. s tereo.
cond., lo mi. SI 175 or best silver. Xlnl cond. Besl of·
ofrer Dys, SS7-4323, eves, fer 551-0451
Autos, Imported 673-0626 --------
••••••••••••• •••• •• •••• --'73 914 2.0 AM /FM cass, AHa RorMo 9705 '73 850 Sp yd er convl . new cu.st. pol. Console,
••••••••••••••••••••••• 19.500 m1 Mae whls, lug· 4JOOO m.i. $5100. 494-8139
•75 Alfa Romeo AIJella ga.ge rack, 8·lrk stereo.
GT. Lo rm, alr. AM/FM Mtnl cond. S21SO. P IP. '69 911, 37,000 mi, rebll
radio. 9900 ml. 833·9400 Only owner. 673·4285 eng, S spd. stereo. mags, immac, $5850. 675-2286
'74\.\ Spyder. blue. 1tereo. '69 S~yder Convertible. Rolls Roye• 9756
mags, 5 spd, 13 M, mint. must S<'ll, rcbll eng, new •••••••••••••••••••••••
ss100 951.0212 bru. roll ha~. $1500 or #1 DEALER IN U.S.A. --·--bsl orr. Vickie, 892-1176 Audi 9707 hm, or wkdoy morn'g, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 675-7140
'70. RARE Super 90. Gd. 1974 l3'1 Sports Convert, 2
mileage, must sell. $996. tops, AM !FM stereo.
Anytlmc752·1660 20,600 ml. Xlnl cond.
74 A\ldl LSIOO .. 4 dr, 4 spd. $38SS. 752·5752 or 673-4666
loaded Lo mi. greal llnl Fiat 850 Racct'. Good
cood SJ,395/off. PP. Ask Cond $1150 752 5752 or (or Mr. Powers. dys. mo46SG •
833 2450, e\•S. 551·5538
-NoMlo 9727
'71 Audi IOOLS. blk, e11lo ••••••••••••••••••••••• trans. ~king $1800 P /P ,
5'16-2008
SADDLED ACK
BMW
• ~ 4 •
ROY CARVER
ROllS·ROYCE
IS40J1mbol'H
,..W1M1rt llH<ll
l~---'--
ClOSED SUNDAn
PARK LANb
Motor Car Co.
Rolls Ro)'c. & Bentley sales as:trvice.
•'83CLOUD111
Convt'rsion. Gd cond.
111,500 ('733NOX>
755 ''A"W.17tb St, CM
('714) 631 ·0$4$
COMCAMMOH'S
HOlsaESS
STAii.iS
Brokerw of tine conlem·
~OLL.S ROVCt BEN'J'Lt:Y
automol>ll••s.
mi E Co.st Hwy
(7J 4 ) 6"f5.0'J30 ---
)
1
MARQUIS VOLVO tlS8BMF>. 74 Ford Mavl'rick Grab
MISSION VIEJO ONLYSll95 ber,38,000ma,auto,good '69 Gran~ Prix. P /B.
831-2810 495-1210 NAIERS s hape. S2S95. 961HY723 PS1PW, air, motor xlnl.
--.:....-------1 body needs work, Xlnl ORANGE COUNTY AUTO CENTER '71 LTD Station Wgn, PS, tram; t'ar. S.'>00. 645·0302 1425 Baker St .. C.M PB. AC, roof rack, ne w VOLVO 540-9109 trans, good c on d '73 Cran Prix only 30.500
EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO ----$1500 Bestofr.968·7146 m1 . ~Int. Mo n -Fri
LargeslVolvo Dealer 1974CHEVY 644 1203 5 43 1936
to Orange County' IMPALA SEDAN Ford '71 LTD. 2 dr, atr, Eves/wlcnd.s
BUY or LEASE Sletto, full power. S97S. ----------DIRECT Aulomatic , radio. (714)552-~ '73 F IREBIRD. Xlnl
heater. air cond • pwr c:ond. Gttat c:a.r .1 owner. ~'H~I' .[~-,~~~.·~ ~~n~g 1~~ra~TI~~~~~ ·~~':r~~wre Wgn. $1.495. C&ll 494-0W T T (343SPH >. Wholesale • Call 548--5449 Thwtdtritlrd 9'70
bluebook is $232S ; our ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2025 S. Manchester pncelsalso Lincoln 9945 1976 T·Bird. Loaded. Anaheim 750-2011 OMLY $2325 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 17,000ml. sr.ooo.
MAR"'UIS VOLVO '71 Continental. IQ ml, xlnt sse-3131 '62 P1800A Volvo . ,.. cond, 'financtni avall.1----------
Restored to perfection. MISSION VIEJO O.A.C. 531-4470 '66 VW CAMPER
will lake trade or • 831-2880 495-1210 MaYtrick 9947 Sl.500. Good Engin.~191
1225. 2 dr, 4 spd, air, '70 MONTE CARLO ••••••••••••••••••••••• clean. $1500_. P_h_497_·28_91_ A·l oond. A/C, stereo. ·73 MAVERICK, 4 dr. V990 9974
bckl scats. P IS. P /8 , nu Sedan, auto lrans, lo ml .. ••••••••• •••• •••••••••• '75 Volvo 164E. Lo ml. fut
ly equipped. JiO()O. Call
644·5478 Cd M.
'12 Volvo 142E, Sedan. 4
s pd, AM /FM, n e w
brks 1tire!!, $3100/0fr.
PP.496-7M3an4PM
Aaltos,Us.ct •••••••••••••••••••••••
GtMral 9901 •••••••••••••••••••••••
IRJCICUH
tm SV1. whJte w /saddle
tires. etc. Orig ownr . new tires. Gd. cond . VEGA 7'
S1650tbstofr. 556·7073 Sl.950. 646·9076 aH HA.TCHllACK GT
'67 Corvalr Monza 110. 3:30Pi\1 .DEMO. 5 speed trans .•
64.000 m i. •1 owner. Mffcury 9950 a Ir co n d .. el c .
644·0496 or 640.0020 ••••••••••••••••••••••• C650$13S32>. Wae $1195 . 72~.~aruc, «'Ur, ·72 MONTEGO 4 <Ir. a ll OML Y $3391
AIC. P iS. p •o pwr. 1 ownr. S13'TS f10WA.RDC'-vrot.t
545-1498 evl.'ll wknds 493-9781 _ Dove & Quall sta.
C NEWPORT BEACH '72 Mert. Col. Park. Al • tl).OSSS Cull Power, ~ttreo. xlnt, _________ _
GT
Hatchback-4 1peed, air
cond. Is radio. A real au
-.
f'XAMP\ l
1977
IOHHEVILLE BROUGHAM
COUPE
2037K7Pl67903
• Stfdt• Price •••••••••••••••••• $8426.IO
lob l.oftc.lpn's Demo Sale Price •••• $6695.00
DISCOUNT •••••••••••••• $1731.80
rxAMPL[
1977
SUN BIRD
2M27C72312401
•sttcker Priu .................. $5911.71
lob Longpn's Demo Sale Price •••• $5025.00
DISCOUNT •••••••••••••••• $893.78
EXAMPLE
1977 .
VENTURA
2Y27L7L108758
•sffcker Price .•........•.••...• $6052.40
Bob Longpre's Demo Sole Price •••. $5195.00
DISCOUNT •.•••••.•.•••••• $857.40
$2395 19730l.DSMOBILf
CUTUSS
VA ltJI') ft.>n~ t_.rfOfy lit
r l"lf'H'I '• ~ "'"" ""w"'' steefl"O· l ftLt•IOPt~CG
$2995 1974 BUICX
REGAL v.e 1uto tt.i"' 11ctotv ,.,
Cond1t1Gntl"'IQ ~ •r~-A~
r.odoO, l_, 100 1970t<KG).
1977
DE
eDEMONSTRATORS
eCOMPANY CARS
eEXECUTIYE CARS
OYER
30
TO CHOOSE
FROM
'Sticker Ol'ice is manufacturers suggested retail orice plus
dffaler Installed accessories. 11 any
EXAMPLE:
Wednesday. July 13 1977
1977
FIREllRD
2S87C7N136565
•Sffcilr Mee •••••••••••••••••• $6316.75
lob L•gp;t's Detn0 Sale Price •••• $5695.00
DISCOUNT ; ••••••••••••••• $621.75·
EXAMPLE·
1977
GRAND PRIX
2JS7R7P294624
•sttcker Priu .................. $7733.IS
lob Longpn's Demo Sale Price •••• $6495.00
DISCOUNT •••••••••••••• $1238.85
1977
CATALINA COUPE
2L37K7P168.C64
• Stfdw Price .................. $72".95
lob Longpre'• Demo Sale Price •••• $5895.00
DISCOUNT .............. $1394.95
1972 BUICX 1975 Ol.DSMOBILE $3195 CUTUSSCOUP'f RECTUCOUP'f V·8 .iuto tt•n1 lectorv atr
Ct>nd1f10"'lf'O ~ ~·ttef'I~ OOWM'
'Nll'U:SOW\ C)Oli¥l)t" aieata. A~ reoto.. U nday 1()(>.1920f\.Vl
V·I . '"'0-''1n1 • fac101y 1fr cond1t1oruno oo._...., ••~•''"'O· l1nd1u too. cru••• controt. 113H14~
$3195 1975 PONTIAC
CATAUHA '°Ult DOOll
Y·8 eu10. lr1n1 .. lec1orv el•
CC"dlll0"•"9 DO"" ttetf\n9. A ... , •IKI•<>. Leno..1100 171'l VIII s1995 1973 OtDSMOBILE
IOYAU
Y·•· IUIO, lrl,.,I .. flCIOfV ert
COl'dillolllnQ. -......... -wrndowl. -ia,.0111 101>. AM·P.,. --'""""').
DAIL V PILOT D 9
WE'RE LOADED W /
177 CORDOBAS •..
'74 SAAB
4 cyl. engine. automatic transmission.
radio. heater & oower brakes. (473KLY).
52495
'75 CHEVY MONTE CARLO
VS. automatic. radio. heater. pawer
steering. power brakes. w/s/W tires.
AM/FM radio, Vinyl top & air cond.
·(262MIG).
52995
161 OLDSMOllU v..e. automatic. air conditioning, pcwer steering, power brakes. radio, heater.
whitewall tires. (852ELU)
'7 2 PLYMOUTH IARRACUDA '76 MERCURY COMET
6 cyl. engine. automatic trans .. radio. 6 cyl. engine. automatic. radio. heater.
heater. w/s/w tires & air conditioning. POwer steering. POwer brakes. w/s/w (261 FUP). tires. custom interior ~ exterior & air
'74 AMC AMIASSADOlt
V-8. automatic, eJr conditioning. power
steering. oower brakes. power windows. AM radio with tape. heater, whitewall
tires. vlnyl roof. tilt wheel, cruise
51695
'71 DODGE POI.ARA
V-8. automatic. air condl\ioning. pcwer
steering. pawer brakes. radio. heater.
whitewall tires. (017DUO)
s995
'76 CHIYSLEI CORDOVA
V-8. automatic. ·air conditioning, power
steering. power brakes. power windows.
rad lo. heater. leather. vinyl roof.
(672PNV)
cond. (958N0Kl.
52895 con•·s2395
'69 MERCURY MARQUIS '71 CHRYSLER NEWPORT
V-8. automatic. air conditioning. pawer VB. automatic. radio. heater, t>ower
steering, power brakes. power windows. steering. pawer brakes. w/s/wffres & air power seats. radio. heater, vinyt roof. tilt conditioning. (138DLF).
wheel. (YPZ906J
5895
'75 PLYMOUTH YAU.AMT '76 PLYMOUTH FURY
6 cylinder. automatic. air conditioning. V-8. automatic. air conditioning.
power steering. radio. hearer. whitewall steering, PQWer brakes. radio. heater.
tfes. (031NOO) vtnyl roof. (347PWM)
CLOSEOUT
·sALE NOW!
225 CID 6 cylinder engine, manual
transmission, bench seat, bumper
'73 IUICK CENIVRY
V-8. autorratic. air bondltloning, oower
steering. pawer brakes. radio. heater.
whitewall tires. vtnyl roof, tilt wtieet.
(269HOO)
s1995 ··
'77 PLYMOUTH FURY vs. automatic. AM/FM radio. heater. · pwr. steering. pwr. brakes. pwr. seats.
pwr. windows. pwr. door locks. cruise
control. vinyl top. w/s/w tires & air cond. •RHl4895 ·
'69 PLYMOUTH ROADRUHNB
V-8. autorMtlc. air conditioning. power
steering. power brakes. radio. heater,
vinyl roof. bucket seats. console.
(XYC748)
5995
Huntington Beach
Fountain Valley
EDITION
Afternoon
N.Y.Stoeks
I
VOL 70, NO. 194, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JULY 13, 1977 TEN CEN~~
Jury
81 GAaY GaANVILLE
Ol Illa 0;111r l'llM SIMI
Secret srand JUry transcripts show that the testimony or a
woman scorned was vital to the
inveslication leading to the re-
cent indictment or Orange Coun·
ty Supervisors RaJpb Diedrich
and Plulip Anthony.
The woman whose testimony
wrapped a band of c1rcumst.an· t1al evidence around Diedrich,
Anthony and their four alleged
co-conspirators in a purported
plot lo undermine slate cam-
paign regulations is Donna Doughty.
Mrs. Doughty was indicted
Fullerton attorney Michael Rem·
Hears 'Wolllan Scorned'·i
Witness Links Checks in County Probe loans from themselves.
And neitJier Remington nor
Diedrich filed major campaign
donor statements showing. their
alle1ed fillancial role in the cam-
pai1n.
ington's chief secretary and or-
C1ce manager for 11 years.
In testimony before the grand
jury, emington admitted hav-
ing a "close reJationsh1p" Wlth
Mrs. Doughty that underwent a
dramatic change when he mar-
ried another woman last Oct. 1. Thus, Remington said, "a few
months ago" things became un·
comfortable around the office
and, by mutuaJ agreement, Mrs.
Doughty left his employ .
On June 20, Mrs. Doughty was
before the grand jury as a wit·
ness into an eight-month probe
into county political practices
that would end in 11 days with the
indictment of Diedrich, Anthony, Remington and three others.
The 42-year-old woman had
been before the jury two weeks
earlier. In that appearance she
responded to questions asked her
about bookkeeping operations in
Remington's office with a slan·
dard "Privileged."
By privileged, Mrs. Doughty
meant that, as an employe or
lawyer Remington's she was
bound to keep ber boss' deadling.s
with b1s cJlents, including
Diedrich, confidential.
But in her appearance before
the jury June 20, Mrs. Doughty
bad been relieved or compulsion
to remain silent by ~ Superior
Court judge.
Then, for more than three
hours she answered Assistant
District Attorney Michael
Capi:tzi's questions.
Mrs. Doughty's replies lo
Capizzi's questions clearly linked
Diedrich checks to Remington
wltb Remington checks to
various polWcal candidates, in-
cluding Anthony and indicted
Anaheim City Councilman
William Kott.
With former police informer
Gene Conrad thrown into the
middle or some transactions, the
basis for the felony conspiracy
indictments was formed.
That's because Anthony, !Cott
and other candidates showed the
Remington money coming into
their campaigns as personal
But Mrs. Doughty's testlmoQy
tended to indicate the Ult was
barely dry on Diedrich cheeks to
her former boss before the
Fullerton attorney passed
similar amounts on to the can-
didates.
Her words also coincided with
bank records either seized by dis·
trict attorney investigators
armed with search warrants or
surrendered voluntarily.
., (See WITNESS. Page AZ)
Jobless Toll Dips
Lowest June on Record for Couniy
Orange County's unemploy.
ment rate dipped to its lowest
point since 1972 last month when
it reached 4.4 percent, according
to figures released today by the
State Employment Development
Department (EDD).
An EDD spokesman uid
June's unemployment rate was
"the lowest on record since the
department began its labor study
series in 1972."
The -t.4 percent unemployment
rate iB down from 4.6 percent in
May and from S.8 percent in
June,1976.
•·unemployment always rises
in June because of graduating
high school and college seniors,"
said EDD labor analyst Alta Yet-
ter.
"However," Mrs. Yetter said,
reached 87s,ooo persons in June, Mrs. Yetter said some firms
a record high. have reported small cutbacks in
She also noted that private
firms within the county
employed 658,800 workers in
June.
Government employment dur-
ing the month was buoyed by 600
jobs, including lifeguards hired
to safeguard bathers at county
beaches.
* * *
employment slnce the repo~
day in mid June.
However, she added, other
firms have reported "strong,
steady expansion.••
The EDD labor analyst said
the recent cancellation or the Bl
bomber plans will have little ef·
feet on employment in Orange County.
* * *
California's Jobless
Lowest in 3 Years
"the increase this year was far SACRAMENTO (AP) -The oatlonal unemployment
less than anticipated and that is Calilomia's unemploylllent rate rate, wbieb has been running as
why the seqooallJ acl.iusted &mo fell to s..t percent in lune, the much as two percentage points
employmentratelssolow." loweatinthreeyearsandthefirst below Calitomia's, wu 7.1 per-
She noted tnat county amuse-time m te\'eD years Uiat the state· cent in Jdne, up from 6.9 percent • ment parks and restauranta has been1M!low the national rate, in Kay.
added 4,500 workers tq their ofJletalualdtoday. · •Reel' Aussie Rescue
payrolls last month. State Employment Develop-Fi ve Australian lifeguards demons trate while three guards feed a line to him. And, Mrs. YeU« laid, Orange • meat Director Mart.in Glick said
their technique of rescuing a stricken When the rescuer grabs the victim, the County's construction boom COO· The jobless rate had been 7.8 employment records were set in
s wimmer for a group of Huntington City pair are reeled in by a fifth lifeguard on tinued when 1.300 workers were percent in May. For the tbird numerous industries, including
Beach junio r lifeguards. The r escuer shore. addedtoconstructioopayroll.s. straight month, total employ-construction, which bas gained
wears a harness and swims to the victim • Mrs. Yetter pointed out that ment set a recor~. nearly 9.3 16 percent in jobs over a year
I the county's civilian work force million. up 136,000 smce May. ago. I . OC Workers' Pay Hike 5.85 Per~ent
By KATHY CLANCY
OI IN Dilly Piiot St•ll
Orange County supervisors
gave themselves and most of the
county's other 9,600 employes a
5.85 percent pay raise Tuesday.
They also set a $52,000-a-year
ceiling on the salaries o( the silt
highest-paid county workers,
: who would have gone higher than
l the SS2,000 mark with the pay
raise. ·
Included in the salary resolu·
tion was a two-year contract with
county general and supervisory
personnel. The proposal, already
approved by the employes ,
grants them a 5.85 percent pay
hike retroactive to July l and a
5.S percent increase for next
year .
Supervisors also rejected, a re·
quest from Russell Bostrum or
the Orange County Association oC
Deputy Sheriffs that the associa-
tion be immediately allowed to
represent deputies.
Instead, they told Boslrum the
group should petition through
routine county channels for a
separate bargaining unit.
The supervisors' own 5.85 per-
cent pay raise, from J28,246 to
$29,898, prompted Supervisor
Laurence Schmit. to suggest that
next year the pay issue be placed
on the ballot.
He voted In favor of the pay
raise for this year. His motion to
place next year's raise on the
ballot died for lack of a second,
but Schmit said be would bring it
up again.
Affected by the $52,000.a-year
pay ceiling were Adrian Kuyper,
county counsel; Robert Thomas,
administrative officer; George
Osborne. director of the Environ-
mental ·1i1anagement Agency;
David Odell, director of the
Human Services Agency; Dr.
Ernest Klatte, director of the
Mental Health Department and
County Health Orficer J. R.
Elpers. All other high-level county of.
ficials except for Probation Of.
fie er Margaret Grier, received at
least the S.85 percent raise.
Miss Grier, whose raise is still
ieaker·: Neutron. Bomb 'Yes' Due . . .. . .
WASIDNGTON (AP>-Senate
Mlbo.rUy Leader Howard Baker
predicted today the Senate will
approve funds for controversial
neutron weapons which President
Carter says are needed for the de·
femeofWesternEurope.
l'ieQtroo warheads are de·
si1n'4 to kill enemy soldiers with
radlatlon whlle lnfltctlng
minlmal uplOlive destruction in
the blast area.
Opponents ot the weapons Jed
by Sen. Mart o. Uatfteld Ul·
Senate Unit
Approves Bl
·Fon~Cut
Ofe.), planned to carry their
fight to the floor of the Senate,
where a vote was scheduled late
today on deleting funds for pro-
duction ol the weapons from a
public works approprialion_!>ill·
Baker said he had not tuen a
formal head count of how the
Senate will vote, but added, "It is
my guess Ulat Hatfield probably would lose.~• .
Before the vote, Senate leaders
met to declde how to limit debate
on the weapons, which critics say
woul4 mu\ a dangerous leap in
theannarace.
