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1977-07-27 - Orange Coast Pilot
' . OC Task Force .Joins . S. Barbaro Fire Team WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 27, 1977 VOL. 71, NO ... 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAOllS Bro • m e en LONE FIREMAN SILHOUETTED AaAJNST THE REMAINS OF BURNING HOME IN SANTA BARBARA AREA Brush Rre Set by Arsonist Deatroya Over 200 Expensive Homes In .exclualve Aa1ldentlal Section SANTA BARBARA (AP> -- Officials said an arsonist set the brush fire that rated down from the Santa Ynez Mountains today and destroyed 200 expensive hoines in this picturesque coastal community. City Fire Chief IUch Petenon said he did not know bow the fire was set, but •aid-it was started within 200 feet ol a 1964 blaze that burned 78bomes in the exclusive, .hilly ttollclential area overlookinl the downtown and Pacific Ocetm beac:harea. One person was arrested for looting but no other details._. immediately available. • • Officially, the fire was Still said to be out ot control, but by 1Plcl-1Dominc, it was apparent tbllt . . ----------- Holdup Proves No Laughing Matter in NB Porsche Parts Resold • By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of .. Olly ....... Jtatt ' f I ~ Newport Beach police said to- day they have brotq a loose-knit ring they believe b8' been steal· ing Ponches and other luxury autos in the Harbo~ Area, CIUJ· nibalizing the cars and selling the parts. So far. underco~r octicers · from Newport Beach, working with the California Highway Patrol's investigation section as ·, well as investigators from the Orange and Anaheim Police Departments, have arrested 11 people allegedly involved with the ring. Detective Lee Roberts said several people are still being soughl According to police, five stolen Porsches and one stolen Lincoha Continental as well as tu.to parts. all worth more than $100,000, have been seized during a series or raids in the central count1 area over the past two weeks. Arrested in the investigations were: Warren Dale Vitters, 24, Anaheim, on suspicion of grand theft auto. Davis Dean Snavely, 28, Garden Grove. OQ...suspicion of grand theft auto. Armando Hernandez. 24, Garden Gove, on suspicion of conspiracy and on suspicion ot t-eceiving stolen property. Michael Jon Culligan, 24, Anaheim, on suspicion ot con· splracy and on susplciqn of re. (See POascJIES, Page AZ> DAILY PILOT ..... f'ro11t Page A I FIRES ••• •conditions currently exlstina over most of CaJiCornla. Depletion of Southland firefighting forces attackinC the Santa Barbara Inferno further ln· creases the severity ot the altlfa- tion faced in the Orange County region, TurbevUle said. , He said about 4 a .m .• nre engines from the county fire de· partment's headquarters in Orange; its Olive station, and the cities of Huntington Beach, Seal Beach, San Clemente plus three State DivisiQn or Forestry qnits were dispatched to Santa Barbara. The additional aid was sent un- der the county's OfClce or Emergency Services Task Force plan to belp other agencies In ex- tremely grave disaster situa· lions. Spokesmen for the U.S. Weather Service say the current heat wave is here to stay at least through Thursday and speculat- ed there will be no reliet before Sunday. Searing temperatures in the south county have reached the point at which county firemen at the Laguna Hills Station plan to throw every piece of equipment at any outbreak of fire. This includes calling in so· called borate bombers to ~rop fire retardant chemicals on spreading names. Ar>Wl ....... to SANTA BARBARA WOMAN OVERCOME WITH GRIEF OUTSIDE THE REMAINS OF HER HOME Mrs. Lettie Serena Weeps Into Her Hands After Returning to Fire Scene Firemen classify fire dangers on the basis of temperature, humidity and wind velocity, by low, medium and high hazards. Normally in summertime, a medium haiard level is imposed around noon and today it was in effect at 8 a .m., with the critical high danger or Red Flag Situa- tion anticipated by noon. From Page Al ARSON .•. well to-do people who fled before Tuesd<1 v·s flames checked into the numerous motels or hotels ~cattercd around the city. Anguished homeowners used garden hoses to wet down wood s hingle roofs as fierce winds blew a storm of sparks and ashes ahead of the advancing names, which tould be seen more than 20 miles aw.iy. It w;is the fourth major fire in 13 years in Santa Barbara. The others were in 1064, 1968 and 1971. Firefighters had a difficult lime r.i::iching the fire area bN·aust• of Lhl' winding, narrow roads that made it difficult for trucks to pass. In addition, large crowds of sightseers gathered along the roads, further hamper- ing efforts to gel al the flames. Police said they would arrest anybody who was not authorized to be in the area. Dennis Orbus, a U.S. Forest ' Service s pokesman, said the blaze was fueled by chaparral brush and eucalyptus trees, both full of oily sap. He said the fire s tarted in the Los Padres Na- tional Forest and definitely was man-caused. / The fire knocked out power in the city of 75,000 persons and emergency generators were be· ing used. Ford Probe 'Unavoidable' WASHINGTON <AP) - C h arles Ruff, a former Watergate special prosecutor who has been nominated for a key Carter administration post, says an investigation of then- President Gerald Ford during the l976 campaign could not be avoided. The investigation involved al- legations lhal Ford used cam- paign contributions for personal purposes while he was a member or the House. In testimony Tuesday before a Senate panel considering his nomination to be deputy inspec- tor-generaJ in the Department or Health, Education and Welfare, Ruff refused to disclose the source of the allegations. Angola Aid Set MIAMI <AP) -Cuban Presi- dent Fidel Castro says hls nation will send more doctors to Angola and expand its medical COTJ>S in Ethiopia. . ORANGE COAST s DAILY PILOT Korean Payoff Congress' Probe To Lift 'Cloud' WASH1NGTON (AP> -Atty Gen. Griffin Bell said today that he expects some people will be prosecuted in connection with South Korean influence buying, s ome will be absolved and Congress may want to deal with ethics of others. Bell, briefing about 100 House members on the progress or the Justice Department investiga. tion, saidi both he and President Carter want to complete the in- vestigation as quickly as possible lo "remove the cloud over Congress at the earliest time." Bell .said "it is like having three investigations going on at the same time. "There will be some people that will~ prosecuted,•' he said. "Others will be absolved and there will probably be some in the middle that your own com- mittees will want to deaJ with from the standpoint of ethics and propriety.·· Asst. Atty. Gen. Benjamin R. Civiletti, who beads the probe, said there is a "possibility o{ ii· legal action" by public officials not reporting the first indications or Korean influence buying as earfy as 1972. But he said the Justice Depart- ment is concentrating on the Korean influence buying itself and has not diverted its atten- tions to the possibility of public officials covering up information about it. Some State Department and other offi~ials reportedly saw in- telligence reports about the al- leged attempts by South Koreans to buy influence in Congress in the early 1970s . House Speaker Thomas P. O'Neill revealed Monday that he had been told indictments will be coming in August and Sep- tember. Aides said O'Neill was told that the Justice Department plans to seek indictments of five people. Other sources said all five are former coogressmen. In a related development. Suzi Park Thomson, who was a secretary to former House Speaker Carl Albert, said she re- fused to talk privately to House investigators Tuesday. Miss Thomson said she wants a public hearing to clear her name ~ of any involvement in the Korean innuence-buying scandal. "I have no knowledge or any bribes or payoffs on Capitol Hill." she said. Miss Thomson said she refused to talk to House investigators behind closed doors for fear her testimony would be leaked in a distorted way that would make her look bad. She was subpoened to give a deposition to investigators work- ing on the House ethics commit- tee's investigation. Fr°"' Page A J PORSCHE RING ••• Ave .. Garden Grove, after a stolen Porsche body and engine parts aJlegedly were found there. Culligan, LaFleur and Pallma were arrested Friday at F and M Porsche and VW Repair, 11782 Western Ave., Garden Grove, in connection with the purchase of four allegedly stolen Porsche tires. Weems, Kennedy and Rom·. mann were arrested Monday in connection with the sale of an al· legedly stolen Porsche, stripped, to the undercover Investigators. Miss Dehoux and Famswor1h were arrested last Wednesday on the allegation they had falsely re-- ported their Porsche. stolen to Anaheim police, when they had given it to Vilters and Snavely and UM!n attempted.to collect &.he insurance on the car. All of the people arrested were booked Into Newport Beach City l au and all but Rommann have been released aner poSUng bail ranging Crom $2,500 to $$.000. ,1f1E PILOT AD . SOUJ IT ALL Undeveloped property sur- rounding Laguna Beach has been closed to trespassing for about six weeks and police are getting especially tough on enforcement due lo the Cire hazard. Orange County Air Pollution Control District officials imposed a Stage One smog alert over the entire county, except for breezy San Clemente. Air conditioning systems in public buildings -those that have them -were humming away at full capacity as the heat grew today to its noonday and late alteraoon peak. Residents of inland areas -• those who had a day off or work nights -thron ged county beaches, as long-chilly seawater temperatures finally began to rise. Newport Beach liCeguards said they readied the 67-degree mark Tuesday, but lifeguards in Hunt- ington Beach said at least a low surr and calm seas kept their rescue count down as swimmers cooled off. Many wete escaping areas or Los Angeles County, where most inland sections were under a Stage Two smog alert today and facing the possibility or smoke spreading from the Santa Barbara fire. Global War Seen TOKYO <AP> -Chinese Depu- ty Premier U Hslen-nien said to- day that China would be pre- pared to face a global war because both the United States and the Soviet Union were mak- in g preparations for a third world war, according t'O Japanese news reports from Peking. .Wltnes 'Account 'What a Night!' In S. Barbara EDITOR'S NOTE: Wet GalJ.afhn began hU joumaliam corcn Ol4 reporter in Louisiana in 1935, COVftred the European front in World War II and post·war Germany for the Assocuited Presa. and went on to become president and geneTal manager of the AP. He retired la&t year Oftd moved to Santa Barbara. The fire came within SO feet of thft home he moved into Jad October, but left the house Ul'ltouched. By WES GALLAGHER l'er•AsM<latM..._a SANTA BARBARA -OhGod, whatanight! The fire started opposite my house, about a mile away on the side of the bill, in the early evening. As we watched through glasses, it seemed as though the tanker planes flylnt from the local airport and dousing it with chemicals would put it under control. But the planes had to stop because of darkness. . A warm desert wind suddenly started custing up to 40 mtles an hour. It picked up the fire and spread burning embers over a four or five-mile stretch in less than an hour. YOU COULD SEE THE FIRE leap a quarter of a mile at a time as is it swept up Eucalyptus Hill, dotted with homes worth $250,000 and more. The tall eucalyptus trees, dried out after months of drought, exploded into name ~s though they were touched with small bombs. The fire then moved down toward the ocean, into the southern sec lion or Santa Barbara, one or the poorer areas of the city. Firemen from 100 miles around had no chance to cope with the names as the winds mounted to about 60 miles an hour, caused in part by the fire itself. ABOUT MIDNIGHT, THE FIRE crept down the mountain toward the Riviera section where 1 li ve. As flames closed in on both sides. my wife and I decided lo abandon the house. As we pulled out into Conejo Road, our cars stocked wfth personal effects and clothes. we encountered 30 or 40 more autos, loaded with children, clothing, dogs and cats. One little girl was leading her white horse out of the fire area. Like almost everyone else in a similar situation. we carried away only some or the really valuable things we had, having raced through the house, scooping up clothes. jewelry, contents of medicine closets, silverware. TREES BLOWN DOWN BY THE high.winds blocked the road temporarily. A crew from·the electric c~ny arrived and sawed the trees into sections. Everybody pitched in to draw them out of the way, down the mountain. Having watched refugees from Germany to Vietnam, I never thought I would be one myself and it is a singularly unpleasant ex- perience. As we reached the downtown area and the Santa Barbara News-Press office, we could see the fire that swept into the southern part of the city start leaping back up the mountain which the city is built on as the wind shifted from the ocean. TIIE WINDS DIED IN THE early morning hours and the combined firefighting forces from many parts of Southern California gradually brought the blaze under control. I had to walk back into the 41rea where I live because of bl0cked roads. I found my neighbor's house 50 feet away burned to the ground, but mine was intact. The fire had swept through around the kn<)(l or the bUI behind us and on the right side as well, but somehow, it left otir house untouched. The threat remained, however . As I came down the road, firefighting cl'"eW5 were trying to douse hot spots where fires still bunted.On both sides of Uie road because they feared the Santa. Ana~ would come again this evening. . ~ . . . WOr/ier Hurts Hand In Newport Mishap A construction worker who nearly sever ed his left hand while working in Newport Beach Tuesday, is reported in fair con- dition today at the UC Irvine Medical Center. A spokesman for the Newport Beach fire department said 21· y-ear-old Francisco Castillo or Duarte was working on the second story or a condominium project at Jamboree and Ford roads when the mishap occurred al about 1 p.m. Inspector Art Morton said the carpenter was ftaming the roof of the building and using a circular saw which ran over his left wrist. Morton said the powerful saw severed the artery, tendons and the large radius bone in the wrist. Castillo's fellow workers rushed to his aid and partially slopped the flow of blood whlle paramedics and two fire com· panics raced to the scene. The medics treated Castillo on the roof and put him in a litter which they slid down a series of ladders the firemen had rigged to the roof. He was taken to HQag Memorial Hospital before being transferred to the medical center. l t ' = ' , VOL. 70, NO. ml, 4 ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Arsonist Blamed ant a ara LONE FIREMAN SILHOl!ETTED AGAINST THE REMAINS OF BURNING HOME IN SANTA BARBARA AREA _______ e_ru_s_h_F_lr.e_s_e_t by Arsonist Destroys Over 200 Expensive Homes In Exctualve Realdentlal Sections Mesa Woman Arrested on Wice Charges Vice officers arrested a Costa ,Mesa woman they accuse of soliciting for prostitution after an 9fficer assertedly picked the woman up hitchhiking Tuesday. Lydia J . Humphrey, 22, of 450 Victoria Ave., was booked into . Orange County ,Women's Jail with bail set at $500. A vice oUicer said he picked the woman up near Victoria Street and Harbor Boulevard at about ~ p.m. Tuesday. He said l'lhc sc\ticiated for an act of prostitution as the pair drove through the city. · The officer drove the woman back to her motel room, where money allegedly changed hands. ~nd the arrest was made. U.S. to Stay 'In Pacific' TOKYO <AP> -Defense ~ecretary Harold Brown said to- day the United States intends to remain "a strong Pac\fic power" despite the planned 'Yithdrawal of 33,000 U.S. troops from South Korea. Brown met with Prime Minister Talceo Fukuda and other Japanese officials to brief them on agreements reached tn two d~ys of talks with South Korean leaders on the plan to. phase out virtually all U.S. 1round forces in Korea. Weather Patchy fog early Tburs- d ay morning and low 1 clouds aloag the beaches. 1 Otherwise tt will be fair th.rough Thursday with warm, sunny days. LQws tonight in 60s. }Uahs in middle tQ upper 90s inland and mtd-'J'Os at beaches. Inferno: 'God, Wb;at a · Nidt•' EDITOR•s NOTE: Wn GallogMr began 1* fou~ cateer os a Teporter bi Uui3iana in 1935, coveTed the European /Tonl in World WOT 11 . and post-war Gentia:ny JOT the Auodated PTns, and ~ton to become president.and general manageT of the AP. He retiTed ltl$t yetJT and moved to Santa Barbara.. The fire come within SO feet of the home he moved into ltut October, bt.lt left the house untouclled. ... By WES GALLAGHEJl .... ~ ...... ~ SANTA BARBARA-Oh God, what a night! The fire started opposite my house, about a mile away on the side or the hill, In the early evening. As we watched through glasses_. it seemed as ~hou~h ~e tanker planes flying from the local aJrport and dousing it with chemicals would put it under control. But the planes had to stop because of darkness. A warm ~esert wind suddenly started gusting up to 40 miles an boor. It picked up the fire and spread burning embers over a four or five· mile stretch in less than an hour. . YOtJ <:OULD SEE THE FIRE leap a quarter of a mile at a time a!t .is it swept up Eucalyptus Hill, doUed with homes w_orth- $250,000 and more.· The tall eucalyptus trees,-dried out after .months of drought, ~locled into name as though t.My were touched with small bombs. The fire then moved down toward the ocean into the southern section of Santa Barbara, one or the poorer ue.; of the city. Firemen from 100 miles around bad no chance to cope with the flames as tbe winds mounted to abQut 60 miles an hour caused in part by the fire itself. • Market Falls To 18-month Inwof888 NEWYORK <AP> -Thestoclt market tell sbarplyfor the third straJght session today. pushing the Dow Jones industrial average to an 18-montb low. The Dow average or 30 blue chi es was down 19. 75 pq,ints to 888.43 after a drop of 15.24" points the two previous sessions. 'l'he last time the Dow closed lower was Jan. 5, 1976, when it bit 877.83. Losers outpaced gainers by better than a 4·1 margin amone New York Stock Exchange-listed issues. Analysts said the market was dragged down by continuing con- cern that the nation's economic growth rate was h eaded for a slowdown. _And n~w W.Qrri~s w~r~dded to the picture by today's govern- ment announcement of a record U,S. trade deficit f9r June, with imports exce~ding exports by $2.82 billion. Oil stocks were among the most notable losers following the Federal Energy Administra- tion's recent announcement that it planned an.extensive audit of 15 large refiners. J Today's Closing ~ N.Y.Stoek8 WEDNESDAY, JULY 27, 1977 C TEN CENTS • m Wind· Hampers Control Effort SANTA BAR~ARA (A P> :-Fire fighters raced the wind to- day to ~top ~ fierce brush fire that destroyed 200 expensive home~ m this ~ealthy coastal city while police sought the arsonist they said sparked the conflagration . . The 700-acre fire was officially out of control. but it had died down from the explosive force of the night before when sheets of flame lore through the drought-parched brush from out of the Santa Ynez Mountains. Cyclonic-like fire storms * * * had erratically leap.frogged from canyon to ridge, leav· Scene ing a patchwork of destruc- tion across the city's richest neighborhoods where home values begin at $250.000. Police reported 22 injuries. most of them minor burns and smoke inhalation, and one arrest for looting. No details of the ar- rest were available. Mayor David ShVfman said that in addition to the 200 homes FOURTH FIRE IN SANTA BARBARA-A4 destroyed , another 40 were damaged by the flames. How the fire was set was un- known, but city fire officials said it started only 200 feet from a similar 1964 fire that destroyed 75 swank homes. Las t week, firemen extinguished it small blaie Qeat the locatlon and 1atir found a time·d(?l,yed incendiary device. Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. de~lar~ a state or errtergeacy and ordered 120 Na ti on al Guard troops to help the estimated 500 firemen battling n ames in thJs seaside city noted for its Spanish· style architecture. A layer of soot and s moke hung in the sky today over the city of 75,000 persons. "This is all I have left, my wife and my dogs, .. said Artillo Serena, a 75-year-old carpenter, as he returned to the rubble of the home he built 19 years ago. His emotions were shared by dozens or other residents who returned to find their lavish hom'es reduced to burned, smok· iog ruins. The fire, sparred by hot, dry wtn<tntrat-gustett'tt> between 40 and 60 miles an hour, burned to within 13 blocks of downtown, clogging the area's roads with fl eeing residents and sightseers. Just before dawn today the winds shifted and then died. giv· ing firemen and their chemical· laden helicopters their first real chance to halt the spread of <See ARSON, Page AZ) At Fire . Chaotic SANTA BARBARA (AP) - The scene at the fivtt·Point in-tersection below Sycamore Can- y~n was one of chaos. despera- tion and heartbreak as residents either fled their homes or tried to get to them in the face of this city's worst fire in years. Standing in the center of the jammed intersection Tuesday night was police officer James Carroway, who battled motorists frantically trying to return up twisting roads to their en- dangered homes while others dashed for their lives down the narrow canyons. ''Park it and wJlk. Park it and .. W'atk, .. be &bou~. Yet despite emergency flares on the street and Ute huge traffic jam some drivers ignored the of- ficer's warnings and managed to slip through. Shortly after 10 p.m., three hours after the fire began, Car- r oway asked bystanders for help. A number of them volunteered and wer e immediately dis- patched to Sycamore Canyon to assist in the evacuation. Some clung stubbornly to their homes as the flames burned re-- le n tlessly down the canyons. Residents who refused to budge were warned they would have to face the blaze alone. At one r esidence, a group of p eople plied turniture, dishes • and clothing into a tiny compact car. Another family drove out of the canyon with their possessions thrown into a trailer. A man walked out guiding a horse, trying to keep it from bQlt- ing in the confusion. Another man gave a woman r esident a ride on his motorcycle (SeeCBAOS,PageA%) . ' t AJ DAILY PILOT c 1$ ... !'-)ft$--FT -- D;ally l'li.. New• Mal' \ f:Jaivyers Rule on . tJie Case. By GARY GRANVILLE Of Ow O•llr P.lltt St•ff Lawyers for a Newport Beach doctor who has refused to obey a woman's written directive to let her "die with dignity" say the doctor does not have the legal right to withdraw the life s upport measures keeping the woman alive. The lawyer s· r"sponse to Marie Welda(s guardtan's'plea for a court order directing Dr. Theodore Alex to let Mrs. Wel· day die was flied Tuesday in Orange County Superior Court. Jn the response filed by at· torney William Garman, Dr. Alex denied that the 84-year-old woman's condition is terminal and that he Is keeping her alive by artificial means. • SHADED AREA INDICATES FIRE-RAVAGED AREA Destruction In Santa Barbara 'a Sycamore Canyon In an interview Tuesday . however, Garman said the is· sues involved In the right to die case go much deeper than d.if· ferences of me~cal opinion on Mrs. Welday's e<>ndition. OC Firemen Assist In Santa Barbara For exam pie, the cross- complaint filed on behalf of Dr. Alex concedes that Mrs. Welday suffered a crippling stroke May 4, 1976, and has been in a com· atose statA ever since. The response also acknowledges that, in 1912, Mrs. Welday ''executed a written document" staling that, "No doctor is to take any measure whatsoever to artificially pre· serve or s timulate life in my body when it Is ready to die.·· By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of ... D•llY l'llol Stall Rumbling out in the relative predawn cool, a flrefighung task force left Oran~e Countv for the blazing h<>lo caust in Santa Barbara today , as fearful authorities calculated how to handle Orange County's own critical fire danger Bl1 s ter1ng tempe ratures re aching above 100 degrees in in· land Orange County are ex~cted to continue at least through Satur- day, as parched brushlan~s sim· mer with Uie relative humidity at only48percent. The departure of eight fire trucks and their crewmen to help combat the march of the firestorm threatening Santa Barbara further worried Orange County firefighting authorities today. Orange C.:ounty Fire Depart· menl Captain Bruce Turbeville said today that no days off. leaves or vacations have been canceled but other emergency measures have been taken. "We have pulled in some of our fire prevention specialists to man trucks in case .... " Capt. Turbeville said in analyzing the crucial county fire situation. "Let 's face it," Capl. Turbeville said bluntly. "The danger right now is extreme to say the least. We are scared to death ... " "We haven't had any Ci res here in the county yet in the current period, but we 're silting on a time bomb with devastating potential." Ile s aid the Santa Barbara blaze is a clear reminder of pre· cisely what can happen in some areas or Orange County that have recenUy become heavily populat- ed and lie adjacent to brush and timberlands. "Right now. we're in an or- ganizational stage," he ex· plalned of preparations being taken in the event a major blaze s hould break out. And any blaze that occurs will be considered major at the very outset due to the critical weather conditions currently existing over most of California. Depletion of Southland firefighting forces attacking the Santa Barbara inferno further in· creases the severity of the situa· lion raced in the Orange County region, Turbeville said. He said about 4 a .m ., fire engines from the cbunty fire de· par tment's headquar\ers in Oranae: \ts Olive station, and the cities of HunUngton Be$ch, Seal Beach. San Clemente plus three State Divlalon or Forestry units were dhpatch ed to Santa Barbara. Tbe additional aid was sent un· d e~ the county's Offlce of Emer•ency Services THk Force. DAILY PILOT plan to help other agencies in ex- tremely grave disas ter s1tua tions. Sp<rkes men for the U S . We ather Service s ay the current heat wave is here to slay at least through Thursday and speculat ed there will be no reltef before Sunday. * * * F r o• Page A I ARSON ••. flame. ''We feel very comfortabl e "'ith it as it s tands ri ghl now.'· Santa Barbara County Fire Chief William Patterson said 1n the: morning hours. "It'!> not ~pread ing." But Dennis Orbus, a lJ.S. Fo r est S er vice s pokes man, warned, "We're still in an ex tre me fire emergency. Those winds should be shifting back toward town and it all depends on how much we can knock down the fire before then ... Another worry for firefighters was the low pressure in city water pumps, caused in part by the thousands of gallons of water homeowners poured on their houses to try to save lhem. The neighborhoods in the c haparral and eucalyptus- c o v ered hill s wer e in · discriminately hopscotched with untouched homes standing next lo ruins. When the arsonist set the fire about 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Sycamore Canyon, he foun.d fertile ground: Brush that 1s normally tinder-dry had become parched to what fire officials called "expl06ive conditions" by two years of drought. Arter the fire roared out of the canyon. it jumped from house to tree t.o house in the Riviera sec· tion, the city's wealthiest area. Downhill. in the path of the names. residents jammed their cars with valuable. easily moved items such as jewelry, television s ets, silverware and personal mementos. Then they fled down the narrow, twisting mountain road. Some clung stubbornly to their homes as the flames burned down the canyons. Residents who refused to budge were warned/ they would have to face the blaze alone. Some waited until the last possible moment, trying to de· cide what to t.a,ke with them. Ot~is went outside with garden .hoses to fight the 20•foot higb fiameS< \ Payne Green, ·a poUcem an, was bnd of the men with the hofies. "I wa~ watering down my roof a~t 9 p.m. when ll began to get too bot.· he said. The family j\tm~ into the car and we "got out of there as qulclc as we could.'' · "I don't even have my billfold but all that counts with me l• that my lttds au,d wife are safe.·• Green said his home wu prob- ably worth more than $150,000 but was only insured (or ses.ooo. "My reason is simple. I want to die in dignity," Mrs. Welday said m her notarized 1972 af. ridavil. As a result of that written c o m m a n.d , th e w om a n • s daughter. Marie Leuck, earlier this month filed sult asking the court to order Dr. Alex to withdraw treatment that keeps. the ''permanently comatose, paralyzed and blind" woman alive. Thal treatment purportedly l'onsisls of keeping the stricken woman's vital s igns going throul'.{h the adminis~ration of glucose. electrolytes, heart and blood pressure medication and other nutrients administered through a nasal lube ... Jn response to that complaint, Gurman said the law is unclear as to wh a t c o n s titute s "artificial ltfc s u s taining measures. "Certainly the r e is a dH· ference between the treatment that is keeping Mrs. Welelay alive and the s ophisticated medical equipment used to keep Karen Quinlan alive," Garman s aid. Miss Quinlan is the young New Jers ey woman whose parents . won a court battle to have the machinery believed to be keeping their daughter alive, turnt.'<I off. Garma.n also said there ls a major legal issue involved in determining if Mrs. Welday's "die with dignity'' affidavit is valid under California law. ·'There really is no provision for a liv1ng will." Garman said. "What we're seeking is court. clarification of these issues.·· The attorneys for Mrs. Leuck said last week they believe the Natural Death Act enacted by the state Legislature last year contains the wording needed to justify asking the court .to order Dr. Alex to wit~draw treatment from Mrs. Welday. They concede that the act's wording and the procedures it outlines to determine who is eligible or who can qualify for the "right to die'' does not fit Mrs. Welday's case. However, they insist the spirit and general wording of the Natural Death Act as well as Mrs. Welday's 1912 affidavit qualify her an<l her guardian lo seek death in a manner she herself prescribed. F rmtt Page Al CHAOS ••. · 1 was 1olnc to see about tn· creaaln( that ln1ur&11ce thJ• week. NoW, I 1ues1 l can ror1et.l~. Tbtto9fwuaft.r•whenwelelt. One of the lucky on• wu . Charle, KlmbaUl, an attorntY wlaOM iMUte was "'• only on• s~artd"withln a quarttMnll• on e1tMr j dt) qttt. . 1'b8 wtnl abitttd. just after \be nam• hlt . n•1tf>Or'1 aaouat, he 1$ld. "l don't ~ow •l\1 ~ I'm J\llt rateful " I l\Udy 'and 1""9 Scl\aaid and their three Cl\Udrtn itOfMl ~" tbe._rem.UW ~ thelr tiiMU: t onl-y moved \n a 1DGnih·:~· ~ Hid '1Tb• hOUai,~ ~ • '"crow." OUtalde the flr• ~ Hacu,uon cea\fta "Wvtl ;:f.i but~ °' th'ie.,fta1De~l:1 vtclltl*w.ftr.ner • fnatead.~.t~~ amm tilt .. ,,.._ ... ;~~-... Uii .. ,~ ftj =· to lit • the dtj' Wte beL•. UNDERCOVER OFFICER AAREsTs S•tlATLESS JAMES WEEMS IN ANAHEIM GARAGE Police Say Porsche In Pt)oto Wa• Stolen and Strtpped of Parts C~ Theft. Ring Smashed: f' Nl;!l»pOrt Police Arfest 11 i.n Stripping ClUle 1 •J duced rate and then sold them to t customers at the regular rates. By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of -D•llY ~Ii.\"•" Newport Beach police said to· day they have broken a loose-knit ring they believe has been steal· ing Porsches and other luxury autos in the Harbor Area, can· nibalizing the cars and selllng the parts. So far, undel'Cover officers from Newport Beach, working with the California Highway Patrol's investigation section as well as investigators from the Orange and Anaheim Police Departments, have arrested 11 people allegedly involved with the ring. • Detective Lee Roberts said several people are still being sought. According to police. five stolen Porsches and one stolen Lincoln Continental as well as auto parts, GOOdldea, Bui, Yolk's . On Them lt was a call a lot of newspopers get when t.he weather is hot. "Hey, you want to get a pi cture of me and my friend cooking an egg on the sidewalk" the young girl asked. A photographer was dis- patched to lht! Montecello townhouses in Costa Mesa. But when he arrived at the al l eyway behind Richmond Drive, t h e photographer found Bryan Jones and Jill Fummer. both 14, sitting on lawn c hairs. staring at a smashed half.fried egg on the cement .. "Somebody drove by and ran over it;" .the pair said, mournfully. · · So much for instant fame. all worth more than $100,000, have been seized during a series of raids in the central county area over the past two weeks. Arrested in the Investigations were: Warren Dale Vitters, 24, Anaheim, on suspicion of grand theft auto. Davis Dean Snavely, 28, Garden Grove, on suspicion of grand theft auto. Armando Hernandez, 24, Garden Grove, on suspicion of conspiracy and on suspicion of receiving stolen property. Michael Jon Culligan, 24. Anaheim, on suspicion of con· spiracy and on suspicion of re· cei ving stolen property. Douglas Paul LaFleur, 24. Garden Grove, on suspicion of conspiracy and on suspicion of receiving stolen property. Wayne Clark Pailma, 22, Buena Park, on suspicion of con· spiracy and on suspR:lon of re· cei ving stolen property. Peter Gordon Farnsworth, 22. Anaheim, on suspicion of con· spiracy and on suspicion of destroying insured property. Fabienne Simone Dehoux, 22. Anaheim, on suspicion Of con· spiracy and on suspicion of destroying fnsured property. James Hardy Weem~. 21 . Anaheim: on suspicion of receiv· ing stolen property. Charles Leroy Kennedy, 28, Anaheim, on suspicion of rece1v· ing stolen property. Ronald Ray Rommann, 24. Anaheim, on suspiciom of receiv· ing stolen property. Det. Roberts and his partner, Gary Black, said they re<:eived information two weeks ago about the ring which alleg-edly was tak· ine Por:scbes from Newport Beach to supposedly legitimate garages where they were stripped of part&. What was left reportedly was aol_d as sheet metal. The two detective• assert that several other auto parts ~·re· pair places in the county were buying the parts, knowing they were stolen. The shops allegedly bouf(ht tbe. stolen part.a at a re· Vitlers and Snavely were ar· rested July 19 after three stolen Porsches and the Continental al· legedly were found, in various sta~es of beinR dismantled. in their garage, Colours by Dave, 8540 Central Ave .. Stanton. Police Hunt 4 Children LOSANGELES <AP> -Police are still searching for four children missing since last Wt!dncsday after a fire gutted the home of Mrs. Earlene Williams in the Athens area of Los Angeles. Neighbors s aid the children. Mrs. Williams' three daughters . and a neighbor boy, were in the home at the time of the fire. Meanwhile James Williams.i 53. was arraigned Tuesday on c harges or strangling his estranged wife, whose charred body was found in the burned-out house. TONIGHT NEWPORT·MESA SCHOOL BOARD --Special meeting, 1601 16th St .. 5:30 p.m. ' MUSIC OF AMERICA -Free concert. Music or th~ 60's with Johnny Lopez. South Coast Village, 7:30p.m. "JACQUES BREL" -South Coast Re pertory Theater. through July 30, 8 p.m. THURSDAY• J ULY 28 COSTA MESA ALL COMERS TRACK ANO F'IELD -Cham· pionship Meet, Costa Mesa High School, 4:30p.m . Yotteybatts & Nets Basketballs & Backboards Soccer BaUs Foetballs·Juniors~ntenneJdate & FllU Size l Ptay1r1• Bans Ra•lh'I Raatuets & Balls Hand Balls & Glaves .. inton Rac•ets & SlluttlecoekS ·. • ' I , . ' . ' °""' ................ POfnlWT ARTIST DIANA NEVILLE SlltlKES A POSE Willi ONE AMONG 15,000 SUBJECTS Laguna Painter Inherited 0.ntte Hand•, Detennlnetton of Bronc.buatlng Cowboy Dad Boning In oli Peopl~ Arwi't Captures Personalities ·in Pas~l,s By ARTHUR R. VlNSEL CM ... D.tlly i-li.tS\ttt The lady in the floppy bat, cool as a tall glass of pink lemonade, must have inherited hands from her mother more than from her - fat.her, a 1950s tail-busting bron- co rider on the Southwestern U.S. rodeo circuit .. Sbe sits serenely under the trees at the Laguna Beach FesUva1 of the Arts grounds, sur- rounded by the work that has earned her legend and the title of an artist among arliats. Diana Neville is one or 100. • artists and craft.Smen exhibiting this year in the historic show held Jekyll/Hyde? in conjunction with the Pageant ol the Muters, which draw a combined average 5,000 dally at- tendance. One of her works, that of a Jong-haired young girl with a haunting, lifelike qua11ty, a.raws considerable attention, along with a four.face series of her husband showman-entertainer Salvatore Constantino. Her father's cowboy rodeo circuit profession kept the family on the move and the little girl who made only fieeting friends along the way instinctively turned to artwork as a pastime. '' 1 was in 12 different schools • Military Policeman • Convicted in Deaths COUNCIL BLUFFS, Iowa <AP> -Johnny Lee Tbornton, . who claimed a dual personaUty : caused him to kill, rape and as- sault, bas been convicted in the Jan. 12 shooting deaths of three Missouri teenagers and the 1 wounding of a fourth. 1 A federal court jury convicted · Spec. 4 Thornton, a .Ft. Leonard \ Wood, Mo., mllltary policeman, Tuesday after two boura and 20 minutes of deliberation. He was found guilty of one count each ol fint·degree murder, rape, as· sault with intent to kill and four counts of kidnaping. The defense stipulated before ' the trial that Thornton, a 23-year- : old father of three from • Russellville, Ark., committed murder. rape and assault but not kidnaping. No sentencing date has been set. The maximum penalty for first-degree murder is Ure im· prisorunent, but all people con- victed ol federal crimes become eligible for parole in 10 yeara or less, U.S. District Court Judge Willia,m Collinson said. " A metor pan of the defense f.n.. 'volved Vi~ped interviewt ol Thornton by a defense p~cbiatnst. Dr. wunam Clary of Sprtnlfleld, Mo. In the tapes, • an alleeed dominant personality knownas .. Johnny" pleaded with · a sabiiUe submeraed personality · known as 0 Jobn" to leave him alone and not hurt anyone. . • Dr. Herbert Spie1el of Colum· l>ia University, a prosecution wit- ess wbo ha4 ex.mined the multiple pencioalltr known u .. SylJO.•• subject »f a teletlalod 9 ovie, tli4 be bellfved Tbomtoe :was• ••coachecl" ll9 Clary~ · emtsview. Linda l'feedftam, 16; Anthony Lee Bates. 11. and Weal'y ·• Hawtlns, 18, all of Pl~\<>. Me>., were ~ed and Juanita Deckard. 11J, of L1DChbure. Mo.. WH wounded. • The prmecution aald Thornton stopped the d®ble.daten, told •. them their ett matel:led the' .. descdpUon ol ooe used 1ll a rob- bery, thm handcuffed and abQt the two boys tn hta .Jeep. 116 then drov• •11 four to • cam• -arden'a cabin, forced tb8 8llis to perfotm sexual acts, and. tben shot thepltaMI. · ~~age Car Stolen· . In San Clemente u GUILTY JN SLAYINOS .Sp4 Jollnny Thorhton . CButiriD. Nixe·d .. . . On Saecharin by·the time 1 got 'out of the eighth · grade," says Miss Neville, who at the age o! 4 discovered her mother's pens and ink and found the roots ol a lucrative career. "My father was a rodeo bronc rider and my grandrnolher was a circus bareback rider. My mother comes from a line ot doc· tors and lawyers," she says, at the same time literally in· terviewing her interviewer, one secret of her success. Diana Neville is a portrait painter and so her stock in trade is people, and she must get to know them intimately. "I talk to them, get them engaged in a conversation and they rattle on and on while I look for a glimpse of character. They don't realize I'm just drinking them in and painting away all the while. "l started painting portraits professionally when I was 14," Miss Neville continues. She estimates to date she has executed 15,000-plus pictures of both ordinary American folks and the hlgh and mighty on com· missions that begin at $1,500 to· day for a full dil portrait. 'Her subjeft.6 have included literally, the butcher, the baker. the candlestick maker, senators, congressmen. U.S. presidents and statesmen, a wide spectrum of show buslness personalities, and Tuesday on the festival grounds, she was negotiating still another commission. This wm be a portrait or a Garden Grove Little League baseball ..Player, baaed on a Polaroid photograph. She was absolutely delighted when trl!t parents said they cer· tainly did want him painted with the black eye sustained when hit by a pitched ball, because it caught him at that moment of Ufe. . "l used to paint entirely from sittings," says Miss Neville, who moved to Laguna Beach with her family 18 months ago. "But frankly, most people ob· jected a bit. It was tough on them sitting for 50 to 60 hOUTS over a 19ng period of time. Now I rely on the camera more." She will have to rely on the Cllmera tor 'mafty amonc the portraits of America's 19 pres ii. dents -along with a handful of elder statesmen such as Ben· jamin Franklin -cotnmi.Sdoned by We Norelco_CJ>ll)Oratioo. "I've llni&l\id sl.x, '' HY! Miss Ne'ville, wbo~~dly f~·ber fee at S~'@ ea@ for Norelco when commis$ioned to paint the 39 heads of state. • • 1 Sb.e. works t>rlmarlly with pastela and velour paper for work dia~ecl at tile festival, but uses olls tot porttaita requir· big Six to etgflt ·mGQt.bS d work. each and also teaches art. Festi~al ~altars W!) intrigued by her Celebrity Book, contain· Ing coplee of portraitl ot many f amobs and c:ll$tlftlulshed people encounteftd through the family's ex~ure to show busi11ess. Hu buabane!t appearing as Sal Tino. and bit J:Sappy Jeatetl, en· joyed a long run ln Las Vegas tllglit dub etttltis a'b4 singer Vic Damcae and com9Cllan Jimmy ' .Durante are •ocllethen ol two of thelrSOOI. O of tb• (elebrtty Book portraits depl,cts Mar Jon Brando, lat. mcl....,. ft.rtqy 1ray haf r bl9• an .. ~ breeie. silt.in• biatdi. • WlUl • ~l of trt<. • 8Dd. ~at rile, ·~·t-• Jhl tmap. n. on1tnal Pi re t-:z:••wwwt'•M .. Ork Oil•'« tM Others ii that ot Col. Kl-eJ &es~tla (USA~·Btt.) wfllM ·--~wo taltDta atao 'E~tvl, .... ia ia fi wltb~u ev ~bi'MillirU'i.lt•k· ~TlaliflcallHdil~~~ l'<lDi ED.c1clopedla, '' ••Y~ 11111 NeVUle. "Pi'esldentl •ven call 1alin "~·4u11Mret Mt ht'• nev• flliiled U.m ,yet. He could till ro.a "91at!.u.i Ille tralu run laSUled.L'' . 1-. Slaying Jails • Actress , MUNICH, West Germany (AP) -A West German court sentenced a 4&-year-old aelrela, a vet.eran of siren roles ln nearly 50 German-tesuace mms. to .seven years imprisonment today for the fatal ahootina of ber playboy lover. Tbe state asked for a 10-year pcison term for Ingrid van Bergen de?' the prosecutcr aald be accepted the defense dalm that her Judemeot wu i.mpaired by impending menopause. The defense asked for a ftve- year term after aclmowledtlng that Miss Van Beraen shot 33- year-old financier Klaua KDl.tba Jast February • · The verdict. whicb came one week after the trial 'began. was announced amid tight security following bomb and murder threats. Police searched for bombs in Munich's Palace ol Justice bu\ fowid nothing. West ,German newspapers, magazines and television gave extensive and !IPJDetimes seua- tional coveraee to the trial. According to teaUmony, Miss Van Bergen, a glamorous member of Munich's artist and film colony, shot Knatbs after be milde her keep dinner waiting for several hours at the villa they shared on a lake near Munich. Their stormy affair bad lasted two years. Knaths, a wealthy real estate broker and financier, was· married and the father of two daughters. His widow hired a lawyer to assist the prosecution. Miss Van Bergen testified that Knaths said he was leaving her for Eleonore Sachs, "2, former wife of a millionaire ln- dustriallilt. Miss Van Bergen told the court she was so despondent on the day of .Knath 's death that she COOBidered suicide and wrote a suicide note. Dr. Wolf Eicher. a Jtvnecolom~ testified that Miss Van Bergen s emotion&I Pro~ lems were typical o! those suf- fered by women approaching menopause. He said the pre· menopause period is frequenUy marked by increases 1n despon· dency and crime. Millionaire On the Dole? POTSDAM, N.Y. <AP)-Gary - Lashomb, who won the state's millicmaire lottery five months ago, has reportedly filed for $95 a . week in unemployment benefits after being laid off from bis job at a local supermarket. Lashomb, 31, who last Marcti won $1,000 a week fot life, could not be reached for comment. Of· ficials of the Super Duper market, where Lashomb worked until a month ago, were also un- available. · But a spokesman for the state lottery said Lashomb told other millionaire winners Friday that he applied for unemployment after being laid off from his $175-a-week )ob as produce manager. 150 Acres Burn SAN DIEGO <AP> -A campfire on the Mexican side ls being blamed for a brush fire Tuesday that swept over about 150 acres of brush along both sides or the border near the town of Tecate, Mexico. Gem Talk ' . ES OM.VPJLOT A3 » ........ VlcnM JENNIFER SANTORO: •AN ANGEL NOW' Pallbearer• Carry White Caaket of Stain Chlld Fa1nily Buried Moumen Pack Church PROSPECT, Conn·. (AP> -More than 8SO people filled St. Anthony of Padua Roman Catholic Church today for funeral services for Cheryl Beaudoin and her seven children, victim& of the worst mas~ murder in Connecticut history. Fred Beaudoln, the father, entered the church with his bead bowed. More than 100 penons stood outside the church. I • DUIUNG THE FUNERAL MASS, THE Rev. Joseph T. Don· nelly, said .. Ob God. •e entrust our friends Cheryl and her children to you.•• The children's caskets surrounded their mother's in front or the altar. The Scripture messages read during the Mass were of bope aQd encouragement. The bodies ot Mrs. Beaudoin, 29, and her children: Fred'erick Allen, ll; Sharon Lee, 10; Debra.Ann, 9; Paul, 8; Roderick. 6; Holly Lyn, 5; Mary Lou,"4, were found Friday in their fire-- damaged home here. Some.victims bad t>een boutd-and beaten before the house was set afire'. . THE PROSPECT CEMETERY ~TJON donated the land fOI' the burials in a small cemetery near the church. Aootber victim. ~year-old .Jennlfer Santoro of Waterbury. was buried Tuesday after Mass was offered at Our Lady of Loreto Cb\ll'Ch. The Rev. Francis Ford told mourners, .. Our prayers should be with the family. Jennifer doesn't need our prayers. She is an angel now." Jennifer was a friend ot the Beaudolns, not a cousin as state police originally reported. She waa visiting overnight at the Beau- doins' small, ranch-style ~e. An early '-momin& blaze ex- tensively damaged it before volunteer firemen arrived and dis· covered the burned bodies, some of which were bound. MRS. BEAUDOIN DIED FROM a stab wound to the chest , and bead injuries, the state medical examiner's. office sald. Head injuries killed her son Paul. The other children died from bead in· juries and smoke inhalation. Fred Beaudoin wu at work in a North Haven factory during · . the tragedy. A day later, his foster brother, LQrne Acquln of Waterbury, was cb~ged with nine counts of murder. Acquin, zr_ was also charged with arson in the burnJng of the Beaudoin house. · · Acquin is being held ln lieu of $250,000 bond at a state jail in New Haven. ' Californians Back Patty's Sentence_· SANFRANCISOO (AP)-Pat- ty Hearst's seven-year sentence for her role in a San Francisco bank robbery wu considered "about right" by the largest number of Californians in- terviewed in a survey, the California Poll said today. But the probation sentence Miss Hearst got for her part in the shootout at a Los Angeles sportin& goods store was seen by 59 percent of the respondents as ''too lenient.'' accordinc to the poll of 1,034 state reslde~.ts. On the bank robbery penalty, 40 percent said it was "about right" while 36 percent con- sidered it "too lenient," lbe poll showed. A large majority of those in~ terviewed -16 percent -said they believed Miss Hearst's penalty would have been more severe had she been an unknown girl from a poor family. · Only s percent sai'd her sen- tence would have been less severe if she had been poor, and 13 percent believed the penalty would have been the same 11 she didn't come from a wealthy family. The smart money is on· WIDEBAND GOLDCOfN PENDANTS f A4 DAU. y "11..0T Miner Charged in Pip~line Bo~bings Holocaust Described TROUBLE UP NO a TU: "It :.eems like it's been 80 del(ees these rughts IUlYWllY And Chen last rught, 1t started getting hot ter a different kind of beat and you got the odor of burning brush along with 1t ·"Then some people started coming into the store about 7 p m. and they said Montecito was on fire agam "I stepped outside our store about 9 p.m. and you could see the entire sky glowing off in the direction of M<>nteC'ito. It was un· real ·· Ttu:. wai. the report from Simla Barbara early today from Elder Son. who lives in Goleta and clerks 1n a downtown Santa Barbara store while attending the university AS OF THIS writing, the fire that swept the Santa Barbara are;i last night has destroyed approximately 200 homes in what 1s called the Riviera area or Mon· tecito. an expensive suburb ol Santa Barbara "The reports that we're getting up here are that the blaze was deliberately set, .. "Elder Son re ported ··we·vc had three other firei. up here in the same general area. All three started on Monday nights. Officials say all t hree out· breaks were similar But this one got away. ·'It was pretty freaky almost like it got planned At the same time the big blaze broke out, we h;,id three other fires in the city itself and «hen a huge traffic crash on the highway. "I guess the authorities were , just about going crazy with aJI that happening at the sa me time." Elder Son went on to explain that one or the added dangers of a night brushfire 1n the Santa Barbara area 1s posed by Sun· downers. The Sundowner is a freakish desert wind that blows down the canyons m the Santll Barbara area TIDS RUSH o•· hot <Air IS crazy because it will abruptly change dir ections. The fire apparently started in the Montecito section, which is in county territory near Sycamore Canyon Road and Westmont College. The Sundowner winds were blowing cast at that time. Then the winds shifted and began p r opolling the hu ge blaze northwest toward the city itself. or the homes lost us of this writing. Elder Son says about half were out.in the county in un· incorporated territory and the other half were within the Santa Barbara city limits. Early today, the winds had shirted again and the fi re was moving northeast. "THE FIRE PEOPLE are hop· ing for containment by noon lo· day. Last night it was completely out of control. In the daylight. at least they can send in the borate bombers," Elder Son reported. "They really want this fire un· der control by noon," he ex· plained, "because if they don't get it by then, the Sundowner winds can pick up again. That could be real trouble." Let's hope they make it. t AJJ\BANKS, Alaska <AP> A 21·)'Hr·old miner hu boen .,.. ruted and char1ed with 1ettJ01 the explotlon1 that state ottlclals have branded "an amateurllb &t· tempt at aabotaae" alOC\I tbe Alalka pipeline. Larry Werti was arrested Tueaday nl1bt as he walked 11ona the Elllott Hlahway, about 10 miles north of Falrban..Q. and two miles from the site of the e•· ploaions. STATE TROOPERS said Wertz was carrying a rifle and a pistol in a s houlder holsler when be was arrested. Wertz, who works a claim in an historic gold mining area, has never worked on the pipeline "as far as we know." said U . George Pollitt of the state police. ·'Information from cltlsens who bad som~ knowledge ol hla act.hill es led to his arrest .... said Pollitt. · W'erti was charged w•th malicious destructioo of proper- ty and held on $100,000 bail. POUJTT SAi_, ofrtcera had obtained a 'seuch warrant to check Wertz's home, near whete he wu arrested. Pdllce susi>ecte.d \thft coll)· merclal dy1u-mite haa been used in the explosions, which caU$ecS minor damage to the tr.t bi11tdn pipeline, but they h ad no idea· how much was used, Pollltt said. The transmission of oil was not interrupted, pipellne ~fficials said. 1be'first crude oil from ~ Prudhoe Bay oil fields waa e':K· pected to reach the ice-free port of Valdez late this afternoon, OK for Seabrook / Sparks New Fight CONCORD. N.H. (AP) Opponents of nuclear power have vowed to "pull out all the stops" and continue their fight against the em bat· Ued Seabrook atomic plant, given new life by restoration ol its o~· strucUon permit. The Atomic Safety and Licensing Appeals Board approved con· struction of the $2.4 billion ocean- front plant Tuesday, when it voted 2· l to lift the suspension or building permits, effecti ve Mon· day. Public Service Company of N e w 'H a m p s .h i r e , c h i e f stockholder in the projec!, said It was delighted. FRANK SHANTS. company spokesman. said the state's largest utility won't decide when to resume construction until it has studied the decision. "Ob· vioulsy it's a step ih the right direction. It's about time we started doing something abo\Jt New England's energy situ&· lion." But a s pokesman for the Seacoast Anti-Pollution Leagoe, which h as been fighting Seabrook before the various Nuclear Re~ulatory Commission <N RC> agencies, said the group will continue its legal batUe,·" "We'll pull out all the "Slnps," said John Parker. CaUing NRC "No Real Chance." Parker said the group would appeal to the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of AppeaJs in Boston. Gov. Meldrim Thomson. a chief advocate of nuclear power for the state. said he was "sure that there are many obstacles that lie ahead, such as appeaJs to hi gher tribunals.·.: U.S. Condemns .. Cambodia. Terror • WASHINGTON <AP > 7t High-i;anking Carter administration of. ficials are depicting comnQmist-ruled Cambodirr as a country wher e "tens ii not hundreds of thousands" have.died. Assistant Secretary of Sta\J Richard 'Rolbroolce told a House panel Tuesday that some "journalists and scholars guess that between half a million and 1.2 million have died since i975." ~ ) The international r elations subcommittee approved a r4s· t1 olution condemning the reign of terror and asking the ad -.,, ministration to work for a restoration of human rights to · citizens of the Southeast Asian country. ..-••rael Dbappohated JERUSALEM (A P l -Prime > Minister Menahem Begin today expressed "deep sorrow and dis- appointment" in U.S. criticism of Israel's policy of settling Jews in t he occupied West Bank of the Jordan River . An lsraeli govern- ment decision Tuesday vaJidat· ing three disputed settlements on the West Bank touched off the American complaint. From the fl oor of the Knesset. the lsra"'eli parliament, Be&in also announced that \be cabinet had empowered its.committee on settlement "lo decide on establishing new settlements" lh the West Bank. ContUet End• TRIPOLI, Libya <AP> -A Ub- yan military spokesman says the week·lonj border conruct ) with Egyp~ has ended but Llbya will remaln on the alert and "keep the finger on thltrigger. ·· Meanwhile, President fdi Amin's official Uganda Radio said Libyan J.eader Col. Moam· mar Khadafy has asked lor an e mergency meeting of the 49. nation Organization of Afric<ln Unity's ministerial council to dis· cuss "Egyptian aggression .. against his country In.sanity Alleged INOJANAPOLJS CAP > An- thony G. Kiritsls is innocent of the kidnaping or a mortgage company executive because he was insane durin~ the 6.1-hour period that h e h eld him hostage, Kiritsis· attorney said Tuesday. Attorney Nile Stanton, who re· ceqUy ~ On Kiri ts is· defense. ·entered a plea of Innocent by realson or lnsartity on behaJf of his client shortly after two court- appointed J>iYChiattists testified that Kirlt.aaa was sane at Ute time orthe abduction. U.S. Storms Scatter:ed Widespread Shower A~tivity F orecat. ..... IAw . " .. H • 11 ., 74 " .. 11 S1 fl 7J ,, .. ,. n 11 JS II " 11 St 1os n .. .. ,. ,.. a .u .. ,. " 11 ., n ?S 60 ... ,. 11 .. 11 ,. 11 n ,. tl .. J comP&eQn1 ~h-.ue Journey thatbe•~··· ... POUM ~ABhtft\clals didn't know when~-of at least five ~lOl190t ~ ... ~lace tn a wooded are orUa ~ FaJJ"ba.nks. They W.ee "•r4ltd M'onday nlgfit. • • · f .. He •td~ ,.o~•v•tC~hat a trool*"'Oft pa~~ ... tame area eaifi; W.:.t:~~·ay ". ported I~ . .,.· •Cri4l8 ot fill· plostoos. .. J The trooper r~ that be ln· vestigated but •.sd' he cou.ld not find the 8°'ll'c~ot tbe e>q>loaioos. He did not 10 onto the pi~e ri,ht·ol·way, howt\ter, Polllt\ sasd. ... "R CAN~ OO~GJ:IU ~ lbose ~om at a •·GI'·~ the same e.xploel~ !evolved ln the plpeline, b"t we ate checking that ~tbillty," Pollitt said. Depu(y ComDlissloner Larry Talbert ol the state Department of Public Safety said ll\4tt wires, batteri65 and what appeared to be detonators had been found at the bl~t site. "It was an ao:1ateurish attempt a t sabotage or s orne pro- fessionals trying to look like amateurs," Talbert said. Cleanup Begins Johnstown. Pa ., begins the long process of cleaning up after the flood last week claimed 62 live$ and-catlBed an estimated $,200 million. damage in seven' c ou'nties. Bulldozers and shovels turn to the task as. the .search continues for 85 people who are missing I I . ./ .. 'T ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.....-~~~~c-~~~-~ .. I , .. ·1 Whit~· ~Honse RelilXe5 '. ·~ Stme ·lJirirkr HoJWrs Italian President •" :1 .. ' "' WAS8INGTON <AP> · The White House was fill ed with proud and ha ppy Italian . Americans .when President and Mrs. Carter · entertained Presi dent Giulio Andreotti at a state dinner. In his toas t Tu~sd~y night, Carter referr¢ 'to the "over· whelming number or Italian· Americans who have been an in· spiration to us aJI." HE SINGLED OUT Watergate Judge Joho Siri<;a ahd Rep. Peter Rodino <D·N.J.), who was chairman of th~ Rouse ill'lpe¥b· ment commlt(ee before the res· ign ation or Richard Nixon. ''I really appreciated those kind words." Rodino said later. Connecticut GQv. Ella Grasso. who sat at the bead table, said she and Andreotti s poke Italian. talking about their roots . "HE HAS A k t1i'L understand· ing of what is going on in our country and he understands that man from Georgia,·• she said. That man from Plains. talking about his own roots, recalled that Americus. Ga., was named alter !-mericus Vespucci, whose name gave America its name. The President joked about get· ting the Italian-American vote through bis selection or running mate Kritz Mondale. which he pronounced "Mo,ndalee." And he made a.reference to bis notorious m ispronunciation during his campaign days of "Italian" as "Eye·talian." IT WAS THAT kind of relaxed. informal mood throughout the «>vening . After a dinner of seafood. lamb, bel paese cheese and grand marnier soume. the more than 250 guesl5 adjourned to the chandeHered East Room where MetropoHten opera star Shirley Verrett sang selections from Italian operas. as well as some spirituals. She,included a specially added rendition of "Amazing Grace," which she said was one of Carter's favorite hymns. Carter. who said he once wept ... ..,..., . . at a performartce of "Madame ' Butterfly,'' sat wlth a nearly bewitched s mile on his (ace, bis '1 arm aroupd daught~r Arny·. ',~ · · 1 ha v~ never t\earcj a more ex. . citing per'fbrmai\ce:" s1Ud'C!rter 1'1 after the hair hour()( music. "We love you very rnuch, •.•he said and :11 ki ssed the singer . ,,,, )c • ,,, Death Studied:"' ~·t For Retarded .;1 WINNl.PEX:r. Oanada (A,.,1-A ·B report on dying prepared for the Anglican Church of Canada says rh cons1deratiQo s hould be gi v~ to ,,: ending the lives of some se,.v,,rely nt. retai:ded infants at.birth. ,. · 111 Dr Lawrence Whylebead of Winrupeg said Tuesday a case : can be made for ending the lives ... of infants born so deformea'that ~ ·they can n ave no real life at'' • all " ll'l , ,, -------, ) I I I I I I I I I I I J No matter how old you are, there's a kid in~ide you who's trying to tell you he wants out this Well, that's what tne bus.js all about. Cr~nge Cc;>u~ Transit Distrtct bCJs~s 18'<E# you to aff of tf;le fort summer. He's dying to cut • loose and have a good old car&j free tir;ne like · he used to. And· not spend alt • tais allowance doing It. places. DisrieyTanoa Knott's Be,,.Y Fermi Ttle Fun t:cill.eiaj Bal6oa, The beaab: Ahyptace. Wlthout1he hassle:arid respeins{~ilf!Y ~f driVinQ.~ 1t doesn•t take a pocketful of change to ride the bus, either. CJusf 25¢ one way. So you can sav~. all your money to spend ·when you get there, instead of spending it getting .there. STOCKTON (AP) -A former patient ol Stockton State Hospital has been· returned for observa· tion after what authorities call an attempt to extort $10,000 from Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. The 72-hour examinaUon of (_: _sr._if_TE_· _) ---------·--· CycHJtS; -from\right> Elalne Weisbach, Alice Cota and Gladys Stott, pedal up Tortey Pines Grade ne'ar San Diego on the fin'al leg of an l ,800·mlle odyssey that began in Seat- tle three weeks ago~ The women, all wit~ grown cluldren, had hoped to lose weight.for their ~!forts but said they "ate like lumbedacks." ' .Paul Ed Fenwick, 21, wu or· dered Tuesday by Municipal Court Judge K. Peter Salen;. •nultJJre_Qt;1lted ~ · SA N ~J,O r,&.~ tA•P) !'.;- Firefighters continued mop-up operations today, after a smokey brush fire blac"~ne4 31.0 ac~es in Santa Teresa 'Jll>~rl{' hi ~oulH San' Jose before it wa,s contained. :T.el\che.-. Pel\SiPU :;,~ .,. •4 . ,l\ • •, .. I , > ~ 1 •* . • A slate Division of Forestry spokesman said th~('e was no word yet whe,i t.he flames would be completely extinguished. Two M~ lnd(cted LOS ANGEJLES (AP) -Two men have been indicted for ex· tortion and murder in the killing of three men, including the murder of a deputy district at· torney's ~¥.>ther .. ·.... ~ · Chart~ .. b1 Ute red~cal erand jury wete Ronald Kent Seiler, 42, of Canoga.Park and R9y,Dupont. LitUe,32';1 ~f.Pa~ount.. • · Be Posed as Doctor LOS ANGELES (AP) -A clinic operator wtto reportedly treated hundreds of patients at an Inglewood medical center is free on bail today alter being booked for investigation of mas- quer.ading as a physician. Hency.~Pu,gh was rel,~ased on $2,600 bail Tµesday, pending an Aug. 9 atV"aignment on ~arges of posing as a doctor and illegally writing prescriptions. ._,.... -•• ·~ .. • • • •' .. .. 