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1978-06-28 - Orange Coast Pilot
7 • ' . 1 I • \ 1' ~--------------------~! upreme ourt r ers • 8VIS ·1 Ba ' ! c .. , .. ;~ DAILY PILOT Caroline, ·Junot Wed i I * * * 10' * * * WEDNESDAY A FT E RNOON, J UNE 28, 1978 l I In Small, Civil Rite VOL. 71, NO. 17', 4 SECTIC*S, 44 "AGES .............. BACKED BY COURT Allan Bakke · SwrAgency 'Misleadi,ng'? SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -A , Ca!ifornia theatrical agency, which booked such stars as Bob Hope, Liz a Minelli , John Davidson and Helen Reddy, has been charged with failing to de- liver some of the big name at- tractions and misleading some of the entertainers. In a federal indictment issued Tuesday, Theatrical Corporation of America's chief executives were charged with 18 counts of mail fraud involving at least · $450,000. J Co ast Weathe r Night and morning low clouds with ~unny after. noon Thurd'ay. Slightly warmer. Lows tonight 58 to 63. Highs Thursday near 70 at the beaches to upper 70s lnJand. INSIDE TODAY Orange County ~roiaora ho~ odoptttl fee hlba at harbor•, beachea and porka. Story Pogr Al2. .... x High Court Artion Racial Ruling B~lle Victory WASmNGTON <AP> -The U.S. Supreme Court today or· dered a California medical school to admit Allan_ Bakke, ruling that he suffered illegal discrimination because he is white, ·but said that race can be taken into account in future col-lege admissions programs. In a 5-4 decision, the court held that t he University of California's medical school al Davis had 'gone too far in con- sidering race when it refused to pdmit Bakke. But it held that affirmative· action programs intended to benefit minority applicants can properly be a Jactor in decisions on admitting students . Bakke successfully sued the university after his application to the university's medical school at Davis was rejected in 1973 and 1974. 100 openings in each entering class for "disadvantaged" stu- dents was really only an im- permissible racial quota. Under it. Bakke charged, less academically qualified blacks, Hispanics and Asian-Americans were admitted ahead of him. The Supreme Court interpret- ed the Civil Rights Act or 1964 to say that while some race- conscious programs are valid, the program that kept Bakke out of medical school crossed the line into illegal racial discrimination. Bakke, a 38-year.oid civil engineer who lives in Los Altos and works for the nation's space agency at the Ames. Research Center in nearby Palo Alto, never had to prove that he would have been admitted if the school had not bad a special admissions <See BAKKE, Page AZ> * * * """i........ THIS WAS THE SCENE IN MONACO 22 YEARS AGO Today Princess Grace's Daughter Weds e 'Commoner' He charged that the medical school's spedal admissions pro- gram which reserved 16 or the 5MenFound Mzuderedin Boston Bar Blacks Flay Decision BOSTON <AP> -The bodies of five young men who were shot to death were found early today in the basement of a bar and grill where they worked in the heart of Boston's main shopping district. The bodies were found grouped in a basement office of the Black:friars Restaurant on Summer Street, by a bar employee. A policl! spokesman said "a shotgun was used." Police were unable to identify the victims immediately, but the spokesman said all were In their mld-20s. There was no Immediate in- dication of how many times the men were sho't. The discovery came at the height of the morning rush hour, al'\d a crowd or curiosity seekers soon formed as police cruisers and ambulances converged out· side tbe five-story office building where the lounge ls localed. The amall realaurant is three lo fl ve years old and ha1 a clientele conslsUnJ mainly of young bUSlneaamen. n 11 in the heart of a district once known u Cbwch Grttn, an area of modem ornce bulldln&s and smaJler abop!'I and restaurants: and two t>locka from the city's two largest de· partment stores Bakke Will Enter UC Davis in September By 1be AsSOtlaled Press The U.S. Supreme Court's rul- ing in the Bakke case today drew praise from the plaintiff's attorney and criticism from some black leaders and mem- bers of the academic com- munity. "My client has a comment," said Reynold Colvin , Allan Bakke's attorney. "He's delight· ed with the decision and looks forward to entering medical school in September." Bakke, 38, was not personally available. He was expected to go to work, as usual, at the Ames Research Center, a NASA faclli· ty, in Mountain View, south of San Francisro. The court ruled S.4 that the University of Califor nia's medical school at Davis, which twice rejected Bakke's ap- plication for admls11lon, Hlegally di11crlminaled against blm because he Is while. It also ruled. however, that the school is not barred from taking race into account In a future ad· missions program. Dr. John Tupper, dean of the school, said: "We''<Ce all been waiting for the Supreme Court to tell us what the will of the people of the United Stat.ea la. We wUl obey the law. I cannot comment further until our legal counsel has had a chance to aciuauy re- hH had a chance to actuallf. read and dlaest tb entire op • Dr. John A.O. Cooper, pteal· '• dent of the Association or American Medical Colleges. said the group "is disappointed . . . Considerable progress bas been made in recent years for greater participation by mi n orities in American medicine. This has occurred in particular because medical school admissions decisions took into coipideratlon the need for broad representation in medicine ·from all segments of our society." Sex Deviate Sought in NB Orange County Sheriff's of- ficers are seeking a man who forced a Newport Beach area wom·an to participate ln an act of sexual perversion after he entered her bedroom Tuesday vla an unlocked patio door. Deputies said the 25.year-old victim told them tbal her as- aallaot beJd a knlrc lO her throat and attempted to rape her after he entered her Superior Avenue apartment. She said he then forced ber to Join him ln an un- natural sex act. The victim described her at. tacker u about 19, five feet, nine. UO pounds. with light brown, medium length hair and wurl111 Jeana. ·• .. Ralph Smith, a law professor at University of Pennsylvania and ch airman of the legal education task force or the National Conference or Black Lawyers, said he was "pro· roundly disappointed" with the decision, but added that he did not know how broad the ruling was. ''It is our only hope that th~ court hasn't becdme the as- sassin ol affirmative action,·· he said. Robert Links, co-counsel for Bakke. said he spoke with him briefly this morning. "He said, 'Great! You guys did it'!" Links reported. "I said, 'No we didn't. You did'." Of the ruling it.self, Links said: 1 don't think the university total- ly lost the case . . . I suspect they wlll try to formulate a more acceptable program and one that ls fair to person$ or all races who may have suffered hardship and dtsadvantage In their lives." (See llEACl'ION. P a1e AZ> Qeanup Complete OPELIKA, Ala . CAP) - Cleanup operations have been completed here art.er the derail- ment of a railroad tank car loaded wtth corrosive material. The tanlc car and en empty box· car Jumped the tracks Tuesday In an incfuatrlal park. Princess 'A Little Nervous' MONTE CARLO. Monaco (APl -Princess Caroline or Monaco married Paris playboy financier Philippe Junot today in a 15·minute civil ceremony in the throne room or the royaJ palace -the same room where her father. Prince Rainier Ill, married American movie star Grace Kelly 22 years ago. "Princess Caroline 's band shook a little as she signed the register." said Louis Roman, president of Monaco's State Council, who pe rformed the m arriage before about 40 family members. The wedding was "nice, and in good spirits," said Roman, but not particularly emotional. About 1,500 pe rsons filed through the palac e gates to attend the post ·weddiog reception. Brilliant s unshine bathed the palace square outside and hundreds of tourists pressed against the barriers . Caroline and Junot will go to the palace's s mall chapel Thursday morning for a Roman Catholic nuptial Mass attended by 100 gues t s , including members or Parisian society and the international jet-set, ex·royalty and vintage movie stars. The press was barred from both ceremonies as well as from the pre-nuptial ball at the palace Tuesday night. The brevity of the guest list, the absence of members of reigning royal houses and the privacy surrounding the wedding were in sharp contrast <See WEDDING. P~ge A2l Film Chief Sentenced BURBANK (AP) - Former Columbia Pictures president David Begelman was placed on three years' probation lo· day. fined $5,000 and or- dered to embark upon a program or community service ror the theft of $40.000 in studio funds. Superior Court Judge Thomas Murphy said be would nol sentence Begelman to jail unless the producer violates the terms ot probatl()fl. From report.a submitted to him. Murphy sald, Begelman·s embeule· ment was "almost like a d e ath wtsb. You are nelther violence-prone, nor are you case· hardened." Fam at tlae Bearh . Whether they're just relaxing on the sand or a !'OCk. or enjoying a splash either solo or with young company, these folks are getting the most out of a nice day for the beach. These photos were taken at Ro~k Beach in Laguna Beach and Aliso Beach in South Laguna. Divorce Try Unsuccessful CAMBRIDGE. Mass. CAP) - Lawyers for Sen Edward W. nrooke and his estranged wife Rem igia, say both wanted t~ settle their divorce out of court. But they failed, and the two- year-old case is headed back to court for a new trial. Mrs Brooke asked a probate Judge on Tuesday to reopen the di\ orce case and .hold ;i new .hearing before the end of July. A ~pokesman for Brooke said the Republican senator, who is running for a third term, was re- turning to Was hington and would have no comment on hi s wife's decision March Ban Asked C HIC AGO (AP) -The Chica go Park District asked a federal appeafs court to over- turn a lower court ruling allow- ing Nazis to march In Marquette f>ark . The president of the district also said Tuesday that he would take the issue to the U S Su pr e me Court if necessary O~ANOECOAST ~ DAILY PILOT f""f'Or•""W (N\I 0 Aitfy Ptl .. Wl!lftwt\ ("'" ~ tl-...0 t""' N,..._ Po \ , Ct\!Df•"-0 b1I~0t ~ (4iit\t P1A41\f\1neC•mie•.,_Y se.., ....... """ .. ,. ~l,._d MondlY "''W"' P"rltAI• ff\t ("~•f• Ai¥w Nf'•DOfl 8"' ,u~ Hu-.ll""OteA ~-""' , (I Jiit ···" V•lll'y "Vlll'IP \AOdh•bltf"ll V.tll•.; """' lA'Q,lft• l•..cn <.ovra(tl.ut A \•nG'f'f9Q -..lf'd t+Oft i\ IHlb'•\l\rd Setvrctey1 ~ """'°••' frwt-~;:t~~~:i .. ~,'~~~'.:,:» w.~ ~. 11 ....... _ Pt-\1Mftt •M ~IV'Wt, JH\11 (WI .. Viet .,t,•Mnt •l'ld 0t1W'••l AiM~ ,.._.,..,,tC•.vtt ldilO' ti••-·· "'"""""' Mil•••·~ ...... 0..t,., H '-"' lllNnl I' INU ""'''•~' IN••t'"' fdll.,, OfflCH t4"•• Mt~• ,,., w.,, n•1,•re•t l ttwn• .. •<f'I t l .. Gl•,..,..1t•$1r,.t .. ~,~.~~~~ .. !'W~r."..~"~~·a ., \M o .... ~ ....... Tetepho"e (114)14.2-4»1 ClH.m.d Ad-.9ftttlfl9M2-ttn __ ,Vtllty-Off • M1•Jt0 ,,....,...,_ ...... ~--... 0.·-'-·'-·1 ... 640-tUO 2 Veiled Gunmen Rob Laguna Hotel Two gun m en, wear ing women's scarves over their faces, held up the Surf and Sand Hotel, 155.5 South Coast Highway in Laguna Beach early this morn- ing, escaping with $1,200 in cash and $15,000in checks. Lt. John Zelko said the two masked men leaped over the <:heck-in counter at the hotel at about 3:45 a.m., confronting a lone female clerk. They cut the telephone wires WEDDING • • to the 2,000-guest extravaganza that Caroline's father, Prince Rainier Ill, staged on April 18, 1956, when he married her mother. Dior. the Paris fashion house. designed the wedding outfits for both Caroline and her mother. Designer Marc Bohan outfitted the bride in blue crepe georgette for the civil cerem on y and traditional white for the religious rite while Princess Grace was wearing apricot • chiffon today and yellow crepe aeorgette Thursday. The palace refuse d to say where Caroline, 21, and Junot, a 38-year-old Parisian financier , we re honeymooning, or what gifts their parents were 1lving them. ' Monaco's police force of 300 and the 80·man palace auard threw a tllhl web of security around the ochre-walled palace to keep 1at1 cruher1 out of the royal ball Tuesday nlgbt. Greek ablppina magnate Stavros Nlarc hoa' Bentley limou11ine almost crashed Into one of the Pollet barricades when J)botorraphers' nashbulbs blinded t.be chauffeur . Tbe 1ut1l1 1l10 Included elt·Kln1 Umberto of Italy. £1Yptlan Prtnce Fuad, Frank Sinatra. David Niven, Ava Gardner and Cary Grant Princeaa Grace mel Reinier wben aho and Grant fllmfd "To Catch a Thief" "1 Monte Carlo. .• and demanded cash from the drawer, thtealening the woman with handguns. The clerk said she heard a car leave lhe area but did not s~ the vehicle. She described her assailants as male Caucasians in their 20s. She could not describe facial features due to t he bizarre yellow women·s scarves worn over their heads. Zelko said it took about 15 minutes for the clerk to contact police due to the cut phone lines. "It was all over by the time we got there," he said. Zelko added the $15,000 in checks were made out to the Surf and Sand and would be very difficult to cash. Ford Accused Of Kickbacks N.EW YORK CAP) -Henry Ford II and the company he heads are accused in court papers of accepting a $2 million kickback from the "highest of- ficials" of the Philippines in ex- change for a business venture that cost the Ford Motor Co. more than S50 million. The accusation was made in a motion Tuesday to amend a stockhol der suit liled by Roy M. Cohn in Manhattan's st ate Supreme Court on behalf of the children of a partner in his law firm. Robert J. Sisk, an attorney repreaenlini lhe auto company. said: ''This ls the latest in a serlea of char1e1 made by Roy Cohn lnce lul April; as In the caee with respect to earlier al· le1allona, lhla lalat char'e is also untrue." Brusbland Burm PALA CAP> -Fifty acres of bru1bland burned lite Tuesday on the Pala Indian Reservat.Jon about three milea north ol Pala In northern San Ole10 County. No Oil( WU hurt. . ' Car Wash BAKKE ;;~;;~~ • • • 'Labor' Assailed The U.S. Department of Labor has riled suit in Los Angeles U.S. District Court against Metro Car Wash alleging violation of the federal Fair Labor Standards Act at its fi ve Orange CoW\ty outlets . Identified in the complaint are Metro partn ers Frank V. Bianchini of Costa Mesa and Mal com Cobrink of Fullerton. Partt)er Bianchini. who had yet to hear of the suit. reacted angrily Tuesday, calling the charges ''intimidation of the worst kind." Bianchini, who operates the Costa Mesa Metro Car Wash. said be was not aware of any co mplaint s filed by hi s employees. The Labor Department has asked the court to order the car wash company to pay all back wages found due to employees plus interest and costs lo comply with t he law in the future. Metro Car Wash outlets are localed at 2950 Har bor Blvd., Costa Mesa; 3400 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach ; 6656 W estmi n s ter Blvd .. Westminster; 2402 Bristol St .. Santa Ana; and 387 Tustin St.. Orange. The s uit is the result of in· vestigations conducted by the Labor Department under the direction of Elmore Wilcox. area director for the Wage-Hour Division. Employment Stan- dards Administration m Santa Ana. ERA Revived In Illinois SPRINGFIELD. 111. <AP > - Like a cat with nine lives, the proposed federal Equal Rights Am endment has been resurrect· ed again in Illinois, but Senate sponsors say a vote is unlikely before November. Sixteen co-sponsors, including the state Senate president. in- troduced a resolution in the up· per chamber Tuesday seeking ratification of the ERA. The move came rive days after the Illinois House dumped the pro- posa I for the second time this month But sponsors said they will not force a Senate vote on ERA until after November elections, when the Legislature reconvenes for a fall lame-duck session Requirements Asked CO NCORD. N.H. (AP> -Gov. Meldrim Thomson has asked for legislation that would make il harder to hold demonstrations like the weekend protest at lhe Seabrook nuclear power plant. Attorney General Thomas Rath said Tuesday the governor had asked his office to prepare a bill that would require sponsors of large demonstrations to be responsible for costs incurred by the s tate In policing them. program. The university conceded that it could not prove Bakke would have been excluded if the pro· gram had not existed. A state trial court ruled that the special admissions program violated the Constitution's guarantee of equal protection and also the portion of t.he Civil Rights Act of 1964 that outlaws racial discrimination by in· stltutions receiving federal funds. The California Supreme Court upheld the trial court's ruling in favor of Bakke on the con- stitutional IJ'OUQds only. choos- ing to ignore the federal law question. The Cons titution's 14th Amendment. which 110 years ago held out to blacks the prom· i se of full membership in American society , granted FroaaPaflf!A I REACTION .. Colvin said of the rullng: "l think the one thing that is clear is that whatever universities do. whatever experiments they engage in, the racial quota the fixed quota as such -I think, has been ruled out . It was a divided decision. a dif· ficult problem. but it seems the court was very sens itive. It seems to have ruled on precisely the question that was before it .. Dr. Joseph Lowery. president of lbe Southerp Christian Leadership Conterenee, noted that the court had ruled Ulal race could be taken into account in future admiuions programs. "I think the court in a seoae has arfirmed affirmative action," Lowery said. "If they ' said that racial conslderaUons m._ay ~·· factor in admissions policy, then ever) though the~ ruled in.favor of Allan Bakke, i\ does not destroy special ad· missions policies in graduate schools ... l think there's got to be room for flexibility. As long as there is . . a sense of urgen· cy about makin g th e matriculation possible and available to blacks, then l th.ink we can live without f ixed quotas ." A s imilar view came from black politician Julian Bond He said the ruling "temporarily en- forces the 200-year-old racial and sexual quota system But. he added, the ruhng also "suggests that race-based ar firmative action plans are legitimate. The task now 1s con · styucting such pl ans to meet today·s rµling ... In a written statement issued s hortly a fte r the rul ing. University of California Pres1 · dent David S. Saxon called the decision "one that will require careful study before its 1m plications are clear ... The Supreme Court's decision means that we must explore even more e nergetically all the legally permissible means to eliminate artificial barriers, whether of race. sex or disadvantaged background that have delayed too long the full participation of so many gifted people 1n American society ·· c1t1zensh1p to recently freed slaves and ordered all states not to "deny to any person ... the equal protection of the laws." Civil rights activists have employed those words ever since In efforts to stamp out what they perceived lo be vestiges of the slave system. Their greatest victory came in 1954 when the U.S. Supreme. Court changed American life by outlawing racial segregation. as "inherently unequal." . . The racial civil rigb'6 move. ment gained momentum over the past 15 years as government· ordered affirmative action pro- grams began to give special pref- erence to minority members and women to overcome past di scr1minat1on in business, education and government. These programs. however. sparked numerous lawsuits such as Bakke's. Each essentially asked the same question: May the govern· ment take a person's race into account for special treatment wh en its goal is to help make up for official discrimination in the past" Four of the U.S . Supreme Co urt's nine members would have reversed the state court victories won by Bakke. Justices J Brennan Jr .. Byron R White. Thurgood Marshall and Harry A Blackmun agteed that race-conscious programs a re valid and voted that the Umvenlty of Callfomia'a pro- gram was valid under the 1964 law and the Constitution. Ju•Uce Lewts F. Powell Jr. Join~ the four inaof ar u ruling that some race-conscious pro- grams are valid. His was the crucial fifth vote needed to ruJe that the unvieN&ity -and pre- sumably all other educational institutions ~ may in lhe future use some forms of arfirmative action. But Powell. relying on bis in- terpretatls>n of the 14th Amend- ment. said the David program had not sflown itself to be necessar y to achieve the sc hool 's stated goals and therefore could not pass con- stitutional muster. Ch ie f Jus tice Warreo E Burger and Justices William H. Rehnquist, John Paut Stevens and Potter Stewart voted that the 1964 civil rights law disallows programs such as lhe one that excluded Bakke. Their joint opinion. written by Stevens, was a narrowly worded one t hat interpreted the law to mean ·'it is not permissible to say ·yes' to one person but say ·no· to another person only because of the color of skin." JARJ'IS BILL \ DAMPENS FUSE LA MESA CAP> -A year ago, 50,000 people watched the tradltionaJ fireworks display on Northridge hill. The show this year is can· celled . The City Council said Tuesday. that revenue cutbacks fro m Proposition 13 mah it im· possible to finance. Particular People Select JOHNSON & SON Home of the 11Golden Touch11 "At johnson & Son, we were trecrttd In a very professional and dfgnifild manMr." MAMCYMmll" H•lla¥• .... Clltf. "Very courteous, very fair, tnfoytd the last four or five years a11oe1atton." AWi SMITH MOOll .......... C4111f. "Courteous salesman, pfeolOnt IUITOUf'ICI.. Inga, exuiltnt service." DAVID DOSTAL ....,.,. leec'-c.t. ''Follow thtouoh Is very goad. t've hod eleven Y*l't of IClttafitd aervice." MIS. llLOllMCI L HAU. ...,.. .... c .... Orange County·s Oldett Uncoln-Mercury Deale1s"•P . .JOHNSON a SON [it I 2626 Harbor Blvd •Costa Mesa • 540-5630 •I \ I . .. '.t Orange .co~st Today·s Closing 7 J I VOL. 71 , NO. 179, 4 SECTIONS;« PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 1978 C TEN CENTS• --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------i ' Slashed N-M Budget Wins Approval : By MICHAEL PASKEVICll OUNO.lly~li.tS~H "Never was so much faith put in r so little knowledge." Superinten· , dent J ohn Nicoll said Tuesday as Newport-Mesa Unified School · Dis trict trustees unanimous ly ap- 1 proved a tentative budget for the next school year. ~he documenJ . guaranteed to dergo changes before it must f finalized in August. reflects an overall $5.2 mUlion loss in funds to the district b ecau se or Proposition 13. School trustees are still con- sidering cutbacks involving district transportation, classified personnel and Instructional Media Center services in light of the reduced revenues. The tentative budget approved Tuesday bas the district receivin~ $41.l million in stale and local · 'Gone Too Far' revenues for the next school year. The figure inc ludes state emergency aid toscbool djstricts. Bas ed on pre-Jarvis tax rev- enues, the district would have received about $46.3 miUion in state and local revenue. The difference between the figures a ccounts for the $5.2 millionbudgetloss. ·'There are still major re- ductions that will have to be faced Rules UC Must Admit Bakke WASHJNGTON <A P > -The U.S. Supreme Court ordered a California medk?I school today ' to admit Allan Bakke, ruling that he ha d s uffe re d illegal 'discrimination because be is while. But the court said race can be taken into account in f uture college admissions programs. In a 5·4 decision. the court he ld that the University of California's medical school at Davis had gone too far ID considering race when it refused to admit Bakke. But it said some affirmative-action progra m s intended to benefit minority applicants can properly be a factor in decisions on admitting students. Bakke told a reporter, "We are pleased with this decision. I ·m not going to make any Early Arrival Sama Cycles in <;eorgia BREMEN. Ga <AP> -At the very least, his timing was off. :fherc on Main Street in 96-degree heat came a m an dressed in red suit, white whiskers and black boots. "Ho. ho. ho." The Christmas-like scene startled p edestrians and police. Santa then zoomed down Bremen's main drag on a motorcycle. Police tried to catch Santa so they could arrest him for failing lo wear a helmet. But they couldn't nab him. "I don't know what he was trying to prove," one officer said. "But he sure could boot that motorcycle along ." further comment." Th e justices limited their seven separate opinions to admissions policies in education and did not directly address what their decision means for th e thousa nd s o f other amrmative action programs in e rrect in governme nt a nd private industry. In the court's m ain opinion. which gave Bakke his victory, Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr. held that s trict racial quotas or goals are illegal but other t ypes of urrirmalive action programs are permissible. ·'The experience of other univ e r s ity admi ss ion s programs, which take race into account in achi ev ing th e educational diversity valued b~ the Firs t Amendment, d e mons trates that th e assignment or a fixed number of places to a minority group is not a ne~essary means toward that end.• Powell wrote .. Jn his pivotal role, Powell sajd the program that kept Bakke out of school. by setting aside for minorities 16 of 100 places in the first-year class, "would hinder, rather than further. attainment of genuine diversity." But In the portion or the opi· nion indicating how far schools can go ID considering race. (See BAKKE, Page A2> Riots · Flare in Mexico Arigry Students Torch Mata11Wros Night Club MATAMOROS. Mexico <AP> -Violence erupted again early today m this not-torn border t own as stud ents s tormed through the red-light distract on the outskirts or the city. burning one night spot a nd caus ing heavy damage to two others. A few miles a way, soldiers arm ed with machine guns patrolled the charred , debris· strewn site or a four-hour riot Monday na~ht that caused an estim ated $2 million da m age and le ft three people dead and 30 injured Police said one person was in- jured in today's outburst. They said a group of youths stormed the Golden Palace night club, ousted customers and set fire to the building. They also hurled rocks, bottles and other items • through the windows of at least i Coast Weather Night and morning low clouds with sunny after- noon Thllrsday. Slightly warmer. Lows tonight SS to 63. Hi ghs Thursday near 70 at Lbe beache11 to upper 70s inland. INSIDE TODA 't' Oran~ County superobors havr adopted fee hikes al harbors. beoc~a and park.t. Story Page Al2. -c. A4 r•· ... ..... .. .. M AU 81-4 All ., .. ..... M .. two other night spots, police said. Two teen-agers were shot and killed Monday night as students mobbed the town plaza protest· ing the alleged beating death last week of a 15-year -old stu· dent who had been in police custody. Three police officers had been jailed in connection with the in cident. but the students dragged Mavor Antoruo Cavazos into the plaza and demanded that Police Chief Emiliano Del Toro also be fired. When police tried to break up the rally. witnesses reported. the crowd erupted, and an estimated. 6,000 to 7.000 people went on a rampage that left a trail or destroyed banks. busi· nesses and government build· ings. Del Toro submitted his res· ignation Tuesday but city of- £1 c 1 a ls refused to accept it. Instead. they s us pended Del Toro pendmg the outcome of an investigation into the student's death. A third death was reported from Monday ni ght's violence w he n officia ls disco ve r e d charred remains in a judge's of· fl ee in the city jail building. Matamoros is a city of about 300,000 people across the Rio Gran de from Browns ville, Texas. In Boston Lounge Five Men Found ~ Shot to Death BOSTON, Mass. (AP) -The shotgun.riddled bodies or five m en were found today in the basement of a downto wn cocktail lounge by a cleaning man. touching off an intensive police investigation. Police declined to identify the victims immediately. However, radio station WEEJ s aid two or them had been tentatively ldentified. as Jack Ke lly. a rormer t elevision news man who was workln1 as the ntgbl manager ot the lounge, and Vincent Solornonte, the owner. Police deputy John Barry termed ll the laraest mus murder in the city in his 20 yean of experience. Police detectives conver1ed on lbe Blecklrtare Restaurant at the be~ht of the morning rush hour alttt the first report. A crowd rapidly aathered as officers searched the building. • Barry said the five were all white males. The bodies were found close together in a back room offi ce or the basement. and a police spokesman said. "A shotgun W(lS used.•· Police spokesmen said all were in their mld-twenties. The first floor and basement of the five-story building at 105 Summer Street was remodeled into the lounge-restaurant about tlve years ago. The building. about a century old, ls In an area or new, high office buildings and is maller. older shops two blocks from the heart of Boston's downtown shoppin~ cel'lter A s pokesman at police headquarters said the first call on the cue came at 8:28 a.m . after the lounge employee entered to bealn lhf day's work. by this district," Trustee Barbara Skilling said. The gap in the district budget a lready has been narrowed somewhat by cancellation of sum- mer school and adult education programs at a savings of about $850,000. However. trustees say more cutbacks are inevitable and they must decide what type of reserve funds the di5trict will carry into .,. .. , ...... BACKED BY COURT Allan Bakke the future. As it stands now. the district would be left with reserves total· ing $655,895 worth of s upplies. but no cash. District officials had planned on carrying a $2.9 million reserve fund through the 1978· 79 school year. Nicoll sajd the district can save about $500.000 by not replacing certain equipment. * * * For All Staff Elimination or all district bu~ ser vice would save about $918.000. ~nd the cancell at1on of in structional media center services would cut d istrict costs by another $300.000. Action on these mallers 1s ex· peeled atfuture board meetings The next step ror sc hool trustees is a line-by ·line review of the budget to be presented at a Ju· ly 11 board meeting. * * * Trustees Nix Pay Raises Newport-Meslt Unified School District trustees told teachers. administrators and classified employees Tuesday to forget about pay raises for the coming school year. The school board unanimously adopted existing pay schedules although negotiations will con· tinue with classified e mployee and teacher bargaining units The action will have no effect on normal pay raises achieved through seniority and advanced ed ucation, so-called .. step raises." ··We consider our proposal still on the table." said Don Kimble. presiden t of the Newport -Mesa Education As· soc1ation. which represents the distract ·s 1.250-plus teachers in salary negotiations. T eachers have been seeking cost or living and frmge benefits increases or about 10 percent. Classified e mployees have asked for cost of living raises based on yet to be announced figures from Orange County and Los Angeles consumer price m· <See TRUSTEES. Page A2) Coast Plan Approved Cnunty Sends lroine Project On to State By KATHY CLANCY Ol CN O.lly ~11.c S~ff Admitting it still m ay need m ore work. Orange County s upervisors e ndorsed the county's plan for the 10,()()().acre Irvine coast today and sent it off for s tate approval As supervisors did so. they also offered encouragement to residents or the El Morro Beach mobile home pa rk by asking state officials to delete it from immediate public acquisition. The park is within 3.100 acres the state is appraising for public purchase. Residents rear that if the state buys the mobile home site for a public park they will los e their homes Donald Cameron, land planner for the Irvine Company, said the firm ·s position is that the state would be better orr spending the $22 million avail able for park purchase e lsewhe r e on the coast. Husky Thief Gets NB Cash Register Operators of the Sporting House. the athletic club located at 3601 Jamboree Roa d . Newport Beach. would like to fi nd the muscular th ief who walked off with a brand new cash register. The $2.000 piece of equipment was delivered to the club at about 4 p.m. Monday. police said . ll was left sitting in the entry hall and employees said that sometime between S p.m. and 6 p.m., the cash register was stolen. Relocating the park residents alone. he said. might take as much as half the funds availa· ble. Richard Munsell an assistant director or the county Envlron- m e ntal Man agement Agency. said he expects to come bac~ to su pervis ors with possible changes before the county plan is certified by the regiona l and state coastal commissions . So rar. Munsell said county or. ficiats have been unable to get specific proposals for changes from the commissions. Metro Car Wash Part or the problem, he satd. s eem s to be tha\. the com· missions h ave been in the coastal permit isswng business so long t hey can't deal with ~eneral policies as contained an - the county's plan. ·'They want to know where every blade of grass is gomg to ~o." Munsell said. ·•we have told them this is a mis use of a planning tool.:· Instead of a s pecific plan. Munsell describes the county's <See COAST, Page AZ> County Firm Sued In Labor Violation The U.S. Department of Labor has filed suit in Los Angeles U.S District Court against Metro Car Wash alleging violation of Lhe federal Fair Labor Standards Act at its fiv~ Orange County outlets. Identified m the complaint are Met ro. partne r s Fra nk V Bianchini of Costa Mesa and Malcom Cobrink or Fullerton. Partner Bianchini. who had yet to hear or the suit. reacted angrily Tuesday. calling the charges "intimidation of the worst kind ... Bianchiru. who operates the Costa Mesa Metro Car Wash. said he was not aware or any co mpla i n t~ filed by hi s employees. The Labor Depa rtmenl has. asked the court to order the car wash company lo pay all back wages found due to employees plus anterei;t and costs to comply with the law an the future . Metro Car Wash outlets are located at 2950 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. 3400 Beach Blvd .. llunt 1n~ton Beac h . 6656 We s tmin s t er B l v d . Westminster : 2402 Bristol St .. Santa Ana. and 387 Tustin St .. Orange . .. ...,..... POLICE omctALS REMOVE ONE OF THE BODIES A~R MASSACRE IN BOSTON FNe Young Men .. to Oeeth In IJ•Nm•nt of Bar In Chy'• Shopptng Dlltrlet I : I . % DAIL°' PILOT C Film Clde/ 'Sentenced BURBANK (AP ) - Former Columb10 Pictures praldent David Begelman was placed on three years' probation to- day. fined SS.000 and or· dered to embark upon a program or community service for the theft of $40,0QO in studio funds. Superior Court Judge Thomas Murphy said he would n ot sentence Begelman lo jail unless the producer violates the terms or probation. From reports s ubmitted to him, Murphy said, Begelman's embezzle - ment was "almost like a death wish. You are neither violence-prone, nor are you case· hardened." FroWIP~AJ COAST ... proposal as a general guide and said details will be worked out in specific project phases later on. The plan approved today follows decisions supe rvisors made two years ago in develop- ing a gener al plan .fOI' the 10,000-acre area. . That plan sets aside 75 siercent or the land in open space with the remainin·g 25 percent for urban development. The Irvine coast s tretches from Corona del Mar on the north to Laguna Beach on the south. Critics or the county plan testified today and in· past hear· .ings raising objections that in- clude an allefedly inadequate e nvironmenta impact report, possible destruction ()f archeological sites and a lack or faw and moderate income hous· in< in the land use plan. Wesley Marx or Irvine sug- gested that supervisors take advantage of an opportunity to create a unique land and sea l)ark in the area He also questioned f roposals for t he San Joaqu n Hills roadway in the area as well as other public services to serve deve l opmc11f 11ow that Proposition 13 will reduce local government budgets . · As a result supervisors sug- gested that detailed plans on the cost of services be presented before any developments are al· lowed. Supervisor Ralph · Diedrich said It m-ay be tttal s pecial districts <:ould be formed to finance services so lbe burden wouldn't be passed on to county taxpayers as a whole. Castro Asks Meet HAVANA CAP) -Cuban President Fidel Castro said late TuesCJay he wants lo meet with President Carter to work out dif- ferences between the two ~ountncs. But he added Carter must take the initiative. 'Tip' Worth $1 Million? WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. CAP> Joseph Baudette llays he may have imbibed a lot of liquor at Kil· .m ean's Tavern. but he never intended to give the .bartender a $1 million lip. The Up -in the form of a lottery ticket that is worth a nywhere from ..$10,000 to $1 million -was blocked by a temporary r estrainin g order by Westchester Supreme Court J ustice George Belsheim Jr. Baudette, ·22, says he gave Clifford Bice a state Baseball Lottery ticket a nd told the 26-year-old part -lime barkeep at the Manh aeset tavern to "scratch off the number; you may be lucky for me. We'll split lf we win." Bice hae a dllrerent version. DAILY PILOT .... """"" ......... ,.,,._,_ , .... (_., "'" .......... , .... o. ... ,, ... _ n-•'"""'' ...... ,_ .. ~ ..... ""'"•t llltl .. ,., °"rt.r.: "'-.... :.'tri: ...... w .tu11eat. 1m 1 Bakke Rulin.g ~ Wins Praise By The ABsoc:lated Press The U.S. Supreme Court's rul· Ina ln the Bakke case today drew praise from the plalnlltf's attorney and criticism from some black leaders and mem· bers of the academic com- munity. "My client has a comment," s aid Reynold Colvin, Allan Bakke's attorney. "He's dell1ht· ed with the decision a nd looks forward to enterinl medical school in September." Bakke, 38, was not personally available. He was expected to to to work, as usual, at the Ames Research Center, a NASA facill· t y. in Mountain View, aouth of San Francisco. The court ruled 5-4 that the University of California's medtcal school at Davis, which twice reject e d :Qakke's ap- plication for admission, Uletally discriminated a1ainll him because he ls white. It also ruled, however , that the school is not barred from taking race into a ccount in a future ad· missions program. has bad a chance to actuauy re- haa had a chance to actuallr. read and dlcest the entir• op • Dr. John A.O. Cooper. prtll· dent of the Association ot American Medical Colleges, said the group "is disappointed . . . COMlderable progress has been made in recent years ror g reater participation b y minorities io American medicine. This baa occurred in particular because medical school admiulons decisions took into consideration the nMd for broad representation In medicine from all segments oC our aoclety." Ralph Smith, a law professor at University oC Pennsylvania and c hairman of the legal e ducation task force of tbe Na ti on al Conference of Black Lawyers, said he was "pro· roundly disappointed" with the decision, but added that he did not know how broad the ruling was. Death Bill .Set J For Vote SACRAMENTO (AP) -Stato Sen. John Briggs' death penalty ioitiatiV9 bas qualified for Lbe Nov. 7 ballot, Secretary of SUte March Fons Eu conflrm1. Brlu•. of Fullerton, aought the RepubUcu nomlnatloa for governor but dropped out before tbe June 6 primary election. He a lso s ponaored an lnltlatlve. which quallfled, against homosexual acbool teachers. M re. Eu said 1\leaday the new measure would: -Expand the catecories of tirat·desree murder punishable by death, or life in pri101r without parole. to include auch crimes as murder of a atate of. ficia l a nd murder that ls particularly .. atrocious." Increase the minimum parole date for first -degree murder from seven years to 16 years, eight months. includini time off for good behavior. -tncrease the penalty ror second-degree murder. -Allow consideration of an felony convictions of the defeo- d ant during the punilbment stage of trial. • J Dr. John Tupper, dean of the school, said: "We've alt been waiting for the Supreme Court to tell us what the will of the people of the United Stales is. We will obey the law. I cannot comment further until our legal counsel "It is our only hope that the court hasn't become the as· saasln or affirmative action," be sald. Robert Links, CO·counsel ror Bakke, said he spoke with him briefly t.h1a morning. "He aafd, 'Great! You guys did it'!" Links reported. "I said, 'No we didn't. You did'." New Main for Mesa -Require judges to impanel a new jury if the first one can't reach a unanimous verdict on punishment. * * * * * * Fr•• Pe,,e AJ BAKKE DECISION • • • Powell cit ed with approval Harvard's admissions program designed not only to ensure Tacial and ethnic diversity but also to select students with a broad range of talents a nd geo- graphic backgrounds. "In such an admissions pro· gram." Powell wrote. "race or ethnic background may be deemed a 'plus' in a particular applicant's file. yet it does not in· suJate the individual from com· parison with all other candidates for the available seats." Powell joined Chief Justice Warren E. Burger and Justices John Paul Stevens, William H. Rehnquist a nd Potter Stewart in striking down the University of California program. He joined Justices WiUlam J . Brennan Jr .. Byron R . White, Thurgood Mar s h all and Harry A . Blackmun in ruling that some amrmatlve action proarams may be valid. Relying on his interpretation of the 14th Amendment, Powell said t.be Davis program had not shown itself to be necessary to achieve the school's stated goals -and therefore could not pass constitutional muste r. Powell's opinion dis missed competing arguments over whether the affirmative action program at Davis used "quotas " or .. goals." ·'Whether thls limitatton is described as a quota or a goal," Powell said, "it ls a line drawn on the basis of race and ethnic status." In a separate concurring opi- ·nion by the chief justice, Rehn· qulst and Stewart, Stevens wrote: "In unmistakable terms, the 1964 Civil Rights act pro- h lb lts the exclusion of in· dividuals from federally funded programs because or their race." However, their joint opinion emphasized that the court was not deciding "whether race can ever be used as a factor In an admissions decision. Marshall, the court's only black member, said today's de· cision carries d.Jre consequences for the hope of racial equality in the United Stales. In an opinion speaking only for himself, Marshall wrote: "It is because or a legacy of unequal treatment that we now must permit the Institutions or this society to 5e consideration to race in m decisions about who will hold e positions of in· nuence, arnuence and prestige in America. SA Air Base Cadets Set ForHonorA A plaque dedicated to the pre. maht cadets who trained at the old Santa Ana Army Atr Baae 1n Costa M•• wUI be pretenteG at Tburada,y cermonl.. •oouond by the Cotta MeH lltatorlcal Socltt)'. The publlc I• lnvtted co ta.. ceremony Ht for S p.m . on the (round• of the Air National Quant faclllty at 2051 Newport ISOUlevard, Cotta .... a . The ceremony will colncldp with the exact data or the cit)''• 25th •nnlvmatv · Durlnt World War 11 more lhan . 120,000 cadell comoletAMJ tralnJn1 at the army buc. A wreath will be placed at the bue of UM new rnarker In tribute lO thoee wbo d1td ln com· bat. • I "For far too long," he said. "the doors to those positions have been shut to Negroes. If we are ever to become a fully inte- grated society, one in which the color of a person's skin will not determine the opportunities available to rum or her, we musl be willing to take steps to .open those doors.·· Fair's Fair- He Tickets Erring Cops NEW ORLEANS -CAP> -lt was only fair. A week ago Larry Dean Hardison received a ticket for parking illegally. So he wasn't about to ignore the downtown scene Tuesday - 19 police cars standing in a no· parking zone outside a hotel where a seminar on homicide was being held. Getting out pen and paper. Hardison prepared 19 "Dear Of· ficer" letters. "Dear Officer: One of the best ways to lose the respect of cititens ts to break the rules which you en· force . You ore parked illegally." Not shy, he signed his name and placed his telephon e number on each note. Hardison said a few minutes later he received a phone call rrom Police Ch ler James Parsons. "He said he had parked ii· legally and he apologized,·· Hardison said. "I was delighted that he called ... if the police officers had been there on or. ficlal business it would have been all right, but they weren't and there were parking lots available. "I got towed away for parking Illegall y and If l had done what they did. I'd get towed away a second time." Man's Body Found Shot Near El Toro Orange County Shertrr's or. n cera have determined that a man whose body was found Tuesday in an oranee grove near the El Toro Marine Corps Air Statton was shot to death t>erore he was dumped there. lnve1t11ators said the body h•Y 10 the arove near the tn- tetaectlon or J eftroy and Trabuco road.a for about a week before lt wu found by lrrtaat.lon worke r•. The vlctlm's bands were bound behind bis back. The body baa not yet been ldtntllted. Ofttcen aald It 11 that of a man apd about ta to 40, ful· ly dreued and with no oulltand· Inc marlta or reaturea that would aid ldentiftcatlon. Warden Appointed • TIJUANA. Mtalco <AP> - Amoldo Cut11la Oarcla, preal· dent of the Mexleall auomeys · 111oclatlon, haa llttn named provlllonal w~rden of the vlolence ·wracked Baja Callf ornla Ponltenttary an or. ftei• 1 ta)'S. Costa Mesa County Water District workers guide new 12-inch water pipe into place today near Canyon Drive and Wi Ison Street. District is replacing about 2.600 Ceet oC water lines on the west side of town. Project will cost about$99.000. TONIGHT COAST CO MM UNITY COLLEGE BOARD -Regular meeting. 1370 Adams. 8 p.m. OCC SUMMER LECTURE "E liminating Self-Defeating Behavior," Science Lecture 2. 7:30 p.m. "OTHERWISE ENGAGED" -South Coast Repe rtory Theater. Tues day-Sunday through Aug. l, 8 p.m. THURSDA \', JUNE 29 COSTA MESA HISTORICAL SOCIETY -Costa Mesa Silver Annivers ary ceremony, Air National Guard grounds. 2651 Newport. Blvd. 3 p.m. OCC SUMMER MOVIES - ··Forever Young. Forever Free," Fine Arts 119, 7:30 p.m. Adults $1. children 50 cents. OCC SU MMER LECTURE - "Art of Communication." Science Hall. 7:30 p.m. Alert False BURBANK <AP > A report of a radioactive leak in a con· tainer aboard an airliner caused a three·hour delay in baggage claims at Burbank Airport before the alert turned out to be false. officials said. f'roW1PapAJ TRUSTEES dex. district officials said. Kimble said the NMEA would request pay raises of up to five percent. Trustees noted Tuesday that state aid to the school district will allow t he district to maintain its curr ent salary schedule. but rule out any in· cr eases. School Superintendent John Nicoll noted that. at one point. district officials were consider· ing cutbacks between 25 and 30 percent in salaries. Swimmers Felled By Chlorine Gas COVINGTON. Ky. CAPl -A chlorine gas tank ruptured al a jammed swimming pool in sub- urban Cincinnati trus afternoon and hospital spokesmen said more than 140 persons were be· mg treated after inhaling the deadly gas. The victims were taken to three hospitals. No word on their condition was available lm- m e di ate I y, but hospital spokesmen said none or the in- juries appeared to be serious. Mrs. Eu said a random sam- ple indicated there were 395,136 valid signatures among the 471 ,411 submitted by Briggs. Ht' needed 312.404 Sorcery 190 Miles From Finish Line Sorcery was 19()' miles from Papeete In the 3,571-mile Los Angeles to Tahiti race at 9 a.m. today and was expected to finish early Thursday. Skipper Jacob Wood said Sorcery was sailing in a 14 knot t'3Sterly breeze. She has averaged 7.9 knots since that start Jwie 10. Bob Gosnell's 49-fool sloop Tula has again moved ahead of Wes tward in their fight for second place on elapsed time. Both yachts reported the same latitude but Tuia was about 50 m iles farther west. Tuia bad 599 • miles to go and Westward 621. Neil Kelly's Celebration bad crossed the equator but was still 1.194 miles from Tahiti. March Ban Asked C HICAGO CAP> -The Chicago Park District asked a federal appeals court to over· turn a lower court ruling allow· ing Nazis to march in Marquette P ark. The president of the district also said Tuesday that he would take the issue to the U.S. Supreme Court if necessary. Particular People Select JOHNSON & SOM Home of the 11Golcfen Touch" "At Johnson & Son, we were treoted In a very prof11lional and dignified tnariMr ." "Courteou1 salesman, pleasant turrmlnd- NANCY Mll1UM H ....... • ..... C.W. ings, excellent service." DAYIODOITAL ............... ~ ''Very~. very fair, enfoytd the last four or ftV'9 pan association." AWi SMITH MOOll ~ ... C41f. "Follow ttnuah 11 very good. I've hod eleven ,.ars of tat11fled ..,... " ._I. N.OllllCI L MAU L...-.... ~. Orange County'• Oldest lincoln·Mercury Oe1lersh1p .JOHNSON le SON lift l 2626 Harbor Blvd •Costa Mesa·• 6~0·5630 . ' • l .I W!dn!!day. June 28. 1918 DAILY PtLOT A3 Tuesday ~ declare o state of classroo1Jl5 for future s tudent.a. voting against the measure obtain approvals for their Pans Marlene Fox. speaking for 11 edles as bond issues for con. over~wd..ing in schools and as-On a 3-2 vote supervisors ap-Anthony withdrew his e~rlier ~s long as. fi ye years before tak-client developers. cont.ended hn· structioo, double sessiona, year- sess ees ~up to $1 ,200 on each proved regulaUons that could support because the fees would Ulg out building permits. posing f~ at the final building round classes. adjmtlng attend· new home m those areas. permit overcrowded distrlcta to be assessed al the time building It is the construction or a permit stage would be illegal. ant'e bouddaries and use o( Tbe new ordmance will apply collect .8 percent of the Milling permits were issued home a~)ater its purchase by County Counsel Adrian empty schools in neighboring only tn U!11~corporated county price for new houses from de-· new families that adds to over· Kuyper disagreed. however. districts. commun1hes after school velopers with 8 $l,200-per-unit As a result, Anthony argued, crowding, Diedrich argued. . In addition. supervisors will districts demonstrate that over· ceiling the measure in effect would be George White, president of . Tbe ordinance requires hear-hold yearly reviews in each crowdlng exists in specified Applied to a home costing r e troactive, applying to de-Cli;pistrano's board or trustees. ~lgs before both the county distrtct to see if overcrowding school aUendance areas. $lOO 000 the fee would come to velopers who already have re-said if supervi&0rs were to ex-annl~g Commiss ion and still exists Already officials In the $800' ceived approv s for their homu e mpt developments with supervisors ~erore the fee Exem~ from the measure Capistrano ~nd Oran~e Unified Su°pervisor Laurence Schmit, tract.a. already-approved tract plans ~ea~ure is applied to any school are so-called moderate-income School Districts are v1ew1ng the long a critic of the ordinance he Supervi r Ralph Diedrich, ther~ ~d be manr children str cL . homes and development limited measure as offering relief from views as 8 "bail out" for school who propo d tho o!'.tfinance, commg into the distnct wit.bout. It also requires school officials by deed reBt.r1ctions to adults r ,, classrooms to hold them. to show they have considered onJy. Voti~ ~ Viewed On '13' GWC Supported Jury Assails Police School I "'"~· THIS WAS THE SCENE IN MONACO 22 YEARS AGO Today Princess Grace's Daughter Wed a 'Commonef" Caroline, Philippe Marry in Monaco MONTE CARLO, Monaco (AP l Princess Caroline of Monaco married Pans playboy financier Philippe Junot today m a lS·minute c1v1l ceremony in the throne room or the royal palace -the same room where her father, Prince Rainier III, married American movie star Grace Kelly 22 years ago .. Princt'sS Carolin.e's hand :.hook a little as she signed the re~1ster." said Lou11:; Roman. president of Monaco's State Counc il. who performed the marriage before about 40 family members The wedding was "nice, and m good spirits," said Roman, but not particularly emotional. About 1,500 persons filed •hrou~h the palace gates to atte nd the pos t·we dding ret'eption. Brilliant s unshine bathed the palace square outside and hundreds of tourists pressed a~ainst the barriers. Caroline and Junot will go to the palace's s mall chapel Thursday morning for a Roman < 'atholit' nuptial Mass attended b y 100 gues t s. including members of Parisian society and the international j et .set. ex-royalty and vintage movie stars. The press was barred from both ceremonies as well as from the pre-nuptial ball at the palace Tuesday night The brevity of the guest hst. th<' abscnC'C' or members of * * * reigning royal houses and the privacy s urroundin g the wedding were in s harp contrast to the 2,000-guest extravaganza that Caroline's father, Prince Rainier III, staged on April 18, 1956. when he married her mother. Dior, the Paris fashion house. designed the wedding outfits for both Caroline and her mother. Designer Marc Bohan outfitted the bride in blue crepe georgelte for the civil cer e mony a nd traditional white fo r the religious rite while Princess Grace was wearing apricot chiffon today and yellow crepe georgette Thursday. The palace refused to say where Caroline, 21, and Junot. a 38·yyr·old Parisian financier. were honeymooning. or what gifts their parents were giving them Monaco's police force of 300 and the 80-man palace guard threw a tight web of security around the ochre-walled palace to keep gate crashers out of the royal ball Tuesday night G r eek shipping m agnate Stavros N iarchos' Be ntley limousine almost crashed mlo one of the police barricades when photographers' flashbulbs blinded the chauHeur. The guests also in c luded ex-King Umberto of Italy, Egyptian Prince Fuad. Frank Sinatra. David Niven. Ava Gard ner a nd Ca r y Grant * * RoyalEv~~t Monaco Becomes Disneyland .. MONTE CARLO, Montfto the photographers into a frenzy. <AP> -Monaco. the guidebooks "I must have a photo," cried' never lire of mentioning, is "a one downtrodden German. fa iry tale realm." But when the Grant turned around and clock struck midnight at the posed for him. royal palace. 1t was more lik e Yet, for all the horror stories Disneyland. about photographers bedeviling One by on<'. the Rolls-Roycec;. th~ lives of celebrities, these Rentleys and M<'rcedes slid up hardworking men managed to to th e Rat<' to d isg orge keep a respectful distance. No bemedalcd old men. stylishl y dress was soiled. no hairdo ruf. coiffed young socialites, women fled. in Dior gowns and a ktlted The only near incident came Scotsman. There was a lot of when Greek shlpplng magnate hand kissing. bowing and hold· Stavros Nlarchoa' cbaufleur, 1oa blgb of DOSes al lhe royal blinded by naahbulbs, almost boll given by Prince Rainier Ill drove lnto a barricade. and Princess Grace ln honor of Al the palace door, the 600 their daughter Caroline's ·wed-~uesta queued for up to half an ding. hour while the guards Alighting were the Princeas of scrutlnlied their Invitations, Savoy, the Grand Duke or lookinJ for gate crashers and Russia, the ex KinJC or Italy, jewel thieves. barons. ('ountt>!l:..e-;. ;)nd many At 2 a .m , the guests began to other ~'ir' "or-; or tht> lifestyle fl le out and hunt the Ir that ,., t•alro lh1• Mo11aco 11.'((Cnd hmous1ne5. Thi· p.d.1•' hu lhcd In "A lovely party," gusht-d nn rtnndll ~hl,, louked like a American gue~l. "The prince 1' cnrdboord facade on a movie looked great. My God. there was !let Hum n silhouettes nilt(.'<f a lot of jewelry in lhorc .. past the aently lit windows or the • ·stulfy and overcrowded." up~r noor ball rooms. ._ n i ff e d an o t b c r . ' ' Co I d Car1 GTanl arrived and drove sandwiches and no caviar " Laguna Hilh voters ID Leisure World favored Proposition 13 slightly more than did the rest of Or a nge County but their counterparts in Seal Beach were less solidly in support of the in· itiative. Figures recently released by the County .Registrar of Voters office show that the 40 precincts within the retirement communi· ty voted 8.963 to 3,330 in favor of Proposition 13, the Jarvis-Gann property lax limitation in- itiative. on June 6. In other words. 72.9 percent of those voting favored the law. Countywide. 404 ,878 voters case "yes" ballots while 171,274 said "no." That's a 70.2 percent ap· prov al. Al Leisur e World in Seal Beach, only 67.l percent of that retirement community's voters approved Proposition 13. As a city. voters in Seal Beach had one of the lowest pluralities 10 favor of the proposition iii the county. turning out 8,256 in favor and 4.259 against for a 65.9 per- <:ent "yes" vote. And Registrar of Voters figures show that Seal Beach, as a c ity . actuatty approved Proposition 8 -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 's answer lo the Jarvis·Gann initiative. Voters in the city gave 5,900 affirmative votes a~ 5,868 negative votes to Propo~tion 8. Leisure Worlders in Seal Beach, howt!ver . turned thumbs down on Proposition 8 to the tune of 2.738 negative votes to 2.501 "yes" ballots,. a 52.2 per- cent "no'' vote. Councilman Says He Didn't Steal By RAYMOND ESTRADA JR. Ot Ille O<tllJ Plle4 Sutt Huntington Beach City Councilman John Thomas testified in court Tuesday that he had no intent to harrass or s teal propeJ'tY from an oil company owner who shares the premises of Thomas' trucking and crane firm. Thomas is c harged with mi sde meanor vandalism. trespass and theft involving $20,000 in property belonging lo King Petroleum Company. The incidents allegedly occurred between Sept. 2S and Nov. 29. 1977. Prosecutor Robert Herron was ex peeled to c ross-examine Thomas today during lhe sixth day of teslin:lony in tbe West Orange County Judicial District court trial. Thomas testified Tuesday that he hoisted an oil well equipment shed from its rafters with a crane on Oct. 16. The shed belonged to Thomas C. King, owner o( the oil company. ThomJs said he had to move the structure in order to complete ground leveling or grading o~rations around IL Thomas said be bad planned to pave the area around the shed. But Thomas said one of the crane hooks slipped and the lightweight shed crashed some 1s reel to tbe rround. Thomas said he hauled the demolished shed to the Orange County dump but left the contents in another area of his trucking and crane yard. A s maller building near orre or the four oil wells in the yard "fell down," Thomas said, when he attempted to remove a large piece of cement curbing near the structure. · Again, Thomas uaer1.ed, be did not Intend to knock the structure over. 'Ibe action was related to tho grading and paving operation, be asserted. · Thomas and Huntington Beach Planning Department employee Sergio Martinez said the city required retnovaJ of "trash Md rubbish" and othe.- 1mprovement.s 11l the truckhtg and crane yard Thomas has asserted that much of the properly he removed, belonging to King, was uctunlly "trash " The property includes 011 Mil equipment sucb as tubing, metal pipes and tools. -· ---··· j GETS PLANNING POST Brea's Rex Gaede Brea Man Appointed Planner Former Brea Mayor Rex Gaede was appointed to the Orange County Planning Com· mission Tuesday by Supervisor Ralph Oiedric!- Gaede, 47, res1;:ned his council seat Monday to accept the com· mi ss io n nppo 1ntment. He replaces former Commission Chairman Margaret Cranston who moved to Colorado. County government should abandon plans to build a police training academy in El Toro and cast its lot with the training pro- gram at Golden West College. the Orange County Grand Jury said Tuesday. The jury's report was sharply critical of Sheriff Department plans to btpld the training center adjoining a planned fire training facility in rural El Toro. Wbile it faulted the proposed site because of the impact or jet aircraft noise, the jury also took a swipe at tbe department's training program. · ·. . . The philosophies and training programs set forth in the Golden West proposal are ra r s uperior to those now advo<:ated and practiced by the Sheriffs Department." the jury said. In an earlier report. the Grand Jury criticized stress training that is part of lhe sheriffs pro- gram and called for an overhaul of training techniques. In its report Tuesday. the jury said, in eCfect, that the Sheriff's Department should yield to the county's police chiefs and their preference for the police train- ing program at Golden West. buildings, the jet joise from nearby El Toro Marine Air 88.!W makes the site an illogical choice. However. Lbe jury clil.tn't com- ment on the feasibility of locat· Ing the fire training station on the site. Suspect's Suicide Ends Case Orange County Sheriff's of· ricers have closed the murder file they opened five days ago "hen Carmelita Arbiso was shot to death in her San Juan Capistrano home. They took their action at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday when Paul Ben- jamin Black. 47, died in the in- tensive care section at UC Irvine Medical Center from a self· inflicted bullet wound. lnvesti~ators sou~ht Black for four days before they found him in an Anaheim motel. Mo- ments after he was asked to sur- render, officers heard a shot and found Black, shot in the head. ly- ing on the floor of his room. The Midway City man died 11 hours later. .. I ~ Gaede 1s executive director or the Child Guidance Center or Orange County. He had served on the Brea council since 1975 and also 1s past chairman or the Orange County Mental Health Advisory Board. The Grand Jury noted that Golden Wes t ''has given a number one priority to expand- ing its academy curriculum and bas designated land for a new facility." Moreover, the jury said, there is no need for two training facilities in Orange County and separate facilities "will only in- t ens Hy the estrangement between the sheriff and local police chiefs." Officers said the gun used by Black to end his We was the one used to lull .Mrs. Arbison, 64, as she and the suspect apparently - quarreled in her San Juan home. He was narrowly defeated June 6 for the Republican nomination in the 69lh Assembly District. by attorney Ross Johnson of Anaheim Gaede. a lieutenant colonel in the Air Force Reserve. also is past president and trustee or the Brea ·Olinda Unified School District Board or Trustees and past vice president of the Brea Chamber or Commerce. • Gaede Is a San Francisco native. He and his wife, Susan. have three children. The Brea City Council has ap- pointed bus iness supervisor Carey Nelson, 51, as Gaede's replacement on the council. Union Hits Jarvis LAS VEGAS <A P ) -The nation's largest A FL·CIO union adopted a resolution Tuesday condemning California 's Proposition l j after a heated de- bate in which delegates warned that "JarVls fever" was spread· mg across the country. Sheriff Brad Gates h as pumped for construction or lhe training academy in El Toro as "the best and least costly or lhe alternatives available lo the tax- payers." Backed by a s tudy that showed joint police-fire use or some of proposed center's build- ings would save $759.125, Gates has won the backing of the Coun· ty Board of Supervisors. But as is the case with the planned fire training center, it won't be known how either prOJ· ect will fare until county budget hearings next month. In El Toro's favor is the fact that the county already owns the land adjacent to the James Musick Honor Farm as well ai;. the projected $759,125 savings in building costs. Gates has also argued that some of the honor farm 's facilities. such as the mess hall, could be used by trainees and their instructors. But the Grand Jury said that. even with sound-attenuated They said Black blamed Mrs. Arbiso for encouraging her niece to end her common law re· lationship with Black and return to San Juan Capistrano. They said Black threatened other members of the Arbiso family last w~kend before he confronted Mr.s. Arbiso and s hot her. Embezzling Senterree Set SA N OTEGO CAP> -Shirley Ann Brown of Vist a will be sentenced Sept. 5 on her guilty plea to embezzling $27 ,388 from a check·cashing office at Camp Pendleton. The rormer Marine base cas h ie r was arres ted in Honolulu. Three other counts we re dropped with her plea Tuesday The sentence. a poss1blt! to years in pnson and a maximum Sl0.000 fine. will be imposed by lJ .S . District Judge Gordon Thompson Jr. OMEGA QUARTZ Gem Talk By J.C. HUMPHRJES Gemologi!t,GIA TIME AFj'ER TIME 11' ha1~ rmprtll'~llmf measurt'mt'fll What tirne is it? We take It tor granted that the answer is almost always available. But it wasn't always so. Once. man had only the moon, stars and seasoos tor a calendar. and his stomach to tell the approximate time. Then. about 3,000 B.C .• man built Stonehenge, a series ot r'OUQh stone monuments In the E09llsh countryside. Historians b&lltw that this was the ' first successful attempt at eccUf"ate time m&Murement. Sun and~ were captured In a precise way. When St. Peter's Baslllca was bullt In tht •th century, It was PMltloned so that on the mst day Of Sprlno, the sun shines on ~ the altar. A little later came the • suncSlal. The Phoenicians used notched candles to mark time, Orlentals burned knotted orass ropes. Hourglasses pre-dated the birth of Christ. Clocks came durlno the middle 4'ges, followed by pocketwatcMs In the 1700s and wrlstwatcMs durlno this century. What's next? Only time wlll tell. Spac~ electronics and nuclear energy undoObtedly are part of our tlme-mMsurlno future. ............ ,.. brrtWtnt H TAILORED LIFESTYLE Omega. o fitting and flatte11ng c:omponlon f01 en. man ond tot m. woman whose ltfe·scyt4H are sparked by chang•-of-pac• and change-of-plaatl Omega Quaru fot on·tlm• accutacy within ~nds a month. See them and othet Omegas In our collecdon. CONVENIENT TERMS 30 YEARS IN THE SAME L0CA TION .. _ ...... _ ................. -----·· -·-~· ........ I I ~ .. DAILY PILOT ~r -Just :·:~ ~oasting {:t wit h~~ Tom~~''·' ~larphine Wielding t he Ax WHEBE THE ACTION IS: Some of the citizenry are sounding off in loud fashion these days &t public hearings as local governments along our coastline try to cut budgets. Huntington Beach seems to offer a good example of what some of the people are thinking. After a number of citizens gave vent to their views during a public hearing the other night at Huntington Beach City Hall, you get some notion of where follcs think municipal government ought to reduce spending. Most of the vocal people seem to think the cut and chop should ~ome from the top. VERY FEW TAXPAYERS have called for hefty cutbacks in their police or fire departments. Most of them would like to keep getting their trash picked up. Where the focus of the whacking seems to focus is UP· on municipal government's top-paid administrators. Those top salaries have the vocal citizenry exercised. A~ the Huntington Beach public budget bearing before the City Council. for example, the pay of five top ad- ministrators was attacked by one critic. City Ad·. ministrator Bud Belsito is paid $50,520 per year. Six other Pr1pWoce Gathertd to ~ Budget Cutting city aides make more than $40,000 annually, although only four others were identified by the civic critic. The demand being made was that these salaries be re· duced. Cut 'em back and save the tax dollars, the working people say. So if you're on the City Council, the next question is how much you cut them back and how much tax money gets saved? tJSE THOSE FIVE TOP Huntington Beach officials as an example Add up their total salary costs per year and it comes to slightly m ore than $200,000. How much should they be cut? How about slicing that pay in half? · U that happens, you have just reduced the Huntington Beach city tax rate by about one cent. Each penny on the tax levy will yield roughly $100,000 for the municipal treasury. And in Huntington Beach, you are talking about a city budget, even under current restraints, which might top the $25 million mark. - Point here is, that while every buck counts , $100,000 doesn 't look enormously significant when placed alongside n figure or $2.5 million. MANY OF THE VOCAL citizenry, therefore, seem to be a ngered by images of what they believe are fat cats lounging around city haU and drawing hefty paychecks. Clearly then, our local government officials are squeezed between a rock and a hard place. The citizens are demanding chopped pay in the thousands for the ad- ministrators while at the same time, city councils are ask· ing those same administrators to fwd ways to make cuts in the millions. It's going lo be an interesting year. $34 Million Sales Sets Auction Mark LONDON CAP> -The richest art auction in history has ended with a total of $34 million paid for the late Robert von Hirsch's col· lect1on. The total was more t han double the pre.sale estimate of $14.8 million and three times the previous record or $11.8 million paid 13 months ago for the contents of Mentmore Towers, the home of the Earl or Rosebery. Both auctions were staged by Sotbeby P arke Bernet. Art world sources said the $34 million would be spread among relatives in Austria, Switzerland, Britain and the United States of the 94·year-0ld German-Jewish leather manufacturer, who died in Ras le, Switzerland last November at the age of 94. , Tanks~ Warplanes Vktnam Forces Slam Cambodia BANGKOK, Thailand <AP) -Vietnamese forces using tanks and warplanes have launched a new push into neighboring Cambodia and may have penetrated up to 37 miles into the territory of its onetime Communist ally, Thai and American military analysta said today. The sources were uncertain whether the operation -said to ln- v o l v e as many as 70,000 · Vietnamese troops on bot h sides of the border -was aimed at wiping out Cambodian frontier bases or bringing down the Com· munist government in Phnom Penh. U.S. SOURCES said the town of Mlmot, a bout six miles inside Cambodia, was in Vietnamese hands and that Vietnamese troops were operating around the Chup rubber plantation, about 37 miles from the frontier and only nine miles from the key Russia Sets Newsmen's Court Date MOSCOW CAP) -Two American newsmen were or· dered today to appear for a court hear ing July 5 on civil charges of slander because of news reports they wrote questioning the authenticity or a Soviet dissident's televised con. fess ion. Craig R. Whitney of the New York Times and Harold Piper of the Ballimoc-e Sun were handed an indictment demanding that they publish retractions of their r eports in the Soviet press. Whitney said tbey also could be fined. IT WfLL BE the fi rst time that American correspondents have been taken to court in the Soviet Union for somet.b.ing they have written. · The two newsmen received the indictment a t a 15-minute, closed -door session with the pre· sident of the Moscow city court, L. E. A1mazov. Whitney said he told them lo return Friday with written responses to the charge. THE HEARING date was set for July 4, then moved back one day because of the American national holiday, Whitney said. The correspondents we r e charged with slandering the Sov- iet television program Vremya -Time -in reports they wrote suggesting that the program's producers pieced together film clips and faked a confession to a nti -Soviet activities by Georgian dissident Zvlad Gamsakhurdia. THE INDICTMENT, which was filed by Vermya's acting chief director, Viktor Pavlov, claimed the taping of the con- fessioD was carried out under ··professional norms and pro- cedures." Gamsakhurdia was sentenced to fi ve years imprisonment and «-xile. The Americans' reports were based on interviews with friends of his in Tbilisi, the capital of Soviet Georgia. WHITNEY SAID Almazov told him and Piper they have the rig ht to hire Soviet lawyers or seek legal assistance from the U.S. Consulate and that they may call witnesses to testify at their hearing. Me kong River town of Kampong Cham. Thai military sources said a Vietnamese move against l<;am· pong Cham would signal lhat the oper ation was aimed at more than sweeping the border clear of Cambodian forces that have been making bloody raids into Vietnam. THAI SOUR CES said the Vietnamese are In the Parrot's Beak, a slice of Cambodia ler· ritory lhat juts into southwest Vietnam, and in adjoining Svay Rieng Province. U.S. intelligence sources in Was hington said the offensive began in the last two weeks. The Vietnamese thrust puts the m a bout twice as far as earlie r ass aults in the un- declared war between the two countries. whose Communist rulers have reverted to the en- mity that has been traditional for centuries between the two peoples. HA~OI RADIO in a broadcast Tuesday said Vietnamese troops a nnihilated two Cambodian battalions in the border area last week . But It saJd the Cambo· dians invaded Vietnamese ter· ritory. An estim a t e d 60,000 Vietnamese troops drove into Cambodia late last year but withdrew. apparently under pres- sure from the Chinese govern· ment, Cambodia's chief backer . The Washington sources, wbo asked not to be identified, said they believe the goal of the cur- rent Vietnamese drive is to wipe out base camps used by Cambo- dia n s oldiers to infiltrate Vietnam. The U.S. and South Vietnamese armies invaded the same area in the spring of 1970 in an unsuccessful hunt for the Communist Vietnamese head- quarters U.S. officials claimed was there. HOSTILITIES BEGAN along the SOO·mile border between Cambodia and Vietnam in 1975 s hortly after the Communists on both s ides or the border defeated the U .S.-backed governments in South Vietnam and Cambodia. Downpour Hits DC 'lhunderstorms, Rain Hit Most of Nation T enaperat 11.-es Albu'QVe •~rlllo A\Mvllle AllMll• B•lllmore Blrmlf'IQMm Boise "' ..... ~ '° IM " " " .. '3 IS tl 11 SS u n '' n ., 70 .. .,,. m II "\2 .. end Ne w York stete. Tll• Washl"Olon, O.C. et'ff reconlecl Ml unus ... lly her'd r.int•ll, estlmeted et up to th~Of.., l~h In less th•n 30 minutes, .c:corcllnQ to !fie NallOMI W-... Service • E•rly mornl119 temperatures erOIHHI ti. Ntkwl r~ from 441 o.grees In $anOur;, (Allt,. to I) In Pan.,.,,• CJty, Fla CaUfornla •Well, maybe so .••.... NATION I WORLD I WEATHER Pre-fHglat Palo1'er RJ.lssian cosmonaut Pyotr Klimuk, left, attended pre· flight press conference with Polish cosmonaut Miroslaw ~ermaszewski, Tuesd~y, prior to being 1.aunched into or· bit aboard Soyuz 30 m the second Soviet International space shot. The duo is preparing to join two Soviet cos· mo!lauts aboard t he orbiting Salyut 6 space station tomght. Fear Realized Woman Slwt by Stray Bullet. TACOMA, Wash. <AP> -Peggy Ann McClain. who bad wor. ried about the safety of the streets a.round her suburban Partcland home. died in her own living room when a bullet tore through the front door on her S8th birthday. It was fired by a police officer dur· ing a shootout with a drug suspect outside. .. It was fast. We heard the noise, looked and shut the door," Mrs. McClain's husband, Sam, said Tuesday. A bullet penetrated the one-incboakdoor and struck Mrs. McClain in ~e back. "IT'S FUNNY. JUS'MHE OTHER DAY, she was telling a neighbor that you could no longer feel secure in Parkland,·· McClain said ... You didn't feel like you could go out and take a walk at night like you used to." Mrs. McClain had spent a quiet evening in front of the television, celebrating her 58th birthday w1tb her husband and son Saturday night. PIERCE COUNTY SHERIFF George Janovich said Tuesday that ballistic tests showed the fatal bullet came from a 357-cahber revolver assigned to Deputy Richard Knabel. "My mom's dead ... over an $800 drug bust that became a full·sca!e war right on our street," said Dwight McClain, 34, who held his dying mother in his arms on their living room floor while police contined to fi re at the fleeing suspect. A FORT LEWIS SOLDIER, Spec. 4 Owen M. Arnett, 21, has been named in warrants charging deadly assault and the sale of controlled substances. He is still at large. Several miles from the McClain home in the suburb of Spanaway, two undercover detectives had made an $800 purchase of amphetamines from a suspected drug dealer. saJd Henry Suprunowsk:i, Pierce County sheriff's chler criminal deputy. The suspect. be said, had a gun and managed to get away. The de· teclives radioed for help and soon police were on the s uspect ·s trail in a chase at speeds up to 100 mph The suspecl's car slammed into a utility pole about 50 yards from the McClain home. Theo the shootout began. BcKlon Brown\Vlll• Bulle to Cllerlstn SC Olerlstf'I WV C.hlt890 c.1ncln,,.ll Ci.•olef'ld Columllu• O.IFl.Wlll Oef'lvtr O.trvtt Htrltofel ......... HOftOIUIU Hcl\nton lnCl'aooll• Ja<n'vtti. Ke"'' (Jty LAt\1"'91 Llltlt RCKJI LOSAf'IOll• Le.ilSYlllt Ml!mpfll\ MlatTll Mllw•ukM .. llO ,, .. .... 07 ., I) ... Alt~ a shot1 ~ toell, f~•'1er• uy, temoereturu In Sout11•r1\ C.llloml• wtll rlW eoeln. T..-\daY"s llloh wes n will\• low of Ml H•Qlls Tllurs<My sflO<lld re.ell into t"9 UPPU 70\, ,,. Hellon91 Wee11 .... Service a.Id. •But talk Is so cheap -and so transitory. tJ •i '5 .. ,. '1 74 ~ S1 " •I .01 '° 10 a '° &S 74 .. 76 .l1J. " n ,. 70 '° 7J .... ,. n » ,. .. n ., to .. llO .01 ..... Otllty ..... o.1_., h0..•w4 Mtwwt~·rfl'('ltty II i >U din ,,..,. "",,,.. 't"ntff' N(Mtf 0v ".'OD~ tAill t'llltl•-.tlll f -I>"' n Yl>ut CDC» '"111 M .,.._...,.., ffl"tiev -luM•Y II l'flol tit) "' I ,~..,. ~, c.l'"lat a11 Ill •m L.t41 =~ . "' lnO 1<111' 000.,, .... w °" M11•s-s1. P. a •s Nail\vllle 9S 11 New Oo'I-t2 12 I.Al Htw York II H Hof'fol ll eo ,, .01 Otite. City ., n 0ma11.1 .. n Oftltf!Oo •s 7• ""'"ltd'llf\l• '° ,, "'"'911111 10. 7' PIUsllurol\ ., .. .21 P'haf'ld, Mrt. II t.3 P'll•nd, Or.i eo to At<hmOf'ld " 10 .n St 1.oul~ •s 7• St P T•mPt 0 74 11 !Mill l•'• " ,. $.tnOI~ 1' 0 S.n Fref'I 4\ l• S.•111• u 61 "''"' .. 1J WHlllllQiOft '7 n ... CAUP!OtlMt• .. "._ BIO Bur BIY1h~ <Al•lllljl l'r••no LOl'O kedl Hotdl•\ e>-tarlo ll'allTI SC>fll9 ,, " 11 '1 lo:I 14 " .4 ., ., 7S •1 100 1S " " ., '° Sa<re"'9nto 7• " S.n Bff1\¥Cflno to '2 S.1'14• a....-. 1) ,. s.n Jow 71 st ~eA.... 7• " Thffmel tt •7 11.s. s .... a.,, Tll11ndertt0<1M COflllllutd IOCl•Y '"°"' the MIC!Wfft to ttlt •ttenllc OMl11 elld _,. widely IC•ltaf'M lf'I other P••h ot 119 netkwl. Storm• •OCM•reo for • third ••••IOhl day over 01110, ecroo nortl""' Wot Vlrotnl• •nd Ml!lllwottn\ "'""'''"...,I• -lf'llO wttl•rn l'oWrvt- $hOwen ano t"""°9rtlonn• a lto COf'ltl"IH from •rllO"a end N<>w ~· l<o tllrvUllf!H\lom (lolor-lf'llo Ille "9f'llr•l af'IO not1/W'n Olalf'lt 11 ..... , ,.,,.. foll lf'I partJ ot ~ ,..,,,., Nerti\ Oellole "•'"' ., ... foll '" w••I ano \Oullleut T•••• 11ot111• r 11 Ce t llorf'lla , ad lt<t f'll POf11fflt of ~I ~~ and In a.vii\ OetrotA. ~"'Ml•'°"'' tnd ICUho. S.n11 I~• ... ,. rNOrltd TuetdeY. l ...... Jn Tera•IWWl--h In W"I Vlf'Vlf'll•, M.tryland 1( ... ,., Movf'lt•ln ~ Til<ndey "-'d lle11t l\IQf\S of In !he mllMOs wHI\ tows In Ille mlcMOoJ HIQl\I In .,. -~ wrn be '° to '° Mid ~ • ...,. "'°"'° be 0 lo IQ), Cocutal 1t'eatllft- .. 1QM encl momlf\I IOw Clema Wllft "'""' .._._ T1lurlclrf. l.IOhl •erletlle wind~ "'9M eo'4 mon!lllQ haun.. Hlilfls T...,,..y -70. (OHtel Mmpwmnt Wiii r91199 bet•••11 60 •nd 6'. Intend t•m· ~•tu••• wot •9110t llttwMn to ..-41 7J. Tlla •atet '9mpfrlltuf't Wiii be IM. s...., Maote, Tl.W. ftl*HO•Y ~ondhl<i'! S;Jtpm )J Se<ond ,_ 12::13 o.m. o.t T"UHDAY '"" hlOh •:H a .m. J • "r•t low II 41 e.m 1 S Se<Olld lllOfl •:ti 0 "' , j sun rhn t 4'I e.m., ttn I :Ol 11.m Moon rt_ I lie m .MIJ I 1.p "1 Surf Rqqrf HunCI""°" .....,, W-• I te , fttt •1111 '°"'" ·-·· C:.W..lllOf'lt POOr Nt<#llOl1 o..ct.· 11¥-• I loot with \CHll'1Wftt •-1. Coricllllo•ll vtf"t - • When you want food bargains -prices you can count on day in and day out, the proof is in print •••.. In the grocery ads In the Da ily Piiot. • Confused by all the conflicting claims? • Shop the D•lly Piiot, get the facts, compare. you're really getting the moat for your money. DAILY PILOT 642-4321 .then you know . . CALIFORNIA Wednetday. June 28. 1978 DAIL V PILOT -A 6 Solons OK $15.2. Billion Budget Anti-abortion Democrats Vow Fight on Funding SACRAMENTO <AP> As- sembly Democrats have broken a deadlock over their $15 2 billion version or the proposed state budget. but the action only delayed confrontations over a bortion funding and govern· ment spending Limits. Anti-abortion De mocrats agreed Tuesday night to vote for the budget an a preliminary form. cleartng the way for a 55-22 vole that allowed 1t to pro· ceed toward a two-house con- ference committee. But they warned they would not yield again on any form of Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.'s $34 million budget proposal to con- tinue fund.mg Meda-Cal abortions for poor women "WE WILL STAND as a bloc against the budget if at contains provisions that are to us morally and philosorhacally repugnant ... Assemb yman Alister McAhster. D-San Jose. told his colleagues before the vote. He said he was s peaking for 12 other Democrats. He told reporters he was will· ing to accept abortion funding in cases of danger to the mother's life. rape or Incest But he said current federal restrictions arc too liberal and he would not ac· cept any state funding that replaced withdrawn federal dollars. The federal law approved by Congress and President Carter last August allows abortion funding only in cases or rape, in- cest. and danfer of death or severe physics health da e to the mother. Those condition cover only a small fraction of previously funded abortions. BROWN ORDERED the state Medi-Cal program to replace the withdrawn federal funds. saying the right to an abortion shoul not depend on a woman's an- com e. The budget proposal , which includes restriction~ after the third month of pregnancy. would cover about 86,000 abortions. If McAlisler's ~roup holds firm . Democralac leaders wall either have to yield on tht' abortion is~ue or reach <in a<' commodali~n with RepublacMs over the spending limit proposal that GOP members want on the November stale ballot. The budget vote was one more than the two-thirds majority n ee d ed for pass age . One Democrat voted no and one abstained . or the 23 Republicans. 21 voted no and two were absent. RE PUBLICANS withheld their votes as part of their de· mand for an Assembly floor vote on a proposed constitutional amendment by Sen . George Deukmejlan. R-Long Beach. that would limit increases in s tate and local government spending to the percentage in- crease in the coot of living plus population. A similar proposal by then- Cov. Ronald Reagan was reject· ed by state voters in 1973. But Republicans say the recent passage of Proposition 13. a $7 balhon property tax cut, in· dicates the public mood has chan~ed Though Brown and Assembly Speaker Leo McCarthy , the Democratic leader in the lower house. say they want a state spending limit, five hours of closed-door negotiations Tues- day railed lo produce an agree- ment that would end the GOP boycott THE STICKING point ap- parently was Re publicans· in- sistence that the measure move out of a Democrat-controlled committee lo the floor before the Legislature begins a recess in early July . Assembly GOP leader P.aul Priolo of Malibu told reporters that the Republicans were will- ing to wwt unlll August ror a floor vole on the measure. pro- vided the legal deadline for qualifying November ballot tneasures is extended from June 29 to Au~. ts as expected. He said McCarthy offered to put a measure on the Assembly floor an August that was · · gen e.r a I I y w 1th 1 n the parameters of our legaslallon ... But he ~rud McCarthy would not agree to act before the recess <1nd did not give satisfactory guarantl~:.. •11 TIUNK WE'RE quite far apart." Priolo said. McCarthy, D·San Francisco. told reporter s that the Democrats would proceed with a spending limit proposal on their own for action in AuguS\. He blamed the breakdown on "the rather passionate feeling against the governor" In the Republican Caucus. The six-member conference committee will try to reconcile differences between the two versions or the budget. Besides abortion funding. they include stale employee pay. prison con- struction. and University of California tuilton. THE ASSEMBLY generally followed Brown ·s recom men dation for a state pay freeze but propO;ied a 2 percent r aise for some employees making less than $23,000. The Senate ap- proved a 5 percent raise (or all state workers. ender terms of emergency state aid to local governments approved last week. the state pay raise will be tho maximum <illowed for local government workers and welfare rec1p1ents The Assembly also wants the freeze applied to legislators and judges. Al'WI ......... SERVES TIME Jane Russell Ex-actress Serving Four Days Bombing Link Widens SANTA BARBARA (AP> Jane Russell. 57, one of the mov- ies · glamor queens in the 19SOs. as serving a four -day jaal sentence for driving while intox- icated. authorities say. Municipal Court Judge Joseph Lodge revoked probation and sentenced Miss Russell on Mon- day. ,and she began serving her sentence that night. authorities ::.aad Tuesday Briggs Smpects Said Tied to More Blast,s Ma ss Russell. who lives in nearby Montecito. was put on probation following an intoxicat- ed driving conviction in 1976. She was arrested and charged a second time following an acct· dent last March. sheriff's de- partment offictals said. Oaoking Suspect Aided San F'ranc1sco police attempt to aid a man they ident1f1ed ffS Greg Bartlow. 31, arter he swallowed balloons they said might have been filled with a heroin-like substance. Police claim Bartow is a known narcotics dealer. LOS ANGELES CAP> Evidence found in an apartment used by live members or a rev- olutionary group links them with other bombings across the nation. authorities claimed m a letter flied in Los Angeles Supenor Court The five -Clayton Van Lyde· graf. 62 . Leslie Ann Mullin. 33 . Judith Emily Bissell. 33 . Michael Justesen, 27. and Mark Curtis Perry. 29 -wi II be tried Oct. 30 on charges of conspiring to blow up the Fullerton office of state Sen. John Briggs. DEPUTY DISTRICT Attorney Hobert Jorgensen. urging Tues· day that Van Lydegraf's bail be increased from $200.000 to $500,000. alleged a typewriter found in the defendants' apart- ment was tested by the FBI. A hearing on Jorgensen's motion was set for Friday. Jorgensen said the FBI de- term aned the t ypewriter was used to type a weather Under· ground communique regarding a bomb placed at the Anaconda American Brass Co. in Oakland on Sept. 10, 1974. The bomb was discovered before it could ex· plode. He ~ajd the same typewnter also was used to type a note in which the Weather Underground claimed responsibility for plant· mg explosives Jan. 28. 1975. in the U S. State Department in Washington. D.C . and the Federal Building m Oakland. JORGENSEN SAID a docu- m enl entitled "Origins of Fascism," found io the same apartment. was typed on the sam e typewriter as was used to type a number or other Weather Underground communiques. These communiques claimed responsibility for explosives m· cadents at Gulf Oil Co. head· quarters in Pittsburgh, Pa . on June 13. 1974. at the Kennecott Copper Co. headquarters m Salt Lake City. Utah. on Sept. 5, 197i, and at the U S. State Depart- ment PUC Oversees '13' Savings Distribution SAN FRANCISCO <AP) -The California Public Utilities Com· mission is laking steps to assure that any tax savings rtteived by utilities or transportation firms because of Proposition lJ would be passed on to customers. Miss Russell. who currently does television commercials. gained national auent1on in her fi rst film. "The Outlaw." The movie was directed by the late Howard Hughes. who had her wear scanty outfits considered risque at the time Streetuxilkers To Get Jail? 'East Area Rapist' Hits Again In action Tuesday. the PUC ordered an investigation to de· termine effects the new property tax cutting amendment will have on rates of companies un· der its jurisdiction. Under the proposal. utilities and transportation companies will be required to set up tax in- itiative accounts to insure lhat any tax reductions are passed on to ratepayers and any new in· creases in taxes. licenses or fees are reflected in rates. SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -Al- leging that prostitutes prowl "rampant" in two of tbe city's most popular tourist areas, the Chamber of Commerce, the police chief and tbe Powell Street Association are demand- ing jail terms for the streetwalkers. San Francisco Municipal Court came under ftre from au three parties Tuesday for being soft on prostitutes. Police statistics show 90 percent or the t ,45-0 prostitutes arrested so far this year served no time i_P. jail. SACRAMENTO IAP} The "cast area rapist" has attacked a 23-year-old woman who lived alone in <:1n apartment complex has 38th victim, the Sacramento County sheriff's de· partment reports. Bill Miller . sheriff's spokesman, said Tuesday it was the first tame the rapist h<is struck in Sacramento since April 14. and only the second time in an <ipartment complex. His last four attacks were in Da.,.1s and Modesto, l\\o m each city, Maller said. Ddlate11 Propo•ed LOS ANGELES CAP> -Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr has pro- posed a senes or four televised gubernatorial debates prior to the Nov. 7 general election. His Republican opponent. State At- torney General Evelle J Younger, as expected to reply to the proposal early next month. ( J Body Exla1U11ed SJ'ATE LOS ANGELES CA Pl -lo or· der "to prove or disprove .......____________ certain physical evidence con- Ken Reitz. Younger's cam· -paign manager. said after meet· ing here with the governor's aides Tuesday that the attorney general wouJd respond by July 7, when the two sides meet again. Subpoena Dbobefled SACRAMENTO CA P l -The Sacramento Union says a re- porter is refusin~ to obey a Superior Court judge's subpoena of tapes and notes from an m terview with a witness in the El len Delia murder trial The Union said Tuesday that the order was issued Monday by Judge John J . Boskovich to re porter John Hammarley cerning the case," sheriff's in- vestigators have exhumed the body of one of the 13 victims at- t r I but e d to the Hillside Stran~lcr. Sheriff's Lt. Phil Bullington saad Candy Lee Hudspeth 's body was removed from the mortuary Tuesday and returned a few hours later to check certain evidence. but he would not elaborate 1tlenwry Queried OAKLAND CAP) -Attorneys for Wilham and Emily Harris say the woman they're accused of kidnapping -Patricia Hearst "lacks sufficient memory" to testify against the pair. Dunk the Tax /tf an A charity event to rnise funds for an En cinitas church will feature a game that 1s. bound to lure most of the crowd. In a re hearsal for the August event is San Diego County A~~('~sor E r Williams. who is dropped ullo a box of water. A baseball was thro\\-n lo drop him this one by San Diego Padres pitcher Randy Jones. Defense attorneys Tuesday told a judge that Miss Hearst. kidnapped more than four years ago and currently serving a prison term on a conviction of joining her abductors in a bank robbery. could not accurately testify because "her experiences over the past few years have af· reeled her ability to perceive. rec· ollect and communicate.·· ,.,. • + ........... ·1 • • • • ··~liZ:~· •" « • HERB • • • • FRIEDLA,DF:R • • IS ~r\Kl:\G • ,. CREAT DEALS • : FREE : 50 G.\l.S : • 01-'G,\S • 1tfi.11otth1•u'""'1"t11A1t "'"''""•••tittl h• •. "~ orOll .('ll,\'\(;J-:~ • Jlt •• tnemm,..,..,.. '' Uw fa.<ton rot tt .. .. •••• I\ t4,. ... )Mtt ,., • • e HONDA e ., • 11'S. .. •Olll•d • • UI n11 •ttlMl .. ~• •4111 •* * * * * * • * * * * *! • MG-TRIUMPH • : e JAGUAR e « • FIAT·LANCIA : • u1 n~f .. ~!~~:.:!'11":,. em • .. ***********• • e TOYOTA e • .... 1-1(, ........ (,rftHlll•d « • t.or*•t.r•" Ul J.4W • •* •• * * * * * • .,, • ~ it MOTORll0:\1 t-: « Starting July I a ll rates col- lected to cover property tax ex- penses will be subject to refund, rate adjustment or balancing treatment. The two business gro\il>s sai<l the situation is particularly bad on Powell Street. where tourists wait to board the city's famed cable cars. and in Union Square. at the heart of San Francisco's s hopping district. rtists June 29-July 2 Thv.nday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday. View nearly eighty professional : SAi .~~ _& ~ i::'.'il'.\l.S: • Ri'.Sf.R\ I·. :\0\\ • • 5:17. 7777 Ext. 500 • ................. • e LEASING e • All 11111~"-""'""••• O.m•ollf ..... A lloUn a..-, -ll• T"""'~ artists and craftsmen d!.splaymg thel! ongmal works. mcludmg oils. watercolors, seascapes and abstracts. It's another Fashion Island experience. And it's free. In Newport Beach on Pacific Coast Highway between MacArthur and Jamboree. • s:.n. 7777 l·:xt. GOO •••••••••••• Your O•lty Ptlot c.n~ "K1'~· Or •~ CCM\I Collf'O"' ·~tr.. ofllc '"' rl'tytllf\9 (fnt..- lor C.OSI• Mtw '-rile cWfennce between better ac beat!' ) . o'."9CC<M••D•··P·•o• Editorial Page ----------------------------------------------- Wedne:ioay. June 28 1978 Rober1 N Weed/Pubh~her Tl'lomlU Keievll/Ed1tor Street Wide ning Projec t Ne eded In appro\ ing a !'>J>t!Ctric nhgnmenl pl"n for the w1dl'n· mg of 19th Street last Wt'ek, Cosh.1 Mesa council member!'> have opened lhe door for some needed improvements in the downtown redevelopment area. A three-lane. 106-foot wide roadw:.iy with b1kt>wuy will, of course. improve traffic circt.tlataon, partic ularly nt the <'onJ.{cstcd intersections of Harbor and Newport Boulevards. 'l'he actual widening v.'lll tuke place from Fullerton J\vt..'nue west to Park Avenue, with work expected to begin insummt.'r.1980 Approximately 15 businesses. all loC'aled on the south s ide of 19th Street. will be purchased by the c ity and t.•vcntually demolished to make way for the expanded <.1rter1al Bec.ius~ of pas!-.age of Prop. 13. which \\.iped out the Redevelopment t\~ency':-, pow<:r to float bonds. there are no f1 rm prOJ(•cts set for the area in question This will likcl~· put the fal of the area more heavily m the hand!-> of private d<'vclopers The new ta:-. la'" however. wall.not affeN the city's anlent1on to spend about Sl.25 million for right-of-way purchm.t>s and 5600.000 m actual construction costs. Con!->adt>ring thl' current situation on 19th Street, both from a traffu: and ae::.tlwt1c standpoint, it would seem to he money well ::.pent . Our Mistakes ' Heccntly the Daily Pilot not4:d with dismay m c.1 news s tory ;,inti an editorial that Costa Mesa once more would huve no member on the new Orange County Gr<rnd Jury, :.rnd indeed had never been represented on the Jury in the 25 years since the cit y 's incorporation. We stand corr<.'{'lC'1 Costa Mesa resident J esse M Green. onC' of the handful of Mesans nominated for Grand .Jury duty O\'C'I the years. was selected and did ser\'e on the 1972 j ury. Other Mesa nominees have been eliminated in the process of reducing the llsl:-. submitted by S uperior Court 1udges lo the fmal Jury roster of 19. We further noted that Costa Mesa Mayor Ed M c Farland was cons1dermg the idea of having the Caty C~uncal !'>Uggest likely Juror candidates to the Judges when future lists arc dra"'-n up This fmc ad('a, \\C' arc informed. already had oc- rnrred to Superior Court Judge JI. Warren Knight who. thi~ very y{'ar, SC'nt out a letter to some 300 individuals ~rnd organ1zat1ons in the county requesting help m lol'at ang potcnti<:1l m embers of the 1978-79 jury The rt.•quest for referrals. according to Superior ('ourt officials, '~·.cnt to members of the Costa Mesa C1tv l 'ouncil. They did· not respond · That's unfortunate, because v.e still feel Costa Mesu. b~· c:omparason with ot her cities. has been under· r epresented on the Orange County Grand Jury and any <"hancc lo remedy the s ituation should be acted upon b't the City Counci l or any~ne who may have the judges· curs · Coastline Message Las t w<'ek brought out some interesting contra~ts rol Coasthnt· Community College, the Coast Communil~ Colleg{• District's "college \\ithout walls ... On lhr Mime day that.lhe Western .i\ssn of College!'> and L'nivcrs1t1cs grcinled the fledgling institution full ac· credit ation. a united faculty group of teachers from · Golden Wl•M and Orange Coast college subm1tte<l a res- o lution <"ailing for the abandonment of the Coastline Colle,ge Despite tht• passage of Prop. 13. trustees have backed the e:<istcnCl' of Coastline, noting that the facility l'dut'.itcs its students at a lower annual cost (about $400 1.·ach I than either of the two permanent campuses. l IOWl·ver , the faculty group , in citing the tendency towal'd superfluous course offerings a nd general wastdulrwss on the part of Coastline, has raised points tlwt Coustluw s hould heed Al a t1ml' when all budget belts mus t be pulled la~hlt·r. Cota!-.l hnc !-i hould t ake full advantage of its ac·· ncditat1on by trimming frivolous and questionable 1'1~1ssrs. and uv making certain at~ employcs arc pro dll<'l 1\'C.' • Opinions expressed in lhe space above are those of the Dally Pilot Other views expressed on this page are those ol their authors and artists Reader comment 1s invited. Address The Dally Piiot PO Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (714) 642-4321 Boyd/Drawing Room By L.M. BOYD Question <irises as to why that special sitting place in old·ltmey houses was called the drawing room. It was where the ladies retired after dinner to leave the men attn· ble lo their cigars and liquor. Because of the ladies· retreat thereto. th<> n:lme originally was the · withdrnw1ng room .. That half h1cyclc-half· m o tor<'vclc known as the moped has lhc best vehicle safety record in Europe. ll gets 160 milos to the gallon And 11 's of no interest to those hot-wheels folk who need high hor s epower Whal 's holding down the sale of the moped in this country Dear Glo on1 y Gu llo, hum look~ like CJnoth.-r Ion.:. hot sum mer without our cool T~Wanklc Park u~uin M M fl ~·.~~I :':',,'.•r.r;:"~~. 4r;. ':!, ,,. .. ,u,.ly roti.<1 "" •••w' of ,,.. ......... ". '-"' ,.. ... , "" ........ c.1 .. my c;v, 0..lt 1'1 ... 1s the lack of safe places to ride the little rascal. Pity the fancy freeway builders didn't preserve rar more frontage pathways for trikes, bikes and the like. More men than women in France use cosmetics. Q "What's the longest stretch of highway with no traffic lights?" A. Interstate 75 between Sault Ste. Marie. Mich . and Tampa, Fla. It's 1.564 miles Q "Why was the Quonset hut of Worid War II so C"allcd')" A Because it was first bu11l at the Quonset Point N;1val Air Station near Greenwich. R I In 1941 for airmen The great lleavyweight Jack Dempsey earned just about as much money throughout his ri1:hting roreer as did Muhammad Ali an losing hjs lust matrh. To that list of inap propriate names, add bllndwormi>, whl<'h ure neither hllnd nor wormt.. They're legle5!1 liiards Amon~ dogs. tht" ttrracrs bark the most. Amonl( <'&ts. the Persians m t'Ow the least The averagt humnn helnR as an lS.year·old Chmese girl Earl Wate r s A Million Here, a Million There fo'or an inkling or the rat con· lent of government, consider Governor .Jerry Orown ·s slate budget for the forthcoming ns cal year commencing July 1. as he initially proposed It lasl January. ll totalled $16 billion. This did not include properly tax relief money subse· <1uently pro· vided In SH 1 or money r o r ~ t a t r e mplo yee sa lary raise:. and numer- ous new pro· grams the governor was pu!>h1ng Adding those. the ac· tual budget would have ex- Mailbox ceeded $18 billion ur S8 billion more lhan when he took office JUSt 3 i,2 y(•urs al(O A quick study or the planned budg<'l ren·als that 1t:s proposals r epresented an increase ror stale agencies for next year ol at least $2 billion over last year. That increase alone would use nearly every penny of all the taxes collected from every bank and corporation. It 1s more than une-thil'd of all the income taxes extracted Crom every Individual. It is more than half the total of I he last full budget spent by former Governor Pat Brown in 1966. hb la:.t year in office · 8 UT THE increase ai. worse than that for at doesn't include any of the increases in the muJtt. ,I ~ ( ~~.HE A\~'T GOIN' NOWHERE. I YANKED THE. DISTKIBVTORW. billion dollar budgets of health wetrare agencies which cover such programs as welfare, Medi-Cal. Wlemployment. men tal hospitals and aid to the aged. all of which are so vast they defy easy analysis. Neither does it include educa- tion which. In the face or declln- in g enrollments, was slated nevertheless ror inc reuses in state funds of nearly a h~lf billion dollars for all levels How do budgets get so fat" ll starts at the top. The governor 's immediate or. rice-budget was set at '$3.5 million. up $600.000 from the 1977 figure . The four ai?encv secretaries under the governor. has cabinet, proposed budgets totalling $3.8 million an an crease of SJ.7 million. Also part of lht· gowrnor's office are the offices of Employee Relations. Planning a nd Researrh 1tnd Emergency Services These three had a combined budget of $7 6 million. up $4.5 million So the tot al cost or running the gov· c rno1 ·s orr1ce for one year comes to almost $15 million and n·presenls an increase or nearly $7 m 1 I hon bet ween I 97fi 77 and 1978 79, almo~l a 100 percent growth' ALTHOUGH most other state agencies were not quite so rast wath the buck. neither were they Scroogei. Cons umer Afra1rs added $8 million for a total $38 m1ll1on; General Se rvice'> -;howed a S26 million increase to $188 malhon. Housing and Com· mun1ty Development went up $7 5 m1llaon to a total $12 S m1ll1on , lhe Highway Patrol In· t•reascd $25 milflon ror a total $223 m1lhon: the Department of Motor V<'h1cles added $24 million to boost its budget to Sl51 m1ll1on : Solid Waste Manage- ment JUmi>('d from a $2 million budget to S20 m illion , the Department of Education came out with $239 million. $67 million rnore than its 1977 budget : Parks and Recreation upped $27 million for a total $83 mallion, and lndustnal Relations JUmped lrom S65 m1lhon to S87 6 million. The figures go on and on in a "'h1rling dervish of spending Even the Legislature boosted ah own budget $12 S million to total $5i 5 m1lhon T H ERE IS little reason to doubt this same frenzy or spend· ing el\ isls at all levels or govern- ment. especially the schools. \.\1th the result government has become almosl uncontrollable As the late Senator Everett Dirksen quipped, "You add <1 million her<> and a million there and preUy soon you are talkin~ big money Tax Calendar Change Would Aid Schools To the Editor Schoob and local govrrnments coulr1 turn S3 into S4 plus Since propl·rty taxes are based upon a fi scal year begin nang on .July I <'ach year. schools a n d liw a I go\ c r nm e n ts a n· coerced :.ilmost in t'ntarety to the same fiscal year Schools in particultir thus are put into a ra ther rad1C'ulous situation budgetwise. Schools must pro- duce a budget beginning July I and ending on June 30. llowevcr, no tax funds are available to them until after the December 10 deadline for the first one-half of property tax payments. What do they do from July l until the end of December·• The logical solution. or course. is to budget and maintain a large sur- plus. Secondly, they may borrow funds. paying interest which in· creases their costs. IT WOULD seem more than lo~1cal to move up the due date for the first one-half payment or property taxes to a Sept. 10 date for the 1979-80 fiscal tax year and possibly to July IO for the 1980 81 fiscal tax year. Sance t ax bills will be general· ly much lower, there wouldn't be ;1nv excessive burden on the t:t\ er age taxpayer. The benefiL5 S<.·hools would no longer need :-.tich excessive surpluses and in each of the next two years the s urpluses accumulated could bt? used lo offset lower tax income Also. by moving up the due date for property taxes by one. fourth of u year. the resull would h<' to 1nrrcase the tax income by one rourth for that particular Y<'<Jr . An advanta~e for the taxpayer m 1 g h l be mov 1 ng the second prop· erty tax deadline away from the April 10 date since state and federal income taxes closely follow The period around April has always been a bummer for businesses because of c-oncen· tratC'd due dates for taxes Sine<' county assessors will no lon~er have the burdensome job of reevaluating property lo the former extent. it wouldn't seem to s train them by providing tax bills thre<' months earlier DOYLF. PIJILLIPS l11Ha/e Sc rerC• To the F.ditor Last week your paper carried the story of Pat Skillman's re- quest for speed reduction on Hamilton Drive being denied by the Costa Mesa City Council The next doy your paper car· rlcd the story thot. in all prob· ability, Ncwport·Mesa Unllioo School O\~rtct Wiii cut busing for next year I think a very valid ond impor- tant issue is being pused over. MMt parent.~ don't object to the extra exercise their children would t>xpcriencc by ~alkmg to !>chool, hut they do obJCCl lo the unsafe strec·t cond1t1ons in Costa Me<;a I HA V f. tried fflr months to J?ct I he Co:.t.1 M(''.'