HomeMy WebLinkAbout1977-07-19 - Orange Coast Pilot7
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. l
ed Near Sheriff's .lfQ ..
Coffee Firm Prosecutions
Trims ·Price Seen in Korea
By 20 C"nts Payoff Probe
TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 19, 1977
VOL. 70, NO. ?00, J SECTIONS, 30 PAGES
Korean Scandal
Prosecutions
Due in Payoff
. WASHINGTON (AP) -Al·
i torney General Grif.fin Bell s~ys
• he expects prosecutions to result
: from the Justice Department's
investigation of the South Korean
influence-buying on Capito.l Hill.
Bell made the statement Mon·
1 day after President Carter
turned down Republican re·
quests for appointment of a
special prosecutor, patterned
alter the Watergate special pro-
Try to Ram
Cop Car Landa
Manin Jail
A Newport Beach resident who
allegedly tried to ram a patrol
qar with his 13-year·old
Volkswagen faces charges today
of assaqlt with a deadly weapon
on a police officer.
Gregory Alan Pangurn, 21, was
arrested by Newport Beach police
early Monday morning after a
ohaseinthe Westcliff area.
Officer Vern Mlller said he was
oalled to the scene of a crash at
the intersect.ion of Irvine Ave.nue
and Heather ·Lane where be
found Pangburn.
, Miller aald that, before he
could complete his report on the
· accident, Pangburn bopped into
bis car and sped south on Irvine
fl'lth Miller in pursuit.
In the chase that followed,
¥iller claims Pan,bum mllde ~veral U-~ iA the stretch ot
&.rvlne between SaaUa10 and
l)over drives. and at times he al·
Je1eclly drove on the wrong side tJI. the divided roadwky ln f'bat .~e ncu bell ved were ·at:..
*itmpts to ram his patrol car.
At one point, Miller 'tllid \Panlbpm drove onto the lawn of
lh• bome at 1'42 lr\ltne An.
where tile officer tried to block
IUa path, but he said PanctM.trn
C8ee SA•. Pa•• .U)
secutor, to pursue the Korean
scandal.
Asked what the Justice Depart·
ment investigations might pro·
duce, Bell said, "We expect
there'll be prosecutions."
The attorney general said the
investigation is being handled no
differently from other cases, ex·
cept that it is perhaps being con·
ducted at a faster pace because
"it topches the public interest."
Meanwhile, Speaker of the
House Thomas P. O'Neill said he
would take personal charge of
the ·troobled House ethics com·
mittee investigation of the
Korean scandal.
O'Neill said he wants quick ap-
pointment of a new chief in·
vestigator to replace '•Philip A.
Lacovara. the former deputy
Watergate prosecutor who re·
signed last week in a dispute with
Rep. John J . Flynt (D-Ga.),
chairman of the ethics panel.
Lacovara said mutual trust l
needed to comptete his investiga-
tion did not exist.
O'Neill said a new·investigator
will be able to bypass the ethics
committee and take his com-
plaints straight to the speaker's
office.
•'My c:oncern ii that the in·
vestigation i1n't moving, and I
want to set it moving just as ex-
peditiously u l can," O'Neill
said.
(See KOU}. Page .U)
Blaze S~ars TrtU!ker . .
Trash truck driver Floyd Meyers, 45, o(
Santa Ana, is rushed to waiting Marine
Coros Search and Rescue helicopter at
Coyote Canyon Dump in Irvine Monday
for airlift to UC Irvine Medical Center.
County Fire Department spokesmen said
Meyers opened truck doors to iiivestigate
smoke comine from dumpster he was
hauling. ·Rush of air caused smoldering
sawdust and debris to explode, inflicting
second and third degree burns over 35
dercent of Meyers' upper body. Resulting
lire in dump took three hours to put out.
Victim was in satisfactory c~ndition today
at the }JCIMC Burn Unit.
School Bm
e
Operating ,
Engineers
Walle Out
·A strike which idled 10,000 to
15,000 heavy-machine operators
in Southern California Monday
has t)alted many Orange County
construction projects, including
more than a dozen Irvine Com·
pany housing projects and a
multi-million dollar sewage
pipeline.
The AFL-CIO Operating
Engineers Local 12 called the
strike after failing to agree with
management over how an ap-
proved $2.95-an-hour wage in·
crease should be distributed over
three years.
The operating engineers, who
drive bulldozers, cranes, trac-
tors and other heavy equipment,
wanted the pay raise in three an-
nual steps; management •anted
to spread it over five increments.
Last month the engineers' San
Diego county counterparts con·
eluded an agreement idenUcal to
the one they seek.
The San Diego engineers went
on strike for a week, halting con·
struction of housing projects and
the San Onofre .nuclear power
plant expansion before the seWe-
ment.
<See STRIKE, Page Al)
Wea&ller
. Low cloum tonieht and
'Wednesday morning,
otherwise sunny Wednes-
day afternoon. Lows
tootght58to65. Hlaha Wed·
ne1day upper 60s at
beaches to mid.a>s inlait4.-· .. ----
INSIDE TODAY
--
DAILY PILOT
0 .. ly Pilot Si.fl P!Mto It's an Ice Statue
Talla flpen
Begin Pleads
For West Bank
" W ASlllNGTON CAP) -Israeli
Prime Minister Menahem Begin,
arriving al.the White House today
Sor talks with President Carter,
said Israel "yearns for peace,
prays for peace and wlll do
everythJ.ng humanly possible.
.for a real peace.''
But Belin signaled Israel's con-
tinuing retusal to withdraw from
the occupied West Bank ol lbe
Jordan by warning that "in cer-
tain circumstances . . . the life ol.
everyman. woman and child" lo
Israel could be ''directly
threatened and pulin jeopardy."
These are the precise words
Begin uses in arguing Israel's
case for keeping the West Bank·
under ISraell control.
de mption" whlch had taught
them .that national security
meant "the lives or every man,
woman and child," hesald.
Begin 63, making bit first
Journey abroad as prime
minister, is carrying what he bas
called "a complete peace plan."
plus a request for more than S2
billion in economic and military
aid, according to Israeli sources.
While U.S. and Israeli officials
botb were eager for the sessions,
acbech&led foe two days, to. go
smoothly, it seemed unlikely
Carter add Begin would be able to
gloss over some of'the sharp dif·
ferences betwe en their ap ·
proaches to such issues as the
future of lsraeU-held Arab land
and the Palestinians.
Begin was scheduled later in
the day to have meetings with
SecretaryoEStateCyrus R. Vance·
and Trensury Secretary W.
Michael Blumenthal.
.ASuper
Slurp re
SPANAWAY, Waab.
CAP> -It arrived ln a
Pacific SepUc Service
truck, and wu unloaded ln
front ol the A.taembly of
God Church, but there was
no mistaking what lt wu:
a 3,320-pound ice pop.
It was gone within a few
hours. demolished by hun-
dreds of slurping children;
b~t it accomplished its aim
of drawing Younl people to
tbe church.
Youth Pastor Skip Ben·
nett supervised the pre-
par a llon of tbe froaen •
treat, which comprised 400
pounds of su1ar. 100
pounds of corn syrup
crystals, 350 gallons of
water and two gallons of
root beer flavoring.
Mark Daukas of Corona del Mar displays
his creative ice sculpture at the Orange
County Fair. Daukas constructed the fish
design from a 300-pound block of ice four
feet high.
Isr aeli sources said the prime
minister brought several maps
for Carter, one showing tiny
Israel surrounded. by the vast
Arab world and another showing
how Arab guns would be in firing
range of Israeli cities if Arabs oc-
cupied the West Bank.
In the south lawn welcomioi
ceremonies, Carter praised
Begin for his "willingness to suf·
f e r for principle •.. his
superlative personal courage in
face of trial. challenge and disap-
pointment.",
F,....PageAI
Cops Seek
Cap-wearer
In Thefts
Maine Brush Fire
Rages Uncontrolled
ByTheAssoc:iated Press
A fi re possibly touched off by
lightning still raged around the
base of Maine's taJ lest mountain
today, but other forest fires that
charred thousands of acres in
Utah, Wyoming and Montana
wer e reported under control.
The rash of fires has been
sparked by prolonged drought
and heat in the many parts of the
country. (Related story, A4)
Four hundred campers were
evacuated Monday as fl ames
whipped by high winds burned out
of control at the foot of mile-high
Mt. Katahdill in Maine's Baxter
State Park.
One park employe was injured
while fighting the blaze, which
consumed 1,250 acres by late af.
ternoon. The blaze was formed
when two separate fires spotted
Sunday ni ght in the park's
southwest c:orner merged during
the night and fed on a n area of
timber blown down several years
agoduringawindstorm.
A park spokesman s aid the
flames were nearing Abol Camp·
g round, a popular s ite with a trail
Hughes Will
Hunt Costly
LOS ANGELES (AP> -At·
torneys and aides have spent
6,000 hours and $630,000 looking
for the real will of industrialist
Howard Hughes, according to
court papers.
Documents filed Monday in
Superior Court said that during
the 15-month search for the will,
34 attorneys and paralegal aides
examined the records or 94 banks
and individuals in 13 states and
four foreign countries.
The documents, filed by at-
torneys and the estate's special
adminlstrator. Richard Gano of
Anaheim, aJso showed that more
than 4:.> people have been con-
tacted or interviewed in an effort
to !ind the will.
Official Probed
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The
senior federal prosecutor for
Southern California, Shelby Gott,
a former Internal Revenue
Service investigator. is being in-
• veaUgaled by the IRS for alleged
. ' failure to file tax returns, the
man•s supervisor, U.S. Atty.
Terry Knoepp contirms.
i
I
r. DAILY PILOT
5
lead ing to the s u mm it of
Katahdin.
F ear i n g a wi nd s h i ft,
firefighters today began carving
out a fire control line designed to
keep the stubborn fire from leap·
i ng uptheslopesofKatahdin.
Some 150 firefighters were us-
ing bulldozers and tank trucks in
the fi ght to control the blaze.
Albert C. Willis, Maine's fi re
control director , said the wind
was expected to shift direction
and come from the southwest
la ter in the day, fanning the
flames toward the mountain.
·'It's a 00-degree shift from
yesterday," said Willis.
He said the 10-to 20·foot-wide
control line was being bulldozed
in an area of blown down trees
along the fire's northeast flank.
"In a blowdown, fire travels
very swirtly. If the wind changes
direction, Abol will be in great
danger," the spokes man said.
FroaPageAJ
STRIKE .•.
An Orange County m anage-
ment official for the Associated
Ge neral Contractors, Larry
Mcilwain. s aid today the Orange
County and Los Angeles county
operating engineers want the
three-year spread of higher pay
because that's what they got in
San Diego.
It would mean that instead of
an initial 80-cent inc rease,
workers would get $1.05, relroac·
ti ve to July 1.
Mctlwain said that besides the
differences in when operating
engineers would collect their
wage hikes, there are no dis-
agreements in the proposed con·
tract.
Operating engineers now earn
on the. average, $10. 71 an hour, or
$22,276 a year, not including
overtime pay.
Though the strike was called
on Saturday after a meeting
between engineers and m anage·
ment. construction projects con·
tinued as usuaJ until union busi·
ness agents brought offi cial word
to job sites, telling workers to go
home.
-Today. Mcilwain said, several
jobs, where business agents ap·
parently had not appeared yet,
continued.
Mell wain was unable to
e s timate bow many Orange
County construction sites were
affected, or the number of
workers on strike .
Bill Waane r. official
s pokesman for the engineers•
local office in Los Angeles, was
unavailable for comment. Office
workers there refu•ed to com-
ment oo details of tbe strike, iD·
cltldinl JJUmben involved.
The Irvine Company, Orange
County's largest reslcfenUal con-
struction groap, said 10 lo 15 ol. its
projects have been stalled bJ the slrlk~.
A spokesman said $5.1 million
worth ol eoutructlon contracts
were held up. About btilf ol th6t
value 11 in comtructlon of a ma-
jor nooct control cbannel between
CUiver Drive and Jeffref Ro.ct m lrvlne, lw flood proteeUOQ ol. the
larae Wooctbrid1e boutlal de-. velopment and other areu. Tbe Imnt official 1ald tb• trike .. .,,ectl ev..,bod,-."
'l'be $5.2 IDllUon Allto Water
Jlanacemeat Aleriey sewer out· fill~ ~AlllO Pier fn&Wth La=· .. ~· • Job'• been itiul doWD."
llte bills Dmil1I O'MalleJ hid. ••we can't w.k wttbout tbe
*ratci'l.0
Mt 0·11au., 1ud there WIWO
be no wb*tliltial dilay In th
-lilildaltd , .. ~ n l'ebfliary, uat•·-~ attlk catttea over iac.J1 lid ........
Egypt 'Ret:unu
Israeli Dead
TEL AVIV. Israel (AP)
Egypt has returned to Israel the
bodies of 19 soldiers killed in the
1973 Mid eas t w a r .
The action appeared to be a con·
cilt atory gesture coinciding with
the meeting of Prime Minister
Menahem Begin and President
Carter in Washington. ·
On previous occasions, Egypt
had demanded the release of
Arab prisoners from Israeli jails
in exchange for soldiers' bodies.
No exchange was involved this
tim e.
The military command said
s impl e wooden coffins were
transferred at the northernmost
checkpoint in the Sinai desert
buffer zone, which i6 manned by
the U.N. Emergency Force -
UNE F. Arra ngem ents were
handled through the lnterna·
tional Red Cross.
Shipshape?
Carte r als o commended
Begin's "deep and unswervloire-
ligious commitments.''
Referring briefly to the Middle
East conruct, Carter said he was
"encouraged " by Begin's as·
s ura nces that ''all points are
negotiable." The President said
he hoped for success in settling
the Middle East conflict this year.
Begin arrived in sweltering
1heat to a 19-gun salute. The
onetime guernlla leader stood
ramrod stiff as the U.S. and
Israeli anthoms were pl ayed.
Begin opened his remarks in
Hebrew and reminded Carter of
the World War 11 Nazi holocaust
in which the J ews "were thrown
into the a byss," later to win
statehood ''in an unequal fight of
the few against the many, the
weak against the strong, right
against might.''
Begin said ''peace is insepera-
ble from nationaJ security." The
Jews had ''ex perience of physical
annihilation and spiritual r e·
Sailm&ker Ted Hood, .skip'*' of the Independence ltl the
America's Cup trials, checks the shape of bis sail before
tbe start of tbe first race in observation trials. (See
story, Paae BS.)
KOREA •••
O'Neill said Flynt offered to
turn the Korean investigation
over to some other House com·
mitlee. 'lbe speaker scheduled
further meetings to determine
whether any more action is
needed. .
A group of junior Republicans
today said .. the credibility of the
Ethics Committee probe bad de-
teriorated" and called for crea·
tion of a new committee to take
over the fuvestlgalion, possibly
with Lacovara as chief in·
vestigator.
Rep. Robert Walker (R·Pa.),
said if Lacovara accepted the Job
such a committee "could hit the
ground already running."
Walker billed the proposal as
bipartisan. but. only Republicans
attended a news conference an-
nouncing it.
More than 50 House members
of both parties joined in calling
for Carter to name a special pro-
secutor, but the President said in
a letter to Republican leaders:
"I have decided that appoint·
. m e nt of a special prosecutor
would be inappropriate and un-
warranted, and would probably
impede the Justice Department
investigation."
Police Seek
Road Slayer
RIVERSIDE (AP) -Sheriff's
deputies were seeking a man in
his 20s who ran at least two cars
off the road, then fatally shot one
or the drivers and robbed the
other.
They said the assault and rob·
bery spree began Monday In Sun-
nymead and ended in Rubidoux.
The man, driving a car later de-
termined to be stolen, ran driver
Laurie LeBlanc orr the road in
Sunnymead and then robbed him
and drove off in bis car.
The assailant then drove to
Rubidoux, where he ran another
man off~e road, shot him, then
stole his car, offieials said.
Police suspect a baseball cap.
wearing bandit who roughed up
his victims before taking their
cash may have been responsible
for two strongarm robberies
Monday in Costa Mesa.
Both victims of the bold,
daylight robberies said their as-
sailant wore a baseball cap.
Harriet E. Atkinson, 71, told of-
ficers she was entering the Lucky
Market at 21a> Harbor Blvd. at
3:30 p.m. Monday when a man
leavina the store shoved ber and
grabbed her purse.
Sbe said the tall bandit rushed
to a car where a second man was
waiting and the pair quickly
drove out of the center.
The woman said she was car-
rying $1,896 in cash and jewelry
at the time of the purse snatching
.i.ncident.
Witnesses said tbe two men
drove off in a 1967 Army green
Volvo two-door sedan.
Two houn earlier ln the day.
Costa Mesa police were called by
a man who said he was robbed of
his wallet and $15 while be sat in
his van eating lunch.
Bruce E . EmeoU, 61, or South
Laguna said he was taking a
break in his van parked al the
rear of a house at 534 W. 19th St.
when a man wearing a baseball
capwalke4uptohimandaskedto ..
see his watch.
When Emeott opened the door
to the van, the suspect grabbed
him and pulled him out of the
vehicle. rjpping the man',;
trousers on the way down.
Police said the tall suspeqt
then fied on foot, before his vic:-
tim could recover.
Police U . George Lorton said
today detectives are working on
the possibllity the same man was
involved in both robberies.
l'r .. PageAI
RAM •••
nearly ran him down when he got
out of his car and then mowed
down a brick planter and some
trees to drive off the lawn and
away from the officer .
Miller fin,lly cornered the
car when Pangburn turned off
Irvine onto Dover and then onto a
cul de sac at Eton Place.
Even then, Miller alleged that
Pangburn was combative and be
and another officer bad to subdue
him before placiq him in the
Tun Arrested
After FaJ,l , patrol car.
Two men engaged in what He was booked· into Oran1e
Laguna Beach police termed a County Jail.
lewd act were arrested early thls
morning after tumbling a few feet down a brushy bank In
Heisler Park.
· Surprised by police flashlight
beams, Sgt. David Avers said the
two lost their balance while try-
ing to put on their clothing. They
were not seriously injured in the
fall Just south of the park's
restrooms, Avers said.
Tbe two 25-year-old men were
booked for disorderly coilduct and
released on their written promi.e to apl>UJ'ln cou:rt.
Redoctiom Urged
WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi-
dent Carter bas asked executive
agencies to submit Ideas on how
to eliminate "federal requlre--
ments that state and local gov-
ernments submit plans when
aalcing for asai1tance." In a
memo sent today lo all depart-
ment and a1ency beads, Carter
said present requirements are
needleaaly numerous and
buraemome.
.,
.. -~
T.~ay's C:los~g ,
N.Y. St°"k8
I
\IOL. 70, NO. 200, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ' ;
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JULY 19, 19n ·c TENCENTS1
I '~Strike Halts ·~onst'.Mtction
' C:ounty • ID
A stnke which 1dJed 10,000 to
U,000 heavy-machine operators
bl Southern California Monday ·
has halted many Orange County
caustructlon projects, including
more than a dozen Irvine Com-
poy housing projttts and a
.,,ulti·milHon dollar sewage
pipehne.
The AFL-CIO Ope rating
l:ngioeers Local 12 called the
llrike after failing to agree wiLb
manaaement over how ap· ap-
proved $2.ts-an·hour ••10 kl·
creaee should be diatrlbuted tN«
three years. •
The operatini enllneen, Y..'bo
drl ve bulldo2er1, er~. trae-
tora and other heavy ~ulpment.
wanted the pay rabe [~three JD•
nual ateps; manqement wanted
to spread it over five increments.
Last month the engineers' San
Diego county counterparta con·
clucled an aareemeot identical to
the one they aeet.
The San Diego engineers went
on strike !OI'·• week, halting con-
tion d-boqsint projeclf and
San OnclN nuclear power
p t apanai(JIJ\before the seWe·
JDent.
An Oraqe County manage-
ment ~clal for the Associated
General Cobtractors, Larry
Mcilwain. said today the Orange
-~ign La~ Time
~ .
Schedule ·OK'd
. o.llf P'lltt Slaff l'llotll
MESA BATTALION CHIEF EO LEWIS CHECKS DAMAGE
Cooking 011 Fire Injure• Man, Wrecka Apartment
....
A Costa Mesa fa\her suffered
•onizing burns and his family's
epartment sustained $12,000
iJamage Monday, when a pan of
eooklng oil heating on the stove
.e'kploded in names.
~ J obn .Mc Querry, 30, of 2883
""'8lrview Road, ·grabbed the ,,.
blazing frying pan and ran for the
kitchen door -clad only in a pair
of bathing trunks -to burl tbe
mass of flames outside.
"He didn't make it. .. said Fire
Department Battalion Chief Ed
Lewis.
Chief Lewis said in his frantic
scramble for the door, McQuerry
swlled Lbe fiery oil down the
front of his bathing sult, which ig-
nited as tbe names splashed ·
around the area.
Mesa
Co11ncil.
Action
Costa Mesa councilmen ap-
proved a sign amortization pro-
gram Monday night, which out-
lines to businessmen just when
they will have to take down their
nonconforming signs.
In a unanimous vote, the five-
m e m ber council approve d
Schedule II of the sign amortiza·
lion procedure, which ties the
value of the nonconforming sign
to tlle deadline forttSTemoval.
, That schedule ,glv~s signs cost-
ing bet\r;eeh $506 ani! n.ooo two
y~ars to exist, and each $500 in
sign COit Jb<we that received six
tnonth1 ddlttonal time for a
maximum 10-year period.
The now resolution tells busi·
nessmen of five methods of de-
termining the value of their
s i i n s. inc 1 u (lj n g a n I RS
depreciation schedule. a r~eipt
for the sign, a cancelled check,
the original permit value, or a
certified public accountant's
statement.
Once the original cost is. de·
termined, the city would adjust
the value to 1974 when the or-
dinance was enacted, by apply-
ing an inflation factor from the
Consumer Pri1:e Index chart.
For example, a businessman
who pald $2,0QO for a sign in 19SO woulti multiply Lbat cost by $2.04,
which is what that sign would be
valued at today's price -or,
roughly $4,000.
That would mean the busi-
nessman would have two years
from 1974 for the first Sl,000 in
value, and aix months for each s:;oo increment ther eafter, or five
years to bring the sign into com-
pliance. The sign then, could exist
untill979. After Jtpproving the sign
a mortization. schedule, coun·
cilmen urg~ businessmen with
questiom about their signs to
contact the city's planning de·
partment.
DUDg J)umper Loses • SYRACUSE. N.Y. CAP) -
Dumping bone manure ill the tewn ball b nota .xprelslon of
free speech, a local Justice has
ruled. Salina Town Justice
Herman Harding found Henry Kindt cullty recently of
disorderly conduct for dumping
tile .ui.oure in the town hall.
County and Los Angeles county wage hikes, there are no dis-
operatlng engineers want the agreements in the proposed con-
three-year spread of higher pay tract.
because that's what they got in' Operalloi engineers now earn
San Diego. -on lbe aver.age,..$10.nan how:.,or
It would mean that Instead of. $22,276 a year. oot including an. i nitial so.cent increase, overtlmepay.
workers would get $1.os. retroac· Tbough Lbe strike was called
Uve to ,July 1. on Saturday after a meeUng
Mcilwain said that besides the between .engineers and manage.
differences in when operating ment, coaatnaction projects con-
engineers would collect their tipped as usu~ 11nlil union l)usi-
ness agents brought official word
to job sites, telling workers to go
home.
Today, Mcilwain said, several
~s. wh~~ bu~o.ess agents ap-pacently bad not appeared yet,
. continued.
Mcilwain was unable to
estimate bow many Orange
County construction sites were
aftected, or the number of
(8-STIUKE, Page A2)
'WA1ERING DOWN' THE ElCOR8JTANr 11LLS FROM 1HE COSTA MESA WATER DISTRICT
Board Chairmen M,rto Durante Preae'nta 0Verp9yment. Check to Mra. Valerie LortNiZ
Water Mftdfall
Mesa Customer Overcharged $1,373. 70
By STEVE MITCHELL
OI UW o.;ty Pllol S\all
Valerie .Lorenz of Costa Mesa
thought $88 was pretty steep
when she got her water bill this
month.
But she had paid as much as
$104 for the two-month billings by
the Costa Mesa County Water
Districl before, so she figured
rat8' had gone up like everything
else.
She and her husband Fred, and
two children tried to conserve
watec at Lbe home at 1827 Hum·
mingbird Drive but the water
bills always ranged from a low of
$48 to a high or more than $100.
IN FACT, she noti~ed the
higher bills as long ago as
December of 1972 when the dis·
trict came out and installed a
new meter atber home.
After five years, the Costa
Mesa woman finally asked her1
OC Deputy Kills
Suspected Sniper
An off-duty deputy sheriff shot
and killed a man early today
after the man allegedly fired
shots at him and cars parked
near sheriff's head.quarters in
Santa Ana. .
A spokesman for the Santa Ana
Police Department said Waynon
Wallace Collins, 54. of S!lnta ,\na
was seen ti.ring shots at parked
.cars outside aberiff's head,.
quarters a few minutes before be
was fatally wounded. ,
It was when three off duty de-
putlea besan trailinc• Wall•ce's
car that b.e w~ confront~ by
sheriff's Sgt. David Keller, 41, at
FJower Street and Civic Center
Drive.
Witnesses teld investigators
that Wallace£U'ed a single abot at
. Keller before Keller returned
fire.
Wall•ce was struck by the
bullet and died at the scene, ac-
COJ'di.n8 to accounts of tbe loci·
dent.
In the aftermath~of the lnci·
dent, police could give no reason
for Wallace's lbootlng escapade
ouuide sheriff's headqu.ners.
neighbors what their bills were
and was surprised to learn they
were only about $20.
She called water district of· ·
ficials and asked them why her
July bill was four times higher
than her neighbors. Curious
district directors went to the
Lorenz home and discovered an
industrial water meter had been
attached to the home instead of
tne smaller residential type de· 1 vice. ·
QUICK CALCULATIONS by
lbe district's finance people
showed that the Lorenz' had
overpaid the district $1,373.70
over the past fiv~ears.
District directors drove out
bright and early today with the
check and their apologies. .
Why did Mrs. Lorenz wait fi'le
years to complain?
She said the bills were h1gb in
(See WATER. PageA.2)
-OCMaySue
To Cover Cost
Of Alien Care
l
,.
• j
l CAIL .. '"l_L_0_1 ____ c _____ T_u•_•_d•_r_J_u_1r~'-9_. _19_77 \
fi'.,...P-.eAJ
CM Sign Law
Debate Rages:
I WATER •••
the summer gf 1972 when the
original meter was workinR.
"BUT WREN Tll&Y changed
the meter we noticed the winter
b1lls were as high u the summer
bllls," she.aaid. "But, appareoUy
we were too busy and didn't notice.
"l Just assumed the rates went
up,'• ahe said with a abrui. S,HTEVE Ml'l'alELL °' .. Oeltr """ ..... The pubUc hearlna WH called
to consider u new umorllzaUon
schedule fOC' Costa M esa's thr~
year old alcn Jaw. But bu.I·
nei.smen wbo turned oul al the
C1ly Council meeting Monday
rughl wanted to discuss the Jaw
Itself.
Speakers at the podium duri~
Lhe hour-1001 hearing seemed
evenly d1v1ded betwee n aup:
porLers and opponents of the or-
dinance wblcb regulates the sue
of business sigm in Costa Mesa.
Several businessmen said they
mi1bt be forced to move out or
the city if their signs are made to
comply with lhe Jaw.
"That doesn't matter much to
me," said Cort Furniture rental
manager Casey Walls ... If my
business goes bad in Costa Mesa
· because my sign is smaller, my
company will just move me to
another city.
Cops Seek
. Cap-UJearer
ln _Tlw/ts
Police suspect a baseball cap-
wearing bandit who roughed up
his victims before taking their
cash may have been responsible
for two strongarm robberies
Monday in Costa Mesa.
Both victims of the bold,
daylight robberies said their as·
sailant wore a baseball cap.
Harriet E. Atkinson, 71, told of-
ficers she was entering the Lucky
Market at 2180 Harbor Blvd. at
3:30 p.m. Monday when a man
leaving the store shoved her and
grabbed her purse.
She said the tall bandit rushed
lo a car where a second man was
waiting al\d the pair quickly
drove out of the center.
The woman said she was car-
rying $1~ in cash and jewelry
at the time of the purse snatching
incident.
Witnesses said the two men
drove off in a 1967 Army green
Volvo tw~oor sedan.
Two hours earlier in the day,
Costa Mesa police were called by
a man who said he was robbed of
his wallet and $15 while he sat in
his van eating lunch.
Bruce E. Emeolt, 61, of South
Laguna said he was taking a
break in hi s van parked at the
rear of a house at S34 W. 19th St.
when a man wearing a baseball
cap walked up to him and asicedto
see his watch.
When Emeott opened the door
to the van, the suspect grabbed
him and pulled him out of the
vehicle, ripping the man's
trousers on the way down.
Police said the tall suspect
then fled on foot, beCore his vie·
tim could recover.
Police Lt. George Lorton said
today detectives are working on
the possibility the same man was
involved in both robberies.
TONIGHT
ORANGE COUNTY FAIR -
Continuing through July 24.
"JACQUES BREL'' -South
Coast Repertory Theater,
Tuesday.Sunday through July 30,
8p.m.
WEDNESDAY, JULY2t
MUSIC OF AMERICA -Free
Concert, Blueerass with Abe
Brown and Canyon. Grau, South
Coast Village, 7:30p.m.
(.
DAILY PILOT
••ru 1WJ have a Job but I like
Cotta Mesa," he 1ald. 1'1'd like lo
mettle down here, but, tr my
1hpwroom cloaes. I'll have to
10."
Walls told councilmen lt ts dif-
ficult to estimate the importance
of a sign, but said at least 15 per-
cent of his customers claim his
aii&n is what drew them Lo the
business.
Stephen Ball, a representative
oC Sinclair Paints, mentioned
Scouadale JUld Tucson as two
Arizona cities where strict sign
laws were repealed after buai·
nesses were hurt.
"We (Sinclair Paints) were in
Tucson for many years, and after
the sign law was repealed and we
put up some larger signs, people
asked us when we came to
town," Bill quipped. Oii and Pedaliag·
She did can la•t year after re-
ceiving a $104 bill and a water
district service man came out to
look at the meter. ·
He couldn'Ulnd a leak, so Mrs.
Lorenz said she just •saumed
"we were overgenerous with our
waler use.
''J'm very conscious of th•
need to save water and all that."
ahe said, "especially with those· high bills."
But ~ eaid the family does a
lot of laundry. takes showers
every day and waters the lawn
once a week.
"I REALLY DON'T see hOW'
"' we could have cut back more,"
she said. "It was very frustrat•
int!'
"U .the {Coet.a Mesa) amortlza·
tion schedule is adopted, 90 per-
cent of our signing goes," he
said.
"We're talking about more
than the loss of signs, here. We're
talking about the loss or busi-
ness."
What these kids share in common today?
Lots of sunshine. Lots of fresh air. Lots of
fun. Lots of tired legs. Group of 21 em-
barked this morning from Costa Mesa
Community Center. bound for San Diego
on thre.e-day Great Southern California
Bike Hike. ~ joint venture by Costa Mesa
and Garden Grov.e city recreation
divisions? it's the first of several planned.
They'll camp in seaside state parks and
return by Amtrak passenger train.
Water District Manager Ed
Schnabel said meter ettOI' is
rare.
"The old meter stuck back in
1972 and we made the change,••
he explained. "Unfortunately,
we installed the wr0ng replace-
ment unit.
Ball and several other busi-
nessmen and a representative of
the Sign Users Council of
California urged the council to
reconsider the sign ordJDance
itself by forming a committee
comprised of businessmen who
have more data now on sign
laws.
Airline Seeks· OC Berth
"But we're honest and we ad-
mit our mistakes. If we're
wrong, 'tle'll stand up to it, ..
Schnabel said.
What will Mrs. Lorenz do with
her sudden $1,3U water-er
windfall?
Noue Level Coneenu Played Dmm in Pl,ea •'Who know1?" she said.
.. There's an awful Jot we can do
with it."
Proponents of the sign law
were just as vocal in their sup-
port ol the ordinance Monday.
night. Representatives of Costa
Mesa Tomorrow, a downtown
businessman's group, and the
city's Beautification Committee
said the issue of a sign ordinance
is a moot point.
Mauree n DiDominico, a
member of the beautification
Committee said the issue of the
sign Jaw was battled five years
ago.
"We haven't exactly rushed in·
to this thing," she said. She
added that the business com·
.munity will benefit from "less
• garrishsigns."
By KATHY CLANCY
Of .. o.lly 11'1 ... l&llH
Attorneys for North Central
Airlines contend the airline's
proposed operation at Orange
County Airport "would not
significantly increase noise
levels" at the county-operated
facility.
In a reply to opposition to their
proposed use of the airport, the
attorneys argue airport noise
problems should be up to local
government to setile.
They said the local noise con·
cerns should not override "the
broader public interest" in de·
veloping route patterns to meet
the needs of the Orange County-
Los Angeles area.
The attorneys suggested as
possible solutions to the noise
problem acquisition of homes im·
pacted by aircraft noise or the
construction of a new airport to
serve the county.
The airline applied to the Civil
Aeronautics Board in
Washington, D.C. in May for
permission to operate flights
between Orange County and Las
Vegas and Orange County and
Phoenix. They would connect
with flights to Minneapolis-St.
Paul.
Even if permission were grant-
ed, county supervisors still would
retain control over the airHne's "When the large signs are
brought down to scale, every-
one's business ~ill be visible,·•
she said.
Councilwoman Mary
Smallwood agreed. "The smaller
signs are lost in a maze of giant.
plastic signs," she said. •'There's
too much for the shopper to Jook
at and small businesses are
harder to find.''
Mesa Motorcyclist
Dies From Injuries
Food 'Pouch'
Unvei"led at
<;oumyShow
What do you get when you
cross a tin can with a beatable
pla:::tic food bag? A "retortable
pouch," that's what.
The pouch, approved recently
by the Food and Drug Ad·
ministration, is one of the hottest
topics at the Westel'D Packaging
Exposition, a three-day trade
show on trends in packaflng that
opens in Anaheim today.
The pouch is made or a
metallic foil that can be heated in
boiling water and Uren cut open
for serving, a show spokesman
said, thus making it possible to
sell fast-food dinners without
refrigeration.
More than 300 packaginf firms
are expected to display their pro-
ducts during the show.
Costa Mesan~hoinas "'E. Keat· ing, 22, died Monday of injuries
he suffered two days ago when
his motorcycle smashed into a
curb on Estancia Drive at high
speed.
Keating, of 2673 Orange Ave.,
succumbed at 1: 15 p.m. in the in-
Mesan Killed
In Accident
A Costa Mesa man who wrui job
hunting in Corona was killed
Monday when his ~ar was struck
from the rear and overturned
several times.
Corona police said Edward R.
Jones, 40, of ~ E. Flower St.,
was dead at the scene.
He was It.ruck from the rear by
a car driven by Jeffrey Lee
Burks of Corona. Police said the
impact tossed Jones from· bis car.
Burks was booked on suspicion
of manslaughter.
Women Saffer
Study Cit.ea Career Siren
LONDON (AP) -Yauna career women lncreutngJy are falllng
victim to "stress disease" and developing facial and chest balr
baldness. and a blgher sex drive, a British medical protessor ·
claims.
Dr. lvor lrlllla ol. Addenbroote'• Hospital, Cambrldfe, bu been
researcbinl bormoaal ch&nC• in worlcina women since 1963 seeing up to 40 women each week at b1J clinic. He disclosed som~ Of tus
findings in the laie.t edition ot the weekly maguine "'Woman's Own.". •
tensive care unit at Costa Mesa
Memorial H~pital. Hospital of·
ficials said he had suffered a
broken neck and head injuries in
the craah.
Police said Keating and his
paasenger, Roy 8 . Butt•ling, 22,
of 599 Knowell Place, Costa
Mesa, were rounding the curve
at Estancia Drive near Swan Cir-
cle on Keating's motorcycle
Saturday night when the crash
occurred.
Keating apparently misjudged
the curve and slammed into a
curb. Both men were hurled over
the handlebars and into a field, police said.
Officers said Bulleting escaped
with only minor irtjuries. Neither
man was wearing a protective
helmet at the time of the crash.
Keating is survived by his
mother, Mrs. Dorothy Keating or
Orange; pJus sisters, Patricia
Gardener of Orange and Mrs.
Linda Newland of Westchester.
Visitation at Bell Broadway
Mortuary in Costa Mesa is
tonight until 7 p.m. Burial Mass
will be said Wednesday at 8 p.m.
at St. John the BapUst Church,
Costa Mesa. Private burial
services will follow.
use or the airport.
County supervisors and
Newport Beach city officials Fre.&PflfleAI
have opposed the airline's re-S
quest. citing concerns over noise TRIKE
conditions around the airport. • • •
The request also bas been o~ workers cn 1trike. .
posed by officials of Hughes Bill wag ner, oUicial
Airwest and Western Airlines. spokesman for the engineers'
North Central's reply to that local office in Los Angeles, was
opposition was flied in unavailableforcomment.Offioe
Wuhington and passed along to workers there refused to cozn..
county supervisors by County ment Qn details of the strike, in-
Counsel Adrian Kuyper. eluding numbers involved.
The reply noted North Cen· The Irvine Company, Orange
tr al 's service proposal calls for County's largest residential cod-
sligbtly less than f ollr departures structlon group, said 10to1S of its per day from the airport and said projects have been stalled by tta,
the service would be operated strike.
with DC-9-50 equipment meeting A spe>kesman said $5.'1 mllli~
federalnoiseregulations. worth ot construction contr::= In addition, the attorneys were held up. About half of
wrote, county supervisors would value is ln constructlcn of a m~
still have authority to determine • jor flOQd coutrol channel~
whether a carrier should be Culver Drive and Jeffrey Road i4
permltt~ to operate at the , Irvine, for flood protection ohhe •
airport. large Woodbridae bousiag dt velopment and other areas.
p,... Page Al The Ir\.ine official said ~
CARE •••
policy IUSpended 60 daya for
study. Supervisor Ralph Diedrich
said he wanted the tast f~ce to
continue its study but suggested
the new policy C9Dllqµe in the
meantime. -~· ·
Anthony ariued. how~ver, "How can you setup a tas~force
to atudy them (illegal alledi) and
all of a sudden implement. this
kind of policy that makes them
almost lmpolSlble to study er at
leut makes them more difficult
to study?"
.. I am still concerned that this
policy is having a devastating af.
feel on the people." be continued.
Murry Cable, county director
of medical services administra-
tion, said between June 20 and
July 13 a total of 266 suspected il·
legal aliens were asked to appJ,y
for Medi-Cal when they arrived
for medical care at UCI Medical
Center.
Seventeen percent, or 46 pa·
tients applied, he said.
strike .. aflects everybody." .
The ~.2 million Aliso waur
Management Agency sewer ouf.
fall project off Aliso Pier 1n5out41
Laguna was stopped,
"'The job's been shut down.•• ~~te boss Dennis O'Malley said.
We can't work without the operators."
But o•Matley said there would
be no substanUal delay in the
project. scheduled for comple-
tion in February, unless the
strike carried over into bad weather.
Reductions Urged
WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi·
dent Carter has asked' executive
agencies to submit ideas on how
to eliminate "federal require-
ments that state and local gov.
ern ents submit plans when
ask ng for assistance." In a
me o sent today Lo all <tepart-
men qen.cy heads, Carter
sald aent requirements are
needl sly numerous and
bu rd e.
\
County Budget T •
.
be $1.s.1 per '100 ol •INlled
valuation, 10 coat. hlabw Ulan
th• put year.
c=aovenunent account.a
Gates did win permisalon to
hire a> new employea lncludln&
additional deputies and in·.
ve1Ugat.ors to serve the growing
unincorporated aouth county.
area.
for r 17 percent cl the local
-pro tu rate wltb ICboal dil-·tttct.a m•lrl• up about IO per.
cent. At tbe same time, superviscn
lifted a countywide hiring freeze
from Gate.' department to allow
hJm to recruit and immediately
replace sworn officers without
aeekiq special board approval.
Amoai meJot euta lm~ed Mood~ wer-e .-.815 troilD the
propolC!ld budlet of th• cou.ot.y
Department ol Educatloo and
t.12t,B from the ~8 mll11on
bud1et proposal of Sheriff.
Coroner Brad Oat.. Supervisor Ralph Diedrich
arcued successfully that Gates
CURAAGH CREW SHOWS COLUMBUS MAY NOT HAVE BEEN FIRST
HJstortan-aallor Timothy Severin (Right) And His Crew
History Sets Sails
Sailor Charts Course of Possibilities
BOSTON CAP) -English historian
Timothy Severin believes more history stu·
dents will forsake their books to try their
theories in action now that be bas shown it
would have been possible for an Irishman to
reach North America nearly 1,000 years ahead
of Columbus.
Severin tried out his theory by sailing a
36-foot leather-bulled curragh from Ireland.
HIS BANANA·SBAPED BOAT. equipped
with two square sails and with a bull of
greased ox hides, reached Newfoundland on
June 26, after island-bopping across the North
Atlantic from Brandon Head, Ireland, the
point from which St. Brendan supposedly
sailed 1,400 years ago.
Severin, 36, who bas undergraduate and
graduate degrees from Oxford and who
studied at Harvard, does not insist his voyage
proves that the 6th century Irish monk was ac·
tually the first European to r each the
American continent.
But, he said, "We now know for 6ure that
it is physically possible. I feel now that Irish
voyagers were making voyages beyond
Iceland to Greenland and possibly, even
probably to North America.•• .
MOST IUSTORIANS ARE SKEPTICAL
about the historical reliability of the 10th cen-
tury manuscript "The Navigations of St.
Brendan," noting the m edieval tradition of
mingling fact and fancy.
A younger generation of historians is
beginning to leave the library for practical
tests of long-studied early texts, Severin said
on a visit to Boston with his boat and crew to
promote a book he is writing on his trip.
"The texts have been chewed to death by
people sitting at desks," he said. ·
SEVERIN HAS TRAVELED DOWN the
Mississippi Ri ver from its source and followed
in the tracks of Marco Polo across Asia.
His liking for such travel echoes that of
Norwegian explorer Thor Heyerdahl , who
crossed the Atlantic in the papyrus boat ''Ra"
to test a theory that people could have sailed
from Africa to South America, and his voyage.
from South America to the islands of the South
Pacific aboard the "Kon Tiki."
1854 Thief 'Cleared'
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -It
took him 103 years, but former
San Francisco alderman Henry
Meiggs finally has pulled off the
per( ect crime -posthumously.
Superior Court J"udge Harry
Low on Monday dismissed an in·
dictment against Meiggs, who
famed Fisherman's Wharf
stands, established himself as a
much· needed developer in Peru.
Atte mpts to extradite him
from Lima, Peru, failed as Peru·
vian authorities pleaded ig·
norance of such procedures.
Meiggs went on to acquire new
wealth and became a national
hero by building railroads in
Peru and Chile.
The move to exonerate Meiggs
was made by Bernard Averbucb,
author and former San Francisco
newspaperman. .
"Henry Meiggs died 100 years
ago this September," said
Averbuch.
forged and cashed $365,000 in
.stolen city warrants in 1854 and
fled toSotath America.
"The atatute of limitations has
run out and Mr. Meiggs bas gone
to the great beyond, where be has
bad his accounting at a higher
court," quipped Low.
Meiggs, who built the city's
first wharf on property where •
While building his South
American fortune, Meiggs bad
pangs of guilt which forced him
to send restitution to tbe city
treasury and his creditors in San
Francisco, which he had fled in
beavydebt.
"It seems appropriate to ask
for the hearing to clear his
name."
Assistant Dist. Atty. John
Dwyer, arguing against the ac-
tion at the lighthearted bearing,
said: "I would hate to see a pre·
cedent allowing members of the
Board of Supervisors to take a
half a million and go to South
America."
• I l llome Buyer Profiled
•
,,
ranged from $13,3$6 to $19,057,
depending on the size of their
family.
Cleminshaw said be dis-
covered the following informa-
tion as be studied the bQJers'. statistics:
-ThirtY·six buyers ·are mar· ried and '9 are either: llnlJe.
separated or widowed.
-Almolt half ol the bu1ers
have no cbildrea. •!die tbe other
halt have up to~ chUdreQ.
... -The averaie aee of the bead
ol the boUsehold la 30. r
-About three-foottbi ol the
heads of household an.cl their
aeouset bave so me colle1e
edlleatlon. mua ~boqt 14 l)Ol'CeDt
~~~
-------------·-· ._,. -... _...._._ ... ----6
Tue!!y,Ju!y ti. 1977 DAILY PILOT A 3
ed. $1.3. Mi11ion·
did • need additional budaet f ~nda for the new penonnel. lie
a:f !tested. loatead, be pay their a ea from money the new
workers would save in overtime
and extra~ fund.I.
. Amoag the -.m worth ol
. cuts approved so far in the Coun·
ty D~:'ment of Education more ball were the result of a separation ot the department
from county government apron
strings.
That means the amount cut
will be made up witb a separate
education tax levy in the coming
year and subtracted from county
· budgeting. .
Supervi.sor&, however, also re-
jected a $223.,MO proposal to ex·
pand an educatlcmal counseling
proaram fOC' Juveniles on probe·
ti on •
Jn additioo. they voted 3.a to
turn down a $148,771 propoeal to
expand a legal education pro-
gram for local school districts.
Supervisol's Phil Anthony and
Ralph Clark voted again.st the
cut1,.
County Schools Superintendent
Robert Peterson said the state
legislature-approved tax rate for
his department in the coming
year would not permJt fUnds for
·the procram.
But Diedrich reminded
Peterson th.al when supeniaon•
granted S'I0,000 for that procram
a year earlier tt was with the un-
deratand.ing that it would be a one-time granL
"We are not really in the
education business," Diedrich
said.
Construction Ban
Builders Sue County
Two developers took legal ac-
tion against Orange County late
Monday in a bid to lift the ban on
construction lo an area adjacent
to tlle El Toro Marine Corps Air
Station.
Named as defendant in the
Superior Court action filed by
lawyers ror the Mission Viejo and
Aliso Viejo companies is the
county's Airport Land Use Com·
mission.
They attacked the county's
adoption of a building freeze ap-
proved after the El Toro area
Teenager
Nabbed.in
Stabb. . :mg
A youth accused of stabbing an
Army officer who is still on the
critical list at Mission Communi-
ty Hospital, Mission Viejo, was
arrested Monday night in San
Diego.
Orange County Sheriff's of-
ficers said the 17·year-old sus·
· pect will be returned to this area
today and charged with the at-
tempted murder July 13 of Capt.
Henry L. Vogel, Sl, of Utah.
Deputies said the youth was
seized on a street in Sao Diego by
an officer who recognized him
from the description circulated
by Orange County authorities.
Capt. Vogel's Army truck, al·
legedly commandeered by "the
suspect after the wounded man wu pushed f\'Om his vebicle near
the El Toro Road offramp of the
San Diego Freeway, was re·
covered last week in Chula Vista.
Officers said Vogel was re·
peatedly stabbed in the chest by
the young hitchhiker after refus·
ing to hand over bis wallet. They
said the officer ha<l been as-
signed to California from Utah on
an Army recruiting mission.
Vogel's condition was listed to-
day as critical but improving. Of.
ficers said the youth accused of
wounding him is a runaway from
a Texas community.
Diamond Lane
'Didn't Work'
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A
$200,000 draft report on the Santa
Monica Freeway's Diamond
Lanes concludes the project
didn't work.
The 500·page report by Systan.
Inc. of Los Altos says accidents
increased 150 percent during the
project'.s ~~eeks.
wu surveyed by engineers from
Ultrasyatems, Inc.
The subsequent report led the
commission and the county to ap-
prove "Community Noise
Equivalent Level.. standards
which prevent home construction
on much of the land in the area owned l:>Y tne plaintiffs.
The lawsuit contends that the
. companies are being unfairly
barred from building lS,724
homes that were sheduled for con-
struction in the area defined by
the noise study.
It is alieged that the
Ultrasystems report does not
comply with state regulations for
such studies and includes incor-
rect and biased data supplied to
the firm by the Marine Corps.
And the report, the complaint
states, does not take into account
landing pattern changes adopted
last March at the El Toro base .
The judge assigned to the bear·
ing will be asked to issue an or·
der directing the commission to
vacate its building freeze d~
cision.
Water Finks .
Neighbors Sni,t,ch on Uaen
LOS ANGELES CAP> -The
city's water hotline has been
flooded with calls as neighbors
snitch on oe~rs. turning in
everyone from their landlords lo
little old ladies.
Someone turned in an elderly
woman who pleaded that her
sidewalk needed hosing to clean pigeon droppings.
And neighbors reported a
woman who said she had to water
her lawn during the day because
s he was afraid of being mugged
at night.
The pigeon lady was told to use
"the old bristle broom and
bucket-of.water method" to
clean up the mess, Jim Derry.
head of the Department of Water·
and Power's water conservation
program, said Monday.
And the woman who feared
mugeers was told to have friends
water her lawn.
The city's mandatory water
conservation law. which took er-
f ect July l , forbids use of non·
recycling fountains, daytime
garden waterings, hos ing of
sidewalks and seeying of water in
r estaurants unless requested.
The hotline t a ttling on
violators was set up last year and
gets 700to900calls a day.
About 100 warnings are mailed
daily to first-time violators. with
a bout 60 percent of the
transgressors in the middle-and
upper-income areas of west Los
Angeles and the San Fernando
Valley.
Usually that's enough to stop
the problem, Derry said. A few
have been caught a second time,
and they've been punished by
having to listen to a pep talk by
city water officials.
However, he said, no one has
been caught violating the or-
dinance a third time. But if be
were, the city would place
restrict.ors on bis water pipes
that would cut the flow from IS
gallons a minute to one gallon a
minute.
Derry is confident this threat Is -
enoutb to make anyone ~
twice about Watling water. -
If persons have a water restric-
tor placed on their pipes, Derry
said, "It'll take them five
minutes to fill their toilet tanks
after flwihing and 18 minutes to
fill their tubs. And it'll cost them
$50 .to drown theit sorrows."
Fumes Fell Worker
A San Clemente city employe,
who ,also is a reserve fireman.
was temporarily paralyzed Mon·
day when be breathed poisonous
fumes while cleaning an electric
f!l_Qtor with sol vent.
A fellow worker found Howard
Smith1 25, semi-conscious and
unab1e to move his arms
and legs about 10:30 a.m. He
summoned city firemen, who •
Smith was working as an elec·
trician's helper when be inhaled
the debilitating fumes at the old
city sewer plant, located at
A venido Pico and El Camino
Real. He has worked two years irt
the city's public works depart·
ment.
He lives at 258 Ave. Victoria
with his wile and their son.
transport.;d Smith to San c~-So--Lt Clemente General Hospital. ·llrlJ8 ~
A bospital s~esman said to-WASHINGTON (AP) -The
day that Smith is doing fine and Pentagon is drafting regulations
may be discharged before the aimed atcurblng the activities of
day is out. She said he has no ap· union organizers in the armed
parent paralysis.as a result of the forces, Gen. Bernard Rogers, the
ac'\1dent. army chief c:A staff, said Monday.
@
·ra&:MWllE · under five carat• regardless of
the number found. In case the
diamond weighs more than five ca~. a royalty and any
taxes due must be paid by the
finder. In 1958 one lucky visit or found a f1ne-<1uallty
15.31 carat stone that
produced a beautiful 8.27
marQuise.
But Arbnsas can no longer
claim to be unlQue. On APril
1 s. 1 on diSOOll9rY of several diamond pipes near the
Colorado-w,<om!OQ border WIS announced. The dlscoYerf was
In a belt ex1endlng southWll'd to Fort OofOna and te> ., ...
west of Boulder.
Colorado State Geologlat JoM Rold said the depoeb'
totat v1l u• could not be
determi ned until .tome commerd• flnn paye to mine
and ~a 10 metet cube of
dltmond bHrlng ore. an
eJCtremetv -~ procett. 11\e diliTtOhd't f6uMTn l""'•-.-.----
.,.., IO far Nve bten am.at -
.t>out the Iii. Of 9rlln1 of
aand -llmltlno them -.o lnduatNI uaea. AOfd Mid the
tnt.-e.d or.nonct ~
are not WOfflld about the
"""' ..,. '**-dl8COWrlea of 11r91 ..... '" South AMca begtn the ..,,. __. ~ In · elrftfW ,..,.,... cMoollta. 8o t~of----~61\ hOPel •
-I DAIL V PILOT
8AllE OLD 8TAND1 I 1t1m.•
u_p on 11\Y vacation \o Modesto.
''ut H I Btartcd upcoaa.t_. somebody told me Mod~to wu#
suffering from a wuter shortajfc
and parkin& vexauons
Thus st was 1 turned back here
Just sn Lame to get into stalled
traffic on the Ne wport .Bay
Bridge a nd sutrer through u
S1galert in Laguna B~ach
Tbere'a no place lJke home. ,
Before retW"Dini to tius aame
old st.and and aweating over a bot
tn>ewrtter. however, I dJd mal-
inger awhile upcoast in the love-
ly little vLllage of Santa liarbara
H this is uldeed the best ol all
possible coasta, Jet's include San-
ta Barbara m it.
SANTA BA.llBARA does in fact
have some rather strong ties to
us right here along the Orange
Coast. It is home base for that off-
shore oil drilling opposition
group known as Get Oil Out -or
GOO, for short.
Santa Barbara, with its palm
trees, wide boulevards and ma-
jestic homes with Spanish-tiled
roofs, was in fact the inspiration
and model used by the late Ole
Hanson when he built his Spanish
Village here at San Clemente.
Perhaps the quintessence of
that stately old Spanish styli ng
can be found out in the Montec1to
section of town al the old Santa
Barbara Biltmore Hotel with its
tiled walkways, majestic lawns
and gardens, quaint cottages and
interior Jounge5 of rich woods
and bright tiles.
You would think you were back
in San Clemente in its heydays.
Santa Barbara also has its
points of interest with colorful
names like Hammonds Meadow
Beach. Arroyo Burro Stat~
Beach, Hope Ranch, Isla Vista
and Haskell's Beach.
It also has other names that
can jolt a bit like Goleta Slough
or Coal Oil Point.
LIKE OUR COASTLINE, San·
ta Barbara draws its share of
tourists, traffic congestion and
attendant woes. The beacbfr<'nt
1s crowded on sunny days, after
the m ists of t he m orning
evaporate.
The community seems to nuw
aJong at a leisurely pace and
leaves you with a small town
feeling. But Santa Barbara is in
fact a county seat and a city of
more than 70,000 souls. not count·
1ng the outskirts like Sum-
merland, Isla Vista or Goleta.
Despite the population and the
summer season squeeze, visitors
from our region might be in for a
real shock when they drive
downtown and park.
There are no parking meteni.
Not one dime-gobbling Ticky
Bird anywhere in sight.
Most of the on-street parking
slots, in fact, offer you a pleasant
two-hour Ume limit. Additional·
ly. when thi1111 do get crowded,
there are a number of off.st.re«
parking lots in operation. They
have attendants. They give you a
timed parking tab.
SIGNS ON THE lot also inform
you that the first 90 minutes of
parking is free. For beach people
who have fou&ht the ballle of the
coin -eating Ticky Birds of
dowqtown Laeuoa or the
Newport-Balboa Pellimu.la, it's
enough to make you rub your
ey• in cm belief.
Clearly, Santa Barbara must
have found a ma1ic parkint
formula that so far has eluded us
here downcoast.
Fe••erat.,.a
'
TllHd!X, Juty 11, 1f77
Chino ut-faces
Teng Reinstated, P.ost;ers Proclai~
... _.,......
SECOND COMEBACK
Teng Hal.o-plng
Moreto~om.e
TOKYO (AP) -China's purged moderate leader Teng Hsiao-ping
haa been relnatated tn all the Communist party. government and
mllltary posts be once held, accordiQ& to wall poetera that appeared
today, a Japaneae report from Peking said.
The Kyodonews service reported thepoeta'I aald, ''We welcome the declalon made by the party Cen-
tral Committee to reagpoint
Comrade Teng Hstao-pjoi a s
party vice chairman, vice pre-
mier, vice chairman of the
miJltary commlssion and chief of
the general staff of the People's
Liberation Army."
The JapanMe report said the
postt.ra were put UP ,on tJ!e wall of
the mlniatry of economic rela·
lions with forei8D countries.
TUEY WEaE SIGNED by
''the first and fourth bureaus of
the ministry.!" Kyodo added.
No further details were given.
The Kyodo story was the latest
io a series of Western reports out
of Peking that the 72-year-old
heir \o ~ policle6 or Qe late
Premier Chou Eo-lai was mak-
·ing il second comeback.
THERE WAS NO immediate
confirmation of the report.
Tena was ousted by radical
leaders in 1987 during the
cultural revolution ~ame they
aaid be favored capltaliat
policies.
After Chou rehabilitated Teng
in 1973, be wu expecW.d to sue.
ceed Chou but lmtoad wu fired
acain inApil m1.
Yl1G08LAVl•'S OFFICIAL
TanJuc newt qency report.eel re-
cently that a formal decilioo
about the return to political Uf e ol
Tenc a.ad \be expulsion from the party~ the IO-Called IRI ol four
radicals, lncludlng Chairman
Mao Tae-tung's widow, Chiang
Cbin_g, could be decided by the
11th Congrese of the Chinese
Communist party.
Ta~ua quoted Chinese sources
as saying the congress would
begin at the end of July or in
August.
Heat Grips Nation
In Relentless Vice
Hong Kone newapaper1 report·
ed in March that travelers from
the southern Chinese city of Can-
ton told of seeing wall posters an-
nouncing Teng's appomtment as
premier and vice chairman of
the party.
IN LANGUAGE limilar totbat
reported today, the March
posters were sald to read: "We
s upport the Central Committee's
decision to promote comrade
Teng Hsiao-ping to IJiecome
Chinese premier a nd vice
chairman of the Chinese Com-
munist party."
Briglatldea
Michael Fortuna's cloud bas a silver lining: His busi-
ness, Brainchild, already bas shipments o( black T-•
shirts with words, "Where were you when the lights
wept out?" on sale in at least 15 New York City area de-
par'tment stores. Fortuna, 21, says his company creates
the ·'Why didn't I think of that myself" type of product,
s uch as this commemoration of las t week's power
blackout in New York.
By The Associated Press It was so hot.
It was so hot along the railroad tracks near Paintsville, Ky., that the
. rails expanded and 16carsofa110-car freight train jumped the tracks.
No one was injured. Temperatures had hovered near 100.
The nagging heat became more unbearable as the National Weather
Service announced that in most
places. there would be no letup the Atlantic Coast to the Rockies
for most of the week. The heat re-and into the Southwest desert. ached across the country from Two Died Needlessly? --
Oil Pipeline
Starts Again
After Blut
ANCHORAGE. Alaska CAP>
Pushed first by gravity and then
by pumps, oil began moving
through the trans -Alask a
pipeline again, 10 days after an
explosion destroyed Pump Sta-
l100 No. 8 and•shul down the.$7.7
billion line.
"Things are mo\·10g along in
reasonable shape. lt looks like
we're on lo stay," said Henry
Mowe ll . Alyes ka Pipeline
Service Company vice president
for operations. "About 6 o'clock
CB p.m. POT Monday) we opened
all the valves."
MOWELL (.\ID THAT ''open-
ing the valves on the downside of
the Brooks R.ail86'' gave the oil a
sbove and then the pumps, wer~
'turned on to keep it gai.nc. nw
blghest point on the pipeline ,.....
4,800·foot Att.igun Paa.a -ii in the
Brooks Range.
A flow station at the bead d the
trana-Alaska plpellne was shut
down early today but oll move-
ment was not affected.
A spokesman fot Atlantic
Richfield Company, Tom Bren·
nan, 1ald "a fairJy small leak"
was detected at the company's
Flow Station No. 1 near Prudboe
Bay shortly after midnight. He
said the cause and exteat of the
leak had not been deterinined bu1
estimated the loss at no more
than 100 gallons.
THE THERMOMETE R
reached 107 in Las Vegas, Nev.,
Sacco, Y tUUetti CtUe Eyed and Gila Bend, Ariz, Near BOSTON (AP) Fifty years
Phoenix it was 112. In New York after one of the nation's most
it waa an ll·year record 100. In ·controversial executions, Gov. and murder in South Braintree.
Roanoke, Va., it r eached 102, Michael S. Dukakis declared to-Mass., r e mained un8olved
another record. day that Nicola Sacco and despite the convictions of Sacco
anarchists and there was some
a nti -Itali a n sentiment in
Massachusetts at the time of the
trial. Air coa4itionine was turned up Bartolomeo Vanutli were cheat-and Vanzetti.
all over the country. Power com-ed by the criminal justice Dukakis did not declare Sacco
panies in Pennaylvania and M.io-system. a nd Vanzetti innocent, but TAYLOR '8 REPORT, ob-
nesota uked customers to cut Citing a report by h~s legal Taylor cited •'the . very re.al . tained by The Associated Press
back on tning electrical ap-counsel, Daniel A. Taylor. possibility that a grievous mss-on Monday, states: "There are
pliances. There were spot out-Oukakis iiSued a proclamation carriage of justice occurred with s ubstantial. indeed compelling
a e es or cutbacks in calling for a memorial day Aug. their deaths." grounds for believing that the
Massachusetts and New York Ci· 23. the soth anniversary of the The proclamation said Sacco Sacco and Vanzetti legal pro-•
ty, where a 25-hour blackout electrocution at Charlestown and Vanzetti were found guilty of ceedings were permeated with
caused ao much trouble last State Prison. being foreigners and dissidents . unfairness .... "
week. AYLOR'S REPORT slated The prosecution in their case re-The case has been debated for A minor traffic accident turned T i~a~~hoortieupoo a::l~h~a~t~th~e~l~l~S~.ooo~~p~a~y~ro~l~l~r~o~bbe~ey~~~~a~~~~yc~a~ll~ed~~t~~~d~e~f~~~d~an~ts~=50=~y=e=~=·==~=====~ Massachusetts highway when 150
cars waiting for a truck to be
towed away overtfeated and
stalled.
POULTRY FARMERS in
Delaware', Maryland, VireiJUa
and Massachusetts reported
thousands of chickens had died
because ol the heat.
Forest fires raged on in Utah,
Wyoming and-lloqpna.
Alr poll&Jtlon bo.iered over the
nat\pn's cavt~ pd wide areas
of Kentucky, Mlhnesota, Rhode
Island and Mary[ahd as stagnant
air masses refused lo pass on.
WATER P&ESSUBE was
down d~erously tow ln fire
hydrants in Boston, Philadelphia
and New York and officials tried
to distribute hydrant caps to slow
the Clow.
What seemed like a break in
the weather for Michigan turned
out to be a lot of trouble. Thun-
derstorms and winds were ac·
companied by funnel clouds in
several areas. Four homes were
damaaed but no 1nJw1es were re-
ported when a funnel cloud swept
over the Hillsdale. Mich., area,
near the Ohio border.
* * *
HOW TO USE THE FOOD SECTION
TO SAVE MONEY. U= the D•llY Piiot fOOd HCtlon w , yqu a.n qve ~ to '10 on
rourweeldy grocery 11111. And, thet'a
• oenMrV8'1n •111••'9. -
STUDY TH£ ADS. The DallJ Piiot
WHnelday food aectlon Ii JuU of
..........,. .. and food edl WNctl
feature, ft9rJ we9k, speclala and
•er ...... M . llltke 8 prK'llce of
ecreetliMg....._adefortMbeatde-
•· Keep"' fftfnd ttu1t st.om wNptt .,. ...... to put....., prlce9 tn .....
.... are MOat lllcetf to. bep tMAr
pledge to help you .... MOney.
CLIP 1HE COUPONS. Cllp and ....
"cent• off" COUpoft9. TMr ..,
NVe WoU onlJ 8 diMe .... eM 8
Mckel ...... fMlltM ........ ..
CIUk:ldr ............ -JOU .etop.
USE THE REC.PEI. An ldnd8 of .... ottlng ,... • .,. ,,....... tn the
OaHyPllotfoodMCtlon.FromchM ..
aoutne to atuffect grHn peppers;
frOM diet CS.Herta to puff ,..,.
Y•'H nnct m.nr ... .., • ...,. _.
newel ••rt to ltntt • _.. ~ ........
aUY IN SEASON. lk= lnatancea th• rtcll>9• .,. to .._.
foeMwNdt-• •nn1r.,...
# '"8Mthey..,.. be In~._..
and priced low.
-..UN AN!AO. ,.._ ._, • .... a •••k ........... ....
,. •• ~ ..... -ftaM .......
lhppl ... ~ .......... CIMI. ~ .... ja., .......... . ..........
--------------...... ---..--.--.... .,. ...... ____________ -.. ·--.. -. ---... . ----...
py Gets
life for
·Treason
LOI ANGELES <AP> -An dr•w Daulton Lee. a youna
ub.....,.ll:tr ~vtcted of •PY·
tq for tbl Rua1lana. baa been etmced to lif • ln prtaon by 1 ,. •~es to deter others
mtNNon. Nataas tbat tbt llf• term would •ilk• LM d!Jibte for parole ln 10
1.,,-. u.~. Diltrict Court Juct10
~ -SFDE )
Jilobut J . KeUeber added n
,ears in a&litional sentences. He
uid tbe tennl would run concur-
rently.
A Jury convicted Lee, 25. of
seWq top.secret national docu-
ment. to the Soviets. Witnesses
&aid-itew89 paid '10,000.
P.-.e•.iut Kiiied
BARSTOW CAP ) -A
parachute rescue technician died
~ter hia parachute failed to open
when he and another man bailed
out of a helicopter during ''war
games" in the Mojave Desert.
Air Force spokesmen said they
didn't know whether S. Sgt.
Martin D . Magee. 27. of
Chillicothe, 111., failect to open his
parachute or whether it malfunc·
tiooed.
Cotaet11 Bid to \' oter•
SANTA BARBARA CAP) -
Residents will have a chance to
decide whether Santa Barbara
County should be split into two
counties.
Proponents or dividing the
county and making Santa Mana
the seat or the new county -ten·
tallvely named Los Padr~s -
have won their bid to put the mat·
ter to a vote. authorities said
Monday.
0....,,. KH~d Ref re••
LOS ANGELES <AP) Acor·
oner's jury hns ruled that Tcx<.1s
oil milllonalr ess Sandra Il ene
West, 37, described by doctors as
prone t o "high ly bizarre
behavior," died from an acciden· lal overdose of barbiturates and
codeine.
l11tegratlon Plan Set
LOS ANGELES <AP> The
city Board of Education has de·
cided lo go ahead in September
a nd implement a limited, and
voluntary, integration plan while
wailing to hear whether man·
datory integration is required
next Fcbruarv.
. _...... .......
~
Together Again
TV pioneers Imogene Coca and Sid Caesar will appear
together for the first time in almost 20 years for a two·
week r un in San Francisco. ueginning Sept. 29 in the
Fairmont Hotel's Venetian Room. Their TV series
··vour Show of Shows" started in 1950
Kill-/ or-hire Plot
Jails Psychiatrist
PALM SPRINGS <AP> -A Pal m Springs psychiatrist has been
arrested for allegedly hiring a hit man to murder another doctor,
police say.
Dr. Morton Kurland. 44, was arrested Monday at the Desert
Mental Health Clinic and held l•n $2:xl,OOO batl for investigation of
charges of conspiracy to commit murctcr, conspiracy lo commit
burglary, soliciling another to com mil murder and furnishing a con·
trolled drug.
POLICE DETECTIVE Jeff Bordok :;aid Kurland 's arrest came
after the doctor paid $1,000 lo an und(•rt Ml'r police officer who was
posing as a hil man. ~ ,
The investigation of Kurland began thrct' weeks ago when a pa·
t1ent at the clinic told police Kurlan<I a~l\1:d him to murder Dr.
James O'Connor a nd lo burglarite his files. Bordok said . O'Connor,
53, is a Yucca Valley general prattltioner
THE PATIENT CLAll\1ED he was given $200 and a restricted
drug by Kurland. Bordok said .
As part of the invesllgat1on, pollct! 1rn1d. an undercover
Riverside police officer posing as an underworld hat man from Los
Angeles was introduced to Kurland and was solicited to commit the
same murder
In vites you to att end
Elizabeth Arden's Red Door Beauty Clinic
During the week o f July 25, a staff of Elizabeth
Arden beauty experts will bt3 llere to conduct
their Red Door beauty seminars. Reservations
are $10 and include a kit of make·up and
skin care essentials. plus credit towards
the purchase of any t lizabeth Arden
product. As classes are limited in size,
make y our reservations early. Come to
the El izabeth Arden counter in the
Cosemetics Department. or call for your
'rese.rvations, 556-0611 . ext. 208.
Cosemetics
Sessions will be held at the following times
Monday, July 25 at 2 30 pm.
Tuesday, July 25at 2 3) or 6.30 pm
Wednesdsy, July 27 at 10·30 am or 2 30
Thursday. July 28 at ·2 30 or 6:30 pm.
Fridsv, July 29 at 10:30 am.
TU!!1!>'· July 1t, 1977 DAILY PILOT A5.
Tax Relief seen
Pane'l Backs Deferment for SeniOn
SACRAMENTO (AP) -
Leclalatora tryln• to neosttate a CO~promlH property tax rellef
blll dlscovered quickly at their
opening session that they had llt·
Ue on which to agree.
But the stx-mefnber con·
ference committee nevertheless
approved a plan Monday to allow
senior ciUzena to defer property
tax paymenta on their homes.
Then back to the disagree-
ment.
UNDER ,,.E PLAN on which
they agreed, a homeowner a&ed
62 years or more with a
household Income of $20,000 a
year or less could delay tax pay-
menl!I until the house was sold or
the homeowner and spouse died.
The state would take a lien on
the property. Then back taxes
plus nine-per-cent-a-year in·
terest would be Paid when the
house was sold, or ownership
transferred to helrs.
THE CONCEPT 'is not new.
Supporters view it as a way lo in·
sure that elderly taxpayers on
fixed incomes are not forced out
of their homes by huge increases
in property values.
Voters approved a ballot
measure lut year allowtni the
le1t1Jature to take such a step,
and Monday'• action probably
meana that the plan wlll be in the
bill the committee approves.
THE STATE expects to re-
cover the back taxes tn m°"t
cases, but aides told committee
members that in a few instances
the stata may l oso mopey
because taxes and other liens
may exCf~ a home's sale price.
After this agreement.
stalemate started wnen the com·
mittee took up the first o! several
controversial issues -revenue
limits on local government.
TWO OP THE THREE proper-
ly tax relief bills being con-
sidered limit revenue a local gov-
ernment can receive each year
frQID R[Q~_yJ.axes.
But the committee appeared to
be split three ways, ~ingreeing
whether revenue increa ses
would be limited to a fixed
percentage or a fluctuating infla-
tion factor, or should have no
limit at all.
"I don't like local controls,"
said Sen. Nicholas Petris <D-
Oakland}, the chairman. "'They
can pose some real problems."
WITHOUT TAKING a vote. the
Two committee members were
absent at the time.
THE PANEL ALSO ran into
trouble when it tried to decide how
much money it had to work with.
It bad dllferinl estimates from
the Department of Finance and
leaillatlve analyst and no easy waytojustifytbem.
"We •lll'eed to disagree two
weeks ago," Clllf Allenby, pro-
gram budget manager fop the de-
partment, told the committee,
which put off a decision on the
que1Uoo unW •tlea.sttoday.
THERE WAS NO tndlcation
Monday how long it would take
the committee, which i1 meeting
while the full legislature takes a
five-week recess, to wrlte a bill.
The panel's work is crucial
because the measure it produces
is likely lo be the one senL to Gov.
Edmund Brown Jr.
Water Skier's
LegSe~ered
CORONADO CAP> -A 31-
year·old El Cajon woman was in
serious condition In Coronado
Hospital today after her left leg
was severed while water skiing. Dead Actor's
Estate Sued
Over Blaze
• committee appeared to deadlock
2·2 on a s uggestion by As ·
semblyman Bill Lockyer (D·San
Leandro). that local revenue
limits beleftoutofthe bill.
Suan Marie Ehrhardt was be·
ing towed on skis by a 20-foot
boat when it suddenly went into
r everse and the propeller struck
the woman, severing her leg al
the hip, sa.id authorities.
LOS ANGELES CAP) -An in·
surance company is suing the
estate of the late actor Jack
Cassidy, claiming that failure to
put out cigarettes started the fire
that burned his apartment and
killed him.
Central Mutual Insurance Co.
charged in a Superior Court suit
fil ed Monday that Cassidy and
three unnamed defendaftts were
negligent in extinguishing their
cigarettes last Dec. 12.
The firm said it paid the owner
of the building $58,124 in in·
surance for damages at the
apar tment caused by the fire, in
which Cassidy was the sole vic-
tim.
Cassidy's will, dated Aug. 28.
1975, left his $150,000 estate to
numerous friends, relatives, the
Motion Picture Reller Fund and
the Actors Equity Fund.
Lack of Padding
Costs , Bag Firm
SACRAMENTO (AP> -California officials say there wasn't
enough goose down in some Seattle-made sleeping bags, so the firm
has agreed lo pay $32,500 in fines and costs in a stipulated judgment..
The state Department of Consumer Affairs said Monday that
the Washington Quilt Co. settled the suit filed by the Sacramento
County district attorney without admitted guilt. . .
The state said the company will be prohibited Crom sellmg
sleeping bags which are not as represented on the label or in ad·
vertising. It will also be required to submit to sampling and testing
to ensure the bags comply with California law.
An official in the Bureau of Home Furnishings, Howard
Winslow. said the sleeping bags were labeled as <:Ontaining all goose
down but it was discovered that there was considerable less goose
down' than represented, and there was adulteration with !ar less· 1t
expensive duck down. 1
I -
No matter how old you
are, there's a kid inside
you who's trying to tell
you he wants out this
Well, that's what the bus is
all about. Orange County
Transit District buses take
you to all of the fun
places. Disneyland.
Knott's Berry Farm.
summer.
He's dying to cut
loose and have
a good old care-
free time like
he used to. And
not spend all
his' allowance
doing it.
The Fun Zone at
Balboa. The beach.
Anyplace.
Without the
hassle and
responsibility
of driving.
It doesn't take
a pocketful of
change to ride
the bus, either.
Just 25¢ one way.
So you can save
all your money to spend
when you get there, instead
of spending it gen1ng there.
· Listen to the kid . inside you.