6. • i lncl9e.ase. Backe~·. SAC~MENTO (AP) -California school districts wou}4 pay an extra $544 million into the State Teachers Retirement System and Ule state would kick in an additional $387.6 million, under a com· promise approved by a legislalivecomJDitlee. But retirement was tbe ooly big.money issue resolved Tuesday by the special committee negotiating provisions of a five·year, $4.9.bitlion school finance bill. THE SlX·MAN conference committee failed to agree on a pro· posed· $638-milli.on bonus for ,districts. which frtclude P,aren~ and teachers in school planning. Negotiations on thitl plan and a doaen other special categories of ~chool aid were continued until Thursday. '. \ ' . . . TIIE COMMITl'EE did tentatively approve a new schedule of "foundation progra~1· support levels that would boost minimums from the current range of $1.(187 to $1,590 per P.Upil per year at ·elementary ·levels and from $1,273 ~o $i,'f16 fot high schools by the 1981·82 fiscal year. That would cost about $200 million more lhfln either the Senate or the ~embly had earlier approved. ALSO TENTATIVELY ap,Proved was a $40.milliort compromise formula t.o give 19 o( California's largest school-districts extr'a f\inds to .meet.coo.ts co~~~ with numing urban schools. · Under the compromise, the Los Angeles Unified School District would get $21.1 million of the extra $40 million, San Francisco $2.9 million and Oakland $2.7'million. Thirteen other' ttBtricts wou!d aver:tge sliglltly less than $2 million ea~h: · ' • · THE COMMITl'Etl'S job ts to resolve all differences by next week, when the full Jegtslature returns from its five-week summer recess. C •I • .,-... • • • ~ .:. /> ~ bQau11ous l At~ prices. )QU can only prof ti! Orpel and Hen1ago• uphotste:ry up tol!O% ott.~ 9*ctlont of • dnlflB'PD'V• ~~lftd.OC<aStOnlll furnllutt~l'ICly) re<1\1c'e4. ~ ~ ~ •• • ~ cte.ite <l ~home. ycx/r ~b«home1 • ~.J\l!y27.1m OAILYPILOT ~· rF ant&Sy ·to TerFor"· ;t·Mov;,e Plot 'F.riggered Busnap' CTime OAKLAND <AP )-An idea for a movie plot t,riisered the real-life kldnaplng of 26 children and their sch()Ol bus driver, according to reports published after surprise guilty pleas by three young men accused of ttie bizarre crime. N~w information about the cas~·~ most b,affllng aspects came forward Tuesday following guilt.Y pleas .in Alameda County Superior Court by James Schoen· feld, ~ bis brother Richard, 24, and Frederick Woods, 25. IN PUBLISHED reports: A c:lefense attorn-:y and two of the kidnapers were quoted as s aying the crime began as a.plot for a-movie but evolved from fan· . tasy t.o real·life terror. •Mary Schoenfeld, mother of Richard artd James, called the kidnaping a "one-time fling" by her boys, whom she said had been "good stralght kids." •The kidnapehG ~anUc reac- tions to news that the children had escaped from a makeshift. cell were rev~ed ha reports about diary '1\Lr s e.od letters by • the trio, repor e(lly used as evidence during sea\ed grand jury hearings.. WOODS AND THE Schoen· felds changed their pleas to gull· Each .t. ttMse advertiHd itents ls readily available for soS. a 1 adverti1ed. ty Monday in the ransom kidnap· ing, which carries a maximum penalty of Ute imprisonment with the chance of parole. But they re- affirmed innocent pleas to five counts of kidnap with bodily harm. which carries a maximum penalty of life in prison with no chance of parole. The three are accused of ab- ducting their victims at gunpoint on a narrow country road in cen· tral California on July 15, 1976, traQsporting them by van 95 mil~s north to a Livermore rock quarry and imprisoning them in a buried moving van. The cap. tives burrowed out alter nearly 18 hours in the stuffy cell. . · "It started out as a lark, as a movie plot,•• said Lester Gen· dron, Attorney for James Schoen· feld. "Woods talked to them about the possibility of a movie plot.·· · · JAMES S«;HOENFELD was quoted Tuesday as telling detec· tives that discussions about kid- naping tor a $5 million ransom began amoni himself, Woods and aJ1' unidentified friend he said was a Hollywood script writer. "It was just a crazy idea, just a wild idea, and I never thought we'd do anything," Schoenfeld told investigat.ors, accQrdlnl to a copYT\iht article TUesd~ in The Sacramento Bee. . . Ediaon Geu P~rBoost PORTLAND, Ore. (AP> -The Bonneville Power Administration delivered emergency power to Southern Callfomla Tues· day because of an unex- plained IOM of generating power in the Southern California Edison Co. system. The power was request- ed about noon Tuesday, ac- cording to BPA Ad· ministrator Don Hodel. He said the electricity is ex- pected to be repaid wilhin 48 hours. Additional deliveries of emergency power to the Southern California area ·were scheduled for this al· temoon to meet demands during the peak hours of electricity use. This Ad Effecttve through July 30 Use S.Ors Revolving Charge SAVE 20%to25%? Pre•Washed Denim Separates GAUCHOS, .SKIRTS 5ee Regular ,7.99 \. • ! Pre-~ashed blu• cotton denim. Auortecl atyles, t • \ JEANS " fi79 Reg.ular· $8.49 . cl.tails. MJue1~ 111••· > . -• -DAIL PIL01' EDITORIAL PA.GE Mesa Zoning Debat~ . \ There are parallels that earn be drawn betwtien a t>uccessful, homeowner·s~sored reCerendum cam· 1 paign lut year und un 1rntu1Uve movement under \ way in nc.>rth Cogta Mesa today. The 1976 ref erenctum concerning the zoning on a ~e·stump siled lot ~longing to an auto dealer was a victory of sorts for College Park homeowners. J They now have an unkempt vacant lot gracing the front of their development. Now the North Costa Mesa Homeowners Associa· tion has begun collecting signatures for an initiative to prevent a developer from starting work on a 665· unit home and apartment project on both sides of South Coast Drive near Bear Street and the San Diego Freeway. . They want that 48·acre µroject. plus some adja· cent land planned for commercial development, t o be zoned for single family homes. Just like their own. . If the petition signing effort is successful, the is· sue could be on the city council election ballot next March. As in 1976. emotionalism, misinformation and confusion have heen gener~ted by both sides in the conflict. On the one hand, the homeowners group is un· reasonable in asking for all s ingle.family homes for the Amel Development Co. project and an adjacent commercial lot. The Arnel project abuts a very noisy freeway and the commercial property runs right up to South Coast Plaza. On the other ha nd. the residential project con· tains much to be criticized. The Arnet firm exceeds, or barely meets, requirements for open space, max· imum site coverage by buildings and density. Objections to the so-called medium d ensity planned development came from the council's own planning staff -which recommended denial of the . . . .. ' project. The city's traffic department and even the police department voiced concern about the project. But the council -with the exception of Coun- cilman Dom Raciti -· voted to approve it, despite staff objections and a petition containing nearly 1\000 signatures of homeowners in the area. As elected officials, the council members had every right to vote for what they thought was the best action, based on 18 months of study during whlch more than 40 conditions were placed on the develop- ment. Perhaps they could have been more demand- ing. •'· Now several of the council members are petulant because t he homeowners seek to overrule them by utilizing the initiative process. . They confend that this process, along with the referendum and recall, was designed to be used when an elected body acts illegally, not when citizens disagree with a decision. We disagree. No matter the valldity of the homeowners' cause, the initiative is a Constitutional element of our government. They do h ave a right to exercise their rights. .;;JJ But in so doing, they ask too much. The blanket R ·l zoning package presented by the homeowners is unreasonable. It is understandable that the pill they are trring to force the council to swallow was simply too bitter. It also is too large a pill for Costa Mesa ·s voters to swallow. · We suggest that Mesans asked to sign the in· itiative petition seekin~ the special vote think long and hard before embroiling the cicy in such a zoning issue. ' Should the issue actually reach the ballot and be voted on citywide, we do not feel it worthy of support as now presented by·the homeowners· group. c Taxpayers Deserve Truth in Budgeting Dear Gloomy Gus 'I :~ Price of 'Giganticism' . . ... l' To the Editor: It is outrageous t hat the various taxing jurisdictions fail or refuse to account to the tax· paying citizenry in an open. frank manner the true effect of yearly extraordinary assessed valuation increases on their real property tax dollar liability in terms that relate their tax dollar liability (or the upcoming tax year to their tax dollar liability for the previous tax year (based on much lower assessed valua- tions). EACH YEAR the public is treated to an apparently well re· hearsed orchestration by these taxing jurisdictions wherein the trustees, supervisor s, etc., represent themselves as striving courageously to keep from in· creasing the tax rate. If the public accepts the basic premise of this yearly drama that if the tax rate is not changed there has been no tax increase imposed, they have unwittingly accepted the necessity of increases in their tax dollar liability arising solely from \he uncontrolled increases in assessed value each year. THE TAXPAYING citizenry is entitled to an open, above board. report of the true yearly budgetary and tax dollar facts-of- life from their elected represen· tatives of each taxpaying jurisdiction. There seems to be no chance of such accountability from those who dominate the fiscal and tax reporting of the taxing jurisdic· tions, thus, it would be ap- propriate for the state legislature to enact legislation mandating Ruch accountable r eporting to the taxpaying public JOHN V. FALTERMEIER Beaela Shutdote11 To lhe Editor: · 1 find the practice of closing Jlig Corona at 10 p. m. disgusting. · To me, the beach is a thing or wonder and beauty. At night it takes on its own particular magical qualities: The opulence or the mi>on on the water, glisten- . ing sand, etc. Closing at 10 p.m. ; .prohibitsone from examining the extraordinary pltenomenon ; 'found in such.a hav(Ul. ln addition, ooe cannot host ' barbecues, p~rtles and other . 'f>eacb activitl~ exceeding the n -early hour or 10 without incurrina • crtmlnal repriuls and the tem· ] pqrary blJndne•• reaulllng fr<>Jn "'{ b.rieht searchlighls and other j suchforeignitcms. 1 Seeltlg that Big Cot<>na is a 1 P,Ublic park, 1 believ~ action • eould be t.akon to lnaure that It becomes jusC that -i>ubllc. It Irk• me to· no end that a beach t caa be 0 JJhutctown." • ANN.£ NOR1.US Blrtt Net •Bad' ( MAILBOX ) Lettera from readers are welcome. The Tight to condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel is r eserved. Letteri of 300 word..' or less wiU be given preference. All Letters mwt in· cit.Ide Bignature and mailing addrest but names may be withheld on re· qUest if sufficient reason ii apparent. Poetry will not be published. you mention it eating would escalate in population which peo- ple would not tolerate. HaiNkl are seen all over Orange County and most likely this bird baa been in the Newport Beach area many times. IT IS our hope that in the future, if people have questions concerning birds, that they ob· tain correct information through books or organizations such u Tucker Wildlife Sanctuary and the Audubon Society. If a persop finds an injured bird we recom· mend their contacting one of the following three plac~s : 1 > Newport Center Animal Hospital; 644-5460 2) Santa Ana Animal Clinic, Dr. Dirvld Reinhard; 548·'1418 3) Tucker Wildlife Sanctuary; 649-2180. SAM BERRY, President DarlcC'IOud To the Editor: I think that there should be more coverage given, and mote research done on our ln\elUgence agencies such as the FBI and tbe CIA. ' Areas that should be looked ln· to are the extent and measures taken by the government to keep check on these agencies. Also, to define the actual legality of some of their work. There is a datk cloud that encloses these agencies that is difficult to see through, a cloud that we must lift. JEFFBAKEft Ll•pLate To the Editor: ll appears as though the stroni arm of the law is a lltUo Ums>-tn the Harbor District ?tlwlicipaJ Courtroom of Judg& Donald Dungan. Tbe good judfe was ap- parently caught in the middle of Wield ., ••• Design for Disaster ' nesses is New York and Mtarili Something rve been trying to figure out since becom· ing a resident of Costa Mesa: Why is everyone selling their garages'! J .V. Gloomy GvJ comments••• subf!>ltttd b¥ reader\ and do not M<HWrlly reflect tM views of tM .. ..,.,_,.,, S.114 yeur !Ht PH,,. to GIOOl'llY G:"'• O•llY l"l .. t. • a "negotia.ted ple'a" scheme between Deputy Di strict At-"' torney Grant and Public Defender MacDeliema who represents fieet·footed convicted c hild molester Jerry Leroy Opson. Opson, who '¥as allowtd to cop to a lesser misdemeanor ftom an original charge of three counts or felonious child molestation, was the winner in the latest courtroom "game called lets make a deal." IT LOOKS as though Opson, in return for the court's withdraw· ing of his $10.000 bail for a release on his own recognizance (similar to cross·my·heart or the Boy Scout honor> and a plea· bargained mis demeanor .. 'Skipped through the loose fingers of justice. Opson's na11ghty broken promise to app~ar before Judge Dungan was in part al- lowed by Deputy Dist~ct At- torney Grant's apparen lack of confidettee in our jury stem's ablllty to intelligently try the facta of the Opson case. I cannot buy the presented as· sumpUon. ~at county jail time w~th aom.e probaUon will help in tracklnt Opeon'• whereabouts and actlvttles. Opson's whereabouts and activities should be cond\lcted behind bars -state prison bars -for a long time. ROBERT A. JOHNSON A4mirltatrationof Justice ' Justice Division Goldin West College . . W ASlllNGTON -For visitors to New York City, the latest blackout taught them that not all the looters there are in the hotel and r estaurant busines s . Generally the reactions were what the steady.standbys, who always get quoted in the media, always say. The Reverend Mr. Andrew Young said it was sin, and that was fitting. The honora · ble Mr . Abraham Beame says that the dark- ness was an outrage, and that was silly. The social workers and the urban crisis folks said that's what you get when you have high un- e m ploy men t amon1 black teenagers, and that was rep· etltious. The consume r e · formers said that's what.you qet when you have a bandit public utility. and that was repetitious also. Consolidated Edison said elec- triclt)' is what you don't get when a lightning bolt hits one ()f its steeples, and that was funny. At the more Olympian levels of social comment lt was said that th at 's what you get in a technologically ftafile and in- terdependent society, and that was bunkum. A IDGHElt llkelihqod of aucb disasters is designed into the system we depend on. New York began prepar~· g for its own -dis-order before of the cen- tury when Gi:e ew York City was fUsed ou of five different counties. The resulting meaalopolil may not have been disaster prone per se, but its site has certaJJ'lly made it more wlnerable. New York was the fint mettoDolla to suffer the woes and penalties of glganticism. . .. Giganticism insure• .. a.ln•t ( VON HOFFMAN ) m a king small mistakes. The Teton Dam , disaster in Idaho last year is a jewel of an exam· ple. The same water conserva· tion and power objectives could have been accomplished there by erecting a number of small dams, the destruction of any one of·wbich would not have resulted in such laree losses of life and property. The smaller dams wouldn't have looked imposingly monumental, and, as a culture, we still have a predilecUon for the large and the grotesque. Wit- ness the twin World Trade Center towers in which an untold number of persons were trapped last week when God accidentally tripped and pulled the plug out. Gigantlcism is bad enough by itself. Think of the dlseconomles of scale in a World Trade Center, but giganticism i6 usually yoked to a passion for uniformity. It, whatever it may be, must be big ancl it must 'also be symmetrical or identical in its parts or with but one way of doipg things. THU~ N~w· York's problems were made worse when the de- -cision we)Jt thl'ough to allow one, consolidated ·power company. Four or five or six seplll'ate com· panies, so long a$ they are kept truly separate,: would have materially reduced the chances of such a large blown fuae. Th~ proof of ~at was ~ across the Huds9n Rlver for 811 New Yorkers to-seetn their dark- ness; New Jersey, with a dif· J4'rent power cOlll{>aft1, was sWl twinktiilg and tQle>Yihi' prime- time TV. The American way, .however, baa been to 80 fotftllaflce OD tht blt t)'stem and then to P1otftt it with fall·aafe mecbanlaml ao tbat we don't haYe the bll ~-· · One of the troubl8'..;.•l&b that approach, u the su~en d._. W 'BiO. the Ultimate Show ( ARTBOPPE ] ner this time. ' 'the-ahow opens with boat Georae Sblock• hltuvtowinc five contestants btf ore a Jive and aci:eamlnl stud.lo audlenee, In a dltect at.at from the old .. ~een for a Day" format. \be eontes• • tanta vle to aee who ean tell the moet tad and bumlUattq tal• ct •oe. The wlnfter ls d.termtne:cs, by an applause meter. In Ulla case- lt 's Mary-Jo HlJb)', 41. who had the Mldience tD ttan with ber atort ot bow her butbud. a Catholic prleat1 couldn't tlnd work:bow her mne eblld.ren and her ml.nlatun schnauzer all, bid woma. aDd bow Iba •• a1n 't never h14DD_..... machtneevw." UCcllajr8WaaUoN )(a17...Jo." c'rlea Sblocke. 0 vou.• are ow Vlc· um reraDQI" "Ob. II ll;dOft't ;et mt tbat wuMal•lclh.ln•," •hi t'Obli. "l Odt*rDdle." Hfiactl1; Mar1·Jo. Now cti dllliar dO ,.,._ want to OJM!bf 'l'becM&C•ll~t'' this year attest, is that it's vefy difficult to anticipate an the' things that may go wrong with any kind of a system which automatically grows D:lore com- plex and more vulnerabf e as It is made bigger. Even if you an- ticipate most of the things that: are likely to go b.aywire, CUard· · ing against them may not be easy either. SMALL. decentralized systems can eo tfftttt ~. but they don't take everybody else climbing on the rnountain t1yiq ' down into the ice crevasse with . them. IC you're told we can't r' have decentralization and small wtit isolation because the world! is so "interrelated" and "in- terdependent," don't believe it. People who talk that way are talking about early 20th century technology. The reason that so many corporate headquarters can move out of a Ni!W York City, the reason that nobody is quite sure any more why a place like Wall Street even exis ts, is because late 20th ~entury . technology permits a looseness and diflerentiation quite out ol the question 30 or 40 years ago. Centralization means po~r importance to those at the cen r of tbe centralization. Jt m y mean death, illness and expe e to others far no very other gopd reason. · j ONLY AN ot'el'Jy 4*ltra1iz~, overl.Y rtlld structqre. which • lowed for ooe way of doi g thtn1s; one ctecl1lon. one tt gram could "aecouaa,t (or I t year'• twine flu pr:oaam. It tbe 1ame kill4 of thl.ain. tbat & ye4ra put all. tbe aiovttamen 's •ntrgy l'tHlrQi, money i o atomic..· -· · · N Mel' tDlDcf "1at th n cUma.iH. r•1ou~ee1 ::no= "1 l:'GC:,:~ people Who tun ._ th•Y're *llptn1 d!IUter ourayatem. QOotes . j , .1 . "My concern ia that, "the n· vesUgetloo isn't mcwtna. an , I want ~get lt movinl just as X· peditiously u I ~10. ' ~ Spe er of the Houle 'AomH r. O'N on thellngerlnsSouU.Korean n- fluence-buyl.n1t' scaadal. ' OltA'-01! COAST DAILY PILOT Seareh for Wife ' Michae l !$lock. who advertised for a wife in New York oewapapen and subway billboards, looks at theater program with Mira Bereen as they prepare to ao on their first date. Miss Bergen, from Atlanta. beard about Block's advertisement "on television and arranged for the two to meet. ·:San Andreas Bus Crash SANTA CRUZ <A P ) - A school bus carrying 20 children overturned Tuesday on a Santa Cruz hillside and alt the passenge r s es~a p ed serious lnjury, Quake 'Near' SAN FRANCISCO <AP> Two giant pieces of Moonie Sues Parents For 'Kiditapi~' Her SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -A 20- yeac-old member of the Unltlcallon Church has filed a $5.3 million suit against her parents, charging she was kidnapped by ltiem as part of an elaborate plan to break her mem- bership in the Moonies. Attorney Marvin Lewis Sr., representing Catherine Greene, sald the Marin County District Attorney's office refused to bring criminal charges against Miss Greene·s parents, attorney Crawford <;reene and his wife, Daphne. LEWIS SAID TUESDAY that Miss Greene's parents invited her to dinner April 14 at their home in Ross, a Marin County community, where she was grabbed by religl~ deprogram- mm11•1m Fiims Theater Dance Television in the If YOU QUALIFY • I HSU RANCE Ml-5554 1914 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA . / Just $1097 ·.· ~.July 'ZT. 1m DAIL y PtLDT A 7 , 1000 ltEl\ATE ~~~LANCIA '·' \'II l ., •• •l'l'h lh1 Jd•hl ljU 11 '•II•!·" 11.1 tlH .I \II I ,1 ,, •.t.' '" l~· ,, I • o 'h• 1' 11 Iii If, d• I I 11 d i 111do I I 11, 1111 I • 1 ",.I 11 11 II ; • ' 111.l +111t1 ''''" tlu .. ul 11 llfil• 111111111 h.1 .. , •************************. , .... the earth's ocean crust sliding and slipping into each other cause the jerking and jiggling Califor- niana feel from time to time. But this slow dance across the earth wtll eventually trigger a massive earthquake, according to a Stanford University geologist. Describing the formation or the San Andreas fault system which runs from north of Mendocino to south Mexico. Prof William Dickinson said one of the faults "1s bound to pop," and produce a giant earthquake. .>-;gets you the great , new look of plaid! '• .. '"" . ' .. . . . r:-· .. ·, ~ •. ,'.. I I. "BUT WHEN AND WHAT FAULTS will pop next" is difficult lo say. Uickmson told a seminar on ··our Developing Oceans," held at the Golden Gate University School of Law. Scientists are con· -----------.. sidering pumping water ( SCIENCE J i~to the faults to help re- '.' llevc pressures. but he _ suid the consequences of • 11 ,I', such an action are still unknown. "It might be a way lo control earthquakes, but it also may trigger a quake," Dickinson said. BUT HE SAID KNOWLEDGE OF HOW the San Andreas Fault was formed and as behaving can help scientists understand the nature of San Francisco Bay area quakes, the most disastrous of which killed nearly 600 persons an San Francisco on April 18,1906. -·-. Dickinson said the Bay Area sits at the in- terface of two giant tectonic plates the so-called . ,. Pacific Plate and the North American Plate. There used lo be a third plate between them . l · Over the years. he said, the middle plate J·t· "danced" away, letting the Pacific and North ~~JI" American plates come together. , ,, THUS WAS THE SAN ANDREAS Fault system ,, born, Dickinson said the quake-producing San An· dreas is a good example of a type of ''plate boun· , • dary" wherein the crusts "move past each other.·· In other cases, the plates pull apart or new oceanic -: crusts form on the ~ea floor. '· "The Pacific Plat~ is still slipping to the-North ,. American pltlte," Dickinson said. "And this cannot lag forever. But when and what faults in the system will pop rtext is hard to s ay." I ' I Special! Roblnson's&>wn import! C1assic tartan piold, updated for now in easy-care, cool potyester,totton. , , It's a super new look In sport shirts. With that sleek flt we know you're afterf A great · assortment of plaids to choose from . We've shown just 3 of our favorites here. All, with a,dJustable doub1e-button cuffs. S-M-l~L Mall/phone. Men's Spottsweor, 21. 4 /' . . ,.. ' --· ... A-.-J;;..;•;;...;DAl~L;.;..Y.;..;Pl=LO;;...;T _____ .,.:~=·.::l!!d!t::1~· Ju~tr~rl~,i..!1.!!.!.m , Ed1:Son, U~HT ca Aspiriil: Still IJke Doctor's PresertiptiOn · • 8)' oa. STIUNCROllN Dear Or. elDcrolla: I've taken aspirin for yeara. Lately, I 'm acared ol It. Accordlnc to what I read lbout It, II you take upirin you 'rt1 U1blt lo bleed to death. I 'm an arthritic. Without this drua I don't know bow J 'Ube able to 1ct throuab 24 hours. My doctor tells me to keep on with It. I Wee only six tablets a day. Whut I'd Uke to know ls this. la ..-.==-----...J aspirin friend or foe? Mn, A. Get GREEN ush for WHITE eltiphunb with u Cla11s1rlt!d Ad Call 642-5678 COMMENT: It makes aood sense to 10 along with a doctor's re- commendation. Don't depend upon everytbina you read. Let me ANOTHER TREMENDOUS · JEWELRY BUY-OUT Sp.ctacvlet ,,....., of denRnt ,..._., jewWy , .... 11 "'W(h fl1her pricu 1l1uriiert. IMly -·•f·•·k~ pitcH frOftl ,0,.W de1i9"1rt, 1-!Wtit ftr IHry-1 quallly that. onen there's truth in part of what you read and hear. Not in all of It. First, accept the basic fact that aspirin has been a wonder drug for many years. Datlna way back when ancients reUeved their aches and pains by chewin& on the bark of the willow tree. NOT UNTIL the 19th century did scientist.a discover that what they later called salicylate was the ac- tive factor. Still later it became the synthetic compound called acetyl salicylic acid. After all these years we still don't know exactly bow aspirin HOT DOG REG. T~~S J 99 2.99 v.-.r - 99 PAIR BEACH BUM SANDALS ,.,..., ...... ....,,... .. ..,, .. •di ntr'f -wtflt. ~..,.... 1m,t .. cewen4 wllll-'*'t celw ..... ._ ttll i.,..,t Ct11trW1t I CN1'611t1 w1t1t ""' fAlllf. Shes S·M·l. Fer -_. ...... r. D0CTOR IN THE HOUSE works its magic. Bu~ndoes. Is it a friend or foe, Mrs. A? Sometimes the one, at times the other. More often a friend. FOE? AT last we have learned that some people are allergic to aspirin. Relatively few, consider- ln1 the millions who take it without harm. For example, some asthmatics. And it may be dangerous for people with chroolc bleeding problems: ulcer patients or hem(>phlllacs. Some patients. although bum;,rin1 1t with aniacids, have minor dis· tress such as heartburn and 1as. FRIEND? FOR years it bas been the drug of choice in treating rheumatic aches. "Take two aspirins and call me later" is a hoary doctor-patient joke. Lately, aspirin hao become even "frtendUet." Studle! at hand, and still goint ~. indicate aspirin may play a stgnfitant part. in wardina off heart attacks and stroke. tt may do so by prevenUna blood platelets from crowdhtg and causing a tbtombu.s (clot> in at\ artery. Wba~ •friend aspirin may turn out to be. However, as 1 sata, Mra. A., still a dream. But would not lt be fitting if our old friend a.sptrin turns out to be the best antidote for such nightmares as heart attacks and s trQkes. We can dream, can't we? -. . , It's not being wasteful to sleep one-third of your life away. if doing so makes the wakeful two-thirds more enjoyable, says Dt. Stein· crohn in bis booklet, "How To Get A Good Night's Sleep ... For a copy write to this paper enclosing SO cents and a stamped, ieli- addressed envelope. ALL OVER QUILTED . & rn~rn0UJ~~1m 0 MACHINE ~ WASHABLE PERMANENT PRESS VAPORETIE INSECT. STRIP PENNZOIL 1 OW40 MOTOR OIL BAN · ROLL-ON ANTl-PERSPIRANT ®~~ Mell'I, ·-·· 11114 dliWr9ft'I Ji'tu . ROSE MILK SKIN CARE LOTION fill)~ VOS ...... _ NON-AEIOSO ·HAIRSPRAY TAMPAX •-.. --~-=-...,,..or:'"'-~..:_ TAMPONS IOX Of 10 SCOPE MOUTHWASH 24 OUNCI , ... tutl~tl A .......... PHILLIPS MILK OF MAGNESIA 260UMCI a~ SALE PRICE RAID .,_.. INSEa KILLER 1t.UOVNCI • . A• twl. Y PIU)T I . .......... Jimmy's Job A Risky Oiie Would 1ou take a job, knowlna that you have a M pertent chanct ol dyln1 while on said Job and another 21 pet-cent chance or dy· ln1 f\ve yeara alter you term.loate? Jimmy ca.n .. dld.. Just terrible how lntpL nature la. Consider your blood, for Instance. In order to &et from one lid• d your heart to the otber. it bu to 10 all the way around your whole body. Ridlculoual GE&MS Q. 0 Wherubouts on the buman body sur· face are the most 1erms? '' A. The face, almoat invariably. Medical teats ahow it's between 100 and 1.000 times • germlertb~ the chest, for example. I couldn't have been more than about 9 years old when a Fourth of July p •.T a d e passed m y mother's little cafe in Bremerton, Wash . The drum major was pretty im- pressive. I said, "Boy, the leader of the parade sure ORANGE COUNTY 93 Attorneys Commended Resolutions commending 93 at- torneys who have served as judges pro tem In an Oranee County Superior Court program to reduce civil case backlogs were approved by supervisors Tuesday. The program, initiated by Presiding Judge Byron McMillan, requires civil litigants to attend mandatory settlement conferences. Supervisor Thomas Riley said of 2,716 cases processed so far, 1,083 were settled thus avoiding . ... . .,. . . . More tbaa a quarter of a mlllloo people vtalted tht Oraqe Cou.n· ty .Fair durfna its 10-day nm which ended Sunday. Fair counters chalked up a record 351,099 vlalton to the fair, up 22,590 over last year. Fair officials credited new fair manaaer Ken Fulk wltla mueb of the succesa ot the 29th annual event. ~ a former Iowa .state Fair maq .. er for 14 yeU'l1 lm· plemented • commercial food J\ldslni contest thls year in an effort to draw bettet quality food to UM falrlrounda. THE <X>NCESSIONS, MNGING ROii Greek to Chlnese foods, drew crowds of hungry vlliton to tr,Uer windows all duri..q the fair. . Winner in the food coneeaalon compeUtlon wu Souvlaki Gourmet Greek food, followed by Chuck Du1an'1 chuckwagon, which woo second place. A record amount of livestock wu sold this year, with bidders buying up $1TI,793 worth of meat on the hoof. Livestock prlces were up from $117,398'1ast year. fair oftlcial.a said. · 1be biggest single sale wu made by Genld Scott, an JB.year- old Buena Part student, who sold b1a champion isteer for $8 a pound earning $19,945. The 1,105-pound steer was sold to a Costa Mesa maii · who said be wanted to help the 4-H and FF A programs, but did not want to be identified. WOW1 OHi OHL YI LOY&'fl"ATTAM Ult WrTH SUM IUHTS .... ,.... "'--IJ2t.tS Oar reg . low ~H.'5 CLIAUMCa--$200.00 WOWI UMl'TID SUH\. YI IOMANnC HAHGIMG LAMPSHADIS Fr.. •llttte es S7.'5 to S29.H 10°/oA~~LI WOWI· ~'.=:.. ·WICKER . ETEOERES W/S.._...._ At Ow s.,.r L,.., Pria fr .. Slot.ts .. Sl+UI ANO "ECEIVE ABSOLUTEI. Y FREE OHE QJ OUll fiOl4HOUS OYSTER SHELL ELS»HANTS o111!r good 7123 WU 7/:t/J LIZ WEATHER, .lS..BUENA Pilltt sold her pand champion lamb to Von's Market for $2,050 -or $20.50 a pound. That was a new ~ WICKER. ETC.· record in lamb prices, which haven't been above $11 a p0und since. WI 7552 w-....... 1963. WllCOMI ~°" leedi i . $ i -...... takes big steps." My mother said, "He's not ~IJe J.41lder. The leader ls the man who put the W)ole thing together. He's probably hiding somewhere. It's. not likely we'll ever see him." That minor moment has come to mind repeatedly over the years. During elections. During the Academy Awards. During wars. Times like that. · jury trials. That translates to a savings of 5,163 trial days or ~.7 million in tax-supported trial ex- pense, he said. Kim Fick, an 18-year-old Costa Mesa Higb School ~tudent sold YOU JO ••••. 847.:-.HO her 214 pound swine for $3 a pound, collectl~n~&~$1642~~· Tb~e:buy:e:r~w:aa:__L:ll;~:Sl~l!!!~;;-~,,.~11.; .... ~~~~!!!~l Pat Jones of the Real Estate Connection of ~oeta Mesa. SAT. 1w ..... ,,.. Address m•1l to L.M Bord. P o . Box u•o. Cost.a Meu 92•~. Death Notice• Death Notice• KAUl'MANN • AltTHUR J. KAUFMANN. r•tlclent DUNl'OltD • 9f~nl•IVvi,Glllfoml•.PtsMCl•w•y CAROLYN KATHERINE OUN· • July27, 1tn.Sum-byllfsd•u9flt•o FORO, resldenl of S•n Ju•n ·: Helen Alnswor111, O.kllYnl. C• .• All<• C.plstr.,,.,, Gllllornla. P••Wd •••v • ;. Sommer. Coil• Mesa. C• .• lllree July 2'. itn at llor "°""'·SM l<!aves •• granddllldrM 0.vld Alnsworlll, Foun-lier llusbend Don F. Dunford. d•ugM.er .; l•ln V•lley, Ca .• LeSlle !>ommer, Mary Travis, Yakima, Wasll .• 1lster ', R-land Heights. Ca . Lori Bowen, Evelyn P si..ter. N-porl Buell, C... ;. CoSla Mes., Ca. Tllree gro•t· SeverAI nlKes Mid neonews. s-e had •: vrandchlldren. Services will be Mid 11ttn a memcier o1 ASCAT for many " Thurs. •v.nln9. , , OOPM at Bell yurs. RKllallon of Ille Ros.ry •I :· BrMdwey oi.pet, 1n1 ... ....,,t at Palm 7:30PM on Thurs. and Ille Mats of •' 5'<'1ftot c.n.twy, P•lm Spr1"9J. Cll. Chrlsllen Burl•I wlll be celebrollad at • Bell ~Y Morni•rydlrKIOrs. 9:()().&.M. Fri. Botll s..-vlctt wlll be at • l'OWEltS Serr• oi.11e1. Old MIHlon of s.n Ju.n ~ PORTER W. POWERS, rn~nt of Capl1tr.,,.,, lnlerment wlll .telee P*• • La9une BH<ll, C•llfornl•. PHted at AK9Mlon Cem.ltf'Y, El Toro, Ca. :-•way Jul1 "· 1'77 at Ille •99 Of 67. SMiier Mort\ler'(. 1533 N. El Cimino , Survl"9d by 1111 wife Carol of lAQUne Re•I, S.. Clemente,dlrect«s. • 0-: Beach, ea .. son Rotiert Pof'ter Po-n. : • Alb\lquef'que. New Me•., d.IUQllter CM- •' dace Powers, Legun• Buch. C•. • Prlv•te f-lly iervlce to be llelcl •• • Sheffw ~ BeKh Mortuary. SMf· : ter u.ne Belld't Mortuery di rec tors. • SCMNlllDlla • GEltTitUDE SCHNEIDER, rftldent '. of 4...-W llNdl, Callfoml•. P•sMd • away Jiiiy ts, lffl Ill Ille ... of 94. SM • 9aHed •way In Soutll lAgune, Ca. : Survlwd by lier..., Hens.,I. SchMIClltr, • Latun. a..ctl, ca., two grendclllldren • and -9rHt1r..,OClllld. Funer•I : wrvtca wwe held Wed., July 21 et ~ ~ 8"ctl Mortuary. lnlt•" • ,,,...t -et PKlflc View ~l•I ' Pan. $NflW UQllN 8e.ctl MM1uery : dlrectars. oeaNlla ARlAND I... GEltNER, PHMCI lw•y ' July 22, ltn. S..rvlved by 1111 son Robert L. G.,ner. Pacific•. C• •• • d.11191'1len ,.,._ el'CI ArHr'ldll. Servlcft MIAMI (AP> -The Most Rev. Coleman F. Carroll. 72, the archbishop of Miami who actively fought against allowing Catholic women to read at masses, died Tuesday. : under.,,. dlr.ctlon of Pt .. ~ &rot,,.... CAMBRIDGE, Mass . Delly ...... "'"' , ...... 'NewE~er Carol Benson is the first executive direc- tor of the Orange County Transporta- tion Commission . She began work last week in her $30,000 a year job. She is a native Southern Californian and a former Washington D.C. transportation consultant. • • Smlthl'~uH~t1ng1ona.•11. (AP) -Loa11 F. Fieser, • MAAV LUSK, lormer ruldenl 78 a leading chemist PiCIU·c Set : of Co1U M111, C•lllornle . ' .. P•n•d ••o July n . ttn whoseresearchledtothe "In Kl,.,...,, Ar11. s....-.1 .. d by !Mr development of the ;. huSb•nd Dick, son Richard ol hormone cortisone USed " WastllnQlon, two ;renOc:lllldren. Slste" Mart1l•Han'°'1,Cost•Meu,ea .• Ed1111 to treat rheumatoid ·: Plepelll>rlnk, Htm•I, c:.. end Ad• arthritis, died Monday. :-P-11•. Vlsell•. Ca. Brot11tr1 BUddy . Parks, u Habr., ea. end a.rt Perks, Fieser helped to develop : Monte1a1r,~1DHtKHN napalm during World •, EVE J. FREDERIKSEN, wll• of. War fl, but protested to • w111r'ldc.,mo111erofJoMD.,ear01o .• the White House about :-Bre111 end Leanne Frtderlkun. • • DaUQMer of Jffll• Dunc•n, 1111er of its use m Vietnam. •, Herold DunclR, Donowl McKenzie end • Geralcllne ltllppem. S.rvlce1 IO:>OAM, • l ~u". at Ille OW~ll al Our F1thers. • Forut Lewn-Cy~eu. Fo,.tl Uwn Mor11Mry directors. • LILLY The Polish National Alliance and the Melr'ose Club or Whittler will sponsor an annual fami- ly picnic from 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Sunday at the• Long Beach police picnic grounds on Dovey Drive. Water Plant Due Funding About $1.2 million in federal funds lrave been earmarked for use at the Orange County Water Dis- trict demineralization unit in Fountain Valley the U.S. Department of the Interior has announced.' · The funds are part or a -$23 million appropria- tions bill for desalinization projects awaiting final approval by President Carter, said Melvin Mattson, an Office or Water Technology and Research of- ficial in Washington, D.C. If approved, said Mattson, the federal funds would be used for continued research at the Water Factory 21 reverse osmosis demilrerallzer which pumps 5 miWon gallons or treated.wastewater per day underground to prevent saltwater intrusion. BUT MA1TSON SAID THE funds would not go towards the $10 million mothballed seawater de- salteralsolocated at Water Factory 21. 'lbe desalter was deactivated· last April after just nine months of operation because of tederal spending cuts. The mothballed unit, which was constructed with $4 million in local fundk and $6 million in · federal grants, has been put up for sale by OCWD. As yet, no deals have been negoUated. 9Ulitt 7-. Z>ca, Sliliiilk Salel FRIDAY & SATURDAY JULY 29-30 1977 OUTSTANDING SUMMERTIME SAVINGS FOR THE ENTIR~ FAMILY ...................... . JOIN US FOR THIS FUN-FlLLEO WEEK-END ·SATURDAY.JULY 30 WED. thru SUN. STREET _RODS UNLTD. JULY 27·31 Pres!lnts YESTERYEARS CAR SHOW SEE OVER 100 CARS OF 1954 VINTAGE OR OLDER ON DISPLAY IN OUR MALL. ............ . PET ZOO BRING THE KIDS TO THE COLORFUL BIG TOP TO PET THE ANIMALS. HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER 2300 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa ( Harbor at Wilson) Negotiations with three unnamed Middle East in~~ts~~e~earlier~y~,O~~ficl~,..---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---said. HertzQg on Panel Costa Mesa Mayor Norma· Hertzog waa ap- pointed to the county Social Programs Advlsory Committee Tuesday by Superviaor Tom Riley. The committee makes recommendations· for spending a portion of the county's share of federal · ~evenue sharing d9llara set aside for social pro-· Jects. mark your calendar .. • ltOBEltT E. LILLY, lo¥1nt hullMlftcl , ... o I ether, died on July Ulft et ui. eet • of S4 toll-Inoa. lengtlly lllneH .... IS • s11rvlwd lllf Ills wife Mory, CS.utlllen : SuMft WI-end Sendra HUGhff lfld lllrH tr41MdtUVflltn, e ll Of <:Ml• LUXEMBOURG (AP) -Prince Charles, 49, of Luxembourg, husband of Joan Dillon, the daughter of former U.S. Treasury Secretary C .. Douglas Dillon, died of a heart attack Tuesday at bis estate in Florence, CHILDREN$ • Mftl, C.. Mr. Liiiy WM llOm Ill arltt, : •-•end fN¥9d to 1M H..W A,... 111 • ,_7, ..-.Int• AdmlnlstrellV9 Anis- • t•nt '°Or.~ o.....,,r.ld ...... or • of St • ....._.. ~.,. Cllul'c1' • fof J .,,...._ Mlnwrlal -\'ket wlll be • llekl •t ll:oo.\M on Ftlda't July 2"" et ; St. .._,, f'resbylerl.., Qlun:ll wllll • ,.. ...... • Dr. °""" OltrW!f\eld of· • fl<letlfltl,. Italy. . STANFORD -Brooks Otta, former chairman of the Stanford classics de· • partment and holder of ----------the endowed Olive H. ;~ Palmer professorship in . . • . IALTl.IH•HOM flUMllAL NOMI • Cofone del Mar 873-9450 : Coeta Mesa 84t-2424 . • . . . ' . • • • • .. . • • • UU. llOADWA'I NOITUAl'I 110 Broadway Cotta Mesa 842·0150 lwmt1'Vn.&. LA .. WlllCLW CHAPIL • •27 E. 17th St. Co.It• Mela • Me 4888 Sln4• Ana Chapel 611 N. Btoadwav s.nt~Ana. 547...(131 ..-:. llOTH9S -.nw NOnUAlY H~llCh the humanities at the University of North Carolina, died Tuesday at hls home iJ) Chapel Hlll.N.C . PUBLIC NOTICE SHOE THU!lSDAY JULY28 DOORS OPEN IOAM EEATIJRING ADIDAS. •vnm •'""'1¥ Clll£D UPS• ltBDS SAIWDAl.9 . AIWDD.,_.,l•OD on august 1st at exactty 1001 a .m . a new dimension in elegance comes to Newport Beach .. , ; . ... . LA-Phill ies ~~~~~ S p lit D ecisio ns I ' Al'l'Mtes Boston's Denny Doyle slides safely into home plate ahead of throw to catcher Larry Haney in a third inning play. Later, Haney and the Milwaukee Brewers won the decision as Doyle was out <below) in the sixth inning. Boston won the American League game, 4-3. A's' .1 79 Hitter Staggers Angels OAKLAND <AP)-Locked in a classic pitching battle, Vida Blue of the Oakland A's didn't think he had much chance of ' winning against the California Angels Tuesday night. "Usually, wh en you have a pitchers' duel, the first team that scores a run wins," Blue said after beating California and ils 12-game winner Frank Tanana, 2-1 .. The Angels took a l ·O lead in • the fourth inning on a double by A...,eb Slate •llGatT>H..,ICMl'Clh41elllOI July 17 C••lfarnla 1110.kl&ftd 1 11 p"' JuoyttC..litomlaatO.ltlanO 1 2Sp "'· JulyttBo.IOnatCatllornla 1 lSp.m. Bobby Bonds, an infield out and a fielder's choice. "I thou~t that was going to be it," Blue said. But be didn't count f on the eighth Inning heroics of • rookie teammate Larry MWTay. 1 Tanana opened the inning by 1 giving up a leadoff single to Tony ! Armas. Jeff Newman sacrificed and pinchhitter Jim Tyrone drew a walk. That brought up Murr~ who brought a .179 average into the game. He ripped a triple to right center field to score two tunS and "He kept telling us he was all right and he looked it." Tanana threw only 87 pitches and 59 were strikes. Blue won his loth game of the year as he also pitched a four. hitter. "l get excited just like every- ~>ne else when I pitch against a great'pitcher," JJlue said. Tbe A's and A'ngels meet again tonight with Paul Mitchell (0·2 > pitching for Oakland against Ken Brett (7-8). Milcbell was called up from the San Jose farm team to replace Mike Norris who is OQt with a leg injury. CALlll'OltNIA HrllM FIOrescf 4 0 I 0 Remy2b 4 0 0 0 8-rf 4 120 Ro.Ja<kSGll lb l 0 0 0 BoylOrlf 3 0 01 G~clh JO I 0 Solaltalb Jo O o Brl9QS lb o O O o Mullll\lku s ) o o o Humptw..,c 3 0 0 O OAKLAND ·~'"" l .Mayrf l 0 1 1 Perez?!> '0 I 0 $aftolln1b 3 O O 0 Pa991f l 0 0 0 R.S<ott SS 0 0 0 0 GrossJt> l O 0 o McK9MYClh 3 0 1 0 ArmMcf 3 0 I 0 M.Aleulllleru o 1 o o Newmanc 2 o o O Plccotou 2 o o o Tyronell 0000 MallOry pr 0 1 0 0 Totlls · lO I 4, 1 Tot .. s 16 2 c 2 Calllornfa 000 100 000-1 Oaltl-000 000 Ob-~ OP-Oetl-1. lOB-C.lllornl• 2, o.lllMCI 3. 2a-eonca. 38-1..MurTey. S~ewman. '" " " •••• so Tanane IL.11·7) I ' 2 2 2 ' 81~ CW,10-111 • c 1 I 0 ' WP-T-ne. T-1 41.A-7,7J1. LOS ANGELES (AP) -Jim Lonborg missed a shutout onJy because he threw a wild pitch. But the Philadelphia right· hander was not as concerned with the shutout as he was with the race in the National Leaaue East. "We are the strongest lh eyery department, we're too strong not to win it," Lonborg saJd after burling the Phillies to a S-1 vic- tory over Los .A.ftgeles TUesday night of a twi-aight' double header. The Dodgers woo the. opener by the same score. Philadelphia -ts one Jame behind the Chicago Cubs in the National League East while the Dodgen extended their lead ln the west to 11 games over ..cincin· natl, their biggest lead since May 29 when they led by 11 ~- Lon b 6 rg restricted the Dodgers to two singles, one of which cost him his shutout. Ted· dy Martinez led off the fourth in· ning with an infield single and later scored all the way from second base on a wild pitch. The win was Lonborg's fifth in eight decisions and was his second complete game. ·'Everything worked well tonight, all my pitches," be said. "The mound tn Dodger Stadium is just the way I like it." Los Angeles won the opener when Glenn Burke broke a 1·1 tie win the game for Blue and the A's. "He bad been pitching me in and out all through the game," Murray said. ''But this time he got the ball right over the middle of the plate." Ozark's ·Two· Battlefields ~ .. Tanana had a two-hitter going into'the -dghth inning. He was making his fint start in almost two weeks after\uffering an arm injwy. "I felt good," Tanana said after the game _. he soaked bis arm 1n ice. ••My arm didn't bother me at all." California manager Dave Garcia was pleased with the way Tan.-ia pttclled .. .. We were watching him very , closely to see If his arm was bothering bJm," Garcia s_ald. Meyer Shines With5RBI Phi'ls Manager Has Fight On and Off the Fiel,d LOS ANGELES-There has been a race in major league baseball which probably rivals anything any of the four di visions can produce. That ls the race between Philadelphia Phillies manager Danny Oz4rk and the euys who report baseball for PbU!'delpbia 's newspapers. A couple of years ago when the Pbila were in a bit of a slump, Ozark made a questionable strategic move durina a game with tbe Dodgers. His verdict to let tbe pitcher bit with the bues loaded and none out was catastropbic as the batter bit into a double Play and the tnnin& ended later wi\b no runs foe the Phillies. Tbe nut day a Phlla4elphla paper priJlted a banner headline: Solution to Phillies' Woes Is £uy-FtreOzarkNow! LHt year Ozark ran a Phil&delpbia scribe out ot the Plllliea' dre11in1 chambers aft er Vie ft'riter hurlea IOllle ~ted (and 1*'b•1>1-1*1afted ) quest.Ions at Ozert Ci!fD! the btatottbetltlt race. trbla year Ozatk "4l tbe Philadelphia pres s resumed hostilities and when the Phils started slowly by winning only ha.If of their first 26 games, I figured the press would be after Ozark's hide. But Ozark 's s kin has WHITE WASH in the seventh with a run seorinc deuble. 'Rick Rhoden, 11·7, earnta b1s first victory In more than a month. since June 20. ••1t•1 been a long time," saJd Rhoden. who gave UJ> nve bits in seven innings. ••rve struUled and won some games, and" l've pitched well and lost, but I feel that ~ I pitch well with Urla club, 8 NflenSlate ANO.-kAK._. July 27 Ptlll~lll>f•at IAl""9elff July a l'tlli.lllp!Uat IA ""9lttft July2tla~al-rffl 7:tsp."'. ,, "'- • •·ll)p "'· I will win the majority ol my games. "I've g\ven up a lot of nms but I don't think I've pitched all that badly." Steve Ganrey hit bis 23rd home t11n in tbe .opener for Los ·Angeles. • The Phillies countered with three lloa.e runs in the nightcap by Greg Luzinski, Bate McBride and Terry Harmon. , The Dodgers have won OO}y 11 • ·of 16 games and five in the la.st seven. One reason is the batting slump of third baseman Ron Cey. who was hitless in the double header, is o for 14, and bas onJy seven hits in bis last 66 at bats. "He's bitting the ball bard, but hasn't had any luck at all,'' said Los Angeles manager Tom Lasorda. '!It's disturbing to him. He's an outstanding bitter. What am I supPQSed to do, send him back tothe minors!" Pers onal F eud .U. PlllS1'0AM• -•LA LC1t.ut09U' ~,. ~~ flOOloc; stflmllta Lllll*llf HellNl'lb Moddoxct lll:IN'Olb "9ri1m1A C.rllDnP· RMdp Hui.ph G•rtierp ._,.... ., .... • o 1 o lopua , o O o Jo I o Ruuolla 2 O o O 0 0 0 0 ~lb J,' ' 4000 Ceya 4000 4 o o o Bollerlf 2 t I O 4tto Loolf :aoo• 4 0 0 0 H•larf 1 0 1 1 • 1 0 1 I 9urllecf 4 I 1 1 ' o 1 o v....,c a , o o 2 0 0 0 lthoctenP 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Molopll 1 0 I 0 1 0 0 0 0."'*'P 0 0 0 0 0000 Tot•s 32 1 6 I Tole" 2' S S l PM~ 000 000 w-t . Los..... 000 100 '1Jr-5 l!-HUmOf'. DP-Pllll•••plllo t. LOI- .......... llHo s. Lo5 •...-i• •. 28 ·--2 • ....... ~-HR-0.fW'I' m>. sa-eurtt. • , M<lrfdt, ~. LAICIH t. 5-ftuss••· .,. " 11 •it•• so Corllon IL.IHI 6 l 4 l 6 :I R-t 0002 t O.IWr t 1 1 0 1 Alloc9M IW,11-7) 5 1 1 l 2 Gar-2 10001 Seve-G.,m•n 141 . WP-Reed. PB-.. MCC.rwt. &elk-Qfltol\. T-2:06. l&CllHID OAMll "41LA LOSAMO£LES =rf cl .. LUlllkl II ~rllnll He-lb HuU1111 lb •-c $11-lb HUmMU LonllofQp nrllM arllJll 4 I 2 2 ~stt> 4 0 0 0 • 0 0 0 Martl,.1 u 4 1 1 0 .. 0 0 0 Smlttlrf l 0 0 0 4121 Cey:IO •O O O o O O o Garvey lb 3 O l I 4000 Bakerlf 3000 0000 Burtteef lOOO 4 1 2 o Oatesc 3 O 0 I 4 0 0 0 Hooton p I 0 0 0 3 2 J 2 Goocbmlpft 1 0 0' 3 0 0 0 Sos• p 0 0 0 • Pow•llllh 0 0 0 0 l.acy~ o O Q D HOU!lhP ·o o •o Totall )4 5 9 s Totllls 29 1 2 O Phll-plllo 000 !20 OOZ~ \.OsAnotla 000 100 000-l LOl -Phlladelpllla 4, Los An4"1ff 3. 2&-Lutl-1, HMmon, MCBrlcM. HA°"llllMltl 021. MCBrlele 111, HerlflOft (?). SB~lf. S- Lontiorv. ... " " •••• so LOftflorV IW,WI • 1 I 1 2 6 H-IL>Sl • • l 3 o 4 Soso 1 100 14 HOU9fl 1 ?120 1t WP~. T-2.02 A-47,M . ·Rosenbloom Cuts Cowboys Series "if our fans tell us they want to see the Cowboys against the Rams ln future years~ we'll have the game." · But oa resuming his friendship with the Dallas president. Roa~bloom declared, .. Ufe's too short. I don't have anything to say to him." Tbe Rams• presidellt said the · mall froiq the (ans had requested a change in the preseason setup. · He also said be bad suu~ted a game in Dallas but bad been re. buffed. • "I say nice peopl& don t get in· \llted to ~er 15 years and.don't ibvite · ~ friends back. They have never invited the Rams to play in Dallaa. • • The tr'1nin1 camps of the two te~,n• tre "both in Southern California -the Rams at .Fullt:rton and the Cowbo,ys at Thousand Oaks. There have been scrimmases frequent),y in the past, and the preseason games dale baclctQ 1963. The Rams' home preseason games this f ~ are against Min· ·nesota. Philadelphia. San Diego and Oakland. Soviets T op LA, Nastase; Laver Clicks · ' We Nastaae's taunts were not enough Tuesday nicht in World Team Tennis action against the Soviets in Salt Late City as lie and his Los Angeles Strings teammates fell~. Nastase, after telling Vadim Borisov, "Ge> back to Russia," and despite comin& up with six aees and two service breaks, lost a 7-5 decliion to Boriaov. Borisov l•ter uid when they meet a1a1-he would defeat Nas~6-0. The IOn drops 'D 1177 Pop · MDlder.'s Work Is Reward. M~n ''Pop" Muld r afanUJJv f .. ure tothe atu.d •nd t .. chon at Golde West Collete u bt ; troll.$ dally •bo\.lt \be ll~qt.on Beach campus : wcorma h tlusll bdebtll cap. T thJtt and pufflnaonMan p t"Ul laf· J I J I , • • . . ~ Hut Yop Wbo •ev ll'MUllld from b11h iu•bool, n nt"lth r a aludert, teecber, toach or main· tenantt man Anyone who Jlnows Pop will tell you b '• much mure than lb1t. Evco btloH the eampus ttre' roM ouL oL the bean and <'•bb•t• ReJ• In UIGIS, Pop, wbo had re· Ur~ att~r 35 years u a fflf mplo,ytd cement con· tuctor. w on band to t lYO worlcer1 some rtne pointa ln the art ol eom•llt 1ayln1 Pop. who will bt< HO yea~ old Monday, worked hmallcaJly. coaching the team, building benches tor apectatora and even luyma down lbe chalt lines before lllme t.1mc By tho second year the soccet team bad a de l'cnt p mo ball and Pop made the payroll tern· pormly when he nlled In for a missing referee. "I kept the check <ror $1S> us a souvenir," said Pop. Rain or shine, Pop rarely misses a practice even thouaJi he oncn walks the three-mile round trip from the Westminster apartment he shares wlLh May, his wlfe of 52 years. ~ tbe team has definitely come of age, finiahin' third In the state last year in in· · tercollegiate soccer compeUUon, although Pop la· menta .. we should have eone to the flnals." Pop has also served as mentor for Golden WsAI Racing Entries ~WT ........ "'"""•014t "'"IT aac• -»> yaro.. t vear Old °""klllM. OelmlflO. ,.,,,.. $2100. Clalml"ll f"rkltt4500. Powet'llY811!1 (Adllrl Dew Mow IWenll "'Ck a UOv IAltltott I Mt. Pesto.. IUl!IYml Tina J1111'ln 1e..-11 Al•mllOtSlr1no CC.Ill P'011Hot1'1' PrlllCHl ((;er-I L.lllle 5"°'1.,. lTrenwtl MIH .. ken Bor (My!M) ,,.,,CA:lnvNM lkt1ltfltl •tt Ill '" .,. "' tn 119 119 '" 112 i q&JoeRot• 1 Cancer Victim 1 ) To Be Honor~d; ' Joe Roth is being remembered by b1I old 1 friends and coaches Friday mcht, Sept. 9. t On that night Grossmont and Antelope Valley colleges will play a football came ln San D'ego ~ . Stadium and game officials hope to raise $10.000 for ) the Joe Roth Memorial cancer hand. Roth, from Granite Hilla H.lgh In El Cajon, died of cancer last Feb. 19. >. Howevtt. the volunt4'Clr work and dedkatlon thlil recently earned him a plaque end tho honor of the &ehool namlns M new ~r-IOltball complex after tum came u a result of Pop'a love of ~<:er. In Golden Wat'11 earl)' daya there waa a club ~~<'er tum but no coach. So Pop, himself a nne <lmall'ur -.1x.·<.·er plover tn has youn"er days, volun- teered West's women's softball and field hockey teams and saco..08'.ace -Jiover~• h'••r oldt. Al~. PIH•• '3200 will be back on the soccer field this fall with coach otck•YtHHO•r<can10Hl He had played two Yellni at Grossmont, earning first team )C All·Amerlcan honors. And he bad been one ol the standout collegiate quarterback.I in the nation while playing for UC Berkeley In 1975 and '76 • . • . Gregory Ghlca attempting to improve on last year's M1• Roclcett• 1L111Nm> re"ord. POP MULDER P'lylft Rem! IA111-.1 '" ------------' H41l.._o(Hart) .. We httd one guy wbo had played soccer before and two Inda who had seen a soccer field ; the rest, nothing, scratch," Pop aays wryly ''I realaz~ you've got to keep gomg or you might R._......_.. 111toob1 as well kick the bucket," Pop says. 0 This," be says o.,,.,y Frostv !WNdl t1' 117 11r 11• 111 '" pointin.1 to the campus he bas made a chief interest Deep Sea for 11 years, ''means a lot to me.·• THtaD aAC• -3'0 v-. J yHr olds. o llmln; .. fl\u·w UJCIO. Qelmlfto Cancer bad interrupted his life for a few months wbeo be was 19. but he thouiht he had ~aten it. And the doctors were 99 percent sure be bad, too. But 28 months later be died of the malipancy. "Our goal is to put 20,080 people in the stadium Baseball Standings .. AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division · Jialtimore Boston 'New York .{:level and .petroit ,,¥ilwaukee Toronto W L Pd. GB 56 42 .S7l 54 42 .563 1 54 44 .SSl 2 43 51 .457 11 44 53 . 454 1 )I;, 43 55 .439 13 34 63 351 21 '"'i West Division 59 36 53 40 55 44 51 44 ·cbicago Kansas City Minnesota t exas ·Angels Seattle ·(}akland 46 49 44 58 41 56 , T"'°'d•1•t k.Of'H • &o\t°' -4. M lfWdUliltt 3. • leu '14, TorontoO ' Nf"W York S~ 8alt1rnMto 4 to 1rm•no11r1 •• Chic-e, Dl!lroill -~ea111e •. MlnneS04• 7 Oa-llnd 2. c.i111oml• 1 Only9-~led T.Uy'•G•m•• 621 570 5 .556 6 S37 8 484 13 431 18'"' 423 19 Mliw..,ktt 1Tr1ver$l-SI at 8oilon IWIWJ 7 0 -8•111,,..,.e (Palmf'r 10.11 •I Now Yor\ !Hunter 8'0 Oelroit IArroyos-•I al Cnlc•90 IWOOO S-71 Cleveland (Flllmorrl$ 1 •I ot IC•M•• C11y tleoMrd,.'H Calllornla !Brett r SI at Ooland IMl!Clocll ""I Mlnnesol1 IRtOlorn 3 S) •I !>ealll" IWfW'.iO<~ ·~·1 , ()nly9 .. neUC-!ed : • I llMw14111Y't G4m•• • MllwMll< .. at llollon •• B11tJ..-11t,_wY0<k Ml-•1 Seattle Teusat T...-to ClevelandatKanMtCJty c.11torna. .. C>Mlland OnlyOlf"O'Kheduled NAnONAL LEAGUE East Division Chicago Pt\iladelphj a .Pittsburgh St. Louis Montreal W L Pct. GB 57 38 .600 ·New York 57 40 .588 1 56 42 .571 2'-"l 52 46 .531 61,, 47 50 .485 11 40 57 .412 18 West Division 61 38 .616 Dodgers Cincinnati ~us ton San Francisco ·sanDiego AUanta 48 47 .sos 11 46 54 .400 1511l 46 55 .455 16 43 59 .422 191h ~ 62 .361 25 r-, .. sc-ChlclQIO J, Cincinnati o • Pl~J,.._tonJ " SL Louls4,Alw.nte2 LosA11991MS..1, Pllll..,.'-'>111 S S..Dleoo+z,-. .... t>-S.1'11<10ll,...,SlrwN- N~wYorllt. San Fr....clscol Tetl1Y't01m .. C1nc1nneh !Soto~_, S.aHr 10-Sl el ~ IKr111l-1-7_8..,.,11t-t0) • New Yor11 (Mlltleck S..Ul at S." Fr~k<o • oc ... _._., , Houston ILB,._.,0-JI et Pll~ (-NI ,. 'Ill ..... !Solomon t 11 et St. Loult I~ $;6,!_.., •-._n at s.. .. OI-IOrfftln I $ .. ) Plli,...,,.11 .(Otrltle<>Mlft t ~I •I LOK "-'"" l}ultlft~51 T"""4ay'1Ga.,,., C>Klnnetlet ~ l>tllllde411Ha et Los Al\091 .. .. .._ .... ~ I Ati.rt.etSt. Louis .>·Only ...... ~ ( l ;' Sports in Brief Atkinson Barred; Walker Sparkles SANTA ROSA -Oak&and Raider defensive back George Atkinson, who last week lost a $2-million slander suit against the Pittsburgh Steelers, bas been barred from preseason driUs un· til he pays $2,000 in fines. The defensive back .was fined Sl ,500 for clubbing Steeler wide receiver Lynn Swann in the back of the head last season -the inc1· de nt which provoked the lawsuit. He also was fined $50() for an incident against New England in the playoffs. A Raiders executive said Atkinson thought the fine ap· parently had been paid by one or his attorneys. Walker Ran• 3:34.J STOCKHOLM -Olympic champion John Walker of New Zealand ran the fastest metric mile or the year to highlight an international track and field meet which ended Tues· day at Olympic Stadium. Walker won the special in vita· tional 1,500-meter race in 3:34.1, 1.9 seconds off the world record held by Tanzania's Filbert Bayi. but a hall second faster than Walker's own previous top time this season. Snell to Coach PULLMAN, Wash. -Peter Snell. former lnter · mediate·distance Olympic gold medaJ winner, has agreed to Readers' Hot Corner Sports Editor: I tll'Uly appreciated your beach volleyball article in tbe Daily Pilc~t and I'm hoping for more. I thoroughly enjoy volleyball and hope that in the near future all In· ternational Volleyball Auocia· tion scores and standlnea will be listed. I would also enjoy more news about weekend tournament ac· lion and 1'!SU1ts. You riJ find that I am one of many who "dig'' the sport of volleyball and would welcome more in depth coverage or it in YoQr news1>aper. Seeing that the Daily Pilot is a local paper, I think it should cov- er more local sports and volleyball is very popular in Orange County. John Chapman Coronadel Mar help coach the W ashlngton State University track team, coach John Chaplin said Tuesday. Snell will be attending WSU this year to work on an advanced degree in physical education. · Snell won the Olympic 800· meters in 1960 In Rome and both the El>O and 1,500-meters in the Tokyo Olympics four years later. A&heSaib LOUISVILLE-Former cbam· p1ons Arthur Ashe and Harold Solomon joined Eddie Dibbs and Dick Stockton as rirst round win- ners in the $125,000 LOuisville Tennis Classic Tuesday. Dibbs rallied to defeat Ramiro Benavides 2-6, 6-0, 6-2. Stockton defeated Peon Joubert, 7·5, 6-0. Solomon was extended to three sets by Ivan Molina before win· ning6-l , 6·7, 6-4. Ashe showed ~he effects of a six-month layoff because of a foot injury but still defeated Sashl Menon 7·6, 6-1. Brian Faurkue advanced with a 6·3, 6·2 conquest or Jean Lou.is H aillet and Dick Crealy beat John Yuill 6·2, 6·4. Star• Ra•IJw The Orange County Stars moved into a first place tie in the International Volleyball A.ssocia· tion's Western Division by beat· ing the Tucson Sky, 12·10, 12-6, 10·12, 12·9 before 1,573 at University High in Irvine Tues· day. The victory puts Orange Coun· ty (11·11) in a deadlock for first with the Santa Barbara Spikers (9·9) and snaps a three-match losing streak. Stars hitter-blocker Larry Vocke was brilliant .in the first game, and finished the match with 27 kills in 60 attempts. N\'Jtl~Bld ~EW YORK -Mayor Abraham D. Beame says New York Cit.y will apply to the U.S. Olympic Committee for the 19SC summer games. Meanwhile, Gov. Hugh L. Carey said the state would spend up to $75 million for the •wnmer games as "an investment, not an expense" Beame said the application would be filed Friday with the Olympic Committee ln the "firm belief" that the estimated $225-milllon gap in the games' cost and its revenues would 'be made up by federal and st.ate funds, as well as private financ- ing. ·.:·.In Track I A' i ~·Thursday Team, Tennis Tiffs Billed/ or Anaheim S11mmer Sports F1Shing Improves Sportsfishing h as taken an upswing around the Orange Coast area with water temperatures rising to as much as 70 degrees in the Newport harbor. At Dana Wharf in Dana Point over 500 · mackerel were landed from one boat Sunday and th e co unt h as included a variety of catches. Leroy Watkins or Cucamonga landed a 29-pound halibut near Catalina out of NewpQrl Beach 's Davey 's Locke r . which h as reported water temperatures or 68·69 outside the harbor. Barracuda have been in the 4-6 pound class out of Art's Landing in Newport Beach. Costa Mesa's Jack Wilson landed an eight·pound s ilver salmon recently off a half day boat. Nl!Wl"ORT (0.vey's locker I U2 •nQlen· 264 bllrr•cuda, 31 bonito, Z IS ulko bllu, 3?$ $and !Miu, 170 rock cod, 50& tnaeller&t. 10 white $ell !>au (Art's LarMll1111 -" •n9leri l -.110. 77 bilrr.Kud4, so \Md ban. l 4 calico bils.s, 100 maekerel, JS roo 11111 SAHTA MOMIC'I -1t an91er1 S h•llbUt, l W!\lte W& .,. ... 2 sand DH\, :MO rock bit~~ ._ .. -42 an9le" UO mecktntl, 1Srock baU, 1 cahcobeu LONG 81ACH ( .. 1,,_, "lffl 0 e1>9lers: " c.allco beu, • $and ban, :124 rTWld<ertl, 4 Doltho,} bilrracUO•. n bllleb&H, 2NKk<Od. (OWeft'tWMrfl -Sf W19le<S' 4 blrre<UO•, 709-.llo. lS<I c.allco blu, I wnd blu. '° roe~ tlsll, '""'le-bass., U4 blue basL lll"IRIAL, 81ACH •S an9len SI berra<WI, 21 DoltllO, 240 <allco bits. 145 rnecurel, t bl.,. c..u. MISSION UY ll1laMlal 1'1 •119le<1: 137 albK0<•, J OOlptlln, 1 rellowuu. 10bonltp~ J1 barracuda, 191 calico bin, 1.1uu macur11, 301 ro<ktlsrt. SRAL 8•AOI -lill IN,llers 1,0S rock 11 ..... 4AO rnacuret, 21 WM wu, 1l calla> bin, 10 llollllo. ~ -IJO angten: 4S mectterel. Jt llonlto. 7 sand blU, lSlllilbUt, 21 rock li•h. SAN ... OltO I~ 0 ' Calll 31 •"91t<•· 67 MrrlClldil. 114 cellc.o wss, 1ss rock mn. J?O ln.tcuret llllld SC. LAlllllftll -1:19 entlen: 10 11~. '1 bln-11euda, 20 llellbut, •10 callco.,.u, l6Sbluebln, 19Sbonllo ltlOONOQ -l21 lf'l9l•nr 6t !Mr· racudl, 109 cellco IMIH, 1 halibut, 110 bliM 111ss. .. ,... -es •"91•n.: t wn<1 bin, t ~. 11 meck•rel, 10 rec:kflsh. OANA WU, -211 a~: ISi llHS, 76 blrrecl.ICI•. 7S bonito, 1 yellowtell,40'°'k«Ml,411 IT!«korel. OC•ANSIOR -.. lntler.s: I vellowtell, I hallbUt, 11 111td ~s. 10 -.110, 2' b9rrecudoe, lit r11Ck flsll Prlc.UllQO. Doti• a. <word I StnooU\H P-<TrfftWOl ea11-.y1Myle$l MIU ....,,.,, Pove ("-lrl 8•r-y IUl'Nlml Tldy'S Oii,..... (~r) FHl!let My NHI IC..tdOte I Orllflan't llo (R°"9fl) c .... en..,. <Hart 1 117 117 lte 117 11t 117 117 1n ,,, POUltTH a Ace -400y ... a.. J yur otd m e ldens. Cte lmlno Purtr 12100. Ctelmln; Price lJCOO. Bunf\yJNn IWNdl C"•rol< .. Coutltv IC..111 'lprll FOOIUolte (l(nlQM l llamltv Ooo IClrcloral Bet Your Wallet (Hartl Ml911t Mlrw IAlllSOltl Med About You ITr11sur•l Ral11111EA91e (Lllllllml H1Qh Blue Gress IM!llrl JetlerR_. (Myles! ""'™ ll'ICE -~ v•rds. l .,..r olds AllowatKe. PurseUOOO. Fanla$llc Gal ITrusurel Cuc-Colly t8.,,_Sl '" 122 lllHIYI• (Carelou, MrTC7 10etombll OupllcNck lAUlsonl Goldel\Oldle IMyle,1 Silly Strea• IAClllrl M\ S.retW R-1 (l1-ml 1n 121 112 tit 121 11' \IJITH R'ICE SSO U•d~. J year old•l.uo At1ow...ce.Pu~i2.oo CoforldO Joe 2 llCnlqllll Oupe'' A•led\11 (Tr..,su<• l BOVf\d To IMylesl Gopasetlc ICtroora I JudY'•Man (Hartl Most RoY•I ('Ill Ison 1 Ool\'sGoMan IBU<ke) Print Me RCl'(al ICtll l Reel ReclWl"" IROU911I 117 1n "' ,,, 111 112 "' 127 "' Sil VllNTK 11.t.CIE -«JO yards. l year olcl• & uP. '111-""u. Pun. '65CO. Rl9Ad00ft 1Creager1 Viv• VIiia IC.Ill Llllte Fancy RO$e (1Cni9111 I Davld~Prl (Lll)tlaml Ed Dee ITr~•su"'I Ur<l·s Go Go IAdlorl 117 119 117 121 172 117 l'IGHTM RACE -870ur~. Jr••' old~ I. UI> Ctalmln<J Purw $3000 and $10,000 in the till from passing the hat al • .·~~ ·~.··.··_.· .,.i .