Hatfield hu said .the funds
should not be approved, .at least
until Carter has provided a legaJ.
ly required assessment of .the·
neutron weapons' impact on arms proliferation.
One Senate source said today
Sen. Rubert H. Humphrey CD-
Minn.), aUemp\edtowortout an
agreement wltb Cartel!" under
which a Senate dHislon on the
neutron weapons would be put off
pending the arms control study.
At a news conference Tuesday,
Carter urged the Senate to ap-
prove funding for further de-
velopment of the weapons.
Neutron weapons, implanted In
artillery shells and Lance mls-
alles, are designed to kill with
concentrated radiation rather
than explosives or heat used in
mote conventional nuclear
armament
While Carter urged continued
development of the weapons, be
A Cottage for Sale
Famed Hammsnlnith Farm P.ui on A.uetian
NEWPORT, R.1. (AP> -Jacquelllle Ken·
nedy Onusts' childhood home where her
romance with John r. Kennedy btoomtd, bu
been put OQ the auction block because the
'lormer F\rstLady'a mother !Meda tM moneJ.
"I doa't want you to aell St," Janet
Aucbincloa quot.cl her lamous dauchter as
HYlDt when abe broke tho news that the a.
acre Hamaaeiamlt.b Farm WIS for NI• tor '889.000 •
.. All my children hate lt, Pd I hat. tt, but tt ls ablolutely necetall')'," llri. ~lleb.IACJOla
1ald Tuelda,y.
lert open the question of actually
deploying them.
.,I have not yet decided
whether to approve a neutron
bomb, but I think it should be one
of our options,.. the President
said.
In a letter to neutron supporter
Sen. John Stennis (D·Mlss.),
Carter said the weapons ••are in
this nation's security Interest."
Carter told Stennis, .. We are
not talking about tome new ldbd
ol weapoo. but ot moderniutiOll
of nuclear weaDODS.
under review, was taken a step
up the salary ladder but her pay
for the present will stay at$37,1SO
annually.
Seven county officials received
the S.85 percent hike plus
monthlyraises ranging from $100 to$400.
County Assessor Bradley
Jacobs received the largest boos~ the 5.85 percent raise plus
$400 more monthly, pUUlng his
yearly pay at $40,272.
Following are the old and new
aal aries ot other top officials:
District Attorney Cecil Hieb.
$48,022 to $50,831; Frank
Williams. public defendel',
$46,342 to $49,053; Sheriff.
Coroner lh'ad Gates, $40,878 to
$44,357; Tom Egan, director or
tbe General Services Agency.
$39,000 to $ll.281;
AJso, Auditor-Controller Vic
Heim, $38, 783 to $t3,001; Tax
Collector·Treaaurer Robert ,
Citron. $37,460 to $42,901 and
County aerk Wllllam St lobn, $34.102 to $31,3116.
Coast
Weather
Low cloud• tonlfbt thr~q b mld·morn1na Tb • SoAny Tbura•
daf af trnoon. Lows
tonl•tat a to aa. Wahs
Tbur•d•7 '10 to 1• at
beac.bM to Tl to M lrdand.
IN818BTeDAY
U DAii Y PILOT H/F
Mistrial
Ruled for
BB Man
Ora.nae County SuJ>('rlor Cour-t
Judie ~\ltirt-tl W. lllck4ty was
forced t.• dt"c-l•rc a m11>lrlltl 1'ut>11
day rn lht• lhrl'1.• wi•ck o ld
murder tr1ul uf nun1\'I Ruy
Ouyhcrof Huntin1tou lieach.
The motion by Deputy Public
Defender Jam~ 8ru1tman wll:s
granted when 1t was learned thul
clerk Manon Hurgmun had in-
cluded with lhe evidence banded
to the d~hberating Jury reoords
~ated to Buyher's prior felony
con\liclJons
Jud&e Du~key had ruled during
the trlaJ and in the absence of the
Jury that Buyht!r's !Jnor cnrninal
record bad no bearing an the cur
rent case and could not be re-
\lealed to the Jury.
Judge Dickey discharged the
Jury alter learning of his clerk's
error and sel Sept. 6 as the new
trial date. Buyher wall be re-
turned to the same courtroom
Aug. 5 for pre-trial action.
The Jury had b<'en asked to rind
Buyher, 23, of 5441 Hendricksen
Drive, guilty of ftrst degree
murder for the alleged killing of
has mother in law, Mrs. Muriel
Ethel Norton
It is alleged thal tre shot and
killed Mrs. Norton, 50, In her
home at 15161 Davia Lane, Jlunt-
1ngton Beach, last Dec. 6 because
s he r efused to reveal the
whe reabouts of her daughter,
Buyher's c!itrangect w1ft', Linda.
Cycle Crash
Victim Still
In Hospital
A 25-year-old Huntington
Beach man, seriously injured
Monday evening when he ap-
parently lost control of the
motorcycle he was riding, re-
mained tn "guarded condition"
today at Huntington lntercom-
munity Hospital.
Police said Steven Randall
Richey of 17172 Bolsa Chica St.
might have escaped serious
head injuries had he been wear·
1ng a crash helmet when he reu to
the pavement on Warner A venue
near Westminster Mall.
The victim also suffered chest
and leg injuries in the early eve·
ning accident. No other vehicles
were involved and witnesses told
police that the motorcyclist lost
control wh1le attempting to pass a
car.
No Pot Rap
For Principal
SACRAMENTO <AP) -No
charges will be filed against the
principal of an intermedJate
school for having marijuana
plants growing an ht'r back yard.
Sacramento County Authorities
say.
District Attorney John Price
said Tuesday there wasn't
evidence that Dolores Ward, 46.
was aware of the small amount
of marijuana round in her home
or of the plants that were covered
by vines and other shrubs.
Miss Ward, principal of John
Barrett Intermediate School,
was one of 36 persons arrested in
a raid last week.
DISHWASHER
CLEA.NED OUT
•·cancel the ad, response was
so good we sold the dishwasher."
Brand new Gaffers and Sattler dJshwshr. Still In
carton SlSO. Phone xxx· xx xx
When people anywhere in
Orange County want to convert
appliances to cash, in a hurry,
they call 642·5678. The best place
to buy or sell ls In the Dally Pilot.
OAANOI COAST 1v,.
DAILY PILOT
0.lly l"tlot Stoff ""°'°
FRISBEE CHAMP CHRIS JOHNSON (LEFT) SHOWS COSTA MESA KIDS HOW IT'S DONE
Frank Werner, 11 (left), Tim Holley, 12, Pick Up Some Tips From the Master
Frisbee
Flinger
'Retires'
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of tt>e D••IY Pilot Sl•tt
What does an aging Frisbee
champion who came within a
nick of the wrist or becoming
world champion do after retire·
ment?
Chris Johnson, last year's first
runner·up in the world cham·
pionships held in Atlanta, Ga., is
coaching other Frisbee nickers
for Costa Mesa's recreation de-
partment.
The 16·year-old Corona del
Mar High School senior says he
can't compete in the Whammo
Company competition anymore
because he's too old.
"They don't want kids who
have placed before in their con·
tests, either," the saucer expert
shrugged.
So he applied for a job as assis-
tant recreation leader in Costa
Mesa last month.
·'I told them I thought I had
something to offer them," he
said. scratching the middle
finger of his right hand. That
finger has a callus near the top
joint which comes from constant
Frisbee tossing.
"I probably should have a
piece or tape on il," Johnson
said.
He's been coaching kids al a
dozen city parks for the past few
weeks in preparation for Costa
Mesa 's ninth annual Frisbee con-
test which was held today at
Te Winkle Park.
"It's just lakes a lot of practice
and confidence," Johnson tells
his students.
He lines participants up for
Frisbee relays, giving them lips
in the eight categories for com·
petition, including straight
throw, right and left curve, skip
night, distance, accuracy. and
catching the disk behind the back
and between the legs.
Johnson picked up his ex-
perience over six summers at the
beach.
He said that when the city
championships are over he'll still
be working for the city's recrea-
tion department. "I'll mosUy be hauling around
equipment to the parks and doing
maintenance things after tbe
contest,'' he said.
Now lbat he's all washed up as
tar as Wbammo competition
goes, will be still tosa a Frisbee.
"Oh, sure. I entered a pro-
fessional tournament last April
at UC Irvine, but I didn't do too
hot," Johnson laughed.
He said he almost broke a
junior record for distance, "but
professional Frisbee is so far up
there.''
All this modesty from a kld
who was 1B76 Newport Beach ctly
champion, Southern California
state champion. Western
Regional Open champion and
runner-up In the world event.
vou·d think he just picked up
his firet Frisbee, the way be
talks.
Newland Site
Shrine Okayed
From Page AJ
WITNESS ANSWERS. • •
Significantly, Remington's
former office manager said she
had no knowledge of a so-called
Diedrich bank trust held by Rem-
ington except what she had read
an the newspapers_
In the end, the grand jury
thought enough of the bank
evidence and linking testimony to
band down its relony conspiracy
indictments.
In the closing stages of the in·
vestigation. the Grand Jury
heard from som e of Orange
County's most controversial
political figures, including
former county Democratic Party
chairman Richard O'Neill,
political consultant Arnold Forde
and lobbyist Frank Michelena.
O'Neill figured into the probe
because of a $100,000 loan
guarantee he and Dr. Louis Cella
posted In 1974 at a Santa Ana
bank for Diedrich.
When Capizzi on June 28 asked
O'Neill about the background of
the guarantee, the self-described
· 'f\nan cier·ranch·
restaurateur" testified:
"Well, Mr. Diedrich requested
a loan. At that particular time he
told me he had high interest rates
-having a little trouble re·
financing some property and re·
quested a loan to hold him over
80, 120 days at the most.''
"With whom did you discuss
the continuing guarantee?"
Capizzi asked.
"Dr. Cella asked me to support
-to go along with this loan."
"And it is with Dr. Cella that
you discussed the l,oan?"
Capizzi asked O'Neill. ·
''Yes," the financier-rancher·
restauranteur answered.
As things turned out on the
$100,000 Cella-O'Neill Joan
guarantee:
-The bank made demand for
payment from O'Neill when
Diedrich initially failed to repay
the loan on lime and to respond to
dunning phone calls and letters.
-The fK>, 120 days turned out to
be 16 months before Diedrich
made payment in two install·
ments.
-Diedrich was indicted on per·
JUry charges for failing to show
the loan on economic disclosure
statements filed in 1976 and 1977,
though it did show on two earlier
statements.
Political consultant Arnold
Forde testified June 28, the same
day O'Neill appeared before the
Grand Jury.
Yes. Forde said, be and
partner William Butcher had
managed Anthony's primary
campalen ln June, ms.
"In Ute general election, An·
thony was more interested In run-
ning the campaign himself,"
Forde said.
"So what we a1reed to do in the
Anthony campaign Is that be
(Anthony) would be in charge of it. ..
"He would be In charge of it
and we would be in charge ol de·
veloplng a direct mail package."
Forde testified.
The poliUcal consultant put
more distAnce between his firm
and the general election cam-
paicn fundra1aio1 for Ant.bony
whenbeu.ld:
''That wasn't our resp0mibili·
ty any more. We almoet came to
a total pa.rttn1 ol tbe ways ht the eampafgn becau.ae, ln one aeose,
AnlhOQY wanted to do that . . . he
w11 golna to be totally In charge
of the campalp." .
Had' Forde told Ar>t.hony that ll
waa okay to accept campaign
loans u penonal loans and thtn
to abow tbl mOMy com1ftl' lnlo
the campal&n u loan1 from the
~andldate?
•1The:re w.-certainly no talk
about a tblid putJ alvlAI mooey 1urrepqUouel.)' or 1D1ttiln1 like
diat, •• ~· tAiltlfttid. Mlc'hei.. •PtDt mott ct hla
tlm• bilore U.. OrUd !!~ ta• tlalnl~ wb1 be bid provkled •
*1•mf*' OI ~ count1 A.Sae...
didate with $3.~.
Michelena said lhe auto and
gasoline credit card provided to
Newport Beach attorney Frank
Waters was, in effect, a retainer
for Waters' services.
And be denied that he or any of
his clients had business before
lhe board.
As for the money paid then
candidate Norton, Michelena
said it was for investigative
services.
The checks were made payable
to Norton's former crony Gary
Newmyer because Michelena
believed the two were collaborat-
ing in their investigative adven·
tu res.
Those adventures ended in
April with Norton being indicted
on perjury charges and
Newmyer acting as the recorder·
equipped turncoat that gathered
the evidence against Norton.
Drifting in and out of the secret
transcripts leading to the inruct-
ments is testimony centering
around the Las Vegas casino
trade.
Frank Watts. controller of the
Riviera Hotel. testified that hotel
records indicate Diedrich lost
$30.000 in 12 hours last Oct. 1 and
2 whHe testing bis skill at two
crap tables.
And, Watts added. as what the
casino calls "a good player,"
Diedrich was given comphmen·
tary roo m s. meals and
beverages during his Las Vegas
stays.
It is Diedrich's alleged failure
to list the value of the purported
Las Vegas gratuities on his
economic disclosure statements
that resulted in a second perjury
count included in the indict·
ments.
The transcripts' most colorful
reading comes from a written
record of a tape recorded con·
versation between Conrad and
Las Vegas showman Joe Agosta.
In conversation liberally
sprinkle<f with four-letter words,
Conrad bragged of the inroads he
had made into Orange County
political circles.
• 1
Busnaper
'Robbed'
Children
OAKLAND <AP> -Some of
the 26 Chowchilla school children
kidnaped nearly one year ago
los t glasses, sneakers and
trinkets to their abductors, it was
disclosed in a pretrial hearing.
Attorney Ted Merrill,
reoresentlng one of the three
young defendants in the case,
read a portion of the inventory in
court Tuesday.
The items were· found in a
black bag several miles from the
Portola Valley estate belonging
to the famil y of d erendant
Fredenck N. Woods, 25.
Merrill, attorney for Richard
Schoenfeld. 24. said the bag con·
tained items belonging to some or
the children and bus driver Ed
Ray.
Ray and the youngsters were
abducted at gunpoint July 15,
1976, and transported 100 miles
north to a rock quarry where
they were kept captive in a
buried van. They dug their way
to freedom 17 hours later.
Hal,t Urged
To Aliens
Medical Plan
At least two Orange County
supervisors are ready to caJJ a
hall to a new county policy ask-
ing indigent illegal aliens to sign
up for Medi-Cal benefits for their
care at UCI Medical Center.
·'We tried to beat the
system . . . and it backfired on
us." Supervisor Phil Anthony
complained.
While both Anthony and
Supervisor Laurence Schmit
were ready Tuesday to suspend
the policy, they agreed with
fellow board members to put off
their decision for a week.
Meanwhile. county health of-
ficials and members of a new ad-
visory panel on illegal aliens
were asked to submit reports
about the policy.
Both Anthony and Schmit said
they had heard reports the policy
was keeping ilJegal aliens from
seeking medical ~are they need
because they fear the Medi.Cal
application will lead to their de· '
portation.
County officials imposed the
new policy in mid-June in an ef·
fort to shift the estimated $4.4
mill ion yearly cost or medicaJ
care for indigent illegal aliens
from the county general fund to
Medi-Cal ..
County Health officer J .R.
Elpers said Tuesday he has not
yet been able to determine
whether the policy was reducing
county costs or keeping those in
need from seeking treatment.
"We are getting some reim·
bursement." Elpers said.
"Whether it is enough to justify
the problem is a very valid ques-
tion."
County officials earlier did not
believe illegal aliens were eligi-
ble for Medi-Cal benefits.
But under a new legal in·
terpretation. they believe aliens
are entitled to benefits while
federal officials check into their
backgrounds to team if they are
under an order of deportation ..
Price-fixing
St,eel Probed
WASHINGTON (AP) -
The Justice Department
has launched a Ci\lil in·
vestlgatlon to determine
whether the nation's m8jor
steel companies practiced
Improper price.fixing in
the sale of steel used for
household appliances and
some automotive parts.
"We are conducllne a
civil investigation into
possible price·fixing, and it
does include most of the
major steel companies."
sai d a department
spokesman.
The probe came to light
after Jones & Laughlin
Steel Co. and U.S. Steel
Corp. disclosed they re-
ceived a civil investigative
demand from the depart-
ment.
Dry Wall.
Strike
Official
Orange County dry wall con-
struction workers' wildcat
walkout became an officially
sanctioned strike Tuesday night
when management rejected
labor's final offer.
''To my knowledge, there was
only one vote in favor of the
union's proposed pay package,"
said John Mullin, Southern
California Dry Wall Contractors
Association president.
Mullin said management's
failure to ratify the proposal
means the strike becomes of-
ficial.
Involved in the dispute is a dis-
parity between commercial dry
wall jobs, which pay $11.86 per
hour, and home jobs, which pay
3.25 cents per square fool.
Commercial dry wall jobs
average $474.40 per week and the
increase home workers are seek·
ing would pay $315 for dry wall
work on an average house.
Workers said an average house
takes three days to complete.
The dispute involves dry wall
'tapers,' workers who do the
finishing work on plasterboard
wall panels used in home con-
struction. They are separate
from workers who actually bang
or nail the dry waU.
The wildcat walkout or tapers
occurred after a June 24 rejec-
tion or a proposed increase in •
wages to 3.38 cents per square
fool of dty wall work.
The strike was not sanctioned
until today, however, because
union bargaining agents ex-
tended the contract hoping to
negotiate a settlement.
That extension was terminated
after the management rejection
Tuesday.
Union sources said the rejected
proposal called for a wage In·
crease lo four cents per square
foot. .
George Hartman, District
Council 48 representative for the
tapers, said the proposal still
would have had to go before the
union membership. "Even if
management had accepted the
agreement, our membership
would still have to vote on the of·
fer," he explalned.
Several union members con-
tacted said they did not believe
the membership would agree to
the four cents per square foot
figure.
~-APPelll BOard .tdtb Uie QM ~aliuedC.UUMUdCllM-WM ~ ........... iliiiillilill .. ~lllil~iliiiilliilll .. iil~illjliiillllllliiiiiliiilll)liiilllliili .. lill .. i9' a.11114 ... ,. ............ ....,_.
•
•
Irvine
EDITION
I
Today' Closing]
N.Y. Stoeks
J VOL. 70, NO. 194, .. SECTIONS,~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JULY 13, 1977
~
TEN CENm<
J11ry Hears 'Wolllan Scorned' ..
I B)'GUYGRANVILLE ot•w-.,..-suH
Secr..t arand Jury transcripts
abow that the testimony ot a
woman ~ed wu vital to the
i.ovesf.i&atioo leadin1 to the re-cent indictment or Orange Coun-
ty Supervlson Ralph Died.rich
and Philip Ant.bony.
Witness Links Checks. in County Probe loans rrom themselves.
And neither Remington nor·
Diedrich filed major campaien
donor statements showing their
alleged financial role in the· cam·
paign.
The woman whose testimony
wrapped a band of circumstan-
tial evidence around Diedrich,
• Anthony and their four alle1ed
co-conspirators in a purported
plot to undermine state cam-
paign regulations is Donna
Doughty.
Mrs. Doughty was Indicted I Fullerton attorney Michael Rem-
1
lniton'a chief secretary and or.
flee manager for 11 years.
In tesllmony before the grand
jury, RerninetOI\ admitted bav· me a "close ret•Uonshlp" with
Mrs. Doughty \bat undenrenl a
dramatic change when he mar·
ried another woman Jut Oct. 1.
Thus, Remington said, "a f~
months ago" things became un·
comfortable around the office
and, by mutual.agreement, Mrs.
Doughty left his employ.
On June 20, Mrs. Doughty was
before the grand jury as a wit-
Atw mey Probe Ordered
neas tnto an eight-month probe
into county political practices
that would end in 11 days with the
indictment of Diedrich, Anthony.
Reminatoo and three others.
The 42-year-oJd woman bad
been before the jury two weeks
earlier.
In that appearance she
responded to questions asked her
about boot.keeping operations in
Remington's omce with a stan-
dard "Privileged."
By privileged, Mrs. Doughty
meant that. as an employe of
Public Vote Urged
i· On Water Directors
By mLARY KA YE legislation to change-the IRWD
°'.""0.11~ ~11°uui11 rules, liti1ation, and negotiations
The Irvme Caty Council de· with IRWD officials. He will re-
cided unanimously Tuesday lo oort back on Jul v 26.
have the city attorney in· IRWD Board President Lan-
vesligate ways or forcing the sing Eberling told the council he
Irvine Ranch Water District does not oppose a gradual shift
directors to be publicly elected. frotp landowner to public voting.
The council agreed with Coun· But he insisted the changeover
cilwoman Gabrielle Pryor's view should be pt\a.Sed, rather than oc-
1 that the IRWD board of directors cur suddenly, as demanded by
• should be elected by registered the council.