He's right about a lot of thl!10S~
-
118
D ILV PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Taxable Benefits?
ln ttlm t Kil l~bor nogoliutlon:. these
d.ty!\, !\o-c.lll<'d f rin c benefits uru llb impor
tanl lo bar6'atnrnl( 1tctua1 pay scale .
fo ma11v u JOb·seeker. tht.' idea of h&v·
V\g mechcal insur11nc~ for tu '4 family, u e of
a company rur. cut rutc 01· free aJrUnc
passc~. or t11scounlt; ul I.he slore where he
worki. ran be even mor~ uppeallng Oum ti
fow extra dollars on the puy check.
:\nd compttnles . reuHztng thb, huve
l'01htanlly enhanct>d their fringe benefit of
f crin~s to attuct attract and keep empJoyes
Tod av it is not unusu1tl for the cost of fringe
benefits to account for from one.fourth to
one·third or total payroll costs.
So news that Jerome Kurtz, lhe new
Commissioner of Internal Revenue is look-
ing "with considerable intensity" into the
possibility of taxing the value or fringe
benefits as part of a taxpayer's total income
is guaranteed to raise eyebrows-and blood
pressure.
pany gilts of Christmas hams and turkeys,
definitely will remain tax-free (too com-
pllcuted to administer>.
Which btin~s up the question o( how the
addition of u fringe benefit tax would ever
permit the IRS to achieve its.declared goal
of u simplified tax form.
...
'Indoor Smog'
Residents of the more-or-less-smog~free
Orange CoHst rarely feel the need to rush in-
to the house and close the dcv:>rs and win-
dows to escape the murky stuff that pollutes
the great outdoors.
So they may be surprised to learn that
the air they breathe in their homes can be
just as hazardous to their health as authen-
tic outdoor smog.
That's the word from a couple of scien-
tists at UC Berkeley who have been study-
ing "indoor s mog" -and have concluded
it's at least as bad as the outdoor variety.
________ .....,..,,,,, ____ -............... -.... ._.
..
Health insuqrnce paid by an employer
would be specifically exempt under the In-
ternal Revenue Code. But beyond that the
possibility of counting fringe benefits as ad-
ditional income are more or less unlimited.
For example. Kurtz points out. free
travel for an airline c mploye and his family
can add up to us much as $10.000 a year ii
the family really enjoys globe-trotting.
Monitoring typical homes with
sophisticated instrument's 24 hours a day.
the scientists found harmful levels of such
pollutants as carbon monoxtde. nitrogen ox-
ide and sulphur dioxide from gas sto\'es
a nd· furnaces. Some of the readings were
two to three times higher than outdoor
levels on a smoggy clay.
Governor lJsurping Power~
r I
Free purking, he points out, can s<1ve an
employe $100 a month if he otherwise would
have to pay for space in a commercial park·
ing structure.
Also present. buL in less dangerous
ll'vels, were carbon mor1oxide from
c igarette· s moke, fluorocarbons from
aerosol spray C'ans and assorted jPOllutants
from cooking and cleaning products.
Budget Language TriCkS
Some firms offer free lunches in the
company cafetcna Cthe value of which. in-
cidentally, is taxable now if the IRS is
hware of it>. Others permit free personal
use of a company car. Some offer free legal
service. Department and other stores
routinely let employes buy at discount
rates: The }i!,t goes on.
Right no'" all this is in th~ talking stage.
but it appears that fringe bel)efits. at least
to some degree, eventually will be included
tn t he definition of taxable income-unless
~ongress steps in to legislate specific ex-
~mptions <besides their own, that is>.
If it's a ny c12nsolalion. the com-
missioner s;.iys that ~mi.I ll goodies. like com·
I
The good news is that newer homes
have better air exchange rates, through
ventilators and exhaust fans. But the bad
news is that energy conservation measures
to limit indoor-outdoor air exchange -
such as tight. insulation -could intensify the
··indoor ~mog" problem.
All of which will pose even more prob-
lems for government exper,s now trying
to devise a national building code to m ake
homes mo~e energy efficient. Once again. it
seems. government regulations could
become hCJwrclous to our hea th.
In the signing of the historical-
ly gigantic $14.5 billion budget
bill last month. Governor Jerry
Brown not only "blue pencilled"
million s
earmarked
for special
purposes but
c rossed out
s p ec ifi c
language
placed in the
enactment to
control the
use of funds.
T h i s
usurpation of power to ron-
tr a vene language intent in
budgetary matters. whil e of re-
cent vintage, is not an invention
Nursing Home Payoffs Routine
Medicaid Fund Kickbacks Udl,ed a 'Way.of Life'
, WASHINGTON The nation's
•candaJ-plagued nursing homes
'teep coming up with new ways to
;kin the taxpayers. Now senators
eave discovered that most nurs·
tng homes collect kickbacks as a
routme busmess practice
Just about all of those who pro-
vide a service lo nursmg homes
-from doc-
tors to un·
dertakers
allegedl y re-
turn part of
th ei r pa y.
ments under
lhe table. Of
course. the
homes collect
the full
amount from
government Medicaid funds. and
lhe proprietors pocket the dif-
ference.
All thJs petty chlsetlng 11dd.s up
to a multimillion-dollar scandal.
The sordid details have been as-
sembled in a confidential report,
which the Senate Committee on
Aging will release later this
month. Committee investigators
found that pharmacies,
laboratories, laundrit:s, food sup-
pliers and other businesses pay
kickbacks or up to 25 percent lo
nursing homes.
As one vendor explained to the
committee, with a shrug:
''Kickbacks are a way or life In
Medicaid. There is a little
larceny in all of us."
The report describes how
pharmacists, for example, make
th~rpQ~~&me~m~y~p
cash, running into thousands
each year, to lhe convalescent
homes in plain envelopes. Other
pharmacists supply the homes
with free drugs, vitamins, cos·
metics and other boot.y.
FOR HOMES that pref er leu
gross transactions the druggists
secretly pay the salaries of atten-
dant.a or buy stock in the homes.
&me also pu~hase advertising
. in nursma home )>rocbutes at 10
limes the normal rates.
lnvesU1ators round some
pharmacists wbo even rented
space ln the linen closets or nurs-
(JACK ANDERSON J
ing homes at rjdiculous rates up
to $1,000 a month. Others made
their payoffs in color television
sets. boats. desks. automobiles,
trading stamps, free use of ski
cabins or beach houses and pre-
paid vacatioQs lo Hawaii or
Europe.
"The evidence is overwhelm-
ing that many pharmacists are
required to pay kickbacks to
nursing borne operators as a pre·
condition of obtaining business.•·
the report states. Those ~ho re-
fuse to play ~e kickback gainl
are barred from doing business
with the corrupt homes. One
pharmacist lost three nursini
home clients when he trie4 lo cul
hls kickbacks_ trom-2S to 20 J>t:r.:.
cent.
WHAT ARE the dimensions o(
the scandal? An incredible 90
percent oC the druggists surveyed
in Florida. for example, told the
eommittee that kickbacks are
widespread. Investigators aJso
found the practice prevalent
among doctors, laboratories and
vendors.
Complained a California
pharmacist: The "sole concern"
of many nuning homes "is for
the buck. Nothing else matters.
Tile pathetic patient in these con·
valescent homes and hospitaJs ...
Cla) treated as a piece of living
meat-a commodity.••
'Footnote: Although the Senate
lnvesUgators found the evidence
abundant, onl~ one kickback
case bas been prosecuted ln the tut. five years. ••The Internlil
Revenue Service has been
anythinabut aggressive in i\8 en·
forcement'' of the law, the report
cbaraes. Chairman Frank
Church. D.-ldaho.iwants to make
kickbacks a fe ony and en·
courage a federal crackdown.
\
flict. He had not handled the re.
quest for a recipe change while
he was an attorney for the ice
cream makers. and he merely
·•approved" the new regulations
as the counsel for the govern-
ment. he told us. .
YET INTERNAL documents
show that Hutt, in his role as a
government official. huddled
with the ice cream men at least
twiee. They not only pleaded for
permission to use milk sub-
stitutes but requested that the
cheaper ingredients be listed as
"milk prOducts." They wanted
the gove11'ment to allow them to
misrepresent nae ~ontents, ac·
cording to "tbe m~mo, because
• "consumers have a low opinion
of whey.''
•The e'cstatic ice cream
makers, meanwhile. are already
deveRSplq cheaper mixtures.
"To be honest." one admitted to
us. "we'll put in just enough milk
to get it on the label.'·
Footnote: A confidential White
House memo warns that the
change will cost the taxpayers as
much as $183 million a year in
higher price supports for the
milk producers, who are already
in an economic squeeze and can ,
scarcely afford to lose the ice
ere am business. President
Carter told Sen. Herman
Talmadge, D.-Ga., in a private
letter that he is "concerned"
about the impact on milk price supports.
Food and Drug officials con-
tend, in turn, that the cheaper in·
gredients will lower the price of
ice cream. But Assistant
Agriculture Secretary Carol
Foreman. in an interview with
our associate Howie Kurtz. dis-
puted this prediction.
Psychiatry vs.
' s I
( VON HOFFMAN )
following federal standar\i& in
our war against communttta -
alleged, probable and possible._
a well placed bomb I.$ the
acceptable answer to the
problem, And the record ot :yov
•work identifies you! ·
''More truly than you believe,
"signed Paul A. Reese
"P .S. Pleaae be gone b)' July 1.
1973."
[ ]
cons titutional separation of
EARL WATERS powers.
_ . HOWEVER, he made t11e5ame
contentions In eliminating the re-
quirement that funds allocated to of Brown. rt first was chanced by
Governor Ronald Reagan who
angrily rejected the idea that the
lawmakers could compel him to
spend money for program. lwl op-
pdsed.
Still, the manner In which the
Legislature has been permitting
to go unremarked the tampering
with the budget bill by the ex-
ecutive is remarkable. It is al80
building dangerous precedents
which sooner or later must be
challenged .head on b:Y the
lawmakers.
The CQnstitution of this state
differs from the federal in that it
permits its executive the luxury
of reducin~ and eliminating
dollar amounts in an appropria·
lion measure which he otherwise
favors. The Pr·esident either ac-
cepts a congressional enactment
as is or must veto it in its en-
tirety.
BUT IN the granting a gov-
ernor the privilege of cutting
legislative appropriations there
is nothing which extends the
power to ~hange conditions of the
a.PpropTiations. Section 10 of
Article IV reads "The Governor
may reduce or eliminate one or
more items of appropriation
while approving other portions or
a bill." No authority there, im-
plied or otherwise. permiUing
alterations in the language of a
bill.
In several instance.s the
language removed by Brown
was provisions whereby the
Legislature was attempting to
restrain the s pending of ap-
propriations by requiring them to
be ·•subject to approval by the
Joint Legislative Budget Com·
mittee." Srown said he had been
advised by the attorney generaJ
that "SUCh tanguage--viotates the
the Franchise Tax Board for
audits of campaign expenditures
be ••conducted according to audit
st;t11dards of the Amerka.o.
Institute of Certified Public Ac4
countants."
There is small doubt. the
Legislature did overstep .con-
stitutional bounds in requiring
the adnunistration to seek subse-
quent spending approv;tl pf a
l~gisiative committee. !>o the
other hand the authority to im-
pose strict conditions on the
s p e nding of money it ap-
propriates seems indisputa~le.
In any case a governor 's
course is to either accept or re·
ject the money. If. in accepting it
he believes the conditions un.
constitutional he has the option of
challenging them in the courts or
r efusing to abide by them. That
is exactly what bis situatioq
would be were the Legislature to
override his veto. If he refuses to
obey the provisions it would be
left to the LegisJature to aUempt
enforcement through the courts.
BUT. by eliminating control
language on constitutional or~
other grounds a governor ~ac~
himself in the position or having
declared himself a one-matt
supreme court. The argument
advanced that control la.dgu~~
··constitutes encroachment upo~
the duties of the executive'' isn't
too distinguishable from the
anguished cries of "executiv«1
privilege" which rose from th~
White House in the last days oq
the Nixon administration.
The question quickly be~omes,
one ot "where does it stop?"
Might not a bolder·person occu{
pylng the governor's office SOOf1t
take to altering enactments othe(
than appropriations on ~milar
grounds?-
.,
<Jriminal Law ., ·.
law enforcement and as a tool of
social discipline.
Why do officials so often
choose to proceed through
psychiatry rather than the
criminal justice system? In
Reese's case, if he were
considered dangerous, or it his
letter were con11id~red a real
threat. then why not put him
under a peace bond or even indict
him? ,
workers and psychologica
counselors, are used in eve
kind or matter from juvenil
dellntuenay to murder in the fac
of data indicating West Alric
witch doctors have a mor
advanced uriderstaoding of th
problem$ ot hum an wrsonality.
Ins.,Ub' d~fenses tit crimin
cases are nothing moi;e than
elaborate tct1m of.' pie
batgalning. There ls as muc
scfentiUc fourldattiQn to
permitting a psychlatrist to ac
as an-•xpert witness certilyi
temp0r·ary Insanity as there is
permit cler1ymen to exculpa
bisnkrobbers on the grounds of
temporary fall from the st.ate
grace.
In the oieantime, do not
lightly calling our esthnabl
public omcials bloodsucking
parasiUc bureaucrats.
DAILY PILOT
Name Change .
Duane and Sandy Herzon sit in their ·
.Miami home with daughter Shawn. They
are among hundreds of Miami area
,families , with Hispanic heritage changing
their names to make them more
Ameriean. 'Fhe family name was original-
'ly Hernandez.
Heaven Full
Of Boredom?
S;\N OTEGO (AP> -ls Heaven really all that
perfect? Hopefully not. says philosopher John Don-
nelly
The variety which makes life interesting might
be replaced by boredom, even exquisite boredom, he
says, and "once you get too much of it, pleasure or
happinessqu1cklydissipates."
DONNELLY, CHAIRMAN OF T HE Philosophy
department at the University of San Diego, said it's
possible that heavenly life may also be a place where
nobody gets bored.
This might be true only of mystics and hermits
who have spent their lives on earth in preparation.
sai6 Dr. Donnelly, whose Uhiversity is Roman
Cathqlicsponsored. . . I
But, .. e :laJdln an interview, "Most good, decent,
moral people who follow their religion faithfully
aren't really capable or that kind of relationship with
God.
.. PEOPLE DON'T OFTEN THINK about
whether if there is life after death it's going to be a
J?leasant thing or just boring, but it could be," said
Donnelly.
There must be "the possibility of learning and
moral growth in Heaven." he said. offering the op-
portunl~y to advance through diICercnt levels of ex-
istence.
"IC there were not the possibility of upward
moblllty, It would also raise questions about God's
justice because people of unequal moral achieve-
ment on earth would all get the same treatment in the
hereafter,·• he suggested, adding:
''111ER'EJtrST SEEMS TO be a contiouing need
in people to have more and more of a thing, but if you
exhaust all the possibilities. wouldn't boredom set
in?
''I'm not saying 1t does. but might 1l not be this
wayin ~avM?!.' •
DAIL y PILOT A 7
lt la also daddys who burn th& t.out, roommys
who fuss over noor wax and little boys who Qever cry ..
THE GROUP IS CALLED THE Pl'Oject on
Human Sexual Development. It bellaves children
w at.c9\ ao much TV that lb~creen is a powerful force
tMching them how to act. So the group wants people
who write the dramas and sitcoms t.o know whell they
are portraying sex ln its subUestrorms.
"We are trying to say that sexuality on
television isn't a program ·about VD,· rape or.
boQ>osexuallty," said .Elir.abeth J ~ Robert.a, a
Harbard.researcber "bod.lrect.a \be program: , •'nt0>.e8sages', v41uqao<11maget tnat are c't>n· vt~d *' male-female l'elatfonships and affec-
tion and ntimacy llt6 all part of •hat sexuality
really as.
THE P ROJ ECT IS SPONSORING discussion
sessions fOr TV writers, directors, producers and ex-
ecutives. ln their next get-together, they will review
s~enes from shows that demonstrate television's
view of family life. men among themselves and
couples together.
The idea is not l0$8Y that what televfsion does ls '1\e~es~ bad. l ns.te•d. Ms. Roberts said, the pro-
J~t l~ tryii\g to help TV creators see the kinds of
bebaYlor roles U\ey are perpetuathlg. Tben they can
decide if they want to continue them .
... The Brady Bun~h-.can convey a lot of sexual
messages, just as much as 'Charlie's Angels' can,"
said Ms. Roberts. "WeJU"e working with television
p~ple to look at what those messages are and what
they'resaying .
"WHAT IS THE ll'J P A.CT,OF seeing family hfe
where there is very litt.,le affection or ini1macy? Why
is it lhut married m en on television seem to be out of·
the 'Father Knows Best' mold or the bumbling kind
of Archie Bunker? And why is it that once the man on
television is married. he 1;enerally loses his scope of
excitement compared to bachelors on TV?"
She said TV people often do not realize the 1m-
portanc~of what they are doing.
"IF I AM AN ADVOCATE of anything, it is that
television bas an impact on people and what they
think and feeJ. It creates our cultural fantasies and
norms. It s);lould at le8$l;be done with care and with
as informed decisions as possible,"
Among those who hav~ participated in the pro·
ject's discussion sessions are executives from the
three commercial networks and writers from top TV
shows such as "Good Times" and "MASH."
.
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~aln Otleck: lhovld our auppty ol aorM alzea or llntt l'Un allolt during thla tvant, we will hollOI' any ordtra plllctd now for futvrt detf¥ery at
1the •rttaed J>rlc•.
GLASS BELTED LETTERWHITES BRANO NEW! NOT BLEMS! NOT RETREADS !
l
Beauties of Tomorrow
Vying for title of Mini·Miss San Clemente
was a thrilling or not-so-thrilling event for
these seven little girls, ages 3 to 6. Left to
right are Angela Ames, Kristen Collins
(who won the event), Ta,-iya Be ndlin,
Shannon Trette, Laura Scott. Desiree
Eastern Wins
On~time Prize
WASlllNGTON <AP> Eastern Airlines re-
corded a 100 percent on-time record between Boston
and Philadelphia in April -the best performance
among the nation's major scheduled airlines, the
Civil Aeronautics Board reports.
Allegheny Airlines' New York-to-Rochester
performance was in second place, with an on-time
record of 98.9 percent.
THE CAB DEFINES ON-TIME performance
as arrival within 15 minutes of scheduled time. On
an overall basis, the CAB said 84 percent of the
flights were on time in April compared to 80 percent
in March.
Eastern and Trans
( J World tied for third rank· C 0 N .'; lf ft1 ER i n g i n th e f i g u r es .
_ _ Eastern tallied 98.3 per-
cent between Miami and
New Orleans while TWA had the same percentage
between Albuquerque and Los Angeles.
Wright Airlines placed fifth. recording it's 12th
straight month among the top 10 airlines in on-time
performance. Wright was on time 98.0 percent of
the time between Cleveland and Detroit.
CAB OFFICIALS SAY EACH airline faces dif-
ferent problems in its operations and the figures
should not be used for direct comparison.
In the bottom fitte in on-time performance. four
involved operations in Hawaii.
Northwest Airlines scored 48.3 percent on time
between Honolulu and Los Angeles. Next was Pan
American, with 51.7 percent on the Honolulu-San
Francisco run, followed b~ Western with 54.2 per·
cent between Honolulu and Los Angeles.
BETWEEN HILO, HAWAII AND Honolulu,
Hawaiian Airlines was pn time 56.7 percent of the
time.
And Braniff was on time 56.9 percent of the time •
flying from Nashville to New York.
March performance figures were also released
by the CAB. showing United Airlines first with 96.6
percent on lime between Greensboro, N. C., and
New York. anct National last at 47.8 percent
between Los Angeles and New Orleans. •
City Employes D<mn
WASHINGTON CAP> -Employment in city
governments across the nation decreased 2.5 per-
cent in the year ending October 1976, the first
decrease,since 1962, the Census Bureau reported.
During the same period. city government
payrolls showed the lowest rate of increase since
1962. the report said.
No reason for the decrease of city employe~
was mentioned in the report.
Municipal employment totaled 2.4 million in
October 1976, down 63.000 from the total reported in
October 1975.
_ ............ ,,... ' -. . , ............. ~M9................. . .. ·~· ..... . • ---... ........... -~----~ -.--. •t ., .. ~f"' .. • ••
Teens Get Hearing OK
Hykas and Charity Smith. The contest,
sponsored by city's chamber of com-
merce, was p a rt of San Clemente
lifeguard~' first ocean festival of beach
and marine competition.
SAN FRANCISCO CAP> The
California Supreme Court has
ruled a mlnor who ia 14 or older
has the right to a hearing before
his parents may have him put in
a 'Slate mental hospital.
The 5-1 declslon Monday held ,
that present procedures for ad·
mitting such a minor to a state
hospital at his parent's request
are unconstitutional.
THE COURT UPHELD his
contention that such a "volun-
tary" admission procedure is in·
valid since "the present screen·
ing procedure does not offer an
adequate for um" to determine if
treatment in a slate hospital is
necessary
··Although the peraonal in·
2Get Posl8
SACRAMENTO (AP)
-Kern County Sheriff
Louis Loustalot and
Susanville prison ex-
ecutive Daniel B. Vaa·
quez have been appoint·
ed to the state Board of
Corrections by Gov. Ed·
mund Brown J r .
For fast relief from that
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c.ill u~ 1ir~1 take o hl'I N<111on<1t
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COSTA MESA: Mesa Verde & Adams
IRVINE: University Dr. & Michelson Or.
LAGUNA HILLS: Alicia Parkway & San Diego Freeway
M•ml»r of F 0 I C
terest of a minor is less com·
prehemive than that of an adult.
and a parent or guardian not only
may but must curtail that in·
terest in the proper exercise of
his obligation to guide the child's
development," said the court.
"in the area of admission to a
stale hospital a minor of 14 or
more possesses rights Which
may not be waived by the parent
or guardian."
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IT SAID THE rights include
due process in determining
• whether the minor is mentally W
or disordered and lf not ~=5ely disabled or dangerous to elf
or others, whether admission to a
m ental hospital is likely to
beneCit him.
The ruling stemmed from ad·
mission of Roser s .. 14, to Napa
State Hospital on May 10, 1976 at·
the request of his mother.
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T....ctay, July 19, 1977
By Phil lnterlandi ~earEllort
End to Sex Bias Laws Set ? ft.UM ...
• MIATIH•
AlaCOMD.
"Have a heart. Doc. My whole life has been a
D\.llpncUce.'~
Deatla Nedees
oel!aY•1t C<Kt• Mn•. ea .. and Marlorie a . Cle· •OWAftO.,,. Gltt!AY•~ rH ldlNll ol Vita, ~. Ca. <JM ~r • ._. C~ta M8a, <Alllorn .. P••MCI -•Y IHn 9rafMklSlldren •"" -., .. , J111y II, "n. Surv1....i by llh .. 11e JaM 9randch11d Funenil .,.rvkos wlll be
l c;rea,.er, 08IJ9hlers B~a w 1110n, neld Tues. July 19, 11 30.AM, s-
We1tm1Mter. Ca ., L•ncSa Gruyer, l os Fornan00Mlulon~1191. lntermen1a1
An~IH, <:41 .. J aMl lwen, Horse Creek, San Ftrn...oo Mlulon C.tnftory Bell
Ca .. JD<lf\ G<uyor, Costa M<!\a, Ca., 8roadwayMot1.,.ryOtre<t0<s.
brolhtr S&Mllav. Wu1c..holltr, KM· OAMBIL
lllC4if, eiS4oar O,,ec. 0-JO', Ce6ta ltOHAU> e. GAMlllL. ,_of
Mose. Ca., fo1o1r 11ra11oc•lldren. Costa /IWa, C.ilarnla. ,.,._,, _..,
lefvlCH ...... .....,"" Ti*. l :OOl!M Julf 11. 1977. S.rvicu ...... ,. .... al
at .. fl 8rwc11Way 0...1 wllll Fatlwr 89118'Q9dwey....,.....ry,
c.teyel St. Wllfred'sE"°"°"81 CIWKI\ ~OS
.. ~ ...... eH.a.uno. l&ter· •LBERT J I.EEDS. teSMMtftl of '-'-'tha ......... .........., Pane, ..._ ~~.P_.._..., 5"1..,_,, ~ Jersey. FOfWanllng July II, 1971. Sotvl•ed by his wile
4111"Kttn, Sell Bl"OlldwayMort\lary. Gertrlldfl, dal.Ollftl•n Mrs. Manny
ttU'l'fNG CJ...,f) Hefti-. 0..'800, 111~ Mn .
THOMAS E. KEATING, re9'dent of Mel'llln IBari.tal JKel>\, s.r.t-.
Otua Miiia. Cellfw*o. ,......, -av Ga .. ll• vrMCldlltdren; Lany. Detlb<• My II, "71. ~Md Wftb-r -JlollleHeff,...,.,-.....,.,Ma.._ Mo$.0.-.~0r-..~ .• s1&· -... ....,. Jac:Obs~u-·r ....,.., ...,.. PatrkM o.--r. 0r.,..., ca .. SIM,., c;,....._ ..._ ••50\f . ..._
Mr$. Undot ...,...,.., ~tdwmer, O Leo luds, Naoln, Fie CrypUlde
l'rilttlll& t"9'( a41 tor vl\ltatlori today, urvlces will ~ held •I 7 OOPAo\, -•
TUH.,JUly ... ~1117 OOPM.M•SI Jlllv?O.aP<lciflotV-MemorUI P-.
., Otti6tlaft Bunal Wed., l :OOPM a1 SI. H9Wport 9eacJI. .iabOf Lester ,.ruin
.ION! tNt ~ 01urc11 wllll MSGR. ornc1at1119. Pa<;lllc View Mortuwy
....,., ottki.a.lftg. lllierm•nt w111 bl> oirect.N
prl,,ato. l!lell ~way Mortuarr ST£aUNO
~iers WILLIAM STERLING, rMldeAJ of
~CICaR San J .,.11 Ca•~r•l!<t, C•lll-4.l.
,.ETEllt "'ICfCE". •Hld<tnt of l'af.H4 aw&y JUI'/ II, 1'11, 9-d
H __ , SMdl, Cah lornle. Passed hla~olMrL~wi CGooc:litllkerl·
-ar J uly II, tf71. Surv1veo by sons Ing. lo'ilng lamer of Wiiiiam Iii. 14ar'I·
Wllll..., P. FICller, "-18HCll, C• lft9, Of'"""'lll""' fll Michael JolWI S'l•rl
•11d Ch•rl•s L . F lcter, Conn , 1"9 AIM>,....vlvedbvlwo11<01hersend
~litlller& A,..elll Flclle r While, onf! tltsl.,. /IN. Sl#lillo -•" ._..,
Nowpor1-...cti,Ca,,8\dSue L. Fl<k•r, .Account Ebc1llhoe tor lO ~ •"" --1 IM8dl, C:.., one or•ridcllild, Moore 8uslne55 Fof'ms, In<. ~ ef
... otlller Wiiii..., F. Flc~or. Lo,.Q Christian -...lef T"urs. Jwly 11. 8M<:9I. <:.\. Mir. f'ldl¥ -a vr-.t• 11 : otAM at St. E4waro's Cattoollc
ol ... U,.fvenlty of BudaoeSI. mombl>r C1111rc11, Dena Po4nt. O'Connor L<>11un•
Of .,. 8•1l>041 Vec:M Club •nd was a HlllsMort.-y•rK~>n.
1t101otv reM>ecled race committee
c.IYI ""81' el °"' -Co.ill lor O•er 7~ yean. He -.. N Ch<lf'CI end cl<' ,;.,..a the llMI..,,. Expo 8u1ldt"11 al tile us An11e1es County Felrorounds
"'-'-'•' M&S$ l :l!JPM Tllur•. Jiiiy l I .. Olir LaclV of Ml. C.rmol C.thoik
Olvrch, NewllO't Bl'iten In 11.u of
tMwefs, memor!.et contnt>ut10f\\ to Tht-
HN9 AMnwl•t Hosp11a1. P.cll1c v, ....
Mori.-Ydi'9<10fS,
Deaths
.Elsewher~
OLOA RUS~~t51.~Lr';,_,d.,nt 01 s1. CAMBRIDGE. Mass. L~IJ. -.-iss..,.._ Paned •w•v JUiy 11. CAP) -Prof. J~ H.
,.,,_ ..,...,,_, bV -""" ,,,.,_ Keena•, 76 . of the
RliH•fl, Santa •n•, Ca .. Roy A . M hu I • "lilMll, Mluourl, ltl(l\ard Ru~ull, 3SSaC Setts nsbtute
Mkll .. .....,, .. nv Sc:NIHer. hus. of Technology, an in·
F_ .. MrVleotwlll lie IWld Fri., July •-rna•:--nl autbort'ty On 21. 11 :~ at ~ TlllNU La--1.1.UUOU
CJteMI. Cott• MeH. 1"1 ... "'e"1 •t thermodynamics. died w.etnil~r Memwl.tt Park. Smite Sunday Tlifnlll ~ Mo4'-.-y Colt• Mese, • dtrec1.on.....-con Ai.TH4 MAYeELl.E COICE, r~I LOS ANGELES (AP) "'"., c.os-. MHa, c.111,rn1a. Paued -A memorial service·
_a., July 11• ""· "'"'1ved " ~ w1'll be h"ld Tb··-..1ay fo.-~ Gene COk.,, Costa AMs•. Ca , " ~ •
OM911lers S.llY Slwdr, (Mia Mese, Dr. David D. Elhes. a
ca .. Pe111 Lo~•u. Lom,oc. ca .. professor of psychology ,. ... ,..,. Mytw, CefrtlC», ea .. son Kart . Cell•. 1un v.11..,. ea .. flster~ 0onna and religion at the J•.., s. .. otngton, c11ar1t~1 ..... Oro., Southern California
H<tlen s.1_.rt, U-ln Cfly, Ore., Sch l ( Tb l t w.tMr Jack ~ ... _. ON oo o eo ogy a
Tlllrt-granc1<fllM1r• --_, Claremont Dr Eitzen ~~Id. Ser\11~1 wHI be .,.Id .. . • • • IO:tOAM. Wed .. July 20 It 8ellx 73, died Sunday at a
~ ~ c.-a ..... 1-r-Pomona h06pita1 alter a ment et~'--............ Park. 1 ill •• , ... ......,..,.,_,,,_, .. r_rs. engthy neas.
ACHEY ---
LINOAL.ACHEY,resto&nto!Hunl· SAN FRANCISCO ~ 9Mc:11. c..11torn1a. p.,,_ -av (A p > L ,_ "BJIJ,. .lvlf o, "17 • ll'IO -of n. Survt....i -OUu ::.S"'::..:.:..~~a=': Jl o.a 1 g ,d sbs, who
Jefln .A. =..:r .. ._.._, ..... engmeere t e growth
~!Mi c-. ....:r'..g.!~: ~.~L.~1vertiaitn~ fitrhm c ......... 9f'Mdclll ........ ltrotllor '""' un: srgee m e _,_... c. CllDI, w.. -...m, ca .. 1•• West. died in his Paclfl c =:-.H:~y":!"a~~: Heights ho m e. Honig
WIHreo E~I Churc11 and •~ was c hairman of the ~si.,,.s.rvicaw11r .. ~1-b d f F t•~ C ..... n.urs .. 1o:~.Pttrc.e••r.n oar. o o i;c;: one.
""'"'•' Cheoe1. interment w111 De Beldmg and Hontg. ~ lfl GQOd SfwtfwrO'I C.!Mtel't', f'-lly IOWHIS aintr1MIM5 lo Mia
Ore1t .. Cou111y Heart A,.oclatlon. Pler(t llrot~' SmltllS' Mortuuy
lllitKMn.
"IM•All ¥A•"OI" D. ttAIMEAU, ""Ide"' of ~ 9"dl, C.fllornla. Paned ~ • ., Jll[ly 1•. 1t71. Survl•ed by
4f•v•lttffS ~•lrlcla IC . Oant, ~kl\MI, Cl., Claire L. Smltll, ONftet, C.., Mltrllrft O. Ptlerson,
SANTA PAULA CAP)
-Funeral services
were beld Monday for
Julian Wads, 95, a Los
Angeles water pioneer
and head engineer of the
Colorado River
Aqueduct. whicb carries
wat« to many Southern
California cities. Hlo4a
WASHlNGTON CAP> -The Justice Depart
ment h11a launched a two· year effort to weed out sex
dt1criminallon from the thicket of thouaanda of
led er al !Awa and reculalions.
A wk force wm we eoraputen to screen 4,000
feden.l 1aws for certain code words, sucb as man,
woman, male. female and other language Mooting •ender.
"ftlEN IT MUST DETEUllNE whether the sex
d•ff.-ent.iallon a mouats to unfair ~atment for eltber nwn or women. In some ca.set, it may decide
the dlltinetion is legitimate. In other cases. lt will
uk Congress to change the Jaw so it will apply
equallY to men and women.
The project m-.y have a stroq i.inpact on
military regulations. Social Security and public as·
•iltaoce programs, said Stewart One1lia. a.
Maryland lawyer who began work Honda)' as
director ol these¥ cliacrim.inatiob &Mk f<fte in the
department's civil rights division.
·-nus is a massive project to rmew all the
federal code and r,i!gU\aticms and remove all the Wl·
equal &reatme nt of the sexes," Ma. Oneg1la, who
pref en that designation, told a news conference.
urr COULD END1JP benefiting men a lot, but I
don't ttUnk it's going to take anything away from
women. We would end UP eictend.ing certain benefit&
to men," she added.
Some changes may b~ as sunplc as substilut.ing
the word person for man or woman but others will
require more complicated policy decis ions. Ms.
One&liasaid.
The same proce~ will be a.pplied lo the·
thousands upon thou.sands of federal regulations.
Task force recommendations for r egulatory
changeswtll be sent totbeeffeeted agency.
MS. ONEGLIA CITED 111ESE examples of
rules that will come under scrutiny:
151 Make
Dean's Lut
AtGWC
A total of 151 student&
at Golden West College
achieved a straight "Au I
average in the spring '
semester, placing them
on the dean's list for
academic excellence.
The list is composed of
905 d ay students and 43
evening students .
To make the list, Stu·
dents must maintain a •
3.0 grade point average
in 12 unita for d~ stu·
dents and le\'en units for
e vening students.
Those r ecording
straieht "A" avera1es
by city include:
COl'l'A MIUA -Llnifa $. 91f'T;fl, J!llfrlf'f ~ k<Nrs, Cra.111 M, C:......, .¥.lllce ~. o.tney. Tim W. LAMMI. JAMllltJt L. MacuyL. """tnnt M. lter,,.., ~:wsi .... ~UW1'Alft VAUJIY -J .... &. Acla«ll, Jlrn L ~. Slwlrol M. Fry, ChW!es E. Funk J r .. Harry 0. Hamilton, O.borah L. Har,.,...,, DoloflMW.~.-A.~, t<em-. M. 099. .....,. l.. ltr .... TertM J . Aymer, 0-I!. ,_,.,
EllreMth A. Scllend•I, lllldr .. IC. lolls, St ... W IC. W-. "Ulf'raNOTOH •LUM -Rll.., D. A"91 .... 11da E. a.r.y, AlcNrd M.
a l•I•, °'9g9ry A. llrl"1, Patrlc.e A. 8rhc.ee, vmc.. A. 8roells, EdW•nl A.
C.nnon, Ir-8. L. a-. Marttw A. • eotoon. Keny L. eo-. Mery M. com.... ,_,.IY A. Candra. ll..,.,, 1..
O-im., Oerretl S. OeYIS, I>!-. E. oe"11'"· ....,.9 K. Do, Da•ld A. O.,_, J. lrwil OWWI, Comllla D.
......... "*V c.. "°-· ~la c. Fryar, 1!-t O. Gerri..,, BnKe A. 0Mr99, ~ OtNftt • ...,IN
P . OOIOl'tll, !Ml M. Gelmtos, Gell L. o.,...,, T,_ N. Guest, Oll'ltthw A. ; • t-lall. J-E. Hell, Thlwnton W. · H~I-, T-• L. HUIY, "°" F.tC • ...,.,, 511111ey R. ~.Heidi
M • ...........,, Jeff C. ~. 9evony .
J . f<antfldl, LAN Iii. IC......,, K• K.t<"-•.~L..1(-"''SO Slllrley J. Kr Mt, Jeoff KnldW, Elel"• l.al LIU, Cn rlstlne A.
L• .. rsnc:e, L<tnlse A. 1.e*r, ROii L.
Lewtll•n, M•ri• -II. Otten k . Mat-. S...... K. Mc<lll~. lilM'c W. Mllehell, Jiii S. Muri>ny, Sally l.. o(
-·"· Jact H. NI'"°'~· J, Mlcll&el . Patin, .$"°'9n w. PllKI). HMll l . F't>am. Tffry J, Sdlw,_., ~lfllefn ~
K S<llWarlr, Wllllafl'I It .... 1 ...... f
~¥ta T. ~In. Ste,..n J. Sl•ct~•.
Laurie O. Torn, Nlllllty It, V~n ilos, r o-oe e. venrtt. ""<• c W«lan· _...,, Kar"" Wl#<Of'llbe, ~ .. T.
Wiiey, Wlllle R. Wl .. ly, SUft 11:.
Y-lllKa. PNllip A. Zlrvtt.
1.AOUNA HILLS -LIN• S.
0env1 ....
"•WHltT lllACM -I.to C. CrayCNe, P• E. Olton. HAL tU.04 -J.-.. C. 9o¥fo,
Otwl W ......... ~ R. Mltc.llaU,l~==~~t luvf\"4.lll-,Loovr•L. T..---. Ji McCOltMIC«
MOln'UAlllS
Laguna Beach
•'4-94t6
Laguna HIJI•
788-0933
died at a Santa Barbara ---------11
retireme nt home Fri· PlJBUC NOTIOE
San ~n Clpittfano
495-111e
day· i---,,-tcn-,.-ou-,-.-u-s1_H_1_ss __
M.AMa STATllMIJ•T FORT LAUD· Ttw---~,,_..flllSI.
L Fl M•KI E R D A E , a • "OYAi.E ,uu1s1teiu. mts CAP> -Bobert M. ,......~cs~ ... ........,vau.,, a .. _ CA'21tl f\,ll;.;;,,;o;iUl!mji .._atey, 64. delicner of oout1• ..,,., ca-,"'"._.
-Tfte law banning women from combat duty
&Hi&nment.s ln the mllltury.
-Rt.aes extending mllltary post exchange
privilege. to widows of servicemen but not to
wldowen af&ervicewom en.
-A Social Security rule which applies when a
handicapped man and woman marry each other.
The rule cYb off diaability benefits for the wile If
her husband loees disability paymenta because he gets a job.
-Rules wbie'ft make it tougher for fathers than
.for mothers to qualify tor aid to families with de pen·
dent children.
'"--..-~. kr•IC. In Y°"' Aree -'811 MISSION VIEJO
"'" ~m1no C<\Plttrano cs.,. OI-p,...y at Awry Pkwv.>
495-0401 COSlAMl!SA 1$16 NfltfPllrl 81"1.
&42·1713
SI. I.le. •t11W
For Classified Ad ACT JON Call a Dally Pilot AD-V1SOR.
Call 642-5171. Put • few words to Wotlc for ,Ou;
111[ UUOPllG GRml IU A• llflG GOIG ... IOflG
llffl TO YOUI DOOi!
A flttt of brJll'lt blue 1m DOdgt varw,completelyOClfflttH to
vroom your pet to PtrftctlOn l'fght itt your curt>, awa Its your
ctll ... (7W 634-<•t
THE 6W.OP11C CMJ011£1..JIAE HE CALLS Otl Y ... et prieet comi>erable 10 tnose In tradl·
tlonal grooming salons ... and the GALLOPING GROOMER
t llminatts all the fuss and bother In the bargain.
111$ .. PO GROGIJIG SEIYICE... Brings all the
faclllllft ot tM finest pn parlour to vour door In a completely
stll<ontalned mobile unit thtt offers convenience to you and
air conditioned comfort to your pet. who Is bethtd and
groomed to lhasOft 1tralnsof mutlc:.
PROUD IS THE PET ... wpo has bffn groomed by the
GALLOPING GROOMER ... a Skilled professional whO
his combined sclenllllc know..ftow and
crutlvt artistry to provide. service that
wlll hlW you Ind your pet bigging tor
more ...
111 W1.tl9I UOOMll flCllUllft ,.. take JOit"' tt I ftt It ltllt llct I Jtlrl
14'.U. ...... OM
•EA&M>MI
Corona def Mar 873-9450
Costa M-~8-2424
aircraft escape system.a ::='' ""' ... l"tlllltflll vau • .,, CA
credited with sa vinr 100 T11l• IMI-11 ~ by an 1...-U.S. pilots' lives in Viet· .. Yltllll,
nam, die d 'Saturday' Tltl• =.-:-;:: w1111 ,.,.
near bere in tbettah of C-VOet'llt10r9llt~e11-.
a plaoe that h ad no such u. "11 ...,...
eacape system. .-u111111WC10-...,c.oas1 o.11r Pilot
THANKS TO DIESE HARBOR AREA BOYS AND GIRLS
UU.M04DWAY NOITV.YY
110 Broadway
OOtt.Meaa
M2-8t50 _.,.._ _.,...,.LANI
-WlflD_,CHA ...
4Zt E. 17\h St. Cllte ...... e4M888 -·Macn.-. •1e N. 8toedway ~•147 ... 13~.
YOO CAN ~AKE "V.E.S!' FOR AN ANSWER
,My"· 26, ..., •• 2, •• 1911
Jln·n
.,,, .... _. _____ ... ·---.-.
A l•ottLY PILOT TuMday. July 1t, 1917
TllE t• 1\111,\' <'.lllCl lS
. . . .
~~
. . , ...
U) Dil Keane
• "They're wrestlin', not boxing. In boxing,
you're not allowed to hug."
.
t Computer Aids
: Samlleback
Applications for partic1pat1on rn Saddleback
College's new computer-as!>!Sled early rcg1stralwn
periO<i will be acc:l•ptcd through l"rid;_cy 1n lht' l'am
: pus admissions office.
. Continuing :.tudents who attcndt'd clai."-i>S e1thPr in
. the spring or :.ummer
· sessions automatically of fall cla~ses will bl•
· qualify for early s1gnups, mailed to d1:-.trict rc>:.1·
which run from Aug. dents during the last two
. 9·23, according to the weeks of July. The free
first initial of the last tabloid will hst classes.
name. registration limes and
enrollment infor m ation.
STUDENTS WHO ap.
-· ply after Friday will re·
ceive appointment times
to register on ;1 first·
come, first·servcd basis.
The fall semester begins
Aug. 24.
STUDENTS planning
to enroll only in off.
campus courses are cn·
c:ouraged by college of-
fi c ials to use spec ia l
mail-in rl•g1stralion
forms prov1dl·d 1n the
class schedult'.
Saddleback 's ~ch~dule
Gift Shop
Awards
Fete Set
The Saddleback Com·
munity Hospital gift
shop has scheduled its
third annual awards
ceremony Thursday al
10 a .m. in the doctors'
dining room. 24451 Via
Estrada. Laguna Hills.
Harold L. Cano. ex-
ecut1 ve director. will
present service hour
award pins and brunch
will be served.
The gift shop is an aux·
iliary volunteer fund·
raising project for 1the
benefit of the nonproM
hospital.
All materials and a
computer printout con-
frrm tng enrollment will
be returned by matl.
The adm1ss1ons office.
loc:atcd in Building M on
the '"lower campus". is
open from 7.30 a.m . to
8 .30 p .m Monda y
through Thur-.day and
until 5 p.m . on Friday.
Sentenced
LOS ANGELES CAP)
-An unemployed com·
puter programmer ac·
cused of filing at least 96
false income tax returns
has been fined $1,0~
sentenced to six months
in jail, and put on three
years· probation. Carl J.
Rogers of Culver City
pleaded guilty to filing
the false returns in an al·
tempt to get more than
$89,000 In refunds.
All you have to do to quahfy for a First National
V.1.P. account Nery Important Person) is be at least
60 years old. You get 11 FREE banking services,
including:
FREE Unlimited checking, no minimum balance
required. as long as your account is not
overdrawn ·
FREE Money Orders
FREE Cashiers Checks
FREE Identification Card
FREE First National City Bank Travelers' Checks
FREE Automatic dePQSit of Social Security checks
FREE Personalized checks
FREE ~ocopy
FREE Notary Sefvioe
FREE Postage-paid Banlc..Sy·Ma~ J
FREE Collect phone calls from anywhere to
verify your account
Just s•op in at any First National Bank office.
We'll have you enrolled in a jiffy and you can start
saving on important bank services right away.
I First National Bank ~
WllllOfll'C:I• ... ,....... 111-0r--Ollloeo< .,._,Stale~ & Bell
NM.-HLl..I:...,,... ,_ c..,..,."" '~~ COITalmAI .... _& _ ......... a--,~
--~°'-............ °' ~111.1.81--~ ..... °"'°"-
..... """' Celllll .,........,,Nl,liioln
~AM ... ~ ~--.~ . .,,.....
Outlaw's Fate. Baffling
CARSON CITY, Nev. <API -What
twppt•11ed to Butch Cussidy. leader of the
turn of the·century Wild Bunch that
robbed lram.s und banks in the West?
The question st1JI bothers history buffs.
Cass1dy's Cale has bec>n a puzzle for
nearly 75 years. But until release of the
movw "Butch Cassidy and the Sundance
Kid" 1n 1969. only a s mall group of his·
toriaru. and fans of Wild West lore had
st!an•hcd lor an unswtr. .
T HE ~IOVIE, WITH its enigmatic end-
ing showing Cassidy and S.undance
shoolllli: 11wCJy at UruguCJyan soldiers
~urround10g them, created a new wave
of interest.
Cassidy, whose real name was Robert
P arker. \vas the subject of debate at u
meeting over the weekend of the Naltonal
Assoctallon for Outlaw and Lawman His·
tory. '· What's known for certain about (1ie
Wild Bunch is that it existed from about
1896 to 1901, based in Wyomm~. and
ranj?c>d around the West on horseback.
holding up banks and trains and laking ·
as mu('h as $30,000 at a crack.
CASSIDY AND SUNDANCE ned to
South America with lawmen on their
heels
William C. Linn, vice president of
Pinkerton's Inc., whose 1tgents trailed
the WlJd Bunch across the West. said a
"preponderance ot clrcumstantlal
ey1dence" indicates Cassidy and Harry
Longbaugh, the Sundance Kid. were
slain in Uruguay after fleeing this coun·
try.
Lmn said Pinkerton's "closed the
books" on the Wild Bunch ln 1912 after
deciding that leaders of the gang pro·
bably were dead a nd in any case no
longer a threat.
BUT "COWBOY JOE" Marsters of
Doyle. Calif .. claiming to be the last man
alive to have ridden with the Wild
Bunch, told the usociatlon he saw
Cassidy alive in this country as late as
1915. Marsters is 82 .
And Cassidy'$ sisler, Lula Betenson of
Circleville, Utah, said she last saw her
brother in 1927. Mrs. Betenson. now in
her 80s. said Cassidy lived out his life in
the Pacific Northwest and dted in 1937.
Jus t where, she said, 1s "a fam ily
secret.''
Jim Dullenty of Kennewick. Wash., a
write r, told the group his research
showed Cassidy died a natural death tn
1937 in Spokane, Wash. Cassidy, 71 at the
ti me. was a respectable businessman
12, .15, 24, or 36 INCH
VANITY
CABINET
living under the assumed name of
William T. Phillips, Dullenty said.
BESIDES THE VIEWS of those
notables. there were several other
theories offered about Cassidy, includ·
ing one that he ended up in Los Angeles
and lived into the 1940s. under assumed
names and repentant for his crimes.
Dullenty also advanced the theory that
the Wild Bunch, for the most part. was
made up of youn~ me n from hard•
working. religious pioneer Camilies who
hit the trail in search of excitement.
They were "the good boys who went
bad," he said .
Dullenty said that when Cassidy and
Sundance arrived in South America they
apparently had only $14,000, enough to
keep them going for only a while. Main·
taining a gang, Dullenty said, was an ex-
pensive proposition. and the two soon
turned again to breaking the law.
Bingo Arrests
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Six persons
caught in a paHce raid of a church bingo
game in Paco1ma have been charged
with conducting a lottery, a spokesman
for the city attorney's office said.
2"x2" REDWOOD 4"x4" CEDAR ROUGH SAWED ECONOMY GRADE
Walle 1t'Jaf.:
Dick Clark, the Iowa
senator who cam-paigned by walking
across his state in
1972, said he plans to
resume walkin g
tours when th e
Senate goes on vaca·
lion in August. He
described the walk
as partly work and
partly vacation.
YOUR
CHOICE 8 TO 20 FOOT LENGTHS ... SURf ACE ' SIOlS, II 10 12 fl ... -.
AIR & HEATER
VENTS
ACRYLIC TUB
EMCLOSURE
25 DIFFERENT SIZES
YOUR CHOICE
S'xS'
SAFER THAN
GLASS
ONE PER CUSTOMER
NO GROOVE PANELING
4 'x7' PRE FINISH s395
BRIARWOOD...... u.
7 OTHER FlAf PANELS FROM SS.SO TO S8.00
1'::::::[ CAMPER & YAN 11.::-::/~ , ,-WINDOWS I~··""' WIDE \ / r.... ·~1 ASSORTMENT s7so '~, '" '1 OF STYLES . -.. AND SIZES. . . . . EA.
CAMP&& VAN
ACCESS DOORS
MANY SIZES s19s AND STYLES TO
CHOOSE FROM....... EA.
5'x7' SHOWER ,
I. & TUB BOARD
SllGHT
DAMAGE
(SECONDS)
~~~l s3~
, , . .. ______ ,..,
RANDOM LENGTHS
CHECK THIS LOW PRICE
2"x2"x8 FOOT
TOP QUALITY
SURFACE FOUR SIDES.
4"x4"x8' POST
DOUGLAS FIR
ECONOMY GRADE. .
4"x4"x8' POST
PECKY CEDAR
SPECIAL LOW PRICE. • •
PECKY CEDAR
SPECIAL LOW PftlCf
52 PANELS
WHITfWOOO. 6'10 8 UNGTHS
Sf'KIAL LOW l'lKE .
2"x4"x88"
KILN DRIED
SPECIAL LOW PitlCE
2"x3"x94"
KILN DRIED
SPECIAL LOW PRICE
l "x4" WHITEWOOD 7c
KILN DRIED t.J
6 FOOT LENGTHS. • • . . . . . • . . • . • • n
ON DISPLAY~
A WOOD BACKED PANEL .
FOR f:VERY BUDGET
25 DIFFERENT PANELS
$39s10 $&95
All METAL
16 GALLON
SELECTED STOCK
8Y THE BUNDLE ONl Y•
PLANT
STAKES
CLEAR
REDWOOD LAP
SIDING
C\W , SMOOTH OR IOUC ..
fHf~OHlY-
• TO 10 "'fCU PUIUNOU
"UP TO lHHl
ICEYlO AUIC_I"
~~~ AME:atCAN
MADI
ALUMINUM
FINISH KEYED
ENTRY . LOCK
Limit 0 per Cu~t.
\
NO PORKING-Orange County Future
Farmers President Julie Peterson, 17 , of
Sunny Hills. near Fullerton, and her hog
Ragoo mingle with weekend crowds at
Orange County l"air in Costa Mesa.. Ragoo
may be back next year. In hot dogs. Fair
ends next Sunday
Seniors Get Break
At OC Fair Today
Senior citizens get the red carpet treatment
tonight at the Orange County Fair with reduced ad-
mission tickets and performances by Lawrence
Welk entertainers.
Orange County oldsters get into the fair for only
$1 tonight. with Welk entertainers scheduled to
p erform at6 and 9 p.m. in the Amphitheater.
WEDN ESDAY'S HEADLIN E
entertainer will be Jim Stalford, a musician
who mixes humor with his strumming. Stafford will
perform in the Amphitheater at 6 and 9 p. m.
Hurricane Helldrivers. a group of expert car
handlers, will put their vehicles through spins.
leaps and precision driving tests in the Grandstand
Arena tonight and Wedne:-.day night at 8.
omER ACTIVITIES WEDNESDA y at the
fair include:
All Day The art of no<:henit, knit by machine
demonstration. handi-brick demon~tralion and old
world tile show, all in the Home Li ving and Design
Pavilion.
9 a.m. 4-H and FFA poultry 1udging.
9 a.m. 4-H and FFA canes 1udj!ing begins
9 a.m. FFA market and fcC'dcr sheep JUdgmg
begins.
1:30 p.m . 4-11 Steer show rlemonstrntion
Heritage Stage
1:30 p.m. Greek cookerv with ·Kay Pastorius.
Gourmet Gallery.
1:30-5:30 p .m . Gary Weathl'r ly and the
Westerners. Mountain Dew Stag<.•.
2 p.m. 4-H market and feeder sheep Judging.
2 p.m. Jurupu Jr. High School Freedom
Singers. Heritage Stage.
2·5 p.m. Fine art screen printing m Fine Arts
building
2·4 p.m 4-H action progr~m. 4 H huilding.
3·4 p.m. Royal court conle!'t, Heritage Stage.
4 p.m. Popcorn Theater .Marionettes. on fair·
grounds.
4 :30 p.m. World's fastest omelet demonstration
in Gourmet Gallery.
5 p.m. Young Life singers. Heritage Stag<.>.
6 p.m . Popcorn Theater Marionettes.
6 p.m . Jim Stafford in Amphitheater.
6:30 p.m. Montezuma's Revenge on Mountain
Dew Stage.
6:45p.m. Junior Naval Cadets of America.
7 P;)"· 4·H steer show demonstralion. Heritage
St.age.
7:30p.m. Parade on fairgrounds.
7 :30 p.m. Crepes by candlelight with Frank
Moser, Gourmet.Gallery.
8 p.m. Hurricane I-Jelldrivers. Grandstand
'.Arena.
9 p.m. Jirn Stafford, Amphitheater.
9 : 15 p.m. Young Life Singers, Heritage Stage.
, The fairgrounds will be open until midnight
:every eveningthrough next Sunday. Admic;s1on is S2
for adults. $1 for children under 13. Parking 1s $1.
, School Bontb F tdter ,
SACRAMENTO CAP) -School officials say there were 35 local ballot proposals in California
; Jaat March to raiae or maintain the limits on school
r district revenue -but only 17 puaed.
• State Schools Supt. WUson-Riles sald school
• bulldint bond issues did even worse;.with only IO of
• 28 i1aue:S being approved by the voters.
• But Riles saJd the rat. of approval of such is-
• aues is somewhat better than last year, leading hlm
to believe that public support for schools may be on
the way up.
Potvin Named
Medics' Chief
Laauna Nieuel-San
Clemente area obstetri·
clan nnecologlst Dr.
Loula E. Potvin will be
lnatalled July 27, as the ,
19th prealdent of the
Oranae County Medical
Association.
'l'he orgaruzaUon'11 top
post w1Jl be turned over
to him In ceremonies at
Sebastian's Dinner
Theater in San Clemente
by outeoin& president
Dr. Alan v. Andrews, of
Newport Beach.
A NATIVE of
Worcester. Mass., Dr.
Potvln is a graduate ol
the School ti Medicine of
St. Vincent's University,
Class of 19S7, and in·
terned at. St. Vincent's
Hospital there.
He served at several
U.S . Navy medical
facilities and in 1968
established his practice
in south Orange County.
He immediately joined
the OCMA and became
active, rising in 1976 to
the rank of state delegate
to the California Medical
Association.
OTHER OCMA of-
ficers to be ins talled in-
clude pfesldent elect Dr. Willi~m M. Thompson. a
Huntington Beach sur-
geon; secretary-
treasurer Dr. Harriet M.
Opfell, a Sant a Ana
pediatrician; and a four
member board of direc-
tors.
NEW OCMA CHIEF
Dr. Loula E. ~otvln
They are Dr. S. Clarke
Smith of Anaheim; Dr.
Lawrence S. Barnett, of
Orange; Dr. Edgar B.
Stewart, of Tustin, and
Dr. Michael H. S1gband,
of Westminster.
NAMED represen-
tatives to the California
Medical Association are
Dr. Edward H . Boseker,
of Santa Ana; Dr. James
C. Doyle, of Newport
Beach and Dr. Robert A.
Hinri c hs . also o f
Newport Beach.
Dr. Arthur D. SUk of
Garden Grove was 1fl·
anlmously re-elected
editor of the OCMA
Bulletin. a monthly
newsletter.
Slaying Su.spect
Pleads Innocent
'
Tu.eday, July 19, 1977 DAIL y PILOT A J J
SALE
through 7 / 21
AUSTRALIAN
TREE FERNS
Fast growing hardy fem for partial sun
and shade areas. Broad arching bright
green fronds. Spcclal purchue limited
to stock oo hand.
5 gallon regularly Sll.95 NOW I 7. 95
FUCHSIA
BASKETS
Popular. showy-Oowered fuchsias
bloom through late fall In partial sun.
Limited 10 stock
on hand.
regularly SJ9.95
NowSl2.95
SALE
through 7 / 21
Elegant specimens of thl1 graceful,
easy·to·grow palm -Jlke. low Ught
e nd warm tempcratura. Special put•
chate limited to stock on hand.
S~ 6' and 7 Regularly $350.00
NOW 1'225.00
BROWN JORDAN NOMAD
Di.tlnc:tlve designer styling that fold•
up for 1torage providing vtrsattUty for
use on patio, boat or sun deek.
limited Lowise chair and ottornen
to 1tock reguJuty U 37 .00
on hand. NOWONLV 1108.00
MARIGOLD BASKETS
Roger's lntemmicmally famous color bask.di
are more handtome than ever wfth yellow
•Nugget" marigolds or marigold and "Butter·
Oy" begonia com'*iationsl
GERBERA
DAISY
The m.Ott ele_gant and tophlstfcated of
daisies. Colors range from cream to
corlll, orange, flame and red. Gor-
geoUI long petal blooms now through
Noverqber.
San Joaquin Hiia Rd. at Mac.Arthur Blvd., Newport Beach. (714) 640-5800
()penDaJy 9am to 6pm-24741 Chrlstanta Drtve. Milsk>n Viejo (TI4) 837·7811
'
SATURDAY 642-5678
is a good day to advertise in the Daily Pilot Classified Section.
A West Orange County prosecutor, maintains
drifter has entered a the death of Neal was a
plea of innocent lo first-deliberate murder
degree murder charges spawned by a simmering
filed in the s hotting hostility from previous
death of a Fountain quarrels and culminated
Valley youth blasted in by an argument. the ne>ck with a rifle dur------"''--------'--------------------------------------J
ing a quarrel.
D avid Louis
Dominick, 3:1, has been
ordered to stand traal in
Orange County Superior
Court following a pre-
liminary hearing in West
Orange County Ju<ljcial
District Court
HE IS accused or pui-
ting o bullet from a high'-
powered hunting rifle in·
to Edmoun Paul Neal,
19, o( 10931 Talbert Ave ..
June 9 at the victim 's
home.
Dominick. h e ld at
Orange County Jail in
Heu of $125,000 bail, and
his lawyer, Public
Defender Gail Hickman
maintai n the final and
fatal blast was acciden-
tal, althoi.1gh three shots
were allegedly fired .
Witness Ed Griffin,
who lived at the :-.lea! ad-
dress and was present,
testifil'Cl he watched in
horror a~ Dominick
broke into the home. at-
tacked Neal and then
shot him.
GRIFFIN TOLD the
court two s hots were
fired before the slug that
resulted in almost in-
stant death for the slain
youth.
Fountain Valley Police
Chief Marvin Fortin not-
ed after the J une 9
homicide that the Neal
h ome was a known
hangout for transients,
outlaw ga ng
motorcyclists and a
sou rce of frequent
citizen complaints.
Deputy District At·
torney Br uc e
Bridgeman. Dominick's
THE INS AND
OUTS OF
SMART MONEY .:
MANAGEMEN'I:-.
IN
OUT
Qu'1!1TY · 1n1urance A big part of smart money management is matching a savings account to your
needs. That's why First Federal offers six diffttent 1avinp plans-including one $1,000.00 at
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zHOME
~.OWNERS ..
that's right for you. .-
~ake our 7. 7 51'/ti certificate account, for example. W'heo tompounded, it
gives you an annual yield of 8.06%. At that rate, you can more than doubk your
original investment in a little over 9 short yean.
There's also our S.75% certificate account-an excellent short term
investment. The minimum time requirement it a men three-months. Yet when
left to compound, it pays nearly 6% a year.
Consider our ngular S.2SO/o avings account, too. It'• (lt:xible euoueh to
make everyday tr&QStctiom a IDAP· And like all our plant, It PaY• high
interest on in1um tavfnp. '
Come into Pint federal today. We'll pve you die Cletalll on all ou'r accounts. •tu1 find one tNt •bl ..... for~·
Year
1
2
3 -. s
6
7
8
9
10
Amount
$1,075.19
1,156.02
1,242.94
1,336.39
1,436.86 -
l,5+4.90
1,661.0S
1,?85.93
1,920.21
l,()64.58
----· ...... ...
,
A. 2 DAIL v PILOT Tuelday. July 1~. 1an '
TV Weatherman
Rape Remark
Haunts Him
NEW YORK <AP) Vl'lm.1 n TV wcutherman
Tex Anlorne mt1dc n ta~I c•l1°1''f ri.:m~rk about rape
during a broadcai.t t•il(hl mc111th\ uiio and even hia
OD·the·atr apolo~y rouldn't !!lop the rc:;ulllng u1>-
roar. Toda~ ht•!-. looking for .1 Joh and confo11slng he
feels hurt und ·a fu1lur~ "
"I feel J hitVt' 'ICJmt-lhing ldt to glvl', l Wi"h to
live ," sayi. tht• 5·1 ~ l'UI ol1l hroudcabler. "My
wheels are !lp1nn1nl( lhut'~ wliul'i. driving me
nuts I wanllo work I lo\(• Ill\\ ork "
HIS TROUBLES Bf;GAN NOV. 24 during the 6
p .m newi. broadcast of the Amcnt'an Broackai.tmg
Co. 's flagship s tation, WABC After an item was
read about the alleged rape or an 8 year-old girl, the
camera shifted to Antotne for his weather report.
"With rape so predominant in th!! news lately."
Antoine remarked, ··conruc1us say, ·ir rape 1s in·
evitable. relax and e f\JOY tl '"
Tbe s witchboard handled hundreds of a ngry
phone calls. including some from WABC ex-
ecutives.
The camera r e-
turned to Antoine during
the same broadcast.
"IC l offended you
with the Confucius say.
1n g." h e said, "I
apologize.··
During the 11 p.m.
news. a n anchorm an
read a statement from
t h e station's m anage.
m ent. which said that
Antoine had been sus-
pended indefinitely for
··an Inexcusable lapse of
judgement" in making a
comment that was "in-
s c n sit iv e and of .
ANTOINE fensive."
WOMEN PICK ETED WABC AND THE inci-
dent was hashed out m columns or letters to editors.
After Antoine returned from a vacation in the
Vir gin Islands, the s tation announced it was re-
instating him -but confining duties to oH-air work.
After 25 years as a highly paid weatherman.
Antoine's contract was not renewed when it expired
10 March. There was no public explanal ion.
A~Ol?'I E QllESTIONS WHETHER HIS Con-
fucius re mark. m adl' undt•r the pressure of a so-
called "happ)· talk" format. was in bad taste.
"Over 34 yPars. I' \'l' said worse things thun
that." h<' said. rt•t·alllng the time.• he blurted out a
four-lt•ltpr word
The comment. he sa1<I . rcflerts polil"J advice to
womt•n who art• altackt>d not to n•sisl.
Claiming that rnrporatc assessment of reaction
to the r em ark, not the actua l reaction, was his
problem, Antoine concedes, "I made a mistake. J
gave them a target. I failed."
HE SA VS llE 1101.DS NO Ri\NCOR for the sta.
lion: ''I'm hurt. Not bitter hurl.''
Asked whc•lher he blamed WABC for letting
him go, Anlo1nc replies. "Under the c ircumstances. no."
Arter he left WABC-he adver tised h is
availah1hty lor t•mploymcnt 1n the show business I
weckh· \'an rt~·. but remain~ Joble~s.
If be sta~s that way. Antoine says, he m ay sell J
his 5' ~room Park Avl'nut• cooperative apartment
a nd build a hous1• ht• has rl<'s1~ne<l lor his 71"2 acres
in Kcrnnlh.•. Tc' Tht• l w1 tc·dl\ orc.·ed nal1 \'e Texan
may abo writ<' <Jn autob1o~rnph~. Bul what he real-
ly wants 1s a JOb.
Schedule Outlined
By UC Irvine
. ............................... ""e........ ~,,...::--'I __ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .......... .......... . . . . . . . . . .
••••••••• I . . . . . . . . . .
••••••••• I .......... ......... ; .......... .......... . . . . . . . . . . . ........ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ' . . . . . . . . . . a • a e e a a a a I .......... a a a •• e .... I . . . . . . . . . . .......... .......... .......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . . • . . . . . . .. . .
.
. . . ---
' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .................. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ................................. ' ~ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ........... . . . . . . . . . . . • a a ••• a a a a I . . . . . . . . . . . ........... . . . . . . . . . . .
r•-1~~c:;::;::i •••••••• • ••••••••••••••• • •••••• . . ......... .
LOWEST PRICED
:xL-100 CONSOLE
AND
s59 CASH
BONUS
DIRECT
FROM RCA
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I • a • a • a •••• ........... . . . . . ..... ........... . ........ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ......... . . . . . . . . . . . ........... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .......... ' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . i~=:c:=~~===---. . . . . . . ... -. . . . . . 24 CU FT ....... ,•. ·.· ... ·. ·. . . . . . . . . :·:·:·:·:·:· WITH ICE . . . . . ,
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I 8 ••••• . . . . . . . • • • • • • • • • • GvM you ~ ice cubes. ond cold W".ll!• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • .w...a.., 1'hru thtt door • • ••••••••••••••••••• . . . . . .
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SAVE $100 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • • • • • • • • • • . . . . . . . . . . 8 ••••••• a • I
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fl
)II
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.. ----.... -
/
Tuesday. July 19, 1977 DAILY PILOT 8 J
Sutton's Long-t-.e ~reaID C~llles ·True
* * *
Ryan's
Refusltl
, i . .
Rapped
MEW YOBJt c.APJ U Billy
N'arUn bad bis way, Nolan lly.n
'NOUld be a UWa ~er.
Martlo, who will manage the
American Leafue All-star team.
uid Vonday that Ryan shoul~ be
&uspended for a week without
pay for refusing to play In tbe All·
star fame.
~ W YORK (AP> -Don Sut·
too. who hu1 drumed ol pitching
1n Yankr Stadium, and Jim
Palmer. wM hae dooo well in the
111m9 ballpotlc. drew the atartlng
u 111omenta roe toru&ht's '8th
AU·•tariame.
SutU>n. the ace ri1ht·hander of
tho Los Anaelcs Dod&eN, and
Palmer, Baltimore's r'ght·
handed ttopner. have fared well
In pr~IOUI All·..tar appear.nces.
Sutton, Ql~ bJ• first start.
hu blankctd· th& AmetJc11n
Learue In five pre vlou.s innJngs,
wb11e P~mer has ~}ed :~
'"I tblnk baseball JboUld dk:~
tate policy to the plal(ers and not r.
let the players dictate policy lo
J>asebaJl," Martin said in lashing
9ut at California's Ryan, who re-
fused to join the American
League squad as a replacement
Cor injured teammate Frank
Tanana and also turned down a
personal appeal from AL presi-
dent Lee MacPhail.
Martin said he originally
bypassed Ryan, who is the AL's
winningest pitcher this season
with 13 victories and baseball's
reigning s trik eout king,
"because I thought Tanana was
having a betler year and y(>u
have to have a player from every
club and you can't pick three or
four from each team and do
that."
The N e w York Ya nkees
manager said he was "sad
because Ryan made the com-
ments he did about the All-star
game. It's played for a good
cause. It's the fan's game. a
chance to show the public the
best in baseball, and he's saying
Tm taking my ball and my bat
and I qult.'
:'He should be suspended and
n«Ji receive his salary for a week.
Why don't they all say it?
Thurman Murson (the Yankees
catcher ) caught a foul tip in the
chest Saturday ni ght.and its hurl-
ing him badly, but he'll be hen•
eyen though all he can do is pinch hit. .•
scoreless innings agatn&l lhe Na·
tlonal League.
Palmer started in 1970and1972
without picking up a decision, but
a.nr •• 1 .. c
0..11...t4•t5
w at a mlddle·innlng reliever in
1911, the last time the AL beat the
NL. Besides the five straight vie·
tories. the NL has won 13 of the
last 14 All·star confrontations.
"The starting assignment is a
treat in one respect. Not-(llBDY
guys get to do tbi&," said Palmer.
AP Pf>olo
In declining the All -star invita-
ti on, Ryan said he never would
go as a late addition. Such was
the case in 1973, the year Ryan
pitched two or his four no-hitters.
when baseball commissioner
Bowie Kuhn added him to the AL
t.eam and Willie Mays to the Na-
tional League squad.
JOE NAMATH BEGINS DRILLS AT RAMS CAMP.
Martin received support from
comments by pitcher s Rich
Gossage of the Pittsburgh
Pirates and J im Palmer nf lhl'
Baltimore Orioles.
Gossage, the Pirates' lop re
liever, said he was "very happy
to be he.re," even though he was
selected Sunday lo replace Bruce
Sutter, the Chicago Cubs' ailing
bullp~nace.
"I don't (eel I'm here just
because some guy got hurt," said
Gossa~. "I knew 1 wasn't going
tc>-.beat out Sutter with lhe year
1 he's havmg."
Palmer, wbo will be the~tarl·
ing pitcher Jor the AL. saia "I'd
like to see him Cltyan) here
because I think he' could con-.
tribute to the club. The same's
much morQ.important (han any
inc2ividuil's feelings and it's just
unfortun3te tha~ he's not going to
be hers."
·: Readers'
:llqt Corner
D~r Ml" White:
I wouldllke to bring to your at·
tention a sports event that would
be of ~tem\ to your readers in
OrangeCoobty.
The Solath Coast Swim Con·
fereoce DoaJs will be held Sator-
day, August 13 at Newport
Harbor B11a'~hool from 7 a.m..
to 1 p.m. 't'\Ut c()nference in·
·eludes "IWlm dUbl from Hunt·
ington Beach, Fountain Valley,
Newport h•ch. Brea, Laeuna
B•acb. -4 tone Beach. The
children !n'\'olnd are from the
ag~s oltlftto .tT. ~h of then\Oe olub• partlcil>&t~n1 wtll be
r;epresell&ed bf',poroximdtely ~
21wimmm;tllj1I parents and
Qtbers:r•· • The Ooaat. Swim Con· ~rence hi& been iD existence lt
~ar• ti4 bas aided lo the de-
ve--t or many nne 1Wlm· mars.
S'1acerely SueTorkellf
Huntlnfton Beach cc: SOuth coast
Swim Conference
Rams Begin Drills
Scholar, Legend
Bidding for QB Job
By DAVE CUNNINGHAM
Of Ille Oalty Piiot St.Ill
The Los Angeles Rams' No. 1
and No. 2 quarterbacks met the
press Monday at Ca l State
(Fullerton>. where the Rams are
holding their summer training
ca mp.
The No. 2 quarterback got all
the attention while the No. 1
quarterback sat back and mosUy
just watch~.
That's bei::.ause the No. 2
quarterback i~ Joe Nam ath ..
formely known as Broadway Joe.
the glamorous and rifle·armed
fi eld general from the New York
J ets.
The ·No. 1 quarterback is Pat
Haden. a poli te, gentlemanly
Rhod~ scholar just in his second
year with the National Football
League.
M.onday . was the ~first op·
portonlty ror mem bers of th~
press to quiz Namath as a Ram.
Whal about the weak' knees
that have supposedly eliminated
Namath as a running threat?
"I'm not even concerned with
the knees ri~ ..JlQW. My biggest
problem is uns guy tight here,"
he said. pointing to Haden. ''If
he's playing well he's going t.o be
tough to move out." T~ toft-spoien Haden &aid he
felt uncomfortable betng ahead
of the letendary NaMeth. "l''I~ admiredpim since I was
a kid/' Haden said, drawing a
grin fr<m1 Na~th. ''Re's a good
thinker. I have 8: lot to learn. and
I couldn't hav¢. bettqr te.acber
lh!ln Joe.''
MIMesota Q~ fr311 TarkentQp
has said be feeJj ~b JOb ls to pl~
q u a rte r b a c ~ , l\P t., t e ~,h
youn1sters hbw to plat. \ut
Namath disagrees.
''I'm always willlnC to help
aootb« individual, whc!thefJ ll's
on the ffeld or off. We don't ac-
compllstl anything~ oa on.''
Namath4ays.
Tbe1 t977 Jlam.s guide Uats
. H•dlO•theatatter and Namath
as a backup QB. but some mem·
ber s of the press dido't believe it.
and tbey asked Namath point
bl ank If he would be starting.
•' l hope so.·· he a nswered.
i'Whoe'!ler does the best will play
and n~ither of us wants to be
second string." Namath said h~' hasn't moved
his (1ermanent residence to Los
Angeles yet and won't until he's
sure his heal(h will pet'mit him
to pfay.
"Right now J reel very good."
he says. "I've got a pulled mus·
cle Under the left rib cage, but it
should be all right in a couple of
days.
•'It was really my own fault. l
. d idn't stretch properly be(ore r
started throwing hard."
Namath rolled into cam p Mon·
day 1llghl and shares a room with
Hadeq.
Haden admitted he had formed
a larger-tha n-life image or
Namath. ''l expected a guy eight
f~t tall to walk through the
door," he says.
9ut the scholar and the legend
hlt it.off immediately.
, '.'Mostly wa've only talked
about football and the Rams'
personnel," Namath says. ''But.
Pdt an4 l seem to"get along very
Well 1' ' • \ . ..
~ Storts on TV
'tONIGm
5:1!1 (4) -AL~·STAR
BASMALL -The 48th All· tett~ elasslc belweett the Na· tionil lnd Americ&ft baseball teacues. Managing the Na·
~~a CinciMati '9 Sparky
4eraon. the Americans are
lM by New York'• Billy
11*1.IQ •. Tbe NatJonals lead in ,t1e·~•tt witbooette.
1..:.c:P_._!I!. (4) -SENIOR
OLDIPJC8-CompeUtio.n -1
th~ :Wlhth Senior Olytni>tc.. taP94 from UC Irvine. ,
whose career record is 20·11
against the Yankees. "The All·
star gamell really haven't been
so one-sided re<:enUy. Only the
results have been ...