~·-~· . halftime for the Joe Roth Memorial Fund," says Gross· mont football coach Dave j Jordan, who once coacl\ed at Corona del Mar High. 1 An after-game concert is • also planned by some or Roth's friends, says Jordan. Tickets are $2 for adults and $1 for students with children un· der 12 admitted free. For addi- .. "'cu10 ... ,,., ti on al Information, write or phone Jordan at G'rossmont Coll ege. Roth hud brilliant games against Saddleback and Orange Coast colleges du.ring the '74 season . Against Saddleback Roth completed 17 of 29 passes for 240 yards as Grossmont and the Gauchos fought to a 27·27 tie. In that game Saddleback QB Marty Mikkelsen completed 19 or 36 aerials for 266 yards. Then in the season finale with OCC for the Division I state championship, Roth hit 14 of 24 passes for 284 yards, guiding the GriCfins to a 34·17 win over the Pirates. Roth played in 17 games for Grossmont in • 1973-74 leading the Griffins to a 15-0..2 mark in that span. ~ * * * * * * SK.lPPIN' AROUND -Orange Coast will host I two scrimmage foes -MiraCosta of Vista (4;30) and Rio Hondo of Whittier (7) Saturday, Sept. 3 in footbaJl. Saddleback's scrimmage is with Long Beach CC (2> at Saddleback while Golden West faces Citrus (10 a.m. > the same day at Citrus ... Mario Mendez is the new Palomar College football coach, replacing Mack Wiebe, who remains a s athl etic director. Clalmlnq Price "6000 Mo Joe 1Kni9"11 Oupe's Patlerl\ (CreA911r I 011pe B Starr ITr~.n~I $9&rttllnQSH tWardl Ouarte< Bonder ( Delomt>• I Mr 81~ !Hartl RambllnEHI' IC.Ill ~:; HB Youth Signups .! Ill 1n J :~ Signups for Junior All-American Football in 111 Huntington Beach will be held Saturday at two loca· , tionsfrom lO a.m. to2 p.m. HINTl4 llt.ACI -«O yann. l Yff• okll & uo C1111mf"9 Pvrse tat• ClllimlnQ Prlu UOOO Boys between eight and 13 years of age are - 811arrwv IBrooltsl Palleo's &v IAdllr l eligible to play. Applicants should be accompanied '" by a parent and bring birth certificate and $10 :~ registration fee. Be me lo( ICeroora I Mr NlpN'Tuc~ (Ll.,...ml l~PD (Wardl POOQ~Mooft lBenl<•I Step-Gone ITreesu~I Tiny Noise (Mil<llelll Wl-(Hertl Mon ao·so..roer !Cre-r) m The North Huntington Beach Chapter. will :~ hold signups at Marina High School. Resident boun· ttt daries arc Warner Avenue on the south and Beach :~ Boulevard on the east. For additional information '" contact Bob McGurr at 897·2249. Area Golf "''" ILNIOUIL Low l'lltt 1--1. T•,.,r C-y end Jao Gately. 135; 2. Oll>Ck Krul· <Ill Ind Ken Cl-. 139; 3 8111 Row •nd Dol\Cltm, 141. CGUPIM -I 1CIUl'ftlly-1. Pet and Oorollly Nido wlltl Don and Joan Mou ll!ttrelal. 124; 2. 8ob •lld Bobbi llAnlSlev wtlft 8111 end JHn l!rlltsoft (Mission Vlefol. 126; J. Hlt'ry one! c11u · Lowe with Joll11 •nd Bobbi &~ IOld Renchl, 130; 5. Mr . ...., The South Huntington Beach chapter holds signups at Edison High. also from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Boundari<!S are Beach Boulevard on the west, Santa Ana River on the east and Garfield Avenue on the north. For information call Bud Tackett at 968-3051 or Chuck Fabian al 536-0423. The Central Huntington Beach chapter is tak- ing l'egistration over the phone. Resident boun· daries are Wa rner Avenue on the north and Newlal\d Street on the east. Those accepting signups are Bob Mentz at 842-1766 and Jim Maue at 842·2280. Mrt. lob Wilbur with Doti -Pehr r----------------------Ga11..i CBIQ C.onVOftl. 1)1. Los Alamitos Race Results -TWM.ly Cte.,TraclrPnt PIRST ltACS -UO yerlb 2 .,...- oldL Clalmlno, F~ f'\Mct.n\ Puno '2100 Miu IClpty 0oo (Hert I 24.00 10.20 ' 40 S1t1qA101t9 (Qrdoal 1760 IUO Uncle Roc~o CROUQl\J • 00 Tleme-1 •. 12 Also Rlll'I -War ~. Tlr!Y Sip, Jets Cr1tt ... Tiny Cllkhn. er .. plft9 Charlie, L lq11ld Amber, Run· lor1'-001d Scretcl!ecl -Flnal Trlbuto. Tint• Rocket, llorlrlta Clllck, ~ Abov1 Y041 U Cuda "MIH ltl,.., bee a 1· SNQ ........ 141.,,....... HCONO ltACll -SSC yards. l yeor 0141• .. up. Clalml119-Pllrw uaoo. N ...... PJ,,,...c"r',_.,,., ' ., J 00 2.40 T09T01tto8rJ (llf'-tl S40 IM o. C:.J1111 CNll'9\l ' oo Tlme-11.tl Also Ren • Apec h• Cll•roo. fto<kafoUer. Moon s1111a, it1.,1,.. Devld NUC'~ TNllllO 8'AC9 -m yeH). J Y•.,. ......... ~l'WM~ l.ltRlllteMWelc.ro..l ... uo uo ...... ... Miss~ COUI ICllrdoal S.lO •.00 or._o . .._""'-" IK,.ltNI 1..0 Tlme-11.02 'lllO Rift -MoN .._, ..... es Kltt•11, T°" eor l!eol•. Fency Affair, E•Pftis v ....... 1. i...ov•18'edT"8ket Notcretc'-9 H Rudi f.l'tlllla. & 1·Mhl LaM ........ ..,. .. HVaNn4 8'ACE -350 yanb. ) Yffr olds & up. All-. flurw $6000. Sunthlne CROUOft) IUD 6.00 J.40 8eken8or '"""'"' uo 3.40 SPKltledTrace IHart) U O Tlme-17.t4 Also Rwi -CNc l"otGo, l"estJll«r. Ttir .. Ol>'s USS, OUftV So9on No 1Kretc11ie1. on discontinued and limited edition styles • j i: r - PUBUC NOTJCC ~nOU1aut1•na fllAMt ITA Tllid'" '-'-'-..--........... -"·' . fOVHTAIN 111!4L ftfATll. •ot41 f "" A-.._ .... " ...... CA. -,, __ ........... ,....._.. .. e C' .. oftrnoeC""-'tl ..... \Oi.11 e llla .... _ ,._,..,. ..,., •• Y. CA.·tv• '"" --· "C-.itlaV ft I «Ir• _ .. , .... ~--..... ,,.. _..., G Ha,., ..,......,., ,,., ---· -lllelt Wttf\ '"" c -··<.-Of er..,..~· ... J"'" I 1tJI, ~" _.,.....,er...,.. ca..t Deltr r 1-. l"'• •.L' ti...., ....• "" ~NOl'ICE PUllUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE l'\lllLIC NOTICE --...... PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PICT11'0US 8USINESS .. AMe STATl!M8 NT TIM fOllOWl"9 ...... IS 004"9 tl;Kl- ts: l"S2·~~~,,!,,E ~,!_~~I=~~{. Irvine. ca. 9111S Thornton E. Tongue, 18601·9 Newl•nd ~-. Huntlr191on Beach, Ct . 9U46 This business I• conducted by "" un· 1ncorpor<1lcd auoc:l.ilon Oll>er than t Pil• lnenl>lp. Thornton E. Tongue This Slat.,,.nt "'"' llled with ti. County Cieri< of 0r"'99 County on July ••• 1971 1'71tJl Publt~ Orar>ge c ... si Daily Pllol, 299•-77 July ro, 11, ano A119ust 3, 10, 1m 3016-n ~---~-----1 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE . - PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICa INVITING llOt 14'4 NOTKI IS Hl!ltl!BY GIVEN tNt NOflC:STOC•IDITOllS Na IN ~It for furnblll119 •II Me.. At MU l•loor, tn•t•rl•••· •QulpMe11t, SU ... ltlCMtCOUllfO,TN• ff""-1.UClft-M<ttl ollltr teclllllH S1'ATIOf' CAl.l"OttNIA .. Ott H llNY be ,..wired for STltEE T TNICOUNTYOflOIUNOa MAINTl!NANCI l'ISCAL Yl!All lh t.ieolARTHURA.ltOESEA,alH ltU-7•; HARBOit •OUL.EVARO known a• AltTHVR Al.VIN ROe seR, I' It 0 M e A IC. I It ST R EI! T T 0 O.C••'"- MACAffTHUll 80Vl.EVARO, .. 111 be Notice It hereby 9 lve11 to ,.,.1_ 11'1' IN Cltv ol Co.I• ...... Cl'edlton ol tile •bOY• M IMO 119Ce<IMI ltw offl<a Of ttw City Cltrll, 17 "'" that tll "'"-.....,,"9 cellms -0•1nn Ori,.., C.14 ,.,.._., CAlltornla, wnlJI tM the Uld Ot<-1 are ""l"lnMI lo Ille hOvt of 11:00 .. m. ~I S, "77, 4't tr>em. with tt.. M<ttMf'Y l>'O;Ktwn , In whlchllml,tlltywll"19-""lllbll<l\f thl othcaof tt.e Cle<tl et Ille •Clolle en- -l'ffCI alOllcl In h Councll Che,... tltl.OC011'1,ortopreMnt1'*"wH11ti.e btra. SHled ,,_..,-.o bear h ~ n•ct-ry -.c~ to Ille ~ONd tie ol tl'le _. ~ ... --of 11-. bid-.t tlW office ol JOll!PW C. OU ROSS, Cler but "° otl>w llUtlnVlilsNnv merll1 m• MtnNtltn 8H<h Blvd., Manhtl· Any bid ,_.llfff .. ~ -Kheou!M ~ 8Mcll, Ctlllornlt tOM. whldl It <tot.Inv llme lor trw r«elpt OI bide shtlt l!Mt pl~e ol ~ness of the ... c1ersl~ be rttumeo to the blddtr ""°"'"'d. It In all matter11»rt1ln11>9 to the H iatt of $/>all bt ttw sci• '"Po"Slblllty of tht Hid O.ct!denl, wllhll\ four monthutl., .,._lo-11>11 hl1 blO Is,,_.._ lft u.. 11n1 Plltllk allon of this notk•. proper time. Oale<IJ~. t'11 A satof pl-. SO.Cl•• Pro""'°"""° SECURITY PACIFIC Mldlll-to c;.,.,ai Provl~ 10 ,... NATIOHALBANK and Standttd 5'1«1flullan• may bt ol>-J OSEPH R JONES talnM at U. Office oUha City E 1>9IMer, C:O.E llK~ollhe n Felr Of1w, Costa ~. Celltorftla WlllOl.akldtc-IM UCIOft ~a POmenl of U 00 JOSl!rN C. DU ltOH An .oililloMI CNl9t ol $1,00 will 1M 1n• M.-Ull ltN<ll 81~ made II htnclltd by mall. P lant, Maitllttt• .. tell, CA tot .. -lfleatlons and othtr contract CIO<u · At-ylorCelllaecwttn menls may also be examined at lht Of· Published Or~ Cotil Oa11y Piiot, flceof Ille City Clerk of the Cltyot Costa July 6, 13, 20, U, 1917 Mtsa. Each bid sl'lall be madt on tllt --------------Proposal form, wets p. t lllf'OUQll p.7 Pf'Qvlmd In ow untract docuMenu. PUBLIC NOTICE and shall be accompanltd with • --------------ce rtlfl«I or c•~,..s Check or • bid .. ICTITIOUS BUSINESS bondfornott.u1-.10-ollhtamount NAM!:STATEMENT Of lht bid, ..-PilY•bl• to tht City of Tne tollOW11>9 perM>ns •r•-nv bu~I· C°'I• Mew. No Proposal Shall bt con-ness u sldtred ""''" accornpjlnled by WC:h AMERICAN LIFE SUPPORT caslll4W's-k,<Mhorl>klder's l>Ond. CORP., 3333Wttl W.rf'llt!r A.,..,ue, s.in. No bid ihall IM considered unless It Is ta Ana. Cill lfornla 92107 m•de on• bltnk form furnished by ttw U.S. OIVERS, co., a CAlllornla City of C:OSta ~sa and Is meo. In ac-corpgrallon 1--------------1 -------------1corcltnce with the provls~ ot tht This Dustneu Is conducted by a cor- PICTITIOUS BUSINESS F ICTITIOUS BUSIN!:SS Proposal reQUlrtrnentl. p0ratloo. NAME STATEMENT NAME STATEMENT Etch bidder ~I 1M llcenwd encl US Diven Co .. ICTITIOUS 8UtUlaSS TM fol-11>9 l»MOn$ •re OOlllO bust· TM IOllOWH\11 ptr_,. •re d0i119 busl· elso ~llflec:lts reciwlrect by law. u-enc&' R ... von. NAME STAT•MINT "'"C:!..~°"s·a' ~!,IENNE~ neu,.,','v 1L' •oEANN· co. & SON ntSS •s : Tiie O ly Council of"--City of Cotu Vice PrHIClenl-FtNtnc~ TIW tOllcMI ~~ • ·~ • ~ ~ THE PLUSH PUPPY P!'T SHOP, Mtsa.-rwsthtri911ttorejtcttnyor Tnls SlltlM'>el'I .. as'""' wlln '"" Milts: "9 P*•IOn Is dolno bU • Tnl! IGllOWl"9 ~ Ii doll>Q bust 111 THE FINAL TOUCH. 1100 W. '686 Weslmtmltr Aw .• Gar~ Gro•e, ell blCIS. County Clerk ot Or~ County on July BLACKSTAR TflUCICING ANO ~ses· K••~"~·8'n.·C•hfornl•t'*7 CA. EILEEN P. PHINNEY I, 1917. AIR FREIGHT. P.O. 8oJI •?As, Hunt-O.S. EDUCATORS REALTY, 1112 flllnAol: Corponrtaetrlopnrts(eqsu.•lllnl~:: 1•0", O&'br• Elhtbtth GteiUOn, & CltyC~ot the F J&.IS1 lllgton e.Kh, CA ~; 2S2S Ocu n G•laxy Or., NewportB .. cl\, CA. '2'60 • -Michael M. GI•-· tWl 0.sll A~•.. City Of Costa Mesa Put>llSl-ed Oran<ll' Coast oally Pilot, 8lvd., C-dtl Mar (Apt. Bil CA Anl•llo 0. Crisci, 1712 Gllaay Or., Calltornlt l, 16tS2 Setch Blvd., Suite Wn tmlMter,CA.'12'83 Put>tl·~ Or~ ,.··st O•lly Pilot, July 13,20,27,anc1Au11usll, 1911 •=•-l• mu Newport BH<ll. CA. tt6'0 2IO, Huntington 8each, Calllornle 9™7 Tiits l'iuslntU Is c.onducted by an In· •--·,... '"""' , ,., , TllOmas Clayton WOOdr ufl, ?SH This business Is conducted by en In· This bu~lness Is conducted by• cor-dlvldu~1. · Jul'f27,and&ugust2, 1977 3310-77 d iv d ... I por•llOft MiCllH IM.GIHson ~~~n Blvd. a Bl, Corone Cltl Mar, CA 1 M ttllo o. Crisci AC·DC ENTERPRISES, INC. Tiiis st•t..,_I wtt lllecl with Int PUBLIC NOTICE Tiii l>IAi 1 Tiiis stat~nt wM flied wllh tM By:-ltsPresldent County Cl~lt ol Orange Covnly on July • • divld~I. neu 'conoucted by an 1"' <aunty Clerk ot OrtnOe CountyonJu.>e This statemet11 WM lllecl wllll tht 7, 1977. TIIDMas Woodruff 30. 1971. County Cler!< ol °'"'°'County on July P'71Ut P UBUC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINEH T his siatement wn filed •ilh 1,,. 1'7.,.1 IS, 1917. Publlshed Or~ c ... st Delly P1101. County oen OI Ortn9t County on July Publl511ed Oranqe eoest Dally Piiot. 1'7to17 July ll. 20. v. and Au91Jsll, ttn NAME STATEMENT FICTITIOUS BUSINESS Tne IOll-tnc) person " 001"9 bUil· NAME STATEMENT 14, ttn. J uly6, U,20,17, 1917 PubllSl..a Or~ Co.Ht O•lly Pilot, 3011·71 "1ttJS 2174-77 J uly 20, 27, -Augustl. 10, 1'17 3180-71 ne~~ as Tl•• lollOWlno persons areao1ng busl- o.A YS-£EZE. 8'32 H&nton Dr . ness •s· Publl$1'ed Oranoe Coast Delly PllOI, July 20, 27, -Auvwit 3, to, 1'77 J077·77 PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE 01' HON·RESPONSl81LITY PUBLIC NOTICE Notice Is hereby g1v~ lhal llW un· ~rsl9ned will not be r-slble tor -------------any <NbO or lltl>llllJAS contracted by ~)4 SUPElllOR COURTO,.THE STATEOFCALtFORNIA FOlt THE COUNTY OF ORANGE Ho.A.-ti llnvone other thin m yself, on <>r alter llltSdale. Dated thls 18tll<Miyol July, 1971. Relph D Sockrtder "n BrownlnQ Or. Huntlnvton Beach, Ca. Publlsntd Oranve Coast Delly Piiot. PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINl!U NAME STATEMENT Th<' 1011ow1nv persons •••do•no buM· nt~~·' BARRY'S ST R IDE R ITE BOOTERY, 2100 Bro Nell. Dru , CA. 91.,1 Mil,Vouno, 40 ·10 F•lrvlew Avon .. , Arctol•, CA. 910!>6 PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOYS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT The toll-1rw;i 1>er'IOn Is doing busi· M$SAS' KEN'S AUTO SALES. 1033? Garden G<o•e 81vd • C...rden Grove, CA 921>4l ICennt'tn H•sn. 6691 Wntnlt~td Or Hun1.rw;11on Beacn, CA 911>•7 • Tn1s bus>nen Is conducted by an 1n· dlvtduel. KMMlh Ho!.11 Tl\ls stc11e""'"1 w.ts Ille<! wllh Ill<! Hunt11191on Beach, CA 921>46 111 COMI TAS ASSOCIATES; 121 Micnele Ol.-.e Strallon, 1'132 Hen-IMAGE ASSOCIATES, 601 An1r1m ton Or., HuntlnQton Beacn, CA 92U6 Ctrc .. Hun11nv1on S.ach, CA. '17UI Tn1s b<ISlness Is conducted by en In· L.ucasC. Cotnll8•, 601 Ant nm Cir .. d lvldutl. Hunhnglon Beach. CA 'l'lM7 Mlcllele0.Slr&l1on ~lcllael HHUl~r. M71 Anlrttn T~ls sia1emion1 was lll@d wlln tlle Ctr , Huntington S.acn, CA. 97M7 Coul\IY Cle<'K ol Orange Ctunty °"July Th>S t>u•11'1'ss is conducted by a IS. ttll. oentral ""r1ne-.rop F7toll t.ucas C. C:om11as Publlsnecl Or-Coast D•llv P1101. Tn,. st••-t wa' lllM With tht July 20, 27, and AuQll.M 3, tO. ttll Jtlt-17 County C~rk of Or..,.ge Coun1y on J Uiy 1 1911. PUBUC NOTICE F71411 Publ1s~ Oran"" Coa•I Dally Ptlol, Ju1v 1J, 20. 21. ano AuauslJ, 1'17 NOTtCE O P' HEAlllNG 01' reTtTION FOR OETe RMINATION 01' l!NTIT L.E M E NT T O OISTltlBUTION 01' ASSETS 0 1' J uly 20, 21, 27, 1971 .-3147·71 Btrrv Young. c '° ~7-10 Fairview Avenue. Arcadia. CA. 911166 Thll buslne.s Is condu{led trv • Count y Clerk 01 Orange County on July 1--------------1 •• 1971. 3042-77 Ot:CEOl!NTNEl.OINT•UST 1------------~.,... Estate ol JANET L.. KISTLER, •ka J ANET KISTLER, aka MRS. FRANK P UBLIC NOTICE gener•I partnership. · SclY~ ICISTLER,O.Cused. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN 111.tt This s14"-...1 was tllect wltl\ the COUlllY Cieri< ol Orange County on JUiy ------M-11-------1 u. 1917. · ,. 1 .,. 2 F~C:~~':/!:~:,.·::,r Publ•""" 0r.,. eo.n o.11y P11ot, JEAN CRAIG ltABUNE nes fllpd The follow1nq persons areao1ng bUS•· July 21• ~AVllU$l l, IO, 17• "11 3301_17 herein • pettllon tor DelPrmin.llon Of £nll11emoent 10 DIS1rtbulton ol Assets ol Oe<edenlneldlnlrusl WHEl'EFORE. nessas Pp1tllonerprayslllnllh0Cour1 makl' lh COUNTY-WI DE AMC •JEEP, order 111a1 778 wrM of Nl'w York I/en-12222 Garden Gro•C 8hld , Garden ----------~--• F71Stt Published Oref'91' C04sl Oallv p,101, JUIY ll, 20, 27, -Al19USIJ, 1'77 3021-11 P UBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOYS BUSINESS NAME STATEMl!HT Tll~ follOWi"ll PfrM>n " doing t>u~I· MSstn 1urP Fund, ll'C. and ackllllon,r unls...ed Grov•. CA m43 Shere\ !>('transferred lo Jean c. COUNTY·WIDF RAMBLER, Raoune. lne per_, l'nlllled 10 rl'celvo INC . e C.llforn1a corpgra11on. 12212 PUBLIC NOTICE INDUSTRIAL SPECIALISTS, 7101 -------------·I Yukon Or., Hun1tno1on B"acll, CA 911>41 Mid ProPer1Y. rpfere..ct lo ,.ntch Is Garden Grove Blvd .• Garclen Grove, NOTICE TOCltEOITORS m&d\' fC>f° turtfltt part1culolrs, .. nd IMI CA. ttUJ SU .. EltlOR COUltTOI' THE Ille ttme anct Plac•ot he•rlnq lhe same Tiits ~neu "conducted by• cor STATl!OFCALIFO•NIA P'Olt l'las bftf1 set for A119USI •• 1917 al 9 00 PGf'tlton THE COUNTYOI' OltAHOE •. ,,. .. In .,,. courtroom of ()c,perlmMI COUNTY-WIDE RAMBLER, _A .. 17t1 No. 3of wldcourl, al IOOCIYlc Cenll'r INC E s tat• of LADI S L.AOO l . Drive West, In the City ol Santa Ana, Jamtt8 IClpln, PrHicletil RESENOEZ.Oece•sed. C:.lltortllt. Hus s1attme'nl wl!s tiled with tM NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to tht OttedJune?7. 1971 County Clerk of Or80Q<.' CounlY on J uly crtdlton o1 the e1>0w named o.cec1en1 WIU..IAM E. SUOHN, s, 1977. that •II perSGnS havlno claims 99•1nst County.Cll'rk LAWRENCE s. WAYNE, ESO. the said dKedent ... ·-•red to Ill• ttHOOf.l,BARNAAO. MAGARAM, f'ISICIN,WAYNE tlWm, with nw nectssary vouchtrs, In Dennis Oall' GraMm. 1101 Yukon Or.. Hunltnqlon Btoach CA "26A8 This l>u$lntts" con<1uc1ec1 oy an 1n dlVldUal ~IS D.llP Gr..,..m Th•• st•t-t ws was 111ea wlln lne County CIHk ol 0r""'lll' County on July 1. 1977. "71,SI Publls~ Oritnve Coast Oallv Piiot, J uly 13, 10.11. ""° Au9ull 3, ttn 302).77 NOTICEOI' PUBLIC NOTICE OIS50LUTIOH 01' ~AltTNE•SHtr Pul>lk notice Is Nrtbl' elwn lhtt RA Y H: EDWARDS, and HI LL--------------· HOLLOWAY, ...... tOlor• doll'9 bvsl· neH unc»r the fklll'-llrm """'end style OI TONY'S FISH MARKE T, al ,,.1 Wtitmlnster Boul•v•rd. City of WestMlmter, County of Or•99, State of Calltornla, did on tne 1st day Of J enuary, 1977, by mutual conaenl, Cll•· solve tne said partnersh ip and ttrmlna1e fhtlr rel•tlons H partners thtreln. S.1d buslntu In ttw lutu..-. wlll be COndUC1.., by HIL.L. HOLLOWAY, who wlll PilY tnd discharge •II llabllllln and -s OI Ille fi,,., -receive all monlH P'Y•l>M 10 lhe llrm. Further notic• IS hereby 91\ltn Ill.ti Ille UnderSIQntd Wiii not bt r-llble, frorn this O.y on, fpr any obi Igel Ion In· curred by tne 01.-1n Ills own ntme or In the.....,,.Of ti.firm. DATED AT Buena Park, C.llfornl•, thh 1111\dtyot JUiy, 1977. l'ICTITIOUS 8USIN!:SS NAME STATE MB NT T"" lollowi"9 perton h dof"9 bu.st· ness•s· NOl\THWOOO REALTY, 1201 Dov• SI rMt, ~lnouse S..lle. Newpor-1 Beach. CA~2060 Bernard J, KOC'rselm4", 13• West y ,\le LOOO. I rvlnt, C•lllornla •7114 This busu~ss is conduct\'CJ by an ln· di¥1dUal e.<'""rd J I( oerv 1m..- Thl • slal...._1 was flll'd w11h 111P County Clprk ol Or-County on Jiiiy '· 1'11. ;-,..,. ll!RNAROJ . ICOERSELMAN, INC. not DoYe s1 .. Ptm. Ste. Newport Beach, CA nwo Pttb!lsl\ed Onln9ft COMI Oally Piiot, July 13. 20. 27, Md A1J9ust 3,.1917 .. 3012-77 MAL.ONl!Y ANO HAAT &.MINIKES.Atm. the office ol th@ clerk ol '"' •bovt en- A rrotessknalCW-•Uon l UO Ceftlllr( P•rtl l!est, Suite "11 llllecl court.Of' to"'''°"' tnem, with the ·------------- I05S EastWnlll......, e 1wc1 , 1.0U119t1es, CA.,..., necns•rv vouchers. to tNundersi91*1 PUBUC NOTICE HILL HOLLOWAY MICHAELS. McCARTIN Alt-y m•H..,.B1..-.. s.lte214 PUBLIC NOTICE Swllt 1020 F7MSZ el tht o4fkt of GRAY. WHYTE ANO Las AntefH, CA 90CMt Publlshtd Oranqe Coast D•ily Piiot, BUR IC ITT. Allorne~ at L•w, 600 l'ICTlllOUS ausntfe:ss NAMESTATIMl!NT Alt-ysforpeltlloner July 13. 20.17,...., AU911Sl3, 1977 Mutual SavlnQs Bulldl1>9, 301 East Publl~ Oran911 CMsl Dally Pllo1. 1 ____________ JO_i_s-_77_1 ColortdO 81Yd .. Pnaclene. Celllornla P'ICTI n ous 8Uj lNESS NAME STATEMENT c.ste Mele. CA 9262' P-15hecl Dr.nve Coast O•llY Piiot, TIM followtnv i»rtons arecio.nv t><nl· M UH: July 13,10, l7,ancl AuQus13, 1977 J(M{>.17 91101, wt\lch Is Ille place Of business 01 PUBLIC NOTICE tht under'stvned In all matters P4lrt•ln- Tiie fOllOWl"9 --Is clolno busl nen as: July 27, tt77 >1'2·77 L AN CA S TER S HE AD · --------------I QUARTERS. t"'3 8Nc.l1 81.-d., Hunt• PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICE 01' MARSHAL'S SAL a NO.Ut1t '21 uao Pilrtt. OrlYe, etc . Plain1111 VS W1h0ft,<1lal. Oel~nl By vtr1ue of an u.cutlon iu.,.d Of\ 1--------------1 inv to tlleff1at<1ot $8id deeedtnJ. within four montht alter the 11,.1 pUbllcatlon o4 lhls noctu . PUBUC NOTl~E Ot tedJ....,29, 1917. ISMAEL. RESENDEZ /lldmlnlstretorot Ille Es1"1e of lhe-Wna<neddectdtnt. GltAY, WMYTE-8Ult1CIT"T Att-ysetl.aw •M-~8111141 .. a1 Eest OMtr.,. Btwd. reHfftla, C.llteml• ti IOI Ttl: CtlJI 1'S-J)M; .. ,_..., Attomeys tor Adrnllllstr•ltr Publl"'9CI OrMIQe CO.st Dtlly Piiot, J uly•. 13, 1'0, 27. 1971 P UBLIC NOTICE NOTICE TOCltllOITOltS SU~llUOlt COUltTO~ THI STATl!OFCAL.IP'OltNIA P'Olt TNECOUNTYOP'OltANOa No, A-9ttot Eit•lt Ot MIL.OREO TUNICK, OtCH'led. NOTICE IS HEREBY G IVEN to ti. creditors OI the al>Ow "l}mecl O.C.-lent tllet all PHIO"S htvlt'IQ clelms 419a1n11 lht said dee~I are reoulred to Ille them, •Ith tlW n&ettsary vouchers, In Iha office ol tae ctert< OI tht •l>OYt -lllled court.ortoprewnt them, win. ti. --------------1 nKtu •ryYOOChtt"l, IO tllt underMvned .. OTICllTOC:ONTAACTOltS CALI.IMO l'OR BIDS SchOOI Ofstrlct: lflVINE UNIFll!D SCHOOLDISTAICT Bid Oeadllne: 2:00o'cloCk p.m. of tht •thd•yOfAUVUSl.1977 PIK& of Bid Receipt: DISTRICT AO· MINISTRATIVE Cl!NT£R. 2'41 Alton AYe,..., lrvlne, Celllomt• '2714 Project ldtllllllc •tlon Name: ltK a<l)ell1'9 Unl\ltrlity Petil E lerntn· 19rySchOot Pl•«• Pltn$•~•onflle: Olslrk t Busl· M H Offlee, 29At Alton Awnue, lrvlM, Calllornla9171' NOTICE IS He1te•v OIVl!N lhllt th• •bO-n.mtcl Sc-I Olstriet or Ofa"9f Collntl'. c.111om1e, ect1119 _by end tllrouOI\ (11 Oover111n9 Board, ll e r elnelter refe rred't o e s "OISTltlCT .. , Will r9Cel\lt U11 la. bu1 1'°' l•ter then tllt ebo\lt-$lai.d time, ,..led bldla for the award of• <Ol'llre<t for the--. ptOJect. Bids ""41 be l"tCelwd In tr. piece ldentffl.0 ...... .,., '"'" be OPtned et lht office Of GOL.D ANO GOLD, Al·· tornays •t Law, Attn: Glori• Shimer, IA• South Beverly DrlY9, Sutte 602, Beverly Hill,, Calllomle qo112, which 11 tll• place of buslnts.s of the undtrsloned In ... mottler• 1»'1•lnl1'19 IO the etlatt Of said o.c-nt. wltnln tour ..-thS afltr the llrsl IJUOllC•hon ot lhlsnoUce. DaltdJunt11, 1t77 ROBERT M. TUNICK E11t<utor of, ... Will of 111e-.N1mecldecedent 00\.0 ANOOO...D Attor11en •t1 • .11w Attit:Olert•~ 144 s...tll .. wrtr ~lw 11111• .. I .. ..,.,.., Miiis, CA "211 Tel: Cl1JI 17>-MU Alt_.,.torE..C- Publllhtd 0rt"9t CoHt Dally Piiot, JlllV•. IJ,211,21, 1'77 PUBLIC NOTICE and publkl'( tNd aloud •t tht tl)OW·l--------------Jtated tltntlndPIKA. NOTICatNVITllfO 81DS E•<h bid must conform a nd bt Notlcelsheret1y9ive<1 thetttM8oard rlt.P011Sl"9totN""'r•l~-1111. of Trustws ot the Cottt (ornMunlty EKllDid ll•ttllleeccomHr1IHl>ytht Ctlleee Olth'ICI ., Ofaflte CO\lnty, st<\lrlty rtfer'l'td to rn lllt contrect Celllornle. ,..11 rec.I.,.-'" llllh uo docum.nn and lrt the Utt ol ~ to ll:OOLm., 'nlundty,A..,,14, 1'71, PUBLIC NOTICE lngton 8Nch, CA 92647 LAKEVIEW !'EAL.TY, 1S783Ctb01 I'd., :: 103, La9una Hiii$, CA. 926Sl Brenda Paris. 23S41 ,t.vtnlde TOl>ilf198. Mission Vl<tlo. CA: "267S This bu$1nett Is c.onductect by an •n· dlvldua1 Ectward Wiiiiam l.Ancasf.,, 1m1 ----s-u-... -.-1-0R_CO_U_lt_T ____ ,~~w· Or., H ... llnoton kteh, CA Ol'CALIFOltN1A MlcllMI Utut'le Ulncasttr, 11'2 8renOaP•rts This stet...._1 w•s flleo whit tne CollnlY Otn< OI Or...,e Cou<>tl' on July Saoohlrt Sf., We$1mlrnter. CA '*3 70l~~!.oi!."!~~11 This business Is condllcted by • SaMAMt.C.llMrMa oener••~'lhlp. I, 1977. CASE NUMBElt 0-t~ Mk'-1 L.. Ltncesler 1'7U U SUMMONS IMAllltlAGl!I Tiiis staten-t w.s lllecl wllll IN Publl~ ~anoe Coast Dally Pilol. In re t"" marrltQR of ,..tltloner: CoUhly Otrll ot Or~ County on July J uly 13.20,27,anc:IAUQuslJ, 1917 LORRAINE R. LEWIS -Respon. 15• 1977• • 3020-71 dent: VAL GENE L.EWIS PUBUC NOTICE NOTICE! y.., MY9 -WM. Tiie ~941'1 may ._kit ... lfttlt .,.., wtt-. y..,r .....,. ~ llftMts ., ... ,.....,,. .... tlll11 » MYL lleM Ille lllfermatlMI -------------......... l'nOll Publlshe<I 0r8"9f CoHI Dally Pllol, J uly 20, 21, ...0 A119ust3, 10, 1977 3191.71 PUBLIC NOTICE "ICTITIOUS 8USINl!SS AVISOI UstMIYt*Hftl_.NI 111------------- MAMa STATEM!:NT tri-..... llKldlr ceoitr• U•. 1loo STATEMENT 01' A8ANDONMENT ThefOllowl1"19s-rtonuredol1>9busl·• ·~letld•. ---UL,.......... OFUSl!OP' nessas: .............. Lu .. ....._.... l'ICTITICIUS I USINISSNAM!:. BETTERDAYS.3700WestWerner ,.,,..._. TM toliow1"9...,.... has abandoned Avenl>l!,SantaAne,CAtt7CM 1. To IM Respondent ISH foot. t!MtuseOfU-.fktlllousbuslnusname : J J L & W, Inc., • Callfornl• llOte'I: NEWPORT BUSINESS FORMS. ::orp0retlon, 972 Minion Orin , Coil• •· Thepetlti-rhllslllecltrietlllon 1110-c Newport Blvd .. C:O.t• MeH, ca. Mesa,C•lllornltt2'». concemno yaur marrl-. You Mat' 'l:U.27 This tiuslnt• Is conducted by a cor· Ille• wrttten rtSpClnM wltllln • del'f of TM Fictitious Busll\tSI Name <&'· poratlon INdtC.thttthlswmrnonsls-wdO<t ferred to'•boYt was llled In Ortn0e J J L. &.W, INC. you. Countyon313175. .Joyce Huglle1. b. If you fall to Ill&' • written Chtr1es Wllll"""' Oou9Mfty, 3601 SK,....,. ,..sPonM within sue.II ti,..., yow dtfault Ptr-11¥ ..... Lafte. t .. B. 1 rv1ne, Ca. '2714 Tiiis ~tat--filed wltll the meybtentend-thec...irt"'•"entw Thl~l>ustneuwasc.onductedbytnln· County Cler1I OI ~--C-ty on July • ludgfNftt conlalnlng lnJunctl\lt or dl¥ldUtl. 1•, 1977 · ottwr ~ concamlno dlvlslan of pro-Olarles w. DouohfflY P'1"" petty, 'flOlllal 51.fPPO<t, Child C11tlodY, This statement ••S 111ec1 with tht Published Ortn9t CoMt Dally Piiot, child wJ>POrt. tttorney•s fees, cost~. c,oul\IY Clt!rtl of Or-xie County on July July20,27,enc1A119.3, 10, 1'17 endllicho9*'l'tlltf•smeylM9f'tnttO 15, 1917. • ..... u Publlslllld Ortnve Coal! Dally Piiot, Ju1v 10, 27, and AUCJUll 3. 10. nn 3t30-77 307._11 by ti. c.ovrt, whleh could result In lht --------------19ernllhment0f w•s, ttltlnoOI money or .,,_,y, or otNr "''"'. c. If .......... "' -It""••<• ef --------------1•11•ltlnlrf!ft 11111 !Nltter, .,.., llle4!., ..ICTITIOUS auSINt:SS .... ,...,,.,,." .. tlltt ·-wrt""" PUBUC NOTICE NAMS STATa MllltlT ,.,,_, lf....,,ma.,Mfll .... U-. The fol'-"'9 PfftanS •,. llol"9 buSI· Dated ~ry22, 1'77 MU as: • WIL.LIAM E.ST J C)MN, PORSCHI! PARTS 08SOLETI!, a.rtt 1'SO Raftl!Olph str .... COSUI Mes .. CA L.lnc1tTMwlef. 926.2' • a.utY Chick 1"9f10n, ll'C., a Callfof"nl.a (SEAL) cor.porat1011, 40 I!. CN sl Hwy.. •The res.-.."'° olhtr .-.mlttltCI N•wll0f1 Buch. CA tl660 1N11tn mwt bf hi """'nt a In the This buslMM Is conducW<I loy • cor-form prtt<rllltd bytMC:.llNl'lll• ltule• .J1>ratton. of c.owt, n..., lllUlt M ffled lft thtt CHIOC IVl!fl~ INC. court .... UI Via PhlPef , ......... - S.A.0..rlton PfOOfofMNlceOltc..,OfaacllOflpetl· AH1. St< 'Tl'Mt 1'-'· Thetlme-a swmlTIOMlldl· Tiiis st•t-was filed wlltl '"' ~ _....,on • _,., rna'f\Yary -. County Clerk ti 0r-. Counly on July lltfldlrv on IN -thod of 1trvlce. FOf' a. ttn. · exaro411e,-ccP•11.10t~•1s.40, ,., ... JUOtTN A.1CA&.UlNY Publlllled Clra!>Qt Coast Dally Piiot, USS I . °'"'1'*" A-July, 11, 20, 27, encl AU11Uft3, 1971...__. s.i .. m -71 ... .._CAt26*1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~ T .. 1QM)'7l<&Mt PUBUC NOTICE. At1••tw: ~ ~1'6111Nd 0r9ftQS c-t O.lly Pleot. PUBLIC NOTICE NOTICaO,. ltlOH-•d POH9181lfTY NotiC't t. llertb'r 91"""' tllet Ula un· dtriJvntd wtll ""' bf ret.poMlblt for any cstbls Of' ll11bOllle1 contrecled by eny-OClltl'\thtn mylollf, or In the neme Of The Hew World o.11, 2t'2 South O!Mt ~•911w••· uouna aeac11, c:..111-~tas1. DetedtflklethdoirYOfJlllY, 1"1 S'-'"IO HerM\l~ 13'0 T"*'"" LAQUnl llta h, CA ms1 Publlltlld ClrMIQlt Coal Dally Piiot. July to,Jl,27, "77 317>71 PtJBUC NOTICE Jullfl7,n ~a.10, tt,ttn Sl90-n wbcontrectora. .. the Pwe:lleal119 --. Of ..... ttllOol IUNIU•e»uttor,,. .. TM OIST•IC'f-lht r19hl to lllstrlcl tocaloeel • 't70""-A-, STollftOPCAUl'OttNIA,.,_ ~te1 any er 1111 ll!kb « to wtl"9 My Ir· COiia MMe. CalifOt'nle, ti •1ct1 time Tlfl COUNTY or OllAMOI l"edwl.,.llltlorlllfermttltltSln111t bldt M" bids wlll De 11'11141<.llY __. ...i ..._...,.. or'illtN11"'911'9. ttldfor: NOTICI OP MIA•t•O o~ TlltOISTltlC:ft\atOtll•lllffl,_l:tle ~ltlHTINO AHO a t NOINO 0" PITl"Oll "°" ""°9ATI Oft "1UI Director ol tflt DttwtrtrMflt ot In-ttn l'ALL LECT UAll ....... AND flCMI La"n••• TIS'tAMt•· cMtml "91etloMtllt ...,_,., Pf't\411• ICN&OUl.IE: COASTLINe COM• tAa1' ANO !'Ott AU~U.ftOtll l~rAttof11ttfltfftw .... lntl'le lOC4lll• MVNITYCOU&OR TO ADMINtJ'fla UMOll .. TMI ryl11-#flk1\lh .. _t.lo11t.,,rf0trned Allllldi -tobt l11~wltll IMDIHMO&NT --1•1•T•Ano.. lot' M<h crtlft er 1Yt19 fff WOt'll~ll the l111tNdkll\.t _. Goltdlt.lom tfld OP UTAft.S ACT 1...,..TI cbDI ntMdtll •-•tilt c4111tr«t. TM9e "'9Clfl<atl-wMclt .,.-. Oii fll• ..,.,. .... r•t• •f'flllfiM tt t1'1t 01$TR lc:T Offl<t lftd may lit -vrM In tM Off let ef 1"t aata tUMYltl .. llU04AltOSON, le<t!H M 1't1 Altilft ·-· INllM, ll'llrd\aal• AOMll ff Mid ec:heel die-.. MAYlla HAU .. lllCKARDION, trlct. Ot6teMd. lec1t~-t ..... t.t1tftlll•~ N01'tc:9 IS Hl ltl e Y OIVlN tl\M M. lUGCNI OUNlA~llM 11• ,_.... • ,... ... .., ......... Wiil MJ..,l• ...... ~T"""4•Y•IM PUBUC NOTICE DAILY _,.LOT "' "You'd think we were a high·proril organization with the numtx-r of p<>oplc oul of their gourds around here." Nicaraguan President Ill From AP Dlspate&es Nicaraguan President Anastasio Somo.za w~s hospitalized in a military clinic. apparenUy suffer- ing rrom a heart ailment, an official communique said. ' Somoza, 54, a West Point graduate,· is in "satl.s.Cactory condition," the communique s aid. baL doctors are checking out "the evolution of· recei)t chest pains." Somoza was elected president in 1972 for a six· year term. His family has ruled the country f.or 'almost four decades. · . , * Presideat Carter chose Rodney O. Kenaedy· Minott, a U.S. history professor al Cal Slate Hayward, to be the U.S. ambassador to Sweden.~ He also chose Andrew I. Killgore. a career foreign service officer, to be the U.S. ambassador ( ) : to Q~~~edy-Minott, 49, l PEOPLE h as written b ooks o n ---------veterans organizations, Hitler, and California politics. * Joan Mondale chastized the federal 1overn- . ment for its attitude toward the creative arts, ad- ding that she favored more direct grants and subsidies to in- dividual artists. The vice president's wife said in San Antonio s uch funds could come from the National Endowment of the Arts and that the money currently spent on the arts i~ "practically nothing. "It's like sending a child for a n ice c ream con e with a Mtt$.~OALll nickel," she said. Mrs. Mondale reviewed a sample or Texas arts and crafts al the home of Mr. and Mrs. Manhall Steves. . * Harold Edwards was legislative counsel to U.S. Sen. Robert Morgan of North Carolina last year when be agreed with Morgan that the FBI was "rot- teq to the core." . Now Edwards has been na med U.S. attorney for west.em North Carolina, and will be ordering FBI investigations himself. He says Morgan misspoke himself, and meant to SQ the FBI was rotten "at the core," not "to the core." PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ---- ft DAIL VP1l0 T W!idn!!d!y1 July 21 g \In MARMADUKE by lrld Andtnon ,,,, lloo ....... _ ..,_ ....... "Al somebody down at Sol's Construction Yard and he sounds very angry!" FUNKY WINKER BEAN C> C> i l ~ I TANK McNAMARA MOON MULLINS I-low ARs You~ INVESTMENTS, PLUSH· -BOTTOM . ?;Ji ® 74.7 TODAY'S CBDSSIDID PUZZLI -ACROSS ·t Unive"ity : faculty ;:!>Norman ,.., Vincent · tb ···cry from M Hold1n • reserve lS Chemical .: cornpouncf ~ PltRdwlth ~Asian G Suture 10Bon~r 1· ~l Botltflr ~East ~ · Canadian •• rover ~ 8!ihapr1<. zj Long ·: ha11n9ue 29 Seco,,d 591f· ·~ 2 words )t Ufelen Singer "·····•nd the W91f" ~-Pronoun .q. "·· ... might • .sav" 4' Sllel Stldlum group 4S Act115S Vetnl · 46 NtwCOfT'te• 48 Smtlt qu1ntltles 50 High rock St Equine Sl 80011 keeping en Hies 57 Promptly 61 Weapon 62 Hea11ng ducts 2 WOid$ 64 Elk"s relative 65 · · · de Leon i.:;.&.::4.=tir+-ri'imi'itiiint;r+:"+--....., 66 Anglo· Suon lowly ltWft~r+Pfr-4 person ~Mil't-1-rtrfW 67 Comes to a IT.+7i*+im+::+Pim~ helt 68 Accrdent ta use 69 Tow e• OOWN 1 .•• Tamiro'll 2 Guido··-II 18 lolu"uon 22 Oozn 24 Becomes ragged 26 Spanish rooms 27 Hilltop 28 Severity 30 Boor 31 Principle of good words co,,ducl 6 German ctty 32 Canedien 1 P.l. !legrito ,!:>lrds 8 Kind of vear 33 Upholstery 9 Mr Kovacs gimp 10 Stem 36 Crippled 11 Liberate 39 Title I 2 SNWeed 40 Highly 13 Gennen rlvtf rtgtrded 43 Talks much bulH'flhUle 45 Scottlah voungiter5 47 Clasoa '9 H11'YM11 crqp 52 PrecipltJtlon qu1,,tltv 53 Yield 54 Not seeled 55 Necessity 56 "····.look and listen" 58 ·••• jure: Bv the law itself 59 Rualan nvtf 60 F11nct1 ri'l9f 63 Compass point BOOMER 61~tv. 'fov~ ~w o'6~ 19 ~1! by Wm. F. Brown ind Mel ~sson ~u 1110 vou ew,g ~11'40 ~IM f 1t-J 1-..1e MISS PEACH • GORDO ~ -.[) Ar A'/J'l /.e'E:1 ' L.OPeZ. If IT i'lU! THAT c.AM!!6 ONL.V TAK& ONA OlflNIC: ~ ~lVIN Q\YS ? by Tom Batfuk by Jeff Millar and Bill Hinds lty Ferd and Tom Johnson ... EVSR SlNCe I «>T INVO~VEC> WITH 7HEM IHEY'V~ DONE NOTHIN(;, BUTGO UP! llUDGE PARKER 7-2'7 0 ~l-OW ~ PA~~! .. ~ i f I~ ; l 0 DOOLEY'S WORLD FAN1ASTIC !t LOOK AT AU.~ MIWONS ANO MILUONS Of STARS UP 11-IERE ! DR. SMOCK AN P HOW WOLJ t..P YOLJ c:>e:S CR1ee; IHe se:ve:R llY OF THE; Pt..AINll FF'S WH 11=>- l.-ASH, POCi"OR? by Mell by Tom K. Ryan J GOT A PERMANENT WAVS TODAY FIRS'f: CECIL. APP.EARS 10 HAVf: CAPSIZED •••• SECONfJ: lHlS /S CAUSEP ~ O:Cll-FAtNT'IN& •••• PEANUTS WMAT'S THE HOCKEI/ STICK FOR? I/OU CAN'T 6U4RO OUR HOOSE WITH A HOCKE'{ STICK ... I J I r l I • ! .. bV Chi.rles M. SChUll 1 60ESS CHUCK TOLO ~OU lHAT M~ OA0'5 OUT OF TOWN, AND ! HATE STMIN6 ALONE I COULD GET MU66fC' WMILE '100'RE SliTING IN THE PENAL.TV eox ! by Roger Bradfield by George Lemont THE GIRLS ••What puzzles me is why doctors spend 10 much time In medical ld.lool-aD lhey evet tdJ you is IO live up eatiJls IOIDCtbirw." DENNIS'THE MENACE s DAILY ALOT U Another Hillbilly Ebsen on TV rwda••••e... DEAR PAT: Several mon1hs 1A¥U tbcrt was an arUde ln tM D.U, Pllot .tboUt a mu •bo wu makint and !'ltlllirt. rain aodl. WW you nnd out wberJ°l can purchueooe? P.H .• Coraoa del ?thr am P•)ne'• rala 1oa an anllable at Narkf'l Ceraaks. lltl Yal•s..~• ,\aa. Malled dtel&'fWJ ti U.. • 1111D'N na M arraqed '' ,.. I .. tTMUl. RttaU oatlet aat" are plamed for la&for ~ yra. acC'Ol"dbll &o lhlktl' O Hr. ... .,..r .. .., ·= Oftlce, lUt Federal Ottlce B a.v.lud, OH wa Lemd .. Letttttt! DEAR PAT: Lut s1.nnmer there w H u toll·free phone number one cuuld call t.o flnd out where fresh produce could be pw-chased directly rrom the l1'0Wer. ls such a number in operation um summer! A.H .. Founlain Valley Tbe CalUonla Departmem of Food <Editor'• ncce: Boswd• · E'-". whole taUwr' Bwld11 h~• tn N..,,C B«Jela, oppeaNd loc:ollJ M •· Hnf ~8 Jeremr T'rofl' and "Ton:igM at•:».··~ at CM CO$tO MeaoCivic P~.J By JAY SllAUV'IT LOS ANGELES (AP)-l"ornlneseuons Bud· dy Ebeen starred lb cBS· "Beverly HlllbllUes. •• Now an Ebsen otrsprlns. BoDDle, 2S. is ln a aimllar-ly bucolic aeries for NBC, •"TbeKalllkab. •• It starts Aug. 3, rum ftft weeb 91),d eoncema a West Vir&inia family that moves to a dMolate spot in California, opens a 1u station and commences scbeming ways to mate a fa$t buck. Bonnie, a tall, blue-eyed blonde lady with a quick smile, will be essaying Bobbi Lou, daughter of Papa Kallikak. NBC HASTENS TO CIADI ltsabow isn't much like "Hillbillies." They note that Jed Clampett's clan was oil·ricb, thia one is dirt-poor and doean 't Jive in Beverly Hills, either. Hob.y. Bonnie may come from a sbowbia family, but she says she's tbe only one ol Ebsen ·s seven kids to take up acting, deciding on that after her first year in college. Miss E., who also studied with New York acting auru Sanford Meisner. did summer stock, appear- ing in "Our Town." Then she ·a pent a lot or thne simply watching her father and others work in his .. Barnaby Jones .. series on CBS. .. HE FELT THAT WAS the best way for me to learn, rather than go to a lot of fllm acting schools ... abeadded. Miss Ebsen, who subsequently landed roles in ••Marcus Welby," "The Hardy Boys" and a TV movie, "Smashup on Inl~rstaCe s ... says her first job was on pop's show, "Bamaby Jones ... "I played the secretary of a militant f emlniat who ·d knocked off her boyfriend,·· she arinned. She spoke or all this dUring the traditional in· terview in Burbank at the NBC commissary, where thesoupoltbedaywas potaaeala thumb. EAllUER, SHE'D BEEN READING thro\lib the third show's script with other cast members. among them Da~d Huddleston <Papa Kalllkak) and Peter Palmer, wbo starred In the Broadway and movie versions ol ''L 'il Abner'·' and now 11 play-ing a German immigrant. · . DEAR PAT: Years ago when l av vlied for my first passport, the pa.saport office kept my mOlber's af. fidavit sweartni to facts ol my birth in Kansas where I was born before re-- ""OJ'da were kept. U wu the only re- cord I bad showing when and where I was born. My mother has since passed on and I have no one else who can make out a new affida vil. . aad Atrkllltue'• dJrect martettac "ho&·Ua• .. ••miter ls 1.-.m.5531. aecaum a.a lalormatloa &bee& by p~oalal t.be above aumber or by wrUl•I to Direct Marketln1 Procram. mo N St.., Sacramento, CA Hat•. All updated UstiJlg becomes av 111.able la September. Dttes DUpllte NEW TV EBSEN It's customary for stars to tell their tots to stay Newport'• Bonnie out of show biz, that it'a fUU·ot a»&oodnib wbo·n Bonnie made mention that lf the Kallikab click this summer, there's a good chance NBC will reprise it In January as a mid-season replacement. And if not? DEAR PAT: I am going to have to go to Small Claims Court to try to recover the membership dues I paid to a tennis club for a swi m membership last May. I found the facility was misrepresented and none of the pool regulations were being enforced. How do I go about filin& a suit? ----------break your heart. Is there some way I can have my mother's affidavit returned after all these years? Where do I write? l got my passport through the New York of lice and wonder if they still have m y record. S.T., Fountam Valley Write directly to the Passport Of- fice, 1425 K St. N.W., Washington. DC 20524, giving the full name In wblcb tbe passport was Issued, yoar date and place of blrtb, number and date of i.sue ol tbe passport (If available). If your affidavit Is still on rue, tbls office may be able to return It t.o you or send a copy. ..... " .. t'~acion a Sea•? -«..'DEAR PAT: My 18-year-old daughter just received a Las Vegas vacation offer from Columbia Research Corp. priced at $1S.9S.. She's thrilled, but I'm suspicious. · ·.-, F .S., Santa Ana Columbia Research Corp. ls apparently not a legUimateaperatlon. Extradition proceedlnp are ander .. way la Cblcago for CRC'1 president to face crlminal and civil da.uges med by tbe CalUornla AUoraey GeDera1. Postal authorities aay tlley are . powerless t.o stop CRC'• a.ttewed mus maWngs. Those who paid for tbe $15.95 vacation and have proof of . payment are asked t.o seiad materials to Dep. Atty. Gen. James Omeo, Office oC the. AUorney Geteral, COOO "State Building, San Francisco, CA "104, with carbon copies malled to the Federal Trade Commission, ~ D.A., Newport Beach The California Department of Consumer Affairs' offers a free publication, .. The Consumer And The Small Oalms Court." Request a free copy by phoning the Orange County Office of Consumer Affairs at 834..Cl•. A complete expla.aat.ioa of the Small Claims Coo.rt procedure is Included In the booklet. A• ll•ple1Uant 'I' am DEAR PAT: I sent a complaint to Crazy Horse clolhing manufacturers in Paterson, N.J ., about a $42 sweater 1 bought m Washington, D.C. last fall. The yam is ••pilling," and I have been told this is because or def~ctiv e yarn. I a sked for a 1replacement or refund, but didn't get any reply. S.G., Huntington Beach Tiie manufacturer's spokesman told A YS that you should submit your complaint t.o tbe company's president Jamee Robbins, at 5Z5 7th Ave., New York, NY 10018. Replacement or rdnd aothortutlon must come from him personally, the spokesman said, adding that defective yarn Is not tbe only cause for pllll.Dg. Be sare to describe the sweater and your lauadering method. If the sweater Is defedive, you will be asked &o mall it for an appropriate adjustment. -t. ........ Little Ainerica CupRllceSet ·'The loan's up, .. read the signs on crates con· taining two C.Class catamarans being off·loaded at Los Angeles flarbor this week.. The C Cats are from Australia and the signs in- dicate the Aussies' determination to wln back the Little America's Cup, emblymatic of world catamaran sailing, which the American sailors won for the first time last year. SPORTING EQUALLY EN111USIASTIC signs, "Keep the Cup, .. on T-shirts and other gear around Cabrillo Beach" Yacht Club. the Am~ricans begin eliminations hext week to determine which of at least 13 C Cats -some of them new -will defend the coveted ptiie against the Aussie challenge. The eliminaU.on series will start next Wednesday and contlnuethroughAug.13. . The acal;lal cup races are scheduled Aug .. 20-.30. St&l9s Set For 'West' TV Movie · LOS ANGELES <AP> · "How The West Was Won;· has signed more guest stars for the big. production Western for ABC. Horst Bucholz will portr ay Sergei. the Count of Kiev, nephew of the Grand Duke of Russia, who will b e played by Christopher Lee. Brian Keith bas been signed to play Gen. "Brandy J ack .. Stonecipher , a general cut from the pattern of Patton and Custer. Peter .Hansen, seven years in ··General Hospital, .. will play an Army major. James A mess stars in the series. Nolan to Ron LOS. ANGELES (AP) -Kathleen Nolan, first woman president of the Screen Actors Guild, bas announced her intention to nm for r e-election. She is completing her· first two-year term. Dlllty .......... "'9119 The boats shipped here by the Aussu;s are Nichol~ n and Quest ·111. the latter presumably a trial horse for Nicholas IL During the Australian selection trials Nicbolu II was the winner in a 3·1 series against Quest Ill. CATS TUNE UP FOR LITTLE AMERICA'S CUP U.S. Ellmlnatlon Trl•I• Start Next Wedneaday TEAM CAPTAIN FOR the Australians is 42- year old ,l.indsay Cunningham. His s ailing crew is composed of Graham Candy, 31; Graeme Fraser. ·32; and Simon McKeon, 21. The final crew selection will be made after the boat evaluation series in Los Angeles Harbor. The team manager Is Doug Guy, 53, commodore of the McCrae Yacht Club or Australia. . At least six of the American defense contenders have already tasted competition in the rec:ent ,Pacific Multihull Association world championship 'at CBYC earlier this month. They were Tsunami. Superduck. Taku in. Aquarius IV, Aquarius V and Sea Eagle. 'Others readying for the competition are Patient Lady ll1, Hawk, Defiance, Coyote IV. AU Spruced Up, Delta88 and Amarysass. THE MOST FORMIDABLE new boat ap- proaching completion is Hawk, designed by Clayton 'l'umbull, Ned Damon, Cappy Sheeley and Rick Taylor. At too pounds it is reputed to be tbe lightest C Cat ever built. The boat is 23 ffft lOQg, 18 feet wide and is coaatructed of such exotic materials as a carbon fiber cross tube, titanium trampOllne an a natural wood finl&h. Als K.odoff of Irvine wlth Bobby Harvey. Cabdl.lo Beaeb, brouabt the cup to U>e U.S. tot the first time last year after a ll'Uel1u sertu in Australia. Their boat \us Aquanua v. designed by cWolf. Three Fleet Tide Races .in Newport The Newport Harbor Yacht Club wu .,ost to three neet championships last weekend. The biggest turnout was. In 'the fast·powing Etcbella·22 Class won by George 'T.tat, NHYC. There were 15 boats on the~ line. Aftotber fast-growing class ia the Santana-20 which lumed. out 14 boats for the first neet cham- pionship. The winner was st.eve Schock, NHYC. The winner in the Luders·l6 Class was Bill Fundenbe!I. NYHC. Summaryofresultl: \ ETCHELLS·22 -1, TCLRYPE lll, George Twist, NHYC; 2, Chaparral, Pat Ayres, NHYC: 3. Perfect, Kent Edler, NHYC; 4. Get Going, Ted Munroe, NHYC; 5, Wuslon, ArtStrock, NHYC. SANT ANA-20 -1, Little Pooner, Steve Schock. NHYC: 2, Sandbagser, Jim Tyler, BYC; 3, Cordon Bleu, Jeff Allen. BYC; 4, Wahoo, AnYleCampbelJ. BYC; 5, Loian'aRun.Dool«an, B(;YC. LUDEllS'· -1, Anael. Bill Fundenberi. NHYC: 2, Windson1, Ann lenaud. Capo BYC; 3. • Lolllpop, Bernard McNa1r, 'BYC. Not Ebsen the Elder, she said: .. No, be·dnever say, •0on•tdothis, don'tdothat. ... AND, SUE SAYS, SRB didn't tell blm ••• de- cided to become an actress' until the American Conservatory Theater in San Francisco approved her application to study there. '11 ran odtside where be was fixiJll bis boat. and cried, 'I just got accepted to acting school, m she said. ••And he went. 'Oh, that's great.· But that was the first be beard of it." I All Stars SWeep TV Ra#,ngs Prize LOS ANGELES CAP) der: "Well,·· she said in the light-hearted way some thespians have when facing possible misery ... then it's on to something else and hi-dic:ldley-clee. an •C>\ • tor's life for me... . SOl 'Tlf ( 'O :\ST f•U A I Wt l A •t I\ 11 I fl. ~ I'~ 0\' I ........... s.t.-S-.1:41 '. -nt1Afa1 . 'ANNIE .. (PO) HALL: WlllWee6fA119 THIA'-H.--w i::i to L.A. -The All-star bqeball ••AU-star Baseball, .. game OD NBC WU the 17 ·' million. NBC: biggest bit In last week's. .. Chulie's Anlela, .. 1'.9 televtaionratinprace. million. ABC; .. Barnaby cw 500M Tbe All-star contest · Jones,'" 13.C ml1.l:laa. and. ...~..,YE~ wuYiewedlzimoretban· "Husbands and Wifes," EYI vr 17.4 mlWon homes on· 13 mlllloa. both £BS;11_,::· ==n=GBt=·=·~..:..I Tu~~ .. week .. Laverne and Slalrley,t' ago ac~}o-.A. c.. 12.9 IDilllon, .. Barney--~--------------- Nieiaen ~fair the Miller," 12.T mllllon, --···"'°'"'"--------------- weekmdlngJulyat.. ABC Sunc1Q' movie. 12.7 A~ +il"V"V'> ago in a ~.V\.I Thia weet'a big Joeer mmton. all ABC: .. All's l\JI ~ UI I Ko u 1 ~T WU • show competlq Fair, l2A million, CBS; .far, .f.:;W PMJPf..I a«ainst tbe national • "What's Happentna, •• 'JUI -"·-1-1' : . pastime -a qss com-. 12.2 mlllion. and '"J.l'bb:' , / edy pilot ca11ed .. Best 12 million, both ABC; • J Friends,'' la.st place in .. Th~ Jefferso~: h 11.7 ~ the numbers ·chase and million, CBS; Happy .. seen in 6.1 million Da·ys," 11.5 million, • .~ homes. ABC; "Quincy,,. 11.2 The week's Nie)sentop million, NBC; "Maude," 20 shows and tllenumber 11.2 million, CBS; "Sun- of homes in which they day Movie," 11.1 were aeen were. in or-millioD; .. Welcome Back. Kotter.•• 11 Skipper:s 1 Of Cal-25 ~ million, ABC; "'One Day at a Time.,. 11 mUHcm; .. Joe Garaglola All-star Special," 10.9 million. NBC; .. Shields and Yarnell,.. 10.9 · million, CBS; ·and ''Barett.a," Boats v~ .·.10,SmDlt~ •. ~~-. Fifty representatl~'·Tatun& Set of Cal-25 fleets Jn th~J:t '. . United States began ar•:. r. ct?. l ' riving in Long · Beach · in. P'-e tJet Harbor today for the Na-· tional Championship I.as ANG~ <AP> R egatta scheduled -Tatum O'Neal wW SaturdayandSUndayout follow. Ellzabeth of Long Beach Yacht. Taylor's footsteps by Club. playing. the lead in Chairman Ted Ediss MGll'.& ~·International said the races will be V~lvelt." sailed on courses outslde Miu TQlcr ma .lier Long Beacb Harbor. mrtjor debut u a child Tberewillbethreences actress in ••National •Saturday and two on Velvet," ftlmecl by llGll Sunday, starting at 11 in 1944. Now. Bryan a.m. each day. Forbes bas updated the There will be a Kip-S>lottotellthestoryofthe pers meeting and sail hone-loving niece of measuring at LBYC Velvet Brown. the starting at 9 a.m. Sabir-Taylcrrale. day. Illas O'Neal, Oscar The Cal-25 is a popular. winner a supporting ac- racing-cruising yach'\de-treu for "Paper Moon,0 signed by c. Will am will be directed by Lapwort~ of Newport Forbee cm locations )n Beach and built by Cal Eqi.nd and tbe United Yachts. Statei tbia f alL RqceTaken ·' . ByMewn: .f • ot • *~IN CONCERTI!** • THIS FRIDAY • " l'· .. EBllt~I( llHl~I~\• "Tfie King of Roell 1111d .&/I" j i ON ST AGE WITH .I THE z • BlllS ~ i ~111111tll~A1111tN 0 "' _, . ~ r " .... ~. m , >. ~. • w 1•1 Bit ~ "Roel& tA• BOdt"J • -. z •. o . • r' .. DAIL V PILOT " Wlldneeday, Ju'X, 27, 1177 ,\ llOllll<lt ll,\lllCH~·lllll.l'll"'-l lJI l'oJ..1•• \ \1\1111':-<I~"-'' 1.i.. LIZA MINNEUJ ·ROBERT DE NIRO. "NEW YORK. NEW YORK" ,, .... .l,,hl \Ill \l·\l ll.\ltll-1\l\ .. IHl.\l\IHI' ..,.,, 1 .. 1 \)U. \I \I II \LI II · t~-1..11., \I \Ill I'"' "II''-'' t•,..J...Jt,. 11111. l'l II. 1'~11 ~...JHPlll11 I (It \111011 1i...,..t.......,i.. JOit' ._ \'-111 H ..lltll Ill llli \l-..t """1•• .-It '""'l.o."'•"'H \l l'tf fit H'' I, Jrrr...t.~ (~,..,JI.~ K. ... 1, •. lil .,., .... ti.. .... t ....... ¥ .... 11\ l .. ~1'-·"··· .. J D'llG•l\Al til0Ti(Jlli'1Cfl.• sou..oruc,4.l.&Lti11 •~ •itd '-"~~uo.oustsait~ J ~~~ T~~-•t•d~~- ---~ MISSION ~ ORIVf.IN --~ ~ ~ IOtoAAOS ~ l;l lM'ORT Cl~I, .. -fBdlEWS THE BAD IDS BEm ARE CE YEAR llllR AND• YJAR WILDER They'Ve fll'9d their coach. They've "borrOwed" •van. They're on their way to the HoustonAstr~ ..• with girts on their minds. cops on their tails and the game of their lives at stake. The Final Chapter Last 'Tall' ,Flick ·Set By BOB THOMAS LOS ANGELES (AP) -Amid the wave of se- quels in today's Cllm market, here's one with a self- desltuctlrla title; "Final Chapter-Wa,lkin& Tall. .. Obv.is>USlY the third in this trio of highly suc- cessful movies will be the last. It takes the story of rural SberUf Buford Pusser to his violent and 1omewhat mysterious death. "We show the final day as lt happened, .. says producer Charles Priltl. "Pusser's mot.her is con- vmced that he was murdered, but a private in· veatigator could find no evidence. .. ALL WE KNOW IS THAT he left the county fair, having his daughter ride with friends. What happened in the car crash must remain indefinitive. There was a paid assassin •t the county fair, and he 'had worked for Fusser's enemies. But there was no autopsy on Pusser, and we don't know how he died. So we sbow the accident but we don't show why it happened." Buford Pusser was the McNairy County, Tenn .. ex-Marine who attracted national attention by war· ring against the criminal element. No,_ "A BRIDGE TOO FAR" PG No"- "ANNIE HALL" PG "YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN" PG "NEW YORK. NEW YORK" PG No"- "SILVER STREAK" PG . .. FUN WITH DICK & JANE" PG ..ANNIE HALL" (PG} "YOUNG FRANKENSTEIN" "THE LAST REMAKE OF BEAU GESTE" "BITE THE BULLET" (PG) "ROCKY" PG "HUSTL~"R •"THE OTHER SIDE OF MIC>NIGHT~R ~· .. ONCE IS""NOTENOUGFf' HoPw!i "EXORCIST II: THE HERETI . "RABID" The killing of his wife by the underworld made him an implacable dealer of justice, sometimes with his own hands. H~died on the bikhway in 1974. just before he was to portray himself in "Part 2 W alldng Tall." "THE FD:tST •'WALKING TALL." starrin& Joe Don Baker, struck a strong note with mov- iegoers concerned with law and order. After a slow start. it caught on with the aid or a c~ed ad cam· paign. ~ Produced for $1.5 million, the film grossed $60 million at the world's theaters, bringing $18.5 million to Bing Crosby Productions and its parent.. Cox Broadcasting. "The picture had an amazing record in this country, playing an unheard-Of year in Little Rock and other cities," said Pratt. "It was great in all of Southeast Asia, Thailand, Hong Kong, The Philip· pines, sensational in South Africa. In France, England and Italy it was not as good.·· "PART 2 WALKING TALL, .. in which Bo Svenson took over as Pusser. cost $1.7 million ~d grossed $40 million with rentals to the company of $11.5 million. The bill for the third film came to $1.85 million ("strictly due to inflation"> and Pratt· happily reported that sample returns in the 650 openings throughout the South indicated more busi· nessthan "Part2." · "Audiences seem to like •Final Chapter·. more," said the producer, who took bis own survey ·at the southern openings. "It bas more heart. The second film was all action.·· The "Walking Talls" are not without their critics. A trade paper reviewer termed the new one "the third and last of those tacky, hyper-violent celebrations of backwoods horsing around ... Pratt, a U.S. Cavalry scout in the South Pacific war, bristled atsucb a view. "THE NEW FILM ISN'T AS violent as the first two," he replied. ''At any rate, Buford Pusser led a violent. action.filled life. He had a point of 'View which rnight 'be considered 'vigilante· by some peo- ple. His theory was •what's right is right, and what's wrong is wrong,' and be decided to do something about it. "He was a simple man who did things his own way. When he caught some moonshiners, be didn't necessarily turn them in. He beat the hell out of them to give them a lesson. He adjudicated the law in bis own way." The one and only real live Ivel Knicvc In .his first dramatic movie role. ;.rntUA ilDiiHF.Tn;1~. ! ~llDi' Panav1sion® Techmcolor ® Distributed by Warner Bros.O A Warner Communications Qimpany CALL THEATERS- FOR SHOWTIMES AND CO-HITS ~ Z. Mott PrnMta A Sondy ~~P Sttloff/Mojor ~ BURT LANCASTERMICHAEL YORK uarri11t 111 "THE ISLAND OF Ol. MOIEAU" a1so -'-e NIGEL OMNPOIT • WIAU onw . llCHAlD IASEHAIT • "Swtr .. w. \N" bleoMd by ...,.,.,._ ln4ltN!tional l'lc-.. ~ Pl"Odlocn SAMUEL Z. AlltOFf ond SAHOV tlOWAlO • lloMd Clfl tilt ftOOlel by H..G. Wth ~ i,. JOHN 11E1MM ~ · and AL AAMRUS • Muslt by lAUtif«t IOSEHTllAl l'nJduclcl by «ltllC": I TlMPU·SMITH ond SKIP STflOff • OincNd by DOH fAYlOI! I Clossic Edot!Cfl by ltwO l()()(S,'*'I• •awmii ftQperboci by ACE 800«$ PG ___ ......,.,..= Calor by McMtlob • A Ctnemo 17 film I I ~·::•:------1 .............. OICA THI ... LUI WIWI ... f\W MWI OI DIATNCNt l "A IRIDGI TOO fAI" .,GI "FOR THE LOVE OF IEHJI" CGJ fl! mu...: ltB} "''"'-'" t1' rnJ"'tJ hi) \llttCh ... , .. , ... 1,1,,-,, 11,,J f1' Richard Baskin Robert Airman Alan RuJolph .-' ~: , (•....:-.~-"'9.' .,._.~, .._....,.~,·~:·~ ··~ ~.._, •·!'\•• ''"'".*''ikt-t•.•·i..n~• -· I • IYL.VHTSA IT ALLOHE 'LUI (POI TALIA SHUil "Islands In the Stream'' "JAUNTY FUN" "FOR THE LOVE • OF IENJI" CGJ "FANTAmc AMIMATIOH .. mYAL"INt • "FANTASTIC P'LA ... ET" • 'l••l•r 11• tl1 lallllt' 11 t.1r 111rrlll•r n1 11 ""' ''"t 11rt RIJHl•a. cr11r ''"t cara. cmy Hiit cu cl1111. m11 Ont Cl nll11.• -O....INNt. ,,,.locley.,_ ..... --. HARVESI' HOUSE , l I I ,,. • ...,. .:--. • ... .. > .... C • .,,,., -eo ··~-(·~'·' '<' ··••;• - I ""·-·~ ' ~- A flNI PU<I TO DN FOii nu omltt JAMIL y NIGHTLY SPECIALS 1/4 FRIED CHICKEN WEDNESDAY'S SPECIAL STUFFED BELL PEPPER THURSDAY'S SPECIAL TURKEY WITH DRESSING FRIDAY SPl!CIAL All THE FISH l CHIPS YOU CAN EAT. .• 219 11' Hr•"'9 l11cludH fbh & chlfH. cno"'Y col• tlow, ,... ............. ALL FOi I'' SUMOA Y SPl!CIAL All THE FRlm CHICKEN YOU CAN EAT. •• 239 I •t nr•h19 l11cl•d•• whipped potetoe1, col•· ..... roll Ir IMlttw. KIDDIE DRUMSTICK PLATTER SOUTH COAST PLAZA 146-2071 3333 So. lridol, Coda MeM HOURSc Moa..fri. 11·1Sat.11·7 S.. 114 W!dr!!d!y. July 27, 1m DAILY PILOT 70MM DOLBY 6 TRACK STEREO XEWPORT 0 CENTEJl FAIHION ISLAND * NEWPORT CENT!R • • ••• • •• DAIL Y·12:00.. 2:30-5:00-7:30- 10:00 FRl.-SAT.·12:00. 2:3().5:00-7:30· 10:00-MIDNIOHT SOARYNO PASSES ''There aren't enough superlatives to descnbe this sensational new film! Benji's .acting performance . is even better than in his first film.'' ANITA SUMMER-FAMILY WEEKLY ' ,i . ., , . . • • ; I ~ . 1 . ( . • • : .. • . . . •.. ... • • I J . l • ' , I ' I l I I .. DAILY PILOT lnte r e t Purchased ltl'MI try Hotel Corp. '1 dlntton bao 11un·hu .. ~ the lnlu al In lh lrvlne Re1t1lry torm ctl)• ln·ltJ h> frammt"l Crow and the Crow Ir\ int• \ t•ntu11• A rHult. Lil hold La wholly u>\ nt·d by Ch1trlcia IAnphu • ch nnan, and bi1 U · "°' lil t• \ nt•w ~'ti m1lllon RttltiJlr)' r ort wlll open 'm 1 1n Snitt~d&le, Aru Tonight's TV Highlights '\Bl. CD 8 00 Tut the Boy King. l'h 1~ ~peci aJ on lh<• E~yptiun teen·ag~ phJ1 o.ih Kine Tulunkhamun. who ruled from agt• 9 lo 19. 1s nurrutcd by Orson \\ l'llc'> Art1f.tcts from the pbaroah's lnmb <1n· ~how f\.11.J 0 8 00 'The As~assination of I rnhl...\. H1<.'hard Burton star:, in this tlo<·udra ma of the Russian revolution I 1 um rnn CHS f) :J l)(J When the Legends L>1t· H1chald \\1dm ark plays the m entor of 4111 lndi<.in rodeo ride r ffrcderic For· rest J m this 1972 western drama. TV DAILY LOG f WEDNESDAYf EVENING 6:00 0 8J (If) fV) Q1l Newt e 1) w U.Ql m 11tws O Voy''' to lhe lottom of lht Sea 1J Gomer ryie 0 • 3J (~ (tJ Mews O Cunsniolt m Partridce hm1ly m A11u $m1th ' )oMs m Journey to Adventurt 2, I lO¥e Lucy fD Eltctnc Comp.any m Oumahc SttltS E!!> M'k1nc It Count -6:30- 0 Night Of The Gnuly * With Clint Walker O Mcw1e: CJ (90) "The N11ht of lhe Criuly" (drd) &b l'lml W~\kpr 'il~tlha Hyrr 1<.fenan Wynn 6 m Andy C11H1th 1 o Merv Cri111n Show ( t1l (},)My Thtte Sons 26 Dick Van Dy\e ( 2il (l)) BewitcMd 39 (~)News m M'n Builds, Man Destroyi m Mtrw Griffin Show '1) The Yit&iniu G> G1ut PetfMmncu tUl Eyewitness on S.nice ~ In Performance 't Wolftr1p -9:30- 0 12JJ 1.v m at) Comedy n"" loo-Out World" When lhree owners ol a California ur wash lry to hdp the lourth one. an O'leorre1aht and nol my bright fellow overcome M shyness they walch with dismay as he bt(Omes a tyrant Michael Huddleston. Justin lord, Bart Braver- man and Steve Oouget s1a1 lt Eyewitnm F KeS 10:00 D IUJ (§) m ~ ICBC News Re- port "Afnca's Defiant While lube' Correspondent Camck Ulley is host ol this documentary e1am1mng the uneasy racial s1tual1on tn South Atma lodav. where lhe while At11kdnt1 m1noril•f rules lhe Bla'k ma1011ty and maintains a aovern- menl policy 1JI strttt raC•dl ~eparalt0n 0 C!) News 'tJ Movie: "Captain Carey, U.U " <dra) '50-Alan Ladd. Wanda HPndm O 1}) (Jal (Qtl{I)) Cltarhe's Anctls "The BluP Angel~·· The Angels u~ hued by lht police lo open lheu own massage parlor in a plol lo calch t vtte olf1cP.1 mvol~ed 10 b11be1y proslilul1on ~nd murd•r ~Non -10:30-m m m11ews M Ho1an's Htroti 11:00 o e 10J m Qt, News 0 (@ lO)) Lrtt Anleriuft Style 0 (3 ~~ (i) NfWl 0 hOllSidt m See U.S. Workers Get • Smuuled Into Muico "FEllNWOOO 2"1GHTI'' m F errrwood 211icht m Marcus we111y ( <]1) (I)) TM lllncll Show !Ml Best of Ciroucho fl:) Rurtdades el) Madleil/l..etiter Report -11:30-u (<Ill CV) (I) ~it:~ "T1ie Prboll• of Z111da" (dra) '52-Slew- arl Cr1neer. James Mason, Deborah Ken. e mi (I) m Oil .lahnlly c.. Cl) Motit: ''tllpper Ship" (dra) 57-Cllarles 81df01d, Jan Sltrhna. Sltve Fooest. D (J) (10) ((3) (I)) Rookies/ Myslwy .. tlle Week G»MttnMWS ~flit 700<M En Captiond UC Ewtllillt 11"'5 12:00 D Tllili&M Zlllt " ..... : CI:) "Wllitt Mona of Sullllltf" Cdra) '73-Jun Seber2. r redenck StalfOld Ga Mowlt: "A ~. Story" (com) 41-lortlla Youn&, Frednc M'rch. Eve Alden, Allyn Joslyn. m Me.ii: CC> ·Deut111 J""rdy" CSl!SP)-Jtck f(elfy, Lauren Bacall. -1Z:30- U l>Rc~ 1:00 CJ 9 Cl) 13) l llfllOfl"OW 0 Mowlc "DOOlle's Dallihler:· "Garibaldi.'' "nose Ptople Nut Ooot" -1:30-m illk#lt: .. ......, DtlMlblll(' (hol)-t:ennu Robles. Juho Aleman 2100 CJ llllM: "The Model and ltlt ~~tr." "Tilt Day the Hot Ln• Got Hor •• ~ "JeMl!r c.. Late4J," -s." ,..,.. . -2:05- •...... : (C) "Ille..,...~} '64-lft tMMll. An11t Ok\IMOll. Aoftald ...... Order A "ked Mailing Pair Pose Threat? HOCHESTF.H, N Y <AP) Unless a federal Judge inttlrvene:., a young Rochester couple's letter d~hvory bui.inesi. could threaten the existence of the U.S. Postal Service. eovemment lawyers have ureued in court here "Monopoly l.s the Coun· med in U.S. District dation of the federal postal ~ystem. Elim Ina· Court here. lion or this monopoly would seriously threaten the very existence or the USPS." governme nt lawyers said io papers THE POSTAL service has c harged Patricia Brennan, 23. and her husband, J . Paul Bren- nan, 37, wilh violating ..------------. postal laws by running a 103-123* lmREST steady, ~ secure. For 16 years. individudl rnv~IOr!>. <I' well as lrui.t and profit i.harlng plani,. have edmed 10-12% on their money -and sorneilmes more. The money has bel'n investl.!d In 2nd trust deed!> on choice Califomla real e1>tale through A. A. Ajax Co. In 16 years, no one has ever lost a cent or falll.!d 10 eam at least 10% or more - no one. 'When a loan Ii. prepdld before malurrty. you receive up to a six month interest bonus on 80% o( the loan balance. This may increase the yield up to 12%. For a detailed brochure, please Wffle or call: Mr. 5andy Ross (714) 837-3744 LA9una Hills Mi.. B11rb.ua Frenkel (714) 772-6230 505 North EucUd. Anaheim, CA 9280:J l Aj!~,!?L2~ M1>rt9••1f' brokn• 011.,..ci to Callfomlu , .. ,c1~n" onl~ letter delivery service in downtown Rochester. Saying it would appeal lo the Supreme Court ii necessary, the postal service sought a court order permanently bar· ring lhe Brennans from competing with it. In an exchange of le,gal briefs Monday, the Bren- nans responded : ·'When government m o nopoli es can n o l o n ge r c ommend themselves. in theory or in practice. to the larger public good, they should be abolished.·· JUDGE HA ROLD I. Burke told lawyers to re· turn in two weeks with responses to each other·~ arguments. Last February. when the suit was filed, P .H Brennan Hand Deli very was charging 10 cents each to move up to 60C letters a day. Drawing the ir c lientele from d o wntown lawyers. bankers and bus i · nessmen. the Brennans g uaranteed same-day deliver y for letters picked up before noon. Service has continued without interruption. Brennan said. The Brennans contend the law granting the gov· crnment a monopoly is unconstitutional and that i l is an excessive use of congressional power and con s titutes a n t>p - pressi ve tax. ----------- OUR ENERGY PROBLEM: How to derive TAX ADVANTAGES. /\ p.ml'I d1\CU•'lon 1•,plo11n11 our ener11y need~. how l.i• .ich.rnt.111e' may be obtdinPd by 1nd1v1dual~ 1tnd corporation~. ,1nd cau1ron~ to httd 1n PnP<l:\I de-.1·lopmen1 pro11r.ims The Industry: Alt'• MCCtl'l!OI. Conwlt1ni; Ceoloi::•\l, Newport Beach lax ramifications: Richard H N1mmom l'.irtner. PNI, Mt11w1cl. Mlfchell & Co Development ~:walter l 11.emmerer, Vice Prl'~1dPnt, Omni Expforallon. Inc Date: Thur$da v. J ulv 28. 1977 Tlrnei 7:30 PM Place: Marriott Hotel 900 Newporl Center 0 flvf' Newport Beach. RESERVATIONS: 1s2-s124 Fee: ssoo Sponsored by: t?Ut1et 1n.1ZJU¥el1Uld C!«p. Newport Beach. ------ Panning Fan Doug Toland, once an environmental r e - search analyst for the state of Alaska. gave up his job to spend his lime pros- pecting for gold in mountain stream s near Juneau. The 35-year-old father of two says he makes between $100 and $150 a week "with persistence ... Merger Complet~d Telefile Computer CO'rp., Irvine, has completed a merger lhat establishes Peripherals General, Inc., formerly or Cherry Hill, N.J .. as a wholly owned subsidiary named PGI. The company is a manufacturer of disk storage systems for General Electric computers. The merger boosts the total number of shareholders in Telefile to more than 1,000 and number of shares outstanding to nearly 1.2 million. Simultaneously wilh the merger, Teleftle's PGI acquired the assets of Lear Siegler, Inc. 's acts com- puting division in Orlando. Fla. To accommodate the merger and acquisitions, Telefile has signed a five-year lease on a new 10,600-square-foot facility near its lrvine head- quarters. ~· ··~ '.i'J,' QD1~[1ij].j)~~ ~~~~~ . Padfle £lgh,b1g GallH Pacific Li&Mlng Corp. ba reported that second-qumer earnings per share were up sUtb~Y over the similar period last year and fort.ht Orat slx months ot 1977, showed an increase of 14 percent over theslmilar period in 1976. The Los Angeles-based utility holdini com· pany. whose major subsldlary ls Southern California Gas Company. reported second-quarter 1977 earnings of $14,037 .000, equivalent after pre. {erred dividends to 64 cents a share of common stock. This compared with $13.6.U .OOO. or 53 cents. for thecemparable period In 1976. For the six-month period ended June 30. Pacific Lighting earned $43,747,000. or $1.17. compared with $36.131,000, or Sl.SS, for the comparable period in 1976. For the 12 months ended June 30, earnings were $68,583.000. or $2.73, comapared with $49,720,000. or $2.13.. for lhe 12 months ended Juneao, 1976. Maa SAL Branch Open. First Federal Savinas and Loan Association of Hollywood has opened a new branch at 17th Stftet. and Westminster Avenue. Costa Mesa. Hours are 10 a .m . to S p.m . Mondays through Thursdays, 10 a .m. to 6 p.m. Fridays and 10 a.m.. to 2 p.m . Saturdays. It is the 12th branch for First Federal and the lhird in Orange County. Dan Chumbley, manager. is former manager for the Huntington Harbour oCClce. /tledlc!al Of flee Open• The Bosley Medical Group of Beverly Hills has opened a new office at 3961 MacArth1.ir Blvd .• in Newport Beach. Two other offices are in BeverJ.y Hills and Sher man Oaks. Devoted to elective cosmetic medical care the group was established i'n 1.97' by L. Lee B~ley. M.D. Hair tr ansplantation consultations and pro- cedu res and cosmetic surgery consultalaons are conducted in the medical facility. The office is headed by Craig R. Hope. M.D .. associate director of the group. 