.U Trnfftc Com mission to low<•r the speed hm1t on Adams A\cnuc· from 50 mph to 40 mph I with en(or('t'ment 1 My requests have very em- phat1t3lly been denied and 1t would _appear that this com· m1ssion·s main philosophy is lo "move traffic ·· I wonder af lhr Newport-Mesa school board 1.s aware that a large number of children will be crossing a 50 mph zone. with no pa intcd crosswalks. to get to school. Or. will the City of Costa Mesa finally get busy and place more rcal1st1c· speed limits throughout the city" Smee most parents will not let their children walk under unsafe conditions. arc the schools really prepared for massive traffic congestion every morning and afternoon'> I hope .some very serious thought will go into the decision making of the next few weeks. and 1 r busing 1s cut. I urge the school board to Insist that city 'itreets be madC' safer for the children who"' ill be using them SllARRAN RENNA Cht•t•r11! To the Editor Th rec cheers for M , T McLaughlin·s letter on the Costa M<>sa zoning 1nit1ative. tMailbox.June 21 1 After reading City Attorney T J . Woods' remarks in court about the init1at1ve process. I don ·1 think there's much chance that the council will listen to the voters· message Perhaps we should use another method to get their ;ittcntaon -a recall election JEFFREYS. HAIGHT .\'o llero To the Echtor I am appalled at the effects -Prop. 13 is having on budget cuts to those less fortunate than we are Homeowners enjoy a profit. often high and unrealistic, when they sell their homes. Then they welcome high evoluation. Home buyers ore uware of the cost or taxes whPn they buy their homes. IC they arc too high, then the priCt.' or lhe home they have ~hosen Is too hi Rh. Approximately one·Courth of the payment Is tax deducUble, lowcrlna it still more. I N O RANGE County. tht' ser vlN'S we r<>r<>lved for our money were worthwhile. In most coses lht' money saved was not nrccssary to mnlntnin a decent standard of living, only to ufford more luxuries This 1s not the case with the poor. blind. aged. unemployed or disabled. Where is the conscience or the people'! Why isn't Jarvis stand· ing trial for drunk dnvanl? and driving without a license instead of being treated as a hero in Was hington" T JONES Airport .~oille To the Editor: In your letters to the editor section or June 7. a letter from Mr. William M. Monroe headed "Aircraft Noise" deserves at tention since il leaves the im pression that both commercial airlines and private jets are not acting responsibly at the Orange.: County Airport. The county maintains seven noise morutoring devices m the take off areas and these units are hooked into a computer at the noise abatement head· quarters at the airport. The noise from each flight is thus re- corded and printouts of noisy flights are discussed in the reg- u I ar pilots meetings by the commercial airlines . An especially noisy flight is handled immediately by telephone for corrective action. WIT HIN the limitations of their equipment. these operator'> :ire acting res pons1hly cooperatively and arc concerned about noise. The same type or monatonng is an effect for private jet opera· lions and each visiting jet I~ given a copy of the noise abate· m ent procedures on landing for ser vice, ct('. Every effort is made to obtain cooperation from private pilots and generally this is obtained. During the first quarter of 1978 only four private jets took off after 11 ·oo p.m. As the newer generation or private jets s uch as the Cessna <.:1tation. Lear 35 and Jet Star ll's become more avaitablc. this noise source will be greatly re duced. To sum up. much hos been done to reduce noise at Lhe Orange County Airport and the pilots arc indeed acting responsibly. JOSEPH E IRVINE Executive Director Community Airport Council Pet.• N~ ID To the Editor : Your newspaper ha11 '1lways been 3dm lrably alert lo the nc<'ds of dog!! and pets in general. T here is one thing I would like you so yery much to write In your newspaper. and that is th real importance of hnvlng a do'rs nnmc, address and telephone numt>t'r J(lucd to lh<' t'Ollnr or neaband. In that way the a.:onyof lost dogs Is praclt<'nlly eliminated. El>pec1ally with dogs going along on vacation traps or other outings. 1t is moc;t essential to h.iv(• an identification Nol long ago, I got my own dog back that COHY.lt.:OA St ude11L '• \/iew To the Ed1to1· · I •Im a .student 111 Orang!.' Coa'.'.t College and I attended the Coai-.t Communlly College Board meeting last \Vedncsday night. Administrator Bernard Luskin announc('(J that Orange Coast College was bunkrupt Teachers were worried ~•bout a proposE!d 16 percent '.'>rtlary cul and in creased rlas.s loads: parl·lime 1ea<'hcrs were going to be fired. occ and ewe teachers are ~ilrcady among the lower paid or the .JCs an Californ1u. despite the la<'t tht>y live in the m ost af. fluent place in the world Many M the te<.1cherc; were worried about losing thl'ir homec;. I wal> -.hocked that at this c rurial 11mt'. the board wa!. considenng leas ing a new fa<'1lity for thl' <"<>ntrov<>rs1al Coa~1 ltnC' College llhl' collc•ge w11hou1 wall~>. which many people feel l'ould be :ibsorbt·d into Orange Coast and Go Id<' n W l'..., I . th u !-. ~av 1 n g m1ll1ons of dollar<; I ENJOY lh<' m0\'1l'S and jazz concl'rls on KOCE hut I don't know 1r it's valid for a ('Ommuni- ty college U> supply such enter- tainm ent nt lht.• co~t of faculty sc.daries lo the tune of several thousand dollars per teacher to support lhl' C'hunnel I low many JC '~ (or Hen s tate colleges 1 have:' a TV channel anyway·! Wh;H I want to know i~ this - why 1sn•t lhl· hourd or trustees cutting out 1h1' real fril l-. instead ol tl'acher' 11nd teacher~ '>alaries" I um g ra teful for the fine education I'm receiving at OCC. with adequat<' <'lass s11es, en thusiastl<' t t>uchers who even t;Jke the time to tutor m e vcrsonolly. nod 1 he chance lo person all y r elate to my teachers But these super conditions will bt• a thln~ of the: past 1r large ('lass s il<'S and ovnworked. t 1 red teacher<; hecome the "nl'w" <>dura11on at Orange Coast . Personally. I prcf~r ll'i•Chl•rs to TV :-.lallons. How .ibout you·• SARAH HILL • l~lltt-1 from readrr$ or,. Wi'k'omr- T~ n~ht to condtn~t l<'fter1 to flt 8J'O("«' or th m 1nat t la tH>l u r tif!'f1Jfd r.ntn• of JOO wordl or l<'i& ""U bc-gw~ pre/ernicl' All ll'ttf'Tt mu.111n rludr ngnoture and moiling oddreu but namts may bt withMld on rr- qwst 1/ su!Jlc1t"nt rtcuon "appartnt Poetry will not~ publl1h.td NATIONAL Wednesday June 28. 1978 DAIL y P1LOT A 7 Landlubber DoWn to Seo in Slipups ,< ----"' '--Ar• Wlreplloto OLD SAL TS ANSWER CALL OF THE SEA But Landlubber Prefers an Expressway Jogging Course COLUMBUS. Ohio IA P l Two Ohio m- surance companies are sponsoring construction of a one-mile JOggmg course with 20 exercise stations in an effort to produce healthier clients and reduce insurance payoffs. Ohio Medical Indemnity Inc. and Blue Cross of Central Ohio say the money will go for course signs. equipment B(ld an installa'l1on consultant. It will be supplemented by cibout $500 from the city recreation department By Ill.Gil A. MULLIGAN AP 5 ... Cl41 Cor~I NANI't.:CKET, Mas:; Among many items or historical interest about this old whaling port, the place mats on the tables down at the local clam chowder house mention u terrible mutiny in 1828 <iboard the whaler Globe The place mats don·t give any or the grisly de- tails, probably for lack of space or maybe because the manner in which the mutineers disposed or the raptain and the mates was not considered appetiz· ing reading ror tourists about lo partake of a meal. WHATEVER WE RE THE GRIPES OF the Globe's crew exactly 150 years ago. I am on their s ide. Having just stepped ashore after seven days aboard a 30-foot sloop. out of Larchmont, N. Y .• I can understand why men mutiny, JUmp Ship. doc~· ) unspeakable things to 4--- their officers and s weur Stew never lo go to sea again Why they go m the first place is what l don't understand. Even among the poets. the lure of the sea always has been a~soc1ated with mental aber· rations and suicidal tendencies. John Masefield, the poet laureate of the deep. entitled his yearning for the lonely sea and the s ky . the wheel's kick. the wmd ·s song. the Clung spray and the blown spume and all that other rot that calls for foul weather gear· "Sea-Fever " meaning, or course. a sickness. ISllMAEL, THE NARRATOR OF Melville's morose "Moby Dick."' s aid he went to sea, ··whenever I find myself growing grim about the mouth; whenever 1t is a damp. drizzly November m m y soul . whenever I find myself involuntarily pausing before coffin warehouses and bringing up the rear o~ every funeral I meet. .. But 1t was bnghl. sunny June in my soul when I went lO sea. and thert' were no coffin warehouses to pause before. only p1zw houses and a few ships' chandlenes offt'nng life Jcickets. non-skid plates. danger n.,res and other omens of disaster at prices that would bring a qu<'st1on lo the lips of J .P Morgan. who once said 1r you had to ask how much his yacht cost. you couldn't afford it. It was a spankmg day. as we manners say Just the sort or day ) OU dream about. when you flip thr;o ug h those yachting magazines m the dentist's wa1tmg room "I MUST DOWN TO THE SEAS agam ... I said lo myself. leavtng out thl' verb the way Masefield <llrt Capt K Fuller scowled aboard "'ith a salty. .. Let's clean up that filthy ccibtn Somehow. except for the "gray mist on the sea ·s race and a gray dawn breaking,·· we never got it all together, poetry-wise. If the wind was m our favor, the current was against us. When the current was right. four-foot waves and a fellowing sea threatened a "Nantucket Sleigh Ride:· which the various "wreck .. markings on the chart s ug gest is not a happy experience . If the sun came out. 1t either broiled us like lobsters. hJd the channel markers with its glare. obscured the shoreline m haze or was on the wrong side of the sail lo warm us WHEN THE OCEAN WAS CALM, tl rolled us about in great stomach-turning rollers. When it was choppy. our slender craft bounced on a blue· green washboard. and a cold. wet unpredictable spray heaved buckets of sea water up over the bow into our faces. When the wind died. we were "m irons." a nd had to r esort to the hated <but lifesav· mg> "iron lung": the motor. When the wind finally came up. 25 knots and gusting up lo 40. we put our rail in the water and heeled. which 1s sailor talk for sitting in a pre- carious perpendicular position sta.ring at your toes. hanging on for dear life and convincing yourself that the fun al last has begun. Somewhere during those adventurous seven days, the s hip's loit also could record dense fog. June bugs, running over your own bow line so it curled around the propeller. runrung out of alcohol for the stove. running out of paper towels and bourbon. running out of spades for a flush in the nightly poker game that was the only planned Suicide recreation activity for the crew besides scrubbing decks.. baggmg sails, washing dishes, taking the tiller. heaving Imes 'among other things) and swallowmg il}.Sults from the bridge. where Queeg and Bligh wei'e enshrined as Idols. SEVEN DAYS STUDYING THE BOTrOM or a s lop bucket , with you r stomach riding somewhere up over your rib cage and no bikinis in sight : seven days or silting soggy in yellow oil skins like an ad for codfish cakes: seven days or ('racked lips, fingers pinched in cleats and body all aching a nd wracked with pain from the hard bunks below are bound lo drain som e of the poetry from the sea. The few lines I could think of were H. Allen Smith's: ··The only known cure for seasickness is to s it under a tree for an hour" and Hal Boyle's deft definition of a sailboat: "If you're not sitting on 1t. you're hitting your head on it. .. But maybe for me the poetry went out or the sea years ago when first I sailed with that great. Journalist-yachtsman. Saul Pett. For 17 hours we beat up Long Isla nd Sound lo Port Jerrersoo in the race of 25-mile-hour northeaster on a raw Nov- e mber day. Men against the sea , weathered. grizzled, chilled to the marrow. Out of bourbon. WHEN, AT LONG LAST , WE TIED up at the dock. Capt. Pett telephoned his wife in Port Washington to requisition an extra sweater against the evening dews and damps. She covered the same distance in 22 minutes and apologized foi-the delay. Heavy traffic on the Long Island Ex- pressway I must down to the Long Island Expressway again. ll"s the only way lo go. · Attempt Religious? DAWSON SPRINGS, Ky. <AP> A 21 year- old factory worker 1s hospitalized after u~ing pocket kmves to cut off his right foot and hand and gouge his right eye. in what relatives said was an attempt to get mlo heaven POLAROID ® CA.MERA ·.SALE FREEDOM FIREWORKS -ALL ASSORTMENTS OVER $10.95 Presleys Topic of TV Show Police Chief .James Rice said Tuesday that Morris Dale Baucum tried to fight off the of· 24 88 ricers with his remain· • 1ng hand when they found him bleeding 1n the s treet ~ood Oftly w1Mt11 ,,..-ted .. "'-Rr9worilt SttltCI lf'O"torH by COMllHIO CHAllTIES SAHTAAHA OFFER LUCKY CEHTP EXPIRES, J)2t SO. HISTOL ,.._ _ __. tMocAlTHUI & HISTOU COSTA MlSA "40MTfiOMBY W AlDS FOUNT AIM V ALLlY 3011 SO. lllSTOL 7·1 1 CEHTU llllSTOL & S.D. FWY.I 'WAltHfl & lUCLID NASHVILLE. Tenn BA UCU M llAD no < A P l -Pris c i 11 a blood pressure or pulse Pres ley. divorced wife 'upo n a rri val at ci of the late EIVIs Presley. hos pital but \\-as re- wan ls to appear on vived. police said te levision to talk about Rice s aid Baucum their marriage. was not on drugs or SALE! Reg. 29.99. __ --A_li!!~---~!! ''One Step" SX-70 type camera. Fully automatic Fixed focus. motorized e1ect1on. J o e Mos c h e o . a alcohol and that he had personal manager and no ideas on the motive booking agent. said he for the self mut1lat1on -------------------------------helped her negotiate Monda) llowever. pictures in minutes• •Spiral sliced for easy serving .... • Honey ·n Spice Glaze • Cooked 30 hours {{ -· Q •Nationwide shipping service H lP (1.\l'.)1110 • · • •Full se""ce Oel1ca1esseo • Sandwiches to go Q!l~Y •Old wo,ld Cheese Shoo ~ 0!~~~11~11!!~$. --w...r. c....-., •• ..,._ ........... j:f .. ~ HOt-IEY 141ll0 HAM ,_ ·-~·"'-"· , ........ s.-. • ...., .-• ...., ...... ..., ...... I ! OlDER HOW! I H~~e9 1 3700 £.COAST HWY• c-def M• • rHOHE 673-9000 Omer 10catt0ns ,,~, ... Opening Soon in Huntington Beach. Beach & Garfield .. Anaheim. El Toro (Now Open). Orange. Palm Spnngs, La Habra - Get Rid Of Unsightly Bulges!! PRESENTING OUR NEW CONCEPT IN INCH LOSS NO Starvation Diets NO Pills Also If ,... 4Wr. ~i... ........., yowtt.M '611" c .. for ............ todey $~ SKIN CARE & FIGURE CONTROL CENTERS HUNTIMG~OH HACH 194-7542 s .... AIM 117·0>20 , .. ~ Ut-Jtl l NO Shots ~ ttl·lll4 with Henr y Jaffe Baucum 's s i ster . Enterprises". a Los Carolyn Gamosh. !>aid 1t Angeles production was religiou!) firm. for the rights lo the show. .. Priscilla and I have been friends and I used to work with Elvis."' he said in an interview. Askert about the con- tents of the proposed show a one-hour in- terview to be broadcast either on the Aug. 16 an- nive rs ary of the singer's death or his Jan. 8 birth· d;:iy Moscheo s aid. "l think it's life with Elvis. her hfe with Elvis. She's going to tell some in· teresting things about her hfe with him. And s he ·s going to s h ow "ome never before seen home movies.·· The Presleys divorced tn 1973. 3 Graduate Three Newport Brach residents have re· ce1ved BS. d egrees rrom the University of Colorado. T hey are Carolyn June MacBeth. Dana Lee Newquist and Patrice Ailsa Young. "HE THOUGHT he done it to get to heaven. that he had the demon in him." his siter said Mrs. Gamosh c ited a Bible pa ssag t• "Wherefore if thy hanci or thy fool offend thee. cut them off. and cai.t them from thet' It 1s better for the(' to enter int o life halt o r maimed. rather than having two hands or two f('el lo he cast into ('verlasting fire ... THE NEXT passage says. "And 1f thine eye offend the('. pluck 1t out, and cast 1t from thee · · ··1 ne ver 'ia\I. anyth ing quite like that ... commented Dr William Jernigan. who said he was amazed Baucum could tolerate such self-inflicted pain "We arc puzzled how he went through the bones with the knives." Rice said . &)Jtrwnnb &1Jutttr C!tnrp. \\'c re Fam1/11 Ou'lted CUSTOM SHUTI'EIS Regular-Wide· Stationary Louvers for your windows CAFE DOORS ROOM DIVIDERS ALL CUSTOM DESIG.NED, FINISHED &INSTALLED Your Satisfaction Assured --One Year Unconditional Guarantee On ALL Work -Buy Direct From the Manufacturer -<:all for FREE Estimates ·= Old World Craftn1an hip Sherwood Shutter Corp. 3655 W. McFadden at Hart>or Santa Ana • 839-3360 1-771-0200 SALE! Req . 129.88. SX-70 Alpha l Model 2 advanced instant camera. • Single-lens reflex focusing. • Compact. light· weight. folds. •Pictures from 10 4" to infinity (flash to 20'). • Shoots as oflen as every 1.5 seconds. • Never needs batteries Buy three packs of Po laroid's brilliant instant color film. Type 88, 108 or SX-70. and take your choice of two popular Polaroid sunglass styles. An s8 suggested retail value. Direct from Polaroid. Include 50' postage and handling. Type 108 p \ If Type88 • sx.10 P-r-.H UtH Nt·N ' •• 1,' th·Vf'1ilJ'•,,~ I 5 ~?~~· 4 ~11~11 .. 5 ~n~1·•·• UseyourJCPenneycharge, Sale prices effective Master Charge ~ or th gh J I 1st VISA•' /BankAmericard . TAeveastJ BUENA PARK: ORANGE: ry_ l\#ot11,·~~~~1""s:,.;.~0~::-'dm CllY Ot 01 O.r-Gntw 81\td •Ootfl-'4M'tt J01ot-s..ncr.,,.11to• SANTA ANA: J'OO 5o 8r 11101 -HO 01 So ~I 'lot• • 0--Mt\ t lO lot ,..,.,,., •• t J010• ~ 10 lo• ~I ' OAll'I PIL.Ol Weonoeo.y. Juno 2a ti78 NATIONAL I AT YOUR SERVICE ............... PIE SALES FINANCE CITY IMPROVEMENTS Mayor Norma Michael Serves Up Slice House Approves Retirement Aid W ASlllNGTON <AP> A House-passed l>ll I would permit a reservist or National Guardsman to provide retirement benefits for his widow if he dies before age 60. The retirees now receive no retirement pay until age 60 There are an estimated 1.100 cases a year in which widows or other survivors are left with nothing because the mandatory age has not been reached. ··r:nr a prob/rm'• ThC'n urnte to Pat Dunn Pat will cul red tape, gettmq thl' answers and action you need le> solue mcqu1t1f•s m gnvernment and busmess Mail your quest1011s to l'at /Junn. At Your Service, Orange Coast Daily P11Dc. P 0 Bo.r 1580, Costa Mesa. CA 92626 As many letters as posS1ble will be answered. but phoned mquines or letters not mcludmg the reader's /uU name. address and business hours' phone number cannot be considered. This column appears da1· lu ezcevt Saturdays ... DEAR PAT: Since when does the butchers union have the right to say I can't buy meat al an all-night su~rmarket? I work late and was s hop ping for a picnic at 3 a .m . When I got to the meat counter, at was covered with netting and signs that forbid sales between 1 and 7 a.m. Why couldn t I buy a package of pre cut chicken? <No "service .. was involved l And why, if there were to be no sales ror six hours. was the counter full y stocked with better looking cuts than a shopper sees during re~ular hours" C.M., Newport Beach Alpha Beta's' general offices spokesman ex· plained that the meat cutlers! union contuct re· qulr«>s a journeyman butcher to be on duty before any red meat or chicken -prepackaged or not . can be sold. Vacation schedules were blamed ror the absence or a butcher when you did your shopping. atthoul'(h he said some 24·hour Alpha Beta markets do have butchers present between 1 and 7 a .m . The fully stocked counter was described as "pro- duction efficiency." In other words, the meat de· partment was a ll set for early -morning shop· pers. The i-.pokesmao added that choice or meat cuts on display can vary depending on sales volume at any given time. Tt9Hderizer Soften• StillfJ DEAR PAT: I've heard that meat tenderizer 1s ~ood for takmg the pain out of a bee sting. ls this true" If so. do vou sprinkle the tenderizer directly on the sting? B.K., Costa Mesa Household meat tenderizers cootaloing tbe enzyme papaln can neutralize tke toxic enect of bee venom. For bee sthig first aid, you must work fast to avoid a swollen, painful wound that can last for days. lmmed.Jately arter the sting, remove the bee stinger from the wound by scraping It away with a knife or fingernail. Don't grasp the end of the st- inger because It ofleo contains venom that could be squeezed Into the wound. Then apply a paste of meal tenderizer and water -about a quarier teaspoon ol tendrelzer to one or two teaspoons of water -lo the stlng. ThJs treatment also works well for honeybee, hornet, yellow jacket and wasp stlngs. Paffenc~ Wiii Peel Poil•t DEAR PAT· I thought it would be easy to re- move splotches or paint from the lid of the pewter fi s h dish I bought at a garage sale. but nothing !>cc ms to have the slightest effect on the paint. 1 ·11 have lo sand off the spots. What abrasive will do the leastddmage? ' G .~. Newport Beach Palnt that has dried to a bard flnlsh Isn 't easy •to remove, aDd Just rubbing with a solvent doesn't work. But before Tesortlng to an abrasive, try keeplnR a sotvenl·saturated pad on the spots for several hours to soften the paint. If no traces of paint appear on the pad alter that length or tlmf', try another solvent -nall polish remover or a strong palnt remover. It might be necessary to work at thei1e spots for several days before all traces are removed. Salt-•oaked Seed• ~r..-ptiou DEAR PAT. We were given a whole bag of rresh sunflower seeds recently Can you tell us how lo salt and prepare them at home? NE., Dana Point Soak the Meda overall(bt l.ll a z percent salt aoluUon Cone.fourth cup •ll per gallon of water>. Ory and spread the Seeds In a hallow pan. Roast plaln or -1th a small amount ol fat or cooklnC oll at ~00 df'grM>~ F. Sunflower ~· need careful watching and rre-quf'nt ~tlrrtng to kffp them from ac:orchlnlf. QUEENIE Just Pie in the Sky? Bake Sales Siooeten Comnumity's Coffers <9 j / HARTFORD. Ark . <AP > -Homemade pies, with thlrk. Clak y crusts chock-full of apples. peaches and pecans. have become the bread·and- butt.er of this l!ny Ouachita Mountain valley com- munity. They've been used lo pay for street improve- m ents and new lightmg for the town ball park and are helping finance a new health center. Pi~ in the sky. you say? FAR FROM IT, ANSWERS the mayor, Norma Michael. Since the pie sales began in 1975 as part or a bicentennial project, the town has raised $6,000 to pay for several improvements. Hartford. population 660. is a former mining town situated in lhe shadow of Sugarloaf Mountain. It is located about 150 miles northwest of Little Rock JUSl east of the Oklahoma border. "They may have called us a ghost town from 1940 on, but they can't anymore." the mayor said. DO HARTFORD RESIDENTS EVER tire of buying and eating pies'' "Yes. I guess they do. but that's only natural. To tell the truth, a lot of people just buy the pies so they can have the feeling of giving." she said Profs Honored Two UC Irvine language professors have received awards from the Southern Fellowship Fund to conduct individual research during the 1978-79 academic year. Recipients are Dr. Alejandro Morales of Irvine, assistant professor of Spanish, and Dr-. Al lko Songolo of Laguna Beach, assistant professor of French. '~ I } . ·,; ·' '; The pie saJes are s ponsored by an organization called "The Hartford Boosters" -a group that in- cludes members of the Women's Auxiliary, Blue Star and Masons The $11.000 nine-month awards are given to professors who wish lo enhance their professional qualificallons by carrying out individual programs of study and research. "Your request for a ratse has been met with a definite 'phooey' .. "THE BOOSTERS WAS FORMED in 1975 as a bicentennial committee lo raise funds for the W. J . Hamilton Mining Museum." the mayor said. "We did so good, we started searching for other things LEARN TO MAKE MOMEY AHO KEEP IT==i An afternoon fun Seminar . Balboa Pavihon. You learn· To make investments that double 1n 6 yrs. . Use Leverage . defer income taxes ... Buy with SHERMAN N. WILLIAMSON M.O. announces his assoc1att0n with t.o do" with the proceeds. no down payment ... use tax shelters. KOREY S. JORGENSEN M.0. Inc. The next proJect is to build a health clinic in hopes of luring a doctor to Hartford, which has JULES A MA.IJME IMC. 17141644-i721 For General Practice & Family Practice C::::::===SEMINAA SPONSOflEO BY J & LASSOCIAT'ES===::i been without a physician since 1952. -;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ at 275 Victoria, Suite D. Costa Mesa The pies go for $2.50 each and are purchased mostly by town residents. And the Boosters have combined volunteer labor with the pie sales to MR. MEL'S HAIR STYLING OH1ce Hours. Mon. Tues. Wed. Fri-910 s Thursday Evening -6 to 9 Saturday Morning -9 to 12 sweeten the pot. Unlpenn ,..._ s•st ····--··--··-··--·······$30 "BY WORKING TOGETHER. WE found that Wl' can accompl ish many things. The Boosters brought people together hke never before. Folks a re cleaning up vacant lots and hauling off their old cars . . We're making Hartford a good place to live." she said Hartford was once a larger town. but many people left when the coal mmes to the south closed and World War 11 claimed some of its young men. •Mett'ISll-.H,c.t •Style ••• Sl.50 • LAMl9t' c.t, C-4 • Style ... S 10-SIS • loys Styte c.t 17 ,_. & _.. 15.00 •Sr. CltfuM ...._,~ HWC..t ... u.so PHONE 7 54-9904 2100 S. lristo&. S_..AM .. t*>cl< _,,, "'w- ltieNftd -'" .,,. llo>) By Appointment: 646-1631 News from all over C.llfomla . ~ . t. rounded up .. chdaj In the DAILY PILOT With everybody advertising new savings plans ••. New Crocker Market Yield Certificates* D Deposit $10,000 or more for 6 months. D Earn interest equal to the current 6-month U.S. Treasury Bill rate. D Receive an interest payment every month, if you wish-we'll even ~nd you a check. D Never lose a day's interest -because our Certificates can be re newed auto-. . matically-at maturity. New 7-3/43 Savings Plans* D Deposit $1,000 or more for 8 years- earn 7-3/4cro interest compounded daily to yield 8.06cro. D Choose either a passbook plan or certificate of deposit. D Select monthly interest payment- if you wish. •ftockral Regulations req~itc a substantial interest pennlty for wit;idrawal before maturity. When you give us the business you'll get these extra benefits ... D Longer banking hours. D Checking accounts free of monthly service charges-for $2,000 savers. D Crocker Banking Card -for fast er service at any of our more than 350 bank offices throughout the state. D CrockerPhone--so you can apply for a loan by phone. D Evening and weekend banking through a growing network of Crocker Automated Tellers. MEMBER FOIC ec.rocktr Na11on.al 8.ank -19~S . I BOATING Puerto Vallarta E1'ent Race 'Relief' Set The Del Rey Yacht Club, sponsor of the popular biennial, Manoa del Rey to Puerto Vallarta, Mexico. race has come up with some innovations for long distance racing designed to give skippers and c r ews some "pleasure and comfort" in the long, 1,125-mile run down the Baja Cahfornia and Mexican coasts. weather conditions and report on the operational status of land·based aids to navigation. Other innovations: A surer, faster way and less costly provision for shipping yacbt gear from Los Angeles to Puerto Vallarta. This will ald in posl·race cruising and return passage to home ports. The nflh PV race is scheduled to start Feb. 3, 1979, and will be the first of the Mexican Ocean Racing Con· ference <MEXORC> a series of races along the Mexican "gold coast." IN ADDITION TO weather In· formation during the race. a "come back committee" will be charged DRYC PLANS CALL for five escort vessels to accompany the racing fleet which will be limited to 40 entries. At least one of the escort vessels will serve as an advance scout. preceding the n eet to record 'with the responsibility of keeping in touch with returning boats and keep. ing them informed of weather con· dilions along the coast on the return trip. Anyone desiring information or entry blanks for the race may con· tact Del Rey Yacht Club, 13900 Palawan Way, Marina del Rey, 90291. Navy Captures ~ili"I! 'l:itle Navy won the l'ntercollegiate team racing sail· mg championship at Mission Bay with a record of eight wins and one loss. The championship gives Navy the Walter C. Wood Perpetual Trophy. Ironically, the only team to beat Navy was Orange Coast College, which wound up in fifth place overall with a record of five wins and four losses. It was the first time OCC had ever compel· ed in a national sailing championship. The three teams representing OCC were Kurt Miller and Tom Devlan, Peter Drasnin and Richard Babbe, and Robert Kinney and Doug Ayres. West Coast sailors selected lo the sailing Hall of Fame of the Intercollegiate Yacht Racing As· sociation of America were Doug Ayres, USC; Mark Rastello and Alan Jewett, UCLA. Receiving honorable mention were Suzie Klein and Vicki Call of UC Berkeley. * * * * * * Hobie Cat Crown Won by Navy Unit The U.S. Naval Academv team of skipper Mark Miller and crewmen won the ·1978 lnter<'ollegiate Hobie Cat Invitational at Mission Bay Sunday with a low score of 6~ points. There were nmc colleges entered in the event which would up the Intercollegiate Yacht Racing As· soc1at1on uf North America national cbam· p1onsh1ps. Earlier events were the women's national champ1onsh1p, the national dinghy championship anrl lht• team ral·mg championship. San Diego State was second in the Hobie Cal e.\•cnt with skipper Bruce Bresham and Pat Con- nors ·1 h1rd w.is Orange Coast College with Kurt Miller and Richard Babbe. Summary: I U.S. Naval Academy <Miller·Speer> 6o/.i; 2. San Diego State <Gresham·Connors) 12th; 3. OCC I Miller·Babbc> 17 ; 4. UC San Diego (James Hon· neysetl) 24 ; 5. Tulane (Rosenberg-Estes) 28; 6. San Diego St.ate (Madison-Bulcb) 30; 7. San Diego State <Tinley·Balkan) 34; 8. UCLA <Rastello· Martin) 44; 9. University of San Diego <Dunn· O'Brien) 48 Power Race Won By Mianll Driver MIAMI (AP) -Duff Daily, a Miami fireman, avC'raged 76.61 mph Sunday to win $12,000 and hrst place in an American Power Boat Association re· gatta for Grand National hulls. Daily, 25. won in his 21-foot craft, Ob Mona. powered by a 700·horsepower engine. ~e boosted his racing earnings to $92,000 with the victory over 18 boats. Finishing second was a similar boat also owned by the Daily racing family and piloted by George Hall of Titusville, who trailed by less lban a boat length as he crossed the finish line at Miami's Manne Stadium. He picked up $6,000. Jack Stuteville of M1am1 finished third in Fish Peddler, and Rocky Aoki. owner of a restaurant chain. placed fourth in Benihana. Watch Expanded With most·Southcm Californians taking a four. day weekend to .observe the Fourth of July, radio station KMPC will expand its regular Chan· ne lwatcb coverage to include all four days, Saturday-Tuesday. Nearly 50 participating United States Power Squadron skippers will be filing hourly reports, beginning on the 7 a.m . KMPC News each day, on wind. sea and channel conditions. lmnorca Ing Race Winner Waller Delmar's Mi norca, flying the burgee or the host club. beat out 19 rivals in the Shark Island Yacht Cl ub 's annual Invitational Predicted Log race. Delmar's per· cent of error over the course was 0.871. In predicted log rac· ing the emphasis is not on speed but the ac- curacy or completing the course at a pre· selected speed, taking into account wind and sea conditions Prior to the race the skipper turns in a "pre• dieted log" indicating when he will round each mark and finish. The skipper also selects bis own startin g time. Results: • 1, Minorca, Walter Delmar, SlYC, 0.871 per-, cen t ; 2, Castagna Re s ult s. Cas - ·tagna/Holden, CYC, 1.344; El Navegante, Don Smith, SIYC, 1.581; 4, ·Misty Sea. Tom Collins, Hollywood YC, 1.876; 5, Sunset Queen, Mel Lurie, marina YC. l.941. FIRST YEAR RACERS 1. S1rene, Ed Riesen Jr., HYC. , 2.160; 2. August Moon, Sy Miller, eve. 4.589: 3, Ln Le Lu. Whit Shaffer, eve. 4.732. Don Ayres TopSaiwr f'ormer Orange Coast 1 College sailor Don Ayres has been named to the All ·America i.ailing team for 1978. Ayres is one of 20 col· l egiate sailors from around the nation to be honored. He competed for the University of 1 Southern CallJornia this year. Ayres was voted occ·s mos t valuable • sailor last year. .Pair Finish At Harvard Two Orange Coasl res· idents have received degrees from Harvard University in Cam- bridge, Mass. Standley L. Dom or Corona d e l Mar was awarded his B.A. Robert Arthur Hoff or Newport Beach receive bis master's in business' adminlstration. Proposition 131/2 -. SHOULD THEii IE AM EMO TO THI HIGH COST OF DEMTISftY? DON T BITE THE BALLOT -VOTE WITH DR. FLANZER. HE'S FOR MODERN DENTISTRY AT PRE-I NFLATION PRICES. WANT TO GET ON THE BANDWAGON? RUN FOR HIS OFFICE. (BUT CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT FIRST.) · Dr. Arnold H. Flanzer, t DDS 370 I. 17tta StrMt Costa Mesa I •art LIMITED WARRANTY f.year .. r1bility war11ntd when epplied over properly p,.,ar1d surfa:e or K m1r1'1 oblieation &11•1 be limited solely to refuad of dM purchase price. INTERIOR FLAT LATEX 21!.fl (a) 28.81 24"•12"180~ 37.81 30"J121"x8r METAL Ulllln CABINETS 2888 Your Choice METAL WARDROBE 37ss Wednesday. June 28. t 978 Your C'1olce 44 Gallon Sale Ends Sunday Latex gloss "House and Trim'" or "The Performer .. acrylic latex flat exterior gives g,year durability. Washable, easy to apply Tools come clean in soapy water. White and cus· tom tints. Shop at Kmart. mart-LATEX &·YEARS HOUSE PAINT 7!!! Paints your house beautifully. Long lasting latex. White and colors. 6-FOOT STEP LADDER 1688 Aluminum, with tool caddy;non • shp steps. 20-FT. ALUM. EXT. LADDER 3988 17·ft. working lengtfl. Type II. UL listed. 24-FT. ALUM. EXT. LADDER DAIL y PILOT A 9 PAllTAll.E CAUlA/SUUR 248 Seals cracks. gaus Inside an~ out. caulks window door frames. 11 ounces net weight. SILICONE CAUUC AND SEAUR 248 Seals etacks, gaps on wan aur· tace. seals window. door fr~mes. 1 1 ounces net welghl SIUCOflE RUBIER CAULK. ff 7 White bathtub caulk. Won't shrink. crack or crumble. Easy· clean. 3 ounces nel weight. SILICONE RUBBO SEAL f 17 1 Clear sealer tor windows, down- spout&. guttera. ducts. 1191'lta. mofe. 3-oz. net wt. Shop now. (a) White cabinet. 4 storage arees, Woodgrain finish wfttl full het shelf. 3 ahelveS. (b) Brown wardrobe. hat clothes hanging bar. A great addl- shell. hanging bar. (c) White base. tlon to rooms wtltl httle or no closet 4988 21 ·ft. working length. Type II. UL hsted. butchef block too. Save today! soace -2~C~;;:;E3~t;;.~~:;~~;:=::~~----JJ,.._ "MARBLE" TOP 25-IN. BATHROOM VAIHn 99as Cultured marbto top, hand mede birch wood veneer cabinet. 2 drawer• and 1 door for roomy storage. fl•""' Nit_.......,, MEDICINE CABINET 1644 18x26". recessed· mounting. Rich wood carved frame in an· t1Que gold. Save now. WASHERLESS WATER FAUCET f 6BB Single handle.Aerator With Pop-up •. 22.44 ENAMELLED WOOD SEAT 4•1 Durable fin 1sh Bar· less;top·mount hinge t DRAFTITE~ CAULKER 3f~f Seals out mois· ture.closeS gaps. 4" NYLON BRUSH f 68 Sturay.easy·to· clean brtstles SANDPAPER ASSORTMENT 3Pk!f Six 9x11" sheets per pkg. 80 YARDS MASK TAPE 3F~f For general use \-.-· Wlde • • •• OA&LY PllOT 9 INCH • WHITE Paper Plates For Y1ur Holld1y _....-..--.... Pitaicl PAKOf 100 79c 111111111111111111 SHAMPOO-It HAIR CWIR by Cleiref 2FOR 3.77 11111111 11111111 • WMl...-y, Jun. al. 1978 ULTRA BRITE TOOTHPASTI · ultra brite "' Rllr111-Y 1ur Wht1/s M•tll! M~ BBc 111111111111111111 2.5 IZ. 1.19 lllllllltJllllllll Twits As Fait A1A.rinl *~==============~· Protect your eyes trom Suinmer Sun! 25 8/o 9'h" PLAY BALL by ESUAY Mmtllbll* ln....-cotn. WHAMO! FRISBEE Great tor lhe beginning lrlsbee expert. .. 322 79c steel 1111C1es I-Piece 29 95 6'4" #CSW-4i64 • COMFORT CUSHION VIVITAR 700 "POINT 'N SHO(lr' POCKET CAMERA 4.59 77c LADIES' JEANS ,,...... ... ra · '--•· lft-.1!d I ....... SIZES 5/1 ti IS/16 f»OIJROtD ONE STEP ~::~RA • flllty Mtm.lllC "'41 • MotDflnd. IUst preu The lluttOll for shlfJ. Clew SX· 70 P!Ctlm LIQUOR COUNT VASYA VODKA ~= 6.39 FOSTER CREEK BOURBOI 80 PllOOF 7 59 1.75 UTER • PllOT CHARDOWY WHnE WllE ktm FRAN: IL 2.39 BRONCO CAUFORflA CHAMPAGNE WHITT:llL 1.59 W8IOEllMUBS Foam Mugs !Mui•*" Hot. C.111 Fttll ~·· PAK If 12. 14 az. Saw-111 Ptwtaetata .. """" ...... "' UWr ,,........ lll .... ..., ,. lft any .... ,.. ... , llm *"' ... Cltllna. °",....., ........ ,. .., ---~.,..,,...,.," ... ~- SAV·ON PHARMACISTS ARE: • LOYAL • FRIEIDl Y • COlllCIEllTIOUI AD PRICES PREVAIL: WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28th. THRU SATURDAY , JULY 1st. OPEN 9:00 AM TO 9:30 PM MONDAY THRU SATURDAY/9:00 AM TO 7:00 PM SUNDAY MOTHER'S ASSORTED COOKIES 18 oz. BAG 119 SAV·ON BRAND Fa bric Softener SHEETS lnbi.a.*"" 'l.A IM-dlllc cllllg_ ~ ::'1.29 RAINTREE )D Tlf£ MOISTIJRE '~' VITAMINS SAV·ON 8RANO BEST of NATURE VITAMIN "A" 10.IOI Ullits ··~ 1.19 VITAMIN "C" WITH MSl HIPS ~ :rABlETS 4.99 ~ VITAMIN "E" 400 l.U. PROTEIN TABlfTS • llfl£1S 2.29 ~"'" white or colors DIAMOND FOIL ALUMINUM 12•x25 FT. 3~s1 ROLL R MAKER LOTION ., lftmtlll ' .,.. ...... Ftr nw111t or . ,,. .... .,, slclft. 1.77 .... ... COVBt• NAILSLICKS CODTW IWl taUR Pnlecta• ~tlolll '"' t111g 111111111 6 9 c ASSORTED SHADES aJYER GIH. LONG'n LUSH' llASCAU .. ""al!imfl ..._... end 1111cta 1.19 ''urm MAX HOLD · ~THE DRY UQt ........ ..... o.. •• , BoL 1.49 GERITOL HIGH POTENCY IROft & VITAMIH TONIC \_ PURINA VARIETY MENU CAT FOOD 111111111111111111 """1.llACH ....... ,,II s,i+1tit16JG't ...... ._.... MIWf'OIT'&M*--1-........ WA....... &TOttO-Mm-.......~,HllUQl4~1112Mu ......... . ~AIM YAU.llr r· S 11 & W.-SI.Mr•......_,.,. S... ...... St, --... . ,. .. - . J mNICE 'n son BATHROOM TISSUE I 75c 4 ROLL PAK 111111111111111111 111111111 11111111 *'.=================~* COLD POWER LAUNDRY DETtRGENT Tiii catd .... s hllll THERMOS-53 OUART PLASTIC COOLER Milk Plus 6 24" Charcoal Brazier Shampoo l Conditioner TWIN 8LADE CARTRIDGES 819 BOY With large 5· whe1la and lftlP·IWIY l&QI lor portabllllyl #2401 ONLY! PAK 159 ~~~~o~ok ~ OF 9 8 bar1114U• grUI. Chro.11-pll48d ========= grlll. 17" x 29" m:cORAroR Nylon Rug #1701 19 B,g . 1 00 29"x60" .... • onuxE Printed Surfs $hi. teed Tea Pitcher !!Er. ......,. . .,_Qm 1.88 AL___i\ ..... , .. ,'~j · 1 Iced Tea Glassn !";:O':"''"o~;;; 9.95 n i' 21 r&&c 2f eic 33" NYLON Wedneedey, June 28. 1t78 11~111111111111111 Hibachi wmt 26" LEGs CHEF'S DELIGHT Durable r:ut Iron conatnicUon. Chrome legs. 14" 114· 131/i· #170S.2IUI lO"x lO"x 31h'" SINGLE Hibachi #1705-138 3.49 Charcoal Briquets lOULBAG 1.29 Umbrella PEPSI DIET or REG. PLANTERS DRY ROASTED ~~PEANUTS FAMILY SIZE ~'!:! 1.19 Il l Dllllllll lllll 111111111111111111 In mor11d colon 1nd 511~~ Pllttnll ~ ....... 2:s1 . . . SAY-ON BRANO SAV·ON BRAND Hawaiian Blend Color Print Film DARK TANNING OIL or LOTION loL 1.49EA. CllO or Cits 7 9 c 12 Expo1uru 111111111111111111 111111111111111111 SUNTAN A•DS Coppertone r; LoUon or 011 • oz. JOHNSON l JOHNSON lllW>-"tSundown SUNSCREEN ;[ 60L 3.75 .. • 40L 2.98 Pabafilm or Pa bage I SUNSCR£EN • l'lb1 ProttctlOft • Allows Tannlno • Prevent• eu.ti,o ·~ 1:99~. HARTZ Bye Bye Bug THERMOS 43 QT. COOLER WITH 1 GA!: Ju G WITH POURING SPOUT Both ur11111n1 l.ul1tllt to kHP foods lrah and bevmv• col( 111 dayt SIGNATURE . GARDEN HOSE Pl11llc. wllll tull-llow. aolld brau coup;•· ~.Bore 29 9 #7626'> VIGORO VIGORO Garden Oust Malathion Mutt111UfPOS• pfOIKtlon Spray !Of tlo1nr1. fruits . YIQlbbfn. etc. Pr011e11 from 1"'"111 3" PORCE~INWARE Flower Pot w.~Slucet Allr1C1lvely 8 8 C. dlCO'lltd ' VIGO RO Foods toryourGARDEN "Mlf' Automatic Room -~ 1:::1 Foaer ,; iu• ~ s.J.88 • • • • t' •• "'' ,,, a I a I .... a ........ ""'"°"' llACM-111. 9"tlle, w........... .. TOI0-'4.1711~ .... MtSSfON ¥11JO-UZ1Z ....... 1 .. " ... i. flOUNTA. ... UW't .. o le&w_. '4MTAAMA-Jtll ............. ) I • I .\J2 CWL.'r PtLOT For the Record LA• VEGAS ""-"-''""'°" ·-----· ..... 'UN(t WARl..AUMONT AICHMOHO V•n<• (Ao'Tol, U of Ml.-V•IO ... ., o...... .. It, 01 N••DO•I llff(ll PALMER TOI.EN °"""kl Owytll, )l, OI f'~llll 11•1 .. y, •llCI Oofl~ 0.tt-, ... Of LO Pol,.,. ALAMI ltle>iMOHO M<Kt.ptle El )0 •nll Mllll•~<I J , ~ !, 00111 Of Nt•l>0'1 8Hcl\ CE llOA·VASOUEZ J immy Of"l906, 11, Of Hunll~Ol'I Beall, •llCI Cc•tlly M¥V. I•. of WH1m!flsl~ UllAI NE·CAlllllZOSA Wllllim Jolln, 20, OI ._.,ngton IHe<ll, - 01-llKIWll. JO. of Ge<*°' Gt'O~ ~HERWIN-NIEl.SUt R-'1 E ll ot H1"'1-, -JoY<t AM, JA, o4 ~enm1,..1er C,_NTRELL MtltNIGHT c;.o,~ Anl'-• Jt. -y-(llt.111ttn lA. _,. ol Cooµ•~ JUNE IO GRO TH WHEELClll P1ut ll"11o•O ». -Oeft<w El••,... tt. ootll of Hut'lltnolon &.<11 JOHNSON 8 ALLARO 'Witty Bun". l3, OI ~ S.e<ll •"" Jo.n P • l•Q•I •Qt. ol HunllnQlon ti .. < .. .... AC.EE WALL ~••kl At~ 3'. -Ah<• F•., lO, llOlll Of Hum1nglon e .. c.11 CULMONE MILLER Vic tor Jo,,,.,, lA. OI ~ Motw, -Kim-Mlt JH r>, 22, Of _ _, 8«e<ll PHIPP$-R1(J4AROSON R1< ... •0 Klng\lon, J:J, -PWkl• Ell&-111. ll t>otll ol Hunltfl(Jlon BH<ll MA SCARENA~HENREHAN RU\\etl O••td. 11, 1no Tl\ereu Mo•lt, 21, botllofCoroNO.IMlr. ""<EWEN·WVN JI-\ OM. 11, •r><I At ....... Mllleet..,1, n. bolll of Founto1n VAlhry llERG !>CULLY R\l\~I Allen, ti, OI S." Cl-It. lf>d Lt'NnlW MO"•· te. 01 S.n J1,.n C.Opl~trono JE I' FOR OS NVOSON Oon•tll J.,...,. d . OI Cvort\\, OM ~ron "' v1An. l&, ot ~trNn\ter HARRtS..l(HOWl..ES TOMMY Ltt, 71 ... o ~··" (ill>OS, Jt. l>Olfl of Wf\lm1~te< JllNE 11 C:.UEST SEAC.10 Brute A H. - T on1 M••I• U. bmll OI Huntl"Olon Bto•fh ROWERS l(LYMl(IN Mott11e .. ~mw•. 19.,.., ~·• LM. t•.110111 ot W•'\lm1Mlf!"t' WILLIS SWAN~ F,..,,, LOy•I t8 ono Pouia Jt•" ••. 001" 01 N.,.<porl 8"<11 JUN[ 12 WILLIAMS.-TtTUS Je~ Po~I, ... ..., L•no. Jo,<e. JI 0011\ OI Hunt 1nqton B•ed'I PRICfio(ARTER Hd•IM R-rt. .. •nd H•"lf'l IC•Y .M. 0011\ OI Hunt •t19IOI' BHCJI JUNE tJ NORTON ORE YER Cr419 WllllOM. l1, -St ... • ll't', ft 00111 •I Hunt1r>01on S.00 1 .r.ACITA Cl.AllK Ci\1\1,.0 Jf\U\, 1S ol Co\I• Mew, dt!O S.111e AIW'I, 11, UNE 14 t;/0•111~ J W ILBY l(INO RC 0 Eow.tra w 1t11om, 3'. ot Lono BPfcn. ""a MArlh• Jo,,.,, 4J, 01 Cost•-.... COMBS M<GEORf·E M1<n•~I 0••t. ~. of VM> NuY~. ¥1d H'len Oo.ona, JO. ol E• Toro JUNE U C.USTAFSON TAOLOCIC L'•rrv Oa•od. 10. and Jlrnmt' ~. 19, 00111 of Hunlln9ton llN<ll LAWSON BENNETT l•"r~t Jf • JO. °' H\lftllllqlon ~ 11. eno An-,.. M., 16, o1 lndl,,_11\, Ind EVAN!. OUNN -~ M.ltv1n, J1, dlld Pllyttl~ J v )I -Of Hunll"91on l\~«11 Bird•• FOUNTAIN VAL.LEY C:O-U'-ITY ltOSl'tTAI. ,_., M• ena M,. MltllHI ltemmer Hunllnglon a..c.11, boy Mr •no Mn . ~~ry GonHIU Munl.,.qton GNcll. girt J-1' Mr ano Mr' 19n&cto Cnav•"" Founl•ln llflley qtrt J_r, Mr "'"° ~ Glenn Jl-i. t-4unt· 1no1on 8e..cn. 91r1 J .... 10 Mr •r><I Mn . Eu<•ll Ll~y .... Ulll· "'Ilion 8ea<I\. O>'I Mr and Mr\ Aon•lt Curt1:., Wes1'"1nucr, 91rt J .... t> Mr an<! M~ Re•""t s..ent Foullleln ll~llh, OOy J-u Mr, •nd Mr,. EdW&•d Sltcll, Hunt· 1n9tOI' ll~<K'1. l>OV W~1. Jurte 28. 1978 County Adop~ Fee Hike Car, Boat, Camper Pai-king Costs Double By KAl1fY CLANCY °'-~i'tliMklff It soon will cost about twice as much to park your car. boat or cam per at Orange County harbors, beaches and parks. Also, if bowser goes along on the park outing, rangers will eharge a 50-cent-per-dog ad- mission fee. If it's a horse you're bringing with you, the fee will be $2. ln addition, the bundles or firewood county rangers used to sell for 50 cents soon wlll go for $1. COUNTY SUPERVISORS adopted lhe new fee schedule Tuesday. The new fees go into effect Friday. just before Lhe July 4 holiday weekend. Ron Novello, an assistant director of the county Environ· mental Management Agency. said the fees were designed to eventually double the $250,000 a year the county bad been taking m park user fees. However. he estimated that lhe doubled fees might bring in only $300,000 the first year until residents accept the higher charges. IN SOM E INSTANCES, he predicted. the higher parking fees will prompt users to leave their cars outside the park e ntrance and walk in rather than pay the doubled parking charge. The day use parking fee was increased from 50 cents to $1 per cnr at regional parks and from $1 to $2 at cout'tY beaches. Camping fees will go from $3.50 to $5 per car for individuals and from $1 to $2.50 per car for group campers. Jn addition, while there pre· viously was no charge for dQgs and horses at county parks, the 50-cenl and $2 charges were iqi· posed by supervisors. along wilh Lhe hike in firewood charges. THE COST OF annual park passes was doubled to $20, with senior citizen passes at half price. Guest slill6 at Dana Point and Newport harbors now will be $10 or 40 cents a foot and boat guest moorings were increased from $2 lo S5. The fee hikes were proposed because of the loss of county property tax revenue in the wake of voter passage of Proposition 13. IN ADDmON to the new fees, Novello said county officials have eliminated the summer day camp program at regional parks and the seasonal parks employees normally hired for· special recreation programs. Rather than the 45 summer employees usually hired, he said, the seasonal workers have been Limited to 13, and five va- cant parks poi;ilions are not ·be- ing filled. County officials also are re- viewing park maintenance COO· tracts to see if upkeep can be reduced to a>ave money, Novello said. • Gen. Hoffman Ends 38-year Marin~ Hitch Maj. Gen. Carl W. Hoffman, who used his trumpet to lift the spirits of Marines through t.bree wars. w ill retire from the service Friday aner a ca~r spanning 38 years. The two-star general wUl be relieved as commanding general of Camp Pendleton by Maj. Geo. Stephen G. Olmstead. 48, cut· rently bead of the Development and Education Command at Quantico. Va. Hoffman began using bis trumpet to boost the morale ol his men during the dawning days of World War II on Guadalcaqal in the South Pacific. He continued the tradition on the battlefields of Korea and Vietnam. At ceremonies Friday. Hoff. man will be honored with the Legion of Merit for his achieve- ments, including the massive re- s et tie men t of thousands or Vietnamese refugees in a tem· porary tent city. Deaths PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE Elsewhere KNOXVILLE, Tenn. • FICTITIOUS euStNEU NAMll STATEMENT f11e lollowtnq persons ••• dotnQ Dlnlneuu. O'KEEFE'S FEED ANO TACI(. un Ne.._, Bt..,, Co$~ Me .... CA Steve r O'Kttle, 1'1S1 Brent-It Clf'CI•. Hunll"91on Be.cl\, CA 92~1 Belly r.,son O'Keele, lllSI 8ren!Welt Qrcle, HunUllQton Bo1<11, CA9?~1 This t><l~lneu I\ conaucted bv • geMr O I jMW1ners,...p. Sltr1eT.O'Kfffe • FICTITIOUS 9USINESS NAME STAT'EMENT The IOl-ng IM!'WI Is 00"'9 ~ MU•\ OOHUT l'AC TORV, 1112 !.unllower Avenu•. Co,I• Mua, C.tltor"'• mi. l•"'I' Riiier•. 2'3 S, C•lfus, Or •nge, C.ltlom•• 9266e TI>1s b~~ is cond\tcted b., .,. 1 .... 0lvtou11 l¥YY Allie<• Tll1s s1•1emen1 wa~ llled with Ille CouMy Ct~~ ol Or•nga Covl'lly on Ju"" 17. 1919 This "11.,,_I w•s ltlecl with tllt cou111v Ctff'k ol Or•nq,i County on June 1', tt1a. ~ Put>llslled Orange Coast Oa1tv Pltot, F .. tll June 14, 21, 71 M>d JIJ1y s. 1978 Publl$11ed 0r""9' C.o.ut DAiiy Pltol, J\lne 21. 28. Julys. It. '918 lllCT1TIOUS euSUflESS NAME STATllMeNT TM 104_,llQ Ptrwfl• ... OOlnQ t>uslrien~ WEST ST~RLING TOOLS. 1l'2 W Wlhol'I A•e , •SS, (OUI MUI • c::.111°""'• mu Aclrt ... 0 S<llltlUntt. Ill W Wiison Att , •SS, ~O\I• Meu, camo~"'• mu O•vld J . Wtt«s. ?:MS NtW-1 BIY11 , 6 SS, Cost.. MfW, C.Olllor-nl• ~1 T1>ts buslnH\ '' conctucte<I by " -•IP6'1nerslllp AC)rllll 0 . SdllelUMt Tlllt stelement we\ llled with Ill• COunly Ctef'il of Or•noe County on June 11, 1971. ,.....,. CAP> -Donald 0 . McBride, 75, Tennessee Valley Authority director from 1966 until retirement in 1975. died S unday in a Fort Wayne, Ind .. hospit al. McBride. who was av- p,ointed to 'the T V A boa rd by President .2404-18 Johnson, wrote a book in •-----------PUBLIC NOTICE Publl\l>ed Orenqe Coast Dally Piiot, June n and Julys. n, 1•. lf71 OAANGt COUNTY I OBITUARIES PUBLIC NOTICE "CTIT10U1 IUSINIHS MAio!• JTATEMeNT ll>t IOllo••"4 _,_, ,.,.. -"9 bUSlntH OS MOl..0 PO<.ISH•NC. SPECIALIST 2ou s l YOn s1 .... 1 ~,. Ano. 1:,. e?m Oell"I\ Ml<Vtn ~ .... , • '110 N £•\!~ S.nt•An.t CA'270• H..,otd -\leT l<IU.' UtO N Eo\lw-. S..11Anf CA~l'l)I Tiii\ llU'I .... \ " ton<IUCIAIO by • ttNr•I perlMMIO 0-t• M.l"''" ~ .... , Tf'lt\ ''•t~t .,.., f1t.O .no• 1"-P County Ctortll Of OrM19f C.OUntY on JuntJ,1t1&. ......... Putltl\l>td Or-C.0.111 0.lty "'IOI June t, 14 tl,18, 1971 PUBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS 9USINES~ HAMii STATEMENT Th• •OllOMl'Q llttlOl'I ~ ~ -· llOHH HARBOR CENTER STYLIST »00 ,.;ort>o< Bl...,., Unit•. COJ .. Mew C•t1•o•r110 ,,,.l!l _..._, ... , Wiiiiam 0 Wlllt•l'n' I.OS S411 Fairest of Fair! Fountain Valley's Regina Woods <lcfu and Allison Francis a re among the home grown beauties who'll vie for the queen of the fair crown July 8 at the Orange Coun- ty Fair in Costa Mesa. "Home grown " is the theme of the fair, which will run July 14 to July 23. Clement• W•v. 8 11•n• Pon c.111orn•• Tiii\ -~ .. ~-II•.,,'" Ot•1d1.1•1 WMO Wiii_.. Tiii\ '""'-' """ -"'°' ~ Cour1ly <.I••~ Of 0.•1'19r C..Ul'llY on JUM 1, "71 ~ Put>lt\f\ed o..,. Cont OellJ P110I JuM I, to. JI, H. 1•,. :1210,. PUBLIC NOTICE A-nno NOTICI! 0" SAi.£ OF AllAI. Plt~E llTY AT PtUVATE SALE NO,A ... 160 IN THR SUP•1t10R a>UltT OF THE STATllO"CAL,,OllNIA f'OR TH( COUNTY Of' ORAllGE In Ille Mell..-of'"" Estate ol OAVIO ALLEN WOLFE. Oe<Nsec! Notke I\ lll!<etiv 111..,n llMI ""' un dentgne<I "'"' seu '" f>r••••• wte. to 1111! 11191\HI .-bftl -Sllbt«I lo <Ol'lllrmatkll> of •-!.upertor COUil. on or •lier lllP )"' day of July, 1'78 "' the olll<f' OI OAVIO E WEISS At tornev •I Uw, 7441 w &.•91'1¥ 81•0 Mont-llO. (.alllO•nl• ~-CA>unl• OI Lo• Ar>Qel..S, SU.le of C..tilOrnt• •II 1i.. r1Qt11. litlt! -1n1..-es1 of ..,a i» ct•..O •I trw tlnw of cwa111 -•" '"" r19111. 1111• -'"'"'"'"' 1.,,.1 '"" n t••• Of \•Id Ot< .. Wd ll<t~ •CQUlr.d D>y ---------------------------~ OPt'••llon ol law o• ollwhrl>* oll>t• PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE 111.tn or In OOOlhon oo ~I of ... Id o. <e.wd 01 ltw '""'Of OHlll, tt• ano 10 •II U.. <trt""" real pr_.-ty tlt...led 1n Ille C1tv of 5.k\10 An•. Cou111y o• ll·JtUI Oronoe. SIM of C..11-•. i»rlieut•r s~~~~~r'~~~A'::. SUPHtCMI COURT 01' THE ly oep'!~~~~T:"::i~':..., of·~ fHl.COUN'TYO"Olt.IUtOE STATE°"CALll'OltNIAFOlt Soutn ll•llol Loi I ol Mary Sftetter• Mo. A-t6Jll THE COUNTY 01' ORANGE. •0<1111on ol IN To-OI S...le Ana .... NOTICE Of' HE Alt I NO 0" NO ""'5141 IM City of S.n11 Ana, Cooi111y 01 ,ETITION "°" 'lt09ATI. 01' WILi. In Ille Moller of '"' E)'"'" ol O••noe Sl<ll• "' Colllorn1•, •s per ANO LEn.ltS TESTAMENTA•Y. Al.FRED M. HAWl(INS. Oeceosed mlo rttorood In -lO. ~ ti 01 E\l•t• of WILLIAM ROSCOE NOll<t I\~ o .. en to CftdllOf'\ Ml'JUll•-Rta1<m.ol ~AllQ!!w• f>ARKER " WM R ..... ,no <IOll'M ~IMI ,,,. Wld ~· County, C.lltoml• D•u~ed • • . PARKER • .,..,, IO Ille ~a Cl~-In ttw otliu °' P.,(~I) ~ Soulll 10 Ifft ol Loi I NOTICE IS HERESY GIVEN ltwt Ille Clet'il ol 1111! 01o<ew10 <ourl or lo of Mary si.,11.,..., Addition lo!'-' 1own 8ETTE ANN llERKLEV ""Wed pn,,.,.tl~IOltwUllCltn'9r•••htllle otS.nteAno..•nllle(Atyot!..tnteAn4 "''tin a petition for ""-tt of Wirt olllct ol OOOGLAS E GODBE, County OI Orat191!. St•le OI CiltllO•nt• -tuuanceof Letteo Test-t•rv 8ALL. HUNT. HART, 8ROWN .. u per m1tt1recoraed 1nboo• J0.1M9" IO 1M ,..,II~. refer-..Ke lo-II ls BAERWI rz. P . 0 . 80• 1281. rte ., o4 Ml\C~la'WOUS R~oras Of LO\ m..ie IOf' lur1-P¥1kuler\, _ ,,,., Lino en ............ LOlljl 8e"c II, A"9f!'IH County, CattlO<n! ... .._ ... _ '""time -of.tee ol hffrlllQ !tie ... ,,,. C.llk>fnhl fl0e01, ..,.<II l•llet' olltu 15 MOnly k"°""' as· t4()4 Nor111 F•onc:h "" bffr1 set tor July 18. 1911, at to oo Ille pt.ice ol bu•tnu1 of the un· Street, Sent.>"""· C.lltomt• PrOO•" a'" tn tM Gour1 of Oep¥t denlQMd In alt m11ten ptrtt1n111Q to Iv beinq 'IOIO I\ "A!. tS" CondlltOI' No 3 of s.ald coun'.°:" 700 CIVIC= SllCI es I.it. Suell c•••'"' """ ,,,. of ~~·~/ .. :;tea"'~~.~:::.. ";.~;1.:::;::.·o~ Drive .W~I. In lllt City ol Slnl• A"", t>t<MW•Y ~~ must ht' lltecl .,... ,.1,. l •n Pl'rttnl Of emoul'll Old 10 bv C.ttforl'llil PrtHnled as atortttld willl1n lour ~lll!d _.111 btd 1975 entiUed "TVA and the Nati<ma.I Defense." PUBLIC NOTICE Oiled J-1tt. 1971 '"°"'"' ••w ,,,. llf\1 pullll<•llon o• 81os or of~ to be '" •dt1ng -FICTITIOUS 9USINEU PUBUC NOTICE WILLIAM E. St JOtlN, tllh notice wllt be ntee•lll'<l •I""' illorHa•O olllc~ NAME STATEMENT County C...-k OalttO June It, 1"71 •I •ny tfrM •lte• ,,... lint l>U04l<at1on ~ICTITIOUS 9USINESS Tiit 1ottowtng PfrSOM art dolno 1--------------iT. o. DALTON 6Nl1'1Ctll H..wlllll\ ~reol •net i.lort!daleOl ... 1~. ff AME STATEMENT buslr>e\U\ NOTICE TO CREDI TORS UJ SHiii SCwMe Stne1 Enc:utor of ll>t WHI Oete<I this 13tfl °"'of Jvn<t. me SONOMA (A P) T~ 1 It I O 1 MAlt U NOUCHI INT£ft. $UPElllCMICOUltTO,THE Lff...,.....CA_,) ofwid~ )Olln8ruce1Cesster ne 0 -no persons ore 0 "9 >jATIONAL. LTO .• po. Bo• 41•S. s... STATE Of' CALIFORNIA FOii T•I: (!IJI U6-al5 OOUGULSE.G009£, AOM1N\tretor of 1111! Eleanor P. Araold, 91, Ousie;~~TIVE PARK JEWEL£ RS. :A!ltMnte. CA; IS Vlst• ""'Ponto, s.n THE COUNTY 01' ORANGE An_., fer: PftitMMr uu .• HUNf,HAltT. Esta~"' Wid OecedMt . do f the I t G "" BeKfl Btlld.. SUit• 161 s. Hur11 :;.1,,,ente,Cellfoml•mn NO. A·tsSO Publlslle<I Ore..ge Coesl O.Hy Pl~ 91tOWNllfMl9Al.ltWITr DAVIDE WEISS, E04 Wl W 0 a e en. l"OlonBNOl,CAm.tl M•rk Slewn ..,.,.,., U lllst.t ""' Est•te of HELEN MARTIN •ko .1-2t,2'411\dJ\llyS,l91t ~.0 ... •,211 2t41Wttt .. ...nvetW, Henry H. "Hap" Arnold, Ho••rd oevtd Subnlck. uss1 Por1to, S•n Cleme<lk. C•lllorr1I• HELENM MARTtN,OecffWd ~,.. ueu"""A---t1<1oCAtil..,....._ the much-decorated Rh0n•Ln .. Hllnli"Olon8Hcll,CA '2''7~ .. , ...... , 11 NOTICE IS HEREBY Gii/EN l'OIM ------------L-.kKll.CA-ltl. 111JI m...a World War II Al·r Force oete E-1M-,11022 L..ttl• k T ·:"° u• J:... ....... Ollmo K019-cre<111~oiti.-. ... mec1-.tdtft1 PUBUC NOTICE ~Or.,.CMsl 0..1y P1tot. At._.,, ............ .,., ... POlnt. Hunti"Olon 8N<ll, CA u, 0 yo, • _. ,,.., •II Pflf'SOM IWWlllQ Cl .. ml 101111s1 J-••• 11 .... JtAy s. 11, ltlll Ol IM £, .... ., commander, died Mon-Tllh buslnMS h Condu<ttO by • Su llowNroOl<-i, ~·0 A.,....YV IN w ld dectdt'nl .,. r-lred I• Ille--------.--------7"2•·11 D•vld All ... Wotl• qen..-el ~Ip Mloo-llu, Tot<yo, llO. J-'"'""· wilt> the _ __, YOU<llers, In ",_,. I-----------.;..;;;...;~ PuDll~ Or-to.Kl 0 •11y PllOI. day. H-ard 0 Sutw'4c• .... Tllh ~ 1sconducled bY ~In-!he Office of""<•-of tM •bow"" su,1.1t10RCOU1tTO.,THE PUBlJC NOTICE """11. u .21.1978. ..,vi<IU•I tlti.d <OU'1. Of' lo P'tlWnl ltltM. with STATE~CAUFOlltNIAf'Olt 0•1• E . .Mesol> Mens Verre THE COUNTY OF OltANGE SAN DIEGO (AP) T111s sl•l-1 was lllea •1111 tllt Tiii\ st•l-1 w.n 11~ wtttt Ille =s=·~ ~~~ .!:,:', NO. A-tt.l7? George Samoel Ba m es, Coun11 Cieri. ol 0.-ange Cbunty on county Cltti.. ot 0.."'"9t COufltY on &e.1<11, C.1t1ornt•. wlli<ll is ttte P'.1<e No TI c E o F HE A It ING o" June"· 1tll JuN 17. 1"18 Of business OI ,,.. -SiqMd ,,. •II ,ETITION "°" "'°9.ATE 0 .. WILL 77, retired president and FOKJU F....,S ill•r\~nlllQI01 .... Hl41•ofs.tt<I ANO 1'011 LETTERS TESTAMl.N· board Ch"''rman <>f the Publl~ Oro~ Coail 0.1ty Pttot, PubltSMd Orange Coes1 O•llY Piiot. aeuoent. "'!Ill",_ Monti!\ •II-1~ TAltY ANO FOllt AUTMOttllATION '" JUfttJl.21.JutvS.t1.t9/I June21anOJulyS,t1,lt,1911 "'""TO AOMINISTElt UNOElt THE 0 'Cedar company of 7405 II 2•311 "'~~it:~~";'.':;:-' nouce INOl,1.NOENT ADMINISTRATION Chicago. died Saturday •------------0otw1<1c. M¥1•n o" ESTATES ACT. at his Rancho Santa Fe PUBLIC NOTICE ------------Eae.:u1or011MW111 01 Estate o1 HATTIE MAE HOSAOC, h ,,PUBLIC NOTICE ·-nltnetlOe<.tdtnt ak• HATTIE BARNES HOSACK. ome. JAMES L. llUIEL. Jll. Oe<HWO. FICTITIOUS IUSIHESS MlJ VI•~ NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN llWI NAMESTATEMENT STATEMENTOFA9ANOONMENT New,.rtl.odl,CllllenMtMO R08ERTA J . COPENHAVER Ms ~::s~o~~~wlnQ pe•wns •re d01~9 OF USE 01' ,.,, 67)-4171 llled "4rtln • Pt!tlllon fOr Prob.lie of CUSTOM TOWING SE AlltCE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME Attwll.., ter Eucl/Mf Wiii •nd lor Issuance of Letters CAPOCCIAMA 1ll9 /1 A ~n Slret-I, Co~ta Mew. TM following person~ ab.wtdol'led Publl\lll!d Oranot Co.tu Oaltv Ptiot. Test•m.-Y and fof' AutMtfzltlot'I to JOSEPHINE CAPOCCIAMA, rt!SI· C.tllomla '1262' the USt ot Ille rlcttllOus bu\l~s name June 14, 11, ?I-July S, "I• Administer untie< tllt! t~nt Act- 0.nl M Huntington 0.ac:PI. C.. Pllued Oavld I.ff Houi<!, 70J<ll Sanla An• THE COACHMEN, 7032·0 Ptocen. ?Jl•·7 mtnlst•allon of E'l1ates Act. ,.!Hence •w•'f on June 26, 1911. She I\ sunrt~ Avenue, S...ta 4 ,,. Hl!IQ!lts. calltornla Ila A"enue, Costa Mt!u. c .. rnornl" 1-------------to ""l<h Is M•de l or 1,.r111er 17y lier "'1-.cl Frill\k C.pocci.mo o1 97101 11&11 PUBLIC NOTICE ~•tkulat\, and lllill the Ume M>d 1-tuntlngton Beach, C• .. one brotl!er Tll• Flcltl.ous 8usl~s Nan-wt re-P4«e of -Ing the"''"" has bffn set Death Notice• C,_..,J NOTICE TOCltEOITOllS S\l,EltlOlt COURT Of' Tl4E STATE Of'CAUFOltNIA FOlt THI C:OUNTYO .. OltANGa HO.~ EJIAlt OI LEWIS 0 OOl>IALOSON. OecHsecl NOTICE IS HEREBV GlllEN 10 '"' Crtdllori ol Ille_. n.tmed ""<'tdtfll INI •II P«'50M ......,,ng <1'91m< ~lnsl Ille Wld otaldtM .... required 10 tit~ ll>tm. wllll the nec~sat'i YOU<""'" In tne office o1 "" <!elk o1 111<1 •bo,.. 11<>· tilted court, Of' to Pf~Mnt them. •llh 1114 Mees....,., -llers. to Ille un. O.nfqnecl It Ille taw Ofitce of NANCY BUNN, INCOflPORATEO, •IS CMc Center O•l•e Wo t, S1nta A"•• Clllfomlo '7101, wtiicl'> Is tllt ,,...,, 01 JJU.fl PUBUC NOTICE SU PERia.i COURT Of' THE STATE OF CAl.lf'OtlNIA FOR TN~ COUNTYOFOAANOE NO.A•tltlll NOTICE 0 .. H EAR.ING OF PETITIOH FOlt Pll09ATI! OF WILL AND LETTERS TESTAMENTARY, FOlt AUTHORIZATION TO AO MINI STER UNDER. f H E INO£PENOEN":' ADMINISTRATION 01' ESTATES ACT E \late ol JE~OME S !.VGERMAN, 0.CU'ii<!d IWldore To~ °' ll•tv •net lier slstu Scott Horace Roboson, 70J<l7 Santa ~--~a lo above was flleo n Orange '°" Jut1 ti, 1'71,"' 10;00 a.m . In Ille -;===========:;;::-T•nau•ll• oecartos ol Italy, 1 ~t~lo~:~:07 Santo '°'"° Htlgllts. County onAl>r 27, 19n. ' NOTICE~MAltSHAl.'SSALE covrtroomOI Oeoer1ment NI). lM\akl , grer1dcflltdren ana 4 gre•I· This bustMu 1, conoucted by a David Oon•to Hall, 1012 J Jol\nManson.~'"1ftt. court,alJOOOv!<CenwrOrl,,.West. grer1dcllttOren. lllsll.atlon T"'1rsd•Y DeM•ll ~rtrwr1NP Wallo"en, Pl..:entta, CatHornla '1670 V'S. In IM City OI Silrll• Ma, C..tHon1la l>u'SH>Hs of Ille unden'9f\9d In •II '""'. ten pef1alnlng to Ille l"<lale OI wkl de ceo.n1. •ltftln lour montftt .iww Ille ttrsl wt>tfcetlon of 1111• l'IOUCt Ooled JUM21, 1f71 NOTICE IS ,.;ERE&Y GtllEN Uwl SARAH SUGERMAN M S llled llff~on a oelltl°" '"" P,.octre 01 wm end " •uonce OI Loiter\ Testamentary 10 thP Petitioner M>d lor 11utnor1i.11on 10 aa mt,.,st9' under '"' lnd~nl ~Cl· m1n1stret1on ol Estllftt A<I, relerMcr to •filt h is tnaO~ •o r l urtller P••llculiJr,, Md th.ti Ille llmp &n<I pt act OI ""••11'111 lllt '""""n1, llffn '"' li>r Julv 11. l'I,., el 10 00 11.m , 1n 1,.... <ooirtroom of Oepar1m.,..1 N., Jo• •••tJ court, •• 100 CtY'I( Cenff!r Or•Yf' w~,.. 111 tlle C•IY ot Sd111• Ano Ca111om1" HLL H04DW4T MOITUAIT • 10 Broadway Co<,IJ M e<,J 042-9150 SMln-t-TUn41U...UMI MottT\IAltY WESTCUF'F CHA,IL 427 E 17th St Costa Mesa 64&-4888 'IYCI HOTHYS SMlnfS' MORTUARY 6::'7 Main St H11n11nqton Bnach ~36-6539 SHlffU MottTUAltY 976 So Coast Hwy Laguna Beach 494-1535 1533 N. El Cammo Real San aemente 492-0tOO ,H« flAMILY COLONIAL ~UHHAL HOME 780 I Bolsa Ave Westminster 893-3525 r4CIHC YtlW )41M011Al ..... Cemetery Mortuary Chao" I :lSOO Paciltc V1Pw Drive Newport Cat1lorn1a 644 2700 McCOIMICIC MORTIIAlllS Laguna Beach 494-9415 Laquna Hills 768-0933 San Juen Capistrano 495-1776 IALnAUGUOM ~HOMI 646-2424 COSTA MESA 673-9'50 0 Neptune Society t REMAttQN lultlAl.~T SEA 646-7431 y _ _... .. ...,, ...... _"' .... ,~_,.......,.,_.ic.. "" ... ''"...,.... "in. '"".J•r. June 2• from 2PM to 4PM at Ol~y 0••10 l. ~ Tll•S bUSll>e\S ts Conduc1ecl by al> .... M••98'el AIJQvr, Oeltn<lanl. O•led June 23, 1971 B•otllers Mortuary, T •lberl ono Scott H ROOl'°11 di•ldu11 IM. 117ZOI WIU..IAM E. STJOHN, HELENA COLE Adml"4stretrt~ wt111 Will AMe-OlltleHlaleol Ille abo.., "4lfnlld ~~I BH<h, Hlll'ltlnqton Bu<.11, ea. Ros.try Tllos \laltme<it ... , llted ,..11,. 1,,.. Oav10 O Hatt By vt•1Ul' OI .,. oe<utoon in""° on eountv Oertt on<! Funer.i Meu wltl be •I 7·JO P.M Counly Clertc 01 Oral\Qt County on Tiit~ ~t•lement was ltted .. 1111 Ille Mire fl JJ, "71 by Ille Su!>Prlor Court, Jofl11 B. Macl>onlld on Thurs<l•Y June 2•. 1'18 11 SI. County Ctf!ril ol Or.inQt (county on 700 Clvtc C-e<\le< 0<1.., WH!, s.tll• NUltWITt. ltEMElt,Ma<OOHALO, M••Y'S By l]lt SH C.ltlotlc Ch11rcll. JUM s, 1971• FH611 Junes. 1'18. Arla, County ol O••r>q•. Sl•I• OI M~AO & ltOSl!-ALO NANCY 9UNN. INCOIU''OltilTEO '1 S Chi< ClMtllf DfiH Wetl HunllnQ1on BeKPI. C.. Crn>tsl<le com· Pubtt~ Or.,. C06\I 0.lly Pttol, I' ·PUl6 C.itlo<nlo, ""°"a ludQl'l'lenl tnlft"ed In A "'"'"~ '*-11..., Mllltl wttt be on Fri<Wy June JO, 1918 June 14, lt. 2t.,,., Julys. 1919 Publtslled Or-Coast O•ltv Pttot. '"'or of J Jotv\ ""'"'°" as 1""9mff>t ... N-..,t ClMtw ort.,,. SIN AM, CA mt, Tel: C7HI ~Nit A._,.fler......,.....lratria CTA ot tOAM II GooO ~ Cemetery. 2232.18 June 1. 14.11, 71, 1971 credit'"' ill\d *'"'l Mlf"90rel AUQU Sw1• 1ns t-411nW•Q1on BeKPI. c.a. C.onducleo by-------------11011' u judgment -or. \_."9. Ml N..,ott8"dl.CA .... Pvbll~Orll>Qe C:O.st O.oty Piiot J-JtlndJUlyS, 12.. t9. 9'11 Otkloy Bro1MrsMonuaryMJ.n11 t>.tl•n<e "' $IO.IJO 1'I) «IU.-llY -on A~,Slef: ~ UEWU PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE wkl ludQnWlt on 111e date °' "" '' P\lblKl>td er-. Coes1 o.tlv Piiot, 2•11 ETHEL M. BREWER. r.s~ of \uano o4 \Aldtae<ullon. 111 .... le•led JllMJt.2'.-J\llyS,1971 •----------.....:.=..;.:: Ca<on• de! -· GI. P--•., on ,....,. -Ml tl>t r\Qlll, ltlle _, lnl.,.esl of tfn·l'I PUBLIC NOTICE J une 2S. 1971. ~lees Ttlundoy J-NOTICE to C1te01TOllS SU,EltlCMI COURT OI' TH a w10 tudOmenl -or In Ille pr_,iyl-----------...:..;...:..;~ 29, 1911 •I 10AM •t SI. James SUPl.ltlORCOUltTO"THE STATE~CAL.l l'OltNIA FOlt In I"• Coul'llY of OrilftQe. St•t• of PUBLIC NO'J1:CE 1-------.-.-... -~------Eph<~I Chu<<PI, Newport 8UCPI, STATaOl'CAl.ll'OltNIAf'Olt THEC:OUHTYOl'OltANOE C.illornl•,cleSUlbed~I04'°'" ·~ C.0 Sef'vtce ()Oft(:t\lde. Er11oMC>1Mnt THI. COUNTY Of' OllANGE NO • ...,.. Balbo.t tt«l. '°' f, OIO<k l1 Com ~ SUHlttORCIOUltTO, 1'0<9'1 lAM> *"-l•t P•fk, G,_ Mo. """'7 N 0 Tl CE 0 I' HE A It I N G 0 I' mofllY --.s: 1316 hsl 8att>o.t NOTICll TO atllOITOttS 01' CAL.ll'OlltHIA. Cl.ale. Botti e..-oeron FVfWf'•I .._ Eslll• OI MARGARET LENA~AN ,ETlllON FOfl Pll09ATE ~WILL Bovl•••rd, Newp«t 0.ecll, 0.-IUl.J( TttAHSn• ANO o.. COUNTY OI' OR.ANOE Cosio Mtsedlrectors CHRISTENSON, •k• MARGARET L. AND LETTERS TESTAMENTARY, C:O..n11. StaltOI Clltlorn4o INTENTION TO TltAHS .. Elt .... A-fUSI 91tO'#N CHRISTENSEN, Oka MARGARET f'Olt AUTHOltllATION TO AO· NOTICE IS H611E8V Gii/EN ttt.lt AL.eottOUC911Vt!ltAOEUCENSI. 'ETttlON "Olt AN OltOElt ~·11suA. ~1s 8R MIN I s TE It u N 0 E It THE -7 00 CM•ECTINO T'HE CONVEYANC• OF ,..,.. ,.. ...., OWN, l"Hldent of CHRISTEN~. Otc .. Wd. tNOE,ENOENT AOMIHISlltATIOH on Jul., Ii,"'"• ot O"CIO<k p M ot CSKI. •m-4ll1 U.C.C..... ltlEAL. PltOPEltTY MlsslOI\ llie)o. C.., passed ewoy on NOTICE IS HERE8V Gii/EN to tile Ml•n Lobby. CounfV Cou<thou\t, ~1 2411n-74 9 & , CIMel June ts. lf71. Senrkes -• lteld on credllOf'Solllle-MtnedO.Cedenl 0 .. ESTATUACT. JambOr ... BIYll . Newport Beem. cu Nolin Is ll«etJJ QIW<'I 11-.1 .. bUl1I Es1•1e ol JAMES LAINA.ENCE TuesdoyJ...,.11, 1971otH•r1iorl.lwl'I-llMl •11 Pff'SOM,....lng clolm1191ln,1 E s ute ol HELEN O IANE OI Newpon ee.cn, CA1un1, of OrM191, trenster, lncludtng in •tcollollc SISSON. alw known f\ JAMES L Mount 011 ... Mort.-., •lld SftepMnlof tl>t sold decedent art r-t•ed 10 lite 80UCHIER. OKelWd. Slalt of C,,tltornl•. I wttt Wll al OUbllc, be.,,.t.IVe tia..,se, k M>oort lo be,,,_ SIS$0N, Ot<HM<I lht +illls United Cllurc:PI Of C.hflsl, llleM, wlltl the MCHMWY •Ou<llt•S. In NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN , .... t auction 10 tllr "'~'· blddt•, for <• OI , .... , <ef'loln coffee~ Wfltl ~ Pttlll-. A'11'1uf R Sisson, •tt<tqe\ l.•9uno Nlo c:.. H•rbor u ... n. 1,,. office of Ille elm 01 the 100,... en-MORAN U WARD. JR., Ills "'"" In 1e .. 1u1 monf!Y Of thf' Unllea si.tes, 1no wine busl""5 known as CROW'S tti•t Mount Ollw 'dlrte10f'S. tilted <out1, or to P<M<l'll lhtm. with ...... 1n • ~tltlon IOI' ""-" of Wiii •II Ille rlQM. lllle -ontH~ Of Hid NE s T •nd IOOled ., UJ1 Etslt>lufl ... 1111-h -"'°' ol Int Will Of t .... nece••-•ouc'""~, to Ill• un· Ind lnuen« Of Utters Tttt-nllry iuOQM•nl Oet11or In Ille ~bo .. Ori~. City ol Newport Be«ll. Counlv J•MH L. Sl\SOl'I, tlleat<t<ltnt ·~ ·-• ...... < ano tor •utllotll.etlon lo lldmtnlsl•• ..... I beet ot Oranoe Sl.ttof C.tttomla •2'60 Subjec I lo odmlr1tslr~tton In '"" atrilgnea •t the ta• olf l<t ol -, 1~ lo.+.-~ ~n·••rJ>on ~ aenr llf0flllt1Y,or '° Mu<ll lheoeol N •me'• ol Tra s le · d Hiott •S ,_ --rly \ltu.-tod 1n 1n• WILLIAM v SCHMIOT, l•to $an ~ ·~ -..... --·" ........ .,. ·~MllVbtnt<HS«YIOS<lllsly••ICIU· " rors •n ~ < 1-------.,...r------IMl91urt Ort••. Suite 300, Ne.,.POrt E\letes Atl, reterenc~ to wlllcl! Is ecutlon, wtlll .l<trued tnl~rest end Llcenw.s, SO<IOI security numtltf •net g:,~j~,:·~~i:;::::~;,.;.l•lt of T11• :~!:-l~~:~~ IMI· :::."~ ~·"' ~:>~=~~~ ~ ::.r::~·E'*Ja~ ~:: <~'!,'° J\JfWI 9• mi. :·,~~?C:E'..!uc:•. ~°1· ~::~:~':':'. :.;:;~e: 1~::,ws~':o· MU OS: .... •II m•tl•rs pertllr>l"9 to ,.,. esl•le Of • m • In Ille court~"' OeoMIMt<ll OMston o!!,~ AllH • ~so-so.1' • . • Booll S1. Pooe .i o4 ~- T·A OESIONS/OIVERSIONS • .ff'21 !~::. c1:~~1~1 ~~~I·~:.~: ~"';~~: No. l ol Wklcourt, •1100 CMc Center M...,,..I. er..-. c.e>unty MA AV Ell E N (R OW. 171 On o.c...., 11, 1'17, Ille decedent S.n Sou<I Or<lt, Hunl'"910ft BNGll, Drive WHI, In the Oly of S...t.t ,.,_., By SfwOft Stapleton, 8\IOMll R.08d. c.51.1 Mew. C.lltorM.t tUQlllld -dtllftred • con1•t<I 111 C:.lll«r>I• fHo'P l'IOtk•. C:.ttfor11l1. OetlulY .,,,., S.S.. •lfWf.,,.. -n111o lrf Wlli<ll "' .-tlld to wtt 10 Terry t....d.ce T-SOll. mt OotedJ-71, 1'11 O•ledJ...,2'.1971 ......... S.S....... N•rne. _, .. M<Vrlty-*' Md Robert l Ortis-Norrnt C. CMll\ 54"1 Sovel Orclt, H<.rsetnvton Be«ll, MAAYP1.ATT WILUWl..stJOHN, ,..tltttlH'•A-y llullneu aadress ot lnte,.deO u pvn,...sers, -Ille pur<llasers C.llfon1I• ~ AOmlnli•••n• #1111 WHI c-ty Clef1I u.. .......... ., TrM>Sfff". lncludlng zip<-• .,.. oOnMCI .. ,.,,,llaM ''°"' ""CIK-1 T WS) A .... Mdtotttentettof '"OMA,W.AU.•H MMi.. ... ....,,CA~t G YOSHITAKA NAOA, 200 Eest ........ .._,., c1e1<r•--.... Ol'I 01.:;;!,':'4 ts conduCted l>Y.,..,.. •llDW-..0 Dec.eden! ,Ut o.w Mrwt Put>lli.Mct Or ... Coast o II PllOC ra ves Avenw, Monterey P•rll, .. , OI ""~ ~ -'°""' WIU.IAMV.SOfMIOT ilille1'1 J 14 21 .,. -1 ., 'Celllo,,•1• t17Sa ; S , S . 1-iethlrllllnhtonlre<t. T~ T•monson M 14111,.,...... ~.. u"' • •.., "'" • S7t~ T t Tllt' ,11""'-' w.-s llleO .,1111 t.N s.i .. M N-..-1~CAtHtl ~11 T°'otc_...,etlonloti.P'fdl'WtN l\e tdlfllrlKI •n no tecorat<I County Ctef'll of Oranoe County Of! ~9MOl.CAttiM T•I: '1"'' JSN•t PUBLI OTI ~ cltktfllf<I, In oenerot. tlS •II bof«• "-ONlllOfdlK~ JuM S, "71. Toi: Ctl•l .....-m Atl-y let: ,._.ltleMr C N CE slocll 1n tr•. lh1turu, ~Pfl\Ml llld OK.0-died WI-""'"..,. '"" "'"~ AttwlMY ... A*\llllllttr»trla CTA • PubUSMCI Or-.oe C.O.St Oolly Pllllt. 900d •Ill ~ •ltll "" licenw Is <.OfWtJ41ftU"'"" .. '" ,.,._ .,., IM Pub"'""' Or-C:O.st °"11' Pilot, Pubthlled Orilf\99 Cont O•ttv Piiot, Jvne l7. 2l-.IUIY4• tf7I , .... ,. l--,-u-,-,-,.-ICMl--C.OU-. -.. -T-O-,.-T-H-.--11oo17.ooo.oa '';':91..:=;:e".='~1~ •II Jun• 1• 14• 21• ?I, ltll t*-7' J -2t olld JUiy S, 1', It 1'71 ,._,,,. UATa Of' CAl.l"°"NIA l'Olt ~~~lle(lt. St::: •U ~vlnll 10 De pttformlld b• him PUBUC NOTICE '"ECOUNTY~~A"o1. 1c1em-110tetooe ..,,11t tenn1oitt.-tntn<.,."'"'' '11 .. 0 TI c I.':' .. "'"::~" IN 0 0, rel)l1KtcllnCoHll dote. ln<ludiftll ""'.,.,_,, ot tU,000 00 SU 'lltla.tCOUltf O"TllE ST A Tl OI' CAI.I l'Olll NI A .. oa THllCIOUWTYOftOttANOa N0.44251 NOTICI Of' "aAltlN O Oft l'TITION ..0.. PttOS.AT• Ofl 111111.L AllDLanalUftSTAMRNTAltY. l!st•I• OI f!.Vl!L YN W. l'RAHC1$. 0t<HM4 NOTICE IS HEREBY ~tVEN lllllt ROBERT M. FRANCIS n°' Olff llftrt ln •petition tot"""''• Of Wiii 111d 1uutfKtOl~sT~•rv10111e ,..ltllon..-, ""ennc• to _,,,<II I• mMt tor fur1W partleulOl"S, ilM tNI IM 11'"41 •nd ~ ol lleotl"9 '"' -11•1 bM11 ~I fOf' July II. 1'1'1.lt lO·OOo,,,.., 111 th• (OU•I-ol Oli)arl!Nnt NO J of wld COlif't, .. 100 Ootl< Cent« Ortw WHI. Ill IM City Of S.1>IA Ano, C.lllorl'lle Ool•CIJuMtt, tt11 WIUIAMl.SIJOf4N, Cqunly Clerk ltO•&llTT.HAltlAUOH 11 111111erc-...wen S..11•1 .. oa.-.c.t...,.._ Tel !OSI ..,_Jim Alt-ys•~ l'Vl>lt"" 0.....,. Goo\! 0.lly PllM, J-tt.,.91\d.MvS, 1'11 1WJ.PI NTITlON l'Olt ...oeATa 01' WILL t~esua. 4l ,!OOOO =~~= =-~;;1~.:: ttt! ANO 1.ana111 TalTAMINTAllY Kind"' tlc»nM IObf ,,_..,'" llnd ~"·~""'°''""""to ..... °"" •ti ftOlt AUTNO•ll ATION TO AO· ~ ... ~ .:'o~s:·· &Mt ltnd Wine .o<t~ ~ 10 Cit -bV Nm to •• M I .. 11 r. It u .. 0 • It T H I TM Wit -,,_. ... '*'" .,. ·-IKt .... lull ~fonn4on(· ·~. In JNOa,aNOCNT AOMIN1$TlllATION Wl'l'fftllt4 Al IO._m on or OfW the Ill cM11"9 the -~IOI 11>t proc-ot Oft •STATUM:T !My OI Auoust. 1t71 M tllt •t<•9W ... wld t~ .............. o•K,... £sl•lt of WOOO kARR'fMAN, parl"'lfnt ol 'ROFESSIONAL T"° I-et the #Yltttn conlro1et Oe<Hsed. ESCROW SEltlltCES, ol 1'11 H • .,.. lt lr end oquflAtll•, -bV r•,uon NOTICE IS HER.EBY GIVEN"""' lusllr1A-.SftoAIWl,C..llfomla. Ol llW 1UOjecl mtli.t OI lllt CO!lltt<t LOUISE H. H.4RllYMAH 11.U lllH All other 11uMnH5 -oftd Od• Md Ille clm1mi'-H I'*' er>d now Mrtll\ • "4111on tor ...,..,, ol Wiii ctrftHt UMcl.., , .. Tr.,...._.. wltllll\ .. 1,11n9 bet-0.(-1\I •no Ille elld It•-Of l.Ailltrt '*''-""' lllt P1'1 ~-~ H fOI' 0, It --llUl'(fltMf, It <.,. be teie<Kfc.tlly -to,,,. Pttll~ tl\CI. 411.14,,.,IHtlOll IOI,,. TrOll~-:-. !weed , • ..,,,,,,,,u .. ,,,.,., , .. l~t TPI• P•rlt•• •orH llwlt IM <M• WHEAEl'OllE, pellllo11er pro' edmtnltltetlOll of tltlOIH AU, ... •'"'•llot! fOt , .. ttOMfW Of Ille butk '""'Ille c-t _... °" °'*"' •\Kl!Orll ttr•n<e lo iMll(P\ 11 medt IOt furtllet MU arid Ille ti<:-'' to tit pel<I ltller "'9 4Hld dln<lll\o Ptllll-r lo corn parflcut.,., tnd '""' Ill• ,,_ 4Hld '"" Cif~rl-Of AIC~I( e. ... olqe P1'4• Ille •enn. ol ""' conl•llCI '"~ Plt<t Of llNriflO Ille -Ms -WI ~ ... 1.01 hit •PPfOYed tlte ~ ~ ""' dee-. by .Wt(uUllt -0. tOt Jiiiy 11, tt11. ol 10.00 • m • lr1 Ille tr•n•ler 11...,lllf tllt ..,.,,.1•1• lnt1nirnt111s tour!._., IJf 099tr'-"' No 'of Mid Oattd J-11.1•11 lo,.,,,, • ., .... ,..., ~rly ... ,1b4tc1 covrt, ti '"° Ovlc C»ftter OMw W•''· At 0'9W ""°"' to ~ L. Cort" -Norm• tn Ille '"Y Of s.tlll• A"6, c.111w11la MOl'Y llten "'°"" C (orllt, on tnCI w&ft<l to 111t <GMur Olttd Jllfft , .. 1'71 frlft'IHW\ rtnt "tformtn(t 1w Ille DU«lltUr ol WIWAM a,"'°""· YosNIOll4 NHI tllt •<h '""' -1orm~ by him, .,,., C-ty Cltrlt TrOMfttw tor ell 011\tf _,, vo1oa1.1N AHO 9AR.TC>tf ,ltOftlUIOffAL uc•ow •••TT HOtlN 9arNf'•WC.O-., HltVICH 1N6(Pltol•A- t)4) VM ~-A..-tnl N, T .... A-~~ •• CA t11'1 ,....,..... a.di. CA.,... a..t• AM.~ f21t1 ht: um as1 ..... ht, JU 1HI IM,.... Mt,_._....,.. Attenlty ....... _ Att-r .... l'!ollt9-'IAlll.-Or.,., Cetit O<tlly Ptttt, Pu04tt,,_ Or-C.0.\1 OMty POOi ....... .,,.. er-. C.0.11 OIH11 l'ltot J-2t. "" J\IM JI, n " ltll JllMtl. u .n . ''"' u .. ,. ,.,,.,. • UOI 71 O•lecl Jun!' 16, 1478 W ILLIAM E SI JOHN. Cour<4v O•n AL.AND SHULMAN ESO Ml WthNre e-tnrd Slflte M4 eeverty Hiits, CA tOtlt Toi· 21J·l7l..c)11 Alltn1ty lor: Pftl~ Publlslll!d Oranqe coast 01111V Piiot Juntt 11 n n. 1911 2J9' ,. PUBLIC NOTICE lt·*U NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S $ALE T S. No. TSl.-JIJ C On l'rooay JUiy ••, 1411, et 11 ·oo • m. Tlllfo tnW<an<.e -Tl"U\t Com Pin,. H OUI• "°"°'"'ed T ruttee UftClf'r and pur\u.;nt lo 0..0 ot Trust •• cora~a No .. Mber 11, t9H, •• tnst No. n•M. •n book 1120s. P.J9't 1m. 01 01 t1<1et Recoros In ttte office ol lhe C<J\ln• tv RecorOH 01 Orang" Coun•v. C1lhforn1, •• '#111 vii at oubflt au,t1on lo hl9htst ~r for (.tSP\ C~v•bte "' 11"11! ol sat~. In •••fut ~Y OI 111t unneo Stalesl •• the Sautll tron1 en lr•nc .. 10 ltwt Ota OronQt! Cour11y Courtl!ou~ 1oc.itc1 in the 20!) blacll of W••t S..nll ,.,,,. Bl..,, (fonnerly Wt!•t "" s1r,..11 5-n•• iv... c..111°"''"· 111 rtoht, 1111• -Int-I c;onveyed to •"" now lltld bY II ....0.-$did Oced of Tnat In l1'r ,,,_,,, ••-"' Mid County end St•l•~rlblld .,: Tiie Nor1h )7 17 lttl of ll>t Souo1 70St 67 ... , cl Block "G" of Trect NO 11 n , •• "'°""' on • m.o 111eno1 r 4"-corded '" Booll 10. _, t end 7 M~ <•ll•~•OU\ M.llPt. ••<ord• ot Uld Or·~~., T,,. ~lrH4 ~s -...... '°'" mon Oe\•Qrwlhon. 11 .,.y, of ,,., •NI prOClf'rly 0H<"bt0 ot>ow II OU<-IN 10.,. 1014 ~ A~ • Cost• Me•• COi fl•'7 111e ""°"'''-' l ruslte d1Kto1m1 .,.,, 11a1111t1v w My 111otor""''""n ot Ille \lrHI ...,.,,.,,." ~ Clfl\et (Gmft'\Qf\ °'\IQ,.elion 11 ony, sf\O#n "'"''" Said \11<1 Wiii Cit -, buf wlttloul <0•1.....,1 Of' _,..,,.,, ~•or•n or ''"' Pli.d, r"9ff<llf19 1111•, ~•son, iw enc:umbr-., lo INIY IM ren11lnit19 Of'ln(IHI Wiii Of l?>t no~ M<U.-..J by ~d Ottd Of ff\dl, '°'"'": 517.1•1 11. wllll llltt""'I l,,.,IOfl. u orovlOtcl In 1•10 notes, llOV4'1<et, 11 •ny, u-r ,,,. 1erm• of Mkl Otte! ot Trutl, '"'· tll•roe' -Hl*l'ft Of ttte Trui• Olld of tllt l~b C1'9.tld by NliCI OWCl ol Tri.Ill f Pie btMll<lorv undllr Mid ~ of T•u•I lltnlotor• UtcUltCI Ind de• 11 .. ,H to '"' _,,lqr>td • wrlllel\ 0f't l•ratton of O..te11t1 -Oeftlon<t •or Solt, 011d • wrllt•n Hollo ot Oooloult 11no Elf'Cllon to Sell. ,.,,. un. dtrS•O,.•CI (llllst<I U ld Nolle• Of o.11u11 ellCI El«tlon to Sell 10 lit re-torllff 111 1111 <OUllty Wflere ttrt !"NI prtptrly "I0<411'd O•tt Jo.lllO I•, "" Tllt•tnwr~••no 1'11\IC-nv <!l\\flCITnM ... ftyVlrttlll• To.<tn Au111Ml1f'd ~•QNIU"I' l>ullltil'*I Orlll\Qlll C.0..1 O.lly Pflet. Junt 11. n.,.., Julys,"" ,,,...,. HEALTH • I • ~ c now~TOWN Poker- C.lub Wedne$day, June 28. 1978 DAILY PILOT A j 3 0--ddsAre Favored WithAnnual Checkup 8> ~· Pf.,.ER b'TEINCROHN ·what do you reall~ lhlnk ot the yearly checkup ? J1n't l\ a wai.te of lime? Why not wait. un· lll you're actually sick before ~pending an that time and money?" Lately there have been reports that some doctors agree that they 'd rather spend their time treating sick people than ex· amining them regul arly to keep them from getting sick -or sicker. But 1 believe t ha t most doctors still agree that pre· r--------- venUve medicine <i.e. yearly DOCTOR IN " checkups) makes good sense. I ' PtevenUna nres Is less exclUnt THE HOUSE but more lmportant than trying to put them out. The other day a three-pack-a· day 1moker said to me. ·'I admit. I 'm smoking too mucb. But I take good care or myself. I have an X·ray taken of my lungs at least twice a year. Had one yesterday It was okay. Now l can keep on smoking in peace ... I said . "You're playing Russian roulette .. He said, "How ? What do you mean?" I TOLD IDM "You're only ua· ing your X-ray check1;ps as ex· cuses to keep on smoking. Sup- pose your X-rays show lung cancer six months from now? It will be toe;> late to stop s moking At least so in about nine cases out or 10." What I said to htm about s moking and lung cancer or course also applies lo smokmg and emphysema and a ngina pectoris and actual heart at· lacks. It 's true that preventive medicine is of value in routine Pap smears. In picking up early cancer elsewhere. THE TROU BLt WITH routine physicals 1s that they're usually not dramatic. Many a patient given a clean bill of health after the checkup says. 'Tm okay. But I knew I was. It was a waste or tame " But tell a s1 mllar patient there 's a ques tion of heart disease or cancer or somethmg else and he exudes atlention and cooperation. "When do you want me back" What shall I do?" Not all physical checkups are pro~ ducttve. Not all are life-saving. BUT l 'M ONE of those who believe that the odds are in your favor 1f you lake advantage of having a routine checkup at least once yearly. Let me add , an efficient checkup not the 15-minute var iety. OPEN All DAY TUE., JULY 4th. '/ STORE-WIDE SALE KEYED TO SAYlllS fOR THE llOLIDA Y WIEllll WIR MUL Tl-POSITION VINYL LOUNGER REG. 10.99 ·99 Htery-lvly 11u l • "UTILE PLAYMATE" ICE CHEST 99 o ... r / YOUR CHOICE 99 •HANOfUGfS.MOSfl llUMCMIN·fru~' f"'"Y •lAUMONT·"NOT CJIHOOMNAT·•t •'"1t •flANCIA·CNIAllTHry ,.4ht11NW ftllt~ •QUINTA VINUA·P'OITllGUlSf IOSl·fllM rtn •'AOULU·YAl'°lllClllA·lt ... rti •,AOUlll·SOAVf.1te1;.., ""'; . .., w'"1t •fMIUA VINI UMllllKO·lteliefl 1wm ttd GllBEY'S ANCIENT AGE TEN HIGH DRY GIN IOURBON BOURBON I .1 S tTRS FIFTH QUART REG. 7.99 SEAGRAM'S 7 CROWN 1.7S tfRS Is• l 01 l 949 WAS 11 .99 8"'·4'9 3'' 449 4'' WAS WAS WAS WAS 10.99 S.29 S.49 S.99 #1 I · 12 JNCft TABLE TOP BBQ GRILL PACK OF 100 PAPER PLATES 10• DISCOUNT ON USf PU.CHASES HO lONGIR OFffRlD "TRI-STAR" SUNGLASSES 9 V2 INCH VINYL TOY PLAYBAlLS t:,~ll 59c ea. SUl'l•l99 PRICI ~·~; 79· lncl•dt• 10 '*''•-,...tit trrr1. S IMM ,ietti< Uniflt •Is, ,..She CVJI ' Mltrt, ,iesllc 19blt clttll UG. 3ss S.91 ea. ~~~-ss: .. 11 ti o .............. •tntlrt•' COMPARI TOOTHIR • BRANDS 1 Ol. Sill SHllNG FOR 1.89 ",.~ 6-12 PLUS ., INSECT SPRAY l 149 O•~ I ,. "''" .~ •• '"''""''' WYLER'S SOUP MIX WHIU STOCIS lAST SUPER 31C PRICl Ouch• •I net, ktf •I NH4lt •·111 •h<tt, Ow4y plt!o PRO 3-ROW TOOTHBRUSH fAllUntC4 ·1 llOUCIO ,II(( FOR Mt4iM .. -. lliri1tlt1. 111 ..•. , •: ~· I r u ~ l-a l ""·' I I 'lt.I •n '.t. I ~Ill s~o"-s ~~ BAYER CHILDREN~ GROCER'S CHOICE Witt. 111ttel t< p1t111c 1,_, SAU s $1 NICI FOi • .... tilt . Rtft'U .... lctlltl ___,. .., ~CLAIROL PACKAGE OF 8 Veritd celou . _., dt1 .... 1. m1umc 93c tlOllCIO ""' ea. 't."' tr Witlt lre11. rMly It wu. •NllUl •llGULAI DELICIOUS ALEX TORTILLA CHIPS ASPIRIN-1 ~-GR. FRUIT SNACK FINAL NET SPRAY CRUNCHOLA BARS VASELINE INTENSIVE CARE SUPH 41c PRICI ea. 1.,o1er fttt t< Otto f111tor ·:r~:g~33c ,.1(1 lt!Tlt tf J6, ..... f1Htf't4. COSTA MESA 233 E. 17th SI. COSTA MESA 2300 Harbor 1t Wiison FOUNTAIN VALLEY 16141 Harbor at Edinger ....... -·ttl'9ttl llelr .... FOUNTAIN VALLEY Magnolia at Talbert WESTMINSTER Weatmln1ttr at Goldtn Weat fANTASfKg e C ttOUCIO MI KI ea. 10-1•111•-IMl!t!ttlM HUNTINGTON BEACH 21131 Beach Blvd. at Atlanta MEN'S· LADIES' TATAMI SANDALS / 1~ REDWOOD SLAT 16x16 IN. TABLE :•:; 299 foMUlt i.Me, ~ • .,. ,..,, "'' COPPERTONE OIL or LOTION •:;i:~:~c 159 ,.Kl 4 tll fore ftll Hit 11111 FINE DIXIE MAID CIGARS-BOX OF 50 HG. 159 1.lS HUNTINGTON BEACH . 5 .. 1 Wamtr I J 1 Ox20 " DOUBLE GRILL HIBACH• R(G.A44 7.99 .. ANACIN PAIN RELIEF TABLETS r::i;~:~c 13 9 ,.1(1 ltllho ti I 00 lor ft1t rtl•tt HUNTINGTON BEACH 9861 Adams at Brootlhurat ; l ' l r I- i AJ .. bM.Y PILOf .A pledge on taxes andjobs to the communities of In the wake of the passage of Proposition 13, important changes are occurring in the com-- munities of California. These changes have the potential of making California an even greater state. And we visualize our communities taking constructive and innovative action to remain in the forefront as the finest places in the countty in which to live and to work. But for this to happen will require the full effort and cooperation of all-our elected officials, our public employees and, importantly, the busines.5 and banking sectors of our economy. We at Wells Fargo pledge to do our pait First of all, it will .be our policy to pass along if we can any tax reductions resulting from the enactment of Proposition 13. The extent of our benefit from a reduction in taxes is unclear at this moment. But when we know, we plan to look creatively at ways to put the money back into the community. · Secondly, we recognize that many· com .. petent workers will be losing their jobs in local government. At present, as part of our normal operations, we have more than 500 full and part time positions open irr California. Although most of these jobs require specific skills and education, we feel many public employees may already qualify for these openings and, in fact, provide an excellent source of potential employees. Furthermore, our business is growing so rapidly we are creating approximately 175 entty level jobs in our statewide branch system. These could be filled by persons facing unemploy-- ment due to the effects of Proposition 13. we · Will provide special and on ... the--job training to those hired for .these positions. Admittedly, the number of these openings is not great in relation to the potential public employee layoffs. But we believe that if all corporations make efforts to create jobs for dis-- placed public employees, the transition called for by the new legislation will move forward smoothly, and Calif omia will be better for it ' . ............. ,..,. ............. '• f •t • #'--• I lnf ormation on openings in your area can be obtained by writing: Wells Fargo Bank Attn: Employment Department # 1000 P. 0. Box 44000 San Francisco, California 94144 or, P. 0. Box 54500 Los Angeles, California 90054. Public employees responding to this special program should indicate their job experi ... eqce and current employment status. We will respond to all inquiries. In another action also related to Proposi- tion 13, we will shortly be advising the more than 60,000 home loan customers for whom we maintain tax impound accounts of an option to reduce their monthly payments in line with their lowered property taxes. This will provide immediate benefits to homeowners and help stimulate the economy. The positive actions described above are our initial response to the challenges posed by Proposition 13. We anticipate that we will be embarking on new courses of action and charting new ways to enhance and strengthen our communities, as the uncertainties that yet surround the imple .. mentation of the new legislation are resolved and responsive programs developed by local governments. We believe, that with the full cooperation and' participation of all segments of our society, the impact of this far ... ranging and significant initiative legislation, passed with the ovetwhelm .. ing approval of the voters of this state, can be a positive milestone in the evolution of local government in California and go a long way towards improving tJ'ie business climate in our state. We at Wells Fargo pledge to do our part to help make Proposition 13 work, for all resi-- dents of our state. And we encourage other banks and businesses to join us in this effort '-· t(. .u, . .;fti~aa..-.&w•·-\.• ..... • l ·•• • u ..... • ..., ... ''•' ~ • -.1 J I I I . _'N:E::s~•o!::=:E~=c:~~~:=:~i~~~s::::;::~_:a~~:~:.~_.OE"iii£! ....................................... ' .............. ~ ... 1,...ortS "" Wednesday. Jone 28. 1978 DAIL y PILOT .c Bl I ~Mad Donga~ian Happy Again -----.. SOme Complain About '.Hrabosky's Act, But He Loves I t By DAVE CUNNINGHAM .. f Oft ... O•lly Pl141t Staff For the first time in three seasooa, baseball is fun again for the Mad Hungarian. the jeague lead in saves (11), holds the Royals'. besf, ERA <1.95) and Is averaglng one strikeout . pe'r inning. an act that earned him his nickname "It was just before the AU-star break and l was 0-1 with an ERA over six." Hrabosky re· members. "The Cards were planning to send me to the minors and I was in a tough game. "IT 'S SOM ETKING I need to do to compel<! al this level." Hrabosky !'>ays. "Pitching as 75 to 90 percent mental anyway. and in my case the percenta~e is even higher I use 1t (the act I to my advantage, and t hkc the nickname very much " I I I I t ' ' , I After a brilliant 1975 season in whi<;h he earned the National League Fireman of the Year award. Al Hrabosky struggled through two m ediocre years before the St. Louis Cardinals finally gave up and traded him lo the Kansas City Royals. The Royals are in the middle or a four.game series with the Angels and it's not a strange town to Hrabosky. He was an All-Orange Coun· ty selection at Savanna High in Anaheim and at· tended Fullerton College before being drafted by the Cardinals. "Playing in post-season competition has been a lifetime dream of mine." Hrabosky says, "ar1d I 'm going to realize that dream with Kansas City. The Royal& are going to win the pennant." "My mmd was wandering and for some reason I went back behind the mound to get my head together and psyche myself up." Hrabosky says. "It worked. the Cards kept me in the majors. and I finished the year with an 8· l record and 2 97 ERA." Some opposing batters and managers obJect to Hrabosky's act. complaining that 1t slow~ or makes a Joke of the game • < I '' '. "I 'm immensely happ~ now," Hrabosky says. "There were a lot or problems in St Louis. and 1 caused some of them myself by not being in the best shape and getting m entally down, but it's a whole new situation with the Royals, and I couldn't be happier." HRABOSKY'S statistics seem lo r eflect his new found joy. The Mad Hungarian-is tied for WHETIIER OR NOT his prediction comes true, Hrabosky might never have gotten the chance if not for a fateful day in the s ummer of 1974. It was the day he absent-mindedly started Rags to Riches Rud~ Hitting .193, Belts Grand Slam Wh al a difference a day makes. Joe Rudi was loudly booed when he struck out twice Mon· day night. and 24 hours later he got his b1gge~t ovallon of the season All Rudi had to do to earn two minutes or loud cheers was s m ash a two-out, pinch-hit grand -s lam in the seventh inning, lead- ing the California Angels to a 5·4 victory over the Kansas City Royals at Anaheim Stadium "I WAS JUST trying to hit the ball. I've been striking out so much lately that I just wanted to make contact.·· Rudi said. When Rudi was asked to go on the radio pos t·game show he gave a telltale sign that things haven't been going well with him lately, as he struggled with the mike and headphone setup "It's hcen so long since I've been asked to go on here that I've forgotten what to do," Rudt s aid with a grin. It was a rags-to-riches story for Rudi, who had been taken Sunshine, Sky hawks Mix Tonight 1t 's still only the middle of the Am erican Soccer League season but tomJ?ht's '7·301 game at Orange Coast College between the California Sunshine and the Los Angeles Skyhawks looms as a bi g one. Only two points separate the Costa Mes a -based Suns hine < 8·3-2) and the front· running Skyhawks <9·4 t l who are locked in a two·tcam dual for the Western Division crown. The third place Southern California La1ers are way back with 52 pomts THE SUNSHINE, which at one point ~arly 1n the season trailed by 22 points, have only been m first place once and that was followm_g last Tuesday's l·O 'ictory <>ver the Indianapolis Oare Devils. The Skyhawks re· gained the lead Saturday by beating the Lazcrs, 4·2 The last lime the two teams met, May 13 at Orange Coast, the Skyh awk s clippe d the Sunshine. 2·1. At that point in the season, the Sunshine was 1·2·1 and 22 points behind the Skyhawks (5·2·0). . It was the only horne defeat of ' the i;eason for the Sunshine, who have since been on a scoring rampage. 'out of the lineup b ecause Manager Jim Fregosi said the left fielder was suffe ring from mental strain ON MONDAY FR'EGOSI said he would give Rudi three or four days rest to recharge his batteries and hopefully bounce out of a slump that had seen his average drop to 193. Now Fregosi says he'll prob- ,tngef• Sfaf e e.11 GamHOll KMPC 11101 l on11111t Ka11"1s C•tv at O lllorn•a 1 Ho m Tnursoay Kens.s cnv at Cailtorn1a 7 H p m F riday Tt.as at Cal1torn1.i 7 7S om ably put Rudi right back an the lineup tonight "The only reason I took him out was to give him a little psychological ltft," Fregosi says. "I imagine he's got a psychological lift right now ... rt was only by unus ual circumstances that Rudi got into the game at all. Tony Solaita had been announced as the pinch hitter for Dave Chalk, but when Royals Manager Whitey Herzog brought in leftha nder Steve Mingori to pitch, Fregosi lifted Solaita in favor or r1ghtha nded Rudi ''SURE, I WAS aware I'd take some nak if Rudi struck out," Pregosi said. "8'1t you 're a lwa ys taking flak for something in this job. I'll send up whoever I think can do the JOb." lt was Rudi 's seventh career grand slam, the Angels' third of the season. and only the second pinch·hit sla m in the club's history. The other came from Mer v Rettenmund earlier this season But more importantly, Rudi's s lam c hanged the Angels ' fortunes. Prior to that drive deep into the left field bullpen, the Angels had gone 34 straight in· nmgs without scoring an earned run. Tbey had lost fi ve straight. CA LIFORNIA'S initial run of the game was unearned. Bobby G r ic h was hit by a pitch. advanced to third on an error and scored on a wild pitch in the four&.h inning. Ka(lsas_City g'ot on the board in the second inninl? when Hal Mc Rae homered to left. and the Royals added three more in the fourth on a two-run homer from Amos Otis and an RBI single by Joe Zdeb Picking up the win in relief of Ken Brett was Tom Griffin. and it was his first vic\ory ever in the American League. Griffin came to the Angels during the off.season as a free agent from San Diego. Tonight Chris Knapp !7·6> lakes the mound against the See ANGELS, Page 82 By now. the routine is famJliar to baseball fans everywhere. The Mad Hungarian glares menacingly at the batter. his Fu Manchu mustache in a perpetual frown. He stomps off Last month umpire Bill Kunkel decided to upstage Hrabosky After the Hunganan went through hts act and was ready to pitch. Kunkel came over, took the ball and rubbed 1t up man imitation of the act . Hrabosky was not amused the mound. pounds the ball into his glove. talks to himself. then marches back to the mound in the nastiest mood he can muster "I'm not trymg to make a mockery of the game. Jt's somethmJl 1 m dead serious about." See HRABOSKY, Page 83 CHANGING IMAGES -Al Hrabosky. o ften refer r ed t o as the Mad Hungarian. is shown clean shaven . with a l''u Manchu mustache and a full beard while a member oLthe St Louis Cardinals. Now with thC' Kansas City Royals. the ex·Savanna High <Anaheim l star rurrently wear~ a F'u Manchu " Cey -Loses Ball; LA Wins J Dodger Was Just Trying to Get It Over Infield ATLANTA CAP> -Ron Cey was only trying to get the ball up in the air and over the infield But what the Los Angeles third baseman did was lose it Cey rocked a fas tball by re· liever Dave Campbell over the le ft-center fie ld fence for a three-run homer in the seventh inning to power the Dodgers to a 3·0 triumph over the Atlanta Braves Tuesday night IT ALSO GAVE left-hander Doug Rau his eighth victory of the season against four losses. Rau scattered seven hits, struck out two and didn't walk a batter . Cey 's her oics came after Atlanta starter Rick Camp, usually a reliever. blanked the Dodgers through six innings and was replaced by Campbell to start the seventh. Bill Russell and Steve Garvey banged one·out singles befor e Cey came to the plate. "You've got to j?O a fter the ball in that situation. with the score tied a nd men on base that late in the game." said Cey. ··vou JUST HA VE to try to get the ball up and out or the infield Dodgers Slate All Gemes tlll KAIC l1'tl Ton1ont Los A~t.s •I All.,,t• 4 JO o rn Thu"d•Y LCK Al'ljleles •• AllMll• ' lO 0 m Fr.Clay LA•lClnc._, 12~ 1 Uo m a nd hope it scores somebody." he s aid of his ninth home run of the s eason. Rau never allowed a runner past second base and the Braves had two runners on base in only one inning. the fourth. wheri Morgan Says Bruins Didn't Break Rules LOS ANGELES <AP I - Contractor Sam Gilbert, who has served as an adviser to a number of UCLA basketball players, and UCLA Athletic Director J . D. Morgan have em- phatically denied allegations of NCAA rule·breaking contained in a book by Jack Scott. Sports activist Scott. author or "Bill Walton: On the Road Witb the Portland Trail Blazers.·• claimed in his book that Gilbert had violated NCAA rules by lending at leas t one Bruin basketball player money. Scott. a friend of Walton. described in one section an al· leged telephone conversation with Gilbert. Gary Matthews and Jeff Bul\- roughs singled "Rau had good control and a good break.mg ball.'' said Los Angeles Manager Tom Lasorda "I thought he had the hitters off t strid<' all night... 1 ·He got us out," said Atlanta ~ M <Jn ager Bobby Cox ... He j 'howed me !>Omethmg by going J 111nf In all due respect. though , \\ t hit the bait pretty goocJ , ou1~clves .. f ('A MI'. WHO WAS making his firs t s tart of the season after 25 re- lief appearances, was satisfied # with h1!' performance but "disap See DODGERS, Page 8 2 IN TII E NINE games since that defeat, the Sunshine has !>Cored 23 goals while allowing just six. After fl fi ve.game un· beaten streak was snapped by the Eastern Division leading New York Apollo on June 10, the Sunshme has won three straight. Included in the current streak arc 7·0 and 4 0 'shutouts on the road. APWl,.,._N ATLANTA'S ROD GILBREATH GETS BACK UNDER THE TAG OF STEVE GARVEY. Scott wrote that he s aid to Gilbert: "[ have a copy of a letter that was sent to you by a UCLA basketball s tar after he signed a lucrative pro contract The letter states the athlete was paying over $4,500 back to you that you had'given him while he played basketball for UCLA " And Gilbert replied, according lo Scott: "Are you going lo use that letter., UCLA would have to return four NCAA cham pionshlps. Whal I did 1s a total v10lalion of NCAA rules .. Seou Runs 3:53~8; Bono ereaks Record From AP Dlspatc:hes OSLO. Norway -UC Irvine product Steve Scott r ecorded a lifetime best or 3:53.8 ln the mile as he pushed Kenyan Wilson Wa1 gwa to a blis tering 3·53.2 as seven runners finished under the once-magic four mmute barrier Tuesday night at the Bislt't Carnes track and field meet Scott. who had sped to a 3 53 9 in the Mc~t of Chnm~lons at UCI March 25, w11o; third in the tight ly contested event as Tanzania's Filbert Bay!, the world record bolder, was clocked m 3 53 s Following Scott were Britam's Frank Clem ent <3 H 2 l. Dr1la1n'r, John Robson (3 !W 3>, New Zealand's Dick Quax <3:.57.5) and J erald Jones of the United States (3:57.9! SCOTT'S COACH AT UC Irvine. Len Miller, was very pleased wlth his performance. .. t will never be surprised al nnythlng he does, .. Miller said today. "lf he can step off, the plane one day and run that well the next, it's hsrd to say how fas t he will run r <'xpect to see ~ome very rast times for him this summer "I .f'~I he ho~ the potential to break the Ame rican rt'('Ord at tin)' ti mt-.. Scott w1U run 1n a meet in Helsinki, Finland Thursday. then in Stockholm. Sweden 1'uesday before returning lo nm against Russia In Berkeley July 7. M F.ANWHILE, H EN R Y RONO, another Kenyan, set !'Us fourth world record this year. l"lnlshing with a furious kl~k. Rono won the 3,000 meters In 7 32 l. lowcri~ by 3.1 seconds the old record of 7·35 2 set by Brendan Foster of Britain on Aug 3, 1974 ·'The Bislet Recortan track was line. the weather cond1t1ons ~xcellent and the crowd ma~vclous." said the Kenyan runner. althouah he admitted. "this 1s not my fa vo r ite distance" "I LIKE 111£ LONGER races better, hu\ l f It fine and went after that old record," Rono said. "l think It would be oossi· ble to push the 3.000 meters record to about 7 29 H I'm l)rt11Sed." Kono ran the tmat 400 meters in 59 seconds and the last 200 meters m '1:16 seconds Earlier thls sdson Rono set world records ror lhe 5,000 and 10,000 meter~ and the 3,000 met.-r steeplechase Shortly before Rono out· Stt SCOTT, Paie 82 Gilbert, who branded Scott's a llegation "a gross falsehood." said In a Los Angeles Times story : "I never received or saw a copy of the letter that Scott re· fers to. 1 know nothing about It. Nor have t ever received any money from an athlete " Morgan said he knew nothing of s uch a letter and pointed out that UCLA ha s been "thoroughly" Investigated twice by the NCAA In the past 12 years Scott said he would produce the letter only i( Gilbert sues him for libel. adding, "Then he would be ll'le one that busted UCl,A. not us " .... ~ ........ Pop Cone B~ak Wom('n ·s golf sens ation N ttncy Loper. t ook s ome time off to visit an amuse m(•nt park prior lC' go\n·! at't<•r he r sixth LPGA title She fai led. but will try to -.turt u n e w o ne this weekend al Noblesville. Ind. in the Maynov..cr Classic ' ~ .. .. 82 01'1l V Pll O T W~news1v Junlil :llJ t978 Byrnes on 13: We Can't Panic The impact of the pussage of Propos1t1on 13 fluctuates and seems to be a day-to-day item ror many schools and.one sedor- the CIF Southern Section office-has been deluged wath telephone inquiries . Although CIF Commissioner Tom Byrnes and his.staff possess no magic wand to remedy problems created by possible cutbacks m funds for schools. they have come up with some relle.r in t!te form of four items aimed at boosting member schools' fmanc1al situations A 21st BASKETBALL GAME wall be allowed for boys and girls in the form or an alumni game. Admission can be charged at the football scrimmages. Awards will continue at the $10 Umit. rather than the recently approved hike to $20. And the 8 cents ~r student dues for the 78·79 campaign have been dropped <which amounts to $240 for a school wtth an enrollment of 3,000). . . . Aside from those pennysavers, the football pre-conditiorung period will be extended from three to five days <Aug. 28-Sept. l) On the surface. the CIF's actions seem a drop m the bucket hut 1t 's more than nothin,:: ·w e haven t come up w1lh a lot of an~wer!>, says Byrnes, but we can t paruc on this thing. It's going to <·all for some mnovat1ve and creative thinking throughout the schools. We can't just sit back and say we can't do anything be<:ause that won't accomplish anything " BYRNES DOES NOT see th~ CIF. playoffs being effected at this point and maintains the playoffs will go on. But he adds .. "We have a fluid condition and all you can do is operate on the facts as they are today. Right now there has not been a single school cancelling an event. I really don't see varsity sports being TOM av1tN1u effected by this." says Byrnes. . Among tht! possibilities this fall will be boosters clubs being Jsked to provide more fin ancial backing. but Byrnes does not see Lhis as a hazard . ··Boosters clubs or organizations cannot pay coaches' salaries They can dohate monies to a school for the school's prerogative. "THERE'S ALWAY an inherent danger when people give money But the Parochial schools have been doing this for a long tame and they seem to be able to maintain control." Would .Byrnes recommend coaching staffs.~ limited to .a certain number tu alleviate one school ga1mng a n unfair advantage over another without a heavy community backmg? · 1 don·l think so ... !>ays Byrnes. "It's always been a ~cho:<>l's l·ho1re in the past and limitations can only lead toward med1ocnty "Resides. the number of coaches don't necessarily mean the ht'st program · NOR DOES HYRNES see a need to curtail summer pro· grams "Keeping kids busy seems the lesser of two evils." says Bnnt>s ··Th<'rl' :.ire some who make a big mistake with overem ptws121ng But on the oth<.>r hand I can't believe locking gyms 1s0 ~oing to help a community "Therl' arc two ways to handle adversity. You can become pet· tv. sm <tll and d<.>fianl. Or you can close ranks and suck it up." · The bottom hne of all this, and the overwhel.mmg co~sens':ls among many we·vc d1scu!>SC'd It with, 1s that varsity athletics will not be a thing of the past. Latest LA Plan Network to Back Olympic Games? '-LOS ANGELES <AP> The prt\'ate comm1tt<'e working to bring th<" 1984 Olympic Games to Los i\ngeh•s has announced its latest plan to safeguard the city from I m:.1nt1al los~ that the network wanning the right to televise the Games guarantee a $50 million backup fund "ll will provide an ins ulation against any possibility or calling -0n t axpayers for funds if for any rea so n expenses exceed revenues." said Howard Allen. president of the Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce and a member of the seven-man com m it tee a ppo1 nted by Mayor Bradley SP EAKING AT A news con ference Tuesday, Allen and com· m1ttee chairman John Argue ... aid the S50 million guarantee would be S<"parate from the estimated $100 million to $150 m1lhon the telev1s1on rights arc expected to com mand The amount nf the network guarantee could be modified de pending on how much financial <lid 1s forthcoming from oth<"r pnvatf' cntc•rpnse or the federal government In n'turn. Allen said, tht.' network wou ld appoint a watchdOJ! committee to monHor expenditures on a weekly basis so the tclev1s1on executives will have some advance warning of any deficit AT LEAST ONE network. NBC. has expressed willingness to explore lhe possibility of un derwriting the Games, and Argue, who is also head of the Southern California Committee for the Olympic Games. said he believed the other petwor ks would go along . However, Allen stress~ the co mmittee's~ bel ief t hat the Games would "be profitable by e1ny standard of rcasonability" and that the fund would never be used. He pointed out that the $1 mi llion deficit Montreal in· curred for the 1976 Games was due to its costly cons truction program -Olympic s tadium, pool complex, village and other facilities whic h Los Angeles would not need to build. Meanwhile, Argue described as "a misunderstanding" a re· port from Switzerland quoting International Olympi'c Com· mittee executive director Moni- que Berlioux as sayin g negotiations were "deadlocked" and that the roe was waiting for Los Angeles "lo budge a little bit .. "l'M NOT GOING to dignify 1t !the report> with a call to her ." hc said "I just don't believe it." lie said the IOC is in the pro· c·ess or considering the negotiat- ing committee's latest proposal to b ring the Games to Los Angeles. That proposal, presented at a recent meeting in Montreal, would exclude t he city entirely from the contract to host the Games and thus absolve it of any financial liabihty f 'rom Page BI ANGELS TRIUMPH. • • Royals' Paul Sphttorff <9·6> The series concludes Thursday niJ.~ht with Angel rookie Dave Frost <0·1 I penciled m to start against Doug Bird <3-3) By Dave Cunnlngham * ANGIL NOTI' ROOlle lhlrd IMMm•n , •• ,.., ..........,., ..-t>o "'" llllllno 111 _._ 1ur1119 llq.om<1nl\ 1n Ill• ltll lhUmb. ••Yt "" "•ould .,. rf!IKly to ,,turn lo lhl' ll~up after '"" Alt ,,., DrH• July 10. n H• QOI ,,,. 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II> Wit\On,11 .ab r 11-. 4 000 4 1 1 I s 0 1 0 s 1 1 1 l 1 1 I 4 0 I 0 '0 0 0 1 0 0 0 ' 1 , 0 •• r II bl L-r .. u•. 11 4 0 1 0 R Miiier, cl 5 0 I O Be>slo<k. ti 1 I I 0 S.ylor."" 4 o 1 O R Jacuon,Jb JI o 0 Fairly, 11> 3 I O 0 Cll•I•. u 3 0 0 0 Solllta, pll O O O o Audi, 1>11 I I 1 4 Mulllnlkt, u O O O O Grltll, 711 J t 1 O OoWftlnQ, c 4 O 0 0 Yotll> lS •9• Tot•h 37$•• IC•~Hl City 010 300 000-<I C.lllornla 001 000 .0• \ E Otl• F Wlllle OP Ce llfo•nl• I l08 Ken.o City•, C.tl!wnla • J8 G 8 rett, Wiiton, Bo•loO I-IA Olll (111, M<Aae "I. Rudi Ill 58 W11\0n Pet~k BolOr If' HR•• H IO 11.ANSAS CffY lf'On.tra 61/J ) \ • Mlft90tl IL,t )I 1111 1 0 O CALffl01tNIA K 8relt J \ • 4 I Orlffin tw M l • J o t J l,.alt0<11e J I 0 0 I I hn l allletl'I• 111 t411P Grltll Ul'I l .onardl WP L-rCIJ T 1 U A 20,4U .. #',....Page Bl DODGERS .. po1ntedfortheteam,"hesa.id. "tr~ we had won tonicht, I think it would have really helped us out l't>r therestoftbeyear. • The Dodgers will try to send Burt Hooton {6-6) to the mound t onight to face Atlanta's Phil Niekro C8-8) Hooton was struck o n the rig ht elbow during pregame drills and may not be able to start as scheduled. "We'll just have to wait and see," said Hooton. IC Hooton cannot make it, Lasorda indicated that 21-year· old rookie sensation Bob Welch would get the not. Also Reggie Smith, angry at being held out of Tuesday's game, figures to be back in the sla rting Uneup tonight. * * * LOSANO.LIS ATUUfTA L-s.Jb Ruuoll I\ Garvn, lb Cey, lb O Boer. 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UCl's Top Priority: Fond Ra~sing Basketball Program Needs Upgrading -Dempsay By ERNIE CASTILLO Ol U. ~ Pllee Staff Linda Dempsay doesn't plan a ny sweeping changes in the direction of UC Irvine's athletic program now that her tem· pora ry r ole as direc tor of athletics has become a full-time one. But she has m ade one im - portant discovery. Her s uccess depends as much upon her ad· ministrative abilities as her salesmanship. "As we look towards next year, the No. 1 priority is fund raising," says Dempsay, who of. a<jds. '.'Sometimes it's amazing how many times I can discuss the success of our tenms team with a person who had no idea we had one " WHIL E SEE KIN G to m aiJltai n the status quo. Dempsay did say that extra c•f fort has been and will continue to be concent rated on basketball After 10 years of suc<'ess in Divis ion II (small collegesJ. UCI 's basketball team won just two Pacifi c Coast Athletic Assn games in its first outmg as <i ficlally begins as c hairperson of the UCI physical education de· partme nt a nd director of ••• athletics July 1. A MEMBER OF the school's faculty since its inception m 1965, Dempsay was an A.O. with an asten sk <acting) this past year while Dr. Raymond H. Thorn ton was on sabbatical leave After a n ation-wide search to find a re placement for Division l entity. By contrast most of the other sports made the adj\.tstment smoothly With championships m cross country, track and field and men's tenms. UC I was the only PCAA school to win more than one conference crown. "Some people feel we're favoring basketball but 1 don't look al it as a c hange 1n direction.