The AL's chances would seem
better U lnJurh!l1 had not
ransacked lta pitcblng staff. Out
with assorted ailments ~re Mark Fidrych of Detroit, F .. ank Tanana
of California and Vida Blue of
Oakland. CaHCornia's Nolan
Ryan refused to pl~y. leaving the
AL with only three starting
pjtchers and four relievers.
Sutton relishes the opportunity
Angels Need
Wnfidence
-Garcia
To win, the troubled California
Angels need confidence, says
new manager Dave Garcia. But
the catch. as he admits, is that
the team needs to win to gain con·
fidence.
Garcia, 3-4 after a week at the
Angels' helm. sees his job ;is pro-
moting a ~tive attitude among
his players, who have fallen Car
behind in the American League
West race despite glowing pre·
season predictions for them.
There are occasions when the
Aqgels feel certain they are go-
in g to win. the California
manager says, but that is only
when ei~her Nola n Ryan or
Frank Tanana is pitching.
''When they go to the mound,
we know we'r e going to win. But
when our other pitchers start, tl\e
players think we might win."
Garcia says, emphasizing the
"know" and the "might."
So far this season, the Angels
have had reason to feel confident
only when Ryan or Tanana was
pitching. The two have a com·
bined record of 25·14 , while the
rest of the California pitching
staff is 17·32.
"I'm confident we can win with
our other pitchers," Garcia said,
"but my job is lo convince the
players.
"We've got lo beli eve.'' The
Angels could be forgiven if they
have become a bit disbelieving.
Despite acquiring free agents
Joe Rudi, Bobby Grich and Don
Baylor and being favored to win
the AL West, they have had a
gloomy first half.
Gric h is out for the season with
a bad back, Rudi httbeen ailing.
Baylor is healthy but not hitting
well. and almost every player -
including Tanana -has been
hurt at some time.
·'It began with Grich and just
hasn't stopp"ed ," Garcia said.
"And every time y ou lose a
starter, it also weakens your
bench.
Garcia, who took over when
Norm Sherry was fired, said,
"The club will gel better jn the
second bal(. I feel our pitchers
will improve -except for
Tanana and Ryan, who don't
have to. L thlnlt Baylor will come
batk strong, and our young
players should help us a lot."
Last Saturday. the Angels
em ployed the services of a man
who·hypnotized the entire team
prior to a game with Seattle.
Armed with confidence, they
went out and beat the Mariners
54.
But Ryan was on the mound
then. and the following day when
P a ul Hartzell s tarted , the
Angels' posltive thinking may
have lapsed and they lost 8·7. .
Stars Tangle
With. Spik~rs
Tile Orange County Stars will
try to keep a lock on first place or
the International Volleyball As·
sociatioo (IVA) Westena Division
tonight as they host the Santa
Barbara Spikers in a 7:30 match
at Anaheim Convention Center.
In their last meeting, at Santa
Barbara. the Stars dropped three
straight 1a111e1 by lopsided
scores. A sweep of Tucson on
Thursday. however, gave
Orane~nty a 10-8 record and
put tbe Stars back to first place,
one game ahead of Santa
.Barbara.
Santa Barbara 15 led by 6-3
Brazilian hitter Luis Eymard,
While the Stan boast four playen
wbo made Ute all-star team -
Dodfe .Parker, Wilt Cham-
berla.to.. Joa RoMrta aDd HUar1 ~ota.oa It'• OUUIBb*ltiJl•a lut a.omes ....
to start for the NL. a dream come
true for the pitcher who wanted
to become a Yankee during the
team's penny-pinching days.
"Only the fact that the·
Yankees weren't willing to pay
me mOfe than $2.000. and l would
have played In Yankee Stadium
before," Sutton said. "I spent all
my childhood dreaming or one
day pitching in Yankee Stadium.
"I grew up on a farm in
PensacoJa. Fla., and l occupied
my days pitching m e ntal
shutouts with Mickey Mantle
making the last out catching the
ball near the monumen~."
Sutton won't be on the mound
to watch the final out, giving way
to another pitcher, probably
afte r three innings if NL
manager Sparky Anderson'$
game plan is not torpedoed by AL
bat.a.
Il was somewhat of a surprise
that Anderson, the Cincinnati.
skipper, was starting Sutton,
with whom he bas had a running
feud, accusing the Dodgers' ace
of Illegal pitching practices. An-
derson rpaintains that Sutton at·
See All·stars Page BZ
AP"'"°
RECORD MAKO SHAAK -James George. a truck driver
from West Paterson, N.J .• displays his record 1,039-
pound Mako Shark Monday at Montauk Marine Basin on
Long Island. George took the s hark during a five hour
battle off Montauk Point. It's the largest Mako ever
taken in the U.S. and the second largest in the world,
topped only by a 1,061-pounder caught in 1970 in New
Zealand.
~rts in Brief
Laver, Friars Fall;
Tiile to Solomon
'.'TORTH LITTLE ROCK. Ark.
-Teimurai Kakulia and Vadim
Borisov defeated Rod Laver and
Cliff Drysdale. 7·3. in a super
tiebreaker Monday night leading
the Soviets tp a 26·25 victory over
the San Diego Friars in the first
World Team Tennis match
played ln Arkansas.
San Diegq had tied 1he match
at 25·25 when Drysdale and Mona
Guerrant defeated Kakulia and
Nastasha Chmyreva 6·2.
I.aver, a Newport Beach resi·
dent, lost his men's singles
· malcb atainst Kakulia 7-6, but
comblne4 with Drysdale to score
a 6-4 vlctory'over Alex Metreveli
and Boriso1' inJDen's doubles.
~~·tt.._.o..,.is.ot
W°"""'S -~.OWW.yrev• iusSRI bltfll •tlll•Ouerrant, ..,,; Morozova IUU RI llHI ~lftll9!U,H.
Ml111td-~Guef••llt ISOI llffl Kaklltla-Qlmy,_,H
Men's -l(ekull• (USSR) belt I.aver, 7 .. ;
lAYtr·~ 1$01 llfft Metre...11·8«1'41'.".!o.~· ~ 11~ -1Cak11lt.·8orl10¥ t~RI
wet o~'-'''"· ,.,. • -UNtf-41~tt uni. Aoc1t, Ark. ~it.Se•~wtu .. M"''' -9or9 (C:) bHI Gorm8" ... ~ .,... flll~.(C')llNt~nt,,Y,7o6. tt~ -TUl'llClllll(C:lbfflstow,M . ~·,am'*O~llM•allat>I.. •-•.m.-.... on....
·' ..
Jl2 DAil Y PIL.OT Tuttaday July 19 1977
)
t
Say Chamb rlain
' I
IV A Pro Circuit
I • Best in the World
• I . STAR GAZl'\J(; f'IH• lJco,l
voll~vbaJl in lhC' world \1' not
t played In tht.· Urukd Stuh•s Thi·
" Ammcan:, couldn't •·vc•n quallt>
J tor thoOlymp1<':0.. lt'l l\IOn t• win 1l
Poland t'v~nh.1111ly won the aolu
-medal by bt•utrn~ I ht• Sov1t•l
.-Unloninlhdinall"
1~ But Will CbJunbtorJ.un ;ilw11~-.
: has Ill\ Opinion and he'" 1wv~·1
;lfraid to e'(press 1t Chumberla111
. tlunb the pro volleybaJI c1rcull
operating now In the we:-.lcrn n ·
&lOll ol the United Sllttei. 1s thl·
: belt anywhere. ' The 7·2 former basketball l>\dr
··may be a little prejudiced He :.
:
. • II • •
• DAVE
CUNNINGHAM
• league president. a player, and
: _investor in the International
: Volleyball Association (IV A>.
J "The IVA brand or volleyball is
1 the best in the world," Cham·
f·berlain insists. "I know because
J I've been all around the world
!-and l'veseenthem all."
•,· Oh,really?
When reporters used to a!>k
: Jormer Lakers teammate J erry
= West aboul Chamberlain's latest
' .controversial quote he would
··comment. "Sometimes Will says
• things he doesn 'l really mean •
WHY BOTHER'!-Dodge
Parker is hailed as the greatest
volleyball setter In the United
. States. He could have taken a
:.ftealtby salary Lo play ln the IVA. ;~one something else In the ofl·
;Meason and been quite secure. < But instead, Parker decided to
:i>ecome part.owner of the
:prange County Stars. In addition ;to playing, he's a coach, lnvesLor, ;~ u b I i c re I a t I o n s m a n ,
p1ycboto&Jst and mother ben.
"I bdJeve In the 1por& and lhe
product." Parker explalna. "The
conctipt of the IV A ls a win.a.er
aod tr w~ can 11t.ay with It lbtee or
four yf;an, ll's going to be very
bi •. "
IN THE RED Pro volleyball
may b<! wry big in three or four
y~ars , but right now it's losing
mon1•) hand <h't'r fool. Slurs
ownership doesn't expect lo start
malung money unhl the third
~eason. .. at the earliest.
While Orange County is sup·
posed to be a hotbed of
volleyball, the Stars' attendance
has been better on the road than
.ilhome.
A crowd of 1,60() is considered
big for the Stars al University
High <Irvine ). but in Santa
Barbara they draw 3,000 easily
and in Denve r a turnout of 5.000 is
not unheard of.
Even in the spacious Anaheim
Convention Center. with Wilt
Chamberlain as a drawing curd,
the Stars only attract about 2,000.
lNTERNl\TlONAL-Tbey call
It International Volleyball As·
sodation because someday they
actually hope Lo go internaUoaaJ.
wllb upwards or 50 rranchlles
tbroughouUbe world.
A pipe dream'! Not so, says
Parker.
"Other countries go absolutely
bananas over volleyball, Parker
says. "In tbls country, It's the
sport or the future ...
'JAME CHANGE-Everyone
still refers to 1l as the Long Beach
Swim Club. That's the group lhat
Mission VieJo Nadadores coach
Mark Schubert considers his big·
gest challenge in the current
AAU swim season.
But last year the Long Beach
Swim Club m erged with the
Newport-Irvine-Mesa Aquatics
and the named was shortened lo
Beach Swim Club. Coach Dick
Jockums wishes people would
start gelling it right.
~NOIA. Aees Honored •
.; Figueroa Most Valuable • . -. ~· Threl' Newport-Irvine -Mesa
·;Aquatics <NIMA.> waler polo
;.:;tars we r e accord ed All
:(\merican honors Sund ay folio"'
: tng the 1977 National AAU out ~:door finals at Newport fl arbor
::High, led by Gary Figueroa. lhc
.. J.ourney's MVP
seniors m l'* fall at their high
schools ~
Others among the 30-m an pool
for '78 ml:luOe current national
t~·am m e mb ers Fi~ueroa.
D1t·kmann. Corona del Mar Hl,::h
coac h Jim Kruse. former
University High ace Nick Baba
a nd Kevin Robertson. who was
Newport H.M-bor High's 1976-77
athlete of the year and bound for
UC Berkelcv under coach Peter
Cutinoin the fal l.
SPORTS
CoJ1tlnued From Page Bl
tempts to m ake a round ball
square, or some other shape,
through some devious method.
"I knew I was a cinch to start
when l got a note from Sparky
last week asking me what grain
of sandpaper I wanted him to or-
dcr, .. joked Sutlon .
Befoce Anderson's announce·
ment, Cincinnati's Tom Seaver
was expected to gel the starling
nod. giving the New York fans an
opportunity to welcome him back
following las L month's trade
from the Mets to the Reds.
ALL·STAR AV!RAGfS INDIVIDUAL 8ATTING
(Of"f'NMm S•nQ•eton a.or M""!'oOl't NY AIU llCli
F•Sk8~ Y•slr1m~1eo-. F•lrly TO< AandOlpll NY llu•lt\OI\ eo.. Hl\le M1n Zl!.k Cll1
Wy~9arM1n
Re J8cktonNY
G 8r«>llKC
t r.omp\Of' 0..1 c •. Scou 9o'>
l Vllll 8°'
Jont\~tl
C•me>anf'ri\ 1•.,
GrouO•~ NellloNV
Mor•1,\Cf"H
s.mmon~~ll Grlfley C1n Lutln\•l Pfll
P~.Hlc11r P~
T~tnoleton srr
-AOie Cln \lel•n11,,. Mu Monl<1M1A11
MO<'q~nCln
G Fo•I~• C•n Smith LA Trlllo CIH WlnlleldSO COf'<epe Ion C•n GarYeyl.A StllmldtPlll Stur .. \NY Cty LP. 8enc11 C1n
~m .. ru.1n
N•h'>"•I
Amenc•n l•11ue A& R HA 11111 Pct
ld 10 US 6 51 .l'U
l'fl ., Q/ 11 S4 .lll 131 •b IQ.I 11 68 .)II 3'1 Sb llJ 73 6D .JIJ
l'fS "' 91 16 SJ .311
31' SI 9/ 18 61 .JOt
781 •7 83 I] -.307 1n lol "8 • ~ .3()1
JS\ 0 l!Nt 7 18 .19'#
JS4 60 '°" 71 111 .)CM »J .. 90 19 63 2'>1 JOO '° 81 6 .a .m
J01 SS IS 16 " .191
JOO '6 8' • Sf .HO
113 •I 19 •• ltS .216
])) "° ~ 7S S4 .1U
7JI Jf 61 9 JS .U,..
]\I n '10 11 •'l .)56
llJ .. 8 \ • 71 .us
JO? ~ " IS •• n~ lJJ Sit I 1 10 lol , ..
N•l-•I UM!"" All R H HR RBI Pel )10 ;"1 101 1 S7 131
l'lt J9 ~ 13 S9 .337 J" /0 llJ 8 34 lll
101 S7 100 11 11 .lJI
11b 61 17• .. 6• ))I)
158 S9 II) 4 J'I .116
156 ,,. 117 • 31 .JIS
11• ., 101 16 so .JI\
]/] •J es lJ Al .JIJ
1'? 1• 91 17 " .111
l•l 69 IOI 19 90 .112
111 61 es 11 Sl .)()/
7111 :IS 811 \ 38 ..31)4
JU ,. 114 71 10 .1'16 )10 J I •• 6 37 .;oqs
ll• SI 111 11 80 m
1!18 u .. 16 S8 .m
H1 J6 n •o J6 ·* llt •• 90 18 76 ,,,
165 "° 11 10 68 .)68
Turn hltl"' All R H MR Riii ~I
6611 •OM l'M' 711 10S8 79' 6UI 1oes 19S8 111 10'!0 JOI
INDIVIDUAL ~I TCMIHG
A,,,.nU<I L.utu•
l 'llf' N Y
C•m~118(,, ICPr.,Clr
P•lfT'U-f 0,...1 SlllonMll
E <-••llPy Cit L•RO<ll•C•I
L•Wll~ SF
GO\H<1• l'Ql1 11.Rtu"l'flCn•
O Surtonl..A C1nclf!111r111 PQI>
Se•v~r Cln (triton PN llnclUIAr Hin
IP H Ill SO W l Ell.t.
~\ I• 16 •l I 1 1 49
k; ~ J6 I~ O \ 1 41
\I> 411 ,. \a ' ' '()t
183 l•q 64 Ill II 8 ) 11
I >J 116 4Q \ 1 ' 8 J U
1\'t 119 •O 110 ·1 i 10
60 4S 28 •6 i. l 61 NII-II l.e~91M IP M 88 SO W L ERA
14 61 11 &<'I 6 • I J1
~/ \I )7 •• 8 6 1 IS
• • 1 11) Al 88 11 J 1 0
14</ 111 •J 118 10 • 1 SO
116 1Qq 18 61 10 ) , 11
14/ I U l'I 113 tn S 116 •SS I.)! ., •O• I J 31)
17' 111 \I )3 10 ~ S•
·: Also chosen were Dana Hil b
~ligh coach J ack Dickmann and
:::Soyd Philpot of NfMA, Enc Lin-
; ~roth of the Southern California ~II-stars and Mi ke Loughlin of
, .. j;oncord followinJ.? six others who
:-;;hared the top seven spots with ~-:Figueroa.
;: Those wt•rc• c hampion Con· ~ord's Peter Schnugg, Jon
.~;;vendsen and Wall Bricker.
"~tanford's Doug Burke and Chris
Irvine Picks Coaches
.'i>orst and Joe Vargas of tht•
))outhern California All-stars
~--Additional area standouts were
:: S'.hosen lo be among a 30-man
',.pool which will furnish members
'::to the 1978 national wal<'r polo
:·team. I• • Among those chosen werc> ~Philpot. Malone and .Jack
jiraham of NIMA. Lindroth. the
;;iormer Oly mpian, and high
:-acbool stars Jac k Graham
Alrvine's University High) and ~ody Campbell <Long Beach
··Jillson). Both of the latter will be : '
I rvane High nas c hosen basket
ball. base ball and wrestling
coaches fo r the 1977-78 cam-
paigns, in addit ion to ret aining
aquatics <'Oach Ralph Roclheim
and track coach Jeff Swigart
Taking over t,he basketball pro·
gram will be former Cal Stall'
1 Fullerton ) assistant P at
Stewart. 36, who prepped at
Artesia High before duty at Cer
ritos College. the University of
Oklaho,ma and Cal Stale <Long
Beach>.
Stewart was a foolba ll-
basketbaJl·baseball s tandout on
the prep level and will be
teachmg in the English Dept.
Gary deBeaubien, who bas a
65·9 record in dual meet competi·
lion as head coach al Mira Costa
High for one year and co-coach al
West Torrance the past three
seasons, 1s lhl' new wrestling
~oach.
deBeaubien. 30. was J high
school AAU st ate champion and
prepped at Mira Costa High.
Richard Manzo, an assistant to
football coach Chuck Sorcabal.
will handle baseball duties. while
Rodhelm and Swigart. who
coached the sophomores and
freshmen this past season, as-
s ume the head coaching reins.
Saivyer Captures
Racquetball Title
AreaSport8
IAStcaTIALL
OOllltfl w.st Cilolleot 105, Ettl LA It
i..,.. .. Kll~ fl Camlnot.l, UgllN e.ac11" D•no Hiiis ... f"oothlll •7 E 1tancl• "· C-Vefley ~ Se" Cl~t 13.. MIH'°'1 Vi.lo 57 c.ttMIMO!ltfl ....,.,_ loll.-...Hlt'll Rtltlbtt llll'llbtr 101, $paM's 1'
SCAll, CMCll9'1trs ...
Former Orange Coast
College basketball coach
Alan Sawyer won the
4~·49 age division of the
Senior Olympics rac -
quetball championships
held at Orange Coast
Cotlt-ge recently.
Men and women came
from as far as Texas to
compete in nine age
divi1lons from 2S to 79.
Ron Drummond. who
GranionRun
S.MeANIM9W L• OUlnt.Sl, IJlllY'tf'Sfly 3' Canyori Sf,.....,_, Hi!lf'bor 40 IASEHU.
~l..ttpt Vanq\Mf'dl1, l>l•ett~t ..,,_NM L• a-.111t• s. ~lmlnsl., o llotU~MdieJ . ...__tt
Ell~l• 10, EdilOll 4
F-11111 Veli.., \ C.Sll llMv I HlllltllltlOft 9tlKIO U, CtrOl\t .,_.
~··
--
Los Alamitos TonigJtt's TV
Highlights Race Results
f'llUT ltACa -.U0 y••cb 2 YH• Olch. Clelrnl"t kw "'•ICleM l'uue u .100 Blur 1!1~ IHarO • • 1 'O 1 to L061Md OKll ICMOotal 4.00 J,JO (h•l.aOVt IR°"Ol'I UO flrne -1111 Al•O r•n -G•l••Y• Sun~lllne, Cll•rotee County, V•11dy ec110,
lm•do< Daul«, Vain O.mbttr, Sito L.lghlly 8Mle, l$MI Go Jet Scralc.ned Ml•• Ao.m o ... Torllll• FIM, Ketlatto l(ld, lk>D \ltn
Moon u eateta 7•81uy •11• & , • ..._ Oectt. ~eld pt.»
Sf COHO RAct! 400 y•fd\ >nu olds. For ,.,.ldlnj PutM U,600 Dry Pttctl
(Mllcllelll 1600 100 S>O sams FWy IC•roora I ' '° J •o tmJo Pol9e (Harl i & 40 To,,...-l0.41 AIMI rtn -Go'IM't1lt Rl .. r Go.!•·
e>e<l•llon n. Min klltn 11 ... Frllr 8o4I No scr.icrw..
TMtltO llA~ -400 y.,di. 3 .,. ..
Okh. Clelmlng. PwwU, 100 Eterfttl Red AUO,
<Ce~) 140 UO 3 • Midway Aul« COelolnoal 4 00 2.• Arw:estor w11 .... 1 ' 40 Tlme-106' AIMI ,.,, -Fe'(l lloy. Urnlts .._, M•llt Y-,,,,,,,.., Dedd'( Moore. Sll· ler M.,y', Gollo, lllue WI'* HI.....,
Scrtlcllelt-llestJet.,..t
U •u<11 >-•t•r,..I ltN 1111•r 1oM1ctw•r lblMr, ~ ... a.use
FOUltTH II Ac• -3SOyerds. 2 YHr olds. Clatmlno. For "'•lelen> Purt.e n.100 FenlMllC G<ll <Broo-S) u 00 5.40 4 00 Je1' Command IMYI•• > 3 60 1.10 6el Your Wallet ICierlsw > 3 Ml Tlme -11.JI Al'.IO rtn -Double\ HtlrtU, Color ,.,,. Cutt, WNt. Policy, April FOOi> Jolie, Foti Jt!!Jiwtay. 8anll On Tiie
M llYOf, Sk Ill ltftO Set.flee Sc r•tclled -Jetter Aeauu1. Ftmous Sir. u•OY lor Sure, Mh• L.ot-omh• '"™ llACI -400 y1rd~. 3 yur olch & uo. Ollrnlng. Pvru S2,IOO Mr.Doty San 18onhl 400 2.111 hO
o .. p s.11a< (AMlrl ll•MtlOI IC.r~I Tlme -10 3'
~IH r•n -Uttocl, C°"Mtl<, 59Mcty S..vaMal\ Noieretc11ei.
SIXTH llACI! -110 Y•rdS· J YN' 010~ & 119. c1aunlng. P.,,..$3.IOO SecondOlorut
NBC ., 5:00 -All·Star Game. The·
48th annuBJ baseball classic from Yankee
Stadium ln New York with Tony Kubek
and Joe Garagiola reporting.
CBS fJ 8:00 -Dr. Su~ss; The Lorax .
IL lp ... f'll) 11.IO 7.tO 00 Rocket T~ ITrNsurel 1).40 1,.0 O•ndr o..... tMy .. sl •.10 n..,._ .. M
A plea for endangered wildlife emer~es
in this children's program about the pre·
servation of truffula trees and grickle ·
grass. Also r.., -Plffd to ·ltuler, 51• """'more, Tome 8o9fl, 8111lloll', ,..Po Dt'sL•n ABC fJ 9:00 ''Love Story." Ryan :,
Scratc~d -HI\ 8'othtr, OV•r l!tt
U Eu«.11 t-s.<eM 0--t & .. ltocllet T9tt, P* tl,t1Ut
SEVENTH llACll -"° yer~h J
yNr olcts All-•nce Purse $J,to0
O'Neal and Ali MacGraw play the ill· :
fated lovers in this 1970 box office ~
bonanza movie with Ray Milland and ~:
John Marley as their fathers. =~ J•• ea.-1rru,un1
S.r•o IC¥.,_I L.I-• Me Too 1Kn111f'tl Tlr11e-tUO
13.10 • 60 uo
6 IO •.IO uo
A ISO r _, -Doc's E ""'"'-T .... ,,,.
I'
·.
., . . . F'"''• ,._,,, W.11NZVt9 lt<llCl'MO..
llGMnt •,\C.11!-Mllytrft. 3YMr
otctL Clllfftlflll. PlwM U,a Lief Tiie Lllclly CBrOOllJI AllNnwe <Mall"l Vllt1.l~M(IC"'9111l
6.00 MO UO
HO a.to
TV DAILY LOG
••• Tl.rne-IT.17
A I to ran -Moon's KlllCM Moll,
Oulckaft Dal•, Go """1!1~. 0.1rro's · •---------.. Aoott,1C1ptv11..,,,,1·•mA1C11111yToo ( TU•SD,.av Ho 1<r1tcf1H. ... R 'I'
~Z luctt •Ult Tiit LIKlr• 6 •· -::::;:;:;;::;::== ..... __ ,,.i...,....I •· __ ,_v ... 1.1 .. 1.,NG ___ ..
NINTH RACll -400 yards. J year • _ old•, c1a1mll'IQ. PunaU,toO ••.OO OH°Klr\Chy Bar V
IMyle>) S.60 S.60 S.00 • CD .())-~ OH·PrOllef'Count WI' ' ICl•rl\Sotl •.oo 00 l.20 II G ()).a U.Sur ll&se· Tlny'sGoCOr1 IMa1r1 3.IO 1111 Cont'd. from ~. Cover11e of Ttme-10... tile 48ttl 1n1111al All.Sui blseblll Allo '"" -Wrengler Roell, Donis dnsic from Yat1kff Stadium in The Cornetr, DI-8ratelet, ~llo a. H y...t. -' h Go to l'ly, Little Nlcu 11oy ... onx. ew "'" ... t sportscasttl\ Scrllclled-Mf'RodtefS•vov T0tty Kltl!Q and Jot C.1crola. u •-NUnoy ear & ott·S. • .., ..... ...._ofl1MS..
Pre.-rClllllll, .. lidP4.• (J)C..,,.. » lucta ·~ c..e & C*·>-• ~ Klrullrlar,li'ilWU'f.• ....... ~ ~ OH·OMd!IO!ltftwflnt •• • ., • ._ ••-•1 All-'-•-~ ... Sllilll & JMes
(~CD) (Q'I ())) ._
'Htw\eye launcnes into • non·sttt
st1eam·ol~1011S11ess monotoc• a oo ~<a Cll> n. ACi
Tlltl41r Mowi1: ct) (2hr) "'-* StOfY" (dra) '70-Ryan O'Neal, ~.
Mc<lfaw. ~y Milland. The dec'f'.
lively stmple l1111y ol lwo apparenllf
m1S111atched colleee students "" mttl, tall in lo~ and 1111rry. ,~ m"'" ~ si. ~-m n.. vi..-. ;,,;
fD ()pef1 fllettre "World ol V1CU!t Herbtrl" ........ 11~ TMJ letlMtt Silts ~ {I!) Malt.,,.. TltNht ii
-9:30-~
G ((!7) CJ)) (I) Ole OIJ lt'j
f11111 (R) An emted S<hne~· 1nv1tes Ann and the am to Ille
Alamitos Entries
ma.kc.try ISILM C.,
fDOadrtc'-7 • on.tic s.iel
he's l"'nl where ht's a0t111 piopose to C111ny. ..... Douclas
10:00
FerT-tlll l'lnt l'otl: 1:0
FIRST llACE 3SO yard> J Y .. r old\ Calil·b~. C111rn1nQ. Purs• 11100. c1 .. m1no or tu '3500 01<-•Y'SAprit flCnlQfltl Ill Ne•ecla Royal IC1erl\wl 1n
Tile Wil-ol Id IC.II I 117 '>ltepy Shine IOomlnque11 111 Cr•m• Bors IAdttrl 117
Mldwt•I' Cooy ICOrOol• I 117 Hlllt>lllyWllly (MyltU IH !>tit Oun It 10etomb411 111 L•llooLotllQO IW•rdl 117 SECOND RACI". lSO y•rd\. 1 ner old mlldeM. Cl1lmlng, Purw 12300. c11lrnl09 price S1'00 Jetltr Rt'<IUHI (MyleU 171 F&IPl<!r Jim (Clerl\sel 1n
Vlklna "''""' ICardotlt 11q My Plu~r fTruwrP• 117
Go Kro\lt Barl H•rU "' Roan Caryl>OI\ (Broo~fieldl 119 little Soo41H 18rookq 110 F.,\t N 8otd tR0U9lll 11'
R•~luo IWardl 1n Powl'r Av Buq IAd•orl 177 THIAO RACE. 110 yard\ J ye.it Old\ t. U0 Cl1ln"1>9 Pur .... $1100 Cl.t•rn•r>Q Pr'!C" UOOO Truxlon !>nip 1Har1 I 1n Roy3I Pd\\ IMylei l IU H.tw1'uar> h it ICMOot• 111
'-"'"'"" 1c1~''"'' 111 £414.., °""""' 18rOO&~ 121 Mr TIQ<'r ROC~•I IAl11;on 117
L<I 01n1-ro (Ada"> 117 Volt F0< Palleo llCntC!hll tn FOUltTM llACE 110 yero, J Y••r Old\ & uo. Cla•m•nq Pu•"' UOOO Cta• m1na P'•<"'SAOOO
4iodr"l•nQ!:.c.d (Wd rdl l tl
Gohmth Pncwbe flrrfl'Ut• 1 11• Ramt>lln Er.y ICAll 1 If l11•ck 8ro1Mr (Htrt> 172
Sur~ Glad fROUQhl 111 01111e's P11llern ICl"H9'1• 1 117 JoM-. l!ocktl (AlllW>nl 111 I'm GonM Oo fFerqur.onl 111 Pl fl'TH llAC~. ll-0 yardl l vur OIOJ
& uo. Clelmlno. PllnU3000. Cl aiming price i•ooo. TopMoonSOOrllWerdl 119
I'm a Srnoom Joi IMyl" 119 Lltlle Tiny Go IAlllM>nl ,,,
O~ep Pivot IH&r1 I 119 Mvnarn.,s-.w IP..,11~1 110
Too f op(Atlllltl "' SIXTH RACI!. 3SO yard>. J ,~ .. , old\ & up. (1&1ml"9. Purw UOOO
(t,,lmi"IQ prlce\lOOO
N•Vltdil Fl~r ITrN<lrrt I •n
s~ v 01 01a<non111c1er1~Ml1 111 (hick Oootl111Hlr11 117 C';o C•lu" IA<Ulrl I If C11rrltr C•s" IKn•qhf I 111 So.t• l'Tl"1 IWard l 1n Shu 9,,....,. P"" l811nk\I 111 SEVE NTH RACE. ol()() YMd\ J V•dt old< & uc> FllllH & ,,...,ts Claim•no Pu"t UllOO Clll4mt"9 prt<e '7SOO M,,, Ruby Pac <C.•clol1'1 ...
(~MQP to(Mn(• (K.,1(1111 1 11•
Mt\\ 8-cl IAlh!oOr\1 t 1'
Ml)re MtlOl!y ((1Prl\\4' I 11•
L ono I Go <Del.,...... I fl•
~ouq"M1nnltt (ftf"t)\Urtt) 1n
l•ttl~ Pf'C)h<a IW......,I 11•
11~1·s 0!¥9"' CT,...sur•I <iYPh' F•ll'I IC.Ill
Ill
111
112 Helull IC¥OOUI
'°"""'"Sid IROUQll) 8tgM T"'IC-en IMllttwlll
Jt!Pf<k Hen-IFtr~I . 11'1 NINTH llACll.lSOy¥0..l'fffroi<K. Clatml1>9, P\K'9 UIOO. Clelmlng prlco usoo.
m
Ch•rlot Alcll (Tr'f!uurel
Go PauurnGtl IACIUQftl He's FOOlitl IC.Woer I
S-rset Af!91S IK.,IQlll 1 VtlYel S1ed9t (Alll'IOftl
Son11y S.ld CM•trl
Spet Ooll cc:.rwra I Gucty De IClfflsw I
Aun Kiity IHMll
Some Klnd.15.ttlof IPeu11
,,.
117
111 11• "' flt
117
"' IU
11•
Deep Sea
Fishing
LONG IEACM C..._ Pi.t:l -1t •nglHs: «> <llllco bus, I IJ bkoe Wis, •10 roc:ll cod. 10...Ws w-11 -16 •no1ors· l08 1>on110. 4IA u11co ban , 3 r•11owt.tl1, 7barracuda, sott11ue bHs . NEW~RJ 10.vy•s Loehr) -112 anQl•rs 1 ~racuda 107 c.allco !Min .
100 s-ti.HS. I ~ti-tall, II roo <Od.
SAN Ol~GO CMwtlcl"I Plff) -61' •n91or~ 1 vtli-11141, t.7l'I alt>Kore, • OolD/lln, 17 l>l<M!ltn tur>a MISSION 8AY llthAllll•
Sll'orlllsllh•'ll · 113 enolus: 202
att>t<ore. S vtll-ta•I. 2'6 bonito, 31 barr•cuda, 80 c•llco bau , "rock COd •
'10m•<k-I. DANA J'fHAlll' -270 •no•ers: ,,.,
IMIH, 40 barrKUd•, t l>Of1lto, t ... llbctf, SO roe-UICI. 1S1 mK•..el. I wtlilt Wol twn. UAL BEAClt -U9 "'9ierS: 7'3
rock cocs. •cow cod, 2 lino cod. 11<'11• •• ,...~rs: 1'1>on1to.•meo.ere1, 12
11a1lt>ut,hJ1nd!>Hs, ii..rnoc:ucs..
SAN ,,_ORO CUM St. LAIMll11tl -
1J an9l.,s: 6h.lllbolt.31>err.11<uda, 17$ ctllco bin. 11 sancJ>an. ea btut brls.
ll be>nllo. SANTA IAlllARA -11 tnot"s.
7H rot I< cocs.e llnacoo
Physicals Set
Physicals for return·
ing athletes (all boys
sports> at Marina <Hunt·
ington Beach> High are
scheduled for Wednes-
day from 2·5, free or
charge.
Look\ Like 11 CAO.tirl 1 it Incoming freshmen
and those who can't
make the Wednesday
111 physlcals a t the boys
111 locker room are to repprt :~! Monday (2·S p.m.).
Cl'laraln Frtt1 Cllllf\a.,.) 11• Wild C•\11 IHlrll I" l!IOHTH ltACE. lSO y..-fl\, ) Y••r old\. Allowen<e Purs• ~ •ma Tiny 1cier11~>
8'ioenoUOI\ I DelombA I
Abl9' Tllll (KnlQht I T t'f S"Moon ILll)llam I
........ ""'*'
-6:30-
• Sl,0001000 SWITCH '* TME CIS ':30 MOVIE 8 Mowie: a:> (10) "Do You lab
T1tis Strupr" (d11) '70 Grnr
lllny, Lloyd Sridaes. D1111t Bakti
CD ...
Cl) .... Sritfitll
(JI lleft Crlffie Slltll
(Ill) CJ)) .., nr.. SollS
S Didi VIII D1't Slltll ez.o. . <• ())) IRltdled
CID •• Mtfs. lillll Destloys
7:00
CD Cnttl&ency OM au..o.
Cl) .., Tiit• Sons ......
CJ) T1 W .. Traltl
G c.c.bltili •1 t.ew LKy Q)Tlla,..
((UJ CD) F_., Attaif fB a-lcae brael Jewish Hovr
SlbJ'enylll.O .
f.m~rR~ fl8) (1))1'1 r..tridie ,,..,.,
eD la! blall & You
-7:30-
0 loft Alntriall Stylt
CJ) The Odd CcNple
(() TM ~ SM • cm ....,..... Squms G Tiie __., WiW ...........
(C11J (})) ...... Oii ltle Road a ........ ,..,..
tD a._, ZI TOll!Pt
(QI()))..., a.di G!t "*°CTW Hm's How
8:00 8 ((ll} Cl)) (I} Df, SutU: The I
Lim A Seusslan symbol of ecolorf speaks in btllalf of afl w1ldhle In his
plea lot tlte pmervahon of SOOle thrutened trufful1 trees and
patches of another product ol
Seussian l111a1in1hon known u
lricll• oass. G Tiie E111tft ~11111 S.11~1
Ofylnjlics Hosted by Rall)ll Story. the
8th 811111111 til(i 111<1 held compeh
tlOll of selllOf 1thfeltS lutum vnior
"*'and IWOmeJI partrc1pahnt 111 ol wllfdl Ill 40 to llO Ytlf\ old
8 lit letUts "The Baille of
811ta1n ' Newly d1sovmd lilm
docuilltnts Ille air encounters tit
twee11 Ille W and Luftwaffe whtell
dfcidtd tllis baltlt "The Battle Onr
lurope" 1tct1t1nts d1slruchon ol
HMlflurt Colocne. Sdlwe1nlun and
Ofesden.
()) llowlt: ~ QJlr) "A Ritt It
llW' (1111) '6S-Sut1n11t Ple"1ette
• CD CJJ (8 ())) Hapn OaJS M~ky. Cofllt Homt" A llo!Mfess clol becolne tile licht ti f on?ie ·a Ille IM ~ Pvbit tnd Ralpll lme lht
Pl• Ht!' 1114 it runs 1w1y, they tell ~"" 11111 Ille ctoc was stolen 11ther lllln flCt hit "'11th. :::•~<F~?c.1=! A ............
!.&•)''"""' ....... ) '70-llme.s [lrl
.lolltl. ""' ~. lOll Gtlbtrt .. ,.,.. .... ·=:=Jr. ill r..-t -~-..... -l:JO-•m<ll> (l)lilt Fr ... A COIMdJ ... -. IW/ •Mtlllltta OI =-~"'i:.?= kl • bttlldi11t -.... .. •• tlti1tl!lal
Sidt. Jt1111t CMMll& H4 SWrr i:l:.v~1 .
... iactll .. tllllr ~ ... ..,,.bcft. ,.,.., .. Soulca. pt ... . 1= ....
~ 8 (UlJ CJ)) (I) llljU (R) ~
t•atks a psychotic ktlltt who has
bttn tmormna Mallhattan a CJ lltwl
f () MoN: ~ "Tiit Bia Sllot'' (d•)
'42-Huml)hfey Bogatl. :
ltil Cl) loea!1 HOllr : • 6 llfttais WtibJ • m CMc.111 Sy111p11111r orc11e1C:, Sc4ti Conducts W1gne1 :•
O)DliellAmado ·: 13 crewttnta ... Semct :· m At tt1t fDP •:
-10:30-:: .. .... ·. m 0> m 111tws ::
OJ) Fa the Issue ' : •
11:00 f:
B CD G CD®D""" •.
·~())-... ·. • ((II Cl)) l.a'fl ........ ~
GkwWt m fftllllCMI ZM1M Cl) llatals ..._,
((ll) CJ)) Thi II.ti .. ~ .... ff Gtlldlt
fD l.atile ColtlNtilMI
fJ) DnNtic s.la e ...... ~ R..-t •
-11:30-:· 0 (<I!J Cf)) (() CIS Ute Moria:
rC) Mdl~IM and lrtft "Blues ~
Sally Ill"' :· D ~CDfla®..._, C.,.
([) Mowlt: -0.ll(tf'Mty Tiiey IJwfl'
(dla) '41-Jolln Cllfitld.
fil CD (31 CIJ) Mtfi1 of ,.,
Wetk "ORiy With Mtiried Men" :
~ •mta «D Ernesto Tht Strill,Je * Prtdicter loob At
The ftblrel Tonlpt mr....w
QJH>it 700 Cl!*
f.D Captioned QC tlM
C!>CINllil4
12:00
D TwlliPf l.eM
Ill .. : CC> "It Tiles M Iii*"
(SllSP) '69-Veia M~ts.
G»Mf!JoMws
Q) MoN: ......... ht"""' (COIQ) 'SI-Mart Stevens. Peen Dow. •
-12:30-;
0 Dtapet m World o1 Sunmi
1:00 D @Cl) (fl) r..--
0 All·licM Show: "Th H0t1ty
Pol," "la~....._"""-Iii ...... : m Mo'flt: "'Tiit Miretle If ttlt
lltlls" (dia) '46-Alllla rait1. ;
-1:30-; Cl> Ible: "Ulldl~ Cm) ·ss;.
nroy Hlrsch, Bl!btia Hiit. ~ 2:00 ~ 0 Mmt: CC) "OilHl9iOI s:'
(susc>) '67-Jeffrey Munl•. ..... .,....,~
"0.ActMllp,.. .
3:00 =:• SM.: .,.., Lift '
• ... .
Comedy, J)rama Open .
CmoingUp
Tue9C!ay, July 19, 1977
BEVERLY HJLLS A pair of well·known American piays, one in tle
Twentlt'th C.tury-t'o" com le vem and the other starkly dramatic, arrive on Fllm Corp. hu an thuaceneUusweek.
DOUDCed that llAI feature Opening ton1cht tor a five-week engagement at
fU.m, "Star Wart," hat the Harlequin Dinner Playhouse is Neil Simop•s
0...-S5' mUUon lo thlrd (and possibly best) comedy, ''Tho Odd Cou·
tbeatw box olflce n· pie." On Thuraday, Golden West College revives ~ ~ SWMlay. nrlTll'l'lllMMtllT Sidney Kingsley's ''Detective Story .. lor an ab-""Star W81"1' openod on UU UUM ..... UU brevtated, roar-performance nm.
k97 JS. and ls DOW play· ''The Odd Couple,•• the Broadway hit which in· .:laa=•= lnm=:thea::::ta'I==· ===;;;;~=:::;=:;::=;~ spired both a movie and a TV series, is the fourth pro· . due lion of lhe new d inner theater just north of Costa
Mesa on Harbor Boufovard. Casting has not been an·
nounced.
.
Intermission
Tom Titus
is the musical .. stop the World. I Want to Get Off" at
the San Clemente Community Theater. Director
Randy Cobb Is doubling in the leading role ot
Lilllecbap. ·
..
DAit. V l'tLOT 8:1
The Simon comedy will be staged Tuesdays
through Sundays at 8:30 following a buffet repast at
the Harlequin, 3503 S. Harbor Blvd., Santa Ana.
Victoria Lynn Rukstalis. Christi Glaser and
Mary Gallagher also are featured in the show, wh~ch
plays at 8:30 in the Cabrillo Playhouse, 2Q2 Avenida --:;;;;===;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiii;~A••'-11
Ca brillo, San Clemente. Reservations 49'2~0465. NOW SHOWINGI
.. A BRIDGE TOO FAR" PG
Nol>-.
"ANNIE HALL" PG
.. YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN" PG
"NEW YORK. NEW YORK" PG , No,__
"SILVER STREAK" PG
"FUN WITH DICK & JANE" PG
WALT OISNC'fS CHllO"EN ~0Pll•CES
"THE BOATNIKS" G"GNOMEMOBILE".
"THE LAST REMAKE OF BEAU GESTE"
''BITE THE BULLET"
"ROCKY" PG
"HUSTLE" R
"The Other Side of Midnight" R
.. ONCE IS NOT <ENOUGH" R ...,,._,.
"EXORC1ST II: THE HERETIC" R .
"RABID" NO~
Reservations 979-5511. ·
AT GOLDEN WEST. DRAMA instructor
Charles Mitchell is directing "Detective Story," the
graph1c study of New York pohce work, circa 1950.
Clark Burson, Susan O'Connell and Alex Koba head a
cast populated by both community theater and col-
legiate actors.
Othe rs in the company include Stanley
Abrahamsen, Richard Shanower, Charles
Gresham. Wayne Hall, Barbara Peters, Sheryl
Goldstein. Ken Cope, Harley Bray, Bunny Good-
mansen, Joan Hagerty. Robfrt Korbo, Robin Cooke,
Robert Kezer, Jim Lucostic, Jim Schendel, Henry
Eilbirt, Dan Ostro and Renata Florin. .
Curtain time is 8 :30 for the Golden We&t \lfarn a
in the college's main thealer with performaoces
Thursday through Sunday evenings. Reservations
892·7711.
COMPLETING ITS FOUll·WEEKEND run
with final performances Thursday through Satur~ay
TV's 'Sheba' Cast
~OWAADS CINEMA WES"J
EDWARDS HARBOR TWIN
CENTURY 21
STADIU D.I.
Continuing their respecUve engagements along
the coast are:
-"JACQUES BREL IS ALIVE and Well and
Living in Paris" at South Coast Repertory, 1827
·Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. Performances nightly
<except Monday) at 8 o'clock and Sundays also at3.
Reservations 646· 1363.
-"My Fair Lady., at Sebastian's West Dinner
Playhouse, 140 Avenida Pico, San Cleme~te.
Performances nightly (except Monday) at varying
curtain times. Reservations 492·9950.
-''Carnival" at Sebastian's Playhouse at the
Gr and Hotel in Anaheim. Performances also nightly
<except Monday) with curtain times varying.
Reservations 772· 7710.
-''STORYTJIEATER" AT THE Westminster
Community Theater, 7272 Maple SL, Westminster.
Performances of this children 's play Fridays at 8
o'clock, Saturdays and Sundays at 3. Reservations
893-8626. -"Norman. Is That You'?" by the Huntington
Beach Playhouse at the Edgewater Hyatt House.
Coast Highway at Westminster Boulevard, Long,
Beach. Perf<'rmances Fridays through Sundays at
9: 15 preceded by dinner. Reservations 828-0583.
'l.OS ANGELES (AP)
-Nancy Marchand and
Robert Walden h a v e
joined the cast of "Lou
Grant," the CBS
newspape r comedy-
dra ma starring Ed
Asner.
Miss Marchand, who
previously starred in
"Beacon Hill," plays
M ar garel P ynch on .
owner-publis her of the
newspaper where Grant
works. Walden was a re·
gular on "The Bold
Ones."
.An
1MEATR£S-ORAHGE CO
Sllll cmmts $1.51
SO. COAST PLAZA
>41UnmUt SU 2111 lfllPllUIC
"THE DEEP" IPGJ
SAT/SUM-I :l0.l:40..
5:50-t:OO. I 0: I 0
DAIL Y-7:30-9:45
S . COAST LAZA
>4 IU1ntll SI SU 1111 111111"''-'
"THE SORCERER"
IPGI DAILY-7:J0-9:JO
SAT/SUH
liJ0.3:JS.5:40.7:45-9:SO
. COAST PLAZA
J411111ttll SI SU J.?.11 11111 , .... , "RO~KY"
7:30-9:30
SAT/SU .. -1 :30..1;35-5:40
7:45-9:50
'9THE DEEP"
IPGJ
t:30-~40.
S:so.a:oo-10: I 0
CINEMALANO
UH S. ...... A.uk•U) 1501 ,.,,.""
"ORCA
THE WHALE"
(PG, l:J0.3:10.4:50
6:30.1: I 0.9:50
"It.AC« SUHDA r'
J:OS.7:45
NSLAP SHOT''
I :00-S:JS-I Q:IS
A different
kind of
love story.
~
•A . ·.·.:·. -~ I ~ H• t
L ........ --~ .... ... c:-.~c.----~
l(a1111• .... , Stedl11-0• ..
13$17700l._7MO
"a1T£ THIE/ULLl'.T"PG ooan 7 :J Nltfltly
•.sTAa WAaS-lNJ •• . . ...,..
TOOFArlNI .
··lllDGI .TOOMrlPG!
TkE CITY SHOHttlO ClHT"f:°I OAAHGt·~tl
~CITY CENTRE C 1N EMA~ ...
S.A. FRWY IMA~HISTfft EXJ
O.q . FRW:V (CITY.DR. EXJ • • \)4.1911 . -
"IS&.AHDOF
DR. MOllilr' l~t
"'ORCA THI
1RU.a WHALE'" , ·.
~'Y"'tNt .-.
A "ltUIY-UU ~ ...... .,..,., '
. -. ' .
SI DAILY PILOl TU!!f!,tr July 11. 1977
MARMADUK E by Ired Anderson
"That's an Odd traffic algnl"
FUNKY WINKERBEAN
BOOMER
~r ~ w..e ~ ClOT'fe>J
~·our COOt're~ !
MISS PEACH
~-,:Jll/
.,,-...
.. -...
by Tom Batfuk
caiqr KIND OF DIAPER
DO CXXJ U6£ ~
I HAVEN'T lJX>RN ON~
IN <.>EARb , SAU..9 I
TANK McNAMARA
. .
MOON MULLINS
TODAY'S CIOSSIGID PVZZLI
ACROSS 66 Throughout
one's
Yu111dav'1 Puzzle Solved:
I lwtlve e•btenCll
6 Europ1e11 •7 W11te olle:
10 Stimulate 2 worda
deeply !>I 011ldren
14 SOii' pl1n1 ~2 Moll dire<:!
I!> Equine roule 2
l!'atu•t' words
16 Bord 54 Kitchen tool ~-17 Thorough !>8 Weight of a ~
fares wrapper
18 European ~9 Norse
coin uplo1e1
19 Shop of 1'92 6 I Elpll\e
20 lifts up 62 l ohengrln's
22 Flushed with wrle
1nger 63 lndlen city to Leglalatlv• ~ Maple leafs 64 IC1mt11 bOdy
or Bruins 65 Ten grus 11 Short lime
26 Hopeful 6e Oort pttlod
. weight 67 Give medical 12 ••••• cu~
reducers 11id 10 1 S Get
27 8anl"1td DOWN lnform1tlon ~1 Min Weal horn book• ?2 Stites 1 Mr. C1M1gle 21 C11tndar
,.33 Rnlgn 2 Actor···· 1bbr.
:.36 Mon11eal Sh11ll 23 Achlrlemtn1
• hockeylat: 3 C1n1I •··· 211 ···-Of HOllOI ~ lnlOf'ftl•I 4 Ouelifltd 27 Chaffing• ~ Cr•• J vo1e11 ,,39 Horsew1tlt1 • 5 OtdWnr 21 Sin
: llterat gait ktuaners 29 Mounc• .. .a Ernie ····· 8 Airport code 1umml1 ~ WW·ll lor &t. lou.-30 Trentftrable
I journalist 7 Wild 1nlm1l's plcturw ~Al Forn1 11,im..t home 34 Werrtnl ~'J. Swedlall lekl I V1n11llted 3$ hlow;,ttfla ~ Dtctlw« t · .. ~h 36 Dutch ltnf th
6 .....,.1 Utv1no¥ l'ntn\I,. ~4 '1llOef -I Mlln 37 tee l'MU
'
39 Cure-alls
60 V11>1a1lng •
niael\1111
42 Scl\e<Mt of
I.US
43 Orawew•v
from «< F~cotton eord
46 Pllot'll
~ncern
47 FIOWtt
48 Fla&lle rocll
69 Four·lttQld•
1nlmal
!iO Mike putt
53 Aulo necesaity
55 Wrtnthtli
M Sfcllia11 rteort
S7 MU.ieat
symbol
tO Heed
coYtnng
by Jeff Millar and Bill Hinds
GORDO
TUMBLEWEEDS
AN¥1'HIN6 excrnNC1 HAPPEN
WHIU: I WAS GONC117EPU1V?
'
by Wm. F. Brown and Mel CiSSon
It( ~~o
$11PWICH
Jl>GT
PEANUTS by Charles M. Schutz
I 60T A NEW
BASEBALL GLOVE
by Melf WMAT KIND? MANK
AARON? PETE ROSE?
RE661E JACKSON?
DOOLEY'S WORLD
EVERY tJtGHT
MOM BRUSHES
HER HAIR· 100
STROKES ...
-SUE'S OON£ IT SINCE SH~
WAS A Lim£ GIRL I
MOTLEY'S CREW
;; HE!A~ l"T" S <SONNA ee A FL..AMll'-JGO WEiA~l~G A w...c1-r e ~UMPSUI.,.-
by Roger Bradfield
HAVEN'T )OU NoTICEO
"Tl.ff MUSU£5 IN
HER ARMS?
MY IPeAWAS
TO GL...US SOMe OF M..Y Ot...P
FE!A"T"HSRS TO A
e1G F=ORKL...IF-r"
IAASGt. ~K4S FOR A WONOeRRJ1.11m; ... ---------~--------------------. ,,,,,. ....... Ttmpltton and Forman
,, '
;CjMK: 1 I' MIKC;, (Yr; :JU!tr \ SCictk k~ ISY I ' 1* ~"PlfN't' I \ OF 1'M; UNtT'I' J
\ erAt'~ .'! ,, I
.... ... "' ..... ._._J.r_,
I YllAM. AND 11' \
AIN'f .-V~N »J ~ ~GCflON ~~ ! / ... ,, -------'\f:"',
.THE GIRLS
•
"No. tlauk you-I'm just ciUoyi. Ntdlw ii it ~t ~
IOfMthbw lo the yard 1...W be .... " . ' ~ ~
DENNIS THE MENACE "
"1BU NOTICE Pl'BUC NOTICE
~" P1CT1nouaava1 .. 1ta
WN11•&e1111tYO-t1118 lltAM81TAHM8Mf au.TtNCA.U""°"NIA '0• , ... , ....... .,,. __ ., ....... llllN·
, ... C.OU .. fY OfOtlANOI "°" ••
-o\t1UI 011\CNT OAWN 2•10 CrtHHy •OT1(a 0" ICIAlllNe 0' WO Ml\1• ..... CA '21 ..
... ftflGlf ... NCMATI Of Wll.,L b • .,,.. 0 'I•~ Olwr, 011 W, A•O ~ ... n8•1 tlUAMIN Mc,...., '-'l•Me CA ti~
\'Al"._ ... A'IY'MO•tUTION Mk-t 0 ~IM• 21"'1111..i-.
TO AOlllfJIU"•• UNOI It fNI MIUIOll V101• C• 'ft/I
1"01 ....... fllf A.OMllUU•AflON Tiii\ ,,.. .. ,,. .. I\ ~ ... 411<\M t1f t ~ lrf"At"&tAC'T ..,..,.,_,,.,ah! ..
luttt ti OICI.,. llllaLflt, ••• M;(-10 -61• OICIV •OV••c t(ltallll , Tiii• ••• ,_, .... 111.i •1111 tM 0.C...... C-h Clo•' .. OronQt c-tw 4"' J!My HOT ICI I\ Ml ltf l'I' CJIVI N ,,..., tJ tt/I
OIOIU)( \ Tto;()Nl'"10N .... lt•tll """
"'""'',_.,._,.,,., .... If .. W•ll -l'ul"tt1""°" Or.,. CMtt O.lly .. Ii.I
.......... , .. , .......... ,y •¥ ,,, J11l1 .......... ~·"·'· .. ,, ~-.,tt-,. ._.,.. ... , ''"M• 111e >tit n ....... ,_.,., ......... ~lr•I,.._ O' th .. I•• ------------1 Mt , .. _, I• _,,11 ,. m • .,,. ID• ........ ~ """1(\11~ -ll\•f .... ,,,,.. Pl 1BUC NOTICE
~ ............ .,,., ..... -.... .,...,1------.-..... ------1 ~ .., ....... 1• ltfl · •1 tO ''° <t "' ' "' tUll't lllOll (O"llT 0" TNI -c..,n._.. tt °"""",,,_1 Mn I "' " w..it '°"'"' .. NO c1.,, ttnlrr r•n•• Uaf lOllCALl,O•NIA,O•
Wttt, "' ti.. (•It "' H nte Ane THE COUNTY 0"011ANOI C-'11•,_,,• Ne A·tUll 0....-y t.4. "" NOTtCI 0 ' NIAlllH00" l'ITITION WIWAM5 M.ION..,, ,0. ll'•oaau 011 Will ANO ,0. C-rCt~n l lTTlltSTIUAMINTAAY
TNOMAS" UAltll ht•lt<>ICALVINO JOY o.< .. \tcl •1c. ... cc:....0t Wnt. NOf •C F •S HflU!IY OtV!N """' S..,»f (,f ARIO<'. JOVl\<Ulllod .... ••ln •Hll•
s..t• .... ,CAtutt l•Oft 101 e>tOCW.t• Of .,,11 •ncl tor ltttt•t
Tt4& OMl --'"l•M~f\1., t """net 10 Wlllch '' .... _.,._. "'"llMoMf rn•ll. 10< ,..,,,.., o.r"culetl, ~ 111•1
l"vllff.., 0r-. c .. ,, O•"• P1101 '"' ,,...,. ••id pl...:• ot ,...,."9 IN .. ,,,.
.klly It, ao,~ lfll ""' btt" •t lor Juty 1•. ttf1, •I 10·00
Jtl'-ll a m 1n 1"9 count_.. of OtPotrlnwnl
---------....:..;..;..:...:..;. Ho J Of \dfO COU<I. •• 100 Cl¥1c C.nftr PUBLIC NOTICE D"•e W••t. II\ the Ctly ot S.nt• An..
C•llf1'rnl..t ------------J D•l•O July7, lt11
PUBUC NOTICE
PVBUC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
~ WILLIAM I!. 5tJ,0HN, "'*'1
SUl'IAIOtlCOUltTOll'THI C°"""lvCt••k STATIOllCALIPOANIA "01t JOHN w. OOltAN l'tCTlllOUS IUllNIH
THI COUNTY o" OAANOE lU ltnMll A... NAMI STATIMINT ..._ ""''Ui4 Lont llU<I'. CA. ._1 Tiie tottowtnv oe•aont ereesolno bvll·
HOT I cf 0 .. "I A. IN 0 0" au ..... , IOI' 11'.ttU ... or neu :·~.M. co .. 111 5ot1lll Gr•nd
'ITITION ,.0. ll'ltOIATf 011' Will Publl\rwd OrM>99 Coot D•ll'f Pllol, Awnue,~l•Ane,Ctlllornl•t110S
;::.,.11'0111 Ll!TTl!llS Tl!STAMEN JulylJ,IJ.t9,tt/7 KVtOAFARMSUPll'lVCO,tNC.
Est•t~ ol LEONA 0 PALMER _, __________ l_o_•t.-_,_' •• C•llfornl• corpo••llOll, '"
O.d•~ed Sou111 Grend Av•nt11t, $tnt• A11e,
NOTICE IS HEAEBV GIV£N th.\t PUBLIC NOTICE C•lll()ff\l•t?>O~.
MARV MINKS 11•> 111"" ht•tln • ,,_11 -Tiits 1>u11,_.u ll conducted by a lion tor p..,~ttl)f Woll •nd lo• iHutMf Cll'·4606 Corpor•tlon.
OI L•lltn Te1t...,..e11tary 1<1 tho pell NOTICI! TOCRl!OIT01t5 Kl/IDAFARM SVP .. LVCO. INC.
CIOfltr •eforM<t ID which I\ m•do lor Sl/PERIOR COURT 01' THE Bv: "•ul K. Kulda
P\JBUC NOTICE
.. CTI Tto.lt IUMNI • M-.enATa•NT
TM ,_._.,. 119'-la doille """ _. .. ,
TH• WIOOINO WOtllCllt, ~n ~Int• H.-Dr., H\lf'tl""*' IH<!t, CAtt ... 1(-"" ........... 1til ... ., ........ "°' ~.,HIMl~'"'-".CAm41 "'"....,...It ~t.c Wt en•~ 41MMI
~1..Mtl14111
Tiiie fllt(~ w• fHed 1111111 IN
C:..t'f C*'t Gf Of-.e C.U..ty efl J11IY ta,..,,
~, .. ,.
1'111111 ..... Ot ..... CoHI o.lly ~llol,
J11ly it,i..1111111•119t,t,1'77 31t>-1.1
PUBLIC NOTICE
PVBUC NOTICE
'IC'TtllOUS IClllNHS HAMeSTATIMINT
T,.. ro11ow1111 oeraont 11 oolnv bus•
MUH:
THI! 8AO(ll! MAN, t»ll Merwta
l.t9UNI Hiiis, CA. '24!.3
All.., 8. Wlllle, 1'611 M•rula,
t.19ul\t Hllll, CA •i.!.3
Tiii• b<Al ... u ,, <onoutlt4 D'( "" In cllVicNll,
Ajl ... 8.Whll•
Tlllt at.t....,.nt was !lie<! wltll '"" County Clt•k Of Or.-ive County 011 July 14, ,,11, lurth•r per11cu1&r\. •no th<1I the '""'• ST ATE 011' CALI l'OANIA FOlt This 'l•l-1 wH llltd wlllt l!te
tll<I plece01 i..•r1nq ti.. ttme h•s l>eM THE COUNTV 01' OltANGI! County Cle•k OI Orllf\Qe C.ounty on July F7'11t ~I tor Auqu~I 2. 1q11, •t 10 00 • m ., tr No. A·tlffl U, 1'17 Publl>~ Or•noe Co.ut Dally Pilot,
11\e courtr-1' Of Dt1><>rtM•nt No l 111 oF\lo•I• nl SPENCER DUANE REO JAME SK NARI/SE, ,., .... July l9, 26.•f\dAugu$11,9, J971
w•d court, •I 700 C•¥•< C•nter Drive Fril fFll ~·. ~<··,,rl,.•.d.~ SPENCER D. REO· Att•ll•Y•I' ·w J 119-11
WtsC, '" 11\t City ol S•nle An• "~ _,. ,.. C•llfornl• HOHCE IS HEREIW r.1VEN to If>(> uuw .......... « .. ll•tl., .......
Otl•d Julv IS, 1•77 d I I d Post Office ... !072 , rr• ' 0" n lhl' al>O•• """"' oecl'd•nt Gartl•M, Cllllorttl• 9014' WILllAM •• SI JOHN, lllAI •" ""''°"' Mv•nq CMHT,, dQ .. 11\SI UUJ u1 .. m
CC<mly Cler Ir ,,,,. ''"" a 'C•dt-nt •rt required 10 II•• MACICE.,.llCLltN,INC enem, ,,11111 thl' r-.t•~wry voucllers, 111 Pul>ll"*I Or""Qt COHI O•lly Pilot,
1 .. 1 CeMwy ll'•rll E•tl ,,,.. Olf•C• Ol ,,., Cltr• OI 1114• •bovp tn• Jiiiy U , 26.-""911112, '· Ul1 JIO·ll
'4111•700 htlof!rourl.orlop-e.-ltMm .... 11111f\t' ·-----------
1.MA•lel.CA"°61 r..c""'''"°"',..'' totntu11<1e1~19n,d PUBLIC NOTICE Ttl: l21Jl 171·UOI "' '"" ,.,., oll1re ol CAltL P ICUL VK
A"""'9TShr: "-'"1-r •ot Grondl"y !.trn t. Su•te 10& ,..CTITIOUSIUSINfSS
Publl"1ecl Ortt1ge Co<ltl O•lty Pilot CyP•t<t f~l·lotno~ 'lll6l0. wnoen 1> 1111> NA.MfSTATEMINT JUI'( n, 20, J6, 1'11 Plt<e of l>u\•"fH Of 1"9 unclerMqMCI I" T
31<1 11 ••I "'"tt•r·, f)trlilnonq to '"" t>tate OI nu!'::oltowtnv Pettons ••tdcM"9 l>Ull·
------------11•1<10.CMl-nt. w1tll1n tour"'°"'"' dlter A CH I C IC I V E R S 0 N PUBLIC NOTICE tht llrstpuohutlonottn•>nollt" VOLKSWAGEN PORSCHl!·AUDI. 8. D•l•dJulv \ 1•11 O•ARlf!'iGROl!S~El CHICK IVERSON V0LKSWA05N. C. ~" CHICK IVElt~ POlllSCHE·.+.UDI, l'ICTITIOVSll/51N(5S AOrn1nlt1r~l0<wllhW1tl O ITALIA·4MERICAN VACHT tM
NAMfSTATIMINT An,,..AedOll""P'L•lrol PORTS. US Ee\t co .. I HtQhW•Y. The loltowlng 1>ersott• tin oolng 1>1m. '"'' dbo~ .,.,,....., ""'~'·"' nuus: CAlll p l<ULVK Ntwp0r16eacn.C.tlf0<nl••1'60
OPtlN 'N' $HVT, 71J6 Sterl•"O. "•lGrlndt•ySl.,511111204 CHICK tVEltSON, INC., .t C°'l.t Mey, CA '1&'7 Cypreu, CA .a.>o Cetilo1f\le <orr»<•llon, 40 EHi Goesl GrtQOryScolt lw•~•" lOIJChMI• ht· l11'llU.1Jll Hlghwey, Nttwport 8tt<n, C.llfornl•
PUBUC NOTICE
'ICTIT\OUS austHUS
NAMl!STATfMINT
Tiie toll"""'llQ oerson 1, 001119 bust·
nusu·
ORl!AT AMERICAN WINDOW
COMPA"l'I', t10tt Adrl., s: 20S, G•r<len
G•OY~. CA. tlMO
Oo"•ld Hanstt1, Uott Ad•l•n,
G•rdP" Grow, CA '2MO T"" buSiness ls conducted bv an on· cltvldu•I.
OontldH•nsen
Tltl> , .... .._t w•s lllecl with the
C-ly Clerk ol Or~ c-.1y on July "· ,,,, F7NIO
Publlllled 0r""9P Coa\I Deily Pilot,
July 1', 1'.-Au9U'I ,,,, 1917.
JO s 11 ~---~----~-PUBLIC NOTICE C~ta Mto ... CA'l•ll Attorney to.-Admlllllfr<t(or CTA 9'WO
SltW BodPnhot'ltr, 2134 ~l•t1ln9 Putil•\"'<I Or•~ fod\t O"''Y Pilot, Tllo\ t>uMllHt 1' co"<IUClltd by• <or NOTICEOl''"lltll',..J\5ALI!
Co\I• ~ ... C.A'17627 July 17, 1? 16. dnd Au9u>t l, 107 p0rot1onCHICK IVl!RSON, INC. .... 241111
Cll•d Othl9ren, 2136 !>trrllnQ, 307111 D.A.CHARLTON, OESTfRREEFtSCHliR,Pl•lnllll Co\ta Mwsa. CA '7611 •~.
Tni\ bus"''" I\ co1>duct~d by a t1Mll -------------1 Asst. Sec· TrHs. BRUCE JOHNSTON, el(, Oeferlddnt
... ~''"'""'P u· JC 0 CE T"lt tlMemenl ...... flltd wit" lhe 8~ Wfr1w C)f .,, ... Culton ,.,utd on GrlMIOry S<olt '"'""~ 1 P BL N Tl County Cler~ C)f Or~ County Of\ July Moy 11, !'7/ bY the ~Pt•IO< court,
Tnls \lal•m•nt w•• lol•'<l w11n '"• -------------1 13, 1911 Countv of 0rc)n90!. St.tie ol Cdl1to1n10.
County Cler~ 01 Or.tnO\' County on Jun" CP-4St6 1'7111' upon • llld9ment rl'ltertd In l•YOr ot :it. IOI NOTICl!TOCAIOITOAS Publlsi.d Or.tf\99 Cots! Dally Pilot, DE STER REE FISCHER as tudgmtnt
FlllU
Publl1h!"1 °'"""" Co~~• Dally Pilol,
~UPERIOllCOllRTOFTHE July19,26,anc!AU9USl1,9,lt77. c rl'dltor •nd •Qoll11$I BRUCE
STATEOFCALIFORNIAll'OA 31tP7 JOHNSTOH, .... B. s JOHNSTON as
July s.,11, 19, 2~. 1q11 THECOUNTYOFOAANGE -----------·judgment debtor, •llow1119. not
'"'"·" No.A .. UJi PUBLIC NOTICE bal•f\uOfU,)l().U.tclu,.llydlH!OtH"'d
·---------r,t~I~ nl WILLIAM D lfENNEOV ----------·--! 1LHl91"' ... lonl"96'tltollllelswanceol
PUBLIC NOTICE Al\O •Mwn ... WILLIAM DUNCAN ·-~·d ••ecutloll, I IWlw• lhle<I upon all
IC F NNE ov (><·<·~··" , ..... u '"' '''"'· Utfe •11<1 lnt<tr .. I 01 •••d Ju09 NOflCl' IS HE!lEBV GIVEN to""' ,ll .. IAICHt COi/RT OI' THI mtnl debtor tn the prf)flerty •n 1hf' Coun
STATIMIHT 01' AllANOOHMl!NT c••OllO" nl IN Abo_, """'•d ~cod,.nt STATI OP CAlt~O•NIA l'Oll ly of Or•nQt!, Sl•te ot Cellfo•n•d,
011' USf 01' 11'•1 •II ~""'" n~vonq Cit"'" dgain•t THI! COUNTY 0,-OltAHOI! .S.1<robedt1 lot1ow1·
l'ICTITIOUSIUSIN1!5S NAMI '"" ~Aul ""<f"(I. t!I "" '""""M to f,le HOT I Cl No·:·~lA II 1 NO O II' Lot 111 Tr.ct SOllOf 8oolr t .. paqe,
'"" IOllOWl"lj .,.,_.. ,,.. •NNl<>Nd in.om W1ll\ '"" """'"''Y •OUClltt\ In 16 to )0 OI Mec>t In lhe Olfoce ot the llleuseolt...,fi<hloous bus1t••n n•mt 1111• """• ol '"' '"'" 01111• •t>o-. en ll'l!TITIOff l'Oll l'llOIATI! OI' WILL Or•n~C-tyRecordPr.
T VFF·COTE R OLL 01'11i11.,,courlorlo1>r•'""'">oJ"'·""""'"" ANO l'OA LfTTl!lllS TISTAMIN· Prof)tr1y oscommo"fy~now""'
'VSTEMS, *'low• 5'. CO.I• Mou, M<n••·~ 'fOUCNr~IO l~unOfrJ1Qf't'd TARY ANOAl/THORIZATION TOAD· ,.,. C•roo Street, NtWPOrl Beath.
CA '1626 •I In• ..... Olt•C• 01 PlVHt<ETT g. 1111 IN tt TI! It u" 0 I!. T .. E Cihlo•n;• Tiie Flctll~ 8 u.,n•\\ Na"'' ,,. PlUNIC ETT "l Ohv~ Av~nut P•\I INOl! .. !NOENT AOMtNISTAATION T~l/ler wllh.Jll itnd Slt!QUI•• Ill•
l•rr•fl lo 6boYt· ..,,,. 111...i on 0•""9" 011•C• Ila• ,,., Hu,,tin91on l'ltac" O,. l!STATESAtJ t~~tm•nt•. Mrtclll•m•nts and JD
C0Unly0<0Apt111 t~IS C~lltnrn,• Q)~ "'""" '',,,..PIA<• al E\lalt of IRMA H '1TCH, •O pUtll'<\•"<~ 1 ... roun10 beto..glng or in
00 1 IRMA HOUSEll Ft fCH Dfo<••MG WILLIAM N JOt-INSON, 1t.i low" ""' \\ n ,,.. """"'"ll"PO '" dll mal NOTICE IS H(ll&BY GIV(N lnal •nywl).-r1 .. n1n9
Sf .CDSla Me•• CAQ1616 '''' IM'rt""'"" I~ llW o>l•t• of '••d <11' NOTICE IS HEREBY GtVEN tf\al on
Th1st>uslneu wauondu<l•dbv•n1rt· •fl•nt. "'''"'" ''"" monln> •Iler lne WILLARO I! FITCH ""'"'""""'tin• Wlldnod•Y. AUQU•I 17, 1'71, ., 10.00 tllYIClu•I. ""tpuo••<All.,,,Oltn••no11ce. petol1onforP..,1Mltof Wlll •Adloti1 0 CIOC-. M .•• M••n Lob by
Wm, N JoM•on O~ttdJu•wo "•1 su,,no ot l.tfft•• TeS1•m.nt1ry lo Ille Cou1tllouw. 100 Cfvlc C•nt., Ot1•e
ThlSllAf1,.,..ntwa,tllPOw111"1tllCoun ROBERT A "°ENNEDY P•fflo-r end •u1horlttl1on to ad• W••t, City OI Sente Ana, C.-IY of tv Cieri! ol Or•not County on JUf\e le .Admln1U•Atnr with lM·W•ll m•nlll•r I,.. ••1•1• unci.t '"' lf'o.peft. Dr•ft9~. Sl•l•ol C•llfOrf\la, t wllt ••II •I
lt11 AM..,•dol uw f\ldleol Mf\t Admil\lllr•lfOfl Of !te.!H Jlcc '" put>ll< tuctlon to Che lll9"fft ble!Mr, tor
11'42417 tl1001>011tn4mPOd•<edent ltrt"<t lo wtllcll 1• rnltdt lor furlhe• <•sll In lltw!ul ,,_y of 1hf' United
Pubtl"'ec! Qr•n11<1 Co.l\I Delly Piiot PLUNKETT & PLUflKl!TT PMllCul,.r\. &n<l tn.it lhe ti-•f\d Ol•U Sl•IU, •1119-rlgnt, tlllt ~nd lnler.,.t ol
July S, 12.19, 26, 1911 ltll 11 'It Oil•• Avt., 8<11 JO a t h&Artng ,.,. um.. M• btt•n )•I 101 s.tld JYd9mMI <MDIO< In floe •bov•
-----------1Huntlf\q10ftllHCl',CA'2'4I Au9usl l, ""·•I 10·00 '"'·In ttw dtH•lbedP1C!)trtY,0<SOmu,h .... rtot
PUBLIC NOTICE hi: su.JOJOor S~I071 courtroom of 0.P<Hftnef\f No, l of u ld .,, m•y be nt<9t..ary lo .allsfy seld ,,_
All•rf\ty\lor A!ffnl"ltlr•IOt'CTA • court, at700 Covlt Ctnttr Drfv9 Wt1L In ecullOll. "'"" •tcr~d Jn1., .. 1 •nd
S·HlU ,.ICTtTIOUS 111/SINESS
HAMISTATIMENf
Publl•htd OtAnQ<I Co•~I D•lly Pilot, Ille Cltvot S.nM ""•·California. <o•U.
July 17, 1Q, ?b,AnAuou\12, 1•11 DttedJuly&, 1'17 D•ttcl •I 5.intt Ana, C.tlllornl•. July JOJ0·/7 WILLIAM E. SIJOllN, 11. 1'11
Tiit lotlowlltg ~''°"' .,. <IOlllQ DU•I· ,,.u n :
COuotyCi.•~ llllADGAT!S. WILLIAMV. $C .. MtOT $Nrlff.Coronor
THltfl!!SOUAltf COMPANY, t•tO
Oo•nWty,Ugv!IA QU<h, CA!lfornl• "'°"'Id A. Kelln, llU Rim of '"" , World Orlvr, Runnlnq Spron9'
CellfornlA'1"392
PUBLIC NOTICE MSatt Ml .... 1Or.,5ullel00 CoumyofOr.,ge,C•lllorl\l.t
NtWPor1 .. «fl, CA.,... By R. Tunst•ll.