'fitle, TrWJt Ofllce Open• TiUe Insurance and Trust has opened a branch office al3901 MacArthur, Newport Beach. Jack Enda heads the title department and Curtis W. Merrill heads the trust departmenL Agency Selectftf Laura Scudder's, the snack foods division of Pet Inc., has appointed Communication Resources I nc., Costa Mesa, to handle public relations and pro- motional activities. Ove r The Counter HASD UstiftCJt MUTUAL FUNDS · Vpa. and Do..,... u~ l..i>1 C"9 kt. .... -2' IJp a.t J • '. Up 20.t l~ -"' Up 14.7 ""' -,, IJp 14.( J • ... IJp 1'-l , .. ... U1> w.! ~·-: • ... ~: I~1 I~ .. 1~ Up ta.! 2"--... Up 11.l ·~ • \ IJp tU , ... + \. Up 1~ 17 • 1• Vp IU ,.. -,_ IJp 11.t 2\ -'• Vp 11.• •loo • "' Up t0-4! 3... .. \, lip I.! lO • a. I.JP a.• ~·~ ~. IJp 7.9 u • ... t .lip '" 71• • 1 Up 7,A ~'. • "'· Up 'i 11' .-' Up 1 . 1 -.. Up 6. ' t Up 6.1 ~NS l..i~f -°'t • .,., -1\o' •~ -I • 1'r. 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UJtrB~ I .04 e 18 12">-• o UnNuclr 1.20t 11 ?51 391~ s._ UnPl\Mn 1 11 2V.-l'I VnRf'fCJ .S. 1 1' Wh-, ... VSFoS 1.?U.. • 16'1<1!-"• US~IOG 9 911 ~-l'!a USGyps I hO 12 131 74~-v, ll!;Gypf 1.llO.. 1 26V•-"• USHom .10 1 123 7 -"• USlnd ·'° I Jsa 1 -.... USLl'HQ .Ml o 2SI 14V•-~~ US Rly .. '4 4V• t •'o V!'.Slloe 1.70 6 68 lt~-"II USStrel uo a S7'6 3W•-llo USTobc: 1.4012 '4 31 -1 unTech 1.110 7 1S4 ~-1'"' UnTcl\11! a.. 1110 -s•4 UnTchp!l.31.. 31 111V>-1 UnlTel 1.28 9 176 11 -V• UlllTlpt I.SO.. I l l•t .. . UnlT lpll.10.. 6 26'/t ... .. ~.Juty27, 1177 1/N DAILV~LDT .. Realistic? Carter's Goals Stretch .Outlays • By JOBN OONNll'P ............ ...,.. Thole Carter admlnlltr'tloll eeone>mlcJoals -4.5 percent u.oemployment, ' eerceltt Inflation a a balanced budget by 1981 -are lncrusbaJ1¥ btine ad]udged unrealltttc by Pl'Olessional anal)'SU. While making such determinations. botrever. critics generally are avoiding any aeaerat de.nunelaUoo of tbe Carter economie· pro1ram. Jt'a tbe 1oat1, not the policies, that are unreallStic, t.bey seem to beaa)iq. EVEN C~LES L. SCIRILTZE, chairman of the President's Council of Economic Adviten, conceded thal the balanced budget goal wq "an ambitious objective.·· But he suggesled it was better to seek than to avoid the challenge. One of the assumptions underlying that 1oal is that business capital outlays will grow at a 9 or 10 percent annual rate for four or five years. But that superior achievement has been attained only once before, ln the first half of the 1960s. 1r ~ , Numerous critics have jumped on I these capital outlays assumptions, fj . partly because of long experience with .'3 seeing spending fall far short of the · projections made for it in various surveys. One or Schultze's former associates at the Brookings Institution, George Perry, is among those who raise doubts about the unemployemnt and inflation goals. CUMNU'~ Perry recently published a study indicating that to achieve a jobless rate of S percent by 1981 the nation would have to boost employment 3.2 percent a year and Gl'05s National Product 5.7 percent annually. SINCE SUCH GROWl'll RATES HAVE not been achieved in recent decades, the suggestion coming from the Perry study is that it would require an unprecedented and unforeseen set of circumstances to achieve the goals. Moreover, Perry cautions, that old bugaboo inflation must be contended with. Should it become nastier, policy makers would be required to slow the rate of growth and thus the economy's ability to absorb workers. Robert J . Gordon, a Northwestern University economist, also is wary of the sensitive relationship between the speed of expansion and the rate of inflation. He expects inflation to worsen; he terms the-outlook "grim." GO.ROON SUGGESTS STRONGLY THAT a plan which includes the twin goals of rapic:l expansion and less inflation is a plan at odds with itself. The experience, he says. indicates that inflation is more a consequence of the speed or expansion rather than its duration. In general, the attitudes oC Perry, Gordon and perhaps a majority of analysts in academe, business and Wall Street seems to be one of great doubt. The goals are just too ambitious, they suggest. What isn't quite clear is whether the Carter administration policy makers might not have the same feeling privately, justifying their public stance as necessary if they are to obtain the best efforts from business and labor. AT A MEETING WITH FINANCIAL writers last May. Schultze responded to .an expression of doubt by saying it was better to have the goals than to not have them. But he also seemed convinced tlle goals were realistic. Ambitious, he said, but not overly ambitious. Stocks Plunge; Loss Biggest Since 197 4 NEW YORK <AP) -Stock prices sutre.ted one of their steepest drops since the 1974 bear market loday in selling that drove the Dow Jones industrial average to Its lowest Jevelin a year and a halt. · Steel and oil issues suffered some of the most striking losses, but the selling extended through every major sector of the market. The Dow average of 30 blue chips showed a 19. 75-point loss to 888.43 after a 15.25 point drop the past two days. The last time the average lost more than 2() points in a single session was Nov. 18, 1974, 'fben U fell 22.69.. . Trading was active. Big b6ard volume reached 26.4 million shares. DowJ011e•A.,erages M'hat Stock11 Did S~~:rllCAPI Flnel Oow.J,,,_ .,,.,99" ~n Hloll Low Clow O'CI 30 Ind 90U1 907.:fl aa.c.tl ... '3-19.71 20 Trn m 10 236 11 nus tn.o-2.t1 IS VII 117.87 11826 116.76 116.'9-0-" 6S Slit 310.8' Jll.S< Jo.1.8' 306.01-S.H ln<lus .. .. .. .. . • . • .. J,210,JOO Tr•n . . . . • . • • • 525.000 UlllS • . • . . . . . 362,SOO 6S Stk . . . . .. .. • .. 4,091.100 NEW YORK (,API Prl!\'. TOday <Ny 262 .,, 1327 ... 319 45 1'<18 191() 46 63 ~· 's ~~l~.'1 :~I~ ·~~ it:=~ UnlvFd 1.12 8 16 21""-v. 1-----------------l ULE$ Unleaf 1.• 1 3t 30V.-~ Upfoton 1.20 ll 1~ JS!i'J-''• USLI FE .'8 7 268 1,V.-~ ~r!'~1{ ·961; 1•1 h~::::. UtPLpl 2.80.. 19 »~\lo -v--~r.~p 1:~ ~ ~: ~ .... : ~ v111.-,1n .4023 129 ll'f-..... Varle11 .2912 127 1t -\to Varolnc.20t s 1t6 10~-~ Vtndo .. 3t ~+ Va 'lt!!l<t .2020 9 ' ..... VH~ 1.31t . . Tt 1•11'1-V. ~,~ ·~i; l~ 1r= ¥: V1EPw 1.14 8 534 15'/t ..... V&EP pU.80 .. 1110 Sf + 1'1< VAEPp! S •. 110 SI.,.,+ V• VIE P pll.84 .. 1120 1112 -V• VeEPe>IUO.. 10 '"31 -\'I VaEP p0.4$ •• 11:$20 1914 +JY., Varn.do .. 144 14'-'- VulcrlM l~J_.,>_ZJ , .. ., WebRtl!UO .. 1100 $3 , .... W;ich0¥ .Sol t '9 1M-V. WACl>l'ty • • lS 4"°'-... Wat Mert • It lt 43 1•\t>--~ we19rn 1.10 7 11• 161.'1--. WltrA 1.408 ) 1 2~ .. WillllOS .66 I 26 19\'1-V• WlllMU 1.20 • 6 UIJ'l ..... W1IUM 1.40 1 1~ JI -'" WalU Pll,hO ,, 8 3314-IV. W1n1i:o .'7t.. 91 7111 + V> w1rneco 40 Awterican Leader• NEW YORK IA.Pl· S.les, ' p.m. price 1~.~~'*'ftoc'i' '1.~' .:=. ~~"?M'~l.~lly et m"[1~,=n JJv. _ " Gths ~I.... '1,SOO 8 -~ Husky 011.... • ...200 27~ -~ tmperOll .A... s..ooo iov. -~ CK Pet . . .. • • S4, tOO 19ll> + V. Synltir C#p.. .• •9,200 tf'I' -Y. T .. 11.-~. •. 11.900 IV. ..... Oeltl>t'Od • ., • •S,600 10' -14 Totaf Pll NA... 44,100 Ml! -'° PGE UOpf.,..... 44.JOO t7¥. -t V. NEW "!'ORI( (A.Pl ·NV s.lot.lt ~•IH Appro• flNI • . . . .. . . • . . . . . ..... 16,•M>.000 Provious <lay .•......••••••• 21.m.000 WM~ 100 .................... 29,380,000 Monlll -oo .. . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . 19',000.000 Vear il90 .. .. .. • • .. • • ••...• 16.007,110 TWo y .. ~ •••••••••••••••••• '4,1~.116· Jen 1 10 ~t• ................ 3,010,580,GOQ 1916 to dale . • .. ............. 3,211,11116,'°3 t'7S 10 d&to ................. 2,M, 13',ato WHAT AMtJC IHD HEW YORK IAPI Pro. Adv11nce<1 11.odlv ~; Oe<llned ,... -UIKl!e"98<f 2116 292 Tot1I 1 .. un 91t ea "''"" ttn "'" 20 11 Hew 1977 '°""' !7 11 A.Malit IAUiS Due to late transmission today's listing will not appear fn the Dally Pilot. ~-------- . .. • ' p 81• DAil Y Pl\.OT WI!~ .Mt 17, 1'17 • ' t Choksterol: The ·Yolk's On ·ine Egg Pro.ducers ;· WASHINGTON <AP> The day t.bal the recommendation Americans reduce cholesterol Gonzales. Tex .• egg producer,"" cholesteroJ are more likely to an important. segment of the nd· t"t(i! Industry, laYlnl it haa bee.n would bo wtthdrawn. Cltina links consumption, including by cut· appearing for the Industry group. have heart attacks. tion 's agricultural economy hurt by • n•t.o commlttee'1 r• between cholesterol and heart ting down on eggs In the diet. The He s{lid th~ recornmendation Tbe en producers said there 1s without unimpeachable facts l~ C'Ommcndatloa Ulat Amen<: dlse t, he a.W, "It seems only panel said one egg yolk by Itself "has the p0tentlal or putting no clear proof that reducing egg back up its recommendation.~ t'Ul down o• che>I t•ro& ion. pnadentrorAmerkanstoreduce contains almost as much manys~•ll.famjlyfarme~out consumptionwillreducechances Dubosesaid. .... 'lumpUon. haa uratd tho pan l to lhelrdletary cholesterol." cholesterol as a person shouh1eat of business." for heart. disease. The testimony was supp<>rt..,,. "•lhdr-w the recommcndaUon. R~esentaUves or the United 1n a day Cholesterol is a waxy sub· "We don 't.beUeve tt1is commit by two doctors who also dilfere(t Nu t r l t Ion Com era l Lt t • EH Producers were protesting ··we have felt the res ults of the stance that accumulates in the tee or any ra~t of the 1ovem-with the advice of many r4t ('halrman Oeorse McOov~rn <D· the panel's recommendattlon, cholesterol 'scare in our busi· arteries. Studles tlave shown that mcnt should make a recommen searchers to redUte cholesterol S 0 ). «ave no lndlc*"Uoa T\A • mode earlier this year, that nesscs," said Jack Dubose, a persons wltb high levels of dation that would tend lo tlestroy levels. • ... I SHAMPOO COltC.OOllTE 3 oz. LIQUID 7 oz. ~r1'~! ltaves hatr oreli:.:.:.-1 '-" s o f I a n d •'.~ radiant -- YOUlt CHOK£ 99~ SOFT & ORI ANTI . PERSPIRANT New Non (nv1roment al Formula Sp-ray . Non -Sling Deodorant Scented. Unscented or Super Ory YOUR CH Ola 2.~ oz. SIU 89~ ~----------------------~ REVlOH REX Non -Aerosol BREOC CLEAN RINSE ---. ,-" ·- HAIR NET Keeps heu from going limp even 1n wind & ram Oil Free CREAM RINSE Leaves hair s Quea ky clean ~-:. 139 lll1110'I 13 oz. • 16 oz. 99c OAIROl NICE'N EASY ShaMpoe·in HAIR COLOR C olors an d co nditions hair In aswrted colors. 1.79 covut GIRL MAK£ • UP •All.DAY Oil CONTROL MAKE -UP • LIQUID MAK£· UP YOW '7: 1.29 a CHAP STl(l LIP QUENCHER ~OISTURIZ1N6 LIPSTICK A new kind ol ltpsllc~ 139 that's kind to your lips. IA. • IATHTUI APPLIOUES "' IUllllMAID OIL of OLAY Youl' for yov skin. • lOTWN 4 OZ. Of • MIGHT CaEAM 2 oz. CREST TOOTHPASTE KLEENEX REFLECTIONS . with FLUORISTAN FACIAL TISSUES .... # DATRIL 500 EXTRA STjEN5TH Pain Reliever 50 mms ggc So ft. pop up tissues . ---· BOX!S Of 100 4 ! lest e(MtlfvR VITAMJN-E "Alt NATURAL" 4001.U. ALLEREST HAY FEVER & ALLERGY MEDICINE l ~I 24 TlllllS 99c , CRUEX FAB£RGE BRUT 33 EFFERDENT DR. SCHOU'S • Air. Pillo · 0 SPlASH.QN lOTION Atlee ~hower . alter shave. alter anything. 1 OZ. SIZE 2.29 DENTURE CLEANSER MEDICATED POWDER Choose lrom spray·on. 8 oz. or SQueeze bottle. INSOLES 96 ,. TABLETS 3 Ot. YOUR CHota Walk easy and soft on these loam cushion insoles 1. 79 2.29 [l. @ MACKINNON'S llENDfO SCOTCH 7 ·99 WHJSKY 8D Pf 1.75 llTEI • CANADIAN RESERVE CANADIAN · 8 29 WHISKY 80 Pf t.n llTEI • FOSTER CTUEK IU PF KEHWCJ(Y STRAIGHT 7 49 BOURIOH WHISKEY 6 YEARS OLD. US LITER • • ~ SAMUEL E. WEBSTER----:· BlOIOEO 6 99 WHISKEY II) Pf 1.lS um ~ IN CASE OF TYPOGRAPHICAL ERROi, MINI· MUM FAIR THOE PllCES Will &£ IN EFFECT. UOUOR NOT AVAIWlE AT RIVERW STORE 3563 RIVERSIDE PlW with Beach. Borax and Brtghtenm1 IUNIO SIZE 9 LB .• 13 OZ. SUNSET 24" 14"x20 FT. CORDUSS SKAT.EBOARD LAWN ·2~., 10.88 CHUJ>aEN'S WOODEN SHEARS -..-1. Hds on 'oll switch for salety Sav ·on Brand B.itlenes Included. #Kl/59177 7 • 77 MEXICAN CHAIR Colorluny hand decoratl?d wooden chair Great for a child'~ own personal use M~MA or BABY KOALA BEAR Soft and cuddly . You'll love lh1s tittle charac ter . for young or old In natural color. burlap material with assor led scenes pnnted designs • 3.88 El MARTZ 2· It 1 I flEA COLLARS ... FOR dogs & cats. Continuous protection _ ___.1_11 \ltr1. . .. '"'" .a~°'~ I 2rn1 · .... , ~-;~~ ~"-'f.· OllUlOSE SPONGES .. • • • , ' ~ . ' . Summer Course ' Lightened The woman donned ln a checkered apron smells the olive oil to see if it's fresh: pours a cup ot It lnto a jar to pilx a dresslna. In, and explains: '!ltalian oliveoll la wonderful, virgin French is best." With that, Betsy Moulton pro- ceeds with the fixillga of the day before studentJ5 of Joprmet Cook· Ing at the Sherm~ FounllaUon ln Coronadel Mar. The menu for the d~y is an ar- ray of summery salad spec· tacles. vegetables, flsb ,f sliced meats and cheese -&lQr ous an· tlpastos, the I&Alian answet to a breadless sandwich -wlt4 all the fixings. · · Included ls a <Ush ofCaponata, a chilled Ratatouille of so~ combining sauteed and seasoned eggplant, \omatoes. onions and. herbs. Betsy warns, "Never deal with eggplant 1.V1til you've salted it and let it weep. Otherwise it will turn bitter on you. Peel it, if you want, cut it into cubes, or however you want it to be served, and salt it generously. Let it stand at least an hour and it will be ready to cook." Today, it is cubed, put into a huge fryer covered on the bottom with spattering olive oil and limp slivers of onion. After the egg- plant, comes a cup o( drained, cut·UP plum tomatoes, a table-• spoon of tomato paste and minced, fresh basil from Betsy's own garden. She takes a French knife to the BEA ANdeRSON, Editor V'Mlnesday. July 27, 19n , New Salads. A Show Off Cl ~cupbooey \.it cup white wlne vineaar t4 cup salad oil ~cup salad dressing 1 teaspoon'Oftion salt \t teaspoon dr)'1'lustard Combinelnaredien ; whiz in blender. Makes • abOutl .,_,cups dresaina. basil In rapid, short strokes, until tt 1s finely broken and fillin~ the room with its fresh green aroma. The eggplant mixture is th n seasoned with salt, white pepJ)4!r and lemon juice, 1 .. cup of b)ack olives that have been c}\urned t.o dainty rounds m Betsy's food proc:.e£sor, and a tablespoon of capers. "This is best made a day or two • in advance so the flavors will have a chance lo mellow, butit's eood today too,'' she Sfys. sampl· · iog the stewed creation Uiat will ·become the central foeus or a tray filled with smoked sardines, marinated herring, pjckled pep- pers, artichoke hearts and rolls of salami, prostjutto, cappoco\lo and cheese. Antipasto, served with long, skinny breadsticks, or any other cold, hearty S'alads make for at· tractive, intimate. picnics and pool parties, she tells students. Especially enjoyable with broiled or barbecued chicken or fish is a French potato salad which features a mustardy French dressi.ng. "But if you are going to enjoy il or any of the whole·meal salads with wine, be sure lo reduce the amount of acid in your dressing so they don 't battle each other on your palate," said Betsy. Wine, she says, is usually not taken with a vinegar and oil dressing, simply because the acid m the dressing offsets the pleasurable acidity of lpe wine. Below are Betsy's recipes for --.. -·- summery maln·courae salad spectacles, cooly and heartily satisfying. FRENCH POTATO SAL\D 1 pound boilin1 potatOH (whiteornew~) 2 tablespbons dry whit• ine or dry vermouth 1 tablespoon wine vlneear ~ teasPOOn Dijon mustard . 1 tablespoon mlnced, peen o,naon 3 tablespoons olive on P4'cb of 11alt white pepper Boil unpeeled pot•toes until tender, drain, peel ~nd slice or cut into eighths. While 1till warm, sprinkle on wine and toss l{{llerly. Make dressing in Jar; shake to cornt>ine and ,toss With cool potatoes. This salad may-be served at J'Oom temperature Makes about 3 cups salad, or 5-6 servings. CIUCKEN SALAD 3 cups cooked, diced chicken (preferrably white meat) l 'h cups diced celery ~2 cup minced green onion tops . 1h cup broken walnut meats 1 cup halved green grapes (or whole, if small> '1't cup rinsed a.Qd dralned capers ' Mayonnaise to birtd Mine~ fr~sb parsley, sieved egg yolks,fer garnish Salt, pepper, lemon juice to taste · · I t (Cblcken can be cooked by aimmerint ln boiling water 20 minutes. Use aromatic herbs and vegetables to season water if de· ·sired. Urt out cooked meat; skin and bone: chop.) In laree bowl, ton together chicken, celery, 1reen onion tops. gnpes, capers and season· ings with just enouah mayoo- . naise to bind. Jusl before serv· ing, stir in walnut pieces. Serve in a bowl lined' with romaJne leaves. Garnish with parsley snips and 3·4 egg yolks that have been put through a sieve or food processor. CAPON.\ TA 3 cups (about 1 whole, 1 pound) eggplant, in cubes 'I.a cue chopped celery "' cup chopped onion 1 cup drained, chopped. canned plum tomatoes 1 tablespoon tomato past 1 tablespoon cbopp6d minced, fresh basil leaves J4 cup sliced black olives 1 tablespoon drained capers Saute onion and celery in 2-3 tablespoons or olive oil, or enough to cover the bottom of a large skillet. Add peeled, cubed • eggplant that has been salted and allowed to weep. When eggplant is near cooked. ~tir in tomato paste, tomatoes, fresh basil, salt, pepper to taste a~ ~monj~~. ~mmu~ covered, 10 minutes. Stir In olives and capers. Chill. Best· made 1·2 days before serving. · From tins of fish and cardboard cartons of accessories comes a summery antipasto served up with thin breadsticks. DAILY PILOT PHOTOS BY PATRICK O'DONNELL . • .. • .. Fruit and fish combine perfectly with macaroni for a summer supper. As a side dish,. add olives and green pepper for color and zest .. l OAILV PILOT * Wheat Germ ·Treats Dishes , For beauty's sake. . . Treat yourself to super main di:fh ideas using wheal germ. Make 1t your energy secret in everyday snacks, sprinkle it on top of fruit and yogurt for morn- ing nower, or simply use it as you would breadcrumbs or cntcker crumbs in dresi;ing up baked or skillet menus. SHOWY FILLED TOMATOES 6 medium ripe tom aloes i,3 cup butter or margarine, melted J4 cup wheat germ 1 tablespoon lemon juice 1 teaspoon oregano leaves, crushed • 1 2 teaspoon onion salt 18 teaspoon each salt and pepper Cut tomatoes about 1'2·inch from the top, removing stem center <1nd a little of the pulp l Leave shells intact.) In small bowl, Los:. remaining ingredients together. mixing to blend well. Stand tomatoes in s hullow baking dish and stuff with mixture, dividing it evenly among all six tomatoes. Bake at 400 degrees F. 12·15 minutes until mixture is lightly golden on top. Let stand al least 5 minutes before serving. Serves 6. ClUCKEN KIEV 112 cup butter or margarine, softened l tablespoon fresh or frozen chopped chives lh teaspoon salt 1/s teaspoon pepper ~ teaspoons each thyme and marjoram, crushed salt and pepper. Mix and shape into a roll about 8 inches long. Wrap in plastic and place in freezer until hard (about 20 minutes). Flatten breasts with rolling pin or meal pounder between s heets of wax paper until very thin. Cut butter into four even lengths and place one "log" on each breast. Roll up tightly, fastening 1f necessary with wooden picks. Beat egg o,yith water or wine, then roll in wheat germ. Place rolls in shallow baking pan and bake at 400 degrees 30-35 minutes. Makes 4 servings. 4 chicken breats, boned and / ' WHEATGE RM SPINACH SA UTE 1 pound fresh spinach skinned lh cup wheat germ •. 1 egg, beaten ,r : ! tablespoon water I Combine butter with herb:., J 1 cup wWeat germ- 1 large carrot, shredded 3 eggs, beaten 14 cup coarsely chopped -----=r· . ·~· . -:"~-·· -;,~-:.z..~ ~.> ·~ CHOPPING BLOCK~ 1160 SUMR.OWER. COST A. MlSA. SUMfLOWEl AT fAfRYllW 545 0637 DAILY 10 A.M.-7,..M. • USDA PRIME SIDE OF BEEF WHOLE TOP SIRLOIN s 148 LI. 99c LI. CUT & WRA,,ED 300-350 LIS. . ' . CUT & WRA,P'ED 12-1 4 LI . WHOLE SPEMCEll 5239 LI. ; USDA. CHOICE SIDE OF BEEF CUT & WRA,,EO 5.7 LI. CENTER CUT FILLET s2 39 sac LI. CUT & WRA,,.ED 300-350 LIS. ..... LI. CUT & WRA,,ED 2·4 LI. O'E_!!~UMDA!_S.J.!-7 ·-... -:-Q ~ _:_· - Best Idea Since Shopping Carts ... ~-...... ' ~w you can do a week's shopping ~.... 9 --without forgetting a single item! Use pre-printed shopping lists prepared for you by PILOT PRINTING. 140 Hparete pftnted ltem1, plu1 addltlon1I 1pacH you can flll In yourHH. 34 StlplH 21 VegeteblH 14 Jfnllta e .. k•ry Item• 5 hveragH 11 Meat and fltfl entlt•• 11 Dairy lt•m• 20 Ml1eellaneou1 almonds or pine nuts 1 2 lo 1 teaspoon oregano leaves, crumbled •,.. to 1 ~ teaspoon thym e leaves, crumbled 1 2 teaspoon salt 1 .. leai.poon peppt!r 1.2 c up butter Wash and drain spinach Dis card coarse stems. Chop s pinach coarsely. Mix with wheat germ, carrot, eggs, almonds, oregano, thyme, salt and pepper. Melt butter in skillet. Add wheat germ mixture. Saute 2 minutes over high heat, stirring frequently._Makes 4 servings. (NOTE: For 1 serving, use 1/4 pound spinach. 11.i cup wheat germ, I/• cup shr~4ped carrot. I tablespoon almonds, ~ teaspoorr oregano, 1-il teaspoon thyme, 1 * teaspoon salt. few qashes pepper and 2 tablespoons butter. Prepare as directed above > Flaming Flair Menu's .Magic The spnng class in gourmet cooking taught by chef Jean La Fontan al the. Victor Hugo IM in Laguna decided they hadn't had enough fun by th~ time the last session rolled around. So they plotted to have another class, this one l!omplete with friends and a s it-down dinner with two fin' wines and two flaming . dishes, prepared in front of them by the chef himself. The dinner was coordinated and hosted by Mr. and Mrs Fred Coughltn, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Bleadale and Mr. and Mrs. Jack K ei fer , alt or Laguna. Coordinator was Sally Jenki,µs Coo me. The menu featured Shrimp Au Pernod, a delicately garlicky first course, served over rice in a mild glace of the liqueur. The entree featured beef filets .. Rossini ," a dtl:>h invented b} LaFontan that de~arts from the s t a ndard "lournedos" with goos\! li ver pate. truffle and French toast garnishes. For dessert, the chef served Strawberries Flambe Au Triple Sec. a glamourous strawberry sundae of sorts. Here are two of his recipes from the evening, both requiring naming flair: SJUUMP AU PERNOD 15 large,· uncooked shnmp, peeled, butterflied and cleaned 2ounces butler 2cups heavycream 1 Yz ounces Pernod 2 cloves minced gar Ii c --~ceashallot 1 2 teaspoon chopped chives 2 teaspoons floor Sall and pepper to taste Season shrimp with salt and ' pepper and coat lightly in flour. Melt butter in saucepao; lay shrtmp, butterflied side do~. cook for two minutes oQ eadl s1de. Remove and keep warm. Add garlic and shallots to pan a nd cook for one minute. Add Pe rnod and flame; let die out naturally . Add h eavy cream, cook forthreemmutes. Transfer s hrimp to serving dish, reduce cream by one-half, stirring constanlly over medium- low flame. Sprinkle with chives and pour over shrimp. Serveover bedofr1ce. F RESHSTRAWBERRIF.S FLAMBEAU TRIPLE SEC 4 pints fresh strawberries, cleaned and hulled 6scoops vanilla ice cream l ('Up sugar I tablespoon vanilla I cup water I tablespoon corn starch 3 ounces Tri pie Sec Cook half the strawberries with w a tc.•r and sugar over low flame 10 minutes. Add vanilla and press m1 xtun.• through a sieve. Put back on fire and st 1r in corn starch (dis- solve first in a tablespoon of water to assure smooth c(jmblning). Cook for2 minutes. Add rest of fresh strawberries to mixture and Triple Sec; flame, let flame die out naturally. Place scoop of ice cream in each serving dis h and top with strawberries. Serves6 , Call 642-5678. Put a few words to work for you. .. , I Crisp Brans Taste Crunchy There are ways beyond a morning muffin to provide your family with whole-grain fiber. Several unsweetened bran cereal products are available with whole-grain fiber now - miller's bran, sold at health food stores, or whole-bran crisp cereals are best -and there's no limit to what you can do with them to stretch your maln dishes. The nutty, toasty flavor or bran is compatible with most vegetables, meats and season- ings. · Enjoy these economical, fiber-stretched main dish ideaa. BEEn;~llAN LOAF 1 'h pounds lean ground beef 1 '12 cups unprocessed bran or unsweetened bran crisp cereal 112 cup tomatQ sauce 16-ounce can tomato sauce IAJ cup mined onion 'l.t cup shredded carrots 1 egg, beaten 1 tablespoon Worcesterishµ-e sauce 1 tablespoon molasses ~ teaspoon each basil, thyme and rosemary 'h teaspoon salt ~ teasJ>(><>n pepper ' In large bowl. mix with fingers, the meat. bran. 'h cup tomato sauce (reserve rest for topping >. onions, carrots, • Worcestershire sauce. molasses, and egjit. Season with s alt and pepper and shape to fit a 9x.S· inch loaf pan. Add herbs to remaining tomat.o sauce and pour half into the bot- tom of the baking pan. Set to.i in pan and spread top with remain- ing sauce. Bake at 350 degrees F . 1 hour and 10 minutes: Let stand 10 minutes before sllcin,s. Serves4·6. Candy Climbs WASHINGTON CAP> - Americans last year ate more candy for the first time since 1968. the Commerce Department said. "After eight years oC declining consumption per person . Americana have reversed that trend, nudging upward their candy consumption b y 2 pereent." the department said. The average American ate 18.6 pounds of candy, compared lo 16.3 ~ lJl 1975. That was far short ot the cand)'makers' nostalgia year of 1968, when the average person devoured 20.3 pounds of confectionery procJuct.t •. The govemment and the cal\dY industry bad no Idea ,why Americ,OS sltddenly acq\llred more of a .weet tootll. The we~ess for sweets wu nQl conru\fd to Amertcau. The Arab countries have dramatically Increased Jbelr cravinC for Aqierican can 1 as they have become wealthy. CARROT·BRAN LOAF 1 cup fresh piu1hr0om1, rinsed and chopped fine . '\-1 cup celery, chopped fine ~ cup onion, chopped fine 1 C\lP carrots, shredded left, beaten l 'h cups bran 'Al teupoon thyme '12 teaspoon oreeano 'h teapsoon salt ~ teaspoon pepper 2 tablespoons vegetable oil 1 6-ounce servin1-size can tomato juice Saute mushrQOIDS, onions and celery in oil until just tender. Combine with o.arrots . beaten egg, tomator juice and bran. Seaaon with herbs, salt and pepper and mix thoroughly. Preas into an oiled baJdne dish or loaf pan and bake at aao degrees 40 minU,tes. Servlnr suggestion: Slic~ loaf into %-inch pieces. Top with. a dollop of sour crea1D and snipped green 'onions or chives. Good with lemon-seasoned, a teamed zw:chlni or broccoli. VEGETABLE ~ESE BURGER& .. • 1 'h cups shredded carrot l 'h cups finely chopped zuc- chini 1 ~ cups finely chopped green pepper 1 ~ cups quick oat.I, un- cooked 1 cup (4 oz.) shredded Ched· datcheese ~ cup finely chopped onion % cup finely chopped mushrooms ~cup unprocessed bran 3eggs 2 tablespoons salt 11, teaspoon pepper \ii cup vegetable oil Combine all ingredients except oil: mix well. Let mixture stand 2 to 3 minutes. Shape to form six Lo eight 4-inch round paWes. Fry patties tn lror oil In large skillet over medium heat s lo 6 , minutes on each aide, turning once. Makes 6 to 8 servin11. BARBECUED BRAN MEATLOAVES % cup shreds or wheat bran cereal 1 egg, lighUy beaten lhcupmilk 'Al cup bottled barbecue sauce. divided '4 cup chopped onion • 2 t,ablespooDs chopped · parsley ~ teaspoon salt • . '4 teaspooo p81>per l 'h pounds ground beer In medium bowl, combine bran cereal, egg and mUk. Let stand 5 minutes. Actd · 14 cup barbecue ouce and remalnin1 lnere- dtents; lnix well. Shape meaOoa! t.Dittqre lnto 6 ~~all ovatloaves, or Uptty pack Uf 6 large muffin cups. Brush with '12 of tbe remainin1 barbecue s..uce. Bale• in 375 de1re. F. cwen for 20 minutes. Brusli with remalnlb& barbecue ••uqe and bake 20 minutes 19Qler. Yield: 81et'vi~f1. ----~ -~ --I ·<• You can't beat Crest for fighting cavities. ThePrells. Forfr8sh, full-looking hfiir. Secret. Strong· enough for. a man, but made for -awoman. DAILY Pn.Ol' 0 Aavor Raves Vegetables Superior ~ . Color. OavQC' and tex:-to 10 minutes is needed vegetable. It abouJd be rack. Q)ok 3 to 4 mlnut-. tu re of v e Ce tab lea before servings. Foods added at tbe end or near until akin ls soft. cooked in a 1Dictowave should remain covered the end of cooldn& Ume. · · R e m o v e f r o m certainly are different, durtnc tbla time. a·•AIV"lftu . micrawave, cut in half 1enerally are superior When preparin& fresh ,...""""" and spoon out seed.I. and wtn more rave. than• ve11tabhw, wash them l sm'all bunch Cl Salt and pepper. Add•1 "hentheyareeookedb1 priortoplaeinginadish. pound)' teaspoon butter or any other method. Thia molature la all that° Wuh stalks aod split mar1arine. 1 tablespoon While most ve1etables is needed for (\OOk.ing to unl!orm alze. Add ~ brown sugar and 1 are cooked covered, moat veaetabte1. Ar-cup water to 2-quart tableapoon raislna fil those with a natural skin !'.ans• \'e1etablea fo.r lla4• disb •. ArraJl(e broc-center. Cover wltb p•per cover need no dish as tbe l)est cookltll}l1ttern. If 1t. coli wttb ate ms alon1 towel« wax paper. akin becomes their cofl.-baa a .apec fie aha.Pe. outside ot dlah. Cook cov-Mlcrocoot for I to ' tainer. Merely plac;e lfeep l11 m nd that. a ered (6 to T min\ltes per mlnlltes. (potato.squash,yam)on doufbllut coold.ftl'lha~ .. pourid).Rotatedisbafter Let stand a fo" • routing rack in the w l 1 o c cu r ~1f it b 3\il minutes. Add \ii teas-a.inut.el before serving .. bottom of the oven and microwave cooldi1C· · poon salt at the end of Seru.ni ~ with ~ cook the required Ume. Seaaontn1s cab be cooking tlme n..11 .. Pilot Clusilied Ad Other vegetables added durin1 cooking · · .,~ should be stirred or time wltb the ucepUon ACORNSQUASH la• almple matte~·· • rotated halfway through of aalt which dlstbrt.s the 11mall (1 pound> call 142•5171. the cooking·time. A car-cooking pattern aad Pierce squash and ry-over cooking time of!> ca uses drying of the place whole on dish or Put • few words lo wortt tor you. -· • ' • , • .. . . -. # ----------. t,,.I DAii Y PH.OT WllOM!O!Y· Jull "'• iv1 f • • Yes, ·hundreds of Speclals ... plus rho~sands.'.·Gf Everyday P. ••• Empress . . . AND -A~· · 'P.AMPER'S -DIAPERS - Extra Absbrbent Disposable I 19 r .. ~ t . . ,,. l . t • -· f • . USDA. Choice Grade Beef CHUCK StEIK ' WE A=r-., FOOD r. STAMP COUPONS • • . -~·- • ---r~~ • • ·--~-- ---~~ Variations Abound Entic::ilig Rice: Add Crunch Take a bJnt from 111ty searartn1 chef1. Tbt nnl ume )'OU cook rlce, cook bunches of lt, f reeae what you cloa't ltrvt ID meuured portJona ca cups, cooked, wtU serve t > ; thaw and rtbtat when JOU want to uae l1 Turn on 1ourtast · huda ••• Ilk• in tbtae reclpe1 Mlow. Another Up: You can make rlce a lot more ln· ' • r • I t.l n I -• D d Dut.rttJcul -tt you v~ tbt text&&rt. J'or In· atauce. to every eup of •11.tte. kmc·lfaln, Ult 1 Ham casserole (above) is good for company. Skillet beef (right) gets its crunch from com chips cup of brown rice and ~ cup of wheat 1roat1 or kemell. Thi• produces a cnancby, nutty·fiavored but for any disb. Or, aaute your · rice fl~t. before you steam lt. In a UWe butter or oil, and aaute 14 cup of 1lhtred almonds, cbopped peanuts or plnenuta along with it. Ktd1 love the added crunch interest. BEBFSKILLET &ANCBE&O 1 pound lean cround beef · 1 cup chopped onlon1 2 clove• garlic. ·crushed · 1 can (10~ oz.) COD• densed cream of muabroom~ ~ cup beef broth or water . , 14 to ~ oup chopped ·.· •reen chille1 · 3 cups cooked rice 1 ~ cups diced Cbed· darcheeae 1 cup crushed corn ·chips Saute beef, onions, and 1arllc until lightly browned. Stir in soup, broth, green chilies, and rlce. Heat thoroughly. Season to taste. Sllr in diced cbeeae and top ~ cup chopped wltb eorn cblpa just onion• before servtn1. Makes 6 1 cup ~hopped 1reen servlnp. peppers &ICE JAllDIN 2 cupe diced cooked ~ cup choppe~ .bam onions · 1~ cups crated 1 ~ pounds zucchini, Swlla cheese thinly sliced 3 cups cooked rice 3 tablespoons butter Blend mayonnaise, or margarine mustard, seasonings, 1 can (1 pound) and ~ cup pineapple whole kernel corn, Jufce. Stir in remainJn1 drained 10gredients. Serve cold 1 can (1 pound) as a salad oc turn into a tomatoes · Uahtly greased 2-quart 3 cups cooked rice casserole. Sprinkle with 1~t.upoooa1JJt "paprika, ii desired. Bake \4 tAlalpoon pepj.r at 350" for 30 m.lnutea. \4 taapooa ground Makes6aervtn11. coriander· · · ·~ New Shell Game? ~ teaspoon le'af ore1uo . Sau~ onlOQI and zuc- c hjnl jn b\ltter until tender .• Add remaining ingredients. Cover and simmer 15 minutes. Makeslservtn1s. Gene Meridith of Anderson wanted two eggs for breakf aat, but only bad to crack one shell to get it. IIU$ide was a normal e'g and a tiny one, complete with shell. Shasta Colle~e "eggsperts" say the tiny egg was f ertllized and formed first. Then it was engulfed by the other. Classes 'Cooking'~~~~~~~~~~~~~ RAM 'N' SWISS SALAD CAMUOLE ~ cup mayonnaise 1 teaspoon prepared mustard 1 teaspoon salt 14 teaapoon pepper 1 can (1314 oz.> pineapple tidbits (drain; reserve juice> ~c_... ......_.c...,.. OIWE TlllMll-K ..... 419 HG. T.tt. A¥e. (7t41991·n&O • Ready to Serve withHoney'n Spice Glaze ··Spiral· Sliced From Top to Bottom • We Package and Ship from Ooaat to Coast • Full Service Delicatessen • Imported ChffMS n.~H!' ....... I Jll S. •ooldwr tt , ...... cu (7141 635-24'1 CORONA on MAI 1700 I. C-t Hwy. (714) &13-90111 -. FRESH RED SNAPPER FILLET .•.•••• ~ 1.59.u. FRESH SEA BASS Fl.LLET .••••••••••• 1.69 &.a. FRESH WHOLE SALMON •••• •!'.~.~· ... 3.49 ~ EASTERN JUMBO SCALLOPS ...••••• 2.69 &.a. • fffftffH .Mw JI to,-. JO, 1977 out the artif1c1al stuff you ·hate. ~ Flour Nutty WASHINGTON CAPl -Government scientists say that flour made from peanuts s hows som e promise as a protein food supplement and that it may be superior to soy- beans in some respec ts. The Agriculture Department says that peanut flours have a bland flavor and have low a mounts of gas· producing sugars. Soy- beans, on the other hand, generally have "an ob· jectio nable beany flavor" and are rich in gas·produ ci n g ~~---.... ~-- t Loafing Perfect for a Pionic What a perfect lunch to fill a picnic basket -a loaf stuffed with a lobster melange. 2 hard cooked""eigs, chopped th cup half and half STUFl''ED LOBSTER LOAF 1 unsliced loaf of white bread, 12 Inches long 1 envelope unflavored gelatin 11. cup water \lb. frozen lobster tails, cooked and drained 1 cup diced cooked potatoes l cup cooked green peas l cup chopped cooked green beans l cup diced cooked carrots Stu/fed lobster loaf slices preparation time. 1 teaspoon salt 2 teaspoons paprika 1 cup mayonnaise Cut a thin.alice from one end of the loaf. Reserve ~Uce. With a sharp knife remove all the sort insides from loaf, leaving a shell 'h inch thick. (Reserve the bread removed for another day.) In a saucepan, mix gelatin and water. Slit over low heat until gelatin is dissolved. Pour mixture into a bowl and stir in diced rock lobster, vegetables, eggs, half and half, salt, paprika. Chill untll '1,ilightly thickened.Fold in mayonnaise. Spoon mixture int<lbread shell, packing firmly. Cut off ex · cess bread shell if necessary and replttce the reserved slice. Wrap ,tightly in foil and chill overnight. 'Cut into thick slices to serve: Serve with tomato wedges and scallions. Garnish top of loaf with thinly sliced cucumber. Yield: about 20 slices. YOU~RE GONNA·LD¥E··1JHE LOW MEAT PRICES AT.DUCKY: C' As Shown In the moat ext.enaJve l~epenClent, price aurvey, taken of ' · Loa Angele• and Orange County aCipermarketa, by Vector Consumer We're a discount operation. We keep prices down by staying away· AS MU H lrom costly gimmicks like coupons.games, giveaways, We're continual- Repqrta on July 14th. ' ly examining our own way of doing busiRess to make it more efficient. As 100% The results show up in surveys like this. Reviewing 46 meat items - 0 beef, pork, poultry, Jai:nb and fish -·th.el~ survey showed the facts. You , could have saved up to 10% by shopping for meat at Luc.ky. *That'• 10°1. from what you might have spent at one of the five other ....iit major aupermarketa. · LOWE . ~, Shopping for meat at Lucky, could have saved you one dollar out of ' . every ten! · The tacts show that no one can promlse ... and certainly no one can guarantee ... lower prices overall than Lucky. Come take your own sur-. vey. Shop with your own fist. See what our meat prices ... and our lower prices overall ... mean·10 your budget. You'll say it's Lucky, for you. rCross Rib " Grade A Ftesh carbohydrates. Peanut flour research Ground '"Boneless "' . Roast CHtJCK 12a BONELESS BONDED BEEF .... LB. !~!!~-LBS0 •• LB 68° is being conducted at the Beef 4 g C Sou thern R egio nal · Research Center in New 3·LB. PKG. OR MORE . LB Round Steak 99c BONDED BEEF .. . ........... LB. Orleans, La., and was · · ~ ~ \.. .J rlarge End "' described in the current Steak issue of Agri~ultural . -Bone s or Research, pubhshed by BONELESS "H!Jfff Smoked ~ ~~s~:r~shs~~~icce~ltural Top Sirloin 198 .. Peanut flours have BONDED BEEF LOIN ............ LB. been used ex perimental· ,!!~~-LBS LB 68°, £'!!!'15 43c SOUTHERN FRYERS ........ LB. Rib Steak 138 ""BONDED BEEF .................. LB. ~ ~~e;~1~~!~V£!£\~~~i,:· !~~E~!t~ut Chuck Roast •6 sec ~o~o~!~~!N!i_p Roast . . .. l8 1•• C~P~~E~IY!!}~!! ...... ... -.... LS 21• ~~8~~-~. c~-~~-81_ H~~ Half . LI 21• ~~~: :~J~d;:ead ~~ ~=~: ~~.~~.~.~d Rib Roast . 8 1n ~~~2~~~§!~a.k ... _ .. . _ ...... le' 141 !:~~E~ Chuck Steak ~~.,_age ~~~~~s Boneless Ham lB 2H ce~_1~~-1th:;e;::t;:~:·ucts ~~0~0~!~~.~.0~~v~P R_oast 10 121 ~!~e~!E.Cut .c.~u~~ .~~~~~ ........ le 59c · !~~0~!~~N!iP Steak ........ ~ 1" Swift Sizzlean ,2_0z~o 121 .:~r=ai~~~~~~~;;f~~~ ~~E~!!E~nd Rib Roast ,0 1111 ~~~Y L~e ~li_~~-d··-~-~~-~-~ ......... H B.P~G 121, ~~!~~,~~ou~!!~st Quart~~~ ... -,0 7gc ~~~!~!~!k!!!!~ked Sausage LI. 1u ;;~~u~~~ .. conventional Enjoy savings at ·the register ••• no gimm_ icks, no giveavvaj$, no coupons. The research involved ~f~eg~~~:.0rr~~a~~\s~ 'Medium AA -, Packaged & Conned Packaged & Conned Liquor & Beer. ~::~:~ and white sk;n Eggs ~ 450 Lady Lee Spaghetti Glorietta Stewed · . ~_!q~~'!!:~ 7-cr,0111". ~~i.s~~! 691 ~.~;~:~~;~~:F~:'~~ Pr~d~~~ OOZCTN • ~~A~~ ,32_oz~ age ~~~~~~~~-OZ~ 33c ~~!!~ealGin .. -......... 7" G.Z~!~!~~:?J.ili'1, :~ lceburg ~.~~8.st~~Y..~~~~~~~~i ~= ~ 73c ·· ~~~-~~ .. ~-~.~".! -~ ~ ~ 5gc 6f ~~-~~~~:, ~~~~ ..... :;;~=-.!: 1 ::;~~~~. ?!.£:f p,: ~~~~~~. ... . .EA. 29° ~H!ayawLE~.~,·8,~a·!rP .. ~~~·c~iru11·or1n·kf ;5 1 1 2 : ~:~~~o~eci~a?-· · ---;!~; ~Lu~~.~~;5~~S~-~~er . ~~i~0~~r;~o~~artc~:ng~! Fresh_ .. ~'!'~ -~~an~ -··· ........... LB 29° ii;1Monie ... Pi.ckle ... tlalves .. ,-0;~57c ivnd.an ... cllic.ken ... Nood.ie~'·Ol. o-4 49c .,,r.~-~~ ,-. .~ ~" (: "c;_tJ" "Since the skins have .., -- -~ ·. -c~ '11t' -1 ...,.... ~ e'/ -. :1!~~~·.:.~ ;.~~~~· • to Golden Bananas '" 1 gc ~~~~~-~:~~~~~~~~~¥ .~:: 2 48c HOOlth & ~Ct1~1,Aids ~·--..... " _ :. ~~ ; !,~ ~~~:!f a1;~~1~:~~rlt~~ LBarrogwenAOvno1·coandsos " 3gc H~~~5-!_~~~~~~~ ""' ~ 25c Tylen~l 1.!b~~·-\_. --~"'m 1u t ,,i: f' r-'i -':! from white·skin peanuts 1oc ~.-.: ~ "is considerably higher" l8 Shoestring Potatoes ef4 59c th an in the red·skin HARVEllTOAY 7 Ol <;AN . peanut flours. Frozen & Dair~ ~-~~-~-.. ~.!~.:~:ra_pe Ju..ic~ ... ·~oz :;: ea~ ~!~A~e!~~ .~-~-~! .. ~~~.·~~ ... :.:AN age ~ : ... s ~~t-· }~ Idea Full Of Grapes Like table grapes? You'll like this easy dessert idea. Simply pluck the grapes, wash and place in a small mix· ing bowl. Stir in enough sour cream to bind and a sprinkling of brown sug. ar. This is good as is, or stuffed in the cavity' of a half a papaya or melon. Harvest Day Del Monte Tomato Sauce ·ef4 27c Dasenex Spray ~ 1•1 , · Ice Cream ct"' 79c ~.U..~.~-.h.·.~1~.-e. -~'-~!~~a-~~!r~:~sgc ~;S.~~~~~~i!~~-n.::---=:~: 141 ......................... h -GAL. CTN. _ -· ~ Lady Lee ~!!:?(~~! .. ~-~! .. ~~~~~~.~-~ ...... t.OZ:: 39c Household & Pet ! ~~~~ 32-0Z ~ 7 9 ° ~:~;sr~~~r{;;,~:1~~:i;.N; ::: PINKOA HAlUA.AL.. ••••••• , •• _ ...... r.-o.-• ..... ·······"'"''' .f8·0Z CAN !!!!~~~!o!~~!~ ....... •~" ~ 55c Ranuzit Air Fresheners ~ 37c SOllO (3 VAlllUIES)I .................................. ., .. , • ..oz. Pl<G. Pepsi Cola Ba~arage ef4 10& ,.,..,.~_ ............. -.............. _ •• ···~··••\'•' ..... 1 ••••• l/ll·OZ 81lS Dove Liquid Detergent ef4 990 . ................. -........ ,.-.................. _ ....... -J2-0z. en .. ~!L~~~~~~~ ~o~~--"~~ 29c ~!!~t~.!~~~.~-~ ............ ~ .......... -.. -.. 17.~t: 39° Spray ·n Wash Stain Remover,~za ,. ,..,.,,,..,,..._,,., .. , "'l''"''' .... •••••-•''~'°'''"''''•••~•••t•••• ,, ·u .t2•02' 9fl.. Lady Lee Aluminum Foll . 530 t+EAWOUTY...::-.. •••••••••• ._,, ........... .._ •• .,. ........ ar.-.~Ft.~ Halley's Chili w/Be ... s ~ 45c ,,,.,.-... , ........ _ .......... .._ ........ , ............ _., ... ___ , .. tS~Z. c.AN ~!~.~!.!~~~! ~~?.~!!~. ##~-49° Purr Cat FoOd · · ~ 170 ~ VANnll.9-•. -_. ...... ~ ... ,...,. ... t'""? .,.,,._. ... ..,....-.o-z,. CAfil Kai Kan MPS Dog Food i:t" IJ'Jo ........... -......... _ .••.• ....,.., ...... ,., .... , ........ .... .M..&CM ~ ........ ,....,..---;::N'·--............ ., .. " "'' -........ _ • . ... ,. . .... .. · OAIL.t f'ILOT' 'l> Wtdnffday. July 21. 1977 'Skinny Shakes' Give Milk the Breaks THE SLIM GOURMET I th IS \KKl\K \ GIBBON~ Rwrk tn th•• 1l1m ct11wn ol ht•lon . 111otht•ra h¥d no lrouhit' a1•llrn~ lht'll 1-1d1 to drtnl. milk. Thu rt'lill problt.'m w.i• rlndlnC the row or ttout to ,1ve 1t Today the mll~mao brlnf l milk. bul klda don't want It unleaa lt '1 pink or purple. Pink Of purple colored water Is easier to "sell' hut soda pop 11 nothlntt more than calorlt l'Ontam1naled water . l he m 1call> colored rake·rlavored ap d swettened with qar You ('dO w• rr your k 1<h b.1d. to mitk by turnani.: 'our "'kJtchetl countl!r into a milkshake ba r with the -1 o( your bl ender Let 1''8l fruit provide the colo1. fl.•vor and sw~ess to mJlk". yogurt. or Kefir Here are some .. skrnn,v shakes" you aod1be kids can m ake together They'r e all relatively lean and caJone·light. so you can cnJOY them. too Ging.er: Age-old Favorite Ginger has been a popular spice for making s.weet bread.I; and cake~ for centuries. Food historians believe at was first used by the Greeks in ba king some {i,000 years ago . The Egyptians used it too, and so did.the Romans, in their f ersions or gingerbread. Over the last ten years. spice distributors repo rt a 62 perc~nt in crease i n ginger imports. Flourishing also are sales or ginger root, the tllberous perennial fl'om which crystallized and preserved ginger 1s mad e. <These are considered confections rather than spices.> In America, g round ginger i • co.nµponly teamed wttll mola-&ses in baking ; wlth browo sugar and/or soy sauce for flavoring vegetables. such as carrots and yams. Ginger also adds a subtle.flavor to a Wel!h pot rdast, when added to a beer marinade. It also blends well with beer when used for the liquid to make a rarebit sauce. Try adding a subtle half-teaspoon of ground ginger to your fl our m ixture when coating chicken to fry1 You can add ginger to rice as well in thm lndian·seasoned blend ~\~ t easpoon tu meric., 14 teaspoon coriander and 14 teaspoon ground &inger. Stir into hot, cooked rice. Garnish with c hopped chi vet or green onions. Spread Hot One This t. truly a bot one. · Dell1h as a condiment for cold cuts (of course>. it's clyna mite when teamed Wlth tbln sllcea of co~d beet. ~ or pork tenderloin and a bowl of toasted sesame seeds for dippiq. Trylt! BNGl..llM MUSTARD ~ c$*1 m\lltard 1 teUIM>OD salt ~ teaspoon 'Whtte pe-~-..... ' 1 teaspoon sugar 1 tableapoon wat~ 4 'l tabl•poon elder vtaeaar oi1 1 t.ablaPGOP., ·~d Stir to1etber tbt mu1tanl, Hit.; ~l' anl 1utft: araclualb 1Ur in the remaininl tn-a red le n ta keeplDe 1lit0tb. Cover and let rlpea at room tem· "'two for at leaat .,.. ~o'-r ~'f9re aervtns . ._. tn the retrt•eratol' . ... abodt ~~. Wt111I " mm~ th\'Y rr run lo do (We ui.u 1t.k1m m ilk J1 v nonfat milk v 11 w d l' 1 11 1 I o \\ I a t yoa ut l I\ ll•w llro11~ of tionty l'Utl he ucMed. 1f you mu"t but vou're llt't ter olf nut ttnt'ouragtn~ J iiwtiet tooth 1 BASU ED BANANA NOO 1 a.antoll rlpo banu1111 111 c:up plain 1 01 va nllhH low fwt yogurt 1 ('Ill.I ll'~ l'Ubcs und " al<•• Cinnamon or nutmeg Comb1 n • pee l ed banana and yoaurt an blender Cover and puree 1moolh. Fill a one· cup measure with Ice cubes. then ftU to the top with Ice water. Pour woter into the blender and run on hl1h speed Add the cubes a rew at u time throu1h top or small openinl ln cover Continue to blend unlit cllnk tna stops and ice cubea are d issolved. Sprinkle with 1p1ce. if de sired. Serves one, about 100 calories BUSTED BLUEBE RRY NOG Substitu te h c up blueberries (or othe~ berries> for the banana. Makes l serving, 105 calor ies. SHOOK-UP PINEAPPLE NOG S ubstitute "" cup c anned crushed un· sweetened pineapple. Makes 1 servln1. 125 calories. SMASHED STRAWBERRY SHAKE ~ cup frozen whole unsweetened strawber ries (other frozen fruit may be aubstltutedl 1 cup cold fresh skim milk Dub of tall ""teaspoon vanllla Few droP1 of honey. to taste Combine in covered btender. Serves one. 13<> calories. honey is an ad· dltional s calories per quarter-teaspoon. FRACTURED FRUIT FROST "" cup canoed Juice· packed unsweetened fruit cocktail (including JUiee> "" cup dry nonfat skim mJlk powder 1 cup ice cubes and water Combine all inare · dlenta except ice cubes in covered bf ender. Puree s mooth. Ad d cubes a few at a time. un · tll dissolved. Serves one, 10' calories. PUNCHED PEACHES <OR PEARS) Substitute half of an 8-ouncc can un::.wecll•ned JUice·packed peaches (or pears I (Or the fru It cocktail. Serves one. 93 calories. CRUSHED CRAN· APPLE FRAPPE 1 apple. peeled and quartered 'Aii cup canned whole berry cranberry sauce ''i cup pialn (or vanilla l low-fat yogurt 1 cup ice cubes and water Combine all inere· dtents except ice cubes Bott011, Round Eas>· 10 prepare ... Pot fioast. SWtss Steak e· Stew. Stir.fry, Chlli Beet Top Round i n covered blender. Puree smooth. Add c ubes a few at a lime. un· ltl dissolved. Serves one. 228 calories with plain yoeurt. 266 calories with vanilla yogurt. Cook whole or chopped USDA Choice Beet-Golden Prentium Meats Easy to prepare .. London Broil, Barbecue. Slroganolf, Chicken-Fried Steak, Shlsh Kebab. Sur. Fry. Cul slices on '45° angle us~ ~-~~ CHOICE Al Rolphs ~ef R-t 11nd Steaks A,. UIDA Choice lxclldlwely = .. . .. Bnf Bone-In Round Steak per lb. per lb. Armour ltar-Wilh "Iba AlllCNd 48 va1. II btl. Ratp•Flnetl Ouamr Golden Ptamlum Ice Cream qt. II ctn. Extra per• '!'r.39 lb •• • Turtcey Breaat 19 Pantry Fillers Super Produce per lb. ~lHnCubee 121 0 &;;i:ot.fryer \ __ Stewing Beef ,.. . lb. ,-@ flfffCnvck .99 Ojii1~~~,;~e l~"Wtc 7-Bone Steak ,., lb. ~ flffl , ... or Cllvck .79 D ,.,..l .... Short Ribs per Sirloin Pork Chops .... USDA 1"1 Cltuct pee .99 Ov~i~uets 'mau Round Bone Roast lb ~ co;;;;d"8eet Brisket ,,., 1" DP'o:kSieak lb ~ ee.;;;:iver .89 DMlldfl-,,., Turbot Fillet Ill. r1AJ c•1 ·s1ea1cs 1•• Ocad~n ,., ~ad Shrimp lb. Wines & Spirits Super Bakery ,.., lb. ,,., lb. -lb . per lb. ,.., Ill. ,.. lb. ,.. ... ~s;'HtReflSh .99 .~sriCid.~~°' 119 ~E~ilada Sauce 1lf ~ OtwftOtM-Ctta111ltJloe. l\!J Whole Kernel Corn 271 ·~~Napkins 1•• ~ r-=ato Paste 131 ~~Illa Wafers 2s• 1701. 33 can • SuPfH'Deli 1:::.'· .38 &?) Sf;jmp Cocktail 1201. 49 ~ ......... c..,.., ca" • ~Jack Cheese 12oi. 49 ~"e~;fe''Ofo1og' na pk!J.. ~ • Ol 23 D "°"".Otltclow u"· • ~Meat Wieners ';.~~· .49 ~ m• 4::.54 o ...... c...-·~ .&7 Sup Plum Ham =.30 :ro .73 ~ .10 21ori25 acJt .19 ·: .43 ... 93 ..... , lb. 1'' pq. 1 lb. 113 ,.,. '°'· , .. .... 2•.-. s• CM .. r' .. Q twl Y PILOT w.dntedly, J\!!y 27, 1977 Cold ·Ring: ~ Light Lunc·h Ult.le ll more welcome on a bot awn mer clay than • lunch u Utbt u it looa. PlneapJ>le· Avocado~ aerv" I ele1antly. Fill the center of tbe rt.QI wU.b chilled, eook41d. clean shrimp and P•H baalultl of cherry tomatoes and warm, but· tered Frencb bread. PINEAPPLE AVOCADO IUNG l packa10 (8-ounce) pineapple 1eh1Un lclU)boUln1 water 1 can (I-ounce) crua.bed pineapple 2 tabJeapoom white vlne1ar 1 cup diced avocado v. cup mayonnalae Lettuce lea vu Dllaolve pineapple 1elatin in boiling waler. Drain liquid b'om pineapple reserving fruit; add juice ahiS vinelar to aelatl.D. Cblll unW slightly thickeaed. . Fold reserved pineapple, avocado and mayoo.nais~ into gelatin mixtUre until com- pletely blended. Pour into an oiled, 4-cup mold. Chill until firm. To serve, unmold onto lettuce leaves. Makes8servings. Tuity Fruity sandwich (left) is flavor treat of fruits, cream cheese. Sandwich Treats Meal When summer's breezes are too warm to spend time in the kitchen preparing a full-blown meal, a wise cook turns to sandwiches ... for luncheon ... dinner ... 3 o'clock munchies .. . Depending on your stock or interesting breads, there could be some neat out-of-hand treats in store -presto -.for your active group. Here are some ideas for your· imagination to savor: . ~ ITALIAN STALLION 6 (S-oz.) pieces natur.;tl ~ing mild Italian sausage 2 tablespoons butter 2 cups sliced mushrooms l cup chopped green pepper 1~ cup chopped onion l clove garlic, minced 6 enriched French rolls 2 cups (2 8-oz. cans) pizza sauce Sslices Mozzarella cheese 2 teaspoons oregano ¥.a teaspoon paprika Simmer sausage in water until done. In skillet melt butter. Saute mushrooms, green pepper, onion and garlic until tender, 5 to 7 minutes. Split French rol,ls. Divide vegetable mixture among rolls. Split C"OOked·aausage and place on top of vegetables. Pour about 'l.s cup sauce over each sandwich. Top with slice of cheese. Sprinkle with oregano and paprika.--•at under broiler unW cheese melts and begins to brown, 3 to s minutes. Serves 6. Berries· Good A STRAW v BE Ba Y more granulated sugar • PATCH over 4 cups rinsed whole OFDESSERTIDEAS st raw berries . Place rinsed, bulled Refrigerate 1 hour, then whole strawberries over cover with ¥.a cup cold vanlll.a ice cream in a fresh orange juice. Serve laree bowl. Allow ice at once. cream to soften sUghUy before spooning into in-• dividual serving dishes. Euy Shortcake: cut Strawb~rrtes may be into 4el'Vlng pieces a pre- dipped first into melted pared buttery pound chocolate or brown sug-cake. Top each with ~ ar and then placed on ice. cup sweetened. crushed cream. strawberries and a • generous dollop of Strawb erry Soda: straWberry-flavored Place ~ cup sweetened, yogurt. Sprinkle with BEEF DILLY 12 slices dark rye bread Softened butter 3 tablespoons drained dill relish 3 tablespoons drained sweet pickle relish ¥.a cup salad dressing 12 ounces thinly sliced corned beer 6 crisp lettuce leaves 6 slices Swiss cheese, cut in hall diagonally Butter 12 slices of rye bread on one side. Combine dill relish, sweet pickle relish and salad dressing. Spread pickle relish mixture on c buttered side of 6 slices of bread and top each with 2 ounces sliced corned beef. Place lettuce on meat so it extends over bread edges. Place two ¥.a-ounce slices Swiss cheese overlapping triangles so tips of cheese extend out from bread ends. Close sandwich with buttered bread, cut in half diagonally. Serves6 .. TUITY FRUITY 6 slices whole wheat bread l 'l.s cups whipped cream cheese l2ora.nge slices 12 apple slices 6 pineapple slices 12 avocado slices 12 peach slices Fruit Dressln'g Toast bread; spread with cream cheese. Arrange layers of fritit coloifully on top. Pour dressing over sandwich. Garnish with toasted coconut chopped nuts or cherries. Fruit Dressing:. 1 cup mayonnaise · 2 tablespoons pineapple juice 2 lablespoons cherry juice Combine mayonnaise with juices and beat until smooth. Yield: 1 ~ cups, ample for six open face sandwiches. ROQUEFORT SOCIETY 6 enriched French rolls lh cup Dijon-style mustard 18 ~-inch thick red, unpeeled apple slices · (about4 apples) 2 cups crumbled Roquefort cheese 14 cup butter . 2 tablespoons chopped shallots or green onions · Partially S..Plit rolls and spread lightly with spatula dipped in mustard. Place three apple slices on each; salt lightly to keeP, from discoloring. In small bowl, -combine cheese, butter, shallots or onion until mixture ltspreacfob!e. Top apple allces with spread. Close rolls and cut 11\ half. Garnish plate with bunch or grapes. crush ed or pureed sllveredalmonds. strawberries in a large ;;;=;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;:;;:::=:;;:;:;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;=;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 1la1s. Add 2 scoops vuana lee cream or ice milk. fill with chilled soda water; stir and top with a whole strawberry. flt LITTLE DIPPE a s ·: Dtp rin sed whole strawberries ID a J>owl of sour creahi or ~hipped heavy cream. then dip into brown auaar. Serve .li.RMIB" 'Bin:BD IRJP at once. An elegant lunch begins with this1: pineapple avocado ring, centere with chilled shrimp. . .• . ~ WITH STATER BROS. AFTER SHAVE YIP· LOW-LOW-PRICES! .'~ t.~~-$1'' . ~ ~ ·" YIP ,. ~) ~:~~:E $1 ~! TAMPAX CLOSE.UP '.TAMPONS TOOTHPASTE , .!5·159 ' ~·SHAMPOO& '8/;: ,~ CREME RINSE . 1 -· ·) 79c · SUAVE 16-0Z. ' -COMFORT TOP KNEE-HI'S • PAITYTOP PA•TYHOSE REO.P«O. 99c TAME CREME RIISE 79.c 4.6-0Z. AEO. ~~O ~ 3PA~ .99 C .·~z. t aac .. ADORIHAIR , SPRAY. 1 3-0Z. s 14' .I 2-oz. IAIY.;.WASH CLOIH · •. .,,c, OIAPEREN 70-CT. . BAii ROLL-Oii . DE•ORAIT 89«= 1.S.Oz. I ·1ARILE& a RIISE w MtCAIN PLUS s 1 ~19 24..QZ. fMICAr~"j L~ ~ ' . ' I .. .. • r ' ' l .. W!tdneedaY· July '¥7. 19n DAILY PILOT Answers End 'PUtti.ng Up' Pickle Preblem·s. By OORO'fln' WENCK u•..-tJ., ""~ c-<'•llwl•'-'• PC"oplt who put up plrkl have plcntr, or probll•ms. Judaina rom the oumt'rous quesUooa we rtl'etv" We \., colh.-t'led me or th• q1K'3tlona we hear mosl on.en. alon1 wltb t belr answers So If you 1i&re a pickle putl•r· upper, thete may spare you the hat minute frustration ot tbumblnc throurh cookbook• to fi nd answers. Q. Wlucb varieties t-' cucumber$ arc but for pJclrllftl? A. Cucumbciu ror picldlnt purpose. ahould bo of varletlet Uuit are ltrm, ot re11ular Corm , aad of sood keeplnar qu•llty. Very larae cucumbers ol Lhe typt' u11d tor aalada are not deilrable for plckllna. Smaller •lie• and alight ly uoderrlpe one• are beat. Recommended varlet.lea are: Wllconsln SKR-58 and Pioneer fermented pickles or aau,rkraut uslnc a salt 1ubatitute ln place or Hll! A In f e rmented ptcklea, salt inhibHs apoU11e during the rtrst ataae of fermentation. Aa fermentation goes on, the lactic acid produced by bacterial action is what preserves the food. sodium chloride) cannot. serve thia purpose and should not be used. However, If you are fermenting pickles or sauerkraut at a low tem- perature -between 45 and 55 degreea -you could substitute calcium chloride for sodium chloride. However, the salt is es· In non-fermented aential at first to prevent "fresh" pickles where spoilage. large amounts of vinegar The salt substitute are used, salt does not made with potassium function as a pre- c hloride (instead of servative so a salt sub- stitute could be ust:d tor flavor. Q. Is rock salt the same as pickling salt? Can it ~ used for mak- in& pickles? A . No, rock salt and pickling salt are quite different. Rock sett is a coarse-grained, un- refined s alt used m ice cream freezers. It is not salt, you can use Kosher salt or i.able salt. Kosher salt has no ad-dl ti ves, but table salt contains additives to make it free flowing. These may cause the brine to be cloudy and the pickles to be sllgbUy darker in color. But it is safe to use, whereas rock salt is not. edible because it con· Q. I have not been able t a i n s i m p u r i l i e s . to find any fresh dill for Therefore it sbouJd not pickling. Is there any be used in pickling. IC around? If not can I sub- YO!J can't find pickling stltute dill seed for it and bow much should I u.ae? A. Fresh dill weed Is avalJable locally in some supermarkets and fresh produce markets. Call the produce managers to aee if~ carry it. H you can't Jt, you can use 1 tablespoon of dill aeed for each three be•da of fresh dill called for 1n tbe recipe. The flavor will not be as pungent with dill seed u with fresh dill . Heating tbe dill seeds helps to releas& t)le flavor. Q. How much ..... GROUND BEEF NOT TO EXCEED 30~. FAT YHK•Hl•I SLICED SHOULDER BOLOGNA PICNIC ST A HA BROS. HOFFY MON[YBACKGUA•ANTH ON OUA&.IYY MrAH fVllV l'l(CI or ""'"' IS VHCONOlllONAU f GUlllAHTllO l O l'lf AU YOU Oii YOVI MOHl1 Wll~ If CHIUIUll V llrUHOID 1·LB. PKG. r11r ..... r11onN•"'"'°"101i11 1i.11~0\.1 59.LB. 59~ ··~ ~~ d. ~~ IAllCllOYUIKEYS ... : LI. , ,.J(I ~· , IHff•IUOf~UI ••• IEV•CHUCK •~OT ••• lll'• ... AlLlNOf\.lt ll • 1 i• ~ • CllUCK STIAK LI AllM ••AST.... \.I ••• STIAK ~~~~ .... LI '-· ---.·-------JP' IUF • 110\IND • llOlff.\N • 11 • lfll" • Cl<llClt ••• lfff ° CllUCll • 90<'Kl .. I • 12• ITAIUlllOS • WlfMIRSO" BHF FRANKS II OIU••· OAHOU • 4 •I SLICED HAM rn1 ~ ... OAUOVP SALAMI STICK , .,, """ u 694 IA 69• IA 69• IA SJ 39 •MSHfllOZlf••CIUll ... lllNC~ s 13• ltUMP •OAST l l 7••• ••A•T LI HOULDI• en•• .. ll TROUT , , 1m. '°"uua •139 Mlf • -1u11111H1 . , 11• '"'• 110UNO • l0f0£UU • 1 •• TU'llf"'11'"°0"1"F11'11T s 11 • •TIW MIAT LI •ou•• STIAK ~ .. 0~~ TIP STIAK. . ...... l l 11 HltlH • Jll~lllO • 13• llU • OOUCC • IOfef•I II • 12• HU• U)"' •21 • , .. f. ... ,llOll" SJ 5, •••••n ll SHOULDI• •••• , LI "-"••• STIAK ... l4 CA Tf ISH II Inf. AOllNO. IOfOILUI • 1 •• ........ AU llfO II .. l . • 12• NU• LOIN.,,.... •21 • 523, TIP ••A•T. 1• ••• ••••T ~:01 ~ ... n1111ousa ... i.a. ~ .... -------L-I .... -.,_iiAa. •L•c•• ll • 1 •• •••• •T••• ~· • 1 •• ;.•••iiii:Oili~ ... l• •21• 1-;;;~~-=~ I . should 1 use ao my pickle$ .tl1 be crllpf A. Alum ls not a necessary tncredlent in pickles and ls not recom- meodecl in m<11t modern pJckle reclp~s . The aeuet for obealainc crlsp pleklea is to pickle cucumbers promptly •fter ltarvestlng. and -..hen Jll'C)C:eulng them to use a llmmetllic water bath rather \ban a boll- iQI ,,._. bath .. It 3ou D)uat use alusn, a piDch per batch ls enoqb. Q. My grandulother's old plclde redpe calla for slaked lime. Whit is this and w}\y is It needed? Where cap I buy it? A. Slaked Ume is hydrated lime or calcium hydroxide. It's made from lime, which is calc.ium oxide. In old- time pickle rec:lpea it was used as a firming agent -that ls, to make crisp pickles. However. it is not necessary it the pickles are fresh and of good quality and proper procedures are followed. Modern recipes do not call for it and we do not recommend its use. Q. ~Y are my pickles bitter? A . Bitterness may be due to the type and varie- ty of cucumber; growing conditi0!1s such as irriga- tion. salt in soil , and tem- perature; added ingre· di en ts such as garlic. onion, or pepper. Bitter- ness disappears in fermented pickles. It may lessen in fresh dills after a few months but will not totally disap- pear. Q. My pickles started to bubble and run over the tops of the jars after · they bad been canned for several weeks. Does this mean they're unsafe? A. Bubbling and oozing are signs that your pickles are fermenting in the jar. This probably happened becauae your recipe did not contain enough vinegar or because the jars were· not properly sealed. What happened is that. lactic acid bacteria started to grow in them producing gas bubble~ and lactic acid. This acid is beneficial in preserv- ing pickles (it'.!l natural- ly formed in fermented types of·pickles) and also adds a desirable flavor. WhUe the fermented piclcles are safe to eat I they will not keep well since the jars are not properly sealed. Either store them in th e refrigerator or reprocess them. UPA~T COAOATUM OR POTHOS POLE PLAHT• I" To reprocess, remove pickles from jars and put them into hot clean jars. Make a new vinegar brine or filter the same brine .through a paper coffee filter. Bring brine to boiling, pour over pickles, adjust bot lid. Process in simmering water bath for S minutes for small pickles and sljces, 10 minutes for large pickles. Q . Can plastic con- tainers be used for mak- ing pickles? A. Yes, food-grade polyethylene containers can be safely used for salt, lye., and acid solu- tions. Do not U(e con- tainers that have not been produced for food use. Glass containers. crocks, stainless steel, and wooden barrels also work well. Do not use aluminum or catvulzed utensils • .Alu~wn may corrode and tal vanlzed ones mq cause metal po1IODllll. I ~ t ' ...._,_ r • . . . .. ISLASD FRUIT SALAD 1 large pineapple or 1 can nsounces> plneap· ple. in chunks 3 or 4 oranges. sec· tioned 1 small grapefruil. sectioned Strawberry halves 1 or 2 bananas. sliced Melon balls 2 tablespoons frozen orange juice concen· trate. thawed 1 teaspoon soy sauce ir.i teaspoon sugar 1/.a teaspoon Tabasc pepper sauce 1 tablespoon lemo juice 'h cup mayonnaise 'h .C\JP sour cream Prepare fruit to total about l '·2 q"arts. To make sour cream dress· ing. blend orange con· centrate. soy sauce. sug· ar. Tabasco and lemon juice into mayonnaise Stir in sour cream. Pass sauce with fruit. Yield: 6to8servings. APPETIZER1cABOBS · 8 large precooked smoked sausage links 1 can (16 ounces) pineapple c hunks . dr ained. or fresh pineap- ple. cutup l tablespoon brown sugar 2 tablespoons soy sauce 1 tablespoon vlnegar Arrange sausage even. ly around edge of roa~t· ing rack set in a glass dish or directly on glass plate and cook 2 to 3 minutes. rotating dish o n e-quarter turn halfway through cooking time. Drain sau·sage and cut each sausaee link in· to 5 pieces. Make kabobs. using 1 ·sausage piece and 1 pineappl e chunk threaded on a round wooden pick. Arrange evenly in a large shallow dish. l n· a ii · c u p g l a s s measure. blend brown sugar. soy sauce, and vinegar and pour over kabobs. Rerrigerate 1 or 2 hours until' serving time. Arrange 20 kabobs on a 1ar1e glasa plate and cook 2 to 3 minutes. rotatll\f dish one-quarter turn and 1poonlng sauce over' top haltway throus~ cooklnt time. Cook add.i· tional kabobt u needed. Serve warm. Makes 40 appetizera. r~ Har~st · • Climbs .. . ---_..,....,._. - -~ -a ~ --· I ' lma~nation~the main ingrealent' in the G6iden Gate )S.fl'lt/Wich. . . 3049 Coast Hwy.,,Corona Del Mar• 10114 Ada1ns Si., Hunt. leach • • ' , • ' l-1 4541 Campus Dr., Irvine . · .. _ . . . . . "' , .. , Mo·rre11 =-wielierS 1, 3 or 5 Lb. Chub • 5-lb. Bag · M11t · . • 1-Lb. Pkg. ' Albertaons Supreme Beef Chuck Steak Blade Cut ' ._, ...---~_....