1 voters, not by large landowners. Council members told Eber·
City Attorney Jim Erickson ling they believe residents sbpuld
' will look into ways or forcing have control on the board since I publ!c election in. t~e I RWD, in· they pay the lar~eat portion oflhe i eluding the poss1b1lity or state monthlywaterb1lls.
i ,,,,...~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
I.
I Disney Sued
Parents: Wolf Mauled Girl
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Photographic slides
taken of a 4-year-old South Lake Tahoe girl after she
was mauled by a wolf have been shown to a
Sacramento Superior Court jury.
But the courtroom presentation was halted when
one juror began showing signs of nausea.
The girl is Shelli Crum. whose parents, Terry and.
Judy. brought suit against Walt Disney Productions,
Inc .• charging negligence in the supervision of
trained wolves being us ed in the filming of a wildlife
movie.
They contend that i" October 1974, two wolves
wandered free during a break in the filming, and one
attacked Shelli. who was in her own backyard
with two brothers and a friend.
The slides were shoWn by Dr. John Iliescu, a
plastic surgeon who has operated on tbe girl six
limes. He said she will need surgery for facial scars
every three to four years when an adult to tighten sag·
ging skin.
County'~ Workers
However, Eberling argued that
landowners account for about
lhree·quarters of the water dis·
trict's revenues, since they pay
for most of the capital improve-
m ents. They also use about three·quarters or the water, even
though it is less expensive, un·
treated water, Eberling said.
On Nov. 8, the current five-member board will be expanded
lo seven members, with the two
newest directors elected by voters, rather than landowners.
Eberling, an executive vice
president al the Irvine Company,
<See WATER, Page A2)
Skate Park
Denial
Brings Suit
Leisure Specialties, Inc .• has filed a S'l.25 million claim against
the City ol Irvine.
Leisure Specialties is the com-pany that wu to build a com-
mercial skateboard course in
Heritage Park. .
That project was halted last
month by the city council after
numerous protests by Irvine resi·
dents and a court injunction
brouaht by the residents.
Jay Henderson, president of
Leisure Specialties, said he filed •
the claim against the city last
Friday and that it will probably
lead to a lawsuit when it is denied
by the Cit.y Council. ·
Henderson said he is asking
$2.l million be says would have
been bis profit.a if the 20-year
leue with the city bad been
granted, plus about $90,000 he
says he already bas apent on
planning the project and about
$60,000 for puniUve damages.
Henderson's attorney, Don
Sessions, said the claim alleges
breach of cont.rad, loss of prot-
ita, interference with business and trade defamation.
Henderson said he is basing his
claim on the fact that the city
councU pitlpolnled the site for a
commerclal skateboard courae
ln FebruarY, named his company
aa the developer ln Match. ap-
proved the terms in May alld then disapproved. the project in
June.
"My board of dlrectora is livid.
They've directed me to take any
action," aald Henderson.
Henderson aald he ls also plan-
nint to rue a $2.25 mllllon suit
again.st the seven homeowners
($eeSVlT,PaJeAJ)
lawyer Remington's she was
bound to keep her boss' dealings
w1tb bis clients, mctudrng Diedrich, confidential.
But in her appearance before
the jury June 20, Mrs. Doughty
bad been relieved of compulsion to remain sUent by a Superior
Court judge.
Then, for more than three
hours she answered Assistant District Attorney Michael
Capiui's questions.
Mrs. Doughty's replies to
Capiui's questions clearly linked
Diedrich checks to Remington
wilh Remington checks to
various political candidate., in·
eluding Anthony and indicted
Anaheim City Councilman
William Kott.
With former police informer
Gene Conrad thrown into the
middle ol some transactions, the basis for the felony conspiracy
indictments was formed.
That"s because Anthony, Kott
and other candidates showed the
Remington money coming into
their campaigns as personal
But Mrs. Doughty's testimOQy
tended to indicate the ink was
barely dry on Diedrich checks to
her former boss before the
Fullerton attorney passed:
similar amounts on to the can-
didates.
Her words also coincided with
bank records either seized by dis-
trict attorney inves tigators
armed with search warrants or
surrendered voluntarily.
., (See WITNESS, Page A!)
D.tllf l'I ... St.H .......
FRISBEE CHAMP CHAIS JOHNSON (RIQKT') SHOWS COSTA MESA KIDS HOW 1r s DONE
Frenk Werner, 11. (Jett), Tim Holley, 12, Pick Up Some Tip• From the Mester
At 16, Frisbee Fun
Flickers, 'Fades'
By STEVE MITCHELL
• Ol t,,_ D•llY ~lkltStall
What does an aging Frisbee
champion who came within a
flick of the wrist or becoming
world champion do after retire·
ment?
Chris Johnson, last year's first
runner-up in the world cham·
pionships held in Atlanta, Ga., is
coaching other Frisbee fli ckers
for Costa Mesa's recreation de· partment.
The 16·year·old Corona del
Mar High School senior says he
can't compete in the Whammo
Company competition anymore
because he's too old.
"They don't want kids who
have placed before in their con·
DISHWASHER
Cl£4NED our
"Cancel the ad, response was so good we sold the dlshw asher.''
Brand new Gaffers and Sattler dlshwshr. SUll in cnrton $150. Phone xxx· xx xx
When people anywhere in
Orange County want to convert
appll~es to cash, In a hurry,
they call 642·5678. The best place
to buy or sell ls in the Dally Pilot.
• tests, either," the saucer expert
shrugged.
So he applied for a job as assis·
t ant recreation leader in Costa
Mesa last month.
"I told them • thought I had
something to orrer them," he
said, scratching the middle
finger of his right hand. Thal
finger has a callus near the top
joint which comes from constant
Frisbee tossing.
"I probably should have a
piece of tape on it," Johnson
said.
He's been coaching kids at a
dozen city parks for the past ft!w
weeks in preparation for Costa
Mesa's ninth annual Frisbee con-test which was held today at
Te Winkle Park.
"It's JUSt takes a lot of practice
and confidence," Johnson tells
his students.
He lines participants up for
Frisbee relays, giving them tips
in the eight categories for com·
petition, including straight
throw, right and left curve, skip
flighi, distance, accuracy, and
catching the disk beblnd the back
and between the legs.
Johnson picked up his ex·
perience over six summers al the beach.
He said that when the city
championships are over he'll still
be working for the city's recrea·
liob departmenL <See FRISBEE, P age AZ>
OC Jobless
Rate Lowest
Since 1972
Orange County's unemploy·
meot rate dipped to its lowest
point since 1972 last month when
it reached 4.4 percent, according
to figures released today by the
State Employment Development
Department (EDD).
An EDD s pokesman s aid
June's unemployment rate was
"the lowest on record since the
department began its labor study
series in 1972.''
The 4.4 percent unemployment rate is down from 4.6 percent in
May and from S.8 percent in
June, 1976.
"Unemployment always rises
in June because of graduating
high school and college seniors,"
said EDD labor analyst Alta Yet·
ter.
"However," Mrs. Yetter said,
"the increase this year was far
less than anticipated and that is
why the seasonally adjusted un·
employment rate is so low."
She noted that county amuse-
<See .JOBLESS, Page AZ>
Coast
We a t h er
Low c louds tonight
through mid·morning
Thursday. Sunny Thurs-
day afternoon. Lows
tonight S6 to 83. Highs
Thursday 70 to 74 at
beaches to 77 to 84 inland.
I NSIDE TODAY
"N~ OOJM• ""'t too maich to males iq> crt Wt point of the NOIOft,"-. the AnRell' MW
batting Wtructor, f<mrUtr ltU·
""" #<it FranJc ~ StOf'JI' 81. .
-I_:! 0 All V Pll OT ,,.._,._AJ
WITNESS LINKS CHECKS. • •
S11tnlf1('&1ntl\, th'rn•n•ton • rormd uffln• mwn•AiN ai.atd she
had no knowlcdao ol a 10 called
Ofedrkb tNink tru~t htld by R~m·
1naton t'Ut'pt wh.it i.ht• hud h 'Md
In the-lli~"\HPllpt'I
ln th(' t•nd, lht• Uraand JllrV
thOUlhl t'OOUKh or thl• bllnk
nld nc't' and hnkan1 katunony to
hind down It~ fl'IOO\-C'OO~Jllrlll'Y
1nd1t'1m.-nt~
In the t'lo:.101( .,latct·~ "' lht' in
\Ht111t1on, the Grand Jury
htoard fro m 1ome of Orlint•
<'ounty'a moiat runtrovunl.il
polHtcal lliiuru. 1nc ludln1C
(ormr r <"nunty Denwcral1 l' Purty
t'ha1rman H1 r ht1rd O 'Nt-ill.
pollt1r1d <·nMultanl Arnold f''ordc
.tnd lobb)'1:il J.'r.rnk Michelena
O'Neill figured into the probt:
because ol a $100,000 loan
guarantt-e he and Dr Louis Cella
po~tf'd In 1971 at u Santa Ana
bank for D1edr1rh
When Cap1zz1 on June 28 ~kcd
O'Neill about the background of
the guarantee, the selC de~cribed
·r1n anc1er ranch
restaurateur" tesllfied
"Well, Mr Diedrich requei.ted
a loan At that particular time ht:
told me he had high inte rest rate:.
havang a little trouble re-
Clnancing some property and re-
quested a loan to hold him over
l:IO. 120 days at the mosl "
··with whom did you d1s<·uss
the continuing guurantee'!"
Cap1zz1 asked.
"Or. Cella asked me lo s upport
-to go along with this loan."
"And il is with Or. Cella that
you di s cussed the loan?''
Capizzi a11ked O'Neill.
"Yes," the financier -rancher-
restauranleur ans we red.
As things turned out on the
Sl00,000 Cella-O'Neill loan
guarantee:
-The bank made demand for
pay m ent from O'Neill when
Diedrich 1nitaally failed to repay
the loan on lime and to res pond to
dunning phone calls and letters.
-The 80. 120 days turned out lo
be 16 months before Diedrich
made payment in two install·
men ts .
-Diedrich was indicted on per-
JUry charges for failing to show
the loan on economic disclosure
s tatements filed in 1976 and 1977,
though it did show on two earlier statements
Pohlical cons ultant Arnold
F'ordc testified June 28, the same
day O'Neill appeared bt!fore lhc
Grand Jury.
YH, 1-'ordt.• ••id, he and
putotr William Butcher had
man•ted Anthony'• primary
campalp ln Jun•. 1916.
"ln the 1eneral elecUon, An·
t hony wu more lnt.ire1ted 1n nm-
n 1n1 the campaien himself,"
fo'ordf' aa.td.
"So wb•t we aareed to do in the
Anthony campll iln i!, lh1tt he
tAnthuny) would be tn ch1trge of ll ..
"Hu wou.Jd be lo charge of 1t ~md we would be In charge of de·
veloplnt a direct mail package,"
Jo'ord• tt!atlfied.
The politle al con11ullant put
more distance between hi~ firm
and the general elttUon ('11m-
pa1gn fandraiaing tor Anthony
when hesa1d:
"That wasn't our respons1blll·
ty any more. We •lmost came to
a total part.mg or the ways In tho
campaign because. in one aeruu.1.
Anthony wanled lo do that .. hi:
was going lo be totally an chuau ol the campaign."
Had Forde told Anthony th•l 1t
was okay to acce pt cwmpaJ1n
loans as personal loans and then
to show the money coming Into
the campaign as loans from the
candidate?
"There was certainly no twlk
aboul a third party giving money
:.urrepllllously or anything hke
that." Forde testified.
Michelena spent most of his
lime before the Grand Jury ex-
plaining why he had provided a
member of the county Assess-
ment Appeals Board with the use
of a leased Cadillac and one-time
Republican state senate can-
aidate with $3,800.
Michelena said the auto and
gasoline credit card provided to
Newport Beach attorney Frank
Waters was. in effect, a retainer
for Waters' services.
And he denied that he or any of
his clients had business before
the board.
As tor the money paid then
candidate Norton, Michelena
s aid it was for investigative
services.
The cheeks were made payable
to Norton's former crony Gary
Newmyer because Michelena
believed the two were collaborat-
ing in their investigative adven-
tures.
Those adventures ended in
April with Norton being indicted
on perjury charges and
Newmyer acting as the recorder-
equipped turncoat that gathered
the evidence against Norton.
California's Jobless
Lowest in 3 Years
SACRAMENTO CAP ) -
California's unemployment r ate
re11 to 6 9 percenl in June, .the
lowest in three years and the r1r:.l
time in 17 years that the ~t.itc
has been below the national rate.
officials said today.
The Jobless rate had been 7.8
percent m May. For the third
:.traight monlh, total employ-
ment set a record, neiJrly 9 3
m11l1on, up 136,000 since May.
The national unemployment
rate, which has been runnang as
much as two percentage points
below California's, was 7.1 per-
cent in June, up from 6.9 percent in May.
State Employment Develop-
ment Director Martin Glick said
employment recor~s w~re se~ in
numerous industries. ancluding
construction. which has gained
16 percent in jobs over a year
ago.
He said the figures were
"further indi c ation that
C'alilomia is outpacing the rest of
the nation in speed or turnaround
GoH Cart Stolen
A. golf cart valued by Its 82-
year-old woman owner al $375
has been stolen from its. Laguna
Hills Leisure World parking spot.
Orange County sheriff's officers
said the theft ol the cart was re·
ported by Mildred Heber Bates,
82 of 2400 Via Mariposa West.
They believe It was driven off by
the thief.
ORANG! COAST
DAILY PILOT
ThtO.-COUIO•llr •1101 wlt•-c•I•<-~~~~~~:.:~~:.:..~ IWf)li""'O Mo"dey tftrovOf\ frtO•¥ IOf (O\I• .... .._ ... _, ... , •• H....tl,,._.., 9t•"'-
te1n V•Jf•'· trvll"lt. S•d<Uf'O.M., V•lltf •M :-:::=::::-~~~~:~~;"~ ~!:~:"'~~:t..~:f:~~.;:,.,. .,.,, •. ,
"-.... -~ ............ ""411,_
JK-· '"""' Y'(•~Ml--0.-.. Mo-,,_,._ ..... ,,_,A .. ..,...... ......... ,,,. .....
-"'--·-··-· AUl>t .... ,..._..,. l'•lof\
Otnc.1 t.uMt .. >•wr.1 ... 11 ..... l.,._ .... ft. lt~G=J.'~""\ "=t::.~~~.;. N101 ~· ,.., ..;..-.,-o .... ~.-
from the recent recession."
But he cautioned that they
reflected mid-June totals. before
President Carter announced that
he opposed development of the
Bl bomber. a move a lready caus-
1 n g tayoCfs in Southern
California.
* * * Front Pag~ A J ·
JOBLESS .•.
ment parks and restaurants
added 4,500 workers lo their
payrolls last month.
And, Mrs. Yetter said, Orange
County's construction boom con-
tinued when 1,300 workers were
added to construction payrolJs.
Mrs. Yetter pointed out thal
the county's civilian work force
reached 875.000 persons in June,
a record high.
She also noted that private
firm s within the county
employed 658,800 workers in
June.
Government employment dur-
ing the month was buoyed b>: 600
jobs. mcluding lifeguards bred
to safeguard bathers al county
beach~.
Mrs. Yetter said some firms
have reported small cutbacks in
employment since the reporting
day in mid June.
However, she added, other
firms have reported "strong,
steady expansion ."
FrotaPageAJ
PAY •••
Miss Grier, whose raise is stllJ
under review, was taken a step
up the salary ladder but her pay
for the present will stay at $37,190 annually.
Seven county officials received
the S.85 percent hike p lua
monlhlyralsea ranatn1 trom S100 to$400.
County Asaesaor Bractley
Jacobs received lb• largest
boost, the S.85 percent raise plus
$400 more monthly, putting his
yearly pay at N0,272.
Pollowln( are the old and new ulartee of othet top otflctala:
D1Jt.r1ct Attorney CecU Hicks,
SU,022 to $$0,831; Frank
Williama, public detender,
SH,342 to $41.053: Sheriff·
Cotoner Brad Gates, '40,m &o SM,m: Tom &au. direct« ot
the General Servteu AJency, Pt,000 to "1,281;
Also, Audilor·OoatroUtr V1c
Helm .... 113 to $61.001; Tax
Colle tOr·Tr~aaurer Robert
Cltt9, itn,4f0 to MJ,IOl and
eo.t1 atit WlWam Sl JoMi $14,lMIO., ....
Onftln1 ln and out ol the secret
tranacripg leadm& to the indkt·
ments la teatimony centenng
around the Las Ve1as casino
trade.
Frank Watts, controller ol the
R1v1era Hotel , testified that hotel
records indicate Diedrich lost
$30,000 In 12 hours last Oct. land
2 while testmg his skill at two
crap tables.
And, Wutts udded, as what the
casino calla "a good player."
Diedrich was 1tvcn complimen·
tary rooms, meals and
beverages during his Las Vegas
11tuyl'.
fl la Diedrich 's alleged failure
to llal the vnlue or the purported
Lu Veaas aratultles on his
economJc dl1clos ure 11tatements
that re11ulh-'d In a :.econd perjury
<'ounl Included In the indict-
ments
Tht3 trun11rrlpt11 ' most colorful
rt1udln1i1 com.-ii from a written
rticord or u tupc recorded con-
venullon ootween Conrad and
l.a11 Vt!U• •howm•n Joe Agosta.
In ronvurtrntlon liberally
tiprlnkl~I with four letter words.
<.:on rad braggNt or the Inroads he
had made Into Orange County
pollll\'al clrcle11.
0.llr f'lllt SIM! ~· OFFICIALS SAY GOODBYE IN IRVINE COUNCIL CHAMBERS
Mayor Bill Verdoulls (left), President Ray Watson
Animal Rulings Delayed
Dogs, Bees Problems Bring Action
Problems with buking dogs, when officers ~hink they . know d~slrict. attorney will pro~e~ute na
bees and dog waste have held up who is responsible, bul d1~ not d1sturbmg th~ peace v1olal!o •
the proposed animal 1 egulations witness the action, they issue three lo five writt~n complrunlS
ordinance in Irvine f11. at least 30 written warnrngs. arBe neteded f~~':; nei=~~:~~erni-d
days. The cha~f suggt:!-.ll·d lhat ur on sai e w
The City Council voted 4·1 perhaps citizens who witness re lo learn Crom Pearl lha_t people
Tuesday to send the proposed or-peal violations could phone the who leave watchdogs m their
dinance back to the stair for re-police and tell them when the dog b~ckyards ~out~ hav1~ th~r &0~~
visions. Only M ayor Bill is regularly walked s o that picked up Y t e po ice_m . ~k
Va rdoulis was completely a nimal control officer:. could be absence because of their ba · satisfied with the document. standing bv ing th
1 The council said the proposed Mrs. Gaido said she 1:. also con Bu~on astted to have at ru e
ordinance was basically a good cerned about barking dogs and ex a_ mined further, sa ymg that he
set or rules. but Mary Ann Gaido, asked the animal services com beheves people should be ardl·
John Burton and David Sills all mittee to come up with a new lowed Lo have watchdogs gua
had concerns over certain se<:-way of enforcing the regulation lhe~r hous~s when they are awa~
tions of the ordinance. concerning exce:.s1ve animal Sills said_ he ".Vas hconc~~ e
Mrs. Ga1do said she was con· noise. that bee hives m t e ~ ~
cerned about lhe section related She said lhal w1lh zero lot lines g roves woul_d not be perm1tt~ m
to "pet waste" and a sked if they in Irvine. some residents are the new ordinance. However. ~h.~
couldn't find a more "creative bothered by barking dogs on the new rul~ _slate that the ~ro~i~e
and modern way of enforcing other side of common wall:.. lion again.st bees does not me u
those rules." They arc the only ones annoyed. com r:ierc1al bees such as those
Police Chier Leo Peart ex-but more than one complaint 1s kept m t~eorange groves-.
plained it is unlawful for a dog necdt!d to get action. she said Council member~ s aid .th~y
owner to let his dog leave waste Peart explained that before thl' will look at l~e ordm~n~e . m 30
in public areas. days and decide then 1f 1t is ac-
"But catching the dog and the ceptabletoall.
owner at the same time isn't School Chie~ easy." the chiel added. J
Peart s aid it's rare to have
animal control oCficers present
at the right time and sald that
Front Page A I
SUIT ...
assoc1ahons that fought against
the project and took the matter to
court. plus all of the ho meowner
associations pre:.idenls and
directors and a list of 11 other
residents involved 1n stopping lhe
pro1ect.
The associations include
Deerfield, Irvine Groves, the
Ranch, California Homes.
Willows, Greentree and North
Irvine.
Sessions said the lawsuit will
claim interference with business.
interference with contract and
trade defamation.
Sessions said he will also notify
the Internal Revenue Service
that the homeowners associa·
t1ons have been involved in
political activity, which be said is
illegal for such non-profit or-
ganlzaUons.
He said he expects the suit will
be filed by the end of this week.
A city spokesman said she ex-
pects the clajm aaainsl the city to
be Included on the July 26 council
agenda.