S·NG" SUPERIOR COURT OF THE
U ATE OF CALIPORNJA FOlt
THECOUNTYOFOAJINOE
rti: 1110.-.am Ot«M_y
AllO<noyfor: """•-JO"Nl.,ICIMlllt
Pub•"lll>d Oran91' Co••I 0•11'1' Pllol. ll'l•lfOtllf'I Altwflty July 11. !), 19, 191/ tMHH•""lft ,.,.,,,. Wtu~rftltf\, JSOO s.>vmnur
Rote! R-"'9 Spr Ing\, CA
M•rlC WHs.rrnaf', l-.00 <.oymour
I •o.d.lt-lftCISotl"Q•(A
No A·7tt11
NOTICE 01' HEARING OF PETITION
FOlt AUTHOlltTY TO EXICUTI
LfASI
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tlli1 tllnlMn h Condu<"lt'd by '"' ""
lf'l<orDOrtced .tt-••tlon al""' ln•n •
O•rtn•rSJ\•P
ron'"'"-''"''"ID ,, •~ E .. 1...r~ of S.-..0'• RUTHC AHOl'ltSON Co1,.erv1tr• Sl/PllltOftCOUllTOl'f"I ~·orice ,., HfAE8V OtVfN , .... , STAT! OF CALIPOllNIA ,.o. I •onal(IA K•l•f\ fhf\ Sltl-f'I WO f1I..., With I,... r P OC IC flt NATIO"IAL 8 AH IC THICOUNTYOl'OltANOE WHlfNEV BROWN e11<1 ICINGSLEY NO.A·tl™ County Cl1trk of 0r""99 County on Jun• HOEGSTEDT ,...,. 11190 n•rtln • pel HOTICf OP HIAAINOO~ Pl!TITION
11'11'11 l•on lor P!otoll"'l lor Aut,,.,nfy to E.. FOii .. ltOIATI! 01' WILi. ANO ,.011
)), 1917
ll'uDllSllPd Ora-(O<l,I Dolly Pllol, Nul• Lr~-. ref~,.nc., lo w~icl"I •\ LETTI AS TESTAMINTAltY AHO Ju,,.H,aftdJ11ly~, t1 It ttll ,,, ... dt IOI' '"'1""1 Do'lrttcuters And thdl FOlll Al/THOlllZATION TO AO 'llO' 11 ,,,. ,,,,,. -Pl/Kt' at ,,..,,!\Q ,,.. UmF NI ' N I s T I! • II N 0 f • T H I
----------11.,, 1>011 Vt tor July"· .. ,, •I q 00 INO.,.IHOl!"IT AOMINtn•ATION
11"', 1n '""courtroom ol O.oartn-.nt O,. l!STATIS ACT
No l 01 .. ld ca.m , ~I 1(]0CIW!c Cenl•• E•t•tt ol EDWA.110 F CRAIG.
Orlvt Wf"\t, '" ti.. Clly ol !>an1e Ana, D•<tu.O,
$-t$tU C•llle>rnta. NOflCE IS HEAE&V GIVEN Ill.II
.. ICTITIOUS IUSINESS D•ttdJ~vl, 1917. STEVEN EOWAltD CRAIG htt lllff
NAME STATIMENT WILLIAM f ,SCJOHN, \ MrtHI• Dellllonlor Pt'ONleOIWllltnd
Tne lotlowlng oe•J0<1• 41re dol"9 DUJI· County Clerll •o• lttters T .. t•m•nlftf'y •11c1 10' MUH: 11.l!AT J.5Mll'l'IELO•"" Autl'IOrltalkltl lo tclmlnltltl' undtr 1,,.
! VTOP C0., 13612 VerrtUMo ftty, JAMIU I . l<INORICI< ff\dtpertOlflt AdnllnltlrtllOI\ of l•tllts J L89u"•Nltuel.C3lltornlHHl1 ~Hfll"11,..lllV"tl.1_SulJ•IUO Ari. ftleft11te to wllt<fl '' m..,_ tor
l Mtrtt W<1ssermon, 3.\00 Seymour Lo' .A,...lw, CA. -10 turtlltr Ptf'll<uttn • ...e IMI lhe time i...a, Running SO<lflg~. CA AllorrMra IWr ... 1111-al\f otace ol ,,._,lnq IM WIN 11•5 bten
• Mitfl•tl Allf)OO<I, JSOO Sl'yrl\OU• Puhllthod Or~ Co.ISi O•llv Piiot, s•l lor AU911sl 1, ttlJ, ., 10:00 •. m., In
I RNd, RUM11lQSprlng•, CA. July 11. It, 1•11 JOt7·'1 '"' courtr_,, Of O.i..irl-nt folo. l ol
Nt••k W.uerm.n, JJOO Stv,,.our ·'------------1ut0 court. 11100 CMc CIMttr 0;1w
,RNtt,•Uftf'llfl0$fiflnvs,CA. PUBLIC NOTICE wu1, 1ri lhe tfly 01 u111e A"•· 1. Tiiis tlutlfttu 11 c.Ol\du<ttd by"" un. C•lllOft'llt.
"11\CO•llOfllltd -·••Ion ollltr 111•11 ' -O•IHJlllyt. tm llf'1Mnhlp Wlll.IAM f . SIJOttft, ~w., .. ,..,.., °""'tYClt•fl
Tlllt tltl-11t wat lflecj 'llfitl! IN MITCMIU. 6Mt'l'CHfl.L
Cou111v Citn<olOr~ County o"Ju"" J.lt.MITOlll'-IMMI
'l, "11, OAVIO L. l'llltCI
PUBLIC NOTICE
..,,.,. ..... t ...... """ 0 ~-11.i.t <>~Co.st D~lly 'Hot, UOtWllllll,.lt-.,
11/w 2', llf'ld Jul\' S, It, tt, "11 U• .......... CA. ... ,, ""-" ... ,,....t._ ,_.___________ ~UbllsNd OrM191 GH" OAll¥ l'lte4,
PUBUC NOTICE July 12. I~ It, ftf)
JOll 17
ll•1t H11f1. C.. •MOI
Publl"*' Oo'tn9P eo.u O•llY Piiot,
July l't,,. ....,AU9Ultt. "11 lOJl.11
PUBLIC NOTICE
tl' ... 11
SUPIAIOlt COURT O,THf
STUeOllCAl.tPOltNIA l'Olt
THI COUNTY O"OllAMOE
H9.MIMt
H 0 TI Cl 0 ~ H E A It IN 0 0 F
l'llTITION llOll PR08ATE 0" WILL
ANO fl'Olt l.lfTfllS TUTAMEN·
TAR.,. ANOAUTHOltllJtTIOH TOAO-
MI HIS 1' IR UNOllt THE
fHOl .. INOffNT AC)MIN"TRATIOH
Ofl II TATIS ACT
EUtte of l'R!Ol!RICI( NA THEN
WATl!ltS, Ot<'NNCI.
NOTICf ,, HEReev GIVEN thal
OOISSA WAflillS, •U OllSStE
'f'A TERS, htt llledllt,.ln• petition for
-...Ml• OI Wiii...., '°''"'*"''Of Ltt· It" hsltmttOl"Y IOIM P•llllon•r•nd
oulnOO'lr•tlon to ltdmll\lller the f>llate
...,.dtr tM lndtpef\dent Admlnftlrttlon
of Etl•lts Att rel•n-• to wnlclt h
r'nt<lf' !or l"f1her ptrU<utars • .tnd lhat 1,,.11~ atld pltct Ol flt•rtflO 1ne S<tme
~· bttt't Mt lor At19Utl t, ltl7, ti 10:00 •.m .. In IN ,_,._•I O.p.trtrnent
N•, 1 ol Mid etvrl. .. 700 CMc Ctl\l~r
Orlv• W..1, Ill IN City 01 knt• At1•.
C.lll6rnl.t.
OttedJvly IS, lt11.
Wlll.IAMI. SIJOHN,
Celiftly Clt•k
COOICHY,COUMAHI
HOWAllD, tNC.
"'" •• ,,,,. .... West ..... ''"'"'· "',,.. Ttr: 11141 tn-W• Anw~ ..,. """*-l'~llWld ~,,.,,. CMll Deity l'llol.
------------• ·""' ,.,,.."'"" JIJ1-77 PUBUC NOTICE P1)~UC NO'l'ICE
T..-<Sex, July 19, 19n DAILY PILOT @§
Ex-chauVinist Relents
India's Prime Minister Raps 'Stronger' Man
From AP Dlspatchet
Prime Minister MorarJI De.al of Ind.la shed
some of hia male chauvlnisl lmaic when be urged
aodal workers to help diapcl lhe old idea thal
women are "lhe woaker sex.'' .
Such thlnklne. Deaal sa.ld, "la totally wroni. t
do not know how thQ men arrogated to themselves
·that they were the stronger sex."
Desai, 81, aroused female ire around the world
when he recently criticized the performances of
women prime ministers In Sn Lanka. Israel and Jn.
d.ia. He also said that Britain Conservative leader
Margaret Thatcher would be the same if sbe
bee ame prime minlster. • The will of actor Stephen Boyd has been ad·
milted to probate, leavma $10,000 lo property and
possessions to the late actor's wife and a broOter
and sister in Ireland .
When Boyd made out his will in 1967, be left the
Teanuter Fund
Tax Woes Hit
Union Again
WASHINGTON (AP) -The troubled
Teamsters Union Central States Pension Fund
might again lose its ta x exempt status if past ir·
regularilie~ are not corrected, the Internal
Revenue Service sajd today.
"If there is any indi~ation that proaress is not
being made, revocation ii one of the possibilities,"
Charles Miriani, Chicago district director of the
IRS, told a House subcommittee. However, assis·
tanl IRS commissioner Elvin D. Lurie noted the
agency Is "saliafied that good progress is being
made" In correcting abuses.
The fund lost lts tax exempt status on June 25,
1976. In a letter lo the fund explaining its dedsion,
the IRS said the fund was "not operated for the ex·
elusive benefit of the beneficiaries."
Goft!r11~t DW•ol1'ed
SALISBURY, Rhodesia CAP) -Prime
Minister Ian Smith has dissolved parliament and
called national elections for Aug. 31. He thereby
signaled the start of a new personal campaign to
end Rhodesia's racial ( l waronhlsownterms, IN SHORT Smith said in his an·
nouncement Monday
.-night he did not expect
any success from the cur·
rent U.S.·Brltish peace effort. He said that with the
backing of the electorate -almoat all white -he
would join with black Rhodesians "prepared to
work peacefully and constituUonally with the gov·
ernment" to draw up a new constitution by the end
of the year.
Sellate Oppo.a •1 r..a
WASHINGTON CA P> -President Carter's de·
claion to stop production or the Bl bomber ii; win·
ning congressional support. The Senate voted 56 to
39 Monday to delete $1.4 billion in Bl production
funds Crom a pending Slll billion defense ap·
propriation bill.
money lo a friend, Elizabeth MUlt, now 65, whom he
hlter married. "
The actor d.led June 2 Qt qe '8. • Oada PruetaeJ, the 56-year-old mother of the
late comedian Frflddle Prime, aald sho
that her son's death waa an acc1·
dent and not suicide as a coroner
ruled .
And the Puerto Rican-born
Mrs. PruetzeJ. who appeared ut
a news conference dressed In
black. announced in heavily St'·
cenled English that 11he plaM lo
write a book wh~ch "will raclual·
ly set forth the lrue cause of
Freddie's death and will also al·
tern pl to reach out to youni: peo· ,••HZ•
pie, like Freddie, wbo are presently seeka.ng a show
bu1inesa career. ·
"He was cryine for help and no one would listen
.Freddie couldn't dlslioiuish his lriend! from
other people," she said. • President Carter's brother, Biily, will judee a
bellyflop and cannonball-diving contest In Van"';
couver July 23, the event's sponsors announced. . -
Billy Carter will be one of four judges at t~
thlrd annual Bellyflop
and Cannonball·Dlvlng ( J World Championship, at PEOPLE
the Vancouver Airport
Inn, said Thomas R. ---------
Buller, the public rela·
lions man who invented the contest a few years ago
Ile said thal at Billy's request, the contract
bans disclosure of the fee being pald. ..
During long Senate debate on the neutron
bomb, supporters of the weapon argued that ~
would defer a Sovlel attack 09
Western Europe. •
CHUltc ..
Sen. Frank Church <D~
Idaho> suggested that lf the
!lussians had any common-
sense they wouldn't need 1·
neutron bomb to discourage
them.
"Who. for example. would
want to govern the French?"
asked the senator. "Even the
French ar~ hard pressed to gov·
ern the French.
"And what of the Italians? What government
with a modicum of good sense would wish upon
itself the task governing Italy?"
. ..
The state's top water officlal figured ll didn't
make ~ense for him to be urging ell Californians t.o
save water when his own home
didn't have a water meter.
So Water Resources Dire<:·
tor Koo Robje bought a meter.
and though it isn't saving him
any money under Sacramenfo's
flat.rate water fees. he reports
it's saving water.
So far, his family of four has
cut back water use about 320
gallons a day, and "l am still
trying lo get it down to less,"
Robie said.
Trials to Match
The House had approved such funding prior to
Carter's decision, but Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill
has said he will vote for deletion of Bl funds and ex· 2
pects the House action to be reversed Stable mates ·.
Jtlarilla Pr•lle Fabe ID•
WASHINGTON CAP> -The Manne Corps Is
trying to decide whether to discharge about 100
Panamanians believed to have enlisted under false
pretenses. Military officials uncovered the problem
following an lnve8tlgatlon triggered by an
anonymous letter claiming that two Panamanian
recruits at Parris Island, S.C., were Ulegal aliens
who used bogus documents to enter the service.
Records covering the last four years indicate
there are about 500 Panamanians on active duty, in·
eluding 112 at Parris Jaland, a Maril')e Corps
spokesman said Monday.
IAllJer, Bulao• Split
WASHINGTON (AJ)) -OrganJzed labor and
the business commuruty are faced off in a lobbyists'
tui·of·war over admlnistration·backed legislation
~imed at making it easier for unions to slan up new
members.
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce sounded a bat·
tle cry Monday when it denounced the proposed
labor law revision as a capitulation to organized
labor. But the president Of the AFL-CIO, promls-
inc to ti,ht tor passage of the legislation, said the
bill will only give workers the rtgbt.a they were
guaranteed 42 years ago.
L !ti. Bogd
NEWPORT. R. I. (AP) -Ted Turner in
Courageous a nd Lowell North in Enterprise match
up today in the fourth day of America's Cup ob·
serv aUon trials ln a battle of lender benders.
It wtU be the second meeting Jn the July yacht
racing series, which will help pick a boat to defend
Yankee honor for the 23rd lime tn history's oldest
continuous internalional sporting event.
IN THEIR FIRST MEETING Saturday, the
boata bumped three times and the New York Yacht
Club's protest committee ruled that Courageous
was at fault for bearing into a leeward boat and for
tacking too close.
On Monday, Enterprise and Independence.
skippered by Ted Hood. split a pa1r of races, North
winning by 2 minutes 19 seconds in the first. a
drastically shortened race In Jighl winds. and Hood
winning the second by 49 second5.
COURAGEOUS AND INDEPENDENCE a.re
stablemates owned by lbe Kings Point Syndicate.
, ~hus far. Courageous haa won 10 and Jost twice 1n trials which began in June. She is 3·1 tn the ob·
servations. North. who called Monday's races with
Independence "a skipper's duel and not indicative
or relative boat speeds." hu a 6-8 record overall
and 2·2 record In the July series.
All About St. Swithin
July lS waJ Saint Swithin's Day. Client
asks what's the significance of It. Saint
Swlthin·s Day is sort of the Ground Hog's Doy
of the holy orders. An old rhyme does: "Saint
Swlthln11 Day ll thou dost rain . . . For tort)'
days Jt will remaJn . . . Saint Swithlh'a Day tr
thou be lair . . . For forty dap 'twill rain dae
inair.'' That partlc:uJar ealnt named Swithin
waa an advtaor t.O Elbelwlr, k1na Of tbe West
Saxona. who aaw to It h• became a bllhop
around m. Al for what b• did to 111ttlt \he
caJendar recognJtJon, 1'11 bave to rtfer·YOd to
tbOlt wbo know a lot more about lt, Jn.a c1te
more. '
Jt'• claimed that women play catch better
whtn they're in a f etocloua mood. R~member
that, slr. lt your wife ts to be your brldae
partner, you're advised to do someWni to ir· rltat. her befor tb• .. me. Welt, n.ver mtnd.
Maybe your openlnlt ploy wlll serve.
FAMILIARITY BREEDS
Q. uwa.sh't it Mark Tw&In who first saJd,
'FamilJarity t>ructs contempt''.>"
A. No, Aesop 1ets earnest credit for tbat
one. Twain aaJd! "Familiarity bneds con·
tempt-and chU<lN!n."
-DAJl V PILOT Tu.day, July 19, 1W7
Rerefined Motor Oil?
New Process Conserves Dwindling Reserves
NEW YORK (AP) -lnstoad of IOh:ll up in
1moko or down the drain, your car's dlrly motor oil soon mlabt bo "rer fined" thtouab Wl envlronmen-
talJy a.ale proc~ which will bd~ con.aerve dwin· dll.D.i rt1CrV if crude oil.
"We th.Int, bued on limited economic studies, that -.e can mak~ lood quality lubricating oil from
used oU at a better prke than with virgin oil," said
C. J Thompeon, ~ chcml~t at the Encrf(y Rtsearch
and Developmt.nt Admlnhstrution's tfftiarch c.·unter •n Bartlesville. Ok Ill.
TUE CRUDE on. EVENTVAtLY SAVED by
the process could run more lhan one million autos
Alrlhte Report• Record
Golden West Airlines, Newport Beach, has an-
nounced a record of 43,187 passengers carried in
June. This accounts for a 19.08 percent increase in
growth over the same period last year.
The airline has carried 238,592 passengers year-
to·date which accounts for a 34.93 percent increase
and a load factor of 57.26 percent. Load factor for
the month was 60.63 percent.
Oxoeo to Seek OU
The government of Seychelles signed agree-
ments for oUshore oil exploration, the first in
Seychelles waters, with Oxoco, a Newport Beach oil
company, the Burmah Oil Company group and
Siebens Oil and Gas Ltd. or Calgary, Canada.
The agreements cover nearly 12,000 square
.miles in 45 blocks surrounding the cluster of
Seychelles Islands, which are in the Indian Ocean
about 1,000 miles east of Kenya.
Oxoco was awarded five blocks totaling some
l ,300 square miles.
Building• Started
Emkay Development and Realty Company,
Newport Beach, has broken ground on a 114,000-
square-foot office and warehouse complex for Zee
Medical Products at Jamboree Boulevard and
Kelvin Avenue, Irvine.
When completed next spring, it will replace
smaller facilities al 16641 Hate Ave., Irvine, which
Zee Medical has occupied since moving to Orange
County from Downey in 1973. Dell H. DeRevere and
Associates of Irvine is architect.
, . Agency Blred
, CompAlarm Systems Company, Inc., Newport
· Beach, has r etamed Estey-Hoover advertts·
ing/Public Relations, Irvine, to create corporate
collateral advertising materials and a regional
newspaper ad campaign aimed at test markets in
Orange County.
Maga:ine to Expan~ I The Executive magazine. published in Orange
County since November 1976, will begin a Los
Angeles edition to reach a combined circulation of
60,000 Southern California executives.
Publisher E.J .F . Regan said the expansion is
occurring this Call , a year earUer than originally
.. planned.
·2 Buildfng• llnder Wa11
Saffell & McAdam, Inc., Irvine. has begun con·
.struction on two buildings for Toyota's area head·
quarters and for Cally Design Research, Inc.
They are being built on 7'.4 acres in Newport
Beach. Both are due for completion in November.
Jfieredat• lleent.e• 6 ...
Microdata Corp., Irvine, has reported revenues
of $9,032,000 and net income of $532.000, or 24 cents a
ihare on 2,217,000 shares for the third quarter ended
. May31.
In the prior year's third quarter. revenues were
$8.508.000 with net income of $883,000, or 40 cents, on
2.231.000 shares.
Microdata also has introduced Reality Royale,
a new family of small business computer systems
with faster throughput, increased diagnostic
capabilities and expanded core memory storage.
Neae 9"'ner a.orted
Brubeck & Saunders, Inc .. formerly the
Brubeck Company, Newport Beach, bas announced
a new name and new owner.
New agency principal, David G. Saunders. has
. purchased all remaining stock of the Brubeck Com-
".pany from Susan Brubeck and has assumed the
,.·responslbilities of agency president and account
'manager. lie is former vice president and agency
partner.
Joining the company are creative direc~r ~onald R. Ward and account executive Jay :Pop-
:rnhusen.
lt1Uard Earning• Fall
The Willard Company, ~Mesa, has repOrt·
ed earnings of $12,296 or 3 cents a share, on re·
yenuea of $853,105 for the first quamr of um .
In the corresponding period last year, lbe com-
pany bad earninas of us.8129 or 4 centa a share, in·
eluding an extraordinary item ol $8,&00 or 2 cents a
,.share, ooaales of $808,863.
or heat 650,000 homes each year, he said.
For year, used motor oil has been collected and
rereflned. But the proceas produced an acidic
sludae which fouled waters and kllled fish near the
planta. Thompson said. Protests helped reduce the
number of rerefining
( )
firms from 150 several ENERGY years ago to about '30 ~o-
-_ day. ....________ Other factors in tbe
dramatic decrease in re·
refining. according to a spokesman for the Associa·
lion of Petroleum Re-Refiners in Washington. were
economic and legal.
••A LOT OF REREFINERS' RAW material is
being burned as fuel, and that is wasteful or a vital
resource and puts lead in the atmosphere at eK·
~ssive levels." said Duane Ekedahl.
In addition, Ekedahl said, changes in tax laws
and a requirement that rercfined oil be clearly
labeled as such hurt the industry. So more and more
used motor oil is dumped or 1s used to heat instilu·
lions such as schools or hospitals.
Industry officials say this is wasteful because
for every gallon of dirty oil that is not rerefined into
lubricating oil, a gallon of crude oil must be
drastically and expensively refined. The refining
process for motor oil uses more crude and more
energy than the process that produces heating oil.
ACCORDING TO FEDERAL FIGURES, only
about 8 percent of used motor oil is rerefined. About
43 percent Is burned, 18 percent is used to "wet
down" dusty country roads and most or the other 31
percent is either poured down storm sewers or
dumped on land.
"The stuff 1s being scattered all over the coun·
trys ide," Thompson said
But he and coworkers believe that as much as
30 percent of the used oil eventually can be
reprocessed and used as replacement oil in
vehicles. Within 10 years, one billion gallons or
lubricating oil a year could be produced through re·
refining, Thompson said.
Rerefined oil can be bought by the consumer for
25· to 35·cents per quart. Thompson estimates that
the cost of oil produced by the new process will fall
somewhere between 35 cents per quart and the cost
of virgin Oil, which ranges from about 60 cents per
quart to over $1.
"Got a problem? Then write to Pat Dunn. Pat unit
cut red tape. getting the answers and action you need
to solve inequitie.s in government and bu.smess. Mail
your questions lo Pat Dunn, At Your Sennce, Orange
Coo.st Dally Pilot. P 0 . Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA
92626. A.s many letters a.s possible will be answered,
but phoned inquine! or letters not including the
reader's full name. address and bwiness hours' phone
number cannot be considered. This column appearsda1·
lyncqil. Saturday.s. ··
1Uakin9 Laetrile Idea the Pit•
DEAR PAT: Could a person make his own
laetrile by grinding up apricol pit!> and eating them
in his food or dl'lnk?
A.A .. Costa Mesa
U cyanide poisoning is what you're looking for,
an apricot pll concocllon Is just the ticket. One case
on record reports the hospllalizallon of a California
man due to cyanide poisoning symptoms arter he
consumed a milkshake containing nearly SO apricot
kernels. Chemists define laetrile as a "cynogenic
glycoslde" because It contains cyanide that Is set
free by an enzyme present in crushed plan& tissues.
It's found in the seeds of apricots, peaches, plums
and other foods.
1t'a.dng·1t'ane• 1t'a11 Out We•t
DEAR PAT: I did a lot of home canning when I
ltved in 0hio. My specialty has always been pre-
serves and Jellies. The variety of fresh fruit availa·
ble in Soulhern Caltfornia delights me, but I've
heard that using paraHin seals Is not recommended
here. Why not? I've held off doing any canning un\il
l find out.
B.D .. Dana Point
In Southern California, where we do not have
cool basement storage areas for jelly, paramn
seals are not recommended. Use canning jars with
two-part, self-sealln1 lids. Fill hot Jars with hot jel·
ly to wltbJn about \.; inch of tops. Wipe off rim and
immediately put lld in place. When cool, remove
·screw band and test seal by pressing the center or
the lid wlth your Unger. ll sbould stay down U it's
properly selled.
:
Ccallps Otter Weight Reaction
DEAR PAT: My daughter bas a weight prob·
lem. I've heard that. there ta a camp ror weight re-
duction somewhere In San Diego. I would like to
enroll her in this type or camp, but only if the fee
isn't too steep. Can you provide some information
. about this camp?
G.W., Costa Mesa
YouJ' Inquiry came too late for enrolling your
daughter ln tb11 unlmer's program, but detailed
hlforrnatlon 1boa& the 1tveft-week weight·
nductJoe prograa at Camp Murrieta can be ob·
talbed by pboftfa' (800) 54%·'"5. or by writing to
Sportl World. Ud.1 8%45 Ronson ROid, Suite D, Saa
Diel•• CA nua. Murrieta'• medlcaJly·S11~rv•sed
profca111 COtt1 tJ,Cts. Phyldcal nt.neas 1nd 'OOd eat·
. In• 'habttl are ttrffUd at the Ualverstay ol San
Dteio loeatte111. wllh dlffereat •elglat los• plau for ,
1lrl1 ••ed &.ll aad 17·21. A llmllar PfOIJabl for
boy1&&eel8·1911 available at Camp Del Mar located
ai the ~n Oteco MUUny Acacltrny. Tuition ts
$1,HS (or WI teven·week ~am, and Inform•·
UOll 111 ava1lable Jrim thei above pboae number and addrea • ..
New-fangled Windmill
Oklahoma Slale University's '·spoke-wheel wind
turbine," 30 feet across. gets fine tuning for the start of
tests in which it is hoped it will generate five kilowatts
of electricity, twice the home's need. ·during normal
wind speeds. ·
Merger Considered
NEW YORK CAP ) -H&R Block Inc., the nation's largest tax·
preparation firm. says it is discussing merging with Century 21 Real
Estate Corp., an Irvine based franchiser of real estate brokerages.
Block said the vulue of the transaction would be at least $19
million.
Over 1.,he Counter
NASO Listlnqs
Credit
Savings
Planned
W ASHrNGTON <AP> -Mem-
ber$ ot !ederatty charteced credit
unions will be offered several
new types or aavlnis accounts
under rules proposed by" the Na·
llonal Credit Union Admini&tra·
tion.
The new accounts, for the most
part, would offer depositors a
higher return on their money
than ~t accounta.
CURRENTLY, CREDIT Wl-
ions orrer share accounts, mean-
ing that members buy shares lo
the organization and· are paid
dividends on these shares. The
new rules would also altow:
-Notice Accounts, in which a
member wou¥1 h ave to give a
90·day written notice of plans to
withdraw money Crom his ac-
cou.nt.
-A minimum-balance ac-
count available in amounts oC
$500 or less.
-SPLJT·RATE accounts with
different dividend rates on dif.
ferent portions or the balance.
with the interest increasing on
larger amounts.
-Share-Certificate Accounts,
similar to certificates of deposit
offered by some banks.
ln addition to offering the new
account types, the government is
considering allowing credit un-
ions to disclose the expected
yield on savings, rather than re-
quiring members to wait until
the end of a time period to earn
their dividend.
COMMENT ON THE proposed
ruJes is being sought by the gov-
ernment. The deadline is Sept.
20.
Write to the National Credit
Union Administration, 2025 M St.
NW. Washington, D.C .• 20456.
lip• and Do..,..
Ndmt'
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MUTUAL FUNDS
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NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS
~ .....
P r (ltd>! Ciow '"" M.-rlOllL S.10 •l 11""'···-MartiCll 11 I Cl4 21" • '' ~rley 1.60 t 1S 63' • • I 1 ~·••v wf .. ~ J•~·-··· ~rrtol UI 11 ,,. 101/H ''• MrsllM ? .01• tolO 6011'1 + "'-M•rSllF 1.1410 14 1'"·-··• Mar tM I lO 1 >'IO Jt\~ • •;, Mt ryK 4011 21 U~.._ 10.
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~ 1.11. 19 184\. ·--Mur11()11 .IO 9 ,.. 36~-'>
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NLT .14 8 2S2 2S'14-V. NVF 2 ASI 6 92 •~ • ~ ..
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"IE"!IT 2 60 'I 21 34VI + •1. NYSEG 1.60 9 146 19"-V.
NYSP! !.7S -• 140 ••'"> ~ 1'1 ~VU!112:U io ~ m: ! ~ Ne"""t I.Ml IS 127 23\lo + '!It ~lat 4.50.. I 74 -I M"aMJ> t.J.110 140 17 ---• -NtaMc>f 3.«J. -VO 3Wt .... . Nl""°'Clf U0 .• 1240 '6 .... . NltMc>I S.25. -llO S,,,.,_ >i. NlMc>I II.IS.. dO 1201/r-1>'1
Nl9QSll .97e .. 10 11 + •1. Nl<Or 2.32 I •7 ll + ''o ~Uh~ m:.:::
l'tor11r> 1.40 • 22 2l -"" ,.,,,,, ' • 7J ~-•.•.
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:mr1.so·1 ~ 3f:~:.:. . ._
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NwtEnt l 20 1 16 .tl1• 1 '• NwEn <17 20 1 I ., Nwllncl 1 llS 1 11• SP>+ 1 t
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OhlEOp4 U4 .• 1?SO S?...,-~"
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Ohfelpl '"'-· 110 101'•. ·-· 0.Ef)I 10 • .a .. rtlO 1u1·,.. '> OllE pf .!e 16.. l10 1141~-y, '8::=a.::: ~ u:t:~~
C>PoopfF 1" •• r•20 IJI .. ·~. OUeGE l..S 10 •11 11~-·-·. Qt.leNG 2 I 6S J7'\ + V. Q 1n(41 I.SO 6 11 '1~+ '~ Ollrtltril I 10 9 1n ~+ .. °""" k • ,, • 56 Otwlda ... I 1• ti ,.
M 38 JI
ACA
RCA Pl •. RTE 781'
R•l•Pur .40 12 Ram•O .~16 Aanco1n .80 9
Rapid.Am 3 AapA pf 2 7~ _ RapApl J
Aayl>I 1 50!> 6 Raymno 118 8
RaylM 10 RUGBal .IO I R•dman S Ruc~Cp ./IO 8 A•evse 1,44 6 R•oOICh , II 9 RellabSI .68 8
Rtll\EI 1.2011 R•IElpl J . R•ll6n<i9 S RelGp~ 120. Rpl(ipf 1.00 ..
Rel In pl 1.68. ~~~~~;f 1 ~ RPPMIQ .
R•PSll I 6010 RrpTu 1 20 a
R•vvOll 10 11 R~vcoOS .010
R••Me 1~ R<vlon l 14 Rut>•m .so a R••rtrd I 44 1 RHnpl 1 l6
R•vnt" J 79 • Rt yin pf US.
R•VM•11.20 I R~vnS. .co. 'I
R•Cll(O I I> Rlthl'tlf .111 t ~::~1aft1.~ ~
R•oGrpf 80 RllPAld .3110
Rol!\hw I IO 10 Robrtsn l SO I Robt~ 11 ' Roct>G 1.40 I Roc>ITI I I Roc•owr .16 S Roow1 110 I Rklntpf •IS .• ~~~';,\~1 :.~i1
RC>flrlnd Rolllns .!011 R~ton II Aoper t.40 J
Aor•r .6012 Rosario • .ob 12
Rowen .1211 RoyCC:OI .to 8 AoylO 4.0lt S Aubb(m .6012
....
Tueed!y. July 19. um N DAILY PILOT' 8 7
SuspicioU. Rise
I ab el Hints
Help Buyers
By SYLVIA PORTER
Wben a f amlliar product rel\11arly suddenly appears on
the supermarket ~elf wtLh a face UCt (Q newly shaped bol·
tie, a revamped label), most buyers suspect the change as
merely another excuse to raise the price.
On glamor products pa rticularly. such as cosm etics, a
newly designed package often may be no more than a lure.
But on staple items, this is rarely the only reason. because
the altered packaging may be too costly to the manufac-
turer and may price him oub of the m arket. say Richard
Gerstman. aod Uerbert Meyers, packa~e designers who
head a New York·based firm carrying lheU" names.
RATREB. A BEASON FOR THE change may be that
the company needs a1alee increase, and a new eye-catching
container may help tbe product stand out from its com-
petitors on the shelf. No manufacturer wants to see bis pro-
duct upstaged on the shelf.
_ A "graphic" change involving colors and printing de-
sign may enhance tts eye appeal and help the maker im-
prove the product label.
Or a newly opening market may dictate an alteration
in packaging. Talcum
powder with a picture of
mother and baby m ay
appeal to Q'lothers, but if
athletes are big users of
talcum as well, a re·
designed package is
called for.
Money's
Worth
A graphic change in packaging is basically for eye 'ap-
peal. A "structural" change may be to cut manufacturing
costs so retail prices can be maintained c$t even reduced. As
an example, a metal spout can be changed to paperboarCI or
eliminated entirely. These guidelines can help buyer1'un-
derstand packaee design:
Q. HOW CAN YOU PICK OUT deceptive packaging?
A. When lt fools you Into thinking you're getting rm>re
for your money than you're actually getting. A package
enclosing an inner package may be to protect lhe contents
or may be deceptive. Beautiful illustrations that mislead
you are illegal but they are still around.
Q. How can you tell overpriced packaging?
A. If an identical product in a simpler package sells for
less. the higher-priced item is overpackaged. Cosmetics
may be super-packaged as a matter of course, say
Gerstman and Meyers, but some Items that seem to be over-
packaged may be so designed to protect the contenls.
Q. WJUCH.IS BEST-A GLASS jar, can or a wa:iced
container?
A. Glass Is usually more expensive but it also Is reu.sa·
ble, recloseable and transparent. Plastic may be cheaper
and is light-weight a nd unbreakable. Cans or waxed e<>n-~aiJlers for frozen products or liquids may be cheapest. •
Q. What does "new" or "Improved" on a label mean?
A. That the product formulation has been changed, And
the word "new" can remain on the package for only a six
m onth period in the retail st.ore. A design change may be
called a "more convenient package" or some variaUon or
this.
StDcks Move Ahead .
In Heavy Trading
NEW YORK (AP)-Thestock market pushed ahead' in
heavy trading today in an advance paced by depressed blue-
chip and glamor issues.
The Dow Jones averageof30lndustriats, which bad risen
8.67 poipts in two previoua aesalons, was up another 6.85 to
919.27. I .
Gainers held an 8-5 lea,d over losers among New York
Stock Exchange-listed issues.
,~:,welt"' IAPI FINI oOw·Joflft •veraots
lO Ind t1~ n~'l' ~':' f~ .. f3 10 Trn 137.Jt 240.07 21''12 2a's1. 2'09 IS VII 111.$1 111.61 111:20 111:n+ 0:61 ~~Jsk 311.lt 31S.IO Jlt.lS J IUJ+ U7 tran -....... , ............ ?.OU.too
Ullls 1.171.)00
•s Silt _ _-_-_,'_;_': __ ·: ::.:.:::.' 4,t~:=
A ..erlcan Le aden
Vp• and Do1011•
NlW VO.-IC (.&Pl ~v Today N Y •» t.)11 Sll 5)()
•1'1 •-U 1m l'llll ISi 131 2'I J8
ULES
Due to late transmission
today's llstlng wlll not
appear rn the Dally Pilot.
Prev. Toclfy 0,., ]JI 31• ,.. ,,.
312 3,, ... 919 SS •1 l2 I
AM•IC IAUS
~-Pl'OW flr>af totll .. • • .. • ----• , .. 3, IMl,UIO toe• Nlti ~ ,... ...... _ ..... 1,4l6,0S
•-OJI flNI boftd •••••••••••••• $1,~,QQO 8'nt ..... ..., ................ "'9.000
NEW YORI( IAPl -1"' ... lowlno lllt
$1\0WS ll'le HflW Yortl Mock l!.C'*'Vll stCK~$ •rid -r1111s !Nit lle'lt oo-. Ull ,,,. most encl dOw'fl Ille "'"1 b6MO Ill\
per<tfll Of Cl\enOt f99AfdlHS Qt VOll#N lor T\ll!SdeY,
No wcurlll<ts trlolltna befow $2 tf't lftcl• J----------------UO.d. Net ilf'd -ctnfto-<'*'9tt -tllt
Cliff..-. bit~ IN ~ '!Qtl"' prtc:e •Ml _.,.., 4 '·"'· ~l<t. u.-. lAst ~ • 3" ., s .. 'l~ : '" . , ....
' + ·~ ~ I =
S•oru I• The s,,.,,.,,,.,
_.,.._..,._.._ .. .. ... .. .... .. .,,,.,,. -..... . ' ......
•
DAILY PILOT Tuelda , Jul 18, 1977 ,
Teen Thugs Shown What 'Prison's lt~ily .tike
WOOOBRlOGE. If. J. <AP> -
Twenty tefn·aa• deltnquentl
s trutted tnto 1\ahway Statt!
Prlaon lo learn about lnc:arcore
\&on from lnm•l• •ervln, ur.
'erm1. Ali. lU'ff Jtoora, the y~tbs walked ou& U•tdb'. some
abakh\I and near...,.•.
"I'm 45 years tld aow and l
know l 'm n.ev« &oiDI to aaa the
streets aaaln," a convicted
murderer aervint a term ot 31 to
Sl years told the youths. "We're
all dyln& to &e't out and you guys
ure poundlna on the doors, say.
Ing ,· Let us in."'
The Juvenile Awar eness Pro-
1ra m wu 1tarted h ere In
O.cember 19T5 by inmates serv·
1n1 Ute term• or ientences over n years lO let Juvenile offenders
know, in the vilest of street
tan1uage, just what prison is
aboul
Recent participants in the prC>4 happens all the time here. And
gram, including sevffal l4-ye&r4 you little punks are fresh tneat,"
olds with tattoos on their arms. the conVicted murdeter told the
had minor acratpes with the law, youths.
ranging from bl'eak-ln!il to ·' The 'message began to sinJs in
shoplifting and assault. Then as the boys quickly stopped
came by bus from a litate-run 1 fldgeti#lg in their chalrs when
juvenile shelter in upstate New other t•Hrers" poked them in the
York. ribs.
.. The Hollywood imag_e of. "I've been in here for 16 years
prison doesn't tell you abqu( and you guyJS can't :llt still for a
gang rapes and suicides. That couple of hours. If you're going to •
,,
ere's more ·to c
•
aow-
j1JStpic
t>e criminals, you better get used
lo,someJ>{l., telUngyo,u what ~o do
all tbe fl rile, '1 • kldnaper tolctthe
boys.
The youths frequenlly are
thr eatene d with physical
violence during the sessions but
are never hurt, said Sgt. Alan
A~~~tl-'prlao,n !~isOQ to Ule
lifer-' oup. • ·
"P . ls no pl co.le bµt we try
to make it seem even worse than
lt le to sc~e these ktds into
atrliiJhlening out." August told
report~.
· The lifers program is con·
sidered a major success, August
said.
"We try to keep track ot the
kid• who've been throuab the
proiram and only a few of UlMa rot Into trouble again.~
,,. .
. . . .,
. '•
,,.
_ ___,/
CJ• DAil '( PILOT f.-.tav J .... 18 ''" ... ......_ I .----...;;;.;.;.;.;:;......;..:.;~-------~:==u=;;:.u.1.:;u::.:.2L.:.::.:..' ~ -•· Mported '· IMported Autos, Imported AMtos. UMCI , Und • U1n ~yclet/ 4Wheel0rtYe1 t lSO ...._W.ttd t S90 ••••••••••••• .. •••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••"'••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••-••••••••••••••••
Scu teu 9 llO .............................................. Cltrottl 9 7 16 Men:edesa.trl 9 740 RoHiRoyu 9756 Well t ttO Cac...._nt.. 9930 Olckl'RObiM 9955 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •uc ... WIWl11 IUY ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ........................ . ~ ·~ ~ • ui k •••••••••••••••••••••••
Yaruha IO Trallblke
lJ7S Model Llke new
UH C•ll Ut· llH
8elWHll MM 6 lf'M
--~-
74HllDA Cl208
Uke aatw, 941ver UMd. de
I wee wlndalueld. roll bar,
r•C'lr •nd bal'llt cmhlonl t.-oat over $1000, wlll 1eJ
l«f100.
• t .. c --""t· YOUIDATSUM '73 SM. Jmm•c C'()nd. Lo '76MIZOOSIL CONCA.NNON'S 811 B c Electra. Runi '73 MARK IV, loaded. ACLASSJC!-"
-• mUea, le1tlh lntr. full f\tlly eql.lipped & In mint aood. '350. Xlnt. cond. Pric~ for •69 "2 Convertlbte. Xlnt
W!:Otrn\F.LLALL PA.lDPOBORN()'J' pwr. Auto tral\8. $6800. condlUon. Must seet HOR~ELISS Ca.11642>036t sate.m.9J.M ~ ... lo mt . ., __ to•""' J~Poti:ALERS TOPDOUAl 544.31129 ST ILes '"'""" ~ .. ~ l,.TBESTATY. .OltOftCA.lS <CXl6RCQ). 5 74L.ESABRELUXUS 9 CcaUnental .Mark UJ. preciat4'.$1500.f'1~7$9 .
HUCH IHVBilTOIY l~WICl(DATSUM ~ ............ !?~~ •74M1i4"5osL =~rs ot nne contem-= ~dtt~P~~i::e xlot cood, all xtras. DIDYOUICMOW
All Medell Mew• Us.id San Juan Capistrano Luxury equipped, low ROI,I.S-ROYCE Party. Jrl:iOO/Olr. 673·7525 That you cu leaae a l•le U~·\~· .. •~•.ble I Sl·U71 49J.JJ75 DllV! A miles & priced to sell. BSNTLEY POSU'T 1 'il6 L1ru:oln Conv. All op-model used Mercedea _,..,.... LllTLE (886KXY). automobiles. lions, orig, invoice & Benz for about &he same
.WC ,,._ WE BUY ••• 2111 I:. Co>Jt Hwy BEA UT. 191 ~ 8 ul c ~ IE::· Good cood. month\y cost ., a new ~HARBORBLVD. SAVEALOT '72 Ml'IZIOCOllpe (114)671~ Regal.Air,st.ereo.V-ti>p, $1.500.494-8917 Olevy,OldsotCadUlac?
Coat.a Me.a ,.MOii Q.IAHCAIS SHOP&COMPARE Loaded, low miles & in Toyota 9765 xtnt.cond.$.1500.~S838 9932
ta-1437___ '71 Bluff 4 apd, low
'74 Bul Purnnc.360. 25 hn mlJ.ee10. air cond,
00 bake, (1('11)' $400. Ooug. 67~ 3217
&TIUCM'S IAltWtCKDATSUH excellent condition. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Coclloc 9915 •••••••••••• .. •••••••••I, ........ .
SanJuanCapistrano (689GWG). '72CoronaMarkU.Great•••••••••••••;••••••••• 11
CONN Ill
CllMOLET
any ot er >"'I Z s n 67>9628. 673·7298 8 3 M375 493.3375 M h ,..8 , i cond. $1395. it
'
stock ... good selection!
l\ll'Wltlilll ;1•1Ull 1977TOYOTA · '7'1 Cutlus Supreme -···F0~··-1·r··H·a 1·i:i·5·T··-Corolla Uftback 1974.CADILLA Brougham. 2 dr, blk, full
~bt:fore6. ----Trwb fHO
VESPA 90 CC. ne*. 2 mOI ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2828 Harbor Blvd.
old Sliln or ~st offer. If 7' DATSUH ~0678 ~Plcllllp
COSTA Mt.5A
54'-IZOO
'" A real beaut)' In blue, COUM DIYIW pwr, air, cruise contrQJ, FLEET PRICES a.utomatic, bucket seals, CabrioleQ.top, tilt wheeJ, stereo. xtras, immac,
'76 HONDA 250XL, perf 4 gpe~, radJo, hHter,
l'Ond $100. Alk for Bill. spech1l stripes 4' rear
l>ays 673-4670, eves bumper. A super truck
WE PAY TOP DOLLAR
FOR TOP USED CA RS f'OR'EIGN, DOMESTIC
or CLASSICS
C aU J im MH cllam tinted glaaa & more! cnise control. AM/FM 3900 mi, must sell $7l00. TODAY! UGH \068SMC). stereo wWt tape player. ____ ;..;.;;;.. __ ..::.::..;~~1 _55&-4233 _______ _
888DOVESTREET .. __ ..... _..... $SAVE NOW s (496KZ1).-'67 VETTE Pt.to 9957
Near MacArthur OVa ~00 ~ --~ $5'595 $7SOOP'1nn 49641311 ••••••••-.;•;•:••••••••• 496-7561 with leu lhan 9,00
MDfor'HM9s.S./ -••t/StcMOCJt •t 60 •••••••••••••••••••••••
&ntZl' FIREBALL. S/C,
loads of Windows 4&
counter space. 64S·2283
SO.CAUF'S
LARGEST
fleet of "New" Motor
Home Rentals. Over 140
19T7 models to choose
from; 18'lo32'.
miles. <U>7SUO)
HURRY NOW!
COSTA MESA
DA TSU.,.
U your car is extra clean
hee wi first.
IAUStlUICI<
2!r2:5 llarbot Blvd.
&JamboreeRoads MERCEDES a3J.1300 Nabers ~ t93l D. speHer OM DISPLAY 284SHARBOR BLVD. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4301/2 legoMG
TOP BUYER HouH of Imports 540.6410540..0213 1974 MERCURY CdM
See us first. & last! Top AUTilORIZtD Cadillac COUGAR Youarethewinner
284S HARBOR BLVD. dollar paid for imparts. MERCEDES DEALER '74 Celjca. Auto., 30,000 -Automatic, pwr. steering or 2tickets to
Coeta Mesa 97$-2500
5
.... ~ COSTA MESA 6862Manchester, mi. Extras! New tires. 2600 H,1rbor Blvtl. +brakes, radio, beater, WOllLDTEAM
40.6410 540.0213 --.. IMport•d DATSU~ Buena Park Xlnt cond:840·1'82 Co•ta Mes·· 540·9 I 00 vinyl roof & many more ••••••••••••••••••••••• " , .. TEMHIS 'ti6 l Ton Ste~Van. w/'73 G.....-al 9701 284SHarborBlvd. 523-7250 Triumph 9767 extras. (412KHP>. E2 GOLDEN GATE
eng. Windows. Xlnt cond~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Costa Mesa 540.6410 On the Santa Ana Fwy. •••••••••••••••• •• ••••• l.enns·O.A.C. 1 yr. parts VS •
SANDfEGO Many xtras. 645·3269; * * * ----------1 1976 TRIUMPH 1970 Cad CdV. Vinyl top, &av~~bor. service .policy 646-7008 1976 Datsun 280Z. air, '67 2505. Orig. owner. Air, facto'"" • 1·r PIS P IB ""
W .Preston AM/FM stereo cassette. P/W, stereo tape.. TR7 '6-wa'.J P/Seals: gold OMLY $3195 STOP 432 Enwrdd Bay silver. l'USt int.. 831-3967 Bst/ofr. 7!4-626-3344 With AM/FM stereo + leather Interior. good MAIERS
DOM'TIUYTHAT . LOCJ"Mlleach ·76 8210 Htchbck. new '712.80SE3.5Coupe,sun· tape. air con\). & only radial tires . 72,000 AUTOCEHTEJI
at the ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
CENTER
July 28, 1977 .....EWTRUCK Youare\hewmner roor, lealh int. AM/FM 14 ,00 ~ m,iles. Im -original °'iles. Runs 1425BakerSt CM ...,. of2licketsto tires . Xlnl cond. stereo,air,concourscon-macu ate thruout! great! $184>0, 870·4~4 5,.0910.,9 ..
·---------'buy my 1956 Big window WORLDT., ... M $2900/bst. P/P498·3504 <181PQQ>. Thiswt;ek. \f\tllertou). , • ·-~ d .. low mi. $16,000. Pvt o· ..... LY $5395 '72 Wlnnebac)o Ford pick· up . Im · TENNIS '69 DATSUN 4 dr, 4 spd ply. 544-7591 eves. " .70 CAD. Good cond. 1 ~ 9935
Insurance included
Dale·s RV Rentals, Inc.
(714 )559·4446 Call 64Z-S67f, ext. 333, to
chum your tickets.
*** Motorbome. Low mi's. maculate with n ew w/reblt. eng. Must sell MARQUIS TOYOTA ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------Many xtras. Xlnt cond engine. brakes. wining GOLDEN GATE $800/best ofr. 646.956() 1976 300 DfESEL. Lo MlSSION VIEJO Owner. Med mileage. ·73 Charger. Xlnt cond. Moving-Must sell '73 Pin·
etc. 289, C4. This truck vs mileage.$13.800 8 3 1·2880 ,.95-1210 Asking$1900.675-3675. $1500 c'ash take over lo Runabout. 1 Owner.
___ c_a_l_l64_6-_90_7_6 __ ~1 can only appreciat.e in SAN DIEGO '73 610 STA. Wgn. AIC. Call-640-0236 , Camaro 9917 pyints.S46·71llaft5 34,SOO_mi's. Xlnt CO!'d.
R.V. STORAGE OCIR. 75< value. S37.'JO er offer, AN~~IM roof rack. lo mi, cln car. SA '76 TR-7. Loaded. Xlnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• New tires. $1700. Dunng J)er ft per mo. Compl must see to appreciate. CONVENTION New wiring, hoses. etc. VE $2,000 ,77 cond. 7000 mi. S579S. '70 Camaro, Good condi· Classic '57 Dodge, leaving working hrs 551·'1310,
s c r v i c c d e p t 673-4266 Eves. CENTER :,~.~~ B . B . $2 5 5 0. ~~ oi!:r/~, sz~'PM PG Marsellus. bus: 546·"300, tion. New eng. $1995. ~831ust ~~· She· La eves/wknds 552-4436.
m4>s75-t290 ·u ~~Ton Chevy PU, de· July 28, 1977 clas~y m:ta"llic gold: hm: 833·2STS 675-9171 ' '73 Pinto Squire Wagon.
WANTED, GMC motor luxe camper SR9Cial. Call 00·5678. ext. 333. to '75 280Z 4-spd, air, mags. w.bilc inter. Loaded! VoltsWCICJfft 9770 Z-2SCam-ro. Oberry 1971 Super Sbar~ '7S Dodge Good cond. Dlx intr. 1
home to rent Aug 15 to loaded w/sll xtras claimyourtkkets. AM ·FM stereo tape. Slereo.$15,950.675·7771 •••••••••••••h•••••••• w/special cam & heads Colt. low nuleage $2650. owner. $1Q15Jf Call eves
t.hru0ctl5Call644·7438 546·0G69 days, 631·39MI * * * Sharp . Mu s t sel l. vw • 8 p · 640-1812 646-3531 '\ '70 250C. MERCEDES 73 us. 1 vt owner. many extras. $3195 . ---------• eves Ask for Mike ----------'~ $5400/bst ofr. 675-0432 or Xt 1 Trailen, Travel 9170 332.2759 SSOOO. Private party ra c ean. 9 Pass. R&H, 54J.6JS5. • . 9940 '7S Wagon. V-6, P/S~ P /B,
••••••••••••••••••••••• '73 TOYO'rA Hilux 56000 * * * ---------t CalJ675-8911 auto, a ir, new tires. Chevrolef 9920 Ford auto, just tuned, nu
2t' Traveleze trlr. Like mi., $1005. Firm. Dorci Gr•-woo..11 '72 Datsun, runs perfect. ---------1 49:t·3S66. ••••••••••••••••••••••• tires/brks. Gd cond.
f 4992373eves .... u Nace s hape in & oul. '74 MBZ 280. Fully• •.•••••••••••••••••••••• .,.'°00 2137486-1 dys new. Lots o extras & '73 . . 27141 Manzano $1395. 6"2·2072 equipped. lvorv/saddle 73 DELU~E Bus. _gd. 63 Chevy Nova, wagon. ~-PHIL 645.ocniev~s .. ...,, •
Jeep W~goneer. Very 62 Chevy ~4 Ton truck 283 Mission Viejo mtr S8SOO cai"l 675-ISJO con~ .. 10 mt., new Mich. Good trans. car. New LONG
clean. will sell together eng, good shape. S895 or Youarethcwinnerof '71 510 Wagon. Auto. cv i.6J3.m3dys radials. S3400. 646-7524 brakes.548-4116.$290. 1972Pinto.S99S.
or separate. 556-867_4 __ best. 548·8531, Mike two free tickets 50,000 mi. clean. $1650. --· --aft 6PM , A ORD Good Condition.
"I' S rt 1' I ISi" 00 I > t 644·6530 MG 97.e2 75 MONZ 2+2, 4 cyl, .,...,0960 ' ~ sm11ster ~av_e l970 Datsun PIU w/shell. "· va ue . o , '75 VW Bug. }uel inj, new air. S3250. .,....,..
T_rlr. sic. sips 6, E·Z ~1ft 8 trk. A Ml FM. xtras. RincJllncJ Bros. I ,77 DATSUM ••••••••••••••••••••••• tires. $2400 646-2338
lutch, lan~cm axle. side $1450 firm. 549-0433 • ......,. & Bailey 280 Z ·75 Mid gel w I carria ge Call 496·0460
'72 Pinto. Auto, 8 track
tape. Runs gd. Bst ofr
over $1100. Pb 545·0932 mount mrrrors $2195. ci·rc·-r ck O I 10 ooo · 979 9935 '60 Ch "'"' 4 d f a · n Y • m1. '64 VW, '74 1600 eng, dual . evy PU w/camper Aug4thruAu" 13 spee . m oo nroo . SJ800 Xlntcond642 0311
Aut S
. p shell. 6 cyl, gd cond. " AM 1 FM radio & rear · part heads, S.S. header~. o erv1ce,_ arts }700/ofr. 493_3965 Anaheim Convention spailer. Racing green * * * fat tires. tape deck.
&Acceuones 9400 ~ Center.800W.Katella wl pin stripes . Like S650/ofr.S49-4919
••••••••••••••••••••••• '76Chevy •,2 tonPU.6cyl. Tickets must be t>x · NEW!(36S844). J.McClosek•y
SAVEWJTH Under priced at $3200. changed for reserved MUSTSEE!ll 2753 VistoUmbrosa
USED&REBUILT 661·0672aft5:30 seats at the Convention •• Mewpof'thach
'FOREIGN CAR PARTS Center ahead of time. You are the winner v'Engines '73 Datsun. Mech. sound. Call 642-5678. Ext 333 to of 2 lickets to
v'Transmissions New clutch, tape deck. claim your tickets. WORLD TEAM
.'Rear Ends rack. Nds tires. $lSOO. * * * 2845 HARBOR BLVD. T. 546-4937 eves ~ TENMIS ~F~~ers Alfa Komto 9705 540-6410 540-02 ll GOLDEN GATE
-"Doors Vans 9570 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Fiat 9725 vs
.!Bumpers ••••••••••••••••••••••• '76 Alfa Romeo Alfetta ••••••••••••••••••••••• SAN DIEGO
JM PORT Dodge 75, PS, PB. stereo GT .. Lo mi. ~ir, AM/FM .751,2 l:1A SPY DER 5 spd. at Ure
AUTOSUPPLY customiz~ in/out. 28.oov radio.9900 m1.833-9490 · AM/FM . $4550 or best c~~iroN
' 101 N. Manchester, mi, xlnl cond. Best ofr. Audi ' 9707 ofr. 548-7129 CENTER
Wanted: '73 VW front
bumper. Call 552·7552
now.
'65 Baja Bug. Needs work.
$450.
Call Ken, 837·1590
POP TOI> CAM PER.
'76 VW. AM·FM stereo.
Lo mi-like nu. Must sell.
642-4468, 63J.1304'
1970 VW Xlnt <.'Ond. Best
ofr. 531-4470 dye; 772-6276
*** McrlShClftker
8946 'Thonws River
Fountam valley
You are the winner
of 2 tickets to
WORLD TEAM
TENNIS
GOLDEN GATE
VS
SAN DIEGO
at the
ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
CENTER
July 28, 1977
Call 6"2·5678, ext. 333, to
claim your tickets.
~ •.•• ,., ... ldt~"~f·••-•'f' .,.,~."'°~ , ....... '72 Pinto Runabout. auto.
2000cc, RIH. good cond
$12,9.5. 548-5556
'75 RUNABOUT V·6, air,
'75 Gran Torino Brog)lm. auto, 10 mi. $3250. AM/FM stereo tape. ____ 968_·8520 ___ _
AIC, PS/PB, new tires, '71 Pinto Sedan.
brks, s hocks. Sharp. $850ormakeoffer
$31115. Call btwn 9·1lam 675-6343 or 7 :30·llpm. Call ---------
anytime on weekends. Plymouth 9960 548-4788 •••••••••••••••••••••••
'00 Roadrunner 383, pis;
Ford '71 LTD. 2 dr . air, p/b; radio/htr, nu pnl,
stereo. full pawer. $975. battry. nu tires. $ll60.
.(714 )552·94a1 Call 839-4009
Alia helm 776-9900 548·1386 •••••••••••••••••• ••••• ---------• Julv 28, 1977 • . '""' Dod . . "74 Spider. bought new in -' evs. is Ranchero, camper top. Pontiac 9965 64-77 Used Mustang .., ge, camper. pop '71 Audi lOOLS. blk. auto '76 l!iOOOmi Xlnt eond Call 642·5678. ext. 333. to l-----.--------------Everyxtrapossible.Xlnt ••••••••••••••••••••••• Parts. 990 No. Parker, top. sink. stove/oven trans.Asking$1800P/P. H~od' bra : AM /FM claimyourtickels. '&'7 Bus.New¥reblt l700cc63 Chevy Wagon, good cond.P/P.
* * •·
()range. Call 997·2000 rel rig. new tires, 586-~ st.er(O. 968_0863 * * * eng. Xlnt me<:h cond. cond, new eng. new tires, 714-751-6735 S2000/makeofr.642-3o.53 , · panel. cpl, R&H. chrome $500.646·7889or642·3390 ---------
1976 PONTIAC
Firebird Formula
Automatic, pwr. steer·
Ing-brakes-windows,
AM/FM stereo tape, tilt
wheel & rally wheels.
11.722 actual miles.
(278NRSJ. EZ terms-
0 .A.C. l yr. parts &
service policy avail.
WANTED: 1973 VW front * 71 Al!Dl Must sell. very •74 Xl9 8 trk, radio. lug. '74 MG Midget. Orig whls. o\lrsz'd tires . $1200 1975 FORD bumper. Call 552-7552 'llJ International 10' Step clean. Ne w trans & k owner. Mint cond. Call or best ofr. 644-2552; 1976 Caprice Clusic LTD LANDAU now. Van. Customized when brakes. Sonroof. 4 spd rhact: mbags; i;reaft calr aft6pm.495·5514. (213)874·3800. Sport. VS, auto trans. ~--------•new for wheelchair & gas s aver. $1850.? a 5 een perecty factoryair,tiltP/S,split AM/FMst~reo,Landau
CHEVY eng. 350 cu. in. 4 RV. Has comm·! lift. 644·5607 maint'd. Take older im· Zippy little '74 MG ·72 VW Bus. Deluxe 7 P f Seats P /W disc luxury group, auto. trunk
,bolt main. $450. Ask for 33,000 orig. mi's. Best . por t sedan .o r pkup. Midget. Very c\ean lh-pass.; sunroof. Orig. brakes, 'cruise' ctrl. j release, pwr. w~ndows·
Bill. Days 673·4670. eves ofr. 675--5652. 74~; Audi lOOLS, 4 spd. 494-00i7 ' side & out. Low miles. owner. camping equip. stereo radio, vinyl roof & aeats-dr. locks, vmyl top
496·7561 air, AM IFM stereo, sun Fiat 076 131, 4.dr, S-spd, runs like a clock. Racing $2,750. (1)496·71Z3 much more. $6450. Call ' &tUt wheel. (117977). EZ
Wanted : parts for
1600 VW engine.
645·4730
'73 Dodge Van, super lo roof, Jo mi, $3350. 830·9495 AM·FM cass. 14 ,000 mi. orange w/black convert. 893-6460after7 PM. tenm·O.A.C. 1 yr. parts
mi, VS, cpl/panel. must orS!MJ-6712 27 mpg. Only 6 mo old, top. Below Blue Book. '70VWPop-TopCamper & service policy avail. OMLYS559S
MAIERS
AUTOCEHTER
1425 Baker St., C.M.
540.9109
I. sell $3290. 681-2165 .11.--N-H·dey 9709 $3200. 835-l046 an 6, value at$2650. 586·4417 Good cond. New cng.; '77 Chevy Malibu classic Nabers low, low price is -~ ...... best offer. 494·9546 wgn. Air/ stereo, fully QMLY $1595
.-'---------1Aaatos Wanted 9590 •••••,••••••••••••••••• Honda 9727 MGB 9744 loaded. Lo mi. $5800. ~osforSale ••••••••••••••••••••••• '64 3000 Mark 11. $3500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 71 VW Bus. Rblteng. AM· 4934791 MAIERS ••••••••••••••••••••••• TOP days 642-5200, eves & MGB·GT .• 73 AM /FM FM00stereo cass deck. --------AUTOCEHTER .I~~--/ wkn<ls 645-8124 stereo cassette. Air. xlnt $21 · 751 ·3657 70 El Camino, w/shell, ht . 14251$11.ker St., C.M, ~ D01 I ""R ond II perform. best offer. • ug.9 I 09' '73 Gran Prix only 30,500 ~asslcs 9520 ~ BMW 9712 c .roustse 548·4750 '74SuperBeetle. 752-5314 .,. ml, xlnt, Mon-Fri ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'PAID ••••••••••••••••••••••• PCl1fffa 9747 Rblleng. Xlnt cond. -------.---'73 Gran Torinowgn. Lug. 644·1203 543·193 6 j~ T-Blrd, P/S. P /B, FORCLEAN ••••••••••••••••••••••• 497·2S98 -Classic Corva\r Coov's. rack, A/C, clean. Below Eves/wlmds
auto, both tops. Recond. '74 L. Mint. While, rarely ,65 B Su '63. '64 .. Re.stored. Invest. Blue Book Trlr pkg. l $8}50.675-0204 ug. nroof. fun.Sl795d536-9993 · '73 FIREBIRD. Xlnt Looks & runs sreat . owner. 644·5858 cond. Great car. 1 owuer . ~ SADD_LEB.A CK
STOP!
DON'T BUY THAT
1 ij8J~Hf.AC..HO~VO
IHIN~!NG T ON BEACH
841 ;751 S·lO 044? '· MEWTRUCK buy my 1956 Big window IMrQIT CARS
Ford pie k ·up . lm -&11·MODELS
maculate with n e w --~-------engine, brakes, wining WE
etc. 289, C4. This truck
can only appreciate in .. ..,
value. $3750 or orrer. c • ii! ........
must see to appreciate. tl.SAn
673-4266 Eves. USED C~RS •. MOW ~.~.~~.~~! ... !~.~! CALL PAPPY
JEEPS "77°
tJ-5 's, CJ-7's,
therokees, Wagooeers,
Pick-ups, up to $1,200 dis·
counts. 5 yr 50,000 mile
warrantys available.
-CoptlalMI Mtn h1¢
2001 E 1st, SA 558-8000
'73 Jeep Wagoneet & 24'
Traveleze trlr. Lots of
f'(ttas •. Like new, Very
clean. Will sell togethel'
Of' ate. SSU674
S40~5630
lott:\so~ & so~
• LINCOlN·M"RCURY
2616 HARM>R llVO.
COSTA MESA
,___
MAAQUIS MOTORS
. · .. BMW.·
COMEIH& SEE
TH~ALLMEW
630CSi HOW!!!
COMPLm
IOOYSHOP
HOWOPEH
$ADD~IACIC
VALLEY t~ORTS
Hl-2040 495.494f
CREVIER
288{J2 Narguulte Pkwy. 1--....--.-..::...-.~-1 • VfSSlON VIEJO __;.. ___ __._.._..:.i
1a1~uo4ts-1210 ·
mirac I t:-~
rn az<iZl
r ~ :-
__________ 1 ____ S00_5_.64_2._20_1_2 __ 1 ·73 Che? Caprice 9 pasli 6.5 Ford. rebll eng, new S2495.Call494-0155
9741 wgn. \:8. auto, full pwr. steel belted tires good ~IC, ~FM, tilt steer· mech cond, $385. 770.1995 1972 Pontiac LeMans Con· 1 n g. rack. : Bro w n ___ ....._ _____ , vert. New painti, top &
w/wo6<lgrainsides.Good '71 GXY Galaxie, 4 dr, tires. 43,000 miles.
cond. $257' or best ofr. vinyl top, air. R/H , _67_5·_1567 ______ _
963-6838 comp. motor overhaul. '73 Pont. Custom VentllJ'a batt. & paint. $1395. 67a.l942 Hatchback. .v .a. auto. * * * AJC, PI B. P/S; Michelin •~ 15) .... EWTIRES radials, cu.st.om dual ex-•-"-Tratton " hausts, radio. AU main· 1S63Coriattder •70 Maverick. stk 6, xlnt tenance current. $2495.
Costa Mesa transp. $650. 963-4640. 64()..1112S Youarethewinnerof U..C-. 9945 ___ _._..-___ _
fWO'freetickeh ....................... '76 Flrebird Eap rH.
($15.00 value), to J.97i Continental. Lo mi, Loaded. Sacri.fi~t !',lust "·-·.. sell! 842-483hfl 6 pm wv... S1900. Call dys 531-4470; ..,,.... Ian., evs772,-6Zt6. '73 Qonn~vtlle. 4 dr
· Circus ~...tdr 99•7 hardtop. A/C. -PS/New
Aug4 thruAugl3 ........................ PB & 4 brand new.
Anaheim Convention t1l MAVERICK radia1kV'ey good cond~
Cen\er,.,W. Katella Lo • $2400. ?86-8194
Tickets must be ex· wMla.XlntCond. chanired ffb' reaerv.ed . , Call646-9076 '77 Gran Prix, p/s; p/b> "I _,..._ p/w, p/seats, Lit whl, seats -at the _,..ventibn '70 Maverick 6 cyl. Xlnt AMIFM. T·roof. Lo mis.
appearing-good cond ! Sac. Eves89'Ml9'16 Muu sell, husband -----~..:....--tr@sfe-rred ! Leaving 1968 Le Mans. V-8, auto. ---+------•town SC)Onl Call 752-1629 vinyl lop, xlnt running ~lr;Dda or aft.6 wkdys. cOnd. '8li0. 64M!90?
"ZS 2Dr., 6cyl. J,;ike new. '72 Grand Prix, full pwr., x1nt Cl0nc1. New UNlt &
paint. '1600. eoe&ti>
.... W..tect 7100 Miia w..w 7100 .-CH 10 I 0 ,..,.....,.. 1050 M11celle1MOUS 1010 loats & Mmine Tueeday. July t9, tDn DAILY PILOT C9 ~~~-r••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••• ••••••••• •••' ~,_.t 9060 -~ .. _JI t060 •••••••••••••••••• ••••• •••••••••••••• ••••••••••• , .... 9040 ..... w -.,...