---. ------_.....,.....,.... -...... -~ -• -a. -... ,, -~ --' . -- ' I t'- •• f 1 Hot Day: Chilled Soup I • -. •· I Bowls Creamy Tempting team for a summer t 'Supper: chilled soup and a grilled J cheese sandwich. · The trick is to offer something I unusual, like Senegalese Soup, a I chilled. crearpy curried chicken I ' bowl, or Chilled Cream of Leek ' Soup. made with fresh leeks and l chilled like a vichysoissc. Ac· r. company either soup with hot I ·Monterey Jac k and ch il <' -sandw1chl's I SENEGALESE SOUP j · 11.t cup butter 14 cup flour · • 2 teaspoons curry powder 4 l plnt half and half , l l U~-ounce) can condensed Ji chicken broth :Y.. cup apple JU1ce or water I ~teaspoon salt •.AJ teaspoon celery salt ., ~ 'Al cup coconut. toasted , 1f.J cup whipping cream I : 1 cOOked chicken breast half . • Melt butter over medium heat. ~ .Stir in flour and curry powder. I \Let bubble 1 minute. Stir In half ,.. and half, undiluted chicken broth, apple juice. s a il and celery salt. Cook. stirring. until I ' a mixture bQils and thickens. Chill. • ··Ladle into bowls. Top with ' coconut, whipped cream and I: .,chicken, cut into julienne slivers. I 1 • Makeslquart (4 servings). I 'G RILLED CHEESE AND CtULE SANDWICHES I• 4 slices white bread f . Softened butter I •. I• 6 ounces sliced Monterey jack cheese 2 tablespoons diced canned green chiles Spread bread with butter . Place cheese and chiles on two s lices. Cover with second slice of bread. sandwich fashion. Spread both sides with butter. Slowly fry sandwiches in skillet s minutes on each side or until golden .and cheese i.s melted. Cut into halves. Garnish as desired with can- taloupe wedges and skewered ripe olives and cherry tomatoes. Makes2se.rvings. CHILLED CREAM OF LEEK SOUP 1 pound leeks (3 medium> 1 large potato, pared and diced 1 small onion, diced 2 cups water 1. beef bouillon cube 1 teaspoon salt Pew dashes white pepper 1 cup whipping cream Trim leeks to 5-inch lengths, in- cluding white bulb. Slice thinly. Combine leeks, potato. onion, water. bouillon cube. salt and pepper. Cover ,and heat to· boll- ing. Reduce heat. Simmer 25 minutes or until ~egetables are very tender. Turn mixture into electric blender and whir until pureed. Stir in cream. IC leeks are fibrous. strain soup. Chill before serving. Makes 31/a cups (4 servings). 1~ t.es Crudites I . . f Ca napes Crisp. I ·, •1· 1r ·l~ I " •• ·ff I t~ ByTOMHOGE AP NewUNl«ftWrilH I discovered on a trip through rural Fr3nce some years ago that almost every French home. from lordly chateau to humble £arm house. featured hors d'oeuvres for luncheon. It might be a luxurious.·truCfle-f1lled·pate of goose liver or a simple assortment of s liced sausa~e and garnishes. of chilled r adishes. The appetizer was'a noon ntual. . AMERICANS, used to eating lbeir niidday meal. on the l'\UI, have little time or lnclin~Uon to dally wltb appetizers at U.at hou1\ But they have become a fixture at that"admlrib1e instltu· Uon,thec~lparty. ' ' Haviali spoiled my appetite for dinner at coul)tless sucb ar· fairs where trays of m eat. fi!1h and cheese canapes enticed me. l Cinatly hlt on a method of enjoying cocktails with a soack. in my own house at least. without reeling satiated. Fittingly. a secorid visit to France solved my proble01. The answer is that delightt\Jl mixture"Or raw vegetable bit& the Frftc:.h call les crudites (wilh an accel\t on the 'e'. >. And the secret of its success hes in a taniy dip. ~.Ju!y21,t97.7 , Icy Frivolities ~c0 ol Off FanciJ~UY Bven eookl who cringe at the pro.~ ol matins complicated ca11ero&a or fancy desserta can m a.ier these lee cream trlvoUUM. AU earned top award• In Batldn·Robbln1 • Jee Crea in Show Off Ullsyear, bpwever, any complementary flavors of ice cream can be used to produce these fesUve results. PRESIDENTIAL ICE CREAM PIE t roll refricerated peanut butter cookiell • 1 cup dates, chopped ~cup water ~cupaugar 3 tablespoons peanut butter 1 \II quarts pralines 'n cream ice cream, softened slightly 1 cup whipping cream 1 tablespoon au gar 1 teaspoon vanilla 3 tablespoons finely chopped peanuts Cut cookie roll in hall crosswise. Cut halt roll into about 30 ~"slices; refrigerate remain- ing half roll. Lightly butter bot- . tom and sides of 9" pie pan. Line bottom of pan wilt\ cookie slices, pressing to form a solid crust. Overlap remaining slices on side of pan to complete crust. Bake in a 350~ oven for 10 minutes; cool, chill. In small saucepan cook dates, water and sugar until th' ck, stir- ring constantly, about 7 minutes. Remove from heat and stir in peanut butter; cool. Fill pie shell with lee Cream mounding in center. Spoon date ~re over Ice Cream. Freeze at least 3 hours. TO serve: beat whlppln1 cream with •u•ar and vanllla until thick. Swirl over pie and aprinkle with peanuts. Cut Into wedges. Makes 8to10 servln1s. .IAMOCA ALMOND FUDGE TORTE 3 cups unsllted nour l lf.t cups sugar 'hcupcocoa 21h teaspoons bakJng powder l 'h cups mayonnaise 1 'h cups water 1 'h teaspoons vanilla 2 quarts Jamoca Almond Fudge Ice Cream, slightly sof- tened · Mocha Fudge Sauce, chilled Coffee Whipped Cream Sliced almonds, toasted Butler three 9" round cake pans, line bottoms with waxed paper. Preheat oven to 350'. Sin dry ingredients together into a large bowl. Stir in mayonnaise: gradually stir in water a nd vanllla until well blended. Pour into prepared pans; bake for 25 to 30 minutes; cool in pan for 10 minutes. Remove from pan, cool, chill. Meanwhile, lightly oil two 9" layer cake pans. Tear off two 16" pieces of plastic wrap. Press one piece in each pan, pressing to adhere wrap to sides and bottom of each pan. Fill each pan, level with top, with Ice Cream. Freeze for at least 2 hours. Place plate on which torte is to be ae"ed In refrigerator ot' • freeaer. When Ice Cream is frozen IOlld, remove oae layer from pan by pullint up odtabe Cl plaatlc wrap. Place one la,er on chilled plate, cover witll one frozen Jee cream layer. lpreM with half the chilled Mocha Fudge 18\fce; repeat. Top wlth third cake layer. · Deocrate top of cake with Col· fee Whipped cream, top and bot· tom edges with cream rosettes, sprinkle'With almonds. Freeze at leaat2 hours. · Remove from freezer, let mellow 10 minutes. Cut b)to wedges. Mates 10to12 servinp •• •odaa hdge Sa•ee Jn double boiler, heat 1 can (14 ounce) sweetened condensed milk, 1 ounce ·square UD· sweetened chocolate, 2 table- s poons water, and 1 teaspoon in· st ant coffee powder, stir constant- ly about 20 minutes. or until mixture thickens. Remove from heat; stir in 3 tablespoons almond liqueur; cool, chill. Coffee Whipped Cream Dissolve 1 tablespoon instant coffee in 1 tablespoon hot water. Whip 1 pint whipping cream to soft peaks, then beat in IA oup powdered sugar until cream stands in pea~. This is an ice cream sipper. Use your favorite liqueurs to flavor it, a frosty pink ice cream for color! PINK ALEXANDRIA 1 pint burgundy cherry ice cream ~cup creme de allQ.ODd •At cup white creme de cocoa 1 tablespoon cream 2icecubes Scoop ice cream into blender. Add remaining ingredients ex- cept ice cubes. Blend on high un- til smooth. Add ice cubes; blend just to crush ice. Pour into 4 stemmed' cocktail gtasses, serve as an alter-dinner drink. LaPaz Cocktail" es ... vvill make your party a success For example, Sweet-Sour Mix is the star of aAy hOme bar. The perfect substitute for sweetened lemon juice. The way to make a great WhiskeY.Sour,1Gin Fizz or Tom Collins. Indoors or out byt~e'"'p'OOI, Sweet-Sour Mix is a friend in need indeeq .. o.ur Mqr:.garita. ~x, of course, is the Queen qf Cocktails anytjme. · . . I Then there's the Bloody Mary.,W.e..offer,· instead, 'the Bloody ~ria. You add tequifa 'and dot~e hat dance. 't l Better keep a mixed case of our mixes oh hand. .. Just in case. And take advantage of this cdupon. Good on any of oar family of PoPular cocktail ·mixes·f~ h0rile entertainmeD~\ ; • r •J \ ~ .. • l ' ,, • t i. , . ' . J . - • .. -. Cucumbers, tomato wedges add flavor treat to chicken Pick of the Crop. Interest Added Summer is the perfect time to water to skiliet. stirring to com- stretch wholesome casseroles bine. Bring gravy mixture to a with fresh vegetables. Why not boil ; reduce ..heat and simmer. take advantage of roadside pro-covered. 45 minutes or until duce to flavor these main course chicken is tender. ideas? Stir in sour cream; add tomato .. . ·· Zucchini. turnips. fresh car-wedges and cucumber which rots. summer squash and new have been cut into chunks. Cook potatoes -even kernels cut off over low heat until Just heated ·. from fresh ears of corn -add .through. Makes 4 to 6 servings. color and taste interest. to old CARROT PUDDING standbys; provid£: souffleing SOUFFLE ideas. too. eastly complemented 1 bunch carrots, washed and with a garden-fresh salad. sliced CUMBERLA...~D 1 small clove.garliC. minced CHICKEN 2 tablespoons butter or 21':? to3-pound fryer. cut up margarine 1 tablespoon oi I 2 tablespoons brown sugar 1 small onion, sliced 1/4 teaspoon cinnamon Salt Jf2 teaspoon salt 1 envelope ) Ye-oz. ( Chicken 2 egg whites, beaten to peaks GravyMix _ Cook carrots in steamer tray 1 cup water over boiling, salted water 8 11.a cup dairy sour cream • minutes. Pour into bowl (reserve 1 large tomato. cut in wedges liquid for adding to soups or l small cucumber. unpeeled cooking rice) and add butter. Using large skillet. brown Mash or puree in blender or food chicken in oil. Add onion and processor. Stir in seasonings. cook until onion is tender. but not Fold carrot mixture into egg ·brown:drainoffcxcessfat. w hites. Grease a 1-q uart LighUy salt chicken: add con-casserole or souffle dish and pour tents of gravy mix envelope and in mixture. Cook. uncovered at Grading T~sted . 350 degrees F . 35 minutes, or un- ti~ top is HghUy golden. Let stand at least 5 minutes before serving. Makes 4 roain course servings. 'tJJRNIP PUF F 1 pound (4 medium> turnips. peeled and diced 2 tableapoons butter or margarine 2bea~n eess ~ cup toasted wheat ge~m 1 irz teaspoon d ehydr ated onion flakes 1 tablespoons parsley flakes 1 tablespoon honey 1 teaspoon salt l teaspoon lemon juice Dash nutmeg Cook turnips in steamer tray over boiling salted water till tender. about 15 minutes. Add butter and mash or puree in blender or food processor. In bowl combine eggs. wheat germ. onion, parsley, honey. salt, lemon Juice and nutmeg, Mix in turnip p14ree. 'furn mix· ture into a greased, 3-cup casserole. Bake, uncovered at 375 degree$ r. until set. 25-30 minutes. Garnish with additional parsley and nutmeg. if desired. Makes 4 main course servinp. · . ~ -· -. -·---~ • • ••T-~• ' . . PEPSI COLA FOREMOST ICE CREAM Store Hours: 9 to 9 Dalty-• Sunday 9 to 7 "'4u1 lffwctl•• • . 'Thurs., Jqly 28 thru Wed.,· Aug. 3 Mc"~ .. s._. ... ...- We Gladly Accept Food St-.• We R•Mr•e The RicJM To Umit quo.titles And lt.tuse Sole T• Dealers Aftd Whotffaien,. . BEEF R~UND-IONELESS RUMP ii BEEF ·ROAST'~J;1~~ . BEEF RIB EYE SPENCER STEAKS 11 .2.69~ BOLGONA ·~IMS RANC~ FRESH EGGS LARGE GR.ADE AA SPRINGFIELD TENDER SWEET PEAS ---~-..-... ·----~ .. ---~--_:_ _- D.41LY PILOT CJ3 Kid Quiz Hits Close to Home AnnO D !: A It A N N LANDERS I um a mot.her or three chlldren and hav~ ha<! ll up to here with qutues that are 1uppo1ed to 1bow wbetb# J am a • '•ood parent. .. My amwtt ls, "I am u aood a parent u I can be,•• and I mean ll. Mt huaband and I love eacb other <Father Theodore Hesbw'Jb'afint rwe>. What then lam)'. artpe! Simply tbll: Al they l•t older t.My become more tW'ly, more lrreaDOUi· bl• 1nd mor• dfaob•· dlent. Tbey arau• amo., thema~v•. whlne, aulk and comphdn I used to enjoy daln1 t.hlna• for them but now J find lt· nett.her 1at.i1f ylna nor re.' wardlna. We do thlnp u a fami- ly. We take an interest m ou.r cb.lldren'• school projedl and act.lviUes. We don't spoil them with 1irts or privileges. They work for spending money. They arcm 't dis- ~iplined with a strap. We use the "talk-it-out" ap- proach. I know we are not a10119, Ann. OW" friends tell UI, "U )'OU th1nk they are a lla.ndtul now, just wall a couple of years." Maybe lf the kids woold try a little harder, more parents would be a ble to answer "yes" to that survey you ran recently -"U you had at to do over again would you have had For Handicapped '\ Day Camps Two summer day camps will be conduct- ed next month at the Rehabilitation Institute of Orange County. The programs are especially run for han- dicapped youngsters. To enter, a child must have a letter from a physician indicating be is free from commu.nicat>fe diseases and can participate in the camp. However, to give the service that RIO wants more volunteers are necesslry to help supervise the programs. Activities include swimming, hiking, overnight sleep.outs, field trips, music and group games. Sensory stimulation experiences will be provided through such creative activities as painting, working with clay, collage and wood, and sand and water play. Language abilities are stimulated through experiences in creative dramatics, puppetry, music, story telling, cooking and scientific exploration. Separate from the camp program, in· dividual special education in speech , oc- cupational and physical therapy is offered. Those interested in the program or serv- ing as volunteers are asked to call RIO at 633-7400 or 541·8822. r ~ CHRISTMAS CARDS 20%0FF FRL\NCk~-ORR """ f 1ne stationery corona del mar GRAND OPENING THE BELLY DANCER A new dance studio • improve the body • expand creativity • feel relaxed • otferinq classes morning, afternoon & eveninqs in beginning. intermediate and advanced belly dancino 2411 E. Coast Hwy.• Coro11a del Mar Call to sign-up (714) 731·4574 FOR THE SHAPE OF YOUR FUTURE USE WHAT YOU HAVE NATURALLY ..• NO MACHINES ONLY BODY & MIND YOGANASTICS • 11 ESNAl"IN0-11£.l"VaNA TING RELAXING • INOlllA Diii! CElflfllO © IHS"'UCTOllt 2706 HARBOR BLVD SUITE 2041 ~5-5300 I COSTA MESA . . chlldrent" Here's a qui& for THEM -for a change: l . When dJd you last hue your mom without wanUna IOtnething? 2. When did you last make an attempt to be e1pcclally llleasant to your did without askJng hlm to n.x aomething? 3. Do you aay hello to your parents• friends and treat. them w1th respect! 4. Do you take pride in your home or do you leave yogurt cups in the hvini room and the spills for someone else to clean up? How abo1,1t the yard? Did you lea~ your new football out in lbe rain all night? s. How about the car? Can a penon ait down without gettin& stuck to a wad of gum? Speaking of the car, when was the last time Dad had to pull over lo the curb or t.he shoulder of the road because of the yelling or fighting in the back seat? 6. When did you last tell your mom the dinner was good and that you appreciate the effort she puts into cooking for you? 7. Are you on lime when Mom or Dad offers to drive you somewhere or pick you up? Are you where you are supposed to be or do they have to look for you? 8. When was the last time Mom or Dad bad to bring a forgotten lunch Sensory motor integration is the result of "messy play·· part of the summer program at the Rehabilitation Institute of Orange County. Children learn how to play nnd touch new things during this expericnet• with dry rice. On other occasions .nee is or a book to school? Do you ever say thanks for this? 9. When did you last do what you were told without asking wby or saying, "Wait a minute" or, "Do I have to?" , 10. Are you proud ot your mom or dad? Their manners? Could they be proud or you? Please, kids, we love you. We could have a wonderful time together, but it's a two-way street. You have to do your part. -FLORIDA MOM DEAR MOM: Millions of eyes wW see your let· ter and the Kld Quiz. It's au re lo make many parents feel less alone. <Your complaints are Landers 0......--0., ~~ ... .-.-GUAIAWTUDN15 Ml 2 t •• ,. ANNUM- 200/o OFF DECORATING SALE! par for the coune.) n ::-'""'sire. may a1ao ~eet wtth a .=a:=. few mlllloo kids out .....,......_.. there who need to shape :!: :.:. up. Thanks tor the lai>ut. JAMESPmtCK Is alcoholism ruining CU ... IMGHAM your life? Know the 1101.s. Coat Hwy. danger signals and what .. _, ~ ~~- to do. Read the booklet, 497-1702 "Alcoholism -Hope and ~~iJiji;iiji;i;;;:fi Help," by Ann Landers. (· Enclose 50 cents in coin with your request and a Jong, stamped, selt-. addressed envelope to Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11995, Chicago, Ill. 60611. O~ly Pl ... pllo .. by 1'alrlC11 0·0onnou STATE FARM A INSURANCE @ FOR INSURANCE CALL DENNIS ROSENE' 410 West Coast Hwy. Newpart Beach 645-6470 UR a good ndlhb«. Scale farm is bR. Stitt flflfl lnwtanc» ~ H01M Ottas. Bloomll>C!Oll, Mlmoll .. Let us Help you c:r .. re • more Hlulllul home. Our tre1ned 1 dec:orelore IHrc:h our l•brlo 1n0 dtelon llbfary to not only NYe your tlma but to 1>lltr Ille VefY beat C:OfOf end llbtlC CO- o rd In 1 ti On S. There 11 no addlllonal c:l'large lor this I aervtc., You p1y only for the merehandln you aelec:t. • Ora11«t11 •Carpeting • Will Coverfog • fum11ur1 • Upholaierlng • Bedroom Eoaemblell Come tn or c:1ll today lor an appointment In your home - 6«-8860. SAVE 20% NOW! 23 Fashion Island Newport Beach 644-8860 I GOLD I -cHAINS ·. •THE MOST INCREDIBLE LOW PRICES YOU HAVE EVER SEEM • HUGE SELECTION TO CHOOSE FROM • ALL SOLID I 4K GOLD • DRIVE OVER TO SEAL BEACH AHD SEE US TODAY~T'S WORTH THE TRIPH THE GREAT ANTIQUE FIVE 8t DIME STORE · orEN MOK-S.t.T. . If 9 A.M. to 6 r .M. substituted with shaving cream, pudding, mud and body paint. Working with the :-oungstl'r!-t arc Cleft to right 1 John Shields, Judy I lanson. Leticia Baca, Pal Larson and ·Laurie Cl a assen I 142 MAIN STREET-SUL HACH I 430-4650 f.n·Z./ftly SUMMER mnt'a~ CLEARANCE FINAL WEEK Taurus Diplomatic THVRSDA Y, JULY ZS By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21 · April 19): Emphasis on accommodating to challenge. You're going to win -know it and take some hard knocks with grace, foresight. Accent on goal, ambi- tion, legal hurdle. TAURUS (April 20- May 20): Direct confron- tations s h ould be avoided. Take long- r an g e view . Be diplomatic. One who is eager to aid in d_istribu- tion, display, publication is very much an ally. responsibility. Money of partner. mate. estate comes into sharp focus CANCER <June 21· Julv 22): Accent on ties. commitments. long-term relation s hip s, cooper a Liv e e fforts. marital status. Be aware of public relations. Take nothing for granted. Time is Qn your side; avoid rushing to de· cisions. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 >: Highlight originality, in- dependence, willingness to take a chance on your own abilities. Emphasis on service, employment, health, coping with "dis· sident" relative. to display courage of convictions. Love is very much a part of scenario Emotional responses are featured. LIBRA (Sept. 2J.Oct. 22 l: Be versatile; ,gi vc full play to intellectual curiosity. Ask quesllons, make inquiries. Diet, nutrition. weight all blend into personal scenario. What had been status quo -undergoes radical upheaval. SCORPIO <Oct. 23· Nov. 21 l: What appears a mishap turns out to be a blessinf{. Your direc· taon is changed. You are initially disappointed. But you soon reali~e that your potential has been enhanced. SAGITl'ARIUS (Nov. becomes fair play. AQUARIUS (Jan . 20-Feb. 18 ): See dif· ference between promise and deception. Steer clear of one who sings blues, drinks to excess, makes outlandis h c la ims. Accent on secrets. clandestine meetings. PISCES (Feb. 19· March 20): If you neglect basic material. Hundreds to Choose From in Mony Styl11 ond Fobrics. R•clino-Rocker. Sofettes, Woll Recliners. IMMEDIATE FREE DELIVERY WHITE'S LA-I-BOY youpaytheprice.Means --~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~___. be thorough -·accept COSTA MESA responsibility. Member MISSION VIEJO NEWPORT of opposite sex wants you loft .. ..,..,,,,.,, 369 E. 17th ~-& ·~ . l Jtl9J~r'y ......---.. "'prove'\ po1n , to com-t-oblodis IClllltl cw • .._.. s--.1 mil yourself to a specific of Misti°"._. pet Voh·o 1·-t_.-i)-.,-J.:, progTam. Do what you deal"' , __ ....,.,_, believe in. 495-5902 M~-~~[, M-. .._.Sat. 10.S Frl 10.7 Sat. 10.5 GEMINI <May 21-June 20): Dig deep for facts - you gain by thorough ap- proach, by accepting challenge -and VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Follow through on hunch -you know what should be done -key is 22-Dec. 21): Emotion ,---------~========~=======~ money, discovery all Calendar YES: Host families for 60 teenagers are needed by the Youth 1=xcbange Service. The teeangers, from Central and South America and Europe, will be attending Orange Coast schools during the fall sernest.er. Anyone interested is asked to call the YES office, 4.92-7907. blend into your personal -~l"".ti;':;;'.'~~~'rn~~:"'"';:;:''.'17~~7"-::~~~~;:::;::'.)H'«rr-~;;r;;µ:-~~'1 scena rip. Change or 1 scenery indicated - good news received via written word. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Cycle high - make amends for recent slight to family member. Friend helps open door p.;~,:~••11!""': lo "forbidden territory." What was out of bounds ·,~.·~~11.~m The T Dbl Club fer tlle T Ital Wiman DON'T IE LEFT OUT! LIMITED MIMIERSHIPS! " • Few CMrtw M1•1nW,. L.ttl . • ~ .)~ . • EQtdee~ _... ..._J·,., : ~=---~--i ·/ ." ·U-~ .,.. .· ,.~~_j\· ••• ...:41 .. ~. :• I J . _.L_., • • • , i • I s ( • • f r I • j . • • I ~ • • p ...... Springfield 45c PEACHES Yellow clmg-halves, slices! No. 21i<t Kleenex ::S_. . . . 49c Assorted colors, white! Box of ioo Dressing r=. . . 49c French, Russian, Italian, lOOO! 8 oz. Catsup on MOlfT( • • • • 39c The goodnesi. of ripe tomntoe~! 14 oz Springfield 2 5 ( Yogurt . Choice of flavors or plain! 8 oz Beer srxrACK •••••••• gge Hullantine"s carton of 6 12 oz cans Noodles :=".:. 49c Helly Crocker's-easy io fix! 5 1~ oz Star Kist Tuna· 79c Solid white meat, in water! .7 oz Grapefruit 4 9 ( JUICE Treesweet-big 46 oun"ce ~ize carf Mother's Cookies99c Oatmeal w/Raisins. Fudge Chip, Cookie Jar Ast't, Chocolate Chip! 19 Ol ': S U 39c ~ even p ..... . ' ~ • Reg., or Sugar-Free! 28 oz N.R. btle . =· Cat Food ......... • 29e :· Kitty Queen's Chopped Kidney! 6 o: WES_SON93e OIL For salads or for cooking! 24 oz F. · h s129 1n1s FOUIE ••••• For automatics-SO oz (inc. 20c off} Viva Towe ls. • • • 55 c Colors or decorator prints! Big roll T.d SJ29 I e DE1t1CDCT • • • • • • Gets out toughest dirt! Giant pkg_ .J ooth Brush • • • 1 Ot Tele ... Adult Hard, Medium, Soft ·. :::~y 69! "Happy Lep"-a880rted colors. If you're in the neiahborhOod...:..or ~t for • Sunday drive-drOp in and MY "hello.'' You'll find the um• warm welc:o~ .. t;hir amiling face.. and the Penonalized Sftvioe that mi.kea El Rancho unique in 1 world ol conformity ! // ~/ ' ~ . _, It's the newest D Rancho • • • (', 16323 Moulton Parkway, ugim Hills FRESH DUCKS 99~ Californ ia grown! Avg 41h-5 1h lbs Stuffed . Peppers 59~ Oven ready with fresh eggs! Nt'wt. It oi- C~icken 49c Livers • From plump fryers! 5 .. Ne ... U S Ch•ck STWRI FOi 79e 1 en...,..... • lru1h 111rltBIJ8 ~ ~:·~:· ........... Ill! El Rancho's own .•. deliciously tender, af!d so meaty! Enjoy turkey any time ••• especially this quality at this price! 10 to 15 lbs. Split Broilers . • 692 Bratwurst •••••• s1 2! Ground Beef UAll •• 992 Fresh Gr. A! Large fryers (with giblets) Lean pork, our own veal and seasonings! Our grind not to ea:ceed ~% fat. Sausage rrAUMsnu. s1 2! . Meat Loaf ••••• 99£ Ground Beef WET s1 2! We make it by pn authentic recipe! Our own-made with fresh eggs Not to exceed 15% fat (CllQPP(D STWS, tot) SPARE RIBS Fresh! Meaty! from Eastern pork. NATURALLY AGED! . . . WE FEATURE GENUINE MILK·FED VEAL! See the difference in the real thing! -· CHUCK 69C STEAK. • Center cut! U.S.D.A. Choice beef Beef Roast~. 514! Chuck cut shoulder clod-Choice bP.ef Beef Short Ribs s 11! Boneless! Rib cut Choice beef! Sliced Bacon .•• s 12t El Rancho's thicker "ranch style" Cure 81 Ham •• s25! Bonet~. fully cooked! Whole or half. Spencer $279 Roast • rub cut of U.S.D.A. Choice beef lpBBCBP ftBBk U.S.D.A. CHOICE 1llll .. ROMAINE~ J9c Super Fresh Produee 1114 ~1111~ ..... : .. ll! So Oavorful! Sweet firm yellow mea( is deliciously juicy! And they:re larJte size. too! ,, \ . :a~::h 29! Ga~en goodneu, fresh and gyeen TI. ntecnt " ............ Jlicy, flmrhl . Fi&h from El Rancho-"the ne.it beat thing to catching t/uml FRESH! "' SlVER $299 SALMON .. •_: Columbia River-whole or halt Salmori Steak •• s311 Center cut-Columbia River-Silver Sna FU FWTS SJll pper PACRU •• . • For oven. broiler or skillet Fillet of Sole •• s2s! Fresh! Mild flavored English Sole Fresh Clams='· 79t New England (UTTUJICIS ••• $1.11 .. ) Fresh Oysters • s1 ~~ Make a stew! Westem-8 ounce jar• Stuffed Clams. 5..,$1 Mattlaw'a-net weight 2 oi. each FRESH 69.c =. TROUT From Idaho! Net wt. 5 oz each Fro zen Food ~:.~:CiE 49c · . Springfield, from Florida! 12 oz Dinners ROSAllT• • • • • 49c Enchilada (beef or cheese) M~ican Eggo Waffles •• 49c Family size 11 ounce package Lemonade.. • • • • 39c Minute Maid pink or Reg. 12 oz Apple Pie • , . . • • 5129 Johnaton's-38 oz and 9" big! Carrots -~. ~. 49C Marshburn Farms • • • 16 ounbe pkg Ice Cream • • • • • age Springfield half-gallo~au f1avora Stouffer's59c Souffles ' Spinach or Com ! 12 ounce package : .. ~ · Delicatesser:z, Vi' Buddig' s Meals 29c 1 Liquor Dep 't. ' Price• in effect Thursday July !8 ~ Choice of seven tasty varieties . • . wafer thin i!lices-3 oz package t • Mozzarella I ezuu •• age . P~ioua (IZ •••• UlJ (11 •••• US) thro~ Wtidrte8day Auguat 3 Op~n doily 9 t6 g Sunday 10 to 7 Vodka ·=m~ Our own label-bottled exclusively for El Rancho-and for value! 1.75 liter • .... , ' y s ~ I I. •ACTOll' .. coe•mo•••• e.i.otfhitt c:rw~tlc. PC)Wet front dlec .,,.,.., power =2' front and , .. , bumper ~uard•. wide vinyl ft"IOldfno-. dull accent s>eJm llrtpet. Ml wheel eo~ i.n-n.nct remote S\\nOf. Po'#9f wntilatlon tYt1-m. v.nyt roof. 400 CIO V-8 engine, w1w radlat tlr••· ~16enc»OtouP. tront OO(nerlnQ ltmOt. digital~ tilt tteertna wheel. fl'*'110 •PMd control, deluxe bumoer tJOUO, tfM9d oi..cotne1tete, ilfum vilor vani.t)' mirror. Stk. fl0004 Ser .• t 03 t 08 UST NICI •••••.•.•••••••••••• $7417. ·sA VE •••••••••••• $I 19 5. P~~le 56222 FACTORY A.II C:OMDmOMtMG Selectshitt cru1se-o-rretic, Power front disc brakes. power steenng. directaire venttlatlon system, 351 CID V-8 engine-2V. wsw radial tires, deluxe bumper group. AM radio. tinted glass-complete. Stk. #1248 Ser. #232436. 55135 ' Wleel covers, bnght exterior moldings, opera windows. color-Keyed cut pile carpeting . woodtone inst panel apptlque. 250 CID 1-6 engine-1V. selectsh1tt cru1se-<>-rretic. Wfl« radial tires. e>ower steering, Power front disc brakes. ~uxe bumper group, tinted gtass-domplete. Stk. 1 1424. Ser. '251507 . UST PRICE ••••••••••.••••••••• $4991. SAVE •••••••••••••• $ 458. " ,, MONTH-END SELL-IF.F JULY 27-28-29-30-31 5BIGDAYSI COME IM AND:SEE WHAT A SALE REALLY IS! GAS SAVER! 4 speed transmission. front disc brakes. rack & pinion steering . bucket seats. cut pile carpeting, mini console, electric rear window defroster . steel belted radial ply tires. wheel covers. 2.3 l iter 2V engine. front & rear bumper guards Stk. #1060 Ser. ~187325 NEW 1977 FORD PINIO 2DMR OUR PRICE 53292 GAS SAVER! NEW 1977 FORD MUSTANG II OUR PRICE 53929 -~ ----- Cloth & vinyl sest trim. carpets. lockable glove box. !tipper rear Quarter windows drip rails. wheellip mouldings. 250 CID engine automatic transmission wsw tires power steering. power front disc brakes. front and rear bumper guards. tinted glass complete. Slk. # 1360 Ser. lf t 67208 '75 FORD LTD4 01. Hardtop 4 speed transmission conloured bucket seats cut pile carpet1no sound insulation package. gauges. wheel covers. w/s/w tires power rack & pinion steenn0. power front disc brakes. tinted glass front & rear bumpPr ouards Stk •°"o929 Ser II 131428 VS. auto. trans. factory air. power steenng & brakes. heater. (135142) Stk #2894 -. LTD 4DR. W. euto.'trans .. factory air. oower steeri'1g & bta .. .-radio. heater. (853GPC) Stk. t864B 525M '73 'FORD SultFllt V AH va. stick shift. radio. heater. mag wheels. port holes. (04641P) Stlt ,2913T s2199 -- DEAL DIRECT AND SA VE ~;-~--~ ·-~-- COMP~REOUR ·coMPETITIVE RA TES ON FORD· GM· CHRYSLER • AMC CARS AMD TRUCKS WE LEASE ALL MAKES AND MODELS NEW 1977 FORD F-250 CUSTOM STYLESIDE PICKUP 300 CID engine. chrome front bumper. f41ll foam seat. folding seat back. dome tamp. seat-knitted vinyl , ammeter/oil pressure gauges. power steering. dual bright swing lock mirrors. cigar lighter, extra cooling radiator. 4 8.00X16.5 D 8PR. spare wheel 16.5 X 6.0 w/carrier. Stk. #T1483 Ser. #205553 OUR ·s4797 PRICE NEW '77 COURIERS · R~ADY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY EXAMPLE SAVINGS: EQUIPPED WITH: 106.9 inch wheelbase. 1800 cc engine: variable ratio manual steering, power front disc brakes. bright front bumper. 6-ft pickup box. ~pd manual trans. wsw tires. Stk. ~1 2 1 2. Ser. #U07882 I ·--.. . . . • • ..... • .. ... l' .. DAILY PILOT ,..._...ks'u -.,. Qrw'9I c... DAILY PH.or CLASSIFIED ADS * • • w.dnwtay, July 77, 1917 ........ For Sal. Hwa For ScH Hones For Sal. Houw1 For SciM . j ... ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .......... ~ .... ,.. l001 Ge•HI 1002 G..... t002GeMrel 1001 H••••fw~ .._..for'S. ....................... ·······••••·········••· ....................... •••••••••••••·········· •••··••········•·•·•••• ....................... ;:~·~·:;:···1·0·-:2· :::::.::· .. ···:;:.···, .. 0·2·! •••rel IOOJG....... 1002 _______ ._______ ---"" -,.._-• ....................... .......•••.....•...••.• . ........... ~········· ...................... . R-2 3 IR.-$62,500 ~~~~....,..___.~ ., .. c.."' "· f1NI "· frWt It Wiltl • W9Rt M . (842·5'7ii] On. c.IS... ftneCtd ......... ••••••••••••••••••••••• TENNIS ANYONE? S B<trma., 3 baths; overlook inf( s1tt! of Davts Cup Matches . Immaculate! S174,~ OR JOit m the park opposite thles lovoly 3 bdrm .• 2 bath. al~o with vlew. $139,900. Hester-Brown n 833-9781 REALTORS ._,.. 1001 .r ...... •• •• •••••• •. •• • • ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I TUITLI llOCK 1002Gftlf'Cll 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• New ltatanK .t Ur. tam rm. huge secludt-d UMOISTltUCTED 4 n. $7 s,ooo Pvt kit VA.LUY ,40-HOO VIEW $1,250 +COSTS! ---of ~oUre upper Back Bay G r e a t l a m 1 I y ---------1 4' 1parli.ho1 li1hts al neighborhood. Palos 1! ~ U night. Superb pride of Verdes st.one fireplace. "'5" STING ownership evidenced io Fam 11 y Ii. it c be n . 4 ILUffS • V•W this s~clous 3 bdrm, 3 S p a c i o u I b d r m I . A great estate starter! 3 Bdrm. & ramily rm. with space for an addl· tional unlt. Located in good rental a rea. 4 BR. & FAM. RM.-$72,500 Newly painted & carpeted, this im· • maculate 2 bath home is one of the best buys available. Please call for financing details. 759-0811 fiut if.N.t 6'ut WuftlU& '8Ug. 1150 NEWf>ORT CENTER DRIVE 759-0811 l002 S 135,000 balh Npt. Bch. executive Enormous lot. VA bu.yen Freshly painted with home. New on the welcome-pay Sl ,250 -----------------new carnetui& ID & out. market. Belter take a down pll.d closing costs I mvklQ 1'J "plan3Bdrm loc*!64&-77ll Won't Jut. at only Olndominlum home with S'lS.000! Callnow1S2·1700 balcony in VIEW lo<'a :QJ OHNr•19•trHuNrOB11111(t• ~:ad•,., 0 "" .. " 1 .:::s~;~oL · !•llfdtl WATERFRONT Picture yourself on the flOM[S GENEROUS decking EASTSIDE C.M. REAL ESTATE beside lhe ('rystal clear If it's true lhal lhe three 631-1400 pool surrounded by lush most import.ant factors plantings · central hall are locallon, location & BLUFFS plan 3 bd.rms & ram. rm. location, lhen this pro-c1ean as a whUUe. Close perty has il all. Across to South Coast Pia:r.a. On· from the Country Club on -Best. early area, 2 BR, 2 ba., form. din., huge patio. Llke new! $120,000 ., · HELEN I. DOWD .:HAL.TOR 644·0134 ;. HEW LISTING! ly $81,500. CaU673-85.50 a shady, quiet street. with ONN 111 9 • II S llJN IOM NI(!' a deep lot I& I IOW price Of THE RtAil ESTATERS MESAVHDE only $74,900. CALL 556-2660. C:SELECT T'PROPERTIES A MOUNTAIN HOME Fish from your porch on the Colorado River in Lakes area. near Granby, Colorado. 8 Rooms, 5 bdrms., on 11~ acres in• beautiful, secluded valley. Especially designed & constructed for summer & winter living. A steal at $150,000, or exchange. For full details. call -673-4400 'Ocean l ·blk.; de luxe duplex: 3 BR, 2 ba. ea. Close to stores & 1.Jdo Village. Reduced t o ,..,679501 EXECUTIVE HOME 2 IR· COTT AGE Uniquely designed home Quiet .~7,lin~OedO st rent GeMral I 002 'Gener..r I 002 buJll around lge btO pool. ........, .. This elegant 4 bdrm corner location across ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,~ ' . , lolboa lay Prop. Reaffon home i s ideal for fromparlt. Warm&cozy gracious fmly living. living room. Fingertip Contains a Cam rm, kitchen. Flower filled * 675-7060 * ~~~~~~~~~I bonus loft/den, cstm yard ! A d oll at only -shutters & wallpaper. $f7,900! Call tast 752-1700 ~~~~U~e~t~ ;:!~~~~ r·•~N Ill ~,:~a~~iiul' ~~tz:;~~~1::!::::ii ·.... . · j }~t-'niF OCEAN AIR . · DUPLEX 4 Bdrms. up, 2 bdrms. ~wn. Sundeck s, balconies & patio; just steps to beach. $180,000 ,.@3·3663 548·0715 Eves '• associated nrOKfR<;-IHAI TOAc; ,"]'. w Balboa o7 I 1661 -THIS IS IT!! l • ,a RIOUCED $10,000. -Harbor View Hills, 3 bedrm home with huge faQlily room. Jt's really ready for YOU! 1312 \&acresl Dr. Corona del {i)lar. ~ .. , Open Daily 11 ·2 . O-· Sat /S.rt I 0·6 '\'> ot t'G Call Mcrg. lertton 641-6161 644-1353 I~ COATS&WALLACE REAL ESTATE , INC. landscplng, btfl Mesa S·~···~· ~·~»·f::<'~-~-~-~-~·~--~·~-~~~I Verde area. close to the Country Club. 646·7711 PENINSULA home. 4 Or 5 BR, 3 ba. all amenities. Lovely neighoorhood, a few s teps from the beach. $195,000. OTHER prestige waterfront homes From $395.000 -Up BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bay\1d•· 0flV•'. N B 675 6161 LOVa y DOVER. LO Vay VIEW 2 bedroom, den and a delighUul view of night lights are features of this Dover model condominium in Big Canyon. Perfect couples' homw! End unit privacy, fee ownership and owners prefer long escrow. A Unique presentation at $195,000. A classic! U!'lllll()UI: tiVMl:S REAL TORS!, 675·6000 2443 East Coast Highway. Corona del Mar also 1n Mesa Verdi!, at 546-5990 There's a big tree for s wings & climbin' & room to grow on this 75xl2S rt. lot! Roomy 4 bdrm .. 3 bath home. light & bright. Gt·eat Irvine Terrace location. $142,500. " Gtnet-9 I 002 lc6oe ,,....... I 007 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• HACH SPICIAL MESA WOODS ~~e1e:x1c!~ ::: !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!j Drnlllf'(D $15 008 combinaUon of loc.. de-~ , • sip & Uae best value on Como Me this beauWul Balboa Pen. ~ADU home ln Mesa Woods RSAL ESTATE, 158-0'181 with 4 bedrm, 2 baths HEW EXCLUSIVE -LIDO 1$LE Beamed ceilings & warm earth tones enhance the beauty of this lovely 2- story home! 3 Bedrooms, family rm. & 3 baths. Lge south patio +north .patio. Prof. ~ecorated. lush near new cptng. Van Luit papers. $2'70.000. and a huge 3 car gara1e. 2 8d.. Rm. 2 Bat.la condo on Parquet noon In famlly the bayview. Unbeat•ble room and entry. Call Joe. many xtras & only now. $142JIOO. SUper value for 546-414 t rllht buyer. Call agent tor appointment. 675-1§8 ~ COATS & WALLACE CoroM .. M,,;. IOZZ RE AL ESTATE. INC. ••••••••••••••••••••••• HUGE a STORY DB.UXE CONDO 1--------·I Over 3000 sq . ft., 3 BR. BEST Buy den, & dining rm w /26' hip open beam ceilin1. 3 Attention Vets! 3 Bedrm, tiled BA, tile entry. in good a rea. Won'l frplc., wet bar, bltns, ln· last! 1 Only $49,990. cludioi compactor, sep. Hurry, call now. laundry rm & overslzed dbl. gar w/elec opener, ,,..~ • R solar bron.ie glass, TV -• .._ cable thru·out, even lealty plumbed for ice maker. 751·2060 $159,500. Vacanl l~~~~~~I JACOIS REALTY 675-6670 Solar H.ahd Pool IUY OF THE WEEK Large 2atory Costa Mesa Charm, Charm, Charm, 4 bedroom home. Heavy 3 Br, 2 Ba, teMis, walk to shake roof. custom brick beach & shopping. Won't and tile work. Gas BBQ. Lut. ()pen House daily. Low maintenance yard. Cal1646-7171 Hurry, owner moved to Ol'fN 1119.11 s rvN 10 N Nl(t •' Canada and must sell! [ .::n~ I Priced only $82,500. Sub· ' ··1liJ!lil:fil! ~~~r terms. Call ). . . :.,,.! Jj£ifjtJ1 ~~HERITAGE REALTORS Beautiful rustic duplex, 2 BR. & l·BR, beam cell., &arden patio. S149 ,500 !~~~~~~~~~ PAULMARTIN Real Fat.ate--m. 7383 RB.AX $10,000 SAVING! The owner of this lovely Harbor View Hills home just slashed the price over $10.000. This pro- fessionally maintained 3 bedrm home shows pride oC ownership. You even owntbelandl Call 640-61'1 ~ COATS& WALLACE REAL ESTATE. INC. REALTY INC. 714l 846-137_1 _ VILLAGE CHARM Weekender or artist's retreat. 2 BR. 2 BA with room to grow. $1.22,500. May lease-option. HALPIMCHIH REALTOR · . 675-4392 .. REDUCED! C PLAN IN THE "BLUFFS" OPEN DAILY l..S Sp~ctacular 2 Story Townhouse In The Newer Bluffs. Full Balcony 2 Suites Plus Large Family Room. Highly Upgraded. Overlook.9 Pool & Ramada. Offered At New Low Price Of $1S7,500 244-i VISTA NOBLEZA •• 1 oova DllVI 631-1800 lWOVACAMT LOTl.C:DM w... l&u Hill lo\ll " ot•&.O • P'aahioe ltland vlew1 Pwfecs for Y<Nr rua&om ...._,. __ ~ .UX.DUPUX C1oH To ~un l'lnt Ume oftered for 1nlt 3 br. l .... ,.iUo • 2 br, a be.. S car pr, ~IK'\ door. d waler ly&~m. laun dry rm, •lraa 317 Larbpvr ""' By •ppt ~-Sll0.000. Otmr/Aat st.MtlOor 711.QSell eve•. ------01..D Cdll . By owner. Char mine i br, 1 b• hoUM on wa wfdt' R 2 kJl. Sl38.5iCIO Open tl'rl., Sat • Swl. n• M anaold MO'l'm DUPU!X Sharp 2 Br. cw.~ unit w '2 Br apt, romer lot Sl&t ,000 Open Sat/SuD l 5, 620 Iris ~7662 MAX. FOR MIM. 3 BR. beam ceiling liv- nn, & a cheery country kit. strikes a balance w/nature. to include ten· rus & swimming in this delightful Twnh m . Throw respons1biUty out the window-to make 1t possible, call XANADU R.E. 759-0761 I ~ ~ ... h HERITAGE . • REALTORS Ln Prtce! flOr tbll l\llMtl'b flltH Ownsr'• pt1d• Llmaoul, 3 Fwnt• Yaley lOS4 bedroom•. den, eallng ••••••••••••••••••••••• a r e•. co1y bdclc ~ Walker 1; lee nreptac. •family room. BeauUful a bedroom, llv· Added on rumpu. room. Ina room & dl'n .. dlnlna RealEatate $75,000. BK R ca ll l'OOl1'I '"bath, cement· ---------MO mo ed RV •«•• large lot. SM Rella.le Specialists. 3. FOW1taln Valley 962·1'134 4 or 5 bdrm models avail, S19 soo eome w /pOOl.s, 968-4602 ' Pennhiiton Properties red hill _ '> •. ? . ; ') (' (' • ~:: '.t--HERITAGE . . REALTORS NEWPORT CREST CONDO Reduced $10,000. 3 Br, 2~ BA. wet bar, pool, tennis, s auna. mlnl· ocean vtew. BJ owner. _;...=.-~-;....;.---· $114,.500. Call Ml.e317. BUILDERS Needs repair a Kings Rd 3 Br 3 Ba home. view side, owner w /consider carry back TD. Priced at $195,000. Agt. 645-9950 ! DECORATOR'S DELIGHT lmmac, I Bdnos, 2 .W, A-frame, only $11)f,600. Also a Bdrm, z ba, ""beach .. WANTED:. HOME ·ON WATER w/41J' plus, boat dock. Unda lale, DoverSbores «?T Private pa"1 only. 644-1452. . NIWPoRT HEIGATS IS llYSPECJALITY Jolin Saar AtJ.'.15'M03o. QuallPI.~ ,07, ................. ~ ... LOCATION! Gre.U Br. 2 Ba. Mme (Ill benlUtol cany0a wltb vtnr of IU.tera Beaob. On 1 ~ Jotttoa.ute~ ~"*='· Ntt at $125,000. BElt'DIA Jll:lGr aw:ro.as IZISDelllal' . -.cut \ ............ " . ,. ..... -~ ..... ._, . ,.Lingo Aul& _ GI.IA T LOCATION -........................ l .... I •• J Will.=· ..... lnWe ....... Mitt ceay .,. -...... t••c•••· I ••4y t• •••• ......... StH,000 1 ACl"'J\,\ 8FAC'll ~1120 499-4551 UA t\A f'Ol1'T •OJ 8812 LAGl NA RP'Atlf .un ~!Cl REALTY INC. 714/146-1371 IUILDEll SPECIAL 1Qth9r RM Estot~ ______ ... __ ,Duplex w /plan11 ror another duplex. 2003 Ma CORONA DEL MAR pie. Costa Mesa. Go ' :· ... , ••...•............. DUPLEX • direct. Qwner will carry Super duplex located 1 financing. 646-5948 ask ! ~leHomts t ..••• ~.~ ......... !!.~~ block from tennis court & ._r•o•r .R.ic•h•a•rd.·----• I close to beach. Each unit1• ________ _ • ' • ·~ flicks 8x4S. 1 br (cap .J.\_in's bed), new r oof & ext. paint. Adult C. M park.SS.S00.548-6173 has It's own privatei---------patlo. Great starter for that new investor. 1149 950. ~ CALLNOW ''l REPOSSESSIOMv (T/. 752 • 7315 •• B~nk must sell 8 re· •ilDlllO·N~A.~L~D~M:.....!. B!..!l:!R.!O!!J , ~seesed Mobile Homes AnoclotH, •-It••• ")1}1(>•rka. Save thousands ---------• ·•<Sollan.10-15% down . Distrftt Properly! I can flnd It for you. Beach area 1peclallst. Probates, Foreclosures, Bankruptcies, DI vorce. Investment properties. Below market price. Wortd WJ• lroken Call 673-4545 , .... SoutNClftdMoblle FOURPLEX ------. · Homt1 Sale1 MOM!Y MAKER ~· .1714)191·9904 MESA DEL MAR IM L YMWOOD Seller motivated. 8 UNIT APT. Bldg, 2 BR. Cal 540-3666 T BRAND NEW. ! Sty, 3 BR. 2fi.~ BA. 4 Blks from buch. Step down livln1 rm. wshr/deyer hook-up, bayfront window. Neeotiable SS25/ino. act. 146-1311. red hill -•• '. • 'lo) d associated 11MU .. t "~ ,J, ,\,fl ~5 i iJ, • I/It bo I , ' L l : --lc6oa Island ll06 3290 ••••••••••••••••••••••• hall 8·15. i3SO lno. rm . L1e pool /· Matureadltl73-8079 Jacuni. Exec home. $675/mo. Coats 4c ~PettlMula 3107 Wallace 546-4141, a1k for ••••••••••••••••••••••• Jane, SSl-7291. YEA.llLY. 1~ Blockl to ..,......,. 3291 beach. AuiJ. now.-~ Bachelor $210. Ph; •••••• • • • • ••• • • • • • • • • • • ff75-6TIS or 673-6.279. Super Sharp • 4br.2ba,fplc,avail OCEANFRONT, Ocean & ~ now.Clllldren. pet.I OK Bay Vlew! Bt. $385 yrly. c S br, 2 ba liome, set • mo. 4Br, 2Jh. re-hlih on hill w /valley vu. decorated, b ll n 11 . A/C, crptg, all bltns, lndtcpd, 988-9174 ea11 walk to 1chls, C:O. ..... lll r:mo. 759-1131 roru;;w;;;::: 3425 *** Klrt&OIMn 208 Dahlia CdM You a re the wtlloer of two free ttdk•ts ($1S.OO value>. to RfftcJINM) lros. a..,.;..,. i lall•y Circus Au14 thru Aua 13 Anaheim Convention Centtt, 808 w. KateUa Ticket• must be ex-cban1ed tor reserved .eats at the Convention. Center ahead ot time. Call 642-5678, Ext 3S3 to claim your U~kets. *** -- .......... Wldne9day,Ju!y27. tl77 ... OAILVPILOl ~ 0,parfwllty 5005 r~~-111t~1c: 5,.60. ~ 7.-... ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..,.._ ~,,. ff • Pft'SOIMlll s.,..,ac... 5360 ....,W__ ,.., ..................•....................................••••...•• ...-..... MAHUFACTURB • ~ NEEDS WHOLESA4.ER AIDE to eld•IY ~e. 13.000. p/mo & mot\ Is P/Um•. 5 d•1• rift'. poaalble with our ATTOR ..... EY Urseat.~lmaftiPM dynamic product We n est.abbsh retaU account.J It provide liberal local TV advert1slna. A sub- stantial mveslment req. for slartlllf tnventory CAlJ.. TOLL FREI:: HOO·~ Cor info. kd! • w y.... BEACH HSE. Steps to Ul W WlbonNl-iluo I •J•l llDIOOM UHn'S und ln Npt Bch. Luxury ()(fice Suite, 2 rooms, wet "1RNOR UNt'URN 3br, Zba Avail now. S300 bar. bath, new-crpts, •2brlownbomewifrpl • NATUllMG • w~k.1 .... $2 burglar alarm. suo. mo. 1 -·•-._ UM19UI AMO DRAMATIC PlOOR Pl.AMS MktorGall,644-7211 • ._.,. 1Nl\.ov •""' ••r•ae Balboa bland wtrlrnt, 3 •.\d"1ta,ch.1Jd lllaov•r Custom dt>Ni,Rned with exceptionally Br. wetikly/or ? SJSO. Downtown oftlce bldg., luslnHs WC11tt•d 5010 Uncontested divorces. $1.50 + cost,.'l. Industrial injuries. automobile accidents. criminal matters. Rlc:hard e . Ju ••tdmi1 Pool•i•cuulavall lorro room~. dramutu: entry wuys. Call MS-1l~or6429562. Ku.n~itoo Beacb. Good ••••••••••••••••••••••• 71,..SSZ-4104 213-625-1151 SC*C lAhH unc luxurious umt.>nltws throuRhout. parking. $125/mo.per Apt Manag11n for to ~JIO m.tl\y~~ .. lril/~r.;,2~~: l.O('Sted 00 Bal. Peno. water front. suite. Call Scott Realty • * • unlta ln Costa Key. aaraae. lndry rm g llARDOn JU.UJo'J<'S Cl"CLE lbr & 2br apts W/boat 536-7~ T'Mlma Walls Lost& 1:-·-d s~oo p-~-1. 5350 G3l..z950 .. Onlyl)LO &4l lti00 I\ allp.$200-$300.S94·3S23 D" tin 2013Ch I rvw1 ~ ~ ·----------(Near Dolsu Chu.' a and Warner 1 1s ctive Office, de1>k are ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• AllCHITECTURAt.· Sharp 2br. <'Pl•. drp11 , HUNTINGTON BEACH 2P~ ~a::·Y11~ •. :~11f.:;: ;.r:J:er!l~il:~qu:r~: You !:::~e~i~erof F'ound: Southeast Hunt· Students from F rance Draft11man /Deai1oer bltm. 1 child OK . No 846·1328 or 840·1123 640-9286or 644-1160CdM NB. 645-5000 x216; twofr.etick•t• lngton Beach-7 /21. need homes during Au•. (Sr') pets. SUO. 5'74 Joann St, 642_5002 1 S II bl k d l • Restaurant desjgn .xp. Apt_ D MS_3417,13234U NB, 2 Br ocn vu, wkly (SlS.OOva uel,to ma ac og. recen · call~ 673-5966 nee 643-3&7! RlncJl&ncJ lros. ly had puppies. 963-2919 ' · · 2 br util furn C'hlldrl'n Cott. Mew 1124 M.w,ort leoch 3169 r11tt..":1, avl monthly Sept. Deluxe garden office for lornuM & lalt "Otry'CALL MASSAGE" A/Re<-. A/Pay, Gen'l Ofc a 'No pets. Mgr apt 6 •.•••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 15.64S-7573Agt. Lse 504 sq ft. 2 oHices, •y Found:gold&wbitemale Ladies only, Orange duties. Exper pr,flct. ttm Wallac~ &42-3447 EA.STSIDE new 2 BR. 'Alli( HIW,OllT Wkly summer rental, 3Br, $360 mo. 833-96.58 1151 Circus puppy. vie. Beacb & County (714) 493-284.S Neill Neon Inc. 531·33'14 pool, Kids OK No pets S.lc b e lors . 1 "r 2 2Ba, furn. avail now. Dove St. SWte 285. N.B. Aug4lhruAugl3 Hazard, Westminster. BAY MEADOWS '2'15 mo 548-0916 " 833-9657 Anaheim Convention lm-2524 545-4282 p-~-' ~--fca. 5360 -Bt.-d.rooms&Townhouses e11:.y access to ocn & ------~ ~ •• Serene,, cozy at I s1co kl NB AIRPORTARE Cenler.~W.Katella rn£"·T · I Lab •. Coll"1e ••••••••••••••••••••••• moapbue. Sp;,ic 1&2 br 11.idrm <1pt. lmmacuJaw From$259.50 poo • " w Y · · A Tickets must be ex-.....,... · '2 "" • apu. Aviul Aug Isl for SZIO mo Water paid, 00 Spectacular spa. total 673-0116 Dix furn private offices changed for resen ed Fem. V1_c. Harbor & 19th stab 1 e 8 du It ~ N 0 pets 645-8889. 675·9869 recreation program. OCEANFRONT LAGUNA w,services for R.E. Bkr. seats al lhe Convention CM Pleasecall 548·5326 • * • ---soc1alprogram.8pools.8 / · CaUBob979·8533 Center ahead or tame. REWARDSlOO. L--lloomber9 kids/pets. $230 to S290 JBr. 2Ba. pvt patio, no tenrus courts. At Fashion 3 B~. 2ba. Sips 9 Pnvate ,.-··- 646-0073 pets, $270 mo. fslaod, Jamboree & San staJrs to beach. $500 wk· Professional offices for Call 642-5678. Ext 333 to Lost, small female dog, 1300 Anhqua "•"•343 ly "-11•""""'2 lse. A1·r cond. Xlnt claJmyourtickcl.6 partPe ... 'ngese,red/wht, NewportBeacb VIEW 01-' OCEAN & --'"°"--JoaquinH11lsRoad. -·~-~··-""""----"' y th · r security systems. Newly * * '* V1 c . Me s a Woods , ou are e w1nnero CITY. 2 br, 2 ba, ftplc, VILLA MEDERA 17 141644.1900 BALBOA lSLAND crpl 'd, beautifully de· ---Wakeham park area. two tr.. tick.eh beam ce1l., JacuzA1, ----O L ttl I I /b t Money to Loan 5025 -• garage. S315 . $395 Low&r, 2 Br, 2Ba ,SteP6tobeach,4Br2Ba. n 'e sew oa ~ratedXlne,ntCryM&I re,~ept ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ndsmedicalion.54-0-0645 <RSli5~.00vwluel.to 64S-82S6 979 331 children welcome. no fplc, cpts. drps, $.550 yrly dock, sips 8· 12x24' LR, ... ea. oca ion. ro1. or . 6 ""ls ....,c 645 1965 Is b a Y P a t i o ' 549.2922 ht, 2nd & lrd T.D.'s LOST: Ll. Brown, wire la-lal•-y ""' ·.......,.mo. . e.642·3443 TELEPHONE, ., '"•rs, han"ed Dachsh d al ,_.. ... MESA VERDE, 2nd fir, 2 .. .,u ---LOANS AVAILABLE un · m e Br. 1 Ba, gar , mature Squeeky Clean. 2 Br, 2Ba. Nwpt Shores are:i. l ~i furn. Aug, $250-$295 wk. Credit nol important. vi c Brook h u r & l I Circus ad 1 ts . N 0 pet s . gar. vaca~t. frplc, nr nu, blksocean. 2br, lbu dplx. 873-5644 luslnHs Rflttal 4450 lrobr. 673-4813 Hamilton H.B. Reward! Aug4 thru Aug 13 2222 P f 642 0758 968·2572 An11he1m Convention Eve/wkndsS46·9926 aci IC • • Yrly lse. 714-956-5871 LAGUNA BEACJl-2Br ••••••••••••••••••••••• Garden apartments. Senior adults. Martim.-Apts # 2 275 E. I Ith St, C .M. 631-1003 --------1.J Center,800W. Kat_,lla Adults, E /side l & 2 2 Br near ocean yrly. 28a, sips 6. s teps t~ 4 DELUXE OFC'S SWING LOANS LOST: Chinchilla. whl. T ickets must be ex· Bdrms, pool, j ucuzzi, Fpl~.sundeck.$340. beach .. p1ctu resq~e Con!. rm .. seal 25. all 2nd&JrdT.O'S Heward! Needs medica-changed for reserved lndry, enclosed gar, $240. S411.8348 ocean view, pvt patio, paneled, sm. whse in re-l DAY APPROVAL lion. Vic UCI. 833·6927 & seats at the Convention &$270. 644· 0878 .. lndry 494-7302 ar. 1 or 2 yr. lease. Lake Credit-No Problem 549-9302 Center ahead of time. -OCEANVIEWyr ly2Brl ·Forest area . Kent ConstructionLoans Call642·5678, Ext 333to Studio, I rm apt, Sep. kit Ba d PI x S4 00 mo Vacation Rentols 4250 Harkins. CALL ANN 673-1166 Found fem Shep/lerrie claim yourllckets. & bath, nu crpts, drps, 6'&4·6780or6"2-3639 · ••••••••••••••••••••••• 714-581-9393 ....,. ___ Want-d-5.030 mix, limps. vie Atlanta & * * • refrig & slv & some furn. -._..y e Newman. 960·2310 No pets.1 quiet adult 00. Lg I Br, new cpts. paint, 1 block lo beach. 1 br apt A!TENTION Arllsl & .. \•••••••••••••••••••• Easts1de Bach unit. New ly, near Westchff Plaza. 15x3o patio, $JOO mo. furn. SlOO. week .or $250. Cralts~e~. $S0 to $400 $l2.500 NEEDED lm· Found yng fem dog, Breed Apts. Ava1J.c.Aug l . AJI util pd. $175 642.0538 Avail Aug l. 768.1676 or mo. yearly. Ut11. incl. mo. UUI _mcl. UNIQUE mediately for PRIM£ B e a g I e m i x ? En911o~ & Frplc, enclosed garage. • 540-9()()7 871-8471: 83J..2105 rel. .~tud10 "The Fae· R.l': Inv. $25,000 return Blk/brwn/wht. Vic H.B. rr.,arat10ft ___ 645-4411 DanaPouwt 3826 ------------tory 4~ E . 30th St, w m90days 559.5311 ?~tralPrk.842-6831 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Across from Beach. 2 Br, R ......... al t Sh . 4300 Newport Beach or call ---1-L-Want d 7075 Large 3 BR Townhouse ..... s o are Mort T t Found 1 pair glasses. -t • A/REC CLERK w' 10 Key by touch. P /ti Me. Call Grace, 549-tu.&· 8-Uam or 1 ·_4..._p_m_. __ _ ARTlST·LAYOUT-' PASTEUP Exper'd or will trall'I, must type. Apply l1l60 Placentia Ave. C.M. ARTIST/FASHION ·• Im med opening. IM fashion artist at Siam of Laguna Bch. Minim~ yrs of bandpaintlng fabric expr. M.B.A. degree to develop D&W market trends. 40 •• AJ.i wk. Wed thru Sun. Sal;ur $10K yrly Call for in- terview & demonstra·- tion. (714) 494-4443-"kg msg. Assembly MECHANICAL · ~ PRECISION ~ • I ASSEMILERS 1f with patio garage + 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apts., ava1la-2 Ba, f~~c. cpts. patio, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 67S.6181 or 673·4~.!__ . D=-s, rvs 5035 Marguerite & La Paz. ••••••••••••••••••••••• · ble 1mmed1ately. D W. washer1dryr, gar. . MATURE Id h 1 Weareasmallmanufco. pool. Quiet complex 661 0798 blk to tennis mature M F, l dep OK . 3 Br 2•2 DESK space al 17875 ••••••••••••••••••••••• M1ssison V. 581·2946 a y, w op ays w/job opportunities for Adults. no pets $335 · adlts.Nopets.'AvlSept· Ba Condo w/pool NB. Beac h Blvd ... n ear gd bndge. paints. does precision mecfanJcalas-64S-338lor837·9517 ~onhach 3840 June.$38S,l&e.64S·S036 631-1806art5orwknds. Talbert m Huntmgton LOANS9°'o Found Fem Shepherd crafts.growsplants,en· ••••••••••••••••••••••• --Beach. $S0 per month. /C rrux. Lrg pup. Blk . Vic tertainmg, great cook. semblers w/6 mo's ~- 2 ~r Apt. S22S. Near shop· IRAMD NEW• 2br. nr. ocn. dish/wash AVOID IMCOMPATIBLE Bring own furniture. Our Also 2nd TD Loans Beac~~lanta 962-7087 WlU do light housekeep-per. You will have the ping. Adults, no pets · $315 yrly. No pet, nu cpl ROOM ATES! receptionist will answer Fajrest Terms since 1949 FOUND: Sml Pug, dark ing. be companion lo chance to move up to fuJ.- 642·2464. 2 Br apts. From $310/per 128h 46St ·gar·645·2117 Qous£·02uu lLruMJTED your phone for $10 per Sotffer MhJ. Co. fawn. vie. Trask & Beach alert smgle lady. In ex-lyuiqualified maclhioe~todt mo.1411 Delaware, HB . ' -month.DailyPiloloWce, 642-2171 545-0611 Westminster. 76 lie. changeforroom,board b Ider. We ofer Open 12·5 Daily.1 Mile to 3 BR or 2 & deo in great Takes The Guesswork 6424321 &salary, must be quality benefits & you will wor CLOSE ocean. 642·9&el Agt. Penn. Joe. Kids olt. gar.. OutofFinding P 1 t d _892·~ home-No Drinkers -onavarletyofPCBdrill· c..., 1808 f d 'd .... er. J b THAT RIGHT P ERSON LAGUNA 1 blk to ca·ty r va e party nee s R ( h d 10· g machin~ ad1"us•t..<n to Beach .....,. pro · ec · ~..,..,. aco s $30 000 2nd T D on Found, tan/whl Puppy, e erences exc ange · "'"• ~· Br, garage, patio, coo-Really,675-6670. SaHSSbySharin9 ~II. 5.000-19.000 sq fl Lagun~ Sch . ·h~m e male. Vic. Baker & 554-15_17 _______ • ~:::i~~ & fillinat to sider s m pets, $295 mo. Back Bay area, available 832-4134 Prime C·2· 494·5049 valued at $285.000. w /tst Harbor, flea & reg. col· Fashion Writer . Exper. toShoppini & Freeways Agt 536·754Z Aug. 16. $250. 2 bdrm. Newport-Mariner's Mlle TD of 1150,000. Will pay lar. 546~290 Feature/Advert. Promo CLOSER Vng fem , looking for 100 ;c (f DELUXE "'PTS dr~peries, carpet. lrg 1>ame, to shr furn 2 Br 12.80 sq ft store nr Po:.I "• w " Yr pa yo · Found; yg fem Irish Set-tional. Former Fashion "" patio. Mal. adulti> only, apt, Pk Nwpt. $170 +. Ofc $640 & 548sq n $300. ·49'f·t5t7 ter, wht on chest. choke Editor.631-3692 CLOSEST Apply In Person ADVANCED \ 2 or 3Br. 2Ba. w/frplc, No pets. 642-2267 640-8665 (213)477-7001 Jerry chain. Vic. Mission VieJO --------patio, enclosed garage, ---------Announc ment / Practical Nurse-Live-in CONTROL ~ 647YounCJSt ~ to Best Value in Town lndry facilities. Great STORE FOR LEASE p • s HI. Sehl. area. 830·6829 or out. References. locations S285 &. up SmtCl•menf• 3876 2~:m .. poot1'4 ~,·~:0!z~to. 7t~21~ ~_sq It. Finest loca. Loenonalst&r.!L .,j Found Green&. Yellow Call645·l2l9 Santa Ana. Calif. 2 Bedroom luxury adult 847·2622 . ••••••••••••••••••••••• rel1"able S175 mo plus "'o tion Harbor & Newport ~ pa ak""'l v· S"'a D ---------&farruly apls from only -. " Blvd. C.M. 548-3401 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• r ...... . ac ... n r. $285 •Bach. nr Golden West & OCEAH ut1I. 840-1409 Eves54S-l270 Lost & Found 5300 C.M. 557-2472. Y-1.. Want.cl Equal Oppor Employer • w . h I VIEW Sh B ( -••••••••••••••• •••••• •• • ...,. 3 p 1 DI h h estmmster, ot Pate, -are 2 r um apt .. $130 . /!!_ • Found: Male Brindle Box· •••••••••••••••••••••••!-________ ,: • oo.s • swasers• refrig.$150.Allutllpd. Brand new 2brs , +uUl.CoslaMesaarea.R~la1lshop 1111busy shop·Lost· Grey & while er. Betwn Bushard & ASSEMILYLEAO Jacuzzi•~laygrounds• No pets. 833-3974 S27S-S32S. Near Pico Bch 646-2651 pmg center. tor lse im· Male mute (Huskey l. Magnolia. off Adams. "'CCOU .... Tl .... G Assembly of small elec· l • Self·clearung ovens• l O 5 De 1 R e p o s o . med. 2180 Harbor Blvd. Female dog, Lag Bch H B 962.0983. "" " " •Locatiof'I 714/~5 Fem only. mid 20's. Nice ~·I~ s~ ft,h$7&00Nm1o laf:S ··Cuti" lost in Lag -----------· CLERK ~q~fr~:1~~p~:~~ : 2511 W. Sunflower 557-4800 •Price 2br apt at Lake Forest . e rus a1 . Belt Reward. 494·4604 FOUND: Sm. blonde Scot-Short term assignment, directing work of up lo 10 2 Br H 2 Ba. 150 yards Dr $160 mo 586 2548 645-0797 ---· t y mix . Fem. Vic. approx. 3 mo's. Resp. for •Luxury Crom bea.cb.Callaft6PM . . . Lost Burmesecat.male. Bayside Dr .. CdM . generalledgerofvarious assemblers.Dayshitr. 2 Br H~ Ba twnhse brk 2 bedroom from $270 41rl.5557 or~725 Xtra Lge 4Br. blk to lndustriaC Rewtal 4500 2 yrs old. blue collar. 67J.2147 cases including thru the STACOSWITCH INC fplc,gar,lgepatio,adlts, BanburyCross•842·6604 ocean. Newport Bch. ••••••••••••••••••••••• CdM are a ''Leroy·· -------financial statements. 11.39BakerC-OlstaMiaa no pets. $285. 22A7 Elden 2 BR. gar . pool, view. Fem pref$130to ~50 mo. BRAND NEW-Light & ~-12.!_SSl_OOre~d_.__ _ _ _,5 5350 Should have pnor book· 549-3041 · • -~ ·Ave.646-7027eves. Bldg. on Van Buren, adults, oo pets. $300. 290 tit 1 1 A 1 8115 ~ k . & . EqualOpporEmpJoy·er·· ---------•North or H.B. Communi· Delgado. 493-1988 u nc . vaa . bright ore suite +1600 sq SSO Reward ! Bob-tail ••••••••••••••••••••••• eepang accounung ex· Lrg Bach. Gd Joe. Pvt ty Hosp., to be complt•d 645-44i65Gary ft fadory or warehouse. tiger cat Lost 5/25 vie. Drinking problem? per.lJtetyping. patio. Adults only. $180 + late Aug. Now taking list-Smt Ju. ()rps, crpt etc. ~deal I~ Pinecreek Village, CM. Call Alcohol Helpline ~l~ecao.:ut!u°Ae gas. 646-4546 ings for 2 & J bdrm Apts. Capistrano 3878 ~s ?4' per sq ft as .tS or wall 534.~1 ot 540.8263 24 hrs a day 835•3830 846-0814 ••••••••••••••••••••••• forllent 4350 improve to sull needs. ----------700NewportCtrDr $210, 31R, 21A ocir."' .... VIEW A rt Griffin owne r . Loet: Smooth hair white PREGNANT? Newport Beach ASSEMILERS Assemblers, preci4iQn,. male or fem. 4 yrs. Anin exper. Good manual dex- terity. good .eyesight. soldering & microscope F ·1 So BR, 1 Ba. children & ...,.." ••-••••••••••••••••••• • am1y, no pets, nr . Brand 2 B $275 t 979·3541 toy Fox Terrier w /tri· Cari ng confidential EqualOpporEmployer CoastPlaza.546-9654 petaOK.$210.mo.Curtis new r, OSTORAGE sgl . gar ---------coloredface.blk spoton counseling&. referral. R e·a1 Estate. Call S32:S.NrPicoBeacb. lOS w/aUeyaccess.$40.mo. Storage 4550 back. docked tall. Abortion, adoption & 1 Br ~io. CI D, refrig, 962·24,,. Del Reposo. 714·496·5275 548-6072 ••••••••••••••••••••••• R d S J t •-... ..., e w a r . a e r °' keeping. Patio, aSdults, no pets. 7.w•-B-r,-2-Ba-, _n_ic_e_a-re-a-,-no-1 SantaAna 3880 Offlc•R...tal 4400 R.V. Stor age Oranfe Geraldine. HB848·043l. APCARE ' 547-2563 James l. 673-7787 pets, sm ch"1ld OK, $225 ••• .. •••••••••••••••••• ••••"•••••••••••••••••• Coun t Y t n t e r n , I ------R 1.sc n LOST: Mans diamond LIHDA&VICKI Spacious 2 Br. 1 ba. UP· mo. 968-9174 2 BR. Hi Ba Condo. adults 65• PER sn FT maoc.ewcaoym, pleteperser·vpe1·cer ring s CO"Sl Fashion stairs. Carport, gd prk'g. · only. $220. Off Bristol & WESTCL,.F ' . " . Outcall Ma1soge New cpl /paint & drps2 BR. H~ Ba Condo Wamer,S.'A.Avall.Aug. 1617 1 F·NB depl.714.a75-1290 Isl, Wes tclifr, Lido, Forthef'vtlofitl AGT 541-5032 daughters keepsake. re· $240, 955·3647 &897·1382 w/rrpl, pvt. lndry, pool & l, 636-3800 aft. 5 · ward. 675.3122 Serving all Orange Co. · rec rm. $305. mo. 847·7363 I SO I Westcliff Dr. lusineu/lft•est/ 835-7313 l..rg 1 BR apt, tor $200. & BRAD F ORD PLACE· RnanC• FOUND: Male Col he, ap· ---------- pool. Call ~°" Spacious 4Br. 2Ba. pool, r..:.~rtOfflc:FinanciSal Ctr •••••••••••••••••••••• • prox 1 yr. vie Orange Spiritual R•°*9" 548-7924 Hc:ri:MMr 3142 kids OK. $375 mo. --.,. • pace Business Plaza539·3S82 18l5So. EICaminoReal ••••••••••••••••••••••• 646-3751 Call on Site Manager n-.t...ity SOOS ---San Ful 11 EASTSIDE large 2 (7 l 6423 -....-.·-· FOUND. M. Irish Setter, Clemente. ly c. bdrms, patio, gar. nu HARIOURLIGHTS SouthLoguna 3186 14 . lllexl246 ••••••••••••••••••••••• PCH. Balboa, Nwpt. Forappt.492·7296 carp, nu paint $295 . Offers e legant adult ••••••••••••••••••••••• DEl.UXEOFFtCES PETSHOP 7;23.673·4549 642-5466645-4483 apartment.a. Localed in Lge, quiet. luxurious, ex-Comml " indsU spaces, AHluent beach area. ------•MICHELLE•S• EASTSIDE I Br, used brick fplc, high beam cetlgs, encl patio. all util pd.1260. No pets. 642·6355 ex.elusive Huntington ec. 2 br, 2 ba apt. 200 lo 2000 sq. n. As low Same owner 25 yrs. Ex· Found: Left In front yard. Outcall Massage. Harbour. The Harbour's Elevator to scenic priv. as 3S< eq. ft. Lag Niguel & elusive, eUte customer ~c'd white man's 10 spd 10AM-2AM 731-4462 only ~partment complex. bch. Party & game room, Mission Viejo areas. list. $18,000 w /$9,000. bike. 546-1108 SpaclOUS 1 Br. 2 Br, & 2 total security. Perfect Handy to S.D. Frwy. down. MASSAGE FIGURE MODELS ESCORTS OUTCALL OHL Y EASTSIDE 1 Br, kettle fplc, an um pd. $210, no pets. 642.QSS Br + den, floor plans livingorwkndretreatfor Call:831-l400 Ult 751-3741 from $280, are co_m· the adventurous adult. plemented by enchanting Starting at S515/mo. Al= Offices .... 1£STAURAHT & gardens & stream s, a 499-2835 beautiful club house ---~-----• 1 ONTIIFREE Cocktoill.ounge w/sauna. gym, jacuzzi, ~nb Funllshed ~11 service. No lease re· Coaetal area. Nice in· Nice 1 Br, pool, adults, no large pool & best of all, or UWful"lllshed 3900 q'd. ~600 sq. ft. Plenty vestment. $100,000 + :;~·. ~~:'6•3798 art wonderful people. we in· ••••••••••••••••••••••• of parking. 2082 s. E. r1\9ge, incl. ABC lie. ---------• vile you to visit Harbour TilE EXCITING Bria lol St , Newport Pftlac. only Own/agt Lights. Pacific Coast PALM MESA AP'TS. Beach. ~7-7010 n&-0768 644·5987 SECLUDED Eastaide 2 br, els to shops. P11lio & gar. Sm. pet OK. $27S. 645-3858 Hwy to Warner, to Algon· MINUTES TO NPT <tuln or off San Diego BCH Fwy exit Bolsa Chica lo Ba .. •-~ BR 1 I c ... 1-. Warner to A gonqu n. from $210. & up. 16700 Saybrook Lane. Adults, No Pets 714-846-3341 1561 Mesa Dr. Month to month rent In· (5Blks East of Newport eludes; recpt. tervlce, leach Blvd.) penona6ied phone cov- 1141 M&-9860 ecaie. cont. room, mai 1----------1 service, underground prkg. • more , in Newport Beach. --------- THE EXECUTIVE SUITE 6054'70 FOUND: St. Bernard. 7 /13, v1c. Bolsa Ctuca Heil, HB. 213·59'2·$243 o 714-840-6500 Found: Retriever Pup? 631·3111 Male. Mesa Verde Go --------- Course area. 5'6·7838 •SHAROM•S• OtrrCALL MASSAGE 499.1224 ·EXOTIC GIRLS Massage & Modeling OutcaJI 542·3169 /5'3·3250 DAHCEOFFUH Beaut. nude girls, dance ----------t & rap sessions. lOAM to FOUND: Cat blktwhlte 2AM, Mon thru Sat. 625 male, taUesa, cerise col· N. Euclid, Anaheim. Jar, vtc Harbor/Adams C.M. 54.5-8168 Interstudy needs Host famlllea, fcailapanese FOUND: Blonde ter-students vialltncS for 3 rter/mlx doa, Iona. abort wts. 557-235'1. or (213) le11, looka like BenJ -.-~~--------- ACCOUHTIHG exper. Small' compo- Expandlng mortgage nents. Hard working, de· banking firm in OraAge dlcated indlvid11als Co. has an lmmed. open· n eede d . Small co. ing for an indiv. w/cx· w/good benefits, gd. op- per. in corporate acctng. por. adva.ocement. J;1dl Must have prior exper. in Carol; 581-3830. MY • mortgage banking. AUTO Please Contact Cathy •-&.. r._ _ _. End Thompson at UniCal ~~ + rTVlff Mortgage, 714/96:).7873 ::barµc needed, 9xper. Equal Oppor Employer · UM M.c:hcmic • · ACCOUNTING DEPT for tuneup, carbura!lon. Need exper'd AIR, A/C, Smog lie. req'd. BOtb inventory control cleric. positions UberaJ COlll'Dl on Burrroughs L6000 + guam. APPlY. Orange Computer. 645-7318 ask Co. Auto, 2401 ·Tu.Un (or JIM Ave, S.A. 54.2-5673 ·Accounting TEMPORARY Re«JbhrTodof WortrTamorrow CloMToHotM * AccOllftfanh •lloolckHpen * A/P Clerlta *A/RClerl&s •P~C:lerb •Maelt...,... •Stat Typists ROllWRTI ...... accoun~· PLEASE CALL 7141135-4103 AUTO MICHAHIC Own tools. Lrg, clitn. well equip . .,inde~~at s hop. Lots of WOl'k. Wkdys only. Larry Kwit Auto Center, 1,'25 Laguna Canyon Rd. Laz. 1 Bch. '96·3000. Automotive New Detail Shop needs help. Top wages paid. EnpPe , Steamers, eng paintei's,' bttfers & polbbers, 1'1>· holaler:r ahampooers. check out, ~ck·utJ &'de· livery.A~[y at 2Al58 Hatbor 81. elf' MS-1030 • • f • . . Add H ... Sulld It... Diaper lt...Hammer It... arpet '' Cement it . Wire lt ... Hoo il ... Clean lt...Move 11 •. Press lt...Palnt It. .Nall lt...PIAst er lt ... Flx It ... SERVICE DIRECTORY Af;fwe... C.,.tS.n-lce C.....t/Cw,.... h•u•g ~ Ha••dl•a.1· Mosonrr ·, P..._,JP.-rl'") ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• AP~u.urca .! J;~R Carpel Mu willlay youn B&D Concrctll. All phaaa. WUDING CLEANUPS Sldploader, dump truck. JMMACUJ.ATB cu;AN: ~ct. block. a labs, frplcs. ~~~ ~~~~~t. H~;':Site~trn~s;, :~u:~: Call ,.l•) ..._ ... _ or mine. Repalra ., coacnte. block '* brick Weeldy Maintenance haul.inc. tree work, ar•d· Il!g_,,You DESERVE Use .atonewott. 20 yrs expr ..... "-"'"P "'•2·"""'" d1ti"onln1. Free est, •10 __ " _._ dlaanls\ftoo' Ou.rworlc wont. ~te •u Lie • Free t 6'29907 mc,demo,etc7$1·»30 B&;,,Q~.'lSl-03'17 Refs esu ~ ~ .... .,,. .,. u~ reliable .Arc~•.. !t.~~avlnaa. ~..,.. ~ 87~20· es . , .._.O The Moppela Cleanln1 ' . Knowles Paint Ing . ~'::.0&trA~ M /C OK. ••••n••••••••••••••••• Concrete· ReJuventors, VERY LOW.PRICES_. .... ._.••••••••••••••••• service. Call ua if you P ...... /P........ Int/Ext, commercial 751-3150 ~ ""~~ ncb.aq.0 Shampoo ti aleam clean cleana r1.11l 4 oil cull Cor on siard0enin& main· Haulln1 movinc cleanup need a aood Job done. ••u•h••••-r••••••••• apts. res idential "--------- for U ape~ So C.t Q)JW' b.i11btener1: wbt Fr.e lllt. "2·8416 tenance. eorae 549"2015 S7/up. 1-r-e.work. Reas, Referrals. *-2393 PETW PAINTING mobile homes. 836·1120 ._,..It R.,.ir lll'H CN lMUPM.,PW Cpta JO min bleach. Clean --,_..f1G de fast tree estM2·4597 Expr'd' Reas Rates ..................... .. bv, din rm. baU '1$ Av1 CEMENT WOR K. All ., Mr . Hsewrk wkdys, 7 yra Free Est Call Gene Q\Wity work, JO yrs ex· Add-on.t paUo, 1kyli1hta ...,....... Mn fl 50, CO\K'h 110. chr klndt. Reasonable. Free Act now I for comp HAULING. Odd Jobs. Palm Springa aru. 552-0458 . per, bone1t, ~epeodable It rpra.' Rtald" comm'!. ••••••••••••••••••••••• t5 Ouar eum pot udur c:aUmate75CH162$ malnt. of lawns, shrubs Law student needs work. Reliable. 963·3'58 at reu pri ce. Lie.• (r esl 962-017 Luka)'. # Malu.r.•Mpndab&e. My Cpt ...... alr. 15-. ex ... J'. -& trees. Res. & comm. Jim4!H·5854 Paint Ii Papering 24 yn bonded and lns. Res. & 291123.1 bom t"M 1 1 f ·~-:.,~u,.r'-my.:1•1• n:rM One man crew$ yrs expr McWeeney,645-5124 Rosemarie's Clnc Svs . • s eomm. Ken638·S40S. · AX'• re 1' """ .. • "' • • pow-\ & l nishl Sel c E Xlnt work. Refs, gd 8~ I Harbor areca . \ ------ll.-.-... lU', locd y~ ~ 1_u.? Ml-OlOI n11 1 011. MOWING EDGING HEAP ST haullng ia ra•-. 0...,... trans............. ~'.<:. . .!'2~1. Refs rura. t-..-.erior Pa; ... Unu --_ ... ..., - --your own forma, aav T . • Cl town. Fr esLS. CHEAP! """" .. " ....,. ... ..., ......, ~ • ...,... .... • ••••••••••••••••••••••• C•I at........ CahriAcJ momiy 861-2423 nmmioa. eanups, 1142.~orS.5-1390 al'l5:~ SUMMllt SPECIAL Repair5. U c " lllli. All ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Havlin a. et c. Reas. PAINTING lnl/Exl. Ex· MOISt J story hoU5es $250. ty""•. Free esl. Walt. -· .._ G 'I ca i c...tr.ctor 646-6952 OCC Student Big ~ T Dependable, Mature, 'd hone l t Re"• M-•2 l h .-.. ..,""' ,...... r,..-•m tfa • bel n t'&Arpenl I !:,!.~~I •Of youRr part)", ••••••••••••••••••••••• truck Trash. tree him Own TransportaUon. P .• s • nea . ..... ""' s ory OUlles ...,.,.,. Call anytime, $41·5930 r{. 101'1 nJ va w-.wp etc HI, r«1 · · • 848 OIU7 Uc'd. Dave 964·1045 Professional worker 10 w Ddl. fr est1 Mark liable. rel'•· 442 7207 NltmodW holml es, add.illons, G ..... al 5-MkH et;:...!!•ndy 60·5703, . p-1-.& y ...... -c •• a.a... yn exper Tree SerYlce ~· ~1-92'72__ &4e-48'11 ' re e ng by Layne. ••••••••••••••••••••••• . $4..-.....,.. Landscaping lllilW1T -.,. 847·5408 ••••••••••••••••••••••• . Uc cootractor. M2·347 Home &Apartment . ••••••••••••••••••••••• AverageExlrlSt.ry$395 · Removlog, trimming. M~ar aa_rqe nb1ntU Ce•p. Ac ... Hc eves Repalr &remodelmg. Housfd--'ng Land.sea In 30 rs ex . 25tory $54$,lntr"5rm YOUNG Man,~ yra expr topplna, fr est, Uc/ii~. In \n ? to 10 sertloiu, up-••••••••••••••••••••••• ---~ al 6(2 6783 ••••••••••••••••••••••• F P t I• Li Y : Prices lncl matr'J.labor In wallcoverina. Free area 14 yra. TC>fty 645-5U4 pen .tior Jowers Als •~-J Q I ~c . W R r ee es . cel)se . rd.,._ ests.64S-&576at\6.Andy ' · ~nY Acouat ca: ua ••••••••••••••••••••••• ant a £ALLY CLEAN 6'5-8149 C·27·1072 Guar/lns , ..-.eeest. catm wall urut1, kllch sprayed ce11lngs, re· HANDYMAN : Carpentry, HOUSE? Call Gingham • Ted55a·Ol34or6!6·708S Buzz's Landscape Maln· rmdl.87~~ --pairs, guar. Lie ll 329005, ~~R~~\~ ~EsRJr£~ electrical, plumbing & Girl. Freeest645-5123 Tr~e. Plant Remove, in rtmht'fllepolr hmance & Tree Trim· c.,...... freeestW.1800 JOBSM2 8233• floora8'6-68Sl, 847·2787 WindOws/Hous~leaning Trim. Lawn Renovation PROFES.SlONAL Pa t· ........................ _nun_·_a_._546_'12t_7_e_v_e_s_. __ ••••••••••••••••••••••• c.n.nt/COftCNt. ........... ~~a.. Hauling, moving, paint· Goodrates -Good refs ~~lnklera . Misc. ~~~:;~~Reas, VERYNEATPATCH Carpentry , any type,••••••••••••••••••••••• . .._,,. .... ctric: Ina. gar clean, trash. CalJ Mr.l.,ynnS36·'7711 · JOB.5&TEXTUR£ Usetl'leOsllyPUot Panel, doors. etc. Also Phillips Cement Co. Lic327136 64.S·fD74 maint, janitorial, yd Masoftry Paiatln1. Loc:aJ·Estab & Jol-eeest. 893·U 39 Comm'I. I.le/est AJ\ 5, Patios, room additions. G • • care. Com pl ser vice Alice's Housecleaning ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1nau.red. Tons of !els "Fast Result" service 548·2719 Con t le 751 5657 "' MtCJ $41--0067 or $42-ll!M Bob, Reas, reliable·, refs. Own Firetl•~·Planter.s Friendly /e Ulc1ent directory. Your ---CaJJcree wor p ·li ·. ••••••••••••••••••••••• WUl orClarlce. trans.fMS-'871 :642·7207 Bn·c Con""et•Pau·o 67:H867 Peoplewhoneed People ·-vice is our Framlne. firush. remodel, 1~ AM to 9 M. c/· Reliable Expr'd Japanese -------------------• ... "" That's what the ...... repairs. Lie Qui ck bond/In.!:_ ____ gardener & landscape. Handyman. reas. rates. Housecleaning. Mature, BlockWalla B.BQPits Finework.State lic &ln-DAILYPILOT specialty. service. Wrk guar. SELL Idle Items with a Reasonable, freo est. Avail. anytime. Call aft. experienced. reliable. Refs,Ests.646-0664 srd. Exterior specialist. SERVICE DIRECTORY CaJl642·S678ext.3U 912-3314 Daily Pilol Classified Ad. 645-5230 Mike #336732 12 noon. fMB·5167 $20, refs 536·0950 Classified Ads 642-5678 Try me-Calico 836-MSS ill all about! lietpWantH 7100HelpW•ted 7100HelpWant.d 7100 HelpW.ted 7100 HefW•ted 7100HelpW•hd 7100 HelpW•t•d 7IOOHelpW•ted 7IOOHelpW•hcl 7100 •·······•·············· •...••....•.•....•....•.•....••.••........•.......•••.•..•...•......• ········•······•·•····· ···············~······· ..••.•................. ············•······•··· •.....•.•.............. IAIYSlnER IOOKklEPER F /C CLERK, office, Aug, Thru COOKS, BARTENDERS, . GROUNDS KHPEl Insurance Billing Clerk MAID, f /~lme for beauty MEDICAL ASSISTANT 4daysweek,Mon·Thurs, Multi books for prop. Sept+. $2.60 per hr. DRIVERS.P /t.ime.Over &crowMgn to$11k (Long tennSubaUtute) p/time.Elficlenli>erson u.loa.RicbardOueUette ;Backoflk:e 1lrl. ~~int· 9-6, Mature woman or mgmt. Call 640-0123. 548·7423 for appt. 21 yrs. Immed openings. Growinf financial In· Saddleback College, Mla1 w/aound knowledge o Salon, 200 Newport Ctr i.ngton Beac~ Physician. Ii c 'd woman . A ~ ln M · stitution seekl (2) sion Vie jo . H ours iov't insurance billing Dr,N.B. Re~lycl~sailaedAdf977. Yorktown/Bushard, HB. t'OOl()(EIPER ASST Clerk, office.full /prt Ume. F.% Pluai;:r~~ 410 En quallf1od people for 7:30am-4pm, Tues· SaL req'd for clinical lab. Ac-MAID Harbor Inn Motel Dally Pllol, PIO. Box 968-fil31aft6 pm. Join growing real e;t. ~rox Copy Center. 17tbSt, C.M. • . Orange Co. locatloos. $1.42 p/hr. 831·9'700 ext. countina & computer ex-1800 W Balboa Blvd 1560. COllta Mesa, Ca. firmasasslsl. bkkpr_. We COOK-Some ex ..... rien"e. Good growth potent. & 302,303.btwnS.5 per .. biahly desirable. NewportBeacb,675-3463 . _92626 _____ ....... __ _ BALL PEN MANUFACTURING M ... WOfMft Day & Swl1t9 1987 PlaceotiaAvc, CM are young ener"eUc & ,._ ,.. fantastic frlnge benefits. u.ullDRiSSER. Ability to handle paUent MEDICALRIC-T · • • Apply in person Derby Call Carry, S4Q·6055, rvu ioquhies. Please contact •MAIDS• ...-~C:~c!~~·b':se s~~: :r . CLERKS Restaurant. 1262 So. Coastal Personnel Agen· Apply In Person Jan HlllyerMG-0140 Tho lruut Laguna Slr.illed ln variely of fronl knng exper. who wants to East Bristol, C.M. cy, 2790Harbor Bl, C.M. Regis Beauty Salon· RO So zu N. CstHwy, Laguna ofc. Or. will train to hel p .... --------.-So. Cat Pwa S4o.8888 I NING meone to do • in back ofc. Beautiful learn as you work. Send INVENTORY COUPLE to manage 20 my ironing in their MAIDS WANTED ofcs, xlnt working a t· resume to : J · R ay and32units. Heaff:1j1Mtalcstloa bome. ltviDe.552·6091 Don Quixote Motel mosphere & staff. Fee Construction Co .. 188 E. 83J.~ EXEC. S!CRITAllY N....,. 2 ,....,_ , in 2100Neutnnrt 81 CM Noa 17th St, Costa Mesa. Ca Special 3 Day assign· ~ e ,...... ior · ...... • ._o. 92627. Attn: Mlke Ray or ment-Good counters DILIVEllY To Dir. of Mktnt. Finan-stallatlon. No experience MAIL ROOM OR. PERSOHHIL call 642·4210. Salary needed. $2.75 an hr. Call Dental Lab dal serv. firm. Type 70 neceuary. GRAHAM KEYPUNCH Must bo able to llll box· 1001 W. LaVeta,Ste209 Nego. Today! Part·Ume.646-«ni>" wpm , ah 100 wpm. BROS HEATING & Alij •l-A02t 0ran£e 633-9740 .,.,.,., 64CM463. COND . .S.S-1653 ast ror •• es, forklift exper . Free&Fee lox .oy Fr~. •54HDATAUC. helpful. Lite .main·--------~o~ office • DELIE Woman, F tUme. FAST FOOD · -•T Al t6t o. tenance work also. 5 Day MEDICAL ASSIST. Banking Fee Paid F/time & P /time. Must vos. ~6 There 15 no need to wait HELPER/COM~ANJON wk. Good benefits. Apply G TELLElt to $650 speak good English. App· 0 OVe rload Days S49-lt22 in line for a dvance· i4> ampu~. P/Ume. We •ICEYFLIX National Systems Corp., ~~~~~~l ei?i!/.d. ~~ Super PR p os. f or ly, 115 W. Lincoln Ave, 557_0061 DENTAL me nt. .. Straw Hat need a woman 2 days •IHFOlllX Ul!BlrchSt,N.8. <Near pendablepersonforlheir customer oriented lndiv. An_ah_el_m_._____ Many dental positions Restau.raot.s are lookin& week, to serve as a •UMIVAC OCAirport> E.O.E . back ofc. Xlnt benefits. lnplush bra~ch.AlsoFee CAMP Counselor m st -·:11-23•B•i•rc•h•S•t•.N•.•B•._ avail. lhruout Orange for individuals w/fast helper companion for a •CHCICEYTAftE FeeNego. Jobs. Call Willa. 8J3·Z700. hav v· o ta' w ug C-0. For more informa· food exper. to becom e woman who ls a double 2 vean experience. Ex-u ""I..._...._."" ...acE M"".... DR. PERSOHHEL Uennis & Denrus Person· e an r s · n. CO KT IL . 1 all shift managers. lf you amputee. Costa Mesa ~~J D •. 1 fftA "''"""'" "'" nelServ1ccoflrvine,2082 $125. wk. Call Susan C A llonp easec have proven leadership ~rea. Must be able to .. -entpay. ay .. sw ng Must have exper. In 1001W.LaVeta,Ste209 Michelson Dr. 498·0176 WAITRESS DR. PERSOMMEL ability & the ability lo bve·ln on workdays. No sh.i/lg avail. Long & short maintaining restaurant Oran,e 633-9740 Learn in 40 hrs the most 1201 W. La Veta, Ste 209 motivate others, we have ~work involved, but term aaaignmen\S, boll· & related equipment It Free & Fee lanldft9 TELLERS C .o.uy.o.ss"'aS exciting. glamourous, Orange 633·974-0 an """"'nin" for you. At· will be expec\ed. to cook day & vacation pay• b ave a working !t'""mt Tme, ""'rm. Earn "'" "' """ highly paJd profess. Day Free&. Fee tr activ: Pa y c 0 meals & otherwise tend ~~~~~~~el.ization pla knowledge ot _the elec· -'.JP to SlOOO r,;;0 . Fuller ~m~~·~1~:. :k:!!: or e~ sessions. ~lace· DENTAL ASSISTANT benefits. For appt. cau: toh~rnee,ds. Xlntsalary. trical & plumb101 trade. Brush (7l4)772•4247• FuU or part time & eve. ment assist. Good Job op· Ex per. pref. Ben ems. 962•1366. Affirm alive ac· Refs req d. If Interested Apply at. Or~e Cow:rty 1 DICTAPHONE Call 557·2101 poCr._ 714/751•9194 Newport Beach. 6«-9211 tiooM/Fernployer. ~~~~53?0n Crouse, ::~~::.s::~'~:: MOLDS MAKER ~ OPERATOR -lam Sp ""' t.br Frl Motd maker ror plastic ~ So. Ca 11 . Cock ta I I Dental recept/business Female Factory Hostesses. Now acceptina · • , 00 " • iJUectioo molda. ut class Jmmediate openinpfor nvaasMan·Neededim· Waitresses, Inc., 17922 assi.stantexperiencedor ,odl.,.... applications, Cano'• ll41C-..-Drhe no&dmakerneeded.Exp. -exper'd well groomed in· med, fully ex per 'd Sky Park Bl. Ste C, trained. Fountain Valley $2.~ Per hr to at.art. Restaurant, 22'1 W. 546-4741 MAIM"t. WOOER in mold const. & rework. • dividuals to work in Oceanside area Irvine,Ca9Z114. area.968-1648 . __ Merit raises. 1537 CoaatHwy,NJ)t&h.AI>-<Acro8Sft'oftl Publlc..apocy ta un-Clean & steady, weU busy. friendly at· l..Ql.1188 i---------ioental Ortho. asst. Moarovia Ave. N.8. ply in person 3·5PM Orange Co. Airport) crowded So. Orange Cty. eetabllsbedco. mosphere. Xlnt salary,--------a.ERICAL P/t..ime tor friendly. low 548-512.S. Thura&Fri. 7128&7/29 EqualOpporEmployer is seeking a high quality CAMIRO MFG. benefits & growth poten· CASHIER & FRHPOSmOHS pressure ore. RDA or .,. .. _a~~i..cu· water & sewer mai.nt. • 7601Clay,HuntBch. tial. Call personnel RDA eligible. Salary n.. ---.. HOTEL person. Should have CW. of Beach, S. or 645-5333. HOSnss Recept/Secy to $900 based on exp/ability. Churns dept. of impor· Front desk cierk & relier Kitchen & Dinlna rm. worklnit tnowledce of Gaifleld) IAHI< OF MEWPORT A~~Jn =~:pm '!opohppor. to~oin xlnt co. Irvine. 559.0777, an e tdlant Caco.11M!e5 uu c~.,~e~00ln· f.l,!1!:l_ •,:a~1t::!i• ~r help. Mhature womahJn in wtrbe • ctc1 se~r rac's.t mdust E.O.E E.O.E. ay ay in t is variety s pot. 64(>.42:92 v. a y. -·· . ,......., e ,,....,.... · guest ome. 7·3 a ft. abotoworkunaer e· --M- 0 - 1 - 0 - 1 -R- 0 -,19'11!---The RM1ty l'ftlcClft Moderate typing & sh Oeonia le Dennis Person-tions open. Exp pref, but C.M. M6-6716. ad.lines & full work loads. v, 15 2735W.CoastHwy,NB willlandthlsgrealpos. DENTALAssist .,exper'd nelServlceoflrvine,2082 will train rlgbt person. Knowled1e of pumps, The Dally Pilot bas a CaUCbrl.s S40·60S5 l yr or more. X-ray lie. Michelson Or. Call Mr. Mazzola betwn LaundryWorllft' motors. & related large route in Newport BANK CHEF $1300 Mo. Sid's T.a.x~ $600 SpanishbelpfuJ.S45-t553 108m-4pm for appt. for Wknda only. Bayview equlp'mt. beneficial. Beach, afternoons Mon J*LOd~Ht CLERI K ~ :.1 ::. l~~:ifi.W.~.a!t 3 ~gperl~ -r:1:~oneh:: ~l~~ Dental Asal. Exper'd, Sell FUND RAISER lnterview 54().ZIOO. ~v~·= Tburin =?'w1~~'!.f:t. ~C:fi~~ ~gl:~~~c! ~ug~ mme 18 e open ng 10 · . · motivated, happy. 7am· Part·time. flexible HOTB.POSmOHS Applylnpenon: HWltinaton Beach office. CHILD CARE benefits & ts a truly good 3pm, M·F. Irvine. Sal schedule, for Orange HeadNl.&btAuditot LIGAL SICRITAlY MOULTON NIGUEL scboolorc0Ue1eatudent. General office back· Woman to care for placetowork. ,...... 75275'56 C 1. F tdestcl k .... ol ,_ •-.__ h $SO cash de posit re -ground, typlng 45 wpm. Call Rita 540-6055 o,._. · · ounty non pro al or· roo er .. -an cw...,., ODaC . WATER DIST. quired. Call 642-4321, ask Some loon experience children, 2 to 6pm, start CltrilTvni1t $625 Da""FTIHG ganizaUon. Experienced NCR 4200. Exp pref'd, needs skille d secy 27500LaPaz Rd., for clreulaUon, leaving Sept 12. 6'4-7095 alt ol ,r· d . _.. lo public conlact, public will train. Acd'g back· w/lit.i1ation exper, xint Laguna Nltuel, Ca. 92677 name and phonoor come preferred. Excelle nt 6:30pm One our rn06t esira· We need a Drafts Person relatiooa, with aome ground helpful. Xlnt benefits, salary nea. CaU Equal Opp. Employer ill salary, working condl· --=--------1 bJecompaJliesneedswell w/approx. 1 yr electro-writing &kills. Write to salary & benelita. Holi· ShirJev ('7lOS31-2293 in and fi out applica- tions and beneCits. Call groomed Pers? n mech'l drafting exper. to Ad No. 918 Dai'~ Pilot day Inn, L•I· Hill. , . MAHAGEMENT Uoo.. Must own car and or apply at branch Clerical w /outgoing per1onahty mate finished engineer· • v • Personnel 588-5000 LIGAL SICY have good dri vldg re. AMERICAN for variety pos. w/good i 0 g draw 1n 1 s 0 f ~ O. Ceo;:. Costa ' Mgr. adult mobile home cord. '-' C AMALYST advancement potential. mechanical parts & as· esa, a. HousecleaolnC Women Ooeto3yursexper, xlnt ~kin Orange Co. Nr. ---------SAVINGS ,.. • Somestattyping helpful. semblles. Also some GATE GUARD . wanted to work p/tirne. ~J1~· c!1~•::,::: each. Some uper. MOTOR ROUTE 7830 Edinger Hunl. Bch Immediate opening for a BeauUlul ore. & Joe. acbematlcs & printed Male/Female, 1181 Back Tues thru Fri, 8-3. Call 75'2·2518 ~~~na~ s~do~~\ The Dally Pilot baa a Mrs. Braun 848·2222 Q.C. Anal)'lt bas become w 11raatest beneflts. circuit boards . Tbla Bay Dr. N.B. 6'4-0510 Janice'a RaaedY Anna apace 11 u\ll. Above la rge route in South Equal Opportunity available du• •-rap1"d Very plea1anl CO· penan should have xlnt G .,... -. 87s.c53 LEGAL Sli:CY·Tralnee, averaie compeauation. f.:'t.~!~~appror mxoaelbarn.-EmployerM/F "' "" workera.Superoppor. draftinS aldlls & either 94--0mCI Nwpt Bch. Some uper. u._ _... --------111 growth. Mua\ be ex· causally 540·60SS have or be working Need typlat/reeept for HOUSEKEEPER/Cook, belplu.l,bulnotne<!. Must Qintact C'714)840-M00. Mon thru afternoons ---------1 pertenced in opaulve ll--"-lst $650 toward an AA des. Thia last growtn1 educational bolive in !.boardll ··~-be alnt wist. 64-0-BllOO M•rtad•rTraib...... andSat&Sunmominss · Bank TellerTme and active electronic --r•._ blisi..1." me &-u 0 p/a.uue _... """ Car and cood driving re-MOHIYSMOHEY$! components. Ability lo Fwl spot in this xlnl co. Is an exceptional learn· pu .• ..,.. co. Near OC Sant.a. Ana.. ~ '1011 . LoisMcO l To SI0,100 cord r equired. Call Public contact? Then work wtthdata collection w/short hrs "raise in 3 lntoppor. w/xlnt chance Airport, aBSOmo. 751·2113 • Reward aeeker desired 84.2 32 Le vtn turn on your smile & and proficiency ln report mo's . Lite typing. & for adya~cement roe the AaltrorDlane 839-3973 L~GALtns~~~sEZ~~lt ror pas. offertn1 tremen· and~nen:m~r. name become part of a areal wrltine a duirable. This sparklln1 peraonahty right mdiv. We ofter 8 General Olfice T 1st HOUSEXEEPER·Llve asiitt~e. ~o S/H. Outao-cbll adv. w/major corp. --"-------- ataff. Call Vic kie, lsanhourlyposltlon. will land this top oppor. food starting salary & Dlvetaltled posiUon~~be or o.ut, muat lov tng all neededto Call Llta Kay, MIM288, HIGHTCLm 848·1288, Dennis & Den· In ooe or the finest com-co. beneflta. Call for Irvine area 9-ll ~/ childrea. apk aome EJla. ~eo3 I f Denni& a Den.nJa Person· FIT Good •/public nil Peraortbel Service or Co~ crow With ua in our pa~ ln the area. •t:!· • be prepared to m.3371Aak i Terri mo. S7S wk. Mf.1968 b:'d. in TusttD ~=u0r c. nel Sentce of Huntlntton neat appearallce. wni Huntinl\on Beach, 16168 new facility. Excellent CallChris ~ 1 wworkaampleaatln· ore · . lntervi 640-0i.O or Be1dl.ll188Be1cb81vd, traln.TravelLodte,Npl Beach Blvd, Ste 121. startin1 salary and eic· Secy,"° th $900 tnview. Geoera1 Offtce Houselteeper/coolt live in. ew. Stel.21. Bd\ 64U25a ---------t c ellent comj)any Growing co. needs ex· Orthoclywe llGtSTitAI English apt'I· H.B. Uf9._..,/lnl act •---------___ area __ .----- Bank Teller & Loan Clk, benefits, tncludlng a per'd person t.o handle 9ectroelc1 Poe. nq'a llte typinf + 848-'lmalU Pref. Rec e•P•; FIT MANAG£R. •xi>er'd or HOWHlllHG t. exper pref'd. SUmltomo credit union, medical Ule variety of dutle.s. J.599Supertor Ave 10 key. AbWty to budle Hie work needed 4 bN per summer, p tr winter. will train. '800-'1000 per Sales Lad)' for ready-to. r :Bank of Calif, CM ofc. and dental inaura11ce. Good typln&. he~v ~S.2 CottalleH <Walla accurately. WOl'k wlt Moa/WedorFri.AJI Call tS'l·llOO aak ror mo+ beneflta t.o;,tart. wear Shop in Dana Pt . . _50-_9_18_1 _______ 1 Please apply in peraon or phones +an outaorna Call846-1616 w/mtnor aupervlaloa. or 'pM H 8 N Bolsa Mike Alil>lt.~ person. · ' 'n Marina, a or • Dos send resume with salary personality will be of AJIPb' National S lema """' . .;.,.;_ r. ... • l:ds ruu Parlor, 410 E. p/Wk. incld'18'mdar. $3. Bartender·Nlgbts. Sid's history to: areat help. Not a pre· Corp.,· GSl. Bm:b ~ N .B. bcaJ~-au.&11.r .. f!".J! IU. Live in wanted: attrac· ,_17lb_St._C_M_____ p/hr. Clll-.oata ror In· ~~~a~~ 21•l Pl, aaurejob. 54().6()55 DllY!I CNearOCAlrport) EOE. 8pu\.. w'Uipicke;Unec Uve, .Um female, qe 11 er/tnlnee Ftr for terview appt. Al•'U 01" TR&IDAT A Call Rtta SUHDA Y OML Y . to 30. Ooatac:t llr or Mn Tb e Fl a h B Q c t e c older snlcnd. BEAUTYOPERATOR CORaA•-"TIO Clerical $450 Deliver Dat11 Pilot Geoera!Offlce . IMCOMITAX Rouna,.ra•r., '20 Vic· restaurant, Balboa. _...---.--.--.---NEWPORTERINN ..-vNI' H Xlnt opPor. for mature bundles to camera. R•· NOOflllADEll MA.ftmANXTR.\'50()0, ,toria. CM in trailer in Somo reatavrant exp.a-11111 _____ _ Mt.oeel•M0-4'140 STAMDAID person to return to work quirH YU or Jar•• Home atudy div. of lntmcmtha,perUlme, ln back. pref'd but not nee. llecrultiaa lbarp. VOLT . . . .. ' .. M ...... ORIES force & aet statUn& poa. wqioo and a 1ood drfv. priva~ edaacaUooal ln· eve:1 II wtmaa u a tu Reference• Hquired. amb.IUoul mo to Ult u.. w/co. offet\nf ou\atand· ins record. Phone .Utuaioa bu an 0M0101 ~r with Tax Corp LYM 7.3 Call for appt. 87J..'1'30, twdwaN, toolt "ebop DIVISION me beul1ta lncJudloit all MMSal. • aak for Hart)' for a proot reader of "' Amvtca. No exper: Medications " lrtat· AakforScotf equipment to tnd.utal An A9Plied Mac:netJcs eo lnlilr., profit sbartoa at Seeley . .Eqll&I opportunl· educatlonal material. req. We train. Htab com· ment.. Nunes Aldt Upm-1--------.ccow\tl. AYf • per MOOW.Se=m P8Dllonp1ana. No\.yplD& tJEmployer P/Um• morns pr.I'd. mt..._ Call· • 'latn. Maa Verd• Conv. MAMICUllST wt.'No aps. w. Call SantaAna, aurm°' ~~ 540.el)S5 DRIVERSllHELPERS ~·~u::1b~~~ -~ • l'\-.~,..,~2881122 ~C4fttu8t,C.M. Exclusive H.B. Salon ... m~..tlM.~~~~~~ ~t lo$600 I• local f\lmlture SOOV· <Nur OC Al.rporo•-----------_..---------• E:lper. •llpb .... CU•n•1 .. ~~Y Apleatantpbooevotc.• lnc company. Exper. E.O.E. IN·INSUaANC& • telepref'd.~....U ... NURK--•AJ-D•TRAININ-..-•G• ~~~~~~~~I or1anbed penonaUtJ pret. ~ o.-.i omce""'p1 ... ror ~UMIS I· wUJ wt1' 1 ttnt JIOll. ln thll Drt~ tow ~ Muat = nnn ·.: .. ";" OC 0.0. A1e7 ...... ea· Would :rou llk• to be luUrowioaN.8.co. bue ·exper'MD~ Kutt -mo. Pbont per'd lJnderwrllen. ~~~..,u0 wama~~01a5- CallSue MO-GS u 1nr~ U • l'\~•t ,._-....,_ -Good1Nl1+tioe-. n_;;~~~----1 ~\I " .,avir ... AJ.SOFllJOIS ve ~i. .... a.-.. _._.,. 14Ml64 -hn clauroom tnatruc· COASTAL ren ulA.-cy ~ H•rbor lnvcl Cost.a Mesa Towtn1 .. JU lndmtrial l~~;.::~~~~~l~---~-1!"'11• don II 100 bn. dJnkal Wu, OJI • ...._ Ull'•T practloe for quallfled ap· ••• ...._... ..,.., pllcantl. Mutt be ln tertattd ln worktac wAoq tlrm~tl 4& m:itlYatild to ...,.,... '!'-op ....-• beDtOta. c.i1 ~ ~. allke •P----~~-· ~=i' HOSPITAL OfAHMIShl 50180. l.&AC8 •mt -·---·-. ~~~~ ..... ~!.~~ ~~.~~.~ ..... !! .. ~~~~~ ..... !!.~~ ~~~~ ..... ?!.~~ t-Wp Want.ct 7 I 00 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Nune, fr•4'l•caJ UV• In Pt rtME ~VE WORK -~~~~~~~-1---------SALES: undah, all ~ alduly lady CdM Muat be u Warner llC.,..OMIST SAL.IS CAR-l.Ya-. Swap meet, O .C. ~l l>riv• lnn Al\er e pm Our 1rowln1 af eoc:y NatJooal Company. No area. Consh1tant, r esp. MUISHYMAM ... kt b.rt&ht. ou 1oln1 travel. Ortlcee tn Pay 135-50 p /day , ~ Aa.....-ce peraon •flood phone Sat/Sun. Mu.t bave vehl S..per'd, f llm• M11t1.1r• l...,.ctor/Tec• vole94amodera~typlaa Jiftwport C•nler . cl• \hat will haul aup male o ... u Zl 6 DMY1 in Xlhl oppor 1n'u11aJI co to P'Mt OW' cllu&a. Lota f:-fOu&at~~.d~ ':!.~! pliea. Stana 7/:1J, 7/31 «'lud 'attSu 11 Work fc,;r Q\A&htiud man Mull ol varlet.)' • Nlaxed al· Apply 711 W. 17tb St. Ste w1'1a11Utttr•l·~ SJllr~ tlavt4yramlneaper.ln moepbert. CaU Carry lf p 0 . Box 1UO, J7CM up Oveortlmr In• l'Wl'trunlc• Call Clll'OI, toa, Newport Cent er Dr.1 __ ._. __ • _____ _ O.ntfll• \d \lrn<'•M•·nt 6¥1.-.0 140.6015 Newport BHch, CA '*3 SALIS IDINll pc1Ct'nt111I l..:111una Hiiis -Coutal Pel'tOAQtl AaH· ffeal&.b 1''ood St.on. Ex- :"lour "'> Im 1':1 T~ro •--------c1, 17IO Harbor Blvd, SALESCLERK• per helpful. perm pos, ~ Real Dilate al .. peraon C.M. CASHIER. $1aO 1tart.1.n1. Ap9ly in 100% ---------1 Houaewarea & 11tt person, 10-llam only, MU.Sf..lM t• l t-: L U W O It )\ rte ~1>1\:Al K t;t•o KTS Mon thru t't1 Oran•• t'o •~11 1Jl3 I )U 3USI C..-ht&o.. Te YM waru. bra Mon-Fri Sat. 7/"'/77, Howard's w. , urn I. ti de • k aacn. TYPIST llam·tpm. Cont.act Pbll NulrlUon. 1072 Bayside lelephono -... crolary ' Matun penon for full M2-lW. Dr, (atJamboree)N.B. help ume Jl()lllllon u reeep SALF.S CLERK-Bill 'nw>mpaon Rily Uonlat-typlAt In attrac. HUISIS AIDIS 3M9'.! Mar1u.nlo Pkwy, office nr 0 .(' Airport & OIDHUIS Slt t:io Mlt1 VltJo Plca&e call. 7S2 01•0 HARDW ARE Hours Mon-Fri 12am· 9pm. Sat 9am~pm. Con· I.act Phll 642· 1133. SALES YOU DON'T Hit.VITO STAMDOH YOUR HEAD TOFIMD 011y11 '95 uno ---t:\Ptr'd Ha>\ 1t·11. ton\ L· .... ,..,37 ~bp 05 Thunn ,._~,.1 ___ .... •\".·s ....... _1.v_· __ Receptlool1t 1tatl1llcal C~ 142·~ -------l,yplal for busy CPA ofc: --------In Newport Center. Ap. •SALES• MUISIS AI DIS E1.JM!'r prd'd F l1m.: & P \lmt! \JI Siu t\ ~ A PP ly, Park Lido <:on.- Oenter. a •h~llhlp Rd, N 8 "2·80t4 HUISH AIDIS Qwilifi~ appllr ant'\ In tereated In nurs11s .11d~ traunlng Cl.iu('S "ld rt Aua. Ii. Apply. l'Jrk Superl1>r lle althl-..ire, 1445 Superior A\ t'. N 8 &t2 :WlO NurJ1ng RN SUPERV. l· I I LYH-leffef l-1 I LYN·l 1·7 Fiume & P/llme Join a team interested in quality geriatric e111re Rehab oriented. 17' Bed SNF. Call Mrs. Darms, 9-3. 828-7730. 501 s . Beach, Anaheim. PART-TIME Make S3 + good hours Must hove car Call 751 2.585 •PART·TIME• F.atab'I firm needs 2 pco 1.-& .... Solff IO Min of your nluahle l1mt! will convlnct• you lo Jmn our :ob.II A•k uhuut u ur co mm1 i.s1011 -.chl.'<lulc, frc61 lr•lning 1>ro~ pllcanU abOuld ~ attrac Expenenced. Mature al· live w /iood telephonE utude essential. Perma· volce & manner. CPA of-nent po11t100 .. Must b~ rice experience deslra-dependable. ble. Ci&ll 71'·644-84!.44 for So. Coast VIiiage appl. Call Dorothy, 557-6963 A GOOD JOB! Time.Lue Llbrane:. has absolutely the finest p/time sales jobs uvalla ble in Orange Co. No door lo door & no pre· l kno1Matot olt times. ------i SSW'e tactics. We UJjtl a Receptioniat nt!eded for SaJeslady f/l. perm. for nice easy fnendly up· C:all for appt , 7S2·6118 --- buay o/fic11. Perm. p/t. proach & our reputation Mornings . Mat u r 11 c b i 1 d re n 's s h 0 P · is number 1 in the bus1· person pref'd. 7S2-0869 Managerial ability and I EALESTATE Smail Sao Clemente ofc. RECEPTlONIST Busy w /money -mak1ng, o( • cooperative associates ~ice. Typlna. tele, light needs exp'd., fulJ lime filin&. call 540-5al1. salesperson. AA Rltrs., 307 N. EJ Camino Real. REST lt.URANT '92-2100 We are now accepting -applications for llli.L ISTATI ~tauranl help. Apply in LICENSEES-person. btwn 3 & s daily you should possibly be no p~one calls p~ease. with us-in a simplier, An c 1 en t M ll r 1 n er n cher life. Our invest· . Restaurant 301 N. Tustin mcnt division has 3 open· Ave. S.A. in gs in our Newport --------- Center ofc. for amb1t1ous Restaurant Me 'n Edi; business-oriented peo· Piua Parlor needs de· pie. Pe~nal trainina . livery drivers & cooks. 21 rasclnaung, challe!lt:ing, yrs or age. Valid Calif. excellent co.mm1ss1on drivers lie & good driv· plan. Call 8111 Gerrie, in& rec. Willing to work TllE GERRIE CO. (714) eves & wknds. $2.70·$3 tl40.6600. hr. 20·4-0 hrs wk. 11.B. or exp. helpful. Begin im· ness. We offer a base med. MZ·3046 salary + a commlsaion &: a great bonus plan . There is excellent money on the job + the al· mosphere is casual & fun. Try a job you'll en· joy for a change We hove (3) Part-time shifts & Full·t.Jme is. of course, uvailable. Our staff peo· pie e nj oy excellent benefits including health & ltfe Insurance. SALES Men & women who need or want to earn Sl,000 a/wk. Selling & listing l\1oblle Homes. Will train right people. Mr. Sims, So. Land Mobile Homes, (714 )898.9904 SAL&S /OR~ANS??? An You TM One We are looking for several high energy level tnd.1v1duals for an exc1t ing career In the music business. We are the Orion Exchange located In (10) So. Calif. reglonal shopping malls. We offor Try It You'll Like It! GlVE USA CALL For,\ Personal lntervw 833-8095 TIME-LIFE LIBRARIES F.qual Opp Emplyr m /f a prestigious career. xlnt -------__ _ pie to do telephone work1---------• 847·1214 , Stanton Real F.atate Free 892·5525 training program , SEAMSTRESS. for Live highest .comm/guarn & Wire Cleaner:., 439 many Cnnge ~ne~ts We Forest Ave. Laguna Bch. from home. Make appls for esUmaters. Current :.taff earns SS·Sll per hr Growing financial 1n .~·~5·4447 ~lltut1on set!kS sevt!ral RETAIL LOGn Officer Tmes req. profess1ooahsm 1n 49-S·3S36 the art of selllog & 11 ------- strong dctermioallon to SEAMSTRESS s ucceed . Some orgnn Exp'dlnsailmaklng. w.ctnesday. July 77. 1sn * DAILY PILOT D7 Help Wot1ted 7 100 Help Wonted 71 O Help W..ted 7100 .,,..cft 10 I 0 ..................................................................... ······················· . THE CITY OF HUNTINGTON BEACH ~yment & Troin11t9 AdmW1tratl011 Announces An OpenJna For The l'Otillion o(; OPERATIONS COORDINATOR S l 2tl To $1601 Per Mo. Appllcatloni. \\ 111 be accepted Only At The City of lluntrn11ton Bt'ach Pcr.1onnel l>tpartmenl. 2000 P.lt11n St . lluntln~on ~arh .L'nUJ SPM. August 2nd TELLERS/ NEW ACCOUNTS Permanent fuU Ume, l)'plna, req'd, prvioua exper desirable but not necessary. llutuaJ Savini• & Loan JllS7 E. Cout Hwy Cdll Mr. Kull 6'75-6010 E.qual Opty Em pl II )F TIAVEL lt.GIHCY MGll For fast arowins a1eac)' In Newport Beach. Call ~ I IST, fast & accurate. Secy /MktncJ to ,.,.uo ST AIMED /LEADED Immediate openlna. •P· .Fee Paid GLASS BUSlNESS ods proximately 4 day p/Wk. Fun lovlne. friendly helper expr'd in all Apply 1660 Placentia ••• S.swC1'1.1r 4161W.17\h t. Coat.a Meta V ou a.re \.be wlnnt-r ot twometfckeh ($lS.OO valu.>. to R....._..lros. .. , .... , ..... , Ctrc• Aus 4 t.hru Au1 u Anaheim Convention Ce.nler, 800W. Katella Tickets mu1l be e1. chaneed for.re1erved seats al tbe CoovenUon Center ahead or time. C.all 642·5678, Ext 333 to claim your Ucketa. .... group in rea1ooal ore or phases.' Eves 675-3175 Ave, Costa Mesa. nat'I firm seeks con· --------•----------Kenmore wuber • 1ai. genial person to Join the STUD~S-JOIS TYPIST dryer S75 ea. Bradford c rew!! Call Cecila. FORSUMMER elec or Whirlpool gas 848·1288. Also Fee Jobs. Falt " accurllle, xlnt deye.r $50 ea. G.E. air Dennis & Dennis PeJ11on· P /time for sn4.4o 'per salary & working condi· conditioner $10 0 . mo. Growing co. Must be · c ll "' ....... ·3347 eed d 11 nel Service oft luntlngton l1ona. a .,_. Guarant & e vered 18+. Cull lOam·lpm. Beach, l6168 Beach Blvd, 714ns1-~. TYPIST needed for _54M672 _______ _ Ste 121. Travel A1ency, N.8 . Mm Switchboard Opr 60 wpm. No sh req 'd. SECY /RECEPT Young erowing Mort gage Co , needs sharp personal/le recept & general ore worker. Bright & self directed. ~0743 P fl1me eves & wknds. Start $3 hr. Cali betwn Will train. Superior 9·12, Spalllno lnterna· Answenn& Serv., 250 K uonal Tours, 759-0155. 17th St, Ste I, C.M. VOCATIONAL Swftchbocrd Opr INSTRUCTORS Hotel Laguna. Apply to Needed in Law enforce· SEC'Y/RECEP'l'. Auditor, 494-1151. ~25 S. ment occupations, for new 1 man law olttce Coast Hwy, La1una Br h. Cashion merchandising, 16 Cu ft frosUesa rdrig. Nice cood $12S. Kenmore washer wora good $2.5. gas dryer f r ee W/Wasber. 50-SC>lf. FRIGIDAJRE Fro8ttree. 2 dr, btm. freelel'. Pale Yellow, xlnt. cood. $80. 548·335'1 • --- -& escrow clerk trainee I~v. G~ i.kills c:.:.en-Telephone Tool Room Ei.per'd 10 the field licydu 8020 ti.al. Will ~ram legal. H Sales· Earn lo $20,000 +. necessary to qualify for ••••••••••••••••••••••• nee. No Cnng~ benefits 11 Locations Orange Co proper credentials. Call BIKF!:s. glrls 26" Wards 3 Salary S600 mo. lo i.lart. & LA. Great bent:'f1t~. Capistr11no Laguna ROP spd. gd cond. $30. Wards 833-0ll}3 btwn 9.5. security & rapid adva!l· 496-3ll8 forfurther info. 20" 3 spd airla, w /hl·rise Service Station Alle n-cement. Call Republic -.----.------handle bars, ban ana dant, exper'd. Day & Dlstrlbutora, Inc. Mr. Wa1t~s & K.ilc~en Help, seat, xlnt cond. $35. Eves. Full & p/time. Ap-Roy, 714/834-9088. $2.SO.~ hr + tips. Must 831-2551aft.6pm ply, Shell Station, 17th & --apply. in per~on, 3·4pm. Irvin NB Original Pina, 2121 Boys green 10 spd bike. e, · Telephone Sales Balboa Bl, NB t60. Good cood. Service Sta. Attendant. YOU DON'T ...;.,_ _____ , 968-0723 exper'd. Full or p itimc HAVE TO WAITRESS, over 18, day Apply Arco Stution. nth ST•MD 0 .._. shift. Apply, al\4pm, San WldiftC)Maten.ea8025 "' " Clemente lon, 12S Ave ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~lrvine,C.~--YOUR HEAD Esplandlan.SanClem. Used Lumber. 4"x12"x18' Service Station wanted TO FIND ---:---(22), 3"xl0"x16' (4 l. (2) Full & p/timc Some A GOOD JOI' WAITHESS, no exp. nee. 2"xlO"xl4W' (432) T T · Apply 30242 Crown .. ~~ • exper. op wages + Time·Ufc Libraries has Valley Pkwy, Lag. Nlg. brackets (26),v-n-0878 comm & vac pay urter 1 b 1 l I th r· t · yr. Apply, Carey's a ~o u e Y . e in~s mam·Spm) Cots 1035 Chevron, 604 S. Coast p/ume ules JObs availa--••••••••••••••••••••••• ble in Oranae Co. No Welder jPrecfsioe Hwy, Lag. Bch No phone door to door & no pre· S 11 ds .bard PERSI~NS Champion calls. ma co. nee b&ood line 8 wks r are PIXAnsw.rS.rY. dynamic individuals CLERKS w/(Alllf. R.E. lic. to work Varied shifts. Exper. in Cerritos, Whittier. keyboard ability Is req'd. 64.5-7950 Serv Sta Help needed Im· IC you arc the one~all ---------i med. Full or p/t. Apply, ssure tactics._ We use a working, dedicated smoke color. $200. ruce easy fnendly ap· worker. Call Carol, 5S9«i63 Wed-Sat proach & our reputation 581·3830. • · pref'd, but will train. Long Beach, LA & San UTOTEM Good co. benefits. Occas • wknds a must. EOE Diego. No exper. nccess. Con•enlettc• Markets Sal to SOOO. Xlnt growth 646·8000. potential. Al50 Fee Jobs. Positions ope11 tst. 2nd & Call Carry, 540·6055, 3rd s hifts in San PBX OperatorTrainec Clemente & Laguna l lllVI A Di-! C:o;c,lal Personnel Agen· Beach. Other area:. have .. ., .. ., cy. 2790 Harbor Blvd, Highly geered firm look Costa Mesa. openizl&a also. No ex per. ing for cheerful person ---------.. req'd. Apply at any of for lake 11ction pos. Call · ---' ourslorea. Susan, 848·1288, Dennis & 2S88 Newport Blvd Denn Is Person n e I RICEPTIONIST Costa Mesa 843-7702 Serv1ce of lluntington Do you Uke workln1 wUh ------- Beach. 16168 Beach Blvd, people? We are looking lETAIL Sit.US Ste 121_. _ _ for a well-groomed in· PEST CONTROL TECHNICIAN .. Steady job for riA;ht person. No exper. nee. Profit sharing & group health. Apply. Wed. 8·12. Lloyd Pest Control. 5GG E. Uyer Rd. SA PHARMACY TECH MJr drug c ha in. Newport Bch. exp. pre C'd. Ty pl nil req 'd. 50 wpm. 40 hr wk. Retail Clk. member. Ask for K. Hyder or P. 0 'Connor. btwn8&5PM 642-2211 Prac. Nu.rae. wknds for eldttly lady on Balboa Penin. 832·5882. dlvldual with a good Sales woman needed for personality to greet the gour met food store 10 publlc and work our Cost a Mesa. Call for switchboard. This full _!_P_pt_. ~9282 __ _ lime position requires SALIS some light typing at 45 su•,LEM~ ... T wpm. Please t":lll ~ ..,... Personnel for an appoint YOUR INCOME ment SSSS SSSS WILLIAM HARVf:v p•aTTIME Santa Ana 714/835 2422 "' Equal Oppty ~mpl M t F TELEPHOMIWORK HOUSEWIVH COLLIGI STUDENTS Recept·F1lght0fflce Guaranteed Hou rly Onwcrd & Upwwdl Versatile lndlv. can Wage Plus Bonus. 5 :30 chmb to great heights in pm to l :lO pm. Call 646-4223 or com" lo 250 E . fun scheduling pos. CaJI l7thSt.. Coeta Mesa. Carrie. 833-2700. Dennis --------- & Dennis Personnel SALESPERSON Service of trvtne. 2082 Ex_pr deslred, but not re· Preseer, combination Mic_he_l~_D_r_. quiredforJewelryStore . wool & silk. Immediate ---------1 Resp person, full time . opening. 499·1985 30846 S RECEPTIONIST NB/CM a rea. 548-3270 Coast Hwy .. S. LaJ!uno Weekends Lt. typing <Alpha Beta Shopping l :30To5:U ~!l_te_r >_. -Ask for Mrs. Johnson Pnnting CAMIRAOPR. Coldwt41hnk•r 644-9060 Exper. w/a Walzber11: or ---------•! Receptionist: good typlna skills. 768· 1222 Ask for Nancy ---------· RECEPT!CLERK. Nwpl Bch. Jl1(1h quality brokerage & consullmf! r1rm, de· s1re11 mature per11on to be recept. 50% or the lime. & to perform clerical SAl.ES.ADV!llTISIMG IH TOURIST GUIDE PUILICA TIOM $425 to S 1275 wk Commissions PLUS ex- penses on trade out plan PLUS renewal accounts. Complete tra1nin1. 3.5 Yean out.aide sales ex- perience necessary. Protected territory in Orange Counly. Nuarc CalT\er& pref'd. Must be uble to make hall tones. Exper req'd to strip for 19' ~ x 2.5' 2 presses. as well a11 smaller presses. Mu~t br able to develop :i ~ plutes Good ro. benefits 4 Day wk Apply. Na tlonal Systems Corp .. 4361 Birch St, NB. <Near OC Airport l EOE. Cu net ions 50% or the MR. LIHDSA Y Printing time. Good ty ping skills 12fll 42'·6763 PRISS OPR. are required as well asi--------- $10,500 low + COIMt + Cor Int 'l comm unlcatlona Daphne Jett. 586-7300 990 ECstHwy, NB ----•SECRETARIES• SALES PEOPLE for new Draper's store opening In L eisurl' World. Laguna l11llb area. Must be exper. in ready -to -we a r . sportswear or :.hoes. Cull Mrs. Douglas, 9:30am lo 5:30pm . Drap~r ·s Corporate Oflicei., ('710540-1904 Legd-Gen'Ml.E. SHlrPIHCi CLERK Employers Pay All Fees Exper. desired. but not Liz Reinders Agency req'd. Will train Irvine 4020 Birch St. Ste 104 area. Ca 11 for a ppt. NcwPort Beach 833·8100 540-i639. EOE . Call for appt/estab '65 SECRETARY /SALES J::ntr)·level, Mag Card <will tratn ). Xtnt typ1n g req. Newporter Inn. Call SHIPPING & RECEIVING Costa Mesa St11tioners, 270 E. 17th St. CM . 8:30·5:00 Mon-Fri. Apply in person 10-12. is number 1 In the busl· -Dogs · 1040 ness. We offer a base We need SO people who are ••••••••••••••••••••••. salary+ a commission & at leas t 10 lbs over· AKC Poodle puppies \iny a great bonus plan. weight. Call Ms. St.one at t.oy all shots ' There is excellent money 751·9175. We can tell you ' ~ on the job + the at· how to lose pounds & ------~- mosphere is ca:.ual & eam money at the same Mini Sclmauier, AKC, run. Try 11 Job you'IJ en· time. femal e, 3 mos old ;oy for a chenae. We -----------Forced t o ael l. Ph have 131 Part-time shins Window Cleaner & Carpet Ml-416S & Full·Tlme Is, of course, . Cleaner Helpers. Nice•--------- available. Our slat! peo· area.~ofhoun. Must Gordon Setter Pup . pie enjoy ucellent t.Uepn*inwork &self. female. AKC Champion. benefita lncluding health 640-27~ ------64Z-8327 _______ _ Barbara Bartos (71 4 l 644·t700Ext536. E.O.E SPRAY PAINTER ·• & life insurance· Woman over 40 yrs. Com· YeUow Lab, AKC, 8 m o. • Try It YOll11 bo interviewing & relier old, 63 lbs, beautiful. SALESPERSON --~-~-----HELPER P/llme. Approx 30 hrs SKretory-H.tp! 18 Yr or older. no exp. per wk.Muslbel8.Av11il Business & Financial nee. $2.75 p /hr to start. to work eves & wknds. Cons u I l . desire s Must have cur. 768-8749 Exper. w1pipes & tobac-versatile, capable ----------· co helpful, but not nee. person. Contact Ray. Don't drop the ball! Get a Apply 1n person t o: 979·7919or546-8640 jobw1thalow·costDaily Tobacconist, Inc. 7777 • Pilot Class1Cled Ad. . &:ll~~r A "!:!.I.:!:_ ___ Want Ads Ca 11642·5678 Phone 642·5678. --------- Like It! on phones for nurses r e· S 1 o o . 5 5 6 • 8 8 3 8 GIVEUSACALL gistry, F /time. Must cves/wknds For A Personal lnt.ervw work wknds & flex. hrs. 1045 833-8095 Refs. nee. Call AM or Free to You TIM E·LIFE eves 646-40'71. ••••••••••••••••••••• • • LJBRARIES ---Retriever, m ix, 6m os Women wanted fo r ttttectr aJ eeds f. Equal Opp Emplyr m /r housecle~nlng service. rectioo .• e:~ n a Full, P /time. $3.20 hr Must ha v e own Twokitt.ens8wks.old transportation. 559-0327 557.3795 Black Lab, fe m : approx 2 mos. loves kids. . 631-0323 "768· L5S6 Exper. on Davidson 700 previous office exp. Perfector press. Must be Startlng salary ll800 per consclenUou• & produc· mo. w /xlnt fringe t1on minded tndiv. Quall-benefits. Call La Verne \)'is Important. Good co. _Sc_h_aa_r !!_!14-642-M67 benefits. 4 Day wk. App. firm seeklnt aoat orient· mi-111'.~~ed penon for lucrative pos. Call Ray, 848-1288. Dennis & Dennls Person· ne1 Stnlce of Huntlntton Beacl!.181• Beach 81\ld, Jy, National Systems . Corp.,4361 BirchSt, N.8 Don't ¥ive up the ship! <nearOCAJrport) EOE. "Lla\' ll In cla.Mlfled. _________ 1 Ship to shore result•! &G-5118. sa.w. NODUCTIOM COHTROLSUPERV. Help Wanted 7100 HtlpW..tecl 7100 Re•ponalble for p lan-••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dini. achtdullng, • con· Vol ol all producUOQ ao· tlvttlel. Muat be famlllar w/EDPmt•ma. STACOSW1TCH INC JJ» Baker Costa Mesa 14t-J041 F.qual ()pPof' Employer PIODUC'nON TaAIMU Rubber bOM produda, l rvlD• aru . Call for .-.M).la8EO.& Coreer lxclte•"' Ive you o per.oq who-tikts peopi.? bi~ • helpif19 customers? I• not ofroid of hotcf.wOl''k1 Wo.Jd find sellinq footweor and oec.uories in ~ sl0ft$ lritere$t~ and thollenQinq7 Would you Gke o ,ob with Qood wogH ond b.nefilS Old ~ room based on ob"lity and p.rform:>nce? 1 ·. BARWICK DATSUN "'·"' lu.1n l q11 11 11111 831 -1375 493.3375 WE BUY CLliHCARS &TRUCKS CONNELL CHEVROLET 'Sl. Austin·Healey Sprite. new clutch, all ori1, re- cent valve job, $850. 5.SN814 aft 5PM IMW 9712 ••••••••••••••••••••••• SADDLEBACK BMW COMEIHASEE THE AU MEW 630CSJ HOW!!! COMPLETE IODYSHOP HOW OPEN SADDLHACK V AWY IMPORTS 131-2040 495-4949 CREVIER $1 ST AHOADWAY SANTA AMA 835-3171 TltE U~TIMA'n DRIVING MACHIM( 1.828Harbor Blvd. •USED IMW's* . 1972DATSUH COSTAMESA '773:!jHspd491RKS PICKUP 546-1200 '743.0CpeS/R 7461.WB With rebuilt ttans., mags -WE--P-A_Y_T_O_P·-00-LLA--R-I '76 2002 4spd S/R 401PDP & in excellent condition! FOR TOP USED CARS 'Ell2002, 4sp. Air. ZKGl.33 (19'103). FOREIGN, DOMESTIC '73 3.0CS. 4spd. 220KMT SalePriced-$1660 orCLASSICS '76 3.0si 4 spd S /R MIRACLE MAZDA Ir your car is extra clean 5~~ 0.. Sundays 2150~~5Bio~,C.M . seei~~IUICK 292SHarbor Blvd. 1962 Ford Pickup, 6 cyl, rack,&box, ·~2Sll8ob Vans 9570 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .. Costa Meaa 979.2500 TOP · DOLLAR .PAID FOR CLEAN ~ 1A83'> BE AC H B L VD HUNTING TON BEACH 8·l2 7'81 S·\O·O·l4 ;> 1011\SO\ ,~SO\ • LINCOLN-MERCURY ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST .$ Sales-Service-Leasing Roy CarYer,lnc. Rolls koyce BMW 1540 Jamboree Newport Beach 64G-6444 '76 2002. BMW, 14,000 mi. Xlnl. air, sunroof, mell. slick, mags, $7700, ~1 9720 ••••••••••••••••••••••• DRIVEA . LITTLE ... SAVEALOT . SKOPlcCOMPARE BARWICK DATSUN "ill' 1.1•1 I lj' • ' ' 83 1-1375 493-3375 NEWPORT DATSUN · . I ... ....... •• ,....... Aaltol. I .. art•cl .......... tiM A.toa, 1Mpori9cf ~-. ·~~ •• • Alltoa, UHd • W!dne!csay, Ju!} 'Z7. 19T7 * DAIL y PILOT •• ... • ••••••••• ••• • •• • •• • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • •• • • •• • •••••• ••• • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • --~=;:;.t.1.~;,c..:::.:....:.::.:..:__ __ ...;.; ___ _!:~;.:_::~:.!..~~~ o.t.. 9720 .._. 97Z ..._. 9731 lolaaoyu 9756 Volvo ,9772 Chrysler 9925 ~.Uhd ...... UMd UMd ....................... ··············•········ •···•······••·······••· ••••········•·•········ ..........................•.•••••.••••••.••.•.••••••••.•....................•••....••••.... C•t• 260 % • .. ..... ;;;-;;;:.;·.... '71 PISTON SNOIN £ •1 DEALER IN U.S.A. .. Volvo Wa1. Stlckahltt. 70 Chryaler 300, .• dr, run ...... 9940 Pealfec . ,,,, v.,. 9'74 ...aftakulher•blue IMCOUf'I Mb1tr ataUoD wa1on. ROY Sl7SO. pwr, A te. tovlo1t1 ;&'a•••t,••w••••••••i•t••••• ... •••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• * FM .._ ....U. • -~ -+• , roo rark ., radlala lots ol car ror • • .. •• new HATCH ., T _.. M4y Ii map' I•--•Jil/hl ate 2,.• ~POU 4·d,r, red, ~ CARVER CallUO.IZM. malnt. Road Handtler eottl"~c AMI/~ x n lt7'PONTIAC VIGA 76 • xtru. ,." • •"-Pl detk 6 vfl'>' k)w AM /nl c....U.. 111"· ROlLS·ROYC£ '72 1800~ Sport Wan. aooo. e7u179 tlr" 6 lilrak .. , orlt AreW. d ~a IAC" G :::f.i ul .... mbtl. <..aNRll> in,to~aedwte«, ,_..,,.,..._. Xlnt cond. $5100. A ownr. OQ11-. m.1162 11:100 actual mllu. D.EMO. 5 speed trans. S.Pttc.4-IJHO mmt NU. tlSOG. F1ui· =~~ ... ,.. Claaalc, P /P. (1)870-7480 dQt AUC.OCUUc, pwr. steer· al r con d . , e t c • *41AC&.IMAD4 blt.'4.WOU CowtfMlllal ttJO lDl•brakes -wlndow1. (e,,QSflSS2). WasSl79S. '10 lla&H.11 UCI, 4 1pd, ...... deck.low .... -.st1 ma llaltlor lvd c Ill (lOSlD SUNDAYS '70 Volvo l4S·S $1900. • ....................... Ford w.~. •.ooo ml, AJl./111 •t.ereo tape,· tilt OHL y $3291 lllO 8 .. • · \. ----Radials, radio, euto. '73 MARK JV, loaded. ortc OWllt. New Ur ... WhlMl•rallywbeels.,EZ 641-1700 ........... 9740 Teyota 9765 Wfn. 703~2 Poinsetta X1nt. cond. Priced for batl, AC, SSOO. dW1M t.enm-0.A.C. 1 yr. put1 HOWAll>Cllewo&.t •••••••••••••••• ••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ave, CdM. aale. ~9134 evs. • labor service polley Dove 6 QuaU Sta . • Lease is C.Olla Delulle, air, U..Coa. ft41 anll. (278NRS). Auto NEWPORT BEACH Mew. UMCI radial•, dtfoc1er, xlnt '71 · 144 aUck, new eng & eor.ette 9f JJ •••••••••n•••••••••••• Oroter'• price 1a llJ.0515 _ ~ '?75· 830-8748 tranamisa1on, xlnt cond, ....................... lt75 MAU IV OH&. Y $5195 ..,, VEGA. 30,000 miles. OYJl 100 '71 Celie•,' a~ed. air PP.Beatofr.4lM-4087 lt71COtVml Everyextraintbewodd MAIRS ttoo CaJt e•~s & MBCIDIS cond. lllnt cone( sisso. 1968 VOLVO 2 Tops. J11ame red wttao lnclUdln1 a burcler AUTO CEHTB ~837-3783 OMDtSPl.AY 628-9348 eva. SEDAN interior. Automatic, ab alarm! Extra nice! lCZ:SBaterSt.,C.11. ltJICHEVY u---ofa-ro"' cond pwr 1teerhir ~Pa).Foraaleaton· "blkeutolffarWBl ...__.. "" "72 Toyota Coron.a Mark 4 speed with factory air AMJF'M radio. chrome ly ~. Cort Fox Leu· 540.9 I Of YEGA AUTHORJZ 0 II, great cond, $1295 . cond. Not many left! wire wheels. Wboleaale lq. Call AutomatJc, alr eond. & lnlillCttWw '77 MERCEDESDEALER 873-7298 <BYl\&40). bluebook·$6SOO · re· 645-3661 only M.000 roiles. Extra Ho111o.1D-.. C e2Mancbester, ----~Pric~$1760 tall·$806S. (839MVG>. , . ~ 9970 clean! {06300). n ·"' arS au12e:a.7~a5r0k '75 Celie a GT. AM /FM MIRAC&.E MAZDA Our price is ea Lincoln, 2 dr, $47S. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 5a19 Pnced-$Z t 60 ....... y ~ • ~P~~:~ini cond. n50HatborBlvd.,C.M. ONLY $6671 Mechanically xlnt. '6STBird. Xlntbody& up· MIRACLE MAZDA 1S Dal.amt 8210, hkhbk, ~,,. ... air l.'Olld, lllnl cocxt.. szaoo. m-3366 ToC ...... Prom! OnlheSant.aAnaFwy 645·5700 MAaqUISYOLYO 5S7.Q6l bolstery. Runs good. 21JSOHarborBlvd.,C.M. UNIVERSITY '67 MB~ both tops, '77TOYOTA eorou •. 2dr, ~ M~IONVIEJO '10Coupe,air,(\lllpw1', lm· SlOOOflrm.545-1202 645-5700 Oldl_.lle stereo FM, dark blue, 4 ~':r·~M/~ater:k, ~ UMd 131-2180495-1210 mac., s tereo, leath int., 1976T·Bl.rd.Loaded. •GTWagon,41pd,A/C. .._. c .. • <9MC spd, superb675·7903 ofr. 64&~sl • m ••••• .. ••••••••••••••••• loml,Al\5,646-4062 17,000ml. $7,000. lowner,xlntcood. $1500/ '72 MOZ. '8,000 ml, air, AM /ft"M, macs. xlot C'o nd. 540·U200ys ; TrllCks '70250C MERCEDES luld 99.10 Mcneridl 9947 S56-3l3l t.\ofr.642-1067 aft.6 28SOHarbor Blvd. $:iOOO Priva~Party 1974 TOYOTA ••••••••••••••••••••••• * * * ••••••••••••••••••••••• '68 T·Bird, xlnt cond, fullt--------- SS2.3JS6Eves. CostaMesa M0-9640 CALL675*11 CB.ICA lt7SWckReglll httyA.hnond '72Maverick,muataell,6 powe r AC stereo 9725 .., C C • U ~ Mertedea Benz ·280S. 13,861 ac\ual miles. 5 VB.aut.omatic,aircond., 2333SViaSanGabrlel cyJ, low mileaae . m.&450' ' ' PeoplewboneedPeopJe Rat 4 IVl Blue Metal c, low mi X\J'a clean sun· speed, air cond .• AM/FM full power. AM /FM 8 La1una Hills $1800/olfer.175-9098 That's what the ••••••••••••••••••••••• W'bt V·top, new clutch. ( • • stereo, vinyl root & track stereo, Ult wheel, Youar~~ .. w~~oC Mere-9950 '73full. MApwrRO~Ne~~nats .. ~ . DAILY PILOT ' 961 Fl •T850 New tires & brkes. Best roo .• new tir es, fully s pecial wheels. EZ custom int., vinyl top, two .. .--C•'""' -r .,. ..... _,.,., SERVICEDIRECTORY ~ olleroverS2300 1~2.9299 equip. Maple yellow t O C ••••••••••••••••••••••• ftrm.675-0970George lsallabout! · ·asOSPIDEll · J w /bamboo uph ol . &errs~ .A.·~ yr. p~rts ralJywheels &l3,000ac· (=i$1.S.OOvalie>,to '76 Monarch Ghia . COHYEllTllLE 1973HOHDA 833·9880 wkc\ays , o r n (~~%~> ~ ~y tual miles. EZ terms-roa. AM/FM, stereo, auto.--... New tlOO Alrtos.Mew 9100 A very c lean c ar! COUPE. Automatic with wlrnds&eves,6"'2·!M04 ~t~r's pricet5 · u 0 ~~:~~~~Y~:i~~~~a,!O~ lomLC~-~lley air, rull pwr, VC.. •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• <XDE437 >. mags. Very sharp car! ·~ Mercedes 280SL : '70 ONLY $3595 (953LPS). Auto Center's Aur4 ~ug l3 ::::,u1. $6800/bet ofr. •----------------• SmePrfce,d-$1460 (t4UtVD). Mercedes ~L. See to N•letS pricels AnahelmConvention .. MIRACLEMA1DA Salerriced-$1970 apprec.536-5006 AUTOCENTER OHLY$4.295 Center,800W.Katella 1972 Mercury, Marquis . 2l50HarborBlvd.,C.M. MIRACLE MAIDA .71 MZB 280SE Blue t42S BakerSt.,C.M. HAllHtS Tickets must be ex· Brougham, ' dr, all 645-5700 2150HarborBlvd.,C.M. · h blkeastofHarborBL AUTOCENTl!R changed for r eserved white, white vin top, 1 645-5700 w/wht int., 10 mt. $:)500. 540.9109 li2S8aker St ,C.M. seats at the Convention owner, very clean. 1971Fiat12AB sedan. 4-dr, 540-7730 aft.6PM 12 blk east of Harbor Bl Center ahead of time. Loaded. Fact air. PS, Radio. Gd cond. Jaguar 9730 '76 .so SL silver/black '7S Celica OT. 5 spd, air, 540.9109 Call 642-5678, Ext 333 to PB, radio, Pwrsplitaeat, 963-4607 ~·••••••••••••••••••7;• loaded, lnimac., low mi: FM/AM tape. Xlnt cond . claimyourtickel.s. Pwr door locks, PW, . . 75~~ XJ·6C. 8,000 mi s. Must ••II SlS 000 or as· $3800. Ph 5Sz.7080 adill 9915 * * * cruise control. $2650 '70 Fiat 850, new lop/tires, $10 400/bs ( "" · • ac 751--0808 eves; 751·59•9 New •77 Monte Carlo! xlnt cond. Sl42S/Best of· • Caul :1~:3924 ~ Is e. 6 4 4. 4 8 7 2 lBll 4-spd, New paint, new •••••• • •••••••••••••••• '73 Corvette, Brown, fully dya. fer 559-6465 -----· -----mags, good engine. $950 ft equipped lmmac 32 000 __:. _______ _ Classic sedan '66. 3.8S. ,74 Mercedes 280 lo mi's IWS-S079 • · • '69 MERCURY Station '72 SPORT COUPE llhr. wood, wire whls. Lo Imma<'. $'9850. 551.1241 0~ Tri•_.. 9767 easy mi. Best offer over Wagon. Good cood. $700. S·s pd. mag whee l s, mi beauty $3900. 646·135S ~laf\ 6 ... .,.., S6()()() 64S.'3009or S4l-0885 968-9'73 AM /FM radio , dual.--. . ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1974 CADILLAC '74 Co ett 350 to b ---·------ pipes, blk vinyl h1.1rd-top, 72 XJ6 green w /tan m · ·70 TR6, AM /FM radio, COUPE DEVILLE rv e · au ' m Mntong 9952 l M k tr MG 9742 w /saddle int, fully••••••••••••••••••••••• canary yellow. Good con· e ri or· a e o er· yeUow w /beige int, $1850 · 1 d d lk p /P diUon. Askin" Sl950 or &12·599lor645-9794. ••••••••••••••••••••••• or trade for Ski boat or ? Ca~nolet top, Ult wheel. oa e ' new. · '&6 Auto 289 57 000 orig .. ---------MG Mid crwse control AM /FM 18500.968-1BlOaft.6pm ml i ~. xint cood. maJc:eoffer. 646-38~8.8fter Maida 9738 74 ert S24cJe~~h~rp, con· 661-1894 -----stereo with tai>e player. '72 VETTE Cust. body, $1.800. 831·1541 Spmor673-7l«an eave ••••••••••••••••••••••• v · · p y, '76TR714,000miles Green C496KZI J pearl whL Rag & hard msglorTammy___ ~8795 -AM/FM cassette. Days $.5488 top. Lots o( extras. Best '70 Auto tra.u, 302 en1, ·75 124 Spider. AM /FM MGA 1600, 1961. Rbll mtr 634·3811 eve, weekends ofr.overS6000.9S2·7478 s&;100 mi, orig owner, cass, alloy rims. xlnt & trans. Nu paint. Bst 847·2814 new paint, xlnt cond, NOW ONLY cond. $4300. 963..aao ~~1 Nabers sisoocash 839-4062 -----'76 TR7. u.~ mi, sun· Cougar 9933 '74 FUI. t Wagon mdl l"~ 2150 H•__.. •"-cl root brown cstm paint ••••••• • ••• ••• ••••• •••• 57 Mustang, 6 cyl, auto,.-. .. -....-... ' ~. 1W1IOr _... MGI 9744 Perl cond. Must sell: ca<1•11 PS, reblt trans, clean,1-~-.·;.-auto, air, lug. rack, Cotta Mesa 645-5700 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 752.5720 I ac. 1974 MERCURY econo, $1095/olr. PP,1•~~'1:.:; ... " .... -.r $2350.673·~ COUGAR Xll7 21.M29-2968 :!;~~ xlnl. cond. 6000 TR7'74. XJ;t cond. Blue. 2600 H,trbor Blvd. Blue m.Uit w/matchlng ___ ...._ _____ 11•,. ,Autos, Used Alltol, Used ...-. ,,,...,._. AM FM P/P .,.200/b t (O\IJ Mc~.1 540·9 I 00 · ri A to . i '65 Mustang 289, 4 apd,1•::!".o..-><.111..-••f•••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9TH271aft6PM · • . ... s tnte or. u matic. a r . . _ot_r_. 998_·_07_10 ____ '!!!~~~!!~~~ cond., pwr. steering & super clean. Runs 1reat . l VW CollY.rtiblH to chooH from '70 1111) c.n-.t. 4 ... r.d, 1-. lf70U S25t5 '70 llllJC.wri. 4 .,, yelow. #7061 ...... S25'5 '741111) eciw.tt1. 4 •• olr. lf70U .......... SAVI l IC• iibUJ\ Ghlas from $26'5 '72 K....-GM9#7010 ....•.....•.•..• Uttl '721l-GMeff50ll ................ UM5 '73 IC....-GM41 #7062 ..•.......•.•... SJ2tl '73 IC.,... GWe #7044 •...........•... Sl2tS .! brakes, stereo radio, _$875:....__· _497_·3_195 ____ _ ep.I 9746 Yolks t7JO '76 CPE DIE VILLE vinyl top. Wholesale ,67 MUSTANG ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wogeft Lo miles 640-6454 blueboolt-$3000; re· _.,5 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------tail·....,100. (~EB). Ou.r -· '71 Opel GT, reblt eng, .. ........., 831M986 ~Firm. 673-7l03 an POPTOPCAMPER. t975C~D•VlU. priceis SPM '76 VW. AM·FM stereo. Fully loaded, low ONLY $3095 SUPERSPECIAL! Lo mi·llke nu. Must sell. ...;leage, vm· yl top. Ex· ""'0 PS PB lo mi ma"e , __ ... _ 9750 .,A.,~..-. 631·1""A .. u MAR"'UIS TOYOTA ~· . . . • • ~ v-ac...._., ""'" ceUentcondition. $6500or ""' offer. 552·1772; 67~ •••••••••••• •• • • • • •• •• • best ff 879 7075 MISSION VIEJO 57 SPEEDSTER XLNT COND. $7300. 640-0975 '69 automatic VW Bu~ 0 er. · 831·2880495·1210 69 Grande. great car , Excellent cond. $1200. '76 Cad SevilJe. Has ever· ---must sell, bestotrer. Eves. 645·3902 ____ ything 19M mi. Mint Dodge 9935 968·7438 -1975 VW Rabbit, 4 dr, ~~~ $11.500.~640·73l4 ••••••••••••••••••~•••• Sacriflc~ Sale! ~~. op1~ m ~·· ~ M / I'.' M. Cad 11 Seville, si2.soo. Lo ~sry °1o~ ~~~a~~in~~~ ·~Y~~t.!~8·:asi~.st~~o~ Late'75Pors le9I4:rM ~ ~.:1o'ia s. stick, mi, loaded. Spotless.PP. cellent condition. Must 962-0722 s~ereo ~asl o ~' eJ. · _____ 714·870-7480 ;213-694·1053 sellthisweekatlowBlue '70 MUSTANG Classic, 1: ean. us serv ce · ·oovweua w/ta pe nu en" -------Book. Call evenin°s Bestofr Call ssz.0042 ._ .. ·68 Coupe de Ville, 53,000 • n ,ooo ml, xlnt cbnd. New · clu. upol, brks, dist, gen, 631-3474. P ch d b 0 7 f mi, StllS. or bst ofr. P.P. ---------tires, 20--2Smpg. $1.950 or 1961 ors e, new re at t + . $1 o o o r . 548·8781 (9am-5pm > '73 Wag. 9 pass. A·l cond. bestofr. &44·146f paint, new lnt, xtra &12·2978 Lo ml. Nu tires. loaded. ------=----• sharp. Runs great. $3900, , VW J 1972 CADILLAC P/P 67r ..... 31.,A.,7390 '72 Mustang. PB, PS .. AC. PP. 646-6187 6S Ba a, new clutch, J",_, .....,. Good condition bralces, reblt eng. $1300. COUP& DEVILLE 840-2:24S or 968-1648 '72 914, New tires,.brks, 847·2282 Fully loaded. Needs •'77 ~ Y•• AM /FM. Lo mpg's, xlnt : . paint & seal covers but •1-1 OOs Okkmobh 9955 cond. $4200/bs t ofr. 63 BUG. Mags, new int otherwise looks great & cu,,t.om eicterior paint & 67J.Q30 AM /FM, reblt eng, nds runs great! (1071-'PE>. A mags custom interior. ••••••••••••••••••••••• body work. $500. 67S·4584. bargain at only $1895. paneling:. fl carpeting. '59 Porsche 16005, new Cort F Le sl d C II .,. __ t--....1-· b k valves/radials. clean. '74 VW 411. 4 Or. auto. ox a n,.. a ...... , s ~u1g, pwr ra e, N diats & b k Xlnl 645-366 I sun roof. AM·FM stereo 1975 OLDS -... No. 467968/803 · t5495 $3500. Trade? 494-2130 ew ra r s. cassettew/4Spkrs. 10,000 cond. $1895. 84Hll24. l""'"'Co 0ev·11 · '68 Porsche 912. Green. s "°"'Gooc:tupe d 'l' 1 e. rru. S0,000 mi. warranty. CUTUSS SALON Finished In bronze w /tU interior. AM/FM stereo, pwr. steering·brake1· .,,1~~,,,;;fr'~itl"Jj!>H;h\:; I J VW luSff & Campers from $2&95 '75 c...,.170SSlSI .................. Sl,JtS '75 lus #5043 ..•..................... S4,tt5 '75 l11116lSMWttl ............•.....•. S4,6tS '71f IC_.. ht llJ6KYDI .••.•••••.••.... S4,4t5 '741..,ntni•lllSLFtl ................ S4,6'5 '73 1111 flHC YCI •.....•...•...•••..••• SJ.ttl '7l ltn1291MJUI ...................... Sl,tfl '73 luslS63HJHJ ........•...........•. U.IH '13ltn1677JJKI ...................... Sl,tfS '70 c....-177H9Hl ....•..••......... Sl,lt5 '70 ltn 171 ""'-1 ...................... S216t5 '70 c...-1164IOJ1 •..........••....• SJ.Otl '6' c.,._tYWTll61 .. , ............... U ,7tl 25 ... todllH .... 'U Y'W .. #7011 ...................... SIMI '14 ..,tn«.9CI ............... , ...... s1.n•~ ., 4 lltll #?n' ............................. "' '72 .... ~ •••••••••••••••••••••• SI.ft• . 21 MlntoclauN,,_ spd. Gd cond. Orig '74 VW West;>ba~an Pop· con 1 ion Brand •ew condition owner. $4900. Ph645-4751 top Camper, air, elec. _ 545-1291 aft.6PM $8800 Invested will sell r~Crlg, propane slv, CAD'74CdV. 2.dr. loaded, for balance owing $'7900. '&I Porscbe358SC. Sliver. AM /FM cass. stere<?, AM/fM ater, wbt w/red S59-S8Sleves. Gd cond. S4SOO or best. xlnt cond. Low mi, int. Xlnt cond. Asking '84 Polara, almost reblt, Ph (714)875-f450 §.7S0.&44·9823aft. 7pm price §000. P/P. ~·9094 must self Imm ed. '75 914 1.8. AM·FM 8-trk, 'OT VW Bug. Must Sell. or751-1971 ~/bst ofr. 979-1342 orange, 21,000 mi. '6.500. Days call 835-3Sll. even 752·1726 '' 962-9528askforGin~er. '62 Porsche, runs good, '72 BUS Xlnl. cond. Camp good cond, S2SOO. 5524999 equip'd. Mich. Tires. all 6PM /wkndJ 12400. 673-6004 windows, bucket seats, vinyl top, air cond., cruise control. tilt wheel. Locally dr\ven car. (82BNJG>. ONLY $4995 MARQUIS YOl VO MISSION VIEJO 831-2880 495-1210 l DI• OAtl. y PILOT DEMONSTRATOR SALE!!! Huge Selection of 1977 Demonstrators On Sale Mow at Year End Close Out Savings! GREAT VALUES ON ··. FINE .USED CARS '74 SAAi 4 cyl. engine, automatic transmission. radio. heater. bucket seats. vinyl roof & power brakes (473KL YI · •75 CHEVY MOMTI CARLO vs. automatic. radio. heater. pcwer• steering. Power brakes. w/s/w tires. AM/FM radio. vinyl top & air cond. (262M1Gl s2995 '61 OLDSMOllLE v..a. automatic. air conditioning. powef steering. Power brakes. radio, heatet, whitewall tires. (652ELU) '72 "-YMOUTH BARRACUDA 6 cyl. engine. automatic transmission. radio. heater. bucket seats. coneole. vinyl top. w/sJw tires & air conditioning (261FUPJ 51695 '74 PLYMOUTH SUllMG v.e. autotnltlc. air conditioning, powe steering, power brakes. radio, heater whitewall tires, vinyl roof. (770LPG) ~ --- . . 76 MERCURY. COMET 6 cyl engine. automatic. radio. heater. oower steenng. oower brakes. w/s/w tires. custom intenor + extenor & air conditioning, (958NOK) .. SAVE NOW ' WITH CUSTOM CAR LEASING-•• LEASE THE ALL NEW CORDOBA AND VOLARE OR ANY NEW MAKE CAR, TRUCK OR VAN DIRECT AND SAVE! LOW COMPETITIVE RA TES. •• FOR INFORMATION AND PRICES CALL PAUL DEFAIUIS... 546-1934 DEPEMDAILE SERVICE YOU CAM COUNT OM WHEN YOU MEED IT! . ATLAS ~HRYSLER/PL YMOUTH SERVICE HOURS:.MOMDA Y THRU FRIDAY, 7:00 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M. SATURDAY 8:00 A .M. TO 5:00 P.M. '74 AMC AMIASSAl>OR V-8. automatic. air conditioning. Power steering. PoWer brakes. Power windows. AM radio with tape. heater. whitewall tires, Vinyl roof, tilt wheel. cruise control. (960JSl) s.2395 '77 PLYMOUTH FURY V-8. automauc. air cond1t1onmo. oower steering. Power brakes. radio. heater. whitewall tires. vlnyl roof. (790REGJ .. . . • • -. • . l •. I • Huntbagton Beaeh Fountabt Valley EDITION Afternooa N.Y. Stoeka VOL 70, NO. 208, 4 SECTIONS, 4A PAGES Arsonist Blamed an ta God, What 1l Night! • EDITOR'S NOTE: Wes Gallagher began his joumaliam COTHT oa p reporier in Louisiana m 1935, ccroered the European front in World War II and post-war Germany for the Asrociated Press. and went on to become president and general manager of the AP. He retired laat 11eor and moved to Santa Barbara. The fire came within SO /eet oJ the home he moved into last Octo-Oer, but left lhe house untOllched. By WES GAUAGHER ,~ .. _....~. SANTA BARBARA -Oh God, what a night! The fire started opposite my house, about a mile away on the side of the hill, in the early evening. As we watched through glasses, it seemed as thou~h the tanker planes fiying from the local airport and dousing it with chemicals would put it under control. But the planes had to stop because of darkness . A warm desert wind suddenly started gusting up to 40 mites an hour. It picked up the fire and spread burning embers over a four or fi ve-mile stretch in less than an hour. YOU COULD SEE THE FIRE leap a quarter of a mile at a time as is it swept up Eucalyptus Hill, dotted with homes worth $250,000 and more. The tall eucalyptus trees, dried out after months of drought, exploded into flame as though they were touched with small bombs. The fire then moved down toward the ocean, into the southern section of Santa Barbara, one of the poorer areas of the city. Firemen from 100 miles around had no chance to cope with t-he fl ames as the winds mounted to about 60 miles an hour, caused in part by the fire itself. ABOUT MIDNIGHT, THE FIRE crept down the mountain toward the Riviera section where I live. As names closed In on both sides, my wife and I decided to abandon the house. As we ptJlle(l out into Cqpejo Ro•~.our .c;ars .stoclted wjtb personal effects and clothes, we encountered 30 or 40 l'l)ot• 1ulo$, loaded with children, clothing, dogs and cats. One little &lrl was leading her white horse out of the fire area. Like almost everyone else in a similar situation, we 9rried away only some of the real(y valuable thin&a we bad. havtn1 raced through the house, scooping up clothes, jewelry, contents Of medicine closets. silverware. TREES BLOWN DOWN BY THE high winds blocked the road temporarily. A crew from the electric company arrived and sawed the trees into sections. Everybody pitched in to draw them out of the way, down the mountain. Having watched refugees from Germany to Vietnam, I never thought I would be one m yself and it ls a singularly unpleasant ex- perience. As we reached the downtown area and the Santa Barbara News-Press office, we could see the fire that swept into the southern part of the city start leaping back up the mountain which the city is built on as the wind shifted from the ocean. TIIE WINDS DIED IN THE early morning houts and the combined firefighting · r~es from many parts of Southern California gradually brought the blaze under control. I had to walk back into the area where 1 live because of blocked roads. I found my neighbor's house 50 feet away burned to the ground, but mine was intact. The fire had swept through around the knoll of the hill behind us and on the right side as well, but somehow, It left our house untouched. The threat remalned, however. As I came down the road, firefighting crews were trying to douse hot spots where fires still burned on both s ides of the road because they feared the Santa Ana wind would come again this evening. . Teachers Contract bike teachers are now asking but adlrdttl!d.:asrome:nt on UlarY Is claaet-U.anl:letwc!. ORANGE CO\JNTY, CALJFORNlA TEN CENTS LONE FIREMAN SILHOUETTED AGAINST THE REMAINS OF BURNING HOME IN SANTA BARBARA AREA Brush Fire Set by Arsonist Destroys Over 200 Expensive Homes In Exclusive Residential Section . 