FroMPageAJ
WATER •••
said the IRWD Is operating with
a formula that calls for more publlcly elected directors as soon
as the population increases.
Eberling estimated thal resi-
dents would have board control
by 1983 or 1984, when the popula·
tion ls larae eoough.
Councilman David Sills
chareed that lbe reason the
board is bein1 expanded from
five to seven members is that
none ot the directors wanted to
aive up their seats and that they
dJd not believe they could get re·
el~cted by the public.
EberUni aareect that none of
the directors wanted to relln·
qulab their seats, but said that
Wat only part of the reason. Hit
aaJd that since tbe district bas
gotten to W,, the workloH ii
(ftata-and that mo:e directora
are needed.
One Irvine rttldent, Wesley
Man addrelMCI the council and cau;d the Nov. I elecllon a
''•ham.••
Marx, wbo I• cunentJ.y In·
votved lD UU,ailon qalnst tbecl·
'1 and Irvine Compao,y rqard· tn1 moderat. COit houall\I, aaJd the upc»mloa election will Just per,.wat.e JAnd.OWner C\ln~ ot
the lftWD, ffe Ufted t.be O<IWtCil to llllf 11Pbatever tltpt are
a.c......,. to rocu public electioft ot lb• ctiredOn.
Aro ids Issue
SAN JOSE CAP) State
school Supl. Will.on Riles. never
one to seek Political conmct. 1i.
tryang to steer his department
relatively clear of the explosive
issue of school antegrallon
Riles 1s barking regulations at
a public hearing of the slate
Board of Education today lhat
would stale his department's
position in favor of desegrega-
tion . but give it Jillie role in
monitoring or achieving il.
Fraud Confirmed .
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Dist. At-
ty. Ed Miller says a preliminary
investigation shows people inside
and outside county government
a re involved in a computer-fraud
scheme to bilk the county treasury.
FromPageAJ
FRISBEE ...
"l'U.mosUy be hauling around
<>q u1pmenl Lo the parks and doing
m aantenance things afler the
contest." he said.
Now that he's all washed up as
far as Whammo competition
goes. will he still toss a Frisbee'!
--oh. sure. I entered a pro·
fessional tournament last April
al UC Irvine, but I didn't do too
hot." Johnson laughed.
lie said he almost broke a
j unior record for distance. "but
professional Frisbee is so Car up
there."
All this modesty from a kid
who was 1976 Newport Beach c1ly
champion. Southern California
s tate c hampion, Wes t e rn
Regi onal Open champion and
runner-up in the world event.
You'd think he just picked up
his firs t Frisbee, the way he
ta lks.
Watson,
lroine
'Part'
-4 Irvine Company President
Raymond Watson and the Irvine
City Council had more than a (ew
kind words to say to each other
Tuesday when Watson handed
the ganl over to the new Irvine
Mayor Bill Vardoulis
It was the la.st time Watson will
perform his traditional duty of
greeting the new mayor with the
gavel, since Watson will leave
the Irvine Company presidency
on July 25 to begin his own com·
pany.
In his farewell remarks,
Walson noted that having respect
for each other 1s much more im·
portant than seeing "eye to eye"
on all the issues and said he has
always had respect for those in
the lrvme city government.
Wat.son thanked the council r~
its past dealings with the lrvll:1e
Company and said he's certain
he'll be back since he is not plan·
ning lo leave the community.
For ils part, the council adopt-
ed a r esolution commending
Watson for being "candid, fair
and straightforward in his work·
ing relationship with the city."
The resolution noted a "spirit
of mutual respect, trust and open
communication" between the ci·
ly and the Irvine Company and
praised Watson for being
"foresighted and enthusiastic in
creating a livable urban environ·
ment."
Fro• Page A J
MOLESTER
Duncan demanded before issuing
a terse order lo draw up a $50,000
bench warrant for his arrest.
He also asked if any represen·
tat1ve or the Manners' Com -
munity Association might be
present.
The organization collected
petitions demanding t~e absolute
maximum penalty be imposed -
six months in county jail -when
Opson was to be sentenced Tues-
dav.
Residents of the Mariners and
Westcliff districts of Newport
Beach were upset over the inci-
dents, in which Opson admitted
involvement.
Police claim he strolled the
streets carryini:? a camera, ac-
costing girls while claiming to be
a newspaper photographer.
No one from the association ad-
mitted being present in the
courtroom.
Judge Dungan then explained
he was compelled by the law to
ignore the petition for . harsh
punishment and order 1t sent
back to the Mariners' Communi-
ty Association without a look.
The organization attached a
cover letter which stipulated the
petition could not be examined
by either Opson or his lawyers,
because signers feared future
retribution against themselves
or their children.
Judge Dungan explained the
law and U.S. Constitution require
that both Opson and his lawyer
have access to. or a confrontation
with, the defendant's accusers.
He could not, therefore, con-
done or consider the petition for
the harshest possible punis h-
ment.
~agun~/South Coast
EDITION
..
Afternoon
N.Y.Stoeks
VOL. 70, NO. 19,, 'SECTIONS, '6 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA. WEDNESDAY, JULY 13, 19n iJr, !. µry Hears 'WoHlall Scorned'
I BJ GA•Y GRANVILLE
Ol t• 0.llf l'1i.c IMlll
Secret srand jury transcripts
show that the testimony or a
woman acorned was vital to the
lnvestiiauoo leadmc to the re·
cent indictment of Orange Coun-
ty Supel"V1sors Ralph D1ed.nch
and Philip Anthony.
Witness Links Checks in COunty Probe loam from themselves.
And neither Remin1lon nor
Diedrich filed major campaign
donor statements sbowinl .their
alleged financial role in the cam·
paign.
The woman whose testimony
wrapped a band of circumstan-
tial evidence around Died.nch,
Anthony and their four alleged
co-conspirators in a purported
1 plot to undermine stale cam-
• paign regulations is Donna ! Doughty.
I Mrs. Doughty was indicted
Fullerton attorney Michael Rem-
ln1ton's chief secretary and of·
!ice manager for 11 years.
In testimony before the grand
Jury. emington admitted hav·
mg a .. close relat1onstup" with
Mrs. Doughty that underwent a
dramatic change when he mar·
ried another woman last Oct. 1.
Thus, Remington said, "a few
months ago" things became un-
comfortable around the office
andl by mutual agreement, Mrs.
Doughty left his employ.
On June 20, Mrs. Doughty was
before the grand jury as a wit-
ness into an eight-month probe
into county political practices
that would end in 11 days with the
indictment of Diedrich, Anthony,
RemiJliton and three others.
The "2·year-old woman had
been before the jury two weeks
earlier.
In that appearance she
responded to questions asked her
about bookkeeping operations in
Remington's omce with a stan-
dard "Privileged."
By privileged, Mrs. Doughty
meant that, as an employe of
LAST MINUTE TOUCHES-Leah Vasques,
a Laguna Beach Sawdust Festival artist,
puts final touches on a fountain-and pool
on the r~tival grounds. Laguna's three
o.ily l'llot St.it I'-•
summer art festivals will begin Friday for
a six·week run. Mo,re than 44'0 arti~ts and
craftsmen will be exhibiting work for sale
during the summer art orgy.
'\Laguna An imal Ait-A.-F air Festival
Sh elter Wins TY/'.• L p .
1 , N d "ins a1Y1•na ennit anners o ~...,
By JACK CHAPPELL The emb.atU~ Art·~· Fair WO? said the comqi!ssion bad the
<>11 .. 0.11,11111.rn .. 11 r earfirmaLion or a cuy pernut authority to revise or reaffirm I Construction of a $36 ,000 needed for its six-week summer previous action.
p e rmanent La gu na Beach art show following a public bear-The hearing Tuesday was
animal shelle r on the city's in g Tuesday before the Laguna scheduled in light of a court
former dump site in Laguna Beach Planning Commission. challenge by the protesting
Canyon was recommended Tues-Commission action to reaffirm neighbors afong Arroyo and
day by the planning comm iss1on. conditions placed on the art show Canyon Acres Drives.
The city has been given until came after a presentation by al· A superior court judge ls to
Oct. 3 to gl't out of leased torney Steven Rosenthal hear a suit Monday brought by
facilities run b y Dr. Rose representing protesing residents the residents alleging they had
Ekeberg. and property owners in the area. not received proper public notice
The commission refused' to rec-Rosenthal charged the com-of the previous hearings.
ommend a temporary solution mission had no authority by Logan advised that since one
lo the animal shelter problem. whic~ lo reconsider permission course of action the judge coold
Consens us seem ed to be that previously granted and that it require was a rehearing of the
em porary solutions tend to could not reconsider after con-matter, the city could cope with
ecome permanent ones. struction on the art show had that in advance with the Tuesday
It narrows the location down to begun. hearing.
he dump site after giving He also said since the city has The properly owners carne in
engthy consideration to position· acted in "behalf and as the alter ror severe criticism by Com-ng a shelter on the ACT·S sum· ego" of Art·A·FaJr, In coastaJ missioner Bellnda Blacketer.
er resUval parking lot on Irvine commission hearings, it had a Mrs. Blacketer, a former resi·
anch land. bullt·in conflict of interest. dent of the area, said oppo&itlon
The dump site is located along Rosenthal said Art· A-Fair really hadn't surfaced uni.lt after
aguna Canyon Road just north should apply for a new permit the commission bad held its
C the Pampered Pel Holiday rather than have the old one re-heartnes. although represen·
olel, (fonnerly Petlicord'sjunk considered. tatives of residenta had been ln-
ard). . City Attorney George Logan vol ved in the planning early on. The commission was ad·
dressed by Phil May of the
l:ltueos P'8t Responsibility Oom·
mlttee, and Ernest Gay, an
(See SHELTER, Pa1e AZ>
Coast
Weath er
Low clouds tonight
throu&h mid·mornlna
Thursday. Sunny Th~rs· day afternoon. Lows
tonight 56 to 63. Hlchs
Thursday 70 to 74 at
beachdto77to84 lnland.
County's Jobless
Rate Falls to 4.4%
lawyer Remington',s she was
bound to keep her boss· deadlings
with has clients, includ10g
Diedrich, confidential.
But in her appearance before
the jury June 20, Mrs. Doughty
had been relieved of compulsion
to remain silent by a Superior
Court judge.
Then, for more than three
hours she answered Assistant
District Attorney Michael
Capiui's questions.
Mrs. Dougbty's replies to
Capizzi·~ qu~tioos clearly linked
Diedrich checks to Remington
wlth Remington checks to
various political candidates, in·
cludln& 'Anthony and indicted
Anabeim City Councilman William Kott.
With former police informer
Gene Conrad thrown into the
middle ol some transactions, the
bui& for the felony conspiracy
todJctments was formed.
That's because Anthony, Kott
and other candidates showed the
Remingtoo money coming into
their campaigns as personal
But Mrs. Doughty's lestimooy
tended to indicate the ink was
barely dry on Diedrich checks to
her former boss before the
Fullerton attorney passed
similar amounts on to the can.
di dates.
Her words also coincided with
bank records either seized by dis·
trlct attorney investigators
armed with search warrants or
surrendered voluntarily.
,. (See WITNESS, Pa1e AU
Tax Triin: Slated
Cut Due b y Laguna SClwols.
A 26. l percent increase in the
assessed value of the Laguna
Beach Unified School Distrlct
will enable the school board to
cut the district's tax rate 67 cents
to $1.81 per $100 assessed value.
The school budget for fiscal
1977-78 is $6.9 milJion, up 7.8 per-
cent over the last year. Final
adoption or the budget is
scheduled for August after public
hearings.
The 67·cent tax reduction will
occur automatically as a result
of state law requiring school dis·
tricts to reduce their tax rates as
the assessed value or property
within the district increases.
One purpose of the measure is
to level out the amount of money
spent per student by rich and
poor school districts.
That law has put some of the
wea\UaY districts in a pinch JS
they try t0 ~bpe with tnflattoit
pressures. Additional leglslatlon
pending In Sacramento would lift
the amount Laguna could spend
perlt1*mt.
Should that amoutlt ~ hl·
creased, Clyde Lovelady, dis·
trict business manager. said the
projected 67-cent cut may not
'tome about. The matter hangs
until the final adoption of the
Wage Boost
Approve d for
OC Workers
By KATHY CLANCY Of 1M OellY l'UOI 11111
Orange County supervisors
gave themselves and most of the
county's other 9,600 employes a
5.85 percent pay raise Tuesday.
They also set a $52,000-a-year
ceiling on the salaries of the six
highest-paid county workers,
who would have gone higher than
the $52,000 mark with the pay
raise.
IncluC:led in the salary resolu-
tion was a two-year contract with
county general and supervisory
personnel. The proposal, already
approved by the employes.
grants them a S.85 percent pay
hike retroactive to July I and a
S.5 percent increase for next
year.
Supervisors also rejected a re-
quest from Russell Bostrum of
the Orange County Association of
· Deputy Sheriffs that the assocla·
tion be immediately allowed to
represent deputies.
Instead, they told Boslrum the group should petition throu&h
routine county channels for a
separate bargaining Unit.
The stlpervlsol'I'' own S.85 per-
<See PAY, Pate AZ>
Firm Hired
budget.
In addition to the general
purpose tax, the school levies a
community service tax rate of up
to 10 cents per $100 assessed
value (about $20 a year to the
owner of an $80,000 home).
Last year the district fixed a
tax rate of 9.5 cents and raised
$181 ,000 through that community
V a lue J u mps
service tax. This year the district
has the potential to raise $240,000.
Lovelady said the school board
will be discussing that rate when
it meets July 20.
The community service rate is
unaffected by the lax limitlaw. II.
is restricted to providing use of
school facilities for community
groups and recr~alion.
Capo Sehool Tax
Rate to Decrease
BF ceB~J:..E&'
The 28. l percent jump in as·
aessed valuation in the
Capistrano Unified School Dis·
tricl wj11 m~ ~ 1S to 90·ctnt decreaM la u.t district's g~aJ
pul"p()H tax rate to $3.33 per $100
aauaaed value.
Sam Chicas, aulstant superin.
tendent for general services, said
the district bas no choice but to
lower the tax rate, since it is set
aecording to a formula
established by 5entae Bill 90.
The amount deemed nec~ary
to run dist.rid schools is based on
averace .cfajly student atten· dance, he said. Called the "total
revenue limit." tlµtt amount for
1977 • 78 for the Capistrano district
is $23.2 mi.Uion. Af~er that figw:e is adjusted to
rettect st.4te .Vd. collection of. de-
li nq uenl taxes during the pre-
vious year and other factors, it is
divided by the district's assessed
valuation and multiplied by 100
to determine the tax rate.
''School districts don't operate
like city governments," said
Chlcu. "We can only adjust the
tax rate down from what the
formula allows-never up."
Chicas will be making a pres-
entation on ·the 1977 · 78 budget and tax rate to the district's gov-
ernin& board Monday at 7:30
p.m . In district orfices, 32792
Calle Perfecto in San Juan Capi&trano.
"I hope I can make the situ•
lion clear to tbe trustees,"
Chicas said. "School financing is
very complicated -you haye to
take lt steJ> by step." ·
Jn addition to the 1e.neral
purpose tax of $3.33, Chlcai said the follo\ytng also figure 1n the
total tax rate for 19'17· 78:
-Adult education, also set by
the state, six cents
-Community services,. 10 ..
centa (the maximum allowed)
-Meall for needy pupils, ~
cent
-State building loan repay.
ment, nine cents
-Regional Occupation Pro-,
gram, '12 cent
-Bonded interest and redemp-
<SeeTAX RATE, Page A2)
Plant-eating
Bug Found at
Fresno Airport
FRESNO (AP)-A Japanese
beetle has been found al Fresno
Municipal Airport, the first time
the plant-eating bug has ap-
peared he.re in the hub of San
Joaquin Valley agriculture.
Officials have been unable to
determine where the beeUe came
from, but chances are it arrived
on a flight trom San Diego, Los
Angeles or San Francisco, .a
spokesman said.
Meanwhile, a Japanese beeUe
has been cau«iht a half-mile from airliners at Lindbergh Field,
bringlngto43thenumberfoundin
San DiegosinceJune29.
All bUt the latest, caught in one
of several traps rin&ing the
airport, were found in com-
mercial planes arriving in San
Die10 from Wasblngton. D.C. An
agriculture official said the
trapped beeUe wu the first found
this year In San Dleso outside an aircraft.
Added SJC Council
DiStricts ~ught
... -
OAIL V Pf\.O'r U!C
A t;ottage for Sale ·
Famed Hammenmilh F01mPut.on.A.uction
~J.':WPORT, R l CAP) -J1.11•q lolellu ~Ill·
nrdy On•sa111' ("hllclhocxl homo when btr
rom&M~ wtlh John F. Keonudy llloomect, hH
b ~n put oo the aucUon block bciul.Ule • U\u
lot'mtt ,,,..t lAdy'a molherneed.e I.he money.
•·t don't •ant )'C>u to sett tt;• Janet
AuC'htn<'lotit quot•1d her ft1m0U1t dlluahter as
aaylot when &he broke tho ncwas that the~
acre Hammeramlth Farm wu fur :sale for ... ooa..
••Alt my C'ttlldr hate It, IU"1 J bate lt, but
1t 11 a*lu&ely oaceeau-y;· Mn. Aucblnclo&a ~aid Tuclsd&.y.
~HE EXPLAJNED thut her late husband.
Hueh O. Auebincloea. devotc-d tus personal
fortune to try to 1ave hls Wushln•ton broker~·• ftr~t AucbJncloss, Redfern and
P1utu, before DJ.I death in December 1976. 0 1 was very proud of him for dolnc It," 11be
said, ••e·1enth~lknnitwouldn'twort.'•
Hammersmith, one ol the oldest workinc
farms in Newport. la alJve wiUs memories.
The children caUed thtt cottage The Castle
and the name bq stuck to this day. Mrs.
Aucluncloss now hves iD TheCasUe.
LEADING A REPOllTEll on a to11r of the
1rrounds., Mrs. Auchinclosa marveled at how
well they are kepL She has had to make do
with four eardeners on arounds once tended by 32 workers.
Mn. Aucblnclos$ !a,ys that her dauehters
by her first husband, John Bouvier -Jackie
o.1nd_ Lee Radziwill r-and her children by
Auchancloss were reluctant to aee the place go
bee a use they liked it •'to be bere for whenever
they bappen4HI to feel like dropping in.
-
• Ca.rol.lne Xeanecty WU here rddq and satur-
day and l Deva" know wbm U. G&ben aN comln1 ...
Htr younaest daughter, Janet, 31, ex-
1>la1Md over a hamburger at Balley'a Bcacb
Ulo feelln&a thechlldren "have.
''IT WAS MY HOME. t grew up here. It's
where everything b~od t.o me. ll's home.
and everybody l!Unk11our bomc will alw-.ya
bothere."
She reminisced about her Jlfe 'Witb Ml's. '
Onassis, who is 16 years older. •
"The year I was 18 she showed me how lo la~." aa.ad Janet. remembering that she wasn't
allowed to date Ulen.
Jackie. •h• 1ays. told ber to tell Auchincloss that her mother said it was all
ri1bt. while telling ber mother that ber father
bad 1iven pumlssiOQ.
"I never saw him ao mad iD my Ule -ob,
well. she wu married to a preaident -I
should have known better." Janeta aid.
Mti. AUCllJNCLOSS SHOWED ber vb-
iton through the IS.bedroom main house,
which largely bas been dismantled. It is now
home to meRJbers of the Swedish yacht team
here fort.be trials of the America'• CUp, which
will be run next month. ·
She showed the bedroom where Mrs.
Onassis spent the last night before ber wed· ding, a third.fioor yellow and while room with
windows looking out to sea.
, She also showed the room that Kennedy
used as an office when he stayed' at Ham-
mersmith Farm during his preslckftcy.
..
•
Bomb OK
Expected
In senate
W ASRlNGTON <AP) -Senate
Minority Leader Howard Baker
predicted today the Senate wilt
approve fUndl for controversial
neuUU> naPOOB whicb President
Carter uya are needed for the de.
!e111.otWestem Europe.
Neutron warheads are de· signed to kill enemy soldiers with
radiation while inflicting
minimal explosive destruction in
the blast.,....,
. · Oppoaents ot the weapona led
by Sc. Mark O. Hatfleld <R·
Ore.), planned to· carry their
fight to the floor ol the Senate,
where a vote wu 1cheduled late
today on delet.tng funds for i>n>-
ducUon of the weapous from a
public worka appropriation blJJ.
Baker said be had not taken a
formal bead count or how the
Senate will v~te. but added, "Ills
my 1ueu that HaUleld probably
would lose."
Before the vote, Senate Jeadera
met to decide how to limit debate
on the weapons, which critics say
would mark a dangerous leap in
the arms race.
Hatfield has said the funds
should not be approved. a~ Jeasl
unUl Carter bu prov.lded • le&al·
ly required aaaeaamel\t ot tho
neutron weapona • hupact on
arma proliferation.