SPX'RETAl\Y T1lt:l:O.IMBll:Jll6Top-Bl•ck1ton• 1a1 d1'7tr, Sl'ICIALSALI * * * General fOIO ........ ~ ......................................................... ..
t'Ubtic JI.el. ~ UID9, 1 ,_,.~ Mu.t I» a,p'd. • Kllltbare wube.r $M ea. lllhlid WOid oo11 .. •.net J-1 W.ttoft ••••••••••••••••••••••• 24• SIA ltA y SOUTHWIS~H OLEN L 14 Sloop. Like :?'• hre da1, flex bn quJ d.. f\iuU•°! p/U"!• 0£0 ... Dryer. KtntDON. ttlil_;~l'tt IK'Sa~ onb' JJUW.W. Vf•~ Sunducer br•nd new Y4CHTSAUS new.sos. Nwpt t.r CaU Carol work •,,. • .-ra up .. o Wuber $100 ta. Ouaru.. -. ""-rt a..-a.. ,..,.... 1 s... MS-~S
tMifbreMMllt lJ.00 per day. C&US.U, twtladellV....SMMBTJ 11!BPV Rlt tWWpor_..._ A'l'GO 4 man rail wtlb or W/t,rlr. SZt,000 +-iDveal· hjllla,IS,'5,UMKll ------------------.nu btwn' • t . CONNBCnON Youarethewtnn.r wtlhoulmotor.CallDale ed.BoaUoaded,fNelOO Morsoo•~J:t S22 HoM.C .. 16 sacal'rAa'TT/W.. "11'"7Mln luilt·hl eled. ov••· 4 ~lHeU, thaJtL.H.B. oUtJckm&o at49S-2709. &alolfuel. Pricedto1ell. Mariaerll '37. MakeOfrer.673·2050 b r.a· .. J·--------1 ........ atcwe. Xlnt cond.. MJ.UU WOILD TUM 714/SD-2S7S aft '1, days Col. lMSuptr m. ~,·,:ra::...~ :!c,fl: TTl'llT wti&. '115. ....... TIMMIS * * • 7 1 4 I '4 e . 4 '0 0. D . er 41 amt. or fief loah. Sllpa/
vr1tha.tleutJyra.-..pr lJtetyplna. MJnCOwpm. ~. • no ....._. refril * * GOLDEN GATE W.MalAof MuwUUI ChaNn/dn.UesAvall Docb 9070 ~•dome.lie,. ~or t.lmllar H· ............ ..--. • 37011. C .. Hw'/ 222l()NeWPOrt1'13-1211 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l .Pleuecall per._h•lpfuJ. hll eo. -~~. PUBl.IC SAN~O ,.~ 30'C ... SCotoOal'7 UOOl4 Wanted &lip for 26' al~ bmll\ta. Y'or lnfo.. •PPl>' ....-~ at the -Fiybridie, twlD screws, Ttait.r E.dru SaJlboat. 675·8280 or ~aver, ProducUon aelrtierator, siu. 11.,.-...0N ANAllEJM Youarethew!Jiner canvu rm, bdsW, (71') IZ.US • &G67ot 8'1~781M SICafTAIY Dept., 16'0 PlaouUa, Waaber/Dryer, uu. u.111 CONVENTION oUtlcketa&o 43HOM,Owner --------
Ql».IU,)' OllllltOI.. Sb CM G.Z.Gdcoad.~ Lat.eModelusect CENTER WOILDTIAM 'H CAL 25. Custom lbat SUpto.~ub-lse,Dana
MC. Typlq..:.'°~filln1 TYPtST/ Upri•'"tft'ener FURNITURE Jul)'28,19'T7 TIHMaS 1066 American Century galley. LPR. GEN, Harbo:S.,~00 (710 tctepbooe. ~ be in o-·· -·· au .. oPl.IANCES Call 6'2-5878, ext. 333, to GOLDEN GATE Cl~lc, like new. New SPIN. Dlney lncl'd. Good --------de llent wottte.r App ....,.___ GoodworidaiCODCllOon rir. claimyourticketa. vs engine, OC1ly Mhn. 407 cond. $7900/or ofr. WANTED: Two slips for lv~s'::nJord Applle< NB. &andal lnlU1UUon • 145-3914 ANTIQUES * * * SAN DIEGO cu. Mutt tee to ap· ... 17 27• Sailboats. Nwpt. to! n Ila .. r I n 1 , 30 8 will t.raJo rap. lodlv. Job 4-tto. 10 15 ED at the preclate ..-00. Call eves. Balboa
67
s, 13
93 itrway Dr , C.M. entailamlM.olcduUeall ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wi .6:CXJ>M PINBALL llACH. 4 ANAHEIM 968-9991 Aft ~:_YAWL,.._ ---·------
" st.al typlAf. Pnafer l yr S.. C...t Allctlo CONVENTION ca.,..., new m.,..,r. Wanted On shore moor·
540-llZS6. ~~.caua.ia•J.J. 2203S.MainSt. ~~eomJ)letebreblt. CENTER 21' Fiber1lass Launc~. $4,995. • AY646-9000 tne o~ Balboa lsl will
s EC RE TI\ RY ,SueCook. ESTATE SALE SantaAna July28,1977 f3:Yg~aty~hj.n'r"as~1: 23'Cttpper0B, trlr, knot, b\o'boatifnec.67J..2'746 = K :~':.cl-~ R s~°e. nPIST /lecpt .lltlv 1 .. 1 f·ZO I Blt No. of Warner ~~~~ $3so win.!': ~m~~k:;.333. to f't.boft\etu, bead, t>unka, alp s, all 1afety, bottom loah. S,..CS &
olflce. BIDkllnt product Pa.rt Ume I« construe· . -siuPADUA. Bet~~~&405 selltor$175.586-20QS. * * * bait lank, lnol:brdn?.!_a)' palntPP.63M183 Sid 9080 ~ ronstr e)(J>er pref'd Uoa olnce. Call Shidey HUNTINGTON BEACH V-8. $42:50 or .r. vwuer ERICSON 2·35, no better ••••••••••••••••••••••• b.ll·:MOO, 8-4 .30, 6'4 m..cm Vic: SprintdaJe/stater ~~~~~on 30 yards ol auper cond. SCHOCK 2 man dory , 673-6315. bey for race or crube. 17 FL lnboaTd! V drive,
eve5/wlmda Hrs: 8:30 to 3 PM. 1929 Wl!TAU brown carpetlog. partially set up for rac· 25.CHRISCRAFT Newport.8'7~ &ow11U., w/trader. Needs
Upholstery-Lead Penon Coca Cola Commercial CONSIGNMENTS 67J..59l8 ing, great for flahlog. New motor VHF sodr work. Best.offer. 536-10« Secretary for Salu/ familiar w/upbol., cut· lceehest&Cap()pener. WASHER&n-·erSear' W/trlr. $1SOO. firm. • • 18' WINDROSE
MarkeUD1 Dept. Youn t101, Hwm., atapling. Columbia Bicycle bmlt DEAUltS WEI.COME Dix. Avocado1 $400/ofr. $2689 f6SOO. AY646-9000 SAILBOAT, 197t·dnt 18' Jet Sid Boal, 4S4 Chey,
810-Medlca.J Corp. Sel F/time. Steady employ. for a. Ma.boa Parsooa ASISAPPUANCES 38'x14' Unfln. molded cond, Volvo 08 4000, v/ trlr, cover, mags,
:. l a r le r w I Io o w/growtnq co. ~U44. Tables, J..i.ncoln Rocker, SAL.ESfARTS Auto. garaaeopeGer lyr. 14' All Gius Boat, no trlr. fbrgls bus, cabin & F/B. (714) 540·7175, (213) $4SOO. PP. 557·1281 days, :.ecretarialskills. Typln 30258.KUaoaDr,S.A. Self~I Gas stove. 6PMSHARP old.$200.~'3 $100. Deep V plr. design. 434-~J.9 S48-8944eves
SO wpm. Excell en Misc anlique glass & AU.ITEMS SLATE POOL TBL. $29 545-3973 112,000/trade smaller 1o~ 5a.---9090
Rrowtb potential Waitreu Food/Coclrta.J.ls. silver, Kenmore 2 ·door MUSTBESOLD firm. Anytime. 644·16 boat.m.8074 * * * ••• "":::.:.':.":'!: ••••••••• benefits. Newpor Applyaft4pm,Sld'1Blue fri1w/lcemaker.OHlce * * &M0-1447 IU.eo..todr
Beach,63H.8$5. &et.1072.lslPt, NB furn: 2 dealu, filing * * * WANTED: Power boats, 165 ... H•_.__ 1 _ BOAT STORAGE $30 mo.
cabinda & chairs. Good . Attention Craftspeople! Carol &tduon 28' & up. We have buyers ..... _-,._.-:,:-•ac~ free launch. Sail/Pwr. SECRETARY WAITRESS.OIHHER used furniture & band Unique decorator m1r· Booth applications now l218BellastAve & desperatety need your liWf """+-" Newport.Dunes.6«·0S10 for j\rt Gallery. Good We accept applications tools. Lots of clothes, rors,3dhnenslonal.P/P. being accepted for the CostaMesa lisUng.CaU&askfor Ed Youarelhewlnner
typing, light bkkpg, full Mon·Thun 3·5. Exper. l.loen&btic·brac. . 77()..1262 4th annual Old Main St. Youarethewlnner of (213) 597·5597, 9·5. or of2ticketa&o TrGMpOrlotion
time.MS-9191 req'd. Gulliver's HS.EN NOLAND c-"d Oak king bed set, Fairin~ean Park Sun. twofneHckeh (714)5S6-8498aft6PM w~ ..... '.us M •••••••••••••••••••••••
Restau r ant., 18482 ~b rl f I t Aug. 21st. Hurry! l st ($lS.OOvalue),to '"'"" Aircraft 9110 SECRETARY MacArthur Blvd Irvine. t , so a + ovesca • come lst serve basis. Jn. . 1,_...:.n...:. lroa. SEARAY 1974, 22' over· GOLDEN GATE ••••••••••••••••••••••• 2 Person ore in N.B. Sal llcydH 8020 beveled glass coff~ tbls, formation (213) 399·1631 ""1"'"J niter, VHF, DF, dual
SS75 pe mo llrs 3.r. Mon WANT IND E PEN· lamps, pecan din rm + or (21.3)399-4544 larnum & lal!.y ball. trim tabs. teak SIS, SAN DvsJEGO New hangers for lease, Fr~ T l. h "·'~ 57"2 DENCE & INCOM E' Be ••••••••••••••••••••••• hutch, wall units. wood C'-·-ice box. 2 B. stove. attbe Corona Airport, hurry lhru
1
• e ep · .,...,. ;u a tax counselor ~ith * * * t d f ( Sch ' n E l d ....... r h t h d 185 only limited number still
gbedameael • enh ur7n7;.~~~ wm xercyce e· Aug4lhruAugl3 hres water, e,a • ANAHEIM avall.633-6817&544·3197 SECY/RECPT,parttime, T.C.A. Prestige, h igh JadcG.tin . vevetc r, ,,......_ luxe,likenew.$125. Anaheim Convenllon r s, s ereo cass , CONVENTION
Harbor area. M.D.'S of· commissions, we t.raln. #8 Wood Mympll bunks. all 3mo. old 54().3001 • Cent.er, 800 w. Katella anchors. fenders & lines. CENTER ~n. Sale/
fice. Exp. pref. 540-458S g:~! .. !~toy~-~~o . l"M. ' Slate pool table, 6 mo old. Tickets must be ex. Must sell. $8450. 673·S478 July 28, lfn7 Reftf 9 I ZO
Service Station Allen· -You are the winner $499. Comer grouping, * * * changed for reserved aft 7PM wkdys/Wkods Call 642-5678, ext. 333, to •••••••••••••••••••••••
dant, exper'd. Day & w 4RBfOUSE of 2 ticket.! to brand new, $150. 496-8311 ROft Hin seats at the Convention Marlin fishing.Jeffries 24 • claim your tickets. '71 ~ Chevy Van/ ·•72
Eves. Full" p/time. Ap-ALSO EHICLE M WOIUJ) TEAM Center ahead of time. T.S., F .B., Rad., D.F. .. * * cruise air conv, sips 4. ply, Shell Station. 17th & V A T HIS PLEASE HELP II Our 3861 Fero St. , CaU 842-5678, Ext 333 lo Riggers. fgbtn'g chair. refrig/roof cooler, '73 350
Irvine, NB. & DELIVERY. Gd d.rlv· GO~GATE friend needs any or all Irvine cla.imyourUckets. MustseJI. 7Sl-1610 COLUMSlA34 cu in Chevy eng, AC, ~~-~Sa· t,H&vy30WUnA:.1. house furnishings. Una· You~tlw~of I.. * * • 1973 Diesel, VHF, RDF. mags, AM/FM cassette, Service Station attend. .....,.. """"' : 1111 vs ble to buy. Wife too.k two...--~ SHARP 18' Bay Boat llB, A/ P, roiJer lurJJng, bike rack etc, $3100. Exper. not necessary. 3:30.Start$3hr+over· SANDIEGO everything. Pref In gd <SlS.OOvalue),to · loats,Marift~ newtWteup.Manyxtras. Avon, slip & more. 675-4884aftSPM 837·7786 time. No smoke. Jo. ANaAHttheEn. rond. We will pick up. RllNJIRglros. · EqulP'Mflt 9030 $2500.642·5583 675-8280or67S..7884
terviewa 1:30 to 4, Mon u•1 ""''1831 ........ ldV •-· & 1a·•-••••••••••••••••••••••• Sm Cabover, fits '66-'67 Se I Slat.on wanted thru ""'"i CONVENTION """" ._,.,, _..... ,,..'/ 24' S-RT FISH..., rv ce
1
.. ,. • AC '""' · '"" Aquarius 23, traller, xlnt Ranchero, 7x44. $150. 121 FUil & p/!Jme. Some WINDOW DESIGNS CENTER 2 Red contemporary de-Circus *ZODI Fi bet glass w /tl"I r , cood. Must sell! $5000/of· 551-4.390 •
ex per. Top wages + 3195 D. Airport Loop Dr, July 28, un7 corator Chairs, chrome Aug 4 thru Aug 13 Port·A·Marine galley, head. bait lank, fer. 963-8212
6
Pack Camper, btfl in· l. romm & vac pay after l Costa Mesa. Pb~Bl Call 642-5678, ext. 333, to 'trim. S75 ca. S40-3001 Anaheim Convention Inflatable Boats d I h d t b tt' Yr . Apply. Care o's 1 . u·c"' •-,..._ l 800W Kt Ila C ua eavy u y a s., l(fTC X._..C-~ sl""' 4, slove/refri g, xlnt J W p 1--catmyour* ..... e.... HJD"'·A-BED, bla£'k ""n er, · a e 2925College, .M. radios, fathometer, sea •5-"" vnu. ,... Chevron. 604 S . Coast .w.r/ recitovn L Tickets must be ex· (714 ) 540-2070 temp, swim step, outrig· $400. Pvt Ply 64.2·1802 cond, $600. 548-4511 or Hwy, Lag. Bcb. No phone Small co. needs ha rd naugahyde, good cond. changed for reserved gcrs, rod holders & Teak _:.._---=------eve1164S..479S _
calls. ~ working, dedi ca t ed Schwinn Exercycle de· S13S.548·2687 seats at the Convention Avon Reds tart. C02. deck Clean & fast. Schock22Fu11Race.Spln· Motoritedl'k .
9140 S Al d t worker. Call Carol, luxe,likenew.$125.. Re decorating, must Center ahead pf time. elect motorS400. Sl5.oo0.S49·23Sl n0~;.,r·sail~e5n_o!,.'.}"soertsoforr. •••.••v••••••'.:.'.; •••••• Service ta. t en _an . 581·3830. :>40-3001 sacn'fl Gold dense p· ile, ·eau 642·5678, Ext 333 to 642·6630 -~ ;,..
t-xper'd. Full or p/llme. claim yourtlckets. __ ·0wnr. 673-6315. '77 Peugeot Moped. 500 Apply Arco Station, 17th Weneed50people whoare luildinc)Materiolsl025 cpls & Pa~. cust drapes, ... qt** British Sei(iull outboard • _ _.
1
· .r-'I 9060 mi's, xlnt cond. $400 or
& Irvine. C.M. at least 10 lbs over· ••••••••••••••••••••••• crystal hghl fixtures, motor.. s.s HP, nearly _, • -bslofr 64()-0384
cli r ellow/while .;.~ c ••••••••••••••••••••••• · · . welght.CallMs.Stoneal UsedLumber,4"xl2"x18' r~ ne • Y Solidoakwaterbeds,com. 'hew. Pe rl. cond. ost 16' aloop. fbrgl. Nu cvr, !;e~Si~elp n7~~ lmly· 751·9175. We can tell you (22), 3"x10"xl6' (4), dinetteset.833·1962 plete line of access. $400. $300./bst ofr. KITESAILBOAT saib&lrlr. Gdfamboat. 77 Moped, Peugeot, l mo ~EC tH~/Ne PP • how to lose pounds & 2"xlO"xl4l,lr" (432), T· BEAUTIFUL furniture Grand Opening Sale! 642-4173 $SOO. ~S48·1617 old,w=~~·(~~·
s ' 0am money at the same brackets (26),644-0878 fromSpyglassH1Uhome. 642-0161 QuaJlfled Shipwright &10-8208 SlDNEYSABOT
9150
SHIPPING CLERIC me. Dogs 8040 Spanish, Mediterranean Santana Courts Racquet· avail. Woodwork,. paint· Udo 14 Boal #3784 and Xlnt cond w/hand lrlr. Mo-forcyclH/ Ex~r. d.esired, but ~ot ••••••••••••••••••••••• & Contemporary. For ball Club Membership ing. Xlnl craftsmanship. trailer $1600. $390. M5.Q)()() Scooters
rcq d. Will tram. lrVlne WIWAMS A.KC Poodle puppies, tiny appt call 644·1538 btwn sale Great price call 642-8929 846-2230 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~:Q~~~E!or appt. toy,alls~ ~a!?::::·Fri&S-l2Sat.· 66l·Zm • loafs.Power 9040 ERICKSON37 S=~~~t~i~~~~bo~~~~ SONOMA 21 .. Col TV 1 ood • • •• •••• Like new, dinette int. dsl. Sails beautifully. Must duro•
75 y.~t:'_AH1 ~ 2
4
5,0&.-00 TEAK FURNITURE, Cof· or . • P ays g · •••• ••• •••••• •• _, .._ Stained Gl ass, p/lrme at ,.,_ __ tCAAA.'--& Poodlepuppy&mother, fee Tbl, 24x70xl7,$50, S7S. Canrusler Vaccuum, 1960 16' Glaspar boat & equip for race & cruise. Sacrifice. $19,000 firm. fftllH. $350. Call ~~;~ci'1'(:~~· ;~1( --~ $50eacb. small roll top Desk, $150. $17.646·152:5 trlr, 50 hp Evinrude mtr. PP. 714"8l1·2160evs. P/P. 549-8181 675-3622 ••es.
642-4382. S..-.ilMJ~,...at 496-831l Cabinet server $7S. End Manual hospital bed & Xlntcond.S.U.5532 '76 MELCRAFT Racing SPINNAKER ~ 02.
1
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Store MaleBassetHound,AKC Tbl. 19x29x2l. $SO . mattress$115; Everest· Try a Daily Pilot Sabot, fully equip'd . radial, Rainbow color.---------STORE C&.ERK
Respons ible pers on
w background Ln mannc
hardware to work 5 days
1n N.8.Apply Lido Ship
Yard. 900 Lido Park Dr
673-7272
regis. Trt~lor, 9 mo's. orange ceramic ~mp, Jennings wblcbr $100. C1asst0ed Ad lo bQY sell w/ct}ver. Never \ISed. unique design, used .:'llow Interviewing For: Best ofr. 67~5535. 36". $15. 640-1402 aft. 3 67J.3l29 • or rent aomethlno. • lm5. 673-63J8 twice. 673-6743 Want Ads Stock & Sales ..
PositioM Cocker SPtniel, papered, Beautiful lge SpanJsh Din· Electric Hospital Bed.
Apply.SO. Coast Plaza 2 yrs oli'I. SSO. Male. ing Tbl, 6 chrs. buffet. $2SO. Good cond. 752·86S8
2nd Level..Across from nuetered, older children bar w/4· stools, swivel or751·7097.
Vidal Sasson oroochildren. 752.7472 rocker chair, Kenmore ---------
wuher & elec. dryer. Ml .itftl'--.. STUDEHTS-JOIS ~~:~ ~: ~:: ABulldK C male ~~.!I U h Lamps. shades, misc. All ;e:w:::o-_______ ,
FOR SUMMER For further information og. 4 mos.......... .st xlntcond. 962·1973 ••••••••••••••••••••••• sell 554.2027 evenings. P/timc for $414.40 per Call Jackie 21.3/2'T4·91Z7 -------""--• 2 Green plaid bed divans,
mo. Growing co. Must be Equal Oppor Employer AKC Mini· Doxies, 4 $J5ea .. 3101 Falrvlew Ave
18+. Call lOam-lpm, female, l rnale, S7S ea. SpaceS3,S.A.557·2669
_7_l_41_7_51_..S_28S_. _____ I X-RAY TECH. female, _962-__ 0303 __ ev_es_lw_lm_ds ___ ,
$CASHFORS
Good used furo/refrtgs
Freezers & stoves
546-0768 SUMMERJOIS needed immed. for AKC female Basselt
Girl to work In snack Radiology office, loc. in Hound tri-color, Hof-Ms 1060 Wanted: 4 Tickets to Nc"""'rt Beach. Must be '"'"'' ..... 66 _,. 5pM ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pageant of the Mastera, shop al Hotel Laguna. ..,..., --~· .. n Laguna Beach. July 22. Also girl lo work in ARRT·CRT. 642·6464 for Frftto y 1045 Palomino Pinto Quarter Will pay $3$ to $CO ea.
Salad Pantry. Contact appt. OU horse, gelding, Westem Call before Thursday. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •-En 11-b. Sbo •--John Glide. Food Mgr. Young man w/woodwork· °' g.... w w ...... er. Susan Churchill 844-8850
494·1151. 42S S. Coast ing ex.per to learn new * * * Xlntcoad.675-3590 Ext8'7. IM~li=~ .. ~1~ Hwy.La~unaBeach. buslness.646~5 "°""Cl..tc 8070 ---------i
TAX.I Drivers, Laguna, Merchc.tdlse 1101 PortCcrtow
tor Checker Cab co.•• .. ••••••••••••••••••• ...._w-portleoch
Male/ Fem. Must\hdave ._~... 8005 Youofa.re2llthec'"e~~er mature pleasan Is· _....,._. • ""..,
t. ' l peAr ••••••••••••••••••••••• WORLD ye. "'M pos1 ion, nea ap -; . ~
Xlntdriving record. Call Wonderland TeeMIS
P a t l y • 4 9 4 7 2 1 1 · GOLDEN GATE
7am·Ham Of Antiques! vs
HU G E w a re b o u a e SAN DIEGO Telephone Tool Roo crammed with over 500 atthe
Sales-Earn to $20.000+ music boxes, nlckelo· ANAHEIM
11 Locations. Orange Co deon pianos, circus or· CONVENTION
& LA. Great benefits gans, wall clocks, CENTER
security & rapid advan grandfather clocks, JuJy2*, 1971
cement. Call Republl fascinatJng antJquea. Oall 642-~ eat. 333, to
Distributors, Inc . .Mr. OverSl,000,000Wortb claimyourUcketa.
Roy, 71418M·ll088. American lnlero.atlonal '* * •
---------• Galleries; 18()2.T Ketler·•------------------T8.EPHOHl S4US lnt St., Irvine. Tel. Kittens, 7 wb, 2 males,
lnMtriol S.ppfy 75'-lm. Open Wed lbru box trained.
We are looking tor ex· $al9AMto4PM. Vlalt! M&-5392 per'd teleJ)hone 1alespeo-
ple to tnlUate our new Furniture Slrlpped fr
program, management Reflnished by ~perts. * * *
potential. Salary +com· 752-~dY11,64M828eve SMrievS..la..,
mission. 645-7318 Alk for Oak S/Roll TOJ> deek. 54", 52S~Jc.toria
Jim rel'U\J.abecl. Best otr-ovr Costa Mes.
$1000. 953-11130. You ans the winner of T ele.-.ne Sales Solid walnut rou ..... dut, two.,.. tkWt ~~ ...y ($15.00va.lue),to • ~~kp~thne. "':8!"uie•tlot.ra ~ll, suso. Beaut. ::eJ."°'· c .... In our c~ • n u.N. ~ •--.. tt...., aalea l'OOCll. FlexJble bn ---AM« PM. Men, women OAK ANTIQUES : P•t Car..
oratudenta,llol'Ovr. Pt.y. 2 Garaca full, 3'8S A1.114lhnlAUl13
s.o.a>l LA Thnu NorM, C.M · 5484542 Anaheim Coov=n
Telephone aollclton Dlnln1 Room Set, I Tf::!'r.•8:'J!i h ~X·
o • • d • d p I t l m • • chain, 3 Bttfets, SS~ cbu1ecl tor reMrved weekdays. $4 per br. <%13)5tz.ZZN Mata at UM Ooev.nUoQ
5.17-31..SS. '"'•CH 8010 C.l\ter abald ot time.
Telephone ••lH. Ad· .... ••••••••••• .. •••••• Call~ Est 113 Lo
"'1!1\ftSGreat potatlal Wuben, clr7tn. CJtan d&lm)'OW'Ucbta.
to ma.a a Jot ot money. Ja.te modell. ttoo. 1 n._ ___ *_*_* _ _.._
Call 642-5678
..
Q D-'ll;_YP OT
Add it ... Bu Id H ... Ol1porlt ... Hammer it... Carpet SERVICE IL.Cement IL .Wire It .. Hoe lt ... Clean IL .Move
it . .Pr i\ It. .Paint lt...Nall lt ... Plas er lt. .. Fl>e It ...
. '
DIRECTORY
*n'ma.... C 1a •• A~ .... 11•:1 ., ... ......._ lh•1de•h I Man.-, ,.,...,..,..... .. ....... ...................... ....•.............•••.• ................••.•... ....................... ...•...•.•............. ...•..•••..•.•......... ...................... . ............................................ .
APPUAJterag-p.tfR Economy Acou.Uce: Qu• BabbltEx,pr'dJ•pan~• OrienlaJ Oardeper, maAD· Houwleanlnt. Mature, Block, brick, el ump· Masttr ,.,.,.. HOMESAVERS. Plumb· CER.\MlC TILE. New or
'1.---.ntceCall .,,.Y•d celltn11. r• l•~eoer fl Jeod1c1J". taln lawn, hou .. bold, expertenced, reliable. atone, wallt I. planters. Custom Pa!AllP• tng It HeaUnc It •Ir eon· rernocW. P'r•~•mljoba ~ Cn4)S.JdZ pal.n, l\lllr, Lief 12119$, R•Ho~blo, free .. t . au&o. (11.4>8Dlt9 '20.ma~ Qual work, reaa prices. · •· com· ditlonlns. Fr'ee est, no welcome~•aftS. ---------1 "-•Ull taJO MS-U30Mlket331'732 B d /ll 586 9906 pet.ltlve prtees. Int/Ext. hr. Honeat fl reliable --------~~~.!!~ ....... C.-.t/C...,.._ Wl!EDING~EANUPS !! •. :.1 ................ l~~~~g&r~A~ ~ c. . ' PSS2-aln~~5 • ~ '~ b •-~~ BofA, M/C OK. c:~~~f\.!:e!t1::S
l'arnllca • ettn1 cca11190 ...................... Weekly Malntenanc. Haullai, movtDa cJ .. nup B!ST. ft&.03T7 P~r.,...... miJ. ~•1·ic.ot~ .,. yrsexper. 912-1883
try, flnh~tns. A~•I CJ!;M&NT WORK Al Freeat 142.9907 fl/up.Treework.Rus . .. ..................... miured. Tou of refs . ._..&ll.,.W
wknd:I, fr ~l• Mar Kindl. R-..c>Q.abl•. Fr VERYLOWPRJCEll fut,freeutSU.~ • ~f::.PS\1 ~te~n~~~ EPE't',EdRSPA.lNTING ~dly/elflcient Add•••••••••••ti-•••k••U•••b•• ~~.'~!••••••••••
1Jl.IJIM.51f·llZ'n ett. Call 710-41&2S d 1 • , xpr . Reas Rates. -ons, pa o, 1 y 1 LI ---------4 on 11r en n1 main HAULING. Odd Jobs. neecs a &QC>d job done. Free Eat. Call Gene Low Prieea. Stetellc &dn· &r rpn. Raid" comm'I. Rcmovinat, ttlmsntnc.
Philllpa cement co. t.enanca.Cecwce5'f.20U Law1hadentneedawork. Referrela.~2393 ssz.0458 srd. Exterior apeclallst. tr eJt 9SM2.17 Lukay t C()ppln1,rrut.Uc/ll11.tn
P•UO.. room eddit.ioJll. Jim41M~ . T ,,.. ._,,.... · • areaUyrt. To0¥8'5-5134 ,..,_A k ........ Prof1 ••• .. r HOUSECLEANING witb p&•,.. ,,_ Peperinc .... .,..., ry me'""alico~ -.... Car-peotry. an)' type . """'"'rel• wor 1Sl· ...... l , ..... .. .,. 1 .u Pa.nd, rtoon. 41te'. Al CAii 10 AM to jPM. lie/ Act now I for comp SoM)' I& Jer. Free baul· a P!RSONAL TOUCH. aerv'g Harbor area St PAINTING Home remodelinat 4' re· Remc;>vals, trlmmln.~,
Comm"I. llc/e6t . Alt 5, hood/in.. maint. of lawna. ahrubl ing, cleanup, ek for us~· Rdiablo, refs58H71B Uc l8321!1. Refa furn. CONTRACTORS pair most walls door• prumQI. free esL Llc •
5e.z7Jt -" lreta. Rea. & com.m. ble Items. Fences, bld& a R ,. '"d 7 642.2356 , TAK"' NOTE ek. 963-3'.58 ' • fully intured SO.~ --------1 8'r.D Coocre~. All pba11 McWffney 645-512' removed. 5S7·2005 aewr .. w .. ya, yu --------~ "' t-'ramlni.finrsb.remockt cooc.rete.. bklck &r bric ' Pah n Sprin11 aree. P•Y Castle REMODELING Exper. Tree Work, finest
repairs. Lie. ~uirk work. Free ~ta. Lk YAl.DCWNUP CHEAPEST haullnc in Relflb!e.983-MSI Average=1Stry$39S ~~Ytrf::/:~M~~~ Sundecks Xll~beu ~-:~~~~Mr
i.e rvlce. Wrk guar. boaded8'f5·t'720. 6'8-9288"645.oooe ~-Fror~~EAPI Lmdlc.,Mt 2Story$495,lntr$4Srm merdal) for exterior Can:>orts Batbrooms
--.Ul4 Concrete ReJuventors, Gat"dtnin Service· cleao . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Prices incl matr'l·labor paintlnf of my bowse in Additions Formica T~ · c.,.ts.r.k• cleans ru.t It oil call lo up. & h!uung ~eekly OCC Student. Big ~ T Landacapina, 30 yra ~p. Guar/lnard, Freeesl. Fullenon <labor only). Roofing Siding •··~··•••••••••••••••••
.......... ••••••••••••• Free F.at. 00.8416 • inamtenance. Reasona· t.n.lck . .,,Trash, tree trim. Free est. Licensed. Tedssi.Gl34or636·708S Call tor Info, 870-4564, Painting Repairs French Gremm•r &
Carpet Man will lay you ,.~-ble r•tes, free estimate•. !!~;_:andy 642·5703, 6681'9, C·2'1·10'1% .a..n. •-FORCE ask for Dave. All Work Guaranteed Uterature. Mlcba,el Jled· I R ---.. ,,._ f ......-.-... "'•"""'" 26ynexpr field.M.A.7!18-1U9 or m ne. epa1r~ ................ ••••••• nn~r 4:30 uk or Ron. ...__y pn"""'"'GCOMPANY WORKGUARANTEED CallDonVickers deaninc too! Guar work . ~7S88or!M8""'987 nuH .u• Int.en" /E tr Fr t al bigger savin&s. Fr NEW Homes, Add1llona, ~ ••··~·••••••••••••••••• 3GENERATIONSOF or x · ee ea· 83G-7136
e:."t,645-3&46 . Remodeling by Layne. MOWING . EDGING ••••••••••• .. •••••••••• ~lacea-Planters Painting Excellence 25 yrs exp. 642-0295 Roofing $1.62 per DAY
Lie. Contract.or. 552-347 Trimming, Cleanups, Want a REALLY CLEAN Bric Concrete Patio Lie. • Bonded · Insured. Ploshr/Repalr ••••••••••••••••••••••• Shampoo~ steam clean. eves. Hauling. etc. Reas. HOUSE? Call Gingham BloekWalJa BBQ PU• Refs fum. FREE EST. ••••••••••••••••••••••• D-..1 Ll & t Alt Color b~ghteners ; wh Bec:trical &46-ftlS2 Girt Free •t 6'5-5123 Refs. Eiits. 646-0464 Dan 839·5851 VERY NEAT PATCH ..... _.rs. c ns. ~pta .. ~~man bhleaJalc$1i;pAea ••••••••••••••••••••••• General ~---t .... ., un-A-•· H Free Est: Blockwalls, PROFESSIONAL Paint· JOBS&TEXTURE g'!if!:.. ... ';t°_!' eat. Walt. u V, UUI rm, .... vg EL er ~.......... nUNUWS ... ouseclean· l t b . k . In /E Fr-""t. ... .. 1~39 ....., ...... e. 541·6930
nn $1.50 couch $lO ch E RICAL SERVICE ••••••••••••••••••••••• i g s u mps on~. rte . mg. ter xter. Beas, __ ... _ ....... ____ _.,. __ •--1 ~-Guar. elim pet ~or. J~ $15 hr," SMl\L ~aullng, moving, paint· Good rate:. Good refs ::S~i°e~·b R_,e:~:9~1:{ work guar642-0386 PlumlMftcJ ~~ ....
Cpt repatr. 15 yrs expr. 8'2-8Z33 ing, 1ar. clean, trash. Call Mr. Lynn. $36-7111 6'2-9177 ' IXOYE. Exp coll students ••••••~··••••••·~··•••• Ladie·s Dr essmaking.
Do work mysell. Refs litcjnHriftCJ malnt, Janitorial, .Yd will paint your home . Repairs/ Jhp1ping. Alterations Restyling
DAILY PILOT
SERVICE
DIRECTORY
531-0101 . •••••••••• .. ••••••••••• ~f~ooJ;>m~~~~~er&'be ~~~~~~b~::;:1Q~n Brick, block, slabs, frplcs, Very reas. rate. Int/ext. Drains cleared, water pattern 'd raft ing:
Remodeling room addl· Will ci rl · tr 646-487l yti' stonework. 20 yn expr. Qua l I l y pal o ting hlrs. etc, all plpes. Reas 548·9406
Have sometttif!gyouwanl t1on, pla~ checks 1 or a ce ans. an me Refs,ests.586-0358 w/PRIDE! Freeest.Dan ra tes .. Dick Morris ---------• ~sell? Cla1iSlfied ads do engineering drawings . Rome & Apartment Housecleaning by reliable 64().8l9'1 768-7962 SELL idle items · with a 1t well -Call NOW, Patterson Engineering. ~pair&remodellng. couple. References. Call Find what you want in Da.ilyPilotClassifiedAd.
642·5678. Co. 842·9666 642-6783 963-5813or1-6'-6-6126 Daily Pilot Classifieds. Want Ad Results 642·5678 Classified Ads 642·5678 &\2-5678.
00 TT M"IW!
642.5671
Engineering
M.ANUF.ACTURIH~
ENGINEER
•
5
•ales _____ _. SALES/ORGANS?n
AnYouTheO...
·" We a re Jooklna: for ~.~ several bigb energy level
''1 •l . individuals for an excit-·]f1:;1 ing career in the music businese. We are t he U llo(K·s <>rcan Exchange loCllted gf,~· <~ in (10) So. Calif. regional 1L.:",~. I .~~j.;wl lS'' I f)r shoppmg ma.11.s. We offer ....... H Kt: apreaUgious career. >tlnt
training pro&r am,
highest oomm/guarn. &
many fringe benefits. We
req. professionalism in
lhe art or selling & a strong determin~Uon to
succeed. Some organ
keyboard ability ls req 'd.
Jr you are the one-Call
Daphne Jett, 586·7300
LOS ANOELES
PAL&.I SPRINOS
WOOOLANO HILLS
NEWPORT BE~CH
BUllOCl'S
WILSHIRE,
a leadingfashlon special.
ty store wW open its firs Orange Co. stor.e in S~lesw<?men to sell
NEWPORT BEACH on diagnosttc kit.I over t be
August 1st, 1977. We offe pl_lone .. No exeer necess.
an opportunity to join an Biological Sci. oriented
exciting fashion forward prerd. Call Zak 645-2111
organization. The follow· ing areu for which we SANDWICH & SALAD
are acce~Uog applica-FABRICATOR, food pre-
Uons reqt.Dre strong sell paration trainee, SAM to
For production develop·
ment or small electro.
mechanical assemblies.
Exper. in documenta.
tion, production line
. troubleshooting & cost
• reduction. Degree
prer'd.
ST.ACOSWITCH IMC
1139 Baker Costa Mesa
549·3041
RECEPTIONIST
Insurance agency seeks
brieht & enefietic ,iirJ for receptionist po6il1on.
Duties mclude answer·
ing busy switchboard,
greeting clients k some lig h t typing. Exp .
help£u1. Hours 9-6, Mon·
Fri. Call Llnda 549·1161
SAUS-ADV&TISIMG
IH
TOURIST GUIDE
PUIUCATIOH
S4ZS to $1275 wk
Commissions PLUS ex-
penses on trade out plan
PLUS renewal accounts. Complete training. 3.5
Years outside. sates ex· per ience necessary.
Protected territory in
Orange County.
ing beck,cround; 12 noon. Mon· Fri, IUO
Lu hr start. Over 18, Lori's -. ggage Kitchen, 979·0747 aft
Mlllnery , _1.0_AM_. --....--
<Wig Stylist exper) Equal Oppor Employer
. ESCROW
*OFFICER*
RECEPTIONIST
Full time. Personable
w /phone e xpr .
Restaurant company. Call SG-9322 for appt.
MR. LIHDS.A Y
l2 l JI 429·67'3
Tailor Fitter
For our Men's
Alteration Dept.
We offer an excellent
compensation plan in·
eluding a liberal discount
on store merchandise.
Please apply in person·
DAILY 10.12&2-4
83 F~HION
. ISLAND
F.qual Oppor Employer
SAi.Es-MGMT
We need a person ex·
per'd in the total
merchandizing concept
of a women's European
SECRETARIES ....... traff••
:~
•Escrow
• .......... ftCJ
Nosh or litesh
TOP $$$$$$f$$$$$
0-tfillW-Q
I t Mi'UIUofl' tit I I'
540.4455
1'711Q2Sky Park Blvd
Ste 101 : Irvine
Equal Oppor Employer
bouUque. AL lease 1 yr1---------prior ex per. necess in management & ules.
Must be ready to step ill·
to mgmt pos. for this
very active N.B. shop.
Call for appt & interview
THE LOOK
DAILYIOAM-6PM
644--6500
sales
Secretariea
LOOt<tHG FOR
TEMrOltAltY WORIC7
F.am extra money work-
ing l0-0al asalgnmenls
that add interest to your
life & open new op·
portunlties. Your office
skills are valued at
WOMEN & MEN Earn ~o~· o f f ice • $1000 a wk. sellin.e & list·
ing mobile homes. No 0 overload
exp. nee., wUI lraio. Mr. 5•7 ,. L Sims, 1198-9904 ~ -vO"I
3'7ZS 8lrob $t. NB
. I OM......, •400 hhat.t ., '-J~. A 1300 , ....... ~lce1U60 HtffJ W•tH 71~0 HtlpW.tetl 71ot -.TU!!Cf!Y-.-~,...,.Ju ... tyi-1~9,._.1 .... 977..._ _______ D._A_tt.;.,_,Y_Pt....,L_O_T_f:---.7 ··~··;_;-•••••••••••••. ~~·· .. Qlall•....., UOI ~~···+·~~.,~, \•••••• ~····••••tt•••········· ··-·················· ..........••..........• -~.... .., .......... , ••••••••• ~T : .,,., F~y I( •llaM • CLERICAL ....,w.... 7'00 .... W..t.d 7t00 efp W..ted 71 00 • NSWflORTBMCU ~ rn.-o I "...._, .Banldn1 S&1. P/Ume lOam-3 m. da . •••--••••••••••••••• •••-••••••••.-••.••••• ••••-•••••••••••••••• Hot s. .. f • two pvt. CJMtr people own U.. r •· .... ,. le. .. 't~hy Dr. TILL8t Tues·Fri. e..1: bkp'I:, Delivery Home deUvcey ._ ______ _
bat ht. Mot .... IDO. IOhl -~m-i·.Nrn= Wilma ~lawl. -.1411 C4M NEWPORT BEACH q'd. CalJ 87M848. ())pt lor Day Stllft • ot,,,. ftt>Cbter ln °*t .,. EJednioiCI ~ . • 1 ~ • '"' 1 \ You an U..wlnaer PoaWon wUl pn>vide u· CQtO & ·rrr. EV. pre-ternooo. Good ~ or • ________ _. t.uadvan&a · c.l •Or ft•,• oUUcketato peisu.re to new acco1.1Dta Q.llUCAL f'CI. 1aiervlew btwn couple ol hrs ucb day 1ECHMICIAH
6t .. IOn ·• H:lunt.f~.l:loJerey ...-w.111 WOlLDTMM uwellas~gularTell•r Nl&bt Shift. Exper. MPJI. 4&4'1 MacArlh~, Approx SSOO·S400 mo.
lllf :I.Jr 8 IMl ..... 9'C.. ~ 11HMlS duties. 8 MCDIM Ttller ~p/uJ, but wllUnl to N.8 . (nr O.C. AJ.rP>~). Muat hve dependable Posit.Joo available ror an
401' ... t lllSTAu.AMT Pt&I .. V91ey GOLDf:N G.\tE experience preferred, train resp. iodiv. Job,.. ~ car+ backup.~. mdMdual witb 2 yean
NIWPOJt1'B£Aat YooUt .. wlnAer ~ but will cOl1rider In· 11'1 tliun apUtude. \yp· Demal Chalnlde Apist minimum bHlc elec· I~' W ... _fDI", 1-ated lnlb ot attivUf aUtk!UUto SAN O • dlvldu~I wittr'atrODI lnl .. 10 key. Xlol wor9'· COOK Irvlne. ·~~ Oay wit: tronic education o r =~U.lCtc 111000. mootb OQfa on _..,_._ . ...., al ,.. u1hienn1 backgrou.nd. ln1 conda • benefits Hom l 1 ~i.i-• Rewardin& lnvolvement equlv,.lenl work ex· .a-. .~ .... ~. •· 12 ...,,_ ._... ANAHm For further 1-'ormaUon w/co. loeated ln Fublon .e 1 Ye~· .or , 'd RD perle .. ce Typa'ng 30 ~ -·· ,..,,.,,... a.. · · TIMMIS & · t.e~ ln.t Isl ta-t u·30AM to9AM .-eurec:nent borne in 1°" exper · A. S800 u • call OD Bae uaicr Owner movllltJ.. aaqt .n.oLD"'"' G•T"" CONVEN , ant 10,11 J ... _•fl'PQ • ,,_:1_ ... ,. · .a..u • ..-• J.,aguna Beach. '94·Nss Sal. Call Betwn 9·4, wpm, and famillarily mt)IO-llllt111JCI ull . Terma. TlllE, '* -~ " .-. CENTER men c 01111 Laun, ~-~.,pm,~. 5S2-8339 with computer termlnal
71U400 i!~ tJ.llly 21119'1't ) (114) 67~ CO 0 K • H 0 US E . --------opeTatlom Is desirable. -..xlOMCll SANmEOO Call Ma-tml, ext. is:s, to LotAftgele• ~~~~~~~~tap~ KEEPER. 12 noon to Dental Ortho. asst. We can orfer the
Q1m.m.1 ii ~ apaca. MOMIY at the clalm)'tW'Ucltet.. ,_.,..., S..iltgJ " bkkpo r deslra· 4PM, Mon-Fri, seo wk. P/li'me for friendly, low qt1111ified candidate an
llt..to2oochq.l\.Aalow .. UaepameottN1•rn.. .tNAH&lM '*'*"* Equal()ppEmp&yTm/f' bl 63i.ifsi.upe En&llsla speaking only. pressure ore. RDA. or excellentstartingsalary ••eq.ft. ... Nituel.tl We'U IJl.tPpl>' tN veblcle , CQNV.¥NTlON e. Own trans. Exper & RDA eltglble. Salary with liberal fringe
lha&loe VJfrlo •r•••· fOUprovlcletbebody. h1 CEmD ~llt& a.BKJYPIST ref's.SC81'771art4PH baa.eel on exp/ablllty. benefits to include a Ka~, to S..P. hwy . ...a&wmtaecured.Com c.llt42~'f:H[!333,lo. ,,.,_..tlow BaolQ!IL. .. ____ S • forN.B.lD.l~anceaaen· COOKS.So.Lac.CM.NB. = 559.0111. aft 6 ~~3i~~l~d~n~~lorn:
C.U:tn·MOO :~-~~"tn :x. claim~tl~ftl· !'•••••'-••·~·: .. ••••••• -_l'JLLI' cy. Jna. exp. helpful. but P/Ume.& f/ltme. Coffee---------• surance.
AlrDm'tottlcn ceaa or $25,000. p/yr. * '* * MIW..ted, 7075 PIXOHRATbR notoec.845-0000 Shop exp. Refs please. DENTAL/Auiatant 1 ffONTfl P'REE cn4>830-51123 ••••••••••••••••••••••• DICT ..... ~1 OPR a.aJCTYftlST Charlie's Chili Ofc. ('11~) ~per necessary, X·Ray Please apply in pe
0
rson . ---------•Found: Royco Union W•e·ln companion. No Ar""" 549-0351 lie F/Thne Call837 7112 lo: fUUMl'Ylce.No&e.,.re-Bl t e VI c El· ddnlt/amolte. Mature RETURMITIMSCLIC Exl>lllldintM.ortgageCo. · · ·
q'd. -.. ... 1\. Plent)' .. ••'9•..t Ua/11a:1nolta • Call woman w/refs/u.pr LOAHCLKTYPIST in Orange<:;ounty bas an COUNTEAHELP Dental St!cretary/Book·
or parill".'· 2CIU S.E. o,,.,..,_., SOii 91?-?125ext.344 • seeka F/Ume eere of Jmmed. opefti.ft•• tor ex· immediate opening for a D&YI. p/Ume. Must be al keeper, exper'd or col· TREHDATA
Briatol St. Newport ••••••••••••••••••••••• eJderlY Wor emotlonally per'd, well «grrco:'med in· ~clerk typist. least 17. Apply in penon .Call546-30QO. CORPORATION BeadL 5.SM'OlO Energv Loet: Bur!J)eSe cat. male, handlcapped person Must type 55·60 wpm alt 2PM TACO BELL
Discove.Jry 2 yrs old, blue·'tollar. i&e6-2Cm,9S2·9S4T dividuals to work in Please call Cathy • • Dental Chair AssLSt. X· STANDARD
111 rrnftlrUT CdM area. "Leroy". busy, friendly al· Tompson at Uni Cal 695 S . Coast Hwy, rayll~nse. MEMORIES u..-..n I PatentAld/mflr A: pi.,-ket· 759-W8 Reward RELIABLE Waley grad. mosphere. Xlnl salary, Mortgage, 714·963·7873. Laguna Beach. • Call 546·3000.
Al.TnMl•nvE ing investment. S20,000. . I will babysit. or tut.or •DY beoefits & growth polen· E.0.E . Count.er help is needed. DB4T AL ASSIST. DIVISION 'Ul"" Sec. Ur. Robertson, Lost: Male Cat, 10011 hair, morn in& or wknd. tial. Call Personnel. COCKT•IL We have openings r~ 2 An Applied Magnetics Co
M• to moolb reJal in· !1J.278-4133:J mldti gray. Nwpt ll&ht.s. 5'14331 645-5333 A w 0 me 0 , w 0 r ..k 1 0 g Expe.r. prd'd. FUll/part 3.aOO W. Segerstrom
eludes· rec.pt. senice Reward.646-1008 IAM<OFMEWPORT WAITRESS w/public in a nice beach time. Top wages. Corp. SantaAna,Ca92704 ~1oed ~e cov'. MoMyto&.o.. 5025 . . HOSTESS for your • Equal()pl)OrEmployer Learn in 40 hrs the most area. Apply before lpm. benefits. Lac1.ma Beach
,. .... .;e con! room ma.ii ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOST· White ~amoye,d, parties, weddincs eLc. excitJng, 11lamourous, Eastbhtr Cleaners, 2547 494-8SSS. Equal Opportunity --·' · • . • male, ans Lo' n.obe" vie. J\eas reliable ref's. hi ..... id ---------• E I M/F servace, underground lst.2ed &lrdT.D.1 Harbor/Wilaon. C.M. 642.720? 646-4871• g....,. pa i_>rofess. Day Easlblutr Or. NB Dental Assist, p/tlme.1---m-p•o•ye•r---•
prkg. & more. 10 LOANSAVAILABLE 548-7086 ' BANK or eve sessions. Place· 644-0032 Chairside. Eves, some ---------Ne~E~trtuTIVE ~l~}7m3~'!a8n3t. Found, small .whit~ p00• URGENT •LO.AM CLERK• ;:,c;_ntassist.Goodjobop-DalVERY/DRIVER Sats.HB846-3540 Electronic assembler.
SUITE ~· v ·-die, Vic. J!:each & Slater, I Need WoXlrkn.t Waitress, Immediate opening in Cdl 714/75 1-9194 & PROD. WORKER Dishwasher, Mature. lmme.d. openings for the -b d · H tingt Be h f(i following positions: PCB 640.5470 _ MoncJl!cJea.T..t H..q.l entify.842·3900 PreferDays?PhS48·392S un on ac o ice. S~. Calif. Cocktail $3tostart.642·2256 Bayview Conv. Hosp, stufCing&louchup,elec·
DHdj 5035 General offjce back· Waitresses, Inc., 17922 20S5 Thurin Ave, CM ••Cd1d dbc 2 rm swta, Found, prescription mens .....,W__.__. 7100 i!round, typing 45 wpm. Sky Park Bl, Ste C, . DELIVERY "~"·3505. toronic chassis assembly
t·1 pd A/C ' 1 k ••••••••••••••••••••••• s ·c I I v· arnwv . i """' & also assembly fo' r u 1 .• , amp e p g, 1 oca g a sses. 1c. Some loan exper ence lrvi·ne, ca 92714. Courier full time.
$155.mo lo mo. 675-6900. LOANS 9°' Lake St. & YorJtlown. ••••••••••••••••••••••• pref erred . Excellent Must have good driving DONUT SHOP smaU solid stale devices
.Lt. 'l '• . ' /0 H.B. 536·5723 ACCOUHTfMG CLK salary, working condi· Cnffee 'Shop Waitress. record Cor deliveries in FUil & p/time. No exper. w/epoxy exp. Apply at
2 Pvt umces, reception & Aho 2nd TD Loans FOUND· 11 7 kl ce Work in lovely new ofcs tions and beMfi\s. ~aU over 18, day shirt. Apply Orange & L.A. counties. nee Age 25-45. Woman. Barcus-Berry Inc., 15461
2 restrooms. 720 sq rt FairestTermssince1949 · 1 • nee JI • in Costa Mesa. Asi;ist or apply at branch to Rosemary, Sun Age 18 or Qver. $2.50 J:ar. Apply in person, Mr. Springdale St .• Hunt·
total. Fqt Valle)'962·3200 ' SatfferMhJ. Co. ~ll~:iS:~t;>nt & bookkeeper w/journal AMERICAN C lemente l nn , 125 Call833·3030 Do(lut.l.35 E.17lhSl,CM _i_ngt;;..._on_Be_a_c_h. ___ _
Piao • 642-2UI 54S.061 I . • :~·r~:·~~gE~i!~."~ SAVINGS ~~e~::.:. Esplandian, DBJVERY PERSOM Drapery Workroom· ENGINEERING
Encutive Suites T p •RTY $CDIU 1£TS .A/rec. & payroll desired. 7830 F.dinger Hunt. Bch Freeway Auto Supply exper'd Cutter & tabler, orriee avail. Overlooks PRJVA £ A """"" Good co. benefits. Apply, Mrs. Braun 848·2222 c 0 M M 1 s s I 0 N Avery Prkway at S/D finisher & Cree·lance ID· LAI TECH
airport. a: moun\aine. Wlll pay more tor your IY~WEIS National Systemg Corp., Equal Opportunity SALESMEN & SALE Frwy. Mission Viejo. staller. 642·1843 For evaluation & testing
Airport/Regist.ry area. 2ndT.D.8'2-3Si3 ftn.J . 4361 Birch St, N.B. <near EmployerM/F MANAGER For new -------------------•of components for
2082Micbelson,.Irvine. Ask us about 1st, 2nd or Sadist-Brawl-OC Airport) EOE. boat dealer & yacht DELIVERY MAM, DRIVER manuf. or electro-mech'l
752.0234 3rd ln.lsl deed loans. Cen· Latch -Det;lip-brokerage, sailing expe FUil time for party rental SUMDA Y OML Y switching devices .• Req's
t 21 1 t CA.5JiEW ACCOUMTIMGCLIC Pankt.eller,exp'dfref'd. nec675-14m. store. Must be neat. & Deliver Daily Pilot sohd state & printed
"The Complete Office" ury nves men No Credit Cards Here. .Mortga~e banking firm &imilomo Ban1t o Calir, able Lo do heavy lifting. bundles lo carriers. Re-c1rcuilry knowledge. &
9 Offices + work room, Division. 963-7866 Strictly CASHEW an<t in Orange Co. has an im· C.M. ofc. 549-9181 COMPAMIOM/U .. I• Apply in person. 2025 quires van or large exper. w/electrical lest
confer· rm· v 8 u It, Carry. med. opening for an ac· GreaUy needed, honest, N rt Bl d CM d ood d · ""'WP. Some J.C. look. I G d ti Xlnl •-------A../ BARLADY·Girl 25 to 30 ewpo v • · · wagon an 3 g nv· -.. 0 OWlge. m oor. ___...n ctng clerk w/exper. io clean, caring, capable ing record. Phone backgroundpreC'd.
prk'g. 4.5< Ct. Top Costa P~/ FOUND: Gray miniature btJnk reconciliations. yrs old, lot.end bar, no mature woman. Nice 642·4321, ask for Harry STACOSWITCH IMC.
Mesa Joe. 2500 sq . ft. or Lost & fowld ~emltle ·poodle, w/flea PI ease call Cat h Y ex per nee, Hunt.mgton home & yard. Watch DO YOU Seeley. Equal opportuni· 1139 Baker Costa Mesa
less. (714)540-2200 or••••••••••••••••••••••• collar. vie Atlanta & 1'hompson. at Unical Tavern for mellow peo· over & care for elderly OFFERASERVICE? tyEmp)oyer 549-JGU
<714)494-4717 Amol.Mcenwllh 5100 Newland, H.B. 556-0352 Mortgage, 714/ 963·7873. pie only. S36-3300 I ad y . Cooking & Let the public know with -=---=-..:...-----• Equal Oppor Employer .
lmpro\'ed ofc space, 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Persowals 5 350 .EOE. BARMAlD,CMarea.FUll housekeeping. Pref an ad in lhe Daily Pilot DRJVERSneededbyL.A.
rooms, all or part': * * * ••••••••••••••••••••••• time. Top pay for right driver, non·smoker , Service Directory. It can Times for par\·lime ---------Apt. Managers for 6-0 lo 80 heerluJ s 1 k k d I t Recept. area. 125 sq. ft. John Kwntt Drinking problem'! units in Costa Mesa. person. Jim. 979.9497 c person. a ary cost you as lit.lie as $1.65 wor . w n s on Y o People who need People R mi·224 s n Roo commensurate with per day. For more in· start.Musthavetruckor That's whallhe 00 • q. · m 117 Monarch Bay Call Alcohol Helpline 631·2950 BARMAIDS. Day. Night capabilities. Refs rcq. van, also hab11ity in DAILY PILOT 2; 321 sq. ft Room 3. S<I' So L ii hrs a day 835·3830 & Re11·ec Sh1 ... s. Call 'or "-II bt 3 formation and complete E 0 E be 8 per sq. ft., incl utll. Nr. • OCJllftO · " 1' ..,.. wn 1·4, 538·107 or ratescall642·5678. surance. · · l : SERVICE DIRECTORY o. c. Airport. Bud Youare.thewinner PREGNANT? Assembly appl.548-7781 _:548~·=354~2 _____ ...:..1---------&SPM.549-8548 1s allabout!
Priess, 540· 7800 8·5. of 2 tick els to Caring con Cid e n ti a I
WORLD TEAM counseling & referral. Nwpt Ct.r Courlyd wiu
dowed ofc. Share reccpl
& secy. SlSO mo. Joe
64().4260
TENNIS Abortion, adoption &
GOLDEN GATE keeping.
VS APCARE 547-2563
SAN DIEGO --------
at the LIND~ "VICKI Executive orflct! space,
950 sq. ft. 5()1 p/ft. 8 mo's
lease w/oplion to renew.
496-5759; 495-4858
ANAHEIM Outcall Massage
CONVENTION For tfle Fu11 of it!
CENTER Serving all Ocanee Co.
July 28, 1977 836· 7313 Qlll 6"t2·S678, ext. 333:to --------Businns R....tal · -"450 claim your tickels.
I '••
........................ * * *
4 D!l.UXEQFC'S
Conf. nn .. seat 25, all
paneled . .sm. whse In re·
ar. l ec 2 ¥~ ~e..-.. Lake
Forest acea. K.enl
Harkins.
••• Tim Hendricks
1637 lrvioe
Costa Mesa 11f.Slf1:9~ You are the winner oC
ATTENTIQN Artist & twofrffticbts
Craftsmen. $50 to $400 , ($1SAJOvalue), lo
mo. Ulil incl. UNIQUE RillcJhcJ lroa.
rel. studio "Tbe Fae· lcl,.,.._ & lcllt.y
tory" 425 p;, 30th St. 1 • Clrcui
Newport Beach or call • · 675-6181or673-4271 • Aug~ lhru Aug l~ ---~· _ __,.... · Anaheim Con:vent1on
DESK· 1u~aoe ~l 1'1875 Center,800W. Katello
Beach }Hvd.,. near Tickets must be ex·
Talbert in Huntington changed •for reserved
Beach. $50' per month. 'seats al the Convention Brin~own·fumlture. Our Center ahead or time.
receptionist will answe~ Call 642--S678, Ext 333 lo
your phone for $10 per claim your tickets.
month. Daily Pi)ot olCice, * * *
6424321 I_;:_....__ Lost & Found SlOO
LAGONI) 1 t>lk tp Cfily ••·~~·••••••••••;••••••
Ha.ll. 5,00().l~,000 sq ll. FOUND: Vic 17th & PrimeC-~. 494-50tl9 Irvine, N.8 . Sm mostly
In CdM for lease. eute 61 white w /tan markings,
sq. ft. pstio store-in male Spaniel type
F e rnle a r court yard. _63_1._1!M8 ____ __...___
Spiritual Reoder
1815So. El Camino Real
San Clemente,. Fully he.
For appt, •1•
*MICHRLE'S*
Outcall Massage
10AM·2AM . 731-4462
MASS.AGE
Fl~R~.~~ELS
,,ESC0fl.T$
OuTCALL OHL Y
6ll·38 I•
*KAREN'S*
Ot.ITCALL MASSAGE
6PM-2PM 973·0893
•SHA.ROM'S.•
OlJTCA.Ll..MA.5SAG E
499.1224
*** Dr. D. Scott
l t 706AIGIH .
,..... valley
You~ the winner
. q( 2 lickell to
WORLOTUM
MECHANICAL
PRECISION
ASSEMBLERS
We are a small manuf' co.
w/ job opportunities for
precision mechanical as·
semblers w/6 mo's ex·
per. You will have the
chance to move U\) to ful-
ly qualified madune ~ool
builder. We offer good benefits·~ you will work
°'!a vaJiety of PC.ll drill·
ing machines. adjusting .
trimming & filling to
tolerance.
Appl)' In eenon
A't>V 4MCEO
CONTROL
647 Y.o,ncJ$t .
Santa. Atta. C.Uf,
Equal Opp()r Emptbyer
Beauty stylist. Must do
new trends. Very busy
salon. Top wages for
right person . Lake
Forest.837·4250,837-8779
BEAUTY OPERATOR
NEWPORTER INN
644-0661 &644-4140
BOOKKEEPER F/C
Multi books ror prop.
mgmt. Call 640-0123.
BUSIOY·DIHMER
We accept applications
Mon-Thurs 3·5. Exper.
req 'd. Gulliver's Restaurant. 18482
MacArthur Blvd, Irvine.
CARPENTRY
Journeyman framer
w /tinish exper .
Rererences required,
Newport Beach 759·0218
Tony
C~RWASH
F/time, over 18. Apply at ASSEMILERS Metro Car Wash, 2900
Assemblers, precision, Harbor Br, CM. '
male or fem. 4 yrs. min expel": ODoctriaanual ~x-CASHIER
lerily, good eyesight, Telephone. Mature
soldering & microscope person w/exper. $500 per
exper. Small compo· mo. + benefits. Apply,
nents. Ra.rd working. de· The Earl's Plumbing, dicat~d individuals 1526 Newport Blvd, C.M.
needed . SrnaJJ co. 842-1753 w/good bCpefits, gd. op-•------~
por. advancement. Call CASHIER
Carol: 581·3830, MV lmmed. Full & p/lime
openings in our self serve
AUTO gas stations, Costa Mesa ....._ + FnNtt ERd area. Great job for stu·
Mechanic needed, exper. dents. 714/821-6260
nee.
/
TOMOKKEA
. WORl;D,·
TEAM
TENN·IS
THE WIMBLEDON STARS COME TO
ANAHEIM IN JUL¥.
JULY 21 JULY 28 Splil·level w/~auliful Found. 7/ts blk/brn Pup,
crptg. Good pk.Ilg & slpi female, -4 mo's. Vic. Run·
space. (213)791J..JSOO Ungton & Utica, H.B.
Newport·Mariner's Mile' _960-_44tc ______ _
1280 sq ft. store hr Post LOST: ~iamue cat,
Of'c. Remod. $640. Jerry tfeylsb color. Vic lrvine Wynn12;13~£7·7001 . . & Anniversary, NB.
. f&4MIS
GOLDEN GATE
VS
' '~ANDfEGO ·ulhe·
ANAHRIM
Lia ~ CdM Re~ly and DeveJop-
1rpr tuneup, carburaliot1. me!'t firm .n~eds ex·
Smog lie. re<i'd. Bo'th lk!cenced girl Frida)',
position& liberal comm exec/secretary type. + guam Appl),. brange Must have eonstructlon,
TeQ.m Russia vs. San Diego
JULY 23
Golden Gate vs San Diego
JULY 30
Store for-Rent, CoastBwy Reward 645-6155
• CONVl!:NTION
'CE(l(l'ER
.July28,1977
Call 842-5678, ext. 333, to
claim )'tfUr ~ickeu.
I ......
CdM. ApJ>l*'TOO lq ft, LOST; 3dogs, 1Samoyed,
Olli rn:334S 1 Sbe~leullx on St\l., vie.
:ro Sq ft.. ·otc. 65• w. lfM;b. Paulai'lno St. &~·Van c M . • ., .. , , , Buren, CM. Rewara! Pis EXOTIC GIRLS Ma.2130 , .67~09 can tmml!d. 548.·0177, Massl(gu,Jt~eltng
---------• 54a41'M or8'2-97'71 callSG:tl~/~325-0' ~ to'' ' .. , ,;: 'U)i l .,.,11 C 7 •~ t-~---------1 •••••·~~!>!~:>·~•ft,,•••• ~t, 14l lt1Y'CO et, ~ R. V. Stor4i• O~anu on ea. foot, fem. Reward.
C o u 11 t,¥ 1 n ( e r n"' I 552.3133 • ' " '
Racew41 • 'l~ per ft., per • '300.REW ARD,
mo. CompliJ~ s'rvlce Wue ~.Great ,Doe.
dept. 'J1~l290 l~ 7/f; ~ . I
Rllfhlls ~ I 0 ,.
• •• ••••• •• ••••. ••. •. •• • LC)$T nltl ~ding band • v)c Miln bcb laW1), Lat. Archlt~ w~ 3 or, 4 bc:b~ noon. -,4~¥ .
bdrm bot.11e1 JU',. Hart>or ---
, Hl. C&Jt •v .. ~J L(JST; •PreacrlpH~n IJ~fora4yrold1 Tie fWbor Sehl 548·915S
C • · ' Tu 1 bk.kpg exp. Com.mwilca· 0 · Auto, 2401 st n lion s"ills essential. Ave, S.A. 542.5673 Salary open. Welton &
Au10motiv~ _Co_. 67_s.e>oo __ . ___ _
New Detail ~P needs CHILD CARE help. Toe ~es patd. Engine Woman. to care for
StA!amen. en1 painters, dilldren 10 Harbor. View
b\ttenr &.polisben, uP· Hom,e . ~~ ·'1~~5 aft
ho11tery shampooers, t m • · •
check out, plck·up ft de· Uvery. App{y al
205&Harbodl11 CM
845-1030 '
San Diego vs. Los Angeles Sea Port vs. San Diego
UAM RUSSIA: Alex Metreveli, 01go Morozova, Natosha . Chmyrevo.
GOLDEN GATES: Francoise Durr, Tom Okker, Frew McMillan, John
'' Lucas. SE~ PORT: Tom Gorman, Erik Von Dillen, Joanne Russell. LOS
ANGELES: llie Notose, Rosie Casals, Charles Posorell. SAN DllGO: Rod
Lover, Dionne fromholtz, Cliff Drysdale, Kerry ~eld. INDIANA: Vitos
Gerulo[tis, S"'e Barker, Allon Stone. Ann Kiyumoro. . ..
• • .-,.;;"--..;;OAl;;.;;,::;&..;.Y.;..Pt.;,:l~O.:..T _______ ~;..::U!fl!~::oYu..• =JWX~1:.:t,~1:.:t'n!.!. tt.det Uwfwwl•ll A,U"f••ll........ 4 1 .:....:.. IMtllft u ... a-• • ............................................ _ ""!* • ..,._._p .,. ..... ,~ Af•t-·•·........ 14400 ' .._.. U•fu Jilli• ..._., U•fwlll.W ._._ ... _ ,.,0 .... ,,*1• "'•07 c.:~··•• ............ ••••••::_::_•~• ....... "' · -·• •••••-•• .... ••• ••••••·~11••""""· ..... . •••••••u•H•• .. ue••• •u•u•••u • .. ••••-• u•u•••••••••-.. •••-_.._ .,.. r< --rwMetit 3124 """'99 ' Jel• ._...._.. • Jl4' ~ 12$ Wk ~wtlb • • •• ., J JJ4 -............ .......................................................... ,.,......... • ...................... ~-··········-· lllkbft "".5C) ," .u>
••0 •••••••••••0 u •••• ~ SJ44 MiAil ,_.., l 211 3Br, 181, aupcr 1bup dlx Excllltive Pema Pt, Joe 1.-se.nss • .• * ~ IHAD• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••"••"'••• Oondo, nr So. Ost Pl•z.a. Lee 2 Br 2 Ba •sit. aduJta. Oeeaofront QJ4 MHlt. ..... N.w1'~ltty,Or, • ..,..u L~KE FORJlEST Pool, .. ,, a wka Cree DO. pat,s.~mo.Calltor S._.fl1tu1n01 ~!:~" •l>ov• Boom 1• lovely. ~ISl•t 1-.. lrptc ta Uv rm 11.R,tbe ...... f.'JG/.US Woodwalk 4br, 3ba, rent.$3llO.M0-4462 appt ~two ••1P M. J l ~U sud. llWJv6 ~.l'Odnm',ptjsOC'
bftaifaal bar l• fam a Bl\, I Ba ••••• '' S3ISJ 6T$ '°""· dl.n rm. 2300 1q ft'. ~ • ...... wtac$owa. atDCllW& ltlt4: Pdv,19.
T11,bb&.xtru..•mo J.BA.aoa. ...... $450 CoveredpatJo,A/C.3car ~·~::t~~~· C.-..,Mw 3121 Awlnnl1t9oomblftatf0n · lbpka. aao '4 ft+. P••·ale. SlSOl.mo.
Nr. M...,.aaa Al E11l1 4Ba.28a... . .$420 pr.$$50be.AvaU.llU. 1a-1'ea · .......... ¥........... ofadult"*"'*"hotnes P~J.alll*~lve tS>CDbe.f-.1t:•a11.
m.a7 ANNIEJM tuLLS Owner5»1510 with luxury IOC)Oint('J'lenhl~ Oil • eoast.. _.._to ft......-1....__ ... 110 IJlR .... u. 3 ....,._ Lb. tuna'b rkreatlon at• --ium pyt bth. Jlea\lto lree1, -.._ · • • ""' t' It <• .... "140 ' . .. . . ..... _,., _,""m• l b& 2 car t'oc-.. tlon. Te .. ..i ... ...:..':.=.._y q,Jll. ~-Sloile or •H•••••••••• .. ••H•N•
-• .. ••••• .. ••••••••••• ... _ • ...... • Steluded S330 · b soa•swll1V'fllng•bclllards . c jm:-• ~ req ,. .. ..,. .....-. -yeaf. a • • Ul...&-VI.&.. J •67 tar•••• fented y&rd. re "'V ,.. ,,, • ..,,.,,.. '""""-pl ....J• n-i-'d. IPI_. t l-• t i.Lo.
••••••••••••••••••p•••• . mo. 1223 fl,. or~11 Jr. one BedrQOII\ '1l50I> ~ year around. oowxt .noor ~tt ~·
SUper a bedrm.1. 2 Nth JC N. Roes, S.A. ~&Tl'9 one & Two Bedroomt. One Btth Q ~ now aYJ., ror ao am·
w/fam rm Al "-.cpt4 w ... • ..._ ,.2 '"-S210.·~u-uavam:.. ..,. ~-b.u la(o~1 1a4Y or d r p 1 • •10 ~•1 '" tHw ~ ti CORONAl)ELMAR · ...,....., J _ ..... --,..-.-i ..... end,or.Shaw'•'-Vve: ceriUit~atU.,popular
nelabborhood. uu~ ....................... 2 Br Townhou.se, trplc. (b .cw:u•• l·Bdrm. apt&. all eJec . .iTuatld Jfacle"'9•· Call
tllM561,Agt.,notee. SuperSharp Pool,~.Someoceaq SOOPpulartnoAvt .. Co1toMtso 75lollt5 $2Qmo. bOW,.,.31147
..a... 4br,2b•,fPlc,avall 6 Catalina Yins Close ·--·-... , 1\amerAssoc:. 494·11'7 S ~ .f200 .-wportleac~ 1269 now.Chlldren,petaOK ... ho . ft• • £C er.,_._ 11'-"-•-H bo •••••••••h•••••••••••• S365/mo Owner5'6-5880 ...,s Ppin&lulDebeacb. c:.t.Meu ~••4 Hi t0 ......... ~•40 ...... , ... ,••••••••-••
· -at w:-andf5'h"~ ... ., .. "-·l HARBOll VJ · GM-2611 -•~""JI•--.-......,......._ .. 1'69 SAHa.•.---1 ~on •a<'h. Call ·~'-""'rv;i..: ~ •s EW 5 B~ Ca•ch.W1•1 •• , ... ,., .... ., ....... ,. ....... .-" ............ ~·-••••••on••••••••• CJlllllA""
Wf«moredetailt. 11.JllTLE ROCK 3 Br ~m,;:et. UO·lM• or ~ 1400 ~-----N0tttH30 . lltAMDMIW! ' PAUMIWPOltT :::~~~· ~os,
Fam Rm ZBa w/VIEW' ••••••••••••••••••••••• SUra«:dM · Mature .adul(.s only, no 2Brapta.From$310/per Bachelors l o r 2 BD1!IA . y·
l•e yard, nr'terut1a ;,. BLUFFSCONDOS F.utbbtfCoadoooareen· •. LOC"'--..S peta. ~ar1e 1)2"3 br mo. 1411 pe~aware, HB BedroomdiT~ea , RJ!:Al:l'()
pools $54$ mo •at Leues •tartln' at ~ ~ 3 BR. 3 Ba, xlnt -~uvn apt&. Dsbwhr, BH BBQ. Opea.12-5,Dail.Y.UlU•~ FromS2:58.50 ~Del liar ~1
152.om · _,.. · Mcnth.AJent644-U33 . $800. mo. ~ :L2&3Bd.rm.Apts. Gu pd. na Scou Pl ~ean: t!U-~601 A1t. Spectacular spa, total --..-----....;..~
NWPTCRE;STCONDO or(213)~ ~: 61~2311Dys. 642-50'13 538-l&o8 , recreation progr am. lU b dtm1, Newport
REAL TY INC.. ~-Two-•Be-droo-•m•,--1 4 BR. children OK, Pool, c.daRlittl• • CMJl"S R.Mlty 62foW~_!ilage 3 Br 2 S.., $3SO. 2 Br 2 Ba, ==At·=~: :::..=:rm..~S:'1o 71 ~-...1 ~71 Ra,ncho tennia, w&Jktobcb. Yrly ..., • .._d 3425 l . .,,._646-2010 $290. Garqe. Rec area. l&Jaod J ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'!I SanJoaq ~~9 .. $6SO.M0-1'1Sl ••••••••••••••••••••••• VIEW-2 bdrm, 1 bath, FURNORUNFURN 10071Jloliy.848-8311 ~ ar,pboree & Sao NPT. BCH. on fenln. l '"" ~ -. w/sundeck ft •2brtownbome•tfrpl JoaqDuh\UW.RoacL blk.toQeeaaorky.tbr, Un Pk. Viii. JI $450 3Br, S47S. 316 Cedar St., ""'ean ..-.oot livinl pvt ' pc, gar.. .r "e .... u,..Aenc iarag• Lg 2Br, lBa, eaclos 14) 64 ... lfOO new'u 1 .. -•..1 ·•-"' wk· WalnutSqwue S375 Newport Shores, Webb staiatobcb specta::ular W/D, all appll's. Nr ~ .. ul~ ...... · "' garaee, 2 bib to beach 1u v.-:;:1--~:._..1 ... •. RaoeboSanJoaq ~ Realt.y831-2110 view, pool: patio, So. park, beach in CdM. •nu .... ~nuu18&over ·walktostores &bus.$260 Slepstobeacb,4Br2Ba, q re...,.. ...,,5 ••"'
Deerfield S37S Laguna, Lae $SaS mo. "50/moJease,675-6061. Pool&Jacuuiavait. mo.98G-Sl3l tpk.~dlpl,$SSOyrly SeJit. July & A_Uf._$2'15.
4 Bdr m p I I 499-Z781 • lse 642·34"3 ~ask for~. TbreeBedrooms on en nsu a 2 BR, 2 bllcs to Bcb <Big COUHTitYWOOOS ZBr lBa iarage patio, 1 · ~
University Park $475 w/~ walJc to bay & Easthluff CoQdo on creen· O>rona), bltn tit, •Wt· . EutsiCS. ntar new. 2 br, cbi0
1d n0 pets. $215 mo. •DauJE-=.~00:~-=~
Very nice 3 br, 2 ba home. College Park $450 ~acll.. W~y & warm belt. 3 BR, 3 Ba, xlnt deck, crpt, util incld. deo. slcyllgbt, aU bltns. 84'1-6182 Eastbl'Uf( 3 br z b•. --:i .:.-......_• ~-•
Cpts ' drps , Village I $475 ~~sg/ame ocation. mod. $800. mo. 833...3985 Lease. $365. mo. AvaU. Adults, no pets. $3". Lease.Jncl.apac:muter ~ .... or~mo.
PATIO HOME
Brand new 2 br, 2 ba,
bnclt lpk:. woveo woods,
wet bar, upfl'aded phub c rptg, pool, s auna ,
jacllZ%1,$47S.1168-9047
car iar., pa~~.~::!~· lo Oranee:rree $450 W ater~:0 :{1~0!:!~ or '2L3llMG-CMOO ~'!'·ts. Eves,6'1J.5454'or 646·1164or ·9543 l Br, paUo, car, nr S. suite, din rm & dbl ---------
hi & h $375 Woodbndge •A15 631 IA"" .. .,,.,.31t1o Die"" Fwy, a dlts, no A t d Be ........ bo /""'A h sc s s ops. . .... . ..,,., ,0~ Spac.newtnhse.2bc,2ba, pet.s.$iosm;m&73-0289 garaie. u o oor a-...,. mew ....... c
963-4.567 Agt. No fee. Rancho San Joaq. $595 Unfurnl1he4 3525 Front unit· of corner many xtras incl f/p; yd, · opener' avail. Pool & out fron t. Completely -----"-------1 Four Bedrooms ••••••••••••••••••••••• duplex.2Br,frplc,st-0ve. garage, lndry rm. E· New 2 & 3 Br in S·ptex, recreation area. Adult.a f\J.m.Fabuloua'Yiew.$750
4 BR Condo, cpts. drps, Culverdale $475 HBR, VIEW KNOLL 3 BR, 2 BA. Stanton. All cpts & drps, So. ol Cst side. Only $325. 642•1603 view. walk to beach, 509 onlY. No pets. Fre>m $36'1 wkJ uJy, $800/w,k A""1St .
refrig, pool, tennis, Univ Pk Viii. Ill . $600 Chanrung Cape Cod ext, rec facilities. $J25/mo. Hwy. No pets. $350/mo. Delaware.536~ up. . : WATERJ'"]U)1'1Jl)l0MES clubhse. $350 mo. 1.st. Univ. Park $525 2Br&den,3Ba, w/vlew. 1't&last 673_4545 Ph:S7S-34Slor'67S·l958. Sharp 2br, ept1. drpl!, I ___ 865_Am_..:,g;...os_W_a.:.y__ 631·1400• • ...
last&dep. 979·7888 Blln applic. Pool. tennis, · bltns. 1 child .OK. No NEW 2 br, 2 ba, bltns, $300
NEAR BEACH. 3 BR con· walk to shops. $600 mo. 4 bdrm 2 ba Townhouse in Costa Meta 3824 pets. $230'. 574 Joann St, mo. Garfield/ Buch. Nwpt Shores area. H2 ~LD l~Y
do. Dbl gar, pools, tennis 714-1-493-5888 C M . D b I g a r • ••••••••••••••••••••••• Apt D. MS-JUT 832·3448 554-7210 blksocean, 2br. lbadplx. Lagu,na~ 4 •Br bO\llie. pool/clubhouse. $425. ' Yrlybe. 714-956-5811 Whlt.ewa.tier~.N CQm· court, lse. Ph:962·636S. 67s.9227 ·• * * · Adult 2 bedroom, beam l&.OCK FROM HACH muniiy, 'bUc tD ie)f~ &en·
REALLYNICE BLUFFS Condo, 3 Br 2 flamf.-.shd celling, no pets $210. 568 3 Br view balcony 2 Br,~~ deck. w/\llew, nia,pciols,jac:.f11>lc,l wy
J br,2ba,famrm,din Ba,llevelendunit.Furn ApartwntntsFtamislted 2941RN-ood W.Wilson,lnq.AptF. dshw~hr,,frplc gar. No ~Li~~~~:to bch. 30 t 'flru A u 4 21,st.
rm combow/fplc. $425. RANCHO San Joaquin, 2 or unf. Super loc. 640-4933 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Costa Mesa Lge 3 br, 2 ba, cpLs, drps, pets. ~ 1Slh S~ 960-4l40 . . ('lltMN-oo82
963-7866 br, den, 2 ba, super UP· Waterfrontc~.a.. • ...... --• ......._+-3707 Youarelbe··-'--er carport. Avail. now. orS36-l7!J. ' BAY VIEW. ~unnlng 2 w•oc•.'-.aatAMT grades, view. $525. Lse --r....--w UUJ ' t br 2 ba tudi "'-'A ._ ~,,,....
Beaut.3br,2ba;famrm, 644-6537 · Lovely2sty,3Br,2~2 Ba, ••••••••••••••••••••••• of2licketsto $290/mo.S46·512n Beach condo 3br, 1~ ba, P~tio. Po!t. ~~stbt!df: BtW.~.2ba.slee&is 8.
!pie, cpts, drps. No pets. . fplc,$650yrly.675-617S 1 br yrly, $250/mo. No WOltLDTEAM 2 br, uW. furn . Children dbl car.~~~ & pool. Mature adults enly. No Auc..t.Sept.60-tt!GG
2 K i d s • c r e a t Uruv. Park Terrace, 2 br, . _ . pets. TEHHIS _ ... N 1iteils to t un $375 mo Ls ••tft neighborhood. $42S. 2 ba, frplc, view. Nr. BLUFFSCOND0.2Sty,'f 67S.S800Broker ""· 0 l::ts. 14•r ppt 6· CatlBob/t63-83u • · pe\I. eat-..u.M0-03C9 N'e.1fDOrt B'l,ac:lr.near
963-4567Agt Nofee pool. S42S. 552·7896 or BR,3.Ba,S6SO.mo. OOLDENGATE 1960Walace642.&u7 . 2Bt.l~~.lla townhse Nr ocen.1.ge'3br,2be,1ar.