·· Dempsay said "We've s upported all the other sports on their high level. The needs of the basketball program a ren't being met on the level of the other programs ." THE PCAA, for the most part. 11> predominantly a basketball- football conference and in l974 dropped two members because they were unable to field 0 1v1sion I football teams. The requirement was later dropped, enabling UCI lo end its role as an mdependent Irvine does not now have. nor will it field in the foreseeable future, a football team "l love football although l 'm afraid they 'r e going to kill somebody or destroy the sport if <See UC IRVINE, Page 83) T hornton. who resigned in May, ~------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~ UC I officials found they had to look no further than Crawford Hall. "Phi losophically, I really don 't see any difference in the pro· ~ram ." says Demps ay. "Our goal is to have a strong Division I program and I think we're al ready part way there on the basis of how we did this last year. "But." she adds with the hard realization of finances, "the only way to reach that is through the generation of income " DEMPS'1\Y ESTIMATES that half of the $400,000 budget should be derived from gate re· ceipts and private contributions and admits that a major part of her job is campaigning for com- munity support and recognition . "There's been a great deal of review or the program and the whole structure this year." she says. "As they (members of the community> become more in· volved and we make a conscious effort to involve the m. I don't think there's any question that we '11 get added Interest and sup. oort. "It's visibility. promotin1 the program, publicizing the pro· gram to gain awareness,'' she I',.._ Page Bl SCO'IT. • • classed a strong field, Sam Ongeri, chairman or the Kenya Amateur Athletics A!lsoclation. -said the distance runner should "take things easy" l'br a while ONGERI SAJD RONO could jeopardize hls chances of win· ning medals for Kenya In the All·Africa Games in Algiers and ihe Commonwealth Games In Canada in August if he did not scale down his schedule. .. ..... BELTED 78-2+2 FIBERGLASS TIRES • 78 series profile • 2 belts fiberglass • 2 plies polyester • tnstallatlon included 4/$110 Reg. F.E.T. Size Price per tire E78x14 38.99 ea. 2. 19 F78x14 39.99 ea. 2.34 4/$120 Reg. F.E.T. Size Price per tire G78x14 41 .99 ea. 2.47 G78x15 41 .99 ea. 2.55 4/$125 Reg. F.E.T. Size Price per tire H78x15 44.99 ea. 2. 76 4/$130 Reg. F.E.T. Size Price per tire L78x15 48.99 ea. 3.05 Salas prices effective Sunday. June 25 through Tuesday,.July 4 Use your JCPenney charge, Master Chargee or Vlaa*/BankAmerlcard• Size A78x13 Reg. Price 31.99 ea. F E.T. 1 71 ea. Quantities l imited to stock on hand. Su l ei man Nyambui o f Tanzania was second in the 3,000 Tuesday, finishing in 1 :40.3. Third was Nick Rose of Britain in 7 :40.4, followed by Rod Dixon of New 7.ealand In 7:41.1 ond I ~ .. • e Vioeas. ~'ue ry Knut Kvalhelm of Norway In --·.,., 7:44.3 -·--- American Morty Liquori was ~ sevenlhin7:57.6. tf/iil. American Maurice People~ ~ped to a 46-second clocklnll to SANTA ANA: win tbe 400 meters while Jeff BUENA PARK: ,,,, iP!'~~~ eive ,...,. 11,.,lef No ouo C•ea• PIN•·<>M<10~,. J 1erle or the United St1te1 won L-~-":.,".!~:.!o.1:.:•:,"0'l:w:.:',,...:.;Sund:119:'::~:.,::'•=.,:~:;•:. .. __ " ____ ...:.;· °""":::.:-=~:cs.:"'~'.:•:;•::.•.:.• ...::s.-.::;:.:.";:.'::.~.:;:'•.:.• _______ •.;'°.;.1_._• --"'-'-"r_o._,_•_10_1_._• ---~--"''-'--'"-'-_. the 1,!500 meters ln 3·U .O. , • I , TENNIS I PEOPLE IN SPORTS ED McCANN PETE CHANGALA Athletes Honored McCa~ Clumgala Gain Al£.CIF Mission Viejo High's Ed Mccann and El Toro Higb's Pete Cbangala have been chosen to the All·CIF 3·A Baseball team as selected by the Citizens Savings Athletic Foundation board. McCann was named to the second team infield, while Changala is a third team choice in the outfield. Player of the year Is Lynwood High pitcher Todd Holmes, who posted a 14·1 record and an 0.90 ERA. McCann was a multi-purse star, batting .413 with seven doubles, two homers and 14 RBI. Additionally he fashioned a 1.98 ERA as a pitcher , striking out 43 and shutting out four opponents in accumulating a 7-3 record. In the first round of the playoffs, McCann turned No. 1 seed Glendale Hoover, which had three players on the All-CIF team, on six hits in a 4·1 victory. Changala batted .362 for the season and had 16 RBl credited among his21 singles. one double. one triple and two homers Changala hit .4-08 in the South Coast League and played error less defense, in addition lo stealing 10 bases * * * * * * '°l"ITNm tnl SIP•• Jetton, Monte••" •lA y h 1. .... .,. ... 1( ..... Mllrtl Cl Inf-Ed McC...n, Mlulot! Viejo "' Sr. P-0.ve LHper, VIII• P•rk ... , Sr OF-G•ry KOUKk, Glendalr Hoov~r ~I Sr P-Todd Holmtt, L.,,._ It I Sr OF Al1n Scnvu. LomPo< 460 St P-MIU W•rffft, FU41ffl0'! 1•·1 Jr OF-Mike MoretlO. Ma9nolra •II Sr C ·Kent ~Y. MOfttcl.,r ~ Sr Ut-Ch•d B1\Mp, Collon ~' Sr 18-Jay Retcl, Lyn-SAi So 28 Jett Vfh4, Fullerton .S11 Sr Tlltrct Tum 38-C.rlosG¥cta, LomPo< '31 Jr p Doug Rut"9r10<d, Burt>en' 1-1 Sr ss-o. ... Atnnon. ~II• '11 Sr P-Steve FOf'eman, L• Mlrilda 9' Sr. OF-.. ln ~-ttky, Warren 38' Sr p Jell Blanke<>Sh•P. El Ooro>dO 7 3 Jr OF-Kevlr1 T•yk>r, Clntwelt S&l Sr p Ru\ly Conerly, Ramona 11 Sr Of'-Jol\n Ovlsl-. Troy •SJ Sr '-Ju•n Quintero, Glendale Hoover -Sr Ut-lke VMldltrbKo, BrN-Otlnd• 01 Jr t~-Mlke BeUder, Mora Cost• JSt y Sec-Te-. Inf Steve BMntt, LA M"..U 311 Sr -8ob leiu. Glendolle Hoovrr .. J Sr Inf-Larry I.ft,~ Lu•s Ol>t\QO fOI Jr -L•ny HIOs. LA Quinta IOJ Sr Inf Larry Davis, un1enn1a1 . .is Sr -Goco Will«le<ley. Mir• Cost• IOJ Sr 01"-Pef•CN .... I•. El Toro .3'1 Sr. C-J1m Joh,,_., LynWOOd 319 Sr OF Earl Mlll•r. !>an LUI\ OO>SPO JSJ Sr 18-1\lvin 0.vls. Rlver"a. North JS-St OF John Pellce. Torrance 3"I J r 11'11-D•v• LIK•s. S.•ann.t Jn Jr UI TOdd Llttmc1n. \Ii Ila Pd,. )19 Sr FromPageB2 UC IRVINE'S DEMPSAY • • • they're not careful," Dempsay says. "I enjoy the sport a lot but it is a big headache as far as :athletic directors are concerned. • "We're not even considering .football at this point. The cost -and expense would just be hor· ..-endous and we have no facility. To start any leaa off, we'd want \o start it off at a competitive level. I can't even estimate w hen and if it might be con- "Bidered. '' Another long range goal is a multi-purpose fa ciliity to replace Crawford Hall. which -seats 1,500. . "THAT'S IN the university's plans sometime but that type of a facility is not a priority item ,right now." Dempsay says. ,"There's no question that down the road il will be since our pre- Goolagong, Evert Have Easy Wins WIMBLEDON. England <AP> -Chris Evert and Evonne Goolagong made short work of their second·round opponents at Wimbledon today. Evert. a two-time Wimbledon champion, played with clocktike precision to oust Sweden's Helena Anllol 6·1. 6·0. Anliot hit flowing ground strokes and often varied the pace intelligently, but al the end, all she had to show for her efforts was 22 points and one game. Everything she did. Evert, the top seed, did a little better. Goolagong, seeded third. beat American Lele Forood 6·0, 6-2, the opening set lasting just 15 minutes. ln the second set. she had a lapse of concentration. and Forood, gaining confidence. s tarted to attack from rni~ court. TUESDAY'S RESULTS -·sSl11t1ltt "l"tltovnd Tom Okker, Ntlherl•ncls. O&f. Onny P•run, New Ztelend, W, W ... 3. 6-2; R1ul A•mi•et, Mexico, def Colin Oll>l•Y. Austr•ll•. t-1, •4, 6-l, Geott MHte"-/\ustrah•, det. Biii S<enlon, U.S 1·S, 6-1. 6.J, 4·1. Ross C..se. Austr•ll•. ~ B Pra-Jou•. Chit•. M. 4-6, 1·•. 6·\. 6-4; Mike ~tte. U.S.. def Vlecllmlr Zednlk, ClecllOSIO••MI•, ... ,, 4-6. 6-3, •·l. Roscoe T•n~. U S • del Ismael •I Shalel. Egypt ••••••••• •·1, ,.,, •·1; Eric Oebltcker, France, def. L. Sanden, Netn•rlands, 6·1. 8·•. 11·3, H , 6'3, Kim WArwlck, Austr<llla, del Gene Mayer, US. 7-S, G-6. 6-0, 16. µ; F•..S McNalr, US , Ciel Cohn Le1'"4!r, AU'>tralla. 6-3. I s. 6·4; Tom LeoNrd. us . drf Pnll McN•mH Aust••l1•, 6-l, 6-4, 6-3; V•n Wlnltsky, U S. Ml Brun~. US ,6-1.6-3,4-l> ... l JOf\en Krtell, Soulh Afn~. cltf Tim Wilk Ison, us . 6-4, l·S 6-3 J•n S1m1>eu, C.zechOstovakta, def A Jarr•U. Britain. r s. I 6, W . 6·3. Brian Te11<11er. u .s .. clef 801> Lult, U.S., 6·4, to-4, J.to, 6·1; John Newcome>e. Austrell•. def O•I• ColllnQs, Austr•I"" 4-6, l·S. l·S. 6·2; J ROY•-. Ind••. clel G.oH Halcler C•n•da. 1·4, 6-J, 6·2, 6-2; Er11t Van Diiien, US drl John McEnroe, US. l ·S. 1-l>, I 9, 6-4. 6-l. Gu11lumo v11 ... , Aroenttna. def. St•n sinun. us .... 6-l.•·l WotJek Fll>ak, Poland, def J L Clero, Argentine. 6 J. l·S. l·S: Jaime Follol, Cnlle, del. Jan l(odes. ClKhO\IO•lk•a, 6-2, 6 I, NI retlr•d. R•y Rullels, AU\tralla. del Jolln Pa1sh, Brlldln, 6-3. 6-4, 61, FrflW McMiiian, South .. trlca. dt'I Rick Faoe•. Us. •·I, 6-1, 6·1, Y•nnlck Noah, Franct, def. R1c11roo Yc11a. Ecu.dof'. S-4, H , 4 1. 6-t. UM Hen' Pfister, U S • ck'f A Flllol, Chile, l>·I. 6-1, 6-1. Bob Horwltt, So"'" Afrlc•. Clef c;.orgr H¥Ole, U S .. U , s-7, 6--4 6·) 6·1. St~ Docherty, u S . oet Artl!U< Ashe, u S ""· ...,, 6·3. S·7, Is. Tom Gorm.tn, US . def Ghrts Lew1>, New Zuland. 0·6, f>.2, •·6, l·S, l>·l , Antonio Zt19a.elll, Italy, del Chris kech<!I, Australia. 1.~. •·6. 2-6. 9-1. 6-1. Phil ~t. Australia, def T0rty Roche, Austra11a, 6·4, l·S, • 6. •I>, 1 S: Bob Glltfnan, AU\tr•ll• def Dav•d Lloyd, 8rll••n. 6·2 6·1, •·I. Robin Drysdale, Britain, def. J.,1 Hrol>ek. CrechO\IOVllll<ia. 2-6. 2-6, l>-4. I> J. 6-1 J""n Fe.Yr•, Brli.ln, del Jo<'I Balley, US, .. , f>..4, 6-4, R•cl< Fhher, US , ~ Jon C.u1olle, France. 6 3, 6 3, 6 I Women's Slntles First Round M1ma J•u~vf'<. Yu90ilav1a1 dt"f Florent• Mlhat Roman1(1, I> 3. 6-1, Kerry Rr1d, Australla. oef Lu Mlonoptl\ U 5., 6-1 l>-4 Lelr Fo<aoo U S drl BrlQltte Simon. FrarKt, 6 0. 6 I. Heten.o Anllot, Sw_,,, Otl F•-rlC Thll>IUll France, 6.t, .. 2. H&N Str<tehano•a. CtKhO\IOvaMI•. dt!I C•noy Reynolds, U.S .. 6-1, 7·S Brlgl11e Cuypers. Soulh Alrlca. def K•lhY Ha•IM, US • •ri. 6-0 Dianne Fromholtr. Austraha, drl l(at1a El>· t>lng!laus, west Germany, J ·6, 6·3. Regina Marsikov•, CtechOSlovakla. def va1e>-lt ZI~ fuss. U s .. H . 7 S, Suoe B•ker, Britain, oet. Ann K1yomu,., US. t.-4, 6-1; St•cv ~roolln. u 5 • def Anne H~. Brll•ln, 6·1 • 1, Martin• N••r•tllo"•· US , def Juhe Anthony. us .... 1, l>·l . Sue ~on, Brlt•ln, def P•ullna Peled, lsreel,6-2,6-• TODAY'S MATCHES wom..,·ss111111es Virgi nia Rutlcl. Rom•nla. def Winnie WooldrldQe, Britain. 6-1. 6 1 Franc0tse Durr, France, Otf FtO<ell• con1u lh Ur119uay, 6·1, 6.0 ll•na Kloss. South Air•<•. Gel Cnris O'Neil ,-ustrtllia, fr1, • 1 5"ond RO<Nld Chro\ E,,_rt. U.S. Ot!f Helena Anl1ot, S-n. b 1, f>..O Evonnt' c.oo1 .. oono. AUSlrlll• def Lele FMood, US., lt-0. 6·2 NEWPOKr FALLS IN VOLLEYBALL sent facilities are very limiting TOR RANCE-u ni versity "Our gymnasium goes from LINDA OEMPSAY High's summer team captured s ix m the morning to one at night. Our handball courts are the national prep champ1onsh1p · d l I h doesn't have to worry What peo· of the U.S. Volleyball Assn. Sun· ma equa e. our poo as even day with a 15-13, 16·14 decision become inadequate. rt 's pie don't realize is that some of scheduled day in and day out but our activities have to be funded over Newport Harbor in the 16· le I t 't 1 by outside sources. and-under division. our wa r po o earn can Pay Paul Kubas. the tourney's there because it doesn't meet "There's no question . · .. standards." we're very dependent upon out· most valuable player. led the All of which brings Dempsay side income and 1f we're going University attack. along with b k to ( d. to compete on the Division 1 all -tournament selection Sam ac square one-un mg. Pedro. level and maintain our present "MANY PEOPLE assume stature, then we're got to be sue-All -tourney honors also went that the university has a great cessful with generating com· to Newport Harbor's Kyle deal of money and that at . .:..:h.:..:le.:..:t.:..:ic~s __ m_u_n_i t.:.y_s_u..:.p..:.po_rt_._ .. ________ s_1a_u_g_h_t_e_r_a_n_d_G_r_e_g_S_u_l_li_v_a_n_. _ __, Stars Top • Smashers SEATTLE -The Orange County Stars had lo come from behind a two-game def· icit to defeat lhe Seattle Smashers Tuesday night before 1,916 in International Volleyball Association play here . Tt\e Stars dropped the first two games. 7·12, 8· 12. with Jeff Reddan of Seattle hilling hard s mashes from the right s ide. The Stars came back with 12-4, 12-7 wins in the next two games and won the deciding t1e·breaker, 6-4 . Jay Hanseth played his first complete game for the Stars. The Stars travel to Tucson Thursday nigbt lo meet the Sky, then host Seattle Saturday night (7:30) at Fountain Valley High. Learn the ugly A lltW W• iMt _, .... f t b t ucltl11CJ-W"""' It , • ...., . ac s a ou wax. CJ'"'"CJ .. •dk+t· '" .... ••• CJrab• tri--4 ,.it .. •h: , lllat • ...,.... A.1td ••• bt<o.,•n 1Mbtd6td w1HI tritty perffcl•' Hlof c• ec~ ~MO ,.11.t. Mow l•crn Ht• facts obout Ming. MlllCJ !Hlh • "'"" Oft , .. , that , .... Hw cart c•'t -tch-• tttl11• tttot's bri~ ti.arr •1 w .. jolt •••llobl•. lndt~d9ftl ~th pr••• It. M111CJ --+hs ,_ ,.,.., pol1tt to • '"lrror·llltt UNM wl thOllt eMll9 ,..._., ,_...... or coeffllCJ'· II 1tt •tr 11ted • wo1 .. AH th• ....... , so 11ld1 It eclllllllf NSbh dlrt, trit Oftd 'ollvt•k. Whll• wu Gth cMler by the dtrr, Mf .. IMftH -. •Wt )lltt ...... A1td If ,_ J .,_,. c•, ,_ t• ........ MfJ.,._ ...,_. .. ,.... °'°"' ...... . ,....... •r .... it .. fOllr ......... ....., c..ew ... fw • ....,, .... •-"""4o.. .,_ ............................. -. tt.tn•, ........... , ... THE f ULL CIRCLE OF AUTO BEAUTY ' J Wednesday. June 28. 1978 DAILY ftlLOT 8 3 Terror for. Kentucky Coach Quake Shakes Hall From AP Dispatches LEXINGTON, Ky. -Joe B. Hall. who had to battle pressure while coaching the University of1. Kentucky to a national collegiate basketball title this past season, says be was faced with a different kind of pressure when he endured 15 mmutM or an earthquake while accompanying his team on a re· cent trip through Japan. "I was thinking to lll.YSell. 'ThisJs the dum· best thing you've ever done. coming all the way to Tokyo to find an earthquake and die.• .. Hall said. "I resigned m yself to the fact I was going to die." Hall had lived through such terrors before. In 1969. be accompanied Adolph Rupp to Alaska to conduct basketball clinics for the armed forces and their party was jostled by a quake. "The one in Tokyo was worse," Hall said. "I can't say they're enjoyable things to experience, but they are exciting. I much prefer my excite- ment on the basketball court, though.'• Hall was in lhe middle of a news conference on the 42nd floor or Tokyo's tallest hotel when the earthquake hit. \ ''There was nothing we could <fl> but wait it out," he said. "The elevators weren't working, but I heard that some people ran down 26 flights of stairs to escape. "My players were on the 31st floor. We also had a party or 59 people from back home who were down in the lobby. They ran out into the streets when the earthquake hit." ----Quote of the Da,,---~ California Angels outfielder Joe Rudi: "J can't blame the fans for booing me the last couple of days. I'd boo. loo, if I paid for a ticket and saw the show I've been putting on. The fans and writers here have been good to me." Ebewhere in S ports ... OLYMPICS -Gold, silver and platinum coins will be offered by the Soviet Union to com· memorate the 1980 Olympics. A set of all 39 coins will sell for more than $4.000. A set of just the 28 silver coins wilt"cost more than $600. BASKETBALL -The estranged wife of Harlem Globetrotter star Meadowlark Lemon re· ceived a conditional discharge Tuesday at her sentencing for stabbing her husband in the neck . Willye Lemon received probation after stabbing her husband in the neck with a five- inch steak knife on a New York City street . . . Idaho coach Jim J arvis has resigned in the wake of an NCAA investigation , of alleged recruiting infractions MEADOWLARK LEMON •• Auburn has lured East Tennessee Stale coach Sonny Smith. Smith suc · ceeds Paul Lambert, who died in a motel fire this spring . f 'rona Page BI HRABOSKY ... 'Hrabosky says. "It's something I have to do to get mentally ready. "THE KUNKEL T m NG was just one isolat- ed instance, but most umpires understand and don't give me trouble," says Hrabosky. "Some people say it's good for baseball because it creates controversy and fan interest." As for lhe Royals. they don't care if he stands on his head. just as Jong as he keeps pitching well. "When we got Hrabosky, we felt we gol tbe best lefthanded relief pitcher in the National League," says Manager Whiley Herzog. "He's what we needed. And there's no question he adds some excitement." After the trade. the Kansas City publicity department started cranking out releases which said Hrabosky was the player who could finally put the Royals ma World Scnes. "I like that,'' the Mad Hungarian says. "I thrive on pressure. And I'd like to prove they were right.'' BASEBALL -Vida Blue scattered six hits for his 11th vit'tory and J ack Clark belted a inch·hit grand slam home run to lead the San Francisco Giants to a 9· l victory over the San Diego Padr es ... Hou s ton knuckleball pitcher J oe Nlekro held Cincinnati to six bits in seven innings as the Astros de· feated the Reds, 7-4 . . . El Toro resident Graig Nettles slugged a two-run homer in the 14th Inning to lift the New York , Yankees to a 6-4 win over GllAIGNl!TTLH Boston . . • Pete Vuckovfcb and Buddy Schultz combined on a seven·hitter and Gany Te mpleton hit a home run to pace St. Louis to a 2--0 win over Pittsburgh . . . Greg La ztnskl smashed a home run off Hal Dues as the Philadelphia Phillies blanked the Montreal Expos. l ·O . . . Rusty Staab's lwoJrUn homer highlighted a six·run first inning that carried Detroit to a 6-1 victory over Cleveland ... Yankees catcher Thurman Munson has been suspended for three games for bumping umpire J im McKean last week in Detroit ... Dick Williams has been signed to manage the Montreat Expos for two more years ... Former third base greats &Idle MaLbews and Brooks Robinsoa have been na'med honorary captains for the 49th All·star game in San Diego July 11 ..• The Yankees have placed WUUe Randolph on the 21·daydisabled list retroactive to June 23 . . . Montreal activated pitcher Stan Bahnsen . . . Cleveland sliced Al Fitzmorris from the roster to make room for pitcher r aut Reuschel. HORSE RACING -The family of Robert Pmeda. a 25-year-old jockey who was killed 1n a four-horse spill at Piml1co Race Course, filed a $10 million wrongful death suit Tuesday in Federal Cour t in Baltimore. Pineda was aboard East Bunny Mine and died of multiple head and intemaJ injuries less than an hour after the mishap. Plaintiffs charge Easy Edith, a horse in front of Pineda 's at the time of the spill, was drugged 1toH•T PINEDA with a pain killer. which pre· vented the jockeys t rom noticing there was something wrong with the horse. HOCKEY -The fate of the World Hockey As- sn. may be decided today. National Hockey League officials met until the early hours or the morning, ttten adjourned with a final session scheduled today as they considered expansion by absorbmg some WHA teams. Under consideration are Edmonton. Quebec, New Engla.nd and Wln- mpeg Sport•on Radio, T'1 RADIO: Tomght -Baseball -Dodgers at Atlanta. 4:30. KABC (790); Kansas City at Angels. 7 : 30. KMPC (710); Sbccer -Los Angeles Skyhawks at California Sunshine, 7:30, KGIL (1260). TV: Tonight -Soccer -Los Angeles Aztecs at New York Cosmos. 7:30. Channel 11 <taped): California Surf at Chicago Sting, 8 o'clock, Chan· nel 9 <taped>. 12 ANNUAL SO. CALIFORNIA OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS SHOW June 29 -July 2 Looking for a business of your own A marketplace of full & part-time business opportunities for Men & Women Investments from '50000 to '60.000~ THE INN AT THE PARK HOTEL 1855 So. Harbor -Anaheim, CA Gen. Adm 12~0 1 ·9 pm da11v -1 ·6 pm Sun Couples admitted '°' ••• aftec 1 p m ThUf'S • Fn & Sat Baseball Standings MALCOLM REID Mgr. says: LEASE A BOBCAT . forOftly AMERICAN LEAGUE East Division W L Pct. GB Boston New York Milwaukct' Baltimore Detroit Cleveland Toronto 51 22 .699 42 30 .583 811'2 41 31 569 9112 40 33 .548 11 35 35 500 141~ 32 38 457 17112 25 47 .347 2517 West Division 39 32 38 33 37 36 Texas Kansas City Angels Oakland Chicago Minnesota Seattle 35 38 33 39 30 41 26 49 TMMly's Sc- ,. ..... S, kaMa'i Oty ' Toronto 6-9, S.ltlmor'e ,., O.troll 6, Oew•-I New YO<°~ 6, Bo5ton • (14 '""'~' Mllw•-tl. Minnesota• , .... J. Oftl-' C.lllt•OO 10, S..111• • Teuy•, 0 •"'" 549 .535 1 .507 3 .479 5 .458 61h .423 9 .347 15 IC•nsas City ISc>llltOrft , .. , •I ,..,..,, llC11- / •.. " Detroit IWllCo• •·S •nO Sl•to<I I 'I ti C:ltvrlond IW•ll\ SI -PalftOll 4 41, f•n Now Yor-IMtC•ll O·O and Cl•Y t J I ti Mllw•uk" .. wousllne H -C.ld-11 I SI t n 8alllmore <Mc~ I-SI at Toronto (Clancy ' "· n T .. H IJenllln\ ·~I •I 0.kl•ncl ILlftOIMCI t )I, n Chlcaoo (l(f1Y9( 6 Sl •• S.•1tf• IAl>botl )-4) " Only 11• .... ICllfcNled NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W L Pct.GB Philadelphia 37 30 .552 Chicago 36 33 .522 2 Montreal 37 36 .507 :l Pittsburgh 34 36 .486 41/l New York 32 43 .427 9 St LOUIS 28 47 .373 13 West Division San Francisco 46 26 .639 Cincinnati 44 29 .603 2 1~ Dodgers 40 32 .556 6 San Diego 35 38 .479 I Jlh Houston 31 38 .449 131"1 Atlanta 29 41 .414 16 ,.,....,.,,~ D .... " J, Atlanl• 0 New Yorlt 7, CN~t 51 LOUIS? ... PlltSburQ!> 0-I f>hll-lpllla I, MOfttrul O HOllllOll I. ClrKlnMll 4 S•n Fr...c:llCO '· S.n oi.oo 1 T-..Y'•O-• ~ (fo4oat0rl ... , at Allan!• (N...,ro M l n New York !Koosm•n 1·11 at Ch1ceao (Hotum.., 1>21 St Louil 1,,_.r11net t·ll •I Plttll>urQh IBlblrf •·•1." Phll•Cl~lph•" ILonborv 6·51 at Mo11tru1 IStl>Al11.,.. 1.01. 11 C1ncl1>n.,I !Nor,...,. I •I •I Houston tOtllOft ).JI n ~" Fr-1sco 18•rr J 4t •t S.wl Di.oo u-).•>." ~,·,a.-· O-..n •I AU..,ta, n Phllldelptlla •I Cl\ICIQO Ntw YOf'I< •I Plltsbur9fl, n Clnclnl"•tl at Holnlon, n Only "'"" Kflecll,lltd LEASING ••• ALL MAKES ALL MODELS NEW 600 W . COAST HWY.• MIWPORT H.4CH • '46-02'2 OR USED , .., DAILY PtL01 Weelneiday June 28 1978 Surf, Sting Clash Tonight P\18UC NOTICE ll·tMJI • HOTICt TO alaOITOlltS SU .. l!lllOft couaT 01' TMI! UATI! Of' CAl.ll'OltNIA 1'011 tMa COUNTYOl'OUNOE HO A-ttal CHICAGO Al Trost and Les lh1rn·t\ ure doubtful st;arters ai. the Cahformu Surf opens a tour-game trip against th~ Chicago Stmg to111ght in Soldier Field here in North American Soccer Leagut- a,chon 4 IS rt·l'ord but wa:-O \0 3l one point ln the rm .. t meeting of the two teams. the Surf postl'd a 2 1 victory at Anaheim St11d1um v.1th lht• u1d of a goal by l'h1c:oto's Ul'rck Spuld1nl>( wltb other teams in the NASL lie scored a goal in his hrs t game with the Surf but was shut out along with the rest of the team in the las t outing. 'The gamf' will be televised on Chan nel 9 and broadcast on K-ORJ <94.31 by tape delay at 8 tonight Tht> St 1ni; attlll'k. IS led by Karl He11ll G r anitza. On T\I To tdght C'han11~I 9 a f 8 Trost. moved back to a midfield oos1tion when David arrived. is the leading Surf scorer with 12 points followed closely by Dan Counce with 11. Trost missed the last game against San Diego because of a knee injury and Barrett suffered a thigh muscle strain during the last game The Surf is 10·10 and hasn't been below the .500 mark in the standingi. this season Chicago has a dPceptive one of the top scorers in the c1rcu1t California figures to do more scoring with Steve David on the front line David has been the league's leading scorer two of the last three yearswhile Surf coach John Sewell indicated he might put John Jackson back in goal during the trip that also lakes the team to New York. Philadelphia and New England before returning home July 12 against Ft. Lauderdale AP Wlre,>lloto REGGIE STOPPED -Reggie Jackson of the New York Yankees is tagged out at home plate b_y Boston catcher Car lton Fisk un- der the eye of Umpire Ken Kaiser Tues- day in New York. The Yankees won the game in 14 innings. 6-4. lo gain a split with lht' Sox Ill the st.>rie~. Area Tennis Roundup ~Braden Clinics to Begin By HOWARD L-HANDY Of ti• ~lly ~ SuH Vic Braden and El Toro High School arc combining to present the first of an ambitious sports program to bring 80 m1ll1on peo pie into tennis by 1980 The program, designed b.) Braden and ~ponsorcd by AMF Head. Inc . wail kickoff July 8 al El Toro High "This is a bL•uutiful game and we owe it to people to give them an easy entry point and good in· struclion," Braden says "WE'RE STARTING off with 15 people, seven male and eight fem ale. ranging in age from 14 to 33 Each of these people must recruit two friends into the pro· gram. and those two must each recruit two more. and so on. Agt• 1s no facto r. "The only requirement as that part1t'1pantc; must have ltttlc or no tennis experience ... Saturday clinics, conducted by the staff of the Vic Braden Ten· ms College and locetl pros. are rrce to progr<tm participants It 1s an eight-week program with the only char(!c ~mg for tennis balls which the players will keep BRADEN HAS statis tics to prove his point of getting another 50 million people to participate by 1980 and says there are over 1,000 areas in Monday VIC BRADEN Orange and Los Angeles t<mnt~ a lone. Directing the m1t1al program at El Toro are Bob J ohnson. head football and tennis coach, and Allen Jones. an assistant at the school Almost 1,500 youngsters from Southern Cali fornia have been playing 1n the 76lh annual Southern Calaforn1a Juniors sectional thampionsh1ps at Loi. Soaring Dodger Leads Foster NEW YORK IAP1 Hick Monday of the Los Angt.'les Dodgers has taken the lead from Cincinnati's George Foster m the balloting for s tarting outfield berths on the National League team for th~ July 11 All star game. accordm(! to fiJtures re- l eased by Baseball Com 011ssioner Ro-w1<' Kuhn'c; office Mondav One "'eek uf fan l>alloltnR re mams. "-llh the sturllnK teams to be announcl'd Julv 5 Monday has rcc~1ved 943,585 votes lo 941.290 for Foster G ref{ l,..uzins k1 of Philadelphia 1s the No. 3 outfielder with 833,568 The leaders in the ra<'es for the other fivc starting position!> remained the same catcher Johnny Bench, sttond baseman )oe Morgan . s hortstop Dave· ( . .'oncepclon and third lrnseman Pete Rose. all of Cincinnati, and first baseman Steve Gorvt>v of Los An~cles · The mO!'ll rccent tabulations boo9ted the totul votes cast an Jline yeal'8 or fan balloting over the 50 million mnrk to 50.402,534. A II st~rt~rs. exrept pltcber11. 'are !>elected by fani. The All . tar manager~ wlll be Biiiy Martin of the N~w York Yankel's for lhl' Aml'rit•an Lea~ue and Tommy l.asorda of the Los Angeles Dod~l'r'> for th<• National LeagUl' LPAdfrs aft~ fO\.lr .,..ff._'-hf vol1f'IQ tor IN!! Nallon•I L~"9"" 1•1t All St•• tum CATCH Ii II Johnny 8r"cll C•nclnn•I• I 01' ~1 ~tt•• y ...... Lcn A .......... 7,441 T•d Simmon\ SI l OUIS S&6 osq lloO a-... Ph•t .. dfll)ll1jt lit Ill Carv Cut .... MonlrNI l)t,llJ 8111 POt<frOCM •t1•nt• IH.ll09 .John StHrM N•• y.,,, '1 .,, '°IRST 8ASE Sttwt G•ney, Lo\ An991 .. , l,2U,•U. Dan D' ~•\\Pn C1nonn•h JSJ .4 t\ Ton~ P111•1 MOntrHI 2S4 •IS ltMh Htrn•l\Oel St lOUI\ 1H 111 Woll•• Sl••Qtll P1thburqh l•l.111 Wtlt•t MOl\l61Wl ...... Yo•'· ,. •• ., Boo Wjtf\On Hou•ton 10l 8"l SECOHD IAH Jo• Mor~n Cln<IM"ll 1 OU,111 Ont l.-•. L•' A.1tt•l•s .. ,..,,we, M•nny 111110, Cf\tc~o lA7,I01 Tod Stl""°'t Phll-lpn1". l ... t14 8111 Maal0<•. S<tn ftM(•\CO 11>' Sll "'""'' Sltn rl<tll, P 11l>burQll 71) •ll M1•e T y\On SI LOUI\ 11S.OS• TMIRO 8AS1i P"t R~t. Conc1nn.ttl. 1.18'.SSS M•~• S<11m1<11 PMl•d•IPllla, "°6,1161; llton (•y, L•• A ..... 1.1. S'4,1'4. Sltw Onlt•tr°'· C111c•oo. ,,., .... """ Oatll•r Plttl-llf\, 17l,010; Kall R•IU. SI lOUI\, IU ,UI. l•nnv A6MI•, N•• Yor-104.0l SHORTSTOP D••~ <;C)fl(fll( 10<1. C111clMa1t au 110 l•rr v 80<0••. Pllll-lpll••. MiO n• 1111 Ruu•H, ..... A11991.,, 4'1,-.S, Ivan 0.J•tll\, C111c-.o. KJ.t1' G•rrv 1 •mplolon SI l.oul•. lll.H 7 ,,.,.. T •ve• •\ l"ltltDurQlt. 71" .,i Cllrlt "'P•••• Mo111re•1 10.m OUO'lllLD 1111<11 -•· '-" ,.....,,.,, •0 . .-1. c..ot0t '••tar. C1n<1nnall, '41 1~ Oree l111111111 Pflll-IDflla, tu. wt ...... t"'llll, l..M A"Mltl, "'·"'. ~"' ~-. Pll114Kle1Pfll• 48'S ... IC•" Grit...,, ClnclnNll HJ,161 O•Wil Klnem- ClllCaoo •61.0 7 Dave Par~•' ft•ll•DurClf\ 4A7,•U, CAIM c;...-1mo (1~11u .. t1 ai',f'O ~y M..rt« °'4<41QOJ OJ OU &aka MclrlO. PllllMtlPlll• 40< 1\7 Jtll l11rr-ll1 Al1...,1a t0U07 l'aballl•rns Ral'quct and Sports Club 1n l'ountaan Valley this \\ C<•k THE TOL'RN,UIE11\T, movl'<I from tht• Los Angeles Tenni" Club bt.'l'am.c of thl' growth at ha-; cxp<'racnc:cd an recent years. 1!> directed by Jim Hillman, the executive director of the SoCal Tennis Assol'1at1on Junior de· vclopment program. Hallman is <.1 former haseball star on high :.chool and <:ollegc teams and a pas l n•c re a t1on d c pa rtm enl dtrN·tor an Los Angeles~ Ill' recently dirN'l ed the Seniors tournament at the L1ndborg Racquet Club in llu nl- mgton Beach The tournament ends Sunday .1t Los Caballeros. The California Youth Tenms Foundation will provide free in· :-truct1on al Murdv Park in llunt1ngton Ueach and at the Fountain \'alll'\. Recreation Center in .Jul.,, • At Murd) ·Park. sessions will ht' hl'ld .Jul) 3 7 and July 24-28 from 4'30 6.30 in the afternoon Reg1strat1on is at the park from fl a m to 10 p m . with location at 7000 Norma Dr In Fountain Vallev. sessions will be from July 3l:Aug. 4 and Aug 21 -25 from 1.30 to 3.30. Rcg1slrat1on is al t he center I 16400 Brookhursl St l TOURNAMENT SCHEDULE Thl' Orange County Junior tourname n t will be held tat the Capistrano Racquet Club beginning Monday. More than 300 entries are expected by Dave Wells of the host club in· eluding two from Sweden, the top player from Malta and two from Israel The Laguna Niguel Tennis Club 1s holding a mixed doubles tournament in all d1v1 s1ons IA-0 > ,July 1-4 with cnt ries closed to club members The Balbo~ Bay Racquel Club will host a Member-Guest tourney July 8·9 and 15-16 tn all di vis ion"-A $12 entry fee is be- m~ charJ?ed and at least one mcm berof a team has tc1 hold club mrmberl)hlp TOUR HEY RESULTS Roull\Ol I~ '"'I •n nual Nol•n d01Jblf~ t•nn1\ c•a\.\lt At L•Qut\f llUCll M,.td ,.. Tim O llellly.Off1r-"'"'"•• Mt 8•11 •••-f: ... .,.. Rau I S "'4 8 coo.,..... Nlt ... h del Trl'lwl GOllt·ll.., Devit U , • l , • I BC Lln41• Pac~.11...,., Murplly del 0•1• °""'*' 010 T_, ••.• I • , c Je Re<llem••TI"' Ohlt def G G.l•mon·lltlclt W ... I~ I S. I ~ D Jollft Jull• S~ Ml '-•DA¥e C.rWr .. ~ • 4 Womtn'' A Oer1ruo. Afflllllt·Ell"' lrye111 d•\ 0111 Jel\Mlooo·C.r!a Wltt ... tiart •·I 4'6 ._. 8 JNll ,..._ S Nl(IMM1 cH>I Neu Nl<llelt Na!Kf Sw_.., I•. 4 • & 2. C Oultl "°'""' Jeclllt S"411 O.~lllH -••11-ft•I Hum-I &~ ._. D Mary •rll 1 CeftlpMll 0.1 ..... Cnltr·J 1(1 ... •• • .o Men ' A ,,. • .,. ~•U Tim O'lltlny <lot A,rl Walll Ill kllwlrtl 1·1, •.J ft o ... llellll Mlllt lleflll Clef T"..,. Tr ... , .. .., O.vlt t-3 0-... •·• C-MellMI l(tflNll II" Nlyler «Mt JI"' ftti.tet Jallfl A--7 ti • 4 C JMlft Yelle ....... Tllelc.,.r Oti Ole• CeMeoi-•• llr.,..k"' • J s I • 4, D Jllll &1110-.-D"""w.ty 0o1 Jw 1«1• O•rrel Tawtl .. •t •4 MISSION VICJO C •llCI D fo•1t1M,,.....t C M•n•t $1nQftf < ,_ IM..,.11119\0/I Bt4Khl Oof I M11llH iMIHlon V .. 1a1 ·~ • 1 Doub!" ... , '" IHllfltlftGMf\ 9N<lll df'I Slltllllatt J~ fHllllll~ ... tlff<lll •2 I) < w~·, ........ , C c.wta.. IMl\t-V1-t11 dal , -'-10-"°'ntl I t 4-• ~ NtU•8r9'11ffl 1Hllf'lt"910ft 111•<111 Clel '-"" o.Hfrlt (IW\\IOll Vlt lOl ' 7 • 4 j Coast Area Volleyball Teams Win 11•'1" 11~-.u-rl Ball>O.t S..y CluD o.f SI Creqory 'El Pno. To I ·~). IS•. ~· Ktfl neln Allen IChl<aQOI l~l. IS• SenlDf' Gori• t lt·•nd·Wllderl Orange County Volleyb.lll CluD del Th••• Ai•er. !Pd) 111. ISl, 11<!1 W1IJ0n Com Cir ICll•<•!IO) IS S. IS 1 l•Qun.t Beach aet M11m1 II 11 1S·I. oel N•per~•llt.111 IS·S U·J Glrh llWncl-..,...rl DCvBc c1a11 e ~ Ry.tu 1Cn•<•vo1 IS 6 IS l Top Golf Money Winne r s Tomwa1\0n Anay Beall Jae-N1tKl.tu\ 4 LeP Tr~Y1no S Get y Player 6 Hubert Green I Andy Norlh 8 Boll l(ralierl q H•I~ Irwin 10 Lon Hinkle Tom Wt1~•oot Fuuy loellM Bruer Llelzor II ll IJ t• G11 MO<Qall U J im St"'Of\\ t6 Lou Cr~n.,.,.. 11 Ron CrtMha• II Jerty P•te It 9111 Roor" 70 Jerry He.tr<! ll M.t< McUnoon n Urry Mee;.... 21 Tom IC•I• 1• Jack Renner 1S 1.ty HU\ 16. J. c SnMa 11 John SclV-r 79 Mllltr 8.,IM'r "' o .. v1<1 (;rell.tm )I) G•OC>v (i<IOl'•I JI CeM' L1"lfr l2 How~nl Tw111v '•l Gr,.,, Jont\ 3 Berry l#<kr• JS Mar• H•Yo• 36 E<ISllff<I 17 Wally Arr,l\t•onQ JI Georoa Burns 3' RoODy WIKlkon\ .a Ray Floyo 01 BoDMurcinv o G.,y Kocll •l Oave SIOOlon •• A111n f 111>1• H ..,lev• Melnyk ~ Cllarlt\ C-Sv 47 BoD C,olde' •9 Cr•tO StM!ler •• MIU Morley SO J a. I nm.n 51 L•rrv Nelson S2 POier Oo~lertlul\ Sl Aod Funwttl s; Jim ColDert SS Tom Purtz« S6 Leonerd Thomp\on 57 Boo !.llffn!r SI Jolln MaN!Uty s• Ktotll For9U' Ml Ml-• SUiiivan Alamitos R esults In lt\t Mttttr o• t~ E:.tlc:U• o• SARAH Elll.ABC: !H Pl R'<o N'> ~(Ptt\ed Not•(t '' her&bV Q•Vf'n to crf'd1tor' ndVH'Q <. ldtm\ aq•1n\t lh# S••d Ot<~ Ofln1 lu HIP W•d <•d1M\ In 1M otfl(l' ot 1nf1 <I rrk ot lhtt Atore~•d court or fc pr1unt f"'4"m to 1hP unotir\tQned et t~ olll<t OI JOHN 0 MEYERS, REICH AOEll ~nd CROST " ProfMslonal l 1w Corporal1on JOO So111n PM~ A>tnu~. Su11t 100 Pomona. c.a11101n1a ~llt>•. wh1th lattt' ottH.e ,~th~ plac• at bU\IOf'\) Of the urt~r \•O~d In au '1'.tf ,.,. 11~rt•lntl"Q 10 w1a •Slal• Such <l•t"" w1lh thfo M-c~wry voucrwn mu•t ~ ttlf'<I or Of~~ntea •• 4l0<Ma1a Wttn1n four month\ •fftr tht flf'\t publlullon ot lhl\ nol1c~ D•led Juno t1, ti11 T~ Mpnry Pt-rkin'\ Jr E •KUIO< ol lllr •tit Of W1d 0eC~N'll JOHN 0 M!:YEllS, lllilCM. ADELi. ~ CROSl AllorfloU •I'-'" A PretaulONll c.r-•llooo -South Parto Aw""" 51141• 2ot Pemon•. c;,111.,..... •HM Publ1'\nA! Or•'W\Of' {.Orf'\I 0 .411., P110f June '' '' 1' aM "''" \ 1Ua PUBLIC NOTICE II·~ ,w TWIN¥ ~UftliRIOtl COUlllT 01' T"[ l'lr\t r•et B• Rl<ll For Sutt ~TATli Of'CALl,ORHIA l'OR I 4 •O I 10 • "°· Go T arrllfc 'u" fHa COUNTY 0" ORANGE 10 ao s '°· Oo Clllt• 11 '° '1 e ••<I• NO. A·-, ... ,, 11•1013100 NOT I Ca 0 , HI.ARING 0' SKO<ld race a ...... 101 • 00 l IO l"ITITION flOR ll'lltOIATIE 01' WILL , ~. Aemblln Men ; 00, ) 10, l'l•t ANO '0" LITTl.111 TISTAMf.N· OFl1t.lOO TAAY Tlltnl R..ce-Goed Two 1UO • 00 e,,.,. ot HELEN B STERICf:L, ) •O . L UUV lenu101 • 00, , 14 o.c ..... Cloud Ch•r"'9r, 160 NOflCE 1\ HERESY GIVEN lllal Fourth r•<e C•llforn1A ~tvon. [llZA9£f H STERKEL"'"' lll•d 4 •O, S 00, 2 00, Lii 8111 1..-, UO, .... ••In • •Ullon !Of ProtMI• of Wiii , 60. Ovtr Tlmt,, Ml. u f.-a<t• I• u •fld IOI .. ._. OI un~n Tttt•lfttll ptlO '' 00 tery •lld Ill' ••ftrtn<e 10 .. hlCI\ 1, fltlf'I ••<• Ml CAPf•. • ..O t IO mto• "" lllrtllt• r:iertl<u••"· •1141 lh•I t Ml, Ea Ott. > 00 , ~o WIO•• \ lho llm• Incl Illa<• Ot l\N<JllO IM .. ,.,... lltoOel, I 10 llH l>etn WI lei' July ll •'19. •t •O 00 <;lath ra<t Waywtra ftu, U 10 • IOI on Ille courtroom OI O.paron~nl •O ... s .0. ~ 1(1"4• rtoll \Ml NO , OI Mid tourt. •I 100 C"l¥1( C•f\lor 4 00; llue W!\llt t IO, \1 t ••<t.o Oro•• Wttl 111 1111 C.1ty ot ~Ill• All•. Ct-SI t•lll 1:U SO C•lllOtlllt S.••"111 r1<e Inv lhrtll • 20 O•ltel ,_ n 1'1t t ... 1 '41, finite .. llo J 6iO 7 60 WIU..IAM I! St JOHN, Vlkll\O Anne , ... ,_IV CIH' CIOlllll rece Plft I• 00 •IO. • >t ~CAR ROU. I •CAIUtOLl S.,...ef C.t, >IO ) 70 fl•rTllllO '°'' aMtWltalll,. ...... • 00, U lo.Ct• C._.I HMI Ii IO I. .. Alltel .. c:A •tt Nl"'ll reet 'kk .. '°'' t I IO.• 00 hi 111)1 -It.JI 4 JO, '9ftl-ll WlM, 4 t10 J Ml. W-Att•Mf' ltf .... II._ .. ware. u -0 u ~ .. <l• 1a.•1 ,..., ll'ullll"*I DfMOt CM11 0.11r fttlOl. "' '° Jllflt ,, ti ..... ,., • .,. '"' •ll•no•nc• •. on TENNIS I VOLLEYBALL PUBLIC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE rl(YITIOUS SUSINESS NAME s•ATEMENT l f'IC' t"110W1f'Q Pt'''°" '' C01rQ b1J\.1 "~'' d'-0 1~£ AM P 0 Ao• 1J7' 1•1' y,., Qf)t.r •o 21A N t<#OCfl H~o4." C•11•orr1it ~'6.l M ..1ry "'"'" 1-.JHOdil" "0H " J-~'<Of\. Aot ( Anttht.;nf' (..tl,.t.·r"'1 r q7904 ''°''\ bU\ll"l!f\ ~ (Of'\CJv<ftd Ov lfl ,,... O•v10u•I MtJt y Af"cn ~ J1rbct1r"' f P\1ei. '~a1,.m-rt •-.... t·'f!d w•'" '""~ Co"ntv (tpr• ,,., Ori.tl"Q'I'" Courtv cu J._,... , ••• ,,. F .... 14 Publi\n«I Or 'nQI• ( c,.,• 1.t 0d•· v P1101 --------------1 Juru .. • ll unO JtJ•'I \ I) •O •O/lt .... Sol2• Pubh\fW'd or,lt'Hr (04-.t D••IY Piiot Jun• I t• 11 19, fq7, ,,,. ,, PUBLIC NOTICE l'IC'TITIOUS 8U$1NESS NAME STATEMENT '"*' Publo,llt<I v -Coa\I Da11v P"OI Juntt ' ,_. 1' 11 ••1• -·-·~------------PUBLJC NOTICE NOT•Cf TO Cll£0tl011~ \UPlilllOtl .:OUR• Of' l .. 11: STATE 0, CAllf'OllNIA 1'011 fHf COUNTY 0, OlltANGf NO At~ f, • .,, .. Of tt:\'fa[ I ............. , o. .... ~ NOT•Cf •SHE Rf_9V O•vr NI~ tM c•fldllon ot lNt MllW• ,....,,....., i»c-t I""' ... Pf'''°'" 11 ... "0 <l••tn\ ~·'"" '"' ,a.o OO<tclf'nt •re •t<111lfOO to lilt tr..m. wllll ..... Mtt\-Y •Oii<"'°"· 1n ,,... Oftl(O ot , ... <ltr-Of , .... •DO ... an PL'BLI(' NOTIC'f-: PUBLlC NOTICF c ...... , '40T'Cl TCCREO•TO•~ ~Ul'IRIOll COUllT 01' T"~ ~·A!f 0' CALll'OllNIA ,0,_ fHf COUNTY 0" O•.t.,.Gto ............ '"'•'•cf l"'"fl P ..,OLMr' 4• t \AA~ t 'Mfl ' t-tOlN't~ '·• Mf< QAY M ••O\.M( <. ~"·'~ NO••('-1<.1>1f Q(h"( C.1'VEN t• ,.,_ 't.-d+tO" ot tM t1DOl/r f"lit·l'•C-IJ CH'U'1J .. l\t tMt aH Of't'Cr' "'1('1¥11\Q ff1!1rft\ .-Q4'1t'I\\ UW \t110 OMMJt "' ,.,. , .. qu•od to It " U\19m. ""''"' '""" ~~W•'-·~uy vout.~n •f\ the ott1<• of .,. (,,.,.Of ,,,. #00\ff' .. " lilted (l)Urt. 0< lo pr~Ynl "'•m .. II~ tP..• n4'c .. ,~,, vOY<.Nr,, to '"• UI' dar\1011~ •I Ill<'''" Ollorf ot £f<NE~ T ' ~ouo :• OI M C~E A\.f MllMPI! R " Hl.Gt<f.\ •••0 "<> K .,,,,.,.. Avtftv# \lrlf" JJO NtWDOrl O••c. n C•••'O''h" •1* ••utf'\ " thf' pt.C-t Of t}u\1M~\ Of UW vf\Ol'f \tQl'\rhf •n .tft ,,,atte" wrt.11t'H~O tO ~,,, t\t••., 01 , .. ,o d•" ~t .#tt"'1n •etur montf\\. fllltQ lOll•I. O< 10 llttwlll tMtn. #1111 ~h• nl'CIUM¥ vauc:twr\. •n tl\e un c!tr\IQMIJ •I tf\OI OtflU 01 P•ul H w.,,~. &>Oe Paf1lic flolllt-.ra. M11111 l"<llO<I P&•\ (-lllorn•• •ll1c11 h '"" pleco 01 Du\ln~•• 01 1111 unde•\iq.,.d In •II m•ll•" oert•111<~ to IM s111•1• at HIO OtCtOtllt "''"'" IOU• mon "' ot tf\i~ 1"'' 1f"lf • .,,. p-.t;1°t• •utt ot '"' '"" ,,,. '"" llUllll<•llOfl nolt<t D•ltO M•v ll lt1' J•rr., I ••nl. P111- Aam111t\I"''"' Ol I"' hi"'' 01 IN ·--Oe<.-ll'AUI. M WAY'TI ~ft•Cflk ll ..... tw• """" ...... "'""'· c. '92» , .. ,., .. ". Allwtlay fer MINlll.W-wt.-Wiit 4-_. .... 1111-OrMltl o..~1 o ••• , ..... , ,_ "· 1• • -Jiily t •• ,. ,, .. ,. N)tlr•' O••ro J~ , ' ••19 W•LL•ANlll HOlMl~ f •H:..,tOf' Ot tl'W WU 011 .... -.... .....a 00<-I 1a1111n J .c-o '" MUl.RVI , MUM"IA 8 .. UOHIS .... ..,_.It-. A .. • \elte UI ..... ,.n ...... c.a"'"' 111417U Mt Attw'Mr\IWl--"""'''lled Or-( .. I 0.1•y P•\91 '""'""Ju••' 11 ·•••rt l~>a l • COMICS I CROSSWORD MARMADUKE by Brad Anderson BOOMER 'How come hrs front is so serious and his bock is so happy?" FUNKY WINKER BEAN CASEY I JtX1' FllJfSJlE D ft.E Al> 1/.1 fr NIXON'~ NEW ~I(. MOON MULLINS GERIATRIX OeAIZ .... 1 cseT 5() CON~O .... 010 YDJ WATCH THE: 1.-ATE l'J~W~ ON TV \..AST NIGHT! !CAN'T~ WH~ P'l:200UC:T!? CAU~E: ~~ THIS W6€K"~ DENNIS THE MENACE . Af'IH\A (l.. f)(PLAIN~ fH~ Ot,0 C 1,...1Cf4E 1 ) ~ > A~T~LA~, ~A1'', 'JO ~NI.AG ASOUT A SU& IN A R'UG ?? by Tom Batiuk by Charles Rodrigues GORDO JUDGE PARKER TUMBLEWEEDS '41SA £.~ ... WH~ CAN; V0U lflP! A m.IW1 HORSE U)(f US 01UE!Ff INPIANS?J NANCY HAYRIDE TO SMITH'S GLEN i i~ PER COVPL( -·- • '->CHIB61 F '.><K1~f;. '.>C.KIB0Lf ">t.K1Bl'U' ·a• .~£- I PROMISED NANCY I'D IAKE HER ON THAT HAYRIDE 8UT I'M BROKE by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson T~ftT'5 You~ PfZOl31.~A' IV~ GOT E.NoLJ6H OF MY OWN .' DOOLEY'S WORLD ~ .;. . > W~y Juno 28 1978 PEANUTS HoW CAN 'btJ 6E CDNCER)Jf D wrw SOMflHING Lll<E THAT WHEtJ IHE WOR1.D IS otJ "ffiE BRINK OF ATOMIC DISASTER? OAIL Y PILOT 8$ by Charles M. Sc hulz HOWNICE ... AN AVTHENT.C IMITAT1CN ARROWHEAD! by Roger Bradfield by George Lemont MOTLEY'S CREW by Templeton and Fotman AT THE MOMIWT, ~ "n?LEFORTE~ 1e>AN }:;1..11151 6lz.M01 ( T. MOM. ~~A:t<:E. OIJL'{ A AAIJD$=UL.. FOrr! il-IE "IP.!>f at~µ. by Gus Arriola by Harold Le Doux by Tom K. Ryan by Ernie Bushmlller ..-,._,,. '''lt.:M,..ru~ .. •'•lldU• '"" UU"H..,.rtt.~ TODAY'S CRDSSIDBD PUZZLE ACROSS \hawl 1 I 1 "'porarv 54 Wrot ~Old~ ll.JICS ~ E •lldCI '> Ch1c.ig1J 59 Ont• rn .111 11.im 1t10111v 9 Mon.tSICtv 62 u s ' O• n1·dd ldN) '4 Ho1eh•1 011 (>I C,1;111 1h1· IS lh.111k~ Ill""'. f.l \.°JIOI <1 't Ir , t t, Pull' t1 ~ I .11 /II 1111111<>.11 " 11 Mn•.1llv ''" p1111.,pl• tJ /1 II llctr•I 111 t'J A.,, 'We~ tiv l'•t·I·• c111t111q n Coup d 10 611• ••rd 7 11 R~<rionr1 111 'Nt"ltd\ 11 Sho11 co11q•1 71 Mon1·1,11v !UHi 74 P•lff>IN, ·'I , t,1ft11 \\Pt~ Y.! 1l11 .. 1• IJ)I '"""' ! I \.•I •1111, ti • 'n'cw"'' J" (111n~n11 1'111 Abt .. 3; Q14wuu1 IC~HU J'l C\rn 11 tv 1•1 lrd llt ,. .l(IC:.1!1 uf 4) W.1,h1•. 41 !;ik11il11llV 4r,.1,. 1ov 41 O· l(l•M 4q ~""' l '"" !lO P,11111111 "> '" P.\"IV !12 LdlKl Arne• /11:, I '' lUH:' /11 Barb<'• J"'; Bu1m1" flOWN I fl I tr to11t1•11wlt ) ltll htf.1rf'I. I M~11t ••<C111v ~ w.11~ w•tl• in~·tj '~tt·it' '·M• C '"' t.\.,f\ I\ llu· 1111m J Thto rwo ~ (It~ 11 I '"' n1ch 11 fh·o • -,11,.~,. Ill P1•L11(' ) 11 ll1111 .. ~11'f1 1.1 llt141Htq •Ill llJt,tlll\ 11 01•\""" UNITED Feature Syndicate ruesday s Puule Sotvect ,, ,, II\ U1101t1H """''' ,,, l ,, I 1ll•l ,, ]'1 R1•109 111 l.1t I lb S11 10<111 , 'H 11t b,_ ti nm• 10 Id~ P\ p1c"I\ tar•• 10 I Cut clowt\ 3J (01111111 l4 "'"" ol H.1t1, .... l!.> (,u•11u ht•tU 1fi Mol11•n ·~ k ~h1muifu:wl 41 AUl~l lh•0011h ''"' '""''' 4.l W1tft1111•cl v .•• , 46 As1.111 hot• ·~ fl11f~W11\·i, .,, (l(otl• '.tr.If• !>J Ra1lwav cm plOy•~·· !>~ N.1v1q,Jhon 45y ... t1·m 'J/ l~Nollll All.II ~ Dries 1i11po Ull' ~1111111 6C Nuv1•l"1 Gr11v b l B11lldlt111l lnrt1.i V.1• 6J Th" ll o~ "ND ' 66 A1'111<.I '" L \ltJ(l(l 1111 68 UIJ IU vnu • 69 T '"'"" fll'JI .... ' 116 DAILY PILOT W.Untedl, Juno 29 1978 Business. People on the Move Orange CoWlty Finm Report Promotions Mark StanJey has been appointed manager of Coast Federal Savings and Loan Aasocl1Uon's of· fice at 19893 Brookhurst Ave . Huntington Beach. He has an AA in business administration from El Camino Coll~e in Gardena and Dearly six •ars experience m the sav· ings and loan field. • F r a n Grace bas been named account executive at Cochrane Chase & Company, Newport Beach advertising, U ANLEY public relations and marketing firm. She was the agency's first employee. Joining the firm in September 1967. * Susan I. Laza has been appointed auditor at Pacific Mutual Lile Insurance Company, Newport Beach. Prior to joining Pacific Mutual. Laza ser ved three yeara with the Golden Rule Life Insurance Company as vice president. audlt, and was a director. • Peter 8. Pltsker of San Juan Capistrano has joined North &: Donahoe. Newport Beach engineer· ing and management consultants, as an associate. He "'ill be responsible for clients involved in the computer and process control fields. Before joining North & Donahoe, Pitsker was with General Automation Inc. in a number of sales management posit.Jons and as director or market· ing. Prior to that, he was employed by Modular Computer Systems. Inc. as North American sales manager * Stephens & St.one T rust Deeds, a division of Granite Home Loans. has opened an office m "" Newport Beach in the Douglas Plaza Building on MacArthur Boulevard T he firm places funds of pension and profit sharmg plans In short-term deeds of trusts. Robert O. Cochran, vice president of Stephens & Stone, heads the Newport Beach of- fice. TISTDRIVE A DIESEi.. SEVILLE ( AllfOtl .. IA lP"-Ml'(, e,J"""'Tl't ''" '1o(,H,\ ,, {0"11"'-ll• I It I I Nabers Cadillac 2600 ~rbol 6lv<1 CO'>!-' fl/II..~ ~<>100 INVEST WISELY ti f n '""' , 5:>nlc><:l K :it>" :l"l ) ~ _p, l 'ritf4-j tn,..A',f'T~I A J. ·'" 11/'.y • ,..,. ~ _ ·I o-. ••.Jv•• i, ... .., <'Ulpe.fetm.n. l ,,,_. Ou .. fontJ". ~ AvP<oqe I will be t1orJ 10 e•plo.n ITlY onw ooch 10 you 01 your ((lf'h1Pntf'f'(O 3041 E. l rd St., Loag IHcll 90114 121 l l 434.-4'95 ' Amcord, Inc .. of Newport Beach has elected Joseph P. Flaherty of Newport Beach as a vice president. Formerly manager of management systems. Flaherty JOined the Newport Beach-based com- pany in 1965. His previous experience includes management positions with Rehance Insurance Company and Burroughs Corporation * UccidentaJ Engineering Co., Irvine. a wholly owned subsidiar_y of Occidental Petroleum Corp ., elected Spencer Flournoy of Irvine as president. Flournoy, Occidental Engineering vice presi- dent and general manager s ince March 1977, Joined the parent company in 1974 as manager of construction U .S.S. R He will continue as deputy director of Russian affairs for Occidental Petroleum. Prior lo joining Occidental. Flournoy served as vice president and general manager. Marine and Civil Construction, for Santa Fe Engineering & Construction Co. m California after 19 years with New York-based Frederic R. Harns lnc. • Silicon Syste ms. Inc .• Irvine. created two managerial positions. R alph D. T horne was named director of finance. and Robert D. Frei matenel manager. Thorne came to SSI from Systonetics Corp., Anaheim, where he was corporate controller. Frei was manager or materials control at F rontier, Inc .. of Costa Mesa, and served in a supervisory capacity al Collins Radio Group. Newport Beach. • Barbara Lind has been appointed escrow of- ficer at Bank of America's San Juan Capi~trano branch. Ms Lind, who joined the bank in El Toro as a teller m 1974, had been an escrow officer at the Laguna Niguel BofA since July. She has also held escrow positions at the San Clemente and Newport Beach branches. A.M. "Bert" Birnie of Monarch Bay retired as a g roup exec·uti ve and senior vice president marketing of Smith lnternatioual, Inc., Newport Beach. He will remam a m ember of the board of directors and part time consultant. He is also a member of the board of directors of Gearhart- Owen Inc. in Fort Worth. He joined Smith International. in 1966 as vie~. president for marketing a nd member of the board of directors. and coordinated the drive for over- seat> e xpansion. Later he turned his attention to the[corporate image. * Alan Ribera, a partner in the landscape architectural firm of Ribe ra & Sue, Inc .. previous- ly located m Oakland, has become associated with the firm of <'ardoza.DJLallo Associates, Inc. of Costa Mesa. as director of planning for its parks and recreaUonipublic works d1v1s1on. Ribera has 20 years experience in public works and private development projects. He is a m ember of the American Society of Landscape Arch1tccLc; and the California Parks & Recreation Society * NB Firm Announces Stock Buy Amcord . Inc . an· nounced th at it has purchased 338,974 sh~es or 38 percent or the com- mon stock of Knight In- dus tr i cs . I n c . of Oklahoma The shar es are the first to be purchased un- der agreements cover- ing 423,038 shares. The remaining options are exe r cisah)e in early November • *ForONLY 6MONTH TERM S h ou ld J\mcord purchase all the shares covered by these agree· ments. it will own ap. proximately 48 percent of Knight's common stock . Luis Barren echea. president o( Amcord, William L. Davis, a n Amcord director. and William T. Pascoe Ill, chairman of Amcord. have been elected to the boa rd of Kni g ht In dustries. * 8 1/2% NEW $10.000 SIX MONTH Certificates Minimum Purchase $20,000. That yield 8.7% lf the interest is placed in a 61h% passbook account and left for one year. Interest is paid quarterly. Matures at the end of the second calendar quarter. May be withdrawn at the end of any calendar quarter thereafter without penalty. No rnterest paid if redeemed prior to maturity. Accounts open by the 12th of July earn from the first. 8 % $10,000 ONE YEAR Certificate That yields 8.24% when the Interest Is placed In a 6112% passbook account and left for one year. Interest Is paid mon- 4hly. Matures at the end of 12th calendar month. May be withdrawn at the end of any calendar month thereafter without penalty. Maximum 3 months Interest penalty for early withdrawal. No Interest paid for a partial mGnth. Accounts open by the 12th of July earn from the first. 6 1/2 % NO MINIMUM PASSBOOK ACCOUNT That gives an annual yield of 6.66%. Interest ts paid day-in, day. out, compounded and credited quarterly. Or we have other thrift plans to suit your needs THRIFT BY MAIL, TOO! We pay postage both ways. Let us send you full Information- just ask! Statewide Of flcH serving Californians for over a qu1rter of a century. Cotti MIH, 270 EHt 17th SlrHI, (714) 845·3153 long BHch, 4S01 Pacific CoHt Highway, CA. (213) 498·3301 Available to Ca11fornl1 Res1cJents Only Offer Made By Far West · Far West Financial Corp., Newport Beach. is offering to purchase alf t h e remai n ing $3 .052,000 p r i n ci pal amount of its outstand· ing 51• p ercent sub- ordin ated debentur es. due Nov, 1. 1979, for $950 for each Sl.000 deben· ture. plus accrued in· terest to July 21. the ex piration date of the of· (er. In addition, Far West Financial will pay a solicitation fee o( $7 50 per debenture submitted by brokers and dealers. The offer will expire al 5 p.m .. July 21. U11less extended. Issue Dropped SOLANA BEACH Cl\P ) Plans for a $22-mllllon hond l11sue on lht' November ballot hnv(' b<'tn <lroppcd It would have built a third Junior hiah school and odd It ions lo lhr Torrey Pines and Snn Olc!iullo highs AraMan 'Brain' Fluor Corporation of Irvine 1s designing the central dispatch system (above> for• Saudi Ai abia. It will collect data on 01 I. gas JUNll I Arthur L Cou,.llou•. 9811 Bols.t Av•. JJ9', W~lmln•t•• ..... llst•d lt•l>tlilon ol 177,12' •nd •sWI\ Of 117,IOO l••n L•• Brac:llev. 1..0 Temp•~ hrr•ct , L,.aquM BeMh. t>.a• llSllM! ll•bllille\ ol 146 SSO .tnd nsel• of SIO,S1$, JUNES Ano•• R•mtro Ch•vH 10101 B•verly Or , HunlitlQ10n 8eMh, h•• 1t•1td 11a11111t1tt al 144,1161> •no .. ..," of '520 JUNIE U Jeno H T\irh, n:i.. Et Bur•o. El Toro. has hsttcl t••Dllltttt ot Sii 921 and •U•IS ol st 100 J UNIE IJ FrtO•rl<' ~ L..t\\. 11811 Mi\IV L•nt! Hunt11>Q1on Be<t<h has lt>ltd 1 .. 11111tjf1S 01 '32,0l'I ""° •nets ol s1,3qs Mr And Mrs K Lit•-"'. 21661 Broo•nurst SL, Hunt•noton BtMll n•s 11slf<l ll•t>•hhe-sot St0,J61/and as.el\ o• St.170 PatriC1• L,.. Nciwm.,,. "'37 ln01•n fot~t Specttum EnQtr't~rinq W•lls Circi., Hunltt1Q10tl 8each, ""' Corp . Sl42·F M< F•dd•n Av .. 11st•O lt•l>illtle1.ofU UIM!da5WISOf Hun11noton ll•.teh. nu llSlfJd U )00 lle bollttn of '20.•12 end •Ss"h ot · 1,,· Calvin G<w Jr, lll 1111 St . S1,3SO Se•• eeacn. h•H listed tlabtlltl~s 01 JUNIE n ... soe a1>d asu1sof Sl,Sll. Tom Austin L•-HM, 8h'l'l Aova1 -T Kat"'yn Park~. 1'33S Oval, Circff! Huntrnvton 8'lacll, ,...s ,,.,.., Irvin•, hu 11s1ta 1>0 assets or 11e1>11t1tn 01 \17.1'3 end ••~ts of ll•l>•llt1es. sa30 JUNll • Oon•ld Lov11 Luuu Sr • ~SI Tllo Ski Machine, Inc , 18 Mrrror Our!Mlm Of' • Hunt•noton &e.ach. h.-L•k•. Irvine, lies ltsttcl llab•hltn of listed 1tabtltllH Of St•.11l .,,., asHI\ UJ,935 ano auets of SIO,Mll. 0, 11,.soo. J UNIE I JUNIE JO -James L BurQess. 2•q1• Via M • r 111 ,. K F •rt n a , ti Grande, Minion Vl•fo, has lt\led Sau•mento frvlnt ha\ ltsttcl 11e1>11111es 01 no,oe• •nd •s••I\ of ll•t1i1ti.es Oi "41,SSO ena "'"" ot M.110 S71 710 Fr•O Anlhon'f Carre, 33137 Via Le MasOheru Tot.UflOQd, M 0 . ett. Pl""'•· S.nJ...., C-.••-. II•• hst· 3"1 Werner A~. HunhnQ1on 8et<I\. I and natural gas liquids from 100 sites over 50.000 square miles and.enable better con- trol of the nation'!' vast resources. JUNE It Sumiko Banks 01 1111 Friml L•ne MunttnQ1on 8etKll ""' ltStrd 1t•blltllts of \4 ~' •nd assrh of ll "0 Sh•rron 1.. ... AbbOtl, l&l• Baylo• O' . 111. Wr\ttn1n\'"' nd\ tutt<d 1ta1>11t11es ot 110.1~ dnd .use" 01 \l.2tS Oon .. ld lerov VttnriP•H •&t • C.Ori•nd~r, "3 ~I· Mt'W. ""' lt\f "" lt•b1ht1.-. ol U 217 •nd d\S<°I \ Of \'10 Oosing Set LOS ANGELES <AP> -"Bleak growth pro- s pects" have force d Diversi fi e d Ea r th Sc iences Inc to an· nounce plans to sell off it s rema1n1ng s ub- s1diarj,es and go out of busmess. company of· f1c1als said Tuesday. Availabk The s peakers bureau of General Telephone is accepting reservations for its l ectu r e · d e m o ns t r ation pro· grams during J uly an~ August. according to Herb Gasser. Orange division manager. The presentatio ns. "h1ch usually are m ade only to student groups during school sessions. are available to service clubs, chambers or com- merce and other civic organizations w i thi~ Gene ral Telephon e 's service territory. The presentations are offer ed as a public service and m ay be scheduled by calling col· lect <2 13> 451~. I Ove r The Counh·r ... I NASO Listinqs NEW YORK tAPI ::.,..nc;.n Wn 3S int m t Gs , .. "' , .. ~. Pao~tA ·~·. t9 '11 s1..-ayn ll' ,M'. ~ ... ~="\!',~' ~~~=rs 4] ... lnB•W\11 ••• QI I Pa<G•R n 11 lo. ~:~~~w\ 11\.11\. llp• and DolellS •\ 26tJ1 171 i lwaSaUt 1'ho 1S"' ~=~:~!' '''• • 1• XI 1ona1 StcurtH~• Cro\sCo 1&111 ,,,,. lamwPr I'• 8\lo 10 10"-Slerl'>I 6''• 6~ Dealer~ A\\n , ovet CutlrFea 1v. 11,.; l~1fyW 11 17>.,, "1tn•Ent , ••• 1&.l• SlrawCI 331' l5 NEW YORK (AP) -Tile followl1>9 1111 '"" counte• Bin•. 8:r~r:rb 1QI J 10111 ... ,.,. P•ttrHH 18( 1 19•~· SUl>fJrEt 111. I"' how\ , ... Over lhe Counlef 1nsur4n(tt &. lndust-,,,. I>.. JosivnM '°'' 11 Petroht ,. .. )q>t, TIME OC llii. •••• stocks •nd w11rr..-1s Ill.ti r.aw 90M 111> .JI llOCk\ 0•1• 100 IS 15• 1 K81sSll pf " 19\. Pettibon 7•1 • 2St.. • T•m~• lll<. :WI.. tr. mMI -CIOWl'I the ..-1 IHISed on AEL ll'ld I"' ..... 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'' · 1:f • 'tl fl":.:.·._ ~· 'J; ] • • 1~'°1 ~ i• .,.., ~ · , tt '"'··~"""Jr. no 'ffl tJ'-•J i r i~-~ ~ ~ ' rff *"• I' :C" , ... I ... " It s 1~14. ~ MM1"'' ,~ t " '""• ..., ~l:::rr:,< "l u. ~~ ~ ' i• '• ~ :~:1..--fii';;f' r,r.; r. ~--:.~ :lrr.1. "•"im. ~ 'a • ,n ,: . ~ = ::~·\i} ~; ~ =·"~,im&J' ~--· ....t ::1·1 i: ::::: = 1.: :1:'l " ff":~ f· i 1j ~ HIO ; ·~ ,_,,'"' ~lit : !ft~ .. ~,.._."' A!' f?! tft• t;, ~~ I I ,,__ tt m~·' * U + ~ ew ·~, 1~1° :r-::: ·~ ~ JO;.:;·: :~. iw: ~~::-~ = .J,i;; u;: a ~.1.i: ,1~ ~-J-:. ~ ~'i n 4:: ~ .. ~soft .i!f· ~ ~·.-;; :1~: ~ • .: ~ U '"" C • ';f ..... =t'_. 9 ';r•• ~I! tl.!.\t ~ ftH tt !WI•" 11 Ji 1J --r:sf • Ir•._ • .-•(11 rm.~.~ c, ':Ji "&:.;1~ t="11tt.i~~ ;~T!l .... ~·:·r': 4 n:.: ~bWt:N1i1~ U"' ~ 0 .u.:! ,tt I -~ =~.,. J ·1 'l: :~: ~ . . WednelcSsy.June 28, 1973 ll N DAILY PILOT fl 7 F irms Avoid Hiring W ives ... , ' I , By J ORN CUNNJFF u ............. NEW YORK -Husbands and wtves working for lht! same company aH produclna leeal and ma.rltaJ headaches that may force some concerns lO renege oo the.it commit· meat.aloequalemploymentopportuniUes. Some compau.les already have decided lo avoid hiring IPoUfft because ol patterns ot dual alMJeoteelsm. schedul· in1 conruc:ts, and damage to morale. said Prof~r Eugene Jennlnp, who bas studied the phenomenon. BVT, R~ SAYS, TBE BIGGEST deterrent lo hinn.g spouses, wives eapeclally, ls the web of legal tangles that only now are appearing. less than a decade alter com- panies betan affirmative action programs. Companies often are a«used of nepotism when they ~mploy spomes, said Jennings, and accused when they don't ol discrlmiaaUon. It's a ~win situation Crauibt with unseen. perverse consequences, he said. Tbe professor's ac· quaintance with the problem Is on orra-( ) or bis rol~ u eon· -NEWS ANAl'YSIS tidenll&J adVlSer to cor· poration chairmen and presidents. who in· c reaslngly rind their concerns threatened by legal action. "They began hiring spouses four. five or six years aga, forgetting what we had learned many years ago." said Jennings, referring to a maxim of personnel relations thl,lt such dual employment was unwise "MANY COMPANIES ARE PULLING back, •• be said • "not formally, because that would be ille"al. but Quietly. They don't want a backlash against women, but they don't know how to avoid ethical and legal problems." J enrungs, management professor at MicbJgan Stale University and author of many volumes on persoMet activities. cites these situations as helping to produce a negative attitude toward dual employment: 1. The wite. administrative as· sistant to a corporation president, con· vtnces him to look favorably on her husband 's candidacy for plant manager. The husband gets the job over more qualified applicants. One of these applicants claims favoritism, quits and sues. Alarmed, the president removes the husband. The wife becomes angry. accuses the presi· dcnl of sexuaJ advances, and quits. THE M.F.S.5 WAS SETJ'LED OUT of court, but among other things. the company lost a qualified plant manager and an administrative assistant. 2. The wife manages a branch bank: her husband i_s loan officer at the central office. She turns down an apph· cant for a loan. He sues. claiming she could not argue •f· fectively with her husband for the loan The company is advised by its lawyers to settle out of court, and to separate the couple in a business sense .. ~en she is replaced by a male subordinate she sues. da.1ming discrimination. Pubhcity causes two other loan apphcanls to sue. AU cases were settled out of court. Stock Ma rke t Saves 1"8 Best f or Last NEW YORK (AP I -The stock market, after declining slightly for most of the day. registered a sudden increase today near tbe end of trading. The Dow Jooes average or 30 industrial issues stood at 819.91a2.60pointrise. I Advances. which kept pace Wlth declines (or most or the day, took a-4·3 lead. Trading was light, as brokers indicated that investors were exerci&ing caution while a waiting several develop- ments expected this week. "There·s a lot of caution here." said Eldon A Grimm. an analyst at BirT. Wilson & Co. "We're just short of wait ing it out." Among the impending developments are the end or Che current quarter. Thursday's release of the latest money s upply figures, Federal Reserve action to raise the dis· count rate and the long holiday weekend . 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Uo J • UD 1 f UP T.J Up 7) ~= a uo •• UP •.I ~= tj ~ •j 8: : i ~: to I I .. 811 DAILY PILO T Television TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS·: .. \\ t-:U!\:t.Sl>A \' EVENING t.~IJOD NEWS 0 EMERGENCY ONlt A senior 111• c•PI•"' -· ., ,,... ,_ rr)eltiod5 used t>y SQU•<I 5 1' •1111~ paramedlCS 0 OUNSMo+cE A youno tnd••n bov helps r~ an e•-cevelry IOI· dler woo wes re$4)0n••t>le tor crlppllng him dunng an antck on the t>oy's village m NA8L SOCCER LOS AnQeleS Aztecs vs N-York Cosmo• Q) AOM4-12 An unlikely witness helps catch a«Ulet ff;) ELECTRIC COMPANY CD rrs evERveoov·s BUSINESS • Business Location i C8SNEWS ABC NEWS 1:30 ROOKIES T tie Min and <1aug111 or ot a man wno died 1r1 pnson ora determined t o lieel\ r8V6fl08 Ell) OvellEASY Edie Adams, Arline Broti. n tt. canned IOO<I r.alety Ellen Goldberg. column1s1 lRI CD REAL EST A TE AND YOU 'W hat Can Vou Alford"' (I) TO TELL niE TRUTH @) MERV GRIFFIN Guests Diel< Von Dyke. Ann Miller [ Dude Rancher .Jeff Bridges stars as a drifter who goes to work on a dude ranch in the movie "Rancho Deluxe," airing tonight at 9 on CBS, Channel 2. Lou Rawls. The S1ng1ng Bond1nis fD 28TONIOHT fil) STARBOARO Guest Roddy McDowell Q) MOVIE • * * "Flamll!OO Road" I 1949) Joan Crawford, 0.Vld Brtan Whlle slrlll\d- ed 1n • amall town. a c:am1- v 111 dancer becomes tnvOIYed witn crooked poll· 1oe1ans and murder (2 hrs.I Ell) NOVA • Alaska: The Closing Frontte•" Alaska's future nenos 1n the t>atanee as CongrM5 decides h<>W 11 should be used and who snould use It '1l) 8tX BaDEJISECKE M~.IAL FESTIVAi.. "Sod Dawson's New Ctoica- i Rhythm Kings" 8:30 CROSS-WITS OvellEASY E<11e Adams. Arline Bton· zall: canned food salety, Ellet\ GOldt>e<g. columnist: (RI 0:00 i) (]) C8S MOVIE • • •'• ·Ranch<> Deluxe' '1974) Jett Brl<lgeS. Sam Watorston Two young men. determtned to free t~ of 1119 rl!SC)Oft- s11>1h11es of conternporwy hie. t>eoOme amleu drift· 0 DAVID FROST Guesls Warren Beatty Ryan and Tatum O'Neal. Gerry Ratte<ty U @) CHARUE'S ANGELS TUBE TOPPERS K CET@ 9 :00 -Gr eat Performances. The fi nal segment of "The Norman Conquests" is presented as the loose ends of Alan Ayckbourn's trilogy are tied up. NBC D 10:00 -Escape From Mad- ness. Singer Rose mary Clooney is featured on this examination of the pro· gress that has been achieved in the treatment of mental illness <see story below>. A BC fJ 10 : 00 -Youth Terror: The View From Behind the Gun ... A startling documentary about crime <see review below>. '- en<>n'ftOUS 81r1del made In fl\e last quarter-century in the treatment of Ille mon· tally Ill. DO NEWS 0 ~ MC'NEWS ~ "Youth TflfTor. The Vr&N From Behind The Gun" tnteMewl With youthful oliende<'s ,_.. wtry 1lley 1>n1a1t the 1-. wno tnev rOI> and how 1ney ChOoSe their wtetlml I ~MAKE A DEAL • • '!\ ··enemy Of The Law·· I 19431 Te.. R11te<, De'ltl O'Bnan. The Te•as R&n98f'S trick a gold thief .mo revealing 1t1e location of ltle hidden gold. ( I hr ) Danny OOM undefc:over as a navy c::Ofl)tlman to st()() a d<Ug ring operating trom a ~VMMl.(RI e TOHlOHT G~t l'IC>st: JOhn Davi<I· aon Guects: Oen Kucftln. ski. Sue Gdlespte, Florence Henderaon. Jerry Van ~OVE. AMERICAN en Pent1 Warren (Part 1 ot 2) t:Z..30 0 MOVIE * * '\ Fr1nken611:11n Meet• l"-Wolf Min I llM31 Lon Cheney. none M .. MY A W9fewolf ~ ong rele11e runs onto Fr&nk-tetn's monat_, ( 1 hr , 25 m.tl I m MOVIE * * * "Ceught" I 1949) Jarnet Muon. Berblt• Bel Geddie A young wome" 1$ umor-11ncken wnen ane reallnis lier new hutband IS a ptychoPeth. (2 M ) Q) MOVIE • • • "Outside Tiie wan" I 19~) Rlehard Basenart, Marllyn llA11Cwell. An e•· convict helps the police r llCOV6f a mllllon do41ara worth of atOlel'I mon&/ I t hr .30 mlf'll ~LJ L.EHRER REPORT 12:31 a CI> t<OJAK "AC11 Of 0859«ale Met\'" A meek accountant (Eugene Aoche) llnda his Ille 101elly Changed ""'*' h•S bOst IS killed t>y a sntl* IRI 1:00 8 TOMORROW .ieennot Srwercz. dlfector ot "Jaws 2:· wtll 01scus:1 ht$c:a<- 8 ~VEAICt< "Thi! Spanish Dancer t:461J NEWS 1:65 0 NEWS 2:00 8 Q) NEWS an ally •n an unknown le n'!lllt wt>o helps thwart an allempt to ovenllrow 1i. • king (2 hfl) 3;2&0 NEWS uoe uov1u * • "D1y Thi E1rtlt F'roz•" I 19641 Ntnl Anc:lw• son. Jollri Powets. A • • VilnQlllut wrtcn biota °"' the aun. cau11ng Ille ""°'1d to Ir-. (1hr •• 30 min.) * * "RI~ Patro4" ( 19481 JoM Blythe, Wally Patoti. Autnorrtles attempt to pre- vent amugollng throughout the European nations. (I hr I 4:000 MOVIE **'"°"An Act Of Mu<de<" I 1948) Fredric March. Edmond O'Brien. L.ove compels• greatly respect· ed IU(IOe to commit a mer· ~..kllliog..j.Ulr.S.) 4: t5 U STEVE EDWAROS 4:30. MOVtE • '* "The Stage To Tuscon" (195 t) Rod Cam1Won. Wayne t.4orris. Two men 1&t out to~ glle the hli-tl<ing of 1ta- ~ iust before tne out~Nlt ol the Clvtl W#. ( t hf., JO m.n I Thur•day'• Dayl lnre Moe l.es M:>RNING 7:00 8 CBS NEWS 0 NBCNEWS 0 UARSCLUB 0 ABCNEWS 0 BOWLING FOA DOU.AAS 7:30 8 BETWEEN THE; WARS "Tt-.e Phony War" Hltlet's tac11cal err0< In assuming •hilt England would not go to war to defend POiand 111gge1s World war It and th1ee vears of controversy over Arnenc:an neutrality. "Hot Lipe And Fingertips ' CJ) $128,000 QUESTION M) FAMILY FEUD "The Sammy DaVls Jr Kid· nap Capet" Tile Angels are hired 10 protect Sam- my Davis Jt rrom k1dnappe<S. (RI Q) MERV ORIFAN Guests· Dick Van Dyke, Ann Miiier. Susan Ford. Phyllis Cneslef'. 10-.30 m m NEWS 11:00 8 8 U (I) tmJ NEWS 8 LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE "Love And The Jealoul Husblnc:I" JOhn wants 10 test hts wile's hdellty. "Love Arid The F'ree Weeilend" Tony 1n1111es Laurie to share an apart· ment for a weekend. fl ~ ABC NEWS CU)6EUP FOUOW-UP Dave Marash hosts a lot~ r9i>Of1 oro "Vouth Terror: Tile View F'rom 8ehifld The Gun .. 8 MOVIE 11:30 m * * * "Harlow" (1965) Caro4 Lynley. Efrem Zlm· t>&llSI Jr A Ho41ywood llllf• •et becomes dislllu540n8CI and turns to a Ille of alco- llol 12 hrs .. 20 min.). Cl) ADAM·12 tt's Mat1oy'1 t>irthday-and a case prOVtdes 1he perfect prosent ED MACNEIL I LEHRER REPORT CD GARDENING FROM THE GROUND UP • Houseplant• (!) JOKER'S WILD 0 SHAN.ANA • Guest· Phyllis Dllw 0 NEWLYWED GAME 0 CRIPS NEED NOT APPl.Y Gary Burgholf. star ot M A S H • hosts this e•am- 1natlon ol the iob c:ns1s 10< lhe h8ndlC8pped 0 JOKER'S WILD (!) AMERICA 2NIOHT Guests. Jo&e Feliciano. Channel L l•fing• 8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles D KNBC (NBCt Los Angeles e KTLA (Ind ) Los Angeles 0 KABC-TV \ABC) Los Angeles Cl) KFMB (CBS) San Diego 0 l<HJ-TV (Ind) Los Angeles @) KCST (ABCI San Diego m KTTV (Ind) Los Angeles Q) KCOP TV (Ind) Los Angeles fD KCET·TV (PBS) Los Angeles 8:00 8 Cl) CAROL BURNElT Betty While and Steve Marlin Joln Carol In R wild spool ol sc1ence l1ctoon and soap operas (R) 0 GRlZZLY ADAMS "Tile Searcn" Adams rac· es aga1n11 time to locate the cut> of a dymg cougar before nuntl!fs !Ind It (RI 0 MOVIE . * * * "The WOif Man" ( 1938) Claude Rains. Lon Chaney Jr A man reotttes. aller he h8S lkllfored an anack t>y a wo41 that he 1s becoming a -r-oll 0 \!§) EIGHT IS ENOUGH ··Trial Marriage·· Tom <l•S· approves when hts oldest <laughter, Mary moves into an apar1men1 with he< flance (Don Johnson I (R) 0 NASL SOCCER Calltorn1a Surf vs Chicago Stong tii) GREAT PERFORMANCES "Norman Conquests: Round And Round nie Garden" Norman's tunive appeatance when Ile ts !.Upposed to rendezvous with Annie in the -.mlage. !>Uc;)g&SIS that hos weekend •s 9om9 10 m.shre. (Patt 3 of JI fil) AUSTIN CfTY UMrTS • Guy Ctatk I Steve Fromholz ' Songwt1ter Clark sings his .-st nns F romhelz, or "Texas Trlfo- 9Y lame smgs at>cxrt Ille in the SoutbweSL 9:30 0 TWIUOHT ZONE David Ell•rn}ton comes UPOl'I an old mOtlastery occupied t>v a 'Trulh' order Whldl IS hOldlng ol t>elgn old man prisoner "Love And The Awallen· Ing" Mtcnael h8S to tutor two IC10rS In Ille film he'I directing. "Love And The $m8ll W90dlng'' Wendy and Robert try to help out • friend ,,, need 0 MOVtE ••'Ir "Fighting O'Ftynns·• c 19"9) Douglas Fatrblnks Jr , Helena Cartllf Two r1Yal$ ettemol the c;ac>Me ol NapoteOnte agents In an lrtltt castle 12 hfl I m TliE ooo OOUPt.E Oscar 1eemS that Felo•s new glr1fnen<I Is not jUll Ille Ubt1tlan he lhtnlcS She IS Q) MONTY PY'TMOH'S fl. YING CIRCUS fD MICHAEL JACKSON Guest Of. Thomas unoer· letder CD MACNEll I LEHRER REPORT m HOGAN'S HEROES An elite Getman <11\llS10n bivouacs "98< Stalag 13 and creates problems tor Klink and Hogan Cl) OETSMART A KAOS master of dlS· gUfSeS tries to asaautnate a Witriess against KAOS. ED CAPT10NED A.BC NEWS M:>RNING 12:000 TWIUOHTZONE Gunlllet Lutze returns to the town of Dachau after spenc:hng yea<s 1r1 Soulh AmlWIGa, m HIOHHOPES Cl) HONEYMOONERS Thinking that he IS 10 be named 'Racc:oon OI The Year' Ratoh rel>earS8$ an ad lib speech IO< the occa • s1on ED DICK CAVETT • • "The B1ac1t Cat" I 194 I) BHll Rathbone. Ntgel 8tUce Alt9' a wtlt If> made public, a scne5 of t><Ulrre murder°s occur I t hf . 25 mtn I 0 MOVIE • • "Amsterdam Attaor ' I 19671 WMkam Marlowe. Catherine Von Schell A young novetret. eccused of mu<<lerlf'l!I n.s 8ll·mt111'9$$. atlem()I• to Clelr rum&e1f whole bec:om1ng more 111volved '" blac.kma•t and 5CandaJ 12 Ills I 2:15i) MOVIE • • ·~ "Companions In Ntgl'ltmate" C 19671 M eNyn Dougt.s. Anne Bnter A l"QU'de<ef S1rlk81 hlll the patients 11t a 1esearch 1nst1tute tor the mno11on8l· IV dliturt>ed (2 hrs I 2~30 m MOVIE AFTERNOON 12:00 0 * • ·~ "Aame 01 N- Orieans" (1941) Marlene °'9tncl'I. Bruce Cabot. Going 10 New Orleans to try he< luctc, 8 beauty hOOlcs the town· s r1CN!St bachelor. but nms off with a dashing riverboat sk ioper II hr • JO '"'"·• 3.-00@) * * ''1 "Stand Up And Be Counted'" ( 1972) Jacqueline S.sset. Stella Stevens The actlOl'ls ol a ,, women s ht>~ c•eates problems tor several rela- 11onships I 1 hr , 30 min ) ~ KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach m CAROL BURNETT AND FRIENDS 10:00 0 NBC REPORTS "Escape From Madness" Tom Snyder reports on the 11:30 i) Cl) HAWAII FlVE-0 Guest: poet I author Rot>· * * • "Thfl 81ack Knight'. ( 19541 Alan Ladd. P&trlc:Aa Medina 1(1ng Arthur !Inds 3:30 fJ • *' r "Lost Honzon" jP8f'1 11( 19731 Peter Finch. Liv Ullmann A kldn&Q98d <l•plomat discovers Shan- gro-ta. a place of eternal peace. (1 nr .. 30 min.) 5ABC Shoivs Toppers LOS ANGELES 1AJ)1 The five mo s l watch ed telcv1s 1on shows nationally las t week were light com· edies from ABC. leading that network to first place in the wec·k ·s rat ings war. according to A C. Nielsen ratings re· leased Tuesday. "Three's Company," the adventures of two girls and one boy shar- ing an uparll'Tl<lnl, was th e week 's m ost watched show. the rat· ings service said. The program bagged a 21.4 rating, meaning it was watch ed by a n estimated 15 4 millior't n ewers during a sum- mer week heavy with re· run s an apparent national pr0<.'hv1ty for frivolity OVERALL , ABC averaged a M 7 rating for prime time, followed by CBS with a 13.5 and NBC with 12 7 ThC' n e tworks say these figure s g i ve th e percentages of homes with television in the country watchin g a particular network dur- ing an average mmule of prime time ···Laverne & Shirley" was second with a 20.8 r a ting, 15 .2 m illio n viewers; Charlie's Angels was third with 20.7-15.1 million: fourth, ··H appy D ays" at 20.2·14.7 million : and fifth "Love Boal ,'• 19. l· 14 million. The top-ranked non· ABC s how was CS S' co m e d y f avor1t<'. .. Ahce," which drew t1 :t9 rating T I E D FOR !fevt>nth place was NBC's '"Quin cy.'' the highest rated noo-comedy entry. with two CBS offerings. MASH and "One Day at a Time.·· all with an 18 3 rating and 13 3 million viewers. "Fantasy Is land." another ABC show. com- pleted lhe top io with a 17.8 raling. 13 million watchers. The leas t watched s h ow of the week. Nielsen said, was CBS' "lhby I'm Back," a comedy about a father who returns after aban· doning his family for many yE'At!\. That ~how drtw a A.7 million rating Jor 4 8 milhon viewers . ,. Al'win,Mt• UNIDENTIAED YOUTH TALKS ABOUT HIS LIFE OF CRIME TV Documentary Probes Lives of Slum Hoodlums View From Ghetto Youth Crime TV Special Pmoorful By JAY SHARBUTT LOS ANGELES <AP> -Filmed in the slums of New York and Newark. N. J .. it's depressing, often violent and obscenity-filled. But the National Education Association recommends it for viewing. The show? "Youth Terror: The View From Behind the Gun," an ABC News special airing tonight al 10 on Channel 7. It's a powerful study of crime. despair and rage among those cities' ghetto kids, most of them black. 1l offers no official theories or statistics about skyrocketing youth crime. proposes no solutions. All that comes in a followup panel show ABC will broadcast at 11 :30 tonight "YOUTH TERROR" simply offers a look al the bille r, violeot ghetto kids -whose Jives seem s ummed up by one youngs ter this way : "We're raised like animals. so we act like animals." The one-hour show h as no nar· ration or on-camera reporter. Its ap- proach ls impressionistic. Only an occasional off-camera question is heard from the show·s produeer- writer, Helen Whitney. It's mostly a grim montage of street ta.lk and slum life. a bit of kid play here. a deadly gang battle there, a glimpse of a junkie taklng his heroin fix in a rubbl< .. fllled alley. THE GENERAL IDEA is to bear from the experts in youth terror. the kid" lhemse1ves. mmed by two gutsy eameramen, Don Guy and Bryan An- derson. in the streets. in abandoned, battered b ulldlngs and in ghetto apartment.' and hideouts The first witness: A bearded youth who publicly waves a gun, boasts that "this is what talks around this neighborhood." To be rough, ready to kill to protect yourself, your self-image or your turf, is a constant theme. There's also a startling scene of one boy at an a partment window. firing off three shots. HAVE TO FAULT the show here. The impression is thal the kid is try· ing to kill s omeone. But Miss Whitney says he was shooting in the air . not aiming at anyone, which the program doesn't explain. A chilling thought by several slum kids is thal when their parents beat t •'em. it helps to hit the street and ease the rage by beating on other kids. As one boy says, this .. takes the pain away." Other r«urring themes: You can't get a decent job. crime pays. it's okay and necessary lo steal. and the prospect of Jal) IS DO big deal. ONE YOUTII VIEWS the last thus· ly . "Court is a waste of lime. They smack you on the hand and you go on al{ain." · Bits of hope amid hopelessness do occasionally pop up. the most elo· quent this plea by an unemployed black man: "Give those· pet>ple something lo live for, and you'd stop crime." Rut lhat the young people have so little to Uve for is painfully evident tn "Youth Terror " ll 's a sad, disturbing jolt of reaUty. a needed reminder l~l "Good Times" ltm't lhe ghello. nol by a long shot. Mental DJness Viewed By TOMJORY NEW YORK <AP> -Rosemary Clooney was singing al a party at Los Angeles' Ambassador Hotel June 5, 1968, the night Robert F. Kennedy was shot as he left the same hotel. "I couldn't handle that death.'' the entertainer recalls. "That's when I lost touch with reality." Miss Clooney talks about her developing depression and later recovery in "NBC Reports: • Escape From Madness.·· to be telecast Wednesday at 10 p.m . on Channel 4. NBC News correspondent Tom Snyder is host. THE HOUR-LONG SPECIAL, featuring Miss Clooney and golfer Bert Yancey. a victim of manic depression, considers recent developments in the treatment or several forms of mental illness wilh the use of drugs and techniques of psycht'logical and social rehabilitation. · · tn 1954, there were 600,000 patients in state and county mental hospitals, and lhe figure was rising," says Earl Ubell, who produced the special for NBC News. "Today it is down to 180,000. "Tilere's literally been a revolution in the Jast20 years in lhe treatment or psychoses ... he says, "M oslly through the use of drugs." UBELl.:S APPROACH TO the complicated and ~nsilive s ubject was to limit lhe scope oflhe report to "lhe narrow constellation of symptoms generally called madness. which affects about IO million AP~ COMING BACK FROM MENTAL ILLNESS Tom Synder With Rosemary Clooney Americans." ---------------------- Further, be says, "lhe program uses a very an- cient medical teehnique-lhecasestudy. ·• In that sense. lhe candid interviews with Miss C1oooey and Yancey demonstrate that people suffer- ing from psychoses can aod do recover. ~ "But there's always a 'but,'" says Ubell, •· nd here it's the fact lhat for many patients. dru don·t work, or they won't lel them work. And the whole structure of how we deal wilh mental patients who are discharged is not intended to support lhem. ·· UBELL AND IDS NBC News crew visited Madison. Wis., and lhe Program for Assertive Com· munity Treatment. which deals with people who spend their lives in and out of mental hospitals. There, staff members help patients find homes and jobs, see that they take prescribed medicine on schedule, and use lheir leisure time constructively and enjoyably. "T hey've shown lhey can keep people out or ho6pft.als," the producer says. "Escape from Madness" examines. in addition, a controversial program at the Soteria Center in San Mateo, Calif., which de-emphasizes drugs and focuses oo human contact in the treat menl of schizophrenia. UBELLCoNCLUDES, "NEVER before has lhe outlook for lhe mentally ill been so bright. Not only are the prison·Uke iostllutions dying. but new treat- ments allow the mentally ill to live decent. humane U ves in the community. · ·'On the horizon, the research in biochemistry of the brain promises even greater advances in the treatment of serious mental disease." Olivia Wins Role ln'Roots' Sequel LOS ANGELES <AP> -Olivta De Havilland, who beaan her car~r playing Melanie ln "Gone With the Wind,'' has been slgned for a starring role lo "Roots: The Next Generation." Sbc plays the wife of Henry Fonda and the mother of Richard Thomas ln the 12-hour minl !Jeries. which will air on ABC in um. They are the leading white family In If onlng, Tenn. The series is based on A1ex Haley's story of bl.s famlly from Alrjca to the present day. ' .. ...... """" .. - WINNER OF 7ACADEMY A~e.~os I • Best Original Score Best Fiim Editing Best Cosh~me Design Newport Faahloft l aland Newport Center ~ Mac: Arthur l Jamborff et Pectftc Coaat Highway M4-07IO (PG) Dally 2:15, 5:00, 7:30, 10:00 ENTERTAINMENT I MUSIC BOX I MOVIES . - Woon •::.d.ty June 28. 1978 DAILY PILOT County Phllharmonle 89 ................................ ... EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT AT EDWARDS LIDO CINEMA ~'lt!PJ!!P Concerts Selling Fast ' Our 1978·79 Orange County Philharmonic Soc:iety season is (lve months away but already we are being urged by Industrious volunteers to sign up now for one or both oft wo series of concerts. TOM BARLEY -? Muaic Box /~ t hos~ concerts. this time as guest conductor on Feb. 17. Sa n ta Ana Hi g h Schoo l auditorium without singing a note This column will be comment· rng more fully on the new OCPS season in the near future. But don't say you didn't get an early warnin~: if you want to see the great· G1ulini get your tickets now. edwards LIDO CINEMA HfW'ott ll'tD. AT Y14 LIDO And It's a good thing : for. looking at the list of attractions to come our way in those eight concerts, this writer believes the "sold out" sign will go up long before the season opens Nov 4 _]'H E APPEA R l\NCE in Orange County of Carlo Maria Giuhni should, in itself. swamp the ticket sellers with demands for seats. The famed successor to Zubln Mehta on · the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra podium will direct four of the eight concerts including the rlrst on Nov 4 But the magic word this year 1s Giulini. He is. without a doubt, the world ·s greatest conductor and his arrival on the LAPO scene is a tremendous coup for -that orchestra. C HORDS AT RANDOM -~!M!EW!!P!O!ltT!l!U~C!H~~'1!l!-8!3~50~~~~~~~~ Th at splendid young cellist . ..! 4 ~IV[RSAl ftllllf p I J[(Jtjllllffi® PANAVl$0(3 IC I ' Mtl • 100 l!ll.m I-OR IOl/ll(H CICIDllU Ci ........ ~ ...... .., .............. ft NOW PLAYING fOWAltDS' NEWPORT •2 Newport Beach 644·0760 o.u u -1-,00 • _,.S-11130 (:INEMA WEST •1 WestmlnsteJ 892·4493 4lUUtl PARK DRIVE-IN ~uena Park 821·4070 L 1111:.UUlllt: 6342553 WILLIAM LEE HOLDEN GRANT D\MlEN OMfNII The flrst time \\ ru, only a warning. iR '-°'00\,........,. ~ ,~~ L•J. e . '• ..,1 ... , PUTT ORANGE 634·92&4 EOWARDS SANTA AHA 540-74'4 STADIUM DRIVE IN 6Jt.78llO MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY "THE BUDDY HOLLY STORY" (PG) CAPRICORN ONE" (PG) "CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND" "THE DEEP" (PG) rite CHEAP DETECTIVE" (PG) "HEAVEN CAN WAIT" !PG) AMERICAN GRAFFITI" (PG) 'Tr.IE STING" -STAn1um 6scAeen 639 -7860 OAIVE·ln 1'•1•11• ..... , St•d1um 'CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND" "THE DEEP (PGI "CONVOY" "EAT MY DUST" (PG) "GOODBYE GIRL" (PG) "RABBIT TEST" Charles Curtis of Laguna ~each, is am"Ong tMhono~again. "Zooby " lovers are. of course. del 1ghted that their idol will be back in Orange County for one of THE OCPS HAS lined up some splendid soloists for the new s eason · pianis t s Mu rray P arah ia. Em a nuel Ax and Yefim Bronfman . v1olin1sls Gidon Kremer and Gl e nn D1 c tcrow, the LAPO's con · certmasler: and luscious mezzo- soprano Frederica Von Stade. who should be able to fill the Charles carried off the first prize at the International Bach f estival in Washington. D. C .. and is the first cellist to do so. He beat out some hot com· petition. we understand. And t o think that this phenomenal artist is only 18' He 1s the youngest winner in the history of the Bach Festival Joan Darling Pi-eves Directing Not a 'Man's Joh' By LINDA DEUTSCH HOLLYWOOD <AP> -She saw directing as a man's JOb -gritty, sweaty. behind-the-cameras labor remote from the movie glamor of her dreams. · J oan Darling, an actress who has become one of America 's first full -time women movie directors, still fights the sexual stereotype that dies hard in movieland NORMAN LEAR FIRST CONVI NCED J oan to direct the pilot and some episodes of "Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman.·· Then she directed an Emmy-winning segment of the Mary 1'yler Moore s how and was signed for more episodes "I thought, ·Oh, my God. I can make a hv· ing' .. recalls the once-starving actress. But her early doubts lingered. "l used to en.me home from MTM and say to my husband. 'Do I look a wful ? Do I smell sweaty'>' t would feel so ugly "Tben one day I realized what was the matter with me." she recalls . "I was s tanding there on the set all day with no a rtifice. It was strictly me . not an actress m a role. As soon as l con- nected it up, I stopped reeling that way .. LAST YEAR, DARLING directed her first 'eature film. "First Love," a gentle. explicitly sex- ual story of a college love affair. The film was a modest financial success and won some good re· views. "It was an odd first movie for me ... says Joan. "It was such a feminine movie. s uch a sweet. son . sensitive story peopl e would expect a woman to direct it" But "Fi rst Love" won her an invitation to set up offices at 20th Century Fox Studios to plan future directing efforts. It also convinced her that directing was in her blood "I could never give up the stimulation of directing ... she says now ·· It's a hard job and very exhausting. You really are the general of an army. But it's so stimulating All directors become junkies for directing .. HE R LATEST PROJ ECT IS a man 's story, .. The Boys of Summer ... based on a best seller about the Brooklyn Dodge rs. She's decorating her office in baseball loeker-room motif She credits the women's movement for some of her new freedom to direct films on any subject that interests her. "I think all those ladies who burned their bras and made speech.es -whatever you thought about them they opened the door," she says. ··A lot of wpmen coming out of the film s chools now want to be directors. With the number of kids coming out of school. in five years r think it's go- ing lo be a sexless Issue · · Prinze's Manager Wins Suit ·LOS ANGELES I AP ) -Actor Freddie Prinze's former ma nager has been awarded $205,000 from Prinze's estate by the New York Supreme Court. which ruled a contract between lhe two was valid. Judge .Jack W. Swink s aid Tuesday the money should be paid to David J onas. whose con· .tract with Prinze was under litigation when the 22-year-old star of the television series, "Chico and the Man." committed suicide in January 1977 Prmze shot himself in the head Jan. 28 and died 33 hours later despite emergency sur gery He was rept>rted to be des pondent over the lawsuit with Jonas, his marital problems and his a rrest in November 1977 on a misdem eanor charge of driving under the influence of drugs Met Opera Season Se t Joanne Cast LOS ANGELES <AP I J oanne Woodwa rd will play Olympias. the mother of Alexander the f\Jerome Hellman , ... r." • AHalAshb\11 Ja;.et=Oit/ld. JOA~ &.ee:DfA/t ~/6;..e" R ' Sa"""""' °' Waldo San '"° RC>OOrt C Jones ""'hi. Nancy Dowd ~ .... .)~Haskell Wexler t ~ ... Bruce Gilbert 1-'iocMed t.,.Jerome Hellman lW\'C1l>d t.. Hal Mb; Untbld Altlstl THEATRES-ORANGE COUNTY MAMll'S SO. COAST PLAZA CttU lilfll lAll l1111tl ~1111 W Al T OISMll" "JUNGLE 100•" ICil I ;t-l .. 1'4~M .. t:Jt "SI~ OF %00 0 .. J,_IM·lM'O ~T IJIO rusas Oil •HOUP ncurt MAMll'S "HEAVEN SO. COAST PLAZA CAN WAIT" (PG) Ctst1 llt11 "" '""" .-I ....,'°*'....,..,! 12:45-2:35-4·30-6:25 ~nn .MO •• t.UIS_ 8·20-10.15 MANN'S ClllEMAUNB 1414 St .,. .. , .... .,. USlltl MANN'S CINEMALANO lf14 St M4111r iaa111" m 1111 MANN'S CINEMALANC 1414 St IUrM• AUhi• U) 1511 llfHW19' "BAO NEWS BEARS GO TO JAPAN" (PG)' 1 ()()..2 45-4 30-6:1 s.3:00·9:45 ,.,, ........ "SA TUlDA Y MIGHT FEYllt" llt \-·· "RIST LOVE" l.J .. , ......... "" -SHOW-fOOAf-1 ... , ..... ""'"'~ "'THE END" (R) 3:40-'5:35-7:30-9:25 "HEAVEN CAN WAIT" AMERICAN HOT WAX" (PG) "THANK GOD IT'S FRIDAY" THE COURT R ULED THE contract between Prinze and J onas. who was relieved of his m anagement duties before the actor's death, was valid for a three-year period beginning February 1974. Attorneys said after the payment to Jonas is made, about $100,000 would be left in Prinze's estate. NEW YORK <APl Great. in a four-hour The Metropolitan Opera ~mioiv.ie.fo·r·N·B·C·. ····················••&~ has announced five new productions for it s 1978-79 season, including Benja min Br itte n 's "Billy Budd.·· Pete r Pears will sing Captain Vere, the role he creat· "LET THE GOOD TIMES ROLL" (PG) '.:DAMIEN: THE OM EN 2" {R) "THE SENTINEL" Prinz.e's will left 75 percent of his estate of his mother, Maria Pruetzel of Los Angeles. The bala nce was left in trust for his infant son, Fred· die Jr. AL.L. ORIVE·IN S O PEN 6:30 P.M.MIGKTLY Cn11a Under I 2 Free Un ten • K1dd1• Pbyground PRINZE'S ESTRANGED WIFE, Kathy, who was left out of the will. has since sued for com· munity property. ~~ DINNER PLAYHOUSE coaTA MllA Manns So<lth Co.t)t 9111A M•nns flrH Pl•ld wtlTMINITl.ll U4M•ll ANA141UI Cenhiry )I Ill TDllO EClw•rds s.CldlelNO OflANOI U4 City CMilr• Or •"O• Mall 6 P•<llk• Or""9f 01 f'.Oll!llTAIN Yal.Lt'f EClwa•Cl•C•nen\d P•clllu 01 NOW PLAYING good seats available 2 FAMILY MATINEES ADDED ~ ...,lar DemaMI Sunday, Ji'IY 16 & 23 'DEEMS Endur- 1119 ••. /UMJI . Qur mote optil1nt •upper lhoWflli!d "Ezctthtg . . 1lick & MICKEY DEEMS :~~. Dttmf :~tirst i Dowll'-.~ J-'tft llriltltMv. L.A ,...,,..., n "Great E11Urtalnmvit Cole Porter's --'""with louahtn" •Ddlghtful ..• Fine Enter· l"'l'l't·-. £111r111 lllt111Qrr, tafnlMftt and utr'Jl good H1NJTffl118 GOES" oc &\#fllfllfN;,,,. food ... r«"Ommnad lilgh• II ft •..tn tvmlng of tun• lV' Jttdl o M"4olfl. /Pt Dfitft WAI,.""), 3*111 $14.00 ll'ldudes °""*· Oenclnt. The Sonf ~of Al Hampton la lro.tdwly "-1 ($If ffll. l SAT ) Openln1July 25, Woody Allen's .. PLAY IT AGAIN, SAM" 3503 S HARBOR BLVD SANTA ANA Jr:~~~sr,='r.: RE SE RV 1\ TIONS (7 J '1) 979-5'.l l l < iHOlJI ·~, '.) 1• 1 ~''> l /' A 'fcNr Delly Piiot can be Recycled. OCC 09eratu otl~al center IOf Cocia MeN UA CINEMA . CM•1 _..,. 1•4l 'MO tt< ,, • " ed in 1951 The other new pro· duct i on s will b e Smetana's "Th e Barte r e d Bride." Donizetti's "Don Pas · qualc," Verdi 's "Don Carlo" and Wagner's "T ht· F'l y1 ng Dutchman ·· If!)' .. ~ .. .,. ....... . .. . Starts TODAY ~ I llWAROS \S111"ot'.11\Ll .. ll•i j H.,-Mt .tt Adt"M Cott•,,..., ... 1-. •141 ~ 'lDWAROS ~ CIP.:EMAV'flSJ l ~_.,.,,..,,..,,., ""Ook111n W"t I w.,..,.,,~, .. r..,. ..... "' •• q l I CJ ~ I .. ' r, 810 DAil Y PU.Of New Orleans Radio Tu1•ns Back Clock ~ ' 8 ) JOSf.Ptl BONNE V NEW ORLEANS CA I'> After Bunny Berrigan blOY." I C1m t Get Start~. · you 'Cet Woody Hermans ong1nal herd in full cry and the sound of Frank S1nalra back when he was an underfed sex ~ymbol Thef) gravel-voiced Louis Prima on ''Young al Heart .·· Carmen Cin~llero &1ng1ng My fo'unny Valentine ' Robert Goulet. "Full Moon and Empty Arms · Radio the .... ay 1t s hould be. s miled Ron McArthur, guidm1 force behtnd a daring innovation In broad· cast programming that Is catching attention around the country. "We're unique " ~ Goodman. Frank Sinatra, Judy Garland "A TOTAL AJISENCE of rock • .t total absence of country, .. McArthur said "We stay away from the really sweet Jackie Gleason type of stuff w e·re not an ·easy Hstenjng' or ·beautiful music' station by any means. It's foreground music, but not tempo. It's very melodious " s tation. Con su ltant Dick Op · penhe1mer suegested the old tunes spiced with sides by New Orleans musicians. It was an immediate hit. When the station first started. delighted rans mailed in 20 to 30 letters a day. The station still gels several letters a week I New Simon Film · In Homestretch McARTHUR. IS program director at WWIW <The Way It Was Radio), a station nourishing under a format or nothing but old tunes from the 1930s. '40s and '505. The combination of swing and big bands is spiced by music from New Orleans twice every hour "This tends to be Dixieland jazz, of course, but not necessaril:v." said McArthur. "The real kick in this thing is the number of people In Ule 18-to-35 group we pick up," said McArthur "This music is new to them. "WE'VE HAD INQUIRIES from all over -Chicago, New York. Phoenix," said McArthur. "I think it would go well in other places. The only problem 1 see is that other cities don't have Indigenous music such as we have here in New Orleans. . t t \ . 5 , 1 LOS ANGELES <AP> -Alan Alda and J ane Fonda are now filmmg the fourth and final segment of Neil Simon's "California Suite." The obvious audience is over 35. but station surveys show they attract a surprising number or younger listeners hunting an alternative to Top 40 programs and talk shows. ln addition, the station does six live broadcasts a week from night spots around the city -more remote broadcasting than any other station tn town, McArthur said. Some of it is hve music. others just sock-hop disco with one of the DJs s,pinning record~ from the s tation's extensive col lection ''But judging from the number of albums that go home on planes and train~ with t.Qurists 1 think il could work as easily in. say. Los Angeles as it does here. The music may not be as familiar to the people in LA as al 1s in New Orleans. but I think there's Interest in what we're doing." The segment is being filmed at the Burbank: Studio and on location at Malibu. The comedy also stars Mi chael Came. Bill Cosby. Walter Matthau. Elaine May, Richard Pryor and Maggie Smith in one typteal hour, for example, he had songs by Doris Day, Wild Bill Davison, Eddie Duchin, Mario Lanza. Ralph Marlene, Eartha Kilt. Fred Waring. George Shearing, Arthur Prysock . Al Hirt. Benny WWIW WAS CREATED a year ago to replace a progress ave country V1Sit Barbra Russians Veto Rock Movie dnd over 200 other Great Stars at World Famous The Biggl'i.t Gathering or ~tars in the World LONDON <AP> -Film pro· ducer Dimitri de Grunwald an- nounced Monday the Soviet Union has canceled without ex· planation a multi-million dollar movie that was to have been set around a two-hour rock concert in Leningrad. "I am absolutely shattered," the Soviet-born producer told the Associated Press. ·'T hey gave m e no reason whatever for canceling, no ex· planation at all. I can only im· agine the current political climate must have something to do with it. However, although groups lined up for the him that was to be called "Carnival." He said the Soviet backers. Lenfilm and Sovinfilm, called Suit Launched Over Emblems NEWARK. NJ. <AP> The him to Moscow and told him the project was off. De Grunwald did not say when he went to Moscow. Shooting was to have begun Tuesday, July 4. under the direction of David Coupe. 30· year.old Briton. "THE MOVI E WAS based on Lhe theme that music is a un- iversal language.·· De Grunwald said, adding that there was to be no dialo~ue. OprnUa\ •ftid~ ~ h ·• l •wwt f ,......,.. ... (1o.w In 8--n.i "•" -i1111o<~"-"-"a..r.1-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~L_ their conduct has been so un· ...: professional. I do not want to get television producer of detective shows "Starsky & Hutch" and "Charlie's Angels" has filed a c1v1l law s uit aga ins t a Fairview emblem company. charging at improperly was manufacturing and selling iron· on transfers of the stars of its popular female detective series. San Francisco promoter Bill Graham was to organize a free outdoor concert for 150.000 in Leningrad that was lo have capped the film. said De Grunwald, who was born in that Soviet city 64 years ago. . ......, ,, ......... ,, 17t-9850 ,,....., .. "lt~ll 979.9150 .,. .. .,,, •~l .... U 1799150 ~·~ ••utJ -121..070 ""9 f.UC & AU Jlll CAil lMI CHIA' DITICTTVI ~GI .... -.......... u. 19.11 _.,,,.,_ uuon OOUUI • JAMii llOUH <A'alCOIN ONllf'OI PlUI lHI INFOaCH 111 tuion OOUUI • -· ltOlHC CANICOIN ONI ll'OI f1.UI TMI U.,OICU111 4nvUM lfAUOlll F.U..T.1P01 PWI <OMAINI 4l. 0-• IACOUlllM lllSll THI OUIK TYCOON 111 PlUI A UTTU NIGffT MUSIC (l'OI IUAT REYHOLOS 0 1HE EMO" lltl 7:11. t:ll $-'f/SUOI -J-4 ..... lt .._ ... HOT AlOMr "CLOSE !Et'COUHTHS OF THE THIRD KIHD" WGA'l'S-1:1-.41 SAT/SUM -:a.+.J .. 1: ... t:Jt "llG WIOHESDA Y" IPGI ''l~DS IH TH! STRUM" ,._ICMAll YINCIMf llO WIDNUOAY lf'OI P\UJ CHllaJNO SICTION IH I _, llfTMOUIS e IALl T flfl O THI IN0111 """' lOVI AND DIATHIN I <l-f INTflf-1 AUCI IN WOHOULAH0111 PUii "NOCQ410 {I I IOT KMI- JAWS 21f'OI e1>0 & IOtU -9T, HO PAJSU nuon OOUUI • UtMll NOUN CAHICOIN ONI ll'OI l'lUI THI INfOIC.H111 THI CHU, DITICTIVI (PG! f1.US THI SHOOTIST INl T NO PAUU llOT SCMbMR JAWS 2CNI I i• & lllU tOllllT, NO PAUU IA...-.c:MA& YM:l:NT MO W1DNUOAT fl'OI Plil3 OUI ...... lf.UOtt IN I <lU MfWI T0MT CU9Tlt UO HIWI llAH eo to~:" INI O•CA • into a slanging match." said De Grunwald, who 1s based in Lon · don. HE SAID SINGER Joan Baez and the pop groups the Beach Boys and Santana were to have nown lo Moscow from California this Saturday to m eet Soviet Spelling-Goldberg Productions asked for damages in its suit filed Tuesday and requested the All American Emblem Corp. be forced to turn over its transfers so they could be destroyed. ··visually, it would have been enormous, .. he said. "But for me this project was something more than a wonderful film. It seemed a reaJ contribution to peace and friendship ... IE-iii:l:·iib-:11 i•l•t:dl ( N ... WARREN JULIE BEATIY CHRISTIE ~ ~~ H~ ~~fA ~wMN ...... SCREENPlAY BY ElAINE MAY ANO WARREN BEATIY PROOUCEO BY WARREN Bf.ATIY DIRECTED BY WARREN BEATI"Y ANO BUCK HENRY Read the Ballantine Papefbac.k A MRAMOUNT PCT\JRE PG rAIUTAL GUIOANCE ~ ._::) '°"" ""'' ........ f -Of llf tuUIU r<)ll '""-ltj SHOWS AT·1:453:50 6:55 8:00 Ind 10:06 Call theatre for show tames and poltcy! 'American Hot Wu'(PG ) Open 7:30 Nightly! • . . . ~J ( ............ Hwy .. °' .... ,,.., --·~' Call theatre for show times ind policy! I .......... - ENTERTAINMENT I RADIO I MOVIES .............. RON McARTHUR PlA VS OLDIES 'Radio the Way It Was' In New Orleans Plus tRI "SATURDAY NIGHT ''F· ·l·S·T" FEVER" edwards CINEMA Mal loti•f •O••\ TI-IE GI ZEEK (R ) cou ...... u . \0-)101 \ ll II !>IO,. ~C' VOUI m1nct• -; ~ BURT ,,,.,. IUYNOU>S •• "THE11110 ., Plu1 n4ESION OF ZORRO t LUOt 00\ll.O Starr1n11(PG GARY BUSEY 51lrunollYT NIGH FEVEn i0H11,i IRAVOI t .. Plua (R) THANK GOO ITS FlllOAY •U'-N kACll f"'4ty M....,,,,... •n Mutt "CAPRICORN ,,.., ,.......,., .,.. •• .,.uy ONE" n4a9"D-W• Q.~ \:F 'Tt'tE J AN ENFORCER._._ __ WDLWCl IUlA G -··-·-· (P ) "'' ... .. ' ~ . - , # . .. INSIDE: •Ann Lander~ •Calendar •Slim Gourmet •Recipes A Bang-Up 4th Brighten Independence Day burgers and franks with Sunshine Fixings that will light up the sky. There's something~ for everyone at your Fourth of July picnic when you serve a colorful array of burgers and franks. Sunshine Fixings add all the vivid color and .appeal of fireworks to your holld~y fare. The flavorful combination or bacon. chopped zuc· chin!, tomatoes, and cheese, with the spark of prepared yellow mustard, can be made in ad· vance. When your meal is cooked, simply re- move the fixings from your cooler or refrigerator and let everyone spoon ll on. Or if you prefer your burgers with a bit more zip, Barbecue Burgers may be exactly to your liking. A zesty mixture of worcestershire sauce, catchup, and chili powder combined with the ground beef before the paWes are formed. adds a barbecue flavor all the way through to the center. More sauce can be brushed on before serving. Your favorite salad\ baked be'ans. melon and iced tea will make your holiday feast picnic perfect. BURGERSANDFRANIUi WITH SUNSHINE FIXINGS 3 slices bacon 1 :i small zucchini, diced 1 small tomato, d'ced Best Buys The approaching July 4th holiday means planning picnics and barbecues. A wide variety of produce items are available to enhance the holiday menu. VEGETABLES The erratic iceberg lettuce market con- tinues unchanged. Presently, quality and sup- plies are inconsistent. Sources say all should re- turn to normal in about a week and the last gap should be over. Tomato 1trices continue to be high. New fields are opening up in San Diego, but ship- ments are light. Prices may ease some the week of July 3. The corn market is light as Coachella Valley finishes production. Com is arriving from several. areas including Florida. Prices ~hould hold steady for the holiday. Potato prices are up as demand exceeds .'.>upply. Most of the storage potatoes are gone creating a greater demand on present supplies. Zucchini and green beans should be great holiday buys. The quality on both items is good and prices are reasonable. FRUIT The 4th of July means watermelon. Quality melon is available, but due to the increased de· mand. prices may go up a biL Canteloupe and honeydew are both excellent eating. Prices are reasonable. The aroma of summer fruit continues to grow tn the local supermarkets. Peaches, plums · and nectannes are in good supply at this time. Prices will be moderate in the coming weeks, with peak volume begmoing the second week in July . Quality on all items is excellent. Cons umers can expect the Santa Rosa plum variety (early) to diminish in the next few days. The Simka Rosa and La Roda varieties are beginning to arrive. The prices on perletle grapes, while not Jow, have dropped some. Cherry prices have come off some for the holiday weekend. The volu me is down this year . meaning prices on the average will be higher than in previous years. Quality Is excellent. Consumers s hould see good prices on strawberries this week. Quality berries conUnue to aNive from Northern California. Mangoes and papayas are more plentiful and prices are moderate. Production of Hass avocados is expeeted to reach its peak the week or July 17. The fruit is reported as excellent ... 4 slices process American cheese diced 2 tablespoons mustard l 1h pounds ground beef 1 pound frankfurters Salt and pepper Hamburger and hot dog rolls Cook bacon until crisp. saving t ltablespoon drippings, crumble bacon. Combine with zUc· chlni, tomato, cheese, mustard_. amt_ Ute la.ble: spoon of bacon drippings. Shape ground beef into patties; grill along with frankfurters until done. Season beef patties with sail and pepper. Serve on rolls. topping each with generous spoonful of vegetable mixture. 10 to 12 servings. BARBECUE BURGERS 1 4 cup worcestersbire sauce ''" cup catchup l teaspoon chili powder 112 teaspoon salt 2 pounds ground beef 6 to 8 hamburger rolls Combine worcestershire sauce, catchup, chili powder. and sail; add half of this mixture t.o ground beef and mix lightly. Shape 6 t.o 8 pat· ties. Grill until done, turning once. Brush with remaining sauce just before serving. Serve on rolls. 6 to 8 servings. Add fireworks to ordinary fare with a vegetable toppmg. Flavorful, Fruity Melon Medley --. DAILY PILOT America is the melting pot of flavors as well as people. Foreign foods and seasonings blend with native dishes to enlarge our cuisine. A tasty example. most appropriate for In· dependence Day. is a medley of native American fruits marinated in a flavorful liqueur imported from Ireland and served in a natural fruit basket. Any e<>mbination of fresh fruits may be used for this adult treat, called "Misty Melon ... But in honor of Independence Day, why not combine red. almost-wbite and blue? Red ripe strawberries and watermelon, pale ho11ey~ew and Thompson seedless grapes color coordinate with blueberries. The fruits are laced and chilled in Irish Mist liqueur. which Imparts a subtle honey flavor. and then heaped into a dramatic watermelon basket. The zesty marinade may be poured into a pitcher or sauceboal and dribbled over In· dlvidual fruit ser'vings. A watermelon basket. though optional as a bufret centerpiece server . adds color and flair to any summertime setting. Honeydew or can· taloupe shells and orange cups are attractive servers. too. Or simply marinate in Irish Mist and serve the savory fruit from your most elegant glass serving bowl. Of course, frozen or canned fruJt may be u.'ied at other times of the year -malting "Mis · --......... -... . . . . . . . ""' . .. . .. ~ •' i. Blend the flavors of summer with amelon medley. l i • 'i I ' t; CJ ty Melon" a year-round taste treat as weU as a Yankee Doodle Dandy. MISTY MELON 1 small watermelon t 'h cups blueberries 1 cup strawberries 1 cup seedless grapes 1 cua.honeydew melon f)alls 14cupwater 11. cup honey '1'J cup sugar 1 tablespoon fresh lemon juJce 1h cup Irish Mist liqueur To make basket: cul watermelon lengthwise, leaving a strip of rind attached for a handle; scallop cut ed1e of watermelon. Scoop out watermelon into balls to measure 3 cups. Rinse blueberries. strawberries and crapes; pat dry. Remove stems from strawberries. Com· blne fruJts in glass bowl. Boll water, honey and sugar for 5 minutes In s mall saucepan. Cool ; add lemon juice and Irish Mlsl Pour Irish Mist marinade over fruits: cover and reftigente 1 u, 2 hours. Cover watermelon buket and chill. To serve: spoon fruits with marinade into watermelon basket. Ladle any remalnin1 Irish M lst marinade into sauce boat or pitcher and pour over lndJvid~aJ fruit servtnis. Six serv- ings . i • I •• .. . ~ "· • ("'~ DAILY P1l01 WllCl~y. Ju~ 28 1978 FOOD Fruit Makes Ideal Calorie-Sa£ e Desserts l::A \' BLUEBERRY MOUSSE 16-ounce bag un -sv. eetened blueberries 4-serving envelope ge latin g rape or raspbt>rry regular or s ugar-free 1 cup bolllng wate r SH• Gou....et By Barbara Gibbons ly layered dessert , a pretty pink. berry· flecked mold crowned with a clear red layer. like Jewels under glass! MELODY'S STRAWBERRY CROWN 1 envelope un · flavored gelatin I p anl fr e !>h strawberries 8 -ounce contarner vanilla yogurt <or plain l -low -fat variety cup of the red gelatm mixture into a six-cup mold. Chill. in the mold. tn the refrigerator. 15 min utes until syrupy. Lea ve rema1n1ng r ed gelatin mixture in mix· ing bowl at room tem· perature to cool 2 tablespoons cold water 1 cup defrosted whipped topping Thaw berries only un - til loose. Stir gelatin mix in bolling water until dissolved. Stir in ber· nes and cold water. Mixture should be )Syrupy-thick. If not. refrigerate until slightly thickened, then gently fold in whipped topping. Chill until firm. Serves six. 135 calories each ·with regular gelaUn; 90 calories each with s ug- ar-free gelatin. melted and dissolved. Stir in cold water. Stir ln yog urt. Chil l in refrigerator until s y rupy. Fold ln banana. Spoon into six dessert c ups and chill until firm. Makes six servings. 105 'h cup cold wate r calories each with plain 4-servlng envelope yogurt; 115 calories with regular. OT low-calorie vanilla yogurt. <Dried s trawbe rry gelatin shredded cocon ut. If dessert mix · used as garnish: is s·. 2 ~ cups bolling calories per teaspoon.) water Sprankle gelatin on cold water In a s mall sauce p a n Wa it o ne minute. unlll softe'ned. then heal gently until melted In a la rge mixing bowl. combtne me I led gelatin, s trawbe r ry ge latin a nd boiling water, stir until dis - s olved. Measure a half· After 15 minutes, re· move mold from r e f rigerator and ar· range six or elgf'\t whole berries m a circle In the chilled syrupy gelatin-. Return the mold to the refrigerator. By this lime the re- m a ining gflatin m the mixing bowl should be a t r oom temperature. When tt Is. beat m the YOiurt untJI thoroughly blended. Chill the yogurt mixtur e an the refrigerator until !>y rup y, about 15 minutes. Meanwhile. slice the remaining bcr· ries (save lt few for garnish. if desired I. When the yogurt mix· ture is syrupy, fold in slice"d berries. Spoon the ) ogurt·berry m ixture on top or the red gelatin ln the chilled mold. Return th e m o ld to the refrigerator and chill all day or overnight, until firmly set. Unmold onto a plate and garnish with a few reserved berries. if desired Slice to serve. Makes eight servings, 80 calories each with re- gular dessert mix and vanllla yogurt: or 35 calories with sugar-free dessert mix and plain yogurt. ALL SEASON FRUIT ..MEDLEY -Here's a d essert idea that makes the most of our "conve- 11 i e n cc" technology , bringing together fresh. trozen . canned and dried fruits from a variety of seasons and chmates. The citrus fruits keep the diced apples a nd pears from brownmg. a nd the combined JUiee:-. so f t en tht• dri e d a p r 1 c o t s V a r y t h l' n•c1pe to suit your whim ;rnd v. hat ·i. avatluhlt• 10 -ounc:t• packagt· froH•n uns weetened melon balls . partly thawed 2 red unpeeled ap- ples, cored and diced 1 ripe green pea r , cored and diced 2 eating oranges. peeled. seeded, cut in chunks Com bine all 1n10?re· d1ents in largL' covered .1ar a nd s tore in the rcfn gerator at least 12 hours before serving , .'<lakt•s l6 servings. 60 • c~rlories each. • Spoon into C.'hampugnt• ~lasses, along with a lit : l le of the juice. ond top • ''UC h ~<'rv1ng with u tables poon or v ~rn11l a yogurt and a teaspoon of shredded <:oconut, if de- '> tr Cd . 80 ca lori es per serving. Or s poon fruit over half-cup low-rat cottage cheese for ti delicious quick lunch or high · protein s nack . 140 <'a tones each serving Or i.crVL' 1t over a scoop of lo w-fat vanilla ice milk or frozen yogurt for an a ny-season sundae About 135 C<Jlorics each ser ving 1'1 RS. MACK'S S LIM BLUE B ERRY BAKF. I. . . More fruit than cake. Mrs Arthur Mack of Toledo. Ohio. wins a Sl2.95 copy of my "Slim Gourmet Cookbook." H arper & Row. for this winning idea:) 10-ouncc packa ge Un ~ W Celene d rroze n blueberries, thawed 1a cup a ll-purpose flour t tablespoons sugar 1 egg l t a b l es poon soft butter or margarine l teaspoon vanilla 1 :! teaspoon double .icting baking powder P inch of salt Spray a s mall eight· inch non-slick pie pan ~~ ith cooking spray. Add blueberries. Beat re· maining ingredients two minutes and spoon over berries , s preading e ven· ly. Bake m a preheated 400-degree oven 25 lo 30 m inutcs until lightly browned. S li ce in wedges and serve warm or chilled. Makes s ix servings, 110 calories l '3C'h . DENI SE'S YOGURT MINI-MOUSSE 2 envelopes plam un· flavored gelatin ... 12 cup cold water l<J cup bolling water 6-ounce can frozen orange juice, widiluted concentrate, partly thawed 6 -ounce can cold water <~cup) 1 cup plain yogurt. <or vaollla) low-lat verlety 1 lar8o very ripe banana, peeled and diced srrlnkle 1elatin on co d water In a saucepanl Wait one minute. then add boilin~ water. Heat gently until thoroughly dissolved Jtemove from heat and stir in orange juice until ·OPEN JULY 411 UYlanso IYUI MUAllYUI IAOl Of ftal !TUii ii IMllllll fO • IUIMl f AWAI.AIU fOI UU • IAOl IUllJT IAllll. UQPT AS WKlhCAUf MOno !If T1MS AO If WI htl OVf Of H AffllmlD ITUI, WI WIU Offft tOll tOlll CllOICI Of a cowuuu ma. wu n Al&Aliu. llfUC1111G nir U IU I.A YlllOS GI A lAll CllfCI l"""*l fOU ro NIOIAJI Tiii ADYUTillD ma &T nil ADYOTISll> N ICI ....... It OA f\ ' PLUS LIQUOR PRICES SLASHED 15% TO 25%1 All QUAlfTITY llCUfU ltSCIVlD ..0 SAU TO DUUIS ot JOI tlSAU OI COMJIUOAl USI. l'IKU lfftCTI'Yl WID .. JUMl U TitlU TVlS •• JUlT 4, 1'71. WINA TRIP TO (10trl••hr2) Wntt'" ti~rl11'1" "tf1 ftOn \100 t•ic• 4 d•t ro ,..,.,.,,..,, ant ol 111,.o<o' mo.