One Senate source sald today Polic~· Seek. Frorn Page Al r Seo. Hubert H. H\lmpbrey (D-I ., Min.D. ), attempted to work out an
Cycle·· Thief ..
After Crash
A man who crashed a stolen
motorcycle early today in San
Clemente and took oft on fool
muu, have au~tained Injuries,
San Clemente police said.
A caUer told police there was
an Injury accident at 180 W. Mar·
qui ta at 2: 50 a.m. By the time of.
ficers and firemen arrived at the
scene, the driver had d1sap.
peared, leaving the heavily
damaged bike where il had run
into a pickup truck. .
No blood was found but the eK·
tent of the dam ace seemed to in.
die ate the.driver must be hurt,
The motorcycle, which re·
portedly was .. hot-wired, .. was
registered to Joseph B.
Guatreau.x Jr. of 1820 Calle Las
Bolas. He told police it had been
stolen. The truck belon1ed to
Albert Joseph Theiler of 158 W. M~ui""police said.
. Police searched the West Mar· .. qaltit area of central San
Clemente, but were unable to
find the man they believed to
h,11ve been injured in the acc1· dent.
Laguna Mayor
Will Address
Chamber Meet
Laguna Beach Mayor Jon
Brand will address a breakfast
meelin& of the, Laauna Beach
Chamber of Commerce at 8 a. m.
Thursday in tbe Hotel Laguna.·
Brand aaid he plans to reveal
propoeed city property tax rate
and will accentuate the positive
thinas the city baa done in recent
yearatoimprovethecommu.nity.
The mayor's talk follows one
last month by CoW\cilman John
McDowell. McDowell -while
propoelnt a 10 point plan to aid the
city, includin8 teduclna un-
employment and me1at alien
workers -also llPP••red lo
forecut recall effom •1alnat
three unnamed council members.
Brand and McDowell are fre· quenUy atoddl.
Humboldt Shaken
OARBERVILLE (AP) -
Parta ol Humboldt County were
roclltd by a moderate earth·
qualte fallowed by two nlllder af.
terabocka, but no Injuries were
reported.
OR ANOE COAST vsc:
DAILY PILOT
WITNESS ANSWERS. 1 ~ a1reement with Carter U.Dder
' t which a Senate 4tclllon °" the • ..
Significantly, Remington's former office manager said she
had no knowledie of a 10-callod
Diedrich bank trust held by Rem·
i~ton except what she had read
in the newspapers.
In the end, the vand Jury
thought enoueh of the bank
evidence and llJikln& testimony to
hand down its felol\Y' conspiracy
indictment.!'
In the closing" stages of the in vestigation. the Grand Jury
heard from some of Oranee
County's most. controversial
political figures, including
former county Democratic Party
chairman Richard O'Neill,
political consultant Arnold Forde
and lobbyist Frank Michelena
O'Neill figured into the probe
because of a $100,000 loan
guarantee be and Dr Louis Cella
posted in 1974 at a Santa Ana
bank for Diedrich...
When Capiaai on June 28 asked
O'Neill about the background of
the guarantee, the self-described
··rioancier-ranch
restaurateur'' tesUlled.
"Well, Mr. Diedrich requested
a Joan. Al that particular Ume be
told me he bad high intereot rat.es
~ having a little trouble re,
Jinancing some property and re-
quested a loan to hold him over
80, 120days at the most."
"With whom did you dJ11cuss
the continuina guarantee? ..
Capizu uked.
•·Dr. Cella aelred me to support
-to 10 alollg with thie loan."
"And it i8 with Dr. Cella that you diacuued the loan?"
Caplui asked O'Neill.
"Yea," the ftnancier·rancb~ restlluranteur answered.
Aa thlna• turned out on the
$100,000 Cella·O'Neill loan·
guarantee~ • •
-The bank made d~mand for
payment from o·~bt when
Diedrich initially failed to TelW'Y
the loan on time and to reepood to
dunnln& phone calla and letters.
-The 80, 120 daya turned out to
be 16 months before Diedrich
made payment in two inltall·
men ts.
-Diedrich wu indicted on per·
jury charges for f~ to ahow
the loan on t1CODOCDlo diaclo9UN statements Ned ln 1979 and J.m,
thouab it did abow on two earlier statement..
Political consultant Arnold
Fo.rd•t..tlftedJune21,tbe'81De
day O'Netll qpeared befor9 the
Gruel Jury.
Yea, Forde eald, be and
partner William Butcher bad
mana1ed Antbony'a prjmar1
campaicnlnJune, 19Tt.
"In the 1e.neral elecUon, An.
thony was more lnt.oreated ln run·
ning the campaign· himsell,"
-Forde said.
''So wbat we Nreed to dq ia u-e
Aqtbony camtalin ia that J\t
(Anthony) WO\lld f,e 1D cbarp ol ft. ..
.. He would be in charge of j~
and we WCM&Jd be ln charce ot c»-
vti:o ma. dUwtmaU pack .... 0
., i.tlfled.
he political «:onsultant put·
mon diltwe llmN• JUI arm
and the general election cam~
pai1n fundrai.sin(C' foi: Aothony
wbenhuaid:
.. That wasn't our resporudbili·
ty any more We almost came to
a tolal part1na ot tbe waya in the
camPfip becauae~n one senae.
Anthony wanted 1o do that be
was going to be folall)"'in charae or the campaign · •·
liad Forde tol<f Anthony that.it
waa okay lo accept campai&n
loans-as personal loans and.then
to sho'IV the money cominc into
the campaian. as loans Crom the candidate?
'"Iher;e was certainly no talk
about.a thlrd pa,r:ty aivinf money-
s ui;reptltlou.sly Ot' anythina like
that, ii Forde testified
Michelena spent moat of his
lime before the. GrlUld Jury ex-plaining why he had provided a
membei: oC the county Asseaa.
ment.Appeala Board wilh the use
o( a leued Cadillac and one-time
Republican stale senate can-
aidate with $3.800
Michelena. said the auto and
gasoline 'credit card provided to
Newpoct. Beach attorney Frank
Waters wu, in etrect, a retainer
for Watel's' aervicw,;
And be denied that he or any of
his clients had buaineaa before
the board
As for the money paid then
candidate Norton, Michelena
said it was for investigative servicee.
The checks were made payable
to Norton's former crony Gary
Newmyer because Nlcbelena believed the two were collaborat·
ing in their investigative adven-
tures,
Those adventures ended in
April with Norton beina indicted
on ~erJury charaes and
Newmyer actin1 u the recorder· equip~ turncoat that 1atbeted the evadencit against Norton.
Drift.in& in and out of the aecret
transcript.I leading to tbe indict-
m enta is teeUmony ceoterina
around the Laa Ve1aa culno
trade.
Frank Watt.I, controller ot the
Riviera Hotel, testified that hotel
recordl indicate Dleclricb loet
$30,000 ia u houri lut Oct. l and
2 while t..tinc his •ltlll at two crap tables.
And. Watta added. u wbat tbe · ca1lno calla ... Sood player,"
Diedrich WU llVtD complimen.
tery room1, °'•ah and
beverages during his Las Vepa •.
stay1. I 0
It ii Dlectrtcb'• aueaed tallare
to U1t tbo value ot the 'purported
Laa Ve1aa 1ratulUe1 on hl• ecooomic di.cloeve •1-tetQenta
that resulted Jn e 1econd pcjqry
count included in th• lncUet~ menll.
The tra~riJ>ll' mC>tl colorful .. readinl comes from a written record o1 ·a tape recorded con-
versation between. Conrad and
· Las Vegas showman Joe Agosta .
In conversation liberally
sprinkled with ~ltUor wordl.
Conrad br.,ged of the inroads he
had made loto Oruae CWA"1
pollUcal c1rcl ..
neutron weapou would be put ott
pendlnt tbe armt eontrol at\ld.y.
At a M'WI conftl'tnCe Tueeday.
Carter ur1ed tht Senate to ap-
prove f\mdlni for f\.lrther de-
velopment ot the weapon1.
Neutron weapoo1, lmplant.ed in
a rtillery abell1 and Lance mia·
sllea. are deaitned to kW with
concentnted radiation rather
than explolives or heat ~ed In
mo~e conventlonal•nuclear armament.
While Carter uraed continued
development of Lbe weapons, he
left open the question ol actually
deploYin& them.
"I have not yel declded
whether to approve a 1'eutl'On
born b, but I think It abould be one
of our options," the President
said.
In a letter to neutro.r, supporter
Sen. John Stennis (D·Miss.).
Carter said the we..,ons "are in
this nation's security interest."
Front Page Al
TAX RATE ••
ti on rate, 45 cents
Adding the general purpose,
adult education and bond interest
and redemption taxes and
permtnlve overridH would
bring the total Capistrano tax rate
to $4.04, down Crom $4 .94 in
1976·77.
"l don't want to pin myself
down on a precise tax rate until
we get figure& from the county,"
Chicas said ... But I am predict·
ing a minimum cut ol 75 centa, a
maximum of 90 cents."
The Capistrano Unified dia-
trict, with an as&eued v~uaUon
o( $682.S IQWlon fof l971·18. COV•
era 20 percent of the land in
Oranae County. 1t iooludea the
sommunlt1e1 of Laguna Ni"'81,
San Juan Captatrano, Dana
Point, Capiatrano Beach, San
Clemente and part of Misaion .
Viejo.
Dlsney~ued
·i:arenta: Wolf ~aaled ~irl·
SACRAMENTO CAP) -Photographic slides
taken of a 4-year·old Soutb Lake Tahoe girl after she
was mauled by a wolf have been shown to a
Sacramento Superior Court jury.
But the courtroom presentation was halt&! WhCJl ~
one juror began showing signs of nausea.
The girl is Shelli Crum, whose parents, Terry and "
Judy, brought suit against Walt Disney Productions,
Inc., charging negligence in the supervlalon ·or ...
trained wolves belDg used in the filming of a wildlife
movie.
They contend that in October 1974, two wolves
wandered free during a break in the filming, and one
attacked Shelli, who was in her own backyard
with two brothers and a friend. .,
Tbe slides were shown by Dr. John IU~11cu, a
plastic surgeon who has operated· on the gfrl six
times. He said she will need surgery for facial Scat$
every three to four years when an :id ult to tJihten saa·
ging skin. • .
South Coast
ROPBoard
:Eyes Budget
The Capistrano-Laguna
Regional Occupational Program
(ROP) 1overninc board is
scheduled to consldft approval
today of a *582,'701 budiet for
1971·78. .
The meetlna la to begin aU:4S
p.m. in the Laauna Beach'
Unified School District board
room, 650 Blumont St.
Cbancea amou.nun.c to $49,989
to tbe ~vioualy •PPf'OVed ten·
tallve budfet would include in.
creaae1 lo teacher aalarles,
•mploye benefit.I, bookl and SUJ>o
plle1 8ftd operaUnc expenses.
Funds to cover the increases
would come from the general re-
aerve and the conUnaency fund.
The ·Caplatrano-Lacuna ROP
·offera on·the-job internablPI in
conjunction with classroom in-strucUon to prepare adults, out·
of·achool youth and hi&h school
students to enter the job market.
It ia co-spons~red by the
Capiatrano and LaJuna Beach
Unified School Districts.
F .... PageAJ
SHELTER ....
arcbltect wbo eaUmated bulldiq
costs.
May said the city ha1 •n
average daily population of
about 25 impounded dogs. He
said were the city to contract
with Orance County Animal Con·
trol fOl' service, t.he yearly COit
would be $36,000 a year tor
abelter aJone.
Jn addition, the city animal
control olficera and truck would
have to drive to Oranae to tbe
county abelter, thua taldnc time
away from city patrolUns. Two
trip• would be n99ded weekend.a
and three weekend days. A round
trip ud kennel Umt i• about two
houri. La1unana would then
have to IO to Oranae to pick up
their lmpowided anlmala aa well.
Gay eeUmated a ~ square
foot office and cat holdint facill.
ty would coat about $36,000.
ConatrucUon of 20 do1 runa would
be another $16,000. Utility costs
and site improvement.I were not
rtaured in those eaUmates tnd
depend on conditfons at the 1Jte. ·
The commisaion unanimously
aareed not to recommend the
A CT ·5 parJt.lna lot as a potential site.
F.re•PageAl " "[ don't feel we should put
anythina in there. I don't think
we should encourage any further
encroachment," Commissi®er
William LtakaaJd.
PAY ••• ·· I J
All other high-level county or-
ficials except !or ProbaUon Of·
ficer Martaret Grier. recel\led at
Jea1t the S.85 percent raise.
Miss Grier .. whose raise is still
under review, was taken a step ·
up the salary ladder but her pay
C or the present will atay •t $37,190 annually.
cent pay raise, from $28,246 to
$29,898, prompted Supervisor
Laureoce Schaul to su11est that
.next year the pay issue be J?)aced
on the balloL
He voted in favor of the pay
rahe for this year. His motion to
place next year's raise on the
ballot died for lack of a secorut,
but Schmit •aid be would brin& it
up again.
Affected by the $52,000..a-year
pay ceUinf were Adrian K~per. county counsel; Robert Thomas,
adminlltraUve officer: George
Osborne, diteetol'o( the F;nviron-
mental Management Agency;
David Odell, director of the
Human Sel'vlees Agen.ey; t>r.
E rnest Klatte. dJrectol' of the
Mental Health ~partment and County l;lealtb Offlcer J. B.
Elpers.
Commiaaioo Chairman Diana
Dike lameQted lntraaaigence on
the part of the S.pcA with wboin
the city bad been contracting for
animal control prior to a
year and a half ago. Tbe two
parted comp&Qy wilb C®lidefa·
ble ill feeling.
"It is unfortunate we bave
already a facility out there in the
canyon with the SPCA, un-
ro.rtunate we can't work out an
agreement with the SPCA," Mrs. Dike said.
The commission illso tuled out
putting a temporary facility on
the city owned Eucalyptus Grove
near Woodland Drive.
uunaoaeptable, .. snlired Com·
miuloner Belinda Blacketer. ··we alreedy gave them Art·A·
Falr. We don't need to give them
thedop, too. ''shesald.
Tbe commission recom·
mended the city council "urgent.
ly purtuo use of the dump site''
for animal aervtcea facility and
said all other alternatives poeed
extreme dlaadvanU.,aea and
should not be used.
• • .
. ~· .. ,_ ..
-
Orange Coast
EDITION
Today's (;I-Ing l
N.Y.Stoeks
·~
VOL. 70, NO. 19~. 4 SECTIONS, ~6 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JULY 13, 19n N TEN CENTS)
J11ry Hears 'Wo1nan S . d'~ corne ·i ..
•1 OAJlY OllANVILLS ..... o.ity ...... , ....
Secret srand jury tran.acrlpls
ahow tb•t tbe teaUmony o( a
woman acorned wu vital to the
inveat1&atioo leadin1 to the re·
cent Indictment of Orance Coun·
ty Supervisors Ralph Diedrich
and Philip Anthony.
Witness Links Checks in County Probe loans from themselves.
And neither Remington DC)t
Diedrich ftled major campaien
donor statements showing their
alleged financial role in the cam-
paiin.
The woman whose testimony
wrapped a band of circumstan·
tial evidence around Diedrich,
Anthony and their four alleged
co-conspirators 1n a purported
plot to undermine stale cam·
I paign regulations Is Donna
Doue,bty. I M.ra. Doughty was indicted t Fullerton att.oroey Michael Rem·
lngton's chief secretary and of·
fice manager for U years.
lo testimony before the grand
jury, Remington admitted hav·
1ng a "c1ose relalionstup" with
Mrs. Doughty that underwent a
dramatic change when he mar·
ried another woman last Oct. 1.
Thus, Remington said, "a few
months ago" things became un.
comfortable around the office
and, by mutual agreement, Mrs.
Doughty left his employ.
On J&me 20, Mrs. Doughty was
before the grand jury as a wit·
neSI into an eight-month probe
into county political practices
that would end In 11 days with the
indictment or Diedrich, Anthony.
Remington and three others.
The 42-year-old woman had
been before the jury two weeks
earlier.
In that appearance she
responded to queations asked her
about bookkeeping operations in
Remington's office with a slan·
dard "Privileged." By privileged. Mrs. Doughty
meant that, as an employe of
Dallf l'I ... St.ft ,.,...
FRISBEE CHAMP CHAIS JOHNSON (RIGHT) SHOWS COSTA MESA KIDS HOW 1rs DONE
Frank Werner, 11 O•tt), Tim Holley, 12, Pick Up Some T1p1 From the Master
N-M Schools
Trim 2 Cents
Off Tax Rate
At 16, Frisbee Fun
Flickers, 'Fades'
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of Ille D•llY "lloUt•ff What does an aglng Frisbee
champion who came within a
flick of the wrist of becoming
world champion do after retire-
ment?
Chris Johnson. last year's first
runner-up in the world cham-
pionships held in Atlanta, Ga., is
coaching other Frisbee flickers
for Costa Mesa's recreation de·
partment.
The 16·year·old Corona del
NB Tennis
Matches Set
Deadline for entries in the
Newport Beach summer doubles
teMJs tournament baa ~ ex·
tended to .July 20, according to an
announcement troin the city
Parks, Beaches and Recreation
Departmetit.
Tbe toUmament will be 1ie1d on
the weekend& of July 30-31 111d
Au1. &-7 in iwo cluseJ. One la for
city residents and the other is for
people who have taken tennis
lessons from the PB and R in·
atrUctors, EntJ1' forms are available in all
city Ubrll':les, 't the Newport
Harbor Chamber of Commerce
and in the PB and R department
at clty ball.
I BJ AUBUa a. VINS&L
Ot•DlllfNMWtt
• A C!'Gllf esaed thUd moliilter
wttb a ,ltilltbt etiJne reCWd la
beln1 IOU'Olt to4aY tbrouihout tlt• western United State1, after
talllilc to appear: In a N•wport
BMCI eourlroo$ Tuead1y for .. ~.
~LeRoy ()peon,"· • Santa Aoa n.tdent who teDdecl bar in 1
CoS&a lfeu beer *-t•ern for a llv·
lq, 11 Qlamld tn 1150,000 ball ar·
Mar High School senior says he
can't compete in lhe Whammo
Company competition anymore
because he's too old.
"They don't want kids who
have placed before in their con·
tests. either ," the saucer expert
shrugged.
So he applied for a job as assis·
tant recreation leader in Costa
Mesa last month.
''I told them I thought I had
something to offer them," he
said, scratching the middle
finger of bis right hand. That
finger has a callus near the t.op
joint which comes from constant
Frisbee tossing.
"I probably should have a ,
piece of tape on it," Jobnaon
said.
He'• been coaching kids at a
dozen dty parks for the past few
weeks In preparation for Costa
Mesa's ninth annual Frisbee con·
test which was held today at
Te Winkle Park.
'1It'a Juat takes a lot of practice
and confidence.'' Johnson tells
bia students. • lie lines participants up for
Frisbee relaya, giving them tJps
in the eight categories for com·
petition, including straight
throw, right aod left curve, skip
fllght, distance, accuracy, and
catchln1 the disk behind the back
and between the leas.
Johnaon plck~d up his ex·
(See FltlSBn. Page AZ>
lawyer Remington's she was
bound to keep her boss' dealings
wtth b1s chents, ancludtng
Diedrich, confidential.
But in her appearance before
the jury June 20, Mrs. Doughty
bad been relieved of compulsion
to remain silent by a Superior
Court judge.
Then, for more than three
hours she answered Assistant
District Attorney M lchael
Capiui's questions.
Mrs. Doughty's replies to
Capiui's questions clearly linked
County's
Jobless
Lowered
Orange County's unemploy·
ment rate dipped to its lowest
point since 1972 last month when
it reached 4.4 percent, according
to figures released today by the
State Employment Development
Department <EDD).
An EDD spokesman said
June's unemployment rate was
.. the lowest on record since the
department beganps labor study
series in 1972."
The 4.4 percent unemployment
rate is down from 4.6 percent in
May and from 5.8 percent in
June, 1976.
"Unemployment always rises
in June because of graduating
high school and college seniors,"
said EDD labor analyst Alta Yet·
ter.
''However." Mrs. Yetter said,
"the increase this year was far
leas tban Qtlclpated and that is
why the seasonally adjusted un·
employment rate ts so low.''
She noted that county amuse·
ment parka and restaurants
added 4,500 workers to their
payrolls last month.
And, Mrs. Yetter sald, Orange
County•s construction boom con·
tinued when 1,300 workers were
added to construction payrolls.
Mrs. Yetter pointed out that
the cOWJly's civilian work force
reached 875,000 persons in June,
a record high.
She also noted that private
firms within the ·county
employed 658,800 workers in
June.
Government employment dur·
ing the month was buoyed by 600
jobs, including lifeguards t-Jred
to safeguard bathers at county
beaches.
Mrs. Yetter said some firms
have reported small cutbacks in
employment since the reporting
day in mid June.