200. Expensive Homes Torched. SANTA BAltQARA <AP> ~:· Officials said an arsonist set the brush fire that raged down from the Santa Ynez Mountains today and- desitof:ed 200 e xpens ive homtt in this picturesque coastal community. City Fire Chief Rieb Peterson s aid he did not know how the fire was set, but said It was started within 200 feet of a 1964 blue that burned 78 homes in the exclusive, hilly residential area overlooking the downtown ahd Pacific Ocean beach area. One pers·on was arrested for looting but no other details were immediately av&Uable. Officially, the fire was still said to be out of control, but by mid· morning, it was apparent that progress was being made in knocking out hot spots. "We feel ve ry comfortable with it as it stands right now." s aid Santa Barbara County fire chief William Patterson. "It's not s preading and we·re trying to widen the inland fire line so that when the winds come up they won't throw anything across that line,·· he said. • Firemen were worried that the wind, wJUcb died down sbortt,- before dawn, would pick up agaln and whip the fire through the dO' brush and back Into areu that -escaped destrucliorr ear Her. Twenly-t~o peoP,le received FOURTH FIRE ONAMONDAY-A4 minor injuraes. Wh~ the fire began about 7 p.m. Tuesday nlgbl, bundreds of persons fled their homes in the northeast section or the city. less than one mile from the downtown courthouse-and about two miles from the Pacific. Shortly before dawn, the winds' shifted and blew from the sea in- to the fire, then died down altogether At first light, five bombers and two helicopters began dropping chemical fire re· tardants. The blaze b e gan in the Sycamore Canyon area and roared through the nearby Riviera section. one of the city's most exclusive residential areas whe re home values were estimatea to be in excess of $250,00o. By dawn, some of the residents b e g-a D ,.. t r n i tt a to neighb-orhoods . that were cbeckerboltd$ of destruction. Guttecthomes stood next door to houses that JVere untouched. While· chaotl~ conditl<llJS )Jre- v ailed in the mountain area,, u hundreds C1{ spectators tried to negotiate the narrow. billy roads. the downtown area was relaUve- ly quiet.. Aside from the neighborhood known a$ the Riviera. the flames licked into Sycamore Canyon and Monteeito and got as far south as the edge of Westmont College. Rather-than go to one of the seven evacuation centers set up by relief groups, many of the well-to-do people who fled before Tuesday's flames checked into the numerous motels or hotels scattered around the city. Anguished homeowners used garden hoses to wet down wood shingle roofs as fierce winds blew a storm of sparks and ashes ahead or the advancing flames, which could be seen more than 20 miles away. It was the fourth major fire in 13 years in Santa Barbara. The others were in 1964, 1968 and 1971. Firefighters had a difficult time reaclling the fire are~ because o( the winding, narrow roads that made it difficult for trucks to pass. In addition, large • crowds of si1htseers gathered alont the roads, further hamper- lna efforts to aet at the names. <See ARSON. Page AZ> 2,000 Apply For300]obs CHICAGO (AP> -The crowd of 2.000 s urged into a new supermarket hungry for work, not food. There were seven appll· cants for each job. "We're desperate." one black woman cried. "Desperate for jobs." · "l need thii job bad, .. Bernard Meeks declared. "I've been out of work for nearly five years.." This was Chicago's South Side on a day when 300 jobs, most of them part-lime and paying only $3.05 to $3.90 an hour, became a vailable. CAKI'ER SE1S NEWS CONFAB WASHINGTON <AP> -Presi- dent Carter will hold a news -=on· ference Thu~ay at 7:30 a.m. PPT. Spokesmen for the television netwOllks said no ·de- cision bad been r.eached as to whether the conference will be carried live. Wea&ller Patchy fog early Tburs- d a y mornine and low clouds along the beaches. Otherwise it will be fair throuah ~hursday with warm, 9'DUlY days. Lows tonight in eo.. Hl1hJ ln middle to upper 90s inland and mid·'JOs at beaches. ' IN819BT•D4Y . \.2 DAILY PILOT H /F w.ctneaday. July 27. t9n County ~iremen Lend a 118nd l ' 9}' AaTHUa a. VINl&L .................. " ftumbUn1 oul In the relative pre-dawn root. 11 flrt'fll(hUn1 t11"k force l~f\ Oranac County for the blaaln1 holut'ouat In Sanl11 Barbara today, u fearful authorllle c.lculated how lo handle Oranae Countyy'1 own critical fire dancer. Bllsterlng t emperuturt>b reachin1 aoovt.' 100 de1irec1 in In· 1and Or&nie County are expected ~o conUnu• at leaat throu(t\ Satur· day, u P•~hcd brushlol\ds slm· mer with tho relallv• humidity ft only'8percent The dcpurture of el1hl tlre trucks and their crewmen to help combat the march of the flre11torm threatening Santa Burbara further worried Orange County firefi&hting authorities toduy . Orange County Fire Depart· ment Captain Bruce Turbevllle ,. o.lly"l ......... Mllt SHADED AREA INDICATES FIRE-RAVAGED AREA Destruction In Santa Barbara'• Sycamore Canyon Lawyers Respond To D~ath Request By GARV GRANVILLE For example, the cross· oi 111e o.11v "''°' St.tt complaint filed on behalf of Dr. • Law}'.ers for a Newport Beach Alex coneedes that Mrs. Welday '. doctor ~~o ba~ refus~ t~ obey ( suffered a crippling stroke May a worn~ s. wr1~len ~1r~ct!~e to 4. 1976, and has been in a com· let her die with dignity say atose slate ever since. the d~tor doe~ not have l~e T h e r e s p o n s e a I s o legal nght to withdraw .the hfe acknowledges that, in 1972. Mrs. • support ~easures keeping the Welday "executed a written woman alive. • document" stating that. "No T~e la wyers respo~se to doctor is to take any measure Mane Welday s gua~di~ s plea whatsoever to artificially pre· for a court order directing Dr. serve or stimulate life in my Theod?re Alex .to let Mrs. W~I· body when it is ready to die." day die was filed Tuesday m "My reason is simple. I want Orange County Supe~1or Court. to die in dignity," Mrs. Welday In the response filed by at· said in her notarized 1972 af. torney William Garman. Dr. fidav\t. Alex denied that the 84·year·old As a result of that written woman's condition is termi.nal command the woman 's and th.a~ ~e is keeping her alive daughter, M~rie Leuck, earlier by art1f1c1al means. this month filed suit asking the In an interview Tuesday. court to order D r . Alex howeyer, Gar~an said the i~· to wi\hdrawtreal mentthatkeeps. sues involved in the right to d.1e the "permanently comatose, case go much deeper than d1f· paralyzed and blind" woman ferences of medical opinion on alive. Mrs. Welday's condition. That treatment purportedly · consists of keeping lhe stricken Hershey Bar Size Sliced HERSHEY. Pa. <AP> - Hershey candy bars are going to be smaller in a few weeks. and they might be more expensive as well. Hershey Food Corp. an. nounced Tuesday that it is reducing the weights of five standard candy bars by an average of 12.8 per. cent, the third welght·prlce change in 10 months. Harold F . Mohler, chairman of the candy company, said, "There is a distinct possibility that we may have to increase our prices with the result that our standard bar will have to sell for 25 cents or more in most retail outlets." OMlllOE COAST "" DAILY PILOT woman's vital signs going throu~h the administration of gluC<l6e, electrolytes, heart and blood pressure medication and other nutrients administered through a nasal tube ... In response to that complaint. Garman said the law is unclear as to what constitutes "'artificial life sustaining measures.·· ·'Certainly there is a dif· ference between Uie trealmeni that is keeping Mrs. Welday alive and the sophisticated medical equipment used to keep Karen Quinlan alive," Garman said. Miss Quinlan is . the young New Jersey woman whose parents won a court battle to have the machinery believed to be keeping their daughter alive, turned off. said today Jhat no da)'I otr, leav or vac:_.ttons have been eonceled but other emergency measures have been taken. "We have pulled in some of our fire prevention specialists to man trucks In case .... " Capt. Turbeville said in analyzing the crucial county fire situation. "Let 's face it," Capt. Turbeville said bluntly. "The danger right now is extreme to say the least. We are scared to I I death ..... ''We haven't had any fires here in the county yet in the current period. but we're sitting on a time bomb with devastating potential." He said the Santa Barbara blaze is a clear reminder of pre- cisely what can happen in some areas of Orange County that have recently become heavily populat· ed and lie adjacent to brush and timberlands. "Right now. we're in an or· ganizational s tage." he ex- plained of preparations being taken in the event a major blue s hould break out. And any blaze that occurs will be considered major at the very outset due to the criticaJ weather conditions currently existtna over most of California. Depletion of South land firelighting forces attacking the Santa Barbara inferno further in· A~WI ..... HAL LASSMEN STANDS IN FRONT OF THE REJAAINS OF HIS SANTA BARBARA HOME Hla House Waa Juat One of Many Deatroyed In the Fast-moving Blue f'ro• Page A J ARSON ••. Police said the,9" would arrest anybody who was not authorized to be in the area. Dennis Orbus, a U.S. Forest Service s pokesman. said the blaze was fueled by chaparral brush and eucalyptus trees. both full or oily sap. He said the fire started in the Los Padres Na- tional Forest and definitely was man.caused. The fire knocked out power in the city of 75,000 persons and emergency generators were be· ing used. County Eyes Park Site on Military Land By KATHY CLANCY Of .... 0.11, ...... "•" Orange County super visors want to find out if they can ac· quire part of the Seal Beach Naval Weapons Station for a west county regional park site. They asked county ofCicials Tuesday to study possibl e use of portions of about 1,200 acres of military land now being leased for farming. At the same lime, supervisors called for cost estimates for three other west county park possibiliUes including: -Land that could link Hunt· ington Beach Central Park to the Bolsa Chica marshlands. -A 166·acre Hellman Estates property in north Seal Beach near the San Gabrie1 River chan· net. -A OOO·acre parcel in Cypress which Cypress city orficials would prefer developed for in- dustry. The action followed a survey or officials from 12 west county cities seeking nominations foc full~re regional parks of 100 acres or more . Eltcepl for lhe four sites supel'Visors agreed lo study further, the surve1 turned up no a dditional posstbiliti~ large enouah for addiUon al oonsidera· Uon. We.tminster and Buena Park otflclals 1usgested a . former Oarden Grove missile base for a fu.., park. But supervisors re· Jecleij tbat au11estlon last fall, despite it.11upport by Supervisor Lauretce Schmit. The mlllUe bue is now bein& developed for Industry. Schmit. ln dJ~usslng the Seal Beach naval property. said the land now bein1 ·farmed is near the Garden Grove and San Ditto Fl'~•JI, maklnl tt easily ac· • cetlalble. - County olftclala HJd put eon· tact.a to aeqwre portlona ol UM land btv• .~n untuccesaful. Supervtton 1uacested coub of. " ficlal1 work wllb local con· 1reu men l n appro&clll n1 mlUt.aey lt8dera.; Rancho VielV Fate Gets Eye Tonight Whal to do with recently closed Rancho View School and an im· pending 30 cent lax rate increase for district homeowners will be topics for discussion tonight when Ocean View <elementary) School District holds a special study session. The public meeting begins al 7 p.m. al d1slnct offices, Beach Boulevard and Warner A venue. Huntington Beach. District officials last week said homeowners can expect a sub· stant..ial hike in the school tax rate because declinin~ enroll· ment has caused a reduction m state aid . Also. county hikes in assessed valuatJOns mean a further reduc· Ford Probe 'Unavoidable' WASHINGTON <AP> Charl es Ruff. a former Watergate special prosecutor who has been nominated for a key Cart.er administration post, says an investigation of then- Presidenl Gerald Ford during thel976 campaign could not be avoided. The Investigation involved al· legations that Ford used cam· paign contributions for personal purposes while he was a member of the House. lion in state school aid, district officials said. The potential rise in the Ocean View school tax rate would be from $2.77 0976·77) to $3.06 per SIOO assessed valualion. Rancho View School. 16940 B St., Huntington Beach. was closed by trustees this sprin& due to declining distriCt enrollment. Pos~sible options for the school's fate include selling or leasing the site, or upgrading it Cor use as new district business offices. 11lE PILOT AD SOW IT ALL "We sold everything in si_ght," are the nicest sounds heard LO the Daily Pilot classified advertising department. And those are exactly the words of a C06la Mesa man after he ran this ad : SALE '70 Datsun truck, McLane 7 blade mower Wilshire sit down pwr sweeper. '61 Ford Falcon, Kohler 12 HP reblt, · 1 d esk. misc. equip. xxx·xxxx. C.l\1. If you want to ''sell everything in sight," caJl the Daily Pilot classified advertising, 64.2·5678. creases the severity of the sllua· t1on faced LO the Orance County region, Turbeville said. He said about ' a.m .. fire engines from the county ~ de· partment's headquarters in Orange; its Olive station, and the cilie$ ol HunUnaton Beach, Seal Beach. San Clemente plus three State Division of Forestry units were dispatched to Santa Barbara. The additional aid was sent un· der the county's Office of Emergency Services Task Force plan to help other a.aencles in ex· tremely irave disaster situa- tion$. Spokesmen for the U.S . Weather Service say the current heat wave is here to stay at least through Thursday and speculat- ed there will be no relief before Sunday. Searing temperatures in the south county have reached the point al which county Ciremen al the Laguna Hills Station plan to throw every piece or equipment at an>' outbreak of fire. This includes calling in so- ca1led borate bombers to drop fire retardant chemicals on spreading flames. Firemen classify fire dangers on the basis of temperature. humidity and wind velocity, by low. medium and high hazards. Normally in summertime. a medium hazard level is imposed around noon and today it was in effect at 8 a.m .. with the critical high danger or Red Flag Situa· lion anticipated by noon. Undeveloped property sur- rounding Laguna Beach has been closed to trespassing for abo'll six weeks and police are getting especially tough on enforcement due to the fire hazard. Orange County Air Pollution Control District officials imposed a Stage One smog a1ert over the entire county, except for breezy San Clemente. Air conditioning systems in public buildings -those that have them --were humming away at full capacity as the heat grew today to its noonday and late afternoon peak. Residents of inland areas - those who had a day off or work nights -thronged county beaches, as long.chilly seawater temperatures finally began to rise. Newport Beach lifeguards said they reached the 67·degree mark Tuesday, but lifeguards in Hunt· ington Beach said at least a low surf and calm seas kept their • rescue count down as swimmers cooled off. Police· Hunt 4 Children LOS ANGELES CAP> -Police are still searching for fou r children miss ing since last Wednesday after a fire gutted the home of Mrs. Earlene Williams in the Athens are of Los Angeles. Neighbors said the children, Mrs. Williams' three dauihters and a neighbor boy, were in the home at the time of the fire. Meanwhile James Williams. 53, was arraigned Tuesday on charges of strangling his estranged wife.. whose charred body was found in the burned-out house. { Irvine t:OIT ION VOL. 70, NO. 208, 'SECTIONS, _., PAGES Arsonist * * * SANTA BARBARA (AP> - Tht> scene at the five-point in-tersection below Sycamore Can· yon was one or chaos, despera- tion and heartbreak as residents either fled their homes or tried to get to them in the face or this city's worst fire in years. Standing in the center of the jammed intersection Tuesday night was police officer James Carroway, who battled motorists frantically trying to return up twisting roads to their en- dangered homes while others dashed for their lives down the narrow canyons. · "Park it and walk. Park st and walk, .. he shouted. • • ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNI A ets ~ Today's ~loshag N.Y.Stoeks I WEDNESDAY, JULY 27, 1977 TEN CENTS 1 SB Blaze Hits 250 Houses SANl'A BARBARA (AP> --Officials said an arsonist set the brush fire that raged down from the Santa Ynez Mpun ta ins today and destroyed 200 expensive homes in this picturesque . coastal community. City Fire Chief Rich Peterson said he did not know how the fire was set, but said it was started within 200 feet of a 1964 blaze that FOURTH FIRE ON A MONDAY-A4 burned 78 homes in the exclusive, hllly residential area overlooking the downtown and Pacific Ocean beach area. One person was arrested for looting but no other details were immediately available. • Yet despite emergency flares on the street and the huge traffic jam some drivers ignored the of- ficer's warnings and managed to sli p through. Shortly after 10 p.m .. three hours after the fire began, Car- roway asked bystanders for help. A number of them volunteered and were immediately dis- patched to Sycamore Canyon to assist in the evacuation. LONE FIREMAN SILHOUETTED AGAINST THE REMAINS OF BURNING HOME IN SANTA BARBARA AREA Brush Fire Set by Arsonist Destroys Over 200 Expensive Homes In ExclusJve Residential Section Officially, the fire was still said to be out of control, but by mid- morning, it was apparent that progress was being made in knockin~ out bot spots. Some clung stubbornly to their homes as the fl ames burned re- lentlessly down the canyons. Residents who refused to budge were warned they would have lo face the blaze alone. At one residence, a group of people piled furniture, dishes, and clothing into a tiny compact ~ar. Another family drove out of the canyon with their possessions thrown into a trailer. A man walked out guiding a horse, trying to keep it Crom bolt-ihg in the confusion . <See CHAOS, Pa~e A2) UCI Student Charged With Murder Try A UC Irvine graduate student i& being held today in Orange County Jail on attempted murder charges after h e allegedly grabbed a gun from . campus police Tuesday and fired two shots at the officers. UCI officials identified the sus- . pect as Kan-Hsving Huang, 26, a graduate student in the engineer- ing department. He is from Taiwan. Campus officials said Huang fired the gun at close range at Ot- ficers John Hoffer and Cheryl 1'{unson, but that both shots missed. 1 The incident be${an in parkin~ lot #1 when Huang was stopped. tn his car by Hoffer and Ms. Munson. They said they wanted to question him .. about an incident that happened earlier on campus because he matched the descrip- tion of the suspect. When the officers approached Huang's' car, hct ·allegedly srabbed Hoffer and' tbe two tumbled to the around and began 8*ruagling, police said. While M1. Munson tr{ed to as-eist Hoffer, Huang grabbed her run and allegedly fired the shots, police said. He was subdued 9/ihen a third person, a parking control officer, ran over and helped. Hoffer and Ms. Munson were tt'eated in the student health center for cuts and bruises. I Car Theft Rµig Smashed Newport Police Arrest 11 in Stripping Case · By JOANN£ REYNOLDS Of the Oally P'ilot Staff Newport Beach police said to· day they have broken a loose-knit ring they believe has been steal- ing Porsches and other luxury au~ in the Harbor Area, can· nibalizing the cars and selling the parts. So rar. und,rcover officers from Newport Beach, workaf\& with ttie California Highway Patrol's investigation s~ction as well as investigators from the Or ange and Anaheim Police Departments. have arrested 11 people allegedly involved with the ring. Detective Lee Roberts said several people are still being sought. Accor.ding to pgli-0e. fi.vest~en -spi1'acy -and-on-suspicion of-re- Porsches and one stolen Lincoln cei ving stolen property. Continental as well as auto parts, Douglas Paul La Fleur. 24, all worth more than SUI0,000. Garden Grove, on suspicion or have been seized during a series conspiracy and on suspicion of of raidi in the centr al county receiving stolen properly. areaoverlhe past two weeks. Wayne Clark PaiJma, 22~ Arrested in~ investieation~ B\lena ~k~u~fon ofaon were; spiracy and on a$l>ldop ot re- W a rren Dale Vitters, 24, ceivtngstolen property. Anaheim, on suaptcion of grand Peter Gordon Farnsworth, 22, thert auto. Anaheim, on suspic•on ol eon· Davis Dean Snavely, 28, spiracy and on suapiclo• of Garden Grove, on suspicion ot destrqyinginsuredpr~perty. grand tbeft. au~o. s· D h 22 Armando lie rnandez. 24, Fabienne imone e oux ' Garden Grove, on suspicion of Anaheim, on su~picion of coo- conspiracy and on suspicion of s piracy and 01) s us picion or rec.ehtlngstolenpro~ destroying insured property. Michael Jon Culligan, -2-4-.--j-ames Hardy Weems, 21, Anaheim, on suspicion of con-Anaheim, on suspicion or receiv-ing stolen property. , Charles Leroy ~ennedy, 28, OC Cyclist Killed In Crash, Explosion Anaheim, on suspicion of.receiv- ing stolen property. Ronald Ray Rommann, 24, Anaheim, on suspiciom of receiv- ing stolen property. Det. Roberts and his partner, Gary Black, said they received information two weeks ago about the ring which alleeedly was (,x . ing Pors ches from 'Newpoft Beach to supposedly legitimate garages where they were stripped of parts. What was left reportedly was sold as sheet metal. A 20-year·old youth was fatally injured today when his motorcy-' cle slammed into a station wagon in Irvii>e and exploded. lrvine police identined the vic- li m as Robert Michael Auger of Garden Grove and said he died about three hours after the accl-- dent a t Tustin Community Hospital. Police attributed his death to massive internal in- juries. According to police, Auger was riding northbound on Culver Drive when he (\Ollided with a staUon wagon trdeling in the op. posite direction. It was starting a turn onto Irvine Center Drive. Police sald Auger was not wearing a safety helmet at the ti m e of the collision. . The driver or the station wagon, Jinsuk tee. 31, of 19 Redrock, lrvine, was notinjur~, Police said they are continuing the ihvesti&a\iof\. Police said t)ltee•d)'ewltnesses reported after the 12:1S a.rn. ac· cident that when the lmpaet oc• cu~red, the motoccycle exploded into tlames 411nd Auger was thrown~tliesb:'~ ~· The two ~electives assert that several other auto parts and re- pair places in the county were buying the parts, knowing they were ~tolen. The shops allegedly bought the stolen parts at a re- duced rate and then sold them to c\lst9,mersattheregularrates. Vitter& and Snavely were ar· (See PORSCHES, Page A2) 'Beer Fairy' Reported "We -feel very comfortable wlth it as ll stands right now," said Santa Barbara County fire chief William Patterson. "It's not spreading and we're trying to widen the inland fire line so that when the winds <:ome up they won't throw anything across that line, .. he said. TALLAHASSEE, Fla. <AP) -State Sen. Jack Gordon has confounded just about everyOfte by-Ois- closing a $10S-gift from "The Beer Fairy," an un- identified lobbyist. Gordon's gift disclosure form on file with the State Elections-d>i~on s~ on . t'!f •tfi• for tliie • 191'-6 calendar year: $75 fro~ Disney World and $105 from "The Beer Fat ." T'?e Miami Beach Democrat says the gift w&S from someone -he never found out who -who kept leaving cases of beer at his Tallahassee apartment during the 1976 session, when Gordon was chairman of the Senate Ap- propriations Committee. lroine School For Waitresses Wins Approval A cocktail waitress training school will be permitted to con· tinue doing business in the Irvine Industrial Complex, the Irvine City Council ruled Tuesday night. The council overturned a rul- ing by city staff members that denied a busiuess permit for Southern California Cocktail Waitresses, Inc. City aides said they are not op- posed to the school itself but that such a use is not permitted under current regulations for that sec· t:ton ol the. industrial complex. The company is located at 179!2 Sky Park Boulevard. The company appe'aled the de- nial, claiming it is an educational institution and should be allowed to operate with a con~iUonal use permit. But council members decided not to force the company to go through the condltionaf use permit process and said lastead that the school is similar enough to Ute permitted uses to be al· lowed l(>operate. Councilman John Burton point- ed out, "A cocktail waitress ~t undmtands her buslneu makes all tbe dlff erence between a pleasant, aftetnoon and an un- plea1ant afternoon." '• Baides~ lt wasn't too lonl .io that the cl~ c:oUncil asked stall to loak iato the nc rules and make the complex more habit•· -.1e, tt •aid Burton. I • 'T'bal meau to encova1e businea, whlcb ii wbat we're do- inl by 111owlnc lbl• company to e>perlte, •• Burton aidded. Councilwoman Qabrlelle Pf)'Clll' ... th• oDly •• tO ~ •la.I.Mt the motlcii. Sbe olilmed tbe compa111 ·lbOidd01it1U •~ dltlciUI UM permit. alftce lt la K• !U&lly a aCbool. Firemen were worried that the wincl, which died ""down shortly before dawn, would pick up ~ain and whip the fire through the dry brush and back into areas that escaped destruction earlier. - Twenty-two people received minor lltjurles. When the fire began about 7 p .m. Tuesday night. hundreds ol persons fled their lfomes in tbe ~t aectloo ol the city. leas P,an ooe mile from the dowutown courtbouse and about two miles from the Pacific. Shortly before dawn, the winds shifted and blew from the sea in- .to the fire, then died down altogether. M lirst light, five bombers and two helicopters began dropping chemical fire re- tardants. The blaze began in the Sycamore Canyon area a nd {Oared through the nearby Riviera section, one of the city's most ex.elusive residential areas where home values were estimated to be in excess of $250,000. By dawn, some or the residents began returning to neighborhoods that were checkerboards of destruction. Gutted homes stood next door to houses that were untouched. While chaotic conditions pre- vailed in the mountain areas as hundreds of spectators tried to negotiate the narrow, hilly roads, the downtown area was relative- ly quiet. • Aside from the neighborhood known as the Riviera, the names licked into Sycamore Canyon and Mont.ecito and got ps far south as the edge of Westmont College. (See ARSON, Page A%) Coast Weather Patchy fog early Thurs· day morning and low clouds aloot the beaches. Otherwise lt will be fair tbrou1b Thursday with warm, sunny days. Lows tonight ln tos. Hicbs il' middle to upper 90s inland and mld·'708 at beaches. God, A Ni Pa~Ch d County Worries Eight 'FrucksJ} Crews Aid Santa Barbara· Battle ~ ED/f'(Jff S ftf()fl'; Wt>a <ioUUllhn ,,.pQI\ Ml ,tOUnwalttm cortfr aa a rrpurf('r in IAAlmano m l!IJ$. wu~red lhf' t:uro,,.a" /ro"f 1n World War II ond "°'' w.tur <inm11r1 11 for th~ ..4uoe1<iled Pru1>. arid w1nl o" ro becomt prt~I llrid ymnul rnor~r o/ tile Al' He r•hrN loft y~r and rnoi,("lt It• ~"'" lforbara TM fir• com• wtlhin SO /eel of lh• homt ht m111 .ffl mto lo.d Oclo~r. but 14/t t>i. holal• untouched By W!l GALLAGUER , ..... ·-·4 ......... SA:'li'TA Bi\ HUA RA Oh Cud, whi.t & night! Tht' fin· \h1rt rd oppo-.1tc my houM!, a bout a mile away on the s1dl' of thr hall, m the 1:a.rly l'Venln1. Ai. w~ watched through ait•~ei at :.et-med as lhOuah the tanker planes Oyln& from the loc.U airport and dousane it with chemicals would put it. under control But tht• plane~ hud to 'lop because of darkness. A warm ck:.t'rt wind :.uddcnly started 1u15Un1 up to 40 roiles an hour It pkkt:d up the fire 1rnd spread burnln& embers over~a lour or Ch e·malc :.trctch in less than an hour. \'Ol' C'Ol'l.O SE~ THE FIRE leap a quarter of a mile at a lame as 1:. at swept uv Eucalyptus Hill, dotted with homes wQrth $250,000 and more. The tall eucaJyptus trees, drted out a~er months of drought, exploded into flame as tb9ugh they wtre touched \\ ith small born bs The fire then moved down toward llte ocean, into the southern section of Santa Barbara, one of the poorer areas of \he city. Firemen from 100 miles around had no chance to cope with the flames as the winds mounted to about 60 miles an hour, caused in part by the h re 1L'ielf ABOUT MIDNIGHT, THE FIRE crept down the mountain toward the Riviera section where I live. As flames closed in on both sides, my wift! and J decided to abandon the hous e. As we pulled out into Conejo Road, our cars stocked with 1>ersonal e((ects and clothes, we encountered 30 or 40 more autos, loaded with children, clothing, dogs and cats. One little girl was leading her white horse out of the fire area. Like <Almost everyone else in a similar situation, we carried l!way only some of the really valuable things we hfd. having raced through the house, scooping up clothes, jewelry, contents of medicine closets, sit vcrwarc. TREES Bl.OWN DOWN BY THE high winds blocked the road temporarily. A crew from the electric company arrived and sawed the trees into sections. Everybody pitched in to draw them out of the way. down the mountain. Having watched refugees from Germany to Vletnam, I never thought I would be one myself and 1t is a singularly unpleasant ex- perience. As we reached the downtown area and the Santa Barbara Nt·ws-Prcss office. we could see the fire that swept into the southern part of the city start leapmg back up the mountain which the city is bu ill on as the wind shifted from the ocean. THE WINDS DlEO IN THE early morning hours and the combined firefi ghting forces from many parts of Southern Cahfornw gr adually brought the bl aze under control. f had to walk back into the are<A where I hve becau~e of blocked roads. r found my neighbor's house 50 feet away burned to the ground, but mine was intact The fi re had swept through around the knoll of the hill behind us and on the right side as well, but somehow, it left our house untouched. The threat remained. however As I came down the road. fi refi ght in~ crews were trying to douse hot spots where fires still burned on both sides of the road because they feared the Santa Ana wind would come a~ain th1:. evening. • By UTHUR &. VINSEL Ottllt Deity~ ... Sltft Rumbling out in the relalive predawn cool, a lireflghllng task force left Or anJ(e County for tbe bluing holocaust in Santa Barbara today, as fearful authorities calculated how to handle Orange County's own critical fire danger. Blis tering temperatures reaching above 100 degrees in in· land Orange County are ex~ted to continue at least through Satur- day, as parched brusblands sim· mer with the relative humidity at only48percent. The departure of eight fire trucks and their crewmen to help combat the march of the fires to rm threatening Santa Barbara further worried Orange County firefighting authorities today. Orange County Fire Depart- ment Captain Bruce Turbeville s aid today that no days off, leaves or vacations have been canceled but other emergency measures have been taken. "We have pulled in some ot our fire prevention speclalig\s to man trucks in case ... ,'' Capt. Turbeville said in analyzing the crucial county fire situation. "Let's face it," Capt. Turbeville s aid bluntly. "The danger right now is extreme to say the least. We are scared to death ... " ''We haven't had any fires here in the county yet in the current period, but we're silting on a time bomb with devastating potential." He said the Santa Barbara blaze is a clear reminder of pre- partment's '-eadquarters in Orange; its Olive station, and \he dties of Huntin1ton Beach, Seal Beach. San Clemente plus three State Division of Forestry units w e re dispatc hed to Santa Barbara The additional aid was seot un- der the county's Office of Emereency Services Task Force plan to help other agencies in ex· tremeJy grave disas ter situa- tions. Spokesme n for the U.S . Weather Service say the current heat wave is here to stay at least through Thursday and speculat- ed there will be no rellet before Sunday. Searing temperatures in the south county have reached the point at whlch cqunty firemen 't the Laguna Hills Station plan to throw every piece of equipment at any outbreak of fire. This Includes calling in so- called borate bombers to drop fire retardant chemicals on sp.-eading names. Firemen cla.ssify fire danger.: on the basis of temperature, humidity and wind velocity, by low, medium and high hazards. Normally in summertime, a medium hazard level is imposed around noon and today it was in effect at 8 a.m., with the critical high danger or Red Flag Situa· tion anticipated by noon. Undeveloped property sur- rounding Laguna Beach has been closed to trespassing for about six weeks and police are getting especially tough on enforcement cisely what can happen in some are asofOrangeCounty thathave 7JlE PJL<Yf AD recently become heavily populat- ed and lie adjacent to brush and ~nrD IT " TL timberlands. ~L /'l.L "Right now, we're in an or- g anizational stage," he ex· plained of preparations being taken in the event a m ajor bl aze should break out. And any blaze that occurs wall be considered major at the very • outset due to the r ri't ical weather conditions currently existing over most of California De pl e t ion o f South l and firefighting forces attacking the Simla Barbara inferno further in· creases the severity of the situa· tion faced in the Orange County reg10n, Turbeville s aid. He said about 4 a m., fi re engines from the county fire de· "We sold everything in sight," are the nicest sounds heard In the Daily Pilot classified advertising department. And those are exactly the words of a Costa Mesa man after he ran this ad: SALE iO Datsun truck. Md.anl· 7 blade mower Wihh1rc ~it down pwr ~"l'eper. ·5 1 r ord Fulcon. Kohler 12 HP n·11l\. l desk ' misc t:<IUllJ XX\ XXXX, C .M. If you want to "sell everything in sighl." call the Daily Pilot classified advertising, 642·5678. due to the fire hazard. Orange County Air Pollutlon Control District officials imposed a Stage One smog alert over the entire county, except for breezy San Clemente. Air conditioning sy5tems in public buildlnas -thoae that have them -were huma\lng a.way at full capacity as the heat grew today to ita noonday and late attemoan peak. * * * Residents of inland areas _ t~ose who had a day off or work nights -lhronfed county beaches, as long-chllly seawater t~mperatures finally began to rise. Newport Beach lifeguards said they reached the 67-degree mark '.'fuesday, but lifeguards an Hunt· tngton Beach said at ~east a low surf and calm seas kept their rescue count down as swimmers cooled off. * * * El Toro Marines Gear up I or Fires Precautionary m easures against the current brush fire menace have been taken at El Toro Marine Corpa Air Station, whose men stand ready to join ci villans on fi re lines at any time. Spokesmen at the base said to- day preparations for the simmer- ing summer and a tten dant drought-created fire dangers began ln early spring, with the grading of fresh fire lines. •'They cut the fire breaks back up in the hills earlier and they made them wider," explained a Marine Corps spokesm an. Baslc fire protection at El Toro MCAS is provided by a civil service fire department oc· casionally suppJemented with Marine personnel when it is re- quired. A special standing statiQl'l or· der was also issued this year by the commanding general requir- ing that a mlhimum of 100 Marines must be merabaled wiibin minutes if needed to fight a major fire anywhere in Orange County. . Crash. crews normally stand- ing by m the event of aviation accidents on the field are also de- tailed to back up the Department of the Navy civil service fire de- partment if It is engaged elsewhere. Spokesmen said the Third Marine Air Wing unit a lways sends at least one fire truck to any base brushtlre orotherDlize to assist the civilian fire depart· ment personnel. Helicopter units at the Santa Ana Marine Corps Air Station also are on standby fire call. Marine Corps officials said they are outfitted to carry 500. gallon water buckets that snap right onto fuselage fittings "They can hover and lower them into a lake, load up and then go back in the air and drop them onto the fire," a Marine Corps spokesman explained. Still another Marine Corps re- source available to civilian firefighters in lime of a major fire crisis includes heavy equip· ment used by the Third Marine Air Wing at both the El Toro and Santa Anu bases. Authorities said in case of a fire approaching the magnitude of the Santa Barbara disaster, road graders, bulldozers and other machinery will be availa· ble. * * * F ro• Page Al ARSON ... Rather than go to one of the seven evacuation center11 set up by relief groups, many of the well-to-do people who fled before Tuesday's flames checked into the numerous motels or hotels scattered around the city. Anguished homeowners used garden hoses to wet down wood shingle roofs as fierce winds blew a storm of sparks and ashes ahead of the advanc:in& names which could be seen more than 20 miles away. 1t was the fourth major fire in 13 years in Santa Barbara. The oth~rs were in 196-4, 1968 and 1971. From Page A J CHAOS ... Irvine Teen ·Escapes Kidnaper Firefighters had a dl(ficult • time reaching the fire area because of the winding, narrow roads that made il dJfClcult for trucks to pass. In addition, large crowds of sightseers gathered along the roads, further hamper- ing efforts to get at the flames. Another man gave a woman resident a ride on his motorcycle to her endangered house. When they got there all she could do was ask him. "What should Itake?" J~1st before 11 p.m., most of the residents had evacuated the can yon except for those few who re- fused to leave their homes. Dust, soot. traces of spray from fire hoses and s parks began to in- ~re~se. By 11 p.m. the blaze had ignited a house within several hundred yards of the busy in· te rsection. "This is the Santa Barbara police," announced a woman's v~ice over a lo~dspeaker. "You will all leave this area im· mediately.'' That failed to stop still another resident from trying to proceed up Sycamore Canyon, screaming "Laurie, Laurie." She got out of her car and headed up the canyon. on foot. Youths waited ominously with, shovels in hand, as burning em- bers began dropping like orange raindrops into the neighborhood south of the intersection. As cars streamed down the canyon roads, the wind and smoke were at their bac:ts and a faint eerie glow could be seen looming over the ridges above. A 1 5-year-ol~ lr.vme boy was jumpfromthecarwhenitslowed ~eld at knifepomt in a car Tues· to a stop al the intersection of .a~ af.ter ~c. accepted a ride Newport and Harbor boul evards. v. h1le.h1tchh1kmg lo work. Police said today they could . Pohcc said the youth w~s not n?l determine a motive for the inJured.durang the k1dnappmg at-kadnaping, which began at about tempt and that he managed to 3 p m. when the boy uccepted a ride at the Culver Drive onramp to the San Diego Freeway. The boy said he asked the motorist for a lift into Santa Ana a nd that the man agreed . However , when the car ap- proached the Newport Freeway. Zoning Mix Studied Irvme City Council members ~gr~ed Tuesday to continue look· mg mto the possibility of building residences in either the Irvine In- dustrial Complex West or East. The council was given a staff . report that stated there would be serl~us obstacles to overcome before housing could be built in either location. However, sta(( members said they could contact certain busi- nesses in the UC-West and ask if they would be willing to sell or least their vacant parcels for residential development. Those businesses are not gov- F rom Page A l PORSCHES. rested July 19 after three stolen Porsches and the Coptinental al- legedly were found, in yarioua stages of beinl{ dismantled ht their garage, Colours by D~ve 8540Cen\ral Ave., Stanton. ' Hernandez was arrested the same day at hts earage, National Collision Service .. 11782 Western Ave., Garden Grove, after a st.qlen Porsche body and engine · parts allegedly were found there. r ChlligaQ, Lafleur and Pal1ma were arrested, Frtday at F and r.f Porsche and VW RepaJr, 11782 Western Ave., Garden Grove, in connecilon with the purchase oC lour alleaedly stolen ?orsche tires. Weems, J(tiined)' and ROm· manh were &rrftted Monday ln conn~Uon with the sale ot an al· 1eaedly stolen Porscbe, atrlpped, to the undercover lnves«••ton. erned by the master regulations in the uc.west and therefore it would be easiest to build res- idences in those locations. Tbe council agreed that staff meJTlbers should pursue that Idea and also. 5hould look into the potential of buildillg residences in the IIC· East from the start. The council \s try\ng to find a way M offering more low and moderate-cost housing ln Irvine and believe thal an answer might be f<>Und in ml,xing reslde1>ces and industry, Constructioq Worker Hurt· ;in Newport However, both industrial com· plexes are adjacent to airports !Orange County Airport and El Toro Marine Corps Air Station> and serious noise and crash hazard problems would have to be overcome first. the man turned towards Newport Beach and refused to let the boy out of the car, pol ice said. The youth said the driver sud· denly pulled out a six-Inch fold· ing blade knife, pointed it at his chest and told 'him, "Don't try anything You 're kidnaped. •· The boy said he became frightened, but managed to escape from the car when it stopped. He told police he ran b.ebJnd a...group of buiJdints and hid tor about .half an botar and that he did not see the man again. The driver of the royal blue Mustang was described u being about 2$ years old, mediu m height and build, with brown halr and f,>rown eyes. • Police said they would arrest anybody who was not authorized lo be in the are a. CAKl'ER SETS NEWS CONFA B WASHINGTON CAP> -Presi- dent Carter will hold a news con ference Thursday at 7:30 a .m PDT. Spokes men for the television networks s aid no de- cision had been reached as to whether the conference will be carried live. YolleytaaHs l Nets Basketblts & Backbeards Soccer Balls F11tbUs.Jtlnilrs~ntermeidate & Ful Size ' --Baits llC~•tW .. lltS & Biiis ff• Bans & Gtms .. .... llCbtS & ~llttliads .. Laguna/South Coast VOL. 70, NO. 208, .C SECTIONS, <44 PAGES Afternoon Y.Stoeb TEN CENTS Worried OC SizZles as FireDiell Leave 8y All111\JR a . VINSEL .... o.ify ......... .. Rumbling out in the relaUve predawn cool, a firef11hUn1 ta.sk force l~n Oranre County for the blaain& h olocaus t in San~a Barbara today, as fearful authorities calculated how to handle Orange County's own critical fire danger. Bhs lering temperatures reactung above 100 degrees in in· land Orange County are expected * * * to rontinue at least thrquah Satur· duy, as parched brushlands sim· mer with the relative humidJty at only48 percent. The departure or eight fire trucks and their crewmen t.o help combat the m arc h or ttre firestorm threatening Santa Barbara further worried Orange County firefighting authorities today. Orange County Fire Depart· ment Captain Bruce Turbeville * * * said today that fO days off, leaves or vacatiOl\I have been canceled but other emergency measures have been taken. "We have pulled in some of our fire prevention specialists to man trucks in case. . ., " CapL Turbeville said in analyzing the crucial county fire lltuation. "L e t 's face it," Capt. Turbeville said bluntly. "The danger right now is extreme to say the least. We are scared l9 * * * death ... ·• "We haven't had any fires here in the county yet in the current period, but we're silting on a time bomb with devastating potential." He said the Santa Barbara blaze is a clear reminder of pre- cisely what can happen in some areas of Orange County that have recenUy become heavily popuJat· ed ~lie adjacent to brush and timberlands. * * * "Right now, we're In an or· ganizational stage,•• he ex- plained of preparations being taken in the event a major blaze should break out. And any blaze that occurs will be considered major at the very outset due to the critical weather conditions currently existing over most of California. Depl etion of Southland firefighting forces attacking the Santa Barbara inferno futther in· * * * creases the severity of the situa- tion faced in the Orange County region, 'turbeville said. He said abOut 4 a.m.. fi•e engines from the county fire de- partment's headquarters lo Orange; its Olive station. and the cities ol Huntington Beach. SeJl Beacl}. San Clemente plus three State Division of Forestry units were dis patched to Santa Barbara. <See FOlES, Page AZ> * * * Arsonist T'WO Held In Theft At Home Laguna Beach detectives ar- rested two men Tuesday follow- ing a concentrated search initial· ed when a homeowner opened the door to his residence a nd was confronted by thieves who had ransacked the house and were just leaving. Police Lt. Al Olson, detective arrested · the men after s potting a dis- tinctively marked pickup truck believed to have been used as a getawayvehichrhrthe burglary. Police booked Richard R . Th"ompson, 18, of 376 Cliff Drive and Casey James Dixon, 18, a transient, on suspicion of burglary. Both men were held on • 1 $10.000 bail today. Lieutenant Olson said detec· tives hope to clear between seven and 1S local burglaries as a result or the arrests. Police patrol and unmarked detective units s aturated the lower Arch Beach Heights area of San Clemente Street and Alta Vista after a burglary was re- ported by Carl Walquist. 2360San Clemente Street. Walquist told officers be had ·been working across the street from his home. He had returned 1 to his house, and upon opening the door heard noises inside and then saw two men walking toward him from the interior of the home. Walquist challenged them, asking "what are you doing here? This is my house.•' One or the men said "Nothing" and the other said, "No, it's not," and claimed it belonged to someone else. The men brushed past Walquist, walked rapidly down the driveway and then sprinted way from the home. Eleven Laguna Beach police were used to search the area. A neighbor told officers she bad seen a liaht blue Datsun pickup truck with stars on the doors crul~ng through the area earlier that day. She said the men had walked past her home, once remarking, •"Nice dog you have there." Later she said she saw the same two men running past her home from the direction they had been '111 al king previously. Police were aided by an un- tdenUfted ~rson wbo apparenUy ba4 monitored search convena- (See TllEn. Page A.2) '&er Fairy' Reported LONE FIREMAN SILHO AGAINST THE REMAINS OF BUflNINO HoME IN SANTA 8AAURA"AAEA Brust\ Flr• Set by Araonflt Deetro,a OHr 200 Expenalve Homes In Exclu1lve Ae1ldentlel Section Tidelands Use Up • Step• c~atr..,ersg . NB Doctor Riley Blasts Letter 'Can,'t Cut' SB Blaze Hits 250 Houses ~ SANTA BARBARA <AP> -- Officials said an arsonist set the brush fire that raged down from the Santa Ynez Mountains today and destroyed 200 expensive homes in this picturesque toastal community. City Fire CJ>ief Rich Peterson said he dld not know how the fire was se, sat s within 200 feet of a 1964 blue that burned 78 homes in the exclusive. hilly residential area overlooking life aownt<>Wn arrd Pactnc-Oce·..--~• beach area. One person was arrested for looting but no other details wer,_ immediately available. Officially, the fire was still said to be out ot c<>Dlrol, but by mid- tnonliq, It wis appardlt that FOUATHFIAE ON A MONOAY--M ·progress was being made iD knoc.king out hot spots. "We feel very comfortable with It as it stands right now.•• said Santa Barbara Count)' fu-e chief William Patterson. "It's not spreadJng and we're trying to widen the inland fir~ Une so that when the winds come To County On Beach Access D f • f A. •d? up they won't throw anything ra ien f, • acrossthatline,"hes~id. Firemen were worned that the By JACK CHAPPELL OUl!e Delly........... • If Or. Gene Atherton. Newport Beach physldan, former can· didate for fifth district supervisor and an open beaches and parks advocate, hoped to sway Supervisor Thomas Riley with a searing letter on public ac· cess to Thousand Steps beach, be didn't. •'This is to acknowledge re- ceipt ol your crank leUer C<JO· demniog me I or my job as upervisor. Sincerely. Tbomu F. Rlley.0 That coJtstltutet! Riley~s answer tod~y to br. Atherton•s four-pue bandwrttten letter written after the physician was unsuccellf~ t.n forcln1 entry to the Ninth Slreet'Beacb In Soutb Laguna via TbOUs*Ad Steps, a rickety stairway joint!f owned bj sUl'l"OUndinC property pwnera ~d Orqeeounty. I= Peter ~an. al to Rllq, uld the letter of • ment eoostltuted tbtl ,actlaa Qle ttftb district emce,~d tiie.tlllt· in• on Athert.On'• ClalblL br .. Atherton summoned Ora,oge County Sheriff's . Deputies to the guarded and barbed wire fenced access to the beach Saturday. He claimed he was beine de- nied access along a publicly held stairway and sought a charge of illegal obstruction. Deputies filed an_infonnatioll report on the inci· denL .. The steps are owned by the public and It Is· not proper for private individuals lo obstruct It. ''I asked the deputies · what they would do if som~ne blocked t.he\ steps going down to Camel Point and they said they would ordj!r them to stop and if they re· )used, arrest them. . ;.. "I am writing to <Sheriff> Brad uates 1o tell him my report was a formal complaint, .. Dr. Atherton . said.. 'Tlte pbysici~n said he bas re-tain~ an a.ttoJ11ey and will _be considerlne adcijtioqal ·~tion. a_f (~Jh he c~nstdete<S ll the ~ respa~slblUtY to abate {SeeACCESS. Pace .U> By GARY GRANVILLE Of tlW D•lly "llet St.ii Law}'ers for a Newport Beach doctor whO tias refused to obey a woman's written directive to let her "die with dignity" s ay the doctor does not have the legal right to withdraw the life support measures keeping the woman alive. The lawyers• response to Marie Welday's guardian's plea for a court order directing Dr. Theodore Alex to let Mrs. Wei· day die was filed Tuesday in Orange County Superior Court. In the response filed by at- torney William Garman. Dr. Alex denied that the 84·year-old woman's condition is terminal and that he is keepin'g her alive by artificial means. ln an interview Tuesday. however, Garman said the is· sues involved in the rieht to di~ case go much deeper tllan clif • ferences of tnedical oPfnioll on Mrs. Welday's condition,. wind. which died down sbort11 before dawn. would pick up again and'whip the fire through the dry brush and back into areas .thal escaped destruction earlier. Twenty.two people received minor injuries. When the fire began about "l <See ARSON, Page A.2) C4Rl'Eil SKIS NEWS CONFAB WASHINGTON <AP> -Presi· dent Carter will bold a news ~.,.. ference Thursday at 7:30 a.m. PDT. Spokesmen for tM television networks said no d..- cislon ha.st been reached u to whethe( the conference will t)e carried live. • EDITOR'S NOTE Wfl GGIJGQMr l»gon Ma joumcMltm career a.ta '""'rffT m LovilJOna tn 193.S, cou.red tM E:uropean front m World Weir JI ortd poet wcrr OnmanN for tM A11ocUal~ Pnu, Qnd Wl'ftt °" co b«orM predlttnt and~ monaoer o/ t.M AP. lit rtUrtd Iott tlf<IT and mot.lid to Soll.Co 8orbaro. Tiii /frf comt wftlltn 50 /eet o/ U.. home he rnovtd rmo kut October. but le/t tM 1'ou&t vntouchtd. By wa GALLAGHER ~-.._.....~. SANT A BARBARA -Oh God, what a night! The fare started opposite my h<>UR, about a mile away on the sade of the hill. In the early evening. As we watched through glasses. 1t seemed u thoupl the tanker planes flying rrom the local aJrport and dousing at with chemicals would put ll under control. But the planet bad to slop because of darkness. A warm detert wind suddenly started gusting up to 40 miles an hour. ll packed up the fire and spread burning embers over a four or five-mile stretch in less than an hour. \'OU COULD SEE THE FIRE leap a quarter or a mile at a tame a::. is at swept up Eucalyptus Hill. dott~ with homes worth $250,000 and more. The tall eucalyptus trees, dried out after months of drought. exploded into flame as lh01,1gh they were touched with small bombs. The fire then moved down toward the ocean, lntothe southern section of Santa Barbara, one of the poorer areas of the city. Firemen from 100 miles around had no chance to cope with the names as the winds mounted to about 60 miles an hour, caused in part by the fire itself. ABOUT MIDNIGHT, THE FIRE crept down the mountain toward the Riviera section where I live. As flames closed in on both sides, my wife and 1 decided to abandon the house. As we pulled out into Conejo Road, our cars stocked with personal effects and clothes, we encountered 30 or 40 more autos, loaded with children. clothing, dogs ao·d cats. One little girl was leading her while horse out of the fire area. Like almost everyone else in a similar situation, we ~arried away only some of the really valuable thiJ'lgs we bad, bavlng r aced through the house. scooping up clothes, jewelry, contents of medicine closets.silverware. ' TREES BLOWN DOWN BY THE hJgh· winds blocked the 'road temporarily. A crew from the electric company arrived and sawed the trees into sections. Everybody pitched in to draw them out of the way. down the mountain. Having watched refugees from Germany to Vietnam, I never thought 1 would be one myself and it ls a singularly unpleasant ex· perience. • As we reached the downtown area and the Santa Barbara News-Press office, we c:ould see the ftre that swept Into the southern part of tl\e city start leaping t>ack up the mountain which the city is built on as the ~nd shifted from the ocean. THE WINDS DIED IN THE early morning hours and the <'omblned firefighting forces from many parts o( Southern California gradually brought the blaze under control. I had to walk back Into the area where I live because of blocked roads. I found my neighbor's house SO feel away burned to the ground, but mine was in~l. T-he fi1'~ had swept.through around the knoll of the hill behind us and on the right side as well. but somehow. it left our house untouched. The threat remained, however. As I came down the road, firefighting crews were trying to douse hot spots where fire$ still burned on both sides or the road because they reared the Santa Ana wind would come again this evening. LB School~, City to Meet On Recreation 'Ibe Laguna Beach City Coun-"tu and the trustees of the Laguna Beach Unified School District will meet in Joint session tonight al city hall to discuss cooperation in development of recreation facilities. The council is scheduled to meet beginning at 6:30 p.m. to discuss salaries or the city clerk and city treasurer. The joint study session with the school board is slated for7:30 p.m. Meeting wtth the council and the board of education will be members or the city parks and recreation committee. They will consider a proposal for development or a ml4lti· purpose playing field and recrea- tion area on Top of the World property owned by the school dis· trlct. Dick Toomey. a member of the Parks and Recreation Commit· tee. is leading the effort toward joint development and usage of the property. The land,rabout 11 acres, is located at the·north end of Alta Laguna Boulevard and bounded by Tyrol Drive. Fundine. property develop- ment and other concerns are to be discussed. The meeting is public. OAANQI COAST t..l1C DAILY PILOT Fr°"' Page Al ACCESS ••• the obstruction. "If somebody leaves a car in the middle of the Coast Highway, you don·t call your attorney, you call the sheriff." he said. Atherton ripped Riley for the supervisor's vote to sell back to the property owners' association easements acquired by the county. That action was ruled illegal in an opinion by the county counsel, however. the county i& proceed- ing with the sale in spite of the opinion. "In summary, you shall have succeeded eventually in ldenUfyJ · ine yourself as having one of the worst records on coast.al con- servation or any polilidan ln the history or California, on a par with Alton AJlen of Sall Creek fame." Herman quoted from the letter Atherton wrote to Riley. FroaP,.,,eAJ mEFf ... Uon on a police-band radio. The woman went to pollce head· quarters and told otficen of a ~rµck in the downtown area. Olson spotted a blue truck with stars on the doors parked at the .lal!k·ln-The·Box, 1200 S. Coast Highway and observed three men tnslde the eatery. OlsoJ\ summoned two addi· tlonal plain-clothed detectives an<t all lbree men were taken into custody. The third man was sub- sequent,ty released and deemed not arrested when coworkers contirtned that be was al work when the crime occurred. Police recovered property from the truck believed lo have been taken in other buralaries. Onb' 13 was talten from Wal· q1iiSt"k1rcune;oltoR"~ • Oillly ,., ...... llMll SHADED AREA INDICATES FIRE·RAVAGED AREA Destruction In Santa Barbara'• Syc.more Canyon F,..•PageAl FIRES CAUSE WORRY. • • The additional aid was sent un- der the county's Office of . Emergency Services Task Force pl•n to help other agencies in ex- tr~mely grave disaster situa- tions. .. Spokesmen ro r the U .S Weather Service say the current heat wave is here to stay at least through Thursday and speculat- ed there will be no relief before Sunday Searing temperatures in the south county have reached the poijlt at which county firemen at the Laguna Hills Station plan to . throw every piece of equipment at any outbreak of fire This Includes calling in so· called borate bombers to drop fire retardant chemicals on spreading names. Firemen classify fire dangers on the basis of temperature. humidity and wind velocity, by low. medium and high hazards. Normally in summertime, a medium hazard level is imposed around noon and today it was in effect at 8 a.m., with the critical high danger or Red Flag Situa- tion anticipated by noon Undeveauped property sur rounding Laguna Beach has been closed to trespassin4 for about six weeks and police are getting especially tough on enforcement due to the fire hazard * * * Fro,,. Page Al ARSON .•• Orange Couht)> Air PolluUon Control District officials impoe;ed a Stage One smog alert over the' entire county, exce~t for breety ' San Clemente • Air conditioning S)')llems in public buildings -those ttiat have them -were humming away at full capacity as the heat grew today to its noonday aml late afternoon peak Residents of inland areas - those who had a day off or work nights -thronged county beaches. as long-chilly seawater temperatures finally began to rise. · Newport Beach lifeguards said they reached the 67·degree mark Tuesday, but lifeguards in Hunt· ington Beach said at least a low surf and calm seas kept their rescue count down as swimmers coole<foff Parts.Resold Auto , Theft Ring Broken By JOANNE REYNOLDS •• D.ilr PlleUqft Newport Beach police said to- day they have broken a loose-knit ring lh~y believe has been steal· ing Porsches and other luxury autos in the Harbor Area, can- nibaliling the cars and selling the parts. So tar. undercover officers from Newport Beach, working with the California Highway Patrol's. investigation section as well as invesUeators from the Orange and Anaheim Police Oepartmenls, have arrested 11 people allegedly involved wlth the ring. Detective Lee Roberts said several people are still being sought. ~ According lo police, five stolen Porsches and one stolen Lincoln Continental as well as auto parts, all worth more than $100,000, have been seized d11rln1 a series of raids jn the central county area over the past two weeks. Arrested in the investigations w'ere: · Warren Dale Vitters. 24. Anaheim, on suspicion of grand theft auto. Davis Dean Snavely, 28. GaJl4en Grov&, ori suspicion of grand theft auto. Armando Hernandez, 24, Garden Gove. on suspicion of conspiracy and on suspicion of receiving stolen property. Michael Jon Culligan, 24, Anaheim. on suspicion of con- spiracy and on suspicion of re· eel ving stolen pcoperty. Douglas Paul LaFleur, 24. Garden Grove, on suspicion of conspiracy and on suspicion of receiving stolen property. Wayne ClarJC Pailma, 22. Buena Par~. on suspicion of con- spiracy and on suspicion of re- ceiving stolen property. Peter Gordon Farnsworth, 22, Anaheim, on suspicion of con· spiracy and on suspicion ·of destroying insured properly Fablenne Simone Deboux, 22, Anaheim, on sW1picion ol con· • s plracy and on fuspiclon of destroying insured property. James Hardy Weems.. 21. Anaheim, on suspicion of receiY- ing stolen property. Charles Leroy Keonedy, 28, Anaheim, on suspicion of recei.Y- ing stolen property. Ronald Ray Rommann, 24... ~naheim, on suspiclom of receiv- ing stolen property. Det. Roberts and his partner. Gary Black, said they received information two weeks ago about the nng which allegedly was tak· ing Porsches from Newport Beach to supposedly legitimate garage-s where they were stripped of parts.. What was left reportedly was sold as sheet metal. The two detectives assert that several other auto parts and re· pair places in the county were buying the parts, knowing they were :stolen. The shops allegedly bought the stolen parts at a re- duce<I rate and then sold them to customers al the regular rates. Vitters and Snavely were ar- rested July 19 after three stolen Porsches and the Continental aJ. legedly were found , in various stages of being dismanUed. in their garage, Colours by Dave, 8540 Central Ave .. Stanton. Hernandez was arrested the same day at his garage, National Collision Service, 11782 Western Ave., Garden Grove, after a stolen Porsche body and engine parts 4.Jlegedly were found there. Culligan, LaFleur and Pailma were arrested Friday at F. and M Porsche and VW Repair, 11782 Western Ave .. Garden Grove, in connection with the purchase of four allegedly stolen Porsche tires. Weems, Kennedy and Rom· mann were arrested Monday in connection with the sale of an al- legedly stolen Porsche, stripped, to the undercover investigators. --. • ,Orange Coast EDITION VOL 70, NO. 208, ~ SECTIONS, " PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA Arso nist Blamed an ta ara LONE FIREMAN SILHOUETT.ED AGAINST T HE REMAINS OF BURNING HOME IN SANTA BARBARA AREA Brush Fire Set by Arsonist Destroys Over 200 Expensive Homes in Exclusive Residential Section ------------------------------------------------ Construc tion 7 Worke r Hurt ·_ 1 In Newport A construction worker t-vho nearly severed his left hand while working in Newport Beach I Tuesday, is reported in fair con- dition today at the UC Irvine Medical Center. . A spokesman for the Newport Beach fire department said 21· year-old Francisco Castillo of Duarte was working on the second story of a condominium project at Jamboree and Ford 1 roads when the mishap occurred at about l p.m. Inspector Art Morton said the carpenter was framing the roof of the building and using a circular saw which ran over his left wrist. Morton said the powerful saw severed the artery, tendons and the large radius bone in the wrist. Castillo's fe llow workers rushed to his aid and partially stopped the flow of blood while paramedics and two fire <!om- panies raced to the scene. The medics treated Castillo on the roof and put him in a litter which they slid down a series of ladders the firemen had rigged to the roof. He was taken to Hoag Memorial Hospital before being iransferred to the medical center. Orange Co ast Weath e r Patchy fog early Thurs· day morning and low clouds aJonr tlU! beaches. Otherwise lt will be fair throueh Thursday with warm, sunny days. Lows tonight in 60s. Highs in INSIDE TODAY. TMrw't an Ebun Us a MW teleoiifOn terl,.. OnlJI thu Um• ft'1 Buddy'• da"flhtCT' Bon•. Stor11t 85. l-1erno: 'God, What a Night' EDITOR'S NOTE: Wes CallO{lheT began hi.a Jou~ carter 03 a reporterin Loui.ria114 in 19JS, covered the European /Total& WorldWar Jf and i:wt·war Germany for tM AssOCtated PTess, and 19'"' on to become pre.went and general maooger of the ~P. He retired lalt year and moved to Santa Barbara. The fire came withtn 50 feet of the home he moved into lost October. but left the hcuse 1111touched. By WES GALLAGHER ......... ,._ .. '""""• S~A BARBARA -Oh God, what a nicht! The fire started opposite my hou~e. about a mile away on the side of ~e hill, in the early evening. As we watched through glasses_. 