. . ..... 551-1245 640-5668; ~6 Colta Mna 1724 SAN ~EGO BAY MEADOWS 3 Br condo, n~ ba. m mi Hi>ag.-Adlts no .,els. Avail. now! "2·1~
Clean 4 br condo facing .................. -... S from beach. Pool. Like $285 ~O ' \ ' ' tennis courts pool & TURTLEROCK Beach house. ~~ blk to $40.00 wru:M & UP atthe ere ne & c ozy 3 t · new Ca:H aft 6 pm · · Balboa ~,1-6, fl50 • Bt ocean 2br lba $350 ~ ANAHEIM mosphere. Spac. 1&2 br · . ...Lo" ~...., • playground. 2 ml Crom 3 2 Ba, btfl & cozy in & · • ·. . P_er •Studio & 1 BR Apts CONVENTION apls. Avail. Aug. lst. for ('114)837-4087 Nice 2 Br apt. w/Jge~eck, .. ,. " ~ Or nm. {ate.
beacb $335 mo. 536-1389 out. Lse. M9·5.229 ~}itl~ ~~c~t!!r~~~i~ •TV & Maid Serv Avail CENTER stab I e ad u Its. No Beach Condo ZBr m ba avl now bn yrly basis. 17$-$110,orMZ·0393
or7Sl·6.1SO *THE WILLOWS. 4 Br, prel'd.832-9871 •PhoneServ,Htdpool July28,197'1 kids/pets. $230 to $290. pool, te~nis'. sec: ~1:0· 615·6'1'1S 0 oCEANFRONT2Br,2ba.
Jbr.2ba.Drivelhrud61 2ba,livrm,dinrm,fam . 2376Newport81vd,CM Call642-5678,ext.333,to 646-0073 $350/mo. Mr Hatch. funlishednittly$350wk
gar. All new in&: out. rm. $425. 644·1480, $8lS.BigCany?nCondo,3 548·9755or645-396'1 claimyourlickets. LG·. 2 br, den, els. to 84'1 ·2561 .o r eves Newlydec .. lBR ... walkto J ul1. $315/wk Aug.
10031 K a muela Dr 8»5050,exl22. !'Jr 3 _Ba, v~ew, pool, SUSC"SfT'"S * * * Harbor Blvd. No pe•·. (%13)592-1531 . beach.$285, Yrly.. !!.•.1t~~rro1't Ho m es
, S40·6174or642·TI'13 . JAa;uz. u. tennis, 7S9·008i "' "' ""' 7880640 u.aa """' ... Neally furn. large & New dlx 2 br, 2~2 ba Con· 5350mo.G44-6537 NEW 2 BR. 2 Ba. $325. -----· ----1---------
Near ocean & shop'g 2 logunolleach 3248 small 1 br. $225 to S260. do. Bltns. Dbl gar . vrEW OF OCEAN & Free 1 mon&b rent if 2 Br. near ocean, yrly. Oceanfront. Weekly . .3907
BR, pool. S33S. Ask for ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bluffs 4 BR, 3 b~. lovely Adults. no pets. 2110 Adlts/nopets.640..0096. CITY. 2 br. 2 ba, frplc, ·leased for 6 mo's. Fplc,s.undeck,$34"0. Seas~ Dr. 3 Br. 2b~.
Mac.962·7787orS46-8609 2 Br 3 Ba, lge ocean vu green belt . Form er Newport Blvd. beam cell ac . 848·3777 548-6348 completely furn. Avail ---------' deck Arch Beach Hgt model. Agent644·1133 · Garden apartments. · • J uzzi, Aug 13·20 Sept J.10 Ph Beach Con~o. 2Br. Jl,!l ba, $47S mo. 1 yr lsc. 499-4414• ENJOY THE PENIN PT 2 Br Apt, 1225. Near shop· Senior adults. i:ar~ge. $315 , $395. Avail. now ! Beaut. 2 br. 2 BR & den or 3 br. in 675-4283 ' ·
pool, tennis, sec. SJSO/mo ----Lo 1 2 B F R · ping. Adults, no pets. Martinique Apfs #2 64S-82Saor 979·3376 new crpt. encl. patio. 2 great Joe· Kids OJt, gar
-Jolr Hatch 847·256L or .• * * ;: 1 r + am m. 642-2464. l75 E. llth St CM Adult E'.siAe 1 br coltane. kids ok. $21S & S22S. mo. Prof. dec'd. $450. JacobS Nwpt Bell, nice 2 Br els to r;;es (213)592·l53l -....d C -" 2 me. Furn. or unr. • • • •• " .. Mgr 17411 B Keelson. Rlty. 675-6670 ocean. Sip, 6, gar, S800 rn __....... foroneyear.$52Spermo. l>cMaPoint 3726 631-3003 Ds hwhr, frpfc, pool, HB 848 JuJ S32SA 675-67
5941 Sierra lroYo 645·7573,A'". ••••••••••••••••••••••• -jacuzzi, encl. gar .• laun· ' ·9155 Co b y, ug.
75
1 4. s or 6 Br + formal din
rm, lam rm, pool &
Jacuzzi. 2650 sq . n. exec.
home in S&S Park Hunt·
ington. l y r lse. Call • 968-4602
Pennington Properties
.. d ...,,,,. aH . 1 zy 1 r, Iba, steps to In~ Super neat villa 1 br BachelorApt. ry._,., . .,.....-08')8 MEWDB.UXE beach, Shores area. Waterfront, Nwpt Bch.
Youarethewmner court yd, pvt.' $200: Availnow.Nicecond. MESAVEJU>E,2nd0r,2 3Br2Ba,nr beach,fplc, (714)956-S871 l111urlous 3 Bt w/boal
of2 tickets to B ~~YS~ORES Single. 496-S29;l; 673-2332 $Ul~/mo. Owner S46·5880 Br. 1 Ba, gar' mature patio, encl gar, skylight, . dock. $400: SSOO wk . W"'8•,.. _"'M J r, a, rplc, bltos, ....____.. "Bed h F d ad It & • No net 8 . dshwshr, smoke alarm, Lido Ba yfront. 2 Br _67_5-677 __ 5 _____ _ ..,~ •'""" patio. Pvt beaches, ~7~ irw.,.~. 9dt 3769 v room ouse. nc "" 1 d tn w/frplc Sandy bch TEHHIS yrlylse .... ,._ •••••• .. •••••••••••••••,yd lrg kichen. newly EveLwJuuls~S926 n ry hkup. AJds OK. ~I/ ~c: ~"' · VaeatloRRetlfah 4250 .,...._ r 'd. "h U2S fMY.L/U"C: ~ lnO. '""'""°" -. • . 1.. -GOLDEN GATE carpt poss. c ild &pet NOW R~NTING Lite • ._.-......,. ' •••• .... ••• .. it•••-••--·
J Br 2 Ba, lge yard. ~2 mi vs OK. No single. S27S.mo. airy bewal)ts. OpeJl Bai'. 2 Br, 1 Ba. no pets, OCEAN VlEW yrly 2 Br 1 l bloclt to beach.•l~rept
to beach, $360 per mo. SAN DIEGO ForIM.se-~Br,3Bahome. Call~0851d2PM. J.>0:il.:i:3IUloc .. '~dren or Children O.K. CJ9se. to Ba dplx. $400 mo. furn.llOO.weelr-or~.
Pvt Ply. 714·536·7384 at the "''tmmtllfdinf view of pe .... 1 br -c: ·~u r >-c: shopp.ing.S22S. 768-87S4 W::6'.71Klor842·3639 roct. "nam. UJil. met_ ANAHEIM ace at Nwpt Harbor, Clean 2bc, pat'io, cool w . • --· • "11.... 8'll-847l · m.2105
SPRINGDALE/Westmtns CONVENTION wal to Ensign & l{arbor beach breeze, l child OK. Pvt. patios, enc g•r. 332 $225. Deluxe Stellfl to bcti. Le 1 Br. ne~ cpts. paint, ---·-------
Cln. 3 br, 2 ba. Lg. yd. CENTER Hig~ Schls from quiet DO pets. $250. OPEN 792 15x30• patio, $300 mo ......... SI.re 4300
BJw. Plush cptg. $365. Juty2S,lD77 Kin15 Rd address, avail W. Shalimar , Apt 3. Avail Aug. 1. 768-16'76 o ••••••-•••••••••• .. •••
898-1625 · Call 642·5678, ext. 333, to Sei>' 1. Owner· 548-4192 549-9492 640-0007 CW deWll
J-Br-.-$-185-. -P-et_O_K_,-4-bl_k_.s claimyourtickets. days,&42·ll22eves. ~!l~~i~~~~:.;~~N~ 2 b.r $250. New crpt & 1 Br .vnlurn apt, n·ea U..,~!
to beach. Fee. * * * WATERFRONTw/DOCK health clu~: biWards paint. Fncd yd. 673 F waler couple only, n SbateahOmeoraptmenl
_H_o_m_e_fi_m_d_ers ___ ss_1_-082_2~13 Br 3 Ba. oceanfront Luxury 3 yr old 19SO nlclil·l~h~d ten nl~ CenterSt.Open.49H76)J ~~~~Onts. $22S/mo. ~Uk -02.uulJHwuTD>
.._._ $ sq.ft. ~ Br 2 ~. gar ~--•-bo LRG 1 b I ... ho $195. 2 Br, kids/pets OK .• ..,....,e. 1350 mo. Lease. lndry, w/dshwshr. bltn'. ,,.,,, .. ,,. ex Pn> I p, · r, poo •• .. r. 11 pa, ~~~~lll
Unt. Fee. Billie, 833-3150 fplc, cpts, drps, S650 yr'y goU driving range, party ad Its/no pets. Utll p;d. ~ * * m ~ bl>uoiwQ
Homefinders 557·0822 lse. Dys , 673"6100; evs ~U~ CTt'" d 1884 Monrovi.,.5'8-0336 Bachelor. Yrly $140 mo.. Forover5yrs. 832-4134 774.~ .. ,. A v1Tl £S: , 1, • utilitiespd,673-2145
3 Br, 2 Ba, Twnhs"e, new * * * FUllUme director. free Large 2 br, 1 ~2 ba stu~10. * • * Male !2 straight, share
cpl, c;lrps, & paint lhru. Chris Saia 3 BriCondo 2~2 Ba, view, Sunday brunch BBQ's New cpts, Ule & painL SUPER new Coota Me111
out. blln oven & range, 290SierksSt. pooL $395 mo. 631·2546 or trips par tle; sport Fncd yd, gar. No doJs. townhome. 751-7593
refrig. Covered patio, Costa Mesa 646-2700 · ' ' S265. 546-3251 • * * * frplc, $350/mo. Avaii Youarcthewinnerof tOumaments &more! DorothyC~sky 8/1Jn.Call962·9584 LIDOISLE B EA U T J F U L 3 br. redec. Upper. ~102Law•-Ln.
New Patio Home. 2 BR
plus. $450.mo. + dep,
8'2·9311or962-<r193
3242 •••••••••••••••••••••••
Lge 2 BR Condo. mint
cond. Many ameruties. '•
Mi to bch. (213)430-8247
4 Br, 3 ba end condo on
point surrounded by wide
channels. SS' side tie
dock. $1200 mo. Ag
8t().J879.
two frff tickets • A P A R T M E N T S : Private. $325. mo. 1 blk '""'
($15,00value),to 3 Br 2 Ba. redecorated, Singles, 1&2 bedrooms. S.A. Country Club. HunUngton Beach Di....a-.lros. $950 lse. (213) 653·7900. f\im. & unfurn: Models 54S-5284or54S-0401 Youa~tbewin1'erof ~·..,..~ Ask ror Frank.Karl two.,.. tickets
Barnum & lalley open dally lO to 7· R~m· Cottage type apt, 1 br, <SlS.OOvahle), to
Circus NEWPORT HEIGHTS. 3 mate servi~e avail. No $250. incl util. 2 br $275. ~ lros.
Aug4thruAug 13 BR, 112 Ba. $450. tnO. lll· lease reqwred. So!ry, Wtr pd. $US. dep. Pvt lanU..l laU.y
Anaheim Convention cld. gardener. 645-~ adults only, no pell. gar & patio. No pets . Circa
Center.800W. K'atella 0 k d Refs.MS-7388 Tickets must be ex· SPYGLASS HILL a WOO Aug4thruAug 13
changed for reserved Panoramic ocn vu. 4Br, G arden Lge 2 Br, s h ag , nr AnabelmCbnvention
seats at the Convention 21,\Ba, formal din rm. a A markets,q'aiet1dults,no Cen~.800W.Katella
Center ahead of time. car gar, auto spmklrs, partments pets. Beamed, SUS. Tick'eu .. must be ex·
Call 642-5678, Ext 333 to custom lndscpg, S9SO mo. 645-2610 changed for reserved
claimyourUckets. 586-2078 H1wpwt1HcW..._.. seats at the Convention * * * 880 trvine (at l'llh> 2 BR, l BA, fplc, encld Center ahead of ti roe. 645-0550 patio, newly painted. c.ll 642·$678, Ext 333 to
.... ..,.,. aMct./s.tti
1700 16th St.
(Dover at lkh>
842·81'10
$285/mo. lit. last +$100. c:lahn your tickets.
'lSl-8714 or 97!Mi896 :1' • *'
·-· .......... . . -
I • ' t ' ' ~!!'.!:'! ............... ~~ ....... tt:·~·~ ............... ~.~ ... :: .. ~::!!':!'!! ..... ;. ~!.~.~....... . Tl!ooday, Joly •t, •m OAA,V I'll.OT '5! ~ ........... .!~ ........ ~ ..... !~.~ .~ ••• ~= ..... !!.~ ~~~~ ... !~.~! ~~~~~ ... !~.~! !~ ............ !!~ ~~~~~..... h = 2110 ~!';~~~ ... ~
M.AMADA By Owner Lra cmr lol IY Owt41tt ONLY •.500 Dleltlitt/ ... •••••••••••••••••••• ~ Mel4I 322.-
bJ' rac:uener In the 3br, 2bit. hrn rm Eltch.11h'eNewl)OrtCr.il 3 Bdrm, dlnlDa rm. Ap• U!illh.. ltOO &i~ Joe Nlo. Colt.a •••••tu•••••••••••••·•· I Ranch ot lrwi••~, Remodeled kl!.,wl>W.AI ~.SpacloulaBdnn., prox'4•<!rtolbe•utlrut •H•••••••••••••••n••• N••· nr oc-ean. lO,OOOVACANr3br,2ba .Cpts,, blllll~nu-• ctiAlaa l"001'9 eab, pe1 & 1roove oak Ht b al h , Id t ch ea parklike HUlna. Top 1q.ft. & 12.700 aq.ft. Ntw. drpl, ct.h/wab, dbl pr .
... I 1'001ft. Vard Lingo ~ra. Sl3IMOCI~ Hae w/aeparate din.Inf .,.. n.ortb l Tu.Ua ar•• I" A.PT FOR SALE. Pin. Call Coldwell Banter .... 'mO J u.~otrtotnrora Sat/Sunis. lcuParadedcarpe'-.aad F~~W~~~u H .B. 1tn1le story 752-Wl C1ni•ma•w ... a 1
...._ HIAITY ll . drlP19. !xccllcot loca· 1081 Foothill Blvd SUS.000. 20% d wn W.fwS. HOO !Wrote you pay somo C.Uw-. Rul&un SPLASH SPLASH tlon le condition. Must AESOP R ll · 84'7 1353 .. ••••••••••••••••••••• aaencla tor lbe "run
UMCHllALTY
Hl-2000
UM¥allTY ,All
st4.HO
1'!11:Cltla1 Edinbura
model towntlom• w13 bdrms, famJ.ly rm. 21.,
OCIAN FIOMT /LACIUMA llACH _,..., .................. ~ ... ......
.. ._ .tewa ~ ••ery f'OOM. 9twt wtltk
to •ho,1 .. 4 rtttoetrenh. Ott th•
•••d -with 'rheh lae•ch ecc••• ..................... ~ S344,500
SO UTH
LAOl''llA
49\t 4~l
497·2419
l.AGllNA ~l(;tlf:L
.-9~·1723
OA~A
POINT
493-8812
ll'!f that tlane a1aln. ~/•klna SlZ4 .ooo. Alkror0on!aH~ten be••"'._."._.. IUILD a r o 11 n d • • c 1 1 t
Customhed ' bed rm 67MfH ,,. HSI 731-4911 Quiet Cul·dt·HC IA HD. a ; YOUI OMAI CON$UM£R8 GUIDE. home in Newport Beach ~ r "" lltQY have and are sled with tarae 11pa rklhtg 1\oUn Meadows, hl1hly BR. 181•• SBr, 1~ I:· .. on WI pr\D\O ll·l lot on t11e7 414. 100'1 of bie's,
pool. And for your HAYIWIGOT u:pcraded Plan H. a BR. pc1c•d·al $87,900. or a cul.cte.110 bl beauUrul plex'a • apl'a avallable
prlvacy a 1lumpatonf SOMITif01MU~ !beam1t··~m .• ,~~~,!8.;~rMn· ::;. ~.:!. M·0238 Prine. QMe4bu Ve1~ _£.oupt ry NOW! Al Beach or ••• Up
wall. Only $Ul7,500. lt'a a POR Y .poo ... -·""" . . area _,,_,, Lo lOO'a of N£W U.Ungs
beaut,vlCaU&40-1151 CATAlJNAISLANDand PAULMARTJN each daJ . Small
SWEEPING OCEAN Real &tale 644-7383 ltteOMt Propert, 2000 11 .• Quall'~ fee/FREE Ure aervtce.
VIEWS from thls r•re ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pl MS-GOO Cro_sat, row townllcun&f OtherRHl•t• C!IC9 ••Com_" ....
Plush earth tooe can>et· ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••CH 4 •• av Prap..-t ... Ing &i drapes and wood MotiNfe HolM1 ~ ..,...,... ii2·'92o MESA DEL MAR
pe,nellq create a stwi• For S. I I DO 4 Units w/~plaoea near 1400 eu~~ HIWf'O HACM SPIQAL
nintoul*'°r·lndoorcon1 ....................... Beach & Adam11. One t1D•t•O.....t RedeCSBrZBa,avlnow.
• ::.1·11· HERITAGE
. . ~t::Al.TORS
bat.hi. Huae backyard lrYiM 1044 • ·----h I 041 w/briclt ~Uo tr fttepl.t. .......,.. .. --
SEAVI EWI T hrllllna
ocean & valley views.
Just below Spyglass.
New 4 br, 2 ba, 2 rrpJcs,
upgrades. S2S9,500.
548-8614 or 768· 7620 aft .6
trast! nree bdrms. "' t••cH p•o year uw. Pride of RnOrt '1400 "50mo . ...,..1 baths, for m•I din Ina .. "' ownerahip. $2ZS,OOO. room PLUS wet bar! Huntlnatoa by the Sea. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Bedroom Condo with
Near pool. sauna, jacuzzi Walk '·k bl.9ck lo beacb. • •ltlVM LOT* bua• muter aulte. f'ami-
& tennis courts. You 10x80 w/lge enclosed Ariz. Blythe area. 1y room, fireplace, 2 car
c an · t t 0 p TH 1 s porch & w/ lge deck and $6,000.1DC4down. JU, pool tennis. 1auna.
Walerfron& •1041'\ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••• ••• •• at 1400 WARMIMGTOM RETIREMENT --------• 2 bedroom lownhome in ~1 NITTY the ere.t development or HAVIH
2 Bdrm .. 2 bnlh O·Y·O
apt. A stooe's throw to
I.he oce..n & downtown.
Light & airy, very dean.
Pioancin& available.
~.ooo.
Completely redone Bluffs
condo, S1n1le level 3 Br,
Ba, w/fplc & sunken liv
U\I Rm, 432 Vista Suerte.
Open Daily 1·5, $111,900.
townhome with THIS I g e c o v e r e d SU Mo. 71'~3460 J•cunl Included. $.US
view at THIS prace porch+pat10. NeXl to o..tof St• call8"-4477 #I W119w y,... L& Woodbndae. Featuring a
QP84SAT/SUM1·5 den, dramatic ceilmes.
WALLS OF CLASS 10 rtreplace aod nicely up·
UUs lovely home open on. Jra~. Now $91,000. Cal
to 2 palJOI with areen~lt or appt.
$146,500 clubhouse Is pool. ~EALTY INC. --------
PRICED lfO SELL. 714/146-1371 Prop.rt, 2600 * * *
"mt. view. Tlui Garden I home i. very suit.able for
Cllif. lndoor-outdoor liv· ~ Ing Ir entertaining. 3
BJl., fam. rm .. 21.~ ba .. '
central air & YOU own
the land. Priced under
MORIMS REALTY * 494-8057 *
JHIVALUE
Is there. Over 10 Ac. of
R·l, undevlp'd land an
$100.000
EVB. YM CO,ELAHD
REALTOR 552·0434
SHARP!
.i# 2 the city w/views. Use n:. KAHCH REALTY an estate. 1.ub·dlvlde or
___ ss_1._1_0_0_0 ___ 1 just watch at apprec
CULVER $160,000.
DALE ZAGRODZKY, Rltr
ha:. a most popular plan 494-8611
-l4 one story 4 bedroom ------
family home that is only
~le~ from the rommuni· LOCJWHI Hlpl I 052
ty pool and a few more to ••• ••• ••••••• •••• •••••. the :.chool Call now at
$91,900. BESTSELLER
UOADMOOR
TURnEltOCK
Home on•,~ ac in prestige
loc, nr schls. purk &
shops. 4 br, 2 ba, ram rm.
garden atnum on quiet
i.t. Cell for appt. 835-1351
(days), 7S2·1030 (eve11 ) I
California Homes 4Br, ::.~ . 3ba, AJC, den/din, frplc. •
Nd1 TLC. Own/ Agt
SS&-8148. 552-8481
4 IR 1f'"OWHER RANCH REAL TY
4 Bedroom, 2 bath. quiet
street in Pacentter l with view. Many up.
grades. $129,500.
IOMD RE.Al.TY
831 -9411
The Willows. Wall to wall SS I 2000 s hac. frplc, Open ----·----• LOOKATTHISI
Sat/Sunday 12·5. 14881 New Wood bridge Condo BRAND NEW-2B r, den,
Grovev1ew. $7~.soo. Ph z Br+ den, 2 ba. Lse opl. 2Ba. frplc, -wetbar. 1m·
552-5900 home, 552·6000 $87.500. S500./ mo. med. occupancy. Acrosi.
ofc 644-4847 or673·3022. own. from Laguna Niguel
TURTLEROC'"' Broad· Ab'l Regional Pk. S89,950. By " ---------• owner661·0068or831·9489 moor 4 br. sep. mstr.
BY OWNER 4 Br
Agt.645·~ .... Quall~
OCEAMRlOMT Iii IPlaa
Balboa duplex, 4&3 br. Prapllf"ti98 •
Seashore Real Eawte. 752•"20 6'5'-5800 l400 OUAl_U!-Hl"":"°"I llACH
N EW"PO RT c REST * ILUFFS *
CONDO Original area. 4 BR, 3 ba.
Reduced SI0,000. 3 Br. end unit. Totally redec. 2~2 BA, wet bar, pool. Move-in ready. l149,000
tennis , sauna, mini· HASTINGS & CO. ocean view. By owner. SI 14,500. Call 548·6317. REALTORS 640.5560 -------OCEANVIEW
New 3 BR. 2 BA on rul-
de·iiar. w/pan'oramlc
view 1905 Yach
i':nchnntrei.!>. 5214,990.
Pnnc only. 833·2907.
Harbor View Montego by
owner Superb value
Leased tit 11 1/78. 4 Br
Ba. xlnl cond. By app
only. Wkdy11 La mi.on.
(213) 593 ·3207
eve/wknds. {213l
433·2854 ; 714~5-5979
*** l .C.Daffon
2065ZEIJretUi.
HuntinC)ton luch
You ;v'ethe wanner
or 2 lJckeb to
WORLD TEAM
TEHHIS
GOLUEN GATE
UDO ISLE
4Br. P\'l brh·te nnis .
S22SM Owr,AgL 673·0289
SPYGLASS HILL
Brand new View 4 Br.
library, Family Rm ,
Dining Rm, Open wknds
12·5. 640-1751
HARIOtlVU
,A.LatMO
4Br, 21,iBa, fam rm, din
rm, prof lndscpd, ja~uzzi. Ownr $186,900.
&W-6221
1076
• ••••••••••••••••••••••
HEAR
s uite w/atrium. Lg
patio. Nr. tcnn1:1 & pools.
$127,500. Cull today !
752-1660
Creenlree-Brookr1eld
2 Story. Open house
Sal/Su n 12·5. 4392
MONARCH SUMMIT SAN ~~EGO
For the youn11 al heart at the
RIVIEIA IEACH
Great 3 bedroom. 2 bath
home w/beautlful ocean
& canyoo view. Short
walk to one of San
Clemente's most desira·
ble beaches. On 11,. Lols
to insure view &privacy.
New listing. ---------1 Mari;1uita. S92,500. Ph 552·5900 home. 552·6000 Can You Qualtty? ~ _ _ _
If so1 this 2 bedroom and Woodbridi;c Pl1tce Biscay
family room home !!. model 4br. Jba $139.SOO.
great for younl{ peoph: t>l I tiOJ8. 968-3986
starling out Its pre· -
mium corner lot local.Jon
near schools and spark I· Laguna Beach I 048
mg clean condition are •••••••••••••• • •• • • •• • •
" only a few of many ex· 4 11·3 IATHS cellent features! It's a
lJ I View! Lge. IJv rm. bas new st ng, 50 hurry' beam ceil.. frpt. wa.Hs of RED CARPET Rtdton 133_3310 glass lead lo paUo & lath
house; ram. rm.: bltn
adult11. 2 Bedrooms. 2 ANAHEIM
baths. interior t astt!fully t:ONVJ::NTION
and expensively up Ct:;NTER
grad c <1 . Exler 1 or July 28, 1977
beautifully land:.caped Call 642 5678, ext. 333, to
Com m u n i l Y Po o I • chum your tickets
jacuzzi, game room. etc. * * *
Close to shopping anrl ---------
beaches. Ocean view I
$99,500
3 Monarch Bay Plaza
Laguna Niguel
496-7222 831·0836
WATERFRONT
New 800 sq ft Mobil
Home, 2.Br, 28;&, $39,000.
Space {CJ'lt SJSO,mo. 4 yr
li.e. 675-383.S
601 Lido luxury
Condo, 2 br. $290.000.
VIEW TO
CATALINA
Out.standing 2 bedroom.
2 bath adult con·
dominuium. Sauna. 2
decks w/super ocean
view + lights or the city
below. Call ror more
features.
BERTHA HENRY
REALl'ORS
2t5 Del Mar 492·4121
k1tch.. laundry area. A ii---------Open DaJly 1~2. Rang LOCATION! Great 3 Br.
POPULAR
CAMBRIDGE
MODEL
buy, $126.500
M1i.i.1on Realty 494-0731 Monarch Summit 11 __ 3_r_. A_gt"--. 6_7_5·_6B_oo_. -·• 2 Ba. home on beautiful
.... canyon with view of Plan B, 2 Br. den. "EWPORTHGTS. RMera Beach. On 1 ~1 EASY... S98.000. 831 -9422 or Comer lot. 2Br, Iba. de· lots to insure view and
... beach access when 831·2212 lachcd garage. 11llcy. pnvacy. Ne.w llatJna al }OuownthisWoodsCove ---------$89.500 Prlft only .
collage +a nearly new, FOOTHILLS S48·362S S~.000.
ocean view studio apt. 3br. 2'·2ba. a slory. new ------BERTHA HENRY
above the garage. You'll patio home. A/C, Crpcl. SPYCilLASS REALTORS
love the bricks, beamed Cam rm. community Be11t Buy! By Owner. 215Del Mar 492·4121
ceilings, 2 frplcs .. hdwd. pool. $89,500. By Owner Brand new. view, 270011q
~nu or $51.fiOU. •--------1 •••••••••••••••••••••• • De•ld Alell Montana Property for 5012 Hwc-La. •--------1 sale by owner. 2 &mall '"1--houses + alx Iota. Year -
LESS TO IUY!
WS TO KUP! 4 Units~-:-~m. i
Lower dwn mo. pymt.s. bath, (2) w/ fplca, owner
like rent. Well built 12x60 anxious. Reduced to in adult/pet park. Cozy
homew/cooler <FV33l9). $l38,~VIHGTOH S3000dwn. IO.A.C.)
Cord Land This one is a beauty in
M.H. Resales. Anahelm.$183.000.
638-8S02 HA.,LES ISLAND
A real pride of ownership
Obi wide. $23,000 rurn'd. Triplex in a preatigious
M o b i I e P a r k o n area. $249,500.
Rrookhurst. 962· 7540 Mini WarehOUHI
Trailer space up to 8x35'. Th e s e a re re a I
Adult park. no pets. moneymakers! Located
548·6173 Crom West Covina to San
round fishing, &ood hunt. You are the winner
ing. very good water ol2 tickets to , •
well. Por further Info WOILD TIAM
write to : Iler m a n TIMMIS
Gutekunst, Box 128, GOLDENOATE
Winston, Montana. 59647
Sale l9 close estate, 6
Arizona Commercial &
Industrial bldgs. From
3000 sq.rt to n.ooo sq.Ct.
May be sold as packa&e
or separately. Below ap·
praisal. 20% + return on
investment. 640-7860 or
640-2357 aft 8PM
VI
SAN DIEGO
at the
ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
. CENTER
July28,um
Call 842·5678. ext. 333, lo
claim your tickets. .....
---------• Dieco. Lease:4br.2ba,
'58 Hicks 8x45. l br (cap· LAND Rentals lstlclut +deposit. ;
tain's bedl, new roof & from Barstow to ••••••••••••••••••••••• $400/mo. No pets. Ace ext. paint. Adult C. M. Oceanside. Houtet funtlshH 631·2026
_p_a_rk_._S5500 __ ._S48_·6_1_73_~ Many different size ••••••••••••••••••••••• ________ _..
3Br, 2Ba, complete! parcels at different -....1t1GM1 1106 NEW3br,2\.~ba.ramrm.
furn. $21.500. on th prices. • ...................... Incl. Clbhse., pool !
beach "Capistran RIVERSIDE ComplflU'D, l Br+ cuest teM.crta.67Me72 ~
Shores'' SC Sp. 78. TRIPLEX + 3 bedrm rm W/aep bath Avl Aua 4 Br 2 Ba, dbl gar, bltd
492-138J home PLUS vacant lot. 1st, yrly. $300 mo. Refs, fplc, S4S() mo. Pool &
-M-o-b1-le_H_o_m_e_.-N-ew_po_r_t, All CorSSS.000. 1st, lat + $200 dep. IP'*ar incld. Nr. School.
Bch, Dbl z Br. Xlnt cond. Cfftfury 21 Sr-:ow 875·28SS dya, 645·57'4 mo Santa Ana Ave. CMe
Adult pk. No p ell. lnvestmentD1vislon eves. ~or213-371-403:l '63-7166 \Ii) 111,000. 675·0221. Wlnter Rental-3Br, 2~~ Somelhtnc Special! Lee",
Acreo,.fwt.,• 1200 ba, newly furn. 106 Brloftw/sauna&jacu:&Q.
•••••••••••••••••••••···--------Apolena. See July 15 lhru in loft. Bltns. pvt sun·
Must see. 82 acre prime
unimproved farm land in
high desert. an ulfalra
entry . On main hwy.
w1well , elcctn clty, g11S,
phone & tall trees .
Priced t-0 sell quick. S130C
per acre. liy owner. q ,2673
AYOCodo Country
5 Acres. fantastic view.
Over 200 Avocado tree5,
two year old house. Xlnt
terms. ,Brolcer
Trade Up?
We have listed a number ot properties, 10 different
price ranges. up to S2 and
$3 million mini
warehouses. Let us tailor
an exchange for you.
Cffthry 21 Sperow
Investment Dfvision
963°7166
I UHITS.IALIOA
4 duplexes, all 2br, 2ba.
4 car encl. garage. Bay
view. $180,000/dplx
Tom Lee, RJtr.642·\603
29. 673· 7975 deck utll pd. 2 car gar,
Mltwpon a.ach 3169 $450. 898·7073
••••••••••• •• • ••• •••• • • 3 Br Ocean View house.
224 Via Lido Nord, Lido lge Fam Rm, grdnr, $500
Isle. 4 bdrms. $2500. mo. mo. 673·6143 August . Ca 11 ---------
1213 )270·4547 or < 213) BUCCO LA BEAUTY
934-0020 4 Br. 3 ba, close lo beach.
$5501 mo 548-6366 Owne
Udo Ille 2br 2ba. Sips 6. or~ Alt.
AUi $1600. Sept $1400. <213) 793--0427 ME.5A del Mar 4 br. 2
frpl, gar dr. opnr.
ON THE WATER cond.$465.497·2268 • 2 Story. 3 Br home._ ___ • ____ _
w/boal dock. $850/mo,
yrly lse. 631·1400 41e~ o
_w_a_te_rf_ro_n_tH_o_m_es_. __ 1 dining rm, fplc. 2 bath!;• <TH 1616-5717
,()Jl 522·2QIO t
·uMDM THI 2 Units Santa Ana. "°°· Aue 1 thru 20. BaS'shOrcs, mo . gross inco\ne. 4 Bracrossfr~ach. Also
double cara1e •. patio.
$450/n'IO.
ttoy Mce.rcle
RHltor lllOHewpori
Cotta Mae 541.7729
OLDOAKTll!E $55,000. By owner. yrlySepton.S48.Q39
Hice Oaka cover tbas 20 541-4054 or 644-0712 •ere fantuUc view pro· ---------
perty, creek bed. partial· DU"-EXES. H.I .
HOUSEBOAT, 1180. Util
pd. Sn&ls OK. Fee
Hometlnder1 557--0822 ---------ly planted, near new 2 duplexes. block to
home with shake roor, beach, <2$1> 3
65
br
000
. 2ba. encl. Homes u..fwftlsHd l.2andU3nbedru-~hConed doe. air conditioned. wet bar gac·•a•• .. ..,. ... -· . . . ....................... -..~ etc. Terms. Broker. Tom Lee. Rltr, 642·!603 lclll»o l"-d 320, Agent6'&-.-.... 6ni~r NEW 14 PL EXES aealh & ....................... Eastslde 3Br. 1 \~ ba, new
---------Constantine. B.u.y now l Br & Loft on Little cpll5/drps. fncd yd ,
5 acres; Lanrasler, Hwy while beinl constructed. Island with soaring llv· carport. 2522 Santa Ana.
138 at 212th W., S6000. ~-cusL. design unJts. Ing room. $450/mo lse. '3.50/mo, 646-3192
Telephone 714,586-8597 lie Rllrs 0 '"' 4493 67"""""'
in GRE ENTR Ef:: 3
bdrm .. 2 ba. PLUS rami· ly k1l. Exlra large yard
wilh beauliful lawns
Home is in "MINT" con·
d1Uon. $88,500 floors & loc:ltion ! Ai.king 558·1302 or 493.7951; rt. 4 Br. 3 ba. t1an rm. fam s... Juan
$28.5,000 Open Sun 12·5 rm. courtyard w/foun Caplatrono I 071 ~nh
29476 Pelican Way lam. FUiiy landscaped & ••••••••••••••••••••••• fw tCllt I JOO
u r · .....,. ........,., Newly painted, lge 3 Br
11t9'LEX, C.M. CONN .. M• 3222 28a. fplc, beaut ~ical !f ~:~~~=~.l ······~················· :.i~~7~:
OCEAMVIEW
HIWPOttT JIACH
Dramatic 2 ·slory
townhouse with a fan·
tastlc ocean view .
Complete with upgraded
carpeting, wallpapers,
mirrored wet bar ond
fareplact. Bi l BBQ. ten·
nLs cts., pool, jacuul and
sauna. A graat way lo
live and only $139,500
WISTHIM! decor. 32 , Dratke» Bay. 4 BR + Dining/Family •••••••••••••••••••••••
On golf course; new Fs9;~~&4S-07S8. Open rm. A/C beauty. By Charmine small Duplox,
thruout, end unit. 2 • · owner. $84,990. Call for garage, close lo waler,
bdr 2 b • ... , $82 U\I\ IY o~.4 -ap))t. 714-131-1505 Hurrv ! $159.000. w .2200 ext. 274, lllS., a .. .s. •""" n"11i1\ -"( da-Or • es ..... 13560
•--------1 Lusk In EastbluCf. Pool ,,.. ..v ""' · r-/Oc•• View w/solar heater. Corner REDUCED S r3,0C)O. C do I I rrtt/T
I ~~~cw wood »nd 759°0226 Lot, 644·1009. Lg. 4 _br, 3 ba, If. back :...: fo::'Je f7o"o
glnss beaut.y. 3Br. 2'.!i ba ~-IN !!!N!H~•) ,._ ________ Lyd tB1kef traUltol ocean. •••••••••••••••••••••••
w beams, paneltng. . ~'"J ,. o s o we paper. An h . Cond View decks Vacanl. J!Utti)fjj_I AttredlY•Pool $99,(M)C).Owner.493·5828 a earn o. 2 BR. I ----------• Ba. 1 yr old, up1raded $160.000. Own/ Agt. Home. professionally de· s.toAftcl 1010 crpts , air, owner .
159.0353 DOUILEDOORS roraled 3 Br 2 Ba .••••••••••••••••••••••• 628.8864
Price Reduced
$10,000!!!
If looking !or a t,u.y, this
Is It . 3 BR. with
whhewater view. Ntw
decor. Walk to Victoria
beach. Eajoy the good
II f,e t h is s um me r .
$149,500
& windows are but a few lleauUtul pvt pal10 yard. ---------1 of the features in this Owner trans ferred.
new, sin'1e level home. $123,500. 714·646-6173 Loc•t•d in a privatel ________ _
•IY OWMEI Leisure World Towera
adult nelebborhood Ask·
ing $87 .500.
1 Br house/fum/$30,000. Lux retire Mewls .
TaJ(e over low VA pay· maids, 100" dn. $3S,OOO. 496-UMO ~ean View 4br, Jba. ram ments. No qualilying. ---------1
rm. 2100 sq f\ + 400 sq Ct 536--0757 Fantastic White Water
walk an storaee. $139.soo.1---------1 view. so. Laguna
645-9953 Townhse. 2 '¥·den. 2 ba,
AMCHOlA•I
INVISTMIKTS
C7t4t 496-7711 Lowest 4 Br, fam rm In
========:!I aAal Top oond. Won 't last. Call John Vutan
'1700 Sq ft. Security, pool. ADULT CONDO very quiet. $123,900.
G o I d M e d a I I I o n Owur. 4t9·l720 or <21:3)
---1~ \"(\,.,,.919
red hill ....
55?-1500
STUMNING Company. ~-8614
BeauUtul Unique brick Pvt par\)' ha• htwnhs.e
patio with expansive $10,000 under m•rket.
North v(t;w. Ou BBQ. Muat move. Newport
oak parquet floors in Crest. ~br +retreat. 3ba.
famJly roorn, ldtcben a, Modern. Near 2000 aq fl.
Townhome ln adult area. _7_110-_tm_. ______ ,
a BR, 11~ bath, clo.e to DwltJCn/
clubhouse, sauna 4' POOi. (Wh... 1100
M .500. ••••••••••••••••••••••• I
~nlry. Best floor plan Tennis+ pool, $45.Bm l~~~~~~~~!J _______ ,;..__, available. (319) SlOl.000 I~
SOA.al~VllW
d the Pactnc from com·
tmlp wood II 1tua home.
2'8r, ckn. Jrpl~ pool.
Slat,aOO .... vwu
C.U$~1 IAI&. Y 11.UFIS
3 BR'+ tam. rel. W/fpl '
Enraaaatore1 t10.* CA YWOOO llALTY '* 141·1290 *
TomLee,Rllr.642·1603 Families only. no pets.
$425. SU.7506 ev•
TAX SHRTElf SOUTH OF HIWAY-3 MnaV ..... lxec.
• BR home. Hardwood 4 br, 3 ba. 3 cu 1ara1e.
Protect Your Income noors, brick fireplace. Shows Ii ke a model
Blild Your Es~te Situated on comer lot. home. $695/mo. Incl.
17 UNITS-all adu lt. ByapJJt.$S50/month. aardener. 557·1717 or
pool, near Knotts Berry 1144-3545
Farm. SUMMER RENTAL ---------
22 UNITS-all adult, One block from China Eod Unit. 2Br. 2ba, patio.
court yard apts. Xlnt Cove Beach ln Corona Lovely decor. W/p\)oh
rentals. del Mar. MOO/mo. 549-81$5 ' ~:~~p~·· pride or CORONA DEL MAR -COLLP.GEPARKHOME·:
TRIPLEX-1 year old, Spectacular canyon 6 4Br. 2Ba, nr fwy, 1hop-
central Huntin1ton ocean vlew. 2 Br+ den. plnf" OC CoUece, avail
Beach locaUoo. Yearl.}'Jeaae. '600/mo. AUi 15. 839-1097
F0l.1RPLEX-1lear·new, COU<»NIWl'OIT 2 Br houle, mo per mo,
cloM to beach in Hunt· .REALTORS nopeta, maturecpl1 bUt ~~ ri:chi 0 u nit.. •71-11 f ' laat mo. 499-3458
brand new Huntlnston LG£ OOZV unfum duple• MESA VERDE ~t z..-,
Surf motel, on the beacb, J.Dr, frpkt • pool. $350. Br 1 Ba, atov9, rmn1,.
3.9 x gross. IMM. Ho.-.. M0-1080 . \V/1: bltqp, Pool, ~
PrindP&JaQD)I ~10 -MPt1l'MOtJn1• CdM,lgt38rhse.l&•lJ\t .__......._ ____ _
COw>tyLocat.loftl! Rra.'Ai..500 1q.ft. FaM LARGE clean olde ·-~·.., Rm. J Ba, 2 car pr, t.oaM.2Br,lBa,encl7 ··~JOO WQOda)'. $550. m.uos Hatt: Aug 1. ~ ------m4~Sbores • Bt: ~Ba, KIDS/PETS OK
TRMUX.CM
Aaaume Loan. sm.ooo Aat. 87().0717
ocn *· pvt bd\11, 111>' Eu&a.lde:?Br.SMS lie. AUi 1 or 15. $850. SpocJoultwahae, ..
l'IMl!l3 l Br Duplu, 1285
67$-8251or64M80
---------.640..,.. . iznc ....................... ,
' ' ft.I 041t..Y ft!LOT Tue1d!Y,,Mx 1t, 1m Houtetf.w Sale Hovlea For S• HMMt FOf' $-. ....... for Sde Few Sale -..-...;;;..;;.;:;.;..;.;~.;._-------..:..:;;;:.;;;:.u;t.;;.1...:,;,;:...;.:;.:..:.. •••••••••••• •• •• • ••• • • • •• • ••••• •• • •••••••••••• ........................ ....................... • .................... . ......._ ... '* Heuea,orS• How•••'°",.. ..._..,forSale G••rtl t002CorwdetMar IOZZC..... .. Mtr 10 c:.ti1Me141 1024lkM ......... eo4o ....................................................................................................................................................................................... ·······················
1001 IOOJ ..._.. ttOI WOOOllJD61 GilfUP&~ s::.==::~J:
_______ _.11·.·.··.·.·.··.·.·.··.·.•·.·.··.·.· ... ••-•••••u••-••• .. ••• ....................... AMOIL4KI with ooe ot these two I · IOCDIW/poolil.• ..,;a
~ al !!'
••• .. , '
~ _, I (
.. I . i ~ t· • ... . . .
..,CH ADO A.IOUT A UDO
Near the M~a. Verd~ Cou.nlry Club
sits tb.b 3 bedroom pooJ home that haa
heen rl'modell'd to lbe hilt · new
rarl>("ts. dr&J)('5 , k1t(•heo, opptianccis,
bathrooms. pamt and lancbcwpmJ:. It
has East<"rn charm und character
wtth big tn•t·s and corn.-r lot privacy.
Tl has been refurbilhed aod really fascinJtm~'
'Tis vacant, open daily and waitine
for you and your Sl20,000.
U~l()UI: li()Ml:i
REAL TORS-. 546·6990
1525 Mesa Verde Drive, EMt, Coit.a Mui
alM> m Corona del M,ir, at 675 6000 •
IRVINE TERRACE-OCEAN VIEW ~Look out at the rolling Pacific. over
verd a nt ~r een yard & throug h
~eautif ul, full grown Pines; you 're in
a carefree world. apart from people
.& t rafCic . 3 Bdrms .. 2 baths; im-
maculate & fresh as a daisy. $162,500.
OPEN DAJL Y 1-5 1437 SERENADE TERR.
673-4400
HARBOR
~~~!'! •......... !~.~~~~~ .......... !~.~~
PENINSULA home. 4 Or 5 BR, 3 ba,
all amenities. Lovely neighborhood. a
few steps from the beach. $195,000.
OTHER pres tige wa~rfront homes
with pier & float from $385,.000 up.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Boy~•Ot· D1 ,.,,,_. N B b 7':J · b lb I
CORONA DEL MAR DUPL!X
J H. 2 IATHS EACH
Anxfou~ owner invites offtt9 on this
splendid duplex wlth Identical units;
top quality construction with over·
sbed rooms. Close to beach, shops &
schools. Drive by: ~14 Iris & then call
us for app't to inspect. Asking
$179,500.
759-0811 .
Great localloo. JUll a SPYGLASS bctrcn .. STARTER Pemii..-ooProperties "'-·-.. J tro HOWDI•' Ou lresbly • ..... .,"' a 1tmp m ~Ja aad out · (JIJe PAanc SAJlfDS DnM . prfvate Jake and eaur. SUPER VALUE $245,000 ~ _.,... ..... ea.,,.ta . htM.~48r1Ba, ~~::~-.!it.~ fated yvdt. tll,000 and Ma~ -tut.Nd pool. on one leve!, fl&l.l,y For new Lusk Cape Hom model 4 BR. '5Z,OOO. Oormf' lot. tit.-an =.t· oo.l1 suuoo. 2~ ba home. Fantastic view of City •f!IQriaa· ~~ DaU11·$
01Wo1,0 •1,1 wNro.,H1Ct• Jights &.Hills. Imme_<'. occupancy. liil Piece e>r&ITUES,WEO&THURSnn.,~pM Pra~ ~~=':!!i,
1400 cau.t.'R... 11ACN It v r 1n , b I ta • •
--------• bndxaped. ccw'd Pillo • RATHER IE Move 1o now. Owav ww
e ••u..u!!...7 help finance. Sbowsa ~ "9 aQYU.me. ()pea Bouse Sat
!!!!!!!!m!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!j Thia' bdrm 2 atory Mesa " SWt. $291 GleMtoae G~---1 10_ ,._ • .._.._....._.._ JO<t .. Verde beeuty has ample Dr.KBMO-aw?
,.._..._ Y• -· --•~ atorace apace for tbat --------••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• sailboat or camper. Lvly LA CUISTA
M ES A D E L M A R , home lo exceti.nt condJ· 4 BEDROOM. WALIC TO IACK IAY Owners/ Aaenta offer lioo. You tal) move rl& THE OCEAN. CALL FIXER UPPER xtn aharp I B.R home. m•eotiahin'.Callri&ht REAL ESTATE BY
570,000 _A...;.ppt.;_..._ont_Y;....·_MM4 __ 1_1 __ 1 ~only $129,500. _M_c_v_A_Y_._ao._m_1_. __
TMiCOLOMY Near prestigious back n... n.i-WM.ICTOllACH
28 MORRO IAY DR.
640·64 I 0 644-4614
PLAM 400 bay area. 3 bedroom, l 1• ,...... 3BR,38a,p-ealdaip!
G .. 1002 G al IOOJ s tory, needs paint, blJtlltf Too ma ay cu• tom ••~••••••••••••••r .. ••~•••··~··••••••••• St 19,500 creative landscaping, You can't beat it for this ___ Real __ Est.a __ t.e __ -1 features to list. won'tlast
I \ \' I ..._: I I • Y '\;
TAYLOR CO.
Hl'::\l 'll JHS -...:.11 l ~tl!i
of this lovely custom home on Big Cyn
golf course. Rustic & quaint with a
country navor. Rough sawn wood ex·
terior. 5 BR, huge play room, study &
51~ baths. lnfo rmal living!
22 CYPRESS PT. LN. Daily 1·5
21 I IS.. ~n Hih Rood
HEWPOltT C&fTH. H.I . 644-49 I 0
Gorceous family home in tJI~. paoel.ing, minor re-~Uc bome. Fountam 10 n g at S 11 o, o o o .
top locatioo • dramatic 2 pam, "TLC. flurry take in rear, party patio. (114 )H0-JU4 or eves
story entry. Brick advantage.962·i188 Laree rumpus room 3 BY OWN£1 (714)1SZ·OH8 OPEN nk~~,· ~~-coun, ll}'ll • K€Y bedroom. or den. eating ""-'-1 -lean I Br, 2 SAT/SVN.
roo'w;uo:u.m • co"':~1,J•.1aym .. 1~ I: I "'€AlJQD c.ft area, brick fireplace. ..,........,.. .. --------........ ~ """' " n,, Ba, dinbl& rm, new cptl By owner 4 Br 2 B•. conditioned. Community -· Lota mor• for $75..000. & dills. covered pat.So, Stl,900 dn • aasume
pool " tennis courts lalbo 1 •• _.... 1006 BKR.~1720• dbl ur gance w/work $5i5,000 In, $t40 ino. Nr
nearby. Fast eaerow a .. _ bench. Corner lot, fncd Brookburat/ ·Heil.
pauib&e. '73..a5SO. ••••••••••••••••••••••• back yard. Room for 891·'72'72
('Pfu r11Q ·11s1v 11o b"·"' JUST REDUCED boat or RV parking.--------
•
. to$159,000. "#I lllCalfOnda" 183,700. 845·7064 or OwMr,4BR.1'4Ba,view
Bes\ buy on Balboa -~-==-=-===:--l•642-067-iiiiiiiliiiiiloriiaiiipiiiptiii. __ -I lot, c&ose to bc.h. $7Z.SOO. I Pen.iuula. 2 BR, t ba MESA VERDE --------1 ~csi:arding Lo. H.B.
· · • · ·' dupleit, great owners un· Jn lovely area. this EXEC'S SPECIAL VIU •ow
it. XAN ADU REAL ··racesetter"4bedroom. SUPER ·-~-A of ffl'~W E.5TATE. 759·~l 2 bath with ftreptace, has DOU HOUSE ~UI 3J wood fenced yard, pool, EHTa'TAIHMENT Near the be•cbl • Big
CdM DUPLEX. bedrm COl'OftCI del Mar I OZZ double garage-AU the HOME BR's, country kitchen, ~ 1 bedrm. Preferred ••••••••••••••••••••••• ingredients for comforta-Reduced $3,000! Lge 5 farnilY center. 2 Bat.ha.
location. Oversized lot Beautiful rustic duplex, 2 ble family llvio& a\ only bdrm two siory Green· Lota of paneling and with~ for a larae a.d· BR. & l·BR, beam ceil., Sl.211,500. brook home. Lge fmly apeelal effecta. Brick I diUooal unit. Sl55,000. garden patio. $149,500 rm 4' I.Iv rm w/ltml din 8 B Q and patio t ll
GeMrot 1002Giwrat 1002 &W-7270 PAULMARTIN ,. IQ"•a rm. Near So. Coast manicured rear Iott A •••••••••·~··•••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• iV 4!in Real FAtate 644·7383 • jii... ~-W,Y~rea:!~:~: t::.=:sc:t area l>u.Y!
~ -· . OCEAN CANYON VIEW Pro ..-this . i predate all Ua amenl.lles -------
OFFICE BUILDING ~ 2Br •den, So or Hwy, 1 P752•1920 · •upgr"lldd. Wa1k in wet Towobouu. Walk to
blk to ..._ach -1·000 "t.NI ••&l'AO bar. Onlv Ul6,500. beach. 2 ap•cioua Great COsta Mesa comer. 17 Suites. IEALJfl~ Owner :ill c~ s'h~ MOOGUAJL. • -~ ' bedrooins, dell, 1~ bath.
Zoned air conditioning. reflective by appt. only, Owner bk ••MISA VERDE•• frpl, 2~ ur car. Too
glass. hydraulic e levator; newly _._u ... oa M.... 673-5740 ArtlaUcally decorated ma01 amemtiea to men·
led & d ped eo~ 000 -"""" ,.." with cocoa brown carpet-tlon. S'l4 ,500. Owner. carpe ra · ~. -VACANT LOTS COZV 3 br, 2 ba duplex. 2 ing, cuatom drapes & re· Rul FAtate &02!67
· • 2 a4jaceot teveJ lot.s i.o patios&lbr.Lse/opl.or mode.led klt~hen area,i--.-.-.-.-.-.---.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.1.--------~ · , . E secluded China Cowl. Jn· sell SlS3,000. Pnn. only. tbia lovely 3 bdrm 2 -'\_~.'-.~ LIDO R ''LTY tereaunc development 640-7030 beth tamJly home ;tth sa.ER IOMUS VACANT
,., ;_: possibilities. Owner says 1/ ILK TO oc~ & .... brand new pool & jacuu.i Immaculate condition Immediate move.in Oft -(.~ 3377 Via Udo, M.wport lffch make offer! 6?l-8550. 2 ~" & covered palio awal tbruoul. Spacious 3 thia 3 Jtedrm, 2 batb -J 673-7300 Ol'fN11tt1•trsruNr0 11Nict • Completely remodeled your pleasure 1 An bedrm and dining. Giant beach home on cul-de·
G...... IOOJ-al IOOJ ra.·&AU~I ~h~ug1:e8~f·amo;;lrsylJdfoonfnm'~~!\~ ~=~~r=~:· :t~hi~ts &E,olr,r':en:yto:u~~b~~uhy~. E#§~~~; .
••••o ••••• • o oo ••••••••• oee•eeee ••• oeee•eeee••• ~ ----' 1:s"11;~' ' UC tr--------GREAT FAMILY open beams. natural I& 1,. .. _,1 Hurry,caJJu.sat5'0-1151.
wood textures and ocean , .....-~ •---..ct AM Marif.1 Hi9hlands HOME Ex lie t a nd jetty view from PlllCIP _....,
Cholce or 2 brand new Large 4 bdrm. 2 stones ce n master aul te & sundeck. Proa• tilt• . lwelllate Pool
homes. <.;ute one story with big corner lot for s•-+-u..-Just steps to Ocean Blvd. ~7Si•M20 Hme 3 Br, bonus rm,
cottage with ocean complete access to boat 19 UH IAl1ll8 $23.5,000. "'°° ouaiut tl&CH {amUy rm, approx 3'00
v i e w · 3 be d r m s • & trailer. This home ls S tbl b tlf 1 2 dladl 44--72 aq.ft. maint. free back fireplace. shakes & tile. immaculate & ready for ee • eau u BY OWNE.ft New 3 Br, lge lot, f\llly yard. w/custom pool,
()(fered at $84,500. The a new b1.1,yer. Call bedrm home near South 3br l~ba. frpk, blw lndscpd. Broker jacu1zi, pool sweep,
other is 2 story wllh 540.3666 Coast Plan. Great 548-5082 752.9023 firepit, lge matr bdrm ocean v1ew·3 bedrms. 3 landscaping and many t /'-I ded extras on cw.de.:Sac. Try ,. _ _..__"--Ice Dana p-L..1. I 026 w ,., c, new upgra balhs,shake roor&wood $64500 ~ ~---T-· V'llllY cpta&drps.9442PierDr.
G..,.... t 002 G.....-at I 002 extenor. ~aJ tile in en· · · · with tome l)C8an view. ••••••••••••••••••••••• HB. J'or 1a1e by <nrner. -
· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• try and kitchen. Auto [·~ I New 4 bdrm, I bath 3br, 2bai Thunderbird •.soo. n•........,Open .. • oc::r,~:w ~'fi!_'n~~~.:~~~:!: H o,kf:$_ :=~ ~017~u:~~~£:~ ~~~~~~~;~ft3t =~:::.. • br.
OOft Holuts W i h d in g wood e n PETE BARRETT MINI f AIM . ----Loads of charm ill UiJs 2 ,._.. -m.a&S3 Suwiftd hm. w/pool Ir 9531 lodlPoint walkwayto secluded 2nd 3 Br. 3 Ba, 3 car gar. Bedroom P!..US 2 jacuzzi & love pit.
Hwmngtonleach story entry! Gourmet -REALTY-could be 7 bed, u bldr AMADHGYAWE Bedroom, witb patios, NEWLISTIHCi Sl07,SOO.Bkr.963-&371
Youarethewanner kitchen. Sweeping liv. 642.5200 had originally planned. 3 MEARTHEIEACH BBQ's, at fireplaces. tst come-lat serve! Lite HODOWHVA
ol2 tkket.5 to rm + loft + fireplace. yrs new. Fresh rrult &c Walk to the sand. CaJI ~ & airy, attractive, beam Newer S br, 2 ba, fam.
WollLD T.::"'M Su n shine breakfa•~~~~~~~~-1 veietables galore. A real honest bargain! 2 moreinlormaUon. cellng1, cedar panelln1, rm, seller motinted. $UIKD VAi.Of ~ patio! Pool. jacuui •nd• SlJO,OOO Story, 3 bdrm friendly 2 patios, park·like yard. Will OOQSider all ·offer&. l"Ul
TIHMIS volleyball make this home in p e a ce r u I cm Westside. $67.SOO. w. L. Call to see. 48r pool home, $90,000
GOLDENGATE i::~nhomellvfngatffi LOOI US OVER neighborhood. Juat Morsftnlty,642·0'1-U BKR.lll.ote0&-.o500 OPEN HSE~,i,SPK
vs finest. Won't last. Call minutes from the water. t-;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;r.~~~~~~~~I Call Marleen 963-<03JI SANDIEGO 847-0010. W~dftt.tc. Secluded parenta I I I• --------1 RealEltatebyMcVay
"llhc ~Nltl9 •ll'HU•H08fN!(fl ' to~~! retreat. 2nd Fireplace in MESA DEL MAI 3br, abs home, I yr new .
.
coJ:ul~~y~EN28~.:T1;9r1°1N !·=·•: .. · ... ·:~,dl~ll •::;c:L:":T,~ ~~'a:thfo00;1sy. ~~r.~d.: --7-~-:_7_~_:_:_-~-~-~-·, __ , ~rJ~:,To:·.~i~~ ~J:~~~7'JZ~s~8r!!!t!'!aea~.v!!!r~e~~!!l!,~cb~~!!!1c~e~,oll!!c~.
. , =i::-=-•=-·LARGE POOL rrn.-.:u ..,..,,.,., Vll,.1.AGECHARM SaVSun 12·.C. 2885 ANZA hoosel·SSat~Sun.33'76i Span. ~urtyd w/louts·
Call 642-5678. ext. 333, to _5 BEDROOMS * * * Don't miss out, call now weekender or artist's Ln.83M340or831·9081 Old Bridge Rd. 493·9448 tain. trPlc. lots e;f xtra&.
claim your tickel.ii. LAGUNA IEACH ~ 'I ...... _ WarrN Hcmcock for "'°"' deUila ! CALL retreat. 2 BR. 2 BA with By owner. Dream ho""'••. $"10,000. 536-o'757. : . .3. * * • Panoramic Ocean View v...._-•• ,_., MZ-2S3$ room to g ow $122 SOO -" --------• 3 BR.2 Ba + fam·rm, wfftt&.ciltg! 621ParkLidoOr. Ol'fNltt'l•llHUNPOBI NICI' Mayleaae.!pu0n • '2·2bdrm,tbathonR-2lot. BRt 2 Ba, beaut. lge lMILISTOliJ.CH
31DIM pool size d lot, 64M161 Yo~~.:-!i~~ror 1•iJlHl.1!!1!1 HALPIMCHtH =·~=er. Wit~ ~=~~0:fz~~ti;(. Owner, 48r, %Ba,'' IAC~Of..o~ lq~e~~ree !£:i~;~u:;· o~!er~~~ ~~~.=rt!~:: ·-..jJifi11' r~ :~~~~ Ml5A VaDI =~ apprec. MS,500. ~=~r;mca::u..~y
ll·n· ... ctreet Close lo . ..,........,,., ~·-, -.:::::cs:::.11•-=== ---------t V ..,...,.1 ... t yd malnt, 'J~900. 20101 ,... • . --------R 9"'S. l f u ery ......, uca, cus om BT-I 032 !tort Circle, ~-21SZ1 schools " major shop.. CHOJC11: Dup e1t So. o u.wy. '-"'"' .. ~~ ui· the u_. --. aa..,.. 1au-... Se t bid ti ....... '""""" -••••••••••••••••••••••• --------ping centers. Huge liv. 2 STORY 4 IDIM Cl--., HOllTHTUSTIH para e gs, pa 0 · Verde aeetion of Costa HDUCED NICI rm. with fireplace ,..,_ 3br , 2ba ea. unit Mesa. 3 Br, fa'm, rm. & CountrysideHomes 0 _._0 __ .._11 Serve-through window to POOL & llACH Aug 4 thru Aug 13 nu_, 3 bdrm home has • $172 IOO. Owner . App l)ONlble lueH q1&81'ten. 3br. 2ba, (am rm. Ceo· ...,.,_ ~-
pnvate pavilllon. Priced Joe to beach Crom thia Anaheim Convenuon dining room & fftl on llP· 831.. AaltiniSlSS,00&. tral air, up1raded -4 br • petio, up1raded
atl62.!'iOO.CaJl963-6787 tughly upgraded twnhm. --------1 Center,8()()W K.atella prox 'I• acre of beautiful A&t~ move ia COIMI. A.Muma· cpti. l)bJ car iar wlen·
Of'CNl11Q •••PU1vro fu,..:r • Gourmet kitchen with YAIUYEIS Tickets must be ex· ~like setting in the CostaMna 1024 -----------1 ble loan. By owner. tra.aoetok.iteben.Bllu,
formal dtning. New S3250. movea you Into changed for r eserved FoatbUJ 1qcb SC!hool dls· ••••••••••••••••••••••• lmlra IN BAY SSl,S00.581-SUS forced air heatlag. ~---·-'
carpets throug hout. sharp a bedrm home. seats at the Conventiori 5trialctea' tf!1Ced.soo. for quick Hesa
2
Y,Brerde Condi 0 , ltmi . ~ 8,..,.. '•• t•Y..._. IOH ~~v,o. 00-VA -FHA-Wl~lng stairs to master Culdesac lot. immac. 1 Center ahead or time. _. mac enc gar pa o "·-• _, •• ~
s uite and children's yrJMJW,S'lt.500. C.all SC.5679, Ellt 333 to OPEN~DAY 1·5 pool SSS 500 75f·OU7° $71,•. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~
THE HEAL
_EST.ATE RS_)
--------• quarters.Call963-6767 REDCUHT cla1myou.rlickets. ll»lF UBlvd. ~ ' · ' ~ "tlST1IDI OCEAMROHT ()"IN 1119 ·11s n Jf-l'o"''"cr' * *. A!SOPl!ALTY Loveb'o~bo01e llALn
B co eni nlly [·· I •4s-3474 73t·49' I SALllY OWMH west ot Irvine Ave.~ T .. Trees ~ .tMC. ~~1d:·fe~.ns:~:.~~~~.il\Ullfj aAIU>EHGROYI A$kM::.n:Cor:::,• 3Ho~~:~: ~~o~~ ~o:: :d'i::ty. H~:: ~ b~~=um ......-"""' . .-i:J-=•••••-3 Bedrm. 2 ba , dble at· ,,_.,,.,., ..,., & U0,500 38r, 2ba 64.\-'7221. lraded with ceramic comer lot O/H Sat J.U
' tach 11ar .• covered paUo YllW w/maov extras. 225 ,-llM'FURY2f ~cet\ter,watercond.1· BY · ;.....,-.. • G......e 1002 CieMraf IOOZ in rear w/brlck BBQ. OHTHllLUfF Wake ht-est. ~ Prl.n· ~· tioner, larJ• cov. patio OWJMW--
••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Priced to sell. ceton & 205 Amhurst. W.tklff I aodntucbmore. The beat WiAUTOllACH -· ,._ """° .. v .. 673·45"" in Huntincton Beach. 831 ,.,.,. 8319081 fortlU50
. ... CE
810111 ILlllS CD.
OVER 60 YEARS OF SERVICE
OPEN HOUSES
LIKI A PIMTHOuSI ••UfPS ..
Two Story End Unit. Upfraded
Overlooks Pool & Ramada. 2 Sultea
and Lge. Family Room. S167.SOO.
244• VISTA NOBLEZA DAILY l·S
-.-... " -'• Formal dining room • __ ......... __ or __ ·----1 MeSA Da MA.I 511.:Jioo.~es .... T72$ By OwMr·lmtnae 28~
newt¥remodeledkltebeb TOMA.IHOME LARGE llnUNetworll w/1pt off clbJ tar i lachr~~~.~ yer1 -~ ~-----
CIL\RMINQ OLDER
SPANISH HOME
Spacious Z sty, 3Br, !Ba,
fam rm, bltna ,
J)aDQl'U'lic CJffat vJtw.
184$0. (.7U>'7224M
-newaakledeepc~· "" 1arace n • w
bu i e b • d room a I RIDUCTION' S .... LI STORY •----... -• :ftta/ltaoleum thnaout, !s~;:t;•~ Great =.Uon· a IU~~ = r::;,:eltTott:'°:i BJ OWMY" c Br 1 Ba. ,SOOqJ=JOOC
ered •neto .. 4 J)atlo ~y2'::, s:!':::lew~ watlp:::• Separate ~-c:oi:.n.t:o auo~e
J*htCalltall&Y8d-25U. XANADU RE AL "*" ad'8 aw_, B kb I a:· ll1
NI t•llSl~l(Ufpjl(I' tro• ot.tt4rHI ,.lo.. tOO uret ...... cl .. __ &Sl'Aft.758~ ~~~ 1'ned .... 97,mz ...... 1041 ~ all ~ lo· ...................... .
~~ i:r-C., ••= Ms l•ttat · .... • llill&IM =a.rd U · U7 wtt.b .. ,." ..... ·~ .... to itdt1. Chl6ot ......... Velie)' _,................,..... ___ -.--.. .... %~:.E.
IJ1l1RIN.._,.
I DASSIT J ' r 1 1 1 1 1
• FllNI N\JMeftfO ltlTUS IN
'"' sr 19\IA•ll I ii&IAliU Al()Vf lfnUS
10 Gtf ANSWU
rrrrrr1
I I I I I I I
SCUM-UTS AMwen Ill Ca..Hk..._ 5300 I
PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
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TU!!d!y. July 1e. 1en DNLVPILOT (2
Thi 8lglet Mlrbtpllc4t on the Or-. CoMt ......,.....
................ 1'9<11ft DAILY Pll.Ot CLASSIFIED ADS ......... ...... ........... You Can Sen It, And tt, [ · J One Col Serik•
Trode It With a Want Ad 842•5878 Fost Credit Appfoval
..................... ............... ·--····"--
"-esfwW. ••••••••••••••••••••••• Holuff For S-. tto.Ms For S-. HouMa For Sdt ......., For S. e. _ _. 1001 •••• , •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ., ••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... G1•re• 1002 G• .. r• 1002 LQ-rill 1001 G•r.. 1002
lllAD & IUTI'lll ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
DUPLIX
Well located Oranae County property. Both
unlU are 1 bedroom, din·
ing room with an at· lac¥ garage. Priced at
a low U9,900. CALL
SSS.21880.
C:SELECT
T'PROPERTIES
OCIAMVllW
Hf.UHISCHL
Tremendous mtn.side hm
-------------CORONA . HIGHLANDS
Canyon Location
On a huge wooded lot with a "5 Gallon
Ocean View", a flawless 3 bedroom, 2
bath home. Walking distance to
pr~vate beach. Only $153,000.
Call 644·7211
"1n NluEI.
BAILLY &
A~5Ul1Af [5 "1n NIG[L
CAll.fY 11.
ASSU(IAT [5
w/4BR,fam.rm.,dining -------------rm., 3 BA. GREAT VIEW rrom both levels. G1Mral I 002 Getwrol I 002
Room for pool. FulJ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••
grown trees, lrg. tot. A TO'"STI ... G bargain at $2SS,OOO. Call A "' 0 w N ER D SHAltP SHARP MAISHMALLOWS I R E CT Ill front of your huge
THE GOOD LIFE
In this Harbor View home· 2 ~rms.,
·dining rm. & den, with poof,' jacuzzi & ·
great view! Tetal charm geared to
candlelight dinners & great outdoor
living. $149.900.
OPIM DAILY l·I
1112 NEWPORT 0HILLS DI. EAST
Orange Coast
• 2600 L Coast H•y.1 Ctroaa del Mar .
IEAL £STATE 644·4141
tOOZ GaMral 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~2722or04.-S. POOi.HOME fireplace 00 those long
JACOIS llALTY Beautitul up1raded wtnta-nJ&bta is gonna be -------• 675-6670 family PoOI. home. ll&Q)' m1ibtY pleasant. 4 Large ESTATE SALESI. ;
lnnovatJoos for your xtn bdnns 2~k baths comple-$3500 4 IR. $75,000 living. Formal dl.QJnl ment this 2.story rustic 3 Bedroom, 2 bath newer
VA-JUSTCOSTS! a~ to Your pleasure. h home. Ocean view. On Th.is three bedroom c a rmer. Bea utiful Via Balle na, San
G r e a t f a m I I y Metaa Verde home can be &alley kitchen to please Clemente. Bids now be·
neighborhood. Palos v~·-Call us. ""~"'2.3l3 the reisident.. chef. Cov· . l d A
V ...a~-....... .....,. ed ti ' 1ng accep e . ppro>e e,~ stone fireplace. °""' 1119· 11s1uN 1o8tN•<l'r er pa o surrounded by value s95, ooo . T r y Family kit c hen. 4 ,... weeping willows a nd
SP a c i o u s b d rm s . ··J fruit tl'ees. All this and $85,500. Enormous lot. VA buyers :: :: best Eastside address
I · 2 Bedroom. fi xer on 3rd we come-pay just closing .,~«i t,oo! 646·7l7l St. Cor on ado Island,
oooU! Woo 't last at only ·i ',·lfii:jiji·I "lue ;, in the l•nd. S75,000! Callnow752-1700 HORSE PROPERTY , . Fatale may accept bid of
OHN Ill Q. ,, s IUN 10 Bf IJ>CI • I"". '"CK I •y ·' $47 Ch<\ Su b hi
[
r. "' A A :> 1 i . , .~. per uy at I s •&111~1 ~b~;:~~~~~f========~ ::; fixer on 1st St. In
----Home"• loo k . Two Seal Beach, 2 on a lot.
&ITERTAIHE:RS bedrooms, family room. v A Market value could be
DBJ'-"'""'-• $120,000. Initial bids now wHT ........... room and a ll.IMt being accepted. Try
Beautiful pride of bouseint.heback:withits SlOZ,OOO. ,
ownership executive own bath. ~ frult • • WoddWideBrokers home on majestic comer trees in that rare couot.ry Tired or paying rent? Let 673-4545 Di.stress
lot w/large ll'x3'' pool & f~g. C.ll lor your ap. us beip. Homes a re Property Specialists
Jacu.ui. Lots ol decorator pointmeot. 546 2:JJ.3, available with little or oo l•--------ameniUes. Owner lellV· Ol'fNl1C.,•lfS1~•011 "'"'' down payment. Let us ~~ ... ~~~ri ... [ ~IUNM ··"979~·oso
C::I Walker & Lee
Real Estate
21R·COTTAGE
$47,900
Quiet tree lined street,
corner location across
from park. Warm & cozy
living room. Fingertip
kitchen. Flower Ii lled
yard! A doll at only
$47,900! Call fast 752·1700
OPIN Ill Q •II~ IUN IOtil NICI •
t~ }-~
THE REAll
ESTATERS I
llGPOOL
llGHOME
on a Mesa Verde cul·de ·
sac. 4 Bedrms, 2 baths
+large family room cen-
t.erinK around 16"36 pool.
Shak e roof.d o uble
fireplace and dining rm.
Pri ced right , ca ll
546-~
~>HERITAGE
• • REALTORS
CENTURY 21
We're open til 9 (or you
UNBBJEV ABLE
S20,000 Reduction !
Chance of a hlctime to
buy in Bayshore!>; 3
bdrm:. .. 2 baths. com·
plete l y remod eled
garden home; you must
see 1t to believe it ! Call forapp't
· C. F. Colesworthv
REALTORS 640-00.10
VIEW
Oriented from beamed
ceiling liVing room. 4
bcdrm, 3 balh. large
kitchen. + large dmrng
,rm + sep. family room.
Laguna Beach For info.
call
WATE:RFaOMt
AXER UPPElt
OFF
Last week's price! 5
Bedroom Eastbluf( home with an ocean vie w!
Seller bas purchased a
new home! Call now! RED CARPET, 754-1202
lllVIHE
2 BR Arbor lake
Highly upgraded
H111e1ot
640.9900
NEWPORT CREST
3 BR Fam rm 21,2 Ba
Gracious living &seclusion
Outstanding Value
Below Market
$129,900 ACT F A.5T !
VALLEY ~40-9900
EASTSIDE
3 BR,2 BA
Rm for RV or boat
Super location
VAL.LEY 640.9900
:ASTILUFF IAllGAIM
Try to match lhis ! 3 BR. Lusk $139,500
Prime St-New paint
VAUEY 640.9900 $240,000
Gigantic 5 or 6 bdrm home on the water with NEWPORT DUPLEX
RARE DUPLEX
In close in Eastside
Costa Mesa. 2-stories
and loaded with curb ap·
peal. Large comer lot
with 2-2bdrm units with
lots of charm. Excellent
parking, never a vacan·
cy. Oill us for details.
This is a winner! 646·7171
()PjN 111 0 •II S IUN 10 81 Nl(f • •...... . i
: ~ , ,, .
.THE REA~ £STATER -----
TWO HOMES
ONA LOT
Reduced $10,000. Easy to
keep rented, or use one
for youraeJI & the other
for ~-in-law. At full
price of $72,500 that•s on-
ly$36,2SOeach! 646·77U .
A oo..vontNT SHOPf>tNC AHO
SfWINO CUIOE '~ THE CM. ON THE CO.
In Women's Sizes The Best Vest!
7297
~~B~
Snap up sporty oulfits with
a 111111. !hipety, V1V1d •est.
Con111st boldtrs arid make·
btl1t~ pockcls accent \'efY·
tile '4;Sl C!ochtt ol sport y¥n
tn a lacy patletn sttlcll tllat's
my to do. Pattein }29]: Suts
8·18 tnChlOed.
SUS fOf t~h ~ttein Add 3~ tach patl1111 '°' hrsHlm a11mail and llalldUnc. Sea4 '*
Allee BrOOk•
Needle<:l1ft Dept 105
01llyPhot
boat dock. Two large
patios & Jots of square Steps to surf
footage to arrange to suit 2 BR & 1 BR
your own style. Needs a $135,000
facelift. but what a challenge. VALLEY 640.9900
--~~-~~~~-
-
WATERFRONT m:~:S~TE' Attrxtive
___ s_31_-1_4oo_ T·Plan
R-2 ZONING .