* *· *
Diedrich cbecka to Remington
with Remington checks to
various political candidates, in·
eluding Anthony and indicted
Anaheim City Councilman
William Kott.
With former police informer
Gene Conrad thrown into the
middle of some transactions, the
basis for the felony conspiracy
indictments was formed.
That's because Anthony, Kott
and other candidates showed the
Remington money coming into
their campaign,s as personal
But Mrs. Dougbty's testimony
tended to indicate the ink was
barely dry on Diedrich checks to
her former boss before the
Fullerton attorney passed
similar amounts on to the can-
cildat.es.
Her words also coincided with
bank records either seized by dis~
trict attorney investigators
armed with search warrants or
surrendered voluntarily.
(See WITNESS. P11e AZ>
......... ,.._ ---->"':::: ______ _
-
&. • T
SHADED AREAS ENVISIONED AS PARKING FACILITY
Newport Buat.,.aamen .S..k Ctty•a Help
Newport to Study
Pier Parking Plan
A group of Newport Beach
businessmen want the city to buy
al least two pieces of property
near the Newport Pier and put a
two-story parking structure on
them.
Councilmen have agreed to
study the proposal.
The suggestion came from a
group known as the Central
Newport Parking Committee, a
coalition of businessmen
representing businesses from
Lido Village to McFadden
Square near the pier.
The committee says it wants to
form a parking district which
would issue bonds to raise money
to buy and operate parking lots.
Paul Carlson. committee
spokesman and general manager
or Lido Village, said the commit·
lee wants the city to buy the land
now and the district, when
formed, would buy it back.
U the parking district fails to
materialize, be said, the city
could then either sell the proper-
ty or operate the parking
facilities itself.
California's Jobless
Lowest in 3 Years
The committee wants tbe city
to buy two Jots on 22nd Street
owned by Dr. Carl Ackerman
and the building on 23rd Street
now occupied by lbe Newport
Harbor Art Museum.
The museum is slated to move
to new quarters In Newport
Center in two months and
Ackerman is cWTeoUy trying to
get city approval for plans to re-
model the two building$ on b1s
lots.
SACRAMENTO (AP} -
California's unemployment rate
fell to 6.9 percent in June, the
lowest in three years and the first
time in 17 years that the state·
bas been below the national rate,
officials said today.
The jobless rate had been 7 .8
percent ln May. For the third
straight ~ontb, total employ-·
ment set a record, nearly 9.3
million, up 136,000 since May.
The naUonal unemployment
rate. wblch baa beeo running as
much a two percentage points
below Calltornia'a, wu 7.1 per-
cent in June, up Crom &.9 percent
in May.
State Employment Develop·
ment Director Martin Glick said
employment records were set in
numerous industries, including
construct.loo, wbJcb bas gained
16 percent in Jobs over a year
ago.
He said the fleures wefe
"further indication that
California is outpacing the rest ol
the nation ln speed of turnaround
from the recent receaaton. ••
But be cautioned that they
reflected mid.June totalJ, before
President carter announced that
be opposed development ol the
Bl bomber,• move already caua-
i o g t ayofh lo Southern
California.
What the committee bas ln
mind ls combining the two
parcels with the ex.isU01 parkine
lot at Forglt's Hardware store.
Coast
Weather
Low erouda tonight
through mld·mornlng Thursday. Sunny Thurs·
day afternoon. Lows
tonight 56 to 63, Highs
Thur1day 70 to 7• at
beaches to 1'1 to M inland.
uf81DB TODAY
AJ DAIL V PILOT N i .. l ~.,., •.•.. (' y •• • •, , ..... ,,• ... ·~.... •
'· I • ~ ... '·· F ' ~ I ... ' .1.
• •W tau ---
Senate to . :Approve
~·
Neutron Funding?
WASHINGTON (Ar\ S<-m1te
MlnorU.Y l~•dt·r Howard Hu.-r pr*91cted today tht ~natc will
approve l\aads fCK controvenha.I
n~ull'CIO Wt'apoal which Presldent
Cart er aaya are nffdod for UM! d~
fen~eotW•tt'm Europe.
Neutron warhciads art-de
sl1ned to kill enemy 1old1ers with
radtat1on while lnfltctl n1t
muuma.I expk>9ive de1trucUoo an
the blast area.
Opponents of lhe weapons led
by Seo. Mark 0 . HaUleJd (R· Ore.), plaMed lo carry their
figbl to the fioor of the Senate.
where a vote wu acheduled late
today on deleUni funda for pro-
ductioo ol the weapoua from a
public works appropriation bill.
H•ker a.utd he had not taken a
formal head count of how the
Senalti wUI vote, bul added, "It is
my auaea that Hatfield probably
wouldlOH.''
Before the vote, Senate leaders
met to decide how to limit debate
on the weapons, which crilies say
would mark a dangerous leap in
lh~ aarms race.
Hatfield b aa saJd the funds
s hould not be approved, at least
unUl Carter bas provi ded a leaaJ-
ly required assessment or the
neutron weapons' impact on
arms proliteration.
One Senate source said today Sen . Hubert H. Humphrey (D·
Minn.), attempted to work out an
Front Page A J
WITNESS ANSWERS. • •
Significantly, Remincton's
former office manager satd she
had no knowledge of a so-eaJled
Diedrich bank trust held by Rem-
ington except what she had read
in the newspapers.
In the end, the grand jury
thought enough of the bank
evidence and linking testimony to
hand down its felony conspiracy
indictment.A.
In the closing stages of the in-
vestigation, the Grand Jury
heard from some of Orange
County's most controversi11l
political figures, including
former county Democratic Party
chairma n Richard O'Neill,
political consultant Arnold Forde
and lobbyist Frank Michelena. O'Neill figured into the probe
b ecause of a $100,000 loan
guarantee he and Dr. Louis Cella
posted m 1974 at a Santa Ana
bank for Diedrich.
when he said:
'"Thal wasn't our responsibili-
ty any more. We almost came to
a total parting of the ways in &be
campaign because, in one sense, Anthony wanted to do that ... he
was going to be totally in charge
of the campaign."
Had Forde told Anthony that il was okay to accept campaign
loans as personal loans and then
to show the money coming into
the campaign as loans from the candidate?
"There was certainly no talk
about a third party giving money surrepUUously or anyt.Jung hke
that." Forde testified.
agreement with Carter under
wl\icb a Senate decision on the
neutron weapons would be put off pendlng the arms control study.
At a news conlerence Tuesday,
Carter ureed the Senate to ap.
prove funding for further de-
velopment of the weapons. Neutron weapons, implanted in
artillery shells and Lance mis-
siles, are deelgned to kill with
concentrated radiation rather
than explosives or heat used in
more conventional nuclear
armament.
While Carter urged continued
development of the weapons, he
left open the question of actually
deploying them.
"I have not yet decided
whether to approve a neutron
bom b, but I think 1l should be one
oC our options," the President
said.
In a letter to neutron supporter
Sen . J ohn Stennis <D-Mlss.),
Carter said the weapons '"are in
this nation's security interest.''
Carter told Stennis, "We are
not talking about some new kind
of weapon, but of modernization
of nuelear weaoons.
The President said the neutron
warheads might be needed ''for
discreet application or force"
against NATO enemies. Neutron
weapons, be said , would keep
potential adversaries in Europe
uncertain whether nuclear
weapons mighl be used ag!Unst
their "forward echelons.·'
Carter said two detailed
studies on the weapons are due Aug. 15 from the Pentagon and
the Arms Control and Disarma·
mentAgency.
Onee he bas received those re· ports, Carter said, ··1 intend to
m ake a final production de·
cision ... " '
Cleanup Time
Good old summertime
meana cleanup time on Newport B~ and lnapec-
tor 8111 Blibeak la flad of it.
The lnl~tor b newly . s tationed her e by the
Pollution Patrol to test the
fraiile waters.
''YOU FOLKS have a
debris p roblem in s um-
mer," be said. "Plastic
cups and bags, cans, bot·
• ties, the usual litter on the
shoreline. It rides the tides
and collects in pockets.
You get someone e lse·s
debris; they get yours.
''And that brown
sargassum weed and 1reen
algae thrive everywhere in
the wann shallow water •.
"HOWEVER, I un·
derstand that bayfront
homeowners and their
neighbors attack the un-
sighUy mess with rakes,
shovels and nets during the
season, and the city and
Harbor Depart.ment pro·
vlde ample pickup.
"I call these efforts
highly commendable.
N othin1 prettier than
Newport Bay -If Jt's
clean."
Before flapping off.
Bigbeak said he would be
making regular dives to
find the source of oth«1r bay
pollutants.
NB Residents Urged
To Help Clean Bay
Members of SPON <Stop
Polluting Our Newport) are
sponsoring their annual Bay
Beautiful cleanup this week by
urging residents to clean up
debris in the lower bay.
SPON members wtll provide
bags for reaidenl8 interested in
cleaning beaches or scooping
debris in the water.
Trash bags are avallable at the
following locations:
Mrs. James Schultz, 21 Balboa
Coves; Mrs Jay Watt, 4 Harbor
Isl•nd; Mrs. Wilbur Reynolds,
123 Amethyst Ave., Bob Bisbee,
UQJon Oil Marine Dock. 496 S.
Bayfront; Mrs. Robert Knutsen.
321 Coral Ave., and Mrs. Pat
Rolllns, ll3Turquoise Ave., all of
Balboa Island.
Bags are also available from
Mrs. James Madison, 222
Abalone Ave .. LltUe Island; Mrs.
Robert Belden, 1350 W. Bay
Ave.; Mrs. A. J . Wevtll, 2117
Seville Ave .• Balboa; Mrs.
Howard Morgrtd1e, 1 Bay
Island; the Lido Isle Clubhouse;
Mrs. Wllllam Mott.er, 2602 Circle
Drive, Bayshores; Mr1. Don
Renner, 1933 Bayside Drive and
Mrs. R. R. Stevens, 1747 Port
M anleigh Circle.
When Capizzi on June 28 asked
O'Neill about the background of
the guarantee, the self·described
··fin an cl er· ranch· res taura-
teur" testified:
"Well. Mr. Diedrieh requested
a loan. At that particul ar time he
told me he had high interest rates
-having a little trouble re-
financing some property and re-
quested a loan to hold him over
80, 120 days at the most.••
Michelena spent most of his
time before the Grand Jury ex·
plaining why he had provided a
member of the county Assess-
m ent Appeals Board with the use
of a leased Cadillac and one-time
Republican state senate can-
aidate with $3,!IXI.
Michelena s aid the auto and
gasoline credit card provided to
Newport Beach attorney Frank
Waters was, in effect,' a retainer
for Waters' services.
OC Workers Pay Upped
"With whom did you discuss
t he continuing guarantee?"
Capim asked.
"Dr. Cella asked me lo support
-to go along with this loan."
"And it is with Dr. Cella that y ou discussed the Joa n?'•
Capizzi asked O'Neill. ·
"Yes." the financier·rancher-
restauranteur answered.
As things turned out on the
$100,000 Cella-O'Neill loar.
guarantee:
-The bank made demand for
payment from O'Neill when
Diedrich initiaJly failed to repay
the loan on lime and to respond to
dunning phone calls and lelten.
-The 80, 120 days turned out lo
be 16 months before Diedrich
made payment in two instaJI·
men ts.
-Diedrich was indicted on per-
JUry charges for failing to show
the loan on economic disclosure
statements filed in 1976 and 1977,
though It did show on two earlier
statements. ....
Political consultant Arnold
Forde testified June 28, the same
day O'Nelll appeared before the
Grand Jury.
·Yes, Forde said, he and
partner William Butcher pad
manaaed Anthony's primary
campaign in June, 1976.
"In the general election, An·
thony was more interested in run-
ning ~the campai1n himself,"
Forde said.
"So whal we agreed to do in the
Anthony campai1n is that he
(Ant.bony) would be io charge oI
it.·~
"He would be in charge or it
and we would be in charge of de-
velopina a direct mail packase."
Forde testified.
The polltlcal consultant put
more distance between his firm
and the general election cam-
pai1n fundraising lor Anthony
Of'ANOI COAl'T
DAILY PILOT
. .-... ... -..... -.-~ ....
V><•-~\:;C .. ...._ --·-
°"""".
c.i ....... , Ul=·='a=:. .......... .... MIM!~t.4(11• ,,.,,_ ...,
• ....,.Vl"'"t llllOl~ .... .--.. _O'-,_
"
And he denied that he or any or
his clients had business before
the board. 5.58 Percent Wage Boost Approved
As for the money paid then
candidate Norton. Michelena
said it was for investigative
services.
The checks were made payable
to Norton's former crony Gary
Newmyer because Michelena
believed the two were collaboral-
in& in their investigative adven-
tures.
Those adventures ended in
April with Norton being indicted
on perjury charges and
Newmyer acting as the recorder·
equipped turncoat that gathered
the evidence agains t Norton.
Drifting in and out of the secret
transcripts leading to the indict-
ments is testimony centering
around the Las Vegas casino
trade.
Frank Watts, controller of the
Riviera Hotel, testified that hotel
records indicate Diedrich lost
$30,000 in 12 hoW'S last Oct. 1 and
2 while testing his skill at two
crap tables.
And, Watts added, as what the
casino calls "a good player,"
Diedrich was given complimen·
tary rooms, m eals and
beveraees during his Las Vegas
stays. ·
It is Diedrich's aUeged failure
to list the value of the purported
Las Vegas gratuities on his
economic disclosure statements
that resulted in a second perjury
count included in the indict·
ments.
The transcripts' most colorful
reading comes from a written
record of a tape recorded con-
versaUon between Conrad and
Las VegasshowmanJoeAgosta.
In conversation liberally
sprinkled with four.Jetter words.
Conrad bragged of the inroads he
had made into Orange County
political circles.
Golf Cart Stolen
A 1olf cart value<f by its 82-
year·old • woman owner at $375 has been stolen from its Lquna
HJlls Leisure World parklnlr spot.
Orange County 1heriff's offtcera
said the theft of the cart was re-
ported by Mildred Heber Bates
of 2400 Via Mariposa Weal.
They believe it was driven off by
the thief .
By KATHY CLANCY
Of u.. o .. u, ~1 .. 1 si.11
Orange County supervisors
gave themselves and most of the
county's other 9,600 employes a
5.85 percent pay raise Tuesday.
They also set a $52,QOO.a.year
ceiling on the salaries of the six
highest·paid county workers,
who would have gone higher than
the $52,000 mark with the pay
raise.
Included in the salary resolu·
tion was a two-year contract with
.county general and supervisory
personnel. The proposal, already
approved by the employes,
grants them a S.85 percent pay
hike retroactive to July 1 and a
5.S percent increase ror next
year.
Supervisors also rejected a re-
quest from Russell Bostrum of
the Orange County Association of
Deputy Sheriffs that the associa-
tion be immediately allowed to represent deputies.
~rvices Held
For Newpori's ·
Mrs. Barnard
Funeral services have been
conducted for Cirrelda Julia r
Barnard who died recently at the
age of 62 at Hoag MemoriaJ
Hospital.
A long·ti me resident of
Newport Beach, Mrs. Barnard
was a member of the Trojan
Leaeue. the Col. WIUiam Cabell
chapter of the Daughters ~ the
American Revolution, Chapter
NQ of PEO and the South Coast
Alumni Club of Pl Beta Phi
Fraternity.
Survivors include three
daugbt.en, Mrs. Jackson MUls.
Jr. of Boulder1 Colo., Frances
Ann Barnard or Newport Beach
and Mrs. Raymond Pineda of
Santa Fe, N.M.; a brother,
Elmer Hale, Jr. of McAlester,
Okla., and four grandchildren.
Mrs. Barnard's husband,
Thomas, died In 1958. ·
The family su11ests memoriaJ
contributions to the Multiple
Sclerosis Society or Orange.
County. 11752 Garden Grove lll~d., Garden Grove.
p,....pa,,eAJ
FRISBEE FLICKER.
perlenceover stJtawnmen lltM
bet.ch.
Ho 1ald that When tile city
cbampkl0a1\lpl ar. o'"" be'U stiU
be wortMc f« th• c!t.7•• recJQ·
tiOll depertment. ••ru moetty be baulln• around ~ulptlMl)t to~!'"' anddO&aia m alnteu.noe •• after lhe contest.'' be Hid. Now \bit bo'I an wubW up
far •• Wbammo compeUtloo
_.,,WW M ltW tall a f'rilbM?
.................. pro.:
,..., • ., ......... lalt A&lfll
• •
Jnslead, they told Bostrum the
aroup should petition through
routine county channels for a
separate bargaining unit.
The supervisors' own 5.85 per·
cent pay raise, from $28,2'6 to
$29,898, prompted Supervisor
Laurence Schmit to suggest that
next year the pay issue be placed
on the ballot.
lie voted in favor of the pay
raise for this year. His motion to
place next year's raise on the
ballot died for lack of a seccild,
but Schmit said he would bring it
up again.
Affected by the $52,000·a-year
pay ceiling were Adrian Kuyper,
county counsel ; Robert Thomas.
administrative officer; George
Osborne, director of the Environ-
mental Management Agency ;
David Odel~ director of the
Human Servaces Agency; Dr.
Ernest Klatte, director 0£ the •
Mental Health Department and
County Health OHicer J . ~·
Elpers. •
-. All other high·leveJ county of.
ficials except for Probation Of.
ficer Margaret Grier, received at
least the S.85 percent raise.
Miss Grier, whose raise ta atill
under review, was taken a step
up the salary ladder but her pay for the preeenl will stay at $37,190
annually.
Seven county officials received
tbe 5.85 percent hike plus
montblyral1es ranging from $100
lo$400.
County Assessor Bradley
Jacobs received the largest
boost, the S.8S percent raise plus
$400 more monthly. putting his
yearly pay al $60,212.
Following are the old and new
salaries of other top officials:
Dist.rtct Attorney Cecil H1cks.
$48,022 to $50,831 ; Frank
Williams, public defender,
$46,342 to $49,053 ; Sheriff·
Coroner Brad Gates, $40,678 to
$44,357 ; Tom Egan, director or
the Ge~eral Services Agency,
$39. 000 to $41.281:
Also, A\lditor·Controller Vic
Heim, $38,7q_ to $43,001 ; Tax
Collector·Treasurer Robert Citron, $37,460 to $42,901 and
Co\4nty Clerk William St John,
$34, 102 to $37 ,396.
Wsm Up Suits--25•s to 391s
Plain Acrylic Jacbt only 141s
Plain AcryUc Pants Only 11 es
Y·neck Acrylic Sweaters 51s
Rumiflif Sllirts-3~ to 91s
O.P. Snn T111Dks -900 ti 1300
Speed1 Swim Suits & Trunks
bslllall Pants 10ts.1215
SlftDall Jmeys-325 ti 7•s
Tennis Shirts & Shorts
Teuls •mes
LaliS T111i1S Sllorts
T11niS Slllls
-~
f. '
,
F,...PageAJ
MOLESTER
Duncan demanded before isauin•
a terse orckl' to draw up a t..<50,000
bench warrant for h1a arrest.
He also asked if any represen·
• \attve of the Mariners' Com· munity Asaociation might be·
present.
Tho or1antaallon collected
peUUona demanding the absolute
maximum penaJly be impoeed -
six months in county jail -when
Opson waa to be aeot.eoced Tues,.
day.
Residents of the Mariners and
Westcliff dJstrlcl8 of Newport
Beach were upset over the lnci·
dents, In which Opson admitted
involvement.
Police claim be strolled the
atreeta carrylni a camera. ac·
costing 1irls while claiming to be
a newspaper pboto&rapher.
No one from the association ad-
mitted being present in the
courtroom.
Judge IlG9gan then explained
he was compelled by the law to
ignore the petition for harsh
punishment and order it sent
back to the Mariners' Communi-
ty Association without a look.
The organization attached a
cover letter which stipulated the
petition could not be examJned
by either Opson or his lawyers,
because signers feared future
retribution against themselves
or their children.
Fro•P~AJ '
2 CENTS •••
which goes to bond debt and
building loan retirement.
No actJon will be taken to re-
duce the general fund tax rate
unUl Aug. 9 when the assessment
figures have been finalized.
Preliminary figura showed the
district's assessed value is up
about 19 percent, buL public uUli-
ty usessmenta aren't complete
yet.
Nicoll told trustees the 66-cent
drop Jn the tax rate would equal
nearly 18 percent, thus offsetting
most ol the increase in assessed
values.
Trustees decided to take action
Tuesday on the civic center tax
rate as "an act or faith,"
demonstrating their desire to
keep tax bUls from rising.by meet·
tng increases ln assessed value
with decreases in the tax rate.
The district's $49.4 million
bude~ ineludes ssoo,ooo in ex-
penditures for civic center proJ· ecta. By dropping the tax rate
two cents, trustees said they wu1 •
take the $216,000 that tu would
have raised from the district's
capital improvement fund to
make up tbe difference.