• Ot••l••ol <•fin (llf•t \ ftOl~••I ,,., G•al1l11111 a•fWllt<r' ff ' loottr p,ru ""' p111n irmoftd '°" ot SN'"' '"' • \O•llt Olol• ....... 1 pllCt ., -...... '-1"1 ..., "'°" <•••• • '"' _.., tw °' !llQ-~ '\ f-\ tc. 111 \llDf'O ""*""' l"CI ·~«•111\ G•IOl4tl'I '\ lilt•<O \ 1"4 ll'!ffi Coll • ' SAYE'' 57.93 WITH i!COUPONS!. ••M&H ll HSIO-• • ~---,l•PS•l•• ••I ~-;.t&T'ciTTm'10' • •, e.?J111• • •iKviiUi • • • HAii "AA" : COLA I · CANNED 1 ~ SANDWICH : 9. LAlll IHS I I I I ,,, . HAM J 1 •u COOIUES 1 :~vt 39c : :~co\t .!l 99c : :r2~~ s s7aa :{ly\10'~ 7 .. -., ...... c : 1,J21,..!9.!. ... -·-...... -I I c .'!" •. -... , ......... ,_I I :!. 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" ..., I I .:-:.:~ '~~.: ~~·"· .,. • I I :--:: ",' 11• •• :··: ••• ··• .. ~ I ......... ,..,, ••••••••• 11.1 .~b••• ........... •••••• ----~L·••••• --- •.......... wr··-..-·s·--,_. .. &'l."l.~..lr.,~---------N YMllUAIMS I . lllP MS• I r1.aH11 l <o .. ,u on• I llAYftAl I · I FlOWla NT r ICE CllAM 1 I ••• CAllOI CAKE I I 111 ••' !!!,!~ ·I I 11• WIYI IAlllll I I "' · (' 1 :~vt_M,,C : 1 .!>'lt -·.$219 ar l &M 89C ::."Mii 8 C : : 11· ,,;:.~"".:;.::=--~ : i3o· ,~~~ .. ~::--~ i : 20· i~s-:~,~ ...... -=!i 10· ~~.._,, .. :..,,,,_,,. =i ---·~x'CouP.o .. ------10 .1 <OUPOM ••• --· llD·l (OU,OM --· ---RI D-ll <OU-eN --- • ..... t'.i ir.,mr-1ntr1nYi s.?llr--UJ··---: e.=s·s 1-a-.r~~i llAPll I ~ SNAY I ~ OUllKNEI • C:!ii!I vrr I 1 ... LMEas 1 1 '" 111111a111 1 1 "' UP sncK 1 • "' AN~11~~a1t 1 :~vi: s21• : :~q s123 I :~H '"'s<--1•39 ::l'f)-\\.f s4'' : I 50< ~:.· I I 15' ,.., I I 40< I I S 1 00 •• I I I I tu ,.,. .. ........... 1 .... , ..... -......... .,1 ..................... I I ..., ...... .,.... .. .,...,..,,.I I • -~· -.--...... I I ~-== ·;::: .~ ... -I I =-·~;. ~""' ...... ·•... I I -;,.~; ~· ..• ·-t ~ I I .. I •• • • .... ~ I ••• llD-1 (OU,OM .... ••• •ID·JI COU,ON ••• ••• llD·l (OU,ON ••• ••• llD-• COU,OM ••• . . -... • _______ ., __ KIAFT I SWiii & SCMll I I "' "'"' SAUCE I :~,~-69c : •20< 'Ml I l .'.''.. . . .. ... '~ ..... I I 1' ...... '•· ... • •• .,. -1 ••• 11 0:."cou'ro" ••• ··21~-,,,-1 I ,,, aA11nusan "... I I • UllOOM WllGllT I 1~'' r· MUENSTER 1 : 20< ~~~~ ~'!~~.!. : I :"·.·."··• .... ,.....~ ... I ••• HO.I COU,OM ••• •·ioto;11 I '" LAllY'S I l~\l. lllAll•All I : 1 0' BE~' ,!J!AK I I ............. -!~,...I I ·:~-. ~" ... '"' ,. .... . I ••• 1 (0.1 (OU,OM ••• •-----~---MAtlnU\lrr 1 MIXID I I '" •ITS I :~\l s 139 : I 20< ,.,., I I ~':.· ................... I I ........ ~ .......... ·-I ••• llD-l COU,ON --- s.i:r11·--rJ11···i i!f!it' DISHWASMIH I I "' DHEISl•t I : t'1y\\ •· 77c : I 20< ':!' I I . ... , .. ... '"'-o-~ I 'I , ......... ,.. -.,. ... ... I ---tiiO..'i cou'fioee --· •----------"llSIHT I •l11' APPi.EASY I I • DISSllT I 11">''' ~ 79c I I 2oc -~f I I ...... , ....... , ............ _I I :~, ·::.·. -:"'"" ··• ... ,. ...... I ••• R!D-1 <ff,~'!_••• •·-.1ma··i SK• I • II• (llAM I i fO! .. tl~~ _ i I ..... _, "' .. ,..... ... ,... .. """ I ---•io:"i' (ouPOM --- • ·--------i HllMC-AIO I I •11 H•Mll I I om"'"''" I I t~\· 99c I • 10<=:· • I ................ ...,.,. ... I I ;.,~.~ ......... I........ I ••• llD-1 <OU,OM ••• ~t t . I I l " . i .. FOOD Wednaeday. June 28. 1978 DAILY PILOT (3 How to Eat Well With High Blood Pressure No one likes lo tbmk about the possibility of having h.tgb blood pressure, or hypertension. but the fact as tha t 15 percent all adult Americans suffer from thtS disease. The tendency is lo ignore il and hope it wiU eo away. But since hypertension is a "sUent" disease, it may be passed over until permanent damage ls done. There is no pain involved in treating the dis· ease, however, so anyone suspecting that he or she might have it should be checked and begin to follow his physician's orders. Correct eating can do much to alleviate the problem. The patient needs to cut down sodium intake. watch his calories and eliminate fat from his diet. A new book, the first of its kind. "Living With High Blood Pressure," offers every kind of help needed lo change a diet permanently and safely. Written by a dietitian and a physician, Joyce Daly Margie, M. S., and James C. Hunt, M. D .. the book includes an explanation of what hypertension is, how the body functions normal· ly aod what happens when blood pressure is high and a look at nutritional therapy. The bulk of the book is menus, recipes and a series of valuable appendices dealing with the nutritive value of food groups, conversion tables and how t.o modify the amount of sodium in the diet. An important point made in the book is that sodium, not salt, is the biggest culprit in hypertension. "Sodium is not salt," it says. "But salt <sodium chloride) contains a good deal of sodium. In fact. it is nearly half sodium." Sodium is found in a great many foods. naturally but most people get most of their sodium from table salt. When a person is healthy the balance ol sodium and water in his body allows the blood to be delivered t.o the tissues in the correct amounts. When too much blood is delivered there 1s a strain on the system and disastrous results. such as stroke or heart attack can OC· cur. Lowering sodium intake lowers the blood pressure. for reasons which the authors say are "not entirely clear." 2 cups low·sodium bread cubes, toasted ·~ cup plus 2 tablespoons imitation eggs 1 '4 cups skim milk l leaspoon instant onion powder Y:! teaspoon ItaUan seasoning 'I• teaspoon oregano 'I• teaspoon garlic powder •1,. teaspoon dill weed ·~ teaspoon white pepper Heat oven to 350°. Empty tuna in ungreased I •At.quart baking dish; break lllna apart with fork. Sprinkle bread cubes on top. Mix remain· ing ingredients and pour over bread cubes. R<tke 30 minutes. s servings. 1 serving-160 caloties. 3.4 mEq Sodium (77 mg>. So the first means of treatment of hypertension should be diet. Following the pro- 'Per diet can reduce the amount of medication the patient needs and consequenUy reduce the possibililles of undesirable s ide effects from the medicine. Elirrunalin~ table salt from the diet is not the sole answer to having a low-sodium diet, the author pointed out. Sodium ts used as a pre- servative and is found in such things as toothpaste. water that is chemically softened, baking powder, baking soda, monosium- glutamate and kos hered foods. Baked Tuna Fondue can make a restricted diet a pleasure. Enjoy the exciting taste experience of this gold medal winner at the California State Fair Made from select U.S.D.A. beef. flavored with just the right touch of spices, then hickory smoked the natural way for extra flavor. It's great sliced or chunked for party snacks and appetizers. used in scrambled eggs, in salads or in that super sandwich. "Living Witll High Blood Pressure," <HLS Press, Bloomfield. N. J .), 1s available for $12.95 from HLS Press, Inc., 1455 Broad Street. Bloomfield, N. J. 07003. The authors worked together on the medical and nutritional team that produced "The Mayo Clinic Renal Diet Cookbook" in 1974. Mrs. Margie is editor of "Dialogues in Nutrition" and Hunt is professor and chairman of the Department of Medicine, Mayo Clinic and Mayo Medical School , Rochester. Here are some of the book's recipes : CHJCKEN OREGANO Four 3-ounce chicken pieces <leg. thigh, breast) t <;love garlic, split 11'.a cup unsalted margarine, melted 1 tablespoon lemon juice 111!1 teaspoons oregano 111 teaspoon pepper Parsley sprigs Set oven control at broil and/or SS<». Rub chicken with cut side of garlic. Mix margarine, lemon juice, oregano and pepper; brush about 2 Old Tuf 'n Ready presents the toughest 1 toweli .I (.;j ~ Tuf 'n Ready"-the only paper towel with three working layers- is better than ever! Because now it feels more like cloth. Yet Tut 'n Ready is still strong enough to rescue you from even the toughest messes. Use this coupon to save 20¢ on •mproved Tut 'n Ready. You 'll like the new feeling-and the savings. ~·~·······························~·········~···················~·· • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• I w a: ~ Limit'-~ "9'~ Of*•• .... Oeoll'llbet 11, 1111. TR·IOIM>98 ~ 0 ::D m § ~ z : • • • . . • • • • • • • • • .................................................................................... C <>own~ Cofilofetion 1978 . ' ' .. I tablespoons of margarine mixture on chicken. Place chicken skin side down on rack in broiler pan. Broil with top about 7 inches from heat until brown, about 20 minutes. Turn; brush with about 2 tablespoons of margarine mixture and broil unl.il tender and crisp, about 20 minutes. Turn; brush with remain mg margarine mixture and broil a few seconds. Garnish with parslev. 4 servings. l serving -285 calories. 3 mEq Sodium (70.25). BAKED TUNA FONDUE 1 can <7 ounces) water·packed tuna, drained Look for the little Schirmer's Sausage Maker on the package in your market. ~. SchirmtrS® the Sociable Sausage Avililitble in the Deli sedion or: LUCKY DISCOUNT STORES Introducing: I I I I I Deliciously rich and mild. -- •• 'l"r" CJ ~1..'t Pll..Of Novel Meal Idea Want something out of the ordinary for sum· merllme dishes? Gel ac· qualnted with some or the relative newcomers to the produce depart· ment or your market. According to the Unit,. o.d Fresh F_ru1L and Vegetable Association. commodiUea once COD· sidered exotic are now appearing regularly on the nation's tables aa Americans become more adventurous in their eating an~ unuaual varieties are more wide- ly available. One novel vegetable, spaghetti squash, may be the answer to the weight.watcher's prayer for pasta from July to January, its peak s eason . While il's similar on the out.side to its cousins. other hard· sbell squash varieties. its interior, once cooked, reveals an amazing and unique diUerence. The golden flesh cooks into long strands, re· markably like spaghetti 1n appearance, texture and flavor! Serve It as :vou would pasta for S paghetti Squash Pom odoro. Boil the squash whole (although larger squash may be cut In half for cooking), extratt the strands gent· ly with a fork and serve this low·calorie special· ly capped with a rich, fresh tomato sauce seasoned with onion, green pepper, garlic and oregano . All yo ur diners, not just the weight·consdous, will fork rn with gusto. Keep the chatter going with a tropical fruit dessert -mangos. In peak supply from May through August, this succulent fruit with its ~ubtle, sweet savor is qiarvelous chilled and sliced into salads or desserts. But it also -cooks into a delectable fresh mango sundae sauce to spoon over sum· Q"l ertime ice cream or pound cake. Fresh mangos will vary m size and shape according to variety. They should be firm when purchased and al· lowed to stand at room temperature until the s kin yields unde r gentle pressure and a delicate perfume can be de· tccted. SPAGHETTI SQUASH POMO DORO 1 spaghetti squash r2 to 3 pounds> 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 12 cup chopped Muon l clove gar lic, minced 1 tomlalocs, peeled nnd chopped 1 ~ cup chopped green pepper 1 1 cup c hopped <'clery 1 tablespoon fresh lemon Juice I teaspoon salt 1 2 teaspoon sugar ~2 teaspoon dried lear oregano. crumbled Dash pepper Place unpeeled, whole squash in kettle of boll· mg water. Cover, boil 20 ,,to 25 minutes or until fork pierces skin easily and squash is tender. In medium saucepan, melt butter. saute onion and garlic until soft. Add ·re- main i ng ingredients;· simmer over medium heat 15 minutes. Cul squash in half. remove seeds. Using a fork, pull squash out of shell onto platter. Spoon tomato sa uce over sq~ash . 5erve with Parmesan cheese, if desired . M ekes· 6 servings. FRF.SH MANGO SUNDAE SAUCE 2 fresh mangos 1 cup water IY• cup sugar ~ cup fresh orange Juice ~ teaspoon lmlta· lion rum navor. Peel mangoe, cut pulp away from pit and chop. Jn medium aaucepan1 com blne choppoa mango, water, s ugar, , orange Julee and rum tlavoq. cook over medium neat unUl suiar dissolves; almmcr 20 . minutes, stlrrln1 oe· caaionally. Serve warm or chilled over fresh fruit, ice cream or poundcake. Makes: About 1~ cups sauce. .... It looks like pssts, but It's really squash. FOOD Chilly Treats for 'Kids V acatloD tlm• flnda children eaie.r tor new projects, and for refreshlnl aoacka to aua· taln their proJecu ! FVNSllAKE 1 Fun Sizo Candy -3 Musketeers or Milky Way Bar frozen blender cocta.iner: cover and blend until finely chopped. Add mUk and Ice cream : cover and blend on b.lJb speed untll thick and nutty. Mak ea l aervlna. FROZEN YOOVllT 8UllPRl8E 1 wooden stick or 'Skewer ~ cup cold Ill.lie ~ cup vanlll• cream Fun Size C&ndy -3 lee Musketeen or Mllky Way Bu Place candy 1 CS-ounce> paper in cup ~ cut> flavored frozen yogurt, sllehtly softened Press wooden stick In· to end or candy. Place candy In a 5-ounce paper cup with the stick ex· tended. Flll cup with yogurt. Place in freezer at least 1 hour. To eat, pull off paper cup. Makes 1 serving. BLACK BO'ITOM BUTl'ERSCOTCll PUDDING 4 Fun Size Candies -3 Musketeers Ba.rs 1 package <:r ounces> butterscotch pudding and pie fWJ.ng <not Instant> SUce l candy into eaclr of 4 dessert dishes. Prepare fudding ac· cordlne o package directions: pour bot pud· ding over candy In dish· es. Cool to room tem· perature; cbllL Makes 4 servings. New ower beef prices to feed '\.those unexpected holiday gu~ts. W1.ll.--< l ' We've lowered the price of every cut of beef, just In time for the 4th! July 4th Is almost here, the day you unofficially declare your independence from the kitchen and move the cooking outdoors. It's that special time of the year when you invite family and friends to get together for that traditional holiday cookout. And just in case more CC¥Tipany arrives than you expected. Lucky ls right there to give AULUCKYST~U Will Dl OPEN JULY 4th 9 A.M. til 7 P.~. your budget a helping hand with our new lower beef prices. Because wholesale prices are down. we've Immediately reduced the price of every cut of beef in our meat case.Merci beaucoup, Cordon Ble u. rhe very same ttung. So. thanks to your enthusiastic and overwhelming response. we'll be keeping all 12 recipes on hand. just In case you missed one. A great way to celebrate the occasion is to barbecue Lucky's Bonded Mmm ..• mmm ... mmm Beef. the same quality Bonded Beef that meets the strict standards set by the Famous Cordon Bleu Cooking School of Paris. That's an acknowledgement we've become very proud of during the past 12 weeks. because It's told us just how good our Bonded Beef really is. And. since we introduced our first Cordon Bleu recipe. you've been kind enough to tell us Make your cookout a big success by stocking up now on all your favorite cuts of beef. We carry everything from ground beef to ftlet, t·bone to top sirloin. And all at new lower prices to help you r<iduce your entire holiday food total. So light a fire under your budget for the 4th, come to Lucky and see what discount Is all abou t. •eUINA ll'A"IC Fresh Meats GROUND OEEF J LO PKG Oii MCI\£ 8 7 OOl~NOI CXCClO JO' rAI .......... lO e ~~FlOtN, ••• lO 2 18 TOP SIP.LOIN STEAK OOO<Ul~llONOO>lllll10"' • • lb 2.28 GlAOE CUT CHUCK STEAK OONOIDlllH •••• ••• •• • .te .89 OONnrn P.OUNO STEAK 1 IC.8 l)(>OIDOlll 10 oJ ~;;~~STEAK . 10 1. 98 POP. TEP.HOUSES TEAK 10 2 .28 GP.OUNO OEEF PAITIES l~l<):i ~I [l(lt \ to()fl \(ll O J lJI ~AO 3 o 2 7 POP.K LOIN P.OAST ··•"t04H(Uf .l10 AVG W't 1n 1.48 PORK SPAREP.IOS C'»tl~•\l'nl ~IOl'IOICIUHO N , ta 1,58 POP.K LOIN P.10 CHOPS •..• ,. ..• ••.• 1a 1.88 PORK LOIM CHOPS 'l'•Dlll(QN •••• • • •• , 10 2.08 SHANK POP.TIOM Of HAM 98 OQNI "' IUll VCOQtllD . I 0 • CUP.£ &1 HAM HALF H()IW(1 D()ljfll~ IW•COOt<IO 10 2.59 ~~Yi,!~~~£?' OP.W~• 1 .19 omoFTHEFP.YEP. ~~~~}.~--\ 10 • 98 ~Km SAUSAGE .. _,_ AUV<'Ut"'\ lO 1. 78 LADY La SLICED OAC°" •ini..y 1.17 Fresh Meats DONELE55 WHOLE TURKEY A llMOUI\ ~I Al\ ~ 7l o~ r10n: ........... l 0 156 Canned&Packaged ~TORTILLA & CORN CHIPS 49 1.AOYlC( 4\/All •.. 1101 l'l'.G e L ~~~AP.I~ OP.AN~~~/ C•• .45 p MARSHMALLOWS 0 ~Ill(. •••• '<>01 "'0 .45 L OELMOHTEPICKLEHALVES 69 l>'ll N<i Clf\t<O'JHI• no1 .. ~. L FP.E~~H·s MUSTARD i.,,, ,., •. 5 7 SHOm"ING POTATOES 69 l•D'rlll 10/ (•~. p HAP.VEST DAY OUHS 0 ..01 D0Ct OI\ HMQjll(,I I\ & (I A<O • 3 9 p HAP.VEST DAY PEAS 19 b •tO/ Oflif • r LAD'tlEE OE\'EP.AGES 6 •)f\A\()11\ "IJ\Oll'O'oH t olO O"\ • 25 L HAP.VEST DAY CATS~!., O't .41 P 0.0.Q. SAUCE 79 O (~C..,11\ N'-()llWl(ll 1JO/ n • b ':PSI~~ .. 9 •>OI '""' 1.JJ ~ PO~K 6 OEAHS b CAW9h \ • tiOI c,.-. • 3J J. VEG·All. VEGETAOLES "'i ¥Wfl0 •oO/ c-. ... V L EAP.l y CALIF. P.I~ OLIVES l\tff[i(•tl'\AV"l'A oO/ (Afrif .65 Canned&Packaged b STAAWOERRY PRESERVES 99 HAr\vt~r 0AV ...... J10l IA!\ e Dairy & Frozen b LADY LEE ICE CREAM 'hG/':L ~UAll((IN e 99 b COTTAGE 115 CHEESE l.AOYllt .. J2 Ol (I" r JENo·s COMOO PIZZA b ""C•Cl\ll\I 11101 ... {, 1.69 r PICTSW. EET PEAS b ••tll ""''· .47 b ~~~.se.~PPL[ JUIC~ >t•u ,_H . 72 LA.DY LEE LfMONAOE 29 ((."<( .,(, ()!<..... •)Ol ('•. Household & Pet l~~K WIW 10n\11ou .7~ b~~~~.~~/;>IL l'"' oe.1 .69 r VlllA STYROFOAM CUPS 49 6 ''Ct NG• LADY LEE PAP£P. t'APKIHS 99 lODCI lllloQ • VILLA PAP£P. Pl.ATES 99 •DOC• llWO • Delicatessen !DALL PARK FRANKS MlAIOnour . . . . ... 100l Pol(, 119 r LADY LEE DIPS b .,,_.Aft'fM"l 60l ~.~7 P KNUDSEN SALAD 0 l'C"I .. () );r)l (IM 1,09 L ?,~SLICED~:: ... <> 2.59 uo·s SLICED MEATS t HAM ...... tf l""""'QI\ 49 b C.-C•IM JOI '"'G • HCOP.N NATIONAL p 'lolll\.'c.f ,~ ..... IOI\ 1 69 b t<>«~WVl\11 • t)Ol ""Cl , L CASINO CHEESE ••AllJCI~\• • ec.r.r •G .99 Health & Beauty Aids r PEP.SONNA GLADES }; C•t\fRlOC10 -..:r, ()t ) • 9 7 l EXCEDP.I~ TAD~,, 0<o01.09 A VITAl.IS HAI~ GP.~0~ 0~ 1 . 97 p DAN DA.SIC f, •tr. on"'o'""' "°" •1~0 )01 1 . 97 r VITALIS HAIP. SPMY i JB ~ lllCI ClAlUll•o<OoD • &OJ ~II • o~ ~·•Poo-t"t1'0'll~~Ht\ ~ t-.... \"O~-,.,,,.,....,,...~~y ~ /tt.'11 ·'""''~ A,h4<fili tO I\ : .... • ·o ,.. •"" -' • "" ··• I ... • *• ._, ..... """' f • • ""J • • , ,· "''\p-.,. ... , .. , . . · •• - NEW LOW PRICES ON LIQUOP., DEER & WINE 10, <O>e di1<oun1 on ......,.,, W""' G 1 •P"'' '"""' cc .. <k..O.l'I'} K•·v 0 ,.,, A\llO'Ot>le Ot VOt"\ wit" ll(}Jl)f Ot1>0· •m('f•I > onl1 r GOLDEN CAO\VM DEEP. 1 OS 0 o •>OI Uo"\ • r Ol.U[ HUM "llME " "S 0 1}01 ti!\ "·" L CADIN STIU. OOUP.OOM 7 89 "'4f'..,.,, t /)lf" O'l • Produce DING CHERRIES , 59 (Ar\(,[ lolQr\l~~f •• LO e HONEYDEW MELON LARGE AVOCADO~ OIJI llf\'I' ICEOERG LETTUCE Piil PA(llAC.£0 GP.ElH ONIONS '"""' ,,,,....,,"""'""'' LD e24 lA .39 "'"' .12 LUCKY PIUSEMTS THE 0.Daysof . ~AMERICA lo ~ .. o • Cl"O ~-... o OV'"O • • 11<!Ov~-<-<>1:14' .... .,.., 'IO? Dov ..,,.. ""' O"<l ·~~f' Doy lvly A•" t..C•y ~·" .... Of' IPO"IO""Q 11 t' ?• OAV\ Qt ,.,..[fl!(A o ~,._ ~ ~I <>N' .,.,...,, f' • .,.__ ~'''" !"<>' t1•"(• l'(O o po.1-on Oii av• NJ·.on' ~ .... ,,..,. .,.,,, ,,.,.""IX'''" t>r '""'"" Cf '•-b'•' P\ ,,,. ~·· -·H Of' \I.Owl\ V. Kl IV (1'0fV\~ I I on MONDAY· FRIDAY SATU"OA'f ·SUNDAY 10 A.M .. & P.M •• 10 P.M. 4 P.M .. & P.M .. 10 P.M. ~•Y kids. •nter OUt' Achlev•ment Awards Com~dtlon. 111OO<ll••""'10 m. twooekor.n on-'<..,....,,...,,..,, AwOl~h (\ooy C~•non will b• NII<! •or on 11uo.t1" ~ I 2 111rovQn I I.I t1111on" w-1 be ollltd "' )() wc>'Q• Of ffl"\ whod\ OO<ltCYIOr ~· f'Mon(I> 11'11' mO>I 10 lhem and wroy GIOnCI P"l<t wllll\f'I~ w~I ~ 11Qw11 YoO A,.,...•(Qn Aorl.,..l tO 'WO\/\ff\QIOfl 0 C !Or Cl Quod•"1 DISCOUNT SUPERMARKETS IOVI d CV' notoan ~ •Ol>IOI C°""".mt"''' d •"• MotlOt A~ ~IY ~OOtl~ <ompi,,_I> ol M0,,,011 HC>t.i• (Omolt'll' lulfl •~llO'I' l"'UV l()fm Ol'<1 <Ol>.-1 Of Oii brooOcO\h d ,,.,. ,, 01\Y~ or AM[l\>(J. o•• <MlllOble otMoilil•'ll "" or oir Luck" Supe<mor~"'' •A.NAH&llil 110 IO. ITAT'I COLUQI 8LVO. ANAHllM no W. U ll'ALMA AVIHUI •cotTA MHA •P'Uu.1.-TON tto NO. AAYOMONO •QA"omf Q..OYI tJl'tl IUCUO AYI. . ~ .. ,, LA ll'ALMA AVl!NUI 21eo H•"•o" eLvo. 'ULLPTON ~NO.IUCUOAVI. • QAln>b Q"°VI nntllAONOUA .._ •HUtlTtNOTON HACH •HUNTUfQTOM 9'AOM ... , ATUNTA AVINUI 1MOO eOUA CHICA AYUtVI HUNTINGTON HACH 1tol0 8"00tcHU"tf tTllUT •LAOUNA HIL.Lf U272 CA80T "0A0 AT LA ll'U •L.A Mf9'AOA •°"ANQI •IAN'TA ANA L.A Ml"AOA IHO~INO CINTP UH L CHAflMAN AVINUI wt 10. 8"11TOt. l'MHT . -· ITOfllHO,.N DAILY t A.M. ... •TUIT1N 1"70 MIWflOttf AV.MUI •WfllMIHITllll •wtlTMINITI" •WHIT'fll" ltOO W11TMINST'llt AVINUS 1'07' 9"1NOOALI l.,.,.llT 1 ... L ~ OL . .. .. , . . " I .. I • --. • . . FOOD W.clneldey. June 28. 1078 DAii. V PILOT d peeial Diets By June Roth R .ecipes Of Gloucester Spicing Up Somehow ruh and shellfish taste better when presented by a ras · herman's wile. Such ie the case of a cookbook called "The Taste of Bland F d Gloucester," a compila· lion of recipes by fls· hermen·s wives. The re-0 0 cipes are delectable since People seem lo know less about their body machinery than they do about their cars. They wouldn't dream of pouring_ the wrong..fuel mto the gas tank of a car, but recklessly stuff trouble-makers into their mouths, and are as· tounded to be doubled up in pain a short time later. Just as cars need a special fuel at times, some people need special food to provide nutri· tion and yet soothe a section of the degisllve system that is causing problems. The digestive system of the human body ts an amazing contraption of pumps and tubes containing spraying acid, enzyme, and alkaline baths lo break f<Y.>d down into substances that keep the entire mechanism of the human body going. It's a wonder that there are not more breakq,owns in the system, especially in the twenty-two feet of small intestine that lies all wound up in the abdomen. The small intestine is comprised of three sect ions. First there is ten inches of duodenum connected on one side to the stomach and on the other to ten feet or jejunum. The jejunum con- nects to ten to twelve feet of ileum that ends with a connection to the large intestine. The job or the small intestine is to process nutrients and to dispose or waste material through the large intestine. Because of its length and activity, often the trouble spot for some people is an in· fl.ammalion or the jejunum or ileum, causing a disease known as regional enteritis Most doctors place sufferers of regional en- teritis on a strict bland diet, the same as that used for ulcer patients when they are having an acute attack or directly alter surgery. Protein as obtained from tender chi cken, turkey, and white fles h fish, cut into small pieces. All other meat should be-omitted during an acute attack. Additional protein may be ob- tained from soft-cooked, poached, or scrambled eggs, cottage cheese, cream cheese, or mtld- processed American cheese. Butter and margarine may be used but no oil. Grains are lim.ited to white toast, white crackers, cooked faru~a. cream of wheat, cream of rice, and strained oatmeal. STRAIN ED CREAM SOUP 2 cups half-and-half cream 1 cup cooked asparagus, peas, carrots, or spinach 1 2 cup liquid from cooked vegetables I/• teaspoon salt Pour cream into a saucepan. Combine cooked vegetables, liquid, and salt in an electric blender; blend on high speed to puree. Pour through a strainer into cream. Heat and stir un· til smooth. Makes 6 half-cup servings. NOODLES AND CO'M'AGE CHEESE 1 quart water v.i teaspoon salt 1 package (8-ounce) broad noodles 'h cup cottage cheese l teaspoon sugar 2 tablespoons butter these women know all about seafood . The women, who pride themselves on fresh fish, suggest that if fresh fi sh is not available, frozen f illets may be su b · sl1tuted. In their cookbook the Gloucester wives tell about the famous Man at the Wheel statue who looks out over the harbor in the historic port of Gloucester, Massachusetts. It sym· bolizes the courage and steadfastness or "They who go down in ships," the men who fish out of G l oucester. The cookbook, in addition to new recipe s and treasured old ones, also contains information on selecting, buying, clean· ing, and fillellng of fish to insure a p er fect reproduction or Gloucester cuisine in kitchens across the coun· try. One of the interesting recipes an ttu~ book calls for whiting fillets. also known as s alver hake. The recipe may be ser ved as a casserole or over sp;ighett1. PRIDE OF GLOUCESTER Cut 2 pounds whaling fillets (or other fish fillets> into J .p1eccs each. Mix . 3 4 cup bread crumbs 14 c up Romano t•heese. grated 1 large clove garlic minced 111 teaspoon p<.•p per 1 teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons parsley, chopped Beat 2 eggs. Dip fish into eggs. Roll fish in bread crumb mixture. Fry in :14 cup hot oil. Set aside. Drain oil that is left from frying fisb into a saucepan, add and saute: 2 cups onion and 2 cups green pepper, sliced. Add : 2 cups stewed tomatoes. salt and pep· per lo taste. Cook sauce until vegetables are tender. Arrange fish in baking dish, pour sauce over fish. Bake, cov· ered, 350,F., for 30 minutes. U desired cook l pound thin spaghetti and arrange fish and sauce over it. Sprinkle with Parmesan cheese. Serves 6 to 8. • Poached Fish Rolls with Gloucester touch. S....H..-.: 9 to 9 Dallv • s..-, I 0 to 1 rrfc.. lffecttH THURS., JUNE 29 THRU WED .. JULY 5 Prleet ~to Stock•...-, We_...., Acc.,. feed S...,. Wt bMrvt nit 1'91it To Ulllllff 9-tft'H Alld ltfltM S• Te DetMn Alld WlileMMMn. Closed Tuesday, JULY 4th · YB.LOW MEA TED LARGE CAUFORMIA PEACHES or AYOCA•S HECT ARIN ES · U.5.D.A. CHOICE ROLLED BONELESS RUMP CLOD or ROUND ROAST 2~~ ' Al LOW£Sl Pll\(£S CALIFORNIA GROWN FOSTER or ZACKY IOllS 10~. CALIFORNIA GROWN FOSTER or ZACKY FRESH HENTURK 1~12U.SIZE 19c Preheat oven to 350 F. Bring water and salt lo a rolling boil. Add noodles and cook for 10 minutes, or until soft. Drain well. Mix noodles with cottage cheese and sugar. Spoon into a but· tered casserole, dot the top with bulter. and bake 15 minutes. Makes 4 servings Wedding and engage· ment announcements nm on Sunday an the Daily Pilot form.'> are aooa/able at all Dmly Pilot offices or by calling the f·eatures .Departm('rlt.642·4321 CALIFORNIA GROWN ~~ .) FOSTER or ZACICY POACHED FISH ROLLS 4 fiJlets of sole To 01m1d disappoint. ~:2£~1~,~~~:i~ ._FR_Y_IN_G_C_H_IC ___ K_EN __ PA_R_T_S black-aTzd white glossy of the bnde or of the couple, fo the ,..ealures nf!part· m£'11t one week before the wedding. 1 package (3-ounce) cream cheese 2 tablespoons milk 1 cup cream ''1 teaspoon sail 1 1 teaspoon dried dill weed Spread fillets with cream cheese mixed with milk. Roll up fillets and place in a s mall skillet. Pour cream over rolls and sprinkle with dill and salt: cover tightly and cook over low heat for 15 to 20 minutes, O'" until fi s h flakes easily. Makes 4 servings Copyr191>1. 1918 JUM Roll\ f:ngagement announce· ments, with black.and· white glossy of the future bnde or the couple, must be r ecf!tved by the f'eoturcs Department su weeks before the wedding date Save35Con Nestle® Quik® olate Flavor. HORMEL EASTERN PORK SPARERIBS MED. SIZE , 129 98~. BAR-M BULK SLICED BACON 1~~ IAR M IOt4ED-aOUEO HAM -~=-=-· FRYER BREAST LEGS & / THIGHS CACHE V AUiE'f IULK SWISS CHEESE PAPER Pl.A TES ';:i'· 7 CAKE MIXES Nii & BEANS '~f:4?1 CiTSUP J2 ~ IOTTLE 99c SPRIHGFIB.D HAMBURGER DILL CHIPS 41 oz. JAR PEPSI COLA 6 PACI 139r:X 120%.CAHS & ... --. DIP. -. ICMlllM)I I.I.I. SPICE I 9'f. CAM AMTHOMYS SALAD MACARONI MIX 61t'•IOX ., ... 4 ---··· .. . . . 1.62 0%. IOTTU (9 ONLY Pll.01 FOOD Tuna Pasta Ring .A la Microwave Ring molds solve microwave cooking problems. M ore a n d m o re ter. and saute onlon and spoon. shape • hollows homemakers are realiz· green pepper for S ln basil. Drop an egg ln· ing the ease and speed minutes. Stir in clllsup to each hollow. Sprinkle of cook10g food in a and bash. Spoon hash in· eggs with salt and pep- microwave oven . to glass ring mold per. Place 2 strips of They're also noting that (about s cups ). Cook in cheese crisscross over t he rigbt cooking microwave oven, cov· each egg. Cover and utensils can make It ered, for 5 to 6 minutes. cook another S to 6 even beUer. Remove from oven. Glass ring-shaped dis· With the back of a hes, for instance, are ex· celleot for microwave cooking. The hold in the center provides more access .lor microwaves to reach the food. This eliminates the problem of .ioeven cooking such as the undercooked center. TUNA PASTA RING WITH NEWBURG SAUCE 3 cups cooked. drained elbow macaroni 1 can (6'h ounces> tuna, drained and flaked 1 tablespoon inst.ant minced onion . 1 jar <4 ounces) pl· miento, drained and diced 1 teaspoon s alt "3 eggs 2 cups (1 pint) half and half 14 cup butter or margarine IA cup flour 2 tablespoons dry sberTJ . l cup chicken broth Sall and Pepper In a bowl , mix macaroni, tuna, onion, and pimiento. 'Pour mix· -ture -into a glass ring mold greas ed with margarine or butter. In a t>owl, mix salt, eggs, and 1 cup of the hair and llalf until smooth and well blended. Pour mix- ture over macaroni. Cook in microwave oven. on defrost, for 22-24 minutes, or until ring is firm. Tum dish occasionally during cooking. While ring is baking, melt butter in a saucepan. stir in flour. Gradually s tir in re- maining half and half, sherry a nd chicken broth. Stir over medium heat until sauce bubbles and thickens. Seasoo to taste with salt and pep- per. Loosen ·edges of ring mold and unmold oo J a large plate. Fill r enter with desired bot l"OOked vegetables - peas, green beans. car- rots, etc. Spoon sauce over ring. Conventional method: Bake in preheated 350 degree F oven for 35-40 minutes or until firm to touch and ouired. BA K E'D ff ASH ' N ' EGGS WITH CHEESE 2 tablespoons butter or margarine 1 smal l onion. chopped 1At cup minced green pepper v .. cup catsup 2 cans (l pound each l corned beef hash 4 eggs Sall and Pepper 2 Slices American cbeese, each slice cut in- to four strips. ln .a sk.illel. heat but- CONCORD SHERBET l pint raspberry or lemon sherbet 1 lh cups concord· grape juice or drink Y.i cup concordgrape jam or jelly Let sherbet soften slightly in refrigerator. Spoon into blender con· tainer with grape juice and grape jam. Blend on 'ow speed until thoroughly mixed. Do not lel s herbet melt completely. Divide into 4 dessert dishes and freeze until firm. . . . . ,. • STIAKSA11 ~ .. ,. ........ LL~· llim& ................. L&. 1• fSill.9ftAIC ........... LL f217. -·ar. ........... LL f2U -.~ ..... LL •2• .................... i.a.'I" Uil%AU.1C ........ t..e.t3n deli. c . ......... WIE•RSOR SLICID WOlllA ··~ ... SPARE liiilollADE ....................... t+<>Z. S 139 HAWAIIAN PUNCH ~~~~t .. t~l-sl.53 CANTALOUPE SSHAST••·DET1°"DR111EQ.•OOLA•°""°°'511Bl·~ 25c PORK & BEANS ~·· .. I .... ,,~51c lAllOEIJc~ tUft'$ ••.•....•......•....•.•. ~ SWEET RELISH ~ASIC ..... I ...... 21<ll-7gc ;:,, CHERRIES IKRC•P .............................. n-OL 7 6c SALAD DRESSING ~~=~~ .. ,.!z. 95c i:JJ LAROE·u·~~ ·llNOS ·liAiiKiiSAICE 79c II HEINZ 43c l ~iiicll~:.:.~~=~~49 ji'fiiftil• .......................... :::: S 117 P.OTA. TORELICSHHl~P-S~:: .. ~. anc lfr of~:~~ :t:: -ii~·-I MCENCl'llf"'-==~•UQUm•omtom:ROBfT•KINGSIZE $ 14 TWIN'ACll ..... :. ••••••• t.01.U... ~~~~~~~~~;.~~t#'~,~~~'fu.~~~~~ P.~.!@KIYI -·············· ................ s 1 1 22 ~~~ms;=',~:::~: I DEVIL'S 1vv :ior~-~ ......... $2'' [ DE llAPKlllS .............. ..er. · 1oo% s2os 'SANITARY FLOUR FRUIT NAPKINS TORTll.l.AS SMACKS ~$149 . = 53c ~'~ STIQtl WHOl.E WHEAT IVM. 1H>Z. 1-0Z.. - CHAI.I.ENGE STATER BROS. DRlllS COFFEE I LUX LIQUID CLOROX BLEACH UOUK> ...... ! .. ~ 57c LncaL nK"TAIT TY·D·BOL =~~ .... t ....... ·-Bt· ~ ~~ $143 ~.:.~11ss STEP SAVER ~SOH .•••••••• I ..... •M>l-s215 ..,__ __ .ol. _____ ___, NO-PEST STRIP l>ml. •. t ............ ( .. $1.69 AIR FRE" .. •R ~"'=;.:~.70c ~ OllAOSll'f'TM. ........ o.~ 0 CRACKER JACKS .... I ...... ~ ..... ~.41c MARSHMALLOWS u .. -~ .. 1 ..... •M>L49c I CORNOIL , MARGARINE FLESC ... ,.NH'S B&c STICK 11-0Z.. ' ~N AMT. 200.CT. FACIAL TISSUE 59c ...L-~~~~~~--~--'~--~---~-~ I SHIRre'S &JC I -.JJ,afl~ & f1,aul!I _Aul, ~~~~~~~~-~~s ~.. . ..... ~ ---~-~-~s~~--~ EXTRA-ABSORBENT.~KT. $221 MARGARINE =~:~~HCll •• ! ...... tt<>Z. 40C ~SHMPOO} J 29 MMll. HT e &SC ¥$799 -·Br . OVERNIGHT .... . I ...... 1KT. $214 BISCUITS IAL MO lSC • ~ TODDLER .................... 1~,.$1•• ~~ ··· · ··· .... <>Z scmlAIY ua•n . I .J.:"" .J.: ••.• '7 ... -:::::.P·--· 4 PICKLE CHIPS ~·-· ·~ Sl.03 ~SI WIPES ate ~ JENO 5 PIZZA ~ .......... ~ ..... l ..... 1~87 flMOUMTAlllDEWOR . $133 _· --·~-+----~-THICK-CRUST PIZZA :=~~;:~$1•• ~ PEPSI COLA ::JOll . ~t1<>Z CANS IAIYWASH SIBF ORANGE JUICE MIMI..., •• f ................. ~474 PICKLES ~llO·OUXll $105 !!!!!' 1 S 1 '' ~v·...n 64c ORANGE JUICE TillDWdT •••••••••• t ........ 1M>Z.a7c CREAM CHEEllOllDs"""Ev,~~~=~·· ·~<>l-7. nc 150-CT. ,,.'°.,. ..... IA. APPLE PIE llllLM™'• • $153 OllWIONION ........ s; .. .oz. _,. SHOWER IOSWEI IYDU.IY • tYA~·-~·-~~;. ;;;;a;::, CHEDDAR CHEESE ~~.~~~ l+<>L $2.79 ..... • s I 09 IA11DllS ~-'"-"..OC ... ~""*"'"""-............ \H( ........................... ~,....., ....... ""...,.,. fJot"---'\ .... ~._._.~-...... ~,.-.... ~ .. '(·---.... ~ ................. -..,~ .. WfllUUIYE THl lllOHT TO LIMIT Of! llE~f SALUTO COMMP¢1Al DEALQIOfl WHQl.ESALEllS •• . . . . .. .... - . . .. . . . .. .. . FOOD Wedneeday. June 28. 1978 DAIL'( PILOT C1 I Three Saucy BBQ Ideas Nothing is more en-frozen concentrated v, cup white vinegar seed joyable in good weather grape drink 3 tablespoons Combine all inare- tban a meal served on minced g~o onion dlenta lo saucepan. Sim-the porch. patio or ter-1 cup ketchup 3 t a bl es po o n s mer 30 minules. stirring race. Outdoor dining 1s a worcestershire sauce occasionally. Use as pleasant way to relax l "'2 cups watei; l t easpoon chill basting sauce for beef and simmer down on a '~cup chili sauce powder kabobs. spareribs or Three sauces will dress up outdoor meals. warm day. ~teaspoon salt pork chops. Mak es ~a!~:t~~~~~~~~~! -,~"·~cH~up~Ah~on~Mey~B=U=R:::::::;G==E~Rv.~ .. ~te~as~poo~n~c~eC1~erR~y:::A~aGbo~u:;Mt~s cO~u~psN~sTa~u~ce~. -:;:::==s=C~O~ ..... ~~~~~===!SA~FEW~!AY~PLE~DG~Es~c;;;;om==N=u1=N:;::;G;;;;;;S:=U=P=Po=RT=o::::F-::: ~~dg8s ·~~ b~~i~~i:h~~g r~! BUNS BEVERAGES OFT 'N PR'r .,,....., y OUR NATIONAL FIGHT AGAINST INFLATIONI 'resident gourmet-in WI Help Our Cus...,..a Stnldr Thllr chef's hat and apron -RefreahlngThlrat..Quencher! Bathroom Tlast.1e Food Dollll"l In Tbele Wap ~~ebrg!~s~ ~f~afa~~f; I s1 4:·796fa and friends will e njoy ¥ the festivities. 11::" M en traditionally have taken charge or the barbec ue grill while women prepared salads a n d s a u l!e s i n t h e kitchen. 11owever. with today's chang ing lifestyles men are plan- ning and cooking entire m eals and enjoying every minute of it! More and more bachelors and fathers can be found in the kitchen -as well as at the grill -whipping up a favorite recipe to the delight or female friends and family members. Suggested here are great s auces for the barbecue chef which can be used all year 'round for basting steaks and chops on an outdoor grill or roasts in the oven. SWEET 'N'SOUR SAUCE 1 can (8 ounces> crushed pineapple, un- drained 1 medium -green pepper, seeded and ~hopped 2 tomatoes. chopped l cup dark brown sugar l cup wme vinegar • 2 cup ~rape pre· serves 1:: cup water l tabl es poon worcestershire sauce 1 teas poon dry mustard 2 tablespoons l'orn starch • .. cup waler In saucepan, combine pineapple . pe pper, tomatoe s, s ugar . vinegar. grape pre- serves. 1h cup water. worcestershire sauce -and mustard. Simmer, covered. for 15 minutes; stir now and then. Blend cornstarch into rem aimng 1.i cup water. Stir into sauce and cook, stirring, until sauce il> thickened and smooth Makes about 3 c ups sauc~ ZESTY BARBECUE SAUCE t can C6 ounces) frozen concentrated grape drink 1 cup ketchup 1 :i cup water 1 1 cup worchester- s hire sauce t medium tomato, chopped 1.i cup c h opped ~recn pepper 1 tablespoon grated onion l tabl es p oo n horseradish l t easpoon dry mustard Combine all ingrc· dients in saucepan. Sim· mer 10 minutes to blend flavors. Use as basting sauce for flank steak lamb cubes or po rk Makes about 2' 2 cups sauce TASTE OF H ONE\' SAUCE t can <6 ounces> SPECIAL TREAT WINE HERRING SNACKS for appetizers 1n your markel s delicatessen depar1men1 TROPHY CHARCOAL Fine Burning Charcoal 10~1 29 SCORESBY SCOTCH CANADIAN CLUB WHISKEY 86 Proof · 86.8 Proof ~.~897 ~~729 EARLY TIMES «AMCHATKA •OUR BON VODKA ~538 ~~699 Tequila Ten High ~ Senortta $349 Bourbon ~•9111 80-Prool ...... 7!10-ftll. 80-Proot l.~ Rum !!.....,!! Brandy ~* 11 Bacaroo -='ti' $414 Chrtstoan Bros •10 80-Proof . . .. 1'504ll. 80-Prool 1.~ 10•;. Case Discount On Case Purcnssoe No Longer OHereo Prices Su1>1ect To Any L1m1tatoons Which May Be lmpo$80 By Legal Action Proces Etfecuve at Locensea Sefewa s $3.00 California Surf Pro Soccer General Admiss ion Tickets Only $1 .00 July 12, 1978 California Surf (vs.) Fort Lauderdale Anaheim Stadium 7:30 P.M . WHOLE BONELESS SCOTCH TREAT LEMONADE Frozen. Concentrate ....... ~-8J1 LEMONADE or Fruit Punch E-) 590 Minute Maid Chilled 84-Gz. Health & Beauty Alcls ••• plus Morel POLAROID FILM KODACOLOR r ·-.• SX-70 Lend C-110 or 126 ~-$51a· ~148 ~~PJ!!~~~ .. ~~~~~~ ..... ~sa.•1•• 1nstan1 Print ,511 Schick Razor 77c Kodak Color .. elCll Super II ........ ledl •abJ 011 ~980 uster1ne 32-Gz.•t•• Tr /Fine .. 18-oz. 30< Off Label IOttle lmg Yo• flm to s.fwwlJ Ind Ian On. .. .FILM DEVELOPING AND. PRINTING ~nm Developed And Printed ~~1~2LF~2-exp.s221 20-ap.1311 • Full• Kodlll ~ "°'' loll ~ Hunrs Ketchup 3~ •1 %..:<i Baked Beans Ranch sty1e • 3 1!".:-11 :-i Foll Wrap Kitchen craft 7S ~Ft 99c :.-; Paper Plates Merigold ot~ 99c ~ Ice Cream snow star a'!i':n 99° ~Potato salad Lucerne = 49° ~ Flelschmann's ~a%na~~e c!:ia 79° Paper Napkins Marigold :11io 75° FARMER JOHN PORK TOP SIRLOIN STEAK SPARERIBS US.0.A. s Choice Beet Loin 9 to 12-lb. Average Weight I fe~lb.~ 5-LB. FRIED CHICKEN 25 or More Pieces 9 U.S.O.A. Choice Beef Round. Full Center Cut 78 Frozen 8 49 Oe~~~ted ~lb. ~Boneless Rump Roast s11a e.:;;;;:;)' u .s 0.A Choice Beef Round....................... .. .. lb. • tOOO B•y•kt• Dr .. Newport 8Hch • $341 No. Coelt Hlghwer. l.agune Beach • 21t I . t7th St., Coate MeH • 8011. Ctmtno AHi, tan Clemente I LllHTCHUll TUNA sear;~59c HIGHWAY PEAS ·c~~~:6"A $1 ... 1= TOWNHOUSE MACARONI Macaroni 0 Salad 39 E-71~ waE·u· EGGS Lucerne 590 Fresh , ... Clrtlll. HID'l'J ... Stlll Time To Win Cash In Safew1y's 2 IRIOll.CtmDICMAIT IHICTMJ• la 1971 .-nu... ..... Nm mu. 1 VAUI PllZD TICUT 12.000 I 1.355.IM 11.000 104 71.222 11oa m 21.151 110. 1.m 4.57a 15 S,.404 2.3to 11 133.002 12 TOTALS 1SU72 Ill -13 ncun ICM.215 1.017 uo 153 114 4.7 4.1 IOllS 2S TICUTI U.141 3.GOI 1,122 In la 2A 2.3 Due 10 Owinthe4mong play ano accei>tanee ot 1111s geme 11 appears the supply of ttckets w111 not test un111 the 5Cheduled tllf· mma1ton dele 01 July 18, 1978. We expect to run out ot t1cke1s between July 1 ano Juty..8. 1978 Accord•ngly, the contestants woll 1iave un11I July 29, 1978 to cl81m their pnzes ,,. No obligallon end nothing to purcilase ta enter game. ofll<:W rules on eolleciC>f caro. Upoa1ed odds will be posted In all par. t1c1pa11nq s1ores ano any newspape< ada. Promotion avellebt• al Safeway St0tes locate<t 1n Cahfomoe counties of· Los Angetes. Venaura San Bernardino, Rtver-~<19. San Luis Ob<spo. Inyo, 0rtlf10e, Santa Barbara. Kern and Mono (166) ano "' Clarie County. Nevade (1'> More Great Buys At Your Safeway! 4 '~"'s1 cart111ns •Lucerne Yogurt •Claussen PicklesAssorted33:z. ggc •Gallon Drinks Lucerne :uwo:Barbecue Sauce c~r;~s' =5SC Potato Chips Party Pride a-oz. 79c Pllg. Baby Diapers T~~~~~~e Pila. s1• olf2 LARGE SIZE ....... . ~ ·· CANTALOUPES -- For breakfast. 00$Sef\ or between meals .. you·u rove the sunny, honey- sweet flavor of these cantaloupes! For a great treat, serve them ala mode WTlh Lucerne lceCrea~Tooight FRUIT ROLLS ~ Romaine Lettuce .... 35c Rad Radishes 2 ...... 35° Graen Onions 2--.. 35° Red Plums Juicy and Tangy lb. 5go Kids Love These! , 3 s100 " For ,,. L Fl I B t Fresh and •·--Ht• arge 0'8 OUqUe Beautiful __ , ~I • •• and this isn't all! More Safeway Speelals In your store! SAFEWAY -~, PRICES EFFECTIVE 7 DAYS ......... u ..... TlllL. .Mr 4. tl71 "' ......... ~ lballlt c........ Siii , ............... c.itlel). ................. we-.UIN ,... ....... 0..- • 24 Mon•reh Bay Pfau, South Laguna • Senta An• P:r .. wer et La Pei, MIH'°" Vloelo • Jeet So Br11tol, S•nta An• LOI MGJll' SllOIUllC & Cllltflft CO, • M•m• at Magl\olla, Huntll\gtOn 1 .. ch • t 4't7 Cul119r Dr. at Walnut, lrvlne ... . -. -. . I ( , I ~ l . I . •; . ' I . a ~l.Y .,llOI Wedneeday. Juno 2a. 19 • .;,1.:.a ________________________________ F_O_O_D Everything From Artichokes to Watercress 8)' J DITH OLSON Of ui. l>ailr "'* ..., Trueorf~. 1 > Broccoh us ¥ mt mber or the oabbaie family 1 > Beets are high in potassium. < > Bananns can be refricerated alter they are ripe ( > The appearance of stems should be con- side red when grapes are selected. H you're an as tute shopper and cook you'll probably k:notr.t the answer to these questioll5. Francisco who ls well known for his column on produce, has written a book describing 49 ve1e tables and 36 fruit.a with a guide to buying and preP8J'inl each. "The Greengrocer " <Cbroaicle Books. ~ 95 ), describes vegetables from artichokes lo waterc r ess and fruits from apples to wate rmelon, tells how to buy them and gives a little blltory, some recipes and eating sugges- tions for each. are all true. Here is Carc1one '1 recipe for EgKJ>l&nt ala Parme&aD: EGGPLANT A LA PAl\MESAN 2 medlum·sized eggplant.a Olive oil Neapolitan Sauce Grated Parmesan or Romano cheese. Cut eggplant crosawise into l/•·incb slices Peel, salt and press eggplant to remove some ot the moisture. Saute in olive oil until lightly browned on both aides. I q man uteo m a lSO-degree oven Neapolitan Sauce l2 fresh tomatoes 3 tablespoons olive 011 4 cloves garlic 1 ooion, sli ced 1 bay leaf Salt Pepper But for those who wander through the pro- duce section of the market bewildered by the variety and unsure or how to select individual 1lcm s, there is help. With the help or Bob Lucas, a nutritionist and dentist, he has put together a readable, in· te resting and valuable work which will help the consumer make wise buys, both financially and nutritionally. Cover the bottom or a casserole with Neapolitan Sauce. Add a layer or eggplant and cover with grated cheese. Contloue filling the casserole with layers of sauce, eggplant and cheese wiW all the slices are used. Bake ts Blend tomatoes 10 electric blender until juice forms. Pour Into a saucepan and bring lo a boil. Reduce to a slow simmer while yoa beat olive oil in a skillet. • J oe Carciooe, the "greengrocer" or San And what about the broccoli, beets, bananas and grapes on the true-false test ? The answers Spicy BBQ Grill An experienced vaca- tion cook knows there's one good way to feed family and/or friends that allows everyone to have a good time and wonderful dinners too - barbecues. There's no limit lo the foods that take we ll to outdoor cooke ry. They needn't b e fancy a nd they shouldn't take a lot of pre paration time. One key lo easy on· t he-grill cooking is a s pirited barbecue sauce that can be made In ad· vance and stored in the refrigerator. This Red Sauce Base combines the essential barbec ue ingredients in a zesty m i x ture s piked with pepper sauce. It goes w i th eve r y thing chic ken, hamburgers a nd fr a nkfurt e r s , s par e ribs -even vegetables. Make a dou· ble batch and you'll be am azed at ~ow multi· faceted il is. CRUCKWAGON CJUCKEN 1 recipe Red Sauce Base • 1 jar (10 Ol.M'lcesl currant jelly , h tablespoo~ lem on JUI Ce l c love garl i c, crushed or ·~ tcas poo_'l> garlic powder 1 c hicken (3 to 4 pounds >, cul an pieces Make Re d Sauce Base. Add currant Jel· ly, le m on j u ice and garlic ; stir over low heat until jelly m elts . Place chicke n on g rail over hot coals; cook 20 to 30 minutes, turning c hi c k e n eve r y 10 minutes. Brus h with barbecue sauce; cook 10 to 15 minutes longer, or until lende r. Heat any r e maining sauce a nd serve with chicke n . If desired, serve with addi· t ion al peppe r sauce. YIELD: 4 servings. LONE STAR JOES 1 recipe Red Sauce Base• 11. cup bolter or margarine 1 medium o n ion . sliced 1 medi um g r een pepper, seeded, sliced 2 c ups s livered . cooked beef, chicken or ham l cup diced. cooked potatoes.drained 4 hamburger buns. <,pht M a ke R e d Saut'r Base"'; s et a s id e In large skillet melt but t er ; s aute onion a nd green pepper until sofl. Add meat, potatoes. a nd Red Sauce Base: slir un· til heated throu~h. Serve over hamburger buns. rr desired, serve with addi t1 onal pepper s a uce. YIELD: 4 ser vings. ¥RED SAUCE HASE 2 tablespoons salad 011 , l m e d ium o nion . l'hol>t>ed <''2 cup) l ca n (6 ounces) tomato paste 1 cup water Come to .... Start ur e I r ChackourMwlow• UIDA Choice leaf Plk11 99r lb. per • lb. - 38 Ally la. Pecbge GnUlll 11111 per II lb. BMforMHt --Wieners 1 lb. II pkg. For Ralphs Number One Club Members rJals Weefl's Special Coupon Offers! ,.iiUM&iii~Oiii-CWB"" ,."NUiiiii1-~.-cwii1 ~ 1'97 : ~ MIS s ... .n. 02TH••lflC~ 19 I ..... 54 +.113Tuwtt11Ceupen 89 z ... LUIU : RalpM N~ 100ct. • ! ChaBriq= 10 fb .• ..,_.ns pllg. wtt!IC0141G" I bag Mlll-..- LimiC One Item and One Coupon Per CUltomer. : LlrNt One llem .ild One C<Hlpon Per CUltomlf. Coupon Enective June 29 ttwu July S, 1871 I Coupon Elleclive June 29 ttwu July 5, 1971 I n...c ...... w ... oNL•..,_.........,..,.._ .... .....,...°"""c .... c.,d i oriiec....,. ... .-.o"""'"""""P'.....-.cl.-.-........,......0..c-..c .... ~ '-•••••••••COUPON••••••••••" '-•••••••••COUPON••••••••••" Golden Premium Meats ' ~ F',Y;Dr=ti°Cics ': ~99 ~ .... Cl>uctl 1" Flanken Ribs -111. ~ hlf llourld-1_.... 1i• ,._,Roast -lb. ~ .... Clludl·•-111 Round Bone Roast pw lb. 1" ~ 9"I Ro..ncHIOM!e .. 221 D ~~Chopl ,.. 141 Top Round Steak ""' ... 111. m'"' 221 D ~Steak ':. 1" Cube Steaks pet lb. Pantry Fillers ~ sai~ Mustard 2•ot 55 .... ~;;..Pickle Aeliltt 100L 38 .... . ~ ll•~SMclll~ Pitted 0 ives h i. 59 C:ltfl. ~S*toNISing lhl. 99 IHI. I ~ s~eetPicldel llol. 69 1111 •• ~ Oft.r:flllftlltr Sin Battwoom Cleaner 2501. 121 ,, .. &?] Sc1"111"9 lmltetton Bacon Chips 3.25o1. 89 ,.. . ~ tf~c0o;;kM1x• 21 201.13• C:llll ~ Htttm•n't·lli9 H I !IOI. 85 o c~0Fu00' Null 21b. 531 Burger Sauce bit. • Cltfl We've got th• holldar •plrlt• Snet.60 rso m1.411 Cluny Scotch ~. ...... u o 4" •-.70 qi. 411 qi. WolflctmidtVodka Old Crow .... bl! . ..... ,so 4" s ... 100 4" Cit. Fleilctmann Qin Cl1 Gordon Gin .., bl • .......... ,,... ....... .......,.,,.... .................... _, ........... .,, .......... Slice garlic into oi I and saute slowlyt until golden brown. Pour hot tomato juice into garlic m ixture. Add onion. bay leaJ; salt and pepper. Simmer slowly for one hour for spaghetti sauce. One PRIZE FARIY .. and ~pk. . II c.n1 .... .,... Old Fasllloral Ice Cnan. ''>gal. m carton • Super Deli Frozen Foods ~P'cXnicake ~s...,Pl'izB°"'°' Super Floral ~ LDng Stem Roa ~Foiege Plants with Newt per II lb. PLAINWRAP " Potato - 8 0L beg II Supel' Produce 85 ~ '""'""*' !."; • ~Valencia Oranges 12DI. 1'' ..... 21b. 1" ..... 4lb.,.., 79· 11.g • ttCh .39 bvnc:h .15 t~.69 Super Bakery '!:-.45 IO"oi.111 ,.. 12'•01.1" pllg. Os;aread 1::.49 ~er-anMutfins ~.79 ~PMrcike H ot. 95 11110 • ~APPi.tsbt.def pk9. 99 oU I Appetite Shoope ~ Apptllt<e '"°'" ~ Potato Salad :: .• 39 ~ Fr•llClll ~ Baby Jack Cheese ~ 11-a lllel•lllced,19911To<>H9f Prlcll lllKtfve June 29 tttru .My S, 1971 ~ Smoked Pastrami ::. 1°' ::. , .. 1 tablespoon sugar 1 teaspoon hot pepper 158UCe 'r'I teaspoon salt Heat oU In medium saucepan; s aute onion until c lear, about s minutes. Stir ln tomato pas te. water, sugar, hot sauce and salt. Slm· mer 15 mtnutea. YIELD: Switch to Number One* •• .Switch to - About 2 cups. You can Charge DAILY PILOT Cla u lfled AdJ 642·5678 -·-. . . . ......._ .............. ... ...,_.,,.,... ...... -.. .... ................. ..._ .. ::=· ..::;:.·· ---•• u.s an. -.r. euc11 tS•7J s • ._,, m1•11 411 l LIMA. AUllf:m 1142 IMIO. llfflllCT• ltACM STOft ll9llS: ... ,. Wy, M S.U, • J . j l ., . • I I f l .. Club Calendar ANN LANDERS /HOROS COPE Wednesday, Juno 28 1978 CAIL Y PILOT ('9 Flea Market The Costa Mesa Junior Women's Club will hold a flea market sale featur- ing toys . games. clothing and other items from 8 a.m. lo 3 · 30 p.m. Sunday, Ju- ly 9. at the Orange County Fairgrounds. Proceeds will benefit the UCI Medical Center, Orange. SWEET ADELINES: The Costa Mesa Harborliles Chapter meets al 7 .30 p m every Monday evening at College Park School. 2380 Notre Dame, Costa Mesa. For mlormalion. call 642-4839 BARKSDALE SELF-ESTEEM CENTER : A seminar on "How to Get What You Want in a Relationship" wtll be held at 7:30 p.m . Wednes- day. July 19 at the Mariott Hotel. Newport Center. Newport Beach. There is no admission charge Call 751 -1334 for information. Comish pasties are a p1cmc change from ham and cheese sandwiches. HOAG HOSPITAL AUXILIARY : Board members of the Auxiliary or Hoag Memorial Hospital Presbyterian will hold their annual champagne reception for Patronesses of the Copa de Oro Chapter at fi p m Friday, June 30 at the Ba g Canyon home of Mrs. William Langston INTERNATIONAL ORPHANS INC.: Mem- bers and guests Will celebrate the Opening Of Children ·~ VIilage, US/\ on July 4 with a ::ocktail crUJS<' aboard the Pa\'ILion Queen. Blabbing DEAR ANN · I 'm a ~-----------_., __ _ on Baldness male In my 50s. neatly dressed and average- looking. A few years ago I bought a hairpiece and have spent quite a lot or money replacing the original with better and newer "haircuts." l !eel it has improved my looks and I would never go back to bein1 bald again • The town I live In Is quite small <less than M>.OOO> and the people who know me are aware that I wear a hairpiece. A certain few seem to take g reat delight in mentioning the fact in front of strangers and mutual friends. This not only embarrasses me but others in the group Who c are s·• Furthermore, what good dous 1l do the creep who blabs it? My hairpiece is as personal to me as their false teeth are to them I wish 1 had a great comeback when caught in this situation. Can you help me? YOUR FRIEND I N WACO DEAR FRIEND: You don't Dffd a comeback. You need 1 thJcker skin and a glassy star e. When some clod drops a crude and tasteless re- mark, just let It Ile there A•• Laaden -01ked. Siience ac- companied by an In· credulous look can be a dev 11t1tlng _reply. otbe r relltlves aod frleod 11 . Pare ntal permlsslveneas ls part of the reason wby sbopllltln& among tbe youna la r1mpant. Tile next letter mltht be of Interest. DEAR ANN MAM -MAW WHOSE LANDERS: I am a boy. TREASURES ARE 1l yeaN1 old. I'm glad DISAPPEARINO my parent~ love me DEAR MAW: What·~ enough to say no. I have tbe mauer with you? Nb .a pal whosl' mom and D E A R J\ N N voul cord1? The very dad let him do anything LANDERS: I bave read first time you saw one of he wants and he 1s a your column tor years your grandchlldren he lp mess but I cannot recall your him-<or her·> self lo one Last night a 12-year- writing anything on this or your "treai.ures," you old girl asked me to be subJect s hould have explained her date at a party. J W h e n m Y the difference between asked my mom and s he grandchlldren come to "mine and thine" a nd said. "NO, and that goes \ISil. they never ask for inst ructe d the child for the next three a nything. When they see never again t o take years ... som ething they like they anything that didn 't I'm glad she s:ud that. Just lake 1t home l 've belongtohJm. Now I don 't have to heard them say to On{' Now that they hive thmk :ibout dates for a another. ''Mam -Maw establ11bed the habit tt long time. Please prmt has so much stuff she will be much more dlf· my letter for kids who will never miss this!.. flcult to make your don't know that s trict A lot of the "stuff," as point, but I ur1e you to parent:. are the best they call 1t, are gifts do it. And mike sure the k 1 n d . -BOSTON from old friends . It parent• of these kids FRIEND means a great deal to koow about it. They are D EAR F R I E ND : me. I was brought up to p rob a b I y t a k Ing Her e It is. Give your believe that when people whatever appeals lo mom an extra hug for take t hings that don 't them from the homes of me. belong to them they are ---------------------stealing. The parents of these kids don't seem to consider 1t as such What is your opinion" ( Horoscope ) THURSDAY. J UNE 29 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES <March 21 · April 191 · Accent on learning truth about mone y. pos:-.ess1on s, valuables. special col· lect1on Pisces: Virgo figure prominently If lusion. romance arc piHt of scenario Protect y o u r ~ e I r. I f t· a r r 1 e d away by romanti c notions, you couJd pay a dear price. TA UR US IApril 20 · May 20 l You come out of cyc le o f f e ar . doldrums -now you are di reet. confident, willing lo accept challenge. Or vou should be ~ Moon ls on your side. numerical indicator 1s 8 and it adds up to power Call your s hots. dance to your own tune Money and love -both are at your disposal. GEMINI <Ma~ 2 1 June 201 : Jmmcd1ate past provides lessons. guide for future. i\r1 es. Libra persons figure prominently -s o does the number 9. Ac cent on what occurs within club, gro u p. speci al or ganization. You could be "elected " a s spokesperson. CANCER <June 21 - July 22>: Accent on meeting people. having ideas tested, accepting "fri endly challenges .. Leo . i\quar1us 1n d1v1duals could play kcy roles MaJOr wis h 1s fulrilled . Loneliness becomes more of <1 stranger love ente rs picture in m eaning ful way. Scorpio persons figure prom anently Assets could be tied up by legal dispute unless you re· view . revise and re. est:ibllsh territorial righls SCO RPIO IOct 23· Nov. 21 )· Chan~es due: bt· an<1lyt1C'al Partners hip, marital status are spotli~hled Rl'lat1onsh1p has passed the "playing gam es .. stage Commitment 1s in p icture. If scenario displeases you. make a move Status quo now will not suffice. SAGITTARIUS INov. 22-0ec. 21>: Low-key ap- proach brings desired results Family member a n nounces policy of cooperation. Domestic situation beromes more harmonious. Keep res- ol u t 1 ons concerning diet. nutrition. exercise Co wor ker , one "ho s hares bas ic interests pays meaningful compli- ment. C APRICORN 1 Dec 22·Jan 19\ Romance. creative endeavor s. t'hildrcn. s peculative v(•nturc s t'row d scenario Get to heart of matters. See situation as is. not merely as you wa sh it might exist.• Pisces. Vargo figure pro· mine nlly -so does the number7 AQUARIUS CJan . 20·Feb 18> · Stick to basic. factual data. Ac· l'l'Pl r espon s 1b1l1ty, bringing priorities into sharp focus What seems a misstep is actually a temporary detour. Build. put pieces together -un- derstand that member of opposite sex 1s serious ·lt' \'\... be\\e'1e The Thinnery Now 1n Newport Beach ,plaza Newport 1000 North Bristol Street (714) 955-1353 Mc. (J •Y ttin. r r C.Jy I CAM • I op~ ~.r rddy 1lf'd ,nd 1v 1 CA~,1 10 f P~I The 1as1tes1 ano most de11c:ous low calorie. sugar free Choco-lar Cakes. Creme Puffs. Strawberry Tarts Mocha Nlo1.;sse Crepes. Apple Srrudel. 'Cy Crcmcy Solt Serve Dairy Dessert, ano on $0 rr1.;ch more Selec1 lrom more' thari 70 qourmc1 desserrs ano spe- cialties Ard no mar:cr wl"elher you re water ng your weight or not. The Th1nnory s got some- thing great rn srore tor you Bui 11.;sr 1n case. calories. carbohydrates, food exchange equi- valents and ingredients are listed so you kl')ow exactly whal you're eating Do yourself a tavor Do your tastebuds et favor V1s1t The Th1nnery roday You'll never know the difference Open 7 r1.1y<., Product~, de11vercd lrc:~ti <Jd11y \. · .. \ I l I 'i' ... ·. There'c. a Thinnery 1n - •1 •4•r rv raute '• ~ &•4 ( o\• 1' ( ... , ... tJ ..... , t..,'Jhl " ,y ...... !'f'M .. , t,,N. I •I • It~ f•I /.._ t ft ) " I '"I ... .... , ... '• l'aiv1 ..,1 Portable Picnic Pies LEO c July 23-Aug 22 l · You hurdle ob· stacles. What seemed a hopeless s ituation is overcome. You advance, gain an authority and strength. Aquarian is in picture. Communicate P ISCES <Feb 19· ~ March 20 1 Short trip Low . • Sugar aids 1n concluding as- ~ignment. phase cyt'lc C I . F You find lhal aorte TheThinnerv ree pugnacious neighbor or One thing is for sure. You can't pack a ham- burger or hot dog in a picnic basket. Yet. there are times when you want to eal outdoors away from home. On the patJO there's always the grlll : In the park, no So. what to carry? The usual ham and cheese sandwiches? Or perhaps sliced chicken on while <hold the mayonnaise. since the car trunk that holds the hamper can get very hot with the sun beating down>. Come on. there's got to be something better. Borrow a good old idea from a Cornishman. l\1ak e portable and palatable picnic pies Pasties 1s what they're called in Cornwall. Prepare the pasties ahead of time, way ahead If you want lo They keep well in the freezer, waiting to be baked at the last minute. Then, may wt'll you ask, how do they stay hot ln the hamper? They don't. Cornish Pasttes are eaten cold They were originally. and still are, the carried lunch of Cornish miners. CORNISH PASTIES 2 lbs. ground chuck, cooked until crumbly and d rained SUMMa LIAININQ IXPERIEHCE 10< IHrning dlaabllltl••· remedial problems or growth - therapeutics atmosphere for your child July S thru Auguat 29th All or part Plo.lAM HATUUlt ·~"~ ........ ,.,.... •-..&. .. ,.. ..... ..._ .... ..__ ...... .....,..,.,....~ • C.O.CW O.SMM.\ ....-OI ~ • -IC, Aft, c:m.tM ""'' • M-f~~U.U-af ....... POI NOIMA TIOH CAU. MIWPOIT MISA '5YCHOl.OGY CUMIC Tit: 14f.ll47 ISUW ..... relative Is more sound Desserts & s ecialties 3 large potatoes. peeled. cooked and diced 1 yellow turnip. peeled. cooked and diced I onion. chopped than f ury . .. ____ .,. _____ .._ _______ _. de~ires. proposed pro· ~------------------------~----~ I can ( 101/4 oz.> beef gravy 2 leaspoons Angostura aromatic bitters Salt and Pepper 6 cups buttermilk and biscuit mix 3 eggs 1 cup milk In a bowl, mix cooked beef. vegetables. gravy and Angostura. Season to tas te with salt and pepper. Chill. In a bowl. mix biscuit mix, eggs and milk. Stir until well blended. Knead dough on a floured surface to an oblong 16 x 24 1I1ches. Cut dough into 6 8-inch squares . Divide (illing equally between squares of dough. Brush edges of dough with wate r and fold over to form a large triangular-shaped turnover. Place on greased cookie sheets and press edges together with the tines or a fork Brush with additional beaten egg and bake In a preheated hot oven (400 degrees F > for 25 to 30 minutes. Serve warm or cold. Yield: 6 large dlMer-slze pasties . gram to one at top. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 >: Accent on distance. journey, special com municatlon, educational project. The more nexi· ble you are. the better experiment, express. Entertainme nt and humor are part of scenar io. Gemini . Sagittarius per!'.o ns figure prominently LIBllA <Sept. 23-0ct 22). Attend to details. get financial report Know basics. be familiar with budgets. track records. Means be aware or pa s t perfor m a n ce s. Aquarius, Taurus. JULY SALE fRANCI&-ORR fine stationery corona del mar J . . . LA·Z·BOV@ .. . .-... TheHtwo styles only AHYCOLOIOI P41•tc IH STOCK IMMEDIATE FREE DELIVERY • ALSO SU OUtt PINI SUCTION Of LA·Z.SL9HS~ Coste MH•/M.wport J6t l. I 7th Strfft ................ Ml1tlo.. Vlefo l.,ff·~"'' 21892 M•tufrlt• Pky. 642-8657 ·= 495-5902 __ ,_ ... , .......... ... Delicatessen Canned s599 HAM Dubuque ... 3 lbs of lean goodness! (PCl.U PUJ!M UM ..• 3 ..... U I) Fruit Punch • • • • 49C Happy Time for happy times ! 64 oz. Salads ::: ••••• &9c Knud11en's 16 oz ctn. (COU SUW .•• lk) Salame Chub •• s299 Gallo ... 13 oz. (stm •.. 3 ez ... 19') Franks nm•• ... s1 1s Choose Beef or Meet ... 1 lb. pkg. Rondele 69C CHEESE Herb.Pepper or Plain ... 4 oz LIEBFRAUMILCH Johann Meister -Imported El Rancho's selection s2! Reisling ........ s299 J ohann Meister imported wine ... ! fifth Zeller • .mun •••• s299 German favorite! Johann Meister-5th I l/ l111clln l11H SUI( •••.••••••••• II! Lee.o Pork lep. Mlect.d to offer you more good eating ... and cured to ctrer mol9 nwardinc navor-1 (water edded) El Rancho Ham"",.. ••• s1oi Delicioualy IND, with flevor you'll favor! ("ater added) El Rancho Ham .u •••••• s1 1! Fit for t ... tinc ... bl1 enouah tor the whole group! (water added) Ham Slices Cllllll en •••••••• s24! Regular or thick elioee, from our own lean hams. (water added) Boneless Ham •••••••••• s21r Roth's Black Hawk. Hormel'• Cure 81, or Bar-M Sliced Bacon auars •••••• Sl4l Cured for El Ranch2 ..• eUced a little thicker wt Wll OIS8VE IY Cl.OSmG SausagerrAUMmu • sis: Our own recipe ... no nitrit.ee! lt'e a day for celebrating ... for feasting .•• for friende and good food! Let it begin at El Rancho, and carry it on to the patio, poolside, deck or cabin or beach or mountains . , . but have a Super Fourth! Bratwursta ... s s1ss P k 1 . . . .. or , vea , aeaaomng-no nitrites lrssll T11rlt11s ~RJ#.a:.~ ......... 11! El Rancho's own . . 10to 15 lbs of plump tender goodness! Main course pleas•·re at any t ime of year Chuck Steak ••• s 1 oz 7 Bone Roast •• st 41. 0 Bone Roast •• 511: Center cut! U.S.D.A. Choice beef Chuck cut U.S.D.A. Choice beef Chuck cut U.S .D.A. Choice beef Ground Beef=: s1 4l Lean! Does not exceed 22<"( fat Beef Roast:m.m. s2'l Chuck cut Choice shoulder clod Chopped Steak. s11z. IAsanest grind does not exceed 15% fat Tap Sirloin Steak 18.ll U.S.D.A. Choice beef. offered to you by our old.fashioned butchers. to be sure you get exactly what you want! Loin cut TOP::' Sirloln $ 3 5~ Loin cut U.S.D.S. Choice beef .. ~::: s1a~ Grade "A"· w/ rib cage and 2iblets (l9£Y ~ ... Sk ., SPLIT ,~ BROIUR ~~ Large Gr. "A" fryer with giblets Sweet and mellow. with that delicious juicy J(oodntM -so welcome el the picnic, the barbecue ... ------------------ROMAINE Garden fresh 39 all iueen lettu<!l'-( Large bunch B~wn 2 29c Ont0ns w U.S. No. 1 quality-all purpoee PAPAYAS Tropical delight! 69~ Sweet and mellow ._, Large size .. Fresh Chinook $299 Salmon .. Fine for bak.inf! Whole or b.a1f Salmon Steak _s37z Center cut from fresh Chinook SaJmon Snapper ...... s241 Freeh fillets afford more value! Cooked Shrimp s31z Cocktail ei for your pleuu.re Lobster TAILS Frozen Food ICE . $119 CREAM:. Royal H08t Premium paci -all flavon Lemonade • • • • • 13c Springfield Reg or Pink-6 oz can _, Brussels Sprouts &sc. C & W •.. Small and tender-10 oz Avocado Dip ••• age Calavo Reg or Hot 'n' Spicy 6 oz Enchiladas ••••• s 111 Van de Kamp Beef or Cheese-19 oz Chooee Doubltt Crust or Dutch-31 oz L iquor Dep 't. (_,All VALlll .. AYtms VODKA Bott led for El Rancho! 1.75 liter Lord Calvert ••• s499 Save 2.00 on the quart ... Canadian Gilbey Gin •••••• 5897 Save 3.00 at this price! 1. 75 liter Earl1 Times •••• s559 Straight whiskey reduced 1.20 quart T ·1 s31s equ1 a •••••••• La Paz ... liter size reduced 1.00! Scoresby s319 SCOTCH Now! ... save 1.50 on the fifth Super Summer begi ns with a Super Fourth . . . that begins at E l Rancho! Mayonnaise QUART •• 99c Price11 ill effect Thur. June 29 throush Wed. July 5 Open doily 9 to 9 Sunday to to 7 No aalea to dealers Potato Chips TWllPACll 79c Bell Brand rings the bell for taste! Reg., Dip or B·B·Q •.. 8 oz package You'll appreciate the quality 88 well 88 the economy of Springfield! Pepsi Cola SUPACI ••••• s 12• Chooee Regular or Diet in the 12 ounce cans ... for refreshing fun times! Ketchup IDZ ••••••••• 59c The slow one . . . thick and rich and red ripe goodneM , .. 20 ounce bottle Beer • , ......... _ggc Ripe Olives • • • • 59c Ballantine's ... 12 ounce canll Springfield Giant-pitted-No 300 Mustard •••••••• 59c Briquets ••••••• s14• Zesty French 'a . . . big 24 oz jar Kingsford, with the edge! 10 lba IDISIEl'S SU 49c · Dressing Vinaigntte, French, Italian· 8 oz :=.• 59c New! Hellman'• 811 "H"-12 os WE Will BE CLOSED TIISDAY ••• FOURTH OF JllY J e NIT11Al . 49c u ice GRAPEFRllT • • • • • • • • • • • • Nature's own goodness at it.a flavorful beet-nothing added! Treesweet 46 oz BBQ Sauce caasaPRTs _59c Cbooae Hot, Regular or l{ickory navor for your cook·out! ! 14 oz bottle Zee Napkins ••• 25c Snack Crackers 75c For your picnic plans! Pq of 60 Your choice of Nabi&co favorite. Macaroni-a.a. ...... 49c Salad, Elhon, Lge Elboww, Shells-1 lb HEllZ 39c BISll Burger, Hot Dog, Sweet, India 10 oz. Dynamo •••••••• s22• Liquid detergent-64 O'Z (26c om ::• 35c • Ill .. Springfield Pq cl 8 ARCADIA P SAOENA SOUTH PASADEN HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT Bt:ACH () . STBLlJFF IRVINE LAGUNA HILLS Suf"l~.-1 e1nc1 Huntin<J10n 170 W Color•dO Blvd f •rmont ,.,nc1 t4un1tn(1tnn Warn•r ..,1nd A l4on<1u1r1 • '.'.' N1·w1 .. '' t11.., • :•,•,11 I ''''f·, ''(I• tin .... ,.,,,,\' ,1n11 M 11 ht•i·.,,,, • 1 Jhd, M,)ulton ' 1 • 1' .. •·1 'f t.1 H,lfl(..hu Ct'rllf"r [ of O'•"lJPQfO"" ~outh1·,, ... 1 '~Hlh"I • • t 4.ul1f)11r M.tt! On '"•' ''••floll" ... I , 1·.tht.1ft \loll l•lt' I t•nt··· ,.,., ...... ~ l ''"""' ,..,,_,It, f' p .. ,~w ,ty P\ft.l,, IOWl. F._ . . . . . . . . . . . . 69' Vanlth· Mlat. Mint. WUd t'lonr· 11• o& ~ M'Ta ............. l9c Holl.ywood Nalunl· DO preeervallvte! 16 01 DISI DEi EICEIT • • • • • • • • • • • • • ato Pura Ume Pr.b· 82 o. tlA (J6t olf) ... • ••••.•.•••••••••• $1.19 BertoUI'•· lmpe>Md trooi tt.alyl Pint llllCr-lm ................... .. Fltiachmano' .. made with oom oil! l lb ~ FE •.....•..•••••••. $1.59 Calron'• a.ntl .. .._tlc febrlc IOlteotr· 3e e1 TY-8-IOL •••••••••••••••.•••.• 7t Keepe It lookins l'rlth· eutomab(ally' 12 oi ·-5al1$ ••••..•••••••• 21" Bath sl11 bu l&ttt I.lid l11ta' and emella nice SOI•• llCGI B'S...... 19' Crill> and flavvrtul , •• 3'.t ountt 1ite • • • # •• .. ... -.. \ PILOT AOVERllSER 8 f One Full week of super savings! '77 FORD CirllAMADA 4 DOOtl VB . automatic trans .. pwr. steering. pwr. brakes. radio. heater. w/s/w tires & wheel covers Lie # 107SWS Stk !!537A '52 DODGE PIC«U, 6 cyl 11athead. 3 speed trans radio & heater A classic truck 1 n good condition! L 1c. 1155B 14S Stk 1!2066BT '75 FORD MUSTANG 2+2 Automatic trans . pwr steering. rallye wheels. radio & heater Lie a61 4LPS Stk 1JP343B •73 FORD ntUHDEUll.O ~· '76 FORD lAHCHBOSOO V·B. auto. trans.. factory air cond1t1onmg, pawer steenng. power brakes. AM/FM stereo B track "Camper Shell · Loe #1B6B816Stl\.11720ATI '76 PONTIAC SUHlll.O Automatic. factory air cond . tilt wheel. custom wheels & interior. vinyl roof. AM/FM stereo & heater Less then 20.000 miles. Lie 1'544RDH Stk. #2167A 53297 '71 VOLKSWAGEN t ,ASSINCHR IUS 4 cyl . 4 speed trans.. luggage carrier. radro & hearer Low miles. excellent condition Lie. #150EADStk. #19378T '61 TOYOTA COlOMA DILUH 4 Dl. VS. automatic trans . factory air cond .. full power. AM/FM stereo. tlll wheel & vinyl roof. Ltc. t1201RXL Stk. #P3349 4 cyl . auto. trans .. AM/FM radio. tinted glass. wheel covers Lie #XOV384 Stk .J17B1B , . . ... Wednesday, June 28. 1978 DAIL y PILOT DI ROBll ts~~~tmn ~~ Closed July 4th ROii HS-READY UUOCAIS l•W, Uo..i C• Wt \ell "41ftl He•t , ...... n,.,, ., .... , .... .... • ,HFObCAHCf • SAHnAMO • UUAJIUTY •~o..o ... ......, •••-H°"i"'~' ./ I RAKES Li""'90.,o..,.s.,.1- HJtlt•llcS.,.._. I ELECTRICAL H.,,., Loph. 1 ..... .., _, .. ,, s,.- I FRONT END W1Mt4 Al•,..-. SM<ao, .... St1Hi119 $.,.t_ ./ POWER TRAIN ,,_ .............. lltcwoooic kept ....... 01..,.... I LUIRICA TION l..IM,OHC ....... ......... Oil,..., 21/J ACRES OF TOP CARS IACKED IY OVER 56 YEARS OF • SERVICE TO ORANGE COUNTY •72 FORD f'IKTO 2 DOOtl 4 cyl . 4 speed trans .. radio & heater . Excellent transportation at this low pnce1 Ltc t1876FBR Stk. t11978A 5 1280 •73 FORD PIHTO squlU WA.GOH 4 cyl . 4 speed. power steering. radio. heater. roof rack. mag wheels . Lie. 1'621HRH Stk.. •2157A •75 FORD GUM/ll.D/11. 2 DOOl Air cond11ton1nQ. AM /FM stereo radio GOOd Sharp Car Lie •996MYI Many Others in Stock '13 IMTHNATIONAL SCOUT414 OVER INVOICE '7 4 PLYMOUTH SATB.UTI W/11.GOH V ·B . auto. t rans .. air cond1t1onmg. tx>wer steering. pawer bl'akes. radio. heater whitewall tires. wheel covers. luggage rack. Lie #402LFM Stk lf1556A.LOW $$$ •76 MGI lOADSTB 4 cyl . 4 speed trans . AM/FM stereo w1th cassette. tonneair cover & radlal tires. Lie. t1229RQH Stk. #18318. '70 CHEVROLET 1/J TOH PIC«U, vs. automatic trans • factory a., cond • radio, pwr steering &> heater. Lie #02B73S Stk. #355AT . '76 FORD l TD 2 DOOR LAMDAU 4 wheel drive. 6 cyl.. 3 speed trans.. fold down rear seat. locking hubs. radio & heater. Lie #68SJEY Stk. #1990CT. VB. automatic trans .. power steering. power brakes. pawer windows. pewer door locks . AM/FM stereo & vmyl roof. Lie. #315PUVStk. #1641A. LOW SSS Salee: Mon-Fri 8 to 9, Sat 8 to 6, Sun 10 to 6 Service & Parta: Mon 7 to 9, Tues-Fri 1 to 6 Parts Dept: Sat 8 to 1 pm A11 l><"ft Ar•"'"' Ta.4 l-~tl C¥' Jiu,. ~t>lect ro PuQf SA .. . \ . 10 Acres of the most modern FORD facllttles on the Wast Coast. I 02 DAIL V PILOT lt Vt~r June 29 197~. NottM1 F..-S4e Ho.Mt for Sc* -:::::===================:;;::::::::.------....... .. . . .. ... .. ..... . ..................... . G .. rel I OOZ G.....,.., I 002 Hov1f1 For S. HCM11H For Sak Hou1u For Sak Hou1u For Sde The.....,~ ... die°"'* c..a DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS .......•...•.••........ ..•..••.••.••••.......• ....................... •.••.•••............... .•..................... ..•.•.•••........•..••. ~ C.. SeH h ,flnd It, a ... 2.•~ l\'9de It Wfth a Went Ad ~ 4iillV 'U ..... hi.t. , .. ,..., ... \om ..,,"°'... . . ...... • • • lOOC). .. " ~:.!~ =t09f ~ 9000-tOft ~~· llwffMwll .!.... _ c 01 ,_. a Aut...-., ' .,.., _ ,,,__ · • · --• 7000 7199 T 9100,......... CLASSIFIED INDEX •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Grams al 1002 G111 .. 1002 ....................... ....................••• NEW WATERFRONT home witb boat slip, Coral Cay. Below mkt Bkr.~ Ta Ptace Y111r Ad. Call MINI-RANCH 642_5678 This exciting property -baa Jwst been placed on HD•K'tt fOR S'LE the market! Charming 8 1111t11 11 bdrm., den home. is new· · · :: 1y carpeted & painted: Ml.SA VHDE REAL £STAT£ HOii,... ~urn"hNt llOll,..., I nfurn .. ~•d Hou~"' ..-urn or I nf Condom1n'"m' t urn Cond<Jn'un1ylfl, I nl TOOAnhuu~ turri T~nhou'\•··,l'nf Duplf''U''\ hu n lluplo·v-• l n I Aph t\trn Apl' \ nlurn Al'l' t\lrn <W' l nf ftaom, Roumt.Ho•rrl Kolt h "loM (i t1t"'\I I kW'TW' ' ~mmfr fhnl1d \'a.cact0n Hrnc .. 1-. Rt'1,b\\\l)Sl'hUt c;.,.,.., ror R~111 orr .... R~nt•• 6ulUK"" fh"nlel ~\111•1 HC"nt.&t ha~ ~nublh111ed 111._ .... 11...Cal• BUSINru, INY£ST· MOO, ANANC£ :::::::::= ln•nt,...nt !?J>Por1'y l!'l'·ntnwnt 'II 1ntr4 . • • M~ to Loan MOMy 'II lnttd llortaH .. TO• ANNOUNCEMENTS. PERSONALS & LOST & FOUND 1-\n.nwM'f'ft'W'nll • Car Pool Ltj(•I NoOr•. 1..o.t" f"wnd rtt ....... i. llo<ral Clut.. lrO\~ SERVICES ::01~122 roomy corral Cor horse in VA TERMS * back. Good location in t(W Santa Ana lle1gbts. im $Sl.500 S7s,soo ::;i:: $; RE>-lfY Iron gate entry, leads to '"'"' 3 BR 2 Ba Veterans !}::.; l!re--am home. SOLO 1071> 0 N C E -B A C K 0 N := MARKET, H URRY! ::: 671·1300 Call S40-9922 '"" ~ 1100 1---.. --·-... · ... _,-.. ~.·~ ... -1 •cmocio1es ··~' ...._ ::?. 1-................... , __________ , u;,•1 tJ•) )l<.el HOO llW 1900 2IJ()O 21\Al Z100 ~JOO ~.at> ~ 2S.'JO 2fJOO ~ ~ l'IMI '111"1 i~:: Mewporl HeiCJhts Hlilll Tri ...... .H.'o ,.....x ~.~:: Only 5 years old, low ~-" maintenance, prime ::~: location. a 4 bedroo111 ~~ and two 2 bedroom units, "'" 4 enclosed garages, coin !'1~ operated washer & dryer 11111 and all curri!nt tenants :~ are momb-to·montb. 4'.QI nus Is 3 chance for 3 fine !:; Investment. !~ UNIQUE HOMES ·~ 675-6000 ::.:: , ..................... , TERRIFtC <>x-IEACH IUY ~:~ Older home, con verted to ~ triplex. Needs elbow :.oJO grease. but 1t 's xlnl :.co;; Newport location and size will excite the "do-il· yoursel!er " ! Call for de· tails. 642·5200 j PETE ' BARRETI .. REALTY ; OPEN HOUSE RlALTY ~· \ .!Tr • PRIME R·2 $92,500 Cul-de-sac, alley access, remodeled with a builda· blelot. 645-9161 ............ FOR ,E\Q!R .. , 4 years old! Low down! VA&FHA Terms! Call REDCARPET754·1202 CORMH CASUAL COMFORT flexible 3 or 4 bedroom home with spacious rum- pus room with pro· fessionally done wet bar. A quality res idential community for the fami· ly and only one block to all the r ecr eational facilities. Many extras in the well·priced home. $93,SOO. Located in Foun· tain Valley. - WAlthr'RONT HOMES REAL ESTATE 631-1400 '"'"-itt C"""""" llOOO llliiiiiiiiiilillll ................ _________ -i EMPLOYMENT l PREPARATION M£RCH ANOIS£ Anlt't'" .. Arc"'••nt 1 Aurbtlf\ th(\(""" 8'.khna \l•t .. n .. 1 C.uw r.n 4 l44v1vf'tH r I c..u 0..• ........ '"'"" ~VHlltUft c ... , .. ~I '.ti Hof"' Uuu-.t>hokt c.ooiil Jt ..... ,," t,hfl'ollM~ Mt11<"huwr" \11\4'" .. ll•n.'"'h \h" t lllntHN\ \\ t1fth•l'f "'' 1• .. 1 In 1ru~nh fMfh' turn" t-11u11• •... , ~·~~ ~t~~h~n~·~ 'iptHtlll~ C1nicid' ....... 1't11ll 11111 ~ t.i..1111 "'' , .. '-#, ~1·. tllHO ~ ..... \ •.:.> "'"° LUSE OROPTIOH SEVERAL sa.ECT Executive bomes and townhouses. Some va· cant. rent dunng escrow. Short term -Ion~ term. Phooe for complete info. • RED CARPET· 645-3474 =o , ....................... , ~~1-..................... ... lllJflO l!Olll !IOflJ IQ; IOl7 trCYA llQ!jJ IJJ(» AO'~ OCEANFRONT Seashore Or. duplex THE VA appr81Sal has been or· dered on Uus 4 bedroom and family room home! Fantas tic Back Bay View! Call Now' REDCARPET75·H202 Eltfoy lttattlittg! "'"*' Re,1~ur .. nr "·'' ~"'"P' -IC1"I 3 & l ·bdrm. units. each with frplc. Obi. garage, corner lot. $340,000 Including land' lalboa lay Prop. Waterfront acre es\ate. Huge trees. Classic French Normandy. Dou· ble d ock & lakeside patio. Massive L.R . & game rm. Art studio. 6 brs, 7 baths, maid's qtrs. All amenities. Over 8000 jlq ft. Furnished. No. Shore private area, Lake Anowhead. $475,000. f " k•dlo Htt 1 '1•·••1> BOATS i MARINE EQUIPMENT (11"4t-'I htt•I" \t41n1 ...,._,\If,. l\o"h \1.utn• t-~4\llP f\••'" f'h••, •~1 .. t ternt 'h.otrr ,t4.)1H .. ,.-1I U.tilh."1$)'11 "'"'"'" ~·· ""'"'" ..... li<Mh 4-,e('lfjO•t_ TRANSPORTATION .\1rrnft t •"·•~'' " t.-ftt-nl j lnuu·(,.,. \1.,h•h tltJftU) \\._.,., t ,,, .. , \<r1Mr MW'f' llm "°k Ht •I ,,_,,),, 1 ... \-.. , Tr 11kr 4 lfh\\ \ul11'rt'""' l11rt AUTOMOBILE I tt o~ .. 1 tllMI RHlton * 675-7060 . ·111v1-.................. __ L h Id 0 ;:~i---------ease o . wner ,..., SIDE IY SIDE (1)33'7·7594 ; 494-4653 -R .• ,.,, TRIPLEXES Mltwporl H•ICJhh 2 ~= Prestigious area in Mesa S Bdrm. Can be convert '"A Verde. Rare opportunity ed to duplex. ONLY to purchase two adjacent $105,000. Southlanders buildings w /no vacancy _631_·_2133 ______ _ problem as tenants walk to posl office & all shop- ping. Pnvate patios & separate laundry rms. Hurry! Phone today! 545-9491. GIVE ME FIVE bedrooms that Is. Local· ed 10 Mesa del Mar. walk to schools & shopping. This beautifully landscaped giant 1s JUSt IMH.ALD IAY • Wood/9-s. fow bedroOllt 9ld f-.lty. Step. to btoch. .• $2,000/"'°""'- Wood/tlot•. tine bedroom Giid faly. f_,mHc oc.-•i•w-SI 500/......._ EMERALD IAY Sp•ct~• •lew hOfH. of fiM .... lty ovet"loaAdltg Elt•rdd lay. n.is is a ~t f..Hy --for those .deslriftg ..... .,.at. prhat• commwstlty. Has darllroo•. ...,. aft shldy,.... 1torecp. $495,000. EMERALD IAY Spectac:.Mr •l.w frOM this Cllris Abel desJC)Md wood/glas,s ttne ....,._ pin *....Hy roe.. or fow bechOlft hoMe. Mew c .......... Giid paW. Y•'ll f..e tt.. .......... .-d clMnt of a .....tabt retreat, but ettfoy Ht. sk)ht Giid so.d of tM ~ Padflc swf. Redllced to $400,000 • OCEANVIEW COLONIAL EMERALD IAY J•st lbted tWs ~ three Mdrootn, fa.Hy "'°°"'-clsHg l"OOflt hOllte wftlt optft be.. ceilngs Giid Catalhla -.sets. This Is the ,. hc:t fantily hOSM. Priced to ... today .. $355,000. CORONA DR MAR HARIOR VIEW-CARMB. Tltree _.OOM. fantily rOOftl, distlRcJ rOOM. Car1HI with 1111pu upgradtt. Shows ct.licJMMy. Mil'TOred wor•ce.s, bMllMn bookcases. electric ~· profflsiOMlly lastdscap•d and decor ated. Owtdoor llghtfstg and community pool/porks. $165,000. OCEAN VIEW A top addrns Spyglass Hiii. T1'i1 bririty occ.,Md four bedrooctt hCMM is fOf' tM dtsca hsi :atiftc) faMlly fftat appreciates tM beat. $439,000. COSTA MESA TAKE YOUR CHOICE FIVE BEDROOM OR DUPLEX? L~ conMf' lot, ~ R·2. COllYenlettt to dowsttown Costa MHa and beachtt • r....-yow kids here.SI 09,000. SOUTH LAGUNA SPECTACULAR WHITEWATER VIEW from this spaclou low maint.nance INlltf.a..el redwood home. Thrff. be*ootns, 2>/• baths. cOMpletely lrlPCJ"oded. Giid in IMbitacwlat• co11dltion. Many Htras, htchtding a lcrge wlM cellcr, wcslstat fittbh sh:dy mtd -*" mo1oic tub. Must '" at S2tS,ooo. 644-7020 2123 SAN JOAQUIN HILLS ROAD NEWPORT IEACH \r\11 Jlih t'l•"-"h \ Hrt,, .,,,,,,,_ v, tht 1, • !'-1,.,,..t K11rr H•HI 1\i\1udUr1''" 110· II. the thing ror a large IACk IAY family or for some<>ne Fine 4 bdrm .. 2'"" bath family home on \,,,, \,11111.1 .... in , .. , .. ,"' .. "'""' AUTOS. IMPORTED t11 '" r.-1 \lt.1 Uvm1•u \111!1 •\udtn 111 ;1\, \ 11\IW :~W' ll•l>Uft, •• rt .. ft h•t 11""'1• J•~UMI Jtfbl•n K .. rm.enn (Hu,. M•Ld.i Mrti t"'fi~it lk n1 MU l\IGll '""' 11 .. nh •, who bkes alot or room. 7~ 2 STORY-4 IEDRM CALL no w o n this . quiet cul de sac: Oversized pool. + POOL-FAM RM 556-2660. playhouse, extra storage. Reduced lo WM & IEACH -=SELECT $179,000. ~;:::; walk to the pounding T'PROPERTIES MESA VERDE :~r.: surf from this executive •---------Attractive 4 bdrm .. 2 ba. home in """ 2 story home. Italian en· _.._.....__.__~ .......... _.. immac. condition. $99,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 1.11 11,, "d' Dr•v•· N B 675 6161 :;~'.~ try. huge rooms. vaulted VETS IAYFROMT ••1.i.• ceilings. To see Is to buy· * * Several fine bay front homes m1 Call963·7881. OOOWN-OCLOSING '17:kl • Cll'fN 111 o· ,, ~ 111ri ro r.i N(I • Homes in all areas of with pier & slips ~~ [•·•filUI 0:~:~~fooTY ~111 !.~~~~~~~~~ !114" ..... , .. ~ t•ut'\• h• M1 A.fifll t(uthKcJ\.., .... , .. JlA •! .... fl.Jf) •i:,,1 IEAUTIFUL & SPACIOUS "GUEHIROOk"! Triplex. 2 Br each, 2183 !!!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Pomona, CM. S125,000 ~·" ..... ~," .. , "'' I 1m1•• \ ~,.,.., "U\ ,, h11 I ltlTOS, NEW ,.,,..., ... U•i\if·1 .. I ,,11~ U·w•' • .adlll.itf tt.n:~.z. ' AUTOS, USED 'ht)liilf'f l \Ulft\·( f •""lln• n1 .. 1 • 'uruth· lvu.(lt• ~:',f·· 2 s tory. 4 bdrms. rmty rm. frml din rm . w;;• cathedral ce1hnRs m hv rm & mstr bdrm. Huj!c .... lo{l overlooks llv rm. nus lge lvly home 15 m A·l condition & Is pro- fHslonally landscaped W/l\prinklers & has rm ror 1ite pool. Offered al only $123,SOO. 545-9491. ~ ... ' t ,~ ... .,.,.lu ,,,ll !NII !IV" "r" "'"-, "''" ytl;t' ~ WJ.) ~ WU Marshall Rlty, 675-4600. $54,500 HEAR OCEAN Why rent? Spedacular value! Cozy townbome retreat! 3 larae Bclrm1! Entertainers paUo! Ten· nia court.II FHA T~rmst Can't last at this price! I HUJTY, call MS-0303 FORF'3T r: OLSON ... '..... . .. I'"'""•' .. u.ncvrn -· .. ~;, , ................ -•L_ ... _._-. __ --~----"' ... , ... M•rnan n.;-.::f,." t'111'0 l'l)!Mtllll "lftU•I r~rlMrrt \.,. .. ~ DO YOU • ..,1 OFFERASERVTCE? ~ Let I.he public know with f'f'lu an ad Lo the Da.ily Pilot "'' Service Directory. It can CacUllact to Go.-Carts Whatever lbe Fad Boll 'em ott the market With a Claall1td Ad Call Now I &l.2'"'811 coat you as little as $1.65 per (J.ay. For more! In· formadoo and complete rat8 caU M2·51'71. MOYIMGm Need bouatnr. lnlo. T Call toll ree 1-800-$25-3920 Ext. OU'14 or OU.O No obll11Uon. A H1'Vlce ol AlfWawct Independent Broken. -, . ' "' S©l'-~µ-~r.zrs ~ Thof lnfri9uin9 Word Gome with o Chudle 0 '•"'·'0~1• ..,"''' c1 ""'• I v' tit•.J~lf'd -otch ~ '°"" ' ·~ .... '°""' ""'° .. WO'd\ I L 0 y c t p I 1 I I I 12 I RUCCO I I I I' I" I I I ! A new dNI hU been pro· _....,,,..1 _R...-u.,..c__,or--1 POMO 1n Wuh1no1on 10 11e1p Ii I I I t ballnct tht bvOQtt. " )'OU ,__ .... __..___ .... _.__. ,. lta110 111 your gold 10 lh• Gov· .....--------.•rnment, l"-Y'll ---Ii IT El y ltl Al RI' I c;o;_~:: "'• .~ ... 1 .. ''"'''"' ~ .. .. • .. .. _ t>w 111 1119 ff' tP.t ""'U ~ l ....o'Ch tOY devt *OO ''°""' ••t o ~ J f.i• f • SC...........,.S Aalwen Ml ClesHlc8'Koa SI 00 • . " G......e 1082 G.......e 1002 ~... 1002 Gewrol 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• \\ L !--.1.J·:Y !\1 TAYLOR CO. HJ-:1\ LTOHS ~i 1w1· 1 ~HB WESTCU" IEAUTY417',900 Impressive slate walk entrance to a beautiful newly decorated 4 BR & FR home. Quality cptng. drapes & wallpapers. Near schools. park & s hopping. A perfect home for children. Own er leaving state. Hurry! WESLEY M. TAYLOR CO .• RIALTOll 2111 S. Jooqllist Hlls Rood HEWPORT CenH. H.I. 644-49 I 0 1002GeMt"al IOOZ • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• TWO DUPLEXES One oceanfront & adJOU'l· ing ooe oo Balboa Blvd .. must be sold together. Oceanfront has 2 bdrm . 2 ba. lower & 3 bdrm., 2 ba upper. blvd duplex is J.st.ory with ocean & bay views ; 3 bdrms . 2 ba. each unit All units exceptJonally s pacious with lots of extras Priced at $650,000 673-364-1 646-8723 E ves ANOTHER DUPLEX Close to beach, 2 bdrms . 2 bat.meach, large yard. Upper has some view. Owner aruuowi ! $189,500 673-366.1 673·8086 Eves associated BRul<.fU'> IHALTORS 201\ W Bui~.,., b1l IHI UNITS UNITS Two~xes Xlnt rental are:is. owner may _carry $98,500 Call S4()..9922 Gr:·~ SACRES IS.OW MARKET $62,000 Gracious. 2 story sun· filled garden home . 3 S pacious bedrooms . Secluded patio Don't W&.ll. Call 646-7171 (>1N l•f o • 11 \If.I"• 'l'lll •.{I [~·lfl*ll 3YEAROLD DUPLEX w/built·ins, bnck frplc"s, etc. One block to the beach for only S185.000. JACOBS REAL TY 675-6670 STARTER HOME Vacant with a FAN· TASTIC OCEAN VIEW. Large ... large yard. Freshly painted J Bdrm home wa1llng ford fam1· ly Close to harbor, parks &schools. $17.500 Call 729-5966 . for y04ll' appt. WALLACE & CO. REALTORS ~COATS & WALLACE . ':JJlJ REAL ESTATE, INC. t\ lOCAllY OWNlO COMPA NY SERVING fH( SOUI H COASI ARlA SINCE 1963 WAMT TO ftADI -The owner of this outslandmg 4 bdrm 3 bath "Spani~h V11lu" has pun·hased another and says "sell", and l will help finance. Or lake a smaller home in trade. If you have been thinking about moving up. but, don't want the hassles of selling. Cati 546-<4141 for further details. llAUTIRIL TOMORROWS IEGIH TODAY -In cozy Jasmine Creek. Enjoy formal dining. crackling fireplace and guarded entry. All for $213.950. Calf 640·6161 Serving Costa M ec;a-lrvine Hu:itmgton B eilch -Newport Beach GftWf'al I 002 GeoMt-at 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• --------i ASSUME 81h% LOA_.. 1 ACRE TENNIS ESTATE Shurp J BH h-.e n r llun\ i.: llrbr Anll.WU-. ownt·r will help ~ou hnance. For complt"tt• 111· lo ask ror Nan 962 77KH kEY REALTORS ---------- 2 year new expan:uve home on qwet cul-de sac Prestigious N. Tustm Lighted champ1onsh1pl_ ............ _ ... _ ... coun, oversize pool & SPYGLASS HILL J a cu Zl I & M 0 R E " The p e rr t' (' l f.1111 II v Spanis h flair, bri ck home, 6 Bit. 412 llA. archways, wro~ht iron. formal d1n1n1:. game etc. Owner will assist in room, mu ids qu11rtcr1'. A financing. Can't las t ' goq:eou~ Cape Cud in Callforprivat.e showlng. CdM ~chool drl'lnl't. Ontusx; ~-1i 2I .. ~Cettttr 640.5357 MOUHT AIM RETREAT FOREST t'ALLS San ~rnard1no Nattonal Park. F ive bedroom . study, hobby room. fam1 ly room Two r1replaces. & above the s mog. s:ll'i.000 ~ ll!-11..il l<I \Lr\ " j I j ' .. \ \ ' ' 7~1~ I tmt H•1 CmnJ d'I ftt11 DOVER SHORES S325,000 Very pr~:.ll~wu;. t•u,tom l' ll l' <' y I I \ <' h o 111 t' ' Pal.i\1.11 ~Jl<'t.I l'nlr) Formal ll\10g & <hmnJ.( rooms. t'abulou. .. k11r hcn & hreakrast room loads A bwlder's dream, with panoramic ocean view. Just minutes from Dana Pomt Yacht Harbor Horses 0 K <.:an you vis uabze white rail ft:nC'C!'-. tennis court. :.w1mmm1: pool, etc., etc ? A flnt· Ill vestment at $350.000. s1:t am ong other mai;nir1 cent ~late~' Cowttry Fttttc:h al~t 1 1 acre includes In W•stcliff homC' plus two lots. Call of i.petce Largt> tll"le farruly room Wet Odr Luxunou:.ly lar..:l· & private maste r win~ Roman bath. Walkm11~ ~ wardroben Main ·,. quurters. Superlll)I landscaped' Owner will finance To M'l' 1" tn Im· e -Comc bv t od<iv 673·MSO Of'ttv f11 fJ . ,, , ' ; [91U<l "' fordeta1b The dream home of a COLE OF NEWPORT s pecial area. Country REALTORS kitchen. J l~e bdrm!>. 675•5511 brick e ntry. beautiful ---------pa tio. s k y lltes, bltn DESIGNS> bookshelves. shake roof. Fixers Dream! many other features. As· FOR EXECUTIVE sumable 1st TO. LIVING Near tbe beal'h' Older home on hu.:;• lol • Zonc•cl R -2 1 U11l1m1tt'd~ poss1b1bt1~' Woulrl vou believe onlv Stoll oou•' Be tte r hurr,\'' t:Jll 00-0303 A O.v1~10n 01 11.irhflr I n\l''' mPnl C11 400UT"~t FOR.!l! This bttaut1fully up· ·--_.,.. graded BucC'ola Home' C.M.~-·. · .. -••• _-....._ Spacious Living Room ....,.r lim wnh b1 1: f''1replace Large Masll'r Bedroom. highly upgraded with WALK TO BEACH that's nght ' 2 Blocks to Lht: ~ ater Thi~ exel' retreat has 4 large BR . formal d1.111ng rm. be;iut sWldt'Ck & fabulous patio ror entertaining Offered at only Sl 12.000. Please call w; now• 540-3666 Wltelc-.11 REAL ESTATE FAMILY HOME Exceptional value 1n Irvine: cathedral c1:1l 1ngs, attr. wood panel ang, large covered patio. 4 bdrms. & family rm Converuent location lc1r commuung '96.!lOO OPPORTUNITY! . .. to buY a nearly new 4 bdrm. & family rm home on the lakefront. Wllh 2200 sq. rt of llYlng space. for only $158,500 BAY& BEACH ADULTCOHDO $56,900 For the d1scnminatmg couple Large mast er swte. formal dmmg + guest bcdrm. Gourml'l lotchen. extra large llv rlJI ., enclosed patio Secluded & qwet. Pool & recreation hall. Call for details 963·7881 [ i'll~llti1 "MODEL HOME" THEILUFFS FRONT ROW BAY VIEW!! 3 IR. 2112 IATHS "REG AMT" Just completed' Truly without equal. ever· ytJung you see. touch or walk on 1s brand new. A totally coordmated re· design & decoration ef fort. So ver y. ver y beautiful. you surely must s ee this s pec- tacular home Detinnely for the qual.tty minded & a pprec1at1ve buyer . Shown with pnde thru i!i,1!i li11n •; :\: l!:1i .. i!~ t\t l I 11 r !i Rrnq 640· 55b0 Anytrme l.1s tbh1tl Pro f Bldg. 450 NEWPORT CTR. DR. 759-1111 BEACH RETREAT VIEW $61, 90 0 ---------1 Steps to pounding surf & __ .................. -1 crystal sand. Back yard ThlllldttclToWRhcMnl7 Is Bay area playground' Visit the ~PECIAUST al Winding wooden walk the Condomlnl"m In· ways lo secluded entry, formation Center. Ser v· gourmet kitchen, step· 1 n g 3 1 1 0 r o c down conversation area TOUCHSTONE RLTY +fireplace. Sunshine h Bl breakf&st patio. pool, l8:>82Beac ·118 Jacu7.11 , volleyb.111 ' •.... c.a11 ... ff ... J.O-•H•7 ... -i Ga rd Wt I 1v 1 ng at 1 t '" r1ne:.t Ca ll quick ! CUSTOM RANCH $1 )9,500. NEW c us tom b ul It, ranrh style executive ho me! Beautiful brick facade. Massive s tone fireplace. Large ramlly rm w /2 nd brick fireplace . Ext r a spaciou s kitchen 4 Bedrms, 3 baths . Detached bonWI room' Mature f ruit trees Choou your lender • Owner may he lp finance too! Call today 752 1700 d1"4 r11 1J• •' \ •L"" '' ,, ,, ' 847 6010 C"lt'1'-.'~9'· f(f[lfV',..,"',,' t !•UEtl EASTSIDE FHAOIYA Btllly remodeled 3 bdrm & fmly rm home. Has rm ror poo.I table. new roof. all new k(tchen ap pliances. new copper plumbing, Near beach. schools & shopplna. Of rered al VA appralsal of $80.000'' Don't watt too lonf:' ~9'91. .. Prl\.tte cntranrl• 10 garden area Slum11 stone planters h1J!hllµht the roo m ba t;k~Jr<f Mesa Verde L1\ mg a\ 1t• Best' Sl29.000 Call 546 2313 --------()1 tt4 ,, .J •If' I ,fl,,-f.t I "• [ ®· ll~lliiWJ UDO LUXURY CRAWFORD CANYON North Tu-.t1n .1r'"' beautiful rou111 r\ :-.t'l tmi.: on 1 • acn· "1th 'tl'~ nl ~I~ Sparr tnrll\,31~1 11arage. J v1•;11· old ('a II 546·5880 ~HERITAGE REALTORS tr a second story v1l'W or the tunung basin. 11 45· boat slip & a big com mwuty pool turns you on. then you ht•ltt-r call about this outst andm~ ho mt• no w 1 C .\LL ----------751-3191. HAMDYMAM'S DREAM C::SELECT T'PROPERTIES Garai;t1• fully 10~ul;1t1·<1 Rullt 111 work h1•111·h 2 STORY L.lrl!t' lot with H \' ,,, •. 4IR + DEH Ct''i ... Nt•wly r1111n11•1t, + HUGE FAM panel.tnl( and ~ Jllp.11k·r Locat ed near beitch Four 84!droom ll<HTW 111 Me:.a North 1r111\ .1 $73.000 assumable loan GrPat Buv ror s;1, rM)() No new loan C'OSl!>. lkM 546-::3!1 · f10ancmi:: .iva1lable Acl c.,•i Now ' Call 963 67fi7 [,.--....,,=f=~=!=,=11=;=f=11 1i'IHMtt1® . · Real F.state Bike To Beach 2 Bdrm. 11'.i bath, ~111,..r sharp C'onuo near !>hop ping and M·hr1ols. (.;h(t1l'I' Huntin!(lon lkarh 1111•;1 t1 on . VJ<'a n l -Ith mec:hatl' OC'l'Upanl'Y ~11ll m1t your terms. Hed111•t·ti to S00.500 Ca II 5'16-~I ~HERITAGE ' REALTORS Class1f1c'<I Ads. your one stop :.hopping cente_r __ Mal-t' your -.hoppi n g e<1.s1cr by U>olnl! lhl' Oa1h Pilot t:l..u.~1fu'tl A1h 1002 G~ral 1002 ······················· ...................... . , SHARP TWO IEDROOM Townhomc in University Park. "YoUllg Decor", uir c·ondllioned. Close to communll y pools and tennis courts. $82.500. A CO&.DWal. 1At«9 CO. 644-9060 \ ' . I ' . • macnab / lrvlne r!elty FINER HOMES FROM $49,900 TO $975,000 llG C:AMYON-GOlf COURSI VIEWl Custom contemp ora r y 1n prest1g1ous IO<'ation opposite 18th Tee w/view of Spyglass. 5BR, 512 bath. rumpus rm , J car garage, garden patio lmlry & c1r cu1ating pond. With redecoration & a creative touch. the possibilities are endless. $465.000 fee, Dick Halderman 642-8235. 0"·124) EASTSIDE COSTA MESA 3BR home in excellent location. New rust cpl, country kitchen & tg. brick rear patio. Priced lo sell at $117.900. Coolue Allison 642-8235. (F-126) MEW USTIMG-CAMEO SHORES ..Beautiful home w/rose gardens & canyon view. Cathedr al ceilings in Jiving rm. 4 lg. BRs. fanuly rm. & atrium. Many custom features & r eady for your s ummer move·in! Appl. o nly. $284 ,500. Donna Godsha ll 644-6200. < F-127 ) YIEW OCEAM. HARIOR Ir MIGHT UGHTS from this lg. 4BR, 3 bath Harbor V iew Hills •esiden ce. Formal d ining + brkfs t. area off gourmet kitchen. Famil y rm. w/fpl., 3-car garage + stor age. REDUCED FOR FAST SALE -HURRY - $272,000. Jeanette Havens 642-8235. <F-128) -ADULT LIVING AT ITS BEST Beautiful views of Npt. from this 'adult security bldg. on Lido's bayfront. 2BR, 2 bath luxury condom inium. $260.000. Terry Hanes 642-8235. <F -129) A SOUND 'If ALUE. • • in this 3BR + dining rm. Bluffs condominium. Excellent location close to pools, tennis club. schools & shpppin~. $124.950. Jane Paquin 642-8235. (F·l30> PANORAMIC SEA VIEW! View ocean. city & beyond from this beautiful Nantucket <2BR + co n v . den ) 'hom e . Features h <1rdwood parquet f loor e ntry. Tie utral colors, private cul-de-sac street close to tennis & pool. Gated community $249.000 fee. Marjorie Ma hon 644·6200. < f'-131 ) llG CANYON Broadmoor Plan J in a m ost sought after location. Formal dining rm. ~ourmet kitchen. 4 BRs & high beamed ceilings. Extra lg . Jot has room for pool. Priced right at $369.000. Lynne Valentin e 644·6200 (J:t'-132> NEWPORT SHORES WIMMER! Completely re-done "A " frame in s uper !oration. 3BR. 2 bath. s torage + s undeck & patio Outstanding use of hardwood. brass & glass. $162.000 fee. Martha Macnab 642-8235. <F·l33l FAMILY llVIMG Wonderful 5BR home in popular £astbluff. Over 2500 sq.ft .. all on l(>ne floor & a bi~. big corner lot for a pool, .orchard , or ? Close to schools. s hopping & park. $179,500. J eanne Newman 642-8235. (F-134) JHE PERFECT COMllMATION Beautifully up g rade d home w /fantastic V I EW of ocean. Catalina & ni ght li ghts. Private yard w/cus tom Jacuzzi & fire rmg L g rovcred viewing terrace + 3 I ~. BRs, <'Ozy d en & family Tm $299.500 incl. fond -Installment s,1 ll1 Belle Chase LC'e 644-6200 Ii" I :15) BEAUTIFUL POOL HOME A handsome residence for lg !amily. 5 spacious BRs. 3 baths. r oomy kitchen/family rm. & used brk. fpl. Colorful pool are a w/brk. patio & fire ring. $119.000. Lois .Egan 644 -6200. <F·136) MEW LAGUNA LISTING Sop hi s ticate d tow nhom e w / sens ational vie w of ocean. ca n yon & ni g hl lights. New hardwood flooring, new plush cpt. & new c ustom kitchen. 3 BRs. .spacious play room w/wet bar. Accented w/d ecoral or papers. beveled glass. oak front door. wood d ec king & c us tom Ille. $260.000. Beverly Morphy 642·8235. <F -lrl) Plat Ir SLIP + SANDY IEACH Marvelous beach home w/all the amenities! "An Oldie but a Goodie" -in prime Peninsul:t 1ocalion for year ·round enjoyme nt. Charm & high beamed ceilings + lJrick terrace. Appt. only. Don a Chichester 642-8235. (F-138) McLAIN TOWMHOMI W /Vll!'Wl One-of a kind end unit overlooking golf course. Tastefully upgraded & done w/rustom moldings & solid parquet flooring Sensat ional ' $239.950 Lynne Valentine 644-6200. <F-lJ:!l ) 642-823S 644·6200 901 Oov11r Orl"'f H&rt>or View Center lrVll'lt •I C•mpu\ V11t1ey Cenler H2·1414 Hottws For S. HouHt For Sa&. WednMday, June 28. 1'178 * OAILV PILOT D~ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~ ....... !~~~ ~!~~ ....... !~.~~ ~~!.~~.~ ....... ~c:'!~!.c:':~~ ....... 1~~!~!.~~.~ ....... . .................•..••. ...................... . 1002G~ 1002 GefM'f'ol .............................................. IMM.ACULA TE 4 br Jst spent $0000 111 u p grades $89.900 Im mediate occup nr best acbools 751·1806 P P •DUPLU • Gr~at ~tarter 1nv~!!>l ment, breud & buttl!f 2 BR until> Super location $110.000 l.&kl':. IL' C.&11 ~5112 R l f/\"1 l U M ,.(JMt•A"''if Rf.A.tTO U •, LU \11 4.UPl~"• ~lffc:h t040 LOIJlllll .. ach 1041 LA191ftG .. och 10.a ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• llR +POOL 3 bdr beauty, big back yord Must sell i\~kani.i $66.400 Call I van 631 1470 + HACH $65,500 Pnme llwltlngton Bea<"h loC'allon near school:. parks. shoppmg center~ & aolf course. $1550 total uwestment to quabfymg buyers Owner will hdp --finance. Take advan I br 2 ba, R 2, 4 plex tage Ca11963-676'7 po:ss1b1llty $130.000 <~1"' '" o. ,, ~ •u .. ' ·~• "'. GOLFER'S TOWMHOME Be on <the> course! You will with this 2 bedroom and den townhome for under $200,000! Security g uarded development with pool. jacuzzi and t ennis f acilities. Super home for entertaining with vaulted ceilings. wet b ar. sunken Jiving room and formal dining room. This Unique golfer's townhome. with unobstructed view, is $176,500 IRAMDNEW!l 3 BR. Family ltm. l baths, fireplace, full}' 111 ~u laled . i!:a&ls11.lc S84.000. COHD~~~WNER [Iii!.. ~ I EverArcen Est Nl'vl'r . ~ : h"l'd m 2 B<lrms. :i ha . .i-;;;i;i~iiiiiiii~~~I TIRED OF CLOSE ENCOUNTERS? -This dlanRing hOfM with CJUfff ...,..,., has thrtt bedrooma and front Giid bod tawfts cOftlP&e" with flowtt" gardeM. pGftds and avlcry. IMicle -..joy ~ hcrdwoocl floorin9 a"d fireplac•. Offered at. . .s 165.000. UNl()UI: t1f)MI:§ REAL TORS'. 675·6000 2443 East Coast Highway, Corona dcl Mar .,t~o "' M•">d Verrlf' rll !>46 b990 Roy McCordl• 1810 Newport Blvd. pat11> 312 Sydney. C'M 917.500 Ph 1·213144!1 1162 Costo MHO 548-7729 1-------- BY OWNER 4 Br+beaut1fu l pool Mesa del Mar area Will sell contract ol !>alt· M .500. Shown by n:ppt only ca11 642·8825 pnn only EASTSIDE DUPLEX Large yard & alley ac cess. attract1\'e owner's tlnll $97 ,500. , to"" OPEN HOUSE REALTY WI Yow Husband 4 Bl'drm, 2 bath, fam rm, d1mni: rm. patio, approl( :moo ,,q r1 • 10, l'ly neighborhood sa5.ooo 645-9161 • •••10. ..... c-... .... PRICE SLASHED $10,000 Extremely anxious Owner's purchased other ho m e' 4 Br. 2.Y• bJ, formal din area, co1.y 497-3331 r rplc m h v rm . spa c 1ous ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! gourmet kitchen w /lrf.? eatlllg area. lrg fam rm 1 1-.... I 044 "'-I 044 overlooloog your 1h3G ".,.... pool Upgraded thruoul. ••••••••••••• •• ••• • •• • • •• •• •• ••• ••• •• ••••••• •• low ma1nt . yard ill LUXURIOUS DRASTICALLY perfect Joe. w tload.s or REDUCED privacy Submtl your IRYJNE GROVES TRI LEVEL U?rrru.. Hurry. T'tu)> t'hJrmmg -t bdrm I 002 llab>a Island 1006 HALPINCHIM REALTORS 675-4392 I 960·43.6 ! I After ::,ou ve l>t.>en th1., tn-levcl orrers the most I-beautiful 2 + Ui'"N in gracious hvmg Huge> .ABANDONED :MM ~o~~ 1~:r~~~u~;>::;_; ~~:'r~:~d ;a[1';f1~·b!~~1. 5 BEDROOM ~;;;;~~~~;1 Vacant .tnd read~ tur 'PJCe for boat or trailer • .•...•.•......•........ .•..............•...... --------- NEW DUPLEX BF.ST BUY EVER! Seller c; were forrcd to ~ you. POOLS. TENNIS. N cw c pt th r u o ut . GREENBROOK leavl'th1i.gorJ(eous home BEACH CONDO 3 BDR PARKaodlotsmorc Redul·e<l to $104,950. 11!64 Sq ft ea unit, twnhse style 3 Br. 211 ba & dbl gar ea. Cor lot Nr Npl Hts & park. D. Levme Pac1f1c Real Es tate 642·0200 On Balboa Island. owner will fmance the purchase of these 2 umts on a full s ite lot Ask111g o nly $154,500. Make offer! t ll 1 mm u t' mo\ c 1 n 21"J ba. dbl gar . $66,000 7511-1501. BY OWNER cond . bNut t1ks. up 96J.7079or 652·4278 Agent 675-6700 0 ABANDONED" ~.~~::'!~~~ .. !?.~~ 3 BH, lY• BA w/wall of 3 BR. 2 ba .. 111 blk. to bay glass overlooking cov Now $100,500' crNJ d:.rnee . p av11ton Marshall Rily mS-4600 G1gant1 c ltvang room.1-----'---- gourmel kitchen w /a ll PENINSULA PT. new 11ppl & formal din· 4 Bdrm. 2 bath. den mg Sl>p master suite & Owner Sl89,500. 675·5660 ovcr:-1zed children:.--------- quarters Loc on curv Corona dd Mor I 022 mg, Lree-llned street 1n ••••••••••••••••••••••• t>t>tter part or Orang~ Co Old Corona Charm Low down lo vets f'u II 3Br 2Ba + guest hse on pnce $67 .000 ove~ sized lot. step:, from K~la Realty beach The ce1hngs are 847-6061 546·9366 high, the frpl large, the MAGNIFICENT MESA VERDE nus IS a fabulous 5 BR family home close to country club, l.hoppinl( & i.<:hools Won't last long at Sl30,000 BALBOA ISLAND Super duplex. Just re niodcled two 2 llH unit::;. natural wood:. thru out ,\ gri•al 111 Vl'Stmcnt S.'05,(M~I REAL ESTATE MAHA GEM ENT OPPORTUNITY 01\ prime prel>llj!IOUC-, ;\ewport Beach location i\ top local firm with years of i>UCl'l'S~ful C'< p~ r 1 en<' c N cw 1>0 rt Beach real t·~tale cx penence preferred i\ rt.• ul opportunity lo grow & help others Applications held m stnct c:onr1dc•nce. Please reply to Ad 112t12. Daily Pilot, P (). Box 1560. Costa Mrsa. Cullr warmth or wood & bnck abound. $234,000 App't 542·4762 67$-8347 JASMINE CREEK Slunmng 3 Bdrm. 2 bath. ram rm, 2 patios Prof decorated thru-0ut Ten ms (.'0Urts, Po<>I & 1ac A!i k tn~ $245,000 by O\l.11er. 644 6867 RC.: Tl\VLOA C:OMPANV RC l\l. TOAh OE~ELOPPRS "100/o DOWMOK!" Owner will help hnancr t'narrt11ng 2 rm home on 11·2 lot w room to ado 2nd unit Pnred to sell al $138.500 Agt 640·5112 OWNER SELLING 3 bdr 2 ha house. 4 hlh Lo A1i.: CoronJ beJch. $155.000 Well main lainl'd home. com<'s with plans & approvals ro1 im med add1t1on or 2 bdr 2 bu upt m rear lds:al fo r builder or investor C.ill 644· 7864 ror 1nforma lton & v1ewmg a..:..p..:...pl ___ _ 9?;626. 1------------HOME & INCOME HARBOR VIEW HILLS A rare and surpnsmg s p E c T A c u L \ R . spa1·1ous J Bdrm+ den fore~cr Cata Ima. orean two slory home Massive ~iews Hui.:l· main used bnck r1rcplace .ind tenance free lot This 3 many other amenities Hdrm + family room Some ocean view from home 1s an immaru13tc Master ~wte and adJoin I II I d d an~ deck PLUS a room\ JC'We igh Y UJ)gra "' ne,er vacant rental All air cond . even a m1n1 pullmi:! green• For lht• oo an overs1<ed lot. JU'>t a chscemm~ bu.)'l'r ~cckmJ! short Jog lu lhe beach I d S?m.000 4 Bdrm 2 bath Ex Arndcd l'pls thruoul tretnely PoPUlarCamelot Huge room:.. latt•::.t t1 i. Model. This lovely home tur~ & ~~w P ~ac~lf ' .it is located in an excellent S00.500 Call 546 23 1:1 ne1ghborhoodon aculdc , ... ,. '"' '"'' .. ,,.,.,. ~~~t:~~n :r.s~ wCI<~~,~~ f{;~ lt?!jf!;J•1 Plaza Shopping M.iny l ~ -~~!!•!! outstandJng teatures an elude CUSTOM DRAPES UPGRADED CA R PET!-. LARG~ COVERED PATIO DESIGN EH WALLPAPER 4'x8' SKYLIGllT OUTDOOR GAS BBQ At.IOGAR DR OP~R SP RI N KRS F'RON T RF.AR 979-8123 MESA VERDE Large family hOnl(' °"llh added rum1ly room ' Cull REDCAHPET754 1202 BY OWNER Prin only plea~e S109.'l00 \te:.a ~I !\tJr SSJ.950 t \"erv clean 2 -.ton t Bdrm. 2 bath. on ((Ull'I street near So CuJ-.t Plaza $94.500. hy O\~nrr 7~1 0221or55!1 i\olll bd. l.im rrn s.tti 3797 --- BEST BUY ! :'.I F.SA VERDE3 Br. 2 ha b\ o-.. nc·r Pr11 ,·d rl' durf'd to S8o.ooo Op,•11 Nt•Wport H~s. l>t'.IUt :J br OOU!>l' SJl Sun l:! :J llj~l 2 ba. new k1tdll'n, up Co1s1c:a l'h 5-16 !l:">~ili ~r adt'd ll) o" n1·r $12.5.000. 548 4930 DmNI Point 1026 Lcwtly 3 Dr. 2 bJ. tam rm w roly lrplr & wt•tlmr All nrat as .1 111n Lnw pnce 1ndudt·s P' I 1n law quartrrs \\' I)\ l l!ntr Jlll'l' Huge lot " I<\ -.wr.1i:t". g 1 a n t l r t' t' s . I u c; h IJnti.scaptn~ & mu('h much mort' .Ju!t~htcd at $79.500 It Won· a-.1 Call How 559-556 TM Wcrburton Co. Let's ~~r~ee ~~~~;1 , :1 bcc1 rooms. den. l'al1n1: .irC'a . family room a11tl .! t1rcpl<1ccs l'ool 111t1 ' St?A.950. BKfi. ~.IU 11:m Ill', Down, no quahfymi.: or $750/per month lease option L,nu!>ual c:uMom 'Pdar & .v.la..,s, oc:can "''". J hdrm. 2 b.i. hillside home Move an 1mmed Sl-18.SUU 0 11 Sul Sun I 5 25236 ~I a n l a n 1 I a Su s J n Wright AJ:t 768 1222, Days 481 7990 E\es Hwtf;IW)ton Beach I 040 ........•.••.•.••..••.• YOR"TOWN VILLA Sharp 2 year new. 2 story l'nd un1l l'OOdo w 1J BH P1 Ba . plu~h upi;:raded ca~'ls. M•parall' laun d11 ra<'•hllt·s and i.:ara~c Wrll m.iintainl·d l'Om mon arc:i." pool & m1m piirk (;lost' to <tl l POOL HOME 2Br. lBa. corner lol home. cpts. custom drps. brand new gas range & self·rleamng ove n, new dishwasher, RV acces:. or use a s a 10xl2 garden RANCH REALTY area. gas heated pool 551 -"OOO with all needed cleaning •ir; tuols. btfl large patio --Fi-.n-al-R-~·~tion•. area with blln BBQ. Ian ~ tasllc for retired couple SS.000 hl•lo mrkt :iBr or atarter home. $72,900 2&. dm111)(. ram1ly lnl·d 9688561art5PM. }ard "f)OOI F1nJO('IOg a\Jll .... ~°" • ~'""!"'r $86,900 S52 3008 .~ •. ; •.... !~.~~I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; __ _ DOWN IT GOES! The pnce hac; JU::.t IX'en lo"ered on this Dl•erfudu charmer This Phm :: 1 Real Estate EW 4 hr, 3 ba 2 s tory, 3'i Oakdalt>, Wll<1dbridge ~1 1 9.9!1u Owner. 213· 657 4376 "BRAMD ... EW" EXECUTIVE ESTATE lnlroducang this 5 bdrm lx>auty. Buyers choice of premium crpung. Lrge rmty rm w lfrplc, frml din 3 baths, 3 car .l(arage, heavy shake. !llt'ar ~chools, park & pool 759-1501 HUNTINGTON HA R B 0-U R A R E ;\ EXEctrrIVE' DUPLEX Scott Realty 536-7533 l"ine 1044 Wlth 2 BR and 21, U,\ 1-. "-------- now at a mind bog~hni: BY OW.,.ER ••••••••••••••••••••••• $72.500 Compan· and " Woodbrid4Je you'll rind this an out New Turtlerork Glen By owner. 2Br. l'hBa standl.ngm\estmcnt ' ~arden home, Heather condo Cov patio. ga!> model, .i im. 3 ba, fam BBQ. upgrds. Nr park. rm H1.:hly upg ra ded new elem schl F'1s hing. w dt>ck & view $164,000 s a 111 n g. s w 1mm1 n.: h44·41!H7 lagoon, pools. & more 938.500. call tlus wkend.1--------• BY OWNl::H Turtlcrock. 5:>9-015l 3Br. 2Ba. single fam hmt• PRESCOrr Woodbndge Place I . 5 br. 3 ba. next to lake. beach club. (714 )731·4484 S &SQUALITY 2 sty home, 4Br. 211'2Ba. bonus rm. sep ram rm w /frpl, form d1n1ng Comm pools& greenbelt Pnced n ght at Sl 14.950 Bkr. 536-1493. CollertP on Ir~ pnv lot AtC. lustl ":I"'" atnum w1fount.ain & up Park itrd flooring thruout 4 Bclrms . fam rm Clost!lo1:ommpark,pool Be rkl'll•\' ;\lotkl \A.1th & elem schl Sl2J,OOO raised pat"' <leek £>011 Open hsc. Sat, Sun 1-!I ble drape~ Qwct cul di! Pnn only· S33-0507. sue location 1048 ......•.•......•.•..•.. BR home w 1sep Lrg apt. & ore. Across from bch. S245.000. Also super S· pit."(. blk tn bch. Wht water $395,000. Agl. -19-l-8611 LOWDOWN COLLEGE PARK lf523 CAMPUSl>t· IRVl"E Lea-.e option & .!.ale:. Mn· JUST REDUCED $4000' Ir a ( t Av a ti 1 n So Cornell model Iron gal· --l..iguna ed entrr to 3 11 brick Sell 1dlc• 1tems M2 56ill I' P 49!l 37J5 patio Massi\ e brick "ine I 044 lrviM I 044 fireplace. F1oor to real· •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• mg bookcases. Galll.'y kitchen. family room G1J?c;nltc bonu:-room 4 Bl'drms & much more' Now only $111.900' Call today i52· 1700 TARMlL ~.~~1es. Sniip il up al '""• , , .. '·. ,, •., "#1 lnCatifomia" i 9'0·06IB 1~ •. '. ~ macnab /Irvine realty '"REDUCED __ 'O' , llu rry ' • ! Seller 1Mlll....._.ia transr'e1 r ed-M esa ---------1 Verde e:-tate tx-twcen 2 golr ('ourscs, 4Br. 341111 sq It. :I ~rs old. $188.9011 I\~ agen t : Bclh 1;11 1 9&1·2431 , 963·9101or n 1t1 835-0211. pagl·r =351~1 ~&-" HrsJlt· ~pcc1all!il~ 3 I or 5 bdrm moc1cls • I\ ;11 I. -.o ml' w / poub 'ltiij~2 Pt'nmngton J>ropertu•c; CONDO' 3Br. 2'-:i Ba Family rm $91,500 752·5086 B<:aut:? br. rrplr. 11':! ba Wmrlsor model an The Terr.lee. l.nt\ Park Nr Dool. clbhse Pr11'\' WOODBRIDGE! ~yp r~sswood mode l built by S&S -1-story, 2BR w/brick rourty<Hrl & atrium. Prof. decorated. Lots of s torage. Brkfst rm. Atr-C'ond . ONLY $89.500 . Donna Godshrill 64-1 6200 <F·l40) pm·ac) e t•i.:am·e .tn Call for DETAILS i.crenity Ot !('rt•d .11 ~s.uoo 644·7211 TOP LOC Mesa dt•I '1ar 2 st~. lhr :Iha. d in111)(. en l'I pa l 1 o , d ,. 11 . n r schls park $111.!IOU ./OG TO BF.ACll slashed l wk onlv from Sul)t'r bu\. highly up 91.1.750 to S82.950-Pnnc ~MCHO SAN J049l1IM Bea utifully de<·orated e nd-unit "San Mal<'o" W/'!. BRs. 2 baths + 2. d ec·ks. Clos(' to pool . ~pa. golf & te nnis Pn<"cd to sell at $116,950. Bell e Partc h i52 1414 <F·l4l) iliiltimm l!radt•d , J bdr Ju!>t burn only owner 839·439R Owm•r 7:J I 0383 \Our toothbrush & mme --------- •--------1 Costa Mesa I 024 ......•..•......•...... Pool home by owner .tBr, 3Ba. manv :octra~ ImmaC'. redun·<l bl•low 1n 01x·n Sunda\ 12 noon t 11 !>nlll 51 ~.I Spu rru.,.. Ed111~(·r Hol-..1 l h1i•,1 i\J,.'l FIXER UP~ER WAKE UPI. <1J)praisal. StO!l.000Opl•n1--------$59,500 Sat1Sun 1·5 or by app t TIME IS RIGHT S2500Totat Down Got to see this F'u1rvicw t t5 74~8 97f Den H r Available now 2 Br. l 'o\l Soanng 2 sty, 1 hr + Farms hm of your nvc rm on y ___ bu. Swedish frplc . Up· dreams. Pnced in the 1--------• graded carthtone carpet pool ' A hundyman·s 70's. llua" yrd wifrwt h d • p 1 "" l!..t.STSIDE t ruout :? Car l(ar, para tSe. :lllll a nc pro lr"ca, udd"O f'llTI rm. IOA flt d h If ~ " 0 " -w t I 11 u n d r v r u c 1 Ill 1 e> s an you avl' .vourse prof buralar al··rm. :ll'r. Spa"•OtlS 3 Bdrm with · l l L' 11 ,., 0 ., " Private patio condn un cs a e r.xcc C'rll 1:1..na. bkr 8<17 !1553 or overs1Y.ed family room. 1'nhm ltvmg. Call qu1t•k, 9686167 home Ht!sorl lakC' 8117.(i()IO ---------quality bWll With Sh11kt• fa('llltl('<; fiV parktnj'.! roof. fpk. and bullttn!i I ''I h •1•1•11 · ''' "'''"'"' REDUCED No w vacant St•c ava1 '-m.e tu sr ools. [ I] park & bt•ach Anxious ~ lflftllil ;~~-:~7;,:i~;7~; i£i~7·~ •. ~~~~' ;:;:: (.. ........ ~ 2 O u .... LOT _P_hon_e_1_s1_-07_7_4_e_ve_s__ .... . ""' •*•POOL••• Ut.•st buy on EJsts1dc 2 •4 BR. 211 Bl\• --- houses oh one large R·2 CoU Pk 751-3910 Rith aJ?t Want Ad llelD • 642 5678 lot lmmarulalc & full or rhnrm Res1drnre plus Corona d.t Mer I 022 Corona del Mar I 022 -- SMOKE TREE ·' dt'hghtful and SOUl'?ht ,1ft1•r :I Bdrm smgle :.tor} end unit on gret>nbelt Nr pool, 1acuzi1 , tennis and bike trails $79,90-0 Call for D~tails 644·7211 .. UNIV. PK. IRV. La Salle. 4 Br. 212 ba absolutely best buy m area. Premium home 2 frpl. Everything done Air-cond, wall-papen•d. mirro red All e lerl kitchen. Plush c pt-. Move an clean $1 19.000 Owner5S2 8584. DEERFIELD PARM HOME Plan Ill ! Ac·ross from proposed park approx. 2000 sq.ft. on one floor w/3f3Rs. 2 baths & huge fa mily rm. w/spac·e for pool table. Beautifull y d eco r a ted & landscapt.'Ci 2 <:overed patios - comm. pools a must see a t $117 .900. M ur1on Frizzell 752-1414. (J-"l42) "IUCKHORN" Beautifully deroratt•d 2BR + den s in g l e f a mil y home in ever.popular Deerfield 1 Gorgeous landscaping, t·ovcred patio & deck + d e l1 g htlul s pa ! JUS1' REDUCED -ll URRY! Tom Qut•rn 644 -6200. <F'· I ~3) mromc, or bu1hJ to c;wt , .. ·.·.·.··.·.·.··.·.·.··.·.·.··.·.·.·.··.·-··.·.··.·.·.··.·.·.··.·.·.·.··.·.· .. ·•• Dana Point 1026 0-PoW 1026 Tius one won't l.\Sl UL II •••••••••• •• • •• •• • ••• •• •••••••• ••••••••••••••• ~!!!!11 ...................... L sas.ooo. 648-1111 CSE: llDBll ILllNS CD. filc~~~~!l2!l.~ GRACIOUS NEW ENG.LAND STYLE HOME ........................ RUSTIC CAPE COD Qu.amt 3 Bdrm . 2 both. 2 i-tory h<lme PLUS rcntal unit. ldcnl location • ~ hlock from South hayfront & 3 block~ rrom downtown shnpp10~. Must sec to hilly ap pr~iate the C:tpt' Cod charm Altk1n11 S279.000 Clll 1714)138-6755 17141673·7115 '• OVER 50 YCARS OF SERVICE: CORONA DEL MAR Irvine Terrace. Lovely 2 Bedroom + De n. In Park·Like Setting. Surrou n ded By Trees And F lowers .• Just A Little T.L.C. To Make It One Of The Finest In The Aren. SJ74,500 111 DOVEll DRIVI 631-1800 HILLTOP DAMA POIMT COMDO Beautiful, nearly new, 3 bedroom. 211:1 bath. 2 s tory model. Wood burning fireplare. pool. saunas. J 1tt·u1.7.i. Lovely ocean breezes HURRY! $88,500 A COU>Wfil IAH«B CO. 496-7222 831 -0836 Jn Woodbrid~~' Features 2 BRs + den . parquet entry & magnificent master bath. All cooled by central ~ir. Beaut . landscaped rear yard 1s extra prsvat<> & large. $110.000. Madeline Cross 752·1414. <F·l44) MAGNIFICENT VIEW. • • In Rancho Sr-m J oaquin wht!re "the llv1n ' 1s easy". a fe w ste ps from pool & golf rours t•. Lnrgest plan In the development. Dorothy Lewis 752 1414 w 145) 6424235 '01 Dover Dt!Ye 644-6200 Harbor Vltw Centtr lrvtne at C.mPll\ Valley Ctnttr 7S2-1414 .., DAILY PILO'T • I othlf' RMI Estate ~: .~ .~ ........ ~~! .~~ ~~ ........ I~!!!.~.~: ....... . ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~·;·····~··lOOO 0th~,. ••ol bto~ HM.a Unfunlllhed Howea U~Wd Mtwport Inch I 069 Mobile Homes ••••••••••••••••••••••• For Sa&. II 00 ropety ...................................................................... . ••••••••••••••••••••••• \Avi-IHQ I 041 t601"PO'i .. odi I 06' .-wporl .. odt I 0•9 1111111., 1 BR ho nu, rm .,. , bA tnd urut on 11n·t.>nbt-ll b} pool $164 .~ Agt 1133-l.366. ~1 6Ul ..•............•.....•. GoH & Oce• Loh for SoA. 2200 Costo MHo lU4 1 .... 1i14e111 ltoch 324 O •••••••••.••.•.............•.....•.....•.....•••.................•••. NEW llOM ES 111 l aiun 1 Be•ch J o"'·ph 11, un Broker Bu1ldl!r "',.II ~l.8 M.B. STEAL 111 .U h 'S I LE\'EL VU end unit ANGEl.ITA, 2br, 2ba. hpl. aouni loon. $1S7 .ooo ownr &U-001. For the dl.6cernang bu) er ~xclus1vr •red nl Uil(unu lulls. Obi wade LilAcer. unmcd occupan cy 121.000. <HU6643 72> Brand n~w San Cltrnent~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••-••••• •• duple•'< Wrap H ound VACAMTLOT Tranquil P unoramlc Beach ~e + &tudw • 2br \ ll'"• back!'. on cour\e SO X t 00, 7.0ncct (M View 3 11111tr ~7 Bdrmi.. $400 'Im ft>e S.S7..()tl2.1 'Two 3 lldrm . 2 b:ilb un dlG)l~it. ~, blk orr Pac 2 '-" bu Fr p It'. 1H' p •HOM EFlNDF;R~• l L' '"'II" t • d C•t liwy L'-·ll o~"'an balcony & yard. Auto t!I """"" d l ren. LI· v1"e~ tn~ludruDan~'"pt earageopnr$. OW .tr~h New 3 BR custoin. lort. C-'Of'h Of Homl' Wllhoul lht' bolht'r 2 Bdrm .. 2 bath O· V O l block to La&unn " M.ian 8eaclL $85,950 RJrUp& SoH Needs paint & c11rpets t.oada of poten\i•I Sweeping ocean view&. La&una location 2 Bdrm .• huge den & 2 b3tm. $121,500 Thi~ charming:, txlrm executive home 1n one of N.B ·~ best areas 1s situated on a "ree lot .. vou own. Huge family room with fireplace opens to loveJy private lJackyard Formal dining, 3 bath:> A real family home . Also private pools & parks. 759-1501 HOR.INS REALTY * 494-8057 * Miulon Vleio I 067 Newpoil"f IHch I 069 HA.MDYMA.M ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• SPECIAL 3 br 2 ba Condo, air cond. BEST DUPLEX crpts, drapes, pool. sgl H!WPORT SHORl!S AT VICTORIA BEACH !>l o r} $ob• 7 5 0 Immaculate 3 Bdrm. 2 H ERE' S A R E i\ l. i'l I SJ0.5085 ba beach house dream SL~EPER! Locate.'<! off EA.5TEHN CHARM Only $109,000 Call now the ocean side or the Ouldren can romp her1•1_~..;_.5.59-45.S6 _______ _ hwy .. Wirn EA.5Y AC & enJOY lhcar own play CESS TO rnE BEACH 1trounJ. Comfortallle Single story arch1le<' forruly ltvmg, an th1:. 4 ture, bwlt on level lot DR 2 (lu +Fam Rm. W I A LL SORTS 0 F w co.iy bn<'k fplc. On cul R EMOOF:Ld •-1 h & POSSIBILITIES The s~h:~°'.' ~~o lt~psAs· I a r g ~ r u n 1 l h a i. soc S8l 1.330 Roberta ON THE SAND 3 Br, 2 Ba, rm to add on. Quaml 2 story, lg lot. 1410 OCEANFRONT Trudi e>e.>m Rily (213)596-3897; 420-1871 SPACIOUS LIV. R M . W I 0 P EN Newport Crest hse w /op· BEAMED CEILING, Hewpor+leoch 1069 t1on to buy. 3Br. 21':1 Ba MASSIVE FlREPL/\CE ••••••••••••••••••••••• Condo. $600 mo. Call tor OF OLD BRICK. t:TC DRASTIC dela11s631-1S.13 Compact kitchen & din· RB>UCTION ing ~ea w /F'rcnch door M.B.·5 BDRM open ing lo secludtH1 Owner needs to move. patio Unique bath ha1> ·nus new IJsting has Just DBL · P U L L M A N & llren reduced S[),000 This M A H 0 G A N Y PANELED WALL!, IN l'harming 2 slory, 5 bdrm , wa:. a cood buy ~fore NAUTICAL Dl'.<;OI< Lvly lot w1vn•w fru111 uµ Tills structurally :.ound. i>lillrs Modt•I 1·ond1llon older duplex as an CIOl!>eto:.c bools.parks & 1.100 ISLE 2800 sq ft. Owner financing 4 br, 3 bu. din arta, hg ltv rm. Ofc s(•t-up. Mod kitchen serv porch, patio, priv. bch. h·g lot. Owner S200,000 f,7~62.'i9 DOYER SHORES NEED OF PAINTING & MINOR REPAIRS If tennis club Eastbluff at PCllKMamlc ¥iew you have desired a atsbest.7SY-ISOI Oflackloy PLACEATTHE BEACH ~Xlsq ft of grac ious h'· W/RENTAL I NCOME. ing offer blfl views of lhill may be your last Bark &ty and Fashion chaneeatlhepnceo! •----------i Center Lg p\l master $159,900 $15,000 DOWN :.uite w 1sunken tub & SEE s kyl1tes open'> onto TJUSQNETODAY" •BY OWNER•BEACH lus hly lndsc pd y d & Mlsslo ... RE"'LTY 15 JU.St 200 steps away Jacuu1 Add11on 3 RR & 2 ~ "' 3Br, 2Ba , frplc. 2 car gar ru11 .. I d noc S. Cst H~•y, Laoun" Ca I I k uJl IS + ma I qlrl> """' -... " an a rme 1 ·e sett.mg f II h I-' bl -~-494-0731 S d w u bat .o me l ,-,_... on a pvt st. 1n Lido an s a r 0 u n d c (' n l l' r $138,500 b-15· 1262 court) nrd, Spam:.h ~tYll• Open' Buy lake rent' Sub mil all term:. & offers' Two large mastl'r i.wtcs. Trades' Etc! Fantastic 4 <'<irh with a lull bath. Br. 3 Ba, Jat·uu1. Like walk m closet&. sunde~k new cont!. 1712 111"hland are yours tn this fabulous $325.000 C31 rmo Agt new 3 Bdrm English ---- ROOMMATES Tudor resa~cnce. The EXCLUSIVE craft~mansh1p I'> ltkt> a BIG CANYON Stradivarius v1ohn And • the decor 1s impercable Elegant !',I Oor:..tlo Call for an appomtm<'nt townhouse in Big ran}'on has 3 bdrm~. 21 2 ba. ts M A Y 0 C K close to pool, 1acu7.z1 & tenrus rourts Sunken hv rm, wet bar, frml dtn rm, b 1 g m i. t r h 11 r an w1balcony Owner will t n"",..""T'n"" 380 Gl.ENNEYRE lAGUNA 8£~ ('714) 494·2148 ---------•I 1ease. 759-1501 Desi9n lnte<]rify A spatial quality 1s aclueved in this C\ n lo i:.ca \'U home. Archall'\' turally dcs1gnl•d Strak 1n1t t•ntry 1\ fine 3 BR n· s1dence. S19K.500 1331 (~l~'M Ii!§ Id M Real Estate RXER·UPPER Ch.irming 2Br collage on large lol w pnvalc rear yard .... eparalc hobby room "" ba attached lo garage Sll0,000 for comfo1·tavlt' h\'tnl! 15xl5' k1t cht·n w hlln RHQ, gamt• 1 m & bar rm make th ts a pt'rfcct hnm1· l nr en 1erta1n1n~ $415~000. M .C. Finanr1ul (71<\i m ~s NEWPORT Walle to tht bt>ach from this fantastic duplex Home & income op portun1ty 4 Bdrm & 3 Bdrm to f1L your neetJs Lots of xtras Pnced to selJnow! CallS40·ll5l ~'.HERITAGE -••• :. REALTORS BACK BAY 3 hr Z bJ w, add1tronal un 1t ur ~ br 3 ba. LA pool, c~tm rt>ll w10ak fir,. 170'x00' lot. hlt·tn'>. 2100 sq ft .Must sC'll Sl24,000 5561182 or ~7 1668 . Ko/an Owner will finance. NEWPORT BEACH SEA VIEW REALTY 675·1642 SIO,OOODOWH 1076 ••••••••••••••••••••••• an Clemente custom h11laide borne nearing ('OmpleUoo 2,000 sq It , 3 Bil. 2 ba, fam. rm .. breakfast n ook. fireplace, wet bar. sun· deck. 1211\i car ~arage. Pnnc only 714/536-6974 or714~4180. .AREYOUA. DISCRIMINATING IUYEll7 then come see this gorgeous 2 sly. 4 BR home situated high on a lull wtan ocean & <'anyon vie w Too many amerut1es lo d escnlx-1n this ad. so call' t:;x- clus1ve agent. Sl43,900. San Juan Capistrano I 078 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •SAN J UAN VlLLAG ~;* 3Br, lhBa Condo, pool, lake. stream s, HY storage.. Priced bc.•low mkt for qu1 ek i.alt• Jmmed poi.s S67,SOO lly ownr G40· 10:ri BEACH HAVEN $81.500 On the ocean!t1de uf J qwet, pnvate i.Lreet. lh1i. 3 BR home's tai;teful elegao<'e rerlects the pnde of 11s owner Just a llll down the bike pnth to the beach, this as heaven al affordable. call 496-4977 731~050 )\!att '•""""° CaDt'ft•nu ~"" Ju•" C.•'-'"'''"""' -----WHtminstet" 1098 ••••••••••••••••••••••• DOH'T MISS'THIS!! C:tn ie>SUme 81-i'"'" loan. 4 kH 2 Ba. 2 s tory, hkt• new tlui:e lot w RV :H' ce~s Super clean Un• que "rountry'style It\• an~" All this for only $8.500. ''n1maim1;;mm 962·4471(;":-;:)546-8103 \'t\ FIL\ TER:'tlS 3Br. 283. dbl j?ar. lri:: brkyd :'t1ove an rond ~.Ooo Rkr. S3ll 11!!3 Other R.at Es tote ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• De Am:a Bayside, 3 Bil mobile home. alum m s ulated s1d1ng, a real MotMle Home Store (7141 848.8895 HUNTINGTON liCll '73 Lanrer, 24x60, 2Br. 28a. Roman tub. A C. Wshr /dryer. 1mm;.i,· , lS1329'7XNU > CCllifontla Pacific M.H. Sales 638·0300 1nct $165.000 • .. romp. beauutu.lly cpl'd & s k y 11 l e a • f p I r . $72,000 Agt 7U 624 1617. draped lbru-oul To i.ee microwave. 2 bl.lu; to bch. Spanish MOMJon f.d Soehnel call 673-22:82. dwntwn. 9850. 497,..341 Converted to 3 units. Uni· Large ocean view lot '" 499-2181 QUI' property · newly re· San Clemente $92 000 $33S 3 br sundeck kids + •-------.---n1oddl!d w1th 1mpr~slve so~~ ran..inct~, pets Smree~900 4 Br. 211 ba. Ntre aH•,1 LH·ul.lt' Uce..in view. TI4-831·9122 g •CONSUMER'SGUlOE ~/mo. 2 Car gar. CJll Sl!K>.0011 _962_·_06_1_6. _____ _ Lake Front lot. 67' on pvt WOW!' HORINS REALTY lake in Mlssoun 1-'ull SlSO 4br 2br Jscuu1 New S&S home. 3br. 2ba. price $2995. "'3 down +saunu frplc d /w gar den. $575. Rent. lse. opt. RETIRED? * 494-8057 * 552_7132 Jim share.Sm fee 64..H!lOO I.st. last. & deposit. Call Perfed home Cot epic cir -------------------•CONSUME.R'S GUIDE Cheer8'6·5531. single. person Lo Lo COSTA MESA Mountain, DH...+, u.-..-..... rent. Single wade w/cx Rnort 2400 ·~·_,.,.. pando. 1978 Kirkwood. INCOME ••••••••••••••••••••••• tBr. Adults no pellj . HarbOur $21.000.Cl268008> Large 3 BR Cabin Big $270-utal pd . 2012 1,·.·.·.··.·.·.·.··.·.·.·.·.··.·.·.·.·.··-· 3242 Mobile Home Stor~ H we don't have 1t. we Bear. All pane ant. 2 fp, Newport •D or £. Days (7141848-8895 ~~nc n~g / ~~r~ r~u b :;~ ~:~ol! &Cask:\~~ ~.1000. 1_642_·083.5 __ E_ves_&46-__ 6423___ ~=:~~. Z 20~:0! 5~~:. TIRED OF RENTING 752 l!l20 vwu/agt.. ..,., Coty I Br $165. gar. Pool & T enn11i. Av all Bargain price dbl wide Out of Cowtty Pix sm fee 64~900 now-/ 0 ootlhse m Orange Only Duplt·~ $8-1.000 Properiy 2550 • C 0 N ~ U M ER S'S . $18,SOO Space rent Uuple'< $89,000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• GUIDE Sll2.SO. Miramar '65 Du 1 ..,05 ooo I t P ex ., • I•--------&Side 3 Br, gar. Crplt'. l2153XNU> Oupll'" $105.000 Partc Ploc .. Oc~Oftlldt fbt'd. adlt.s. Lsl & last. CALIFORNIA PACIFIC Duplex S22S.OOO 2 &JBEDROOM S•OO. Avail July l . REALTY INC. M.H.SALES 638·0300 JUntt~ . $92,500 VA·FlL\ ~7-1255. 714/846-1371 FUSSY BUYER 4 Uruw. $144,000 GARDENTOWNHOME 1---------1----... ---• Tius ts for you Blfl dbl 4 Untl!-$160,000 2ca~ Garages ConswfttN leworel! wade S1lvercrest. near 4 Unit-. SIB0,000 1-43).9924 before you pay some ~~~ 76~orner lot ~B~:~~ ·: :i~:= Ens 1·757-IUl ~~JN°A~bu~~~'. 'J!'1~ 3244 ••••••••••••••••••••••• RENTALS MoblleHon. Store nUnats .. $314.000 --------CONSUMER'S GUIDE 7 UnJls . S340.000 H~"R "'IRPORT Many have and are clad 2 ~R. t ha. .. • . $425 3BR.2Ba ..... S'S001640 {714> 848-8895 7 Urut..s .. $362.000 KOA A they did!! Save time. gas EXCITING 11 Units .... $3G3,000 Super ranch home, like &money&onfee. 3 BR, 2''' Ba ....... $625 4 BR. 21,\ Ba . . $525/64-0 4ToSBR. l "\ba .... $675 5BR,21.'1 Ba $600 e e 12 Unll:> , • . $4-10.000 new, on 10 acres. Com· I OOO's of Rewtalsl ' mute daily or Oy to your SoPoclflcPoradlse QUAIL work and ram·h. Pool. KJDS·PETSWELCOME Get away from at all in 1ac. fireplace & fenced 64S..4900 Lhis btn appointed 2Br PLACE CALl..NOW before it's to 1 ___ 0..;.pe_n_7_d_a-'-y_s_9_·7 __ llla. extra lg lvang rm late <14.x.201. All 10 tasteful PROPERTIES'-1•247•2631 ·1 ZONEDhome.Attr11c· So P ·r d ttw 3 BR 2 Ba, laundry, act tc ecor an '1 • (Opeft TU 1:30 r .M.I Land Division I I I d d' Park Priced to sell al ---ge Pc an ming area only$17,900 (FH17a21 35 U. MEAR BEACH Ben Hinkle R.E. Inc. Super modern kitchen+ California Pacific Luxunous adult security n-.... Es"_._ garagt' ofc for business bid "~11 II l l'Ul"UI """' venture $600 mo. 17'12 Mobile Home Realty R ""' ~r WI ioiint•e Ex~ 2800 Tu.sun. CM. Agt. 646 J2SS 2706Harbor.Ste208 w /$400:\l do"'n A~t ••••••••••••••••••••••• u5"'3C ft..j 540-4937 !08·49:ii ______ Want Beach property for BR 2 Ba. dbl fplr an Fam .., ' AMPCISwa~ R\llJilE -"'--'"I t B k 4 ,..,_,. home io Anaheim & LR. 5475 mo. Avail TIIE CANNEHV Water close. plush, smoi: free, Lancer dbl wtdt:.'. Ille. a ll')' (1\3'1166·771 Mobile Ho,,. St~ (714) 848·8895 •EXCITING• Mewport Beach Lavan~ an Newport flch in comfort & harmony Im ely adllpark. :!>Wammani:. JD CUZ ZI & SOl'tal ,11' ltnlles g11lur1: 2lir, I Ila 1n quality homl'::. /\II 101 only $12.000 1SC11J511 California Pocific Mobile Home Hr•:tlt \ 2706 Harbor. SLe :ttm 540..5937 -___; AU'e'OCje for Sule I 200 ..••......•............ MINI RANCH SITE 21 1 Arres in the heart ul ranching rountry Soul h of Oran)le County . a II usable Xlnt terms OKR 11 11 111111 5717 OR522 2080 10 Al'res Lake Elsinon llat I.ind. SJS.uoo "' 111 down. 498-5280 4!16 7301 700 ACRES R1' ors1de Courll} .11 a lcUlC frec\liay oft rump &lme xlnt comm<'fl'tJl potcnllal. Rapidly rle velop1ng nrea & :! mill·~ of freeway I ronl:1)!.e 111 vcstor te rms. BK H (71-IJ677·5ffil OR 522.0:.:10 ;xu1 v emen e ro ers ,_,.,.~ Joaqwn Townhome. uru•· arr""S lh" stre"l Call 535-2334 or 535-0568 now Agt. ~3255 "" ...... " " golf course view. 2 BR. lrom ocean. Concrelt> DRA.i'wt,\TlC. nu 3 bd. 21; 21; ba & den. S600 mo. steix-to bcarh Fmanc Rentals ba 2 st}, FP Nr heh Lg ~l4.\Baft.6pm. ing arranRed. $225.000 •••••••••• •• •• •••• • ••• • yd SSi>S625 646 1035 •---------- Call for brochure B J HouMs f"Umllhed 1..:...--------Woodbndge 3br . t • z ba Assoc8rokers7687839 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •l Br. stove. cpLc;, drps, To"'nhoui.e. $410 mo. GET INVOLVED If you re rt>ady to move up or start your am est menl progr.i m then tOmt· lo the <''<perts at Quail Place Propert1eo; for !>Olld r>rOft·M.IOOal toun~l·llnl! I\ slJlf lat~(· l•nou~h to -.en\! .. i.mall lOVU~h to (,Ir\' (',all i~ 1!1:..'0 j QUAIL A_,~~~~~w 10s-Til 8:30 r .M.I 12 UNITS 4 Safe or l'rode! lnrome property I!'> our ~pet·1ally Ii.I~ 409S <tn)'llml' BcAoa Island 3 I 06 pnvacy. $225 Adlts. no 1-s.s2_l_94_i _____ _ • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • pets 833-897 • $t30 2 br + ram + dtnl.' Soper 3 br pallo home on r. tBa. $2i5 mo 2085 G<1r F~ 557-082-1 the bay' Where the stars Placentia C.ill to ~ee •HO:'ttEFINDERS • are A Wlnner' Rare_ Sm 548·8618 •--------- fce 5S7·0824 -Beuut1luliy dN·oralcll 4 •HOMEnNDERS• M-i'IQUE BUFFS E/Sidc bdrm. 2~'2 ba, fJm rm, nr 2 BR house, coved re1 I pool. tt!nnt~. gu11rd gat.- lal»o Peninsuto 3107 1ngs, hardwood floor~. a;:;o,mo lt'asc559·52W • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • h u g r y ,t r l1 . p t• t ~ - -• ON THE BEACH!" welrome. S395 mo. <;a 11 3 Bdrm. l ': ba Condo S3253br2bamoresmfee S4658110a:.kforU11l N~w rplldql:., W I D •CONSUMER'SGUIDE - ----hkup -.. poul. S-175 &.15·4900 2 UR tnplex w1frplc & K33 9100 tJays. 83H·Oti51i ----rncd yd. Like new! S395 (.'\CS CoronodelMar 3122 Eastsadc Al(l .~·0434 •--------- ••• •• •••••••• • •• •• • •• • • --S495. Deerfield Condo. :1 ---------•1$2\U I br, k1dl>. p<'ls Rart! BR J Ba. DR. FP. i:arop Fantastic VI• •w Sm fee ss-; 0824 nr 83:J-J307 ""' •HOMEFINDERS• '-__;_ ______ _ from this partially •----------Br 2ba Deauulullydec furnished 2 Bdrm & den $2.50 2 br. 'l>ool. renc-ed Comm pool. ~e~n1i. home. Older adults on]} HWTY Sm fee 5Si' ~ court!> SS50 mo Grdnr S750 mo}rl~ •HOMEFTNDERS• inrl. C11n be 1-;e topt. 752-0283 or S49-77S I AJn For Le~ lmmt'd occ uf} Top qual 3 br. 2 ba. On The Wafer $liS1mo 1~ Costa ~esa Pre-s11i::1ous condo with St. belwn Irv Tustin pnmettay.Ocean&Jel LrR tnl·t1 yrd Cull 336 E 17th Costa MP'a l} \'tt'WS. Full secunty ~ 213 bid~ Pool and dock ror•---------- t:m'. Pk Verv I' lean 2 st.ory 3 br. 2•; ba. lam rm End unit townhoml' $540 mo 552 ~ 1-11 or 5.">2 S6.1(J SIDE BY SIDE DUPLEX 50 ft boat 2 Bdrms. 2 2 BR apt hse. patio. sird.n . bath.~ F'ully furnished D W. FR. lndr) rm. wall -----SJSOO mo yrly lease fnrc. S37S G4S 4266 (io see th•'' 3 br. 2 ba You r an ltve ma lovel} W.\TERFRONTllOMES 2-8 ;;:-d-h -L frplc. d~h\\hr. krd' & h b d t 631·1-100 r ... s1 e <' armer It ""'l.5 ok Sl35 96.t 2Jiih or l ree t: mom apar backyard S380ml'l'gul1l 97J-29'it.Am.notee m1:nl 11 nd have the ---------& gardenl't. Garyi----'-'-'"---- sel·unty ol 8 handsomt> Huntin«Jton Beach 3140 -52 ltl60wkdy<; leoc.. 3248 monthly rent cht-!t'k from ••••••••• •• •• •••••••••• ' •••••••••• •• ••• •••• •••• the other apurlmt!nt all g h El Toro 3232 act'oria·Laguna Bearh In Rood C'Ond1l1on. &>ut Ndew ~S ~e. 3~r l 31ba, ••••••••••••••••••••••• house, 2 bdr. rrplc, ot·ean 111:.11 l ~l.ilu /11c 900 G1c1111ey1t: Sttect 494 9473 54 9·0316 Back Bay on N B Golf $1995/MOMTH Course, 'J.i ac:rr horse 3Ilr. 2Ba. Ii mos new. ranch . 2 h oust•s, I comm pool, t ennli-. worki.hop & slorage rms. guarded gales. no credit lleaulvuofgolf rnurse& needed. l 'll f1nancl' loL<; of rm fo r horses. 957-1998. bargain. N.B $34.950 Business Property 1400 terms Ownr/bkr mov· ••••••••••••••••••••••• l~llSl' h'lhh ~Stn~ COSL'\ O~~ 1st'. iast.&·de~ C~~j $:m 3 br.} ba, kldS Ok, VleW,S\epelObeaCh.$650 (all today 7.,2 1920. C.'h 846.~31. Sharp! 55,.0824 Fe<' lse. 848-0666 J '-"UAIL eer •HOMEFINDEHS• 1------l.oc_pta Hiiis I 050 •........•....••..•.... mg. 675 8458. 631 4920 NEWPORT BLVD, C1'.1 BIG HOUSE Z Sty, S Or. tum rm \4 'wet h,1 r, :lHOO :;c1. fl.. dl'Crt'd & lndst•(XI ltk1• 11 mdl hm. Will l rd Cor 5maller bm St69.5\)0 Jfl'/ W Y~oh Co 499-2237 ---~Mi~I 1052 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Laguna Niguel I ~ Reaty • YOU ARE EMTmED TO ENJOY LIFE 1n a home w 'l>nv.1ry & h(JSte PllllO an•u, P<X>I & Jacuzzi. 4 RR + much more. Prest1g1ottS & 1n v1l.1Jlg .. SHS.500. 495-5220 496-24 13 49).9494 830-5050 Musl sell, 0 A $1 1!1,000, -•. -l.206--ESS--E-X_L_A_N_E_ good terms !>49 i'!ly_i __ 3 Br + F. R. 2388 sq rt •EXCITING• SY OWMER Westclirr $152.SOO. ~u<it Nwprt llgts lrg rorner ~ell Try tor, down HuntfnC)ton lch Absolutely breathtaking <!1x64, 2Br. 2Ba. rumpus rm & bar 1975 Hoyal Lanc<'r an 5• Park Ten· lot. 2 bdr 2 ba. famtl} rm Manna Realty 642 88JO + bonus rm. St l!I 500. 64>70.W Opn Sunda) ----- DOVERSHORES Owner mu~l ~ell 4 Br, JBa. prof lod"cpd. & de cor:itrd w Jacullt & pool Rlln m icrowave. m a n\ ot h e r xtras S229.s"oo. Opn Sundays 12 s 1531 Hlghl.md Dr. 645-4226 THE BLUFFS BUILT WITH ms courts. i.w1mmin..:. IMAGINATION 1acuzz1. social acl1v1tit'' & .._.D LOVE and much much more _., (Jr.nil ZI. White 1nten or with :.trik Cmifomia Pocific 1ng color accents 2 Mobile Home Rcnltv &-droom. den. 2 bflth~. 20706 llarbor Sle2oil formal d1n1ng rnom . 54"5937 Play t eno1s, walk lo ----""----- bearh-S102.000 O" nl'r Mobile Horm Store 548-5361 A s s 11 m a b I e s , r e · 3 Rdrms , 212 baths. BAYFROHTJPIER passes!>1ons. buy rentals. rent town f or info C7141 848-8895 rormal dining rm . coun Contemp Promonlorv try kitchen. gorgeous de· Bay home. Will takt' 6.1' ror! View lo grt:.'t!nlJelt. bout. 4 Br. 3 ba. den & Priced lo :.ell now at fnm1ly. 3800 ~q ft. 3 S135.000 Agt G40 SS(l() frplcs. Decks and patio:;. MUST SELL B<>uut rondn. Cslm de<.'Or thrCl-out. Call pnce reducl'd $10,1100 NOT GOOD. NOT NICE. Bkr. 64-0-2J65 •WALK TO BEAC'll• Single wide 60' Ion):!. encl'd porch 5 Star Park. Pool & jJcuu1 Must sci I 960·5844 or 536·7711 0 w n e r b t.' 1 rt ~ HUT A GHEAT Harbor 1---------- P nmeromm'l Inc 4950 Sq fl 194 56011 Conwnercial Prop«ty 1600 .............•......... REAL ESTATE'S BEST INVESTMENT TODAY It's opportu1111y knrn.-k1nf;! at the door Wf' ha~·· lhl'('(' mnh1le home pi1tk-1 from three m1lhon to eleven l'all us n arn 752 l!Y..'i) QUAIL PLACE PROPERTIES'¥ l()petl TU 8:30 ,,M.I SI 00,000 PRICE REDUCTION l'nmeShoppini; Ctr On Beach Blvd ., tn ltB P roduced s pendubleS$ TUSTl ..... v "'C ....... T 2"11 years young Sl·oll transferred. 3 Or. 2• 1 litt. View llome. 3 BR. dm THE BLUFFS --------- patio. view, <''<dus1vc rm. 2 ha. close to pool. Pnce slushed on th10\ 3 loc $83.500 Call own<'r pcrrert rond Move-in BR, 2 ba . <'onver!ial1on afl6pm.8310117 now. Ownr. $139.800 JJ•t w,frplr , popular Q· ..... "' "'" nealty 536·7:i:i3 ---------i 640-0325 P I a n . $ I 3 2 , 0 0 0 \Owner /agt > PAClRC ISLANDS CUSTOM HOME VILLAGE 3 nr. 2 bath. Finest 3LS83 Crystal So net.; Nt".11port lits area. Beam OpenSat Sunday 11~ <'t'tl·s. formal dminit rm 2 Bdrm. 2 bath. lan.11 rm '1uch more. 631·45lG Agt High in coastal hallc; with John forever vu•.., of ocean ~.,m ~ Lslt1t Comfortable l1vtni: 1n , m.ciates .adult" community. l'et• • Ol'IG4S6'2S i.1mple Sl!.0,000 Bkr 1--- 8:JO.l.2l2 HARBOR VIEW'S 1055 ••••••••••••••••••••••• IRAHDHEW 2 11t.ory. 4Br. den. bonu-. rm, 2 wetbnrs. Lnrite lnt .Sl0 ,000 d o wn , 11100/mo. No qunhfvmg ne<'t'SSnry. S}57 1998 ~Vl•fo 1067 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Quiet Cukle-Sac VERY BEST Country 1'.:nglls h al mos phere witb .used brick entry leads you t< our Montego. Ca me1 carpctlnR w1tl- coortl 1n1ll1n1t paint. paper. and 111.llny other uparadea A great i;trrrt ; 11 J(rcul location for $164.450. Another of Jbhn Sht'n'll llJ1Uln$1. Call nnd 11J1k ror John or us at 752 1920 WIDEA·FRAME 2-Sty 3 BR. 2 ba Wt1lk to ocean. pools "' tennis Now only $107,SOO CAYWOOD REALTY INC. 548-1290 THEILUFfS CharmlJl& 2nr. 2b,1 Open Wed I :> & Fri 10-3 al 2200 Fies ta . II J 1\ssor 763-7839. 768 1081 CHERRY LAKE ESTATE! !luge ~ bedrm tn level home. Lake, trt't'!I. & l11lls afford stunninit views. R ed1scove1 nSllure an your own back yard. Gall early for tlt• tails 645 7221 3 Br, 21':1 bn. r;im rm forml dmmn rm, 2 frpki1 Lae lot. 2 lge pat111~ $prklr.4 fmt/back ~""' paint In/out Wnlk k 1 scbls. sho~. & r~ cnlr $119,000 b y owner Im -32118 Of" 831 31177 Ontut; J QUAIL -=r--~21 PLACE b=1_1lf ·· ..aonATIES., 1 __ W_n_k_ll_ff_R_e_af_ty..;__ CO,.. Tll 1:30 r.JiiC.I Want Ad lfelp" 842·5678 197S SKVLINF:. 12x44, I--..:._ ___ _ romplelely furnished Coast Hwy , Npt &>at h Dlshes & linens included w irelarl store + apt o r <LV376ll ore. Assume 7r;; loan $195.000. Agt. 64-0 24 M SANT A AHA· lncOf'l9 Pro~rty 2 000 VACAMT ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1977 HOM!::TI~. 12x52, completely upgr<ided. i.tri\ larse rooms, own4'r nnx1ous lo sell NOW' Rent~ INB50ll) FAMll Y MEB>B> 1976 KlNCSTON, 24:<60, 38r. family rm. 2Ra. full Alkon. rompletely up graded. central Ornngc County~. •Park (A·83003l 4Tii OF JUL V SPECtAL HELPll 1977 KlNOSTON 20x44. 2l:Jr . 2Ba. eprcirtlly prlr<'d this week. Sput't' rcnt$130. IA B45086 l 20 Year financing 11v11ilt1· blo Mrmbe r Cnhfornia Multiple Servtce We have over 000 Mobalr llomell for ~lllC' AR1'1S1'1C MOBILE HOM F. $40-.800S ~o t3G8 ' MEW TRIPLEX IY BUILDER 1-4 BR, sl(l i1try & 2 3 OR , nil spat·aous deluxe units Bike to brh from hl'rr $198.000 Ip 24 12 Delawarf', 118. 5.16 1711~ • 2 TRIPLEXES * Nr Lake Park Min to heh. l 4 OR, 3 ba; l 3 Bil, 2ir. ba. 1·3 BR. 2 bo, ~ gar, fprplc'11, Sl89,000 c11. 1709 t7l3 Alabama. II 0 536· 1718 SAM CLEMENTE 8!.ACH TRIPLEX Spaelou~. !lparkllna 3·2 2 tn lop loration nl SIS7.SOO Q£RTllA llENRY RF.Al.TORS 2151)(>1 Mar 492·-11 21 Dumpy dupleir wllh two hr~place~. 228 Albe rt C d s l a ~1 es a 8 k r 831·2170 ,,. LI---s U-L·-i·sh-~ r_ _ __.._.1... y-1•-323.. BH, den, 2 Ba, IRC yard. PLACE ~ ~ C"U .._.um uu.:y .. ~undeck. view. mo tn ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo. $450. 673-3415 PROPERTIES•w General 3202 Beauuful 2 story w /bonus • ••••••••••••••••••••••• room 3 hr. 2 ba. lrplr. LOCJmtO Hills 3250 10,... Tit l :JO r.M.I •I.OW RENTALS• di.hwhr Kids & pets ok ••••••••••••••••••••••• lOOO's of vacancies $49."l 004 2566 Ai:t , nu LEISURE WOR LI> New DUPLE.'</$27,500 •HOMERMDERS * ree <·ondo. ~01 geous bl1u~f \short drl'oe from Allareas-Allpnces u.~ n-h 32 .. 0 \.tew. 2Ur. 2Ba. \ (. Oran)o(e Co l(t\'l'~ :,ou • ·-.. ··"TOft DCOC .. W 10 . vacant. $500 mo h11,!hly dl0!>1 reable ar<·a •557-0824• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 6734642 with fantasltl' ~rnwth LIFETIME SERVICE OPEN llOUSE --------- and posallve c ash no"' Good mall 22ofCices New~legant 2 bedroom Ldw Forest 325!> from )our tn\ei.lment 1 FEE then FREE for ~ den ($Si51. Cedar & ••••••••••••••••••••••• For eompletedeta1ls ••LIFE•• window home 5 Blocks the lake J br. 2 ba. Call 973-4626 Mow Homes apts dplxes bachs lo beach. Pnv11te 2 r ar A1C pvt spa, club & lakt• BenHi,.leR.E.lnc. SllS lbrShare utpd j?arage Fully main· pm~s S645.871388!f 1""1L' 17thSt,SA Sl35 1brfn'eUlll tamed:.ard Adult:-No Mi . v·. 3267 '"' "" " S2402brktdsJWlS pets 525 18th St (il41 won 1•1° BY O WNER :?llr $33S3brk1dspetsok 96(M).13t ••••••••••••••••••••••• house+ bach. F.'sadt> CM $375 4 br kids pets ok. S41S J br kads-ok. i::ir •tu•.t ~ ... II at r"duc "d Calltoday&move' SSSO. 4 br. 2 ba. fam rm. Fctvd Ft'<'·5S';'·OIC!4 " ·' ·'~ ~ ~· /\1C. beautiful S&S home • llOM !-:FINDERS• pr1ct:' 1 mmed Gar) Balboa Peninsuta 3207 in pnme area. Nu. or Ed· ------- _15_2_1_1il_iO "!dys A_l!l ___ ••••••••••••••••••••••• m~er belwei!n Maf.!nolla Super 3 br. 2 ba. frplr 30 U .... ITS BAYFROHT COMDO & New 1 u n d 15H 4 2 dshwhr. k1d.c; & pet~ ok " Luxury l RR. 2 ba unit Maybrook 1\ ,. a' I now· S ~ 3 5 ORANGE w1V1ew. i\va1l monthly. GL•m1ni nenlty l\39·6623 _!i'l-2566. agt, no_rce __ _ COUNTY or lease opt. SS95 &tpcr' S2!'>0 fncd yd patio Newport S.och 3269 PRIDE OF S40-29Sl peti. pool sm rec f.45·4900 ••••••• ••••• •• •• •• •• • • • OWNERSHIP Capistrano Beach 3218 •CONSUMER'S GUIDE 0 FEE' Houses. condo!>. •• . duplL•xe s. Re11 t al F o u r y t• J r ' n <' w ••••••••••• ••• • • •• • • • SUP ER DELUXE Pavilion. 675-4912 Bkr P r <• ( e i. s 1 o n a I I y :JBr. 2Ba Custom Dplx ~ 4br 2 ba lge pallo --- 1 ands caped :ind w,frplc. ocn view. no k1d.c;tpetssmfce64S·4900 ()pen'Buyllkerent.4Br managed. Close tn 7 to 30 pets SSOO mo. 496-8024 •CONSUMER'S GUIDE 3 ba. 1acUUJ, etc. l7l2 days or:i AITO. l'Ont.ract Coronoct.!Mar 3222 H ighland. S325.00l• or :o;ub1ect lo Will a<'· ••••••••••••••••••••••• WALK TO REACH home. Agt .. 631-0900 rum mot.I ale exchange S.UO 4br 2ba rncd yd patio - $1.200.000 Call 752 1920 Spectacular Harbor Vtew ~ar sm fe-e 645-4900 SU VIEW lrgt8R,$47Smo •CONSUMER'S GUIDE Unobstruct<'d \l('W ol ' QUAIL PLACE • ftttOPYTIE~'" 9750927bN9&.5 oce1rn and Newport $16518rgar.yd .ulll lleut•h. JBR, 3ba f\cw , Lovt!ly :? Bdrm home part pd 1-'ee S.'l7 08~1 full ~t'cunt} Tenn•' Corond 111.l(hlands 110"'1EF'INDEHS " l • " ' • •ar"'ll, ~w 1 mm 1 11 2 Mature coupe. no pet.' ' .. ~ ., $400 675-7258 Wow 1 $350 ~br I'-: ba. }d soooimo consider lse opt. to,-Tit l :l O r..M .. t poot sm fee 645-4900 A.l(t Owner. Ask for Rod Costa M.so 3224 111CONSU~tERS GUIDE al (714) ~or Dean ~,4 ....... •• •• • ••• •• •••••• at lil41 832·5144. Specify P 2100 t.ae 4 RR.:? ba home in Sl4-0 bltns, lndry. kids, + L.:.Se.:.:a:....v..:.•e.:..w......;.H...:o..:.m_e......;. __ _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Mesa Verde. Avo1l July ~sm fee645-4900 INOUSTRIAI. m.uo In 8th $485 Ftr'SI & ••~l mo. •CONSUMERS GUI OE New 2br 2ba pool ' $400 CM A 5220 fl r I Fncd kids sm fee 645-4500 pprux sq u · rent. (3mllles only . 3 Br. 21.<J ba condo, good •CONSUMER'S GUIOE ly occupied or c&n be 5"9·1656 Onys area From $400. IREN. usro by buyer. Clll lo So 955,2507 Eves. 968-229'7 Newport HU. 3 BR. 2 ba. Coost Pl111.11 StS6.000 -------------------1 tam rm, pal .. dbl gar . own('r07S·3464 Nt-w 2 br, 1"'1 ba <'Ondo 3Br, 2lla. country k,ll. etc. s:;.2$.642·7945 1.-.L.. ..._ s...a-2200 $450. Also new 3 br. 2"" e r acklln frpl, super L:,:~=.=.;;..;...:..;..;.__ ___ _ .un ,...,.,-...,.. ba rondo $SSO Obi 1 d $4BL $2952BR +garage ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~a raae. pool. jaeuui c eon. a11r e ncr. ., roo-557·08iS MULT I PLE ZONEO Choo.ole your crpt color Calltosee.B47 :l34l •llOMEFINOERS• IAYrS NC('(I p11rtnt•r or Victoria & Canyon. WAl.KTO Bl::ACH. 2 DR bullderCALLG42·9001 63120ll0 Me,u.nJque.ill nt1w,('x· Carbo r Vu Jlm 4'~ OFFICE IL.DG SITE llunlinlnon Beoach Z7 .000 IQ (\ lot near P11t•Htt•11 llO"Pllll1. ~ Polnt.t Shop Cntr & Cl YI C C4'ntcr SJ3~.ooo David 8ourkt' Rltr 546·~ l '"" a to .. Mon11co. 2-Br + dl'n. 2.Ba. or..1.eTSIDI remc 8"" cy. s v ... '"""'"' refnit. /W, reap snals r.-:.sr.oo:..:.;....:.Col;..;._ll_549-8 __ ~_,s.s_. __ 3 br. t~. ba home Has welcom<'. P<'l~ on ap lnu or llled bnck In hv-prov111. baby OK. ~ ~IOR VllW tna rm & ramlly tm rno. SJS.24~ 8r11thl & cheery. 1 BR. Refrig, dshwhr & 2 ---------l sty. "Monaco Pltn" paU08 On.ly S47S mo 3 br, 2 ba. xlnt area. St.epe Tolal.ly tmh, movi" In Call Hayward·Watson to IBkl' & Central Perk. nowatS650prrmonlh Real ~tat~. 731·5581. ~ 17~ Agent 640-~ • \ ~·u.fww. S.-..rR..tal1 4200 Offlce Rental 4400 Wednesdoy June 28 1979 OAILV PILOT ..._..Ultfwti•d tf tw11t1Fwa.W.1d hu.tw.. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 3144 1''1m choice Lugu.oa loc 6 rm:s. 21, ba home Quiel. private, conv Walk to bcb. Sl200 mo 494-7~ •• ••• •• • •• •• •• • •• • •• • •• ~to lo. 5025 Lott Ir '-cl 5300 Schoota & ,..... ...•.•..•••....•......• •.••...•...•..•.••.•.•. ........ .. °" 7005 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... ,.,. .. edt l2" ..... .-cl 1124 •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11rbr \ u Hm 1 Rr. 2 ha 1 ISr, 1215 yurly Hu J DH 2 BA. lo..,,·l'r A\all S4:pt l Nr i.chli. Gaus<'. Av.u! Ju.I)' 1 ~ dt-('Or. l.lrport. no &ho~ pooh. & par\. ?:>2 0651 or 675·7!>98 pel<> 1021 Vale1H'IJ l\n11I furn $750 mo incl lelboe r.-w1e 3707 ~ tltM .:~nt wlr 640 6289 ---••••••••••••••••••••••• EA..c;'I'SlDE 3 Br 2 K.J . no c~n ...... !! ~ 2br walk lO l>each + ~t.:.. $300 184 21st St . before )'OU f A'i 11011'11' more sm lee 64S·<l900 J \'Qll July I 546-0011.\ •it ency or the •CONSUMER'SGUIDF. ----- "R UNAROUND" Call -CONSUMER'S GUIDI:; CostoMeH 3724 MewTwntts.Apts Many have ond ure glad ••••••••••••• ••••• ••• •• I l/1 Mii• hoch they did! 1 Save Lime. gai. SSO WEB & UP & money & on ree. Studio, 1 bedroom t 000'1 of RHtalsl Maid service, pool KlDS·PETS WELCOME 2376Newport HI. C.M. 64s.490 0 548-9755 or 645-3967 J l:klrms, 11., Bullis Flre1-1laces. r11110:. Olshwashers. Disposals Li.tundry F'ac·1IH1es ••••••••••••••••••••••• an&<'trec 1 BR condo, AC"; rec fat'1I . S300 Mt 9648 LOIJlllMI leoeh ll 41 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BACH APT. new k1tch Nt>w cpts. '• blk l>ch OCEAN F'RONT Newport Sips II 673 3001 DELUXt; 1 & 2 BR from $&20. ulil B l G C A N Y 0 N Townhomc Avail Julv U\cl f"'6-0SOS_____ 15-Aug 1. 2 Br. tennts S tudio. modern bath. court. Jacun1. pool c rpb. drps. pnnl'lin.:. 759-1594 walk LO brh. no k1lch. uu1 1---------piut.1, $170. Isl & last V1ctona Be:ich. 2 bdrm. 1 41}1 4154 b1t, $800/mo or yrly 499-4883 Eves &ecuHve S.ites Office avail Ov~rlook~ airport & mounl111n~ 2082 Mlcbe{bon. lrvtnl' ~ 0'234 FULL SERVICE DELUXE OFFtCES Perwnal lelephonl'/ re cepl1on1sl. Sf'cretary conference room, coffl'l' & hospllaht> serv1ce1> F.xcellent location. n1•ar freeways . IAKEA CENTER (714)979·2161 2 bdr, den. ocean view. 1,2 tilk from beach. year rowid S475 mo. 494-728?, 494-1561 f\im Corona del Marl Or becuti"• Row Inc Apt. July 2-23. $200/wk ur 0 r c s p J c e 1 n $.500 ror 3 weeks. Non· Newport/\1rport Area QUICK CASH lat & 2nd Tr~l l>l.'ed loa.llb arranged for ;iny reason Crt'd1l no pro blem Aorrow on the 1n creased vulue of your home Call toony for foi;t, court~u.s 1nforrna t1on Lll't'n~ed llumt• Loan Hrokcr-; :.en 1ng So Cahf for 17 yrg. Call our ncarcsl o ffH't. 714-837 3H4 Open 7 days 9· 7 HiMHftcJt• hoch 37 40 Big Cyn Tnhsc. 2 BR .+ S~~-~.*si;~CH;;cIT·~~· smoker pref. JO min walk .Reception. phone serv . Isl. 2.nd & 3rd T 0 ·: •. 1875MonrovlaSt. 2 Bdrm. Btk to beaches. to beach. 673-1776. l'OnCerence rm . k1tch. Crud1tnoprol>lem $l25/mo 640 0357 town. Carport. patio. , __ 644_-06_11 _______ secy serv, dictating & 738-4271 den, wet bar, 2~2 ba. $825 ROOMSS37.50Week $450 Y I 768 9451 ·-copy mal'h1nc. f''rom A ed b f''ound Youn~ n-wll' bliiC'k Lab Wh1lt' on l'hC'-1 Mella Vcrdt· li/2.1 Ph ~ 0010 f'ound Fcmall"1m1J1.ed tiger col. )OUnl(, rlcu col lar El Toro 830 4034 t-'ound Cr cum color •'d Cock a poo Older t.lu1o: 751 16'10 SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Bolero L11-Cht Tumor Oc1t1ol1: QUTo f 01:.U'I' Sign fn · u loun t•ompuny window· .. Now you cun borrow enough monl'y lo get completely OUT ol DEBT'' ••••••••••••••••••••••• Earn HJgh School Crewts· lndependenl StudyRe~d 1ni:. Math, Spelllng & Study Skills Opeo enroll mt!nl Total coi.l $200 Woolhri1othl Acuclt!mV Cl88l &-ach, Wi.tmru;tcr 897~ Summt•r ~c hool. a~c., 2 1, 12. ~w1mm1 n i,:. read111g $JJO mn Pa~·· S('hool. G42 l» 13 ijACK TO BASlt'S' Ont: to·one 1nstruct111n pro v1d1't:I for 1mprov1ng your duld't1 readm~. wnt.tn~ & nictlh !>kills. !>411-tlMO &\2!)',mf 7075 ....•.............•.•.. mo. Lse or lse opt . Apt $165/mo ~-3037 644-5702 · N e w 2 b d r 2 s t Y • --$385. 1 Bdrm, Huntington w/encloud sarago & SEAVIEW. 3Br beauty, Landmark. Coot& & patio. U!SOsq fl 827114l0 49HIGll r Y · · ' Lillie Bal. Isle 12x20' LR. S320 17 14)752·7170 Coas~r~~e Jans · faces boat dock, gar, has 1----------·----------Lost t-'cm I ni.h Setter Mewport .. ach 3169 phone.Opento7/15.Also CdMOFFICES OOVOl:JNEEDCASH" Near 17th & OrJnRe. Matun! refined woman t.lei.ires ll"l' 1n pos a:. <'Ompan1011 aid . I.ill' nur!>ing. Xlot dr1 Yer 67517~ comm pool. T ennis Wallace 962•4454 Noctuldrcnorpets ••••••••••••••••••••••• 8115 on. 673·282A. !>48·9647 I st lftOnths rfltt tr.e lsl, 2nd & Jrd C M Plea!!t' call 646 17~ $000/lse ' -- Belly Grubb Heal tor Mewport leoch 17 69 Nt>w 2 br. 2 ba. all bllns, , "IK .... EW.,.,.RT B .... ghl and cheery nt•w Home owner loans "' " ,....., Spuc1ous 2 br. 2 ba. ,. edf ua ch e Io r s, 1 0 r 2 stone's throw from Lag office swles So or Coast arrang as\ 644 0818 ••••••••••••••••••••••• frplc. l'ncl ~<ir. patio, l.nclry rm $3St) Bedrooms & Townhouses Beach sand. sleeps ij llwy A vaila bl(' now' ~rrow SlOOO. SIOO.o-00 fr'om$329.50 SJ()()wkly 4(}.i.7135 You mus l !>t..'t' lo JIJ fl<·x1blc Ll'rm ~. pas t LUX TOWNHOUSE STEPS TO IE.ACH TSL ~tl(ml 3 Br, 212 ba. \lew deck, 3 Br. 2ba, Pen111 $650 642 1603 Spectacular spa, total ---.------prl'l'lall' <.;ult l.1ndJ credit no probl1..•m Call ro~r"al1on program. VocationRtontals 4250 bi5·2311 usnooblJgat1on frplc Stell6 to water 32' SUMMER RENT AL 2 Br. c pts. <Irµ:,. ktds ok. nopels S265 .... ~· '°TERLlN. G L'(,N S"'.f social program 7 pools. 8 ••••••••••• •• • •• ••• • •• • J .. '-•7 pvt shp a\•ailabh.•. S76S Bayfront, 4 BR. 2 ba on lse or lse opt Call big bay. $8SOWeek 645-2271 tennis rourts At Fashion On So. Lake Tahoe, 2 BH lusinffs Rental 4450 714 955· l6IOll>kn Island, Jambor~ & San condo w1dol:k, pool. nr 6-12·3033, alll.'r 7p m 67S-L215 1 Rr Easts1de. $240 Small Joaqwn Hills Road. casinos. Ownr dfl 6. cozy w 1natural wood (714) 644-1900 644·660-t JASMINE CREEtC cabinets & beam Ct'll· ------------------ ings. Sto"e 73H3001 9am Ea.stblufl 3 br, 2 ba, studio POIPU BEACH KAUAI associate·d llROt< ERS -REl\LTCJRS 'u:·. V't' 8albvo b·~·Jb6i Beauufully upgraded 2 to lpm. apt, lge mstr s te. all Hawaii oceanfront nen· bdrm. den. lrplc, pool. bltru. Dbl gar w /elec. dr lhouse. 4 br 3 ba. Jae. 111· t ~no1s , guard gatei---A-T_B_E_A_CH--!-!!--2bdrm.1•2 bo, $325. pool. opnr. Pool & rec Cacll. side condo. Fantusllc ~omm. $725/mo. 644-1968, car port Adult s, no pets. Pref. coastline & sunset VIC'W 835·7100 B>nkecompl furn 71-1 /492 6841 S200 furn poot + more ___ 645·5088 married cpl. $425. lse. , ____ · ------ Soper exec. condo 3 or 4 $200super lbr util pd 2 Bdrm, 2 bath, ILSO ~q ft. Avail. July 1. 759-1745 CATALINA..C..year round 'br, 2"2 ba, frplc. family •CONSUMER'S GUIDE Encl garage. i''rplc. Nwpt Hgts lovely area, 2 lease, roomy 2 BB home. rm. full rec. fac1I. $650. 645-•1900 O/W, G!Di $350. Mesa bdr 1 ba. priv. palio, gar, spectacular har~r view. bi3·3313 or675-871 I , ___ W_E_E_K_L_Y___ Verde 751-8888, 979 8533 no pets. $325 mo. 548·5804 2 sundecks. furnished ur uff or494·3223 unfurnis hed ISLANl> Bl s. 2200 SQ fl · 3 Br, 3Hr S.150. Brand nu apt. 1\va1I July REALTY213 510 1150 :·1m rm., pool. Vll'W. 2Br S!50 I:: S1dl' 2 hr. I ha No Nace 2Br Dplx upstairs, . . ~75_Mo A~enl64-1 ·0134 l2'J:.15thSt.!1;1l pcLs $350 mo I 9tJ7 1720. frplc. W./D. ~aragc , Collage By Tht• SC'J. Uy " Br. 2 ba. frpk D W. 213·006· 1711 548-3354 adults. no pets. nr Lido week. mo ur > r AM u.·1lk lll beach rvwils l n .t. _ _._. bJe bhopptn" A11a1l ap· 751-!'700 or PM (l75·-106CI ~ • ,,~ • l' ......-... -n•> 2Br, JBa, WCKul l>t•,111' ('-'ti " P 0 Do 1014 N t B h ........ S575 Unfurnished ings. crpto. \dlt only.'no ~ 7115 ~~rcdit ref Ca 92Ji8Jx i P t' . •lanna Hcully 642 Kll:>ll ••••••••••••••••••••••• pets 6-Ui 1751 __ m_o_4_· _____ ------ ;;:-plex 2 hrl l>a wshr/ GeMral 3802 ----Steps to beach. lrg moc.1 llAWAll lbr duple,, • ( · rd.n ••••••••••••••••••••••• l RR Bach, s toH•, rl'lni:i. ZBr. beamed ceilings. Kailua B> dJY·l.l-t!'k Qryr. slv, re ng. g r. . Fl S cptS&drnc NrOCC' '"'IU h !160 1 ~11 1 r mature adltb. no ~ls 12621 ower trl'cl, .,,., · ~ frpl, all bltms $450 yrl} mont . 1 u m 5. mo 517 Bolsa Nwpt Garden Gron~-Large mo 557·42311 Avail. 6130642·4657. •-~-·~------- H.gts548-5041 one bedroom apartments Westside 4·plex I br. . · ...... _ b -close to shopping Laun· stove. r efng, carport 3Br. 2Ba. patio. lse. or 3 IAU"' mountain ca m ~stbluff.marncd ramtlY dry r a_c 1I1t1 es. !"' o Cl<lf>C to bl!!>, ~hoppmg & mo. btwn ocean & bay, secluded Big &!&r :i rea only $500 mo.lease Reis children. no pets. Call OCC ~ .. c 673_4622 673-1.266 646-4871 S40. tday 3 day min· req'd 644·6584 Ma.ryat (714)891-1013 ·""'-' . $230./wkSlpslO 556·M34 Newport Shores steps to Big Cyn townhome. 3 BR. 13742 Newland Street, 3 BR 2 Ba. cpls. drps, bltn beach. 3 br. 2 ba duplex. Palm Spnngs Vacation <abulolll> Hew' F\Jll scl'.. Garden Grove. BeauL1£ul slO\'e, Nr OCC. $32.'i mo. yrly lse. (7141956·5871 Condo on Mission Hilb 557-42311 Country Club 968 5430 flOQI & tennis. ~ Mo two bedroom apartmc:nts , • ? ..... ...,. 1 t Lge ,1 br, 21 ~ ba. encl. R__.al t Sh ,.300 •\1?'1 759 0087 1640 6500 1 n e '< c e I I t• n l vpsla!rs ~ uo .,.;OltJ mu s patio N~w decor 1 blk """ s o an -. neii.:hborhood. Pn' •~IC la.st +d<'P '11<1 r h1ld p1•t-. bch ''""'' yrly 6?3-2507 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Super \'1t•W . Sl'<'Urll). patio view from lm1·lv ,\d;im;./ II arbor lil!H 7875 -.,.., •110~1 f.SHi\RINC J)oOl.tcnni>. 3UH Avail k1t t'hc n . l•nrlu ~t'd all5 Wtrfmt2bd.sl.lpavail Nr s L·RVlCE ·t1I :>.11\ Sl20<J Mo i\Jwnl " ·1 r ... • • 11 o o l "' " · " g e s · -Lido shopp111•1 631 t77tJ N'o f' ..... T1l f'la""'' 7S9-0llR7 ti4U-6:iOO S320 monlh Call Mary at 2 bdr, cnOlused ~<arJ~e. 1113 2828 .... H .. ~'\,I t7M18911013 bit ans. laundry, quid >.l. · · _ ___ __ 530.2494 t-lluffs tuntlo. -1 hr :J lw. ---W S1d1•. ,\dull>. ~<!:ill September Rentals 26 >'old female wants Lu end unit, fµrl 67.1 5304. Balboa PettinsuJo 3807 -51 ·••:!2 dy· "7~ "''Jt' 1 L' u r 644.5771 • ... , .,, u " 0 • • .-urn or n um share apt & \'XPen:.(·s ••••••••••••••,•••••••• ~'\l'S__ Call :i£l 5, S44·15:JK LOvel~ 3 bdrm 3 l>ll. \kn. S.SSO. Lovely large 3 Br JBr. 2B:i. $600 canal front home. near bltns. fpk. ~lose lo bch. Lge b..it'h J pt. Goud Super s harp. yrly 1st:. •IE SELECTIVE• pools & tennis, walk lo shops. d101~g. Yrly localt•. Pvt palm /\dull:-.. beach. 64 5 . 9567 0 r AdllS, tlll-3307. 673-7077 ~~5_859_W __ l!lth St.:.. C~~ 2Ur. lBa. $300. Garn a rebable roommate. 645·7464 •SHARE A HOME• 548-0747 Lo\·ely 2 Br. $400 mo. yr-Unfurru!.hcd Hooms with kitchen pn" 1legcs C'>n veruent IO<'al1on on bus lines. 545-2120 9 mos. upstairs unit +IEWPORT REHT ALS l·BR. furn . $275 2 BR. 2 ba. SSOO 2 Br Balboa Cov<'s $700 4 BR on canyon. SS50 4 BR S Cst Pl ala, SS75 BAY& BEACH 450 NEWPORT CTR. OR. 759-M11 ly. Frpl. 211 Cypress. 5J6..6617. Fantastic bach. $250. Yrly, ulil inc. sips 2 Roommate wanted, Female pref Tammy, 631·5185. Work, 645·0566 Coronodet Mar 3822 ••••••••••••••••••••••• New 4Br lux dplx. A C. 129 3Slh St, NB Agt. Gub, 213 966-1711. Newport Beach. Ocean· GARDE:'ll APTS CORONA DEL MAR 2 Br Townhou:.e. trplc. Pool. tenrus. Somt> ocean & Catalina views. Close to Fashion Island & Cine beach 6'W·261l Indy rm. lnt'rl } .ml. dbl gar. frpk SC l'latJ SSJO. 955.2777. 557 1044 front . 3bdr Yrlv OCIMPoint 3 bd. 2 ba Nr bch No Wash Dryer Fem pref ch aid I pets 2 ad Its 67~2986 3826 S420 moulll incl631·0749 •-~----~-... -1-__ -.--te? ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~~ VVHff•- SPJ\RKLING CleJn 1 hr. S-Cletfttnte 3876 To Profcss1onally Find bltn:.. nr ocl'an S250. No ••••••••••••••••••••••• THAT RIGHT Pi':RSON k1as .pels. 193-7231 art Deluxe 3 bdrm. across st. ~-COAn.s U/ol\J..~TID 5PM rrom ocran Concrete steps to beach decks. -u:Ic '-i« ~ ~t'<h,.R I bd. newly decor clean. at.llts. rl'f & dep rcq. $275 833-9703 garage, rehi!!. $395/mo. c..• ~~~ >.i. •. •1<"1~ R J & Assoc Brokers 832·4134 Since I 971 _7_68_·_78J9 ________ i-Roo--m-ma_l_e_to_s_h_a_r_c~dc· --------•IHwttl!M)ton Beach 3840 ~nh F1.tmished luxe 2Br. 2Ba £urn apl. Lux 3 BR. 21 2 B<.i . l ront ••••••••••••••••••••••• or Unfw-nilhed 3900 Sl60 + ut1I. S48·036R ..•..•..•.•.......•.... 4 DELUXE OFC 'S Conf rm . seat 25. all paneled, sm wh:.c In re ar. L or 2 yr lease. Lake Foresl are11 K l'nt Harluns 714·581 9393 5400 sq ft Showplace of town Mcau Verde Dr. Plaza 1525 Mesa Vt>rdt' Dr f-. <.;M 545·4123 E SIDF: C .\1 Shops. offc';., hobby. whol~ul(•. gen u~c f'r S8:; 5411 Will Store office 1c; 11 w l!.llh C M 2 e:i :id1mning 300 READY CASH Wll'i fret with f1nant1al problems Scc us for r l~l action 2nd T 0 loanN $1.000 to SS0.000. Instant approvaJ. Credit not 1m portant. AHLBkr 774-060 I Mort9oges, Trvst DffdS 5035 ••••••••••••••••••••••• LOWEST lnttttst Rates ht T.D.'s1 also 2nd T.D. Loans. Fa1rebl Termi. ;.inl'l' 1v.at1 Sattter Mt(}-Co. 642-2171 545-061 I Sll5 bolh S200644·987i Hctired couple has mom·) NEWPORT BLVD. c; ~ tolend 1st&2ndTD'., Pnmc comm'I 10\: 4!150 Al(ent. H13i·3i44 !IQ ft 494 560H lst TD S.J0.000 a t 10'. tndlldrial Rftttal 4500 Well s£'<'ured Propert) ••••••••••••••••• •••. •• \ 0alur $100,000 + 979·5m IUILO TO SUIT Amcutcenenh/ 5.000To20,000sq n. M·G PenoMl!s/ rone, Costa M<'sa Lost & foUnd WF..SLEY T ,\ y LOR en ••••••••••••••••••••••• REALTORS 6114910 Amowtc~nts 51 00 4464 SQFT ...............•..•.... 2 pnvutt•off1c•es, SCRAM LETS + recp~. & ~en I oft l<'l'. l • re~troorni., 12U/20ll \' :J ANSWERS ph, 'kyliJ.:hts, b Pat·e heaters 1-:xt.•t•ll locul1M1 Policy ()c.•t•ur Call Mr llard a~l· Cuno l.ktra) ·rn C.:u Heult:V BUH\' YOC 645-0621 A new deal has bt>cn 1-1ro ----post'<! in Washington to 7500 sq fl Mod, A/(.; off's help balance· the budi.:et & manuf Xlnt loc A\ ail If you leave all yuur gold A\ijt 1~ 2915 292SS llala to the go\ t•rnmt·nl , daySA646·751Z they'll BURY' YOU Jl RentalsWanted 4600,_F_ort_Kn_ox __ ~-~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lost & Fo.d 5300 Rcl1able, working ••••••••••••••••••••••• JOurnahs1 needs one Lost or Found a pel" Call bedroom cotluge or Jpl Animal A!>SlslJnle by Jul> I tn l.JJtUnJ Lcague5J7-2273, nu (ct> Bca(·h. Ne'Aport Jkach or C06la Mt·!tu S2UO or lc:.s Qwclnl'i>:O 1•si.~nllal Reply to Clai.i.1fwtl Ad 11192, Daily Pilot. P 0 Box 1.560. Costa Mesa. Cal 92626 cir ll'lcphone 645.9301 Wanted b<-ach h!tC for rt•t wnler. U:il Penm. S500 lsetyr. 675-9347 LOST M Iris h '>l'lll'r Under I yr old No tags Vic Cameo Shrs. CdM Ca 11 642 1729 Losl Heward. f'cm med s7. wht dog w is m I blk spots on buck Has sorC' on :.haved leg. H B ll•'V 847-0561 duplex Nl•w cpts. patio. SHARP. beach, 2 & 3 Dlt, ••••••••••••••••••••••• gar. S..550. 673· 7513 agt. fr p I . d 1 sh wash t' r , TIIE EXCITING l&ainen/ln"est / --Reward lost Seal P t Siames e cat female Cdm Call 644·7071. Balboa Isl. share 3 br. 2 ba Ancinee w male /£em. Sl-12 mo ••••••••••••••••••••••• 'Sein Clemente 3276 .••...•....•........... L.se ocean view t·oni.Ju. JBr. 2 1 ~ea. 2 car garage 1 hdrm waterfront apt S350. yearly lease. 875·3282. 9 5 2 patios, spcl'laculur lbdrmaptstepstobeach, \lew S42Smo 498 21611 $325 ut1l in cl uded ~~ -~>6299 Luscious 3 br. 2 h<>. ocean ------ gara~e. p aLios, 960 235R PALM MESA A'1S. 2Br. ch1ldrl•n welcome. no pclc;. !>tarting at $2.15 mo. R46·m<l7 MlNUTESTONPT BCll. Bach. 1&2 BR. from S220. & up. ;\dullS. No Pets 1561 Mesa Or 15 lilks East of Newporl Hlvd l Uul ind 673-8632 Roommate wanted to s hare 3Br. 20a condo. SJC. 49J.6329 Offic• Reftfal 4400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' 1 l' w b 1'' r " I c . 2 Costa Mna 3824 bakonws. S500 492 7715 •••••••••••••••• ••••••• 546·9860 2adj. ores. pvt enl. approx lluge brand new ln le, el LA MAHCHA APTS R---------4-0-0-0 8x33'. $:150 mo 1827 -·-WeslcliH. NB 631 ·0900 J Br. 3 ba. ram rm, huge Large 1.2&3 bedroom deck. 4 car prkng. waler garden apts. Dshwhr , 1ews. S650 492 7715 bltns, encl. gar. #(as bbq - - -Pool. Gas Pd 778 Scott Pl ti-t2 507 3 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Room w / kitchenette $50w~k&up 548·9755 3278 -su=p=y~..,.-=-=1-=c:-:E:---Ambassador Lnn in Costa •••••••••••••••••• ••••• •Lcx'ked gar w lg stor HEAR BEACH Mesa. 2277 Harbor Ceo · San.Juan Cap mono 2 Cond~ 1 ,.lry 3 h<lrm. :! • O/W, patio, ln<lry rm & CIVIC CENTER lraUy located, 235 rooms. haw (rplc. pool:. & PJrk. •Special cabinet spuc-r lJRAND NEW Spat'1ow; MANY with k itrhen . walk lO :.choob. m1ssmn. •Gas heat. itas l'OOkmg drluxe 3 & 1 Rr All hllns. phone & TV Swimming Orhce suite. M V. al Avery Pkwy. Deluxe iSO sq. fl. 55< sQ H Prufcr Mgmt. 831-7444 Execut1 ve Offices near OC Airport, all serv1c11s available $225 mo 752-2873 all nrw. no fl<'l~ ~so mo gas hol water all free frplcs. ~ar. lg1· ~ d 520 pool, jacuzzi, and rec 842-3935 •Adulls. no PCL'I Yorktown Ju:.l Wt•st 1i( room Oa•l'i & weekly ON THE WATER I Br $270. 2 hr $.'llll Beat•h Blvd. 000 2:!ltl 1>r rates starting from S54 a Monlh to month _SJ6_._11_111______ week. 645-4840 Deluxe SUites .232.:IEldenAve.C M HUNT t N Ci T 0 N Santa Ana l280 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Businffs Opporlunity 5005 . .••..••..•...........• INTERESTF.O IN SELLING YOUR COIN LAUNDRY'' CALL NOW ' MPE IHC. Com laundncs s1nCl' 196:i 1714) 547-5934 L..osl lns h Setter. f<•ma It·. n/22, vie. El Toro I h1i. bad ear infection 1714 1 770-1()37 or i68·8862 Lost Austral.Ian shl'ph1•rd 6 23 in CdM Mull1 l'lr. ~h1te nee!.. n o t:i1I, REWARD '. H73 ll:Jll 642.,i~ White F :'Y1 in poodle Old. nds med1('1ne Lo!'.t Balboa Blvd & P C H SNACK SHOP 6/23 673·6413 localed 1n mult1·m1lhon --------- SS sport.>1 complex o, er Lost Sml while dog named S7000'mO Only Slll,000 ~1am1e 13 yr ol•' Mes:i full pncc /\.,, 751 · L400 Verde .irea 545·2219 OISTRllUTORS Lost Fem mall-mute t:S Teletron.oneofthc huskv. ch cha10 ,flt·<1 larat.>sl M£r of ~1 ant coll Sat ti,24 Irv A' Nil T\''s, as st•ek1n1-t dis· b:lt-2837 ____ _ lnbutors in lht' Cost~ REWARD' S$S Lar~t· ,.. Mesa area !nvcs tmn l Great Dane. 1 yrs. .. ecur.ed by invt:nlory , blue grey. Please ('all We wall partially l1nancc <t94·l003eKt 709 nghl incltvd'I Call for · found, I ran)( 1n Ml'i.,1 lloui:.t'kecp1ni: and t or Verd<• area Owner itll'n cooking 'laturc F.uro t1fy_10 cla1_m ~56 2884 IH' Jn w 11 m ii n . X Int ... erv1l't' S.11 25~1 Peno.tab 5350 I'ypinl-C ... l'n 11·1•. tull N.111 • ••••• •• •• • • • • •• • •• • •• • l"} or lt:avl· me:-.~a~e . Spirituot Rffder 1:.1 386.'> L81:>So El Cam111u lkal SanClemenlt' F'llll\ he For appt 49:! 7291> RELAXING M/\SS1\GE Dependable housekcep..•1 fur nun i.mok1ng r!r1111( retired couple. No tram. 492 :JO.II DobJam~L1c Mub~eur Ua&-Wonted 7100 Outcall 9·9. 4!i'I Sil I :::;••••••••••••••••••• *SANDY1 ~-I' Outcall Massa~ 973.032'J •SHERI LEE• Certified Mab!>e ust: House Calls · By ;ippl. 838·68.18 FOXY LADY Outcall Mau~ M/C 731-3561 PHEG:>;A"li1 · ('.1rin~ <:onf1denl1.JI l'OUllSt'lll)j.( & referral Abort1t1n . .idop lion & keeping APCARE 547 2.'i63 LINDA & VICKI OutcaHMos~ For the "'" of it ! Sen.ing all Orangt.• C-0. 83.5 7313 1----xx DANCE OP f' "J X~ Beaut nud•' girl:-O.int·1• & rap sei.!tmn., .1 l our nt.•'A locallon '' 1h1· mo>.t lux uriou..c; in Orani.:t· (ount~ If \OU tl1•st•n I' lh1· ht·~t tr;. 1l Now upu1 :!4 hn. 1•\er) tlu~ .: 0 Ii I) ~ () l•. u I I I " ' Anahc•arn 1:::..l·l\1111! dt· lu1b. ~J4 l~I U1H>rre Bank ru11ll'Y S50 Action Typing ooo s..1 rn ESCORTS OUTCALL 558-2677 Ii ,\ M (.' \'IS1\ WA."llTED S1ni::le~ tor clal 1n~ Saddll'l,Jl'k Club l'l35·<H89. 58 l IU<!i '>IOI l' w Whitt' male 3-1 , w1.,hl'S to "1l'et wh1tt• fl•nUJ 11· IOI rompan1onsh1p &12 o:ix1; MASSAGE RGURE MODELS ESCORTS OUTCALLOMLY Dys, eves, hr 631-2140 HAPPY BIRTHDAY GEORGE WEEKS Thanks . for Be in9 ther~ LOVE YA PENNY ----Penonol Ser"ices 5360 ..•••••.........•.••.•. Lcl u.c: help ~OU ~••h \l)Ur 1mpo11 .1n1 l'ar 1•••r t•ha11 g 1• Htd1a11I ~. R1 i;:l1•1 & 1\ '"Ill t 71 ll j~~l Social Cl&lbs 5400 ················•·•·•·· ACCOUNTING CLK AIR & MP for expand mg petroleum t•o. Sal commeru;urall' w texpcr Pleast-send resum~ tt1 Amoril•Ot Pl'Lroll'um lnl' , Al'('ounlm~ Ocµt JllllHI Cri•wn \'u lll' I' ii I kW ti \ , I. J ~ U 11 .r N1gupl 1';1 ~l2n77 ,\1'\ ounl tt1g \'11•rk 1111 -.mall d~11am1r 0((11 1· m•ar 01 l'l' ,11rporl t11 f!t•r1 orm \ .1 nl'\' of tJsk., ~houlcl hav1• :! \ r:. t'\ Pt'Ol'Ol'I'. typing . JO k('\ Sal,1ry ciix·n Pll'~1i.1• :wnol resume tu UO\. .!1)5, 1· 11 Dail} J'1 lot. J> l) Box 1560 Costa Mesa. l.J !12626 Acctng Bkkp11g TEMPORARY ne~1sler Toc.ldy to WC.II I.. on' a nous :tl't'uunlrn~ & tioukl..l'l'P1nc .1:-Sl){ll m1·n t:-. ~ork dust• '" ' o u r h " 111 ,. F 1 g 11 r 1 Clt•rk~ I<• Sr \l'l'UU11 lJnt:-111•1·tll·<l thru11111 Orang1• l'11 lloht•rt llaH ., 1\lTl)l)l)lt.•nlp-i ~IS Ma111 Slt•SOI :o-;o Towr·r, l,;111011 Ba11k Jn Tht• L'1ty ol Orungt· i 14 835-4 IO:I --------- 1\CCOUNTING PAYROLL CLERK PART· Tl Mt: 1::01' cll.f)l'r prcfd Wtll trJ1n 1f JPJllll'anl h,J. 'lrong manual 1>a' roll exper ur othl•r <ll'l'llUlll me 1·xp1•r ltJ K1•y In looch and hit• typing r•· Q 1l /\ppm' :.'O hrs Jl<·r wk \p11l\, N.111un.ol S~"ilemi. Corp. 4:J61 B1reh SI , NB. 1N1•J r Ot' 1\irpnrl ) Equal Op portunll:r Employer ACCOUNTING cuts I Yro£ccxptl0key m N1•wport <.::)II Nanl'y Mii l!li ti 1\t:ct 's Hct'('1vahl1• · \1·<·l Pay.able Con-;tru1·t1111t up. r{'{J N R i52 HkM Adm1n1slral1\1 l)l't'rl'tdn Please M'•' •lUr Sundav ad under OI fll't' ~cl,,a~l'r · J>Otl'nllJI ADVERTISING Looklng tor ;a t'areer w11 h .m 1•'1Ccdll'nl d1unce (u1 JCJ\ ancemC'nl m I tw ;11t 't'1\1!-1n11 fu•lt.1" MtP.t h.1\l' typing bkllls t'.Jll ll.'> .11 'l5i·'l30CI APARTMENT MANAGERS t'ouplt• to m:i naitl' fh'> un 1~ 1n Gurdl'n Gr11\'r I 111 'ilt' full l •m .. pos1lt1111 Call M1kt• Sul11va11 (7J 11 1[12 2tlO!l QUAii. l1 l.1\C'I•. Mi\Nr\GEMENT. Bradford Placc twnhsc. 3Br. I 1?Ba. nicely t.lc corated 556·1977 642·7fi05 LANDMARK CONOO. 3 Beaut room, priv. bath. 2!11·1270 Sq ft Lile bright airy & new 2 BR 2 Ba, wetbur. pool & E mployed. mature appt. 121Jl442 143.'l. S ml while poodle M . SINGLE? "1-'T ~i\N1\<; Eli Mature• rpl to m1111ai.;1• Jpl. t•11mplex. woma11 full l1mt•. mun l'IT GCMl1I s a I a r y .f tJ pl N 11 chlldren Call 673 81103 aCterti PM br & 2 ba' frplc pool & rec racil S450. Coale; & person. SlSO+. Laguna. A.II amenities $195. I br home nice. JaCUlll. Adults, no pets . Wallace, 962.4454 494.7340 Lido Fen('ed, sm I~. ~57 0824 C..tQ IU'>l • M--' v1u.-•HOMEFlNDERS• ,,.., . .,.... SZ052br 112ba pool! Kids. SulNntr"entals 4200 _-.no "-r ----------•Central toe 2 BR 11 2 Ra Gar Smfee6'15·4900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport 67S..e662 Cc.de ••llllM near ne~ townhouse' •CONSUMER'S GUIDE Ocean Fl-ont 2 slry apt. 0C "IRPORT Uiwfwftlshed 3425 Fn d d d $345 Best loc., 1trl bch. "' ••••••••••••••••••••••• moc ~'ia~~:on · 2 bdr. 2 ba. condo. pool. $400/wk June 20·July #I LOCATION MlNt OCEAN VIF.W. 4 carport. adults only Call494·S317or 67>5530 Ex.eeo!c avail. Bdrm 211 ba. dbl R&lilliliC S3lO 955 3097 975 0121 $495 Coats & \f'ifffte NE.t\R NEW 2 BR I RA. Or_e_a_n_v-,e-14-.-;;.-, -b-r-.-2.....,..b-a-.1 ---------· -----·----- 0024454 upstairs apart Nr S ON THE A EACH 2 NeWlSh bldg, 750 sq ft , ----c 0 as l r I a 7 a a 0 d rrplc s3so mo 208 l9lh Rd r m , 2 bath Patio. DIS. Excellent parking To~d lSOO WC)O(flandVlg 0 1W,nic(' SL9G2·8S47 BRQ. TV Guted com· Nr Plaza 1n 0 P _._ "P" •·d"""'-1st last~so S259 Spa1·1ou.., 2 Or. Ol'W munily.$700/wk M o ntgomery fl E ....................... .. ..., .. . ·-· . . .. dl'p i\dulis. nu pets. Call cpt, patio. 2 kids OK -•-'-·-12.611 ____ _ i-;xc1m1ve Ir' srcti :J Rr. 3 R11, frml rlmt• rm, LR, 546-5880. osk for Lesbe 847-0967 ON THE BEACH 4 Rdrm So. La~una , tiny pen· fnm rm, A1C, fully furn , ----WALK TO UF.ACll. 2 RR pool J11c11ul&ti'nn1scrt L.arge3Brtownhous<-apt, dph. all new, 'i love, home with pnvocy at lhouseoffice. leascS200 sin>1wk. Approx. 500 sq. ft ore. $625 mo Call 551 5.T17 2 ba, frplc, patio. aarar.c re r r' J:. fa n t as t 1 c WATERFRONT llOM ES To...,_. Quiel complex Adults, hideaway, pvt rnC'd d<-C'k . • 631·1400 Ullfwwllhed lSJS no pets. $400 645.3381 or Sngls welcome. Cul OK, 1 ________ _ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,_m._5949 _________ sa& __ 24_~ _______ --------- 2 bd. 2"' hn, encl 1tM. 28r. upstairs. nr shop p:u10. frplc, Nn P<'la ping. Very clean, neat, Irvine. SW/mo ~l 6085 av all 7 II $230, r~·r,, a.ft 6 ndu!Ls. 549·"225. 556·3900 ' d k Npt Bch oceanrront Hunt1ngl<ln .on mar duplex, sips 6, nr Mkt condo. 2 br. 2 ba · wet· Bskt Call c rt 673 1573 bar. garage, new, many · u • • ~~Adults. $42S mo. $]50 /WI Lrti 3 bd. 2 l1 ba. wt at· 2 bd 1 baU1, carpet. new tachcd &Ar, door opcr , drapes &•rage. adults, BEAUTlf'UL·2 Rr, nr viciw, pool, i.aunu. trnsh no petJll $235 319 '1onle park & be11ch. yd. l(llr. Olamorou.s mr. 2 bath ln Promontory W /forever vl<'w. Pool. Jae. suuna. ten n l~ Walf'rrront space. ocean view $375 Month. lease Turner /\ssO<' ~ltors 499·4S91 IAYRtOMT OFFICES CaMery Villuge-New of rices from 300 sq Cl fantasli<' vil'ws, lg patios parltlng & Janitorial lncludcd. 2808 Lafayetll' A \'C • N U 673·1003 comp. Ana llJlls. $445 Vistn,8312997. $120mo.B271t8thSt 637 8828 2»500 sq H dlx ofr W . ''TllESEVlLLE' ~-l.9UI St. CM. from $150 Homftl 63J.1<100 Avail Al.IM. 1 2 bd. II'> bo, 2 Br wtaar. odhi.. rpUI, H..t.o. 3842 Nltt 2 br •pl, i, blk to bch mo TomM0-2200 patio. carport . nr drps, ranac. fncd yd ••••••••••••••••••••••• Newport. Sleeps 7 s:rns. --· -------- p001 HD loc child ok w 'p•tlo. wtr pd S295 Condo ()('n Oa<'h prt'f wk up. 873 3801 Mcd1c1I unll. good C M $385. mo wkdys 964 1741 2619 $ante Ann t\H' Walk to heh $.125 12l3l WA ACTfOil" -Io<' :HI on . r1 e I u x e w1rollar & 77 llCl'n"•' Call INTROVIF:W for thl' B ChOCKbTAll-'\... tags. Magnolia & Warnl'r intelllgt:nt & d1 i.c rcct Y l e a 'i ,. rel' FV 847 -4056 I standing bldg, gd park· ----------way to meet new l>IOJ.: c mg. long leai.e Terms. FOUND. 6/25. Vic V1lla1-te ,.,.pcollllip•lc-7•52-54•1•l---- agt., 751-l400 San Juan . S J C 1• •\"sl•mblrr~ to wrk i TRAVEL AGENCY FRANCHISE M1ruature blk poodle. M. E:npoyment & AM J ·Jo PM Apply at Ill~ long tail. 495 1744, aft f'r+Paratiott W 18th SL CM EOI:: 6:30 ••••••••••••••••••••••• i---------- The new way to own a travel agency Travel FOUND· R1rlgebark, M. Network Start )OUr own RB area. 6 is Exp not r.•qu1 red 673·313011 30 -4pm Com1-1letc support & loo~ term service prnv1t.led POUND Mixed collit• Coll Mr C:harlei. dog.blk.v1cF'V 6124 7140 92$2 962-05l8 luNnn1 Want.ct 50 I 0 Found li /23178 Blk loy ••••••••••••••••••••••• PoodlC'. fem Vic 12th & Lease1buy hody s hop Rolboa Bl. NU.1\73 OflQ5 3-5.000 liq ft. w lbOOths & Found· 6/24 , Fem Gr cal romp, 5.S4·M651myt1m1..· 0 ll n e v 1 c ~to~ 5025 Brookhurst /Chapman ••••••••••••••••••••••• 53()..4016 llS Govt. Guar. Loana Slwf TermLoana VenhnCop6tal Nrw busloesse1<. hu,1 n~ 11cqu1.,lllonl'> or 1•x ----------f'ound. Grey Cockallel. vu·. 2000 K Balboa Bl 1'1h 673·9003 Found Ladles rmg. on Bl.lys1de Dr. NB 6/2•1 675 lf.66 parui1on. any worthwhile .,. 0 u n d f ,. m pu~e Wt-I m n ran e r y n ~ '"-COftlUttation w choke collar 631 9!!02 call for appt lnt<'r<1(ate Rui1incu !k•r vlt'I'' Ill ll Pound Old English Mui<• Mon Fri 11 12 Sat Shcepdo~ on Hunt Och S23-W75 t>ea"th call 960 2720 Schoals & lnstn.cH°" 7005 ••••••••.•.•........... REAL ESTATE LICENSE SCHOOL OF~ERS ASSEMBLERS 501'raine1• Assembler~ NH<led lmmcd1ately Lon~ & Sh.ort Turm 1hs1gnmenls :lSh1ft'I Available. .Mulll hllVf' own lrnnsp Cal Today 556-8&20 f'rl~' Top f'ay Vor Pn\ Victor T •'"f'Orary s.t-vlc•s 01 v WoJter Kidde & Cn •Cr1111h Coul'!I\' 11vo1lobll• A:WI Bir('h Stn•el •Matenols provided Suite 213 •S moll r lu:1::1es Cor Newport Ueach person111l1ed lnstruct1on EQuol Opportunity •Choo6e own I mile di.y ~mployer M /I'' & night class<'s •--------•Placem<'nl-up to tl(I•; ('()mn\J&SIOn F'rc•• :J Wt•t•k ~l~::i T1 a1n1na c• For O.toft1 131-1003 493-0442 Kalellt1 Heal Eiilet\' S<'hool 32001 Oi mlno Capi:ilrll no San Juan Capistrano utobody •PAINTER• und exper helJ)('r. (1ualt1 ~ i.h op. izd po y. pu111 holidoys, in11ur avail ~t.I workin~ cond fender Ac-ndf'r Shop, 549.3053 SELL idle llems with J Dall.y Pilot Clusil1ed Ad G42 5678 ~ 9S2 an 636-4120 l·S 34.9 2.109 960 1830 Classlfod Ads 642-5678 Reuonablc. S48 2lo.1. ==========---J....;;;;===..;;=====---=:..L::====_,;;;;-=~-:;~------=-====---~~;:;:;;:;:;;::=;;::======-~L=====---=--===....1,;;::====;;.,,.,_;;:;;;;;;;;;~-==~---.:=--=--=:___J, ___ -======'-= • \ '1 C.-,.4 S.....lce ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• BlrJAppliM.nc~Sc:n Shampoo' 6leam clean Room Add111 un~ " tlANUYMAN Carpentry. TRJP CHARGI!: $10 Color bnghlt'nc-ric whl H.emudellng JI yr:. npr clte\nl'ul, plumbing & ~Mam.SA cptslOmtnbleach Clean w/hard to bwld 91tet. flr.. 847 27117,557 IS04 S49--al22 ~1 0169 llv, chn rm, hull SU Avg IMAGINATION t.. our ,. _ _.._. rm S7.SO. couch $10, tbr password Quall Bwldt·1 i. ~~ { Floors. carpets, ~aths. walls, p1tll06. WlJldOW!> Spec pnce for \<Jcanl re· s1dences. Those Guys 974 0810 .. , .... ..,.,.. ~ Guar ellm l)t!l odor it2!34!)4Gordon~41~1 ...................... . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cpl repair l~ yrs expr • llaul sk1plouder dump Immaculate Cleaning Co. rto .. ~ ... 1-1 t111111rw t ll~JP.-'"'9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Housecle:i~1ng & han d yman repairs Nµl Bcb1CM area Bonded cpl. ~123 arter 5 or Bnrkwork Small Jobi. Nl"Wport, Co:-;t1.1 Meso & Irvine 1>'75·3175 eH•s weekends 1 ~~!~~~~••••• HOUSE«WER PETERS PAINTING Puper hanginft, est IQC.tl REPAJ R & H ~ROOI:'' All ly l::uropr1.1n l Ypc• i.h1nslc' craftsm:.in,h1p <.:all rockshukcs t·ompo-tur 5-9PM. 540-2880 Free el>l 541-5930 Custom Wollpapenng All work J:Udr Fr~e tlllt . tl7H1:;8 Re-Roof For Less CUii Anytime 894·0421 Reliable weekly clean Expr'd Reas Rate!> Ing. 1 f~ or hrly <.:all Free Est Call Gt'l\l' llou.."it! e.1untJnj!. tnl , Ex Tiie ~rglna at 631·2219 aft 552 0458 ler Free estimates. John ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Save Money• [)o work my:1elf. Refs Cal 1Corn1 a <.. o a!> t ;1 I trk. gradinf!, tree wrk, For those who deserve Unveways•Parkin.,; IQt 531 0101 Serv1re New. r-..mUl.ld & tlcmohuonl> etc 831-1257 the best 759-0377 •Repairs •Settleu11t111g hauJmg. l•'rl'I.' t•i.llmJlc~ •Lie. NB . C M S&S CahriftcJ ca11Maxat.i92·f.393 H~n Rosemane's Houseclean· l\sphaJl 646-4871 •••••••• •• ••• ••• • •• ••.. - --• ••• •• •• ••••••••• ••• ••• lnl:. Refs. reason. Own --Weddings. summerCuNlom Remod1'11ni.; & vl'neral Handyman traru;.642·1403.645·3439 . All PROFESSIONAL Beck 645·2161 C~HAMl(;llle.Ncworn• Brother and sister team. p 1 E model. Free est. Sml labpitffncJ parues wine la::.l1ng. Add1t1ons. C:ill Vmc:1• P111nt1ng, c:urpcntry. Carpet cleaning. win ••••••••••••••••••••••• Cabana.:_ For The Fine Lenhoff&. /\!>sot' i;n 7104 roof mg. masonry Any dows ovens we do il all' with references. will ulnuni.:. nler/ xter Int. ext. serving area for 7 Jobs welcome. 5:16·4961 Rea:;. work guar 642·0386 "rs. Prof. Nia 1 work. aft <, K1odergarden teacher ArtofCatenng.645·9858 'Bectncol -homemamtcnanceorre Th ' • clean your home. Dcpen· ., • -·-·-------dable. trustworthy and Pruntmg. Extr/lntr £x Reason Neat. In:.. Dave Tutori avail my CdM ho111e, CAmlnt/C t ••••••••••••••••••••••• modeling proJects. J eMopJ>ets546·2393 Mon. Wed, fr1. 9 S. OftCN ~ u.....LL--'lb-t . Waugh.631-2233 Walls. ce1lmgs. floors & experienced Before pr'd . honest. neat. rcas 581)..~ ••••••'!?••••••••••••••• 9AM or .ifler JPM. Llc'd964·1045 Dave 644-9806 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ gcC n c windows cleaned. Call .,, _.._R--' Foundullons. rtta1n1ng Llc327136 l>i5G971 HauNncJ after6PM.646·6l45 968-9024 Fine Exter Painung by Apartment deaning xlnt R. Si.nor Sl lie • ms. Try work C M. urea Call me. 83&-SSSS24 hr.. ~~l New hoW>e~ also ---------YOUNG MAN. 5 yrs expr Ciatom painting. int & Tutonnl(, remedial read e~t. also wallpapcnng Ing, learning d1:.ab1lllte:. I-r e e e 'I t · UICn'<l .. 675·1&.M .. cy,.... ..-,....r walls. block6, patioi>. •••••••••••••••••••••••._ ________ _ 6751338/&iO 0473 Dyci. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 556--8241. L1c'd. ELECTRICIAN-Pnced OCC Student. l Ton truck. Mobile 81cy1·h~ Repair Al nght-free est1ma te on Trash. tree tnm. Ron Your Home for Appl Cement work, all types. large or small JObs 642 5703. 979,6-189 0£11891 14SS call wknds or wkdays aft Licensed 673 0359 5 64.2-8482 or 646.lJS l .,__'-~s Seriric• .,_....., Lite hauling-moving Garage Yard ck1rnin~ Reli!i rates f.>12·0705 SUHSHIHE GIRLS The professionals 1n home and office cleun lllg We are fully insured Is your service? Free estimate. 540-9525 ~~inc) in wallcovering 1-'ree •••••• •• •• •• •• • •••• ••• • ests. 64.:>-8576 And) Crede ntialed readin~ Int/Ext. patnllng. high i.per1allst. male. will quality Reason pnces. tutor your home. SIO 1 'l clean work Free est. hr. Mon-Fri. 847 9404 Gary Prankhn 642·0203 --------D 1 g · It La n d s c a Pe or ~1.5 Cour..es offered m .\lg J Reai.on prices Free Pmnt Your Casffe AJg 11 & fundamentals of est '<.:a 11 d n Y l 1 me Spec1almng tn res1dcn· Plaster /Repair anthmellc for 6 wk:. beg ••••••••••••••••••••••• <:ontractor ••••••••••••••••••••••• DATA PROCESSING ••••••••••••••••••••••• WESTERN FEN<.:E<:O l'llF:APF:ST hJuhng In DlRTYWINOOWs~ town for csts CHEAP' CALLLYNN 6'l2 2995 or t>-15· 1390 536-7711 960·5844 64&7070 I.lat hom~. inl. & ext ••••••••••••••••••••••• July 3 Enrollment lmtd Int/Ext. home or office. Plea:.e check our 1 t' Neatpatches&texturcs to 15 pr cla~s. Call Mr Servic~ for sma II bu::.i R J lluHma n & Son. Wood & Chamlmk nei.se:. & professions Hemodel & add1t1on::.. Llc#245·151 536 11137 Custom programming G4S 4644 or548-4541 Gcrc»nin<j Reasonablt• Southwest Licensed & Bonded. ••••••••••••••••••••••• llauhng-yard & garage Housecleaning per day ul int plant maintenance. ferences. Lie 11 320881 RlEE EST. 893-1439 Wolf 646-5349 Guar. 1n:.rd . free Servlces. 9.57 Oltl2 -REMODELING •VERY LOW PRICES• l'leanupb Lawn mi.Lalla· low CQi>t w/expenence. I.Ion & removal. Tree & Free esl <.:<ill Cella plants below retail for est:Ted. 636-7085 ~ Window Cl~anln<J do-1l-yoursel!ers. selec· ---------••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• C~er Cw.tom Room Adds On Gardening Ma1nt. shrub removal Rel. 548·2Gt9 ••••••••••••••••••••••• cabinets'Countertops George 549·2015 Fr k J 631 0'"'4 --------- carpenter F'rcc c:.t, Any Mz.e JOb~. Call Allan ur Tony, 646·1:1649 Apt.Ol'Cice·Comm-Alt an veni,, · ..., · Beach homes houses & CustomHomes &Umts Clean·ups. Hauling, 642·6059 apartmentcl~aning. Ex· lion & consultallon. Call Jn Living Color. 640·1338 Landscaping. Tree trim· ming. Clean-up. 8 yrs exp. Free est Noboru. 848-4043 or 897 ·2862 WE WJLL PAINT AN HOMESAVERS. Plumb· Serving CM /NB/Irv , AVERAGE HOUSE ex· ing & Healing. Free est. Reas. Coa:.l Cleaning tenor. S249 Aver. 4-unit SlO hr. Honest & rehable Servace.548 581l QualJly not Quantity Lan~~caping Im med HousKleanln<J cell. work. 847·3637 apt. ext. $375. 11346935. service BofA. M IC OK. 54i. 7334 979-.8065 or 847 ·0383 Get a clear view from "A CLEAR VIEW" Co. "1nd. carpenter. cumm'I, reb. No JOb too small. Wm.li. Anderson·Bldr servictng 642'9907 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Colleen's CleanJng Serv. f'ree fst. 631-0361 Yard & garage cleanup. Want a REALLY CLEAN Thorough hsecln'g by Prof p:unting. Ext & int Classified Ads. your one· Low rates. Refs Free The (as test draw in the 631 ·0'.!17 833· 1470 AnsSer John. 531-ao82 or 046-0425 Want Ads tree trimming . Call llOUSE'! (;all Gingham appt. NB. (;M. 631·2271 Call 642·5678 Gilbert. 548·6475 Girl. Free CSL. 645·5123 afl4 slop shopping center. est. 536-4780. 536-4383 West . .a Daily Pilot Classified Ad. 642-5678. Sell 1dle items ~Wanted 7100HelpWanted 7100HfipW•hd 7IOOHflpWtlftted 7100.W,W..ted 7100 H.lpWanted 7100 HlltpWClllfed 7100 elpWORt~d 7100 H.lpWawted 710~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• J\utornatlc lran:-.m1:.:.1on!>. Bookkt!i!per, Or l:tv at' Clem·al Q)llege or H.S girl help Delivery person freeway Earn extr·a rnonl!y al (;~neral Off1ct!. malun'. GUARDS H & H man. MUST h.ive HANK l'l I( firm louktn~ for Mail Cl~rk w s weet handicapped auto. Avery freeway al h o m 11 No exp er good typ1!>t vaned duuei.. F\.111 & p/ltml' i\11 area~ 4'mplt :.et ol toob i-:x~r * TELL~R * bookkeeper S;il.iry l'vm No pnor ex per nccess. :.chi girl & hle hsehld S 0 . frwy, Mission VleJo necessary. Details. :.entl ~ood benefits. 642·5997 Uruforms furn Ages 21 preferred 548 2288 mensuratc with ex per entry level pos1t1on in duties. $2 75 hr No:.rnok· stamp How To, 2539 U I:: or o v <' r rte t Ir c d '\utomolt\C SerVll'e Immediate operuni.: In 71·11!156·7860 volves sorting & dtS· IO)l Owntransp. Big Ca· Dental Assistant.FIT.ex-RidmgWJy,Orange,(;,\. General ore work for welcome No expcr Laguna Htlls off1c~. Sav· nyonarea. 640·5335. per COA pref. s alary 92667 Chn~l1an :.chool. Apply. W r 1 l e r . l' >. p l' r cl 1ngs and Loan or bank BookkecJ)(-1 tnbutmg of ma 11 to ofr open. Lag Hills/ El Toro 16835 Brookhurst. ._. Vly. necess. Apply. t:n1ver:.al w German car:. Mu~l be E'xpcrtl'nce required. pcrsoMel. flung & con area.830·ll30 Protection Service, 12211 1 ehable Serv1cm~ C M ca:.h handling reqwred f /Charge $1300 trol of supplles. COLLEGE GIRL BedrOftic T~chs General Office W 5th St. Santa Ana. ln & N. B <1rea!> ~JI + Excellent salary. work· Small growmg co. nct1d:. CovttCIC)e Cleric Bachelor needs tulkpr. DENT AL ASST lmmed openings & OP· Reservations. type. must lervw hrs 9·12 & 1·4 Mon comm ti42 1604 1ng cond1l1ons nd 'd h Nop o expe eq cnt portumties in an estab. be able to meet publlc & Fr• . benef1•u Call . la t eakxper person wt o can le ·t" por lo r r . I rye Dana Pt. Condo, full Exper w /x·ray lie. for an co. tn Orange Co 111rprt work weekends. Apply in•---------AUTOMOTIVE ...... Qr app Ya t e over comp ell' Ul' ve si a n. mvo \ s pnvileges Call for 1n· El Toro oft'. Ask for area Applicants to ._, 0 EXPERIENCED Branch cowitmg funct10n, thru work~ w1computer(' terview 406.6658 Jim or Eileen830-351l. troubleshoot. repair & person .... ewport une:.. CASHIER AMERICAN J1nanc,·1bal slmTb un Ptorova1dJugslceorvseraTg~p11nn~ Denny Deotal ofc needs exper test electronic systcms llJlBackBay Dr.NB. SAVINGS manua a:.i:. remt'n · · " "' Recent analog & dl~llal !•---------lJ.535 Calle de la LowsJ dou~ growth poll'n t :.kills helpful typisl/rel'epl, Jo' or P /T. ex per req'd . Jnll!rll lt'W Cri!neral Good work111i.: 1·011111 tl<llll>. ~ood 1.1<.1)' & c·om· J>:&n) benefit:. If I'.\ 1i(•rit•11cc•d. 1>ho111 M1 Wnf!ht J't Laguna Hills Opt' n I rr1 ml' d \ii II Opportunity for Commerc1·a1 C...11644-0683 by apptonl). 5SHI051 a:.k Mr• Cameron 770""'ltl Coa~tJI Pcr.,onnel i\gc·n Advance-ment ror Bu•"h. ~ "° "''''" 11 •~· Bl d •u Dental Assistunt. ural :.ur· ~-E<1uul Opport11n1t) l'~""'""' Jluvr v l ... l''or ton~1derat1on . ---------- Emi>lo)'er M F r,.i(}u)!);) Loan Off1·cer gcryonly. NB Emplo)ed bul wanl to ,\LL JOBS FHl::i': t~ai-e c_.ll, 752 7!IOO. ext __ 644·6161 make morl' without lc.t\ COSTA MESA • <. DA TSUM "· Harm:i11J p,ttml' Lall llClwecn !Oam & 3pm BURGLAR ALARM Servic~ Man ~15 llAHHOR BLVD S.0-6410 540-021 3 l~bys1tter. P rr for H mo old girl. Mon Wcd /1-'n 4 hrs dy. 548·51!>5. Expr'd only No othL·r~ Bartendl•r, cxpcnl·nre 1n need apply rop waJ!l'S, high volume tlrnncr many bl•nl'f1l' 2:!8 hou:.e nec11ssary. Apply fo'orcsl Ave. Lag Bch Mon Wed. 3 ·~PM No ~ phone t·alls. The Victor •-•8•U-S•1•0•y-5-- (;:H !l;)tUI Babysitter for infant. S twys wk. Sam 5 J(}pm f.45~ HUS?o Inn. 361 Chrr Dr. Lag Bch Ueauty salon in CM nl!eds Habvs1tter for 6 mo "Id h:11r st) hsl:. ss--. cum-l)(ly Tue!> & 'I hur' rn1!>sion 548·3446 ltS 30 Wl•stchff Jreu . ., S I ,. ,1 ••16 i4S4 uCJUl) a on in .... " HABYSl1"1 f..H ~anlt'd mer II!. 2 mo ... rhtld. m~ humc t\ppro\ 20 hr "k tlir.. c\'" flt'x hr~ $.! hr Ov.n tran:. 67.1 :!1123 Uakrr or bJkt•r ., lwhwr 1'\Jll Umt• W1ll l1 Jiii I' 'f ti l' j n ll p h l' 111 ,ti " (I needed :wi :1o:u nN'<b Wig StylJsts 65'; l'omn11s:.1on 548 ;J,.H(i IEAUTY ASSISTANT for bus) salon Oppor to receive twst tra1ninJ! pro· g r,1m Prefer neal. fash1onnl>le applicants ,\pply in person. 200 Nt•wport Ctr Or. N .B. Beauty Stylist. lramed to ----------i lake over C'lient~le. tup .Bank mi.: wages. 1137 ·1!779. 637 ·4250 LENDING PLATFORM Ueirnty Assuaant operator SECRET ARY w / so m c f o I I o w . Jmmcd opt·n1ng lor c,1rccr minded ind1v w l'Omm'I & or 111-.tall nwnl lendmi.: C'Cper Ht' ct"• ~uo<1 l>t-1· r<'t 1ir1 ,ti -.k1lb Xlnl ad\ Jntt•menl potcnt1.1l Manicurist. Modern !>alon. CM/NB area. Call .&12 5381 Days & Nights Apply after 3PM TM Ancieftt Marin"' 2fH1 W Coast Hwy ~ R Business woman ~<'ek~ JO aggrc~!>I\ c lt•a1lcr to tram & de\elop otht'r.., 1n d1slnbultnl! c·on:-.ulllnt.: bw.uws:.. E W l' tlti21111!1 CANVAS PER SOM Selling ex pr ht'lµI ul Cu~tom rover '> Good pa) for PIT. Salb. by Schock. G75· 1823 CASHIERS r /llme Good Pay Growth co. 5 Locations We train. Co. Benefits METRO CAR WASll 2950 Harbor 8!/\M Cashier Wanle · purl time, Thurs. Fn •• .'al. & SUn. Call Barbura for appl 54()..3280 CASHIER f'ruckntial Pr.,-ty & Casualty Insurance Co. /I. subs 1d1ary of thl! Prudential Insur Co of 1\menca. 1600 Dove St, Ste 200 Newport leach EOE M i r' ------- Clencal pan lime Lado area Typing & book· kt!epmg e:.sentral. Call 675-8030 Clenral ADP PENSION SERVICES ;; ()ppor & l'hallen~l' of ferro to resp 1ndMduals 10 our Newport fmanc1cil firm localed in f'asl11on Island. We ha\C 1mmL'<l. openings for Personnel Clerk ~xpenence Required Clerical 1-'igure ap & lite lypinl:( Xlnt wrkmg (·ond:. & co. benefits offered Contact &W 4360 ext 262 Lo~!~"~~r ~~~i~~yrs lending exper Must be capable of a ssuming luture adm1n1strat1ve responsibilities & be growth & profit oriented. ~aJor bank loan training & MBA desirable. Aggressive mdependenl bank prov ides xlnt beneftts, promotion:il OP· portumt1es & sat com· men.surate w 1exper f'or 1mmed coni.1deral1on please send resume & :.alar)I history in con· l1dence to EXEC. OFFICER PO lot7120 Newport ~ach, 92660 Equal Oppor Employer Comparuon. dnver. cook. Good pay 494-4457. Cook. dish·up, s-0me ex· per. Spaghetti Bender. 62Q.1 W. Cst. Hwy. NB. DE:HT AL REC EPT. Pedlutnc dental office mg present JOb '.' Call lor appt. 494-51~ Costa Mesa. l::xpenence • - - - - - -t reqwred. 548·5588 Dent.al Recpl. NB Ortho ofc Ortho exp req Start at up to $850. 642-2626 EXECUTIVE SECRETARY career oriented person, Dental office receptionist single preferred. some needed 1mmed1ately bookkeeping knowledge. 4-41'2 days. experienced Must speak perfect X-ray llcense reqwred. English. For a ~rowing S600·S650 to !>larl. successful Jewelry Bu:.. 673·0116 Apply m person 3800 So DE:HT AL ASSIST Plaza Or Santa Ana. Ca . . ------Sol.Jd oppor m II n. Up to date. efficient. plt'asant Exp bartender v. anted ore & ~taff No Sat or f presugiou~ restaurant eves RDA pref'd. Call 59 Newport Center Dr 848·0234 meet u:.. & dis· Fashion Island. NB c~ 3 better Job. -Fa_b_n_c-Sto_r_e_n-eed_:._P IT Dental ass1sl l rt~cept . F1T. M1ss1on VtcJo. urea Exp. only 495·0223 DENTAL Ass1:.t. p/timc. N.B. ofc. Xray he req'd. Sal open. 642-6880 salesperson. Tue:.1Wed1 Thurs afternoon. J-6:30pm Call 54!>.0127 ask for Jane. f'actory Help. vnall manufacturer needs full tame help. Man pref'd. Curry Tool Co. 1387 Logan Ave C M. 540-4299 Dental Asst Trne T errific oppty for de· d.lcated ind iv. w /top Or. Call Amy, 848·1288, Oen· rus & Denrus Personnel COOK Service of Huntington FfSHIMGTACKLE Retail tackle dealer located 1n Newport Beach need:. rnan for counter & :.omc :.crv1c:e work Top pay Chunce for ddvancement Good Im med opening. 2 yrs ex· Beach. 16168 Beach Blvd. per nel·. Good pay. ask *Summer Jobs EARN VACATION$$ Needed lmme<11atcly ./Clerics ./Cleril Typists t45WPM> v'Seeior Typists 160 WPM 1 ./Stat Typists l~Cl•rb ./~ ./PIX ap.raton ./SecretariH with or without SH Work v..he rc ~ou ".inl & \~hen )OU ~Jnl with VOLT Long & ::.htH t term assignments I loh dd~ <\. \ Jl'JtlOO IJJ' lloi.p1ta lli.it10~ 111.in .t\allciblc NEVER A f't::~ APPLY ·*VOLT* TEMPORARY SERVICES 546-40741 3848 Campus Or. Ste 106 Across from OC Airport 879-9330 1624 Orangethorpe Wy Anaheim Equal Oppor Employer BEAUTY OPERATORS Joan Kent Hairstyles. ncwl) derorated -,hop. nl'l'<iS ope1 atur:. w 1 l·hcn le-le Lease or comm \p pl>. 170 E 17th St. Dt t>l2 6212 With hle bkkpnl( cxpcr F time Days Mull.loon:. Restaurant. &i0·4 LIO for Chet. 480 Coast Hwy, Dishwasher needed App. Lag Beach. ly Mon-Wed. 3·5 PM No phone calls. The V1c·tor COOK HEEDED Hugo Inn. 361 Cuff Dr. kno"ledge ot PJt'1f1c .---------- DMVCURK CLERKS E\es & Morns. To $4 hr Lag Bt'h. General Office CORJlESflONDEHC E / • m·Spm Monday thru Frrda~ WELLS FARGO GUARD SERVICES 230 W. Warner. HM 217 Santa Ana GUYS&G.ALS No exp. nee. for cmplov ment 1n radio KNi\C Gold Rw.h telephonl' pro mollon $J·S.S per hr J!Uar salary + bonus. Wrk '• AM to 2 PM or 4 P~l to •1 PM Apply 13245 l1~1rt1or Blvd Su1l1• II (i l; m phone 530· I IUO HAIRSTYLIST J slallon now llVallahh· for rent. ALSO l p 't1m1• :.talion for rent Vl'n husy shop. t-:asy to hu1 Id tl1entel<.•. Tom Ral' Jiau-styles 645-4012 HAIRSTYLIST Balboa Island :,hup. Call 675.;!?01 HANDYM/\.N Retired m;in nt•edmg lo supplement 1n1•nm" .Joh COll)o l S I :. of 111.:hl 1anitonal work. pal•kag mg, pickup & rlcll\ ~ry m company t rut·k Sma II ro Appl> CiL<; Sy~ll'm,, Inc. 11152 <.:ondor A\ FV 549477; l\cy pos1l1011 m noh' 1lt•pl handlln!! DM" dC>('Unll'n t.it1on Ex Pt-'r prcl d :'llew Customers Welcome Cashier-New cit t t 1'11.'rk Stock brokera~c firm l''a!oh1on Island. Newport Beach. 35 hr wnrk week Liberal benefits. Call Susan Mes:.l'Ole. 7.\ '' 3P~ 644·7040 UTOTEM The Gnnder Re:.t · 1400 Dlslnbulors & Sales Peo· W Pacific Cst llwy; NB pie. Supplement your In· 642 8881 come. V1tamui co 2oor: Coast rishmg n mu:.t Send resume to Ad ;: 13!1, C 0 Datly Pilo t. Bo'C 1560. Co:.lJ Mc:.ci. CA 92626 Nallonal education corp. ~;;;;;;;;.------• has pos1t1on avail in stu· dent :.crv1ces dept Typ mg so wpm & i.ome teuer writ1n1t Custom er servtcf' exper helpful Good pos1t1on for md1v retunung to JOb ma rkt'l l:onta1·t Bud l),1 \IC., 148· I 2 34 for appt. Poclffc Cliy lonlt i::qual Oppor Emplo} er l~nk1ng TELLER l·.xpcr \)rcf'd Lat,· t~ p in~ Neat .1ppl•ar Sal 1ommens11rat1• w l'Xpt•1 &at Woodworker~. t.'lt· pcnenced & apprcnt1rC'd Good pay & benefits 1\p. ph 11200 Condor 1\\e, 'f"V M0-5211 ROOKKEF:PER1f''C Growmr. \(fg ,..1 rm in Santa 1\na needs full chariie hoC>kkct>per thru T B lnforma I work in!( l'Oml . l.!•)Od s11lury Call 11.i !17!! ;,.mo Cooks Expenenced fry profit. tno 751·1706 for Foreman trainee. (or cooks. full or pan time. further info. plasuc injection molding fringe benef1Ls. Apply m Diver. experlenrcd lo :. hop M s l h J v c exper necessary-we person 3·5PM. Coco'!S clean boats m Newport mechanical ab1ltty. 2nd CASHIER train. Advancement op-Famous Hamburgers Harbor.S7J·3980 sluft. Plastics Develop· porturul1es to those who lSSSAdams. CM ment Corp 3.1091 <.:Jlle Telepho~I.' Exper & l:Clod CJUal!fy For mformallon Oraflmg position open for Perfecto SJC Apply alt 4 per:.onalitv fnr merlmit I ~o to our nearest market Cooks Hiring expeneneed young person willing lo PM the puhhc: rcq'd. 30 llr or rontact lhe personnel cooks. Good wages Call \earn in small mcrh work wk m our l" M office at 492·2151 engmeerlni: ofr. located Front Ofc S960CI r'ee Pd :.tori!. S:3 Per hr i\pply 12442 Lam~on St COOKS· Line. expe r . m Irvine. 6 mos-1 yr ex WONDERFUL ~on·Fri. H·S at The UardenGroveS37-4810 Do L n h R per pref. Salary com WORLD Openings Now Available for fuJI or p time clerks on 2nd & 3rd shifts. No GR.ADER Entry levt>I po~1t1on grading 1·xum1n.it1on!> R.eq'~ neut handwnting & htetypmf! HOST /HOSTESS Need ind1v w plcasanl appear & personality to work m our mforma lion l't'nter p time includ 1.1o'knc1 ... Pleast> ca II f>4.t 338!1 :Jam ·111 Noon THE IRVIHE CO. 550 N~wpan Ctr Ur Newport Beach Equal Oppor Bmployl'r Pll"llst• 1·11111,H'I l>on:. M111·hl'll 55A·!'>28() lur r1ppt UHIOH BANK Bookk°t'epcr. FT or PIT. to work 1n an acclng ofc l0<.0lllly Call 892·5505 Earl '~ 1\lumhmi:; lilt'. i.·~ualOppor Employer wntown ag c est. 153 3 w Lint•oln ,l••""I ________ Ask for Nina or John. mens w /cxper. Call Prominent OC r1!'m i\nahe1m or cull 6<1.l· 1753 ---------1_494_·9_7_65_______ 540-62111 for app't see k... "o u r p r o -Apply Natwnal S)slcms i---------• O>rp. 4361 Birch St. N U ext ll CLERKTYPIST D bl & fessionahs m for very COOKS rapery ta er ior diplomatte pos1l1on• Call INearOC Au·porll Equal Opportunity f.mployer lilll Newport Ct•nh'r Dr Newport Ii.each t-;(Jual Oppor i-;mployt•r Uoot..kccJ)('r. F' IC. for ac- c 11un11 n g s ervice . Castuer 10f c To $11400 lnd1 v. w1good appear & machme o~rator Ex· pleasant manner needed Top pay. all !.htfts avu1la· periencl' p referred but Candace. IWIH288. Oen· for loan broker firm. ble Apply betwe en will traln Paid vacation nis & Dennis Personnel Somephonework.Near 2·5 pm , Dt'nny 's after 1 yea_r. Good Service of Huntington Fashion Isle.. 644 11824 Restaurant. 529 Avenida benefis. Contact Coast Beach. 16168 Beach Blvd. BANK TELLER M.wport Beach L..tguna lulls 30·40 hrs 770 3-\Z! Stock It Up! Fast paced profess1onul co. seeks top qualllY pcrs &okkct'ptng Trainee for outslonding career Win<JYourWay growth. Call Candace. CUAKTYPIST &18 1288. Dennis & Den Hotel-Sales lleavy l '-'P· i-:,c1t 111g career pos p I Se r " ni:, ersonne rv1ce o mg. uen ofr wQrk .i 11wa1ls bright, eager tu Be t 68 " leampersw fun loving Huntm((lon 'a1·1,l6l Oay/wk. 4 llrs d.1y co. Call CJrol M8·128S. Reach Blvd Newporter Inn. 611·1700. IX>nnt!> & Dennis Person· Child Care & Day Camp ext5:1XS1dney E~ Wl• try lo mu kl· ) 11ur nel &n·1cl• of Huntington Workers Needed Prefer CLERK TYPIST world l>ctlt•r 1.1o1lh J Beach.161688eac:hBlvd II ud Ch plens:1nt l.'nv1ronmrnt co ege sl ents n'I Irvine area. Mon-Fri. -l·S 1>lJb11ltyandcompellllHRool<krept'r llan School . 16835 1\1-..perday S:l 50slart. ... alancs Wt: till' sel'kmi: OPPORTUNITY+ Brookhurst. flluntnin Send quahf1cut1ons tQ a peoplr or1entl.'d 111 11 you've got il. you hJvc Valley Class1f1ed Ad lllo.5. Ouily dMduul. preferably with to GROW WITH lJS Ex ---------•I Pilot. PO ~x 2560. Costa previous Teller or pandlnl! Real E~t.1te ClencaJ Me:.a.Ca.92626 SHIPPING CLERK Codctoll Waitress School Earn up to $300 per wk Low twtlon. Placement 8SSlllt. 751·9194 <'ai.h1er cxper1t•nt't' IX'velopment& l'ropcrty fo'am1lanty with typ1n1o1 Monaaement C<>mpany reqwred. Dut11•:1 will m tn Nt>wport Center 1~ rlude the proeess1n11 ot s ~ e k 1 n JC a B o o k deposits. w11 hit rn wa ls keeper /Office-M anagrr snd handllnsc or mom~y with xperlenro thru orders and traveler':. f'·1s . Must be able to han checks. WP oCf('r .irowth die pressure & meet de npportunlty and flnt ndline& J oin four younl( Bxcelle nt opportunity for cntry level Pnrl ti m~ No C'X pt• ri «'fl c1· I-------••• necessary, we will tram tmployrt• btnrfits St·c l(rowth orli'nted com ~Xl't!llt'nt romp11n y what Wt' hJvc to n(f«r. pllny Excellent Salary. bc.'ncflts lneludln.: nwjor Rl\C11&o1c111ll,t!44 ~ Bt•nt•r1ts. Yt•rir 1-:n11 mrdlr11rond dental Call Uonusei. fur rlJ,lht In or apply In J)<'r11on 3f>$2 GLEHDALE FB>!RAL dl\ldui.l I campw. Or1vc. Newport SAVINGS R.C. TAYLOR CO Buch. 1714> S40 6080 100 Nt'WPOr1 C.nl(•r nr Nev.purl Bt•u1h IMC to; q u 11 I opp tt rt u n 1 t y 640-S I I l cmployt>r md 1h TRAHSMASK Equal Opport11n1t) Have something you want CORP For Ad Action Call a DailJ Pilot AJl.VISOR 642-5678 Employer M 1-· 111 tc• sell" Classified ads do ·------· --· --------•I II wtll ft.2·5'78 --------- Pico. San Clemente. Consulting. 557-8866 AJso Fee Jobs. COO K S W a n t e d -1---------•I F to care for disabled Breakfast. lunch & din· DRIVERS woman. Room/board m ner stufts. Ma Barker's Men or women 2S yrs or CM 548-$596 Restaurant. 212 t:, 17th older Know the coast _F\J_ll_l_1_m_e_ll_be_rg_l_a-ss_a_s_· St.CM. 646-4300 cities. Net $180 a week or s em b 11!.r::. wanted Counter Help. p /llml". more. Orange Const 631-2464 Saddlebark \'a ll t•y Yellow Cab. 17300 Mt Plaza. EITuro SJG.9230 Herrmann. F'ounta1n R.IRHITURE Valley. <No 0 1 Slater Top expenence. men or O>uple wanted to manage be l w n New h op t' & women lo stnp & refinish Geft'I Ofc H..,.,. Opening for reliable pN:.on Out1eE-1ncld phone. typing & customer ~erv backup. ~ mo+ pu1d ben::.. "lie & hol Call Mary Ann, 6312272 GOOD JOB Peru.1oner:. l 0Jp Pt!r v.ik. Perm. c¥r No sell mg. 613 2.289 !!mall bustnt>si; P /llme Euclld I kit cah, wood panelin.:. GUARDS Mr Hall642·1634 !•---------ban1ste1 . ove rhead l'erm rehab i''\Jll tlln(' beams. wooden floors. Jrd Shill p 111mr l'>l CUSTOMER DRIVER doors . f u r n . e l c sluf\. Retired welcome RELATIONS Sl5.001hr. Must h:ive Ca r & phone req 'd Saturday & Sunday Yout own stnpp1ng and Irvine Complex. Cull MONDAY monungs to dt>ltver Om· reClnlsh1nf( equipment 833-3000. ext l9l ror In· 7A..M-12HOON ly f'Hot to earners in andputupworkm11nshlp teniew Equal Oppor. TU6-FRI 7 AM-11 AM Lal(una Ntscuel & South security LOt!I of work on Employer mir Company ha!I openlnK Laauna. Must have large hand. Al. 7\4·683·5423.1'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii for alert. personable. station wagon or van & a Riverside. tr no above 11 motflrC' lndlv to be the good dr1vtn11 record. For experience. will train greeter ror 8 new car de· lnlormatlon call 642·4321, Training fee requ1 red alcr's service dept Pos1· '=iiasikiiiloiriHiiaiiriiryiiiiiSeeiiiiiliieiiiiyiiiiiiiim _Sa_m_e_n_u_m_bc_'_r ___ _ t1on located on Harbor 1• MOW IS THI TIMI BI v d I n 1 e r e 11 t I 11 IC tor Job a~ers to check cw.tomerrelaUons work. Toplaceyourmesaasce the Duly Pilot Jletp Sl~rt S2 85 hr. Advance before the Wantfl(l elasslflcat1on Ir ments Pd \;acat1on$ & readlnt public. the Job you want h1 not hohd11y1 Apply l\1on phc>M there you might eon.4'ldcr Thur rrom 8 .30 AM 4PM Dady Pilot orrcrtog your services at Nu Orm Plan. 3tfMC" Clasall1~. &f.2·5678 with an ad in the Job Airport l.oop Dr . C M Wanted cateaory Pbont or ealJ for appl S49· l~ 642-5678 For Ad Action Call a Daily Pilot AO.VISOR 642-5678 lfotel FRONT DESK CLERK Part-Time Good oppr for a peopk onented person able lo work nex1ble hrs inrlud lnx wknds. En.JOY xlnl t•o benefits Apply 9am·noon Mon Fri. Personnel MARRIOTT HOTEL 000 Nrwporl Centl'r Or Newport Beach ~uJI Oppor Employer llotel PANTRY WORKER Wt• arc st>ektna an in dJvldual with exper. in an.lad & prodUC'e pre p to work lht> day shift. En.lo) xlnt co benef1L'I. Apply 9nm noon Mon f'ri, Personnel MARRIOTT HOTEL 900 Newport CenteT Or Newport ~eeh F.qural Opp Emplyr m 1r IFYOU have a 1erv1ce lo oH~ or goads to sell, place an ad 1n lhe Dally P1 lot Cbsell\ed Sertton . Phonl' 6'2·5678 .... • ; •4 r \ I ~....,Wonted 7 too ...., w .. te-ct 11 oo Help w-••d 11 oo Wedoesoav June 28 1978 * OAILV PILOT 07 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• H.4p Wuted 7100 ~ W•led 7100 C)fll ntn ·~ tur J Jdlt~ to R R Help WD1tftd 7100 Hetp Wallted • 7100 H"' WOftted 7100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• iw ~ 1-, r '-'a...-.1: eslaurant '°'SP ,adlt. ••••••••.••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• l'UI 11 111v . ~ty Con~ var 1 l' d d u t 1 l' $ 1 n S;iltspcrson ~:mti:d rm HOUSIC J.u\ltot J"nUrl':oi.. I' ttml' .ipprox to hr, ''k < Jll I~ 1111ndw1ch &hop. 20 clothmll 1 A 1 t $1.'l'rll<ffY llort:d'' l';irt TYPIST HttpWonl•d 71 ..•............•••.... LEA.HING a. I lrmt• tr"n"' iJrea M1&.11ut11ctunn~ 3ftn~locJµµt 1.t21Ai1*1; .. .,...-.or 30 / hr i. ,1 wk lHO'S Cvrl'll Pl"" Lirncl>nlc~ .. ~n1n• Joint Thl'l't.•M)ba\er HE:l., "111 1141111 ldt'Jl f(Jt Photo Plaie CJrdl ~ll'l'VI\ ">Ur)l1~·ul Ul> We seek an 1nd1v1duulrur 2 30 41 :)()pm ~ 2-HH lkh l 5~ II wr ... L.i.: \I.Ori< With "4CWJl()rt m 16 lookini: tor a p 'tlml: l'ullllllll' ">1onl''ri l'Jit hc.lll:•l'"'l\ci.. 'ludl·nlb d. Train-s '"l.int l'>t"t.'rll!lll'l' fu'Ststut'ltowork tnour ---lilwnl~~~ m' -'Kt: ain "irant•t• munagt•r Shirt t\pr?>t Mon & Tuell \Ill)(• 14ork 11\1111 1lunn.: q1b ( Jll ~·twn J bµm """" .. Qua.Illy Control Dcpurl R~Ulurant P at $500 mo Call Carol or u1 l ... I ~14 .. .,., 70l.. Wt! J (l' "l'l!k 111" 111 Ol'l'\ ..... JI \ t'Jll 003 0127 t N SUH ... Y SIDE u· ,-e.i.,,U\l workmi; \:Onlb 141'1' .. or on ::-i.,t "1 I Jl '• 1.,..., ., .. men o cxperll!OC'I! " r SA.LESPui.SOH Joe. 640-4ll9or 640 4260 M·"'c·m '"'W" Apply 111 .... Lll\ldua.b rv1 (u -.t .. 11111 VI 7~1 •ng.1 Jltl'r Ii PM II full liOft ""' .. , " r \'pl ~tuul·11h lor :.um necesi.111')'. Wt! WI train ~ time pos1t1om. open C-061.i Me:.a Stationer:.. 11er!>oll 1660 Pl.1<'cnt1.1 111 l't l' 1:1 PI v} ml n l JANITOR.AL J)(>!>llroni. in our 1'11>11\11 llwlllni\on Uea~ Cook. w JI tresses & 270 E 17th St. <: M S.,.RET"'RY Aw l'M .l4!>V~'l pi t'\t-ntn~' 1-.,p IJon Ot!pu1lnll'nl '\o ,., i'<lllltt·r J ~car' t•\per. Excellent company general kll('hen helpers f' llml· Apph tn pt'r!>on "''" A W n1U11lc:. Clean ~ bitnk~ Pt.'nl'O<'l' ON'l'\'J' > "1· l>r"·ti & rt>ll"r S3 50 hr to benefits including maJnr needed Avplb In ""rson 10 · ....-.... I001111 E'"•ER \NTl-:D tbkpr rvr d1!>abki.I I.ill" ,... ~ will tram J.>1·1·111·111 ~' ' edi I d .-~ · am noon. -~ "" '°'" Mf':~ W0\1E"i ~ NU Top pay C<.111 121J 1 ~ -.t.irt ''°':! "3:ffi art :;PM m ca an dental. Q;ill m-r 10 l2 or y Jppoint ---Goldt•n opj)(.lrtun11y tor l!'lper " l'Jr 111·rm :; !T.!10115 gruw)t.l tlvor oµµortu111t) or apply in person 31152 rnent 580 1901 X221 Wl' · ll!b Ketarl till' right pt·ri.on llt>a\y ALL DEPTS rh!>,gdpJ)' 76117926 tnclt•\1ru111t'lfldU~ll\ 1'11r\111·r wanlt'd. take Campu!> Dnve, Newporl offer excellent l>encr1ti. CURTAI.._. typini: & !ih '>kill-. Lile Mt-n•h11nd1!on1t. d1!>ph1) . lluu.wkl'CPt.'r. lJll' work & JANITORS owr l'X(>11n!>1on proJecl tn Beath. 17141 540·6080 and ton i: en 1 n t J t " hookkl't!l>tng Phone cx dor11c,l1t .i 1>pl1 J II Cl'>-. 1 ,c mi·al, ~Ion l"rr, L'oupll' J..)ays Apply m Comptl'11l•111-1\e c11111 orimi.:l' Co Oppor fur 6 Equ11l opportunity m~phereat A.._.D lh•r Only qualif1t•d i-alt.'h &i.crv1t•· 1; tuPM :t Gpm, owri trao:. f>c.·n.on Newport Dunt:!>, puny l.>end1t1o 1nclud111i.1 rii:urt' 111co111•• w1l11111 Ii employcr.m1r1h THEIROADWAY " per-.onl> apf'IY Must •, cla~ S~1l No exper il.i 1135 7206 1131 l~ck tt11y Ot. N 6 major m~H·11l 1111d d1·11 ~·~ 1''01 lll)Jll1> only call Laguna 111118. S1111 011'110 DRAPERY hJH' neat apl)eur.11H·l· & nt.>edcd 10 '>Offil' areai. _..._..._~ ... ,_....,_...__. t;tl Call or .1111,ly rn tJ46 l::iJJb1•tw11!H larn TRAHSMASK lreeway al El Toro lltl ~xpcr pref'd but wt• wrll pll'a!>Jn\ pcrwrH1l1t~ Top wal(rs profit shar llt1U.'>l'kec!>('r. tor •• few µcr!>On 31152 l'.i 111pu:; CORP. EOE · Xlnt l'<I bencf1l!> & .,,.: .•• '"~ pmgr:im & m<'entiw h d I M Jr ""t'" ne""Pt .. , .. rn On\" N"Wnt)rt I'' 11 1'1!11 tinw Ii :io to 12 30 . . tn11n you for II n..•rma· ,. ""' PU" 1·l.·1n L'•11· 1nlerv1··w r' a1 y u:.t have car • .,.: , '' ~ '· ' rr "'•11 N " I' I 1. ----nt t t ,.. workini: c·1>r1cls St•t• Br l'll , ' ,-' ,-ti-15 lS53 St•111orAIA to$11hr '71.t l 540-6080 1-:qtJ.il 1111 • n \l'J -.!>t Utc R t tH I '11 l'U!•I ion 111 our phu111· aht•r I PM 1:11tt· lntcrtkl>r l!iS75o portun1ty c:mirlo\o•i l>c\l•ltiµt·1 lfr1•epuon1st esauran •P Laguna Hiib .,hopptni; dJ .. i•IO!IJOO. Nuhors 97113862 HOUSl::KEEPF.RS Ei..ecSecy toS12K 111 I h II. 1'1Pnlal a~bl tu t·on RealEstateSales F /t tme C'ook. F t timl' l'Cnler ston· Xlnl work 1 Jd1ll.1t•, 2cl00 llarlmr _ -- :'\o exper net· F ·tr me lrvtnl:' Personnel Agenc) troll1•r 642 1121 litcJM•ien Wek:otM 1-'ood Prep & f''/timl:' Di:. mg t·ouo ~ 1•mplnyt.•c Bini. Co.,tu Ml':.tl WA.HTED DRIVER Gooll PJY &. bcn<, 4111!El7thCO!>laMe.-.a TRAMSM,.SK FREE J W hwa~her Apply in benefits Appl~ lo ~tort> SUND y OHLY Bayview Coov llosp, Su1tl:'22i 642·147 "" p J TIME , EEKS person. Muldoon~. 202 mJnJ.:t•I' :v!unlt'J Sct•n•t,ir.v. ~1111n s1ikn". A 2 -CORP. TRAINING Newport Ctr Dr NB Holl •w·•y . -, ~, .. l'"il, "' To tleh,·1·r Uaily Pilot o::is Thur1n <.: M ~~ " " " "' 111 for sml otc rn (' M bundl to R ""'· ••/\c L: 0 L, -640-4110 Mor.in Dra""ry Stun•, Cl> carn1.1rb. c: ,,.... ...,..., ,._ " r llrlv -.al 011\'ll 751 li892 qwr"• , o I t LABORER EVE Hew CClrffr 20 '<lores i.t>rv1ng So 1----~------4 "" Jll r ar.:e s a 11ou:.rkccper. \ lt(•ndanl tor drsablc>d Pl'r'>On 1'11 .... 111on~ avail p trml'. I ume. ll\e·in or out M/\RINEllAROWt\flE N IU!slaura11l CJhr uon wagon and H gool.I for lani.lscap111~ i·om. Exp !>ale~person nt•Nh'CI ew ProlfMrity Short Order Coob -S.c:wity Offic•n dn vmg n•cord Phnnc• l'i.111\ ~3 50h•-. I' T Gd uµpo r fut hJrd \dull!> 1411h m !>l:rndtllg. •Absolutely no prior Exper'd,graveyd 117 Sale!>Tr:i1rt1:t' Food f:..tub l Hcuriry rrrm M2 4321 and J!>k Jor &lo '1166 workmg tndl\ Full Ii ml' .illrJt'llH' l>t!r onuhlle'> training or experience Apply Denny·!>. lliOO s SI I , 150 ~Paid n1·t·d ... n·h.1hlt mvn & lldl'r; Sl:'cli:~ & wknd!> ti73 1080 "'hv l'llJO' 1411r 1111( with necessary Cst Hwy, Laguna Be.ich Base + car .. exp ot \\llffit·n 101 un1torml·i.I t::QuAI. k1t1'. ::O.t.irt ;it If,() J)t'r •Pt!rsonah.cl!d 1ni.lruc 4941660 ll•red It• s h.irp s 1•1r .,l ,Urll~ po:.1l1on~ 111 UPPOHTU'\IT'i llctalls contat•l l>Jlt L.indM'ili>l' lnslalll'r, mtn \ldnl11'oh C<'nll'r l11r tht· I ) r C"(per. must be able 111-.abled 171-l ) 1198 !J.'iil to 1n!>lall !>pr1nkler:-.. Maturl' wum.1n to pro\tdc· IO\C & cart· tor 111fo111 ;J days J week \I) homl' while mother wor kl> 673-6267 art 5 PM hr l'hrnll' &12« 321 :z:;o. lion ~turtl'r w well t-SlJh I ('o,..tJ Mc"J l''ull or EMPl,OVEK llctwl'l'll:I oo 5 IP~ •Proresswnal on lhc JOb ----------I food firm Call <.:anddct.'. p t 1 ml' R l' l 1r1• ct II l) lJ S 1-; W 0 H. K plant!>. lrees. seed & i;oo & Mu'>l also bt! w1ll..111g to 140rk hard Call 675·763:J. t\.la m ipml Ask for lraimng RESTAURANT 8-'8 1~. Uunnis & Dl'n wckoml' Phon1• mJ111 Equal Op •Uptoaor;.comm1s!>11111 OJ!> P<'r..onnl:'I ~t.'nrn· of ok 1·nllt'ct fur J <.'u~lJ WAREHOUSEMAN 1'Jck1ng & lite wh-.1• \\Ork Pll':i,unt. <·l«.ir-r working conds Paid \ ac ins benef1ls Start S3 25 CHORES Mon & f'rr 3 hrb da~ + ~1 hr, 15• mt. car 1\cc CM 646-8359 ,1fl 3 pm Emplo~l:'r •Choice or lop ol fin· JACK IH HWlltngton Beitch, 111168 M ~· ... ,I a pp l I:! l 3 I ' locallons. Bea<'h Blvd ~ 01~ Be your own boss \\llh .i THE BOX IUl-:AL P l TIME. h11usew1vei. & rollcgc J.(1rls w I car:.. OvN 21 !l :JOAM-12:30, Mon Fri 1-::am $80 to $100 weekly 1Cuarant1•l' S751 Mu~l ht• nl•at. personhhk & Land:.cape Supervisor. MAT U R!.-: WU MAN i-----•---- 3 p 1t 1mc lo wck•>llll' PAYROLL mm· yrs exper. mu:.l be newcomer:. & cont .11·t uble to !>uperv1se and In· merchants 1'1c>x1hll' hr~ P A Y 0 L L stall spnnklers. plant Need car. llll· typing. lrt.>el> & shrubs. also seed C ERK or ~od. Mui.t abo be will· _54_7·_309_:; l'i\RT Tl Mr: In I! Io work hard. MEDICAL EDP l'Xper. prd'o Will 57:;.71;:l3, <9am-7pm > Bock Ofc A.nistant tram rl ;cpplt1·an1 ha!> ''.n t' r ll et 1 r l.11r1 · ~ L:.111di;cupe maintenance. K111·he11. 979 11747 att full lime. 40 hr wk. Mon Ill.\ '\1 for apJ>()1nlml'nt !'Ti Newport Be~ch & Ilusy Nwpt HHh OB. ~lrong mjnual pa)'roll GYN offil'C. 1-:xpr'd onlv C'<J:H,·r or ulhC'r Jt'l'OUrll· need apply l'ka:.l' 't'nrl 1n1: l'\lwr 10 Kl'Y l)y resume to J\d 2311. uaily loud1 & litl' typing req 'd. Pilot. p o Hux 1.iGO. t\flpro-.: W hr., µer wk ln'lnc area 644·41!!~1 aft ti IFYOUDOM'T PM WA.HT TO WORK L•I ~-=r!lary Costa Me!>ll, CJ\ U21i21i 1\11ph-°'JJl1011al Sy:,tenb (.;orp -l:itll Urn·h St. N li. tNear o(' J\1rport> Equal Upportun1l) Emplo) t'r FULL-TIME. llll 11ft• !>alary tumnll'n!> Medical Ass1-.1ant Do ... 'T "t'\l>l'r. mm 2 \r:-. t.>>..· l:rology ba<'I.. oll1n• " ! IJl'r :\liiture woman. T'.> pmg, 1\1·11~ hH!> a J>('rfcd nr 963·5657. stcn Ii ll n.: & " 1 J v porl unity lnr men 548-22-17 14onwn <17 or oH•rl to [A•giJl 51.'erctarv. c:\P Nr ------ t•J rn extra t·a:.h as Orange Co J\1rport Medical Offtcl' I:! !'>vm. marl room hl!lpt·r~ e\ t-ry girl oCc 751-1831 typing. daily chart 1•n· Mon Tul'~ nq~hl 1n tnes 6446813 PBX A.Mwer Sen. AJI :-h1fls JVJ1I Exper prl'f'd . buL \\tll train. Wl:'ekend<; a mu:.l Call for appt :;:;1 7i77 EOE --------L.Ji.:una N1gud leCJol Secretory --- Exper IO P.I plaintiff MED. RECEPT. PBX Thi;. 1s an uieal 14 ,I\ for ~n C ITl :l.ENS. 110l1 Sl':W l \. J-.s . & '-''I I 111-.N J'S In su1111IL• 1111•11t 11w1r 11w11nw 1111 .1 1•·rrn p t1rn1• ha'" :"<o t•\pcr 11l't'dl'1l 1"111 1m rn1..U for IO('!JI 11111.'l'\lll'W t<ELL Y SERVICES IS:ll t.1542orl!:l:J 14·11 l·:quitl Uppor Empl11~ t•r ln. ... urant'P Lill' bkkpng I Man ofc tn Busy Dr. ofc l:.xµ. 0111\ L JI( H ch ::-. a I t' ll m Ht-nel It.. 646-390:1 lnl'll'>Ur:tlt' \\ cxp1•r '.';ct-d 1mml-d. -197-li!W LOT BOY Exl)('ncm·ed l;o.xJ dn' 1ni: re«ord :.. day Wl'l'k <'<>mµany b<.•nd1t!> !'!l'L' Wtl Krnetzcr at MESSENGER w11h '<lnl dn\in~ rt•t & 11wt1 n1r Paid milt••JJ.:t· 6t hrl~ wage C11arr1 :!O hr!> pl'r wk (';i II UdllllL'. 5 I !t IS fl 7 I Ii :1 ti ;, Profel>:.1110.il Mc1rtg.1l!L' Sl•n te·c~ ~Is & Escorts Masseus~s Female Top m•lnl')' Must have ear 631 21411 Motivators needed tu take uver managcmt•nt I l''P 1\ II s wt' r I II g s e r v I cl' oJ)t•ralClr lull & Prr Call RJ.'> 3561 --- PBX Operator Will trutn F llmf' I lpm 7.im l'o11tacl Maurine. :'liL•wporlt·r Inn. l IOi .J .1 rn ho re r H ti . N B G·l·I 1700, E(lE PLUMBERS DRAIMMAM WILL rRAIN W OWN TRUCK Apply 1J37 S Bn'>tOl S 1\ POLISHER PENSION ACTUARIAL SPECIALIST of p1t1me bu.s Compll'll' Nt>l'dCd in Dcgrea:.mg tra1n1ng 1f qu<1l1f1l'd Room Will train &i6·lli6 ~>2!1C>t.lnmt' MOTOR ROUTE t.rowth wrlhin ou1 group 1w11!>1on 111wrat1on µro '1111--. an oppor fur J llll,1llf1t•f1 l'Pr-.oll •" ,1 I' t• 11 ' 111 n a 1· I u .1 r 1 ,J I 'Jl''l'la h.,t l'rn wu-. 1·\ )111ch1nl:'Q' AsM•mblers. 1w1 111 ~r111111 clcl &nl'tl ~>me i.hop l'Xlll'I ncl' 1i .. 1H l1t pl•n!>Wll pl.in Slart 1mmed Call r>avl' \Jlu,Jt111n ,, c·om11ukr or llob!15i H7til. Dall) Pilot roull' 1n La1tun;i Heath & South LagunJ ,ii t crn1111n ... Mond,I\ throu.:h 1-'rtt.l,1\ pl~ !-.JturdJ} .ind ~1111 ctay morning~ )<1511 1111 ill'r m•J i::rti ... s 11rnl 11 11n Vurtr,1n1 11rogrJm 1111 n 1-: h .H· I. i: 1 11 u n ll & m.ith dci:n•1• ;in• ~enl'I al 11•q111rcmPnh lur the 1irn.111rn1 Bt>neftt:. ml'ludc lllt'tht·al dt·nt;il & t111I1nn rdund <.:onturl l'L'f'>Onnt•I IJcpl MACHINIST SSC1 Oo wsh dl·pc1-.1I n N qwrt-d Call b-12 ·1:121 .1'>~ 1 .B. en. nce<b Class A for Circulullon L1•J\1' M11chm1st for Bridgeport Name, J\t.ldrc·-.s. l'huiw Mill & 1-lardinge Lathe Cln:.e tolerance prel'1s1on ~um~er and M .ikl' ol work, 1-:xpcr req'd. Top Car Good for :.tudl·nt or hens. t:: 0 E 557-9051 ask retired person for Ron Adams. HURSE-LYN PRESS PERSON H.t111dl)' gr11wtnµ S&I. ~Cf·k'> 1nd1\ lo handle u 1 Pt'r"m ,.,hop fnr quick pnntin1: of formb on a 125U IJrcs:-Thorough l..1111141 ot Jilk lfl 15 "·'"'"' .1 a '1lu-.1 Call !G:l~I Shilt• :\lulu.ii ::O.a\ togs 4001 :\laci\rlhur 81\'d Newport Heach Equal Oppor Employer PRESS PERSON ® PACIFIC ffiUTUAL MAID & .vtamlenancc :HI Shift. 1"1llml· :;!l hl·rl Man for hie mainl. 1\pp-factl1ly Xlot hPn"' ly. Tr;ivelodge. o20~ w Bayvrl'w Conv 1111 ... p Coast llwy. N.8 :!055 Thurrn Av1· (''\l Full time ITEK & /\B Dick l·xper LaAuna lhlls locauon Call for appl t71<1) 586·3150 111() ·"C" port t.:'t•ntt•r Ur i'<t•wporl lll'ath Equal Opµor ~:mplO}t'r PRINTING t..tl J.SOS MAID wantt.'<i lull t1m1· or - lntc·ni.11 JUdilor 1 mt•il P lllllt." Seacllff ,\fotcl. Nursinq Attendants -.111• or.1ni:t· Cu ho.,µil.il Jlilil S Coal-l llw }. All !>htfts Tramtnl! pru &per. B1&siness Forms Collator Opr Should know snapout & 1·ont1nu11u~ forms Will runsidl.'r tr .11nec w some 1·nl~Jtor hat•ki;!round. S \ Jrt•a ol OranAe Co ~IM27 \\ rk " l't1nlroll<'I' m~t hl• La1tuna Bch 494-4892 ~ram for C<'rt Xlnt pa'.> & I t I t bens Bavv1C'\\ ('onv 1""'" a l'°(P ... I llllj.( un :\1anJj.Wment llos1>. :!05°5 Thunn ~l • 11.'.' r. l'por1., hurt~1·tb, MA. ... .o. r-r.R TR •t ... EES .u t t .ioal\ 'I' <'ii n •t·tm ""'-.;fl'.:; "' " C M 642 3!>0:i I'. t> I•. 11h,1t11111 ·r,..,1111111 .1\,nl I\ nall1Jow1dl' JC"l'll) <'O --- imm1."I Call.i•i:i llOllt'<t "ill teach you the· OfflceManager potcnt1JI -tHJ Jewelry bu~rne.,~ $251J 11 • Pro.:rc'>:il\l'. )OUnit Profl'.,.,111nab looking for J A.HITOR F ,1rl) hr' (k'(rhlt· 11 <L.i,., 1wr 14 k l•'"'° for :-tudl·nl ~I:!.> p1•r hr -l'lti 571)7 OPPORTUNITY knodc; often when you IC:>l' result Aelttng Daily Pilot Classified Ads to rcal'h the Orange Coa11t market Phone 642·5678 wk +-romm 'Jo 1•xp nee N B consulting firm tax :ihellt•r & retirement Will lrnin For .ippl l'all need!> d sharp out~om1t plan Call 1142 9513 fi42·516.1. 1nd1v lo take l'hg or l girl ----- 0 ff Ice . v a r I el y 0 I Proofnoder r /t MANICURIST respons1b1hl~. incl rt' Mun !Oam Jpm . Tues Needed r or bu~ y cept1on1st .. '"''ret .1r111I !JJm ll•1m. Wt'd 9 s. Frr fashionable salon m :-. IJ bkkPR & office mitml In !>am 11pm Must have ~xper a must.t'ollowmg div. mu:.l bl! mJturc. :-.oml' typrni: ability. pref'd. Apply m person. c11r1.>er onl'nlcd & h.l\t' Pie.is.mt wnrking cond!> 200:-.!ewportCtr Dr.NB hacl svperv1-.or~· l'XP Apply m pN~nn. Prn ----- -Thas ~s a chall('ng•ni.: ny~:.ivt'r. lfi60 Placcnlla MA.MUFA.CTURING growth pos 1t 1on \o\ ·• Av<'. c M Oran~e Co. firm needs rop1dly cxp11ndrn~ r1rm Polisher m Degreasing CPA &/or l.iw firm orrc· 1----------Hoo m . W 1l l tru1n expera+.VcryplN1sun1 PURCHA.StHGCLK 546·2001, Irvine. cnv1ronmt'nt. nm! pC'o Part time lmmcd of)t:n llave somethin_g_to--sc-l-I? pie. Gootl h1•nl•f11:> ml( rur inchv. dcsinng to Class1f1edads doitwell. Salary r11mml'nsur:1lt• work 3 day:. a wk. l Yr w cxper Plcai.r 'end rt' gtn'l ofr work preferably HetpWanhd 7100 H"PWcmted 7100 sume to Box 1110-1. D:11lv m p11rchus1ng or ac· ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pilot. P 0 8-0'< t51ill, t·ountt'lll Musl be l(ood INVESTMENT SALES f'rr~tr~1ou' se<'ond trust deed mveslme-nt (1rm I!> ::>l'Clunit an cxpl!rrl!nt'l:'d salesperson lo M.'11 prime Orange County rcs1deot1al loan~ Cos __ la_M_cs~ Cal. 92626 1·nmmun11·alor. Typing 50 wpm. rrting & heavy phont"(I Older lady. permJlll•nt pos1t1on Salary. pr1v rm & ba m exchdCU:C for hit' housekeep1n..: & ~1111111• -l!ll-9577 SELL 1dlt' rlem!> with a Daily Pilot Class1hc'<l 1\d l'all 644-33811 'lam 't1I Noon THE IRVIHE CO. 550 Newport Ctr Dr ..._ewpe>rt Bt'ach I-qua I OpJ>Or Emplo)'er 7100 Hlfp Wantotd 710 top notch professional or Sandwich & Salad A s :.emblero;, ~AM 9 JOA:-.t Must be ne:it. clean & dcitl<'rous $3 Per hr !!7!107<17 for apµt all lOAM. Lon s K1t<'hcn St>n l<'t' Sta Atll'rtdanl. hr 6421 Industry W JV, cxper d F\Jll or P llml' Wcslmtnsler · garuzation. Katella Realtv For details coll Un/a 831 -1003 493-0442 Mow Hlrin9 CCMttet-P~ Apply. Artv Slalwn. 17th - ddrvine.01 WA.TCHMA.KER Seamstreu. St!n1ee Stal1on Allen danl, cxper'd . Day & J::ve~ Full & ptt1mc. Ap ply. Shell Slal1on. 17th & Tu a~i.1sl eng1 nel'r w 1devrlopment of dt• llc;ile prt•c1loc IO!>lrumen lat1on for oil f1l'ld (~111o<l work111g conds + c·o Recept1ontsl. exp. (I Med ofc Mst type & lraru;<'nbe. 633·6060 We have 1mmed1alc openings available for Counter Personnel on all stufls. full and purt time Please apply in person Apply in per:.on 111170 Euclid St. FV 5:;7.5220 _ ~net1t;. Top pay. EOE Sl•I'\ ll'e Sta Attl•ndJnt Sc1enlfl1(' l>nthng Con Ir VIOl'. NU Hecept 1Sec'y Heal 1'~tate knowledge req'd License pref'd. Re!>1dl·n· llal real estate ofl'. Full time lnqwre964 2::i7ti t020ceanA.n Hwm~on Beach Seamstress. E'>.pt'ncnced Siub & Sall COVl:'rS 1-.:x l't'llenl wa~e!> & in :.urant't' ht-ncllt!> Lo< al l:'d m NB 645-4:;()1 f lirrw ,\pply. Cht·Hon troli. Nl·wporl Bead1. l:!.'ll 1\1 C:it llwy L.il:un.1 557 OOSl ask lur Ron Lit U.'.IC'h lit• RECEPTIONIST f'1ume Mon·Frl. Must be per sonable. well groomed. enJOY meeting the public Phone exp pref'd. Full co beneht!> Apply. Pennysa,er. 1660 P lacentia. CM E .0 E 18462 &.och Blvd ~onhoch l::qual Opportunity Employer M I'' RN For fEENT> doctors &'<'. g1rl rn. 9-1. 5 d)S, for Ul..-.urance & investmcnl firm. l\ pmg & ,gd s~·ak 1og \IOICt'. $4 50 hr &W-5780 or 6-10-1752 office, 41·2 dys wk 9 5 30 Secretary. for law oft· s.52·8250. 552·4933 P T :.um mer hi:' Ip. ~d Sc.>n 11'1' 'tat1un allt>ndl•nt. t•,p.-r 11 ~nutty ' L 1Hvn it. ~:!Ill 11.irhor £\hd. c ~l ::-.en MJ Help necdc<J 1m m e d M u ' l b 1• 1 11 Oa\o nlJ?hl -.hrfu. avJ1l Full or p t. Apply 99(1 i-: C:.t 1114' . ;-.. B R~ept. Tme S600 SALESGIRL typin~ & shthnct Expcr TINMISSHOP ootneel?!>s.!'118 6445040 'it'Pll'C !-ta Attl•nd CdM. exper or w1ll lram Set-rrtary.Adm1nistrat1H• 1-· tr me l''<Pl.'r ti. lttt• Mui.t be F 1T M axtnl'. duLre~. w adVt'rtt!>ml>{ & me< h l knnwled!ll' App Attom.y's Ofc! Sharp careensl 14111 ex- l'l:'I w SU<'Ce:.slul firm of fenng super adv opply Call V1ck1c. !Mii 1211!1. I>enrns & Denni?> P1•r!>Oll nel Service ol I lunltnJ.,'lon Beach, ltH68 Beach Blvd 640-417:? 1·op.> "'ntrni? back~round I~ 2.500 °"l'14 pon Bl, CM .---------·I l\Ot.'rl to .,,jl t 1mml'd c,111 Kl'n u," 1 ... 7">1 1841 RECEPTIONIST (Weekends Only l lmmed. opening for re rcpt to work m bu!>y re;il estate oft Mu!>l bL' personable. able to hao die pressure or extrl'mt' I} busy phone:. & hav1.· accurate typmi.: Please call &l-1·338~ 9am 'trl Noon THE IRVINE CO 550 Newport Cenll'r Ur Newport Ucath EqualOppor EmplO}l!r Remodehn1o:. all lradei. needed. Develol)('r Ron Tayb15'19·1186 499-3922 SALES GIFT SHOP PAHTTIM E MARRIOTT HOTEL Wl· are sct•k1ng a 1wopll• onentt.'<i per:-.un ubk lo work rtcx1blt• t•v1•n1r11-: hours Apply 9am noon Mon I-Tl. Personnel 000 Newport <.A-oter Dr Newport Beach Equal Opp 1-:mplyr m r SALEStllard"' arl' I:;xpr pref. F time App ly 1n per!>on Crown Jlardwan• 3107 E Coa!>l ll"'Y· Cd M SE:<'rctar) EXEC SECRET ARY To The Prl:'s1denl llt:al est mveslment ltrrn fur t•tlUl'dlOri. Good l'arl'l'f nppor & Vt•ry 1 halll•111-:1ni: Xlnl l) p inj.(1sh rl•q'd f'.:xt•t wn ex per a mll!>l ('a II Etlcl·n at640-0l23 SECRETARY I C..1lalleo~mg pos Joh ha., V<Hlel) 1nl'lud lilt' pt'rsonnel work Sh KO, typing 60 lr\'mC area Call tor appl. :>40 7~ 1:-:UE ~el ret.ir} lnno~ all' r pcr.lln St>lf -.tarter '\o .,h rt•r1 ti (' .i II Mr!> lllll(ertiill 1211 S.c:tttary /R~cept. -For :"-I B clrn11-,1 1\1'1·ur R.E. Sales SA.LESLA.DY typm1o: & hl1· hkl..vii)! '" One or S. Calif. lcudmg Part time. cxclu:.l\'e c1'd Xlnt working comb bldrs and developers IS fashJOnS 1803 WP~l CltH & !lay 6-12-4612 in the process of In -Dr Newport Beach. ex ---- terviewlog for their re per ne<' SECRETARY s ale division. We a r e SALESLADY-For ladies An 1mmt'c1 opening tor seeking amb1t1ou:.. UR· bouliQUl' 10 N 11 l',x senetarv wrth cx1· sk1lb grcss1ve, hcenst'd 1n per 'd 67 ;1.8530 . C.:on:otrud1un •''<Pr d1v1duals who hovt· a ht•lpful Call NJnn po:;1t1ve mental attitude lOAm·GPm 752· 1904 • and a real de:.1re for sut· Saleslady for JCW<'lry -.-------cc~s. but who understand store. ~1 or 4 dJYJ "'I( s <' <' re ta r Y r / ' u u n i.: that their goals and ours Refs reqwred. 548.3402 b1oml'd11-:ll roq1 Sell tan only be reached by -., l a r t •· r w 1 i: o o cl hard work. We w1ll lram. SA.LESMEH·Y ACHTS !>Ccretanal & nr~Jn1za l'all for 1nterv1e14 :\ton Prefer experience rn t1onal bkllls 'l\Jltnl!. !'>II f''r1 9AM 4PM • .isk for brokerage & sailboat~ wpm '(lnl growth ,...,_ Buzz, 960-4361 Commission onl). Kona potential & bcnl!l1h "'H R. E.Sales BUSY & NEEDING Manne. 