Approx 7000 sq.ft . lot In
turn oC cu1-de-sac. Ideal
to build one more unll.
Existing home a 2 bedrm
+ molher·in·law or guest
rm w/sep bath. Near
Newport Hts. Reduced to
$72.000.
~~
-ANYTIME
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
IS MY SPECIALITY
John Saar Agt. 752·2'020
STBtS TO HACH
Mesa Verde, brand new
l.istmg. 3 bedrms, family
rm, fireplace. 2 covered
patios, lge yard with dog
run. Lots of fruit trees
and pri vacy. Owner
moving nortb. Anxious!
Asking $79,500.
546-4141
~
COATS& WALLACE
REAL ESTATE.INC.
COSTA MESA ~SlDE· 2 BR. older
home, middle of town.
Walk to buses & shops.
Exchange· for No. San
DtecoCounty. SS9,500!
lalboa lay Prop.
Realtors * 675-7060.
$84,900
Newport B e a c h !
Decorators dream. Cozy
wood grail)ed Ii vini i---------
room witb Swedis h SP.&.._.•SH fireplace. Butcher block ""'
counter top in this HACIENDA
gourmet kitchen. Cozy Sparkling 3 8R, i BA
hideaway muter wt~g w/arched entry fJ red Ule with mirrored watdrobe. roof. lnterlor of thk
Two more s pacious home has been lavlsbly
bedrooms, cu.slom s un· paneled & papered. This
deck, ~s. sw~mming outatancffng offering is
& ~oattng fac1Jitles only Syears old 4 priced
Don t be too late. C•ll ror quick Hle at 178.$00 ':,~~~~?r~ruNIOllN"'' CALLquic:.k. 7Sl..:IDL · [:•·lill ·~~~~~~;IEf;
GARAGE SALE ads in
Don't drop the bell! Gft a the Dally Pilot brtnt h•P.
job with • !ow·eott Dall7 P1 ~ts. To place )'OW" Pilot Clualfled Ad. drewln1 card, phone Pbooe &cz.5'79. • ... KW8'1I todaf.
..... -
,
DAil Y PILOT T'*Cfay. July 19, 1011
Image Ruined by Exhibiti.on (Ann ~~nders O"i
. bett~r . too. -A KIN TO
ROBERT E . LEE DEAR ANN LANDERS: Wbat
on earth ll ''Andout Fiord" try.
tn1 to do anyway? It 1 hard
eoou1b to be la>' and 1 t people
to accept us, then tbll ldlot
prances around like 1 damned
fool la a fut.bered boa and silver
wedJI• &Dd wrlta to Ann Lan·
dtra about it.
No wond« tho woman 1pUt her
aldu ltqbJQI. There'• no need
for a 1-,y to m"t bl1 lover'• wlft
for the fint time decked out like
the atar ~ a burlesque 1how.
What wife wants to loae her
husband to a namLnl quHn?
I Just wiab you'd cet the ldea
across to your re111den that there
uo nutty bomoeexuala Just as
Repeat
Match
After a divorce that lasted
41 years, Ruth and Shields
Hodges figured it was time
to re-tie the knot. Love
bloomed on ce again after
the Texas couple was reunit-·
cd at one of their children's
homes. Ruth, 77, and
Shields, 82 -married in 1919
and divorced in 1936 -re-
married a few days af.
lerward.
·lhort aro. nutty htlCrOlexuals.
Bizarro exblblUonlall make It
very rou1b on tho11 of us who
don'taolnforthauortofthlna.1.
for one. wouldn't be cau1ht dead
ln 1uch a rt1. Thanks for ar\y help
you ml&ht llvt ut. -ONE BUT
NOTDAFVV
DEAR ONE: I received
HYoral letteu from other
bona0teJ11a11 wbo alao were out·
rated. Obvloualy a 1roat many
•tnl•ht people h•ve a tendency to tblak ol all bomoaexuals as
Ump-wrttted. 1wl1hy nances who
love to clre11 up in women's
clotbes. No&hl.q could be f unber
from &he &rutk.
DEAR ANN LAND!:RS: I
don't know if I'm being un.
aenerous or beini ta.ken advan-
tage d . l don't mind attending
showers for friends but I resent
belng Invited lo a shower for
someone I hardly know.
Last year three gitls I went to
school with (but hadn't seen for
over a year) invited me to
showers. I accepted, bought gifts
and haven't heard from them
since. SiQce January. five more
have aMounced they are preg-
nant. I am close friends with two,
but the three are merely "hello"
acquaintances.
Some people are nattered to be
invited to anythina, whether they
APWl..._IO
His HobPy 'Aimless'
By ERMA DOMBECK
As a woman who is m arried to
an amateur camera freak, I
respectfully suggest that some
kind of legislation be passed re·
quiring a permit to carry a
loaded camera.
I don't mean lo overreact. but I
live In fear that someday my
husband will point that thing at
me, forget he has taken off the
lens cap, and click click! I'll end
up another staUstlc at Photomat.
l have been photoaraphed
walking out o( a public bath
house in a Michigan campground
wearing a nightgown, curlers,
and rain slicker ... fishing
around In my mouth with my
fingers trying to r emove a fishbo-
ne . . . and there are 30 prints
floating around somewhere of
me on my side in a bathing suit
that I would give up my next un-
born child to get the negaU ves.
The other day he was flipping
the camera around carelessly
. when 1 said irritably, "ls that
thing loaded?"
"Look." he said, "how many
accidents have l had with this
camera?"
''There wa; the time you
s napped Freil at the omce
Christmas party trying to Xerox
M lss Framptol He threatened to
rearrange you nose. Then, there
was the time e posure when you
nearly broke your leg trying to
get back into the picture ...
anJLlh_e_ blrtjµla.y_ .Party
where ... " ·
"All right, so join the camera
lobby and try to get them o(( the
market." ' .. All I'm s4)'ing Is cameras
· shouldn't be made available to
the man on the street -only pro·
fessionals who know how to use
them. The way.tt stands now, any
child can walk right into a
camera store and buy a Sunday
ACternoon Special rigbt off the
counter -no questions asked.
The next thing you know some In·
nocent person l5 staring into the
eye of an Instamatic. ··
AT
WIT 'S
END
"C'mon. You're making a big
deal over nothing. l don't use the
camera all that much. I just feel
kinda Important when l have a
camera ridfng back tbere in the
window or my pickup truck.
Besides. it's sorta fun watching
people's reactions when you
point it at them." He grabbed the
camera and trained it on my
hips. which look like I'm carry·
Ing two U.S. mail pouches for the
Pony Express. I heard the button
click.
"Fooled you. The camera Isn't
loaded."
One or these days, he'll push
me teo far. There Isn't a woman
jury in this country that would
find me guilty.
Weddings V'Q;
and Engagements
s
Peering Around
To avoid disappointment. prospective
brides are reminded to have their wedding
stories with black and white &lossy
photographs to the Dally Pilot P~ople
Department one week before the weddfng.
Pictures recei,·ed arter that time will
• not be used. ·
For engagement announcements it is
imperative that the story. also accom·
panied by a bl•ck and white &lOllY plc·
ture. be submitted til!l weeks or more
before the weddlnt d•l•i otberwtae tl will
not be publlabed.
To help fill Nqt.iNmtf\ta on both wed · dtftl and •ftl•I•,.._ 1torie1, /or.ma are
av,Uable In all Dailf Ptlol ofttces. F ur·
\her quntlone will be anlftred by People Dfpartment ttiff bMlftbetl at Ml-021.
CUEllYL A. SMITH, Newport Beach. has
been named to the newly-created position or ad-
mlniltJ:ative assistant to the president or Com ..
prehenaive Care Corporat.lon, Newport Beach.
The nirtional health management firm is in·
volved in alcoholism rehabilitation through the
CAREUNIT Progrnm.
E ILEEN C. MOORE, Laguna Beach, has
been cho&en by the California Womell Lawyers
election coml'l\lttee as a flnaUst for Student Gov·
ernors at Larae. She is a law student at Pep·
perdine ••
Ms. Moore is a graduate of UCI apd is a
licensed registered nurse.
w.w,....,,, •• ....... .,.........,,
A faclal detlGMd tot lO'l -th• Europe~ way.
DEAS KIN.: "RMS White And .
feel cloae or not. I feel imposed
upon. Should l realbe this Js a
social tradition and accept It -
or do I have tho rl&ht to deqline
the invitations I don't feel com-
fortable about? -U. P.
DEAR \J.P.: Anyone baa tbe
'1rl1ht" cb·decUne any lavltatlon,
for whatever reason. U you feel
as if you're beln1 used It's as
good a reuoo aa there ls.
sldered my W&)' ot speaking
"normal" unUl.l went East. Peo-
ple kept sayi!li, "You sure do
talldunny." O"woman told me I sounded like 1 bad a mouth full
of mu.sh. Another 1u1tested l
take speeth lessons. I felt hurt
until another Southerner sat me
down one day and said, "Just
listen to THEM. At least we en·
joy tbe birds -not 'boids.' We
also 10 td the toilet -not the
• te rlet.' If anypne needs
speech teuona It's these oddballs
with the Eastern accent."
Shae" ver)' ••arly s~arted
another QvU War. I'm pleased to
pabll1h oae of tbe many rebut·
tali. Thanks for writing.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: A
word to the Northerner who
signed herself "Red White and
Blue."
How young is too young for a
child to learn about sex? That's
;uat one thing yoq'll find in Ann
Landers' new booklet, ••ff9w.
What and When to TeH Your
Child About Se"." Send 50 aents
l aro a Southerner ..,ho never
traveled more tban 200 miles
_from home until I was 19. I con·
I fell a lot better .Cter that little
sermon, Ann. I hope you'll print
my letter ao all transplanted
Southerners will see it and feel
In coin, along with a Jong, 1 stamped, self-addreseaed en-
velope to Ann Landers, P.O. ~x 1 11995, Ch.ica,o, W. 60611.
.Scorp io
Sceneay Chariges
WEDNESDAY, JULY 20
By SYDNEY OM ARR
ARIES <March 21·April 19):
You gain rare insights -inspira-
tioo could be part of scenario.
Means you perceive, know
without formal knowled~e. sense
whal is to occur -you come
face·lo·f ace with yourself.
TAU.llUS (April 20·May 20):
Key is to organize facts. Business.
opportunity might present itself
-and you should have basic in·
formation available. You make
solid impression and you're able
to imprint style.
C.EMINI (May 21-June 20):
"4. ou have chance t.o be rld of
burden , situation that causes
emotional stress, financial drain.
Know when it Is time to "let iet."
It Is time! Fulfillment of ambi-
tion depends on legal maneuver.
CANCER (June 21 ·July 22 ):
Promise that has been "hang·
ing" should be examined for con·
tent. substance. If r elative is in·
volved, insist on new deal. Im-
portant for you to express ideas.
desires.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22): Follow
through on hunch -learn by
teaching. Deal with Aquarian.
Accent on matters concerning
money of others, including in·
heritance, unique tax structure.
VIR~ (Au&. 23·Sept. 22 ): Op·
porturuty knocks. -; ti~ing im·
proves -expand horizons
soclaltze. make contacts.
Popularity increases. Legal de-
cislon proves favorable. What
. had seemed an irreconcilabledif·
fere~e will be resolved.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
Check de\8flS behind scenes. If
tho.rough, you are able to correct
past mistakes -and to locate
lost objects. What beslns as a
"cloudy" situation becomes
crystal-clear. You'll b e
enlightened.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov. 21>:
Ch&nie of scenery could be on
agenda. Gain indicated throuib
written word.
. SAGnTAJUtJS (Nov. 22·Dec.
~ > : Major decision concerning
"location." is due. Where to go,
direction to take. where to reside
-these all command more·than-
usual attention.
CAPRICORN <Dec. 22.Jan.
19): Nebulous promise is not a
commitment -know it and insist
on factual information. Don't sell
yourself short.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 18 ):
Involvement Is keynoted
Nothing is halfwc.t -there is ad·
dilional responsibility, in·
tensification of relationship -
money and love mix and it will be
exciting.
P ISCES <Feb. 19·March 20>.
Finish what is underway as con-
trasted to initiating a project.
Probably every woman has a ..__
sll9htly different reason. Are
you plannlnCJ to go back to
work? Did your: husband CJet that
promotion, so you'll be minglinCJ
more with the co,..any wives?
Or did you catch o CJllmpse of
yourself In a store window and
wonder, lust for cm Instant who
that heavy older looldnCJ woman
was? ·
Whatever your very personal
reason. It's undoubtedly time you
discover ed the Li llian Ballard
n~'?J:CR€£!<
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Method of Re~ucing., ,.,.........., o.-pco.t,
Discover how uou can lose one
dress sl:e in time for Sunanaerl
HARRIETT FOX
SAYS,
t was middle aged and
mlaerable and htd an
Inferiority QOO'l>lfll,
Criticism
Evaluated
O.fly Pf lilt Pllet•by Patrlek O'DonMfl
Women Overcome Rigors
-
By JUD1111 OIM>N
Of ... o.llYll't••'-"
The VCI School or Criticism and Theory 11 now In session with
J full cl•ot pa1t-doctoral s~tnt.a!Jltbe bu6'an1Ues. It'• not a 1chool tor just anyone, H the ~pies are extremely
sophistlcat.ed and scholarly. butlt'a helplnt put the university on
the map ln literary crltlclam and theory. .
Thia )'ear there are student.a from Australia and India and
alreadY prof euora from The Netberlanda and Sweden have in·
d.lcatea l.ntereat 19' the 1978 school.
The alx·week annual summer sesalon la the result of a dream
by Murray Krle&er and Huard Adams, profe.aors ot Enclisb at
UCI.
They wanted the new campus to achieve a reputation in
crlticiam, much as UC Davia ia known for its atriculture and
veterinarian programs and other campuses for excellence in
science and medicine.
Such scholars as Northrop Frye ("The Anatomy or
Criticism") and M.H. Abrams (''The Mirror and the Lamp")
now are honorary fellows, indicating the Importance the School of
Criticism and Theory already has acbleved.
SENIOR FELLOWS are Ralph Freedman, Rene Girard,
Geoffrey Hartman, Leonard Meyer, Edward Said and Hayden
White.
Adams and Krieser serve as resident senior fellows while
Adams is the director of the U1rt session.
Tbla year's faculty includes Stanley Fish, professor of
Engliah at The Johns Hop~ Univeralty; ¥eyer. who i.& Ben·
jamin Franklin Professor ot Music and the Humanities at the
University of Pennsylvania, and Barbara Hernsteln Smith. pro·
lessor of Enalish and Communications at the University of ·
Pennsylvania. ·
Frank Lentriccbia, professor of En&Usb, UCI, is assiatant
director, and Krieger also is a faculty member.
The school's purpose is to "situate, investigate and a.ne5' the
recent variety of tbeoQ' and clearly munciate the competitive re-
lations among all the theoretical approaches."
The scope ls not limited just to writing, as all the humanities
are discussed. ·
Meyer, for example, is examining the question of style and
will delve into.music, visual arts ~d literary WOl"k.s .
Other seminars wlll lbok at European literary tb~ry such as
structuralism and phenomenology. ' •
MEYER, WHO somewhat jokingly describe~ Jllmself as a
"third· or fourth-rate comPOSer" and former viollnist;said that
the work of all critics is basically the same: to look at works or art
that have moved people and that they have been devoted to.
Scholar Leonard-Meyer
is extlmining writing
styles, music, visual
arts and literary works at
UC/ School of Criticism.
Academy Life. Mastered
By DENNIS McLELLAN ..
Of 1119 Oell't ,.llot Staff
When Elizabeth Sternaman
was a student at Foontaln Valley
High School the idea of attending
the Naval Academy crossed her
mind.
But it wasn't open to women
and Miss Sternarnan, figuring
' "that's the breaks," forgot about
it.
The 19·year-old Huntington
Beach resident has, however,
(along with 63 other young
women) just completed her firsl year at the United Stales Naval
Academy in Annapolis.
The original group of a> women
were the first females to be ap-
pointed to the traditionally male-
dominated military educational
institution.
•'There were a lot of guys who
didn't think we should be there
and they were very open about
it," says the midshipman (the
Navy refuses lo buy "midship·
person"). .
"There was some friction, but
not a lot. At the end or the year;
they thought we weren't so bad.'•
But it was, after all. precedent·
1 setting. •
MISS STERNAMAN AND the
other female members ot the
class of 19a> even made the CB.5
Evening News last July when
they were inducted.
Both her mother, Hlroyo. and
father, Rollo, a retired Navy pet·
ty officer, saw the broadcast.
"My.dad" is really pleased
about it (her appointment)," she
said. "He feels it's a good ex·
perience. He really loved the
Navy, so he's gung-ho.
"My mom said, 'do what you
want lo do. as long as you're
happy'."
Home on leave befor e report·
ing back July 31 for a month-long
cruise up and down the East
Coast. Miss Sternaman indeed
looked happy, despite having
gone through the m ental and
physical rigors of "plebe year." ·
Tanned from a week's vacation
in Hawaii with two women from
the academy, she appeared
rested and ready to return.
"I feel so idle," she said one
morning while a "Happy Days"
rerun un!9lded in,_the background
on the TV, topped with a picture
or her in her full dress blues.
<PLEBES, BY THE WAY, are
not allowed to watch TV. ride in a
car. date or drink.)
"When l'm home it seems llke
things go so slow.•' -.he added.
Although she's/been seeing
friends , go.in&,.. c 8.JlJP.iJl8, waterskiint and pliylng tennis,
that seemed like an. appropriate
laJQent.
After all, abe's just completed
a yea'f lp tbe rigorous ~t
mospbereof th!: Naval Academy.
The day begins early, in time
for an hour of-exercises and run·
ning begtonlng ats a.m. Then it's
off to classes, rifle drills, parades
and weapons training.
The firat lew Jnonths, called
plebe summer, was a w~ni .
out process of sorts to test the
new midshipmen.
But the "plebettes" or
"mldshiJ1 chicks" u they were
nicknamed, held their own.
Like the young men who
dropped out during the year, the
young women who left dis·
covered it either wa&n 'l what
they expe<:ted or they couldn't
meet the physical standards,
said Miss Sternaman. .
She added that anyone who en·
tered the academy on academic
or athletic "ego trips" was quick·
ly whittled down to she durini~
~ebeye,ar.
BVT OONPIDENCE was slow-.
ly built back up, along with a.
feeling of unity among company ·
members. ,
Miss Sternaman, whose main
reason to go to the academy was
to take advantage of the ex·
cellent educational opportunity,
said the studies haven't been too
dirflcult for her.
Adjusting to mllltary life, ahe
admitted. was probably tbe
hardest part.
"Everything Is planned out for
you," she explained, adding even
off-hours require careful plan·
nine to accomplish everything..
"It was really an experience~:
said Miss Sterna.man, who ww
major in operations analysis. 0 1
feel like I've done a lot and grown
upa lot."
She's also enjoyed meeting
people from all parts ot the caun-
try. which abe feels baa enabled
hel' to see beyond the confmes ol
•
"We want to undentand those as much aa we want to un·
deratan4 the.oatural worl~" Ile a aid.
He and other critics h1 ISUidYlnl the works of aucb aftlsts as
hetbovetl and Sbak ... U'e to .&ndent8*l •h1 ~IY u. valued
and what about them provlda a rich expetlleoce.
· Other questions, 1ucb u bow people undentand a plffe ot
mualc and follow it, mu.st also be asked. And. theorist.a want to
know bow music 1ot to w.bere It la today.
Meyer. a native of New York wbo la married to a
musicol<>&1st. aatd be feels very· rortunate to be ablo to pursue
these kinda of questions 1n an academ.ie settt.na.
BE TAUGHT at the University of Cbltage> after graduating
from BJrd Colleae and aerving 1n World War II. Ai an under··
graduate be swdJed compot1ltion and pbil0so1>b7, ao be as at bOme
in all the areas of the humanlUes.
Meyer said he thlnks the 0 ellte" arts.web u classical music,
art and opera hav~ sel®tn had maas appeal and tbat they are not
declining todlU' as many boU~ve.
"Expectations have changed," be noted. "We now expect
everzone to read and write ~go to college.
'We have unrealistic expectations about the am having
mass appeal. I believe ln 'democracy In art' -everyone having
an opportunity to attend to the kind ol art bellkes."
The new media, such as television aod better recording
techniques, have not yet been thoroughly evaluated ror their im· paet. he added.
"I do ltnoW people who woul~ rather stay home and listen to a
recording~ go~ a live perf6rmance. ••
"People also are wol'fled about saying the ri~ht thtng about art," Meyer added, "so often bOthing at all is said. '
HE PJtE DICTED that within 50 years there will be more sup·
port of the arts by the government, either through tax laws or
sponsorship bx government agencies.
The arts also are more confusing today because of the sreat
diversity available for enjoyl.ni and studying.
'1Webave every culture and all ages available to us,•• Meyer
said. "We live in a 'supermarket culture.· One or the problems is ch~°lnJ. How do I spend my time? People want to be aure they
are choosing the very best."
While be is in Irvine. Meyer plans to work on a book on style,
which 9ndoubtedly will be influenced by his students 'n the School
of Criticlsm and Theory.
"I enjby having a 'batUe of wit.s' with my students," he said,
explaining tha't tbe classes provide a, good opportunity for him to
test his theories. •
He also said he learns from the students. "l don't dispense
the truth," he asserted.' •
---'---9EA ANDERSON, Editor
Tuesday, July 19, 1977 Ct
"Southe:rn, California society."
While the academy. which will
add-about 90 more womea this
year, eeems to have takeQ the
female influx in sttide, there bas
been at least one advantage to
admiWng women.
'Pausing between
classes at the
Naval AcadefJ1y
is Elizabeth
Sternaman, left,
a member of the
first group of
women admitted
to the military
educational
institution.
Now it doesn't have to recruit
six coeds every year from nearby
colleges to serve as
cbeerlea4ers. (Miu 6temaman
also holds the diatlnction of being
one of the academy's first
cbt;erleadera.J
Cm::~ativity: Sleep on It ,
this technique worb lot recutar
dreams as well aa niahtmaree.
Alternooa J
N.Y. Stoeks.
TEN CEN
Halts Construction .,
ID County .
A lttlke which ldled 10,000 to
11.llO llMvy·naacllln• operaton ID SoutMra Calllornla Monday
la• baited many Oranie County
coutnactlon projects. includiQI
aore thaa • doHlt bvine-£om..
1any houaioc projects and a
~ulll ·million dollar sewaee
jlpe.llne.
Tbe AFL-CIO Operatine •n1ineen Local 12 called the
· dl'ike after failing to aaree with ..
mana1ement, over bow an ap.
proved $2.95!an·hour waee in·
cretse should be distributed over
three years.
The operating engineers, who
dri~. cranes-;-trae-
tors and other heavy equipment.
wanted the pay raise in three an·
nual steps; manaeement wanted
to spread it over five increments.
Last month the engineers' San
Diego county counterparts con·
eluded an qreement identical to
the one they seek.
The San Diego enaineers went
on strike for a week, baltiJlg con·
atruction of housing projects and
the San Onofre nuclear power
plant expansion before the settle-
ment.
An Orange County manage-
ment oCficial for the Associated
General Contractors, Larry
Mcllwain. said today the Orange
I
t
•
By Off-duty Deputy
i
~ An off-duty deputy sheriff shot
and killed a man early today 1 after the ma n allegedly fired i shots at him and cars parked
t near sheriff's headquarters in
Santa Ana.
c A spokesman for the Santa Ana
Police Department said W aynon
·Wallace Collins, 54, or Santa Ana lias seen firing shots at parked
cars outside sheriff's head·
quarters a rew minutes before he
was fatally wounded.
. HB~ain
1Delays Vote
On~ning
The Huntington Beach City
Council delayed action again
Monday on six proposed land de-
1i 1 nation changes from in·
dlulrial to residential use along
Gothard Street.
-For the past two years, land-
owners in the area, known as
tbe Gothard industrial corridor,
bve been trying to convince ci·
't.y officials to change the general
'pt an to allow homes to be built
'there. ·
., But Bill Back, city economic
development officer. told the
•(!Duncil for the first time Mon·
'clay he believes the area should
remain zoned for industrial use.
.-The council agreed to hold the
Cleci.Jion on the land use changes
fQr two weeks because of Back's
9\atement.
Council members Harriet
Weider apd Ron Shenkman
spoke in favor of most of the pr-0-
pOled changes.
''The area has for too long
*'-ea -fl blight to the city," said
Mrs. Weider.
Shenkman said the area, used
"1ge1y for junk yards and auto
wrecking firms, would be more
productive to the city if homes
weTe butlt on it.
But Councilman Richard
Siebe~ and spokesmen for the !Kun~ Beach Chamber of
Commircc_e and HOME Councit,
l (8eell7.()NE, PageA2)
It was when three off duty de·
puties began trailing Wallace's
car lhat he was confronted by
sheriff's Sgt. David Keller, 41, at
Flower Street and Civic Center
Drive.
Witnesses told investigators
that Wallace fired a single shot at
Keller before Keller returned
fire.
Wallace was struck by the
bullet and died al the scene, ac·
cording to accounts or the inci·
Coffee Finn
Trims Prices
CINCINNATI (AP) -
Folger Coffee Company
has announced a wholesale .
price cut of 20 cents per
pound on ground coffee
and two cents per ounce on
instant coeree.
Tbe firm cited lowered
prices on imported green
coffee Jn addition to re-
duced sales since the price
of coffee began to rise
sharply at the beginning of
the year.
Folger officials noted
that the wholesale price of
their ground coffee has
dropped 95 cents per pound
to $3.48 since May 12. The
price reduction on instant
coffee lo $.5.25 is the lirsl
since a price increase on
March 14.
NO REPLY
NECESS.4RY
EL CAJON (AP) -Govern·
ment is sometimes overlapping,
explained City Councilman
Howard Pierce.
In the mail be got a letter from
himself as chairman of the Com-
prehensive Planning Organiza·
lion's Activities Center Advisory
Committee, outlining the work it was doing.
dent.
lo the aftermath of the inci-
dent. police could give no reason
for Wallace's shooting escapade
outside sheriff's headquarters.
Officers said at least five autos
were damaged by bullets.
They did say, however, the
12:20 a .m. incident is being in-
vestigated jointly by Santa Ana
police, lhe county Sheriff's
Department and the county Dis-
trict Attorney's Office .
Penalties
likely in
Bribe Probe
WASHINGTON CAP) -At·
torney General Grlffin Bell says
he expect.I pre>1ecutions to result
from tbe JmLice Department's
investicatlon of the South Korean
infiuence-buying on Capitol Hill.
Bell made the statement Mon·
day after President Carter
turned down Republican re-
quests for a ppointment of a
s pecial prosecutor, patterned
after the Watergate special pro-
secutor, to pursue the Korean
scandal.
Asked What the Justice Depart·
ment investigations might pro-.
duce, Bell said, "We expect
there'll be prosecutions."
The attorney general said the
investigation is being handled no
differently from other cases, ex-
cept that it is perhaps being con·
· ducted at a faster pace because
•'it touches the public interest."
Meanwhile, Speaker of the
House Thomas P. O'Neill said be
would take personal ·charge of
the troubled House ethics com-
mittee investigation of the
Korean scandal.
O'Neill said he wants quick ap.
pointment of a new chief in·
vesUgator to replace Philip A.
Lacovara, the former deputy
Watergate prosecutor who re·
signed last week in a dispute with
Rep. John J. Flynt CD-Ga.),
chairman of the ethics panel~
(See KOREA, Pag~ A2)
I County and Los Angeles county
operaUna eneineers want the
three-year spread of higher pay
because that's what they got in
San Diego.
. It would mean that instead of
an initial 80-cent increase,
workers would get $1.05, retroac·
tive lo July 1.
Mcilwain said that besides the
differences in when operating
engineers would collect their
wage ~. there are no dis-
agreements in the proposed con·
tract. •
OperaUng engineers now earn
on the average, $10.71 an hour, or
$22,276 a year, not. includin&
overtime pay.
Though the strike was called
on Saturday after a meeting
between enaiDeen and manage-
ment. comtruction projects con-
tinued as usual until union busl·
It's an IC'!e Statue
ness agents brou1ht official word
to job sites, telling workers to ~
home.
Today, McDwaln sald, several
jobs, where business agents ap.
parently bad not appeared yet.
continued. · Mcll~ln was unable to
estimate how many Orange
County construction sites were
afteC!ted, 01' the number or
(See STJUKE, Page AZ>
Mark Daukas f>f Corona del Mar displays
his creative foe sculpture at the Orange
County Fair.,Daukas constructed the fish
design from a 300-pound block of ice four
feet high. ·
School 'Fax Hike Due?
Oooan View Rate May Climb 30 Cenb ,
By MICHAEL PASKEVJCR
otU.Dally ...... IWf
A tax rate increase of almost 30
cents may be In stote for tax-
payers ln Huntington Beach's
Ocean View School District, as-
sistant district Superintendent
Jim .Jones told trustees Monday
night .
The potential tax rate in·
crease, ~bich district officials
attribute to a loss of state Income
due to declining enrollment and
the state's inability to provide
property tax relief or a new
school financing plan, could
further inflate tax bills already
pumped up by record increases
in assessed valuation.
· .. I would be very surprised if
other districts facing a declining
enrollment situation (Fountain
V.alley, Huotineton City and
Westminster elementary school
districts). won't be facing the
same situation,•• said Ocean
View Superintendent Dale
Coogan.
However, in the Huntington
Beach Union High School Dis-
trict where enrollment bas stabilized, taxpayers may re·
ceive as much as an 18-cent cut in
the district's tax rate of $2.41 per
$100 assessed valuation.
'(be H\Ultington Beach City
(el~mentary) School District ex-
pects a decline of 200-250 students
next year, leading to as much as
a five-cent boost in last year's tax
rate of $2.89 per $100 assessed
valuation, officials said.
Fountain Valley elementary
School District officials have yet
to comment on the tax rate in
their district.
Hites in asses$ed valuation are
up 24.1 ~cent in the Ocean View
elementary, 24.6 in Fountain
Valley elementary and 20.S in the
LONDON (AP>-Younc eareer women Increasingly are fallinf
victim to "1treu dJseue'' llDd developin1 facial arld ch~t bali,
baldness, and a ~-aex drive. a Brfti!h inedic'1 professor
claims.
-Dr. !Yor llil1a al Add--•e•s lloslJllal, Cambridge, bas been
researchlill banDOaal cb...,. ID workiQJ women since 1963, seeln,-
up to 40 wom.a Neb week al bis clllllc. Re discloteG some ot bls
findlnp ID tbe liteit .UtlGia Ill tM weildy tnagazine "Woman's
Own."
Huntington City school districl
The possible rise In the Ocean
View school tax rate would be
from $2.77 (1976-77) to $3.06 per
$100 assessed valuation.
Ocean View District offtcials
say the new money is needed to
maintain programs and offset
the 1065 of slate funding due to
the decline of. district enrollment.
Enrollment dropped about
three percent during the recen.Uy
completed school year and of-
ficials are predicting an addi-
tional 3.5 percent drop in enroll·
ment for the coming school year.
Since current state law re-
quires that 75 percent of lqsses in
revenue from decllnine enrc>ll·
ment be recouped from l~
sources, the combined losses in
enrollment would cost taxpayers
about 21 cents.
The additioiud nine-cent In-
crease in tax rates would 40 ·to
district contributions to state
teacher retirement funds (@out
twocenbt).
Another seven cents woutd be
needed because district offitjals
say last year's tax rate was
"depressed" by this amQunt
because the disll'ict received'°°
(SeeTAX, Pa1eAZ>
A.f DAILY PILOT H/F
Mother, May·11·
Miaing Boys Found Fu""'6
SANDIEGO (AP)-AntanloBaaUqu alkedlfhi
could ao !iabll\a, but h1a mother aald no, not iiaht
lhen
That wus Sunday. By that cvenJnr and into Mon·
day. J)()hce and 1herm·1 olflcers had a mualve
scarc6 undw-way lor Antonio. 10, and for Michael
Kainumoku, 7, ulso reportedloet.
A helicopter pUot aided the patrol cars and four·wbeel~riveveblclu. ,
K.idnapiQI wu the fear ot Antonio's mother; June.
The boys were located later Monday with their
fishing poles on Fiesta Island in Mission Bay. Tbe
fish. they said, weren't biting very well.
Visits Carter Today
Begin Says Israel
'Yearns for Peace'
WASHINGTON (AP) -Israeli
Prime Minister Menahem Begin.
arriving al the White House today
for talks with President Carter,
said Israel "yearns for ~ace, prays for peace and wall do
everything humanly possible .•
. for ~realpeace.''
But Begin signaled Israel's con·
linuing refusal to withdraw from
the occupied West Bank ol the
Jordan by warning that "in cer·
lain circumstances • • . the life of
every man, wom41n and child" in
Israel could be ''directly
threatenedandputinjeopardy.''
These are the precise words
Begin uses Jn arguing Israel's
case for keeping the West Bank
under Israeli control.
Israeli sources said the prime
minister brought several maps
BB Trustees
F~~HBWoman
Pact Tonight
Huntington Beach Union High
School District trustees will con·
sider final approval tonight of a
one·ye ar teache rs' contract
which includes al least a four ,
percent pay hike.
The meeting will be held at
the district offi ces, 5201 Bolsa
Ave., Huntington Beach.
Officers of the District
• Education Association <DEA>.
the teachers union, said Monday
teachers have mailed contract
ratification ballots which will be
counted today.
DEA officials indicated con-
s iderable support for the con·
tract which was tentatively ap-
proved with district omcials last
month.
District and DEA officials
agreed to give 830 t eachers
either a four percent pay boost
or 58 percent of new state funds
which can be used for salaries,
whichever is greater.
Funeral Set
118 Resident,
Carol Hunter
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday in Huntington Beach tor Carolyn B. Hunter, a SO.year
resident of HunUnaton Beach
who died Sunday at Pacifica
Hospital. She WU 83.
Mrs. Hunter, of 8> Huntington
St., was a member of the Senior
Citbe111 Club of Huntington
Beach, the 'American Le~ion
AusWary and the World War I
Veterans Auxiijary.
She ls survived by a nephew,
Lester B. Hunter of Granada
Hills.
Services will beein at 10:30
a.m. Wednesday at Pierce
Brothers Smith Chapel, 627 Main S\·· Huntington Beach with in-terment to follo'Y at
Westminster Memorial Part. •
DAILY PILOT
for Carter, one showing tiny
l&rael surrounded by the vast
Arab world and another showing
bow Arab guns would be in firing
, range of Israeli cities if Arabs oc-
cupied the West Bank.
In the south lawn welcoming
ceremonies. Carter praised
Begin for l\iB "willingness to suf·
fer for principle ••• bis
superlative personal courage in
face of trial, challenge and diaap-
pointment.",
Carter also commended
Begin's "deep and unswerving re-
ligious commitments."
Referring briefly to the Middle
East conflict. Carter said be was
.. encoura~ed" by Begin's as·
surances that .. all points are
negotiable." The President said
he hoped for success in seWlng
the MiddleEastconflictthisye.ar.
Begin arrived in sweltering
heat to a 19·gun salute. The
onetime guerrilla leader stood
ramrod stiff as the U.S. and
Israeli anthoms werepla.ved.
FroaaPa,,eAJ
KOREA •••
"Lacovara said mutual trust
needed to complete his investiga·
ti on did not exist.
O'Neill said a new investigator
will be able to bypass the ethics
committee and take his com·
plaints straight to the speaker's
office.
"My concern is that the in-
vestigation isn't moving, and I
want to get it moving just as ex-
peditiously as I can," O'Neill
said.
O'Neill said Flynt offered to
turn the Korean investigation
over to some other House com-
mittee. The speaker scheduled
further meetings to determine
whether any more action is
needed.
A group of junior Republicans
today sald "the credibility of the
Ethics Committee probe h~d de·
teriorated" and called for crea·
lion of a new committee to take
over the investigation, possibly
with Lacovara as chief in·
vestigator.
Rep. Robert Walker <R·Pa.),
said lf Lacovara accepted the job
such a committee "could hit the
'round already running."
Walker billed tbe proposal as
bipartisan, but only Republicans
attended a news conference an-
nouncing it.
More than SO Houae members of both partid 'joined in calling
for Carter to name a special pro-
secutor, but tbe President aald in
a letter to Republican leaders:
"I have decided that •ppoint.
ment of a special prosecutor
would be inappropriate and un·
warranted, and would probably
impede the Justice Department
inveatiaation."
F.-...PflfleAJ
STRIKE •• ~
• . ' .
·Firemen:.
Battle ~, <
In Main~
By'l'be.\Nocla&ed.,_; l
A fire poulbly touched df ~
llgbt.nina sWl raged around the
base at Maine's tallest mount$
today. but other forest fires that
charred thousands ot acres in
Utab, Wyoming and f4o•tana
were reported under control.
The rash of fires (las been
•parked by prolonied drought
and beat in the many parts ol t.be
country. (Relatedstory,A4)
Four hundred campen were
evacuated Monday as names
whipped by high winds burned out
of control at the foot of mile-high
Mt. Katabdin in Maine's Baxter State Paik.
One park employe was i.rtjured
while fighting the blaze, which
consumed 1,250 acres by late af-
ternoon. The blaze was formed
when two separate fires spotted
Sunday night in the park's
1outhwest corner merged during
the night and fed on an area of
timber blown down sever al years
ago during a windstorm.
A park spokesman said the
flames were nearing Abol Camp-
ground, a popular site with a trail
leading to the summit of Katahdin •
Fearinr a wind shift.
firefighters today began -carving
out a ftre control line designed to
keep the stubborn fire from leap-
ing uptheslopesofKatahdln.
Some 150 firefighters were us·
ing_buJJdozers and tank trucks in
the fi&bt to control the blaze.
Albert C. Willis, Maine's fire
control director, said the wind
was expected to shift direction
and come from the southwest
later ln the day, fanning tbe
flames toward the mountain.
"It'.-a 90..<fegree shift from
yesterday," said Willis.
He said the 10-to 20-foot-wide
control line was being bulldozed
in an area of blown down trees
along the fire's northeast flank.
"In a blowdown, fire travels
very swifUy. If the wind changes
direction, Abol will be in great
danger,'' the spokesman said.
F,....PageAJ
REZONE •••
a local homeowners group, op-
posed the land use changes
because they claimed the city
would l08e tax revenue.
Chamber of Commerce
spokesman Bill Peterson told
the council his group would not
oppose changing indus trial
areas to residential use if soil
and other topographical condi-
tions prevented other develop-
ment.
Opponents of the\"land use
changes said new housing in that
area wolJld overload local
schools and sewage systems.
The six proposed land use
changes are included in a
package of nine reclassifications
the council will consider again
in two weeks.
The package of nine changes
iJ cona.ldered as one city general
plan arnendment. The council
ia prevented by law from ap-
provi.ng more than three general
plan amendll\_ents per year,
according to Planning Director
Ed Selich.
Oeltypt ............
'WATERING DOWN' THE EXORBITANT BIU.S FROM THE COSTA MESA WATER DISTRICT
Board Chairman Marlo Durant• Pr•Mnta Overpayment Check to Mr•. Valeri• Lorenz
Water Windfall
Mesa CWltomer Ove~harged $1,373~ 70
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of tlle o.tjly "'*Si.If
Valerie Lorenz of Costa Mesa
thought $88 was pretty steep
when she got her water bill this
month.
But she had paid as much as
$104 for the two-rnonth billings by
the Costa Mesa County Waur
District before. so s he figured
rates ba4 gone up like everything
else.
She and her husband Fr~ and
two children tried to conserve
water at the home at 1827 Hum·
mingbird Drive but the water
bills always ranged from a low of
$48 to a high of more than $100.
IN FACT, she noticed the
higher bills as long ago as
· December of 1972 when the dis-
trict came out and installed a
new meter at her home.
Water Conservatioll ...
Prop~sed for V ~ey
The Fountain Valley Cit? 'Water crisis, according to Coun·
Council will consider a proposed cilmanAl Hollinden.
emergency water conservation The proposed ordinance would
ordinance at an 8 o'clock meeting e1Jow the city to cut off water
tonight in the Council Chambers, service to any home or business
10200Slater Ave. which violates the conservation
The proposed law would only go measures.
into enect 10 the event of a seveTe Gutter flooding, washing hard
V.S.~et
Meeting Tolil,
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -
The Carter administration and
the Palestinian guerrilla
leadership are involved In secret
high.level contacts, the Beirut
newspaper Al Anwar reported to-
day.
The contacts included a meet·
ing in London June 24 between
former Pennsylvania Gov.
William Scranton, chosen by
President Carter to represent the
administration, and Basil Aki, a
mem~ 0( the Palestine Libera·
tion Organization's United Na·
lions delegation, the report said.
•
surfaced areas, ornamental·
fountains and obvious water
leaks would be prohibited under
the proposed emergency law.
The council will also consider a
plan to buy 1,000 "water saving
kits'' f<r residents which include
a shower flow restrictor, leak de·
tector and toilet device to reduce
water use.
Public Works Director Wayne
Osborne said the kits would cost
the city a total of $1,117 and
should be sold to.residents for 60
cents.
Fre~ Lunches
Offered in
' West. County
Pree lunches tor youngsters
under 19 years of age are now of.
fered at four locations in Hunt-
ington Beach and Fountain
Valley.
The summer lunch program,
sponsored by the Orange County
Community Development Coun·
ell, will provide meals until Aug.
26 at the following locations:
-Foutttaln Valley Boys' Club,
9840TalbertAve.;
-Huntington Beach Boys'
Club, 319 Yorktown Ave.;
-Huntington Continental
Townhouses, 19801 Brookhurst
St., Hwrtington Beach;
-Oak View Community
Center, 11261 Oak Lane, Hunt·
ibgtoD Beach.
The lunches 8" served at noon
Monday tbrou&b Friday.
The program ls almed at raJs-ine the notrltloaal level or
children from low income
f amiUea. commulllty develop-
ment councll Ofllclals laid.
After five years, the Costa
Mesa woman finally asked her
neighbors what their bills were
and wag surprised to learn they were ooly about $20.
She called water district of.
ficials and asked them why· her
July bill was four times higher
than her neighbors. Curious
district directors went to the
Lorenz home and discovered an
industrial waler meter had been
attached to the home instead of t~e smaller residential type de-
vice.
QUICK CALCULATIONS b~
the district's finance people
showed that the Lorenz' h~
overpaid the district $1,373.'JD
over the past five years. "
. District directors drove out
bright and early today with tJt,
check and their apologies. '
Why did Mrs. Lorenz wait fivp
years to complain?
Sbe said the bills were high lb.
the summer of 1972 when the
original me'ter was working.
"Bur WREN 111EY cbange}t
the mete.r we noticed the wllWs'
bills were as high as the summ.-
bills," she said. "But, apparently
we were too busy and didntt
notice. •
·~1 just assumed the rates weat
up," she said with a shrug. •
She did call last year after re.
ceiving a $104 bill and a water
d1strict service rnan came out to
look at the meter.
He couldn't find a leak, so Mrs.
Lorenz said she ju•t assumed
••we were overgenerous with ou
water use.
"1 'm very conscious of th
need to save water and all that,"
she saJd, "especJally with th
high bills."
But she said the family does Si
lot of laundry, takes sbowers1 every day and waters the laWDi
once a week.
••1 REALLY DON'T see how
we could have cut back m«e, ••
she aaid. "It was very frustrat-
ing."
Water District Manager Ed
Schnabel said meter error ls
rare.
''The old meter stuck back in
1972 and we made tb6 change, ..
he explained. "Unfortunately,
we installed J.he wrong replace·
mentunit.
"But we're honest and we ad·
mlt our mistakes. U we•re
wron1, we'll staad QP to it.'"1
Schnabel said.
Wbat wU1 Mrl. t.oreoa do with
her 1udden $1,343 wat~r
windfall? •"Who lcoows1° she said.
'TheN't 8ll aWful lot we cu do
With1t.0
Irvine
EDITION
VOL 70, NO. 200, 3 SECTlONS, 30 PAGES
Strike Halts
A ltrike which idled 10.000 to m1n11ement over how an •P-U.900 Me¥Y·maebioe operat.on proved $2.95-an·bour waae in· ~ Southern CaUlornla Monday creue should be dlatributed over iaa halttd many Oran1e County three years.
comtruct1oD projects. includ.lnc The operatina engineers, who
more than a doun Irvine Com· drive bulldozers cranes, trac·
,-ny '°"5iDI project.I and a tors and other Wavy equipment,
mutU-mlllioo dollar sewage wanted the pay raise in three an.
pipeline. nual at.eps; management wanted
The AFL-CIO Operatinc i tospreaditoverfiveincrementa.
Bn&ineen Local 12 called the ~ Last month the engineers' San
itrike after failing to asrei with Diego county counterparts con-
~oting Spree
eluded an agreement tden*al.to
the one they seek.
The San Dieso engineers went
on strike for a week, halting con·
structlon of housing projects and
the San Onofre nuclear power
plant expansion before the settle-
ment. .
An Orange County manage·
ment official for the Associated
General Contractors, Larry
Mcilwain, said today the Orange
•
SA Gnninan Killed . ' .
I· By Off-duty Deputy
' An oft-duty deputy sheriff shot
and killed a man early today
•ter the man allegedly fired
.Pots at him and cars parked
• qear sheriff's headquarters in
Santa Ana.
A spokesman for the Santa Ana
P.olice Department said Waynon
Wal lace Collins, 54, of Santa Ana
was seen firing shots at parked
cers outside she riff's head·
qllarters a few minutes before he
was fatallywounded.
.
Irvine Sets
I
Formnfor
New Plan
Irvine residents interestAld in
the city's general plan amend·
nlent are invited to a seminar
Wednesday at Venado Middle
School in Irvine.
The public forum will begin at
7:30 p.m. in the school's little
Uteater, at 4 Deerfield Ave. It is
~eing co-sponsored by Irvine
Tomorrow, a local political
lf'Oup, and by the Orange Coast
"J,.eaeue ol Women Voters.
Irvine resjdents will have an
epportunity lo ask questions and
~scuss various land use issues
bacluded in the general plan
~endment before the final
aubllc hearing by the city council
fbJuly28.
•itSpeakers at the Corum will in·
fl\lde Mayor Blll V ardoulls, Ed-
iie Peabody and Mel Roop ol the
-'fJ's community development
11epartment. BiJl Littlefield, an
*onom\at, and Chuck Huegy,
former chairman of the city's
Sconomic Advisory Committee.
"* According to Ken Benson of
ftvine Tomorrow, the forum is
lMUng held to stimulate interest
tit t.be general plan amendment
~ell. "Thla general plan amend·
ient mayfbe even more impor·
tJnt than the original general wan in-tetms o{ ultlmate land ~··and ffertboundarl,es of our ~ty," B«:mon said. Alon~ witb looking at the ~oader impllcatlons of the
~endment. forum participants 'lll1 be questioning bow the dif •
&rent 1aDcl usea will affed city -.xes.
It was when three off duty de·
puties began trailing Wallace's
car that he was confronted by
sheriff's Sgt. David Keller, 41, at
Flower Street and Civic Center
Drive.
Witnesses told investigators
that Wallace fired a single shot at
Keller before Keller returned
fire.
Wallace was struck by the
bullet and died at the scene, ac-
cording to accounts of the inci·
Coffee Finn
Trims Prices
CINCINNATI (AP) -
Folger Coffee Compa ny
has announced a wholesale
price cut of 20 cents per
pound on ground coffee
and two cents per ounce on
Instant cQlfee.
The firm cited lowered
prlces oa imported green
coffee in addition to re·
duced saJes since the price
of coffee began to rise
sharply at the beginning oC
the year.
Folger officials noted
that the wholesale price or
their ground coffee bas
dropped 95 cents per pound
to $3.48 since May 12. The
price reduction on instant
coffee to $5.25 is the first
since a pr1ce increase on
Marchl4.
OCMaySue
To Cover Cost
Of Alien Care
dent.
In the aftermath of the inci·
dent, police could give no reason
for Wallace's shooting escapade
outside sheriff's headquarters.
Officers said at least five autos
were damaged by bullets.
They did say, however, the
12:20 a.m. Incident is being in·
vestigaled jointly by Santa Ana
police, the county Sheriff's
Department and the county Dis-
trict Attorney's Office.
Chowchilla
Kidnaping
Plan Found ,
OAKLAND (AP) -A plAA for
kidaap~D.I a buaload of C'howchllla school children, com-
plete with a ransom note and list
of victims, wu found at the home
or one ol the three defendants in
the mass kidnaping case, it was
disclosed today.
In a 23-page search warrant
and inventory of evidence seized,
authorities said they found in the
home of Frederick N. Woods, 23,
"a large manila envelope con-
taining;
-("a) 'Plan' of kidnap on
three-ring binder on lined paper;
-("b) ransom note on three.
ring binder on lined paper:
-("c) list of kidnap victims on
old Jack-ln·Box bag."
The Ust o( evidence was com·
piled by a sheriff's detective, Sgt.
D. E. Gull, in a search of Woods'
family's lOO·acre Portola Valley
estate during the early morning
hours ol July 22, 1976.
It did not contain the wording
of the ramom note and did not
give details of the kidnap '']>Ian."
Altbouth there bave been
published reports or a $S million
ransom note connected with the
case, it was the first time the ex·
istence of any note bad been con-
rfrmed.
lronlcally, the inventory was
made public by a defenae at-
torney, Ted Merrill. who
represehts Richard Schoenfeld,
24.
Despite the vigorous objections
ot Woods' lawyer, Herber\
Yanowltz, Merrlll moved to
make public the inventory in ef.
forts to force the prosecution to
disclose exactly which items Will
be offered u evidence at trial.
AutboriUea Hid more tbaa
1,000 Stems ,r«• 'le1&ed at the
Woodl ..iate. They are among
IOIU .(.800 pltcea Of evidence in tlM~e~eue.
Coun(Tand Los Anaeles county
operating en1ineer1 want the
three-year spread of higher pay
because that's What they got tn
SanDieeo.
It would mean that instead ot
an initial 80·cent Increase,
worken would aet $1.05, retroac-
tive to July L
Mcllwain said that ~ides the
differences in when operating
engineers would collect their
• .. . . '\ •
Today's.Cloill.g •
N•Y. Steeb iii
~ ...
TUESDAY, JULY 19, 19n TENCEN
County • ID
wqe hikes. there are no dl.1-
aireements in the proposed con·
tract.
Operating engineers now earn
on the average, $10.71 an hour, or
$22,276 a year, not in~luding
overUme pay.
ThQU&h the strike was called on Saturday after a meeting
between elllineers and manaie-
ment. construct.ion projects con·
tinued as usuai until unJon bu.al·
11eaSJ11entahraugbt olficlal ward
to Job al'tel, &eru.ni worken to eo home.
Today, McDwaln aeld, several
Jobs, where ~ aaeota 81>9
pareptly bad oot appeared Jet conUnued.. .
· McllwalA was unable to
estimate how many Orange
CdUnty comtrucUoo 1ltets were
affected. or the number of CSeeSTJU:KE. Page AZ>
Blaze Sears Trueker , .
Trash truck driver Floyd Meyers, 45, of
Santa Ana, is rushed to waiting Marine
Corns Search and Rescue helicopter at
Coyote Canyon Dump in Irvine Monday
for airlift to UC Irvine Medical Center.
County Fire Department spokesmen said
Meyers opened truck doors to investigate
smoke cominr from dumpster be was
hauling. Rush of air caused smoldering
sawdust and debris to explode, inflicting
second and third degree burns over 35
percent of Meyers' upper body. Resulting
fire in dump took three hours to put out.
Victim was in satisfactory condiUon today
at the UCIMC Burn Unit.
Airline seeks ·oc .Berth.
Noiile LeDel Concenu Played Dmm in Plea ·
By KATHY CLANCY Of tM Deity f'I ... SUit
Attorneys for North Central
Airlines contend the airline's
proposed operation at Orange
County Airport .. would not
significantly increase noise
levels" at the county-operatAld
facility.
In a reply to opposition to their
prop01Sed use of the airport. the
attorneys argue airport noise
problems should be up to local
government to setUe.
~hey said the local noise con·
cerns should not override "the
broader public interest" in de·
veloping route patterns lo meet
the needs oC the Orange CoU.nty-
Los Angeles area.
The attorl)eys suggested as
passtble solutions to the noiae
problem acquisition of homes im-
pacted by aircraft nobe or the
construction of a new airport to
serve the county.
The airline applied to the Civil
Aeronautics Board in
Washington, D.C. in May for
permission to operate flights
between Orange Couqty and Lp
Veea'-and Orange County and
l>boenix. They w~ndd co~t
with tughts to MlnneapoUa-$.
Paul.
Even lt pmnisai<>n VJer.e arant•
ed. county supervisors still would
retain COf)trol over the airline'•
use ot the airport.
Count,Y aupervll~rs aot;l
Newport Beach city oftlclala
have opposed the airline's re-
quest, citing concerns over noise
conditions around the airport.
The request also bas been op.
posed by officials of Hughes
Alrwest andWestem Airlines.
North Central's reply to that
opposltion was filed in
W ashingt.on and passed along to
coanty supervisors by County
Counsel Adrian Kuyper.
The reply noted North Cen-
tral'• service proposal calls for
sUgbUy lesa than four departures
per day from tbe airport and said
the service "°ould be operated
with DC-9-50 equipment meeting
<See Al.RUNE, Page AZ)
Pair Face Trial
In Newport Protest
By ARTHUR a. VINSEL
Of U. E*ly Pl ... Staff
Two of 12 protesters who dis·
rupted Davis Cup tennis matches
in Newport Beach to protest
South Africa's racial policies are
due lb court again Friday.
A bearing was scheduled this
morning for five others tentative-
ly scheduled fbr trial on m.isde·
meanor trespassing charges.
Five other demcJNtratch aym·
path"9tic to the plight ot blacks
under South Africa's apartheid
racial policy already have
pleaded sutltJ • · Tbe two men set.tor trial Frf·
day, Alex Dortch and StanJey
Alexander. wet• orlglnant
achedulM ror trlal1ut ftlday, but their att«neys aubmltted a
variety ct motions· to Harbor
Judicial J>lstrict Court Jud&e
Donald DunglU).
Dortch and Alexandel' face
chareea of vandaliam and tresp~ 41 a result ol the
April 16-17 fracas at the ~ewi>ort
Beach Tennia Club during the
Davia CuLzone final between tho., U.S. 8nd th Africa.
Juqe DwtiannJected...i
of the mot.fOaa and qreed to stud)' tile anrits ot otbera !Ude·
in a bid to a.et. char1ea aaaialt • Dortch. .m Alexander ~
ad tbe""tllrownoutot ~ l Amtllal~tbe'deteoleat•. ton~ aU•• -.re ll"OQ.Pdl for cU• ••al Ot cbarae• a1a.1Mt the ehn'• .. & ... ,.....
I
t
I a
(
I • •
(
~ 2 -DAll ~PILOT
TallaOpeta
Beghi Pleads
Probing
' MayEnJ,
For West Bank In Court
W ASHTNGTON (AP> -t1raell
Prlmt> Minister Menah~m Beain.
arrtvm1 at the Whit~ House today
for ta1kl w1lh President CIU'ter,
saJd larMI '°Jelll'fta for Ma~ preyt for peace and will dO
everytb.in« humanly possible. •
. for~ real peace."
But Bqins11naJed larael'scon·
tlnuiqg refusal to withdraw from
the occupied West Bank of the
Jordan by warnine that "Jn cer-
tajn circumstances. . . the Ule or
every man, woman and child" in
Israel could b e ''directly
threatened and put 1njeopardy."
These are the precise words
Begin uses in arguing Israel's
case for keeping the West Bank
under Israeli control.
Israeli sources said the prime for Carter, one showing tiny
Israel sw-rounded by the vast
Arab world and another showing
how Arab guns would be in firing
range of Israeli cities if Arabs OC·
cu pied the West Bank.
In the south lawn welcoming
ceremonies, Carter praised
Begin for his "willingness to suf·
fer for principle ... his
superlative personal courage in
face of trial, challenge and disap·
pointment.",
Carter also commended
Begin's ''deep and unswerving re-
ligious commitments.'•
Referring briefly to the Middle
East conflict, Carter said he was
"encouraged" by Begin's as·
surances that "all points are
negotiable." The President said
he hoped for success in setUing
the Middle East conflict this year.
Begin arrived in sweltering
heat to a 19-gun salute. The
onetime guernna leader stood
ramrod stiff as the U.S. and
Israeli anthoms were played.
Begin opened his remarks in
Hebrew and reminded Carter of
the World War II Nazi holocaust
in which the Jews "were thrown
into the abyss," later to win
statehood "in an unequal fight of
the few against the many, the
weak against the strong, right
against mi~ht.''
Begin said "peace is insepera-
FroaPageAJ
TRIAL .••
-Allegedly prejudicial pre·
trial publicity which they claim
will make it impossible to get a
fair trial.
-Allegations that certain
statutes involved are too vague
and indefinite for application.
-Allegations the group of pro·
testers acted as a class and thus
should be tried together and
equally.
-All egati on s o f dis-
criminatory prosecution.
The latter motion was made on
grounds U.S. Ditvls Cup Team
Captain Tony Trabert went after
the demonstrators with a
vengeance, taking a few practice
serves at their heads wiUl his
racquet, yet he was not charged
with any oHense.
Judge Dungan said Monday all
motions raise substantial points
and certainly aren't frivolous un-
der the law, although he might
not rule in favor or the defen·
danta.
"One motion was rather uni ·
que," )le observed, noting he had
never encountered it in bis law.
career.
I
Dortch and Alexander's
lawyers asked to question Judge
Duncan at length to get an idea
about his personal beliefs and
opinions.
They are from the Los Angeles
area and unfamtUar with Orange
County judges by reputation, a
frequent factor in being better
able to map courtroom atrate1Y,
it w aa explained.
"Naturally, I rejected that one
rigbtaway," JudseDun1anaaid.
DAILY PILOT
bte from naUonaJ security ... The
J ewa had "experience of phyalcal
anoibilatlon and spiritual re·
dempUon" which had taught
them that national security
meant "the live. ot every nuui.
woman and child," he said .
Begin 63, m aking his first
journey abroad as prllJle
mlniater, is carrying what he bu
called "a complete peace plan,"
plus a request for more than $2
bllUon in economic and military
aid, according to Israeli sources.
While U.S. and Israeli officials
both were eager ror the sessions,
scheduled for two days, to go
smoothly, it seemed unlikely
Carter and Begin would be able to
gloH over some of the sharp dif.
ferences between their ap·
proaches to such issues as the
ruture of Israeli-held Arab land
and the Palestinians. Wait TIU Septe.fJer
Begin was scheduled later in
the day to have meetings with
Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance
and TT'easury Secretary W.
Michael Blumenthal.
Bicycle racks stand empty at Irvine High
School in Irvine, creating geometric pat-
tern to entice photographer's wandering
eye. One might say it is summer v~cation
for them too. But they'll be kept busy
when Irvine youngsters mount their 10-
speed steeds to hit the books again in the
fall.
I
Budget ·Cut Attempt Dire
Irvine school trustees will take
another look at the district
budget Wednesday night as they
attempt to find areas to cut
spending to reduce the school tax
rate .
Trustees decided last week to
bold the workshop when thiy
learned that district ad·
ministrators were recommend-
ing only an eight-cent tax rate re·
ducUon -from $4.98 to $4.90.
Several trustees said they
would like to lower the rate even
further because property values
in Irvine rose 36.1 percent -the
Mother, May I?
Miasing Boys F oUIJI/, Fiahing
• SAN DIEGO (AP) -Antonio Bantique asked if he
could go fishing, but hi s mother said no, not right then.
That was Sunday. By that evening and into Mon-
day, police · and sheriff's officers had a massive
search under way for Antonio, 10, and for Michael
Kaimimoku, 7, also reported lost.
highest amount in Orange COUft..
ty among school districts.
One trustee, Frank Hurd. sug-
gested a 60-cent reduction, which
would mean slicing $1.8 million
out of the $24.4 million district
budget.
Wednesday's workshop is
public and will begin at 7 p.m. in
the district headquarters, 2941
Allon Ave.
Assistant Supt. Gene Hartline
said he will not suggest any ma·
jor cuts, but will explain to the
school board some minor re·
visions based on salary adjust-
ments for classified and manage-
ment staff members.
"The trustees will be looking at
all of the items in the budget and
they may have suggestions for
m:tjor cuts. But we don't," said
Hartline.
F,....PageAI
AIRUNE •••
federal noise regulations.
In addition, the attorneys
wrote, county supervisors wOuld
still have authority to determine
whether a carrier should be
permitted to operate at the
airport.
Reductions Urged
WASHINGTON CAP> -Presi·
dent Carter has asked executive
-agencies to submit ideas on how
to eliminate "federal require·
ments that state and local gov·
ernments submit plans when
asking for assistance." In a
memo sent today to all depart·
ment and agency heads, Carter
said present requirements are
needlessly numerous and
burdensome.
WASHINGTON (AP) -At
torney General Griffin ~11 ._
he expects prosecutioM to resul
from the Justice DepartmenS'' investigation of the South Kote
lnflueace-b"'ying on C~tol HllL
Bell made the at~tement M
day after t>resldeiit Carte1
turne4 down Republican re-
quests for appointment of ,.a
special prosecutor, patterned
alter the Watergate special ~
secutor, to pursue the Kore• scandal. i
Asked what the Justice Depart·
ment investigations might prf.
duce, Bell said, "We expect
there'll be prosecutions... •
The attorney gener<U said tit£
investigation is being handled aq
dlrrerently from other cases, eJ
cept that it is perhaps being
ducted at a faster pace beca
•'it touches the public interest.":
Meanwbtle, Speaker of tff
House Thomas P. O'Neill saJd It
• would take personal charge
the troubled House ethics COl'll
mittee investigation of tbe,
Korean scandal.
O'Neill said be wants quick a~
polntment or a new chief in·
vestigator to replace Philip A.
Lacovara, the former depu(y
Watergate prosecutor who re-
signed last week in a dispute wUh
Rep. John J. Flynt CD·Ga.),
chairman of the ethics panel.
Lacovara said mutual truat
needed to complete his investio·
ti on did not ex:ist.
O'Neill said a new investigator
will be able to bypass the ethi~
committee and take his co~
plaints straight to the speaker')>
office. .
"My concern is that the ~
vestigation isn't moving, and:¥1
want to get it moving just as e •
peditiously as I can," O'N ·
sald. • ,
O'Neill said Flynt offered to
turn the Korean investigati~
over to some other House co-.-
mittee. The speaker scheduled
further meetings to determine
whether any more action js
.needed.
.
A helicopter pilot aided the patrol cars and four-wheel-drive vehicles.
Kidnaping was the fear of Antonio's mother, June.
Froat Page Al
Publication Budge; STRIKE ••.
The boys were located later Monday with their
fishing poles on Fiesta Island in Mission Bay. The
fish, they said, weren't biting very well.
Toro Youth Killed
In Flaming Crash
Timothy Wayne Sallee, 18, of
El 1'oro, was killed Monday night
when the car he was driving was
broadsided in a Laguna Hills in·
tersection by a pickup truck
driven by a drunk driving sus-
pect.
A California Highway Patrol
spokesman said Sallee was
pirtned in his auto when it burst
into flames immediately after
the 11:15 p.m. collision at La Paz
Road and Moulton Parkway.
AITested on ampicion of felony
drunken driving and suspicion of
vehicular manslaughter was
Norman Bush, 19, of Garden
Grove.
A CHP report said Bush al·
legedly ran a stop slgn at the in·
tersection.wblle travelinl east on
Moulton Parkway.
The drunken driving suspect
was unittjured in the coWslon but
two passen1er1 in bis pickup
truck were treated for mlnor In·
juries in Saddleback Community
F,....Page.4J
€ARE •••
Hospital, according to the CHP
report.
Sallee, who lived at 24881
Branch St., El Toro, died at the
scene. The CHP report said the
young man was driving home
from work at a service station
when the accident occurred.
Suit Filed
In ·Alleged
Belt Beating
Damages totaling $!!5,000
were demanded Monday by a
man who clajms bis daughter
was beaten with a leather belt
wielded by a fellow student at an
Irvine school.
Identified as defendants in the
Orange County Superior Court
lawsuit filed by Joseph Cosgrove,
17991 Gilman St., Irvine, are stu-
dent John Reagan and his father,
John Reaaao.
'Cotcrove states his daughter,
Marla. 12, aulfered serious ln·
juries June 24 when she was
beaten with the belt oq the pre-
tn is ea of Sao Joa4uin In-
termedlate School, ·U61
Mlchellon Drive.
Claimlnl that hi• dauahter was beaten about the face with the
belt, Cosgrove further alleges
that tbe younaer Reacan had a teP_Utatlon for bullyjng ot!ter stu·
dtonta.
workers on strike.
Bill Wagner , official
spokesman for the engineers'
local office in Los Angeles, was
unavailable for comment. Office
workers there refused to com·
ment on details of the strike, in-
cluding numbers involved.
The Irvine Company, Orange
County's largest residential con·
struction group, said 10to15 of its
projects have been stalled by the
·strike.
A spokesman said $5. 7 million
worth of construction contracts
were held up. About half of that
value is in coflstruction or a ma-
jor flood control channel between
Culver Drive and Jeffrey Road in
Irvine, for flood protection oftbe
large Woodbridge housing de-
velopment and other areas.
The Irvine official said the
strike "affects everybody."
The ~.2 million Aliso Water
Management Agency sewer out·
fall project of( Aliso Pier in South
Laguna was stopped.
"The job's been shut down,"
site boss Dennis O'Malley said.
"We can't work without the
operators!'
But O'Malley said there would
be no substantial delay in the
project, scheduled for comple-
tion in February, unless the
strike carried over into bad
weather.
Vote F al& Short
Saddleback College' trustees
barely got a quorum together
Monday to discuss the ad-
ministration's . revised, $25.8
million publication budget pro-
posal.
When it came time for ~ vote.
the four board members present
were so sharply divided that it
proved impossible to approve the
spending plan as required by
law.
The vote was 2·1, with one
abstention, in favor of a slightly
reduced budget of $25.3 million.
That would have included a two-
cent reduction In the total district
tax rate.
The board's inability to agree
on the publication budget means
district administrators will be
forced to publish the district's
tentaUve bud1et of $24 million
prior to the final public hearing
and adoption date of Aug.1.
The tentative budget doesn't
include such recent adminlstra·
ti.on adjustment.a as addition ol
$1.2 million in unexpected r e-
venue generated by the 27 per·
cent surie in Saddleback's total
aaseJSed valuation.
That money bad been allocated
by the distrlct staff to a haH-
dozen capital projects, including
the planned second campus In
Irvine, a softball field, stadium
lights and a swimming stadium1
This doesn't mean trustees will
be stuck with the lower tentative
budget figure for pext year. They
stUJ have one more budget study
session prior to the final bearing
and may revise the figure uP-
ward.
This week, trustees Norrisa Brandt and Frank Greinke were
ill and trustee William Watts was
on vacation.
During Monday's hearin6,
much of the discussion centered
around Trustee Donna Berry's
objection to a $3,400 expenditure
for conference attendance by
board members -up from about
$6,400 last year.
The only attempt at a vote
came when Trustee Robert Price
of Laguna Hills moved to ap-
prove a $25.3 million budget that
allowed a tax r ate reductlOD of
about two cents.
He suggested slashing $500,000
from the fund lo build the dil-
trict 's second campus to acbiev~
the small reduction.
c
• Tueida1'• 1
Closing Price NYSE COMPOSFfE TRANSACTIONS
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•t :11Z 1l
TIMCl!Y. July 19. 1en QAIL y PILOT Bf;
Susptcloias RUe
Label Hints
Help Buyers . ..
BySYLVL\PORTBR ·.
When a familiar product regularly suddenly appears on
the supermarket sbelr with a face Utt (a newly shap«l bot·
Ue, a revamped label), most buyers suspect the cb.ange is
merely another excU&e to raise the price.
On glamor products particularly, such as cosmetics, a
newly designed package often may be oo more thao a lure.
But on staple items, tbls is rarely the only reason, because
the altered packaging may be too costly to the manufae·
turer and may price him out of the market, say Richard
Gerstman and Herbert Meyers, package designers who
head a New York-based firm carrying their names.
RATHER, A REASON FOR THE change may be that
the ~ompany needs a sales increase, and a new eye-catching
container may help the product stand out from its com·
petitors on the shelf. No manufacturer wants to see his pro·
duct upstaged on the shelf.
. A "graphic" c~aQge involving colors and printing de-
sign may enhance its eye appeal and help the maker im·
prpve the product label.
Or a newly opening market may dictate an alteration
in· packaging. Talcum
powder with a picture of
mother and baby may
appeal to mothers, but if
athletes are big users of
talcum as well. a re·
designed package is
called for.
Money's
Worth
A graphic change in packaging is basically for eye crp:..
peal. A •·structural" change may be to cut manufacturing_
costs so retail pric!es can be maintained or even reduced. As
an example, a metal spout can be changed to paperboard or
eliminated cnt>rely. These guidelines can help buyers un-derstand package design: ·
Q. HOW CAN YOU PICK OUT deceptive packaging?
A. When it fools you into thinking you're getting more
for your money than you're actually getting. A package
enclosing an inner package may be to protect the contents
or may be deceptive. Beautiful illustrations that mislead
you are illegal but they are still around.
Q. How can you tell overpriced packaging?
A. If an identical product in a simpler package sells for
less, the higher-priced item is overpackaged. Cosmeticit
may be super-packaged as a matter of course. say
Gerstman and Meyers, but some items that seem to be over-
packaged may be so designed to protect the contents.
Q. WJUCH IS BEST - A GLASS jar, can or a waxed
container?
A. Glass is usually more expensive but it also is reusa:
ble. recloseable and transparent. Plastic may be cheaper
aod is light-weight and unbreakable. Cans or waxed con•
tamers for frozen products or liquids may be cheapest.
Q. What does "new" or "improved" on a label mean?
A. That the product forrnulaUon has been changed. And
the word "new" can remain on the package for only a six
month period in the retall store. A design change may be
called a "more convenient package" or some variation of
this.
Q. WHY ARE SO MANY PACKAGES bard to open?
A. Government regulations to protect children or
thoughtless designing are the usual reasons.
Q. Are packagiog rules qecoming stiffer?
A. Yes. A ruling soon td~nie effecth·u will require
co.smetics labels to ~ist all ingredients. The Federal Trade
Comrtlission also is <;lamping down on the practice of un-ne~s~ary slack·fill that results in product contents
weigbmg less than the wrapped package. Much more in-
formation on labels is on the w~y.
Q. WHAT ABOUT FAMIUAR LABELS on lower-priced
products? -
A. Pirating is hardly new. Study the label before you
buy. check for your trusted name. An unknown brand io an
imit.ation package may contain contents that are inferior. ·
Rate Views
Utility Users
May· Get Voice
..
LOS ANGELES <AP> -If YOU. tbink your electric or ~~ter or telepho~e rat~ are too high, what can you do about
it.
Not much, because the agencies that set utility rates go
through weeks of hearings and piles of evidence io their de·
liberations, a process that essentially excludes the average
customer. . ·
"mE INTERESTS OF small utility consumers aren't
represented with as much expertise and attention as the in~
terests of larger consumers," says Joanne McNabb, ari
analyst with tt\_e legisl~tive unit or the state Department o(
Consumer Affau's. "Big business can af(ord to have expertd
reJ)resenting them at rat.e·maktng hearings, and while the
residential customer is entitled to appear. the complex.itY.
.and length of the bearings make it imPQ6Sible for him tb
(
represent himself ade-
quately."
ENERGY 1 To change t hat
situatJ~n. the departt
• ment tS supporting
, leclslaUon coauthored by A•semblyman Bill
· Loe~yer ([).San Lean:
dr9) ond Sen. Alfred Alqulst (D-San Jae~) t.Mt would create
theSmalnJlilit)',Consumer AcUonGroup (SUCAG ), 1 ·
The bUL. A~1289, bas passed the Assembly and will be
ta1"en up shortly by the Senate.
.,ALL TffB ~ERBSTS AFFECfED by reguJatory: ~g@'ncy decis1ont should hava u.{ opR(>rtunl~Y to present
thtit views for coo.sldoratlott dunna. Ute dect~lon-makf~
protess,., d~rtmeat cltNlCt« Blchllrd Spohn aald in a retJ tu '4t'aint support for t&e bUL :
UUUt, compaaief and bl&IW&l.Drell baterelt.s are nOW: able~ r•ts~themseives ettedlvetY.." ht said. "SUCAO:
woulc! prprp~~c ' ~. e~H ud ac:countabUIW. qec:elJBat'l' ore ~~ Np~t.lcio Of tb6 ln.tereats ot re-~
sldeotial 11malJ bulhJea utlltti CoblUmera," tho J~
said. : ~~CAO would be financed e:btirely b1 vol~ con.: trtb\lu~ from uWlty customers. wbO would add au · sa payment le Ol)e of Uidr uWJt¥, bWI.
Laguna/South ·£Gast
' .
L 70, NO. 200, 3 SECTIONS, '° PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
' .
Alteraooa
N.Y.Stoeks
OC Planners OK .. South Laguna Trac.
SupervilOl"I.
Tbe beet they could muster for
lbelr effects Monday, however,
w u Commluloner Floyd
Farano'a looe d.laaenUna vote ..
Farano characterized the sro-
Poled project u ... Oat land de.
velopment lhovecl up into lbe
bills."
He aaid the hill site west of
Crown Valley Parkway and
south of Talavera Drive "is one
of lbe best areas in Orqge Coun·
ty" fer natural bUlalde develop.
ment.
But Fatano's four fellow com·
mluiooers didn't agree with bis
aueasibent of the prqject.
Commissioner Richard
Footner, for example, reminded
the development's critics that
o~inal plans called for develop-
ment ot 6'5 reaidentlal lots oo lbe,
alte.
Tbe 331·lot venlon ac~pted by
the commlasloo showed that
Batawin bad made concessions
to those who opposed the project.
Footner said.
"I think the developer has done
a great job in trying to appease
everybody and this board," be
added.
g Jobs.Halted
Strike Stops Construction in OC
·~ ~ \A strike which idled 10,000 to s~ 000 heavy-machine operators
tQ!a Southern California Monday
plQ~ halted many Orange County
aconstruction projects, including
clJDore than a dozen Irvine Com-pany housing projects and a
l~ulti-million dollar sewage
)Qpipeline.
st The AFL-CIO Operating
Engineers Local 12 called the
otlltrike after falling to agree with
"
LB Council
Sets Fall
:Event Study
t~l A proposal to hold Laguna
eacb's Third Annual
ktoberfest will be considered by
she City Council Wednesday.