The move received the
unanimous support of the seven
trustees who termed it "ap-
propriate and a "step in the right
direction."
CdM Girl Elected
Girls State Mayor
Corona del Mar High School
student Jeanne Eliades won elec-
tion as mayor of the mythical
town ol Burnett during the recent
statewide youth in government
program known u Girls Slate.
Miss Eliades, who wm be a
senior at Corona del Mar in Sep·
tember, WU one or SIS delegates
to the 'program in Sacramento
which ls sponsored by the
American Legion Auxiliary_
• -..
Saddlebaek
EDITION
llfternooa
N.Y. Stoek.s
1
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JULY 13, 1'177 . TEN CENT~ t VOL. 70, NO. 1CM, .C SECTIONS, ~6 PAGES
' ,_, s d'~ ~J11ry Hears n onian come ·,;
'
BJ GAaY GaANVIU.E Ol ... o.11,_,..,..
Secret 11and jury transcrlpta
abow that tho tt1tJmony of a
woman scorned wu vital to the
investigation leadlnc to the l'fl·
cent indictment of Ounce Coun-
Witness Links Checks in County Probe Joans from themselves.
And neither Remington nqr
Diedrich filed major campaign
donor statements showing their
alleged financial role ln the cans·
paiJn.
. ty Su])er'Vi50rs Ralph Diedrich
and Philip Anlbooy.
The woman whose testimony
wrapped a band of circumstan-
tial evidence around Diedrich,
Anthony and their four alleged
co-conspirators In a purported
plot to undermine state cam-
inaton's chief secretary and or.
flee manaaer for 11 years.
In teaUmony before the grand
jury. emington admitted hav-
ing a "close relationship" with
Mrs. Doupty that underwent a
dramatic change when he mar-
ried another woman last Oct.1.
neas lnto an eight-month probe
lnto county political practices
that would end in 11 days with the
indictment of Diedrich, Anthony,
Remin&ton and three others.
Tbe 4.Z-year-old woman bad
been before the jury two weeks
earlier:.
t paign regulations is Donna
Doughty.
ThllS, Remington said, "a few
months 810" thinp became UD·
comfortable around the office
and, by mutual agreement, Mrs.
Doughty Jen his employ.
In that appearance she
responded to questions asked her
about bookkeeping operations ln
Remington's office with a st.an·
dard "Privileged." I Mrs. Doughty was indicted t Fullerton a~tomey Michael Rem· On June 20, Mrs. Doughty was
before the grand jury as a wit-
By privileged, Mr"5. Doughty
meant that. as an employe or
i I
I
I
I
o.ily l'llOI SI.it Pllolo
LAS T MINUTE TOUCHES -Leah Vasques,
a Laguna Beach Sawdust Festival artist,
puts. final toucb~ on ·11 fountlilJ and J>OOl•
on the feqtival grounds. Laguna's tflree
summer art festivals will begin Friday for
a six-week run. More than 440 artists and
crafllmeii will be exbibittng work !Of' sale •
during the summer art orgy.
OC Workers Pay Upped
5 .58 Percent Wage Boost Approved
By KATHY CLANCY
OI , ... D•lly Pilot Swll
Orange County supervisors
gave themselves and most of the
county's other 9,600 employes a
S.85 percent pay raise Tuesday.
They also set a $52,000·a-year
ceiling on the salaries of the six
highest-paid county workers.
who would have gone higher than
the $52,000 mark with the pay
raise.
Included in the salary rcsolu·
lion was a two-year contract with
county general and supervisory
personnel. The proposal. already approved by the employes .
grants them a 5.85 percent pay
hike retroactive to July 1 and a
S.S percent in~rease for next
year. .
Supervisors also rejected a re-
quest from Russell Bostrum of
the Orange County Association of
Deputy Sheriffs that the a~ia·
tlon be immedJately allowed to
representdepuUes. ·
lnatead, they told Bostrum the I group should petition through
' routine county channels for a
separate bargaining unJt.
The supervisor•' own S.85 per-
cent pay raise, Crom $28,246 to
$29,898. P!~mpted .Supervisor
Co ast
Weatb~r
Low clouds tqnlght
through mid-morning
Thursday. SW\ny Thur•·
day afternoon. Lows
tonight 56 to 63. Hl&hs
Thursday 10 to 74 ,.t
beaches to Tl to 84 inland.
Laurence Schmit to suggest that
next year the pay issue be placed
on the ballot.
He voted ln favor of the pay
raise for this year. His motion to
place next year's raise on the
ballot died for lack of a second.
but Schmit said he would bring it
up again.
Affected by the $52,000-a-year
pay ceiling were Adrian Kuyper,
county counsel; Robert Thomas,
administrative officer; George
Osborne. director of the Environ·
mental Management Agency;
David Odell, director of the
Human Services Agency; Dr.
Ernest Klatte, director of the
Mental Health Department and
County Health OCficer J . R.
Elpers.
<SeePAY, Page A?>
Japanese Beetle
Found in FresTW
FR~NO (AP)-A Japanese
beeUe has been found at Fresno
Municipal Airport, the first litne
the plant-eating bug has ap-
peared here ln the hub of San
Joaquin Valley airiculture.
Officials have been unable to
determine where the beetle came
from, but obance~ are it arrived
on a flltbt from San Diego, Los
OC Dey Wall
Walkout
Now a Strike
Angeles or San Francisco, a
spo~m~ said.
Meanwhile, a Japanese beetle
bas been cauaht a half-mile from
airliners at Lindbergh Field,
bringing to43 the number found ln
San DiesoslnceJune29.
All but the latest, caught in one
of several traps a:inglng the
airport, were found in com·
rnerclal planes arrivin1 in San
l>iego from Washington, D.C. An
acriculture olficlal ... d the
trapped bwtle was the first found
this year in San Dleao ootaide an
aircraft.
The live beeUe found Tuesday
ln front of the Fretno air
terminal •as sent to state
afticulturll officu in Sacramen-
to. The bUC overcame t.remen·
dou• ockla ln evading ptecautions
tG keep beetles out. oC Fresno,
airwrt.ofticlala said.
The diJCOVery p~pted atx
airport 1DllUIPl'I to set nve new
beetle t?ape at ba,caae areaa amt ottieJ' polnta thto\lp which
lb•~ would bt Ukelf to en~r.
Tb• adclltlooaJ "''* brin1 the to\al •umber •t the airport to
etlbl .act tM tout In Fresno coon~ to alrnOit)OO..
lawyer Remington's she was
bound to keep her boss' deadlings
wun his clients, includtng
Diedrich, confidential.
But in her appearance before
the jury June 20, Mrs. Doughty
had been relieved bf compulsion
to remaJn silent by a Superior
Court judge.
Then, for more than three
hours she answered Assistant
District Attorney Michael
Caplui's questions.
Mrs. Doughty's replies to
Capizzi's questions clearly linked
Diedrich checks to RemlQllon
with Remington checks to
various political candidates, in·
eluding Anthony and Indicted
Anaheim City Councilman
William Kott.
With former police informer
Gene Conrad thrown into the
middle of some transactions, the
basis tor the felony conspiracy
indictments was formed.
That's because Anthony, Kott
and other candidates showed the
Remington money coming into
their campaigns as personal
But Mrs. Dougbty's testimony
tended to indicate the ink was
barely dry on Diedrich checks to
her former boas before the
Fullerton attorney passed
similar amoonls on lo the can-
didates.
Her words also coincided with
ban Ii records either seized by dis·
trict attorney investigators
armed with search warrants or
surrendered voluntarily.
(See WITNESS, Page AZ)
Jobless Toll Dips
Lowest June on R ecord for Count"y
Orange County's unemploy-
ment rate dipped lo its lowest
point since 1972 last month when
it reached 4.4 percent. according
to figures released today by the
State Employment Development
Department <EDD).
An EDD spokesman said
June's unemployment rate was
·'the lowest on record since the
department began ats labor a(udy
series in 1972. ••
The 4.4 percent unemployment
rate is down from 4.6 percent in
May and from 5.8 percent m
June. 1976.
"Unemployment always rises
in June because or graduating
* * * State Job less
Rate Falls to
6.9 Percent
SACRAMENTO (AP'...)
California's unemployment rate
fell to 6.9 percent in June. the
lowest In three years and the first
time in 17 years that the state·
has been below the national r~.
officials said today.
The Jobless rate had been 7.8
percent in May. For the third
straight month, total employ-
ment set a record, nearly 9.3
million. up 136,000 since May.
The national unemployment
rate, which bas been running as
much u two percentage point&
below California's, was 7.1 per-
ffnt in June, up from 6.9 peT"Cent
in May.
State Employment Develop-
ment Director Martin Glick said
employment records were set in
numerous industries, including
construction. which has gained
16 percent in jobs over a year
ago.
He said the figures were
''further indication that
California is outpacing the rest of
the nation ln speed of turnaround
from the recent recession."
But he c~utloned that they
reflected mid-June totals, before
President Carter announced that
be oppoted development of the
Bl bomber, a move already caus·
in1 layoffs in Southern
California.
F.arm Hired
For Niguel
Park Design
The South Lacuna llnn ptLan1
and Wood was blred by Orar\16
Countv sui>ervtsors Tuesday to
desi1n a $450,000 expansion
project at Laruna Nltuel
RelioaalPartr.
Tb• ap~lon calla for de. velopm~t ot C•Unpin1 are~,
froup picnic ground• a.net a trllll eoonectin• the ear)c to the ne~by
Crown Valli)' cqnnn\anlty Parl.
a report &o •uPel'Vison said. ~ ottkiaJt uld lloc:e Vie
par& w11_opeofidm AQptt tm it
tiu a~:S70AIO Yialtcn m;. c1Ud~1~4\U1AIUM. • n. ~k·'-aoeat..t .i-. ta Paa JlGi94Dtat Allcla.Paroqa.
LacwaaNituel I •
high school and college seniors,"
said EDD labor analyst Alta Yet·
ter.
"However," Mrs. Yetter said.
"the increase this year was far
less than anticipated and that is
why the seasonally adjusted un·
employment rate is so low."
She noted that county amuse-
m ent parks and restaurants
added 4,500 workers to their
payrolls last month.
And. Mrs. Yetter said. Orange
County's construction boom con-
tinued when 1.300 workers were
added to construction payrolls.
Mrs. Yetter pointed out that
the county's ci,·1Jian work force
reached 875,000 persons in June,
a record high.
She also noted that private
firms within the county
employed 658,800 workers in
June.
Government employment dur·
ing the month was buoyed by 600
jobs, including lifeguards hired
to safeguard bathers at county
beaches
Mrs. Yetter said some firms
have reported small cutbacks in
employment since \he reporting .
day in mid June.
However. she add ed. other
firms ha"·e reported .. strong.
stead\· expansion.··
Drivers to See Red
Where Hydrants Are ..
The lulrd·to-~, squatly and buff-colored M ·on Viejo fire
plugs that have en a thom in
the side of law enforcement of.
ficials and some motorists soon
will be easier to see.
Orange County supervisors ap-
proved a plan Tuesday to paint
the curbing along all 1,000 fire
hydrants brilfbt red as a warning
to motorists about to park their
cars.
The Moulton-Niauel Water Dis·
tJict has offered lo supply the
paint and Explorer Scouts will
man tbe initial paint.in~ crews.
County government then will
assume the estimated $8,000
worth or annual painting maJn-
tenance cost.
The modem fire plugs first
presented a problem last
December when South Orange
County Municipal Court Judge
John Griffin ruled in favor of a
Leisure Hills man contesting a
parking ticket in front of one or
the plugs.
The ruling came after the man
arrived in court, photos in hand.
to cont.end the fire plugs were out
or the ordinary and improperly
noticed.
The same judge later tossed
out several other tickets for the
same reasons.
County and local officials later
considered painting the fire
hvdriJnts. installing old-style
plugs or relocating the hydrants
to curbside before agreeing on a
solution, a report to supervisors
said.
County ofticials also are work· •
ing with the waler district and
Mission Viejo Company on a new hydrant design to avoid similar
problems in the future, the report
said.
Capo School Tax
Rate to Decrease
take it step by step.•'
In addition to the general
purpose lax of $3 •. 33. Chicas said
the following also figure in the
total tax rate for lm·78:
-Adult education, also set by
the state. six cents
-Community services, 10
centa (the maximum allowed)
-Mula for needy pupils. '4
cent
-State bUlldinJ loan repay·
menl, nine oenta
-R•Clonal Occupation Pro. 8J'alD, ,,. ceslt
-.BoQded interest and redemp-
tion rate. 45 cent.a
Addlnl tbe 1enerll purpose,
adult education and bond Interest
ancl redemption taxes and
permla1lve override& would
brinftbetotalCaplJlratlotaxrate
to $-t.04, dow.o from $4.N in
(See TAX ~TE, Pace At)
sa ,,_,_Al
WITNESS LINKS CHECKS.
Slenlrh·antlv. Remlncton'"
former olfk~ manaacr 11i11d ah"
had no knowled1• ot a 10-called
Dledrkh bank tru•t held by Rem
inaton exc.-pl wh11t •he had reMd
1n lb• newiipa~ra
In lht• end, th\• 1itrand jurv
tbou1ht eno11ah or the bunk
evldenc~ and Unldnt ldllmony h>
hand down 1~ frlony co1111>lnacy
1nd1ctmen1' Jn Uw cloi.1ne Maaes of lht-In·
vest11auon, th~ Gr1tod Jury
h~ard from some of Oranae
Counly'a moat cofttrover11al
po\illc:.I figures, incl udlnt
former county Democrallc Party
c hairman Richard O 'Neill,
pohllclll consultant Arnold Fordu
and lobbyist Frank Michelena.
O'NetU f1Jured into th~ probe
because or a Sl00.000 loan
guarantee he and Dr. Louis Cella
posted m 1974 al .. Santa Ana
bank for Diedrich.
When Cap1~2i on June 28 asked
O'NeUl about the background of
the guarantee, the self-described
'f1nancier·ranch -
restaurateur'' testified:
"Well, Mr. Diedrich requested
a loan. At that particular time he
told me he bad Mgh interest rates
-having a little trouble re-
financing some property and re-
quested a loan to hold him over
80, 120days at the most."
"With whom did you discuss
the continuing guarantee?"
Capizzi asked.
"Dr. Cella asked me to support
-to go along with this loan."
.. And it is with Dr. Cella that
you discussed the loan?"
Capizzi asked O'Neill. ·
"Yes," the financier-rancher
rcstauranteur answered.
As things turned out on the
$1 00,000 Cella-O'Neill loetn
guarantee:
-The bank made demand for
payment from o·~eill when
Diedrich irutially railed to repay
the loan on time and to r espond to
dunning phone calls and letters.
-The Ir>, 120 days tu med out lo
be 16 months before Diedrich
made paymenl in two Jllltall-
menta.
-0\edrtch was Indicted on per·
Jury chu1n for fallln1 to abow
lh• loan oo ecoaomtc dlaclo.ure
11taitmenu filed ln me and 1m.
thouah ll did show on two earlier
alatem~u.
J>olllical consultant Arnold
Jo'orde te21Ufied Junt: 28, the samt:
day O'Neill appeared befort! the
(;111ndJury.
Yea, Forde said, he and
partner WIJUam Butcher had
manaaed Anthony's primary
campaiifl in June. 1976.
"In the general eleclJon, An-
thony was more interested in run-
ning the campaign bimseU, •·
Fordesa.id.
··So what we agreed to do in lhe
Anthony campaign is that he
l Anlbony) would be In charge or
It."
"He would be in charge of it
<1nd we would be in charge of de·
velopmg a direct mail package,"
Forde testified.
The political consult ant put
more distance between his firm
and the general election cam-
paign fundraising for Anthony
when he said:
"That wasn't our responsibili-
ty any more. We almost came lo
a total parting of the ways in the
campaign because, in one sense,
Anthony wanted to do that ... he
was going to be totally in charge
of the campaign."
Had Forde told Anthony that it
was okay to accept campaign
loans as personal loans and then
to show the money coming into
the campaign as loans from the
candidate?
·'There was certainly no talk
about a third party giving money
surrepl1t1ously or anything lake
that," Forde teshfied.
Michelena spent most of his
lime beCore the Grand Jury ex-
plaining why he had provided a
member or the county Assess-
ment Appeals Board with the use
of a leased Cadillac and one-time
Republican state senate can·
oidate with $3.800.
Mlcbelena 1aid the auto and
suoll.Qe credit card provided lo
Newport Beach attorney Frank
Waters wu. lo effect, a ret.alner
for Waters' services.
And he dented that be or any or
his clients had business before
the board.
As for the money paid then
candidate Norton, Mi chelena
said it was for investigative
services.
The checks were made payable
to Norton's former crony Gary
Newmyer because Michelena
believed the two were collaborat-
ing in their invesugative adven-
tures.
Those adventures ended in
April with Norton being indicted
on perjury c harges and
Newmyer acting as the recorder-
equipped turncoat that gathered
the evidence against Norton.
Drifting in and out of the secret
transcripts leading to the indict·
ments is testimony centering
around the Las Vegas casino
trade.
F r ank Watts, controller of the
Riviera Hotel, testified thatholel
records indicate Diedrich lost
$30,000 in 12 hours last Oct. land
2 while testing his s ic.ill at tWt>
crap tables.
And, Watts added, as what the
casino calls .. a good player,"
Diedrich was given complimen-
tary rooms, m ea l s and
beverages during his Las Vegas
stays.
It is Diedrich's alleged failure
to list the value of the purported
Las Vegas gratuities on his
economic disclosure statements
that resulted in a second perjury
count included in the indict-
ments.
The transcripts' most colorful
reading comes from a written
record of a tape recorded con-
versation between Conrad and
Las VegasshowmanJoeAgosta.
In conversation liberally
sprinkled with four-letter words,
Conrad bragged of the inroads he
had made into Orange County political circles.
A Cottage for Sale
Famed Hammersmith FarmPut on Auction
\ NEWPORT, R.I. <AP) -Jacqueline Ken·
ncdy Onassis' childhood home where her
romance with John F. Kennedy bloomed, has
been put on the auction block because the
former First Lady·s mother needs the money.
"I don't wanl you lo sell it," J anet
Auchincloss quoted her famous daughter as
saying when she broke the news that the 58·
acre Hammersmith Farm was for sale for
$989,000.
"All my children hate It, and I hale it, but
it is absolutely necessary," Mrs. Auchincloss
said Tuesday.
SHE EXPLAINED that her late husband.
Hugh 0 . Auchancloss, devoted his personal
fortune to try to s ave his Washington
brokerage f1rm. Auchincloss, Redfern and
Parker. before his death in December 1976.
· I was very proud or him for doing it," she
said, "e'len though I knew it wouldn't work."
Hammersmith, one of the oldest working
farms ln Newport, 1s alive with memories.
The children called the cottage The Castle
and the name has stuck to this day. Mrs.
Auchincloss now lives in The Castle.
LEADING A REPORTER on a tour of the
grounds. Mrs. Auchincloss marveled at how
well they are kept. She has had to make do
with four gardeners on grounds once tended
by 32 workers.
Mrs. Auchincloss says that her daughters
by her Cirst husband, John Bouvier -J ackie
and Lee Radziwill -and her children by
Auchincloss were r eluctant to see the place go
because they liked it "lo be here ror whenever
they happened to Ccel lake dropping in.
Caroline Kennedy was here Friday and Satur-
day and l never know when the others are
coming.''
Neutron Bomb OK Seen
~r Predicts Se~ Appr~l of Weapon
WASIDNGTON (AP)-Senale
Minority Leader Howard Baker
predicted today the Senate will
approve funds for controversial
neutron weapons which President
Carter says are needed for the de-
f enseof Westem Europe.
Neutron warheads are de·
s igned to kill enemy soldiers with
radiation while inflicting
minimal explosive destruction in
the blast area. .
Onoonents or the weapons led
'by Sen. Mark 0 . Hatfield (R·
Ore.). planned to carry their
fight to the floor of tbe Senat~.
where a vote was scheduled late
today on deleting funds for pro-
duction of the weapous from a
publlc works appropriation bill.
Baker aaJd be bad not taken a
formal bea~ count of bow the
Oll4NGe COAST u i•1!1tgg11t11 .
=~~=-'r,::i=:::::.::. CM•l -11111"0 CO.-.O..,y, .......... ..,.,_.,.
-·--·· lb•..,.."~ ~~.~:~~= Ytlloy -"-.. 41<11/tOomlO..st.A ................. HI•
..... 1~ -·-,., ..... .,, """ ~.on. no iw1..c1,..1 ....., ............ , '-' ........ , Slf"\ C..lt!IW ... C..IH_t_ ·--··-~l'ffl---l-JKUI Cllftty Ylco __ °"""',.,,_.
Senate will vote, but added, "It is
my guess that Hatfield probably
would lose."