675 1403 631 185.'>l''<t l:J Salesperson. ex!>('r -want S<>_creUiry l:'d for wet!>wl & sports Expenenced fmmf'<1i;1h• clothing. FtT CJll eve;. l>pcninJ: C1~mpl'1111v1· IA5 7207 '\al.iry. Or ( t y . ;11 rJH•rl SA.LES REP Fee Paid. Growth l'O ba!>ed 1n Orani.ie Co Estab acct!> $10.500 + ('()mm Xlnt potent. Call Jeanne Ros!>. 540·5001 Snelling & Snellmi.i of Newport Beach Agency. 4340 Campus Dr Al!>o Fee Jobs .irca Call Jn)lllllt' 557 jJ29 Secret:inal lr\loe manufat·turini.: rnmpany wanl'> J '<'If slarlt•r With good o;krlh Interest 1n~ Joh I t.2<! llrown1ng . In. C'J Bon!lnza Fan~ Uruque Homes of Mesa Verde 1s "phigged into" a relocat10n r efer ral servtce t.hal has created a demand for more salespeople. We are busy a nd need h e lp ! Ex· perreneed or n ew salespeople may apply. Attractive (antiques) or fit'e & top qu;iht' 1peo pie> associates to work wath. Contact Sondy1------ SECY /OFC HELP Shipping & Ht'('l'l\.1n g Lot:. 01 hea') ldt1oi.: Mature l't'r,011 1'11~1 <1 :>lt.~a Stationer!>. :!'rn I~ 17th St. l' :.1 li JO a Mon thru l''r1. Apply 111 1wr~nn Wl2 ShipfRecei•iftCJ Clk Orange Co ba!>C'd 1•0 needs deJ)t.'ndablc l)l!r!>on fam1har w1UP S & u1r lulls of ladini: Must wo1 k w min of superv1s1on & po!>S('SS a valid Caltf ilmt•r. lie· <:all Sl·11•n trrrt· Onlllng C'nntrob. 5S7 ~151. a:.k. for Daw Mu-.queda Shoe Sale-. pcr,on. exp. full t1ml', top t·omm app I> rn pr'n Paul Allan Shoe:. 9 Fa~h1on 1:.land 0,:8 Switchboard Opr. Full & p I Will tr.Jin ~lu:.t bl' rl•hJ. & abll• 111 work t'\l!'o wknds Ph 645 7:»5 Tt>achl'r!>IGO\' l Workl•r-. Prop 13 Concernin1t you 1 Sl<i r t p /trme bu .. rnc-.s w long rani:e Hl'lllltv For appt call 751 692/i • -----Teacher, prt• ~t'hool. September Call t>V•'~ · :;40 52\!l ---- TeachC'r ... dl'Stnni: :.UJl plement al rnt'Oml• Ncl'd Jggrc!>!>IVt: leudcr:.h1p potential Per!>Onal Bu!>tnl•s:, Management !If:);! 122:; TB.EPHOHE SA.LES Tm'd OfTh1• Routine•• This JOb •~ for you 1 (.':.Ill Us Now \t 833-80•5 Time L1fr L1brane' Equal Opp lo;mpl) rm'' TELLER Level headed & cheerful lclll'r needed 111 t tnlL' Contact Mrs C.:roxon 111 '1rs Lee 6'"1·"161 Im renal Savings & Lc)an 5SO N1•wport Ctr Ur, N II EOI-: ~L !-'/II 0 rlowsk1 or J im Wood a t 5'16·5990 SALES/Tennis Shop p l1ml' 121 Pos1t1ons 10.2 & HI 848·0666 Suturdays 10:31J to 5 30. Tow Truck Driver!> t''< Apply lsl11nd Tennis 301 ------.---• per'd. 'fop pa) i\1>ply. j1l~~l~~~ p~'!r a 30 day ad in the DAILY PILOT SERVICE DIRECTORY DOITNOW1 642-5671 Marine Ave llalbo;1 •S.c:,.taries• G&WTowmg, 1000 lr\lnc _eland ~5-3113 <M Off The Beach'•• Ave NB642 12.)2 l\tan~ Acctng C1ks. ffl·n ------STOP!! Ofr&.Typiststo$ISK Travel Mtent Minimum <I Take lime to relax and Employeri. Pay All Fee!> yrs intcrnauonql trinel shop at home It's simple Liz Rt•inders Al!Cllt'Y a~coc•y c~pt:nerkl• Call w Ith 0 a 1 I y I' 1 Io t 4020 U1rc•h St. Ste 11>1 Mr-. Dryer 549-2246 Classified Ads. And 1r NewJ>()rt flt'Jch 8338190 CombinotiOft you have something to C.all (or i\ppt/E.oitab '64 sell. call a friendly TYPESETTER / Class1 r1ed Ad V1i>or Jl ---- WORD PROCESSING> ~ure )Our Cuturf' w 1011 quaht) ffrm i-;xper on Xerox MO Up to $1200 DOE CJll :\llchele Kuhn, 540-5001. Snt'llm~ & Snell 1ng ol :\cwporl Bl!al'h Agency. 43.tll Ca m11u:. Dr WORK AT HOME Phonl!sall:':. 7 11.im SJ(). 52....'>() ..............•.......• 8005 •••..••.........•..•••• A:\lEHICt\N <>Al\ Largc-.l Scl1·r11on in Orange Counl \ • Stl'wart Roth 1\nt111ue:.: 7!i0 E Oyer Kd_ S./\ (al Nwpt Fwy t 751-13922 J ONATHAN'S ANTl<.!UES WHOLESALE ONL V ENGLISH SHIPMENT ON SALE NOW. I 18335 MT LANGLEY FOUNTAIN VALLEY 968-1.331 ANTIQUES <1 1 W II 0 L 1-; S A I. i.: l'Rl<'ES 6.0110 :.11 It 14Jrl•housr p;11'kl'cl " 11\el 5')1) tnkrCSllOJ? fH'"' 0~1k I htna t•ah $l~I Mai hi" w,..,h.,t.111l.I S1i:1 r.u14l'"l pr11·l·-... 111 ~oulhl'rn l'al1I (';i,h ' Ch1•C'k'>/ Vr:.a I M (' ,11· l'l•Plt.'ll. OpPn 1'Vl'rv1L1~ 10 11 . Come 1n a11•l •brOW!>l' L•1bl M1111· Mercanllll' Jiw:IO llan d1lll·r C1rl'lt• I" V. (7141 !lbo-1 2511 ....... WHOLESALE rO'fH 1-: TRA DI': Jonathon 8ixby's 2!111 Crod1ly W av Santa Ana. Ca ~o 2!111 JONATHAN'S ANTI OU ES Wholesale Warehouse Clearance- Sale 20% OFF Now s hipment arnvmgsoon. lOAM WEDNESDAY June 28th 18335 M1 Longley (off EJl1sl Foun101n Volley C161-t331 i\ot1que piano, refinished Sl95 or will exrhunge fur ,1 rmo1rc also church ~-5678 SECRET ARY TYPIST H.a.. Welftted 7100 H .. p Wcmttd ~ 7100-'\In\ opportumt) lor~lt I':\ p .. r I I' n l' 1' d w It h _Jlll_w_._t _'a_l_I S36_..(_I00_7_ kn014le<t~1· of 1·oltl lYPt' Appliances 80 IO ~-r ' t ,1 rt "r C u st om t• r .•........................... , •........... , ... F \ c· , .. 11 t' n l t• o 01 r> .• n v • • • •• • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • •• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ....................... TIM City of HMntington IMch Efi¥kry•••t & Tr°"""9 A.cllRW1traff011 ~" OpHl•CJI for 'IC"r\lt't• ur coni.ln_l('t1on b al' k ..i ro u n 11 he Ip I 11 I <.iMd l}pmi.: a must Xhlt .... 11 .. ry ~ ht•neftl!> 752 lti6C) 11sk for Lynn ht>nef1ls Apply lwlwl!t'll F R G HT I)/\ MAG 1-: I> 11''1 & ~PM. MondlJY H01'POINT SALE. 330li thl"OW{h l·rtdJV Ai,k for W Warner nr Harbor Prc•rrr lnct1v1duol \\Ith ~oocl investor ha'c .ind ltt<al ~:.i.tat<' :.ale!> license fh1o; 1s an 1''<<'!'(llrnMI opportunity for on fn rlr\'1du:il with ~111·r1·s~ rn Securities Sales and ll>Okmg to C'llt!'r a growth oriented lodu11try w1thoul thr <'Onccrn or morket decHm•. 1-~xcellt'nl c<>mm1~~1on Sl'hedule permits un· limited personal Arowth end 1mmed1at~ lo- <'Ome Prrs1•nt lnvl'11tmr 1L Counselors eorn o minimum uf J~.llOO 00 nnnunll)'. Our loeni. nre written to ollrllcl !SoPh.tr>llcated '"' c-.tor' "'l'ktnll ,,.run• tnvt•:1tmcob1 w11h \ 11•1tl!> av1'r111t1nl( 12'i NEWPORT EQUITY FUNDS, INC. 620 Newport Center Drive, Suite 211 Newport Beath, Catifomla 92660 NURSES NEEDED RN 'S. rcu. CHARGE $102 SlOS RN'S, ICU. $92 $98 RN'S Floor Sft0-$8.5 LVN'S $.52-$60 /\ides & Onlcrllcs $42-$44 All Shirt~ N!'l'rl<'rl F'or llO~Pllol St11Cr R~liet Work hour' c'it h11<1p11uh ol \llllr choir«' Free Malpractkf'. Group 1nr1urunre avallablf' with c11ll<'OUnt Cor \\Orkinl( tor Wt·~lchrt Skill 115 ~t'1111mt>nt lr'll~ 1111• ~'""" Rderencc, & "" pendnbrht) .1 mu~I lll't1llh rle1mincc re q111rrt1 C't>mt• In ~on n1r111v !1 ;; W csldtff Nuric~ fic(.!lStry 161; West cliff Dr. Ste 212 Newport Beacti. 631 0610. 752·!ll18 Landscape Moillhftmtc• Tralnlftg 'through the use ot clasm>0m & on the job ltalnlng portidp11nts learn the use o f equipment , tools & 1•hem1<'als nttt'llsary m l and5<'11pe 1nstullut1on ~ molntenanrc ope r ations. The program h 40 hr:; 1wr wk ror UI Wkli dutlnlol wluch the part1C'1punt 11. pmd $3 :JO pt•r hr. These arc Ct::TA lundrO po!lltl<'fl!I & requltti llunt1og1on Uco<'h rr!!ld1•ncy & IS wk$ pnor unt'm pfo> m<.-nt Applt,•atioos will b\' nrccplt'd untll :JPM 1-'rrday July 7t h 3t tht' ~;mploymcnt & Training Center.~ Mnin ~t. II B TYPISTS Otnd~ulll'trN Santa Ana. 979·2921 OltAN(: E COAST ' ' • DAJl.V PILOT •Washer&, dryers. <'lean 3:_1() W Bay St . late mode Ii., yr guor Costn Mc•s;i SIOO uv . delivered tA1u11I OppMtunlty King's 636-2840. M IC & SECRETARIES ame Show Winner-JO" Do you need extr:.i monry Ty p 1 n ll . l s o pall e self cleanin.: elec. oven & enjoy v11rirty. 1.-t'l lhc manui1t·npt, no h urr y. (Wblrlpooll. $500. !\take (n.'<'dnm & ncxibdHy or Call 642 9846 or 645·4757, offor Gene ::i::i9·1916 wurktn11 trmporary us aft 4pm 1---------- F.mployrr sotnments of your 1·ho1r1• voc&do. 12 cu rt Admiral work for yl'lu Cull 1m· Tvpinll &>rv1et'. will de· Rt:fr1 ~. $125. Work:. m1-d111lt•ly h'er t:all 496 3G34 uny perfectly s::i9-807A €0~ of flc e • day 0 overload 'l'yp1st1n•ct'pt for d('~\111 ore wuutcd. •'XJX'I', I' 01 • 557-0061 l,.l' <'rcllt;.u 0683 :1723 Utrch ~l. ~ B 1)'J)1,t. nccurute 10 wpm F.qual Oppor Employt>r G1•rn-ritl olc i.lulrei. (7141 ~~l NEW Ward's Convt'rtoblr 0 1shwa11hor. Co!'t S200. Sacnrtec Sl90 ~ 8904 Ma)'taA w;1~h1•r. 11:\rO h lll06, Ktnmorc dryer, l moi. old Both white ~ 1821 " , I DB DAIL.Y .,IL.OT • Wlfdn..O..y Jlm• 28 1978 loah & Marfft• , ..... Sall 9060 ..... ,...nt ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~me" 101 ~,_,wilue IOSO Mhc.almr..a 1010 ....................... Qal 34 i.lo~1t· 4 gas t'n~ w.cr1 9150 •• •• • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 4 wt.e.t Ori .... 9550 Trucks 9560 v .. 9570 •••••••••••••• ••• ••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••• •••• G1M~ 90 I 0 ,11.J\ ' b ....., Jeru. sp1.11. strm JI . 4'*' toldl.pol vvkl l H lNki \,.a~ hu.k ll lkd ~. Dt.1;1gnt'r Ldtml·r" LI\ ••••••••••••••••••••••• anchor. ROF. din1th) ~ ~lal tone.I $1M l'h comlortJbll' uphol d rm Brkrml $400 011 ~or,1 \lrnollt n,•w " 1>l.i~l1l' rull rus-h1 on~ Supt>r Tv.o ·m RU Yanklhti:. $:lOC.I euch 6U rha1r SlU 'rulpturf'd lble t6S Lg Ant rh.11r dmi:h) S7.> cond. 87S-0921 Olne lone l'Pl i.:. approi1 $300 Bdrm rum $M1 s.tUO I J.:unJ 11111-.831 !l'J.lli 17 cu ft l'up1wr < olc-r I~~ .i.nb ~ >d ~·3901 AlllJQUt.'~ S2U up tldbrd & 1''r1g1rl1urr Xlnl rond aft .i spn·ud S'l~ Slt'i<pt•r ,0ru loots, Maint...ance/ • f75 979 42117 II' La"' !>Un l) Pt' ~0(11. $~ !');il & SUn :15 332 5«-tlce 9020 St'anl Wa&ht•r & dry,·r l:I iim While' i.tniw \\•hd Evt>n1ng c~n)On Rd ••••••••••••••••••••••• )f'S old, .:d run.: rnnd. w cushion buck 1 Orex CdM Merhu111<·al or fo:ll.'rtnral Santana 20 1183 "Hum rrungb1rd". F race. curr class champ Ot>liv Apnl ·n. Hardly Obl'd 0 ' 0 lrlr, Owner .1nx1ou~ Wkdy eves. 213/578·0'J6.\ 14hl S50 eu 640 7549 ell good cond 2 Black PHOME M "'TE Probll'ffil>? Call f'n><I al wrought iron occas1onal "" 646 4005 Grnnd Uank:. Columbia 2 l Sailboat J(i ' fo'r1i;11l111re deluxe 19' chr:. w rust fabric w warru11ly $79 c•xpt>rt Refcrenrei. Big. fast. comfortable \\Ot'ado. fr:!>l>l pro(lf. t'Ubluon:. IW1Mlti87 w remotr SHll 750 :mn daysailer Open cockµat Gcm1n1 retrig $250 n.u'erUrown lo~M__Jn• ,,..< .,.,.,7 '"'" -.. un ~ seats 8. Xlnt bay crw:.er '"""°'' COUCll w 1h1dt•·a 1.wd 2~--1 k Eqlapmtnt 9030 &ableoff shoreboat F'1 ' Ulut'. C:rcal i.hapc """ts king sl/.l' I c n"w. ••••••••••• •••••••• •• •• a.LI & lbo d N Westinflhou11t• rost lree 494 2871 • mattress, box sprinf.ls s s ou ar . Wl)l rcfng. harvl•st f.lOld. top __ ___ w/frames . s125 t'lll'h Marine Battery Sales ~UI) avail. Must sell for frzr Sll!!>.9605286 Oblbed&framc lC<k!t S2SO> 548·021U aft Special: KO 2 15 ump onlySl650.499-'1940 $.50 6p Sl 19 95 Genc-ral Manne Tappan dishwa~her, xlnl 640_2017 m. Batteries 631 .4343 22' Columbia Llalley rond sso Arter l\PM. 5 dwr stl filc. smglc l.;t>d, Model. Honda outb<>ard. 5SHl856 _Geroge Sat. 8055 tude-a-bcd. lge ceram1<· 19' Tandem axle boot VHF radio, $-1400. !213> Bicycles 802 ~·~~·~~~··;~·~~~;;;~~~ ~~ All under ~ ~l~t ~rrw~c~170\s as .:7·:~kson 29. "u1wr ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~'OOds. furn. Isome anh· Irvine Coast <.: l' Golf FOR SAL~ M/\RINt: boat, wheel. spin. OlJn) quesl..dtshesappllanres. Memberi.hap l'rin• ENGINF; Palmt•rPti0.4 xtras, $23.500 P.P John Cycle & Company GRAND OPENING SALE many 1tem4'. come ser Negotiable $3G 1537 ryl 30 hp. Vt•r) ~ood b75-0060. Al 6-tO it27 Fri June 30 July 5 1115 --rond 100 hri:. $950 Ph Ber h h 1 rt' L n N B Mo\ mg S.ile lle(nj{. S20 631 3133 tlrvmc to Highland to Bar & 2 :.lools S'.15 Qul•en • Oxlord1 m.ill. spnngs & frJllll' loah, PowH' 9040 9i() Olk H:h·l'l lOUl'h & ••••••••••••••••••••••• Moving Plant Sale. all kmili.. lrg & sml, lots or 'e" & usro b1kl''>. lnf.l 1mpat1enl 's & hangm~ 1!•~1·ounts IOspds $97 SO planll> CH EAP' 642 71164 Beach Cnasen lti26Santa Ana Ave CM Fode Mopeds . MOlO·Cro!>S bikes parts· 'lH1 Sherwood Barstools, JCCeS!> Hepa 1 rs all lablei., chairs. c lothes. make>s Duy i.ell trade lamJJb. masc. Sat noon. tOnl>!gn Sun. 2-170Nt::WPORT BL CM Liv r-m-f-ur_n_._c_os_l _S800 __ . ---•64•2•7•9•10 ___ 111 sellmg for $400. Refng, upnle freezer, 2 bdrm IO\.~eat $150 coHe llJI & endtbl Si SO ca Mis<' itl'm~ Ii 132 Kult·l.lu L.n =r llB Sora & mutl·hang loH'i.l'ul. J• Ton :11r cond . china closet, sofa , Galfrr Sal t It' r oven bro 1 I c r . •I burner blln stovt• w hood, :.lainle!>S SlN'I dble bar s ink M1~c items. 540·556S art II G1tane600.S135cash. suites. blk & v.ht TV, Pottery kiln. 12 t'.f Cull aft 8pm dmc-tte set. swmgset-w1rum & pipe ssoo IJr Welknrft WttbndH 21' "' 233hp motor. hkt> new cc1nd. full) l m t•n•d ~It>:. I l'rat'\'d lO 't•ll Sll.'100 A'k tor M.1t·k 00<! 77118 or 9G3 1025 \'\ l'" Bay boat, Hf La~trakc Class1t. Cray l /B Xlnl. SZ.495 it rade 759·0260 FOR SALE Santana 20, i:83. 'llurn nungbird · 11:.ir<lly u&ed F rare Curr tlds~ champ. 0 U. lrlr Owner l.IOXIOUS Wkdy l'\.l'~ 213-578-0'J6.I • • Coronado 25. 3 'a1b 712 Honda ¥.:· super dt>an w i:.h p. Mu:.l !.ell 64..5·0719 645-265!1 Catalin a 22. super clean. pop top + enclosure-, custom cockpit cushions. gaJley. alcohol s tove. 150 jenny, $.5,400. 846-5840 '74 Hobie Cat 16 w / trlr & box . Gd cond. $1500. li45-4106 554 .3423 ~'Ito OOJS 11 a 73 Honda 3511 S1·rambler run.-. ~ood. $4~. Geor~l' SSl 1?S7 '74 HONDA XR 75 Excellent C.:ond 9688407 Motor H~s. Sale/ Rewt /StorocJ• 9 I 6 0 ..•••.•................ Rent a 1!17i to;\l•t'uta\I' Mo lo rho fll l' or M 1111 motorhoml· lrum lkrh f'rll'dlandt.•f t:,olf •HI) Of these numb .. ·r-. 898-6777 537-7777 828-8888 R'EIIT 23· fircbJll. sl'I( <:ontaincd I.uh <tf \Ira:. &I!):!~ For lknl <!if P .in• Ar rov. .111 . .il•n <·ru1:-t· "ll'rt·u nu & 111· .IUl 6.'.M)-t!~ NEW '78 JI l'Jl'l' ,\rro"' Slpi; 5 Load\•d Wt•l•kl) n•nlal onh ti ll) :!136 days. t>4G 6.'>9.S cH·~ TRAD!-: 'ii T Hird for CQUll) Ill M1n1 Motorhomt• t>lti ·-1664 1978 Monaco motorhome. 440 en~inc, l'a~l> la1>c deck. cab & 1 oof u1r. Onun l(Cnl'rJtor, ll'ss than 5.000 m1 ~an~ other t•Xt ra~ :Sl7 ooo 581 3399 53+i 9452 new ' P 1c:n 1 t' lb 1 & best offer 646·35.\0 benches. lawn r hrs. BBQ ------ Cameras & J(nll. pictures. plants,·CB radio . .Coax. :int~·nn:i. 1975 24 • Re Inell Segdan Bndge. OMC 225. xtra dean. dual s tation. VI-IF. dl'Plh finder. bail l:ink. many xlra~ Pr1rerl to ~· Clipper marine. 1975. 29' 0\ crl,1nd . .,fp:. Ii. F G. VHF. rath . knot Sl.'itl wt< Equlpnwnt 8030 bar wmo stooli>. cam pang S75 all. lad1e" gcilt clubs ••• •• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • e q u 1 p t ' 6 3 F o r ti & hag $30, pool r U('' SS Miranda 3Srnm l'<tm<'ru Ernnolint> \an. fi ·l'YI. 9f.S.M21 w len~. ,\ml•ncan opl1t·s S6SO Lotsofodthdn•nds' \11cr~COJ)l•!;-'I( 7206 1721 f\lll\'rtOl'I 1\\l'. CM fi42-0386. 9-5pm Cats 8035 - ----- ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ 8060 Ext•rl'tSt h1cvrl\.' SW 5-111 :.?Ti:J Jrter lil':\1 ffi(IV\' ~st off@r. HARRISON'S SEA RAY BOA TS 3101 Coa:.t llwy • U Femalt•, llC\'r kittens 8 ••••••••••••••••••••••• .... ec-ks old. SS l)(J ea<'h ~organ quarter gelding ti 547-31112 yrs gd recreational Eat nulnt1onally Supplt• 631-2547 ment your life "'1th ---------· SUNASU \ 1tam1n::.. horse w ieven tempera minerab. herb:. h1 ---------· Do'J5 8040 mcnt S600. 842-1755 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 644-4627 Golden Rctrae\•er pup 1---------- Pll.,, Al\C: Field & ::.how Alfalfa leafy hay $5 85. pct Shots, wormed. horse feed & supplies, r.osed w TLC X Int d1i.p . free dellve>ry mJ1 -125 1561 O'Kfffe's Feed & Tock Gulden Hctrat•\'l'r pup Pll',, Fl•mall'. SIS ~l(j:J 7fi52 AKC r\•g tilk L<ib pup~ Shiu t~lll 4tf.JU ,; rt ;l .lo En1?hsh Bull dog~. 1\1\l' :1 males. 5 f<·m I f!Jrt• wht male Call:;IU 033:! ,\l\C r<'A Dobl•rman 254it t'kwport Bhd CM lacro~s from Orungc Count) fair 1 645 56llti Jewelry 8070 .....................•. DIAMONDS t 08 Carat GIA appr:11M•d ~1400. w1 ll sl.'11 for Sl!j()(J. Man s 7 cluster of tJ ca t 3 01 tot:il >. Appraised S8900. sci I for S.\900. .\94·9921 puflb 71 Ch 1n last 6 ~l·n :\'!Jlc~ Sl75, F(•mJI C~ Sl90 546 28.111 ssr. 8!!52 ---------• Frff to You 8045 ...........•........... llob1c• lnsh Settrr 11011 h rnonlhs. hou!>t'llroken Lo\Hbk 1-'rl'l' to i.:ootl homt• r.r.1 ;mo GEMS PRI YATE ESTATE 2sc*tairH t111ltl Hlnr Gl•rm Shep Appraised $24,975. nu\. \l'r)' Jllf JCl hi\ ;1 111, •• h. ... brkn Xlnt"' I.id,. ~I for $8,000. Bl~ :i.">2 0038 protein 49-1 4736 Garage door. 15' w1dt. xlnt conl.l $65 anclud hardware 962 9731. Newport Rea(·h 1\thlctn· Club Member:.hrp SIUO 675·9626 Bab\ 1tl'ml. ,,1 rollt•r l'~ir seat, <'lolhl''> Tr,111\'r hllth. ·ltH 1!121 Make Clffl•r S1:1. lwnl" 111111 chair~ & 01ninl! IJhl1• lnl't'd work I l!li :ilk!) MlscellaMous Wc..ted 8081 ......•.............•.. Would hke to bu~ a re asonably p r ll td tent trailer to <;let-p 6 8. will also cons1dc-r n•nl1nJ( 5.\7·3182 Will buy u:-ed l'arpcnll'r and mE-chanic tuob Jnd clC 979 !J635 ti4tsica:I Instruments 8083 ..•••••••••....•....... Ro~er., i P<' drum !>l.'l t-::1. cell rond Mu~l :-l'l' SS;)(I Firm Ste\ t' 752 li.q67 - l1t.·au11ful llgl•r :-.ln l>\•\I lcm R wks and hn llu!fy f.!ray fem play ma It'. 53+i·K2M ...... 't fl I · Offic@ F-umitutt & wnt e aw ess Marqws Equipnwnt 8085 Other iJemS aU On l.11~clY H·ry playful kit · Oistreu sale. ll·n. lxix tramtil ln ·mt. By appt. Only :">S!l ·l-167 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Oivert·A·Call at 'z pnt•t• receives & forward~ your phone calls. Ncarl> new Only $600. 75!.Hllll l 1\sk ror Smith or Haa~1-. SEA RAY BOATS Now Open Until BPM 7 Days a week ONCE A YEAR CLEARANCE Sav@ S6,370. :lO Sporthnd,l.lt• twin \'!l's. lnm tall!>. clcctrac· refnj<l & i.tovc. doL·k "'d" puw1•r. -.hO"'-Cr. 200 gaJIOn fU('l, ffia ll) l'Xlrao; 1 only. Stork :i632 Sove $3,532 24' 1-:xpre~s Crw~er \It lrlr. elL'<'lnt· n•fnlo(, rlork side powt•r. tnm ldhi. \\ 1pc·rs. 100 A<• lion I ut•I. loaded l onh Stot•k ::t);ll 1i73 '-o. d1•Jlcr~ pll.'.l'>C Save $3,245 :i.t Cudd) Cahan VII. trlr. loaded Rt•atl) lo r1sh. f1s hl!rml'n'!>-,Jchghl Onl} l)ne Stock 115;;.1 Save S 1,893 20' fiunabout. VI:!. trlr. onconly Stork ~57U HARRISON'S lrt•c to good homl'. '~ l7 I 4J 546-0710 Lab 12 Oalmatwn 5 mo~---------• old 837 5934 1 r l' a v y d u t y w o r k SE .., R .., y benches. drafting tbb, & "' "' chrs. wooden 1h•:-.ks S75 3101 Coast llw). N R ~1etal desks S65-up. Nl'w ----63•1•254-•7 __ _ 1"r1·<' lo f.l0011 homl' lllal'k l..ib. ;! >''" fnendl~" s.io t»~w "•bcn;in hu::.k' 2 H·ar-. :-,1>.i)cu female Nt>ed!> i.:ood home ti-16 2H I desk & files SI HJ !15 Woodc-n shel v1n~ CE WllOLES1\LI': Of'PICE nJRN ITL: rn: 2().W Plal'cnua. t' \1 631 ·2777 1>:11 25ill New 35 Blu cf1n Sport(1shcr A\ ail m 2 3 wks Twin eng. 30+ knts. many x1ra~ $35.'CIUO 5!)1 0833. 640 5279 l...ih ~t Al•rnJrd m1" o.ill hlk. 6 \\k,. 968 1331 d) .. :.."17 297K1'H'" 3.61 cl. Marq. dia ring, very while S7500. M' ~ rt Columbian Emerald Ooo:.el very clear S3.000. 2 35 ct. nawles~ rnd daa S7500 Severi s mallc-r d1ll.l> & some loose .sap· ph1res Need cash Must ell this w eek Rolex Pr<'~ hidden rlai.p dial chocolate face S3500 P\t. Ply 1714 1 IH2-108l or 962.9840 IRM Elcrtm· l)pc .... ntci ·73 ~· Sabrccraft I 0, sip Model C Tht·rm•1fJx 4, low hr-;, loaded. xlnl ropaer S200 for both t·ond 540 23-11 d;i)~ 675-!llJi i;'75 96i3 e\eS 1, :\lo mall· lk•aJilt! 1-~rel' to /.! o o d h o m \' . g r 1• a t "' rhaldn•n & H•ry t.:t•n 3 Hew desks tl1• !'>.'i6 09i9 , _________ _ Black & l'hrome. v..Jlnut forma('a lop Bar.:.11n S80 ea 5 matching chrome chairs S25 t'<l 000·.\ 111 -------- F1•malr Nl•wfnundland, MiscellonecMIS 8080 'P;t\t•d to .,:ood ho111t' on ••••••••••••••••••••••• Desk. 5' b~ 30". bbck. 2 block chm r~ h I~ 71311 LUGGAGE TAGS i'h.'c GC'rma n !:ihcphcr<l mix C:Jll aft Ii !Jl)(Jf!HI from vour business card. Send ·one rard for each 645 :1473 {i73 3029 tag plu..-; ont> s pure We Pets 8087 return permanently ••••••••••••••••••••••• \ U 0 RA n !. E Mi H· d sealccl ollrart1ve tag & Kl1t9 Sndce & Ca<Je l\EESHONO l'upp1c~. 0 strap. m eeting a irline szs. 841l·ii65K week~old 646·1102 1.0. requirements. Pre· --------- FR E E " 1 TT E N S ~ vent loss &. theft~ For a Female cow. plenty of Playful. used to outdoor personalized tag enclose milk & cheese . S216 & do~. healthy, 1 wk->. wallpaper. fabn c or _F'l_R_M_! _548_·52_0_3 ____ , 751-7472 "Doy Clo" paper & we ~ G--....t-8094 will bark & tnm your ..,..... .. IMJ ~ Cote Male K1llens. whl &. lx•1gc. 8 week:. old 540 7532 ---- tags. Or try two cards ••••••••••••••••••••••• back to bark Marlin Mod 336 · 30·30 n PRICES Oe S9S. Stevens Mod. 5100 $2 ea or 31$5 dbl bl 20 ga Shotf(tm F'w1Wture 8050 4 5 lags $1 60 ea SIOO 545-2083 •• •••••••••• •••• ••• ••• • 6 9 tags $1.50 ea TV, Radio, HIFi, Sttno **I BUY** Good used f'urn1turr & Apphan<'e~ OR I will di or SELL for You MASTERS AUCTION '4"'8686 & 833-9625 lOor more $1.40ea Sall'S Tax Included 8098 ••••••••••••••••••••••• NO CARD" Draw your own or scnrl 25" RCA C'OLOR TV name. address. phone & Beaut.1rul rontemporarv we'll make one card JX'r walnut cabinet New p1r tag. Add 25< each lure tube. only I ) ror Send check or mone)' or· old S200 C-011642 0138 Solo. J moe. old. ru'>l & derto CB Radio. 40 rhnnnel h l' 1 i:". Ir:. i> th a n PILOT PRINTING Realisuc, inrlud1n,.-: 1m whole!tale 846 1838 P 0 Box 1560 der dash raek (or 11111<·k 1 Costa Mesa. Ca. 9262il removal and trunk JO· Ml'st "<'I I Custom R' t Al ()(Ill new 56r. hlue'whl vc>lvN sofa , Irvine Coast Country :~ hsPM ' " Olll l.Chml( trftd rottee & Club. Class A C:.imily a 1 end tables Bes t orr m embersh ip $750 Stereo, phase linear amp 675-9396 +transfer fee Cu ll &preamp,200w.century Twin b<!di. ~O Childs 979-0067 size speakt'rs, Terhni d~k S2S 3;lrwr pmc rlrsr Tool.kraft tbl sow. 10" all ques turntable. S:>50 $20. 2 twin 11prt•<1ds. h"Y attachments $19!). Set vr _499-4008 ________ _ reversible blk & re-I.I s:?S 3 matching Belgium ao.tJ & M9rift• ca 846 4658 ~~. net'd cleaomg. $75. ...,,... .. Girl's t"' m hNlroom '"l. I 54()..()303 ••••••••••••• •••••••••• 20 imp 3C17 oml'. 2o llr-. !>lnt'l' maJorc-d \'EF. DF. bi11t sy~. loaded. SSS00 (ii-I J 752 71170 days (7 14 I &14·081fi eve~ --- 47' Clas:.1r 1!130 bndRc dk 1·rwser GM d~l. much leak. ~real ltvl'aboard Cl<• g a rd us V a r h I s $17,000 548 5S56. it hr:; LIDO LIVING Without the high rosLs. Acqwre th11> gaunt posh 100' hvc a board. moored al'ro~s from Lido Island Entertain i:uesti.. ~o to Calollno. c harlt•r for business. wnte off. enJOY 360 degree waterfront \' I e w " I n r I n I l t' poss1b1hlles with this un 1que dramatic & interest· 1ng Sll\llll ship Lc:.s than u down payment on a watertront hou!!e $18!>.000 Tot11l Price Term~ !nliCJ' Yacht Sales !>48 I 131 675 2650 loah, Rent I Charter 9050 •··•·••········•····•·· ALBACORE Fast 411' SPortfisher. All acrom's for I 3 ds11ys. 6 Pl'OPle only. for re~rva t1ons call 714/299-5722 or 714/276-1529 GE$TUfllll 57' S IS Cutter avo1I r :4th or July wknd eharter 3 ~pies S32S per do} in· clu 11k1p & dl!ck hond Joseph 1\1 innc•v V nrhl Soles 5411 172.'> mt!ler. 9.!lllP motor. !.'Ice • ~ 1 na st..irt S.9950 84C·JO:J3 Go Fast Sale Go fast lo the l:H·tor~ dire<.'\ Sol Cul ~ale Fat lOr) d(•mo. promol1onal and u:.ed <·.itamaranl> ava1lable. foully v. arr:m teed from St-195 Sa\ t' money and start ~o-fasl sail.mg now' Call or set.· us al 1932 E Pomona. Santa Ana 714-541 2285 li' o·oay. xlnl cond Jib & main sails includ trlr & motor, $1.iOO. 495-6257 or 64().7020 •LANCER 25 SLOUP l tli'i 1 ~ "'-dl'IU'<l' lrlr ~15.UOO 1nH•Slt'll. musl ~di. ;iny rt:a!-•>na bit· ofr ur trad ... for IJlC' mQlld sportscar G75-l!I Ill Columbia 22. full} n1rnl'<I for OCl'an crwl>llll? Ind J?allc~. hl'ad. n1mpa~s raC'tnl! gear. h\ v wpatht'r !>hrouds. slanch1om •. nu bottom paint & more $3950 &l0·534 1 Wanted· 2 rl't1rcd peoph.• t or l'fUISlnR (JO JI! :.ail boat Help v. rrui ml & Pxpense:. E1r-. 2l3 596-0217 t8' Sol Cat. suoo 4 molorr) rle,, ~100 wn Chns.646 il75 541! t'>111, T~!!~~.s:.~~~:~! ... ~ ~ !~ Otvon 1· ~dll ii :\h• Too custom 27' 5th .... h,.cl U:.l'<.I IWl<'l' Ila:. .1:ar:ii.:1• perfect for ll•e11.1~\·r~. ~l. dirt blkE'" hi(') d\·~ S 7 9 5 0 h s l of r L .1 II {).1().83MJor lcJ'-l' me~:. '75 Terr) Zi 1 ~ 5l h "'hl.'cl w GA Che\. •, Ton. Sti50U 67!>8113 1971 traH•I tra1ll·r 1;1.,· Ken~k1ll. 'l'I! l'Ontaincd. 8 pl) 11 re,, m·\~ hall & v.att•r ~~::.lt•m ;\1.1n~ ~lri11> l::xl'cll contl CJn I)( '>C'Cn :tl lt;.111 t;;ii.:lt- l.J1. I IU on· all K 111 5!11:111, Trailers, Utility 9180 . ••.......•..••..•• , ... Small ut1hl) lrntll·r. $.5(1 f)i.10 2700 Auto Service, Parts & Accessories 9400 ..••..••...........•... ,\utobody Repairs :\-1aJor or Minor rol1Js1on B1i: <,av1nf(s 1\IJn 556 4011 70 Camaro part!>. front end. door<:, bm·k 'l'ilb, C'll '67 Camaro & b:! Che\) pans !'>411 3117 l':"IGl ;.!f: Olcb l~.tl r1111.., .:n .. it S:!Ull ho -.t HI I Craa)! K.1.1K1K•; <h" Boats. Slips/ Docks 9010 Autos for Sat@ •.••........•..•..••.•• Sl!PS AVAILABLE YAC Newport 646-0551 Out of toWn owner wo11ld hke slip 30· s<11I bu.vn Lido Isle & Penn Iii 11 645-2800 or 12131 2"17·0321 REWARD! $)00. for findmA sltp or dock NB. P.P. Call Lyn OJC Barry 644 ·0371 loats, Sp@@d & Ski 9080 ••.•...••••.........••• Hondo flatbottom 4 IO Chev}. with V dn\C. ~lnl ski boat. 963·ti05S Salv~ Sale-As ls '76 J9' Sea Ray l!l5SR Runabout McrCrwser. 188HP .... 888 outdrtH' lni.pl'CI at 407 Bols;1 ,\ve .. N B 548 1264 Suh mil bid to So Coasl Manne Suneyors Im• 57:12 F:. Second St. Long Bch 9080.1 (213 1 434 8471 Bid subJect to approval oC owner Bid sale con eludes noon. ti13-0 711 Transportation ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.Sale/ Rent 9120 ••••••••••••••••••••••• VW Camper. 1970, recent overhaul. ,.:ood rond. S1900or offer. 540·4407 Older cam per 4·~ah.•. w o truck SISO SlO\ 1• & rcfn~ 640-2700 Motoriwd llkH 9 I 4 0 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '77 Blk Poch Maxi Moped Call After5 ()(I Doug. 5i2-8S.'lll ~Jee.!:'/ 9150 •.....•................ '76 Su1uJ<1, RM125. xlnt cond Rare read> ;\111.e 675· lJ(J:I Suzulu '76 RM 125. llC'\f'r rared. excel rond S.500 675.IJ(XI '76 HONDA 550 Super S p ort , p crf{'cl ennd . cu~t om paint. wlnd.shJeld. nc>w tire & battery SJ, 150. 536 7fi75 s..p.rci.anl '76 HOND \ 1soi-· Lo miles. tow r ncel 536 771 1 or 900-!>844 ..•...••.•........•.... 9510 .....•....•••••........ C:1d11lal' 1\rnbulan1·1• !'Hill ~e~ds work 83~10 hP't orr C:a 11644 994 1 Antiqws/ Classics 9520 ·····••4•••············ 51 BUICK Hun~ gllll<I S350 /trode. 642-4758 ti.'l C:orv;iir l'On\ t . rad1.1b mis :;<>ml' bod\ .... rk. l'a:.1 I> rei.tored. ·good 111p, rt?blt eng ~~l() P~t µl~ ~·919.'l 52 Por-.chc JllO\" 'i.:•JO<I <'Ond Make olr · hJO .>12J dy::., 751 !121:1 l'\t'::. Recreational VtNcles 9530 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 72 Ford I Ton van. l>land up bubblr, Jiood cond F\Jll) cquap'd. rernl! & Sl v S'.l.150 (.;a II 6i5 1193 Alr..lream iO tw111 31 ' H'r) <'le.1 n S5. 'l!lS C.il I 646·60'.>ti 72 \,W llutlhll' T op Camper. lr1d~l'. "ltl\'(' smk, radio, C:B, <'a!>~l'tte player. larf(l' motor. nl'w tlr{'s and hull(•ry Xlnl cond. 59.000 m1 S.1200 firm 830 3~7 4 Wheel Drives 9550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• COSTA MESA .AMC/JEEP #I IN CALIF. 1978 CHEROKEE $6995 <J8i\IGNN127i831 32 Cherokees In ~11wk OVERSTOCKED CJ 5 l'll'kllf}!> Woitonc·l•r<. $1300 Ol!>t'Ounton some modch, 2!>it llorbor Alvd COST A M !:':SA 714 /549-8023 '7l DODGl 4•4 Su pc-r n l<'•' rrl n•d cheap" 11234.~il $3995 TRUCK CITY 554-5400 poster canopy lwd !'> 11~· Les-Paul copy Blat'k & Gtfllt ail '10 I 0 $2 7 s or b t• 11 t of re r wtute xlnt cond $150/bal. ••••••••• •• ••• ••• ••• ••• 1"1Ul020 orfer Jeff 6.11·382.8 W 11 n t 1• '1 9 n r I 0 ' '16 Hondo !ISOSR. low locrh. Soll 9060 mlle. pnced to sell Cost' ••••••••••••••••••• ••• • S\150. 646-9720 ~ Hnrbor 81.,,d S ,\ Jeep 1, pick up 3'7 Che\. cng, b1a llrM, nrw paint. runs irood 6-15 1561 lalenrl<'r 30. MK 1J , ~U(>('r boat, many ltras 123.SOO pp .....•..•.............. .......•.•.•.•..•••.••. ······················~ '76 CHEV Ikner \X4 ,'>ul)t'r L le:in l>t,t> 113$147' <.:hL·av $6495 Cheap . TRUCK CITY 554-5400 520 llu(bor Bl\ll ~ \ ii UIJLC'r W.1~C11l 1,·1 A {', I' ~. P R ~lt•reo. rnut•h mort Toµ .• hJIJt' 1n9.3214 '75 Chev4',.T 4,;4 Sharp Cleaniot:2..'>l 1 $5295 TRUCK CITY 554-5400 520 Harbor Bh cl . ~ /\ 'fi8 BRONCO' Run:. ~uod Looks -b11d SI~ M11 y take Cy1 I\• 1r. t1 .1dt 552 7132.lam ----r. Jccp Chl'ruklt· Ch1l I ,\Jr PS Crw"e cor1rol 1111 "'heel \ \1 i' \I I Stereo Mul h mon Lo"' mile~ SH 71HI IWO -110 I Hetween K Ju J m & " 1M> pm '74 FORD COURIER & C.:.tb o .. cr C;imP1,·r L1k1 new. rleJ.n 13479SY 1 $3895 TRUCK CITY 554-5400 5th & Harbor S.int;i 1\nJ Trucks 9560 .••••.•.•...........••• · ·ALLEN .. . . . ·cMC TRUCKS· 1978 GMC >/• TOM ptCl(UP v• • ,oeeo HI) ,_,...:cw ~~re tiu"'ID9f QaUOe\ ' t1 0 ,.,, D"""'Ml" TCL7•8l~4~1 5 5767 1978GMC RALLYWAGOH & pan Au oono p.trtt ""''"'9 I C'•U-9\ ff141'Ht C()f"!t1ol f':U\IQm iDO ~ A Mt wt'lttel TGR266lJ~t4llO' 57976 WE HAVE A GOOD SELECTION Of JIMMYS, SUBURBANS &VAN COMVERSIOHS WJP"C• IM.I""''"'~"-· 00,.t, "(j.t COUftO SI f'-.•1..,(1 VflU•tl'lll'll' --.-'71 lntemotional >t•T & Camper Clt•an llt•a11 v,ll,1ll01! Spc-t'ldl I lllh5SK I S2695 TRUCK CITY 554-5400 520 11arbor Bl\d :-.. .\. '72 Doh"" P /U l!1.1n Hun ~1.1111 t7-IU11 $1899 lRUCK CITY 554-5400 52(d I.• rbor Hll rl ~ \ Jtl 1 .. onl I' l ,111 11·1 r :1111 11rb iOIJC, 1::: hn ti \ .111 punl'I $1 ;;1, Junk lmp.11.1. 1•111:1111. 11m .. <.:~,,h •JIU} f,Jli .!:ti:! '64 CHEV r;u L '"'' Ill'"' mu I "<"' Sl299 TRUCK CITY 554-5400 Fifth & lli11 bar :-.. 1\ 63 ~ ord PL v.hal<. hlu\•. /\ \1 f-'ft II I r k II I' W hrak1•' ~~, J» 1 hi l h or 1~111~1 '76 RANCHERO $3995 TRUCK CIT6Y 55 4-540 tilth & 11.irhw :-. \ '69 CHEVY C -20 UTILITY TRUCK VI!. ,1utvm.1t11 , Ion l' h J , :-1 , t .11 1 Cl I \ .11 r ('01111 . Ultl.Jl) 1)11\ ~ IH>lld rill'k. rudao h1.,1ln l\ lo .... m11<.-,, Exc<•llt•nt l'Ontl 1 t I ,, fl I ,, ' I •• j I: I 1Slk 2263AT 1 $2387 ...THEODORE " ROBINS : : ,.., FORDi.i."'. , 1060 HAl&Q{l tlV,D. •· CO!>TA M£SA.1'6A2;0010 '74 Et CAMIMO 1.!til<i l. S2995 TRUCK CITY 554-5400 5th & llJr hc>r SJnl.1 .\n., ·~I Lu\ l'l \:\I I \I -.u·r I J \ l .111 n" I 11 • "'atl•rpump h;1ll 1 ,ti \I )l)h Xlnt hm .11 ~:W(! lii3 Ji t3 ti:! l ht•\' .. l'nn I' l h '· 11 ' ~ 111 .: • ., n 11 '.t•I hL·~t'lllll '''"I.Ill •111 H,\,:\Cll:· HCl• to1J1Hl l'OndlllOll _!fi1, \ • .\1;to ( '11lar.1 JI I ho•llfl> (i11UIJ work l rur k '!,(Ill ·i.)tt :;l!li 1 111 ts-I~ bli5.· Vans 9 S7C ··················••·•· '69 Ford l/•T Von Supl'r -.urf1·r -.p1 1 1.11 tin-:-. ""hb. int. 111 rnalt•" ,\T 1211H.SQ1 TRUCK CITY 554-5400 520 1larbor Hl\d 'I \ '72 CHEV 1 1 Ton Lon~ Wht•l•I B.;1~1· \JI\ \'!!. :i ~pct.•d .11 r 1:ond r .t ll 1 • • t'<-h • .1 1 • r l!T,tJ(.}I\ I Ml. I >1211,\ 1 5.2496 "THEODORE . ·"• 'ROBl'NS · I FORD ... 2000 HARBOl lllVD. COSTA MESA ' 6.,l·OOlO .69 GMC St.p Von $1499 1 !01371 TRUCK CITY 554-5400 Fifth & 11:.trbor i, A 7:1 Ford ' T l.,.I, ma .. I' ~ hcakr ,\ M l';\1 11 trl. -.lt•r t\1 p1 r tir' lrpl p.ml'I \ln)I 1nlt•r twd 53[><)(1 552 !1<14 t or ~!)():It, '7 4 Dodqe ·s.arfer $3995 ( J.'l()l:J I TRUCK CITY 554.5400 fo'1fth&Harbor.S A. 6:'1 Ford E\·onolml'. 6·e) I. nl.I~ "-hi 1 le work bu l run' ~6~11 R(J l1~t 1-\Jllerton. C:\l 6'12·0386. btwn !• 5pm ____ _ ~t.d CJS90 ......•••...••••.••.•.. WE WILL BUY YOUR DATSUN l'i\lll FOR OR NOT TOP DOLLAR FOR TOP CARS BARWICK DATSUH "·''' .tu.tn• .1p1 ... t1 ·'"" 8)1 .1375 493-3375 WE BUY CLEAMCARS &TRUCKS CONNELL CHEVROLET 21!2'11 larbor Rf\ ll COST,\ ~I ES.\ 546-1200 WI-I'\ Y TOI' DOLL1\H FOil TOI' LSED l'AHS FOREIGN 00\lf:STll' or CLASSICS I( ~our l'•ff I~ l'\lr..o dean Wt' u.-. ri rsl BAUER BUICK 29'l5 Ha rbor Blvrl ~lJ :'ttl.'l>J 979.25()(1 WE BUY USED CARS l \LLt;Mnr1 L -.t•d C.1 r \1 :.:r 540-5630 I~ 2626 HARBOR BLVD COSTA MESA WE BUY USED CARS! Wt r1 the new Cht-' roid 1lcalcr~h1p in the I n ·m1• \uto Center W{' need )u0r u::.t'<I t·ar' JOE MACPHERSON CHEVROLET .!l \ulo~nle>r Ornt• IHVJNE 768-7222 .Aaltos, Imported ·•••············•····•· AHoRom!o cnos •................••.... ·71 -;pHkr !d .-untl \lr ":- ~I ~:! 151lfi 'f>:l lntcm'I PL Short b<•"· Autos, N@w 9800 Autos, N@w 9800 wh1 ~vokt.' ""his. 1rJ.! knoh ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• DH''" I l'~' 1•ng lltr !17!10183or754·01.lfi '73 Chev El Camino CHERRY ll!J.1321' J TRUCK CITY 554-5400 520 llarbJr Bl\ d !' 1\ '70 Datsun PU I l'\ I I -.pt'ed I .tdh• hc.it~·r C<1anµtr ... hl II 1sss32T11stk ~ 17al!Br1 Sl565 THEODORE · ROBINS FORD 2060 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 641·0010 '68 FORD i.r NH't' <'nnd1l11111 \Ju-.l st•ll' 186LO'l1\ • $189'1 TRUCK CITY 554-5400 520 llarbor Bl\d S ,\ '67 Forr1 Pt: VIOCI. V K. HUto. 11 T. :is2 en.:. If bed. ~cl l'OOd ~1500 Mt Spm & wkcnds. 548 1849 '7 4 CHEV 1/• Ton Super clean 13i699V 1 TRUCt< CITY 554-5400 520 Harbor Uh d !"11\ 59 lntt-rn..1t1on,1I Huns f.lood S.~I 110 :>4!1·28.">1 675 1311 '70 CHEV 1,. Ton & (. .1h O-.t•r C.1 m111•r Mu..,1 'el' th" un1l Pnc·1.-d lo :-d I 1 il!O!IS(i • $3595 TRUCK CITY 554-5400 520 llarbor B:.,,d SA 1976 Datsun Km1t (';ah l'l:, ster CB'iS. r u, ~he ll. Norsema11 tare-.. M ·~ch More I ... ery 1\1 l't' r r• 644-676.1 '75 DODGE >1,.T $3999 Lie "73911 TRUCK CITY 554-5400 520 llarbnr Bl\ c1 S 1\ ·71 El Camlno i02 <'nil. Th~ luxurious Landman Van • tG .. Ot' • .u'I' OW • CH-.i ,.. rv~· Mflf't.r-Q • , •• ~ .. , r ,.~,.. .. , OCH ()W1 4. ,.,..-1 \,li»f• • ~veo~ c.totr. .•tn.ttr"-. ,,~.,-~,.,.,. l\en•tN1 '11111.t • . ..,,.,,,..,,.,Mfl'll • 1~11 .,,,,u •• ,.,,,, NOW AT HARBOUR VW '••1 I\ ~·~ ~ ., <- \:..__id_ "' \. , u 'i ' I l ' -: ~ ~ ~ ,~ .. VINTAGE VW CAR SHOW SAT., 7-1 I 0-3:30 ' I 0 VW Buses & Campers E.0111pl•: ·71 vw c....--IMiOMHI $2795 2 VW Convertibles • MANY BUGS '74 •O'Xll '6• VW 11.q S-'f WUI I /n '72 ·~Q.hle ~olOl f '74 Metdellt•4Wp.11rq11 '74 Men: C9'1ri 4 tp 1 1~1oo:v, '1' f,....... ~ IJObl'IZOI '75 Hotl49 CMc •M&MYM1 '75 Tn ..... TU 7114NR01 ff 595 SAVE SAVE Sll.t5 Sll95 SAVE S24t5 SAVE Harbour Volkswagen 842~4435 1871 I lead• llvd., Huntht9ton hocJI Sale Hrs: Moft.fri. 9·'· Sat 9·7. S• I 0.7 So• .. ,.,. "'41 M wcecll • t04l lo 0.1 ... 10 f "'-Deco. OCle" MO<> e I "' Ill• "' Ol!tw nponn II" >~ Loveseat, excell cond . 1l>on'9X south paw 1235 brn1wht plaid After KlQJC water bed comp 6PM ~I 68S6 114$ MS-1531 Mon111ome1y dlnllh)', t>r 11 ' whaler or 11m1 h1r. lop pnee 1f good cond t'a II 67S-<XSSS '75 Honda SSO four rotnng, rack. nds rrinor wrk S750. ~-:;881 Claulfiod Ads 64.2 5678 P S. P f9, radio 'tint <'Ond ~200 mk orr WI 1!>88 ----- ; . . . • ~oa., I .. ort.d ••• 1 Mw4 ......_ a rted •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~;;.---........ 1 ••••••••••••• ~ t720 o.t.. 9720 I t7 6 AUDI POX Automaht, tur cood • fuel tnjecu.on. Excelltnt l'OlldiUoo (1189RJf). •·or '>ale at only $4150 Cort fo• Uctliftq 2586 Newport Bin[ COSTA M !::SA 6.U-3661 74 FOX. blue 4 door, AC, /\!\i/FM. auto. $2300. A·l shape, T.L.C. 968·1486 ---1• BMW 9712 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1978 BMW's HERE NOW! COMPLETE JODY SHOP NOWOPEH DCILLEHT SEUCTIONOF IMWRESALES We may ha\c your next ear in our Inventory. Cal I lL'l lOday! · 831-2040 495.4949 . . CREVJER & I ST & lllOAOWAY SAHTA AHA '835·3171 I' T llf UlllMA rt: O"IYINQ MACHINI •USEDIMWs• 77 320, 4 SP sr (7215M Y > '722002 lsp.(S44LJI\) i i 2002A,A IC I (598LPO J 75 530! Auto. (9l6M TV I '762002, lSp$/R(S49PHZI 76 5JOI. Lux(606PJI M I 76 530t. S/RCS8lRCS1 Clowd oi. Sundays WOW! SAYIMOW! DATSUN SALE! 5 1686 '73 610 2-Dlt. H'f- S-.oom "-""""" onty n ooo MllH AM1f'M CUM!te IUIO .._ -~(60«)X) s199a "76 710 4 DI. Ol\e OI a '-"'O' t..e I'*' T,000 onQ•net "'41M W cond .. AM/FM. cvttom 1"'40ne l*f1C. lllo.e new IJHL7 IOOl7162i s3595 '77 200SX CPE. A little~ end -Wttl> ait eond auto """' AM/FM stetto tow '°"' "'""" renSXAJ '54777 •76 210%2+2 ''" COl\d AMtFM c:M6elte ~ 'tlC"i '"'"' 1 rMll ~ at an llfloet,.•M>ltl ~ 191l!PO"I 55995 ••••••••••••••••••••••• iG280ZH2. JCtr lo mt A l ccnd, AMJf'M CHI PP 8'2-9852 'TI 2IOZ. S·spd, loaded, 14,000 ml, Uke new . $7900 orolr P.P 979-6274 eves '71 240Z A M/FM. titr, ma gs, $2950 837 6050 c ltl 554 wkd}S 497 2618 eves/wknds '75 280 Z, xlnl cond.' Low ml. fully loaded. S6600 Ca II S.S?-4240. '72 Datsun 1200, needs eng work , $500 or ofCer 675-3227 eves. i t Datsun 1200, nds work $550 586·9413 '75 280 Z 4 Spd trans, AM /FM stereo. air. mag whls. Persimmon w 1blk int. 30,402 m1. Xlra nice (369NMLl $5650. Call 64>-0602. '7S280Z 2+2 mtlc bm. low ml, loaded, beaut cond ! ~.759·0456 '74"'1 260Z. Salver nu p&nt, A1C Sl500 6758228 --- 'i4 8210. Leavmg rountry $100 + a:.sume payment on approved c r edit 499-2337. 541-4227 aft 7 PM '77 8210 30,000 n11, new tires, '73 OZ. excellent loved nd1tion. Needs new home for someone will-ing to pay for a quality car. Start al $1500 a nd see how far own<'r will come down. All extras. dbl carburetaon. cstm air. Must sell 1mmed1atc ly Call 7111848·0355. 957 0214 eves O vl'r Bluebook & worth at' 78 Pickup. 4,000 mi. ex· tras $500 & take O\ er payments. 5.S2-8412 ORANGE COUNTY'S OLDEST & ·m 510 Wagon. $950 or ,.;;~;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;:;;;;;;~ best offer. P. P 754·424 l, Sales Serv1l·e·Lca111ng Roy CGrYer,lnc.. Hulls ftovrc BMW lS40 Jambor~ Nt'wport Bearh ~0-6444 Capri 9715 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '74 260Z 6 ryl ~4 speed, air cond., mag wheels. radial tires. AM , F M ste reo . 1700KZZ) tSt.k. P3470). $4870 THEODORE ROBINS FORD 1060 HAllBOR BLVD COHA MfSA 647·001<' '71 CAPRI 1600 CC, 4 cyl. !>tr·el bltl'<l radials $1500. !'>1H·980fi. aft S Mon· f'n , '77 Datsun 280·Z, A/C, ·1:1 2000, clean, xlnt cood, AM/f~M stereo 8 track. $1750. mags, louvre windows. 4 545 98171962 1382 spd. 18.000 mi. Pvt pty Datsun 9720 S1500. 963-0867; 542·2790. ••••••••••••••••••••••• •DATSUNS• Lfir?SeledHMI Of AllModefs SALES-LEASING PAHTS·SERVICE ·COSTA MESA DATSUN 2845 HARBOR BLVD. 540.6410 540-921 l *DRIVE A* * LITILE ••• * SAVE A LOT SHOP &COMPARE BARWICK DATSUN ....., 11t J 11.1n c .1p1-..t r .1110 831 -1375 493-3375 76 710 Sht W9'1 4 speed, sunroof. radio & heat.er. Super rlean car. Less than 18.000 mis. (473PCF I $3259. THEODORE ROBINS I) FORD 8314497 eves. 1967 Wagon 53,000 m 1. Xlnt me c h c ond BI au punk t . ,\ M I I'' !\I ca~s S750 Co61 1185 Fiat 9725 ••••••••••••••••••••••• * FIAT SALE!* on all Fiat 121 & I l 1 models ( Brava except edl al Fodory ln•olce plus dealer 111stalled ac· cesaones, 1r any. orrcr good thru July 4. 1978 Herb Friedlander hnports 13749 Beach Blvd IHUNTINCTON BEACH 537.7777 898-6777 '76 131-Clean 22 mi. stereo/cass. auto. $3,500 642·6049,979-7613 1976 FtAT 128 SPORT COUPE 4 speed. radio & heater \629PKJ). Pnced at JUSl over wholesale bluebook at OHLY $2375 · ..._.,.... .. nMtn I Harbor, Cost u Mesa 642.07'1 . '75 Fial 131 AM/FM. II A.tot. llftporhd Avto1, hnporlff Auto1, Imported ...•.•..................••..••..................•......••........•... Woon1~0e1y Jurw :.>8 1916 DAILY PILOT 09 * H.do 9727 Mere .. s s.nz 9740 Toyota 9765 Mtos. u..d Auto•. Used Auto,, UHd ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• i6 Cellca 5 Spd Llftback Cailbc 9920 Nd 9f4'0 "'-d Mew '78 HONDA Cars MA.HY To ChooH Ft-om! UNIVERSITY ot.kftDbl .. Honda Cert • GMC Trucks 28SOHurbor Blvd Costa Mesa 540-9640 '76CVCCCUSTOM GT. ~spd Hatchback. yel/blk Int., AC. Blaupunkt AM /FM stereo, tarp. racing wtlls, tach. cocoa m ats . flared fenders, Qurncy Victory mag!>. 13" Goodrich radial T A 's, front s poiler. dcl·hromed 40K mi Very cherry !:it't' Oct 1975 Playboy mag for twin $3750 f:H•s, \\ knds. &I0-0608 ·72 Honda 600 spl.cp. $995. 586-!MIJ Maroon LX $6500 673·6510 '77 ACCORD 5·sp. A C. salver. blk mt. AM FM. lake nu Sl995 Call 549-5078 aft 6pm 'M 280SE, 4 dr lmmac fully equip New tares, comp I. serv recor<ls. (:4111,.asl Oetall 7SH337 w t&hude. tur. AM f~,. ••••••••••••••••• •• •• • • •••••••••••• •• • • ••••• • • •••••••• •••••••••••• ••• S4500 998-4784,634 9551 '17 Seville. fuUy loaded l.975 Moma 2+2 ("<cell 69 LTO. ung owne1 ~.500 m1lcis $200 ra!>h & cond '"'w paml & t1rci., ~.000 mt, clcuu ~ '70Corona. lluto. xlntcond take O\er lse at S246 mo 64&~1 9b4 1005 '73 450St.COMV. lo & oul Nu tires & ca11542 7727 24h1' LI--'--.. ------,, AM/FM raadlo, air, 07.000 brakes , I o m 1 • s. •---------·n Mont~ Carli• In m1 , ,_,,....,.... 47 au·s. xlnt cond $14.500 $1000/80 642 6126 perfect cond. Jl1•loc111cd •••••••••••••••• • •••••• 64(}.79116 1----------to Europe. mui.t i.l•ll. 1972 Grabber. 302 V x. '72 Corona Murk II. aqua 6• o 9 2 2 2, M 1 ch a e I auto, P tS. radio 631·-0780 '67 Cla&s1c Coupe. lo ma, w/blk Int. lo m1, tluto. Romen • evell. rrunt conlhtlon. 957-0620, AC. Sl850 557 4396 -------- 631·2519 Tri._.. 97 1. 7 ·m El Camu10 307 cu mcb, Mercury 9950 _..,., v 1977 CADILLAC AM /FM 11 1rk "''''r•·o. ••u!tu..uu.•0•.e.t~..s.1.,_t •• ·71 280SL. t'X cond . 2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sacnrke$2SOOS40·S308 011.Artl\.;t;\; UNT l':.. tops,. brn 1tan int. '62TR4targo top.rollbar. SEVIW MEWEST $13,SOO . Dr. Miiier Sll00/0130 :~~~·~::':" .. ~'.:'°.::.:"'~ '74 Monte Carlo, P 18, _LINCOLN-MERCURY 6:1}4901 tl33·1023 •8000 ... ,._•.,.....,.."IV P1B.111r,xlnl cond rnui.l Dealt!rshlpis nowOP,EN 0 13•ouM~1 sell S297S 640·5192 RA y R.ADEIOE '66 Diesel 200 • looks hke '77 Spitrare, white. lo m1. ) I Q,995 UNCOLN·MERCURY new. A/C. ra(.ho. 1 owner under warranty Ms t 1978 CHEVY PP.$2500.6737005 8()11. mk ofr 640·1356 or MOHTECARLO 16-18AutoCenlerOr. ·70 MB 2805. auto. aar. &40-0t~O 1975 CA.Dill.AC ~ VH. pwr w1111Jow~. SDF'wy·r~t~:~retitex1t bluicream. mint cond A VolkswCICJ"' 9770 COUPE DE VIUE c r u 1 s e l' on t r o I . U0-7000 classw. $6100 493 0730 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 11••9• ••t•110• ru11 "°""' 11utomat1c 'm:vl 101> & .,-1KIO'V "" "°"" ..,,. "'""' 1 stt'reo For bl.lit' or ll:'Ubc Y' .. .,,.,\fy (130PVt< J '63 Mil 220 SE. cl~SSJC VOLKSWAGEN S6495 (~IUBG I ~~ f~rra·ar~~~~·~n1 sa1H-s...-,1ce S62SO l9 7 4 pt, YMOUTH Cort Fo• LeaslftCJ '74 MIZ 450SLC Top Dollar SHRIHG COUPE 2S86~~~~lvd Ori.g1nal lhruout ' Pa1dforUsedVW s -e••ck ••lenor ""'9""""'• COSTA MESA Automatic. pwr. steen ng COMMONWEAL TH '"''°"' •·1 """" ' ""' ""... 64r.366 I & . d (•""") Set t3t$421 ~ aucon · -..v MOTORS $16,995 SIMCE 1953 s299 5 HOWAJtD Chenolet l442So Bnst.ol OOVE & QUAlLSTS. Santa And lNear MacArthur. 546-0220 Jambor~· & Dnstul 1 Approx 2 mt No uf NEWPORT BEACH South Coast Plaza 833-0116 1976 CADILLAC SEVIW Oo~ ••'""'°' tuu ~ w c:ono taoe &. t .,, watr&l'lfY 183tN0MJ awysa.r 9925 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 197 6 CHRYSLER CORDOIA 1972 Mercury Marquis Xlnt cond11100. low miles, vmyl roof, air con d1llon, power brake~ .. power steenng, s tereo good gas mlleage. $1,975. SJIHS74 '75 Ma.rqws Brougham. <f dr, loaded, xlnl ronrl 72,000 m 1 's. $2800 842-5762 Mustang 99 52 ••••••••••••••••••••••• JOIJllCI" 9730 1967 VW Beetle, gd run· ••••••••••••••••••••••• MGI 9744 nlng cond. Sl 100/best ;9995 00140 power scat. s un· root. s pet'd control, stereo & oil electric. 1619RKPI. For sale al only MUST SELL! ·75 Ghw V.S. auto, loaded. Xlnt cond. $3500/ofr. 545-2448 '73 XJ6 J aguar, has every ••••••••••••••••••••••• Ofr 540 7800, 524-2157 option avail. show rm '77 MGI ROADSTER eveslwknds 1978 CHEVAOLET S619S 1968 Mustang convertibll'. excl'llent condition. &&2·2338 cond, perfect body, Pill & Nice & clean With lots or '77 VW_C_o_n_V_l'_r_t_b_le-CORVEnE int.$7700. 496·6658 ex l r as 11 k e AM I FM h I 1 ' ~~~~~=1~°':,,.."~ =;· Cort Fox Lea5in9 2S8li NC'wport lllvd COST,\ M ES1\ 645-3661 -------·o.<i Mustang Convert. 21*1. cassette. luggage rack, c rome ye 1.ow, xlnl 2soon111 .. 1i.e. 121TTr1 '74 JAGUAR XJ6L rallye wheels, and low cond. $5500. 496 SO~ ) I J 9 9 5 Don't miss this 30.156 rrules. (221831 '69 Beetle Ht•all'r air 1 Air. A/T, P /S, I' /8, taC'. mai:s. Ofr. 640-043.1 1967 Mustang $1200 111\le gem 11 as most $4686 &ulCI $500 llfri.I ofrer .. lf!llll!llP.l!M,_illl!ll!!!i.i"4 everything including air \ZBASSOI 552 904<! ,,.,._cc,,.",...,.< ..... ,....,.,., ... .,., 9930 ••••••••••••••••••••••• cond., pwr. windows. , 11• ,... •• ~.... ,,. '77 Mark V lmlll!ll I I' I' 1>40 IS-14-t Wt·<'kdayc. •) 1 540 2279 after 6PM locks. stt'ert ng J nd St500 Jn\t:..,ll·tl in "'L't(·o. brakes. leather, and for o;all• ur triltll' for VW NEWPORT DATSUN ~LLEN lih \luslang, C!l!!I eng, JUto. A IC, ong ownr ~1400/BO. ~615 ~""' 1,.,, f '-\I 1' 1•! '' ., pol 1 B· 11 1. stereo. <LRCJAGI 979 1626 CA01ll.A(. • OlOSMOBll E GMC ff1UCMS $7888 NEWPORT DATSUN 11(."'I..-11 ,, ...... , ,., '~' \ • Ill I' t ' ' I I 833-1300 9732 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '74 JENSEN HEALEY CONVERTllLE Hard to find onbr\nal car with low milt-s. AM FM ~lt'rl'O, mag~. lu.1igage r&ck 19S8KXV> $4778 . NEWPORT DATSUN 1\.'-~ I )1n1 ..._,,,. t ''\\I"'' I JI, ·" I 833-1300 Mmda 9738 ....•....•.....•......• miracle mazda 2150 H..t.or ll•d.· Cotto Mna '45-5700 HUR,Y-NOW AT MIU CLE MAZDA WlTH THE PURCl-l1~E OFANYNEW 1978 MAZDA GLC You will rccet\ l' Jn A.M, f'M StC'rt!O "FRiE" pr the cash equivalent orsn9.w CONTEST SALE ENDS.JUNE 30th. MIRACLE MilDA/ltEHAUL T 2150 Harbor Blvd , C.:\l 645-5700 -------·oo Squa.n•bad. :1.lnl rond. P~ 9750 nu eng s 1:rno r1rm ••••••••••••••••••••••• 642 9631. Cr;11).!.KJm Pnstane of llunllnl~lon 6pm, '1on lhru S;ll 833-1 JOO Beach 1s offenng lacquer '60 Bod~ fix up Good \•n 01"90 F'tlf''r A•~r'I f ••I LAGUNA NIOU E L ·si LoJdt.'<1, \ ~ gtl rnml S1050 (714 ) 540 2740 paint. metal fmashmg & trans S300 fender Oanng to Porsche 673·7965 9917 owners. 536,.7888. ----------• ••••••••••••••••••••••• CCIMlro . . ·75 VW convert. lo ma. 73 9.14·1.7 Light blue, ex· mags & stereo. 645-0884 eel cond. musl sell~. after6 PM 546-5778 ----~---- '67 Ca maro. mags, i; 1·} I uuto. new trans. $799 586-9413 19r. Ml.. V i .000 + rnr.., loadt'<l, ( rt'am. hl°'>t or Okkmobile 9955 fer Wall>.., rar 1>31 289i •••••••••••••••••••··~· Corre+te 9932 ~Ids 442. auto. A IC. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 586-9413 COrvelt.e Bids now bemg 1973 Cutlass Suprem1· taken on Indy SOO pace 65.000 mi's, A C. vnyl car m -;tork Fletcher roof PS/PB. S2 100/BO Jone\ t hl•\ rnh·t 6633 5$6·0363. wk. 957·01 IO Wes 1rn1 n i. t er ,\ ~, . hme Ask for Marty or W e ~ l m 1 n ., t e r . <.: a Lknny ____ _ P h . C f '75 VW Sc1rocco·4 spd '70 Camaro very l'll'an r 892·"44-i orsc e, 59 pe. sunroo . Air AMt FM stt!r Lo · · 1---------• new crpl. new paint, mi'~ Must sell. 494·2671. ~wnt'~ .. lm·al l;.idv Sl!175 Iii'! Toronado. rblt. eng perf ext very clean. 642·2754 li4-0 11.36 r\.\_I ____ _ ·7g Vet, lo:idcd bllt 7K m a. St 100/be:.t ol fer 'f,6 VW, 800m1 on 1600 eng 1977 911S. only 4500 mr. Xlnt cond. All mamt air. s unroof. leather. recpts $1300 673·3229 Ctw•rolet 9920 Sll.~IM>'•tolr Pinto 9957 ••••••• ••••.... •• • •• •• • 586·9-a 13 •••••••••• ••••••••••••• AM/f'M, loaded. $18.500. _...;._ ______ _ 675·.ii!78,494·l619 '72 VW Bug. 39.000 miles • ,. . , -New tires. Call aft 8pm, 62 J56B. white. f M cass, 640-5003or640-6S78 it chrome whls. xlnl cond it S4.850.S46-6022.aft6pm '72 bug Radio. nl·-... • 96 P h C brakes. tares. Xlnt cond it 1 1 orsc e onvert.. Sl.900 846·4086 it '76 Corvette Utl, 4 ~pll. T 'i6 Sqwre Wagon~ 6 <'' l . ,. top, rarl'. lake nt•w auto. A/C, Al\! l·M. low Orang<.' <tll option~ miles . 644-2292 da)s • $10,500 Day-; 642 i!H l. 759-0597 eves * Wknds 1•\ l'S 644·9222 .. '72 Wa~o n . AM /FM. • Cougar 9933 mags, ong. owner. $1400 • ••••••••••••••••••••••• 494·5551 rare. blk on blk. good ----cond1t1on PP 497·3289 ·74 Supe.r B~ radiQ/la~. ,. • 1977 Cougar X R7 . Im· -. -new llres. brks. shorks • it m a <' u I a I I! • l> I k 5 Pinto Runabout. ,\ 1r AMIFM, PS, PB, S24UO 847-2011; 833·3@> 78 9"~. 5,000 males under Looks new 52575. 63l 0~11 • • w l'hamo1s ml & lnm. warranty, $10.495 -• ~ It All eqwpment + lo ma. 645-416fi '68 VW Bug. AM IFM H • .. L'lo .tt See lh1'> one ht I' P trk. good cond. N1•w ROGER MILLEA SAYS. 549.11335 '77 wagon. AIC. AM/PM stereo. auto. 6 c} I. xtra-; - -9935 ~-673·2064 Porsr he. 19'TS. 914 1.8. 5- s pd. air. moonroor. AM F:\I cass. 24K m1 trres S800 1 b~t ofr 6424384 xlnt. S67flll 557·11 1-19 1970 VW Squarebal'k. &X· wkdys rell cond It ton Sl650. Call C\eS 673·5!>34 '67 Brown 912 Targa Saddle lntenor 644· 1481. 67·912. lmmaculatl' cond. Pnvale part,y. SS,800. 836-0Q:!I 9755 '74 VW Su pe r Beetle. yellow. S2300 498 2M5. 1935651<Kalhy1 ·73 Superbug, auto. clean. Nu llf('S, brake:. $1950. Gary, 752 1660. wkdys ----- '\ow Pric.es!" LEAS I HG 494-1131 546-9967 ~ •••••• •• • ••• • • •• • • • • • • • '76 VW Bus ti passengt•r. ,_..--. __ ;;;... ___ _ TESTDRIVEOUR w beds. mint rondation 1_9_6_9-C:ht'_v_c_ll-1.•-S1a11on "LE CAR 497 ~7 t'V(.'f;. Wagon. very tired' $250 Of THE YEAR" '76 VW Camper. Por:.cht.' PP 546 .. 1519 ~ •••••••••••••••••~<1• .. • '73 P111to. xln4 l'Ond1t10Jn "68" Dodgl• Coronet $1.500 G o o d t. o n d 1 t 1 o n , 646-2&'1 art h PM aut.omat1c 375.000 miles ..._uth 9 960 $450. 962 8711! I IJff---~------...................... . 6-l Dari. body n<'eds '73Scamp,6r)l.AIC. pa ant. SJOO bes t offer PS/PB. radio auto 646-4311. $1650 7 S2 2282. d) ., Ford 9940 '76 Volare Wgn Prem1l'r •• ••• •• • •• •• • • • ••• • •••• Z7K m1. loaded St2SO 552·3907 i i Ply moutll Fury Ill Clean and spam1us. 1wod co11d1t1on. Bent fender ut front. Must S1.•l I. S50Q (.'all after 3PM !Hl8-902t ---- 1060 HARBOR BLVD. CO'>fA MESA 647·0010 track, auto, $2,000 Call WANT ACTION? Good inventory in stock Hurry while they last ! MIRACLE MAZDA/REH AULT 2150 Harbor Blvd. l' n ~ . n cw r a d 1 a 1 -; . .:_ F.I ~ --AM tFM. mml. warran· ""' , Liminn \\ 1 ·•'.11rwr ty. PP. $6200 firm .;hell S;in~!111• !.:!11111 675 58.57 847 7926& 53h 01111 "" PonHoc 9965 ........•...•...•.•.... 642-8436. Classlled Ads 642-5678 Auto1, Mew 9100 Alltos, Mew 9800 Autos, Mew Autos, Mew 9100 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• . OltDB YOURS TODAY IT'S V AMT ASTIC!! V°'•o 9772 Rare 1977 Mon1.a Sp~d1•r ••••• ••••••. •. •• • •• • • • • 4-sp, V 8. ,\ C Lna<frd COSTA MESA 645-5700 IE:FORE YOU BUY A USED VOLVO, ---------•I See u' Jt Southern l.963 Caravclle con,.ert1 Orange County., Volvo ble w thardtop 2 top~ Jleadquant'r'> :\lusl sell. Good sb&pt• MARQUIS VOLVO 536-6296 MISSION \'IKIO 831-2880 495.1210 Rois Royce 9756 --••••••• ••• •••• ••••• •••. ORAHGE COUNTY w 1opt1ons 1131 i:!litl 493 7570. c\es, Ken l••• ........ ·~·~·"' 0i .. ,.,, ... 11 •• , 6 th"1.,PA1o11tt1t • .... I•• JW~ '75 !'t1JIJbu Clas~11 :-..1111 ·;5 LTD ~ld WJJ!On. 1, -... cond .. air. l'!l "PU S21!!1H P B. A c. ~rt!at ,hape Ph !W().2390 m J2U ---·77 Che\C'lll' :--ii\•·• \Int 71 Panto \\..:n rdck. <J1r cond 16,000 ma. s:iooo l'h rlt.•an. xtrJ 1.·ar, $16:!95 5S9 823 l 95.'I U38ll '75 /\<;tre htchl.u'k 1 spd. 29.000 mi. ~d cond. $ll!()IJ aft6586·2M5 ti7 Le Manns Convert, rt.'blt t•ni! & trans. lfaH' paper' AM F)1 S Irk. IT\J~., & wide 11\'a Is. H.' L 111 r "' r Sl70U. 8!17 ·4558 a:.k for ~!Jrty -------nird 9970 11 1 DEALER IN U.S.A VOLVO rorc1ass1f1ed Ad 1910 Sia W~n country i6 T Bird, full)' load1.-d, SQr f'l(l(l nr m·.ir<'~l of 1mmar $5000. P\1 parl\. ft·r 4!14·711170\\nCr ~oani.: ~.in 7Htl0 o r 524·21 :l7 EXCLUSIVELY VOLVO ACTION Largest Volvo D('&lrr Call a 1nOran~l·Countv' Daily Piiot •Ill RANCH ERO• Good ~ 9974 BUYorLEASI-~ AD·VISOH n md1uon 260 VS Auto ••••••••••••••••••••••• DIRECT 642 SO.Ii c·ntm1 Jet h1•11d:; r.ood ·n \.cl(a. Uood s ha1w. ~~-·· -------;:;_o~i ~~k $600 55!) 5.%1 mustscl~~-~73 ,,_~ ~ \_l: ~ Autos, New 9800 Autos, New 9100Autos, New 9800 1961 Rolls Royce S1IV<'r 2025 S. M a nc hester •••••••••••••••••••• ••• ••••••••••••••••••••··~····••••••••••••••••••• Cloud II Beaut car S18.soo. 540.1030 Anaheim 750-2011 Toyota 9765 Swedish Voho Ml'l'hanar ••••••••••••••••••••••• at lvun·~. 1995 llurbor c.LOSED SUNDAYS ovef'S4!as C\'1'" wknd~. . . . . .. ... .,,,.,. ... __ "' .. . .. . WIN . ~ . Everytning aoout tne Landmark s ays Quality Including a peppy. two-litre. fuel-injected engine Famous VW rel1ab1hty 9nd e ff1c 1ency And a host of luxury features BEFORE YOU Blvd .. C M 646 1982 SELL YOUR TOYOTA, SEE US! Autos. Used ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1978 FAIRMONT FUTURA ABSOLUTELY • nylon c•ri>eling • 4 plllow·beck bucket se•ls •double bed eonwertjble sot• • p•neled w•lls • wlnyl heedhoer end door penels OVU-STOCDD OMGOOO USED IAlllTSll MAMY TO CHOOSE NOMI '59VW "-..... SOOtl (;Qlille -•--llOMUl • ice boll sink. bu • suodo curlelns • 2 reer speakers •choice ot 2 deflgner p1lnt scheme& • tull lnsulahon • delu11e op!lona el ea tr• c:o11 '74 DASHER HetdilMick A11 CQtl4t!IQtlllt9 AM/~M <11(11(> ne• 0111\f, ~ tftitt Nie• (820ll(0) SEVERAL LATE MODEL BUSES & CAMPERS Cocllac MARQUIS TOY OT A ••••••••• •• •••••• •• •••• MISSION VIEJO 131-2110 495.1210 ·77 Cchca liftback 5 spd GT. ropper wrlan am. $.S.l)() 499-1866 '72Corona Mark 0 . AM/FM. air, auto, 46,600 mi's, gd cond. $2100. <TI4l 842-36l2aft 6pm '68 TOYOTA 4x4 Wlnch ·O(f R o nd Ure/Super cond., mu~n see! ( 1234711) $2799 TRUCK CITY 55 .. 5400 M.h & Harbor.Santa Ana '76~ Corolla SR·5. 29K miles. AM I FM. rln, SUOO. Ca.I I 968-106& '77C&ICAGT H p, AM /FM 11.tr, R lr tape, alr,)dntcond $4850 S57·0103 ii • OnMge COU11ty'1 S.•Hle Ce....,_ • TEST DRIVE A DIESEL SEVILLE • ~hOll II 11 h•'' Bl\d C.•l\l,1 ~k\.1 ~ 10 1111)() Com• In ed tnt drl•• my MW or nec1 c.-or flwk In our hucJt llnentory. Ccr to be glnn ewtq 1:00 P·t'L 30th of ..... 1971. ' .\ BRAND NEW 1978 CHRYSLER CORDOBA 318 CID engine. split back bench. torque t ransmission. cloth interior. tinted windshield. GR78x15 glass belted radial tires & pin stripes. (SS22H8R183078). '77 Pl:-VMOUTH '77 PLYMOUTH VOi.ARE SEDAM FURYWAGOH VB automatic trans . radio. heater. VB. automatic trans radio heater. Power steering. Power brakes. w/s/w Power steenng. PoWer brai..es. w/s/w tires vinyl top & air cond1t1oning tires. air cond1tion1ng & luggage rack (164SHO) (2465B1 ) s4295 s4595 . '71 FORD '74 FIAT 128 MUSTANG SEDAM 4 DOOlt SEDAM va. automatic trans.. radio, heater. 4 cyl . 4 speed transmission, radio power steering. power brakes, raised and heater. (141LJO) white letter tires & air conditioning. (4538 SX). s1595 s1395 .. .. '75 AMC HORMET SEDAM 6 cyl automatic trans radio. heater oower steenng. power brakes. w/s/w tires. air cond1t1on1ng & vinyl top (429MXCl s2495 '77 PLYMOUTH VOLARE COU,E VS. automatic trans.. radio. heater. oower steenng, oower brakes. wls/Yf tires. air cond1t1on1ng & vtnyl top 1240SXGl s3795 ., BIO DAILY PILOT Wednesday .iune 2a 1~71 '68 PLYMOUTH CED AM 6 cyl automatic transmission. racho. heater and cower <>teer1nc; IVGE355l $1095 '77 PLYMOUTH VOLARE WA.GOH 6 cyl , alAomatic trans .. radio, heatec. power steering, oower brakes. w/s/w tires. air conditioning & luggage rack. (240340) s4195 ,, GIANT OVERSTOCKED INVENTORY OF BRAND MEW 1978 CHRYSLER CORDOBAS MUST IE MOVED OUT ~ THE SA VIMG OPPORTUNITY O~ THE YEAR!· '76 DATSUN 1210COU'l 4 cyl 4 speed transmission. radio heater pOWer brakei; W/S/W tires & air cond111on1ng 1470PHL ' s2595 ·16 HONDA WAGON 4 cylinder. automatic 1ransm1ss1on and heater (441NZD) 52795 ATLAS CH•YSU• PLYMOUTH SHVICI HOUH: MONDAY TH•U FRIDAY 7:00 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M. SATUtlDAY 1:00 .A.M. TO 5:00 P.M. t • J • Huntington Beach Fountain Valley . .\•·te1·taoo11 N. Y. Stot-ks VOJ-. 71, NO. 179, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA W EDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 1978 l'EN CENTS HB Cops, Firem.en Priorities Backed Huntington Beach City Council members tentatively approved~ list of ~riorities Tuesday night that, if adopted. may stave off drastic budget reductions for the police and fire departments. City officials said they would like to add about $1.3 million to the police de partment budget that had been trimmed about $2 million because of the Jarvis initiative. An additional $750,000 also was given high priority to beef up the Schools . I To Trim I Budge t Huntington Beach Union HJgh School District trustees are expected to take final action Thursday on plans to cut <.ibout $5 6 million from the d1stncl's 1978· 79 budget. Supt. J ake Abbott told the school board Tuesday that action should be taken soon on teacher salaries. lie also said decisions about wh<'ther to cul back a number of programs including sports, band and drill team are needed soon Options before the school board include ehm1nat1on of coach and ~dvasor extra pay. transportation 1)nd other cost:-, for sports, debate. dram a.drill team and music. Student counc•al memberc; have asked the s<:hool board to allow them to l'Ollect donations from the community to fund sport~ and related programs. School district legal counsel Dave Larsen told the school board Tuesday ll would not be legal to charge s tudents fe es to participate m act1v1ties s uch as sports. But officials said the ~tudent fundrai s1ng idea will be cons ide red by the school board Thursday. Officials indicated budget cuts m ay not be as severe as they thought they rrught be last week. Now state legislation allows the flchool district to use Summer Schoo l and Summer Adult Education fund allocations for general fund purposes. off1 c1als said · The school board has canceled sum m er pro gr a ms This provides the district with en ad~1t1onal $2 8 million to use for regular school programs. said Abbott. Rut school board mf'mhcrs arc still eyemg plans that would mean 51 teachers who n.•s1gn ur retire would not be replaced and that eigi't temporary c:ouns1.•lors wou Id be laid off. Other proposed <·uls include layoffs fo r 58 non teaching employe<'s Jn add1t1on. eight admm1strat1n• Jobs that arc now vacant m1J!ht not h(' fi lled. Truste('s also will eons1der t>lim1nat1on of most student busing, drtH'r trrnning and field trips The ::.chool board is expt>cted to reach a final decision on the proposed cuts during a 7 o'clock meeting Thursday night. The meeting will be held in the Huntington Beach High School Auditorium, 1905 Main St. Coa~t \\'eat her f'.fight and morning low rlouds with sunny after- noon Thursday. Slightly warmer. Lows tonight 58 to 63. Highs Thursd ay nl"ar 70 at the ht'aches to upper 70s inland I NSIDE T ODA'°' Orange County aupermsors have adopted Jee h1kt'& at horbort, beo.cM& and parks Story P•A12 •·•---..c. Ind.-~ A.tAMU~ ... ~lllloa a •• t::'"l....-A• Mevln .. ,. ·'"'-' WI...-..!• On:tl .... Ctf!llU o. .. ..- OHlll Nolle" ''"""•'"-··~·......... , .... 114.-etc .. ... , M111lt ... AS Mvtwel l'-01 It Not .... 1"'- 91 Ou~c-ty •s 5"n• A.U Or St.iM ...... M 5t•o Merll4't1 ... " T••••ltlOfl a, ..... .... ci--.1t ... ,_ a.,, .. ,..,. • .,. •• .. M AU .... AU ., .. .. .. M A4 city's firefighting forces. 1C the priorities win approval in the final budget, the poltce department would lose 18 employees instead of the projected 60. Restoration of $750,00<r in the fire department budget would mean that all city fire stations would be open around the clock. There also would be enough money to operate two paramedic units and two ladder companies full time. H the r ecommendation is adopt~. 10 firemen would face loss of their jobs instead or the projected 31. Councilwoman Ruth Bailey said today that the polJce and fare programs are tentative priorities '"that we would like to see added to the budget." She added that it doesn 't appear that all programs will win final approva l unless sufficient money can be found. The city is hopeful of receiving ..... _,...,...,. THIS WAS THE SCENE IN MONACO 22 YEARS AGO Today Princess Grace's Daughter Weds a 'Commoner' Caroline, Philippe Marry in Monaco MONTE CARLO. Monaco CAP) -Prmcess Caroline of Monaco married Paris playboy financier Philippe Junot today in a 15-mmute cavil ceremony in the throne room of the royal pala·ce -the same room where her father. Prince Rainier Ill, married American movie star Grace Kelly 22 years ago. "Princess Caroline's hand shook a little as s he signed the regis ter," said Louis Roman, president of Monaco's St ate Council. who performed the marna~e before about 40 family members. The wedding was "nice. and in gobd spirits," said Roman, but not particularly emotional. A bout 1,500 pe rso ns filed through the palace gates to attend the post -wedding reception. Brillia nt s unsh1n<' bathed the palace square outside and hundreds of tourists pressed against the barriers Caroline and Junot will go lo the palace 's s mall chapel Thursday mornmg for a Roman Catholic nuptial Mass attended b y 100 guests, in c luding members of Parisian society and the inte rnational jet-set. ex-royalty and vintage movie stars. The press was barred from both ceremonies as well as from the pre-nuptial ball at the palace Tuesday nighl. The brevity of the guest list, the absence of me mbe rs of r eigning royal houses and the privacy s urrounding the wedding were in sharp contrast to the 2.000.guest htravaganza that Caroline ·s father. Prince 0 Rainier Ill, staged on April 18. 1956, whe n he married her mother. Dior, the Paris fashion house, designed the wedding outfits for both Caroline and her mother. Designer Marc Boharr outfitted the bride in blue crepe georgette for the cavil ceremony and traditio nal white for the religious rite while Princess Grace was wearing a pricot chiffon today and yellow crepe gt:orgettc Thursday. The palace r efused to say where Caroline, 21, and Junot. a 38 year-old Parisian financier , were honeymoonmg, or what gifts their parents were giving them. Monaco's police force of 300 and the 80-m an palace guard threw a tight web of security around the ochre walled palace to keep gate crashers out or the royal ball Tuesday night Greek shippin g magnate St av ros N iarchos' Be ntley limousine almost crashed into one of the police barricades · "hen photographers' flashbuJbs blinded the chauffeur. T he guests also included ex King Umberto of Italy, Egyptian Prince Fuad, Frank Sinatra, David Niven, Ava G a rd n er a nd Cary G ran ti Brushland Burns PALA CAP) -Fifty acres of brushland burned late Tuesday on the Pala Indian Reservation about three miles north of Pala in northern San Diego County. No one was hurt up to $2.7 million in state surplus money to take up part of the slack. Other money raising sources will be considered at tonight's meeting at 7 o'clock in council chambers. They include added fees for planning permits, an increase in oil barrel taxes and imposition of an oil tank tax, charges for library cards and increased parking leVles. OUicials previous ly have discussed a charge of up to $8 per month for each home and apartment in the city for user fees. This proposal w as frequently criticized at a public hearin~ Monday. Officials also have indicated that they will attempt lo slice salaries of employees as another means of savings. Other programs that were cut from the "Jarvis Budget" but given priority Tuesday night 'Gone Too Far' included: -Senior c itizen meals on wheels and transportation .--Beach maintenance and cleaning programs A work force or SIX persons in the public informa tion office. All se lf -supporti n g recreation programs . summer playground activ1t1es and the operation of community centers -Two employees 1n the city"s civil defense office. Rules UC Must Admit Bakke WASHINGTON CAPl -The U.S. Supreme Court today or- dered a California medical school to admit Allan. Bakke, ruling tltat he suffered illegal discrimination because he is while, ·but said that race can be taken into account in future col- lege admissions programs. Jn a 5-4 decision, the court held that the University of California's medical school at Davis had gone too far in con- sidering race when it refused to admit Bakke But it held that affirmative- action programs intended to benefit minority applicants can properly be a factor in decisions on admitting students. Bakke successfully sued the university aflet bis application to the university's m edical school at Davis was rejected in 1973 and 1974. He charged that the medical school's special admissions pro- gram which reserved 16 of the 100 openings in each entering class for "disadvantaged" s tu- dents was really only an im- permissible racial quota. Under it, Bakke charged. less academically qualified blacks, Hispanics and Asian-Americans were admitted ahead of.him. The Supreme Court interpret- ed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to say that while some race- conseious progr~ms are valid; the program that kept Bakke out of medical school crossed the * * * ................ BACKED BY COURT Allan Bakke line into illega l racial discrimination. Bakke. a 38-year -old civtl engineer who hves in Los Altos and works fo r the nation's space agency at the Ames Research Center in nearby Palo Alto. never had to prove that he would have been admitted if the school had not had a special admissions * * * Black Leaders ·Hit Bakke Decision By 1lte Associated Press The U.S. Supreme Court's rul- ing in the Bakke case today drew praise from the plaintiff's a ttorney and criticism from some black leaders and mem- bers of the academic com- munity. "My client has a comment," s aid Reynold Colvin , Allan Bakke"s attorney. "'He's delight- ed with the decision and looks forward to entering medical school in September.·· Bakke, 38, was not personally available. He was expected to go to work. as usual, at the Ames Research Center, a NASA facili· ) ty, in Mountain View, south of San Francisco. The court ruled 5·4 that the University of California"s m edical school at Davis, which twice rejected 8akke's ap- plication for admission, illegally discriminated against him because he is white. It also ruled. however. that the school 1s not barred from tak m g race into account m a future ad- missions program. Dr. John Tuppe r. dean of the school, said: ··w e've all been waiting for ltle Supreme Court lo tell us what the will of the people • of the United States is. We will obey the law. I cannot comment further until our lega l counsel has h~ a chance to actuatty re· has had a chance to actually read and digest the entire opt- Dr,. John A.D. Cooper. pres1· dent of the Association of American Medical Colleges. said the group '"is disappointed ... Considerable progress has been made in recent years for greate r partlcipataon by minorities in Am erican medicine. This has occurred 1n particular because medical school admissions decisions took into consideration the need for broad tepres entalion 1n medicine from all segments or our soctetv... · program The uru vcrsity conceded that 1t could not prove Bakke would have been excluded if the pro gram had not existed A state trial court ruled that the special admissions program violated the Constitution's guarantee of equal protection and also the portion of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 that outlaws rac ial discrimination by in- stitutions rece iving federal funds The California Supreme Court up~eld the trial court's ruling m favor of Rakke on the con- stitutional grounds only. choos- ing to ignore the federal law question. Th e Constitution's 14th Amendment. which 110 years ago held out to blacks the prom- 1 se of full m e mbe r s hip in American s ociety, granted citizenship to recently freed slaves and ordered aJI states not to "'deny to any person . . the equal protection of the laws " Civil rights activists havt• e mployed those words ever sin ce in efforts to stamp out what the,.y perceived to be vestiges of the slave system. Their greatest victory came in 1954 wht'n the U S. Supreme Court changed American hfe by outlawing racial segregation as ··mherently unequal ·· The racial civil righb move- m ent gained momentum ovt•r <Set> BAKKE, Page t\21 Councilman Says He Didn't Steal By RAYMOND ESTRADA JR. Of I,_ D•1ly Pilot St•I• ll untin~t o n Beach Cit y Councilman John Thomas test1f1ed m cou1 t Tuesday that he had no intent lo harrass or steal propL•rty from an 011 company owner who shares thr premises of Thoma~· trucking and crane firm. Thomas 1-; charged with mis demeanor va ndalism. trespass a nd theft involving $20,000 in property belonging lo King Petroleum Company. Tht:- tnc1dents allegedly occurred between Sept. 25 and Nov. 29, 1977. Prosecutor Robert Herron was expected to cross-examine Thomas today during the sixth day of testimony m the West Orange County Judaciai D1stnct court trial Thomas testified Tuesday that Leis11re Voting Tallied Ralph Smith, a law professor at University of Pennsylvama and chairman of the lega l education tas k force or the National Conference of Black Lawyers. said he was .. pro roundly disappointed" with tlu.~ decision, but added that he did not know how broad the ruling was. he hoisted an oil well equipment · shed from its rafters with a crane on Oct.' 16. The s hed belonged to Thomas C. King, owner of the 011 company. Thomas said he had to move the s truc ture in order to complete ground leveling or grading operations around it Thom as said he had planned to pave the arca around the shed Laguna Hills voter:; In Leis ure World favored Proposition 13 s lightly more than did the rest of Ora nge County but thei,r counterparts in Seal Beach were less solidly in s upport of the in- itiative. Figures recently released by the County Registrar of Voters office show that the 40 precincts within t.he retirement communi- ty voted 8,963 to 3.330 In favor of Proposition 13. the Jnrvis·Gann pro perty tux llm1tat1on 1n ltiotlve. on June 6. Jn other word!!, 72 9 percent of those voting favored the law Countyw1de, 404,878 voters case '"yes" hallots while J71,274 sold "no.·· That's a 70.2 percent ap- proval. At Leis ure World in Seal Beach. only 67.1 percent of that retirement community's voters approved Prop0sition 13 As a city, voters in Seal Be8<'h had one of the lowest pluralities in favor of the proposition in the county, turning out 8,256 in favor and 4.259 against for a 65 9 per. cent •·yes" voto. And Registrar o f Voters fi gures show thnt &-al Reach. as a city, nctuully approved Proposatlo" 8 Oov. l!:dmund Brown Jr ·~ ans wer t o the Jnrv1~ Gann inltrnt1ve Voters in the city gave S,900 affirmative votes and 5,868 negative votes to Proposition 8 Leisure Worlders in Seal Beach. however, turned thumbs down on Proposition 8 to the tune or 2,738 negative votes to 2,501 "yes" ballots, a 52 2 per- cent "no" vote. Laguna llllts• Leisure Worlders. however, turned down Proposition 8 by 61.S percent. 6.887 negative ballot3 to 4,299 yu votes. Orange County as a whole turned the Issue down with a 315-,214 "no'' vole to 238,461 '"yeses." ccordlng lo final of . f1c'3l resull8 In the Realstrar's orflce. ··It is our only hope that the court hasn •t become the as· sass in of affirmative action," he said. Robert Links, co-counsel for Bakke, said he spoke with httn briefly thls morning "lie said. 'Great! You f(uys did It'•" l,lnks reported "I said. 'No we dad.n 'l Voudld' ·· Of the ruling Itself. Links said I don't think the university totol ly lost the case I suspect ( ee REACTION, Page A2> nut Thomas said one of the crane hooks slipped and the hghtwe1ght shed crashed some 15 feet to the ground. .. Thomas _said .he hauled the demolished hed to the Orange County dump but left the <'Ontcnts in another area of his trucking and crone y11rd . A smaller bulldanR near one of the four 011 wells 1n the yard "fell down ." Thomns said, when he .ittl'mpted to r<'movc a larAc p1t•ct' of cement l'Urban~ near lht• s trut'lure Aeam, Thomas 1.:~l\ertcd , h<' did not 1nt<'nd to knock the (Stt TRIAL, Pt&«" \1) • • } \ Fun at the Beaf!h Whether they'r e JUS t relaxing on the sand or <.1 rock. or enJoymg a splas h either solo \>r with young com pany. these folks are ,:!ettmg lht' most out of a nice day for the beach. These photos were taken at Rock Beach in Lagun a Beach and Aliso Beach in South Lagunu. E'rona Page AJ BAKKE DECISION • • • the pu!!!t 15 years as government· ordered affirmative action pro-gram!'. began to gave special pref. crcncc Lo minority m e mbers and women to overcome past d1!-.crimrnat1on in business, cdul'at1on and government. Th('se program s . however, !-.parked numerous lawsuits such as Bakkc's Each essentially asked the ~ame question · May the govern- ment take a person's race into .iccount for special treatment ''hen its goal 1s to help make up for official d1scnminat1on in the past ? Four of the U S Supreme Court's nine members would have re,erscd the state court victories won by Bakke. Justices J. Brennan Jr., Byron R. While, Thurgood Marshall and Harry A. Blackmun agreed that race-conscious programs arc valid -and voted that the Uni versity of California 's pro- gram was valid under the 1964 law and the Constitution. Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr 101ned the four insofar as ruling · that some race-conscious pro- ORA NOE COAST H F DAILY PILOT '~ ~lf'lqt (O.t\t D••ly P.tftl .,,,,_ wfiw(fH\,.°"' "'""" ,,,.. ,., .. .,. p,,,, 1\ 0Ub'•'hl'00¥ '""°'~ Co'"' Pvf>4·~·"QC6m0•"'• ~,_,.,.-ct1ho"''•'" pion1 '~d MOlld4''t tfilff'\IQ"'I Fr•GIW IOt CO\'• ...... \.It ._,,tJlllPOf'l &ft<.t\ H 11.t"'ltf'Q'lot\ kHfll f°"' l••"'I V.tl •• ttv1n,. \•dOlfbie(' Velf~y •M l 4'1'-'"'• 1\#• " "°"''" (0.-H •"f111Q••,.-~l-.01 t 'W't °"~"filfod \•h1•rtan MIO~"' ll"fl P'•"' .... 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His was the crucial tifth vote needed to rule that the unviersity -and pre- s umably all other educational institutions -may in the future use some forms of affirmative action. But Powell, relying on his in· terprelalion of the 14th Amend- ment, said the Davis program hact not s hown lts eJf to be necessary to achieve t he school's s l ated goals and therefore could not pass con- s titutional muster. F,.._PageAJ REACTION .. they will try to formulate a more acceptable program a nd one that is fair to persons of all races who may have suffered hardship and disadvantage in their lives." Colvin said of tbe ruling: "l think the one thing that Is clear is that whatever universities do, Whatever experiments they engage in, the racial quota - the fixed quota as such -I think, has been ruled out. .. It was a divided decision. a dif· ficult problem, but It seems the court was ver y sensitive. It seems to have ruled on precisely the question that was before it." Dr. Joseph Lowery, president o ( the Southern Ch ris lian Leadership Conference, noted that the court had ruled that race could be taken Into account in future admissions programs. • · 1 think the court in a sense h as affirmed affirmative action," Lowery said. "tr they said that racial consideraUona may be a factor In admissions policy. then even thouah they ruled in favor of Allan Bakke, lt does not destroy s pecial ad· missions policies ln graduate schools ... 1 think there's got to be room for nexlbillty. As long as there ls . . . a sense of uraen- c y a b out mak tn a the matriculation possible and available to blacks, then I think we can Ii ve without fixed quotas.·• ( ERA Revived In Illinois_ ISPRINGFIELD, Ill. CAP> - Like a cat with nine lives. the proposed federal Equal Rights Amendment has been resurrect· ed again in Illinois. but Senate sponsors say a vote is unlikely before November. Sixteen co-sponsors. including the state Senate president. tn· troduced a resolul1on in the up- per chamber Tuesday seeking ratification or the ERA. The move came five days after the Illinois House dumped the pro- posal for the second time this month. But sponsors said they will not force a Senate vote on ERA until after November elections. when the Legislature reconvenes for a fa ll lame-duck session. ·Divorce Try Unsuccessful CAMBRIDGE. Mass. <AP> - Lawyers for Sen. Edward W. Brooke and his estranged wife. Remigia. say both wanted to settle their divorce out of court. But they failed, and the two. year-old case is headed back to court for a new trial. Mrs. Brooke asked a probate JUdge on Tuesday to reopen the divorce case and hold a new hearing before the end of July A spokes man for Brooke said the Republican senator. who 1s running for a third term. was re· turni ng lo Was hington and would have no comment on his wife's decision. JARns BILL DAMPENS FVSE LA MESA !AP) -A year ago, 50,000 people w atc h ed the traditional fireworks display on Notthrid&e hill. The show this year is can- celed The City Council said Tuesday that revenue· cutbacks rrom ProposiUon 13 make it Im· possible to finance. Car Wash 'Labor' Assailed The U S. Department or Labor has filed suit in Los Angeles U.S. District Court against Metro Car Wash alleging violation or the federal Fair Labor Standards Act at its five Orange County outl ets. Identified 1n the complaint are Me tro partne r s Frank V . Bianchini of Costa Mesa and Malcom Cobrink of Fullerton. PartQer B11ilnchini. who had ret to hear or the suit. reacted angrily Tuesd ay. calling the charges "intimidation of the worst kind " Bianchini. who operates the Costa Mesa Me~ro Car Wash. sa id he was not aware of any com pl a ints fil e d by hi s employees The Labor Department has asked the court to order the car was h company to pay all back wages found due to employees plus interest and costs to comply with the law in the future. Metro Car Wash outlets are located at 2950 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa: 3400 Beach Blvd., Huntingto n Beac h : 6656 Westmins t e r Blvd ., Westminster : 2402 Bristol St., Santa Ana : and 387 Tustin St., Orange . T he suit is the result of in· vestigations conducted by the Labor Depart ment under the direction of Elmore Wilcox. area d1 rector for the Wage-Hour Division, Employment Stan- dards Adm1mstratton in Santa Ana 5 MenFound Murdere d in Boston Bar BOSTON <AP> The bodies or fi vc young men wh.o were shot to death were found early today in the basement of a bar and grill where they worked in the heart of Boston's main shopping district. The bod i es were fo und grouped in a basement office of the Blackfnars Restaurant on Sum mer Street, by a bar employee A police spokesman :.aid "a s hotgun \\as used .. Police were unable to identify the v1ct1ms 1mmed1ately. but the s pokesman said all were in their m1d -20s Thcre was no immediate in- d1 eat1 on of how many times the men \\>Crc :.hot The d1scoverv came al the height of the morning rush hour. and a crowd of curiosity seekers soon formed as police cruisers and a mbulances converged out· side the fi ve-story office building where the lounge is located . The small restaurant is three to Hve years old and has a clientele consisting mainly of youn·g businessmen. A .. WI ......... Watch It, Birdie A bird ponders the head of Jame~ Pendergas t, a former alderman and brother of the la te po ht1cal boss Tom Pendergast. as it comes to re~t on the statue m Kansas Ci ty . TRIAL •.. structure over. The action was related to the grading and paving operation, he asserted. T h o mas a nd Huntington Beach Planning Department employee Sergio Martinez said the city required re moval of "trash and rubbish" and other improvements at the trucking and crane yard. Thomas has asse rted that much of the prop e rty h e removed. belonging to King, was actually .. lrasb .. The property includes 011 well equipment such as tubing. metal pipes and tools March Ban Ask ed • C HI CAGO !A P > The Chicago Park District asked a federal appeals court to over· lurn a lower court ruling allow- ing Nazis to march in Marquette Park. The president of the district also said Tuesday that he would take the issue to the U .. S S upr e m e Co urt If necessary. Valley D e lays Budget Cuts Fountain Valley ctly council memb<'rs delayed actlon Tuesday on proposed 1978-79 hudget cu~ and uses of S737,14Z" in revenue sharing funds Council members slated a 7:30 p m meeting Thursday to take fuial action on the proposed $2 million in budget cuts. Mayor Marv Adler said more umc was needed to hear from ('1(1 7ens regarding the budget cuts and use::. of revenue sharing lunds Supervisors Okay Alicia P r oject An agreement to provide for the widening of a portion of Ml'Fadden Avenue in Hunt- 1n~ton Beach was approved Tuesday by Orange County !-.Uperv1sors Under 1Ls terms the city and county each will provide $97,000 -to widen the roadway to four !(.Ines between Gothard Street ;rnd the San Diego Freeway Particular People Select J<;>HNSON & SON Home of the 11Golden Touch11 "At Johnson & Son, we were treated in o very professional and dignified f110l!il«." .. HAMCY MITICIM Hwl ..... Oll ~ C91f • "Very courteous, very fair, enioyed the last four or flve years association." AWi SMITM MOOll &..e,.e ..... Celtf. "Courteous salesman, p1eosont surround .. ings, excellent service." DAVID DOST AL .,.,..,_..._11.c•. "Follow through is very good. I've had eleven years of satisfied H rvice." MAS. A.OttlHCI L HAU l.,......,c .... Orange County's Oldest Lincoln Mercury DeatMsh1p .JOHNSON Be so~ I ~ I 2626 Harbor Blvd • Costa Mt~.~ • 540·5630 ' I \ .. CALIFORNIA Wednesday June 28 1978 DAILY PILOT ,.\ ~ Solons OK $15.2-Billion Budget Anti-abortion Democrats Vow Fight on Funding SACRAMENTO (AP> A':> sembly Demoerats have broken a deadlock over their $15 2 billion version of the propo~ed state budget, but the 1tct1ota only delayed confrontations over abortion funding and govern ment spending limits tare. r ape or incest But he said cu rrenl fede ral restr1ct1ons arc too liberal and he would not ac- cept any ":>tale funding that replaced withdrawn federal dollars The budget vote was on{: more than the two thirds majority need e d fo r p assage. One De mocrat voled no and one a b s tained Of the 23 Republicans. 21 voted no and two were absent day failed to produce an agree ment that would end the GOP boycott De m ocrats would proceed with a spending limit proposal on their own for action in August. Anti-abortion De moc r ats agreed Tuesday night to vote for the budget in a prelimrnary form. clearing the way for a 55·22 vote that allowed 1t to pro· ceed towa rd a two-house con· ference committee But they warned they would not yield again on any form of Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.'s $34 million budget proposal to con \inue funding Medi-Cal abortions for poor women ··w E WILL STAND as a bloc against the budget if it contains provisions that are to us morally and philosophic ally repugnant." A sse mblyman Ali s t e r McAlister. D-San Jose. told his colleagues before the vote He said he was speaking for 12 other Democrats He told reporters he was will ing to accept abortion funding in cases of danger to the mother's The federal law approved by Congress and President Carter las t Augus t allows abortion funding onJy 1n cases of rat>e. in· cest , and danger of death or severe physical health damage to the mother. Those conditions cover onl~ a small fraction of previously funded abortions BROWN ORDERED the stale Medi-Cal program to replace the withdrawn federal funds. saying the right to ao abortion should not depend on a woman's in- com e. The budget proposal, which mcludes restr ictions after the third month of pregnancy. wo uld cove r about 86,000 abort1om. tr McAliste r 's group holds firm. Democratic leaders \\Ill either have to yield on thl• abortion is~ue or reach an ac commodatidn with Republicans over the spending limit p roposal that GOP members want on the November s tate ballot. R £PUBLI CANS wi thheld their votes as part of their de· mand for an Assembly floor vote on a proposed cons titutional a mendmcnt b y Sen. George De ukmej1an. R·Long Beach. tha t would limit increases in s tate and local government spending to the percentage in- crease in the cost of living plus population A similar proposal by lhen- Gov Ronald Reagan was rc1ect· ed by state voters JO 1973 But Republicans s ay the r ecent passage of Propos1t1on 13. a S7 billion propcrt) l<i'< cut. in· d 1cates the µubhc mood has chan).(cd Thou~h Brown and Assembly Spt~akt•r Ll'o McC<.1rthy, the Dcmotrnt1c lc<.1der in the lower houst•. ~"Y they want " state ... pending limit, five hours of c losed door negotiations Tues· THE STICKING point ap· parently was Republicans' in- sistence that the measure move out of a Democr at -controlled com mittec to the noor before the Le~islature begins a recess in early July Assembly GOP leader Paul Priolo of Malibu told reporters that the Republicans were will· mg to wait until August for a floor vote on the measure. pro- vided the legal deadline for qualifying November ballot measures is extended from June 29 to Aui;. 15 as expected lie said McCarthy offered to put a mt•asure on the A":>":>embly floor 1n Au ~us t th at wa s "ge nerally with in the parameters of our l1·~1slallon " But he said McCarthy would not aj:!ree to act before the rece..,s Jnd did not gtvc satisfactory gu;.i ranll'cs "I TIUNK WE'RE quite fa r apart." Priolo said McCarthy. () S<.1n Franl'1sco. told reporters that the He blamed the breakdown on ·• "the rather passionate feilling against the governor" in the Republican Caucus. The s1x·member conference committee will try to. reconcil e d iffere nces between the two , vers ions of the budget. Besides abortion funding, they include statt' employee pay. prison con· struction. and Univer s ity of California tuition. THE ASSEMBLY generally followed Brown 's recommen d"3t1on for a state pay free2e but proposed a 2 percent raise for some e mployees making less than $23,000. The Senate ap proved a 5 percent raise for a ll ::.late workers. L'nder terms of eme rgency state aid to local governments approved last week. the state pay raise will be the maximum a llowed for local government workers and welfare recipienb The Assembly also wants tht- frce2e applied to lcg1slators and Judges , . ' APWI~ SERVES TIME Jane Russell Ex-actress Serving Four Days Bombing Link Widens SANTA BARBARA IA P ~ J ane Russell , 57, one of th~ mov- ies' glamor queens rn the 1950s. 1:> serving a four ddy Jail sentence for dnving while intox 1oated. authorit1e!> say Mumt•1pal Court JudJ.!e J oseph Lodge revoked probation and sC'ntcnced Mis"' Russell on Mon- day. a nd she began S('rvmg her senlenc(' that night. authorities s<.11d Tuesda, Briggs Suspects Said Tied to More Blast,s Mi ss Russell. who lives rn nearby ~ontec1to. was put on probation foll owing an 1ntox1cat l'c1 drt\tng conv1ct1on in 1976 She wa~ arrested and charged a second t1mt-following an acct· dent last Ma rch. sheriff's de partment official~ said Af'WlrepM\O Owking Suspect Aided San Francisco police attempt to aid a m an they identified us Greg Bartlow. 31, after he swallowed balloons they said might have bee n filled with a heroin-like substance. Police claim Bartow 1s a known narcotics dealer. LOS ANGELES I A P > E\ 1dence found 1n <1n apartment ust'C1 bv 11\e members ol a rev- olut 1onary ~roup links them \\Ith other bombings al'ross the nation. authorities claimed rn a ll'ller fllc•d in Los Angeles Superior l.'our1 The five Clayton Van Lyde- grar. 62. l.ec;lie Ann Mullin. 33; J ulf 1th Emil} Uts~e ll , 33: Michael Justesen, 27, and Mark Curtis Perry. 2'J will be tried Ot t JO on charges of conspiring to blow up the Fullerton office of state.· Sen John Briggs. 0 E PUTY DISTRICT Attorney flobert .iori::ensen. urging Tues· day that Van Lydcgrnf 's bail be increased from $200.000 to $500.000. alle~ed a typewriter • found 1n the defendants · apart- ment was tested by the FBI. A hearing on Jor gensen's motion was set for l''nday J orgcnst•n s:ud the FBI de termint:d t he.• typl•writcr was used to t~ pc.> a weather Cndc.•r· grolfnd communique regarding a bomb placed at the Anaconda American Brass Co m Oakland on Sept. 10, 1974 The bomb \\as discovered before 1t could ex- plode. lie said the same typewriter also was used to type a note in which the Weather Underground claimed responsibility for plant· ing t'Xplosives Jan. 28. 1975, in the U.S. State Department in Wa s hing to n . D.C . and the Federal DuHding in Oakland. JORGENSEN Si\lO a docu· ment e ntitl ed "Origins of f'3scism." found in the same apartment, was typed on the s ame typewriter as was used to t ype a number of other Weather Underground communiques. These communiques claimed 'East Area Rapist' Hits Again SACRAMENTO <A P > The "eetst area rapist" has attacked a 23-year-olrt ..... ornan v.ho lived a lone in .an apartment cornpl<'x h i s 3 R t h " 1 c· l 1 m . t h c Sacramento County s heriff's de partment n•porb B I I l M i I I l' r . s h e r I f f . $ spokesman, sa1tl Tuesday it was the first time the. r<.1p1st has s truc k in Sacr amento since April 14, and only the second time 1n an apartment complex His last four attacks were 1n Davis and Mod<'i>to. two in each city. M 1 lier sairt lh!bfltes Proposed LOS ANGELES <AP l Gov Edmund G Brown Jr has pro- posed a series of four lclev1sed gubernatorial debates prior to the Nov 7 general election Hi s Republican opponent. State At· torncy General Evelle J Younger. is exp<.>ctcd to reply to the proposal early next month. (-__ s_J_'All~~---J Body Exhumed .It LOS ANGELES <A l» In or- dl•r ·'lo provt' o r dis prove ccrtam phy~1cal evide nce con- cerning lhc case." sheriff's in· Ken Reitz. Younger·s cam 'J)a1gn manager . said after meet rng here with the governor 's aides Tuesday that the attorne-y general would respond by July 7, when the two sides meet a gain. Subpoena Disobeyed SACRAMENTO <AP> -The Sacramento Union says a re- porter is refusing to obey a Superior Court judge's subpoena of tapes and notes from an in terview with a witness 1n the El- len Delia murder trial. The Union said Tuesday thal the order was issued Monday by Judge John J . Boskov1ch to re- porter John Hammarley \'t:st1gators have exhumed the body of one of the 13 victims at· tributed t o the H illside Stra ngler Sheriff's Lt. Phil Bullington said Cindy Lee Jl udspeth's body was removed from the mortuary Tuesday and r eturned a few hours later to check certa in evide nce. but he would not elaborate MefltOry Queried OA KLAND IAP> Attorneys for Wilham and Emily Harns sa} the woman they're a ccused of kidnapping -Patricia Hearst "lacks sufficient memory" to testify against the pair. Dunk the Tax !flan C'ountv AssC'ssor F: C Williams. who i"l dropp~ into rt box of watf'r A baseball was throvm lo drop him th14' one by San Ow go Pad1 cs pllCh(.11 nan<ly Jones A charity event to raise funds for an En· cmitas church will feature a game that-b , bound to lure m ost of the crowd. In a re- hearsal for the Au~ust event is San Diego , De fense attorneys Tuesday told a Judge that Miss lleari,t, kidnapped more than four years ago a nd c urrently ser ving a prison term on a <·onv1c t1on or Joining her abductors tn a bank r obber y. could not accurately t estify because "her experiences over the past few years have af· fected her abihtyto perceive. rec- ollect and communicate '' • •• • • • • HERB • • « • FRIEDLA'.'\DF.R • • IS '.\1AKl~G • G REAT OF.:\LS « FREE: 50 (~.\LS : OF(;,\S « ... •1th ti\• •'' •' ''''" ··' fll• •, ., i•v "'• , + ~ orOll.<"11.\'<a:~ « Jt-" '""""' "'"'MtH h' ,h,.. futnn for tt Jt-I \ fn.-1 ''-\OIU tt•ft '*"'' f'tr fl • e HONDA e • Jt IT.0•1\r1r~llhd • 1t S.Jt n:' •~•muhtf'r ~-•n1 .... * • * * * • * *. * •• • MG-TRIUMPH ! * e JAGUA R e « ! FIAT·LANCIA ! • )lt u~~,,~~~:,.~;~"h:,.•n1 • ..... * •• * * • * *. * •• • e TOYOTA e • • 1...,1t.1rdl'11tl•'"''""8h4I '41 Jt •••t•"•·"'''" U1 M .. 41 ············~ : . :H<~ORll~~l E . : ,. S .\l.U~ & R f.~T.\l.S it ~.Es_E R\'!·: :\OW : • . .,.n.,777 Ext. 50t) ,.. •••••• * * * *. * ... • e LE ASING e it "" ~hk••~ r-1• & o. ..... ,lf It'"' A 11<>1a.r l .. OM. !lo. a .. TIMlm- • 537 ·7777 Ext. 600 **********'** Your o.ity Ptlpl Cln be A.cyc:l,ct. 0•1f'IQI! c ~,, COll"9" I\ lhf' Ol hC IA! trc ye '"''l c~nt.., •or Cosl• Mn. respons1bihty fo r explosives in- <·1dents at Gulf Oil Co head- quarters in Pittsburgh, P a . on June 13. 1974. at the Kennecott Copper Co. headquarters m Salt Lake City. Utah. on Sept. 5. 1977. and a t the U.S. State De part menl. PUC Oversees '13' Savings Distribution SAN FRANCISCO !AP> -The California Public Utilities Com· mission is taking steps to assure • that any tax savings received by utilities or transportation firms because of Proposition 13 would be passed on to customers. l n action Tuesday. the PUC ordered an investigation to de- termine effe<:ts the new property tax cutting amendment will have on rates of companies un· der its junsdiction Under the proposal. ut~lit1es and transportation companies will be required to set up tax in· 1tiative accounts to insure that any t ax rt'duct1ons are passed on to ratepayers and any new in creases in ta>ces. licenses o r fees are reflected in rates. S tarting July l all rates col lected to cove r property tax ex- penses wHJ be subject to refund. rate adjustment or balancing treatment. Miss Russell. \\ho currently- does te lev1s1on commer cials. gained national attention JO her first film. "The Outlaw " The movie was directed by the late Howard Hughes. who h ad her wea r scanty outfits considered risque at the time Streettoolkers To Get Jail? SAN fRANCISCOt AP> -Al· leg inA that prostitutes prowl "rampant" in two of the city's most popula r touris t areas, the Chamber of Commerce. the police chief and the Powell Street Assoc1at1on a re demand· ing ;a il terms for the street walker<: San Franc1:'co M unicipal Court came under fire from all three parties Tuesday for being soft on pros titutes P olice stat1st1cs show 90 percent of the 1.450 prostitute~ arrested so far th1l' year :.crvcd no time in jail The two business ~roups sail> the situation i!> particularly bad on Powell Street. whe re tourists wait to board the city's famed cable tars. and in Union Square, at the heart of San Francisco's shoppin~ dis trict rt is ts I June 29 -July 2 Thursday, Friday, Saturday and SUJ\day. View nearly eighty prof ess1ona! arosts and craftsmen displaying theu ongmal works. mcludmg oils, watercolors. seascapes and abstracts Ifs another Fashion island expenence. And irs free. ln Newport Beach on Pactftc Coast Highway between MacArthur and jamboree ~ ·~e difference between betteT & best:' I o'""9 ~.,. o ... , p,,g, Editorial Page ..................................................................... ·' tl/f Wednofoday Juno 28 1978 Council Ruckus .May B e H e althy T h t· llunlln~ton DcaC'h City Council has taken plenty ot lum ps tn ret•t•nt m o nths fo r it~ pe rfo rmance standards . n m eeting nights a s well as at other times. T here have been m ore than j ust a fe w o bservations that the Montlay nig ht sessions h:wc t urned into a c ircus . Residents and council m e mbers hH ve on occas ion c rossed the line ol ac ce ptable behavior . And wh ile <.'h ildish and boorish a cts are not to be <.'<>n doncd. they appear to be an accepta ble price to pay tor a I ruly op e n public forum. Items an.~ put out o n the table for frank discussions ;,ind dc>rision m ;.iking. This. is p url and p a r cel of what dt•rnotra<.'Y i s all abouL Last \H•ck. c.·omme n ts from the audience lasted for 111·;,irly I hree hours. Monday nig ht. 200 res idents attended .t publit' hearing on the city budget a nd 30 of the m spoke . This 1::, a fat' helter "ay of doing bus iness tha n that of .1 nc1ghhon ng tlly Lhal some times polishes off a m eeting in l 7 minutes he fore Just a ha ndful of residents. Th(• Jluntmglon Bt·ach council puts its cards on the t ahll•. <'ouncrl mem ht•rs don't try to conceal things fro m t he people. al lt'ttst not often . Mt•t•trngs can he fill ed with chaos a nd turmoil. And it 1 ... I rut• t hat tJwy often arc the best show in town. But no one ever s;.iid ckmonacy 1s t he most e fficient form of go\ crnml·nt P ark P rotest s About 100 f<'ountai n Valley residents h ave voiced ... trong proll·..,ts O\ t•r two preliminary plans to develop the last 87 ~u·n•s of land at Mlle Squa r e Regiona l Par k . Apparently . residents arc vehe m ently opposed to a priv~H t· t·1mr1•ssionairt·'s use of the la nd as a softba ll !',Ol't'cr f1l1ld complex under a proposed 35·year le a se . \ nd t lw n·.,ult-nts do not like a nother proposal that talb tor :-.katt•board and bicvdc m otoc ross courses which WOU id C'O!'tl lhe <.'Olll1ty $3.l m illion . Sonw n•sacknls h avt· t·xpresscd fears that Orange Count\ llJrbors. fkaches anti P a r h offic ia ls would sc.•nou~ly ('onsid<:r th e sott b~\11-soccer concession becaus e 11 \\011 ld not cost 111l' county any initia l funds. Bui ~1.,, the) hun.' poanlt:d out. the county -and the ci· I\ a'.'> \\t ll "ould ha' c to pay m ore m po lice cos ts h rought ur1 h'.' intl'<.'ust·d u~l' ol that :.et·t or of the county· run JWl'k H(• ... 1dt•nh "ho Ii\ l' 1wur the undeveloped . no rthwest :11 ••a of tlw p.srk \Hllll lo "'''l' grnssy. op en s p ace a reas as m ud1 ol I he• rc.·~t ot t hl· ;\1 1 le S<'1u<1 re• faci lity 1s today. And it \\ 11111<1 "l't·m t·on-;1s t1·nt lo <k\'clop t he 87-a c re ar ea in a 111.111nt•1Ihat11•s<'mhlt•s lhl· n·->l ol thc park But Ill li,ghl of t h<.' l'Urrc nt lack of funds for s uc h prn,1et·t..,, 1s t hl•J't• rt>;ll ly anythmi.( tha t c an be done with the 1:111<1 t''<'t·pt lo ll•:nt· 11 111 tl!-> undt•\·elo pe d s tate? II th•· nrn.1on1 ~ ot Fountain \'alley residents tru ly op- pose• t hl' t \\ o pnipost•d pul'k plans. the C ity Council sho uld <Hlopt ,, I l''olut1on rl'flcct111g th is feeling Coastline Message L :1 .... t \H'l'k hrought out som e interesting contrasts for Coastl1n1· Communtt Y College. the Coa s t Community ( 'ollt•J:(t• D1stnc:t 's · college without wa lls.·· 0 11 lhl· sam<.' duy lhut the Western Assn. of Colleges ,ind L' Ill\ ('r!->1t1t• ... grantc·d the fledg ling ins t itutio n full ac- t·1 L·d 1tataon. a un1t<·d l.1cult) g roup of teache rs from G11l<kn \\i('sl ~111d O range Coast coll ege submitted a r cs- 0111 1 inn cull111g tor th<· abandonme nt of the Coastline < 'ollt>gl' fh'..,p1tt-tlw pas~ag<.· o l Prop 13. trustees have backed t ht' t''lsl1·nt·l· of Coal-tl1 nc. noting tha t the fac ility c.-duc·atc·.., its -.tudc•nts ~1t a lower annual cost Ca bout $400 t•a<·h 1 th.m 1•1thl'I ot I Ill' t \\.O perm ane nt campuses 110\H'\ 1·r. tlw l<.wu lty g roup. an eating the te ndency toward SllJH'l'lluou:-; l:OUr.sc o ffe rings and general \\ ~1l-I ('f 11 I nl''' on llw pu rt of Coastline. has r aised points I h.it Co;i~l ltm• 'hould heed i\t .i 1111w \\.h1·n <ill budget belt<; must be pulled t 1ghtPr, l '1>ast 11111· -;llould t ake f ul t a d vantage of its ac- r1t•d1t:1l1l•ll IH t11mm1ng l'l'l\ulous and q uestio nable c l.1 "''l"· :rnd Ii\ making c·ertJin 1t:-. <.'m ploye:, a re pro· dttc'l l \ t • Opinions e xpressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot Other views expressed on this page a re those of their a11thors and artists. Reader comment 1s 1nv1ted. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O. Bo)( 1560, Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321 Boyd/Drawing Room Dy 1..M. novo Qul'Stmn arises as to why lhat spe>c1al silting place 1n ohl l1 mey houses was ca lied lhe d rawing room. It was where the ladjes retired after dinner to l<'a ve the men at ta· hie to the ir ci~ars and hquor Bccau!.e or the laFies' retrea~ I he reto. the nam originjlllY \V <1 s t IH' •• w I t HJ r d w I n g room.·· No n<'~ novchst w1 lh a r e- ll'('t ion s lip 1n hand should for get that Pearl Buck 's .. The G ood E a rth " was I urned down by 14 publis hers hdore •l wound up as the No. I b ests elle r for t wo s uc - <.'essive years. n ear Gloo1ny G u s When is R i n g lin g Rrottll'rs ~oin~ to put a t~nt ovt'r lluntrngto n Reach city ~o'er nment m eet 1np::-nnd ch:irgc t1 dm1 ~1c 1 o n " T h <>sc s howc; roulri ht-he!pmg boo~t t tl~ rt'\ rnUl' J v <#lOf)ftt' ""' commtt\t\ 4r• \Mb rtH tt•• Df , •• d.t\ Ane •• "01 "t"tt'\\..ttltt ,,...~, ...... ,.,, 04' .,,. ~~~~. '1>..~.:,:,;...,.., -Vt .. What sort or breakfas t a p- peals to you ? Pres ident U.S. Grant liked nothing better to start off his day than a c u c umber drenche~ 1n vinegar. More men than women m France use cosmellcs. Q . "What's the lon gest stretch of highway with no tra H1c lighLo;"!" A. Interstate 75 between Sault Ste. Marie. Mich .. and Tampa, Fla. It's 1,564 miles. Q. "Why was the Quonset hut of World War II s o called"" A. Because it was firs t built at the Quonset Point Na val Air Station neor Grf'enwich, R.J. In 1941 for uirmen. The great Heavyweight Jnck Dempsey earned just about a s muc h money throug hout h is fighting caree r as did Muhammad Ali in losing hJs last match. T o that lis t of inap· p ro prlate nam es, add bllndwo rms . which are ne ither blind nor worm. They're legless liinrds Among dogs, lhc terriers bark the most. Among 1 5aLc;, the r crshtns meow the rast. The averaRe humnr1 ~inR 1s an 18-year·old Ctllnese gJrl. Earl Waters A Million Here, a Million There For nn Inkling or the fat con tent of government. consider Governor Jerry Brown ·s state budget for lhe forthcoming ris· cal year commencing July l. as he initially proposed it last January. It totalled $16 billion. This d1d not include property tax re lief money subse- quently pro- vided In SB 1 or mone y for s tat e employee salary raises and numer· ous new pro- gram s th e ~ovcrnor was ~)ushing. Addirtg those. the ac- tu a I budget would have <'X· Mailbox ccedcd $18 billion or $8 billion more than when he took office JUSt 31 " yt'ars ago . A qujck study or the planned budget reveals that its proposals represented a n inc re ase for state a gencies for next year of at least $2 billion over lust yur T hat increase alone would use nearly e very penny of all the taxes collected from every bank and corporation. It is more than one-third or all the income taxes extracted from ever y individual. It 1s more than half the total or the last full budget spent by for mer Governor P<it Brown in 1966. his last year m office. BUT THE increase is wor se than that for 1t doesn't include any of the increase-; in the multi· billion dollar budgets or health welfare agencies which cover s uch programs a s welfare'. Medi-Cal. unemployment. men tal hospitals and aid to the aged . all or wtuch are so vast they de fy easy analysis. Nei~er does it include educa· lion which. in the race of deelin 1ng enrollments. was slated nevertheless for increases 1n stale funds of nearly a h~lf billion dollars for all levels. How do budgets get so fat? It starts at the top. The governor's immediate of rice budget was set at $3 s million. up $600,000 from the 197i figure . The four a JZe n cv secretaries under the governor. ht s cabinet. proposed budgets totalling $3 8 milliori. an m · Neasl• of l l i m1lhon Al~o part of th<.' governor ., off1 cC! are tht' offices of Employee Hel ation~. P!a nntn~ and Resea' c h a nd Em l'q~enc~ Serv1c<'.., T he:-c th1 CC had ..i combined bUdRCl o( Si ti million. up S4 5 m1llton So tht: total cost of runn1n~ the gov t rnor ·, off1Cf' for o ne )e ar comes to almosl s1;; m1llton and r epresenl.f. an tnl'resse of neatly Si m ti hon btol wel.'n 1976 77 a nd 19i8-79. a lmost a 100 percent gr.o~th ' Al.THOtJGll most oth<'r stall' agent 1es wcrt' not ~uitt• so fast \\1th th£ butk nc1th<.-r \\t-re they Scr oogt's Con~u ml·r Affa ir., added $8 m1lhon for .1 total $38 m11l1 on : G l·n l'r a l Service.., "howed <i S26 m1llton increase to Sl88 m1lhon llousmf! and Com munit) Dc-v<.'lopme:n t wC'nt up $i 5 m1li1on 10 <1 tot a l $t2 ~ m1ll1on . the-111..:hway l'atrol 1n crt>ased $25 m11l:on 101 a total S223 m1lhon thl· Ut·parlment or Mo t o r V1 h1 t'il' .• d d l•tl ~24 rnt1l1 on to boost 11r bu<.lgl't to S151 m 1llton . Sol:d W a~tc Manage ment jumped lrom J ~2 m1l1 1on b udi.:l'l in S20 rr.1ll111n . the De pa rtment or Edul'<1t1on ca me out w1lh S239 m11 1ton. $67 m11l1on m or e tha n 1t=-1977 bu dget . Pa rks and Rerreat1on upped $27 m1llton for <1 tota l $83 m illion. and Industria l Relations 1umpcd rrom S65 m1lhon le S8':' fi malhon Thl' figures ~c on and on in a \.\ h1r ltng dt>r v1sh or ~pending Even the L g1~l:.ture boosted lh O\\ n budget St:.: 5 m 11l:on to total S5i ~ m1lhon T H ERE IS l!lllt· rt•u:.on to doubt th1~ s<?ml· fr('n;:y of '>penc! 1og 1•x1st~ <:t all lev('ls or govern ment. cspe(':ally tht> school'. with tht-n•sult ~ovcrnment h<as becoml· almost uncontrollable As the-lall' Senator EverC'tt U1rkscn quipped ·v ou add ,, million her<' and a mtllion lh~r<· an1! pt e ll) soon you arc t alking big mone~ Tax Calendar Change Would Aid Schools To the Editor : School!> nnd loeal governments could turn S3 into $4 plus . Sin c e property t axes arc based upon a fiscal year begin ning on .July I each year. schoob a nd local governme nts a rc coe rced almost in entirely to the same ra scal year School'> 1n pa rticular thus J re put into a ra th e r ridic ulous s 1tuat1on budgetwisc Schools must pro duce a budget beginning July I and endin~ on June 30 However . no tax ru11ds are availa ble to them until after the Decembl'r 10 deadline for the first one·half or property tax payments. What do they do from J uly 1 until the e nd of December'' The logical solution. or course. 1s to budget and maintain a large.• sur Illus . Secondly. they m ay borrow funds. paying interest which 1n creases their costs IT WOULD seem more than logic al to move up the due date ror the first one-half payment or property taxes to a Sept 10 date , for the 1979-80 fiscal tax year and possibly to July 10 for the 1980-81 fiscal tax year Since tax bills will be general· ly much lower. there wouldn't be any excessive burden on the ave rage taxpayer. The be nefits . Schools would no longer need such excessive surplus es and m each of lhe next two years the surpluses accumulated could be used to offset lowe r tax income Also. by moving up the due dat<' for property taxes by one- fourth or a year. the res ult would be to increase lhe tax income by one fourth for that particular ye ar. ' An advantage for the taxpayer might be moving the second prop· erty tax d~adline away from the Apnl 10 date since stat<:, and rederal income taxes c l6sely follow. The period around April has always been a bumme r ro r businesses because of concen- trated due dates for taxes. Since county assessors will no longer have lhe burdensome JOb of reevaluating property to lhe former extent, it wouldn't seem to strain lhem by providing tax bills three months earlier DOYLE PHILLIPS Work Together To the Editor: Last evening. June 22. at lhe meeting of the Board of Trustees of the Fountain Vall«>y School District. 1 pleaded with the s chool board. the Fountain Valley Education Assot'11tt1on. and the Fountain Volley Citi1cns for Quality Education ( rtctill group> to drop all their ~uit.s. countersuits. and reca11 actions that urc doing nothinf' but s pendlnai our t&x dollars Tux dollars thot could b<' s pent on the education or our children' - There "a)> no n·sponse from either of these groups The re- c a 11 g r oup ~l·n l ahead a nd served their notice of intent to circula te a pet1t 10n for the recall of threl' of our C'lectcd board m<'mbers This rec.di C'lcct1on could cost the taxpayers 1n cx- te-.s of Sl7,000 or school d1stnt't funds 1f t•arried a-. a -.pec1al l.'lc~:1 1on T h\.