~ The council considers routine
..,..siness from 3:30 unW 5 p.m.
rmd adjourns until 6 p.m. wh~ it ~g~ its public bearing agenda.
l1ie Oktoberfest consideration is
cheduled alter two public hear-
ngs.
The sponsors. the Village
::enter Committee and Laguna
• 'leach Junior Chamber of Com·
"nerce, propose to hold the ~~elebration from 5 to ll p. m. Oct.
·l on Forest Avenue which would
)e closed to traffic from 3 p.ni.
· atday.
-'·Some downtown merchants
ave complained that past
jlctoberfests have harmed bQsi·
fes, and they have commented
alleged incidents of drunken·
ess and disorderly conduct.
t"'The sJ>OMOrs propose beer will r sold .. in keeping with the
r,tbenticity of O~toberfest. ••
The Jaycees will provide ~00,000 liquor liability in·
urance. There are to be two
lka bands and refreshment
d game booths set up by local
rvice clubs.
Other council business in·
des:
., Discussion of a planning
"'mmission recommelldation to
nstruct a city animal shelter
ii the toMl's abandoned dump in a~Canyon.
.-DLscussh>n on Incentives for
ombini.nC lot& ln Arch Beach
f!ights.
1 ~true.lion ot racquetball urtl ~ 15(11) S. Coast flighway.
-An ordfnance banning
eos in the city.
Coast
management over how an ap-
proved $2.95-an-hour wage in-
crease should be distributed over
three years.
The operating engineers, who
drive bulldozers, cranes, trac-
tors and other heavy equipment,
wanted the pay raise in three an-
nual steps; management wanted
to spread it over five increments.
Last month the engineers' San
Diego county counterparts con-
eluded an agreement identical to
the one they seek.
The San Diego engineers went
on strike for a week, halting con·
struction of housing projects and
the San Onofre nuclear power
plant expansion before the setUe-
ment.
An Orange County manage-
ment official for the Associated
General Contractors, Larry
Mcilwain. said today the Orange
Shooting at Cars
OC Deputy Kills
Suspected Sniper
An off-duty deputy sheriff shot
and killed a man early today
after the man allegedly fired
shots at him and cars parked
near sheriff's headquarters in
Santa Ana.
A spokesman for the Santa Ana
PoJ,lce Department. said WQDOO Wall ace Collins, 54, of Santa Ana
was seen firing shots at parked
cars outside sheriff's head-
quarters a few minutes before he
was fatally wounded.
It was when three off duty de-
puties began trailing Wallace's
car that be was confronted by
sheriff's Sgt. David Keller, 41, at
Flower Street and Civic Center
Drive.
Witnesses told investigators
that Wallace fired a single shot at
Keller before Keller returned
fire.
W alJace wn .truck by the
bullet and died at the scene, ac·
cording to accounts of the inci-
dent. •
ln the aftermath of the inci-
dent, pollce could give no reason
for Wallace's shooting escapade
outside sheriff's headquarters.
Officers said at least five autos
were damaged by bullets .
They did say, however, the
12:20 a.m. incident ls being in-
vestigated jointly by Santa Ana
police. the county Sheriff's
Department and the county Dis·
trict Attorney's Office.
Prosecutions Due
,..
In Korea Probe?
A group of junior Republicans
today sald ''the credibility of the
Ethics Committee probe had de-
teriorated" and called for crea-
tion of a new committee to take
over the investigaUon, possibly
with Lacovara as chief : ..
vestigator.
Rep. Robert Walker (R-Pa.),
said if Lacovara accepted the job
such a committee "could bit the
ground already running."
Walker billed the proposal as
bipa.J'tlSan, but only Republicans
attended a news conference an-
nounetne it. .
More than 50 House members
of both parties joined in calling
for Carter to name • sJH!cial pro-
sec:ut«, but tbe Pr811dent ~aid in
a letter to Republican 1,aders: ~·1 have declded that apj>Ohtt·
ment ot a 1peelal JK'Olecutor
would be Inappropriate nd un•
warranted, and woald probably
hnpede tbe Justice Department lnY~tion.'•
County and Los Angele.s county
operating_ encineers want the
three-year spread ol higher .pay
because that's what they got lD
San.Diego.
It would mean that instead of
an initial 80-cent increase.
workers would get $1.051 retroac-
tive to July 1.
Mcilwain said that besides the
differences in when operating
· <SeeSTJUKE, Page "2) -
Planners
Get Heavy
SC Agenda
An industrial park, redevelop-
ment of the pier and bowl area
and a widening of the San Diego ,
Freeway through the city are on
tonight's San-ctemente Plannine
Com~.seada. The conf mfsaion meetin1 is
scheduled for 7~30 p.ip. in the
council chambers al cttJ hall. ~ A venfda Pr'estdlo.
Commissioners are to review a
draft environmental impact re-
port on a proposed industrial
park, which would be located
eastofthecityonAvenldaPieo.
They will also bear presenta-
tions by the Kelsker·Johnaon
consulting firm on alternative
plans for the area around the
municipal pier.
The California Department of
Transportation bas prepared an
environmental impact report on
the proposed 'Widenlna of the San
Diego Freeway from six to eight
lanes betwee.n Camino· de
Estrella~tbe-northendoftheci.
ty and the Orange.San Diego
County line to Ute south.
· Commissioners are to receive
a report tonight on the wtd~
project, whieit is expected to be
(See PIANNEBS, Page AZ)
Tuu AITested
After L~ Fall
Two men ens-ied 1n what
Laeuna Beach police termed a
lewd act "ere~ early tb1s rnorninle after tumbtwf a few
feet doWn' a brushy l>ank ¥i
Hellller Part. '
· Surprised by Police flisbllttlt
beams, Set. David Avers said the two JOit their balUce wbQe try.
inc to put an tbetr e=· ~
• wet'e not-~ bi Ult fall~~ ot tile Paft't res .:Awn Hid. • The two lt-J'Nl'-Glct ram wen bookecttcrdflardlrW eclOductUd
releued oatWuntttm prrilM. toappe.l'ltieom"(; ... ., · ,
But those words failed to ap. peaae liapna Sur'& critics, in·
cludhia the ~th Laguna Civic A.,ociatioo spokesman. AlltbolU' .Gruao.
He was among lbe dissidents
whet VQWed to appeal the com-
mlsatoo•s decision to the Board ot
Suoemsors. And an association pamphlet
~at charged the hills will be "de-
nuded" bY the project's iradini
needt and Other alleged faults
was clrcula1ed amona those in
the audience.
For Baldwin, acceptance ot the
project by the commiasion ended
a four-year struggle for •P·
prov al.
In the end, the commlssion en-
dorsed a plan that bunches the
<See PBOIECI'. Pace AZ)
STRIKE HALTS $5.2 MIWON ALISO SEWAGE PROJECT
Crane Stffled In Shutdown of Outfall Work.
'Keep rreaehers'.
Remedial Classes
Pmposed in CUSD
Capistrano Unified School Dis-trict board president Ted Kopp
propoaed ?.f on~ay that some
junior high school teachers in the
district be kept "alter school."
with one teaching staff from 7:50
a.m. to 12:29 p.m. San Clemente
students who will attend
Shorecliffs will attend Marco
Forster with their own set of
teachers from 12:3.stoS:~p.m. Noting that double sessions at
Marco Forst~r .Junior High Superintendent Jerome
School will cut teachers' work Tbornsley said that although
days thls fall by about two and a teachers will work fewtt hours,
bait h~ a day, Kopp suuested he is sure they are convinced
these teachers establish re-they'll be putting in a full day•s
medial classes in the extra time work already, without any addJ-
rather than&Qing home. tional assigned duUes like tbe
tutoring KdpP prOJ><>Sed. 1'1t's time to get innovative ,. wt th lddsWbo lla~e liarnln.g prob-Thomsley said tbe students ·
lemr," sa.ta 'Kopp. "I woUld be mieht also restat additional work
W1lling to piteb tents to provide requkemeots, which they would
help for these kl~. and we'll be lllrely to view~ punishment. ·
have th~ teaching staff avail!lble. "I ~an't bell eve we're ~ loS·
M'arcO Forster~ located in San iae sQmetbing educationally Juan Caoi.trano, will be on dou-when we ao on dauble sessions," ·
ble M!Ulco for at' ttast two or Kopp aalcl. "This WO\lld be a thr~ Dlclids this-Jail> pendlDg chancetom~eupforthat." eom~edon of Sborecliffs Junior Thornsley was dl(ected to in-mgti ln San Clemente. vesttgate supplementary imtruc· • tlon at the.school and tepdrt back
Studeata Jn tile Karco Fonter · tc> the boards at its next regular
attelMl.IDce •ea will be jJUCbool meetlnl, Ml,.1.
,... !)
(
sai
to pa
a c~ :
th
wl
m
$1
t~
D
r1
tl
DAILY PILOT L/SC
OC Eyes ~uit of tr.S.
Alien Medical laaue Study Set
OraanfP County supervisors
ta.id today they may 10 to court
to set the fedC!ral aovtirnmtnt to
pay for an estlmultMi $4.4 mlllloo
a year m county.patd m~cal
carefor1Uegal~eru1.
SUpervisora vot~ unaohnoo11·
ly to ask County Counsel Adrian
KU7per to atudy the pownUal fOt'
~uch a suit
Their acuon came on the heels
of a similar proposal by Los
Angeles County Supervisor Pete
Schabarum who said medical
care for illegal aUens in his coun-
ty costs $50.7 million annually.
Orange County .supervisors
also voted 3-2 today to continue a
Policy d. asking suspected illegal
realdent.a to apply for M~.Cal
benefita.
Supervilon Phil Anthony and
Laurence Schmit voted against
continuine the policy, with An-
thony areuing it is forcing illegal
ILlieM to "ao under&round" and
avoid seeking mecllcal care tbef
need.
Anthony said he supported the
recommendation of a task force
set up by supervisors recently to
study the illegal alien queatioq.
The Rev. Bruce Johnson,
chairman of that group, told
supervisors the panel wanted the
policy suspended 60 days for
study.
Supervisor Ralph Diedrich .
District Counters
Teamster Demands
Capistrano Unified School Dis·
trict trustees presented their
co1J,:nterproposals Monday t o
Teamster Union demands, which
the district has said would cost
an additional $4,212 per employe.
The bargaining between the
school district and Teamsters
Local 911, representing 46 bus
drivers, mechanics and service
personnel, is limited to wues
and fringe benefits.
Other contract areas are cov-
ered by an agreement reached on
March24.
The Teamsters have proposed
a n '18 percent salary bike and
monthly benuses for those who
have worked for the district five
years more. They are also de-
Fra. Page Al
' STRIKE •••
engineers would· collect ·their
wage bikes, there are no dis-
agreements in the proposed con-
tract.
Operating engineers now earn
on the average, $10.71 an hour, or
$22,276 a year, not including
overtime pay.
Though the strike was called
on Saturday after a meeting
between engineers and manage-
ment, construction projects eon~
tinued as usual until Anion busi-
ness agents brought official word
to job sites, telling workers to go
home.
Today, Mcllwain said, several
jobs, where business agents ap-·
parenUy had not appeared yet,
continued.
M c llwa in was u nable to
estimate how many Orange
County construction sites were
affected, or the number of
workers on strike.
Bill W ag n er, official
spokesman for the engineers•
local office in Los Angeles, was
unavailable for comment. Office
workers there refused to com-
ment on details of the strike, in-
cluding numbers involved.
The Irvine Company, Orange
County's largest residential con-
struction group, said 10 to 15 of its
projects have been stalled by the
strike.
A spokesman said $5. 7 million
worth of construction contracts
were held up. About half of that
value is in construction of a ma-
jor flood control channel between
Culver Drive and Jeffrey Road in
Irvine., for flood protection ol the
large Woodbridge housing de-
velopment and other areas.
The Irvine official said the
strike "affects everybody."
The $5.2 million l\l,iso. Water
Management Agency sewer out-
fall project off Aliso Pier in South
\,aguna was stopped.
"The job's been shut down. ..
site boss Dennis O'Malley said.
"We can't work without the
operators."
But O'Malley said there would
be no substantial delay ln tbe
t>roj eet, scheduled for ~omple-
1 lion in February, unless the
strike carried over into bad
weather.
DAILY PILOT
manding that the school dlatrict
pay in full all medical and
hospital coats and provide den·
tal, vision care and prescription
drug plans.
In addition. the Teamsters
have proposed that the school
district take over payment of the
employes' contribution to the
Public Employes• Retirement
System and pay for a new, addi·
tional pension plan. run by the
Teamsters.
The school district has
responded that pensions are not
subject to negotiation at this
time.
The district proposal on wages
would keep Teamster employe
salaries competitive, but not al-
low them to get out of line with
other classified employes. No
specific percentage increase was
included in the district's coun·
terproposal. ·
Fringe benefits would stay the
same, according to the district's
offer, said Robert Knapp, district
personnel director, witb max-
imum limits established for
hospital care.
Capistrano Unified teachers, .
represented by the Capistrano
Unified EducaUoo Association,
have declared impasse with the
district on their salary and fringe '
benefttnegotiaUons. ·
Knapp said the district ls near-
ing settlement with the
California School Employes ~
sociation, represenUng a maJon·
ty of the ctistrlct's classified employes.
Services Set
In I .aguna for
H.B. Adams .
Memorial service for Howard
Holms Adams, a long-time
Laguna Beach re11ident and
direct·descendant or aecoqld U.S.
President John Quincy Adams,
will be held at 10:30 a.m. Thurs-
day at St. Mary's Episcopal
Church in Laguna Beach:
Mr. Adams died Sunday at
South Coast Community
Hospital. He was 76.
Until about a month ago, Mr.
Adams had been a-ciive as·
manager of the Laguna Travel
Service. He was retired as a,
publlc relations representative of
TWA airlines, and a retired
Artny Air Corps colonel.
Mr. Adams and his wife
Maureen bad resided in Lagwuf
Beach for alaout 18 yeata before
moving to Leisure World, Lasuna
Hilla about a year a&o. . .
The Adamses bad pr_evtously
lived in Laguna Bt!ach while Mr.
Adams worked in the Los
Angeles area, but alter several
yeata of the lengthy coln.Qlut,e,
they relocated and retufntld tQ
the Art ColooY on bbreUrem•
Mr. Adams WU a.cUYei in, St.
Mary's congrecauon.
Re Is nrvtved bJ his WidOw.
Funeral arraq•meata an
directed by McCormick's '
)lortul'y.
said he wanted the task force to
continue its study but auuestecl
the new polic)' continue in the
meantime.
Anthony argued, however,
"How can you "t Qp a task force
to ttudy them (ilJeg..a aliena) and
all of a sudden implement this
kind ot poJley that mallea. them
almost impossible to study or at
least makes them more difficult
to study?"
"I am still concerned that this
policy is having a devastating at·
feet on the people,'' be continued.
Murry· Cable, county director
of medical services adminlstra·
tion, said between June 20 an4
July 13 a total of 266 suspected il·
legal aliens were asked to apply
for Medi-Cal when they arrived
for medical care at UCI Medical
Center.
Seventeen percent, or 46 pa-
tients applied, he said.
Cable said the Medi·Cal pay-
ments for those 46 patients will
total an estimated $66,000.
Supervisor Ralph Clark said
projected for a year that could
mean about $1 million to the
county.
Under terms of the policy, sus-
pected illegal aliens sign up for
Medi-Cal benefits by signing a
statement saying they are not un-
der a deportation order.
While their statements iu-e be-
ing processed by the u .s. lmmi-
g ration and Naturalization
Service for verification, they are
entitled to ,Medi-Cal benefits.
County officials have said their
past experience indicates federal
authorities may not have the
staff to process the large num-
bers of verifications sent them.
Coffee Finn
Tri11111 Prices
CINCINNATI (APl -
Folger Coffee .Company
has announced a wholesale
price cut of 20 cents per
pound on ground coffee
and two cents per ounce on
instant coffee.
The firm cited lowered
prices on imported green
coffee in addJtion to re-
duced sales since the price
of coffee began to rise
sharply at the beginning of
the year.
Folger omcials noted
tbat'the wholesale price of
their ground coffee has
dropped 95 cents per pound
to $3.48 since May 12. The
price reduction OJl instant
coUee to $.5.25 is the fir~t
since a price increase on
Marcb14.
U.S. to Sell
Ai-ahia Jets
LOS ANGELES CAP) -The
Carter administration has ten-
tatively agreed to sell Saudi
·Arabia 60 F·15 supersonic
fighters, one of the most
sophisticated U.S. warplanes,
the Los Angeles Times r eported
today.
The Los Angeles Times said
the decision bas been pending
ever since the visit in May of
Crown Prince i'ahd, Ule Saudi
deputy prime minister. •
·The Times sa~d the White .House was afraid dlaclos\lfe of
the sate:\VOUld qut Carter's first
meettnc With on tsraell.Prtme
Minister ·11enahem Begin.
"Scheduled today. on shaky
cround.
.,.. ..................
CLEANUNESS IS NEXT TO GODUNESI IN IOUTH COAST ROP'S AUTO SHOP ~
Dan And!reon (left), Br~ndan Shea Wortc on 1"9 Porsche Engine ;
No 'Grease Monkeys' .
Teaclwr's Auto Shop Kept Immaculate
By ANNE COOPER
OftMO.lty PllOt5tatt
Immaculate tools are lald out
by size and function on flannel·
lined• trays for men who work
silenUy, with strict concentration
like jewelers or surgeons -only
these men·are working on car englnes.
"People come in here and ask
directions to the auto shop," said
Erwin Schlaack, who teaches car ,
and motorcycle repair at Laguna
Beach High School for the
Capistrano-Laguna Regional
Occupational Program CROP).
"Visitors can't believe we
work on engines here -it's too
clean. They don't understand
that an engine must be im-
maculate internally to. run the
way it should.
''A Porsche eqine like the one
we 're building now is worth
about $4,500, We're not going to
take a chance on geWng dirt or
sand in there, so we place a high
priority on cleanliness. In
Europe, in the shops where fine
engines are built, conditions are
almost comparable to an operat.
ing room." .
Scblaack's students are ex·
hibiting their work at the Orange
County Fair. About one-third of
Saddlehaek College
Publication Budget
Vote Falls Slwrt
Saddleback College trustees
barely got a quorum together.
Monday to discuss the ad-..
ministration's revised, $25.8
million publication budget pro-
posal.
When it came time for a vote,
the four board members present
were so sharply divided that it
proved impossible to approve the
spending plan as required by
law.
The vote was 2-1, with one
abstention, in favor of a slighUy
reduced budget of $25.3 million.
That would have Included a two-
cent reduction in the total district
tax rate.
The board's inability to agree
on the publication budget means.
district administrators will be
forced to publish the district's
tentative budget of $24 million
prior to the fi.Dal pubUc hearing
a nd adoption date of Aug. 1.
The tentative budget doesn't
include such recent administra-
tion adjustments as addition of
$1.2 million in unexpected re-
venue generated by the 27 per-
cent surge in Saddleback's total
assessed valuation.
That money had been allocated
by the district staff to a half-
doien capital projects, including
the planned second campus in
Irvine, a softball field, stadium
lights and a swimming stadium.
This doesn't mean t.rustees will
be stuck with the lower tentative
budget flcure for next year. 'Ibey
still have one more budsei study
session prior to tb' final hearing
and may revise the figure ~
ward. ·
This week, trustees Norriaa
Brandt and Frank Greinke were
ill and trustee William Watts was
on vacation.
During Monday's hearing,
much of-the discussion centered
around Truatee Donna Berry's
objection to a $3,400 expeJ\diture
for conference attendance by
board members -up from alM>ut
$6.400 last year.
The only attempt at a vote
came when Trustee Robert Price
of Laguna Hills moved to ap-
prove a $25.3 million budget that
allowed a tax rate reduction of
about two cents.
He suggested slashing $500,000
from the fund to build the dis-
trict's second campus to achieve
tqe small reduction.
FromPageAJ
PROJECT •••
331 residential lots on 69 of the 213
hlllslde_acrea,
The remaining area will be set
aside for permanent "natural
open apace."
In its pamphlet, the South
Laguna Civic Association called
the project the largest single de-
velopment in South Laguna.
Fre91PageAJ
PLANNERS
undertaken by the fall of 1978. It •
will cost an estimated $20 mlllion
and require two yeva~ to eom-
plete, p CalTrans spokesman
said.
the exhibit, scheduled to rui,
through Sunday, will be devot~
to examples of students' work.
The other two-thirds will be a
living exhibit, with students as.-
sembling engines from rudimen',.
tary parts and demonstratine
how the parts function to drive a car or motorcyele.
"Mechanics should be proud at
their work -it's a craft, if it f
done right, just like woodworkini
or cabinetmaking,•• said Robert;
Augus t , 18, a student o
Schlaack's. A June graduate
Laguna Beach High Schooi.
August is enrolled at Cal Stai.
Long Beach, where he said he
m ay study automotive engineen-
ing. i
August coordinated the f alr e
hibit, which is co.sponsored b
Laguna Beach High School an
the RO~ l
"We want to show the pubU
that engine repair is not a dirt
business," he said. ~
"The srease monkey imag
American mechanics have is
terrible thing," said Schlaack."
fight that every day with mys •
dents -that and the rush, rus
rush. I am teaching a craft.
just a trade."
Schlaack apprenticed fiv
years without pay in Germany
learn auto mechanics an
worked three more years as
journeyman to qualify as, ·
master mecbamc.
A back injury in 1969 f orc
him to leave the business te
porarily for teaching; and b
found himself hooked. Six ye
ago, when he started teaching f
the ROP, be said be was e ·
only about 10 percent of what
could have made as a wor · ·
mechanic. Even now, he said, h
could triple his income if
chose to ply his trade com
mercially, but be' d rather teach.
"I like helping youngsters
become self-suftlcient and conn
dent t:4 themselves," be said.
"That beats just fixing thi
cars fot' them.••
For five years, Schlaac
taught the ROP courses at com
mercial garages, but be ran in
problems because firms wan
to hire the students they wer
teaching. Most of the studen
were still in high school, wt
parents who wanted them to s
there.
So a year ago Schlaack <if
to teach auto shop at Laguna
Beach IDgb School if he could us
the facilities there to teach thE:
engine repair course for the
ROP. . '
H is courses are heavilJ
enrolled. Adults who want tlQ
learn a trade ailD on , as do bl~
school boys -and lfrls -rang·
ing from straight ;tA .. students~
potential dropouts. I
"They like the course becaWM:
I 'm demanding, .. Schlaack saidJ
• •1 run this shop like a com-
mercial enterprise, with eltact;I
ing standards and d eadlines. b
gives the· kids a sense of prld
and accqmpllshment.
.. There are no paytn
customers, but we pretend ther
are. And the kidl don't get paid
but they get a lot out of tMir wor
-tn aybe .somethiq WQr\h tnor
than money... r
L. 70, NO. 200, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES
.
Today's Closing
N.Y. Stoeks
TUESOA~JULY1~1W7 N TEN CE;NliS
.
Constrlletiori County Halts • ID
strike wblcb idled 10.000 to
000 beavy.macblne operators
I Southern Callfornia Monday tt._. halted many Ounce CountJ
cft.st.rudioo projecta. includini
more tban a dozen Irvine Com-
PPY hoasin& projects and a
dultl·mllllon dollar sewage
pipeline. ~he AFL·CIO Operatinc
Epglneers Loe al 12 cal led the
svike after failing lo agree with
management over how an ap·
proved $!.95-an-hour wage in-
crease should be distributed over
three years.
l:be operating engineers, who
drive bulldozers, cranes, trac-
tors and other heavy equipment,
want.ed the pay raise in three an·
nual steps; management wanted
to spread it over five increments.
Last month the engineers' San
Diego county counterparts con·
eluded an agreement identical to
the \lne they seek.
The San Diego engineers went
on strike tor a week, halting con·
struction of housing projects and
the San Onofre nuclear power
plant expansion before the setUe-
ment.
An Orange County manage-
ment official for the Associated
General Contractors, Larry
Mcilwain, said today the Orange
OC Eyes Suit of U.S.
Alien Medical Issue Study .Set
Orange County supervisors
said today they may go to court
to get the federal government to
pay for an estimated $4.4 million
a year in county.paid medical
care for illegal aliens.
Supervisors voted unanimous·
ly to ask County Counsel Adrian
Kuyper to study the potential for
such a suit.
Their action came on the heels
of a similar proposal by Los
Angeles County Supervisor Pete
Schabarum who said medical
care for illegal aliens in his coun·
ty costs $50.7 million annually.
Orange County supervisors
also voted 3·2 today to continue a
policy of asking suspected iJlegal
r esidents to appJy for Medi-Cal
benefits.
Supervisors Phil Anthony and
Laurence Schmit voted against
continuing the policy, with An-
thony arguing it is forcing illegal
aliens to "go underground" and ,
avoid seeking medical care they
need.
Anthony said he supported the
recommendation ot a task force
set up by supervisors recently to
study the illegal alien question.
The Rev. Bruce Johnson,
chairman of that group, told
supervisors the panel wanted the
(See CARE, Page A2)
Water Windfall
Mesa Ciutomer Overcharged $1,373. 70
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of IM D•llY ~llot Sl•lt
Valerie Lorenz of Costa Mesa
thought $88 was pretty steep
when she got her water bill this
month.
But she had paid as much as
$104 for the two·month billings by
the Costa Mesa County Water
District before~ so ihe figured
rates had gone up like everything
else.
She and her husband Fred, and
two children tried to conserve
water at the home at 1827 Hum·
mingbird Drive but the water
bills always ranged from a low of
$48 to a high of more than $100.
IN FACT, she noticed the
higher bills as long ago as
December of 1972 when the dis-
trict came out and installed a
new meter p.t her home.
After five years.• t'he Costa
Mesa woman finally asked her
·Development Limit
:~ought ill Newport
• ...
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Ol llM Delly PU°' 5t•lf
··A small group of Newport
,la~ach residents who want to
sl~w the pace of growth in their
dty say they are organizing an
dfort to control development in
tJlecity.
5.Jean Watt, one of the primary
C}fganlzers of the group said that
t!ley are trying to organize and
j'et financial support so they can
Have John McCarthy of Clare-
Diont, a specialist in environmen·
~l law, review the city's general
plan.
''The id~a is to find out whether .e need to do an initiative for a
building moratorium or whether
•ere ·are existing city and state
laws that could be put into ef-
fect," Mrs. Watt said.
.-The make up or the group is
Rill informal, she said. Mrs.
Watt, who ia president of S.PON
fStop PollpUbi Our Newport)
noted that her -organizatiDn has
not yet decided to join the effort.
although she ~son~llly is in·
volved.
Some of the other individuals
participating include pioneer
Balboa Island resident Carroll
Beek, long-time central Newport
resident Sue Ficker, both SPON
m'enibers, an<l Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Robinson two of the
original members of tba Friends
of Newport Bay which led the
fight to preserve the Upper Bay.
The only organization which
has officially joined in the effort
so far is the Orange County En·
vironmental Coalition .
represented by Hal Thomas, a
local environmentalist who is
also a member of SPON.
The Friends of Newport Bay
have not yet joined, Mrs. Watt
said.
Mrs. Watt said Councilman
<See CONTROL, Page A2)
neighbors what their bills were
and was surprised to learn they
were only about $20.
She called water district of·
ficials and asked them why her
July bill was four times higher
than her neighbors. Curious
district directors went to the
Lorenz home and discovered an
industrial water meter had been
attached to th• bQIPe lnstelld o{
the smaller res(dential type de-
vice.
QUJCk CAl.aJLATIONS by
tbe df1trlct'1 fioance people
showed that the Lorenz• had
overpaid the district $1,373. 70
over the past five years.
District directors drove out
bright and early today with the
check and their apologies.
Why did Mrs. Lorenz wait five
years to complain?
She said the bills were high in
the summer or 1972 when the
original meter was workime.
"Btrr WHEN THEY changed
the meter we noticed the winter
bills were as hleh as tbe summer
bills," she said. "But, apparently
we were too busy and didn't
notice.
"I just assumed the rates went
up," she said with a shrug.
She did call last year after re-
ceiving a $104 bill and a water
district service man came out to
look at the meter.
He couldn't rind a leak, so Mrs.
Lorenz said she just assumed
•·we were overgenerous with our
water use. -
"I'm very conscious or the
need to save water and all that,"
abe said, "especially with those·
high bills."
But she said the family does a
(See WATER, Page AZ)
Couhty and Los Angeles county
operating engineers ~ant the
three-year spread of higher pay
because that's what they got in
San Diego.
It would mean that instead ot
an initial 80·cent increase.
workers would get $1.0!5, retroac·
tive to July 1.
McDwain said that besides tbe
differences in when operating
engineers would collect their
wage hikes, there are no dis·
agreements in the proposed con·
tract.
Operating engineers now earn
on the average, $10. n an hour, or
SZ2,Z'16 a year, not includlng
overtime pay.
Though the strike was called
on Saturday after a meeting
between engineers and manage-
ment. cooatruction projects con·
tinued as usual unttl union btm·
Bklze Sears Trucker
ness agents brou.&ht oUicial word
to job sites, telling workers to go
home.
Today, Mcilwain said, several
jobs, where business agents ap-
parenUy had not appeared yet,
continued.
Mcilwain was unable to
estimate how many Orange
County construction sites were
affected, or the number ot
(8ee81'lUKE, Page AZ>
Trash true~ driver Floyd Meyers, 45, of
Santa Ana, is rushed to waiting Marine
Coros Search and Rescue helicopter at
Coyote Canyon Dump in Irvine Monday
for airlift to UC Irvine Medical Center.
County Fire Department spokesmen said
Meyers opened truck doors to investigate
smoke comlag from dumpster he was
hauling. Rush of air caused smoldering
sawdust and debris to explode, inflicting
second and third degree burns over 35
percent of Meyers' upper body. Resulting
fire in dump took three hours to put out.
Victim was in satisfactory condition today
at the UCIMC Burn Unit.
Airlliie Seeks OC Berth
Noiae Level Coneenu Played Doun in Plea
By KATHY CL~CY
• Ol Ille o.lly ~MC Sl•ll
Attorneys for North Central
Airlines contend the airline's
proposed operation at Orange
County Airport "would not
significantly increase noise
levels" at the county-operated
facility.
In a reply to opposition to their
proposed use of the airport, the
attorneys argue airport nol~
problems should be up to looal
government to settle.
. They said the local noise con-
cerns should not override "the
broader public interest" in de-
veloping route patterns to meet
the needs or the Orange County·
Los Angeles area.
The attorneys suggested as
possible solutions to tbe noise
problem acquisition of homes im·
pact.ed by aircraft noise or the
construction of a new airport to
serve the county.
The airline applied to the Civil
A e r o n a u ti c s B o-a r d I n
Washington, D.C. in May for
11ermission to operate fUgbts
between Orange County and Las
Vegas and Orange CC>unty' and
Phoenix. They would connec!t
with fiights to Minneapolis-St.
Paul.
Even if permission were grant-
ed, county supervisors still would
retain control over the airline's
)!Se of the airport.
County supervisors and
Newport Beach city o!Cicials
have opposed the airline's re·
quest, citing concerns over noise
conditions around the airport.
The request also has been op-
posed by officials of Hughes
(See Al.RUNE, Page A2)
Pair Face Trial
In Newport Protest
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of tM DMIY ~let St-11
Two of 12 protesters who dis·
rupted Davis CUp tennis matches
in Newport Beach to protest
South Africa's racial policies are
due in court again Friday.
A bearing was scheduled UUs
mor~ for five others tentative·
ly scheduled for trial on misde·
meanor trespassing charges.
Five other demonstrators sym·
pathetic to the plight of blacks
unde~ South Africa's apartheid
racial policy already have
pleaded guilty.
The two men set (or trial Fri·
day, Alex Dortch and Stanley
Alexander, were originally
scheduled for trial last Friday,
but their attorneys submitted a
variety of motions to Harbor
Judicial District Court Judge
Donald I)angan.
Dortch and Alexander face
charges of vandalism and
trespasaiog aa a result of the
April 111-17 fracas at the Newport
Be~Teonb Club during the Dav p zone final between the
U.S. th Africa.
Judie an rejeeted several
of the motions .and •treed to.
stud)' tbe mmts of others made
in a bid to •et cb&.l'J(ea aplnat
<SeeT&IAl., Pace AZ>
112 DAILY PILOf N
T•lbOpe• <A/fee Finn
Trinu PrWea
CINCINNATl <AP) -
J'ol1er Cott .. Compaa1
hu &MOUOC'ed • wholesale
price cut of 20 cenu Ptr
pound on around co/tee
and two ce:nta per ounce on
tn.atant cotlee.
Begin Pleads
For West -Bank
The flnn cit.cl lowered
· prlc• on imparted •reen
c-offee In adcbUon to re·
dund a.alfll alr.ce the price
of coffee be.an to riae
slt uply at the bellnnlaa al
the year. ,.oll"' orrtcial11 noted
that tbe wh<,lcsal4' price or
their &round coffee has
dropped 95 cent.a per pound
to S:t.48 SU\Ce May 12. The
price reduction on instant
coffee to ~.25 Is the first
since a price increase on
Marchi•.
WASHINGTON (AP)-laraell
Prime KJnlster Mooabem Begin,
arrtvlna at the White House today
for talks with Praldent Carter,
.. 1d hraal "1eana for ~ac,, pray1 for peace and wlll do
everything humanly poss.Ible ••
. for a real peace."
But Begin signaled Israel'scon-
tinulng refusal to withdraw from
the occupied West Bank ol the
Jordan by warning that "in cer·
tain circum.sta.ncea • • • the life of
every man. woman and child" in
Israel could be "directly
threatened and put in jeopardy."
These are the preciae words
Man Tries to Ram
Cop Car With VW
A NewpOrt Beach resident who
· allegedly tried to ram a patrol
car with his 13-year-old
Volkswagen faces charges today
of assault with a deadly weapon
on a police officer.
Gregory Alan Pangurn, 21, was
arrested by Newport Beach police
early Monday morning after a
chaseintheWestcliffarea.
Officer Vern Miller said he was
called to the scene of a crash at
the intersection of Irvine Avenue
a nd Heather Lane where he
found Pangburn.
Miller said that, before be
could complete bis report on the·
accident. Pangburn hopped into
his car and sped south on Irvine
with Miller in pursuit.
In the chase that followed,
Miller claims Pangburn made
several U-turns in the stretch of
Irvine between Santiago and
Dover drives, and at times be al-
legedly drove on the wrong side
of the divided roadway in what
the officer believed were at-
tempts to ram his patrol car.
Al one poinl, Miller said
,,.._PageAJ _
TRIAL •••
Dortch and -Alexander dropped
and the case thrown out of court.
Among reasons the defense at-
torneys allege are grounds for
dismissal of charges against
their clients are:
-Allegedly prejudicial pre-
trial publicity which they claim
will make it impossible to get a
fair trial.
-Allegations that certain
statutes involved are too vague
and indefinite for application.
-·Allegations the group or p~
testers acted as a class and thus
should be tried together and
equally.
-Allegations of di s-
criminatory prosecution.
The latter motion was made on
grounds U.S. Davis Cup Team
Captain Tony Trabert went after
the demonstrators with a
vengeance, taking a few practice
s erves at their heads with his
racquet, yet he was not charged
with any offense.
Judge Dungan said Monday all
motions raise substantial points
and certainly aren't frivolous un·
der the law, although he might
not rule in favor of the defen·
dants.
"One motion was rather uni-
que," he observed, noting he bad
never encountered it in bis law
career.
D'ortch and Alexander's
lawyers asked to question Judge
Dungan at length to get an idea
about bis personal beliefs ~
opinions.
They are from the Los Angeles
area and unfamiliar with Orange
County judges by reputaUoo, a
frequent factor in being better
able to map courtroom strategy,
it was explained.
''NaturalJy, I rejected that one
richtaway,'' JudgeDunian•aitt
"
DAILY PILOT •
Pangburn drove onto the lawn of
the home at 1442 Irvine Ave.
where the officer tried to block
his path, but be said Pangburn
nearly ran hlm down when be got
out of his car and then mowed
down a brick planter a nd some
trees to drive off the lawn and
away from the officer.
Miller finally cornered the
car when PSngburn turned off
Irvine onto Dover and then onto a
cul de sac at Eton Place.
Even then, Miller alleged that
Pangburn was combative and be
and another officer had to subdue
him before placing him in the patrol car.
He was booked into Orange
County Jail.
Pair Arrested
In Newport
Drug Seizure
Newport Beach narcotics of·
ficers said today they have ar·
rested two men and confiscated
9,000 tranquilizers worth an
estimated $4,500 on the illicit drug market.
Booked Monday on charges of
selling the pills were Michael
J osepb Smithers, 26, who said he
is a transient and William Lee
Yates, n, of San Diego.
They were arrested by
narcotics officers after the two
m en allegedly sold tbe un-
dercover investigators 5,000
pills.
The remaining 4,000 allegedly
were found in their posse.salon
following their arrests.
They were held in Newport
Beach City Jail today in lieu ol
$10,000 bail each.
Thieves Rifle
Youth's Car
A Costa Mesa youth who was
enjoying a late night stroll on the
beach in Newport told police
Monday thieves broke into his
car and stole a bae containing
$1,200 in cash and about $200'
worth of clothes and textbooks.
Kalhva P. Bertleman, 19, ·or
290 Magnolia St., said the items
were contained in a small piece
of luggage he locked in his car
parked fn the 2200 block of West
Ocean Front.
He said be found his car un·
locked and the bag missing alter
returning from bis stroll at about
la.m.
.From Page Al
STRIKE •••
Be1io uses in argulne Israel's
case for keeping the West Bank
under Israeli control.
laraeli aources said the prime
fo:r Carter. one showing tiny
Jarael IUl'J'OU.Dded by the vast
Arab World and another showing
how Arab guns would be in firing
range of Israeli cities if Arabs OC·
cupiedtheWeatBank.
In the south lawn welcoming
ceremonies, Carter praised
Begin for hia ''willingness to suf-
fer for principle .•• his
superlative personal courage in
face ol trial, challenge and disap-
pointment.",
Carter also commended
Begin's "deep and unswerving re-
ligiouacommi&ments."
Referring briefly to the Middle
East conflict. Carter said he was
"encouraged" by Begin's as-
surances that "all points are
negotiable." The President said
he hoped for success in setlling
Lhe Middle East conflict \bis year.
Begin arrived In sweltering
heat to a 19-eun salute. The
onetime guerrilla leader stood
ramrod stiff as the U.S. and
Israeli anthoma were played.
Begin opened his remarks in
Hebrew and reminded Carter of
the World War 11 Nati holocaust
in whlch the Jews "were thrown
into the abyss," 1ater to win
~aLebood "in an unequal fight of
the few aaainst the many, the
weak against the strong, right
against m.Utbt."
Begin sa1d "peace is insepera-
ble from naUonal security." The
Jews bad ''experience of physical
annihilation and spiritual re-
demption" which had taught
them that national security
meant "the lives of every man,
womanandchlld,"besaid.
Begin 63, making his first
journey abroad as prime
minister, is carrying what he has
called "a complete peace plan,"
plus a request for more than $2
billion in economic and military
aid, according to Israeli sources.
.,.. ............ .....
SUCCUMBS At 12
Peter Ficker
Longtiine
Yachtsman
Dies in NB
A memorial mass will be
celebrated Thursday for
longtime Newport Harbor
yachtsman Peter Ficker who
died Monday at the age of 92.
Mr. Ficker was the father ol
Newport Beach architect and
former Anterica's Cup s~pper
Willi am Ficker.
Born in Budapest, Huqary,
the elder Ficker was a graduate
of the University of Budapest
where he received his training as
an architect. After coming to the
U.S., he established an architec·
ture firm in the Los Angeles
area.
A resident of Pomona unW two
years ago, Mr. Ficker spent most
of his spare time in Newport
Beach. He was a member ol the
Balboa Yacht Club for more than
25years.
Besides William, his survivors
include another son, Charles of
Connecticut; two daughters,
Angela White and Sue Ficker,
both of Newport Beach; a
brother, William Ficker of Long
Beach, and one grandchild.
Services will be conducted at
7:30 p.m. Thursday at Our Lady
of Mt. Carmel Catholic Church,
1441 W. Balboa Blvd.
The family has suggested
memorial contributions to Hoag
Memorial Hospital.
Moratori11nt Issue
Newport Chamber
To Study Building
Directors of the Newport
Harbor Area Chamber of Com·
merce said Monday they would
rather compromise if possible
rather than face a confrontation
over a building moratorium in
Newport Beach.
Bill Eilers, reporting to the
directors from the chamber's
Governmental Affairs Commit·
tee asked that dlrectors approve
a committee plan to study the de·
velopment and moratorium is-
sue.
"We would like to study the
subject and see it there-aren't
some areas in Lhe city or types of
construction on which a
moratorium might be in order
and areas where it would not be," heexplalned.
The study was suggested in
light ol two recent. but unsuc·
cessful, attempts on the city
council t.o impose a moratorium
YMCA V olleyhall
Tournament Set
Or#tnge Coast YMCA
youngsters will participate in the
coastal club's first annual
voUeybal.Uournament Aug. 13 at
the north end of Corona del Mar
st.le Beach.
The tournament in the sand is
open to hlgb school students who
must reilster at the Orange
Coa1t Y, 2300 Univ~lty Drive,
Newport Beach, no later Utan
Aug. 10. For further inl~ation,
call 6'2-9980.
on major construction projects in
the city aa well aa the beginning
of a similar effort by local en·
vironmental activists.
Noting these factors, Eilers
said, "there must be a lot of emo-
tion on this subject. I think a
study could prove useful as a
compromise effort· on thJs sub-
, ject rather than letting us get into
a head-on confrontation wiLh the
people who back tt."
In addition to backing the com·
mittee's study, chamber direc·
tors agreed they ought to urge
chamber members to speak out
on city issues as lndlviduals
moreoCten.
f'rom Pllfle AJ
AIRLINE •••
Airwest &net Western Airlines.
North Central'& reply to that
opposition was filed ia
W ashlngton and passed along to
county supervisors by County
Counsel Adrian Kuyper.
The reply noted North Cen-
tral 'a service proposal calls for
slightly less than four departures
per day from tbe aln>ort and aald
the service would be operated
with 009-ll'O ~ulpment meettnc
federal noise reauleUoD.J.
In addttlon, tbo attorneys
wrote, county 1upervleort1 would
sUll have authority to detennine
whethtt a c•Trter 1boul~ be
permJtted to operat• at the
airport.
Koreaa Seaadal
Prosecutions
Due in PayOff
WASlllNGTON (AP) -Al·
torney General Griffto Bell says
he expects prosecutions to ~ult
from the Justice Department's
lDveatipUon ot the South Korean Ulftuence-buying on CapJtol HID.
Bell made the atattment Mon-
day after President Carter
turned down Republican re-
quests for appointment or a
special prosecutor. patterned
after the Water1ate special pro-
secut«. to pursue the Korean
scandal.
Aakecl'wbat the Justice Depart·
ment lnvest:lgaUom miibt pro-
duce, Bell said, .. We expect
there'll be Pl"OMCUtklc.s. • •
Tbe attcney aeneral saJd the
investigatloa ls being handled no
differently from other caaes, ex·
cept that it ls perhaps l>elng con-
ducted at a faster pace because
•'it touches the public interest.•'
Meanwhile, Speaker ol the
House Thomas P .. o•.NeUl aaid be
would take personal charge ol
the troubled Houae ethics com·
,.._P-.eA!
mUteo lnve1UgaUon of the
Korearueanclal.
O'Neill aald be wants quick..,..
pointment of a oew cblet ID·
ye1tJ1ator to replace PhWp A.
Lacovara. the former deput;y
Watu11te proseouwr •bo re-
•l1ned last week ln a dispute witib
Rep. John J . Flynt CD-Ga.).
chairman o( the ethics pan'
Lacovara aald mutual trust.
needed to complete bis lDveatig..-
Uoai did not exist.
· O'Neill iaid a new lnvestJ.catcr
will be able to bypass the ethidl
committee and take bis com-
plaints strai,ht to &be apeaker-S
office.
"My coacern is that the .._
vesUgation .ls.n't moving. and:!
want to 1et it moving just as •
peditlou.sly as I can:• O'N ·
said.
O'Neill said Flynt offered th
turn the Korean invesUgatiah
over to some other House como
mlttee. The speaker scbedul ..
further me«ings to deter~
whether any more action i6
needed.
,....,PflfleAJ
CONTROL.
Paul Ryckoff, who has twice thl: CARE• • •
year tried to get the city council policy auaperu:led 60 days fer to lmpose building moratoriums, atudy.
"is very interested" in the pro-Supervisor Ralph Diedriab
ject and Councilman Ray said be wanted the taalt fotce to
Williama, former president of the continue ita study but suggested
Fri ends of Newport Bay the new policy continue in the
"seemed interested" when she meantime.
explainedthegrouptobim. Anthony argued, however,
Mrs. Watt explained the ~P "How can you set up a task force is not so much interested in to study them (illegal aliens) and
bringing construction to a com· all of a sudden implement ~
plete halt as it is in having some kind of pollcy that makes the!Jl
means ol enforcing phased de-almost impossible to study or at
veJopment to coincide with road least makes them more difficult
development. to study?''
Some of the individuals and the "I am still concerned that this
one organization involved ln the policy ls having a devas"tating af.
past have spoken in oppositi~ t.o feet on the people," he continued.
plans to expand the city's exist-Murry Cable, county director
ing road system, including the of medical services administra-
extension of University Drive Lion, said between June 20 anil
around the Upper Bay· J I 13 total of 266 ted i).. "We were talking about a u Y a suspee ·
moratorium originally," she ex-legal aliens were asked to apply
plained, "but that's such a terri-for Medi-Cal when they arnve.s
ble word and it doesn't really ~:n:i,~cal care at UCI Medical
solve our problems." s tee t ~~ The moratoriums unsuc-even n percen ' or -pa.
Cessfully sought by Ryckoff tienta applied, he said. Cable said the Medi.Cal JNIS-would have brought building to a • ments for those 46 patients will halt until the city's road system total an estimated $66,000.
could be improved and then Supervisor Ralph Clark =
would only permit development projected for a year that c and t.be roads could be expanded to handle t.be new traffic. mean about $1 million to ttli:
"Wbat we're looking for is an county.
impact ordinance to bring about Under terms of the polfcy, SUS.
phasing in construction with the pected illegal aliens sign up f<r
force of law. Right now all we Medi-Cal benefits by signing a
have is everybody's word that It statement saying Lhey are not uO-
wiU be done in pbues." der a deportation order. '
Mrs. Watt said she hopes to While their statements are be-. of Ing processed by the U.S. Immt· have an adyisory commalttee gratlon and Naturaltzatiob 10 to 20 people organized by next week in order to hire McCarthy. Service for verification, they are
She said his analysis will take entitled to Medi-Cal benefits.
about two months. County officials have said their. past experience ind.icatea federal Based on what Ute lawyer com· authortUes may not have the
es up with, Lheeroupwill Lbende-staff to process the large nwn·
cide if an lnitiatve petition is be rs of verifications sent them. necessary.
She said that in addition t.o
seeking or'Jlanhations to ,,....P11pAJ
r.artJcipate in the project, abe is
nterested in getting individuals w· • 1TER
to join the group, too. 4 • • •
"We want this thing to be open lot of laundry, takes showers
to anyone who can donate $10 or every day and waters the lawn
more," she said. ooce a week.
NB Police Scout
W1D8 Top Honors
Mike John.son of the Newport·
Beach Police Explorers woo top
honors at last month's Law En-
forcement Explorers Academy
in competition with 8S Explorers
from Oraqe and San Diego
cou~tiee. · Jobnaon. a junior at Newport
Harbor Hlah School. competed ln
a variety of subjects related to
law enforcement taklng flrat
place hoaiora ln the physical
tralnJna and Wdtten exam1. He bu been a member of the
Newport Beach post for four
months.
... REALLY DON'T see bow
we could have cut back more,.,.
she said. "It waa very frustrat;.
ina."
Water District Manager E4
Schnabel said meter error is
rare.
"The old meter stuck back in
1912 and we made the chance, ..
he explained. ..Unfortunately,
we installed the wrong replace-
ment unit.
"But we're honest and we ad·
mlt our uil1take1. U we•re
wron1. we'll ataod up to it,••
Schnabel ta.ld.
What will Mn. Lorena do wtth
her 1udden $1,3t3 water--.r windfall?
"Who know1t .. the said ..
"There's an awful lot we cu do wltblL1•
Saddleback
EDITION
Al&era .. a
"' N.Y.Stoelm
J
VOL. 70, NO. 200, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTi
Construction • ID County -
A atrtn whfcb Idled 10.000 to
11,000 beaYJ·machlne operaton
.. SaQtbem California Monday WU batted many Oran1e County ~ projects, lncludiq
"°"e tbsn a dozen Jrvlne Com· ~ny boaslnc projects and a
multi·milllon dollar sewage
. pipeline.
'!'be AFL-CIO Operating
J'!tlglneen Local 12 called the
'Strike aner failing to agree with .
manaeement over how an ap.
proved $2.9$-an-hour waae in-
crease should be dlatribuled over
threeyean.
The operating entineen, who
drl ve bulldozers, cranes, trac·
tors and other heavy equipment,
wanted the pay raise in three an·
nual steps; management wanted
to spread it over five i.ocrements.
Last month the e~loeers• San
Diego county counterparts con-
Sho.oting Spree
,
eluded an qreemellt identical to
the one they seek.
The San Dleao engineers went
on strike for a week, halting con-
struction of housing projects and
the San Onofre nuclear power
plant expansion before the settle-
ment.
All Orange County manage-
ment official for the Aasociated
General Contractors, Larry
Mcllwaln, said today the Orange
:.SA Gnnlllan Killed
·ny Off-duty Deputy
An off.duty deputy sheriff shot
and killed a man early today
after th~ man allegedly fired
shots at him and cars parked
near sheriff's headquarters in
Santa Ana.
A spokesman for the Santa Ana
,olice Department said Waynon
Wallace CoJlins, 54, of Santa Ana
was seen firing shots at parked
ears outside sheriff's head·
quarters a few minutes before he
was fatally wounded.
It was when three off duty de·
puties began trailing Wallace's
car that he was confronted by
sheriff's Sgt. David Keller, 41, at
Flower Street and Civic Center
Drive.
Witnesses told investigators
that Wallace fired a single shot al
Keller before Keller returned
fire.
Wallace was struck by the
bullet and died at the scene, ac·
cording to accounts of the inci·
Driver Arrested
Toro Youth Killed
In Flaming Crash
Timothy Wayne Sallee. 18, or it Toro, was killed Monday night
when the car he was driving was
bfoadsided in a Laguna Hills in·
tersectlon by a pickup truck
c:ltiven by a drunk driving SUS·
JSecl. -'A California Highway Patrol
s,tokeaman said Sallee was
~nned in bi• auto when it burst
t»to names immediately after
tile 11: 15 p.m. collision at La Paz
lt>ad and Moulton Parkway.
~Arrested op suspicion of felony
dfunken driving and suspicion of
~bicular manslaughter was
1'brman Bush, 19, of Garden
Grove. .
JI
A CHP report said Bus)l ll·
legedly ran a stop sign at the in·
teraection while traveling east on
Moult.on Parkway.
The drunken driving sus~l
was uninjured in the collision but
two passengers in his pickup
truck were treated for minor in-
juries in Saddleback Community
Hospital, according to the CHP
report.
Sallee, who lived at 24881
Branch St., El Toro, died at the
scene. The CHP report said the
young man waa driving home
from work at a service station
when.the accident occurred.
Prosecutions Due .,
Korea Probe?
..JVASHINGTON (AP) -At·
ney General Griffin Bell says
exi>ecls prosecutions to result
the Justice Department's
esU.ation of the South Korean
uenee-buytng on Capitol flill.
ell made the 1tatement Mon·
after President Carter
ned down Republican re·
ftsta. for appointment of a
cl al proaec:utor, patterned
r tAa Watersate apecial pro-
ut«, to pursue the Korean
ndal.
lked what the Justice Depart-
t investiaatlona mitbt pro-
Coast
duce, Bell said, "We expect
lhere11 be proseeuttom."
The attorney general said the
investigation is being bandied no
differently from other eases, ex-
cept that it is perhaps being con·
·ducted at a faster pac:e because
"it touches the public interest."
Meanwhile, Speaker of the
House 'Ibomas P. O'Neill said he
would take personal charge of
lbe troubled House ethics com·
mittee investigation of the
Korean scandal.
O'Neill aald be wants quick ap.
pointment of a new chief in-
dent.
In the aftermath of the inci·
dent, police could give no reason
for Wallace's-shooting escapade
outside sheriff's headquarters.
Officers said al least five autos
were damaged by bullets.
They did say, however, the
12:20 a.m. incident is being in-
vestigated jointly by Santa Ana
police, the county Sheriff's
Department and the county Dis·
lricl Attorney's Office.
Saddle back
Bond Vote
Postponed
County and Los Angeles county
operating engineers want the
three-year spread of higher. pay
because that's what they got in
San Diego.
It would mean that hutead of
an initial 80·cent Increase,
workers would get $1.05, retroac-
tive to July 1.
Mcllwain said that besides the
differences in when operating
engineers would collect their
wage bikes, ther• are AO dis·
agreements in the proposed COD· tract. ·
Operating engineers now earn
on the average, $10.n an hour, or
$22,276 a year, Dot including
overtime pay. .
Though the strike was called
on Saturday after a meeting
between engineers and manage-
ment, coostruction projects con-
tinued as usual UntU union busi-
Blaze Sears Trueker
ness acents brou1ht o(ficJal word
to Job <es, telllaa worken to 10
hoaie.
Today, McDwain said, several
jobs, where business ageots ap.
parently had not appeared yet.
. continued.
Mc'llwaJn was unable lo
eetimate bow a,any Orange
County construction sites were
aftected, or the number of
<SeeSTBllt.E, Page AZ)
Trash truck driver Floyd Meyers, 45, of
Santa Ana, is rushed to waiting Marine
Coros Search and Rescue helicopter at
Coyote Canyon Dump in Irvine Monday
for airlift to UC Irvine Medical Center.
County Fire Department si)okesmen said
Meyers opened truck doors to investigate
smoke coming from dumpster he was
hauling. Rush of air caused smoldering
sawdust and debris to explode, inflicting
second and third degree burns over 3S
percent of Meyers' upper body. Resulting
fire in dump took three hours to put out.
Victim was in satisfactory condition today
at the UCIMC Burn Unit.
Wunly May Sue to Ctmer Alien Medi,cal, Co.ta
Orange County supervisors
said today they may go lo court
lo gel the federal government to
pay for an estimated $4.4 million
a year in counly·paid medical
care for illegal aliens.
Supervisors voted unanimous·
ly to ask County Counsel Adrian
Kuyper to study the Potential for
such a suit.
Coffee Finn
Trinu Pricea
CINCINNATI CAP) -
Folger Coffee Company
has announced a wholesale
price cut of 20 cents per
pound on ground coifee
and two cents per ounce on
instant coffee.
The firm cited lowered
pricea' on imported green
coffee in addition to re-
'duced salea alnce the price
of c:of fee began to rise
sharply at the beginnlne of
the year.
Folger officials noted
that the wholesale price or
their (round c9ffee l\a•
dropped 95 ~ta per pound
to ta.• atnce Ku 12. The .
price redUetlon on lmtiDt C?oflee to ts.25 ls Uie nnt
alnce a l!flce ~ ... 01D
Karch14.
Their action came on the heels
or a similar proposal by Los
Angeles County Supervisor Pete
Scbabarum who said medical
care for illegal aliens in his coun·
ty costs $50.7 million annually.
Orange County supervisors
also voted 3-2 today to continue a
Polley of asking suspected illegal
residents to apply for Medi-Cal
benefita.
Supervisors Phil Anthony and
Laurence Schmit voted against
continuing the policy, with An·
thony arguing it is forcing illegal
aliens to "go underground" and
avoid seeking medical care they
need.
Anthony said he supPorled the
recommendation of a task !occe
set up bf 1upervisors recently to
study the illegal alien question.
The 'Rev. Bruce Johnson,
chalr.!JlP of that group, told
superviSors the panel wanted the
policy suspended 60 days for
study.
Supervisor Ralph .Diedrich
said he wanted the task fore~ to
cobtltrue ,its study but sug,ested
the hew policy 'IPntinue m the
meantime.
Anthony arcued. however,
"How can you set up a task force
to •tucty them <illegal alieoa) ~
all of a S¥4dt4 implement this
ldhd 'ol poli!!Y fbat makes th~
almost im*81ble to ~tudy cir at
"leut makes them mwe dlfficu4 to1tud1?" .
"Jam still coac:erned that Ulla
policy is having a devastating af.
feet on the people," he continued.
Murry Cable, county director
or medical servtces administra-
tion, said between June 20 and
July 13 a total of 266 suspected il-
legal alieqs were ask~ to apply
tor Medi-Cal when they 4nived
for medical tare at UCI Medical
Center.
Seventeen percent, or 46 pa-
tients applied, he said.
Cable said the Medi-Cal pay.
(See AID; Pase AZ)
131,,jured
In Bus Fraciu
CHICAGO (AP) - A bus
passenger who missed her stq,
got upset when the _.1..driver
wouldn't stop and let ber out in
the middle ol a block. Police said
she attacked the driver, causini
a crash thkt btjured 13. .
Twelve passengers and the
driver,, Brazlttl. IJ.scomb, 36,
were ~tect (or ·~~· after tbe , Qilcago Transit ·:~Ority
bus htt fiv~ park~ aild
c:ame to reSt on • s{~ew Mon· ~ay. Foor people T'ID•i~ed
hospitalized today. . Yoh~ safd Ml• 'Eltn~Henry. 64, WP cbaqed wfth b df was bellla.b~d lo lieu flt ' ,(JOO
boqd. She .•u P4>l-JD.i\U'ecl ba the
DAILY PILOT 58
SPANAWAY. Walb.
(AP> -ll arrlvod tn •
PacHlc Se ptic Service
lnack, and waa unloaded ln
front ol tho ANembly ol
Ood Qaurcb, but there WH
no mtlt;!!~ wtJat lt wu:
Budget V ~tin.g
Hit hy ·Snag
• 3.JZO. lee pop.
It •u 1000 wtthln a few
bour1. ttemoUlhed b,y bW'·
dr ... ol alurptq children,
but lt .ceompllabcd lt.1 atsu
ol drawtna ~people to
lbecburch.
Y outb Put.or Skjp Ben·
nett IQI>er-viaed lbe pr•
paration or tbe frozen
treat, which comprised .60()
pounds of aufar, 100
pounds of corn syrup
cryatals, 350 eallons or
water and two gallons of
root beer Oavodng.
Saddleback Colleae trustees
b arely cot a quorum toeether I
Monday to dl1cu11 the ad·
mlnl1tratlon'1 revlmed, $25.8
mlWon publlcaUoa budeet pro-
posal.
When it came time for a vote,
the rour board members present
were 90 aharply divided that it
proved lmpoulble to approve the
spend.inc plan u required by
law.
Tbe vote wu 2·1, with one
abstention, in favor of a slightly
r educed bud1et. ol $25.3 million.
That would have tncluded a two.
cent reduction In the total distrtct
District Count'lrs
Teamsters Demands
Capistrano Unified School Dis--
trict trustees presented their
counterproposals Monday to
Teamsters Union demands,
which the district has said would
cost an additional $4,212 per
employe.
The bargaining between the
school district and Teamsters
Local 9U, representing 46 bus
drivers, mechanics and service
personnel, is limited to wages
and fringe benefits.
tional pension plan, run by the
Teamsters. ·
The school district bas
responded that pensions are not
subject to negotiation at this
time.
The district proposal on wages
would keep Teamster employe
salaries competitive, but not al-
low them to aet out of llne with
other clanlfled employes. No
specl.ftc percentage increase was
included in the district's coun·
terproposal.
t ax rate. The board's Inability to agree
on the publication budget means
di1trict admlnistratora will be
forced to publish the district's
tentative budget of $24 million
prior to the final public bearing
and adoption date of Aug.1.
The tentative budget doesn't
include such recent administra·
lion adjustments as addition of
$1.2 million ln unexpected re·
venue generated by the 27 per-
cent surge in Saddleback's total
assessed valuation.
Tbat money bad been allocated
by the district staff to a half· •
dozen capit.al projects. including
the planned second campus in
Irvine, a sol'tball field, stadium
lights and a swimming stadium.
This doesn't mean trustees will
be stuck wlth the lower tentative
budget figure for next year. They
still have one more. budget study
session prior to the flnal bearing
and may revise the figure up·
ward. This week, trustees Norrisa
Brandt and Frank Greinke were
ill and trustee William Watts was
on vacation.
During Monday 's bearing,
much of the discussion centered
around Trustee Donna Berry's
objeq&lon to a $3,400 expenditure
for conference attendance by
board members -up from about
$6,400 last year.
STRIKE HALTS $5.2 MILLION ALISO SEWAGE PROJECT
Crane Stilled In Shutdown of Outtall Work \
F,....PageAJ
Other contract areas are cov-
ered by an agreement reached on
.March24.
The Teamsters have proposed
an 18 percent salary hike and
monthly bonuses ror those who
have worked for the district five
years more. They are also de-
manding that the school district
pay in full a ll medical and
hospital costs and provide den·
tal, vision care and prescription
drug plans.
Fringe benefits would stay the
same, according to the district's
offer, said Robert Knapp, district
personnel director' with max-
im um limits established tor
The only attempt at a vote
came when Trustee Robert Price
of Laguna Hills moved to ap-
prove a $2S.3 million budget that
allowed a tax rate reduction of
ENGINEER STRIKE. • •
In addition, the Teamster s
have proposed that the school
district take over payment of the
employes' contribut.ion to the
Public Employes' Retirement
System and pay for a new, addi-
hospital care. f\
Capistrano Unified teachers,
r epresented by the Capistrano
Unilied Education Association,
have declared impasse with the
district on their salary and fringe
benefit negotiations
Knapp said the district is near·
ing s ettle m e nt with the
California School Employes As·
sociation, representing a majori-
ty of the district's classified
employes
abouttwo cents '
He suggested slashing $500,000
from the fund to build the dis-
trict's second campus to achieve
the small reduction
Odor Nauseating
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two
members of Mayor Tom
Bradley's staff were hospitalized
after a mysterious odor swept
through the mezzanine of the
mayor's office in City Hall.
Water Windfall
Mesa Customer Overcharged $1,373. 70
By STEVE MITCHELL
Of .. o.ll't P4MtSuH
Valerie Lorenz of Costa Mesa
thought $88 was pretty steep
when she got her water bill this
month.
But she bad paid as much as
$104 for the two-month billings by
the Costa Mesa County Water
District before, so she figured
rates bad gone up like everything
else.
She and her husband Fred, and
two children tried to conserve
water at the home at 1827 Hum·
mingbird Drive but the water
bills always ranged from a low of
$48 to a high of more than $100.
IN FACT, she noticed the
higher bills as long ago as
December of 1972 when the dis·
trict came out and installed a
new meter at her home.
years to complain?
She said the bills were high in.
the summer of 1972 when the
original meter was workinll.
"BUT WHEN THEY changed
the meter we noticed the winter
bllls were as high as the summer
bills," she said. "But, apparently
we were too busy and didn't
notice.
"I Just assumed the rates went
up,'' she said with a shrug.
She did call last year after re-
ceiving a $1CM bill and a water
district service man came out to
look at the meter.
He couldn't.find a leak, so Mrs.
Lorenz said she just assumed
"we were overgenerous with our
water use.
"I'm very conscious ol the
need to save water and all that,"
she said, "especially with those·
high bills."
But she said the family does a
lot of laundry, takes showers
every day and waters the lawn
once a week.
"I REALLY l)ON'T see how
we could have cut back more,"
she said. "lt was very frustrat-
ing."
Water District Manager Ed
Schnabel said meter error is
rare.
"The t>ld meter stuck back in
1972 and we made the change,"
he explained. "Unfortunately,
we installed the wrong replace-
ment unit.
"But we're honest and we ad-
mit our mis takes. If we'r e
wrong, we'll stand up to it,"
Schnabel said.
What will Mrs. Lorenz do with
he r sudden $1,343 water-er
windlall?
"Who knows?" she said.
"TMr.e.'a ~n.awful lot we can do
with it."
workers on strike.
Bill Wagner, official
s pokesman for the engineers '
local office in Los Angeles, was
unavailable for comment. Office
workers there rerused to com·
ment on details of the strike, in·
eluding numbers involved.
The Irvine Company, Orange
County's largest residential con·
struction group, sald 10 to 15 of its
projects have been stalled by the
strike.
A spokesman said $5.7 million
worth of construction contracts
were held up. About half or that
value is in construction of a ma·
jor flood control channel between
Culver Drive and Jeffrey Ro~.ln
. Irvine, for flood protection of the
large Woodbridge housing de-
velopment and other areas.
The Irvine official s aid lbe
strike "affects everybody."
The $5.2 million Aliso Water
Management Agency sewer out-
fall project orr Aliso Pier in South
Laguna was stopped.
"The job's been shut down,"
site boss Dennis O'Malley said.
••we can't work without the
operators."
But O'Malley said there would
be no substantial delay in the
project, scheduled for comple-
tion in February, unless the
strike carried over into bad
weather.
Save and Earn
Bright ldetU Rewarded
Employes of the Saddleback
Valley Unified School District
now have the chance to make ex-
tra money by saving money for
the district.
District trustees have ap-
proved a program which will re-
ward certificated employes (in-
cluding teachers), counselors
and most administrators for
making money saving sugges-
tions.
They appToved a similar pro-
gram for the district's 650
clerical, maintenance, food
service and transportation
workers in June.
Both programs call for a
monetary award of 10 percent of
the fint year's estimated net .
savill'5. The awards ~P range from $10 to a maxlum $1,500
for each suggestion.
Wlnners will be selected by a
committee which the su5en· dent will appoint. Ce ·
also will be awarded to
whose ideas are used but do nol
qualify for a cash award.
John Cooper, assistant to the
superintendent, said the pro-
gram probably will begin at the
start oC the new school year in
September.
U.S. Secret
Meeting Told
After five yea rs, the Costa
Mesa woman finally asked her
neighbors what their bills were
and was surprised to learn they
were ooly about $20.
She called water district of·
ficials' and asked them why her
July b1ll was four Umet hiaher
than her neighbors. Curious
district directors went to the
Lorenz bome and discovered an
industrial water meter bad been
attached to the home instead at
the smaller reslde1ttlal type d~
vice.
Airline Seeks OC Berth
BEIRUT_. Lebanon (AP) -
The Carter administraUon and
the Palestinian guerrilla
leadership are involved la secret
high-level contacts, the Belnit
newspaper .Al Anwar reported to-
day
The cootacta included a raeet·
int In London June 24 between
former Pennaylvania Gov.
WilJlam Scranton, choaen by Pr~ldent Carter to represent the
admlniatration, and Balil Aki, a member~ the PalesUne Libera-
tion Organbatlon's United Na·
tions delegation. the report said. QUICK ~Al..CULATIONS by
t.be dlstrict's1 fl.baoce people
showed that tbe torena• bad
overpaid the dltt~ct $1,373.10
over the,pastflve years.
District direct~ drov, out
brisbt and e.i, today with the
check and their 8P01G1111. Why did, Lorm wall nv&
OltANMCOMJ M
DAILY PILOT
county supervisors by County
Counsel Adrian Kuyper.
The reply noted Nortti Cen-
tral 'a service proposal calls for
slightly Jess than four depart.Urea
per day (rom the airport and said
the service would be operated
with DC-9·50 equipment meet.in,
federal nolserel\llationa.
In addition, tbe attorneys
wrote, county supervisors would
still have authority to determine
whether. a carrier should be
permitted to operate al the
airport.
.TwOEye
Suupping
Of Land
Saddlebact Valley Unified
School District officials 11.\"1 u-
cbanae land with the ¥Jlalcn
VleJo Company for two tehools
which •ill be needed tn U.e
future.
The district currenUy OWIJt'
land for a high school planned for
1980 In the undeveloped 11.i.saiOG
Viejo IJMiiptrjal Park.
But Bob Fer= dlrecl« ! plannlna and · ev opment. sal
there ls a more suitable lite
Antonio Road and Loa Allq
Boulevard ln norther Klllloe
Viejo. \
The district also owns aa
elemeDlary school alte acrosl trom the Montonoso Recreati•
Center. A better site, the a6-
ministrator sald, ls on Entidad 8*
Los Alisos Boulevard in M=i Viejo. This school will be n
tn SePleDlber, um.
Fercusoo said the Mtasioo Vie.
jo Company bas generally
agreed to the exchange but it
won't be complete unW the dis.
trtct and compa.Jl1 accept an ap-
praisal report. He said tbU
should be done by September.
Ferguson said the developer
bas tentatively agreed that if thf
combined value of tbeirpt"OpertJ
exceeds that of the d.1Jtrict'1
sitea, it will forfeit the uceu.
But Uthe district's Pl'OM'tY is
more valuable than the com-
pany's, be said, they will pay the
difference. '
Student Home 1
Still Sought
Near Coll~
Homes still are needed fot
some of the 33 Spamsh studenta
who will be amving in the Sad
dleback Valley on July 28.
The students, a&es 14 to 21, are
being sponsored by the Forei14 I
Study League. ·
League officials say host
families are being asked to su~
ly the students with a bed, meal•
and possible transportation to
classes at Saddleback Colleg~
The students come completel~
insured and with their own in-
surance money.
Tbe students will atten•
English langua1e and Americap
culture classes at Saddlebact
College during tbe weekd~ mornints. During their rem ·
ing time, they will be visiting
sights d. Southern California. ~·J
The goal or the program, ~
ficials said, is to help the stq-
dents know and understand U.
United States in a way not avan.-
ble to the average tourist. l
Those interested in obtaininc
further intormation or sharlQI
their home with a student are
asked to call David Kearns. pro-
aram coordinator, at4~
FroaPageAI
·AID.~.
ments for those 48 patients
total an estimated $86,000.
Supervisor Ralph Clark said
projected for a year tbat could
mean about $1 mUUon to u\e
county.
Under terms of the policy, sul-
pected illegal alien.a sign up fdr
Medi.Cal benefits by tlcnins a
statement saying they are not Ul-
der a deportation order.
II
While their atltementa are.be.
illl proceaaed by the U.S. lmmi·
gration and Naturallaation
Service for verification, they are
entlUed to Medi.Cal benefits.
County officials have aalcllbelr past experience lndlcates federal
authorities may not fl1ve the
staff to process the larl• num-
bera of veriflcat.iona sent thesu.,
Frette Pflfle AJ
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OArl V "'LOT 8'{
Help Buyers
B1SYL\'lAPOBTBa
When a famillar product reaulatly suddenly appears C>I\
the •upermarket shelf wlth a face lift (a newly shaped bot·
Ue. a reva~ped label>. JDost buyers suspect the cbaDS•is
m.,rely another excuse to ralle fhe price.
On glamor products particularly, such as cosmeticlf, a
newly designed package often may be no more than a lure.
But on staple items, this is rarely the only reason, ~ause
lhe allered packaging m_, bo too cottly to the manula.e·
turer and ma.,y price him out of tbe market, say Richard
Gerstman and Herbert MeyerS, package designers who
bead a New York·baaed flnn carry{Qg their names.
RAmER. A *EA.SON FOR TBE change may be that
the company needs a tales increase. and a new eye.catching
container ms,y help the product stand out f~om its com-
petitors on the shelf. No manutacturer wants to see bis pro-
duct upstaged 011 the shelf.
A "graphic!·~ change involving colors and printing de:
sign may enhance its eye appeal and help the maker jm.
prove the product label.
Or a newly opening market may dictate an alteration
in packaging. Talcum · · ·
powder with a picture of
mother and baby may
appeal lo mothers, but lf
athletes are big users ot
talcum aa well, a r e·
d esigned p ackage ls
calledfor.
Money's
Worth
A graphic change in packaging ls basically for eye ap·
pea l. A "structural" change may be to cut. manufacturing
costs so retail prices can be malrUained or even reduced. As
a n example, a metal spout can be cbanged to paperboard or
eliminated entirely. These guidelines can help buyers On·
derstand package design:
Q. BOW C.\N YOU PICK OUT deCepUve packaging?
A. When it fools you into \binking you're getUng mOre for your money than you're actually gettiJ>I. A package
e nclosing an inner package may'be to protect the contents
or may be deceptive. BeauWW Uluatratfons that. mislead
you are illegal but they are sWl around.
Q. How can you tell overpriced packagiM?
A. U an jdentical product in a simpler package sells tor
less. the higher·priced item is overpackaged. Cosmetics
m ay be super-packaged as a mauer of course, say
Gerstman and Meyers. but some items that seem lo be over·
packaged may be so designed to protect the contents. •
Q. WIDCR IS BEST -A GLASS jar, can or a waxed
container?
A. Glass is usually more expensive but it also is reusa·
ble, recloseable and.trapsparent. Plastic may be cheaper
a nd is Ueht·wetgbt and unbteakable. Cans or waxed con·
tainers for fr~en products or liquids may be cheapest.
Q. What does "new" or "improved" on a label mean"!
A. That the product l<>P.Pulation has been changed._J\nd
the word "new" can remain on the package for only a six
month period in the retail store. A design change may be
called a .. more conveoleo1 packaep" or some variatiou IX
this.
Q. WHY ARE SO MANY PACKAGES hard to open?
A. Government regulations to protect children or
thoughUess designing are the usual reasons.
Q. Are packaging ruLes becoming stiffer?
A. Yes. A ruling soon to becOme ef(ecth-\: will require
cosmetics labels to list all ingredients. Tbe Federal Trade
Commission also is clampin& down on the practice of un-
necessary slack-till that results in product contents
weighing less than the wrapped package. Much more in-
formation on 1abel8 is on the way.
Q. WHAT ABOUT FAMIUAR LABELS on lower-priced
products?
A. Pirating ls hardly new. Study the label before you
buy, check for your trusted name. An unknown brand in an
{mltation package may contain contents that are inferior ..
("
~
Bate· Views
Utility Users
May Get Voice
LOS ANGELES (AP> -If you think your electric or
water or telephone rates ace too hlgb. what can you do about
jt ? .
Not much. because the age11ctes that set utility r ates go
through weeks or bearings and-Piles of evidence in their de·
liberations. a process that essentially excludes the average
customer.
ENERGY
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