1t seemed as ~hou~h the tanker planes flying from the local airport and dousing 1t with chemicals would put it under control. But the planes had to stop because or darkness. A warm desert wind suddenly started gusting up to 40 miles an hour. It picked up the fire and spread burning embers over a four or five-mile stretch in less than an hour. . YOt! C:::OULD SEE THE FIRE leap a quarter or a mile at a time as is 1t swept up Eucalyptus Hill, dotted with homes worth $250,000 and more. The tall eucalyptus trees, dried out after months of drought, exploded into flame as though they were touched with small bombs. '.fhe fire then moved down toward the ocean, into the southern section of Santa Barbara, one or the poorer areas of the city. Firemen from 100 miles around had no chance to cope with the names as the winds mounted to about 60 miles an hour caused in part by the fire itself. • ABOUT MIDNIGHT, THE FIRE crept down the mountain toward the Riviera section where I live. As flames closed in on both sides, my wife and I decided to abandon the house. As we pulled out into Conejo Road, our cars stocked with personaJ effects and clothes, we encountered 30 or 40 more autos, loaded with children. clothing, dogs and cats. One lltUe girl was leading her white horse out of the fire atea. Like almost everyone else in a similar situation, we carried away only some of the reatJy valuable things we hacl, having raced through the house, scooping up clothe&, jewelry. contents of medi~ine closets, silverware. TREES BLOWN DOWN BY THE blah ~nds blocked the road temporarily. A crew froll' t,be electric company arrived and sawed the trees into sections. EverybQdy pitched in to draw them out of the way, down the mountain. · Having watched refugees from Germany to Vietnam, I never lhol_Jghl I would be one mysell and iUs a ainaularly unpleasant eit· penence. As we reached the downtown area and the Santa Barbara News-Press office, we could see the fire that swept into the southern pai:t.-of th~ citrstatt ttapJitf ba~ up tlie mountain which the city is built on as the wind stillted from tbe ocean. THE WIN'os DIEP IN 11IE early momin1 hours and the combined firefighting forces from many parts of Southern California aradually brought Ute blue W)der controt I had to walk back into the area where I ll'le because ot blocked roads. I found my neithbar'a house 50 teet away bumect lo the d swept througb aroun e on of the bill ~ l.ll Md on the rt1ht tide as well but somehow, it left our house untouched. . • ' The threat remained, however. As I came Clown the road firefighting crews we« tryl.nc to douse bO\ spot. wbere ftres atili burned OD both sides of the toad bf!CIUH thet feaNd the 5anta Ana wind would come 11atn UU.eve_plq. ... t . ~ Market Falls -To 18-month Low of 888 NEW YORK <AP> -The stock m.ark~t feU sharply ff>r the th!fd > ~iht .sesslod tbeiay. pushing the Dow Jones industrial . average to an 18·month low. The Dow averaee of 30 blue chi~ was down 19.75 points to 888.43 after a drop of lS.24 points the two previous sessions. The last time the Dow closed lower was Jan. 5, 1976, when it hit 877.83. Losers outpaced gainers by better than a 4·1 margin among New York Stock Exchange-listed issues. Analysts said the market was dragged down by continuing con- cern that the nation's economic growth rate was headed for a slowdown. Andoew worries were added to lbe picture by today's govern- ment announcement or a record U.S. trade deficit for June, with imports exceeding exports by $2.82 billion. Oil stocks were among the most notable losers following the Federal Energy Administra- tion's recent announcement that it planned an extensive audit of 15 large refiners. T oday's Closin g N.Y. Stoeks WEDNESDAY, J ULY 27, 1977 N TEN CENTA • m Wiiid Hampers Control Effort SANTA BARBARA CAP) --Fire fighters raced the wind to- day to ~top ~ fierce brus h fire th.at destroyed 200 expensive home~ m this ~ealthy coastal city while police sought the arsomst they said sparked the conflagration. The 700-acre fire was officially out of control but it had died down from the explosive force of the night before when s heets of flame tore through the drought-parched brush from out of the Santa Ynez Mountains. Cyclonic-like fire storms * * * had erratically leap-frogged from canyon to ridge, leav- ing a patchwork of destruc- tion across the city·s richest neighborhoods where home values begin at $250.000. Police reported 22 injuries. most of them minor burns and smoke inhaJation, and one arrest for looting. No details of the ar- rest were available. Mayor David Shiffman said that in addition to the 200 homes FOURTH FIRE ON A MONDAY-A4 destroyed, another 40 were damaged by the flames. How the fire was set was un- known, but city fire officials said it started only 200 feet from a similar...1964 fireJ.hat destroyed 15 s wank homes. Last week, firemen extinguished a small blaze near the location and later found a time-de1ayed incendiary device. Gov. Edmund Brown .Jr. de~• sta~ of eniefiWY and-or"deri!d I20 ~ational 6uird troops lo help the estimated 500 firemen battling flames ih this seaaidecit.ynoted for its Spanish· . style architecture. A layer of soot and smoke bung in the sky today over the city or 75,000 persons. •'This is aJl I have left, my wife and my dogs," said ArtilJo Serena, a 75-year-old carpenter, as he returned to the rubble of the home he built 19 years ago. His emotions were shared by dozens or other residents who returned to find their lavish hom'es reduced to burned, smok· iog ruins. The fire, spurred by hot, dry winds that gusted to between ~ and 60 miles an hour, burned to within 13 blocks of downtown, clogging the area's roads with fleeing residents and sightseers. Just before dawn today the winds shifted and then died, giv· ing firemen and their chemical· laden helicopters their first real chance to halt the spread of <See ARSON, Page A2) Chaos Reigns At Fire SANTA BARBARA (AP) - The scene at the five-Point in-tersection below Sycamore Can- y~n was one of chaos, despera- tion and heartbreak as restdents- either fled their homes or tried to get lo them in the face of this city's worst fire in years. Standing in the center or the .. jammed intersection Tuesday night was police officer James· Carroway, whQ battled motorists. frantically trying .to .,~tarn ~ twisting roads to tb ei11 q;-:~~ dangered homes w~ others dashed for their lives aown the narrow canyons. "Park lt and walk. Park it and walk," he shouted. Yet despite emergency flares on the street and the huge traffic jam some driveJ'I ignored the of- ficer's warninls and managed to slip tbrough . Shortly after 10 p.IQ., three hours after the fire began, Car· roway asked bystanders for help. A number of them volunteered~ and were immediately dis- patched to Sycamore Canyon to assist.in the evacuation. Some clung stubbornly to their homes as the flames burned re- lentlessly down the canyons. Residents who refused to budge were warned they would have to race the blaze alone. At one residence, a group or people piled furniture, dishes, and clothing into a tiny compact car. Another family drove out of the canyon with their possessions thrown into a trailer. A man walked out guiding a horse, trying to keep it from bolt· ing in the confusion. Another man gave a woman resident a ride on his motorcycle (~ee CHAOS, Page AZ) D .. 1, .. INC--lt ~ers RUle on 1 Die Case By GARY GRANVILLE Ol l .. Deity ...... Sa.ff Lawyers for a Newport Beach doctor who has refused to obey a woman's written directive to let her "die with dignity" say the doctor does not have the legal right to withdraw the life s upport measures keeping the woman alive. The l awyers' res ponse to Marie Welday's guardian's plea for a court order directing Dr. Theodore Alex to let Mrs. Wel- day die was filed Tuesday in Orange County Superior Court. In the response filed by at- torney William Garman, Dr. Alex denied that the 84-year-old woman's condition is terlninal and that he is keeping her alive by artificial means. SHADED AREA INDICATES FIRE-RAVAGED AREA Destruction In Santa Barbara's Sycamore Canyon In an interview Tuesday, however, Garman said the is· sues involved in the right to die case go much deeper than dif. ferences of medical opinion on Mrs. Welday's condition. OC Firemen Assist In Santa Barbara For example, the cross- complaint filed on b~half of Dr. Alex concedes that Mrs. Welday su(f-ered a crippling stroke May 4, 1976, and has been in a com· atose state ever since. The response also acknowledges that, in 1972, Mrs: Welday "executed a written document" stating that, "No doctor is to take any measure whatsoever lo artificially pre- serve or stimulate life in my body when it is ready to die." By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Ol 1,_ D•llY "llol 51•11 Rumbling out in the relative predawn cool, a firefighting task force lert Orange County for the blazi ng holocaust in Santa Barbara t oday, as fearful authorities calculated how to handle Orange County's own <'ritical.fire danger. 811!.tering t e mpe r a tures reaching above 100 degrees in in· land Orange County are exl)f.cted Lo continue at least through Satur- dav, as parched brushlands sim- mer with the relative humidity at onty 48 percent. The departure of eight fire trucks and their crewmen to help combat the march of the firestorm threatening Santa Barbara fu rther worried Orange Co unty firefighting authorities today. Orange County Fire Depart· ment Captain Bruce Turbevllle said today that no days off, leaves or vacations have been canceled but other e mergency measures have been taken. "We have pulled in some of our fire prevention s pecialists to • man trucks in case ... , " Capt. Turbeville said in analyzing the crucial county fire situation. ··Let's r ace it,·' Capt. Turbeville said blunUy. "The danger right now is extreme to sav the least. We are scared lo de.a th ... " "We haven't had any fires here in the county yet in the current period. but we're silting on a time bomb with devastating potential." Ile said the Santa Barbara • blaze is a clear reminder or pre- cisely what can happen in some areas or Orange County that have recently become heavily populat- ed and lie adjacent to brush and tim\lerlands. "Right now, we're in an or· ganizational stage." he ex- plained of preparations being taken in the event a major blaze should break out. And any blaze that occurs will be considered major at the very outset due to the critical weather conditions currently existing over most of California. Depletion of Southland firefighting forces attacking the Santa Barbara inferno further in- creases the severity or the situa- tion faced in the Orange County region, Turbevllle said. He said about 4 a.m .• fire engine.s from the county flre de- pa rtment 's headquarters ln Orange; its Olive station. and the cities of Huntington Beach, Seal Beach. San Clemente plos three State Division of Forestry units were dispatched to Santa Barbara. The additional aid was sent un· der the county's Office of Emer enc Services Tuk Foree. OAANOE C0MT H DAILY PILOT ,...:::,.;:;,_ ¥Wt~~=-...., plan to help other agencies in ex- tremely grave disaster situa- tions. Spokesmen for the U.S. Weather Service say the current heat wave is here lo stay at least through Thursday and speculat- ed there will be no relief before Sunday. * * * Fro111 Page Al ARSON ••• name. "We feel very comfortable with it as it stands right now," Santa Barbara County Fire Chief William Patterson said in the morning hours. "It's not spread- ing." But Dennis Orbus, a U.S. Forest Service s pokes man, warned. "We're still in an ex- treme rtre emergency. Those winds should be shifting back toward town and it all depends on how much we can knock down the fire before then." Another worry for firefighters was the low pressure in city water pumps, caused in part by the thousands of gallons or water homeowners poured on their houses to try lo save them. The neighborhoods in the chaparral and eucalyptus- c over ed hill s were in· discriminately hopscotched with untouched homes s(anding next to ruins. When the arsonist set the fire about 7 :30 p.m. Tuesday in Sycamore Canyon, he found fertile ground: Brush that is normally tinder-dry had become parched to what fire officials called "explosive conditions" by two years of drought. Arter the fire roared out or the canyon, it jumped from house to tree to house in the Riviera sec· tion, the city's wealthiest area. Downhill, in the path of the flames, residents jammed their cars with valuable, easily moved items such as jewelry, television sets, silverware and personal mementos. Then they fled down tAe narrow. twisting mountain road. Some clung stubbornly to their homes as the flames burned down the canyons. Residents who refused to budge were warned they would have to face the blue alone. Some waited until the last possible moment, trying to de- cide what to take with them. Others went outside with garden hoses to ftght the 20-foot b\gh flames. Payne Green, A policeman, was one of the Jnen with the hoses. "I was watering down my roofJlbout9p.01. when it began to get foo hot," he'laid. The family jumped into lhe car and we "got out. of there u f&ulck u we could/' "I don't even have my blllfokl but all that counts with me b that my kids and wife are 1ate... ' GTeen said bla home wu prob- ably worth more than $150,000 but. was only insured for $65,000. "l was ioing to see about ln· creasing that. tnaunnc• tbla w-. Now, I iuess I can for1tt i\. Tbe roof was atlrewhen we \eft," One of th• luck)' onet wu Charles Kimball, an attorneY whOIM ~ WU the onlY ~· •i>~ 'Wltliln a qumer.mllit oe tlt.tienideOf i~ rn.e' wtnd lblftecl Just dM' tM ftalMI bit a Mlllabor'• lMMaH1 be 1ald. ··1 don'.t ... •by. 1'111 Jud tratAil\ll." RUd)t~I .. June lehmld iD4 their~ cbildr• 1t00d 0Ut1IM the ftiDllM ot tMll bOme. 0 W• only movtd bl a montaa .,._ .. tM Hid. ''TM boU-. WU .1tUJ iii escrow." OQtatde the ftre ...... Nttll "My reason is simple. I want to die in dignity," Mrs. Welday said in her notarized 1972 af. fidavit. . As a result or that written command, the woman's daughter, Marie Leuck, earlier this month filed suit asking the· court to order Dr. Alex to withdraw treatment that keeps. the "permanently comatose, paralyzed and blind" woman. alive. That treatment purportedly consists of keeping the stricken woman's vital s igns going through the administration of glucose, electrolytes, heart and blood pressure medication and other nutrients administered through a nasal tube ... Jn response to that complaint. Garman said the law is unclear as to what co n s titute s ··artificial life sus taining m easures." "Certainly there is a dif- ference between the treatment that is keeping Mrs. Welday alive and the sophisticated medical equipment used to keep Karen Quinlan alive." Garman said. Miss Quinlan is the young New Jersey worn an whose parents won a court battle to have the machinery believed to be keeping their daughter alive, turned orf. Garman also said there is a • major legal issue involved in determining if Mrs. Wetday's "die with dignity" affidavit is valid under California law. "There r eally is no provision ·ror a living will," Garman said. "What we're seeking is court clarification of these issues." The attorneys for Mrs. Leuck said last week they believe the Natural Death Act enacted by the state Legislature last year contains the wording needed to justify asking the court to order Dr. Alex to withdraw treatment from Mrs. Welday. · They concede that the act's wording and the procedures it outllnes to determine who is eligible or who ~an qualify for the "right to die" does not fit Mrs. Welday's case. However, they insist the spirit and general wording of the Natural Death Act as well as Mrs. Welday's 1972 affidavit quaJlry her and her guardian to seek deiatb In a manner she herself prescribed. i'rotaPageAJ CH.AOS •• ; ~vacuatioil ~ wen lit up. ~at tM RaaDCla01 ....... ~~tlMri··· Ja1tel.s.~ Jammect tlte ft.et.. ftO :l.'fo~a: ... ~ ............... UNDERCOVER OFFICER ARRESTS SHIRTLESS JAMES WEeMS IN ANAHEIM GARAGE Polle• Say Porsche In Photo Waa Stolen and Stripped of Parta Car Theft Ring Smashed Newport Police Arrest 11 in Stripping CtUJe By JOANNE REYNOLDS OllMO.lly .. ltetst.H Newport Beach police said to- 1 day they have broken a l~e-knit ring they believe has been steal- ing Porsches and other luxury autos in the Harbor Area, can- nibalizing the cars and selling the parts. So far, undercover officers from Newport Beach, working with the California Highway Patrors inve.stigation section as well as investigators from the Orange and Anaheim Police Departments, have arrested 11 people allegedly involved with the ring. Detective Lee Roberts said several people are still being sought. According to police, five stolen Porsches and one stolen Lincoln Continental as well as auto parts, all worth more than $100,000, have been seized during a series of raids in the central county area over the past two weeks. Arrested in the investigations were: Warren Dale Vitters, 24, Anaheim, on suspicion of grand theft auto. Davis Dean Sna~ely, 28, Garden Gro\·e, on suspicion of grand theft auto. Armando Hernandez. 24, Garden Grove, on suspicion of conspiracy and on suspicion of receiving stolen property. Mi chael Jon Culligan, 24. Anaheim, on suspicion of con· spiracy and on suspicion of re· ceiving stolen property. Douglas Paul LaFleur, 24. Garden Grove, on suspicion of conspiracy and on suspicion of receiving stolen property. Wayne Clark Pallma, 22, Buena Park, on suspicion of con- spiracy and on suspicion of re· cei ving stolen property. Peter Gordon Farnsworth, 22, Anaheim, on suspicion of con· splracy and on suspicion of destroying insured property. FabieMe Simone Dehoux, 22, Anaheim, on suspicion of con- s pl racy and on suspicion of destroying in.sured property. Jiames Hardy Weems, 21, Anaheim, on suspicion of receiv· ing stolen property. Charles Leroy Kennedy, 28, Anaheim, on suspicion of receiv- ing stolen-property. Ronald Ray Rommann, 24, Anaheim, on suspiciom of receiv- ing stolen property. Del. Roberts and bis partner. Gary Black. said they received information two weeks ago about the ring which allegedly was tak- ing Porsch'es from Newport Beach to supposedly legitimate garages where they were stripped of parts. Whal was left reportedly was sold as sheet metal. The two detectives assert that several other auto parts and re- pair places in the county were buying the parts, knowing they were stolen. The shops allegedly bought the stolen parts at a re- duced rate and then sold them to customers at the regular rates. Vitters and Snavely were ar- rested July 19 after three stolen Porsches and the Continental al- legedly were found, in various sta~es or tteing dismantled, in their garage, Colours by Dave. 8540 Central Ave., Stanton. Former Newscaster, Robert Lilly, Dies Robert E. Lilly, a former radio newscaster who most recently served as an administrator at St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church in Newport Beach, is dead at the ageof54. Mr. Lilly, a Harbor Area res•· dent for the past 10 years, died Monday following a lengthy ill· ness. Born in Britt. Iowa, Mr. Lilly moved to Cedar Rapids, where he worked for the National Broa<Jcasting Company <NBC> as a radio newscaster for many years. While in Cedar Rapids. he met and married his wife, Mary. Mr. Lilly moved his wife and two daughters to Newport Beach in 1967, becoming church in· s urance directo r for th e Preferred Risk Insurance Com- pany. In 1910, he joined St. Andrew's church as administrative {lssis- tant to Dr. Charles Dierenfield, pastor of the Newport Beach con- gregation. f,\r. Lilly is survived by his wife, Marr. of the famUy home at 1845 Monrovia Ave.; daughters. Susan Wisdom and Sandra Hughes, and three grand- daughters, all or Costa Mesa. SUCCUMBS AT 54 Robert E. Liiiy Memorial services will be held at 11 a.m. Friday at St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church with Dr. Dierenfield officiating. Volleyballs & Nets Basketballs & Backboards Soccer BaUs Foot•atts-Juniocs4ntenneidate I Full Size pjay1roand Batis R1a1111tbalt a.•ts & Batts Hand Balls & Gloves Badminton Ratkets & Sltllttlacks 7 • I •• Saddlebaek /llteraoon N.Y. Stoeks eo1TION VOL. 70. NO. 208 ... SECTIONS, .... PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JULY 27, 1977 TEN CEN;~ Arsonist Blamed \ anta Bar ara • m God, What A Night! EDITOR'S NOTE: Wes Gallagher began his journalism career as a reporter in Louisiana m 1935, covered thf European front m World War II and post-war Germany for the Associated Press, and went on to become president and general manager of the AP He r ehred last year and moved to Santa Barbara. The fire came within 50 feel of the home he moved into last October, but left the house untouched. By WES GALLAGHER For IN Auoclated Pffta SANTA BARBARA -Oh God, what a night! The fire started opposite my house, about a mile away on the side of the hill. in the early evening. As we watched through glasses, it seemed as though the tanker planes flying from the local airport and dousing it with chemicals would put it under control. But the planes had to stop because of darkness. A warm desert wind suddenly started gusting up to 40 miles an hour. It picked up the fire and s pread burning embers over a four or fi ve-mtle stretch in less than an hour{' YOU COULD SEE THE FIRE leap a quarter of a mile at a lime as is 1t swept up Eucalyptus Hill, dotted with homes worth $250,000 and more. The tall eucalyptus trees, dried out after months of drought, exploded into flame as though they were touched with small bombs. The fire then moved down toward the ocean, into the southern section of Santa Barba ra, one of the poorer 11reas of the city. Firemen from 100 miles around had no chance to cope with the names as the winds mounted to about 60 miles an hour, caused in part by the fire itself. ABOUT MIDNIGHT, THE FIRE crept -dow~ the--mountain toward the Riviera section where l li ve. As flames closed in on both sides. my wife and I decided to abandon the house. As we pulled out into Conejo Road, our cars stocked with personal effects and clothes. we encountered 30 or 40 more autos, loaded with children, clothing, dogs and cats. One little girl was leading her white horse out of the fire area. Like almost everyone else in a similar situation, we carried away only some or the reaJly valuable things we had, having raced through the house, scooping up clothes, jewelry, contents of medicine closets, silverware. TREES BLOWN DOWN BY THE high winds blocked the road temporarily. A crew from the electric company arrived and sawed the trees into sections. Everybody pitched in to draw them out of the way, down the mountain. Having' watched refugees from Germany to Vietnam, I never thought I would be one myself and it is a singularly unpleasant ex- perience. As we reached the downtown area and the Santa Barbara News-Press office. we could see the fire that swept into the southern part of the city start leaping back up the mountain which the city is built on as the wind shifted from the ocean. THE WINDS DIED IN THE early morning hours and the combined firefighting forces from many parts or Southern California gradually brought the blaze under control. I had to walk back into the area where I live because of blocked roads. I found my neighbor's house 50 reel ~way burned to the ground, but mine was intact. The fire had swept through around the knoll of the hill behind us and on the right side as well, but somehow. it left our house untouched. The threat remained. however. As I came do"'<n the road, firefighting crews were trying to douse hot spots where fires still burned on both sides of the road because they fearE<i the Santa Ana wind would come again this evening. NB Police Break / -. Porsche ·Tlleft Ring By JOANNE REYNOLDS Ol-OellY ... 1141teff Newport Beacn police said to- day they have brokett a loose-knit rlna they believe bas been steal· ing Porsches and other. luxyry autos lb the Harbor Area, can· 'lleer Fairy' Reported nibalizin& the cars ana selling ~Ile parts, So far, undetcover officers front Newport. Beach, working with the Califoroia Hlpway Patrol's investigaUon aec:Uon as w~ll as lnvestieators from tl\e Orange and Anaheim Poliee Departments, have arrested 11 people allegedly involved with thering. • Detective Lee Roberts said several people are stHl beint sought. According to police, fivt ~tQkm Porscbes and one stolep Unc~n Continental d well as auto pa.N,. all worth more than Sl00,000, have been seized durinc a series of raids in the central eounty &Ha over the past two weeks. Arrested ill the iovestJa1Uon1 LONE FIREMAN SILHOUETTED AGAINST THE REM~INS OF BURNING HOME IN SANTA BARBARA AREA Brush Fire Set by Arsonist Destroys Over 200 Expensive Homes In Exclusive Residential Section xpensive-Homes ·-TorChed SANTA BARBARA <APl -- Officials said an .arsonist set the brush fire that raged down from_lhe Santa Y-nez Mountains today .and destroyed 200 expensive homes in this picturesque coastal community.· City Flre Chief Rich Peterson said he did not know how the fire was set, but said it, was started within 200 feet of a 1964 blaze that burned 78 homes in the exclusive, hilly residential area overlooking the downtown and Pacific Ocean beach area. · One person was arrested for looting but no other details were immediately available. Officially. the fire was still said to be out of control, but by mid- morning, it was apparent that progress was being made in knocking out hot spots. "We feel very comfortable with it as it stands right now," said Santa Barbara County fire chief William Patterson. "It's not spreading and we're trying to wid~;i t.be inland fire line so that when the winds come up they won't throw anything acrQSS Chat line," he said.x Firemen were worried inat the wind, which died down shortly betqre ~l:WQfwould pick up again and whip the fire through the dry brush and back into areas that escaped Qeslnu!t.ion earlier. Twentr·t~o people received FOURTH FIRE ON A MONDAY-A4 minor injuries. When the fire began about 7 p.m. Tuesday night, hundreds of persons fled their homes in the northeast se'ction of the city, less than one mile from the downtown courthouse and ..8bout two miles from the Pacific. Shortly before dawn, the winds shifted and blew from the sea in- to the fire, then died down altogether. At first light, five bombers and two helicopters began dropping chemical fire re- tardants. The blaze began in the Sycamore Canyon area and roared through the nearby Riviera section, one of the clty"s most exclusive residential areas where home values were estimated to be in excess of $250,000. By dawn, some or the residents began returning t--0 netghborhoods that war~ ehecketbOatds of destruct.ion. Gutted homes stood next door t.o ltouSe!i that were.untouched. While chaotic conditions pre· vailed in the mountain areas as hundreds of spectators tried lo negotiate the narrow, hilly roads, the downtown area was relative· ly quiet. · Aside from •the neighborhood known as the Riviera, the flames licked into Sycamore Canyon and Monteclto and got as far south as the edge of Westmont College. Rather than go to one of the seven evacuation centers set up by relief groups, many of the well-to-do people who fled before Tuesday's names checked into the numerous motels or hotels scattered around the city. Anguished homeowners used garden hoses to wet down wood shingle roofs as fierce winds -blew a storm of sparks and ashes ahead of the advanetng flames, which could be ieen more than 20 miles away. It was the fourth major fire in 13 years in Santa Barbara. The others were in 1964, 1968 and 1971. Firefighters had .s., difl!cnll --- tiine reaching the fire area because of the winding, narrow roads that made it difficult for 'trucks to pass. )n addition, large crowds or si~tseers gathered along the roads, further hamper· ing efforts to get at the flames. <See ARSON, Page A2) 2,000Apply For_ 300 Jobs CFUCAGO (AP) -The crowd of 2,000 surged into a new supermarket hungry for work, not food. There were seven appli- cants for each job. "We're desperate," one black woman cried. "Desperate for jobs." "I need this job bad," Bernard Meeks declared. "I've been out ·or work for nearly five years." This was Chicago's South Side on a day when 300 jobs, most of them part-time and paying only $3.05 to $3.90 an hour. became available. C4IUER NEWS CONFAB WASHINGTON (AP) -Presi· Weatller Patchy fog early Thurs· day morJliDg and low clouds along the beacbe11. 1 Otherwise it will be fair , through Tbursclay with • warm, IUJU\1 days. Lows • tonight ln 4119'· Highs In middle to UllPel' $08 inland am! mld·'lOs at beaches. :\% ~LY PILOT SB ~--Sizzles ··as Firelnen Leave lly o\antUa •. VINSEL Olt .... 11, ............ RwitbWtJI out ID t.h• relative pred Mt f'OOJ, • nreft1htln1 taak tone Id\ Or•n•~ Countv '°'the bla1101 holot.·uual In S•nh 8arhar11 todu y. u fc•rful authoralles calcuh1led how to handle Or•nge County·~ own t'riUC'al fare d.tn~er. Bltsterlng tcmpl'ratures reachmg above 100 dearet:S ln an land Orange County arc e•P!"Cled to conunuc 11t lea~t throuah Satur day, as parC'hed brushland\ ialm mt>r "'th the rel411LIH hum1dlty &t only48percent Th~ d~parture of eight fire trucks and their crewmen to help t'Om bat the marc h of the rireslorm threatening Santa Barbara f\Vther worried Orange County hreftghting authorttu::-. today. * • * Oranat • \Y re 0.part-tn•• CllJ In Brure Turlaevill• t•ld today that no <,taya oft, Ito or vacaUona bawe been uncel«i but oth emercency me un:a have been takea. "We h1av4t pulled In some of our tire prevtntlon apeclallata to mun ttuclui In cue .. .," Capt. Tur~vllle 1uud lo analy&ina the auclal county fire situation. "Lcl 'i. hce It," Capt. Turbeville i.aid bluntly. "The d1rnger ra~ht now is extreme to i.uy the least. We are scared to dl•Ulh ..• "We haven't hud any fires here tn the county yet In the current p~raod, but we're sitting oo a time bomb with devastating potential." He said the Santa Barbara bhtte is a clear reminder or pre- cisely what can happen in some * * * ·El Toro Marines Gear Up/or Fires Precautionary measures against the current brush lire menace have been taken at El Toro Marine.Corps Air Station, whose men stand ready to join civilians on fire lines at any time. Spokesmen at the base said to- day preparations for the simmer- ing s ummer and attendant drought-created fire dangers began in early spring, with the grading of fresh fire lines. · "They cut the fire breaks back up in the hills earlier and they made them wider," explained a Marine Corps spokesman. Basic fire protectlon at El Toro MCAS is provided by a civil service fire department oc- casionally supplemented with Marine peJ'SOnnel when it is re- quired. A special standing station or- der was also issued this year by the commanding general requir· mg that a minimum of 100 Marines must be marshaled within minutes if needed to fight a maJor fire anywhere in Orange County. Crash crews normally stand- ing by the cvl•nt of aviation acddcntl' on the field are also de- u.uled to back up the Department 01 the Navy civil service fire de- partment if it is engaged elsewhere. Spokesmen said the Third Marine Air Wing unit always sends at least orie fire truck to any base brushfire or other blaze to assist the civilian fire depart· ment personnel. Helicopter units at the Santa Ana Manne Corps Air Station also are on standby fire call. Marine Corps officials said they are outfitted to carry SOO. gallon water buckets that snap right onto fuselage fittings "They ean hover and lower them into a lake, load up and then go back in the air and drop them onto the fire," a Marine Corps spokesman explained. Still another Marine Corps re- source available to civilian firefighters in time or a 'major fire crisis includes heavy equip- ment used by·the Third Marine Air Wing at both the El Toro and Santa Ana bases. Authorities said in ·case or a , fire approaching the magnitude of the Santa Barbara disaster. road graders, bulldozers and other machinery will be availa- blt' Doctor's 'Rights' -Debated by Lawyer By GARV GRANVILLE Of tl1t Dally Piiot St•fl Lawyers for a Newport Beach doctor who has refused to obey a woman's written directive to ll'l her "die with dignity" say the doctor dqes not have the legal right to withdraw the life )iUpport measures keeping the woman alive. The lawyers' res ponse to Marie Welday's guardian's plea for a court order directing Dr. Theodore Alex to let Mrs. Wei· day die was filed Tuesday in Orange County Superior Court. In the response filed by at- torney William Garman. Dr. Alex denied that the 84-year-old woman's condition is terminal and that he is keeping her alive by artificial means. In an interview Tuesday. however, Garman said the is- sues involved in the right to die case go much deeper than dif· rerences of medical opinion on Mrs~ Weld~~s cog~iti•!!.:_ For example, the cross· complaint filed on beha\f of Dr. Alex concedes that Mrs. Welday suffered a crippling stroke May 4, 1976, and has been in a com- atose slate ever since. The response also acknowledges that, in 1972, Mrs. Welday "executed a written document" stating that, "No doctor ls to take any measure whataoever to artlficlally pre· serve or stimulate life in my body when it is ready lo die." "My reason is simple. I want lo dle in dignity," Mrs. Welday O"ANQl COAST ,.. DAILY PILOT s aid in her notarized 1972 af· fidavit. As a res ult or that written co mmand, the woman 's daughter, Marie Leuck, earlier this month filed suit asking the court to order Dr . Alex to withdraw treatment that keeps the "permanently coml}.tose, paralyzed and blind'' woman alive. That treatment purportedly consists of keeping the stricken woman's vital signs going throu~• the admipistration or glucese, electrolytes, heart and blood pressure medication and other nutrients administered through a nasal tube." In res~se to that complaint. Garmaa said the law is unclear as to what constitutes ··artificial nre sustaining measures." "Certainly there is a dif· rerence between ttie treatment that is keeping Mrs. Weld~ ir-ttve-~rtd--ttrtr S'ol)lfislTcated medical equipment used to keep Karen Quinlan alive," Garman said. Miss Quinlan ls the young New Jersey woman whose parents won a court batUe to have the machinery believed to be keeping their daughter alive, turned orr. Garman a.lso said there is a major legal 1,sue involved in determining if Mrs. Welday's · "die ,.with dignity" affidavit la v~\icl under California taw1 •11btte really ls no provision for a Uvinc will, .. Gum8¥ 1aid. ''What we're aeektnc ls court clarlfiaatio~ or these lsauea." . . The attdrneya for Mn. l.e\&ck sakl'last week they .. lleve the Natural Death A'ct enacted by the •t.ate Le1Jslature laat year contains the -wo,dinc nffded to Juatlf y asklnl tt)e court t.o orcler l>r. Alex to wt~aw trutme'flt from Mrs. Welday. I areu d Orange County that bave re.eently btcome btavlly oooulat- ed and ll~ adjacent to brush and Umbularidl. • .. Rllht now, we're in an or- t•nlaaUonal ataae." he ex- plained of preparations being taken In the event a major blaze should break out. And any blaze that occurs will be considered major at the very outset due to the critical weather conditions currently existing over most of California. Depletion of Southland firefighting forces attacking the Santa Barbara inferno further in- creases the severity of the situa- tion raced in the Orange County region, Turbeville said. ' He said about 4 a.m., fire eneines from the county fire de- partment's headquarters in Orange; its Olive station, and the cities ol Hunllagton Beach, Seal Beach. San Clemente plus thr~ State Divi.slon of Poreatry wilts were dl1patched lo Santa Barbara. The additional aid was sent un- der the county's Office or Emergency Services Task Force plan to help other agencies tn ex- tremely grave disaster situa- tions. Spokesmen for the U.S. Weather Service say the current heat wave is here to stay at least through Thursday and speculal· ed there will be no relief before Sunday. SearinJ temperatures in the south county have reached the point at which county firemen at the Laguna Hills Station plan to throw every piece of equipment at any outbreak of fire. This includes calling in so- D~lh• Piiot News ,_.P SHADED AREA INDICATES FIRE-RAVAGED AREA Destruction In Santa Barbara's Sycamore Canyon called borate bombers to drop fire retardant chemicals on apread.lnc names. Firemen classify fir~ dan1er11 on the baats or temperature, ·humidity and wind velocity, by low, medium and high baurds. NorJnally in summertime, a medium hazard level is imposed around noon and today it wair in effect at 8 a.m .. with the critical high danger or Red Flag Situa- tion antici~ated_by noon. Undevelope<t property sur- rounding Laguna Beach bas been . closed to trespassinc for about six weeks and polic'e are getting especially tough on enforcement due to the rire hazard. Orange County Air Pollution Control District officials imposed * * * a Staae One smo1 alert over the entire county, except ror breeiy San CleJ:Qente. Air conditioninc sy,tems in public buildings -those that have them -were hummin& away at full capacity as the heat grew today to its noonday and late afternoon peak. Residents of inland areas those who had a day oft or work niihls ~ thronged county beaches, as long-cruUy seawater t~mperatures finally began to rase. Newport Beach liteiuards said they reached the 67-dearee mark Tuesday, but lifeguards in Hunt- ington Beach said al least a low surf and calm seas kept their rescue count down as swimmers cooled off. * * * C~s, Heartbreak Mark &ene ·of Fire SANTA BARBARA CAP> - The scene at the five.point in· tersection below Sycamore Can- yon was one of chaos, despera· tfon and heartbreak as residents either fled their homes or tried to get to them in the face or this city's worst fire in years. Standing In the center of the jammed intersection Tuesday night was police officer James Carroway, who battled motorists frantically trying to return up twisting roads to their en- dangered homes while others dashed for their lives down the narrow canyons. "Park it and walk. Park it and walk," he shouted, Yet despite emergency flares on the street and the huge traffic jam some drivers ignored the of- ficer's warnings and managed to slip through. Shortly after 10 p.m., three hours after the fire began, Car- roway asked bystanders for help. A number of them volunteered and were immediately dis· patched to Sycamore Canyon to assist in the evacuation. Some clung stubbornly lo their homes as the flames burned re- lentlessly down the canyons. Residents who refused to budge were warned they would have to race the blaze a lone. Al one residence, a group of people piled furniture, dishes, and clothing Into a tiny compact car. Another family drove out or tbe canyon with their possessions thrown into a trailer. A man walked out guiding ~ horse, trying lo keep it from bolt- ing in the confusion. Another man gave a woman resident a ride on his motorcycle lO her endangered house. When they got there all she could do was ask him, "What should I lake?'· From Page AJ PO RS CHES. Wayne Clark Pailma, 22, Buena Park, on suspicion of con- spiracy and on suspicion of re- cei vlng stolen property. Jury Transcripts On Diedrich Due Just before 11 p.m ., most of the residents had evacuated the can- yon except for those few who re- fused to leave their homes. Dust, soot, traces of spray from fire hoses and sparks begun to ln· crease. By 11 p.m. the blaze had ignited a house within several hundred yards of the busy in- tersection. * * * From Page A J Peter Gordon Farnsworth. 22, Anaheim, on suspicion of con- spiracy and on suspicion of destroying insured propertv. Fabiennc Simone Dehoux, <!2, Anaheim, on suspicion of con- s piracy and pn suspicion of destroying insured property. James Hardy Weems. 21. Anaheim, on suspicion or receiv- ing stolen property. Charles Leroy Kennedy, 28, Anaheim, on suspicion of receiv-. ing stolen property. Ronald Ray Rommann. 24, Anaheim, on suspiciom or receiv- ing stolen property. Del. Roberts and his partner, Gary Black, said they received information two weeks ago about the rine which allegedly was tak- ing Porsches from Newport Beach to supposedly legitimate garages where they were stripped of parts. What was left reportedly was sold as sheet mcl~. · The two detectives asl!ert that several other auto parts ~d re- pair places in the county were buying the parts, knowi~ th,,Y._ were slutelJ. Th-e "'Sllops a egedly bought the stolen parts at a re- duced rate and then sold them to customers at the reaular rates. Vltlers and Snavely were ar- rested July 19 after three stolen Porsches and the Continental al- legedly were found, lh various, stages of being dlsmanUed, in their garage, Colours by Dave, 8540Central Ave., Stanton. Hernandez was arrested the same day at his garage, National Collision Service, 117&2 Western A '*e., Garden Grove, after a stqlen Porsche body and enaine · parta alleaedly were found there. CulUgan, LaFleur and Pallma "ere ~ted Friday at F and M Forache ud VW Repair, 1178a Western Ave., G~n Grove, in connection wttb \be purchase ot four allegedly alolen Porsche tires. Weems. Kennedy and Rom· mann were erreated Monday Lil coM~Uoo wtth the sate ot an al· te1.c11.Y stolen Porsche, stripped, lo the undercover lnv•Usaton. Grand jury transcripts of de· liberations which led to the in· dictment of two Orange Coun. ty supervisors and four co· defendants were lo be released to the publiC' and press late today. The unsealing of more than 2,000 pages of transcripts became possible late Tuesday when the Fourth District Court of Apperus upheld Superior Court Judge H. Warren Knight's earlier ruling. . Defense attorney Thomas Crosby h ad argued f or Supervisor Philip Anthony, 41, that the transcripts shouJd be sealed until a jury reaches its verdict. The 2,200 pages due for release today deal with the last three months of the 1976-77 grand jury's probe into allegations of corrupt campaign financing in Orange County. More ~ban 1,800 pages of transcripts devoted to the early portion of the probe have already been a made public. Scheduled to face arraignment August 11 before Judge Knight are Anthony. Supervisor Ralph Diedrich, 53; financial con:;ultant Gene Conrad, 43; Dr. William Koll, SS; attorney Michael Rem· ington, 37, and Calabasas jeweler Martin Kirschner,§7. A!i six face trial on multiple felony counts related to alleged violation of state poliUul cam- paign and financial disclosure laws. RehiriQg Planned LOS ANGELES <AP> -The ci- ty Board ot Educ;.ation plans to rehire Wtllian Johnston as superintendent and wm extend hls. contract throu•h 1981, wllen he plans to retire at age 55, the Los Angi?l~ Times said Wedhes· day. ARSON ... Police said they would arrest anybody who was not authorized to be In the area. Dennis Orbus, a U.S. Forest Service spokesman, said the blaze was fu eled by chaparral brush '8nd eucalyptus trees, both Cull of oily sap. He said the fire started in the Los Padres Na- tional Forest and definitely was man-caused. ' Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. declared a state of emergency in Santa Sarbara County today and sent 120 Na\ional Guard troops to Santa Barbara to aid firefighters and police. Brown torn reporters his declaration will enable homeowners to apply for low- interest federal loans to pay for property damage destroyed in a blaze burning out of control on the edges of the city. & ~· \?@lYl ([ ®@i?wn@@ ........... &M DEAR PAT: Several month• lllO th • WU "' arttcle In th• Dally Pilot. ubcK&t • nian who waa maklDI and ziellltrL raJn aoch. WW you nhd out wbeni nn purcbut on•" P.H., Cotonadel Mur am Payw'a rata •od• are avatJabJe· at Markel C-era•lu.1111 Tale, Santa .ha. Mailed ..Uve"J ol *"• SI ftiunt. caa M UTlapid bf pa.c.lq t'Jl.tlJl. llet&IJ oudet •al•• are p&aened for later tbl1 year. acconll.q &o alatll.el'11> ....... ._.r .. ow DEAR PAT Years a10 when 1 •P· plied for my f1ral pusport, the puaport office kept my mother's af- fidavit sweanne to ract.s or my birth in K.ansu where I was born before re· cord.a were kept. It was lbe only re· cord I bad showing wh en and where I was born. My mother has since passed oo and I have no one else who can make out a new affidavit. Ia there some way I can have my .mother's affidavit returned after all tbese years? Where do 1 wnlc? J got m y passport through the New York of· fi~e and wonder 1£ they still have my r«ord. S.T .• Fountain Valley Write dlrecUy to the Passport Of· flee, 1425 K St. N.W .• Washington, DC 21524._ giving the run name In whJcb tbe passport. was issued, your date aad p.l;lce ot birth, number and date of issue ol the passport or available). If your aUidavlt Js sUll on me, lhJs olfice may be Jlble lo relurn iL to you or send a copy. . :i1 .., :. V-*adoa a Scana? 4 DEAR PAT: My 18-year-old daughter just received a Las Vecas vacation o(fer from Columbia Research Corp. priced at $1S.9S. She's thrilled. but I'm suspicious. · .... , F .s .. Santa Ana Colambla Research Corp. ls apparemly not a Jegltlma&eopendon. ExtradlUGn proceedtn1s are QDder way bl Qalcago for CRC'a president &.o face c.rlmlnaJ and civil clauces filed by &ae Callfonaia Attorney Gaetal. Postal authorities say &Jley are . powerless &.o stop CRC'a eobtbmed mass 111aWn1s. Tllose who paJd for the $15.15 ncadoo and b.ve proof ol : payment are asked &.o •end m•tedaJs · to Dep. Atty. Gen. James c.neo. Offtee ol &lie. Attonaey General. COit "Stace BulJdlng, San Franc~ CA 9'UM, wUh carbon copies malled to &be Federal Trade Commission: R= Oftlff, mt l'ederal Offtc. 8 ,Onelalld.OBttltl. Le•• -uit11ee OEAR PAT: Lut aumn:i.r thero wa• a toll-tree pbont nwnber one could call to flnd out where fresh productt ~ be purchAMd directly from tbu •rower. 11 such a number in uper&Uon thil summer? A.H., Fountain Valley Tbe Calllonda DepafUn•t ol hod and Apt~·· dlreet mukedq ••bot.Une'' mamber la 1.-.m.5111_ Reqaeat •• laformatlea •beet by pllcMllaC &be above aamber er by wrlt1a1 Co Dlreet Martetl•f PfOll'Ul, 1220 N &., Sacn.mea&o. CA t~N. Aa wtpdated UsUng beeomea avallable la Septentber. .......... ~ DEAR PAT: I am going to have to go to Small Claims Court to try to recover tbe membership dues l paid to a tennis club for a swim memberabip last May. I found the facWty was misrepresented and none of the pool regulations were bein& e.nf orced. How do I &o about flllni a suit! D.A. Newport Beach The Callforola Department of Co•attmer Affairs offers a free pa.bUcatloa, .. Tbe Consumer And Tlae Small OaJms COQ.11." Request a tree copy by phoning the Orange Couty Office of Consumer Affairs at SM .. 181. A complete explau&loe o( Ute Small Oaima Court procedue Is included in the bookie&. DEAR PAT: I sent a complaint to Crazy Horse clothin& manufacturers in Paterson, N.J., about a $42 sweater 1 bought in Wasb.ingt.oo, D.C. last fall. 1be yarn is "pilllnl,.'.' and I have been told this is because of defective yarn. I asked for a lfeplace111eot or refund, but didn't get any reply. S.G., Huntington Beach Tbe maaufactarer's spoke.man told A YS &llat you sbou.ld submit your co.naplalllt to UM company'• pntddeat James Robblu, at 5Z51tlt Ave., N~w Yorlr, NY 1M18. Replacement or refmld allt.borlutloa must come from him penooally, the •PGk•mu HIG, addJq 1hat del~dve yUD b no& Ute oD.ly cause fol' pllUJls. Be •are to describe tb~ aweater and your laamled:ag m•ed. 'H Ute sweater II defeetlve, you will be asked &.o maU It for an appropriate adjustment. ., _.J,• ~4·1' ~ Little· Airierica \ . . ~ ~.Ju!y27,1977 s DAILY PILOT ., Another Hillhilly Ebsen OD .TV .............. f&lltor'• 1d•: Bo.We Ebailn, 1DhoN lothn' hddil Miss E .. who also studied with New York acting live• a NfU;Jport Beac". appeared locaUw "'"Htte U.1 guru Sanford Meisner, did summer stock. appear. J~ Trost' ond "Tonight al 1:30.'' ~at U.. Coata in& in "Our Town ... Then she spent e lot or time MeaaCW.CP~.J simply waScb.IJll her falher and othen work in bis ''Barnaby Jones·• aerlea on CBS. By JAY SllASBlJTI' LOS ANGELES (AP> -hr alneseasons Bud· "HE FELT THAT WAS the best way for me lo dy Ebeen atarTed ln CBS' ••Beverl1 HlUblWes. •• Now an Ebsen offspring, Bonnie, is, ls ln a almllar· !ii~~~er than go lo a lot ol film acline schools.·· ly bucolic aeries for NBC, ''The ~kab. •• Miss Ebseo, who subsequenUy landed roles in It starts Aug. 3, run1 flveweeb and ~cern1 a 0 Marcus Welby," "The Hardy Boys" and a TV West Virainia famUy that moves to a desolate spot movie, "Smashup on Interstate 5, .. saya her first in California, opens a eaa station and commences jobwasonpop'sshow. "BarnabyJones." scbeminc ways to make a fut buck. "I played the secretary ol a militant feminist Bonnie, a tall. blue-eyed blonde lady wlth • who'd knocked off her boyfrie~;· abe grinned. quick smile, will be essaytng Bobbl Lou, daughter She spOke o.f all this dUrin& the traditional in- of Papa Kallikak. terview in l)urbank at tbe NBC commissary, wbere NBC llABl'ENS TO CLAIM ita show lsn •t much lhesoupoltbeday w aa potaae a la thumb. like "Hillbillies." They note that Jed Clampett's clan was <Ill-rich, this one is dlrt·poor and doean't · E.\tLIER. SHE'D BEEN READJ,NG through live in Beverly Hills, either. Hokay. the third show's script with other cast members, Bonnie may come from a show bi1 family, but among them David Huddleston <Papa Kall.i.tuj s he says she's the only one of Ebsen 's seven kida to and Peter Palmer, who starred ln the Broadway lake up acting, deciding on that after herfint year and rDOIVle versions of "L ·u Abner'·' and now ta play." in colleae. ing a German immlarant . NEW TV EBSEN It's customary for stars to tell their tot.s to stay Bonn.it made mention that lf the Kallikalts click .Newport'• Bonnie out of show biz. that it's full ol no-gonctnika wbo'U this summer, there's a good chance NBC will ---------break your heart. teprise it io January as a mid-aeasoo replacement. Not Ebsen the Elder, she said: .. No. he'd never And if not? Stars Set For 'West' TV Movie LOS ANGELES <AP> -"How The West Was Won, .. bas signed more guest stars for the big· production Western for ABC. I Horst Bucholz will portray Sergei, the Count ol Kiev, nephew of the -Grand Duke of Russta, who will be played by Christopher Lee. Brian Keith has been signed to play Gen. ·•erandy Jack,_ Stonecipher, a general cut from the pattern ot Patton and Custer. Peter Hansen, seven years in "General Hospital, .. will play an Army m~or. James Amess stars in the series. Nolan to Run LOS ANGELES (AP) -Kathleen Nolan, first woman president of the Screen Actors Guild, bu announced her intention to nm for re-election. She ls completing her. first two-year term. .. say. 'Don •t do this, don •t do that.... ••we11, •• ahe said in the liaht-hearted way some AND, SHE SAYS. SHE dido 't tell blm sbe•ct de-lbesp{ans have when facing possible misery, ''then cided to become an actress' unW the A-......a...... it•s on to aometbio& ebe and bi-dlddJey-dee. an &Clo' _,.._ tor"1 life for me." Conservatory Theater ln San Francisco appnmid ------------------her application to study there. "I ran outslda where be was flxlnl bis boat. and cried. •1 Just gol accepted to acting school ••• lbe s aid ... And be went. 'Ob, that ·s great.• But that was l4e first he heard of lL '' .tfll Stars Sweep TV Ra~ings .Prize -The All·atar baaeball .. All-etar Baseball.•• '."\Ol I'll ( O .\ST / • /'t. It• I ,\' "",: ' ' 1 . LOS ANGELES. <AP> der: ~ game <JO NBC was tbe 1'1.4 mllllon, NBC; blg1eat bit ID last weet•a .. Clwtle'a Anlels. •• H . television ratlnp race. mm~ ABC; .. Barnaby •. · . Tbe All·•taf contest · .T~ U.4 m1llloG. and N was viewed In more &ban· "Huandl ad Wifes.,.. 1'1.4 mi.Woo bomea on· 13 mllllon, both :iCBS; • -.. · Tueeday n1'ht • week "Laverne and Shirter.P·....,-~~-----.., ago accordina \o· A. c 12.9 mllllon, .. Bamey--"'!""'!'-~~------------ Nleiaen 11~ tor tbe Mmer:• u.1 million, ---· .. ~-------------- weektodin.I July,M. · ABC &mdQ movie. 12.7 A. ~ +il'"'l"V'> ago in A ~V\.J This week'• big loser million, all ABC; "All-a l'VI ~ UI I~ II I u ~, was a lbow eompetin& Fair. 12.' mllllon. CBS; f::.r b:V FtJJFftJ aaaloat the natlooal • "What's Bappenlna," JV11JVI -··-1-· · pastime -a qBS com· 12.2 mllllOQ. and ••nsb," i edy pUot called ••Best' 12 million, both ABC; • Friends" last place in ''The .Teftersoos ... 11.7 the n~bers -chase and mUllon. CBS; "Happy seen in 6.1 million Days," 11.5 millloo, homes. ABC: "Quincy," 11.2 The week's Nie)sen top mlllkn, NBC: "Maude," 20 shows and the number ll.2 million. CBS: "SUD· of homes in which they day Movie.•• 11.1 were aeen were, ln or-million; a.Welcome 1 Skippers ~ • . 'f)Up·~aace ·~t . Of Cal-25 Back, Kotter," 11 milli~ ABC; ~-an.,-Day at a Time.•• ll mlllloo; "Joe Garaglola AJl-star Special." 10.9 million, NBC; "Shields and Y amell." 10.9 · mllllon. CBS; ·aDd .. Bareua, .. · .. '"the toan·a up .. •• nlld the UD8 Oil~ eon- talnlng two C.Clasa ca~llb:S Wn& oft.loaded et lps Angeles 1iarbor this ~It. · The C Cat.s are from Australia and the signs in· dicate the Aussies' determination to wln back the Lillie America's Cup. emblymatlc of wor\d catamaran sailing. which the AmerlcansaUara won for the f1rst ti me last year. SPORTING EQUALLY EN'l'fftJSIASTIC sicns. .. Keep the Cup, .. on T-shirts and other gear around Cabrillo Beach•Yacht Club, the Americans begin ellminaUons next week to determine whJch of at least 13 C Cats -some of them. new -will defend the coveted prize againat the Aussie challenge. The eliminatlon series will start next Wednesday and continue through Aug.13. . The a~al cup races are scheduled Aug. 20-.30. The boats shipped here by the Aussl~s are Nicbola.5 II and Queat 'Ill, the latter presumably a trial horse for Nicholas n. During the Australian selection trials Nicbolu II was the Winni?' in a 3-l: series against Quest III. TEAM CAPTAIN FOR the Australians is 42· year old Lindsay Cunningh~. His sailing crew is composed of Graham Candy, 31; Graeme Fraser. 32; and Simon McKeoo, 21. The rinal crew selection will be made after the boat evaluation series in Los Angeles Harbor. The team manager is Doug Guy. SJ, commodore of the McCrae Yacht Club of Australia. At least six of the American defense contenders have already tasted competiUon in the recent Pacific MuJUbull Association world championship at CBYC earllet thb month. They were Taun&.011. 8.uperduck, Taku Ill, Aquarius IV. A~uariua V and Sea Eagle. Others readyln1 for the competition are Patient Lady ill, Hawk, Deliance. Coyote JV, 141 Spruced Vp, Delta 88 and Amarysass. TRE MOST FORMIDABLE new boat ap· proachln1 completion is Hawk, designed by Cla)'ton Turnbull. Ned Damon, Cappy Sheeley and Rick Taylor. At 400 pounds it is reputed to be the lightest C Ca~ ever built. The boat is 23 feet lon&.13 feet wide and ts constnacted of sucb exotic materials as a carbon fiber Ct'OSS tube. titanium trampoline on a natural wood finish. Alex Kozloff of Irvine with Robby Harvey, ~~ ~h, brought the cup to the U.S. for the pl,.. time Jut year after a srueUnr aeries in ~ Tbe1r boat wu Aq\W'lua v. cle$i&Ded b1 DlllYNll ........ CATS TUNE UP FOR UTTlE AMERICA'S CUP U.S. Elmlnatton Trtala Start Next WednHday Three Fleet Title Races .in Newport B ,7:. lQ.8 mm•~. ABC.·. oaf.8 T~. . . .. FUty representatt~ ... Tatruli Set of Cal·25 fleeti .tn thA~ . . Vnlted States began ar• .. .. 'y 7 l ' riving in Long Beach . •R re vet Harbor today for the Na· . ti on al Championship LOO .ANGELES CAP> Regatta scheduled -Tatum O'Neal wlll SaturdayandSundayout follow. Elizabeth of Long Beach Yacht. Taylor's footsteps by Club. playing. the lead in Chairman Ted Ediss MGM'.& ~'International said the races will be V.elvelt." sailed on courses outside Miss TaylGr made her Long Beach Harbor. major debut aa a child There will be three races actress ln ••National :Saturday and two on Velvet,•• ft1med by MGM Sunday, start1ng at u in 184'. Now Bryan a.m. each day. Forbes bu updated Ole There will be a atlp. plottotelltbea11oryoltbe pera meding and sail borae-lovtng niece of measuring at LBYC Vehet Brown, the &tarting at 9 a.m. Sa~ Taylcrrote. day. Mias O'NeaJ, 0sc81' The Cal-25 is a popular. win.Der as supporting ac· racing-cruising yacht de--tress far "Paper Moon," signed by C. William will be directed by Lapworth of Newport Forbes on locations in Beach and built by Cal England and the United Yachts. StateS this fall. . w dnt-aday's NYSE COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS 2 p.m. (EDT) Prices o..4•1._ ........ ,, .. ,.,. ....... ., Y9", Ml4wt'1. l'M,111(, ............. 0.1"'1 end Cl1Klft1Mtl tlO<ll ~1..W,...,,.. •1 IM ..... lei!WIAUecl.utlttf S«Wllltt OHi.n..-lftMINI. I I> • 11~ n I lAI 1 'I() ) 1 ,, )1 s llM 177 &• S8 B 1 29 184 4l 1 ' IO ltll 1 114 1 l ••• • I] 10 JJ JO ~ .... "-14 1) .. -\11 SJ\.-..... 23 + "' 131<.-V. ,,...,_"' ~-..... ,,....,_ "'· .,,.,_ ~. lJ•i.-.... ,. ... "'•• ~ ,. '. 15'11-"' 1"1 "' 11'"! I • 1n•·i fl~• •• ,. 11' I "•· IJ ...... ,,.. .. i... ., .. , ... 18''1 t Vt 1J•. + ... , •i. .. IC)>oo ... ,,~.-14 l S\11-''-ll•'J-t , 10'.t. ••••• JI~ -''t u .. -.. ,, ........ 11 -'4 ""' ... ~-'h '°"' • "' II~•-V. .. ..._"' , .. .,_ ..... v.ct!?e!day. July v . uin s DAILY Pt.LOT .. Realistic? Carter's Goals . Stretch Outlays By JOHN CUNNIFF .......... .......,. Th06e Carter admlnialratlon economic coats -4.S percent unemployment. 4 percent Inflation and a balanced budget by 1981 -are iocreasln&lY beln1 adjud&ed uorealisllc by professional analysts. While making such determinations, however, critics generally are avoiding any 1eneral denunciation of the Carter economic program. It's the &oats, not the policies, that are :.mrealisllc , they seem to be aaylog. EVEN CHARLES L. SCIRJLTZE, chairman of the President's Council of Economic Advleers, conceded that the balanced budget goal wu "an ambitious objective." But he suggested it was better lo seek than to avoid the challenge. · One or the assumptions underlyln1 that 1oal ls that business capital outlays will grow al a 9 or 10 percent annual rate for four or five years. But that superior achievement has been attained only once before, in the first half ol the 1960s. Numerous critics have jumped on these capital outlays assumptions, partly because of long experience with seeing spending fall far short of the projections made for it in various surveys. One of Scbulue's former associates at the Brookings Institution, George Perry, is among those who raise doubts about the unemployemnt and inflation goals. CUfllNll'I' Perry recently published a study indicatlng that to achieve a jobless rate of 5 percent by 1981 the nation would have to boost employment 3.2 percent a year and Gross National Product S. 7 percent annually. SINCE SUCH GROWTH RATES HAVE not been achieved in recent decades, the suggestion coming from the Perry study is that it would require an unprecedented and unforeseen set of circumstances lo achieve the goals. Moreover, Perry cautions, that old bugaboo inflatJon must be contended with. Should it become nastier, policy makers would be required to slow the rate or growth and thus the economy's ability to absorb workers. Robert J. Gordon, a Northwestern University economist, a lso is wary of the sensitive relationship between the speed or expansion and the rate of inflation. He expects inflation to worsen; be terms the outlook "grim ." GORDON SUGGESTS STRONGLY THAT a plan which includes the twin goals or rapid expansion and less inn ation is a plan at odds with itseU. The experience, he says, indicates that inflation is more a consequence or the speed or expansion rather than its duration. In general, the attitudes of Perry, Gordon end perhaps a majority of analysts in academe. business and Wall Street seems to be one of gTeat doubL. The goats are just too ambitious, they suggest. What isn't quite clear is whether the Carter administration policy makers might not have the same feeling privately, justifying their public stance as necessary i r they are to obtain the best efforts from business and labor. AT A MEETING WITH FINANCIAL writers last May. Schultze responded to an expression or doubt by saying it was better to have the goals than to not have them. But he also seemed convinced the goals were realistic. Ambitious, he said, butnotoverly ambitious. UC Survey Firms Def end Investment Role BERKELEY <AP> -Some American corporations operating in apartheid South Africa refuted charges they act as financial support for racial segregation, arguing nonwhites benefit from thelr presence there. The comments were part or a University of California s urvey covering 29 or the ~ companies in the university's portfolio queried about their dealings in the racially·t.om country. THE SURVEY FOLLOWED HEATED student protests this spring and summer and calls from several state officials Insisting that the nlne·campus university divest its interests in South Africa. - U. Gov. Mervyn Dymally has gone on record in support of divestiture, and Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. bas said there is need for "a fundamental reassessment or UC investments." Xerox board chairman C. Peter McClouth wrote in response to lhe query, "We believe that if we were to discontinue doing business in South Africa, we would be in no position to help our nonwhite e mployes and other non.whites gain equal treatment." .... GENERAL MOTORS SAID IN n'S letter that its departure from South Africa would leave a vacuum filled by other auto companies that would not necessarily continue GM 's "progre5slve" poltcies. Most of the corporations respondJng ao the query noted their investments in South Africa reprekent a very small portion or their total uaets. ONE CORPORATION. PUREX, has not yet ~ed to the university query. Seven or the etpt remainlng companies have advisad UC they will reply ln Ume for lhe Sept. 18 meeting at which UC regents will adopt a policy on Investing unJverslt.y f\ands ln corporations opera Ung in South Africa. Stabi~izing Market lowers Mortg~es