•..,c l<tx dollar ... could bt· :.pt>nt for m an} mon• con s trul·t1Vl' bud~ct 1lcms 1n the school district· T he i-·ountatn Vjlley Educa- tion As~oc1e1t1on 1s t alking about -. dC'fam<ltton stul against the school district Once again. tax dolla rs from the school d1stncl huds:<'t will havl' tn be spent lo rt ..r l' n d t h c· ..., c· h o o I d 1 s t r i C' t .1g:11n:.t llw FVEA' T ll E SC'tlOOL 0 1. TRICT 1s pr 11paring -.u1l lO n·cover costs of tht· FVEi\ s ll't'P 1n. \\h1ch the f"V E A mu~t cll'ft•mJ Once again. t ;1 x doll ars from the school dis· t r1('t budJ,!<'l must h<' s pent • I urge responsible taxpayers to C<t ll the board of trustee mt>mbers al the Fountain Valley School District ancl ask the m to :-. t o p t h l' s u i t :i g a i n s t t h c t cac hc,r-.' 01 .,tri c t p hon e fl42 f'65 1 . Call th<.• Fo untain Valley Edut'at1on Association and a sk them to slop the ddamation suit against th<.• Fountain Valley School 0 1stricC FVEA phohe: 847-9356 , -~all friends and neighbors involved in the recall group and ask them to stop the recall! I Or 1f they won't, don't sign the peti· lions they will be circulating) All of the above actions are s pending tax dollars that could be u sed ror e duc ating our children' The board of trustees. the teachers, and the taxpayers of the community have to pull together to give the very best education that we can. with the reduced buditet that we have a~ a result of taxpayers s upport.mg Prop . 13 Let 's s how the rest of the State of California that the ta xpayers of Fountain Valley and Hunt inglon Beach can work logelher to give quality cdu<'atlon' JAM ES M JOHNSON T axpager•• Cllol_.e To the Editor . During the "Jnrvis" budget hearings regardmg public safety for the citlt.ens and taxpnyers of Hunlinf(ton Beach we saw Police Chier t;nrl Hob1t nllle come before the City Council. present h1~ need!\ for. poll~<' !lf'rvlcc and protection, then dcfen<I them on their reSJM'<'llVt• rncnts and Ir} to work WJlh the count'1l on th(• basis of the level of service the city needed and what it could <tf rord. Then Fire Chref Ray Picard had his turn before the council a nd he showed that the Fire De partment had been running al minimum strength for all thest· past years and how cuts in his programs would not be in lht· best interests of citizens or our cit y He outlined his program~ and then defended and JUSt1f1cd them on lheir m erits and needs THEN WE saw llarborc; and Beaches Director Vin ce Moorhouse come before eoune1l.· a nd because he either felt that he could not JUSt1fy his pro grams or wac; himself incapa bl<' of doing so he instead started taking swipes at othe r city d(' pa rtme nts in e ffect !>ho wing that. if I'm going do~n. you·r" going down with mt-It did not matter what was 1n the best in tcrest of the tax pa} er. who is p ay ing the brll. and survcr show that i O percent of the m do not use the beaches that thl'y pay for. t\s a taxpayer or long standtn~ 1n the City of Huntington Beach I would much rather see my tax dollar spent on quality poltct• services and quality fire anc! para medic protection rath<-r than cleaning beaches and pro viding lifeguard service for the citizens of Whittier. Pico Ri vera. Garden Grove. Pasadena. West Covina. Los Angeles. Buena "Park. La Habra, Orange. Mon· terey Park. Etc. Etc To make it fair for all con cerned the city should take the lifeguar d and beach main tenance budget and use it for Police and Fire protection for the people who hve in the city and tum the small remaining sect Ion or the beach and )its employees over lo the Statt' or California M.H. PA'l'RICK Th.ea .. FaM To the Editor· I think John Thomas is a great councilman. He takes the time and t rouble to drive around town and look at problems. He doesn't JUSl look at s Udei; on o prOJcctor shown at council meetings I have never heard him say any cuss words. The whole thing ii1 a divide and conquer gam e . making Thomas the scapegoat. MRS BILL PHELPS Fan• 1t' ,..,.9 To the Editor Re Pilot James Evnns J iwe 7 l<'tltr. I wt~h to sav he has soml or hi facts wrona 1 r one rt>ad~ the Cnl Trans data :-tht'l'I 1t t'lcar ly s tates lhal M1:adowl t1rk runw a) h n~ a d ts pl nCt'd thre!!hold caused by the ut1 hty wires . I phonl·d Mr Alltm of F'AA and h<.• agrt>ed \.\tt h me thal 1f you rt: mO\ c th<.-poles this doe:. 1n fart ~I Vl' ffiOfl' lllo,<iblf' ll'n~t h of run" a~ .I COLLl 1"~ Si uit.•ut ·" \ it"u.~ To I he E<J1t1)1 1 iJm .~ -1uc!f'n1 ,,1 Orang<' Coa:.t Ct>lll'J.!t' iJnc1 I :11tt•nr!t•ct th•· Coast Comm un11 v Cnl!t.•J.!t' Boarc1 mel'ttng la~t \\ednts<I«) n1gh1 . .\dm 1n 1str~1tor lkrnarrt Luskin annountNI lh<1I Or:ingt• Coasl Colh:gt' \\:t!'o l'>a nk1 upt Teacher.., '' crl' \\ orrit.•<l :!bou1 .. pre posed 11: pt rc<.·n1 '-aljr\ n. · Jnd JO t·r N1:.1•<! ('la..,s 1ouds. p~11 llml' t<.•athl rs Wt•n• 1-01ng to bt· 11rcd OCT an<~ C \\ C: lt'•·<'h1•1' art• ;.iln·;.11!~ amon).. tht 1m\(&1p:.11d ol lht .JC .. 111 ('.il11orn1~1. clc~p1tt.• th1• I :IC'I l ht•v lt\ t' 111 I ht• mosl af llla•nl ploH'l ir1 llw "or iel M <111y 111 1 ht tl'u<·hl r ... \H'I t• "orru.•ro ahout !o ... in1-th< •r home•'.'-I w&" ~h Ol'kt•d lh;;t ; I lhl" <'fUl't<ll t1mt .. th<. boa1d wU!-. C'onsi dering lc~·~1ng .; m" lac·•l:ly tor tht• c·ont roH'r .. 1;11 Coast lint· C:ollcgt• ct ht• cotlt•i.-1• w•lhoul wall..,l whtt h m:in~ Jlt'OJ)ll' IL•f•t l'O Uld bt• ~1bs11rot1<1 intr. Or:>ngt.• Ccwst and G o I c1 1• n \\ 11 .. 1 1 h ''' • J v I n ~ m 1llrnns ol dotlctr" l f:NJO\ lht m OVI(.' ... and Jilli. {'Onl't'rb on KOCf, but 1 don t know ii 11 ... 'ultd 101 .1 cnmmun1 r y < olle)o1t> to o:upply such ent('r ta1nmc nt ••t tht• cost of Jac ultv ..,alanc~ lo th< tune ol several thous.lnd dollar" pc r teacher 111 !-Upport th< channel I low many JC .. 'or even s tair college<, 1 havt• " TV channel an}WU)' Whal I w;m t ro know 1s this - ~ h~ 1sn I 1 II~· l>oarl'I of t r ustet-.... cutlrn~ out lht· real frilh 1n-;tcad o l t 1•;H·h c 1·-. .ind ll•.11·hl·r:-. .... .ilat I('..,' l a m J!rt:ll·lul lor tht' fin\• Nhll'ullon I m rere1v1ng ell OCC. wflh adequulc class s1t11s. ('n 1hus1a:-tH' tl~acher., who C\Cn 1 •' k <' t ht 11 me to tutor m t' per~onally. und the <'ha nce lo p e r !I o n u 11 .> 1· l· l a l <' t o m ) I l•uchcrs But the:-.t' 'upt•r cond1t1ons "111 tw u thin~ 01 t hC' past 1 f I ari::e ('111:-:-'IH'~ 11nd O\ t•rworkt'd . 11 1 C'CI t 1·ad11 r.., bt'<'O ffi \' th•• ne" Ntu1·atllH'I .ut Orl\nt;l' (o;i,1 Pt·r ..,o nJll~ I prefer lt':i('h('r.., lo TV c,t;.illmh. Hnw j bOUl ~OU' S1\ RAii HILL • (,('ttrn-/rom Y1'ader11 OH' Wt'lcom~ Tht nght 10 ronden&t> ltttrrx It> f11 rpoct or 1•hmmo1.-l1bt>l 1~ r t~ lAttrr~ of 300 1.f'()rd.• ()r Its will be gtr1'1I prrti:rrncl All ltll('T~ muet 1n cll.dt> .. 1ynn11.r(• and ma1hnq odd,,!l.~ bl.Ir namu may ,,, wrthhtld Of\ '" QU4'$1 •t &t•f /1c-1ent rl'4~mt 11< o.ppar~t POftry wiU not be P"bhaMd ' I I ~l I . Irvine EDITION , T oday"s Closing ~.Y. Stoeks VOL. 71 NO. 179, 4 SECTIONS, '4 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 1978 TEN CENTS 17 • Rentals to Ch11rches Uncertain At least eight Irvine church congregations were le ft un· certain today about whethec they'll continue to be able to rent city buildings on a regular schedule for devotional services. Local clergymen left a council meeting that started Tuesday believing the counci l had adopt- ed a revised policy on church ~ use of public facilities that al· r lowed them up to a year's use of ' buildings without additional council approval. An attorney for the ACLU, Meir Westreich of Laguna Beach, also left, after warning the council that such lengthy re· served use of publlc facilities violates constitutional principles that the use must be temporary. As the marathon meeting stretched into today's early hours. the council's confidence 'Gone Too Far' in its action eroded ahd. at Mayor Bill Vardoulis' urging, the matter was reconsidered at 1:45 a.m. The council ordered Marc Winthrop, an assistant city at. torney who prepared the revised city policy, to reexamine the question of what a "temporary" use would be. Winthrop is to re· port back July 11. He said today he doesn't know, Court Rules UC Must Admit Bakke WASHINGTON <AP> -The U.S. Supreme Court today or· dere d a California m edical school to admit Allan Bakke, ruling that he suffered illegal discrimination because he is white, ·but said that race can be taken into account in future col- lege admjssions programs. In a 5-4 decision. the court held tha t the University of California's medical school at Davis had gone too far in con· s idering r ace when it refused to admit Bakke . But it held that affirmative· action programs intended to benefit minority applicants can properly be a factor in decisions on admitting students . Bakke successfully sued the university aner his application to the univers ity's medical school at Davis was reJected in 1973 and 1974. He charged that the medical school's special admissions pro· gram which reser ved 16 of the 100 openings in ea ch entering class for "disadvantaged" stu· dents was really only an 1m- oermissible racial quota. Under it. Ba kke charged, les<> academically qualified blacks, Ftaa at the Bea~la Hispanics and Asian-Americans were admitted ahead of him. The Supreme Court interpret· ed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to say lhat while some race· conscious programs are valid. the program that kept Bakke out of medical school crossed the l i ne into Ill ega l ra cia l discrimination. Bakke. a 38-year -oid civil engineer who lives in Los Altos and works for the nation 's space agency at the Ames Research Center in nearby Palo Alto, never had lo prove that he would <See BAKKE, Page A2) Whether they're just relaxing on the sand or a rock. or enjoying a splash either solo or w1lh young company, these folks are getting the mos t out of a nice day for the beach. These photos were taken at Rock Beach in Laguna Beach and Aliso Beach in South Laguna. - and Westreich doesn't know, what "temporary" means. Winthrop advised the council, though, that the shorter the time period is defined, the least likely it iit that the city will be sued on constitutional principles. Irvine church groups which haven't buildings to meet in also have used school district facilities. Westre ich, for the ACLU, has filed lawsuit in Superior Court alleging the un· constitutionality of that arrange· ment. • One of the points of the suit. conC'eTDS the definition of ·'tern· pQrary," and holds that the At· torney General has ruled that a stale Education Code section de · fines it as five uses per year. Winthrop told the council that. "Between five days and six months. it's anybody's guess * * * Legal or Not'! .. what 'temporary' is ·· Westreich further argued that rental or any city facility to a church woulcj have to be re newed for each event of the church. that is. week to week. Also according to state and U.S. constitutions. he argued. church groups must be given lowes t priority among groups seeking to use any municipal building. <See RENTALS, Page A2\ * * * Council Ponders U.se of Facilities Bono red Contractor Paul Sa l ata. fo under of Irrelevant Week. has been named Commodore of the Year by the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce. During Irvine City Council de· oate Tuesday over church use of city facilities: -Mayor Bill Vardoulis laid ou t the welcom e m at t o "atheists, agnostics and devil worshipers." -Councilwoman Mary Ann Gaido, who s ided with the council majority a'nyway. asserted the council is "blatantly trying to gel around the s tate Constitution." -Councilman Arthur Anthony calle d the Ame rican Civil Liberties Union "self-anointed guardians of liberty " An ACLU Position tha t city rentals of m•101cipal buildings for religious services may be un· constitutional. enunciated bv Laguna Beach attorney Meir Westreich. brought on the ex· changes. • Mrs. Ga1do was troubled by Westreich's contention that any church use of public buildings must be temporary-and more temporary than a proposed city policy granting religious groups the right to reserve a building for as long as a year Marc Winthrop, an assistant city attorney. had told the coun. cit he wasn't certain the policy would stand a conslllut1onal test on that ground Mrs . Ga1do also wondered 1f by rentm~ to some rellg1ou!i groups. the council would be open to lawsuit by not being able <See CHURCH, Page A21 Coast Plan Approved Coumy Sends lroine Project On to State By KATHY CLANCY Ol 111e DMly Plle4 S~tt Admitting it still may need more work. Orange County s upervis ors e ndo r sed the county's plan for the 10.000-acre Irvine coast today and sent it off for state approval. As s upervisors did so, they also offered encouragement to reside nts of the El Morro Beach mobile home park by asking state offi cials to delete it from 'mmediate public acquisition. The park is within 3,100 acres the state is appraising for public purchase. Residents fear that if the state buys the mobile home site for a public park they will lose their homei>. Domlld Cameron, land planner for the Irvine Compan y. said the firm's position is that the stale would be better off spending the $22 million avajlable for park. purchase elsewhere on the coast. Relocating the park residents alone. he said, might take as much as half the funds availa· ble. Richard Munsell an assistant director of the county Environ- mental Manageme nt Agency, said he expects to come back to s upe rvisor s with possible changes before the county plan is certified by the regional and state coastal commissions. So far. Munsell said cbunty of· Boston Mass Murder ficials have been unable to get specific proposals ror chan~es from the commissions. Part or the problem. he said, seem s to be that the com· miss ions h ave been in the coastal permit issuing business so long they can't deal with general policies as contained in the county's plan. "They want to know where every blade of grass 1s going to go." Munsell said. "We have told them this is a mis use or a planning tool." Ins tead of a s pecific plan. Munsell describes the county's proposal as a general guide and said details will be worked out in <See COAST, Page A2) Five Men Found Slain BOSTON, Mass. <APl The shotgun-riddled bodies of fi ve men were found today in the basement of a downtown cocktail lounge by a cleaning ma n, toucning off an intensive police investigation . Police declined to identify the victims immediately. However. radio station WEEI s aid two of the m had been tentatively identified as Jack Ke lly . a former te levision news m an who was working as the night manager or the lounge. a nd Vincent Solomonte, the owner. Police deputy John Barry termed it the largest mass murder In the city in his 20 years of experience. Police detectives converged on the Black:friars R~staurant at the height of the morning rush hour after the first report. A crowd rapidly gathered as officers searched the building. Barry said the five were all white males. The bodies were found close together in a back room office of the basement, and a police s pokesman said. "A shotgun was used." Police spokes men said all were in their mid-twenties . The first noor and basement of the five-story building at 105 Sum mer Street was remodeled into the lounge-restaurant about five years ago. The building, about a century old. is in an area of new, high office buildings and s maller. older shops two blocks from the County Firm Sued In Labor Violation The U.S. Department of Labor has filed suit in Los Angeles U S. District Court against Metro Car Wash alleging violation or the federal Fair Labor Standards Act a t its fi ve Orange County outlets . Identified in the complaint are Metro partne r s Frank V Bianchini or Costa Mesa and Malcom Cobrink of FulJerton. PartQer Bi(anchini, who had yet to hear or the suit, reacted angrily Tuesday, calling the charges "intimidation or the worst kind." 8lanchini, who operates the Costa Mesa Metro Car Wll5h, sald be was not aware of any complaints filed by his eD'lployees. The Labor Department has asked the court to order the car wash company to pay all back wages found due to employees plus interest and costs to comply with the law in the future. I Metro Car Wash outlets are located at 2950 Harbor Blvd .• Costa Mesa; 3400 Beach Blvd .. Huntington Beach ; 6656 W es tmin s ter Blvd .. Westminster; 2402 Bristol St., Santa Ana; and 387 Tustln St., Orange. The s uit is the resalt of In· vestigations conducted by the Labor Department under the direcUon ot Elmore Wllcox, area dlrector for the W11e-Hour Dlvlslon, Employment Stan· dards Admtn.i.Slrallon ln Santa Ana. _ .......... / he'afi. of Boston's downtown shopping center. A spokes man at police headquarters said the hrst call on the case came at 8:28 a.m. a ft e r the loun~e e mpfoyee ente red to begin the day's work. The club had closed at 9 p.m. Tuesday. The basement section of the lounge-restaurant includes part of the drink and food service facilities, a function room and rest rooms. The owner of the restaurant wa s not determined immediately. Coast Weather Night and morning low clouds with sunny after· noon Thurs day. Slightly warmer. Lows tonight 58 to 63. Highs T hursday near 70 at the beaches to upper 70s inland. INSIDE TODtl ~ Oran~ County ~rvuor., hove adopted fee hikes a~ harbors, beacMs ond porka. Story Page Al2. \·~ l - 0All V PIU)f Critlcb• T oo Bakke R11ling Wins Praise By The Associated Prelis The U.S. Supreme Court's rul· m g In the Bakke case today drew praise from the plaintiff's attorney and criticism from some black leaders and mem- bers of the academic com- munity. "My client has a comment," said Reynold Colvin. Allan Bakke's attorney. "He's delight· ed with the decision and looks forward to e ntering medical school in September." Bakke, 38, was not personally AP'WI,..,...., BACKED BY COURT Allan Bakke Fair's Fair- He Tickets Erring Cops NEW ORLEANS (A P> -It was only fair. A WC'ek ago Larry Dean Hardison received a ti cket for parking illegally. So he wasn't about to ignore the downtown sccn<' Tuesday 19 police cars standing m a no- oarking zone outside a hotel . where a seminar on homicide was being held. Getting out pen and paper. llardason prepared 19 "Dear Qf. f1cer" letters. ·Dear Olf icer One of the best ways to lose the reRpect o/ citizens 1s to break the rules which you en- lo rce You are parked illegally .. Not shy. he signed has name Jnd placed his te leph one number on each note. Hardison said a few minutes later he received a phone call from Pol ice C h 1c f James Parsons. ' "'He said he had parked ii· legall y and he apologized ... llardison said "I was delighted that he called . if the police officers had been there on or. f1c1al business 1t would have been all right, but they weren't and there were parking lots available · · 1 got towed away for parking 1llegally and 1f I had done what they dad. I'd get towed away a second time " JARJllS BILL DAMPENS FVSE LA MESA (AP> A year ago. 50,000 people watched the traditional fireworks display on Northridge hill. T hl! show this year is can· <'C led . The City Council said Tuesday that revenue cutbacks from Proposition 13 make it im -pos111ble to finance. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT lfW()r""'9'1 ( .. ,10.,1, p, ... •'"-"· f\1 tt.W"n ~f'W"Ctt•H••\ ,.,"'"'' t'\PUOftWOb\tt""'()f~ (CM I Pvb'1Yi•noCorno•"Y ~~·-··(M"'V'I,,., .. lklb'•\MO MoftdAf lf'l,OVQl'll f,>dly I~ (/).i-..IA """*W Nirt'lllil'OO't hHPt H\;"41~ 8"M.f't '"""" Wtft V•ll•w lfw1A• ~t.etw(a. 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'ta\\ """'"' ,...,., •• to\t.t ,.._,u (.tl1forflu • ~wbH rt et••" "'" r '" *'' U Vl =z~i..::, :~::.;o ~·~·.. m1t •••• available He was expected to go lo work, as usual, at the Ames Research Center, a NASA faclli· ty, in Mountain Vlew. south or San Francisco. The court ruled 5·4 that the Un1v·ersity of C alifo rnia 's medical school at Davis, which twice rejected Bakke's ap- plication for admission, illegally discriminated agains t him because he is white. It also ruled. however. that the school 1s not barred from taking race into account in a future ad- missions program. Dr. John Tupper, dean or the school. said. "We've all been waiting for the Supreme Court to lell us what the will or the people of the United States is. We wtll obey the law. I cannot comment further until our legal counsel ·has had a chance to actually re· has had a chance ·to actually read and digest the entire opi· Dr John A.O. Cooper, pre~i dent of the Association ot Am erican Medical Colleges, said the group ''is disappointed . . . Considerable progress has been made in recent years for grea t er pa r ticipation by min orities in American m edicine. This has occurred in particular because m edical school admissions decisions took into consideration the need for broad representation an medicine (r:om all segments of our soc1etv." Ralph Smith. a law professor at University of Pennsylvania and c hairman of the legal education tas k force of the National Conference or Black° Lawyers. said he was "pro· roundly disappointed" with the decision, but added that he did not know how broad the ruling was. * * * F rot11 Page A l BAKKE ... have been admitted if the school had not had a s pecial admissions program. The wµversity conceded that it could not prove Bakke would have been excluded if the pro- gram had not existed. A state trial court ruled that the special admissions program violated the Constitution's g uarantee of equal protection and also the portion or the Civil Rights Act of 1964 that outlaws racia l discrimination by in- s titutions receiving feder al funds. The California Supreme Court upheld the trial court's ruling in favor of Bakke on the con- stitutional grounds only. choos- ing to ignore the federal law question. T h e Cons titution 's 14th Amendment, which 110 years ago held out to blacks the prom· ise of full· m e-mbe r s hip in Ameri can soc iety, g r a nted citizenship to recently freed slaves and ordered all states not to "deny to any person ... the equal protection or the laws ... Ci~·it rights act ivists have em ployed those words ever since in efforts to stamp out what they perceived to be vestiges of the slave system. Thei! greatest victory came m 1954 when the U.S. Supreme Court changed American life by outlawing racial segregation as "inherently unequal." The racial civil rights move- ment gained momentum over the past 15 years as government· ordered affirmative action pro- grams began to gave special pref· erence lo minority members and women to overcome past discrimination in business, education and government. T hese programs. however, sparked numerous lawsuits such as Bakke's. Each essentially as ked t he same question: May the govern· ment take a person's race Jnto account for special t reatment when its goal is to help make up for official discrimination in the past? Four of the U.S . Supreme Court's nine members would have reversed the stale court victories won by Bakke. Justices J . Brennan Jr., Byron R . White, Thurgood Marshall and Harry A. Blackmun agreed that race-conscious programs are valid -and voted that the University or Califortlia 's pro- gram was valid under the 1964 law and the Constitution. Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr Joined the four insor!lr as ruling that some race-conscious pro-grams are valid. HJs was the crucial fifth vote needed to rule that the unviersity -and pre- sumably all other educational institutions -m ay in the future use some forms or affirmative action. But Powell, relyine on bis in· terpretation or the 14th Amend· ment. said the Davis program naa not snown 1tse1r to be necessary to ac h ieve the sctiool 's stated goals and therefore could not pass con· stltulional must«>r Girding for Artion T hese 119-foot girders are being readied to move into place in construction of Von Karman Avenue bridge over the San Die~o Freeway in Jrvine. The S975.000 CalTrans p roject is expected to be com pleted by Christm as, and will connect north and south parts of Irvine Industrial Complex. relieving trarfic prohlems on Jamboree Road. Several lanes of the freeway between Jamboree and MacArthur Boulevard. have been closed during l to 5 a .m . hours since last Wed- nesday to aid construction effort. Mexican Student Riot Erupts Again MATAMOROS. Mexico <A P> -Violence erupted again early today in this riot-torn border town as s t udents stormed throuf(h the red-light district on Death Bill Wins Spot On Ballot SACRAMENTO (A P > -State Sen. John Briggs' death penalty initiative has qualified for the Nov. 7 ballot, Secretary of State March Fong Eu confirms. Briggs, of Fullerton, sought the Republican nomination for governor but dropped out before the June 6 primary election. He a lso sponsored an initiative. which qua lified. against homosexual school teache rs . Mrs. Eu said Tuesday the new measure would. . Expand the categories of first-degree murder punishable by death. or life in prison without parole. to include such crimes as murder or a state of. fi c i a I and murder that i s particularly "atrocious." Increase the minimum parole date for firs t -degree murder from seven years to 16 years, eight months. including time off for good behavior. Increase the penalty for second-degree murder. --Allow consideration or all fe lony convictions of the defen- d ant during the puhisflment stage of trial. the outskirts of the city. burning one night s pot and causing heavy damage to two others. A few miles away. soldiers armed with machine guns patrolled the charred. debris· strewn site or a four-hour riot Monday night that caused an estimated $2 million damage and left three people dead and 30 mJured. Police said one person was in- jured in today's outburst. They said a group of youths stormed the Golden Palace night club, ousted customers and set fire to the -building. They also hurled rocks. bottles and other items through the windows of at least two other night s pots, police said. T wo teen·agers were shot and killed Monday night as s tudents mobbed the town plaza protest- ing the alleged beating death last week of a 15-year-old stu- dent who had been in police custody. Three police officers had been Jailed in connection with the in· cident, but the students dragged Mavor Antonio Cavazos into the plaza and demanded that Police Chief Emmano Del Toro also be fired Burrill Said Good Afte r O peratio n Newport Beach radio station owner Gary Burrill is reported in good condition today at Hoag Me morial Hospital where he underwent open heart surgery Monday. 'Burrill. owner of KOCM-FM. is active in a variety of civic and cha rity organizations . Fro•Page AI CHURCH ... to rent to all. if only because of lack of space. She said less popular religious groups could take the council action as a signal to demand equal treatment "Taken to its ultimate." she s aid. "we are asking for trouble. We have three facilities availa · ble now, a nd already eight churches want space. There are probably 20 churches in the · ci· t y that need a facility "I don't think we should be so flip. By being so blatant in try- ing to get around the s tate Constitution. is not responsible." Vardoulis retorted that the ci· ty could post s i g ns during church services in public build· ings. advising the groups aren't involved with the city and won't be there long. "If a group of a theist s. agnostics. devil worshipers - whoever-apply to the city, they 're welcome." the mayor said. A hostile Anthony berated ACLU's Westric h a nd said ·'This council is not going to roll over for speciaJ interest groups" that try to "dictate city policy. "We have not rolled over in the past. and we should not do so in the future. "Pe r sonally . J con side r church groups in our cit y as far less of a threat than s elf· anointed guardfans or liberty." Westreich , who apparently sensed early he was not in friendly territory. had alluded to a possible lawsuit and urged an unemotional approach from council members. "I do not think that liberty. or religious tolerance." Westreich told t he council. "is in any way served by e motional or intern· perate exchange. '.'The courts will. decide. l'm perfectly satisfi ed to leave it to the courts to-decide." . ., F ro91 Page A I COAST ..• 5pecific project pbaaes lat.er on. The plan approved today follows decisions super visors made two years ago ln develop· Ing a general plan f M the 10,000·acre area. T hat plan sets aside 7S Jie"rceot or the land in open space with the remaining 25 percent for urban development. T he Irvine coast stretches from Corona del Mar on the north to Laguna Beach on the south . Critics or the county plan testified today a nd in past hear· ings raising objections that in- clude an allegedly inadequate environmental impact report. p ossi ble de s truction of archeological sites and a lack or low and inoderate income bous· ing In the land use plan. Wesley Marx or Irvine sug- gest ed that supervisors take adva ntage or an opportunity to create a unique land and sea park in the area. He also questioned proposals <or the San Joaquin Hills roadway in the area as well as other public services to serve deve l op m epr n o w th at Proposition 13 will reduce local government budgets . As a result super visors sug- gested that detailed plans on the cost of services be presented before any developments are al- lowed. Super visor Ra lph · Diedrich s aid it may be th.a.t special districts could be formed to rinance services so the burden wouldn't be passed on to county taxpayers as a whole. Irvine School Board Meets Over Budget Irvine school trustees are ex- p ected to adopt a tentative 197~·79 budgt;t a~ a 7:30 meeting to01ght at distnct offices. 29'1 Alton Ave. The proposed $26 .1 million spending plan includes a 4.4 per- cent overall budget reduction caused by the loss .or p·roperty tax revenues under Proposition 13, officials said. T r ustees also may decide tonight whether a scheduled S.S percent increase in t eachers salaries. as called for in a two- year contract negotiated a year ago, is to be paid . A state school relier measure which indicates previous con- tracts with employees are to be considered null and void, may invalidate t he pay raise, or. ficials said. Some $1.3 million is involved. March Ban Asked C HICAGO CAP> -T h e Chicago Park Di strict asked a federal appeals court lo over- turn a lower court ruling allow· ing Nazis to march in Marquette Park. The pres ident of the district also said Tuesday that rte wooJd take 'the Issue-to tbe - U. S. Supreme Cou rt if necessary. Man's Body Found Shot Near El Toro Orange County Sheriff's of ricers have determined that a m an whose body was found T uesday in an orange grove near the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station was shot to death before he was dumped there. Particular People Select JOHNSON & SOM Home of the 11Golden Touch .. I nvestigators said the body lay in the ~rove ne ar the in- t e r sect ion o f J effrey a nd Trabuco roads for about a week before it was found by irrigation workers . The victims hands were bound behind his back. The body has not yet been identified. Offi cers said it is that of a man aged about 35 to 40, ful ly dressed and with no outstand- ing marks or features that would aid identification. Fro• Page A l RENTALS • • A further effect of the ACLU assault on Irvine's renting of ci· ty halls to ·church groups is that. according to the revised policl'. the council unanimously adopted today, the groups will pay more than in past times. and possibly more than secular, non·church groups. Winthrop said the new policy means that churches won't pay simple costs incurred by the city by opening its buildings lo them. They'll have to pay fa ir rental value, with the city charging a fee to make a profit, just as the private sector would. The city does not now charge any group at profit rates. Under the policy. churches now are the only groups that have to pay the higher rate. Winthrop said that as a result, an overall public facility u!\e policy. which he has been asked to Incorporate with the church study. may recommend that all l{roups be char ged at profit rates ''At Johnson & Son, we were treated In a very professional and digntfled rnol'il1Mtf'." NANCY NITKIN Hwe ...... IMc .. c.H. "Very courteous, very fair, enioPd the last four or flve years association." AWi SMITH MOOll L...-.... c .... ·I "Courteous salesman, pa.asant surround· ings, excellent service." DAVID DOSTAL ...,.,.,. ....... Ctlf. "Follow through is very good. I've had eleven years of satisfied Ht'vke.H MIS. ROl84CI L MALL .......... ~. Orango County's Olde&t Llncoln·Mercury Doalershlp dOHNSON a SON .. lit I 2626 Harbor Blvd • Cosio Mesa • 540·5630 . \ 7 Lag11na/South Coast .Afternoo11 N.Y. Sto~ks VOL. 71, NO. 179, 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 1978 TEN CENTS Beaehgoers Told: Leave Fido Home Charges of dog attacks on elderly citizens and health prob- 1 ems caused by dog waste prompted City Council support for a strict new dog ordinance m Laguna Beach Tues day night. The vote was 3-1 with Coun- c a 1 woman Sally Bellerue OP· ~ posed to the ordinance which f bans dogs from the beach all r year . except for certain hours. I T he original ordinance as pro- posed by Councilm an Kelly Boyd. was amended to allow dogs on the beach before 8 a.m . and after 6 p.m. from April 1 to Sept. 30, and before 9 a .m . and after 5 p.m . during the rest of the year . The ordinance calls for a $25 fine for a first offense of dogs off leas h. dogs on the beach during res tricted hours. and owners who fail to pick up their animal's waste. lt calls for a $50 fine for a ' second offense. and a $100 fine for third offenses. Support for the new ordinance tame fr o m a variety of Lagunans. including long-time dog nuisance opponent Bruce H opping, who a ssailed dog waste on public beaches. "Dogs in this town leave 7l tons of waste on the beaches an- nually." he said . adding that "it does n 't take much nosing around lo find dogs defecating on the beaches ... Terry Neptune said her 20 - month-old son has been the target of loo"Se dogs relieving themse lves on the beaches. She s aid that while a stricter or dinance would be nice. 1t won't work Wlless it's enforced. a belief held by many of Tues day's speakers. Dr Rose Ekeberg. a iocal veterinarian. said the existing animal ordinance should be en· forced. instead of creating a new one "It never has been en- forced. so why should the city go .o rf into othe r realms., .. s he asked Earl Secord. 74. l>a1d he has bee n attacked by dogs -and the ir owners on !>everal oc· casions-in the Art COiony. and called for more e ffective e n· forcement of any animal or· dmance ·'My wife and l never walk on the beach anymore for fear or dogs ... he said Councilwoman Sally BelleruE' cast the only vote opposing the new ordinance. saying ··1 don t see why we s hould push out the <See DOGS, Pag<' A2> 2 LB Roads Back on Master Plan Supreme Court Ruling UC Davis Must Admit Bakke l AP WlrePlloto BACKED BY COURT Allan Bakke · New Clemente Park Wins Approval A 47-acre park, proposed by developers of the Forster Ranch in north San Clemente. met with unanimous approval of the city's p a rk s and r ec r e:d1on com m1ss10ners Tuesda} The new c ity park will be located between an elementary and a Junior high school. near the c e nter 0 1 the 2,200·acre Forster Ranch, inland of the San Diego Freeway between Avenida Pico and Camino de los · Mares Estre lla Properties. Ltd . developers or the ranch will dedicat e the 47-acre park . cons1st1ng o f 26 acres or re lati vely level la nd and 21 acres wtuch are Jess levl'I, said c it y parks pl a nn er Bob Johnston To mN!t requirements of the city's new park fees ordinance, approved by voters m March. E st rella Properties will pay-$2.l million in park fees in addition <See PARK, Page A2> Coasr Weather Night and morning low elou~~ wi!h .. synny after. noon Thursday. Slightly warmer. Lows tonight 58 lo 63. Highs Thurs day near 70 at the beaches lo upper 70s inland. INSIDE TODAY Oran~ County 8Upt>roisors haue adopted fee hikes at harbors. beaches and parks. Story Page A.12 c:. Al .. ,. •• .. M AU 1 1-4 AU ., .. .. ,. M A• WASHINGTON (AP) -The U.S. Supreme Court today or· dered a California medical school to admit Allan Bakke. ruling that he suffered illegal discrimination because he is white . but said that race can be taken into account m future col- lege admissions programs Jn a 5-4 decision. the court held that the Un iversity or California's medical school at Davis had gone too far m con- sidering race when it refused to admit Bakke. But it held that affirmative· action programs intended to benefit minority applicants can properly be a factor in decisions on admitting students . Bakke successfully sued the university a fter his application to the university's medical school at Davis was rejected in 1973 and 1974. He charged that the medical school's special admissions pro· gram which reser\ted 16 of the 100 openings in each entering class for "disadvantaged " stu· dents was really only an im- perm issible racial quota. Under it. Bakke charged, less academically qualified blacks. His panics and Asian-Americans were admitted ahead of him. The Supre me Court interpret- ed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to say that while s ome race- conscious programs are valid, the program that kept Bakke out of medical school crossed the lin e into illega l racial discrimination. Bakke , a 38-year old civil engineer who lives in Los AJlos and works for the nation's space agency a l the Ames Research Center in nearby Palo Alto, never had to prove that he would have been admitted if the school had not had a special admissions program. The Wlive rsity conceded that it could not prove Bakke would have been excluded if the pro- gram had not existed A state trial court ruled that the s pecial admissions program v io lated the ~onslltu t1 on 's <See BAKKE. Page A2) TUX> MWJked Gunmen Rob Laguna Hotel Two gun m e n , wearin g women's scarves over their faces. held up the Surf and Sand Hotel. 1555 South Coast Highway in LagWla Beach early this morn- ing, escaping with SI .200 in cash and $15,000inchecks. Lt. J9hn Zelk:Q_ said the two masked men leaped over the check-in counter at the hotel at about 3:45 a.m .. confronting a lone female clerk They cut the telephone wires and demanded cash from the drawer, threatening the woman with handguns The clerk said she heard a car leave the a rea but did not see the vehicle. She described her assailants as male Caucasians in their 20s. She c ould not describe racial features due to the bizarre yellow women 's scarves wom over their heads. Zelko said it took about ts minutes for the clerk to contact police due to the cut phone lines. "It was all over by the lime we got the~." he said Zelko added the $15.000 in checks were made out to the Surf and Sand and would l>e very dlfrlcull to cash. Fun at the Beach Whether they're just relaxing on the sand or a rock. or enjoying a splash either solo or witn young company. these folks are getting the most out of a nice day for the beach. These photos were taken at Rock Beac;h m Laguna Beach and Aliso Beach m South Laguna Monaeo -Prineess Weds- Civil CeremO'il,y Held in Throne Room MONTE CARLO, Monaco lAPl -Princess Caroline of Monaco m arried Paris playboy financier Philippe Junot today in a 15-minute civil ceremony in the throne room of the royal palace -the same room where her fathe r, Prince Rainier Ill, married American movie star Grace Kelly 22 years ago "Princes!l Caroline 's hand shook a liule as she signed the register," said Louis Roman. president of Monaco ·s Stale Council, who pe rformed the marriage before about 40 family members. The wedding wu "nice, and In good spirits," 11&ld Roman, but not particularly emotional A bout 1,500 persons filed through the palace gales lo attend the post -w e dding reception. Brilliant sunshine bathed the palace square outside and hundreds of tourists pressed against the barriers. Caroline and Junot will go to the palace's s m all c h apel Thursday morning for a Roman Catholic nuptial Mass attended by 100 g uest s. includin a m ember!'! of Parisian s ociety and the lntematlonal jet-set, ex-royally and vintage mov1~ stars. lfhe press waiJ barred from both ceremonies as well as rrom the pre·nupt1al ball at the palace Tuesday night The brevit)' of the guest hst. the absence· of me mbers of reigning royal houses and the pri vacy s urtounding the wedding were in sharp contrast to the 2.000.guest extravaganza that Caroline's fathe r. Prince Rainier m. staged on April 18, 1956. when h e married her mothe r · Dior. the Paris fashion house. designed the wedding outfits ror both Caroline and her mother Designer Marc Bohan outfitted the bride in blue crepe seorgette for the civil cere mony a nd <See WEDDING, P11e AZ> Action Regains Funds? By STEVE MITCHELL Of tlle D•llY Pllet SUit Two hot·potato arterials are being returned to the LagWla Beach master plan of streets by a s urpris e C i ty Councii maneuver Wednesday night. The new City Council maJonty vot e d to place Alta Lagun::s Boulevard and Tempie Hills Drive back on the street p1an. The streeL<> had been deleted' four years ago because of fears that placeme nt on the street master plan would lead lo·ne~ inland access to La~una hilltop communities. Deletion an 19i4. however. put the city at cross purposes with the county arterial plans and ended city access to certain road funds the county shares with cities ior maJOr s treet work. The Council maJonty maintains that Wednesday rught's action 1s only a technical way lo aizam qualify for those fWlds. The action camt: JUSt minute~ after an earlier m otion was ap- proved to do a traffic study lead mg to de letion of the routes from the county's highway list Councilma{l Howard Dawson returned from a 10-minute break t o a nno unce h e had beer "h oodwinked " b y Coun- cilwoman Sal ly Bel le v ue '" earlier deletion motion. She op- poses having the routes on a master plan. His announcement came after many of the crowd or road oppo- nents had left the packed council cham beJs • . • Mayor Jack McDowell picked up the ball with a motion that the council add Alt ~ Laguna Roulevard and Temple Hilb roads later on Jn that way. ~a} <:ounty of ficials. Laizuna Beach \\.-Ould Ix· eligible next year for Artenal Highway Funding Program money , Th e move. :.ipproved bv McDowell. Dawson. and Coun- cilman Kelly Boyd, surprised those remaining in the audience. Mrs Bellevue \.Oted n(} and Councilman Wayne BaR lin was absent The action authorize~ a letter of inte nt lo the· county adding the two roads t o the co unty·!' arterial tughway list. a move adamantly opposed by nearly 20 s pe ake r!-during the n early three-hour hearin~ The three council m ember~ claim that by adding the roads to the city maps, the city will ~ e lig ible for arterial highwaY. funds. which may be used to im- prove other roads, s uch a~ Laguna Canyon Road and Coast Highway But the council said 1t faced a July 1 deadline to add tht- routes. and councilm e n in dividually said they would work to delete the roads after county fund approval. a move one speaker called "devious. 1£ not illegal." -AmtwtntnnaTTy spt'akers S'aid - they would not be opposed to county arterial highway funds for •Other routes. nearly all op- posed extending Alta Laguna Boulevard and widening Temple Hills Onve. E s te ll e W arner, a representative of the Te mple Hills Community Association. slid a ny funds from the highway funding program would have to be matched by the city. She indicated the amount would not justify the addition or the roads to the city map, sug· gesllng that funds sought from Ca I Trans and other sources listed. But the remarks which drew the most applau.<ie came from Jo Franson. who read campaign s tatements frtm several or the c°'1ncil members before the packed audience. (8-ROADS, Page All Laguna/South Coast ,,fft~rnoon ~.Y. Stoeks VOL. 71, NO. 179• 4 SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 1978 TEN CENTS Beochgoers To1~: Leave Fido Home Charges or dog attacks on elderly citizens and health prob· lems caused by dog waste prompted City Council support for a strict new dog ordinance in Laguna Beach Tuesday night. The vote was 3-1 with Coun- cilwoman Sally Bellerue op- ~ posed to the ordinance which f bans dogs from the beach all • year. except for certain hours. The original ordinance as pro- posed by Councilman Kelly Boyd. was amended to allow dogs on the beach before 8 a .m. and after 6 p.m. from April 1 lo Sept. 30, and before 9 a.m. and after 5 p.m . during the rest or the year. The ordinance calls for a $25 fine for a first offense of dogs off leash. dogs on the beach during restricted hours, and owners who fail to pi ck up their animal's waste. nually," he said, adding that "it speakers. casions-m the Art Colony, and It calls for a $50 fine for a doesn't take much nosing Or. Rose Ekeberg, a local called for more etrective en· second offense, and a $100 fine around to find dogs defecating veterinarian. said the cxastmg forcement of any an.!.!!lal or- for third offenses. on the beaches." animal ordinance should be en danance Support for the new ordinance Terry Neptune said her 20· foroed. 1RStea4or el'eating a new "My-Wife .and l..ne.vcr walk C?n - came-!:-..:;.-:;~"~ar-ie-t-y-o+--m1'm-h~~ se..,-~ be~ the--"'Otte:-~•'irbmm"-eftf: -~~nY111art> tor fear" or> :.:.1t- Lagunans, including long-time target of loose dogs reheving lorced. so why should the city go dogs." h;e said dog nuisance opponent Bruce themselves on the beaches. orr an to other real ms.," s he Councilwoman Sally Bellerue Hopping, who assailed dog She said that whileastricteror· asked cast the only vote opposing the waste on public beaches. dinance would be nice. at won't Earl Secord. 74. said he has new ordinance. saying "l don t "Dogs in this town leave 71 work unless it's enforced. a belief been attacked by dogs -and see why we s hould push out the tons of waste on the beaches an-held by many or Tuesday's their owners on several oc -<See DOGS. Page t\2) 2 LB Roads Back on Master Plan Supreme Court Rul.ing UC Davis Must Admit Bakke APWl ........ 10 BACKED BY COURT Allan Bakke New Clemente Park Wins ·Approval A 47-acre park. proposed by developers of the Forster Ranch in north San Clemente. met with unamrru>us approval of the city's park s and r ecrc<1t1o n comm1ss1oncrs Tuesday The new city park wall be located between an elementary and a Junior high school. near the center 01 the 2.200-acre Forster Ranch, inland of the San Diego Freeway between Avenada Pico and Camino de los Mares Estrella Properties. Ltd .• developers of the ranch will dedicate the 47-acre park , consisting of 26 ac r es of relative ly level land and 21 acres wtuch are less level, said c it y park s plann e r Bob Johnston To ml'et requirements of the dty's new park fees ordinance, approved by voters in March, Estrella Properties will pay $2.1 million in park fees in addition (See PARK, Page A2) Or::'4:as1 Weather Night and morning low clouds with sunny after- noon Thursday. Slightly warmer. Lows tonight 58 to 63. Highs Thursday near 70 at the beaches to upper 70s inJand. INSIDE TODA l" Orange Count!/" su~nmors hove adopted fee hikes al harbors, beaches and parks. Story Page Al2. a A6 .. It ., .. ... AU ..... AU ., .. .. It M M WASHINGTON <AP> -The lJ S. Supreme Court today or- dc red a California medical school lo admit Allan Bakke. ruhng that he suffered illegal discrimination because he 1s whale. but saad that race can be laken into account an future col· lege admissions programs. In a 5-4 decision, the court held that the University of California's medical school at Davis had gone too far in con· sadering race when it refused to admit Bakke. But it held that arrirmative- a clion programs 'inte nded to benefit minority applicants can properly be a factor in decisions on admitting students . Bakke successfully sued the university after his application to the university 's medical school at Davis was rejected an 1973 and 1974. He charged that the medical school's special admissions pro- gram which reser\red 16 of the 100 openings in each entering class for "disadvantaged" stu- dents was r eally only an im· perm issible racial quota. Under it. Bakke charged. less academically qualified blacks. Hispanics and Asian-Americans were admitted ahead of him The Supreme Court interpret· ed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to say that while some race- conscious programs are valid. the program that kept Bakke out of medical school crossed the lane into i ll ega l racial discrimination. Bakke, a 38-year-old civil engineer who lives m Los Altos and works for the nat10n·s space agency at the Ames Research Center in nearby Palo Alto, never had to prove that he would have been admitted if the school had not had a special admissions program. The university conceded that it could not prove Bakke would have been excluded if the pro- ~ram had not existed. A slate trial court ruled that the special admissions program violated the ~on st itution ·s <See BAKKE, Page AZ) TiroM~ked Gunmen Rob Laguna Hotel Two gunmen, wearing women's scarves over their faces. held up the Surf and Sand Hotel, 1555 South Coast lhghway in Laguna Beach early lhas morn- ing, escaping wil,h $1,200 in cash and $15,000in checks. Lt. John Zelko said the two masked men leaped over the check-in counter at the hotel at about 3:45 a.m., confronting a lone female clerk. They cut the telephone wires and demanded cash from the drawer. threatening the woman with handguns. The clerk said she heard a car leave the area but did not see the vehicle. She described her assailants as male Caucasians in their 20s. She could not describe racial features due lo the biiarre yellow· women's scarves worn over their heads. Zelko said It took about 15 minutes for the clerk to contact police due to the cut phone lines . "It wu all over by the time we got there," he 11id. Zelko added lhe $15,000 ln checks were made out to the Surf and Sand and would J:>e very c!lfficult to cash. Fun at the Beach Whether they're Just relaxing on the sand 01· a rock. or enjoying a splash either solo or with youn~ company, these folks are getting the most out of a nice day for the beach. The!)C photos were taken al Rock Beach in Laguna Beach and Ahso Beach in South Laguna. -Monaco Princess Weds Civil Ceremony Held in Throne Room MONTE CARLO. Monaco (AP) -Princess Caroline of Monaco married Paris playboy financier Phihppe Junot today in a 15-minute civil ceremony in the throne room of the royal palace -the same room where her rather, Prince ,Rainier III, marrielt American movie star Grace Kelly 22 years ago • "Princess Caroline's hand shook a little as she signed the register." saad Louis Roman, president of Mona~·s State Council, who performed th4' marriage before about 40 family memben1. The wedding wa!I "nice, and in good Spirtts." said .Roman, but not particularly emotional A bout 1.500 persons riled through the palace gates to attend the post -wedding reception. Brilliant sunshine bathed the palace square outside and hundreds of tourists pressed against the barriers. Caroline and Juoot will go to the palace's small chapel Thursday morning for a Roman Catholic nuptial Mass attended by 100 guests, including member of Parisian society and the Int rnational jet-set. ex-royalty and vintage movie stars. Cfhe pre !I was barred from both ceremonies as well as from the pre-nuptial ball at the palact> Tuesday night The brevity of the guest hst. the absence of members 9f reigning royal houses and the privacy surrounding the wedding were in sharp contrast to the 2,000-guest extravaganza that Caroline'/\ father. Prince Rainier Ill, staged on April 18. 1956 . when he married ht>r mother · Dior. the Paras fashion house. designed the weddin& outfits for both Caroline and her mother Designer Mart' Bohan outfitted the bride ln blue crepe aeoraettl' rol' the civil ceremony and <See WEDDING , P11e A2> Action Regains Funds? By STEVE MITCHELL Ol lN Dally Pllel Staff Two hot-potato arterials are being returned to the Laguna Beach master plan of streets by a surpris e C i ty Councli maneuver Wednesday night. The new City Council ma1onty voted to place Alta Laguna Boulevard and Temple Hills Drt\'e back on the street p1an The streets had been deleted four years ago because of fears that placement on the street master plan would lead to new inland access to La~una hilltop communities. Deletion an 1974 , however. put the dty a t cross purposes with the county arterial plans and ended dty access to certain road tunds the county s hares with cities for maJor street work. Th£- Counc1l maJonty maintains that Wednesday night's action 1s only a technical way to again qualify for those funds. The action camt-JUSt minutei- after an earlier motion was ap- proved to do a traffic study leael ang to deletion of the routes from the county's highway list Councilm~ Howard Dawson returned from a IO·minute break to announce h e h ad been .. hoodwinked " b y Coun- c 1 I woman Sally Bellevue'.; earlier deletion motion. She op- poses hav1nJ? the routes on :i master plan. His announcement came arter many of the crowd of roael oppo- nents had left the packed council ~chambers ', .... Mayor Jack McDowell packed • up the ball with u motion that the council add /\It~ Laguna Boulevard and Temple Hall~ roads later on In that way. i-a; county of facials. Laguna Beach ~ould b<.· eligible next year for Artenal Highway Funding Pro~ram monev. , The movl'. approved bv McDowell, Dawson. and Coun - cilman Kelly Boyd, s urprised those remaining in the audience. Mrs Bellevut! "oted nG and· Councilman Wayne Baglin was absent The action author1zei-a letter of intent to the county adding the two roads to the coun1y ·s arterial highway list . u move adamantly opposed by nearly 20 "peakers during the nearly three-hour hearing The three council mcmbt:rs claim that by adding the roads to the city maps. the city will be eligible for arterial highwa~ funds. which may be used lo im- prove other roads. s uch a:. Laguna Canyon Road and Coast Highway But the council said 1t faced a July l deadline Io add l hl' routes. and councilmen in· dividually said they would work to delete the roads after county fund approval. a move one speaker called "devious. if not illegal " ~ And wtW~ many ~11ke1 s said they woll!tt not be opposed lo county arterial highway runds for other routes, nearly all op· posed extending All& Laguna Boulevard and widening Temple Hills Onve. Este ll e Warn e r, a representalive or the Temple Hills Community Association. s'id any funds from the highway funding program would have to be matched by the city. She indicated the amount would not justify the addition of tht> roads to the city map, su~· gesting lhat funds sought from CalTtans and other sources hs ted. " But the remarks which drew the most applause came from Jo Franson. who read campaign statements fr.m several or the council membt'rs before Ute packed audience. <See ROADS, Page AU A~ DAILY PILOT use w C'ritf~Too WinS Praise fly Tbe AssodatH Pre~ The U.S. Supreme Court's rul· ing in the Bakke case today drew praise from the plaintiff's attorney and criticii>m from some black leaders and mem- bers of the academic com· munity. · "My client has a comment " s aid Reynold Colvin, All~n Bakke's attorney. "He's delight· ed with the decision and looks has had a chance to actually read and digest the entlre opi- Dr. John A.O. Cooper, prebi· dent of the Association o( American Medical Colleges. said the group "is disappointed . . . Considerable progress has been made in recent years (or greater participation by minorities in American medicine. This has occurred in particular because medical ...toJ:..W.ara tc •~te-l'ing--medic~ school in September." Bakke. 38, was not personally available. He was expected to go to work, as usual, at the Ames Research Center, a NASA facili- ty, in Mountain View. south of San Francisco. · ·-school admt5oions declstons t(k)tr' Into consideration the need for broad representation in medicine from all segments of our society." - The court ruled 5-4 that the Univer sity of California's me.dical school ,at Davis. which t~ace. rejected Bakke's ap- pl_1cat1_on .for admission. illegally discriminated against him because he is white. It also ruled. however, that the school is not ~barred from taking race into account in a future ad-missions program. Dr. John Tupper, dean of the school. said : "We've all been waiting for the Supreme Court to tell us what the will or the people of the United States is. We will obey the law. I cannot comment further until our legal counsel has had a chance to actuaJ!Y re- ROADS .•. ln respon se to a 1976 queslioruiaire sent out by the Top or the World Association, Mrs. Franson said Mayor McDowell responded to a question about an Alta Laguna Boulevard ex- tension by saying, "I am op- posed to the extension of Alta Laguna and will support your association's opposition." She quoted Councilman Wayne Baglin as sayi ng , "I am sensitive to the growth inducing possibilities <or the extension> and would vote for it only with the support of the Top of the World community." Howard Dawson reportedly responded to the TOW questionnaire by saying, "I categorically oppose any ex· tension of Alta Laguna.'' · · Mrs. t'ranson satcJ 95 percent of the Top of the World com- munity has expressed opposition to the road extension, ''and since we don't want the road, and ob- viously you don't either, we ask this council to honor its com- mitments." Her comments drew applause and laughter from the au<lience. Kelly Boyd, who switched his vote and supported adding the 'two roads to the map; said today he will never vote in favor of the Alta Lagwia extension. "We were not voting on lhe road last night, we were voting to gel a study done in order to be eligible for highway funds next year." . K~nnetfl Smfl h , a · representative of the county's Environmental Management Agency, which oversees distribution of the matching highway funds. said the coun· cil's action enables the city to qualify once again Jor highway funds. Ralph Smith, a law professor at University of Pennsylvania and ch airman of the legal education task force of the National Conference or Black Lawyers, said he was "pro- foundly disappointed" with the decision, l>ut added that he did not know how broad the ruling was. "It is our only hope that the court hasn't become the as- sassin of affirmative action," he said. Robert Llnks, co-counsel for Bakke. said he spoke with him briefly this morning. "He said, 'Great! You guys did it'!" Llnks reported. "I said, 'No we didn't. Youdid'." Of the ruling itself, Links said: I don't think the university total- ly lost the case . . I suspect they will try to formulate a more acceptable program and one that is fair to persons of all races who may have suffered hardship and disadvantage in their lives." ·~ * * f't"OWIPageAI BAKKE ..• guarantee of equal protection and also the portion of Ute Civil Rights Act of 1964 that ouUaws racial discrimin ation by in· stitutions receiving federal funds. The California Supreme Court upheld the trial court's ruling in favor of Bakke on the con· stitutional grounds only, choos· ing to ignore the federal law question. The Constitution's 14th Amendment, which 110 years ago held out to blacks the prom· ise o f full members hip in American society, granted citizenship to recently freed slaves and ordered all states not to ''deny to any person . . . the equal protection or the laws ... FroaPageAJ DOGS .•. r esponsible dog owners. We have voted to deputize some of our .:. .. l.i t.e..g ua-ras t.--0 issue citations," she said, suggesting the city let them try enforcing the existing law. The council will hear the or- dina nce again July 11 at a second reading, at which time Mayor Jack McDowell said he will take additional public com- ment on the new law. Daily Pllet PMla '°f , .... Mlltllall Intersection SHde in Laguna Laguna Beach Pol.ice Sgt. Vic Sagan in- spects small foreign car which flipped over after colliding with another car at the intersection of Flora and Catalina Streets Tuesday morning. The car was driven by. Kimberlee Bruttomesso. 28. of 1306 Catalina St. Police said she collided with a car driven by Hermine Michelle Law. 32. of 1425 Hillcrest Drive at about 10 :45 a .m . The collis ion s ent th e Bruttomesso woman's car skidding on its side into a parked car owned by Dorothy Kennedy of 385 Flora St.. slightly damag- ing that automobile. No one was seriously hurt in the .crash. police said today Ni~l C~ses Slated .Regist~ation opened today and will continue through Friday for summer sc h ool c l ass es sponsored by parents at the Crown Valley E lementar y School in Laguna Niguel. From July 3 to Aug. 4 , children in first through sixth grades can study reading, math, cooking, arts and crafts and sports, taught by certiricated teac h ers , said Robert Schuhman, parent sponsor. Schuhman and other Laguna Niguel parents oFganized the summer school program with the cooperation of Capistrano Unified School District ad- m1nistrators, when it was an· nounced that the district's sum- mer classes would be canceled because of Proposition 13 budget cuts. S ummer school al Crown Valley is planned daily, Monday through Friday, from 9 a.m. to noon. The fee is S85 per student, unless enrollment exceeds 150 or outside contributions are made. Th_en it will be reduced to $65, said Schuhmann. • Registration is seheduled to· day. Thi.lrsday and Friday from 7-9 a.m .. 11 :30 a.m.-1 :30 p.m, and from 5-7 p.m. at Crown Valley School, 29292 Crown Valley Parkway. Extra Laguna Fees Cau~ing H~adaches Lagunans signing up for city recreation programs this sum- mer are being hit with a double· whammy fee schedule increase as a result of Proposition 13. and recreation officials say it's no fun trying to collect. "We 're trying to go back through 1,500 people to pick up the extra fees as a result of Jarvis ," s aid r ecreation supervisor Doug Allen. The City Council directed the Recreation Department earlier this month to operate on a self· supporting basis. It had before Jarvis. but the taxpayers had been picking up the ad- ministrative costs. Now the city is a s king recreation enthusiasts to pay an average $2 per program extra for administrative costs. In addition. the Laguna Beach Unified School District board of trustees is slapping a rentaJ fee on city use of school facilities . That's another cost the city is passing on to the recreation de- partment participants. "For instance," Allen said, "we used to charge $12.50 for a gymnastics class, but after we slap $2 for our administrative costs, plus a whopping $6 per person for rent of the high school gym, we're talking about $20.50." Recreation swimming at the rngh school poot has,. been i-n- creased from 25 cents to SO.cents per day and cost for other swim programs have increased sub· stantially. The revised fee schedule 1s posted at the recreation depart· ment. 515 Forest Ave. For more information. call 497 3311 ext. 238. County Hires Dana Point Consultants Two consultants were hired by Orange County supervisors Tuesday to address ·land use. zoning. traffic and parking problems in Dana Point. Castaneda . Berg and As· sociates will be paid $35,000 in federal revenue sharing dollar to prepare a so-called Oa a Point Specific Plan. That study is to address on- ing inconsistencies, traffi con· flicts. residents' concern and overall land use, Supervisors also hired Kohle, Perry and Associates of Fullerton for $20,000 to study the sufficiency of Daoa Point's street system and to identify ex· isling problems Royalty Lights Vp Monaco MONTE CARLO, Monaco <AP l -Monaco. the guldeboOks never tire of mentioning. isv''a fa!F.Y tale realm." But when the clock struck midnight at the royal palace. it was more Uke Disneyland. One by one. the Rolls-Royces. Bentleys and Mercedes slid up lo the gate to d isgorge bemedaled old men, stylishly coiffed young socialites. women in Dior gowns and a kilted Scotsman. There was a lot of hand kissing. bowing and hold· ing high of noses at the royal ball given by Prince Rainier III and Princess Grace in honor of their daughter Caroline's wed· ding. Alighting were the Princess of Savoy, the Grand Duke of Russia. the ex-King of ttaly, baron!i. countesses. and many other survivors of the lifestyle that created the Monaco legend. The palace. bathed in floodlights, looked like a cardboard facade on a movie set. Human silhouettes flitted past the gently lit windows of the upper floor ball rooms. .I' Cary Grant arrived and drove the photographers into a rrenzy. "l must have a photo," cried one downtrodden German. Grant turned around and posed for him. Yet. for all the horror stories about photographers bedeviling the lives or celebrities. these hardworking men managed to keep a respectful distance. No dress was soiled, no hairdo ruf· fled. The only near incident c~me when Greek shipping magnate Stavros Niarchos' chauffeur. blinded by flashbulbs. almost drove into a barricade. * * * f'rom Pap A J WEDDING • • t raditional white fo r the r eligious rite while Prtncess Grace was wearing apricot · <:hiffon today and yellow crepe georgette Thursday. The palace refused to say where Caroline. "1, and Junot. a 38-year-old Parisian financier. were honeymooning, or what gifts their parents were giving them. Monaco's police force of 300 and the 80-man palace gua rd threw a tight web of security arounq..ttie ochre-walled palace to k~p gate crashers out of the ro~ ball Tuesday night. / Greek shippin~ magnate Sta v ros Niarchos' Bentley limousine aJmost crashed into one of the police barricades when photographers' flashbulbs btinded the cha uffeur. The guests also included l'X ·King Umberto of lta\y. Egyptian Prince Fuad, F rank Sinatra. David Niven, Ava Gardner and Cary Grant. Princess Grace met Rainier when she and Grant filmed "To Catch.a Thief'' in Monte...Carlo- ,,. Information about the sum- mer classes or registration is available by calling 768-0555. Particular People Select JOHNSON & SON Home of the "~olden Touch•• Meanwhile, the council of Neighborhood Associations, comprised of several hilltop community groups, issued a statement this morning criticiz· mg the council vole. The statement, released by a spokesman of the coalition, said : "The three members of the City Council who voted for the letter or intent to the county to redesignate the two streets as arterial highways on the city map have acted against the will of the people." Most Leisure World Voters Backed 13 "This definitely shakes .our confidence in tne~r willingness to protect us against the county's turning our residen tial neighborhoods into a traffic cor· ridor." ORANGE COAST LISC. DAILY PILOT ~~:w~~~~~:;.'r,=i::::~:;,: CM\f P\ibtl\ftt'"J Comp•nf Stolof'•'~ f'Oll'°"' .,,. e>ubh "'•d ¥oNI•¥ lfl\f'outf"I fr10.¥ tor Co-tt• Mil\• ,....woort BtAt h Hunt•~nn fWMf\IFOUf\ IA1r'I V•ll•y lrvtn~.· SAOdlf'fM<\ Vltlf¥ •Ml l~UO!\a 8eKfl\l$0uth toA\t A \MQle r~I ffJ1 r.on '' ~·~ S•turdA.,-, .no Suno.n T,.. ;~~~~:::~~'t.f1'~~'~.r.1:--~· Say tll••r1N ..... Pt flt6tnt .tnd Pvbtl~t JOOll C-V•U Pn\lcte~• •rid c;.~t•I MIN9ftf '"•flita1K .. -.H EOltOt Tll•INtA M-M M.t,..4'"4 f.Cf'tor CU•IOM ~· lllCMnl~.- An•\t•ftt MIMtt"O E:•ttit\ L.aaun• •••ett ome. --·n .. oitt"""•.,,•5''"" MolllftO .. dd .. \\ ,. 0 ....... •i.11 Offl~• to.lo Mo M 1)0 WO I llh St•>fl H ... ll"O!Of'lkKl't 1117~--ord 5.tddl-•YOlloy l)IOll• ... r"- ••""'Ot090Fr-.rv T..._,hone (714)'°'4321 Cluelflff Ad\<enltlfte tu-M71 Legufll hHll All 0eµ"'40ntt: Telepnone4Mo .... ,,_\ ... , .. ,....,.. 411-AOO ~T."1."; !:!. O:::t'~ c:::,::.~..!..":'':11= f'"Ut~ ., MfftUH .... "" ... ,tlft ft'•Y ... toprodvtti •llltovt tPtc••I Pttll'•ttl&tl ti •oP'trltl\1- ~~.~;:, ,_c,':'\~::~~ro .. ::'d.,:• t~~~::, ~':o =~·~~t>li ;~:.:o MOf'ltf\ly m 1t111,, Laguna Hills voters in Leisure World favored Proposition 13 slightly more than did the rest of Orange County but their counterparts in Seal Beach :.vere less solidly in support of the in· itiative. Figures recently released by the County Registrar of Voters office show that the 40 precincts within the retirement communi- ty voled 8.963 to 3,330 in favor of Proposition 13, the Jarvis-Gann property tax limitation in· itiative, on June 6. In other words, 72.9 percent of those voting favored the law. Countywtde, 404,878 voters case "yes .. ballots white lil,274 said "no." That's a 70.2 percept ap- proval. At Leisure World in Seal Beach, only 67.1 percent of that retirement community's voters approved Proposition 13. As a city. voters in Seal Beach had one of the lowest pluralities in favor of the proposition in the county, turning out 8,2l6 ln favor and 4,259 against for a 65.9 per- cent "yes" voto. And Registrar of Voters figures show that Seal Beach, as a city. actually approved Proposition 8 -Gov. Edmund Brown Jr. 's answer to the Jarvis-Gann initiative. Voters tn the city gave S,900 a ffirmatlve votes and S,8'8 negative votes to Ptoposltlon 8. Leisure Wo rlders In Seal Beach. however, turned thumbs down on Propos{tion 8 to the • tune of 2,738 negative votes to 2,501 "yes" ballots, a 52.2 per- cent "no" vote. Laguna Hills ' Leisure Worlders, however, turned down Proposition 8 by 61.5 percent, 6,887 negative ballots to 4,299 yes votes. Orange County as a whole turned the issue down with a 315.214 "no" vote to 236,461 "yeses," according to final of- ficial results in the Registrar's office. Front Page AJ PARK •.. to its park land dedic ation, Johnston said. In addition, the developer will irrigate and landscape the hillier 21-acre portion of the park and pay for an architect to work with the city and the Capistrano Unified School District on landscaping the remaining 26 acres. the planner said. "We expect to establish a forest on the less level areas and probably will provide ror more active retreational use of the taraer, level portion," said Johnston. The proposed park will require City Council approval. 1'he parks comml~slon recommendation lR expected to be considered by tho City Councll at its July 5 meeting. I "At John~ & Son, we were treated in o very professional and dignified mannet ." HAHCY HITKIH "_.... ... .....,c ..... "Very courteous, very fatr, enfoyed the laat four or five years auociation." •WE SMITH MOOll L..-... C ... "Courteous salesman, pleolClnf surround- ings, excellent HrVice." DAVID DOSTAL Hewport leeck. C•. , . "Follow through is very good. I've hod .. even years of sattafled Mt'Vice." MIS. R.~L HALL ........... c ... Orange County's Oldest Uncoln·Mercurv Dealership .JOHNSON a SON I iJ-I 2626 Harbor Blvd • Costa Mesa • 540·5630 ' ) CALIFORNIA Wednesday. June 28 1978 DAILY PILOf A5 Solons OK $15.2. Billion Budget Ailti-abort~on Deniocrats Vow F~ght on Funding SACRAME:'llTO IAPl A':> sembly Democrat!> hJvt:-broken a deadlock over their $1 5 2 billion ver$1on or the proposed state budget, but the action only d elayed confrontations over abortion funding and govern· m~nt spending hm1ts Anl1-abort1on Democrats agreed Tuesday night to vote for the budget in a pre liminary form. clearing t he way for a 55·22 vote that allowed 1t lo pro- ceed toward a two-house con- ference committee. But they warned they would not y ield again on any form of Gov. Edmund Br.own J r. 's $34 million budget proposal to con- tinue funding Meda -Cal abortions for poor women "WE WILL STAND as a bloc against the budget 1f 1t contains provisions \hat .are to us morally and philosophically repugnant ... A sse mbl yman Al as ter McAhster. 0 -San Jos<'. told his colleagues before the vote. He said he was s peaking for 12 other Democrats. He told reporters he was will ing to accept abortion funding in cases of danger to th(· mother'<;:, life. rape or ince!>t But he !>did <·urrent federal restriction:. arti too liberal and he would not ac· cept any state funding that replaced withdrawn federal dollars. The federal law approved by Congress and President Carter las t August allows abortion funding only in cases of rape. in· cest. and danger of death or !>eve re physical health damage to the mother Those conditions cover only a small fraction of previously funded abortJons. .. BROWN ORDERED the state Medi·Cal program to replace the withdrawn federal funds , saying the right to an abortion should not depend on a woman's in- come. T he budget proposal. which includes restrictions after the third month of pregnancy. wou ld cover about 86 .000 abortions. If McAlis tcr 's group holds farm. Democratic leaders will either have to yield on the abortion 1s~ue or reach <in ac- commodatidn with Republicans over the spending limit pro1>0sal that GOP members want on the November state ballot The budgt't \Ole wa!> one more than tht• two thirds majority n eed e d for passage. One Democrat voted no a nd one abs t ained Of th e 23 Republicans. 21 voted no and two were absent RF. PUBLICANS w i thheld their votes as part of their de mand for an Assembly fl oor vote on a proposed constitutional am e ndment by Sen . George DeukmeJian. R-Long Beach. that would limit increa ses in s lat<' and local government spending to the percentage in· crease in the cost of Jiving plus J>Opulation. • A s1m1lar proposal by then· Gov Ronald.Reagan was reJecl ed by state voters in 1973. But Republicans say the recent passage of P roposition 13. a $7 b1lhon property tax cut, in ·chca tes the publi c mood has l'hJn)!l'd Though Brown and Assembly Speakl•r Leo McCarthy. the Dcmocrat1c leader 111 the lo"'l'r house. ~ay they want a stall' s pending limit. fi ve hours of closed·dOQI' negotiations Tues day failed to produce an agree ment that would end the GOP boycott. THE STICKING point ap- pa rently was Republicans' in· s1st£nce thal the measure move out of a Democrat controlled c-omm1ttec to the floor before the Legislature begins a recess in early July Assembly GOP leader Paul Priolo of Mahbu told reporters that the Republicans were will· mg to wait until August for a floor vote on the measure, pro- vi ded the legal d eadline for qualifying November ballot rneas ures is extended from June 29 to Aug. 15 as expected. He said McCarthy offered lo put a measure on the Assembly floo r an Aug us t that was "gen era lly w ithin ·the parameters of our legislation " But he said McCarthy would not agree to act before the recess J nd did not give ~atasfactory guar antee!> "I TtDNK WE'RE quite far apart." Priolo said. McCarthy. D-San Francisco. told r epo rter s th a t th e Democrats would proceed with a spending Limit proposal on their own for action in August. lie blamed the breakdown on "the rather passionate feeling against the governor" an the Republican Caucus. The six-membe r conference comm 1ttee will try to reconcile differences b£-tween the two versions of the budget. Besides abortion funding. they include !>late employee pay. prison con- struction. and University of California tuition. -. THE ASSEMBLY generally followed Brown's recommen· dat1on for a state pay free~e but proposed a 2 percent raise for some employees making lcs~ lhan $23.000. The Senate ap- proved a 5 percent raise ror all state workers Under te rms of emergency state aid to local governments approved last week. the state· pay raise wall be the maximum allowed for local government workers and welfare recipients The Assembly also wants the freeze applied to legislators and Judges. ... w .......... SERVES TIME Jane Russell Ex-actress Serving Four Days Bombing Link Widens SANTA BARBARA <API Jane Russell. 57, one or lht mov· ies· glamor queens an the 1950s. 1s ~~n 1ng a fou r day jail sentence ror· driv ing whale intox- icated. authorities sa y M unic1pal Court Judge Joseph Lodge revoked probation and sentenced Miss Russell on Mon- day. and she began serving her sentence that rught. authorities said Tuesrl:.iy Briggs Suspects Said Tied to More Blasts M iss Russell . who ltves in nearby Montec1to. was put on probation following an mtox1cat· ed driving conv1cllon in 1976. She was arr~ted and charged a second tame following an acc1 · dent last March. sheriff's de- partment officials said. Choking Suspect Aided San FranC'1sco police attempt lo aid a man they ident1f1ed as Greg Bartlow. 31, after he swallowed balloons they said might have been filled with a heroin-like s ubstance. P olice cla im Bartow is a known narcotics dealer. LOS ANGELES 1AP > Ev1dl'nce found in an apartment use<.! by live members u l a rcv- ol u t1o na ry group links them with other bombings across the nation, authorities claimed in a leltt>r fil ed an LO':> Angeles Superior Court Th(• five -Clayton Van Lyde- .. r:if. fl2. Le<>lic Ann Mullin. 33 . Judith Emil y Bissel l. 33. M 1chael Jus tesen. 27. and Mark Curlis Perry. 4!9 will be tned Oct JO on charges or conspinng to blow up the Fullerton offi ce or statc Sen. John Braggs DEPUTY DISTRICT Attorney Robcrt Jorgensen, urging Tue!>· day that Van Lydegraf's bail tw increased from $200,000 to $500.000. alleged a typewriter found in the defendants' apart- m ent was tested by the FBI. A hearing on Jorgensen's motion was set for Friday Jorgensen said the FBI de- term 1ned the typewriter was used to type a weather Under - g round communique regarding a bomb placed at the Anaconda American Brass Co. in Oakland on Sept. 10. 1974. The bomb was discovered before it could ex· plode. He said the same typewriter also was used to type a note in which the Weather Underground claimed responsibility for plant- ing explosives Jan. 28. 1975, in the U S State Department in Washi ngton. D <:;. a nd t he Federal Building in Oakland. JORGENSEN SAID a docu· ment entitled "Origins of Fascism." found in the same a partment. was typed on the s ame typewriter as was used to type a number of other Weather Underground communiques. These communiques claimed 'East Area Rap~t' Hits Again SACR.\MENTO CAP> -The "cast area rapisl" ha!> attacked a 23 vcalO(old woman who lived alone· in an apartment complex hi s J8th vi c tim , th e Sacramt•nto County sheriff's de- partment reports Bi ll Miller. s heriff's spokt>sman. said Tuesday it was the first tame the rapist has strul'k an Sacramento since Apt·il 11. and only the second t1 m(' an an apartment complex 111 s 1 ast four attacks were an D::n as and Modesto. two in each city, Mtll<'r said Debates Proposed LOS ANGELES <AP> -Gov. (---~-·_ ... ,,.._·r ___ J Body Exhumed .::JI.~ I.~ LOS ANGELES CAP> -In or- der ·'to prove or disprove certain physical evidence con· Ken Reitz. Younger's cam- l>aign manager. said afte r meet- rng here with the governor's aides Tuesday that the attorney general would res pond by July 7, when the two sides meet again. S ubpoena Disobeyed SACRAMENTO CA P ) -The Sacramento Union says a re· porter is refusing to obey a Superior Court Judge's subpoena or tapes and notes from an in· lerv1ew Wllh a Wltness in the El· len Delia murder trial cerning the case." sheriff's an· \'est1gators have exhumed the body of one of the 13 victims at· tr 1 but e d to th e Hi 11 s id c Stran,gler Sheriff's Lt. Phil BulHngton said Cindy Lee Hudspeth 's body was re moved from the mortuary Tuesday and returned a few hours later to check certain evidenc<'. but he would not <'l a bo rate 1lfemory Queried OA KLAND CAP > -Attorneys for William and Emily Harris say the woman they're accused of kidnapping Patricia Hearst Defense attorneys Tues~ay told a judge that Miss Hearst, kidnapped more than four years ago and currently serving a prison term on a conviction of joining her abductors in a bank robbery, could not accurately testify because "her experiences over the past few years ha ve af- fected her ability to perceive, rec· ol lect and communicate.·· ,,, ............ ·1 .. . • • • responsibility for explosives an· c1dents al Gulf Oil Co. head· .quarters in Pittsburgh, Pa . on June 13. 1974 : at the Kennecott Copper Co. headquarters an Salt Lake City. Utah. on Sept. 5, 197i. and at the U.S. State Depart· ment. PUC Oversees '13' Savings Distribution SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -The California Public Utilities Com mission is taking steps to assure that any tax savings received by utilities or transportation firms because of Proposition 13 would be passed on to customers. In action Tuesday. the PUC ordered an investigation to de- termine effects the new property t ax cutting amendment will have on rates or companies un · der its jurisdiction. Under the proposal. utilities and transportation companies will be required to set up tax in- 1tiat1ve accounts to insure that any tax reductions are passed on lo ratepayers and any new in· creases in laxes. licenses or rees are reflected in rates. Starting July l all ra tes col· lected to cover property tax ex· penses will be subJect to refund, rate adjustment or balancing treatment Miss Russell. who currently does television commercials. gained national attention in her first film , "The Outlaw " The movie was directed by the late Howard Hughes. who had her wear scanty outfits considered n sque at the tame Streetuxilkers To Get Jail? SAN F RANCISCO (AP) -AJ. leging that prostitutes prowl "rampant" in two of the city's most popular tourist a reas. the Chamber of Commerce. the police chief and the Powell Street As:.;ociation are demand- in g j ail terms f or th e streetwal kers. San Francisco Municipal Court came under fire from all three parties Tuesday for bemg soft o n prostitute!>. P olice statistics show 90 percent of the 1.450 prostitutes arrested so far this year served no tame an Jail The two busin ess groups said the s1tuat1on 1s particularly bad on Powell Street. where tounsts wait lo board the city's famed cable cars. and an Union Square. at· the heart-of Sun FrancJS<:Q s shopping district Edmund G Brown Jr has pro· posed a Sl'nes of four televtsed gubernatorial debates prior to the Nov. 7 general election. His Republican opponent. State At· torn ev General Evelle J Youngc·r. as expected to reply to the proposal early next month. The Union said Tuesday that the order was issued Monday by Judge John J Boskovich to re- porter John llammarley ·'lacks sufficient memory" to .• t~~:!JL...~I:.!J~ testify against the pair • rtists Dunk tlw Tax Man A charity eveAl to raise funds for an En- t•1nitas church will feature a ga me that 1s , bound to lure mgst of the crowd. ln a re- hearsal ror the August event is Son Diego County Ass<'sc;or f: C Williams. who is dropJW(l 11\to a hm. of ~ater. A. baseball was thrown to ctrop him this one by San Diego Padres p1tcher Randy Jones • • HERB • : FRIEDLASDf.R • • I ~AKISG • GREAT DEALS • FREE: 50 G.\LS : OF G:\S « ••• ,,,.,"' ... "''"'''"'' "''" .... ,., 1•-.i Jll4 .... ~ or Oii. <'II.\'\(; t:S • it ",.,,.,.."'~ '' °" f•ctoo for • Jt •'-IO"I ., , .. •••'Wt Cit • it e HONDA e • it-1nit&.uhllhd • Jt. UT 7117 ""'•mlft•l•r .,,. '111 ,.. * * * * * • * * * * ·: • MG·TRIUMPH • : e JAGUAR e • ,. FIAT-LANCIA : It U1 n'1~ .... ~!1!::;.;:eh~•m ii .... * * * * * * * •• * •• • e TOYOTA e • .. • .. 11 ....... c. .... 111.~ • It t·•~*"I·•••• U1 M.. 41 it*** * * • * * * * * ~ : l\IOTORllO:\I F. « .sAu-:s& R F.~T.\1.s • ~ RESER\'t: SOW : it 5:t7-i777 E\l. 500 • ........ .,,,, .. • e LEASING e .. All 'll••••~fenoio6 0..."'lf Jt ht A lllt11tr i,,_, llff It• 111em- it 537.7777 t:xt. 600 ************ .. .. iii • Your Dilly Piiot Clftbe Aecyclfd. Or•~ Co.t\t COllllqt t~ Ille oll1c1at rl'CyCllrtq Cf,,I~ '°' Co\to11 Mtw June Z9 -July 2 Th~y, Friday, Saturday and Sunday. View nearly eighty professional arnsts and craftsmen c:hsplaymg theU' ongmal works, mclucting oils, watercolors, seasca~s and abstracts. It's another Fash.ion lsland expenence. And it's free. In Newport Beach on Pacific Coast Highway between M acArthur and jamboree. ' '-rile difference between better & be.C' • ' :-ta L • .'C Oranoe Coast Oa11v Pltot Wedn&Sday June 28. 1978 Robert N Weed/Publisher Editorial Pag_e .. , .... K .... "., ........... _ .... .. -------------------------------------School District Needs Unity Now Last week's approval of a county study to determine \\hether the Capistrano Unified School District should re· muin mtac•t or ue split into two or three smaller districts c:amc at a good time. _ The study wus prompted by a petition from 250 San Clemente residents. They said local voters might be more likely to s upport school construction if they knew that new schools would be built closer to home and not at the other end of the sprawling Capistrano district · On June 6, Capistrano Unified voters defeated the fourth <:onsecutav~ ballot measure in less than three vears. On the ~~me day, California voters approved ·Prop 13. chmanating bond or lease-purchase elections as a method 01 financing s chool construction. So thl' -<1ues tion 1s no longer who will support school hond t•ll•t·t1ons to fund new schools. but how Capistrano ~chools can cope \\1th <.tr) influx of 8.000 new students ex peeled m the nt•.x t fl ve ) l'flr!' It docs not seem appropriate to break up a strong un- ified school district. wilh its wealth of resources and l'>easom·d administrators. Still, the county study will be worthwlult• 1f 1t convinces the dissident element that they ~land stt'ongt•r together than apart -and that the system 1-; worth~ of their support A Poor. Performance Laguna Bc:.ich has Jost two fine publk servants this month, victims of accusations, innuendo al)d City Council fumbling -"'." Bettv Freeman was a Planning Commissioner for more than two years. Michael Schley served as a Board of Adjustment m e mber for nearly six years. Mrs. Freeman quit after council comments regarding the Planning Commission's '"inefficiencies. inadequacies and rude behavior ... The charges were made by coun- cilmen at a public meeting and not in front of the panel it W'1s chastis ing In Schley's ca~c. the board chairman was criticized in public for eomment..'> he allegedly made to another gov- ernment bo<lv more than four months before. Then he \vas fired a week later at the end of a council meeting he did not attend. The weak charge~ against Mrs. Freeman and the fir· mg of Schley were pohllcally motivated. And while 1t is not wrong for a new council majority to seek its own kind on its appuintcd commissions and committees. the panel should huve been more honest in its approach. lm;tead of besmirching the reputations of two fine. dedicated panelist s who contributed many years of servitc.• to Lai;?una flc.·;;1ch . the council should have politely ;.isketl for their resignations upon taking office last M<1n·h A mec:harns m needs to uc set up in Laguna Beach whereby all commission anc.J committee members tender 1·esig nations when a new council takes office. Then, if the council ~o choosl'~. 1t can reappoint those it wishes . Tell a Friend 1t 's Just two «-eeks until festival time in Laguna Beach. and before you s tart groaning about the summer traffic woes created by the three art exhibits out Laguna Canyon Road, remember that this year you can help pr..:vent the congestion. 11 t·rc s he l\\ Thl' tit~ has created a temporary parking lot about a quarter mile north of El Toro Road on Laguna Canyon Hoad capable ot handling up to 800 vehicles. During tho...,c congested summer weekends, motorists from thc intcrior areas will be encouraged to park the family buggy out the c'}Jlyon and catch a tram ride into tl1l' n.1nous fcs ttvali.. · · · That's where Lc.1guna Beach residents come in. Tell your rdatives and frwnds to park out the canyon. catch the tram into town, a,nd offer to meet-the.111: at one or the festivals The more v1s1tors who use the lot and catch the tram, the less eungc~t1on in town. And tell them it will only cost tlH.•m a hut k lo pal'k all (,h1y and get a free tram ride. \\'hill.' ~·c1u ·rc.• Ht 1t. !)uggest they visit all three art shows lht-Fc•sttvul of Arts, Sawdust Festival and A1·t /\-Fair. all l<x:ated within a half mile of each other That "a.v .vou help keep downtown streets lesi; crowded and support local artisan~. Opinions expressed 1n the space;k are those ol the Daily Piiot 01her views expressed on this page are those of their authors and artists Reader comment is invited Address The Daily Pilot, P 0 . Box 1560 Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (714) 642-4321 Boyd/ Drawing Room By L.M. BOYD tluestion rinses as to why that spe('1al s itting place in old.tlmey houses was called the drawing room. It was where the tactics retired after dinner lo lcave'lhc men at la· ble to lheir cigars and liquor. Because of the ladies' retreat thereto, the name originally was the "withdrawing room ·· 4 "!low much money do Donn\ and Marie Osmond make"· A Hcporls 'ary But those who claim to know say they e~ch ~ross about $1 ,50<> a week Dear Glooany Two efft'('lS or Prop 13 may canc<'I earh other out l ref~r to laym1t orr • police offlct>r:s when thousands more kids are roamimt the streets due le~ !\ummer :s.cboot canet>llat1on. AR What sort of breakfast ap peals to you? President U.S. Grant liked nothing better to start off his day than a cucu mber drenched in vinegar. More men than women in France use cosmetics. Q. "What's the longest stretch of highway with no traHic lights?" A. Interstate 75 between Sault Ste. Marie. Mich., and Tampa, Fla. It's l.564 miles. Q. "Why was the Quonset hut of World War II so called'?" ~. tre-couse it was first - built at the Quonset Point Naval Air Station near Greenwich, R.I. In 1941 for airmen. The great Heavyweight Jack Dem~ey curned just about as much money throughdut his fighting career as dJd Muhammad All in losing his last match. To that list of In a P· propr1ate names, add bllndworms, which are neither blind nor worms They ·~ legless liurds. Among dogs, the terriers bark tht most Amona col.$, the Perslaru; moow the leul. The average human being ts an 18-)'e._r.old Ctlinese girl. ' • l Earl Wat r& A Million Here, a Million There fo'or an inkling of the fat con· lent of government. consider Governor Jerry Brown's slate budget for tht> forthcoming fis· cal year commencing July l , as he initially proposed it last January. It totalled $16 billion. This did not include property tax relief money sub6e· quently pro- vided in SB I or money for s tate employee salary raises and numer - ous new pro- grams the ~overnor was pushing. Adding those. the ac- tua 1 budget would have ex- Mailbox ceeded $18 billion or $8 billion more than when he took omce Just 311:1 years ago. A quick study of the planned budget reveals that its proposals represented an increase for stale agencies for next year of at least $2 billion over last year. Thal increase alone would use nearly every penny of all the taxes collected from every bank and corporation. It is more than one-third of all the Income taxes extracted from every individual. lt is more than half the lotaJ of tbe last full budget spent by former Governor Pat Brown in 1966. his last ye1Ar in office. BUT THE increase is worse than that ror it doesn 'l include any or the increases in the multi- ~ ( ~~-HE l\\N'T GQIN' NOWHERE. I YANKED THE D\STRlevtORW. billion dollar budgets ~f health welCure agencies which cover s uch programs as welfare. Medi-CaJ, unemployment. men· tal hospitals and aid to the aged. all of which are so vast thuy defy easy analysis. Neither does il include educa· lion which. in the face of declin· ing enrollments, was slated nevertheless for increases in stale funds of nearly a h~tr billion dollars for all levels. How do budgets get so fat" ll starts at the top. The governor's immediate of flee budget . was set al $3.5 million, up $600,000 from the 1977 figure . The four a~encv secretaries under the governor. his cabinet. proposed bodgets lotalllng $3.8 million, an in· • I• crease of $1 7 million. Also part of the governor's office ure tho offices of Employee Relations, Planning and Research and Emergency Services. These three had a combined budget of $7.f! million, up $4.5 million. So the total cost of running the gov- ernor 's office for one yur comes to almost $15 million and represents an increase of neal'ly $7 m c Ilion bet ween 1976-77 and 1978-79, almost a 100-percent growth' ALTHOUGH most other state agencies were not quite so fast with the buck, neither were they Scrooges Consumer Affairs added $8 m1lhon for a total $38 m1ll1on . General Services showed a $26 million increase to $188 m1lhon: Housing and Com- munity Development went up $7 5 million to a total $12.5 million:· the llighwuy Patrol in- creased $25 mitrion for a total $223 million: the Department of Motor Vehicles added $24 million to boost its budget to $151 million: Solid Waste Manage- ment jumped from a $2 million budget t o $20 million ; the Department of .Education came out. with $239 million, $67 million more than its 1977 budget~ Parks and Recreation upped $27 million for a total $83 million. and Industrial Relations jumped rrom $65 million to S87 .6 million. The fi gures go on and on in a whirling dervish or s pending . Even the Legislature boosted its own budget $12 5 million to total SSi.5 milhon. THERE IS little reason lo doubt this same frenzy of spend- ing exists at all levels or govern- ment. especially lhe schools. with the result government has become almost uncontrollable. As the late Senator Everett Dirksen quipped, "You add a million here and a million there and pretty soon you are talking big money " Tax Calendar Change Would Aid Schools To the E<hlor · Schools and local governments could turn $.1 into S4 plus. Since property taxes are based upon a fiscal year begin- ning on July 1 each year . schools a nd local governments are l'Ocrced almost in entirely lo the same riscal year. Schools in part1culur thus are put into a rather ridiculous situation budgetwise. Schools must pro- duce a budget beginning July 1 and cndin~ on June 30. However, no \ax funds arc available to them Wltil aft.er the DccemQe.r 10 deadline for the first one-half of property lax payments. What do they do rrom July I until the end of December? The logical solution, of course. is to budget and maintain a large sur- plus Secondly. they may borrow funds . paying interest which in· creases their costs. IT WOULD seem more than log1cal to move up the due date for the first one-half payment of property taxes to a Sept. 10 date for the 1979:80 fiscal lax year and possi bly to July 10 for the 1980-81 fiscal tax year. Since tax bills will be general· ly much lower. there wouldn't be any excessive burden on the average taxpayer. The benefits Schools would no longer need such excessive surpluses and in ca('h of the next two years the surpluses accumulated could be used to orrset tower tax income. from non-residents and tourists. This class of visiting people de- serve to bear lheir share of stale costs rather than have free ac- cess to beaches, parks, etc. This and other ideas. s uch as a state lottery. may do more than offset the lust revenue. The dis· sentmg factors likewise deserve to be heard from in perspec- li ve with the greater good ART WEISSMAN Dbilhuioned To the ~ditor . A Hhough it was probably s imple-minded of me, one of the things that has kept me afloat in the contaminated political waters of the t;ist few years has been the hope that there remained a few men in public hfe who were still unwilling to sacrifice their own in· tcgnty and principles for political expediency. I CLUNG to the possibility that Sen. Alan Cranston was one of those people. and I applauded his opposition to Prop. 13. He kn,ew then as he knows now -t .• at lloward Jarvis is a fortuitous de· magogue who has done an enormous disservice to the state and ulti'malely. I suspect to the nation. When Cranston fawned over Jarvis in Washinf(lon this week. he lost my vote and my ~speet. l ' m sorry for us both. JOSEPH N. BELL Nollero Also. by moving up the due date for property laxes by one· fourth of a year. the result would To the Editor: be to increase the tax income by I am appalled at the effects one fourth for that particular lProtph. 13 i1s hav,inrtg on bl udtghet cuts year. o ose ess o una e an we An advantage for the taxpayer are. . . i might be moving the second prop-Hom~wners enJO>: ~ prof t, erly tax (ieadlinc away from often high ai:id unreahst1c, when the April 10 date since state and they sell their homes. _Then they rederal income taxes closely welcome high evaluation . Home follow The period around April buyers are aware of the cost or has always been 8 bummer for taxes when they bu.y their businesses because of concen· homes. 1( they are too high, then -" the price of lhe home they have trated due dm.es for taxes. . Cll)osen is too high Approximately Smee county assesso.rs...wil1$_ an~·niUrtll of l~l>J'.l)'menl" la tH longer h:ive ~e burdensome job d d fbl towel'ln" it still ftlore. of reevaluatmg property to the e uc 1 e. " former. extent. It would.n".t seem IN ORANGE County, the to strain them by prov1dmg tax services we received for our bills three months earlier. money were worthwhile. In most DOYLE PHILLIPS t'Oses the money saved wu not S~•llo11 To the Editor. Why not e n courngc your Mall box readers to contribute helpful lden11 to overcome the jobs/services reductions caused by the passage QI Proposlton 13'! Surely the continumg a:rowth of Californio cunnot be st:y micd by such tosses or f'U"ds to mccUng ever mcreasing needs My contribution to the More or ideaR reloUna lo constructive er forts would be ror the st&t to tmmcdiutcly Implement legisla- tion to. rt'place the lost r~vcnue neeesMry to maintoln a decent standard or living. only to afford more tuJCurles. This Is no\ lhe case with lhc. poor. bllnd, aged, unemployed or disabled. Where ls the consc\ehce of the people? Why isn't Jarvi!! stand· Ing trial for drunk drivln1 and drivlnR without a license lnstud or being treated as • hero Ln WashifUlton" T JONES Tl.w 10 l.iRICft To tht' F,c.:tllr · Rf puls1vc Is the word to bc(tn this letter '!'ith Why rcputrlve - because or what the politicans are doing in the wake of Prop. 13. The politicians have shown their boldness year after after year by defeating any bill that would have lessened the tax burden on the people. Now that they have been overwhelmed at the polls. they have set up their operation to divide and conquer. HAS THERE been any talk about wiping out patronage jobs., Any talk about wiping out useless proJects? Any titlkvabout curbing pen sio n s for the pollt1c1ans·! Any talk about only allowing a politiean one pension and that one being dropped to a sensible figure ? Perhaps these things have been mentioned and I have missed them . however I doubt it. This is the waste the people have set out to end and this 1s why so many or us voted for Prop. 13. The politicians know this: however they are making cut s in schools. police , rire departments and county workers trying to pit them against the working homeowners. It is time the teachers. police. firemen and county workers and horn eowners joined forces statewide and voted these very clever men out of office. Let them took for a lucrative Job and pension somewhere else. Don't let Prop. 13 go into the state sewer; unite now before it's too late. WALTER L. BIGNEY Ala•ka •Bargaifl• To the Editor: As we look around ror "no cost to the taxpayer" bfr~ains. the opportunity to acqulre the most outstandingly beautiful park lands on the continent. as well as extensive wildlife h abitats. should rate high prforlty. When Alaska became a state. "1'1 bl,......, Mill~ ~ .. "°' ., .,. ,...,. al ,,.,., ,.. .. "" .. ... -"' • pouttd ol ...... . the state and the Eskimos were able to choose almost two thirds of the public land for develop- ment and exploitation or re- sources and, m the case of the Eskimos. for the continuation of the1 r h fe styles. The rest. publicly owned. 1s open for designation as national parks. wildlife refuges, or na- tional wild rivers . Thanks to s upport of O range Cou nty Congressmen Jerry Patterson and Mark Hannaford and 352 other con~ressmen the House -voted t-&prese-rve these l and~ for- public enjoyment and essential wildlife habitats. THIS le~islation. on one of the mosl 1mPQrtant issues ever to C'ome before the Congress. now goes to lhl' SenatC'. Senator Cranston has :-.upported a bill ' h1eh would achieve virtually the same obJect1ves as that passed by the House .. Senatot Hayakawa is undecided. If he. and other senators who are in doubt. could realize how far. reaehmg 1s this land and wildlife conservation opportunity we wou ld be assured or its pres· rval1on To the extent that early ongresscs extracted from the public domain the lands for the establishment of Yellowstone. Yosemite and other national parks and monuments at no cost to the taxpayer. we are the beneficiaries. That they did not preserve a Redwood National Park has cost us dearly. Sup~rt for the Senate bill will obviate this happening to Alaskan lands. tS 2176> EVELYN OAYMAN Pe111 N~d ID To the Editor Your newspaper has always been admirably alert to the needs of dogs and pets in general. There is one thing I would Uke you so very much to write in your newspaper. and that is the real lmparll.lMU of having a dog's name. address and telephone number glued to the collar or ricobond. In that way the agon)'of l ost doi::s i s practlt'ally eliminated. · £specially with dogs going along on vacation trips or other outings. It is most essential to huvc un identification. Nol long ugo. I p,ot my own dog back that way COBY JUDA • IArterr from rtodtr.• art ~lcomt. TM nght to condtnst l#'tttrJ to flt spou cw l"hm1natt labtl is rtsttWd l.Ltt111 o/ 300 word8 or ~u will bl givt"I prt/trnict All ldttra mlLff in· elude 11gnaJ11rt on.cl matUng addrns bul ltdmt1 ma~ ,,. ""1Mdd on rt· qwst IJ .Ul/6Ciftll rfOton ilapparfftl. Poftfry wl/l M l bl' pMbWhtd_ l • ' . 7 ~ ' Orange Coast l Today's Closing N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 71, NO. 179, 4 SEC !~ONS, 4.t PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 1978 N TEN CEN rs ---------.------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------..... -----·---------------. ) •• Slashed N-M Budget Wins Approval · By MIC'llAELPASKEVICH Of llll o.ttr ~-S\eft ·'Never was so much faith put an so little knowledge," Superinten· dent John Nicoll said Tuesday as Newport-Mesa Unified School District trustees unanimously ap- • proved a tentative budget for the • nextschoolyear. f The document. guaranteed to undergo changes before it must , be finalized in August , reflects an \ overall $5.2 million loss in funds to the di s tric t b eca use of Proposition 13. School trustees are still con- s idering cutbacks involving distric'l transportation, classified pers onnel and Instructional Media Center s~t.vlces in light of the reduced reveli\aes. The tentative budget approved Tuesday has the district receiVing $41.1 million in state and local 'Gone Too Far' revenues for the next school year. The figure in cludes state emergency aid to school districts. Based on pre-Jarvis tax rev- enues. the district would have received about $46.3 million m state and local revenue. The difference between the figures accounts for th_!) $5.2 million budget loss. "There are still major re- ductions that will have to be faced Rules UC Must Adnrlt Bakke WASHINGTON CAP) -The , U.S. Supreme Court ordered a California medical school today . to admit Allan Bakke, ruling that he had s uffe red illegal discrimjnation because he is white. But the court said race can be taken into account in future college a dmi ssions programs. In a 5-4 decision, the court held that the Universit y of California's medical school at Davis had gone too far in considering race when it refused to admit Bakke. But it said some aff irmative-action programs intended to benefit minority applicants can properly be a factor in decisions on admitting s tudents. Bakke told a reporter, "We are pleased with this decision. I 'm not going to make any Early Arrival Santa Cycles in Georgia BREMEN, Ga. <AP> -At the very least, his liming was off. There on Main Street in 96-degree heat came a man dressed in red suit, white whiskers and black boots. "Ho, ho, ho." The Christmas-like scene startled pedestrians an·d police. Santa Ulen zoomed down Bremen's main drag on a motorcycle. Police tried to catch Santa so they <:ould arrest h·im for failing to wear a helmet. But they eouldn't nab him. "l don't know what he was trying lo prove," one officer said. "But he s ure could boot that motorcycle along." · Flgers Dist:ributed further comment. .. The justices limited their seven separa te opinions to ~dmissions policies in education and did not directly address what their decision means for • the thousands of other affirmative action programs in e ffect in government and private industry. In the court's main opinion. which gave Bakke his victory, Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr. held that strict racial quotas or goals are illegal but other types of affirmative action programs are permissible. "The exper~ence of other univer s ity admissions programs, which take race jnto account in achiev ing the educational diversity valued by th e Fi..r st Amendment . d e monstrates that th e a ssignment of a fixed number of places to a minority group is not a necessary means toward that end," Powell wrote. In bis pivotal role. Powell said the program that kept BaJcke out or school, by setting a side for min-orities 16 of 100 places in the (1rst-year class. "would binder, rather than further, attainment of genuine diversity ... But in the portion of tht; opi- nion indicating how far sthools can go in considering race, <See BAKKE, Page A2> ·-~ NB ·seeks 'Quiet 4th' In an attempt to get some residents involved in keepmg order over the July 4 holiday, members of the West Newport Beach Improvement Association ar~ issuing niers to every home in their area Dick Clucas, one of the a ssociation's board members, said fliers wall be distributed Thursday and Friday to every r esidence south of Pacific Coast Highway from the Newport Pier lo the Santa Ana Ri ver The fliers will contain a lotter from the board. one from Capt. Kelson McDaniel of the police d epartment a nd one from Fire Chief Leo Love. soliciting r~s idents' cooperation in maintaining order over the long weekend. .. ( Clucas said the move was Coast \\'eat h er Night and morning low clouds with sunny-nter- noon Thursday. Slightly warmer. Lows tonight 58 to 63. Highs Thursday near 70 at the beaches to upper 70s inland. INSIDE TODA V .Ora~ Cotmty ~or.t have adopted fee hikes at harbor•. beoc~• and parks. Story Page A12. C't A4 ·.