Before the vote, Senate leaders
met to decide how to limit debate
on the weapons. which critics say
would mark a dangerous leap in
the arms race. q
Hatfield has said the funds
should not be approved, at least
until Carter has provided a leizal-
\
Fro• Page Al
STRIKE .•.
ly required assessment of the
neutron weapons' impact on
arms proliferation.
One Senate source said today
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey (D-
Minn.), attempted lo work out an
agreement with Carter under
which a Senate decision on the
neutron weapons would be put off
pending the arms control study.
At a news conference Tuesday,
Carter urged the Senate to ap·
prove funding for further de·
velopment ot the weapons.
Neutron weapons. implanted in
artillery shells and Lance mis·
siles, are designed to kill with
concentrated radiation r ather
than exploeives or heat used in
more conventional nuclear
armament.
While Carter urged continued
develoi>ment ol the weapons, he
left open the question of actually
deplo)'iol them.
..I hav~ not yet decided
wbe~er to approve a neutron
bomb. but I th1nk it should be one
of our options,.. the President
said.
In a letter to neutron supporter
Sen. John Stennis (D·Mlq,),
Carter said the weapons "are in
tblf oaUoo'a security lntereaL"
Carter told Stennis, "We are
nOl talld.GI about IOD\e new kind
of weap0n. but of modernluUon
of nuclear Wea DODI.
The Prel1deDt aald tbo neutron
wa.rtaeadl ;r: be need~ ''for cllacnet a CatlOf\ of foreo"
aialnst NA enemltf. Nttat.ron
WHPoQt, he laid, wouJd keep
potfttla1 ad.enar1 .. ln Europe
unce.rtaln whether tlt&clear ••t\M>na mtpl be UMd .. aloat their ••forward echelons.••
Carter Hid t•o detalJtd
atudlee aa the we&poa9 an due
Au1. 15 frotn the P•talOD and
Ui• Anna ~l and Disarm&· iv•t~. ()Melle 1bM Nc.ti•ed CJilM ,..
pOftl Cater • ..,, • '1 lDt.iild ..
male' annaJ ~--· daloo.. ... ,
...
O~lly Pllol Sutt~
FRISBEE CHAMP CHRIS JOHNSON (RIOKT) SHOWS COSTA MESA KlDS HOW IT'S DONE
Frank Werner, 11 (left}. Tim Holley, 12, Pick Up Some Tip• From the Master
Frisbee
. Dy STEVE MITCHELL
Of Hie OMIY "lol Sull What does an aging Frisbee
champion who came within a
flick of the wrist of becoming
world champion do after retire·
ment?
Chris Johnson, last year's first
r unner-up in the world cham-
pionships held in Atlanta, Ga .• is
coaching other Frisbee flickers
for Costa Mesa's recreation de-
partment.
The 16-year-old Corona del
Mar High School senior says he
can't compete in the Whammo
Company competition anymore
because he's too old.
"They don't want kids who
have placed before in their con·
tests, either," the saucer expert
shrugged.
So he applied for a job as assis-
tant recreation leader in Costa
Mesa last month.
"l told them I thought l had
something to offer them," he
said, scratching the middle
finger of his right hand. That
finger has a call.us near the top
joint which comes from constant
Frisbee tossing.
''l probably should have a
piece of tape on it," Johnson
said. .
He's bee·n coaching kids at a
dozen city parks for the past few
weeks in preparation for Costa
Mesa's ninth annual Frisbee con·
test which was held today at
Te Winkle Park.
"It's just takes a lot of practice
and confidence," Johnson tells
his students.
He lines participants up for
GoH Cart Stolen
A golf cart valued by its 82-
year·old woman o,wner at $375
has been stolen from its Laguna
Hills Leisllre World parking spot.
Orange County sheriff's officers
said the thert of the cart was re·
ported by Mildred Heber Bates.
82, of 2400 Via Mariposa WesL
They believe it was driven off by
the thief.
Flicker .
Frisbee relays, giving them lips
in the eight categories for com-
petition, including 'straight
throw, right and left curve, skip
flight, distance, accuracy, and
catching the disk behind the back
and between the legs.
Johnson picked up bis ex-
perience over six summers at the
beach.
He said that when the city
championships are over he'll still
be working for the city's recrea-
tion department.
"l'lt'mosUy be hauling around
equipment to the parks and doing
maintenance things after the
contest," he said.
Now that he's all washed up as
far as Wbammo competition
goes, will he still toss a Frisbee?
•'Oh, sure. I entered a pro-
r essional tournament last April
at UC Irvine, but I didn't do too
hot.'' Johnson laughed .
He said he almost broke a
junior record for distance, "but
professional Frisbee is so far up
there."
All this modesty from a kid
who was 1976 Newport Beach city
champion, Southern CaLifornia
Fro• Pag~ Al
TAX RATE .•
1976-77.
"1 don't want to pin myself
down on a precise tax rate until
we. get figures from the county,"
Chicas said. "But I am predict-
ing a minimum cut of 75 cents, a
maximum of90 cents."
The Capistrano .UrM.Lied dis·
trict, with an assefied' valuallon
of $582.5 million for 1977-78, cov-
ers 20 percent or the land in
Orange County. It includes the
sommunlties or Laguna Niguel,
San Juan Capistrano, Dana
Point, Capistrano Beach, San
Clemente and part or Mission Viejo.
'Fades'
state champion. Western
Regional Open champion and
runner -up in the world event.
You'd think he just picked up
his hrst Frisbee, the way he
talks.
From Page Al
PAY •••
All other high·level county oC·
ficials except for Probation Of.
ricer Margaret Grier, received at
least the 5.85 percent raise.
Miss Grier, whose raise is still
under r eview. was taken a step
up the salary ladder but her pay
for the present will stay at $37,190
annually.
Seven county officials received
the 5.85 p ercent hike plus
montblyraises ranging from $100
to $400. •
County Assessor Bradley
Jacobs received the largest
boost, the S.85 pe rcent raise plus
$400 more monthly. putting his
yearly pay at $40,272.
Following are the old and new
salaries er other top officials:
District Attorney Cecil Hicks.
$48,022 to $50,831 ; Frahk
Williams, public defende r,
$46,342 to $4 9,053; Sheriff·
Coroner Brad Gates, $40,678 to
$44,357; Tom Egan, director of
the General Services Agency.
$39,000 to $41,281;
Also, Auditor-Controller Vic
Heim, $38,783 to $43,001; Tax
Coll ector-Treasur er Robert
Citron, $37 ,460 to $42 .901 and
County Clerk Wallfam St John,
$34, 102 to $.17,396.
Vote Bid Fails
MADRID, Spain <AP) -The
centrist government or Premier
Adolfo Suarez lost its initial bid
for a majority vote as Spain's
first freely elected parliament in
41 years held its inaugural
session today.
Wedn!!dey, July 1S, 1117 -s DAILY PJLOT 81J
Spending Tally:
Food Costs Fall
B1 SYLVIA .rou.ea
True or falae: As tb& COltl of food bave skyrocketed, Lho
share of tho family's buaet 1olnt for Lbla ft.em bal eoared
too, and a greater proportlon ot aft«•taxdollan ta epeot f(J
food today than in U.. put. The um• tread appltes to bealLft
care, which is abaorbtng a latCHbarooffamily Income.
False. Aatoondlnc as it may seem, the Jatat familY,
s pending filuret. lak~ from Census Bureau surveys irld
published by lhe Bureau of Labor St.aU$tlcs, underline Lb•
point. To document:
-ROM 1'51 to 1MCM1, THE relative importance o(
food in the American famUy'a budget declined from 29.7 tq
24.4 percent, and keptdropplng until it had reached 20.1 pe~
cent at latest reporting date. um-73. Even if the explosion
in food prices in 1974· 7S raised the percentage a bit. it could
not have lifted it back to the proportion food took in 1950.
-In 1960-61, the share ot livin& expenses going le
personal care and health costs was 9.6 percent. By 1972·73,
that was down to IU percent. <Some explanation follows.)
-Meanwhile, the proportion of a typical family's
budget going for
clothing has dwindled,
from 11.5 percent ln the
early 1950s to 10.9 per·
cent in the early 1960s to
7.8percentin 1972-73.
Simultaneously, of
course. other essentials
Money's
Worth
and luicuries have been taking larger shares.
Homes and utilities have been eating more and more an·
to incomes. The proportion going for sheller and utilities
has jumped from 15.6 percent in 1950 to 17 .0 percent 10 years
later to 21.3 percent in 1972· 73.
I N MORE THAN ANY OTHER single category, spend.t
ing for transportation -particularly for buying, maintain:
ing, financing and fueling our cars -has rocketed. The,,
climb has been from 15 percent of family spending in tM
1960s to 21 percent in the 1970s.
The· average family spent $5,054 on consumer goods and
services in Lhe early 1960s; the same family spent $8,282 al
the opening of the 1970s.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics says it shows a decrease
in dollars going to health care, because medical costs re·
ported by the survey refer only to out-of-pocket family ex-
penses. The do not include health insurance premiums paid
by employers or the U.S. gov\U"fllllent.
FAMILY SPENDING FOR aECREATION and educa•,
lion has remained virtually unchanged for decades, with a
shift from 9.3 percent or living expenses in 1960·61to9.4 per·
cent in 1972-73.
The following chart sums up major changes in basic
consumer spending patterns between the 1960s and 1970s.
Note that less is being spent for essentials and more for lux-
uries -the key sign of a continuingly affluent society.
ITEM lMCMl 1972·73
Total Ji vmg expenses 100.0% 100.0':1
Food 24.4 20.1
Shelter and utilities 17 .0 21.3
Clothing (cost Jnd upkeep) 10.9 7.8
Transportation 15.2 21.4
Medical and personal care 9.6 8.4
Recreation and education 9.3 9.4
'It Works Good'
Inventor Makes ,
'People-catcher'
PHILADELPHIA <AP) -David Gutman finally
perfected his pedestrian-catching bumper. He doesn't own a
car, so Gutman bolted the bumper to a kitchen table and ran
headlong into the object.
"It works. It works good. It pushes in, then pushes right
back out," Gutman said.
GtrrMAN, 66, IS ONE OF thousands of backyard inven·
tors, people with ideas for doing something and the
mechanical ability to carry them out. Many of these latter·
day Thomas Edlsons troop to the U.S. Patent O!flce tp re·
alster their creations as officially their own.
Gutman is a Russian who moved here 25 years ago from
New York. where he worked in a machine shop. His inven·
tions Include a fire escape that lowers a person to the ground.
a nail that prevents battered thumbs and two car bumpers
designed to protect pedestrians.
"1 don't drive," Gu.tman said, explain·
{ J
ing why he spends so
WAT ~"r'Q /V'~ much tirne on bumpers
,,.. EUAi .;;, £W to protect pedestrians
"I used to, but I'd get
---------------lost or I'd lose the car or
something. So now T
walk."
Outman's inventions. like many·dtiigned in backyard
workshops, are unusual in appearance . Take the car,
bumper.
THE FIRST ONE, PATENTED IN 1960. was a com·
pllcated system of spriflCS and rods that ran out and em·
braced the pedestrian struck by a car. Although Outman ap-
proach~ several companies, b9 one bought the idea.
The latest bumper Is simpler, consisting or two tern·
pered steel rods that curve down and out from the bumper.
The rods are connected by a cl'QIJ8plece that theoreUcally eeta as a "cow-catcher," acoopiq the pedestrian up and on· to the hood.
His fire escape, whlch ean also be used as a window
washer, drops down one aldo at a time, with a cam arran1e·
ment preventing It from coming down out of cont.rot. Gut·
man tested the crude·lookiq prototype b)' descendlnJ on lt
from the roof oC bis house.
THE ONL y INVENTION TO MAKE him ID)' money ls
lhe naJI bolder. lt ls destined primarHy for small natls and
tacks that can't be btld and hammered without daroace to
the flngers. and Outman put those Into production htmsetr
He Uid he made about $1.000 -just cnodah to pay the cosl
of 1ettlni the patent. An olficial of the U.S.•Pat111t office aald that 1bout a quarter ot tbe patent.s laslled 10 w PtQPle like Gutman. ''Tho tnd~l inventor 11 auu a r~ to be l'ttltoned with,••
aald ltN~ Flei.cbmann, director ol Inronuatlon ot Services for the U.S. Offi~ of Patentl Ind Trademarks •
• .,,,_.. a.re some who do mab mooe,." M utd. • 'Tbq
"ould.o 't do it if tbtte wera 't lbe ~-ot some ,... tn\lneret.lon. 11lere la ,uu aneect I« lnveOUOM. ''
· Auxiliary Honor& Planned
Harold 1. Gano, u
l'l'Ullve dJret"tor ot ~•ti
dltback C'nmmunlty
Ho1pllal. will prt>nnt
atrvlce Dil\I to mcm~n
or th• Odd• and Ends be rnade In the doctors'
aux1llaryatthelrflrstan dlnlne r oom o r the
nuul award• ceremony hospital located at 24451
fhunday at 10 a m Via Estrada, Lueuna
The preaentaUoo wall Hllls.
Soon ... _
BETTER
SALADS
WILL
BEGIN
IN
LAGUNA
HILLS!
---------~-:::-::~ d • ·isurt · /ocatt -""" • dining room is h htrt you rt L.og"na Btac No matttr w LtJkt Fortst,
VI j El Toro. ·,;u-
ld MIJsiun to. ..b ring commun1 wor I ting ntlgn 0 0
{the other enchan r-beginrung In
or an)' o lads-and mor . better sa '// soon tnJOY you
t..osuna H Ills!
In
Yoar
Best
Interest
Higher interest than commercial banks pay plus th e
assurance that your savings are safe, insured by a
Federal Agency. A deposit of $1000 or more in a 6 year
Investment Certificate yields 8.06% annually. Or, a
$1000 Certificate of Deposit Account for only one year
yields 6.72%. Of course, interest 1s compounded daily
at Los Angeles Federal Savings. Investment Certificate
and Certificate of Deposit savers qualify for a safe
deposit box, just one of over 20 most wanted services
available. It's in your best interest to start your savings
account today. One minute and one signature is all
it takes.
mt®~~ 'I
®@@®
i,,;.• lli]~
All Interest Compounded Daily
Annual Yield Annual Rate
8.06% $1000 fore to 10 years 73/40/o
6.72% $1000 for 1 to 2 years 6 'h %
5.39% Paid day-in to day-out SY•% •
ft~••I r~vl•h '\a p.r .. ol .. llf Wlll\dlMI hOlft ferll'I .Cl'Qlnl~ Sub,fci 10 6Mbtla•tlll 1n1-r
•l~ucuon.
Wednesday, July 13, 19n s DAIL V PILOT A J J
Pair Charged in Kidnap ~ay Camp
Indictment Just Beats Statute of IJmitations Signups
From AP Dispatches South next week will feature a town meeting and an Planned
Two men have been indicted in the $1 million . overnight stay in Yakoo City, Miss., White House
Vlr1bala Piper kldnapln1of1972, just 16 days before sources said. Registration ls con·
the statute of Jlmltations would have expired on the The sources said the Unuine for summer day
Minnesota case considered the most expensive un· town meet Ing a p. ( J camps sponsored by San
solvedkldnapinginthecountry. pearance will be pal· PEOPLE Juan Capistrano's
Only $4,000 of the $1 million ransom was re· terned after the one he al· recreation department.
covered. tended for two hours ----------The camps are one
A federal grand Jury in St. Paul handed down a when he visited Clinton, week long and are locat-
one-page indictment that named Donald Floyd Mass .. In March. ed at Dana Point harbor.
Lar1on, 51, a Stlllwater Prison inmate from Willow Carter also is expected to stay overnight on The sessions ar e for
River, Minn .. and Kenneth James CaJlahan, 52, a July 21.at the h.ome of a local family in Yazoo City, children6to 12.
carpenter from Cumberland, Wis. as be did at Clinton, although details were not an· The sessions a r e
Mrs. Piper, 54, was abducted from her home in nounced. scheduled for July 11-15,
Orono, Minn .. by two masked men July 27, 1972. She * 18-22, 25-29, Aug. 1·5, 8-12
was released unharmed two days later in woods A North Carolina judge dismissed a license and 15-19. ne~r Duluth after her husband, Harry Piper Jr., plate mutilation charge against a well-read travel· The camps will include oa1d the ransom. ing salesman who folded his plate to conceal the participation In nature·
Piper is . board chair of Piper, Jaffray & slogan, "First in Freedom." oriented activities, camp
Hopwood, a Minneapolis brokerage firm. The salesman, Victor Graham Jefferys, 23, of crafts, outdoor cooking, .. Burlington, said he folded the plate because he swimming and outdoor
When Howard Cannon ( D·Nev.) sees the movie didn't think ''North Carolina has any monopoly on education.
.. A Bridge Too Far," he reacts dtfferenll than freedom, no more than the other 49 stales." For further inform a·
most viewers. The movie tells He told Judge Lacy H. Thornburg in Asheville lion, phone493·1171.
the story of Operation Markel· he read recently that the U.S. Supreme Court ruled
Garden during World War II, the that stales have no authority to require citizens lo
airborne Allied assault on Nazi-display slogans or mottoes". · ·
occupied Holland. •
The assault took place Sept. Miner John Ford, the foreman proclaimed a
17, 1944, and involved more than hero for flnclmg a boml> m rus western Kentucky
5,000 fighters, bombers and coal mine then accused of planting the explosive,
transports, and more than 2,500 has been found innocent.
gliders. One of the pilots was "It's been one hell of an experience. but a lot of
Maj. Howard Cannon. people were behind me." said Ford after a federal
Cannon's plane was s hot CANNON jury announced its verdict.
down shortly after the paratroopers on board bailed Last December. a federal grand jury in
out. Cannon and Lt. Col. Frank Krebs bailed out Louisville indicted the \l2·year-0ld Ford aboul a
behind enemy lines. Cannon and Krebs who is on month after he was called a hero for having dis·
the senator's staff, evaded capture for 4°2 days and covered the bomb in Peabody Coal Co. 's Camp No. 1
finally reached Allied lines. mine near Morganfield. Company officials credited
• Ford with preventing the deaths of at least 12
Ron Pallllo, who portrays the exuberant miners.
Horshack in the "Welcome Back Kot r" v· ·
series, made an Inauspicious en·
trance in New Hampshire sum·
mer stock theater.
He was scheduled to arrive
in a seaplane for a stint at the
Lakes Region Playhouse but
ended up hitchhiking with two
dogs and two co-stars the final 10
miles to Laconia.
Hundreds of fans had been
waiting for Palillo lo land on
Lake Wmnipcsaukee when his P•LrLLo
amph1b1ous plane developed engine trouble. The
pilot landed 10 miles short and the Pahllo lroup de-
cided to fend for lhemsel\·es.
The pilot, however, repaired the plane quickly
and flew on to Laconia. He arrived before the passengers ..
President Carter's two-day trip to the Deep
...
•
Prime Minister Giulio Andreotti of Italy will
m ake a two-day official visit to Washin on Jul
26·27, the White House an·
nounced.
The announcement said An·
dreolti "will have an opportuni-
ty for talks with the President
and other United States govern-
ment officials on an extensive
range of issues in the context of
the friendship a nd alliance
between Italy and the United
States."
* ANDREOTTI
Gov. and Mrs. James B. Edwards of South
Carolina will spend the first two weeks in August in
South Africa as the guests of that country's govern·
ment, his office announced.
Accompanying Edwards will be aide John LaFIU~ and his wife.
ltt<.'
ThriftSlwp
Sak Slated
A boutique sale will
take place Friday and
Saturday from 10 a.m. to
4 p . m. at the Saddleback
Community Hos pital
Thrift Shop, in Sad
dleback Valley Plaza, El
Toro.
Sale ilems will include
dresses, suits, evening
attire, sportswear and
accessories. Additional
information is available
by calling Row e na
Gordon at 837 ·4500.
Zoo Train
Trip Set
A train ride to the San
Diego l.oo on July 29 is
being offered by the San
Juan Capi strano Recrea·
tion Department.
The train will leave the
Capistrano Depot at 8:30
a.m . andreturnal6p.m .
For more information,
phone 493-1171.
lt'a kinda nice for us at ShO\.VtiJP,e to hear some of
the comments from people we talkea to recently.
M~ & Mrs. Charles R~. Dublin, Caltfomla
0 lt's great to iee movies without interruptions by
commercials:' MR. BILL GREY
'The terrific advantages are you get to see the full
movies not cut ea smithereens like on regular W.'
MR. BASIL DRAKE
1 These are people who now have Sh<Mltime in
their home. With a simple 1V cable hookup, you can
have Showtime and watch first run movies like Dog Day
Afternoon, Shampoo, or Robert Reqford in Three Days
of the Condor. Movies that may not appear on regular
1V for ~rs. Andwrth no editing or commercials.
And it's reasonably priced. You can get a 'month of
Showtlme for what it costs to go to the movies. Once.
Sho.vtlme. It's just fantastic entertainment at a
fantastic price. And you can quote us.