~ ... ,. .. .. ... AU ., .. AU . , .. ... ,. M M prompted after a r ecent association board meeting. "We have hollered for the past seve ral years that there's a seve re crisis here," he explained. "In the p ast there's been eme rgency action taken , but it's come after the situation is already out of control." Police Chlef Pete Gross has an· nounced a program of enforce· ment to keep a lid on large rowdy parties and the use or fireworks, which are prohibited in Newport Beach. The party crackdown has been in e ffect for the past three weeks. In addition to breaking up parties that dist urb neighborhoods, pohce are now a rresting the hosts of such gatherings. McDaniel said that kind of treatment is being used on res idents who h abitually host large, noisy parties. "We're not going to try to get the guy who may have a few friends over and they get a little carried away," he commented. The fireworks crackdown was announced by Mc Daniel who said officers will cite· people who come to Newport Beach to discharge fireworks , whether the devices are the type that can be legally purchased in another city or the illegally imported type. CSee FLYERS, Page A2) Hummel Objeets Driveway in Park Stirs NB Dissent Newport Beach Ci t y Councilman Paul Hummel said today he is still unhappy about a driveway that his council colleagues are going to allow to cross a public park in Corona del Mar. But Hummel, who sugge.sted Monday he mjght considea legal action. says he's definitely not going to take the city to court over the matter. Monday, councilmen voted 4-2 with Hummel and Councilwoman Evelyn Hart dissenting, t o approve a plan for a driveway across part of th~ Bayside Drlvc Park, now under construction. The driveway will provide acceSf to one or two garagea planned ror a home to be built next to the park on Goldenrod Avenue by Larry Miller. As planned , the home will have an additional garaae for lta studio apartment, but that garage will He reached via the alley running between the 400 block of Golde nr o d and Heliotrope avenues. Miller's lot lies on a steep slope next to the footbridge that crosses the Bayside Drive gulch. He argued that providing all the necessary garage access off the alley would present him with a n ea rly insurmou nt able engineering problem. He also told councilmen that any further delay In his building project wouftl force him t.o sen the property. AccoTding to Miller , he began tho project because he was told by a city start member that the lot had access rights across the park . But Hummel challcn1ed that contention. POintlna out tbat lb <See PARK, Pace Al> by this district." Trustee Barbara Skilling said. The gap in the district budget already has been na rrowed somewhat by cancellation of sum- mer school and adult education programs at a savings of about $850,000. However. trust~s -say more cutbacks are inevitable and they must decide what type of reserve funds the district will carry into AP WlrepflolO BACKED BY COURT Allan Bakke the future . As it stands now. the district would be left with reserves total· ing $655,895 worth of supplies, but no cash. District officials had planned' on carrying a $2.9 million reserve fund through the 1978-79 school year. Nicoll said the.district can save about $500,000 by not replacing certain equipment. * * * For All Staff Elimination of all district bus service would save about $918,000. a nd the cancell~tion of in· structional media center services would cut district costs by another$306.066. - -• --- Action on these matters is ex· pect~d at future board meetings. The next step for school trustees is a line·by-ltne review of the budget to be presented at a Ju ly 11 board meeting. * * * Trustees Nix Pay Raises Newport-Mesa Unified Sctlool District trustees told teachers, administrators and classified employees Tuesday to forget about pay raises for the coming school year. The school board unanimously adopted existing pay schedules although negotiations will con· tmue with classified employee and teacher bargaining units The action wiU have no effect on normal pay raises achieved through seniority and advanced e du cation. so-called "step ra ises." "W e consider our proposal still on the table ," sa id Don K 1 m ble, president of th e Newport-Mesa Education As· sociation, which represents the disti;ict's 1,25().plus teachers in sala ry negotiations. Teachers have been seeking cost or living and fringe benefau. increases of about 10 percent. Classified e mployees have asked for cost or hvan3 raises based on yet to be announced fi gures from Orange County and Los Angeles consumer price in· <See TRUSTEES, Page AZ) Coast Plan Approved County Serub Irvine Project On to State By KATHY CLANCY Ol \M 0 .. 1, ,._Sutt Admitting it still may need more work. Orange. County s upervisor s end orsed the county's plan for the 10,000-acre l(vine coast today and sent it off for state approval. As supervisors did so. they also offered encouragement to residents of the El Morro 'Beach mobile home park by a'sking state officials to delete it from immediate public acquisition. The park is within 3, 100 acres the state as appraising for public purchase. Residents fear that if the state buys the mobile home sate for a public park they wall lose thetr homes. Donald Cameron, land planner foJ the Irvin! CQm.Puny. said the . farm's position is that the state would be better off sp~nding the $22 million available for park purchase e ls ewher e on the coast. Husky Thief Gets -NB Cash Register Operators of the Sporting House. the athletic club located at 3601 Jambo r ee Road. Newport Beach. would "like to find the muscular thief who walked off with a brand new cash register. The $2,000 piece of equipment was delivered to the clu b at about 4 p .m . Monday , police said. It was left s itting in the entry hall and employees said that sometime between S p.m. and 6 p.m., the cash register was stolen. Relocating the park residents alone, be said, might take as much as half the funds availa- ble. Richard Munsell an assistant director of the county Environ· mental Management Agency. said be expects to come back to s upervisor s with possible changes berore the county plan is certified by the regional and stale coastal commissions. So far, Munsell said county of- ficials have been unable to get s pecific proposals for changes from the commissions. Part or the problem, he said. see m s to lre that the com- miss ions have been in the coastal permit issujng business i;o long they can't deal with gene ral policies as contained in - the county's plan. "They want to know where every blade of grass 1s going to go." Munsell said. "We have told them this is a misuse of a planning tool." J nstead or· a specific plan .. _.. Munsell describes the county·s <See COAST, Page AZ> In Boston Lounge Five Men Found · Shot to Death BOSTON, Mass. <AP> -The shotgun·riddled bodies of five men were round today in the basement o r a do wntown cocktail lounge by a cleaning m an, touching off an intensive police investigation. Police declined to identify the victims immediately. However, radio station WEEI said two of the m had been tentatively identified as Jack K e lly, a former television news man who was working as the night manager of the lounge, and Vincent Solo monte, the owner. · Police de puty John Barry t e rmed it the largest mass murder in the city in his 20 years of experience. Pol ice detective::. con verged on the Blackfriars Restaurant at the height of the morning rush hour after the first report. /\ c rowd rapidly gathered a:. officers searched the building. Barry said the five were all whale males. The bodies wer1: found close together in a back , room office of the basement, and a police spokesman said, "/\ stv>tgun was used." .t>olice spokesmen said all were in their mid-twenties. The first floor and basement or the five-story building at 105 Summer Str~t was remodeled into the lounge-restaurant about five years ago. • o.11, .................. THIS IS WHERE LARRY MIUER PLANS TO BUILD HOUSE AND GARAGES Driveway (Foreground) wm Cvt Aclott Bayalde Drive Perk In Corone del Mer • -Contract Qt. Paul Salata. rounder of Irrelevant Week, has been named Commodore of the Year by the Newport Harbor Area Chamber of Commerce. Fro.Page Al FLYERS ... Clucas s aid residents ha,1e been asking for that kind of enforcement a nd a ssociation m e mbers decided to act "to convince the pubtic-not only the Newport Beach public but the 'public from out of town as well that this is not the place to come and raise hell." He said the flier put out by the association advises residents of the e nforcem e nt program planned for the hoJiday and asks th'eir cooperation. While the fliers a r e being distr ibuted, city staff members will be posting 1,000 s igns, s imilar to p a rking signs, reminding residents and visitors of the city's ordinance against use of fireworks Four large sign!> bearing a s imilar message ar c to be posted at main entrances to the city Man's Body Found Shot Near El Toro Orange County Sheriff's of· · ricers have determined that a man whose body was found Tuesday in a n orange grove oear the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station was s hot to death befot e he was dumped there. Investigators said the body lay 1 n tt\e grove n ear the in · t ersection o f J e ffrey a nd Trabuco roads for about a week before it was found by irrigation worke rs. The victim 's hands were bound behind his back. The body has not yet been ul~ntifieg. Officers ~aid it ls thal. of a man aged about 35 to 40, ful· ly dressed and with no outsland· ing marks or features that would aid identification. .. Sex Deviate Sought in NB Orange County Sheriff's of· ricers are seeking a man who forced a Newport Beach area woman to participate in an act of sexual perversion after he entered her bedroom Tuesday via an unlocked patio door. Deputies said the 25·year-0ld .. victim told them that her as· sailant held a knife to her throat and attempted to rape her after he e ntered her Superior A venue apartment.· She said he then forced her to join him in an un· natural sex act. The victim described he r at· tacker as a bout 19, fi ve feet, n ine. 150 pounds, with light brown, medium length hair and wearing jeans. ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT ._,._ .............. _,.,_ ~OC' I (W"'1 Y•(• .... t'll$tl'lt e"'4t 0..,...M~ ~nKMvM t•lt .. ,_,,,AM,,......... M•••t ••ofitlil• O\ortnM.l.M• lt-P' IMll AH1 .. ..-l INM91,,. l-,,1t11" Tei.ptiot1e {114)MMS2'1 CMl..m.ct Advenlelf'I 141-MTt H Death Bill Set ''lip' W'otth $1 MilliOn~ Crltteb• Too Film Chief Sentenced For Vote SACRAMENTO <AP> -State Sen. John Briggs· death penalty iniliulive bas qualified for the Nov. 7 ballot, Secretary or State March Fong Eu confirms. Brlgg_s, or Fullerton, sou1ht the Republican nomination for governor but dropped out before the June 6 primary election. He also sponsored an initiative, which qualified , agains t homosexual schoolteachers. Mrs. Eu said Tuesday the new measure would: -Expand the categories of first·degree murder punishable by death{• or JiCe in prison without parole. to include such crimes as murder of a state o(· f icial and murde r that is particularly "atrocious." Increase the minimum parole d ate for first-degr ee murder from seven years to 16 years, eight months, including time off for good behavior. -Increase the penalty for • second-degree murder. -Allow consideration of all felony convictions of the defen· dant during the punishment stage of trial. -Require judges to impanel a new jury if the first one can 't re ach a Wtanimous verdict on punishment. Mrs . Eu ·said a random sam· pie indicated there were 395,1.36 valid signatures among the 471 ,411 submitted ~iggs. He needed 312.4-04 \.. 'j Fro•PageAJ PARK ••. only city map that showed such a n access point was an a r c hitect's rendering of the park. not an official document. .. I think this is a very cavalier hand l ing of the public 's property, .. he declared prior to the vote Monday. "In fact. I have such strenuous objections that as a private citizen I would proba bly s ue the city." Hummel. who lives about a block from the building site. said today his remark was made in the heat of the debate. .. I think so much of the city. I wouldn't want that kind or a confrontation. I have no plans to sue.·· he said. However . the councilman indicated he would continue to oppose the granlings or such easements anywhere in the city. "I still think this is a very cavalier way of handling the sitvation," he added. WHIT!! PLAlNS. ~.11! <AP> -JQMPb BaudetU H)'I be may bave imbibed a lot or liquor at Kil· mean's Tavern. but h~ never int~nded to glve the bartender a $1 million tip. The Up -in the form oC ~ lottery ticket that is worth anywhere. fro m $10,000 to $1 million -was blocked by a temporary r estraining order b y Westchester Supreme Court Jus ti ce George Beisheim Jr. Baudette, 22, s ays fie gave Clifford Bice a state Baseball Lottery ticket 'and lold the 26-year..old part·time barkeep at the Manhasset tavern to "scratch off the number; you may be lucky for me. We'll split if we win." Bice has a diCferetlt version. F,.._PageAJ COAST ... proposal as a general guide and said details will be worked out in specific project phases later on. The plan approved today follows decis ions s uper visors made two years ago in develop- in g a general plan f<H" the 10,000-acre area. That plan sets aside 75 percent of the land in open space with the remainin·g 25 percent for urban development. The Irvine coast stretches from Corona del Mar on the north to Laguna Beach on the south. Critics of the county plan testified today and in· past hear- ings raising objections that in· elude an allegedly inadequate environmental impact report, p oss ible de stru ction of archeological sites and a lack of low and moderate income hous- ing inthelanduseplan. Wesley Marx of Irvine sug- gested that supervisors t ake advantage of an opportunity lo create a unique land and sea park in the area. He also questioned proposals for t he San J oaquin Hills roadway in the area as well as other public services to serve d e v e I o p m e 11 t' fl o ·w t h a l Proposition 13 will reduce local government budgets . As a result supervisors sug· gested that detailed plans ori the cost of services be presented before any developments are al· lowed. Supervisor Ralph · Diedrich said it may be th.at special dis tricts could t;ie formed to finance services so the bur4en wouldn't be passed on to county taxpayers as a whole. Night Club Burns Mexican Student Riot Erupts Again MATAMOROS, Mexico <AP> -Violence erupted again early today in this riot.torn border town a s s tudents s tormed through the red-light district on the outskirts of the city, burning one night spot and caus ing heavy damage to two others. A few miles away, soldiers armed wjth machine guns patrolled the charred, debris· strewn site or a four-hour riot Monday night that caused an estimated $2 million damage and left three people dead and 30 injured. Police said one person was in· jured in today's outburst. They said a group of youths stormed the Golden Palace night club, ousted customers and set fire to the building. They a lso hurled rocks, bottles and other Items through the windows of io. least two other night s pots, police said. Two ~n·agers were shot and killed Monday night as students Driver Falls Asleep; Car Strikes Man Margie Murdy, 48, told police she fell asleep at the wheel of her car Just before it plowed into tw o parked cars and a pedestrian Tuesday afternoon ln Newport. Beach. She wasn't hurt, police saJd but the p edest rian, Donald Anderson. 27, of Wtlnut, s uffered a broken let a nd various cuts and brulsea. He was Juat getting oul of the car he had parked about 2:~ p.m . Ln the 900 block of Weat Coast Hl(lhway when he waa hlt, pollce said. He was troated for his injuries at Hoa1 Memorial Hospital. Tratnc lnvllttpton ••Id tM car bcln8 driven westbound by Mrs . Murdy, 1401 Uncoln Lane, Newport Beach, veered oft the hlahway. atrUdnc And rtOf1 and hla car and com)nt to rHt a1nlnalanotherpa.rked' auto. I mobbed the town plaza protest· ing the alleged beating death last week of a 15-year·old stu· dent who had been in police custody. Three police officers had been jailed in connection with the in · cident, but the students dragged Mavor Antonio Cavazos into the plaza and demanded that Police Chier Emiliano Del Toro also be fired. Fair's Fair- He Tickets Erring Cops NEW ORLEANS <A P> -It was only fair. A week ago Larry Dean Hardison received a ticket for parking illegally. So he wasn't about to ignore the downtown scene Tuesday - 19 police cars standing in a no· parking zone outside a hotel where a seminar on homicide was being held .. Getting out pen and paper. Hardison prepared 19 "Dear Of· ficer" letters . .. Dear Officer:. One of tlu! btst wa11• to loN the rupect o/ cUiana tt to brtok the rule• which .,ou m· force . You are pc.r'*1 W.oollt1.'' Not shy, he signed his name and placed b is telephone number on each note. Hardi.loo said a few minutes toter be recelved a phone call from Police Chlef ·James Parsona. "He aaJd he bad parked n. le11lly and he apolo1laed." Hardlaon saJd. "I wu dellghled that be called . . . if the police orncera had been there on of· , ficlal business lt would have been all rtl)tt, but they wereo 't 1tnd there wero parldnt lots available. "l lot t.o-.·ed IWll)' for parking llle1ally and lf I had done what lhe)' did, I'd 1et towed away a second Ume.•· \ Bakke Ruling Wins Praise By The Associated Press has had a chance to actually re· The U.S. Supreme Court's rul· has had a chance to actuallf. ing in the Bakke case today read and digest the entire op • drew praise from the plaintiff's Dr. John A.O. Cooper, presl· attorney and criticis m from dent of the Association o( some black leaders and mem· American Medical Colleges. bers of the academic com said the group "is disappointed munity. . .. Considerable progress has "My client has a comment," been made In recent years for sa id Reynold Colvin , Allan greater p a rticipation by Bakke's attorney. ''He's delight· minorlU.es in Ame rlcan ed with the decision and looks medicine. This has occurred in forward to entering medical particular because medical school in September." school admissions decisions took Bakke. 38, was not personally into consideration the need for available.Hewasexpectedtogo broad representation io to work. as usual. at the Ames medicine from all segments or Research Center. a NASA fitcih· our society." ty, in Mountain View, south of Ralph Smith, a law professor San Francisco at University of Pennsylvania The court ruled 5·4 that the and chairman of the legal Un ivers ity of Calif o r nia 's e ducation task force of the medical school al Davis, which National Conference of Black twice r ejected Bakke's ap-Lawyers. said he was "pro· plication for admission, illega.lly roundly disappointed" with ~e discriminated against him decision, but added that be did because he is white. It also( not know how broad the ruling ruled. however. that the school was. is not barred from taking race .. It is our only hope that the in to account in a future ad court hasn't become the as. missions program. ,sassin of affirmative action." he Dr. John Tupper, dean of the said. school, said: .. We've all been Robert Links. co·counsel for waiting for the Supreme Court to Bakke, said he spoke with him tell us what the will of the people brieOy this morning. "He said, of the United States is. We will 'Great! You guys did it'!" Links obey the law. r cannot comment reported. "I said, 'No we didn't. further until our legal counsel Youetid'." * * * * * .. F rort1 Page Al BAKKE DECISION • • • Powell cited with approval Harvard's admissions program designed not only to e nsure racial and ethnic diversity but also to select students with a broad range or talents and geo- gr aphic backgrounds. ·'In s uch an admissions pro· gram," Powell wrote. "race or ethnic background may be dee med a 'plus· in a particular applicant's file. yet it does not in· sulatc the individual from com· parison with all other candidates for the available seats." Powell joined Chier Justice Warren E. Burge r and Justices John Paul Stevens. William H. Rehnquist and Potter Stewart in striking down the University of California program. He joined Justices William J. Brennan Jr .. Byr on R. White, Thurgood Mar s hal l and H arr y A Blackmun in ruling that some affirmative action programs may be valid. Relying on his interpretation of the 14th Amendment, Powell said the Davis program had not shown itself to be necessary to achieve the school's stated goals and therefore could not pass constitutional muster Powell's opinion d is missed competing argument s over whether the affirmative action program al Davis used ''quotas" or .. goals." " "Wh ether this limitation is described as a quota or a goal.'' Powell said, "it is a line drawn on the basis of race and ethnic status.·· In a separate concurring op1· nion by the chief justice, Rehn· quist and Stewart. Stevens wrote: "ln Wtmislakable terms. the 1964 Civil Rights act pro- hi bi t s the exclu s io n of in· dividuals from federally funded programs because or their race." However. their joint opinion e mphasized that the court was not deciding "whether race can eve r be used as a factor in an admissions decision. Marshall. the court's only black member, s~id today 's de- cision carries dire consequences for the hope or racial equality in the United States. In an opinion speaking only for himself, Marshan wrote: "It is because of a legacy of unequal treatment that we now must perm it the institutions of Uus society to give consideration to race in making decisions about who will hold the positions of in· fluence. affluence and prestige in America. .. For far too long." he said. "the doors to those positions have been shut to Negroes. If we are ever to become a fully inte· gr~ted society. one in which the color of a perstm 's skin will nol dete rmin~ tJ_le opport119ities avafla1ile to litm or her, we must be willing to take steps to open those doors.·· BURBANK (AP> - For m er Co lumbia Pictures president David Begetman was placed on threr years' probaUon to· day. fined $5,000 and or· dt>red to embark upon a proaram of community service for the thett of $40,000 in studJo runda'. Superior Court Judge Thomas Murphy said he would not se nt e nce Begelman to jail unless the producer violates the terms of probation. From reporta submitted to him. Murphy said. Begelman's e mbezzle· ment was "almost like a d eath wish. You are neither vtolence·prone. n o r a r e yo u case· hardened." TRUSTEES dex. district officials said. Kimble said the NMEA would request pay raises of up to five percent. Trustees noted Tuesday that. state aid to the school district will allow the district t o maintain its current salar~ schedule. but rule4 out any in· creases. School Superintendent John Nicoll noted that. at one point. district officials were consider· Ing cutbacks between 25 and 30 percent in salaries. Sorcery 19Q Miles From , Finish Liiw Sor cery was 190 miles from Papeete in the 3,57l·mile Los Angeles to Tahiti race at 9 a.m. today and was expected to finish early Thursday. Ski pper J acob Wood said Sorce ry was sailing in a 14 knot easterly breeze. She has averaged 7.9 knots s ince that start June 10. Bob Gosnell 's 49-foot sloop Tuia has again moved ahead of Westward in their fight for second place on elapsed time. Both yachts reported the same latitude but Tuia was about SO miles farther west. Tuia had 599 miles to go and Westward 621. Neil Kelly's Celebration had crossed the equator but was still l,194 miles from Tahiti. March Ban Asked C HICAGO <AP > -Th e Chicago Park District asked a federal appeals court to over· turn a lower court ruling allow- ing Nazis to march in Marquette Park. The president of the district-also said Tuesday that he would taJ<'e' the iS-sue To the U.S . S u preme Co urt if necessar y. Particular People Select JOHNSON & SON Home of the 11Golden Touch" "At Johnson & Son, we were treated in a very prof essionol and dignified marn'llf." NAMCY MITllM Hw .... •IMdl.c..tf. "Very courteous, very fair, 9"fopd the last four or ftw years auodatlon." AUJI 5Ml1'M MOOD LAii-.... Ct9f. ''Courteous smHman, pleasant sunutd- ings, excellent MtVlct." DAVID DOSTAL ............. C4f. 11Follow through 1 vtry good. I've hod tltven Y9CJ"S of Mltfsfled ..,..... .. MIS. kOl8CI L HAU. Laf1119 .... C._ Orange County·s OldHt Lincoln-Mercury Dealership JOHNSON le SON I ~ I 2626 Harbor Blvd.• Costa Mesa • 640·5630 ,1 CALIFORNIA Wedneeday. June 28. 1978 DAILY PILOT .45 Solons OK $15.2. Billion Budget Anti-abortion DeDiocrats Vow Fight on Fwiding SACRAMENTO CAP > A!.· sembly Democrats have broken a de adlock over tbe1r S1 5.2 billion version of the proposed state budget. but the action only delayed confrontations over ebortion funding a nd gover{l ment spending bmits. Anti-abortion De mocr a ts agreed Tuesday night to vote for the budget in a ~relimin ary form. clearing the way for a • ;55·22 vote that allowed it to pro· ceed toward a two-house con- ference committee. But they warned they would not yield again on any form of Gnv. Edmund Brown Jr . 's $34 million budget prop,osal to con- tinue funding Medi-Cal abortions for poor women. "WE WILL STAND as a bloc against the budget 1f it contains provisions that are to us morally and philosophically repugnant." A sse mbl y m a n Ali s t e r McAlisler. D-San J ose. told h1s colleagues before the vole. He said he wa~ speak1ng for 12 other Democrats. He told reporters he was will· ing to accept abortion funding in cases of danger lo the mother's life. r ape or Incest But he said current federal restr1cllons are too liberal and he would not ac· cepl any state funding that replaced withdra wn fe deral dolla rs. The federal law approved by Congress and President Carter last August a llows abortion funding only in cases of rape, in· cest. and danger or death or severe physical health damage to the mother. Those conditions cover only a s ma11 fraction of '!.reviously funded abortions. BROWN ORDERED the state Medi-cal program to replace the w•thdr awn federal funds, s aying the right to an a bortion should not depend on a woman's in- come . The budget proposal. which include~estrictions after the third month or pregnancy, w o uld cover about 86,000 abortions 1f McAlister 's group holds firm . Democratic leaders will either have to yie ld on the abortioll7 is~ue or reach an ac commodatidn with Republicans over the spending limit proposal that GOP members want on the November state ballot. The budget vote was one more tha n the two-thirds majority need e d fo r p a s s age . One Dem ocrat voted no and one a b stai n e d . Of the 23 RepubllcaAs, 21 voted no and two were absent REPUBLICANS withheld their votes as part or their de- mand for an Assembly floor vote on a proposed cons titutional amendment by Sen. George Deukmejian. R-Long Beach. that would limit increases in st a te and loc al government spend Ing to the percentage in· crease in the cost of living plus population. A similar proposal by lhen- Gov Ronald Reagan was reject· ed by stale voters in 1973. But Republicans say the r ecent . passage of Proposition 13, a S7 billion property tax cut, in· dtc ates the public mood has changed Though Brown and Assembly Speaker Leo McCarthy. the Dem ocratic leader in the lower house. ::.ay they want a state spe nding lim it, fi ve hours of closed-door negotiations Tues- day failed to produce an agree- ment that would end the GOP boycott. TH£ STICKING p o int ap· parently was Republicans' in· sistence that the measure move out of a Democrat-controlled committee to the noor before the Legislature beglns a recess in early July 0 Assembly GOP leader Paul Priolo of Malibu told reporters that the Repi.blicans were will· ing to wait until August for a floor vote on the meas ure. Pr'Q· vided the legal deadline fpr qualiCying November baUot tneasures is extended from June 29 to Au~. 15 as expected He swd McCarthy offered to put a measure on the Assembly Cdo or in Au gu st that was '"ge n e rally within the parameters of our legislation ·· But he said McCarthy would not agree to act before the recess a nd did not give s atisfactory guarantees ' "I THINK WE'RE quite far apart," Priolo said . McCarthy. D-San Francisco. told re p o rte r s th a t the Democrats would proceed with a spending limit proposal on their own for acBon in August. He blamed the breakdown on "the rather passionate feeling against the governor" in the Republican Caucus. The six-member conference committee will try to reconcile difCe r ences between the two versions of the budget. Besides abortion funding. they include state employee pay, prison con- s truction. and University of Ca lifornia tuition. · TOE ASSEMBLY generatly followed Brown's re com men- dation for a state pay freeze but proposed a 2 percent raise for some employees making less than $23.000. The Senate .ap- proved a 5 percent raise for all state workers. Under terms of emergency state aid to local governments a pproved last week. the state pay r aise will be the maximum allowed for local government workers and• welfare recipients. The Assembly also wants the freeze applied to legislators and Judges. ., .......... SERVES TIME Jane Ruaaell Ex-actress Serving Four Days Born.bing Link Widens SANTA BARBARA <AP> Jane Russell, 57. one or the mov- ies' glamor queens in the 1950s. IS Se rving a four·day jail sentence for driving while intox- icated. authorities say. Municipal Court Judge Jooeph Lodge revoked probation and sentenced Miss Russell on Mon- day. and she began serving her sentence that night. authorities said Tuesday. l Briggs Suspects Said Tied to More Bltut,s Mi ss Russell. who lives in nearby Montec1t.o. was put on probation following an intoXJcat- ed driving conviction in 1976. She was arrested and charged a second time following an attl· dent last March. sheriff's de- partment officials said. Oaoking Suspect Aided San F rancisco poli('e atte mpt lo aid a m an they identified a s Greg Bartlow. 3l , after he swallowed balloons they said might have been filled with a heroin-like substance. P olice claim Bartow is a known na rcotics deale r. LOS ANGELES <A P > - Evidence found in an a partment used by li ve members or a rev- olutionary g roup links them with other bombings across the na tion. authorities claimed in a letter filed in Los Angeles Superior Court Thf' five -Clayton Van Lyde- grar. 62. Lesli e Ann Mullan. 33; J udith Emily Bi ssell. 33 ; Mi chael Justesen. 27. and Mark Cu rtis Petry, 29 -will be tried Oct 30 on charges of conspiring to blow up the Fullerton office of stale Sen. John Briggs. DEPUTY DISTRICT Attorney Robert Jorgensen, urging Tues- day that Van Lydegraf's baiJ be in c r e a sed from $200 ,000 to $500,000, alleged a typewriter found in the defendants' apart· menl was tested by the FBI. A he aring on Jorgensen's motion was set for Friday. J orgensen said the FBI de· tetmined the ty pewriter was used to type a weather Under· ground communique regarding a bomb placed at the An aconda American Brass Co. m Oakl and on Sept 10. 1974. The bomb was discovered before it could ex- plode. He said the same typewnter also was used to type a note in which the Weather Underground claimed responsibility for plant· ing explosives Jan. 28. 1975, In the U.S. State Department In Wa s h ington. D.C .. a nd the Federal Building in Oakla nd. JORGENSEN SAID a docu· m e nt e ntitled "Origins of Fascism.·· found in the same apartment. was typed on the same typewriter as was used to type a number of other Weather Underground communiques. These communiques claimed responsibility for explosives in- cidents at Gulf Oil Co head- quarters in Pittsburgh, Pa .. on June 13. 1974: at the Kennecott Copper Co. headquarters in Salt Lake City. Utah. on Sept 5. 1977. and at the U-S. State Depart- ment PUC Oversees '13' Savings Distribution SAN FRANCISCO <AP> -The California Public Utilities Com- mission is taking steps to assure that any lax savings received by utilities or transportation firms because of Proposition 13 would be passed on to customers. Miss Russell. who currently does television commer cials . gained nationa l attention in ber first film. "The Outlaw." The movie was directed by tbe late Howard Hughes. who had her wear scanty outfits considered risque at the time Streetuxilkers To Get Jail? 'East Area Rapist' Hits Again In action Tuesday. the PUC ordered an investigation to de- termine effects the new property ta x cutting ame ndment will have on rates or companies un. der its jurisdiction. Under the proposal. utilities and transportation companies will be required to set up tax in· itiative accounts to insure that any tax reductions are passed on to ratepayers and any new in- creases in truces. licenses or fees are reflected in rates. SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -Al· leging that prostitutes prowl "rampant" in two of the city's most popular tourist areas , the Chambe r oC Commerce, lbe police chief and the Powell Street Association are demand- ing j ail t e rm s f o r tbe street walkers. San Francisco Municipal Court came under fire from all three parties Tuesday for being sort on pros titutes . Police statistics show 90 percent of the 1,450 prostitutes arrested so far this year served no time in jail. SA CRAMENTO tAP > T he "east area rapist " has attacked a 23-year·old woman who lived alone in a n apartment complex hi s 38th v i c t i m , th e Sacramento County sheriff's de· partment reports B ill Mill e r . s h e riff 's spokes man. said Tuesday it was t he first time the rapist has s truck in Sa c ramento since April H . 'and only the .second time in Hn apartment complex. His last four attacks were in Davis and Modesto, two in each city, Miller said. Debaies Proposed LOS ANGELES <AP > -Gov. Edmund G Brown J r . has pro- • posed a sen es or four televised gubernat.onal debates prior to the Nov 7 general election. His Republican opponent. State At· t o rn ey Gen e r a l E ve lle J . Younger. is e xpected to reply to the proposal early next month. ( J Bodfl Ezh .... ed STATE LOS ANGELES CAP> -In or- der "to prove o r dis prove ------------certain physical ev1d~nce con- Ken Reitz, Younger's cam· l>aign manager , said after meet· ing here with the governor's a ides Tuesday that the attorney general wauld respond by July 7. when the two sides meet again. Subpoena Disobeyed SACRAMENTO <AP> -The Sacramento Union says a re- porter is refusing to obey a Superior Court judge's subpoena or tapes and notes from an m ter vie w with a witness in the El len Delia murder trial. The Union said Tuesday that the order was issued Monday by Judge John J . Boskov1ch to re porter John Hammarley. cerning the case." s heriff's in· vestigators have exhumed the body or one or the 13 victims at- tribute d t o the Hills id e Strangler. , Sherifrs Lt. Ph11 . Bullington said Cindy Lee Hudspeth's body was removed from the mortuary Tuesday and returned a few hours later to check certain eviden ce.· but he would not elaborate Mento'°" Queried OAKLAND CAPl -Attorneys for Wilham and Emily };larris "say the woman they're accused of kidnapping -Patricia Hearst "lacks sufficient memory" Lo testify against the pair. Dunk the Ta~ Han County Ass('ssor E C. Wilhams. who is dropped mto a bo~ of water. A baseball was thrown to d rop him -this one by San Diego Padres pitcher Randy Jones. A c harity event to raise funds for an En· cinitas church will feature a game that is , bound to lure m ost of the crowd. In a re- hearsal for the August event is San Diego Defense attorneys Tuesday told a judge that Miss Hearst. kidnapped more than four years ago and currently serving a prison term on a conviction of joining her abductors in a bank robbery. could not a ccurately testify because "her experiences over the past few years have af. fected her ability to perceive. ree· 9llcct and communicate.'' 1'r • + • • •••••• • ., .. . .. • .. • « ... • « • HERB « • « • FRIEDLA,DF.R • • IS :\IAKl~G • • GREAT DEALS • FREE: 50 GALS : OFGAS « ............ 1 ... 1'f.1t1f'ht .. , ............. ,.~ .... . ~ or 011. ('llA ~<a:s « 1• u tf'«'eMm"'*"' "" liH' fan ot) ter '41 Jt H IH I H )'Oii .._,.)MU C., • • e HONDA e .- • 1175'11.oOlll•• .. • w n11 """"._. .. "4111 •* * * * * * * * • * • ·: • MG-TRIUMPH • • e JAGUAR e « ! FIAT-LANCIA : • m n~~·u.i~~:!;!lll'!um « .. * •• * * * * •• * •• • e TOYOTA• « • 1•1«;. ... o........ « It C•'*"'-,.•• SJ'l MM « , ...... ~····~ : MOTORHO~l 1-: « ,. SALF.S & RF.~T.\I. « Starting July 1 all rates col- lected to cover property tax ex- penses will be subject to refund, rate adjustment or balancing treatment. The two business groups saio the situation is particularly bad on Powell Street. where tourists wait to board the city's famed cable cars, and in Union Square. at the heart of San Francisco·s shopping dislricl-: rtists Jane 29-July 2 Thunday, Friday. Satv.rday and Sunday. View nearly eighty prof ess1onal • RESER\'E ~ow • • 537·7f77JF.Xl. 500 •*********** it e LEASING e It All IW•h• ...¥..,..,.. 6 Dt111••tlf ...... "k!Wr ._ ~ .... .,...,,,_ artists and craftsmen dlsplaymg therr ongmal works. mcludmg oils. watercolors, seascapes and abstracts. Irs another Fashion Island experience. And it's free. In Newport Beach on Pacific Coast Highway between MacArthur and Jamboree. * 537.7777 Ext. 600 ••******""*** Your A OellyPllot can be "9CYC!fd. OranQt Ccwn 1Cotlt9f hlhroW<l•t rt<\1<11"9 ctnt~ '°' C011• ~w ''The difference between better • best." . - ~ ,. " .. • WodneSday June 28 1978 Rober1 N WH<f/Publlshtr B<lrbarct l<r~1btth lEd1tortal Pac;J4t Editor Orang.-eo. , o.,,, Po•o•. Editorial P!!fJ.e .................................................................... _ Fireworks Control Raises Questions Once again, Newport Beach city officials the policemen m particular -are faced with the problem posed by the city's ordinance which prohibits the use of fireworks inside the city limits. The law has been widely ignored for years because Newport's bay and ocean beaches make such attractive places for· people to come and put on their own small fireworks shows. The small , family type events. unfortunately are complicated by the fact that a lot of rowdy people also use the beaches for their parties and as launching pads for large, illegally imported fireworks. Add to that the hazard posed by most beach area housing, old buildings that are crowded together. and the mix is dangerous indeed. Jn light of this situation it is difficult to disagree with Police Chief Pete Gross who recently announced a crackdown on fireworks as part of his July Fourth enforcement plan. The reasons are understandable, but the res ults may not be what the chief wanted. Based on recent history, it seems that kind of enforcement is going to get his patrolmen nothing but a lot of trouble. something they traditionally have plenty of over the holid<.1y. There may be some advantage in tr~ing \o enforce the city's ordinance. however. The res ults could set the s lage for a review of the city ordinance that needs to be · revised ir it's to be practical. One consideration city councilmen may wunl to s tudy after the holiday b cstablishmenl of a few areas where the use of fireworks would be permitted. Traffic Puzzle The County of Orange has just issued a report on the· impact of development in the southern half of the county The 5&3-page document may provide some interesting reading lo Newport Beach residents because a portion of the city and its area of rnfluence are included in the ~tudy · ~rhc arc::i . surprisingly. is dubbed North Newport Beach and 1t encompasses about seven square miles or lerritorv ca~l ot MacArthur Boulevard and south into the unin<.:or.µoratcd lrvme Coast. L'nfortunat(•lv. the studv of this area reads ~s if 1t \\'\.I~ written by 'a <:ounty staff member who never left Santa Ana According to th(! rcpo1t. th<' only traffic congestwn of •my magnitude in North Newport Beach is caused by beach-bound wC>ckcnd and holiday visitors. The report never mentions the tinily rus h hour traffic nor does 1t address the ~ub.i<.•ct of the role residents play 111 automobile congestion The finrtings of the rCJ)Orl concerning highway a<..luq uacy ought to come as a s urprise to Newport Uca<:h ·s H5.000 l'{'sidcnts . most of whom a re probably under the impression that traffic conges tion is a s evC'n-days-a ·\\'t•t.·k problem in their city. even lhe "north" part of it C:Oastline Me ssage Last week brought out som.e interesting contrasts fo r Coastline Community College. the Coast Community Colll'gc D1stnct's "college without walls ." On the same day Lhat the Western Assn . of Colleges and ·niver~1t1e::. granted the fledgling inst1tullon full ac· c:n.:ditat1on. a united raculty group of teachers from Golden West and Orange Coast college submitted a res- olution calling (OI' the abandonment of the Coastline College Despite the p<.1!'.!-.:Jgc of Prop 13 , trustees have backed ~he t·x1sH.'n<'e of Coastline. noting that the facility cuuc~1lcs ib student::. al a lower annual cost (about $400 t!ach > th:rn either of the two permanent campuses. J lowei.·l•r . the faculty group, in citing the tende~y toward s uperfluous course offerings and general w:islcfulness on the part of Coastline. has raised points that Cnustlint• ~hould heed At <1 l11'11L' when ul I budget belts must be pulled I 1ghlt•1-, Cm1~lhl\L' should take full advantage of its ac- l'rt.'ditalton by lnmming frivolous and questionable classe'>. and h~ muking certain its employcs arc pro clU<:ll\'L' • Opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily Pilot Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and art1sls Reader comment 1s 1nv1ted. Address The Daily Pilot. PO Box 1560. Costa Mesa CA 92626 Phone (714) 642·4321. Boyd/Drawing Room ByL.M. BOYD Questton arises as to why thal special sitting place in old ·limey houses was called the drawing room. It was where the ladies retired after dinner to leave the men at ta· ble Lo their cigars and liquor. Be!t'ause of the ladies' retreat thereto. the name originally wa s the "withdrawing room." Q. "How much money do Donny and Marie Osmond make''" A Reports \'ary But those who claim to know say they each eross about $1.500 a week. Dear Gloon1y Gu So our beautiful little green park on the Pe n t-n s u 1 a n c a r the Scout llouse Is J(oing to be turned into tennis courts, whether we play or not. whether we like it or not Things like lhls caused Prop. tl. O.J G. I • .> Whal sort of breakfast ap· peals lo you? President U.S. Grant Uked nothing better to s tart off his day than a c ucumber drenched in vinegar. More men than women in France use cosmetics. Q. "What's the longest stretch of highway with no tramc lights?" A. Interstate 75 between Sault Ste. Marie. Mich .. and Tampa, Fla. It's 1.564 miles Q. "Why was the Quonset hut of World War 11 so callect ?·• A. Because it was first built al the Quonset Point Naval Air Station near Greenwich, R .I. In 1941 for airme n. The great Heavyweight Jack Dempsey eorned just about as much money throughout his fight ing career as did Muhammad All in losing his last match. To tha t llst o r lnap· vropriatc names odd bllndworms, whlc'h :ire neither bllnd nor worms. They·r~ legless li1.ards Among dogs, the terriers bark the mosL Among cats. lhc Pcrs1ani meow the least The a,·e~e human being Is an 18 year-old Chinese girl. f Earl Waters A Million Here, a Million There F'or an inkling or the fat con· tent of government. consider Governor Jerry Brown's state budget for the forthcoming fis- cal year commencing July 1, as he initially proposed it last J a nuary. It totalled $16 billion. This did not ioclude property tax relier money subse· quently pro· vlded in SB 1 or money for sta t e employee salary raises and . numer- ous new pro- gram S" the ~overnor was pushing. Adding those. the ac- tua I budget would have ex- Mailbox ceeded St8 bllllon or., S8 billion more than when he took office just 311 yeurs a~o A quick study or the planned budget reveals that its proposals represente d an increase for ljtate agencies for next year or at least $2 billion over last year That increase alone would use nearly every penny of all the laxes collected from ever,Y bank and corporation. It is more than one -third of all the income taxes extracted from e very individual. It is more than hair the total or the last full budget spent by former Governor Pat Brown in 1966. his last year in office BUT THE inc rease is worse than Lhal ror 1l doesn't include any or the increases an the multi· ~- ( ~W-HEA\tn GQIN' NOWHERE. I YANKED THE. DiSTKIMOROf. billion dollar budgets or health· welfare agencies which cover s uch programs as welfare. Medi·CaJ. unemployment. men· tal hos pital& and aid to the aged. all or which are so vast they defy easy analysis. Neither does it include educa· lion which, in the face of declin· Ing enrollments. was s lated nevertheless for increases in state funds of nearly a h~lf billion dollars for all levels. How do budgets get so fat? It s tarts at the lop. The governor's immediate or- fi ce budget was set at $3 S million. up $600,000 rrom the 1977 figure . The f our a~encv secretaries under the govemor. his cabinet. proposed budgets totalling $3.8 m11l1on. an tn· t'reasc of SI 7 million. Also part of the governor's orfice are the offit'e~ of Employee Relations. Plannang und Resear<'h and Emergency Services These three hud a combined budget or $7 6 million. UJ> $4 s million. So the tolal cost of running the gov- t' rn o r 's office for one year comel'! lo almost $15 m1ll1on and represents an increase of nearly S7 million between 1976·77 and 1978 7f#. almoi.L a 100 percent growth ' ALTHOUGH most other state agencies were not quite so fast with the buck. neither were they • croogcs Consumer Afra1rs added $8 tn!llion for a total $38 mlll1on. General Serv1cts -;howed a S26 million increase to Sl88 million. Housing and Com· mun1ty Development went up $7 5 m1ll100 to a toldl $12.5 million. the Highway Patrol in creased'" S2S million ror a total S223 mtlhon . the Department of Motor V~h1clcs added $24 million to boost its budget to $151 million. Solid Waste Manage- ment Jumped from d S2 mllllon budget lo $20 mlll1on : the Department of Education came out with $239 million. $67 miJlion more than its 1977 budget : Parks and Recreation upped $27 million for a total S83 million. and Industrial Relations Jumped from $65 million to $87.6 million. The figures go on and on in a whirling dervish of speoding. F.ven the Legislature boosted its own budget Sl2 5 m1lhon to total $57 s million TH E RE IS little reason to doubt th.ts same frenzy or spend· IOI! exists at ull levels of govern- ml'nl. especially the schools. "1th the result government ha~ bl·come almost uncontrollable. As the late Senator Everett Dirksen quipped, "Y.ou add a million here and a n>illion there and pretty soon you are talking lllg money .. Tax Calendar Change Would Aid Schools To the Editor Schools and local governments could tum S3 anto S4 plus. S1nt'e property taxes are based upon a fiscal year begin· ning on July I each year. St'hools and loca l governm e nts arl' coerced almost in entirety to the sa m e fiscal year. Schools in particular thus are put into <1 rather r1d1t'ulous s ituation budget wise. Schools must pro·' duce a budget beRinning July I :md ending on June 30. However. no tax funds a re available to them until after the December 10 deadline for the first one·half of property tax payments What do they do from July 1 until the end of December? The logical solution. of course. is lo budget and maintain a large sur· plus Secondly. they may borrow runds, paying interest which in· creases their costs. IT WOULD seem more than logical to move up the due date for the firs t one·half payment of property taxes to a Sept. 10 date for the 1979-80 fi scal lax year and possibly to July 10 ror the 1980·81 fi scal tax year. Sance tax bills will be general· t y much lower. there wouldn't be an y excessive burden on the aver age taxpayer. The benefits: Schools would no longer need such excessive surpluses and 1n each or the next two years the surpluses accumulated could be used to offset lower tax income. Also. by moving up the due date for property taxes by one- fourth of a year, the result would be lo increase the tax income by one fourth for that particular year . An advantage for the taxpayer miF(ht be moving the second prop· erty tax deadline away from the April 10 date since state and federal income taxes closely follow. The period around April has always been a bummer for businesses because or concen· lruted due dates ror taxes. Sance county assessors will no longer hav(' th<' burdensome Job of reevaluating property to the former extent, it wouldn't s~ to strain them by providing tax bills three months earlier DOYLE PHILLIPS S~•tlo11 To the Editor: Why not encoural(e your Mail box readers to contribute helpful Ideas to overcome the jobs/f1erv1ces reduction!l caused by the passage of Proposlton 13? Surely the contlnulna JJrowth of Calitornlo cannot be !\tymled by such losses ot fUnds to meeting evt'r Increasing needs. My contribution to the store of ld<'BS relating Lo constructive ef. forts would be ror th state to immodlately lmpt~ment legisla· tlon to replace t.h l0$l revcnu~ from non-residents and tounsts. This class of v1s1tang people de serve lo bear their share or state costs rather than ha vc free ac- cess to beaches. parh. ett' This and other ideas. s uch as a state lottery. may do mo re than orrset the lost revenue. The dis· senlang fa ctors hkl'w1sc deserve to be heard from an pers pet'· live with the greater good ART WEISSMAN Di11ilhuio11.-d To the Editor Although II was probably ~imple·mmdcd nf me. one of the things that has kept me afloat in the contaminated polilit'al waters of the last few vears has been th(• hope that there remained a few men in public life who were still unwilling tosacnfit'c their own tn· tegrity and prtn<'1pl c::. for political expedient'~ I CLUNG lo th<' poss1b11tty that Sen Alan Cranston was one or those people. and I <1pplauded hts oppos1t1on to Prop 13 He knew then as he knows now that lloward .J<1rv1:. I!> <I rortUllOUS de magogue v.hu has done an enormous d1s::.erv1ce to the state and ult1malely. I suspect to the nation When Cranslon ruwncd over Jarvis in Wa~h1n~ton this wee k. he lost my vote an<I m y respect I'm sorry for us both. .JOSEPllN. DELL .\'f> Hero To the Editor· I am appalled at the effects Prop. 13 is having on budget cuts to those less fortunutc than we are. Homeowners e njoy a profit. often high and unrealistic. when they s ell their homes. Then they welcome high evaluation. Home buyers are aware or the cost or taxes when they buy their homes. 1f they are too high, then the prtce or the home they have chosen 1s toohlgh. Approximately one-fourth or the payment is tax deducllble. lowering 1tstlll m ore. IN ORANG t: County . the st>rvlces we received tor our money were worthwhile . ln m ost cases the money saved was not necessary lo maintain a decent s tandard or llvin~. only to allord more luxuries. This ls not the t'ase wiU1 the poor, blind, aged, unerhpl<>yed or disabled. Where is the consclonce or the people? Why Isn't Jarvi11 stand· Ing trial for drunk driving and drivlntt without u license instead or b Ing trPBted :is a hero In W811hington" 1' JONES 11 lrport Nol•,. To the Ed1tor In )'our lettPr.1 tn tht' editor St'CtlOn Of June 7, 0 letter from (_ Mr. William M. Monroe headed "Aircraft Noise" deserves at tention since it leaves the im· pression that both commercial airlines and private jets are not acting responsibly at the Orange County Airport. The county maintains seven noise morutoring devi ces in the take off areas and these umts are hooked into a computer at the noise abate ment head quarters at the airport The noise from each flight is thus re· corded and printouts of noisy fli ghts are discussed in the reg ular pilots m eet in gs by the co mmert'lal a i rlines An especially noisy flight is handled immediately by telephone for corret'tive action Es pecially with 11:.dogs gomg along on vacation trips or other outings. 1t 1s most essential to have an identification Not long ago. I got my own dog back that "'<lY t;OBYJUDA S tubnt•• ''ieao To the Editor: . I am a s tudent at Orange Coast Coll<.'gc and I attended the Coast Community College Doard mccr 1ng last Wednesday night. Administrator Bernard Lus kin announced that Orange Coas t Collcgl' was bankrupt. Teacher~ were worried about ;1 proposed 16 Pl·rccnt salary t·ut and in- l'rt'ased c·lass loads part-time ' tl'i.ll'hN., were gt)lng to be fired. WITHIN tht-limitatio ns or occ and C\\C t~a<'hcr'> are thci r equipment. these operators alreCJdy among the lower paid or are act 1 n g res PO n s 1 b I Y · tht.>.JCs in Cahfnrnia. despite the cooperatively and are concerned facr tht'y hv(• '" lhe most af- about noise. fluent pl<1ce 1n tht.· worlct Many The same type of monitonng of tht.• tt.>.H'hcr!'i \H'r<.' worried 1s in effect for private Jet opern lions and each visiting Jet 1~ Htiout losing their homes I was ~huc kctl that at ltl1s C'ruc1al given a copy of the noise abate lime. the board was considering ment procedures on landan~ for service. ett'. Every effort 15 lcasin~ <1 new rac·11tty for the made to obtain cooperation from tontrovcrsrnl Coaslline tollegc d II h llhC' t'Ollege w1thnut walls1. pri\•ate pilots an genera Y t ts which many p<:opll! ft•el could be is obtained During tht.> firs t quarter or t97R onl~ four private absorbed into Oranl!e Coasl and Jets took off after 11 oo p.m . As G o ldl·n Wcs 1. thus sa ving the newer generation or private millions or dollars. jets such a s the Cessna C1lat1on. Lear 35 and Jet Star ti's become more available. this noise source will be greatly re.· duced. To sum up. mut'h has been done to reduce noise at the Orange County Airport and the pi lots are indeed acting responsibly. .JOSEPH E. IRVTNE ExecuUve Director Community Airport Council Peu N~dlD To the F.ditor· Your newspaper has always been adm1rably alert lo Che needs of dogs and pets in general. There is one thing I would like you so very much to write in your newspaper. and that Is lhe real important'e or hnvlng tl dog·s name. address and telephone number glued to lhe collar or ncabund. In that way the agony of lo s t dogs Is practic;)\l y eliminate<!. "Your,.., ,._ bwt • 1 1r·• now Z.000......,. • ~ I ENJOY tht• mm·1cs and Jazz roncerts on KOCE but I don't know 1f it's valid for a t•ommuni •Y college to supply such enter tainment at the t'OSl of faculty salaries. to the tum• of several thousan<1 dollars per tcacher•to support thl' channel I low many JC's (or f'ven ~tale colleges 1 have a TV channel anyway'.' What I w<1n1 to know is this - why is n't the board of trustees t'Ulling out the real frills instead of teache r " u nd te11chers salaries'' I am grutl'fu! for the fine education 1 ·m rl'cc1v1ng :u OCC, with adequate clu-.1. sizes. en· thus 1t1t4l1c tcu('hers who even take tht> time to tutor me r>rn1onally. and the chuncc 10 pt>rsonally retai l' t o my teachers But th<.>se super conditions will be a thing of the past if large class sizes and overworked. t I red teachers become the "nt'w" education J I Orange Cuu-.1 P<.·r~onally I pn•rl'r 11•ar ht•rs lo TV stations. How uboul you·J SAHAH HILL • Utters /rom rtadtr~ art' welcom" The right to condtna1 lettn .• to llt :rpau t>r rhmmatt libel u rt~ lAlltrl o/ JOO word.a ~ tu.r wdl bf gtut'n prtftr111ct A I! letttr' mu.st In· cludt 11Qnolure and 7lloili119 oddru1 but riamtt ma11 bt llPtthlwld on rt· ~" 1( sufl1cltnt "'"°" u oppcrcm P~ry wall Ml bt pubh#led. c 7 ... .. Saddlehaek Afternood N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 71, NO. 179, ~SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28, 1978 TEN CENTS 'Gone Too Far' Rules UC I ~ ; j Must-Adnllt Bakke ., , t WASlllNGTON <AP> -The U.S. Supreme Court today or- dered a California medical school to admit Allan. Bakke, ruling that be suffered illegal discrimination because he is , white. ·but said that race can be taken into account in future col· Jege admissions programs. In a 5-4 dedsion, the court held that the University of California's medical school at Davis had gone too far in con- sidering race when it refused to admit Bakke. . But it held that affirmative· 1lction programs intended to benefit minority applicants can properly be a factor in decisions on admitting students. Bakke successfully sued the unlverslly after his application 1 to the univer sity's medical school at Davis was rejected in 1973 and 1974. He charged that the medical school~s special admissions pro- gram wtuch reserved 16 of the 100 openings in each entering 1 c lass for "disadvantaged" stu· dents was really only an im- • permissible racial quota. Under it, Bakke charged, less acade111ically qualified blacks Hispanics and Asian-Americw , were admitted ahead of.him. • The Supreme Court interpret- ed the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to s ay tha t while som e race· conscious programs are valid, the program that kept Bakke out of medical school crossed the Al'Wl~o BACKED BY COURT Allan Bakke l ine into i llega l racial discrimination. Bakke, a 38-year·old c ivil engineer who lhces in Los Altos and works for the nation's space agency ar the Ames Research Center in nearby Palo Alto, never had lo prove that he would have been admitted if the school had not had a special admissions program. . The university conceded that it could not prove Bakke would have been excluded if the pro- gram had not existed. A state trial court ruled that the special admissions program violated the Constitution's guarantee of equal protection and a.lso the portion of tJte Civil Rights Act or 1964 that outlaws racial discrimination by in· stitutions receiving federal funds. The California Supreme Court upheld the trial court's ruling in favor of Bakke on the con- stitutional grounds only. choos· ing to ignore the federal law question. The Cons titution's 14th Amendment, which 110 years ago held O\lt to blacks the prom- ise o f full membership in Ame rican society, granted citizenship to r ecently freed slaves and ordered all states not to •'deny to any person . . . the equal protection or the laws ... Civil rights acti vists have employed those words ever since in efforts to stamp out what they perceived to be vestiges of the slave system. Their greatest victory came in 1954 when the U.S. Supreme Court changed American life by outlawing racial segregation as "inherently unequal." The racial civil rights move- ment gained momentum over <See BAKKE, Page A2) Tru~tee Conflict Eyed County Counsel Report Draws No Conclusion By WILLIAM HODGE Of U. Dally Pllet Sutt While a county counsel's opi- nion says a Saddleback Valley school board member's business dealings have .. al least the ap- pearance" of a conflict or in· terest. the r eport reaches no conclusion on whether or not a conllicLhas occurred. The opinion. dated June 22. was requested by trustees when Saddleback Valley Educators Association President Bill Mecham le\teled charges April 12 at board member William Kohler that he had been selling tax.s helte r ed ann uities to * * * district employees. The 14-page legal opinion notes several Kohler votes on raises gra nted to district Superintendent Richard Welte and other votes ratifying district contracts with various insurance co mpanies offer i n g t ax - s h e ltered annuitiJ!S t o employees. The county report also points out that Welte h oLds tax-sheltered annuity pl ans through Kohler. which were increased 21 days after a SJ.000 raise granted to the superintendent on J an. 18, 1978. That annuity increase Jumped * * * Saddleback Board Eyes Welte Contract · Superintendent Ric hard Welle's four .year Saddleback Valley Unified School District contract apparently will not be extended beyond its June 30, 1979, termination date. district sources said today. If trustees do not intend to ex- tend the contract, they must notify the top official by June 30. That would require trust ee action on the ext e ns ion at tonight's board ~eeting. Coas t Weather Night and morning low clouds with sunny after-noon Thursday. Slightly warmer. Lows tonight 58 to 63 . Highs Thursday near 70 at the beaches to upper 70s inland. INSIDE TODA~ Oro~ emmtu ~'" have odop(ed fee hilcei ot harbora. beocM• and porlca. Storv Page Al2. Board President George Henry confirmed today the con- tract would .probably not be ex- tended but ~d the action was unre lated to Welte 's conflict with three board members in· eluding· Henry, Carole Neustadt and Mary Phillips. "In my mind that's not true." Henry said "When there's the possibility of a new board com- ing up. you don't extend the con- tract. "This was discussed by me a long time ago." Henry was referr ing to elections next March in which three trustee posjtions will be up for election. including seats held by Henry, Mrs. Neustadt and Loa Young. ·•t•m sure a lot of people will think the action is related to our recent problems but it's not.·• He nry said. School Budget Eyed Tonight Saddleback Valley Unified School District trustees are ex- pected to get a tentaUve bud&et from Saperintendent Richard Welte at the1r regular rneetin& tonJ1ht. The meet.tna will take place al 8 p.m . in district offices. 25631 Dlseno Drive, MJsslQn Vlejo. Delalla of Welle'• bud1et pro-posal were not available this moml"I. The dtstrtct faces a '7.2 million bud1et cut in the wake of pusafe of PT'Oposlt.lon 13. 52 p e rcent over what the s uperintendent had been purchasing prior to the raise. the county counsel opinion notes. Kohler said today he believes the opinion, in reaching no COO· clusion, affirms his mnocence. "I didn't do anything," Kobler maintained. "If there's no con- clusive evidence then I must be innocent. "I'm a salesman and this country was built by salesmen," he continued. "I'm proud of that, 1 think I'm offering a great service to people." Kohler pointed out that his votes on Welte 's raises were not the decidlng factor. "It was always a 5-0 or 4-1 vote," he said. "My vote was moot anyhow." (See REPORT, Page A2> County OKs Saddle back . ... Park Projects Two Saddleback Valley park development project s were approved by Orange County supervisors Tuesday despite the budget crunch brought on by Proposition 13. • But future maintenance of Stockport Park in Laguna Hills and Aurora Park in El Toro will mean county officials must trim back on other property tax- financed services in those com· munilies. They. propose e liminating s treet sweeping, cutting supervised recrefltlon programs in half, reducing landscape maintenance by ts percent and refusing new dedications of landsca ped medians and roadside slopes. The $126,030 Stockport Park, at Stockport Street and Wilkes Place. will be financed jointly by federal revenue sharing and property tax doUars. It will include volleyball, basketball courts as well as pie· nic areas. officials said. Development of Aurora Park, along Marguerite Parkwa~ south of Alicia Parkway, will cost $208,400, with the Miaalon Viejo Company paying $77 ,000 of tbat for grading, turf and an ir- rigation system. County officials said they ex· peel sot.tball league park users to assis t wltb so mo maintenance. Aurora Park -...on't Include any play equipment or picnic facllltles for the present. they noted. Fun at the Beaf!la Whether they're just relaxing on the sand or a rock. or enjoying a splas h either solo or with young compa ny. these folks are getting the most out of a nice day for the beach. These photos were taken at Rock Beach in Laguna Beach and Aliso Beach in South Laguna. Monaco Prine~ Weds ~ Civil Ceremony Held in Throne Room MONTE CARLO. Monaco CAP> -Princess Caroline of Monaco married Pan s playboy financier Philippe Junot today in a 15-minute civil ceremony in the throne room of the royal palace -the same room where her father. Prince Rainier Ill, married American movie star Grace Kelly 22 years ago "Princess Caroline"s hand shook a little as she signed the register," said Louis Roman. president of Monaco's State Council, who performed the marriage before about 40 family members. The wedding was ·'nice. and in good spirits." said Roman, but not particularly emotional. About 1,500 per sons filed through the palace gates to a tt e nd the pos t .w e dding reception. Brilliant s unshine bathed the palace square outside and hundreds of tourists pressed against the barriers. Caroline and Junot will go to the palace's s m all chapel Thursday morning for a Roman Catholic nuptial Mass attended by 100 g uest s. including members of Parisian society and the international jet -set, ex-royally and vintage movie stars. The press was barred from both ceremonies as well as from Proposition 13 Baeked the pre-nuptial ball at the palace Tuesday night. The brevity of the guest list. the absence of members of reigning royal houses and the privacy s urrounding th e wedding were in sharp contrast to the 2,000-guest extravaganza. that Caroline's father. Prince Rainier Ill. staged on April 18, 1956 . when he married he r mother. , Dior. the Paris fashion house. designed the wedding outfilc; for both Caroline and her mother. Designer Marc Bohan outfitted the bride in blu'! crepe eeorgette for the civil ceremony and <See WEDDING, Page AZ> Leisure Voting Tallkd Laguna Hills votens in Leisure World favored Proposition 13 slightly more than did tl'le rest or Orange County but their counterparts in Seal Beach were leH .solidly in s upport o( the In· ltlaUve. Figures recently released by Ute County Reg1strar of Votel'!i office •how that the 40 precincts within the retirement communi- ty voted 8,963 t.o 3,330 In favor of Propos1Uoo 13, the J u ·vls·Gann propqty ttx limitation ln· ltiaUve. oo June 8. kl other words. 72.9 percent of lhoso voUnt favored the law - Countywide, 404 ,878 voters case .. yes" ballots while 171,274 said "no." That's a 70.2 percent IP· prov al. At Leisure World In Seal Beach. only 67.1 percent of that retirement community's voters approved Propos1lion 13. As a city. voters Ir\ Seal Beach had one of the low~•t pluralities In favor of the proposWon In the county. turning Otlt 8,ZM ln favor and 4.258 against for a 6$.t per-cent "yea" vote. And Re1lstrar of Voters fl•ures show that Seal Beach. as a dty. actually approv~d Proposition 8 -Gov. Edmund Browfl Jr. 's ans we r to the Jarvis-Gann initiative. Voters in the city gave 5,900 a ffirmative votes and 5,868 negative votes to Proposition 8. Leisure Worlders in Seal Beach, however, tutbed lhumtss down on PJ'opo8itlon 8 to the tuno of 2,738 negative votes to 2,501 "y " ballots, a 52.2 per· cent "no" vote. Laauna Hills ' Leisure Worldera, however. turned down ProposiUon 8 by 61 5 percent, 6,881 ne11Uve ballots to •.211 yes votes. ·12 f>AIL Y PILOT SB Critiria• Toa Bakke RuJing Wins Praise By Tiie AsaoclatM Preas The U.S. Supreme Court's rul· mg in the Bakke case today drew praise from the plaintiff's attorney and criticism from some black leaders and mem· bers of the academic com· munity. "My client has a comment," said Reynold Colvin, Allan Bakke's attorney. "He's delight· ed with the decision and looks forward to entering medical school in September." Bakke, 38, was not personally available. He was expected to go to work, as usual, at the Ames Research Center, a NASA facili- ty, in Mountain View, south or San Francisco. The court ruled 5·4 that the Uni versily of California's medical school at Davis. which twice rejected Bakke's ap. plication for admission, illegally discriminated against him because he is white. It also 5MenFound Murdered in &stonBar BOSTON IAP> -The bodies -0! five young men who were shot t.o death were found early today •n the basement of· a bar and ~rill where they worked in the heart of Boston's main shopping district. The bodies were found grouped in a basement office of the Blackfriars Restaurant on Summ er Street, by a bar employee. A police spokesman said "a shot)'Cun was used." Police were unable to identify the victims immediately, but the s pokesman said all were in their mid·20s. There was no immediate in· dication or how many times the men were shot. The discovery came at the height of the morning rush hour, and a crowd of curiosity set:kt:rs soon formed as police cruisers .and ambulances converged out· side the five·story office building where the lounge is located. The small restaurant is three to five years old and has a clienlele consisting mainly of young businessmen. .Two Masked Gunmen Rob Laguna Hotel Two gunmen, wea ring women's scarves over their faces, held up lhe Surf and Sand Hotel. 155.5 South Coast Highway in Laguna Beach early this morn- ing, escaping with $1.200 in cash and $15,000 in checks. LL. John Zelko said the two masked men leaped over the check-in counter al the hotel at about 3:45 a.m .. confronting a lone female clerk. They cut the telephone wires and demanded cash from the drawer. threatening the woman with handguns. The clerk said she heard a car leave the area but did not see the vehicle. She described her assailants as male Caucasians in their 20s. She could not describe facial features due to the bizarre yellow women's scarves worn over their heads. Zelko said it look about 15 minutes for the clerk to contact police due to the cut phone lines. "It was all over by the time we got there," he said. Zelko added the $15,000 in cbecks were made out to the Surf and Sand and would be very difficult to cash. O"ANGE COAIT SB DAILY PILOT ~~n~~?:."r.i:.i:1:==;;..~ CAM\t ~ll"'•l"llQ(Of'ftt)-A"' ~·~.,.,~,,,. out>t1\l\f'Ct ¥o"Ct•'I IMOUOf' 1-r'<My l0t (C"'lt• ,w,w Nit•P6'1 8#6<.f'I """"''~ ~-" J:..,_ t••" Y6H•¥ h••n• \..-0......,': V•• .. .-•"'9 L...,...,..Af.M" ...,.,,_( .. \I --~~,_.~Hi! 1"°" '' O'*tYM-0 S•lw,4•¥\ .o ""'°""' ,,.. t~~'C~~::,.~~,.~::.~~.~~ Wf\t ft•Y ._ .... _ Pr•\tdfftt •nd ll\AJllWf -••.c-, '"'" ...... ,,.., .,,., °""""'--· , ............ t. [dllOf '':'::.',~ '\.~ CM•ltt M Lff• •-I> IUU ., ...... , "°'t""411t llllltt• Sa~aek ValtevOffloe '"'' I.• .... llooa al""' ol .. oo ,,,....n OfflcH ~ •• Mo .. JJOWt\I...,,~ H""to"91lftll .. c~ lltl)tw!•lovttv•f11 "-.. "<• 11 .. 0 -•54-I T~11e (1141MMn1 Clualflect •ct•.ntt6nt ICMf1'I ~\Yollt•-OHll• Nt-4*t0 rr..,.~(- UMIOO '""'-'"' 0.-CNtt .............. c--... -..... "' .......... _ ...... ... ""ett•r •t ..-,~"'"'"*" Nrtt._ ~•r ~ ;::;:.:;:~· I •tittt•I fffMIHtM r:.=',"',~·0,::::~r. .. ~··.t(m::p -;;":. ftlll44't"lf bf M•il l• ,. "'*'"._.. Mft1••f'l .... -,-~, ........... , ruled, however, that the school is not barred from taking race into account in a future ad· missions program. Dr. John Tupper, dean of the school. said: "We've all been waiting for the Supreme Court to tell us what the will of the people o! the United States is. We will obey the law. I cannot comment further until our legal counsel has had a chance to actuauy re· has had a chance to actually read and digest the entire opi· Dr. John A.D. Cooper, presi· dent of the Association or American Medical Colleges, said the group "is disappointed . . . Considerable progress has been made in recent years for greate.r _par~icipalior:i by minorities in Amer1cul medicine. This has occurred in particular because medical school admissions decisions took into consideration the need for broad representation in medicine from all segments of our society.'' Ralph Smith, a law professor at University of Pennsylvania and chairman of the legal education task force or the National Conference of Black Lawyers. said he was "pro· roundly disappointed" with the decision, but added that he <lid not know how broad the ruling was. "It is our only hope that the court flasn't become the as· sassin of affirmative action," he said. Robert Links, co-counsel for Bakke, said he spoke with him briefly this morning. "He said, 'Great! You guys did it'!" Links reported. "I said, 'No we didn't. You did'." Of the ruling itself, Links said: I don •t think the university total· ly lost the case . . . I suspect they will try to formulate a more acceptable program and one that is fair to persons of all races who may have suffered hardship and disadvantage in their lives." * * * E',.._PageAI BAKKE ... the past 15 years as government· ordered affirmative action pro· grams began to give special pref. erence to minority members and women to overcome past discrimination in business. education and government. These programs, ho.wever, sparked numerous lawsuits such as...Ba kke's. Each essentially asked the same question: May the govern· ment take a person's race into account for special treatment when its goal is to help make up for official discrimination In the past? Four of the U.S. Supreme Co urt's nine members would have reversed the state court victories won by Bakke. Justices J . Brennan Jr., Byl'on R. While, Thurgood Marshall and Harry A. Blackmun agreed that race-conscious programs are valid -and voted that the University of California's pro- gram was t1alid under the 1964 law and the Constitution. Justice Lewis F. Powell Jr. Joined the four insofar as ruling that some race-conscious pro· grams are valid. His was the crucial fifth vote needed to rule that the unviersity -and pre· sumably all other educational institutions -may in the future use some forms of affirmative action. But Powell, relying on his in· lerpretation of the 14th Amend· ment. said the Davis program hacs not snown itself to be necessary to ac hieve the school's stated goals and therefore could not pass con- stitutional muster. Chief Justice Warren E . Burger and Justices William H. Rehnquist. John Paul Stevens and Potter Stewart voted that the 1964 civil rights law disallows programs such as the one that excluded Bakke. Their joint opinion, written by Stevens, was a narrowly worded one that interpreted the law to mean "lt is not permissible to say 'yes' to one person but sny •no' to another person ooly because of the color of skin." Toro Thief Entry Via Doggy Door Jewelry and a tape recorder with a tot-al value or $1 ,685 were taken from an El Toro home by an Intruder who enleted via the do1gy door. Orange County aherlrr's of· (lcen said the entry of the •P· parenlly dJmtnullv intruder wu reported by auto dealer Al Perry. U82S Lakefield Ortve. Girding tor Artion .These 119·foot girders are being readied to move into place in construction of Von Karman Avenue bridge over the San DieJ?o Freeway in Irvine. The $975,000 CalTrans project is expected to be com· pleted by Christmas, and will connect north and south parts of Irvine Industrial Complex. relieving traffic problems on Jamboree Road. Several lanes of the freeway between Jamboree and MacArthur Boulevard. have been closed during l Lo s a.m. hours since last Wed· nesday to aid construction effort. E',....P~AJ Toro Pioneer Home REPORT ••• C ~ He also indicated Welte had Donated to Ounty initiall)'. purchased an ~nnuity from him before he decided' to run for the board in 1974. Kohler admitted his approval The 1904-vintage w~oden its location at 23041 <'.herry Av~. votes on three or eight tax- rrame home of El Toro pioneer and eventually .take. its pl~ce in sheltered annuity contracts ap- Harvey Bennett was accepted as the Ser~ano Histoncal Village proved for district employees a historic donation by Orange along with the Serrano Ado~. was .. an oversight.·· County supervisors Tuesda¥. El Toro School and St. Georges The opinion notes Kohler an. The home will be moved from Church. nounced his status as an in· Suit Leveled On Car Wash; Wages Cited The U.S. Department of Labor has filed suit in Los Angeles U.S. District Court against Metro Car Wash alleging violation of the federal Fair Labor Standards Act at its five Orange County ouUets. Identified in (he complaint are Metro partners Frank V. Bianchini of Costa Mesa and Malcom Cobrink of Fullerton . Partoer Bi{lnchini. who had yet to hear or the suit, reacted angrily Tuesday. ·calling the charges .. intimidation or the worst kind." Bianchini, who operates the Costa Mesa Metro Car Wash. said he was not aware of any com plaint ~ filed by his employees. The Labor Department has asked the court to order the car wash company to pay all back wages found due to employees plus interest and costs to comply with the law in the future. Metro Car Wash outlets are located at 2950 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa; 3400 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beac h : 6656 Westminster Blvd .. Westminster; 2402 Bristol St., Santa Ana; and 387 Tustin St., Orange. The 56--acre historic village is surance agent on May 3. 1976 being developed along Serrano and vowed not to vote on s uch is- Road west of Lake Forest Drive. sues before the school board The William Lyon Company He voted approval. however. plans to develop property where of district TSA plans on three OC· the home now sits, a report to casions following the May 3 an- supervisors said, and company nouncement. officials have offered to donate "That was an oversight on my the home to the Saddle~ack part.·· Kohler said. "I was Valley Historical Society. mistaken and I adr:nit it." . The society, in turn , will He insisted he did not ~o b~s1· donate the building to the coun· ness with any o.f the eight 1n- ty, the report said. surance companies whose con· The home's builder. Harvey tracts he voted on since Nov. 2. Bennett. was a stale legislator 1975. . . and gentleman citrus rancher Ko~ler sa1~ h~ believes. the noted for inventing improved conflict question 1s a dead issue crop production methods, of· bul acJu:iowledged the teachers ficials reported. group might pursue !l The cost of moving and ren-"If th_e educators association ovating the home was set at feels darferentl ~; the>: should $55,000 by county officials. lake me to court, he said. The historical society already SVEA President Mecham said has $6.139 in donations and today his group has made no pledges to assist with the work. rarm decision about following up Vandal Runs Tap, Damages Home Damage estimated at ~.000 was inflicted on a recently com· pleted model home in Mission Viejo by an intruder who turned on an upstairs tap and let it run. Orange County sheriff's of· ficers said the break-in at the home at 25384-Juniper Drive was reported by officials of South Coast Community Development. They ,said catpeting and furniture were ruined. the county counsel opinion. The county counsel report notes that "since penal statutes are involved, the matler could be referred to the District Al· torney or the Grand Jury for in · vestigation." Board President George Henry said today he didn't believe it was legal ·'for the board to take action against another board member." "If someone wants to pursue it. that's their bus iness," he said. "I don't personally plan to take any action." Royalty Lights Vp Monaco MONTE CARLO, Monaco IAP) Monaco, the guidebooks never tire of mentioning, is "a fairy tale realm." But when the .clock struck midnight at the royal palace, it was more like Disneyland. One by one. the Rolls·Royees, Bentleys and Mercedes slid up to the gate to disgorge bemedaled old men, stylishly coiffed young socialites. women in Dior gowns and a killed Scotsman There was a lot or hand kissing. bowing and bold· Ing hiah of noses at tbe royal ball given by Prince Rafuier Ill and Princess Grace in booor or their daughter Caroline·s wed· din~ Alighting were the Princess of Savoy. the Grand Duke of Russia. the ex·King of Italy. barons. countesses. and many other survivors of the lifestyle that created the Monaco legend. The palace. bathed in floodlights. looked Jlke a cardboard fa'tade on a movie set. Human silhouettes flitted past the gently lit windows or the upper floor ball rooms. Cary Grant arrived and drove the photographers into a frenzy. ··1 must have a photo." cried one downtrodden German. Grant turned around and posed for him. Yet. for all the horror stories about photographers bedeviling the lives of celebrities, these hardworking men managed to keep a respeelful distance. No dress was soiled, oo hairdo ruf. fled. The only .near incident came when Greek shipping magnate Stavros Niarchos' chauffeur, blinded by nashbulbs, almost drove into a barricade. * * E'roM Pflfle A I WEDDING • • traditional white for the religious rite while Princess Grace was wearing apricot chiffon today and yellow crepe georgette Thursday. The palace refused to say where Caroline. 21. and Junot. a 38-year-old Parisian financier. were honeymooning. or what gifts their parents were giving them. Monaco's police force of 300 and the 80·man palace guard threw a tight web of security around the ochre-walled palace to keep gate crashers out of the royal ball Tuesday night. Greek s hipping magnate Stavros Niarchos' Bentley limousine almost crashed into one of the police barr icades when photographers' flashbulbs blinded the chauffeur. The guests also inc-luded ex ·King Umberto of Italy. Egyptian Prince Fuad. l"'rank Sinatra. David Niven. J\va Gardner and Cary Grant. Princess Grace met Rainier when she and Grant filmed "To Catch a Thief" in Monte Carlo. The swt 1s the result of in· vest1gations conducted by the Labor Department under the direction of Elmore Wilcox. area director for the Wage-Hour Division, Employment Stan- dards Administration in Santa Ana. Particular People Select JOHNSON & SON Home of the "Golden Touch11 1.abor Aide Sets Address U.S. Department of Labor compliance officer Milton Jacobson Is scheduled to speak to the Saddleback Valley Chamber or Commerce mem- bers at their 7:15 a .m . breakfast meeting Thursday at Barone's Restaurant in Laguna Hills. Jacobson will discuss methods of enforcement of the Fair Labor Standards Act, which In· eludes provisions covering the minlmum wage, overtime pay, record·kttping and child 1abol" Jaws. He also will discuss the Equal Pay Act and the Age Discrimination in E'mployment Act, said chamber manager Sharon Figeira Viejo Slates Trail Ride The Mission Viejo Equestrian Center bu scheduled Its seventh annual old west trail ride al 9 a.m. Julys. The all·day rlde to O'Nelll Ranch wUJ begin al the stables at 27752 Mar1uerlte Parltway and will culminate with a barbecue served al the stable picnic aru. aaJd spok~woman Joy~c Miller The ftt 15 117. ReaervaUons can be made by caWng 831...,., or 495·1571 . - "At Johnson & Son, we were tr.attd In a vtry profe1alooal and dignified _manner." • I MldtCY MITIUH H....._•leeQ.C4ff. "Very CGUrt9oul, vwy fair, entoyed tht last four or flw yean association." AWi SMITH MOOU LllpM ... C41f. "Courteous s•1mon, pleasant swround. Jngs, 1xctllent service." DAYID DOSTAL .._.... ...... c.lf. "Follow through Is very good. I've had •v•n years of saffsfltd ..mc.." Mal. N.C)UttCI L HALL a...-... C41f. Or•nge Coun1y·s Oldest l1ncoln·Mercury Ocaler1h1p .JOHNSON A SON I i1-l 2626 Harbor Blvd • Costa Mesa • 540·5630 .• Wedneeday, June 28, 1978 s DAil y PILOt A3 New OC Hom.es May ~ay School Fee Orange Coanly aapenllon a bousln& boom that bu 1eft d istrict• was joined b ~ gave tbemselvh tbe power lb em wit bout 8 u rtlclent Supervisor' PhiUp Anthony ~ aaid. however, many developers N e'wport Beach attorney '-.}and round lmpract.lcaJ sucb rem· Tuesday to deelare a state of claasroonu for future student.a. volln a aJnst the measure obtain •PPf'OVJlls for their plans Marlene Fox. apeaJclng tor 11 cdles as bond Issues for con· overcrowding in tcbools and N · On 8 3-2 vot4 supervlsol'I ap-AnfhJy withdrew his e~rUe as long as five years berore tak· client developers, contended lm· struction. double sessions, year. sess lees ot up to $1,200 on each proved regulations that could t1upport because the fees woul~ inf out building permits. posing fees at the final bu11ding round classes, adjusting attend. new home In tlloM areas. permit overcrowded dist.rlct.a to be assessed at the time building t Is the construction of a permit st.age would be lllegaJ. ance boundaries and use of The oew o~nce will apply coUect .8 percent or lbe aelll.ng permitswereba~ home and later its purchase by County Counsel Adrian empty schools io nelgbbortng only ln ~at.ed cowity prtee for new houses from de-· new famlli~ tbat adda to 0"1· Kuyper disagreed, however. districts. com munatles after school velopers witb a $1,200.per-.unit As a result, Anthony argued, crowding, Diedrich argued. lo addition, 8upel'Visors wUI districts detnooatrate tbat over· celling tbe measure In effect would be George White, president or . The ordinance requires bear· hold yearly reviews In each crowding exists In specified Appiied to a home costing retroactive, applying to de· CB;pistrano's board of trustees. 'tigs brforec both ltbet county district to aee tr overcrowding school attendance areas.. SlOO ooo the fee would come to vetopers wbo already have re-said if supervisors were to ex· ann ng omm ss on and still exists. ' Already officials in the saoo' ceivM approvals for their home em pt deve l opments with s upervl~rs ~efore the tee Exempted from the measure Cap~ ~ Orange Ynlfled S~pervi.sor Laurence Schmit. tracts. already-approved tract plans dte~Ju:-e app ed to any school are so-called moderate·lneome School Districts are viewing the Jong a critic of the ordinance be Supervisor Ralph Dteddcb ther~ would be many ch~ldren s c · homes and_ deveJppment limited measure as Offerinl relief from vlews as.a "baU out" for school wbo proposed the ordinance' commg into ~district wttbout It also requires school officials by deed restrictions to adult$ • classrooms to bold them. to show they have considen!d onJy. Death Bill Set For Vote SACRAMENTO <AP) -State Sen. John Briggs' death penalty iniUll'.tive bas qualified for the Nov. 7 ballot, Secretary of State Marcb Fong Eu confirms. Briggs, of Fullerton1 sought the Republican nomination for governor but dropped out before lbe June 6 primary election. He also sponsored an initiative. w b icb qua I ified, against homosexual school teachers. Mrs. Eu said Tuesday the new measure would: -Expand the categories ol first-degree murder punishable by death, or life in prison without parole, to include such crimes as murder or a state -of· ficial and murder that is particularly "atrocious." -Increase the minimum parole date for first·degree murder from seven years to 16 years, eight months, including lime ofl for good behavior. -lncr:ease the penalty for second-degree murder. -Allow consideration of all felony convict.ions of the defen· dant during the punishment stage of trial. -Require judges to impanel a new jury if the first one can't reach a unanimous verdict on punishment. Mrs. Eu said a random sam- ple indicated there were 395,136 valid s ignatures among the 471,41 t s ubmitted by Briggs. He needed 312.404. Man"'s Body Found Shot Near El Toro "lip' Worth $1 Million? WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (AP> -Joseph Baudette says be may have imbibed a lot or liquor at Kil· mean 's Tavern, but he never intended to give the bartender a $1 million tip. The tip -in the form of a lottery ticket that is worth anywhere from $10,000 to $1 million -was blocked by a temporary restraining order by Wes tchester Supreme Court Justice George Beisheim Jr. Baudette, 22, says he gave Clifford Bice a slate Baseball Lottery ticket and told the 26-year·old part·time· barkeep al the M anhassel tavern to "scratch off the number: you may be lucky for me. We ·11 split if we win." Bice bas a different version. He Gives Policemen A Ticket NEW ORLEANS <AP> -It was only fair. A week ago La rry Dean Hardison received a ticket ror parking illegally. So be wasn't about to ignore the downtown scene Tuesday - 19 police cars standing ln a no· parking zone outside a hotel where a seminar on homicide was being held. Getting out pen and paper, Hardison prepared 19 "Dear Of· ficer" letters. "Dear Officer: One of the best ways to lo3e the respect of cttizens u to break the rulea which you en· force. You are parked illegally." Not shy, be signed his name and placed his t e le phone number on each note. Star War Fought Over TV LOS ANGELES <AP> -The forces of 20th Century-Fox are facing those of Universal studios in a real-life U.S. District Court battle over "Star Wars." Fox contends in a federal suit that Universal's upcoming ABC television series, "Battle Star Gatacttca," infringes upon Its copyright of "Star Wars." the mos t profitable movie of all time. The movie, released May 25. 1977. has grossed more than $216 million in the United States and Canada. Fox seeks an injunction to bar MCA. its subsidiary Universal, and ABC from broadcastin.g the weekly series in September. ABC plans to air a three-hour movie opening the "Galactica" s pace adventure series and follow it with a two-part show before going into the weekly series . Universal has said it will release the movie theatrically in foreign countries. The Fox suit contends that "th e defe ndants MCA and Univers al have copied the Galactica feature from plaintiff 20th Century's copyrighted photoplay 'Star Wars.'," It asks· the court to stop the theatncal release of the movie and the TV ~M~. . "Galactica" has been touted as ABC's big new hit or the season. The three-hour movie cost a reported $7 million and the weekly budget has been re· ported as Sl million, which would be a record for televison. The space adventure stars Lome Greene, Richard Hatch, Dirk Benedict, Maren Jensen, Terry Cart.er, Herb Jefrerson Jr. and Noah Hathaway. It was created by Glen Larson. who 'serves as executive producer. GETS PlANNlNG POST Bree's Ru G•ecte Brea Man Appointed Planner Former Brea Mayor Rex Gaede was appointed to the Orange Collllty Planning Com· miss ion Tuesday by Supervisor Ralph Diedrich. Gaede, 47, resigned his council seat Monday to accept the com· mis sion appointment. He replaces for}ller Commission Chairman Margaret Cranston who moved to Colorado. Gaede is executive director of the Child Guidance Center of Orange County. He had served on the Brea council since 1975 and also is past chairtnan of the Orange County Mental Health Advisory Board. He was narrowly defeated June 6 for the Republican nomination in the 69th Assembly Distric t, by attorney Ross Johnson of Anaheim. 6WC Support·~d Jury Assails Police School County government should abandon plans to build a police training academy in El Toro and cast its lot with the training pro- gram at Golden West College, lbe Orange Cowity Grand Jury said Tuesday. The jury's report was s harply critical or SherifC Department plans to build the training center adjoining a planned fire training facility in rural El Toro. While it faulted the proposed site because of the impact of jet aircraft noise, the Jury ~lso took a swipe at the department's training program. '·. . . The philosophies and training programs set forth in the Golden West proposal are far s uperior to those now advocated and practiced by lbe Sheriff's Department." the jury said. In an earlier report, the Grand Jury criticized stress training that ls part of the sheriff's pro- gram and called for an overhaul of training techniques. In its report Tuesday, the jury said, In effect, that the Sherm's Department should yield to the county's police chiefs and their preference ror the police train· ing program at Golden West. The Grand Jury noted that Golden West "has give n a number one priority to expand· ing its academy curriculum and has designated land for a new facility." Moreover, the jury said, there Is no need for two training facilities in Orange County and separate facilities "will only In· tens ify the estrangement between the sheriff and local police chiefs." Sheriff Brad Gates bas pumped for construction or lbe training academy In El Toro as "the best and least costly of the alternatives available to the lax· payers." nearby El Toro Marine Air Base makes the s ite an illogical choice. However. the jury didn't com- ment oo the feasibility of locat- ing the fire training station on the site. Suspect's Suicide Ends Case Orange County Sheriff's of· ricers have closed the murder file they opened five days ag<> when Carmelita Arbiso was shot lo death in her San Juan Capistrano home. They took their action at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday when Paul Ben· jamin Black, 47, died in the in· tensive care section at UC Irvine Medical Center from a self. inflicted bullet wound. lnves~ators SOtU?ht Black for four days before they found him in an Anaheim motel. Mo· ments after he was asked to sur- render, officers heard a shot and found Black. shot in the bead, ly· ing on the floor of his room. The Midway City man died 11 hours later. _ Officers said the gun used by Black to end his life was the ooe used to kill Mrs. Arbison, 64, as she and the suspect apparently quarreled in her San Juan home. They said Black blamed Mrs. Arbiso for encouraging her niece to end her common law re· lalionship with Black and return to San Juan Ca pistrano. 1 i ' • Orange County Sheriff's of· ricers have determined that a man whose body was round Tuesd ay in an orange grove near the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station was shot to death before he was .dumped there. Hardison said a few minutes later be received a phone call fron:r Police .Chie f James Parsons. The produce r is John Dykstra, who woo an Academy Award as s upervisor or special photo· graphic effects for "Star Wars." His company, Industrial Light and Magic. did the special ef· fects for "Star Wars." Gaede, a lieutenan~ colonel in the Air Force Reserve. also is past president and trustee of the Brea-Olinda Unified School 1JiSlrfct Board of Trustees and past vice president of the Brea Chamber of Commerce. Backed by a study th,,at showed Joint police-fire use of some of proposed center's build· lngs would save $759.125, Gates has won the backing of the Coun· ty Board or Supervisors. They said Black threatened other members of the Arb1so family last weekend before he confronted Mrs. Arbiso and shot her. · ,, - Investigators said the body lay in the grove near the in· ters ection of Jeffre y and Trabuco roads for about a week before it was round by irrigation workers. The body bas not yet been identified. Officers said it is that of a man aged about 35 to 40, ful· ly dressed and with no outstand· ing marks or features that would aid identification. "He said he had parked ii· legally and be a pologized ... Hardison said. "I was delighted that he called ... if the police oHicers had been there on of· fi"cial business it would have been all right, but they weren't and there were parking lots avhilable. "I got towed away for parking illegally and if I bad done what they did, I'd get towed away a second time." Gals ~-Hit Stones MEMPIDS, TeM . CAP) -A group ol Memphis women was to picket the Mid-South Coliseum today during a concert by the British rock group, the Rolling Stones. The demonstration is being or-· ganlzed by tbe Memphis Chapter or Women Against Violence Against Women. The group ls part of a Los Angeles based organization that bas been protesting the Stones' portrayal or women in their performances and recordings. •'The history of the Rolling Stones i!r ma5ocbls t , ·~ a spokesman said. "They promote vioh~nce against women by showing them to be s ubmissive animals, to be no more than a piece of meat -something to be abused just for pleasure." Universal has not replied to the Fox suit, but production is continuing on the AEC serfes7 20th Century-Fox, of tourse, had an opportunity to create its own TV series, but felt "Star Wars" had a much greater theatrical value and that a TV version might lessen its value, s a id D a vid Hand e lman, secretary of the movie com· pany. This month, Fox and two merchandising companies filed o federal suit against Arco In· dustries Ltd. of Hong Kong. It charged copyright infringe- ment in the manufacture of a line of plastic figures similar to lbose from "Star Wars." Dollar D ips Again TOKYO <AP> -The dollar fell to another record low of 203.80 yen in early trading on the Tokyo foreign exchange market today but recovered to close at 205.325. Riots Flare in Mexico Angry Studenu Torch Matamoros Night Club MATAMOROS. Mexico (AP) -Violence erupted again early today in this riot-torn border town aa 1t.udenta stormed through the red-Ugbt dlat.rict. on the ouutdrt.s of the clty, burnlng one night spot and causing heavy damage to two others. A lew miles away, soldiers armed with machine guns patrolled the charred, debris· strewn site of a lour-hour riot Monday nltbt that cauaed an estimated t:2 million d1mage and let\ three people dead and 30 injured. Police said ooc person was m. Jured ln today's outburst. Tbey sald a lfOUP of youthl stormed the Golden Palace niahl club, ousted customers and set fire to th~ bulldlng. They also hurled roefl•, botUes and other ltem.s LbrOu.gh the windows ol al leut two other ntahl 11poL... police said. Two tttn·agers we~ shot IDd tilled Monday night as atodent.a mobbed the town plau protest. • ins Ute a11ecet:t be1tio1 cte.th taat wedt· of a 15-yur-old llu· dent who had bfMn In police - custody. Three poUce officers had been jailed in connection with the m· cadent. but the students draeged Mayor Antonio Cavazos Into the plaza and demanded that Pollce Chief Emiliano Del Toro also be fired. "-' Wben police tried to break up the ral\y, witneHes reported, the crowd erupt ed. and an estlmated, 8,000 to 7,000 people wept oo a rampa«ie tbat lef\ a trail of destroyed banks, busi· nesse1 and government build· ings. Del Toro submitted bi~ ~ lgn1tloA Tuesday bul city of· ficlal• refu:sed to accept it. Instead, they suspended Del Toro pendi.na tbe outcome of an lnvestlgaUoo lnto the student's death. A tblrd death was reported from Monday nlahl's violence wbtn 0Ukial1 dlacovered charred rem.a1na in a Jud•t's of. nee Jo I.be clty Jail buildlna. M.aLatOal"OI {s I cJ\)' Of about 300,000 people across the RJo Gran de frorn Brownsville. Teiu. • \ Jail official Antonlo Peru Trevino said 10 prisoners escaped and four were injured durmg &be fracas. . "It's Matamoros• turn to catch hell," Arenz said, referring to recent slmilar violence in o\ber northern Mexican towns. Local union members called for a general ltrlke Tuesday to show support for the city ad· mlnlstratioo. Some stores were closed but it was business as u1ual ln aectlons o r town popular with Aroerlcan tourltU. Several arrests were reported Tuesday night as lootin1 ~ Unued in sections of downtown. Some local observers aald the violence wu pollUe,ally motiv&t· ed , but Edmundo Loaano, a s pokesman for Tama\lllpas Gov. Enrique Cardenas Gonulea, down.pl~ the siplficance ol recent polltlcal problems In northern Mexico. He aald the rtoters ~re mott Interested ln looting. "It 'a slmlbr to what happened In New York. Once tho c?Owd starta ... madness," he 11ld~ I Gaede ts a San Francisco native. He and his wife, Susan, have three children. The Brea City Council bas ap- pointed business s upervisor Carey Nelson, Sl. as Gaede's replacement on the council. Union Hits J arvis LAS VEGAS <AP) -The nation's largest AFL-CIO union adopted a resolution Tuesday c ondemning California 's Proposition 13 after a heated de- bate in which delegates warned that "Jarvis fever" was spread· ing across the country. ' But as is the case with the planned fire training center. it won't be known how either proj· eel will fare until county budget bearings next month. In El Toro's favor is the fact that the county already owns the land adjacent to the James Musick Honor Farm as weU as the projected $759,125 savings in building costs. Gates bas also argued that s ome of the honor farm 's racllitles, such as the mess hall. could be used by trainees and their instructors. But the Grand Jury said that, even with sound-attenuated buildings, the jet joise from - Embezzllng Sentence Set SAN DIEGO <APl -Sh1rley Ann Brown of Vista will be sentenced Sept. 5 on her guilty plea to embezzling $27 ,388 from a check-cashing office at Camp Pendleton. The former Ma r ine base c a s h ier was arrested in Honolulu. Three other counts were dropped with her plea Tuesday. The sentence, a po6Sible 10 years in prison and a maximum $10,000 floe. will be imposed by U.S. District Judge Gordon Thompson Jr. OMEGA QUARTZ G em T alk TIME AFTER TIME we haw tmprot>td lfme mccuuMMnt What t ime 1, 1~ We take It for oranted that the answer Is almost always evallable. But It wasn't always so. Once, man had Oflly the moon, st.rs and MaSOnS f« a celenclii!lr. and hts stomach to tell the aPPf'OJCimttt time. Then, about 3,000 8.C., man bullt Stonehet ige, a series of rouQh stone monuments In the English countryside. Historians beflwe that this was the first successful attempt at eccurete ti me measurement. sun and shadoW1 w.re captured In • pr.else way. When St. Peter's Bull lea WU t>Ullt In the 4th century, It wn positioned so that on the first day OI Sprlno, the sun Shines on the altar. A llttl• later came the sundial. The PhoefWclans UMd notdlld candlts to mark time, Orlent•ls burned knotted oran ropes. Hourglasses pre-dated the birth of Christ. Oocks tame during the mlddl• eoes, foltowed by pot.kttwetcheS In the 1700s and wristwatches durlnc,a this century.1 What's nut? on1y time will ttlf. s~ •lectronlcs md nut.INr-enerov unOouotedly 4mt part of our tlmt-meesot'lnQ future. t \ TAILORED LIFESTYLE Omega, o fitting and flatten companion fot the man and for th• woman whose life.$Cytes ore spork4td by c:hotl9•-<>f-poc• ond d\009•-of-plocel OmeQo Ouottz fot on·dme oexut0cy wtthfn seconds o monm. S.. ~m ond ocher Om.gos In our col~n. CONVENIENT TERM!i 30 YEARS IN THE SAME LOCATION -. .. .-14 DAii. V PILOT Wednetd&V J\.me 2$, 1911 "" •ICb~ Tom ~)ll'l'\'.' Marpbine Josi ... :'.':~easting Wielding the Ax WHERE THE ACl'ION IS: &-~f the citizenry are sounding otr in loud raahion these ;;~; •t public bearings as local governments along our coasthne try to cut budgets. Huntington Beach seems to offer a good example or what some or the people are thinking. .After a number of citizens gave vent to their views durmg a public hearing the other night at Huntington Beach City Hall, you gel some notion of where folks think municipal government ought to reduce spending. Most of the vocal people seem to think the cut and chop should conie from the top. VERY FEW TAXPAYERS have called for hefty cutbacks in their poliee or fire departments. Most oU.hein would like to keep getting their trash picked up . Wh~r~ the focus of the whacking seems to focus is up- on murucapal government's top-paid administrators. Those top salaries have the vocal citizenry exercised. A~ the Huntington Beach public budget hearing before th~ ~aty Council, for example, the pay of five top ad· m~n.astrators was ~ttacked by one critic. City Ad-. mm1strator Bud Belsito is paid $50,520 per year. Six other Popul4ce Gathered to Disc1'&a Budget Cuttmg city aides make more than $40,000 annually, although onJy four others were identified by the civic critic. The demand being made was that these salaries be re· duced. Cut 'em back and save the tax dollars, the working people say. So if you're on the City Council, the next question is how much you cut them back and how much tax money gets saved? USE THOSE FIVE TOP Huntington Beach officials as an example. Add up their total salary costs per year and it comes to slightly more than $200,000. How much should they be cul? How about slicing that pay in half? · If that happens, you have just reduced the Huntington Beach city tax rate by about one cent. Each penny on the tax levy will yield roughly $100,000 for the municipal treasury. And in Huntington Beach, you are talking about a city budget, even under current restraints, which might top the $2S million mark. Point here is, that while every buck counts, $100,000 doesn 'l look enormously significant when placed alongside a figure of $2S million. MANY OF THE VOCAL citizenry, therefore, seem to be angered by images of what they believe are fat cats lounging around <;ity hall and drawing hefty paychecks. Clearly then, our local government officials are squeezed between a rock and a hard place. The citizens .are demanding chopped pay in the thousands for the ad- ministrators while at the same time, city councils are ask- ing those same administrators lo find ways to make cuts in the millions. ll 's going lo be an Interesting year. J$34 Million Sales Sets Auction Miirk LONDON <AP> -The richest art auction in history has ended with a total of $34 million paid for the late Robert von Hirsch's col- lection. The total was more than double the pre·sale estimate of $14.8 million and three times the previous record of $11.8 million paidr 13 months ago for the contents of Mentmore Towers, the home of the Earl of Rosebery. Both auctions were staged by Sotbeby Parke Bernet. ~rt world sources said the $34 million would be spread among relatives in Au.stria, Switzerland, Britain and the United States or the 94·year-old German-Jewish leather manufacturer who died in Basie, Switzerland last November al the age of 94. ' Tan ks. Warpl anes Vietnam Forces Slnm Cambodia BANGKOK, Thailand <AP) -Vietnamese forcu u.sln1 tanb and warplanes have launched a new push into nelabboring Cambodia and may have penetrated up to 37 miles into the territory or its onetime Communist ally, Thai and American mllltary analysts said today. The sources were uncertain whether the operation -said to in· volve as many as 70,000 · Vietnamese troops on both sides of the border -was aimed at Mekong River town or Kampong wiping out Cambodian frontier Cham. bases or bringing down the Com-TJlal military sourcea said a munist government in Phnom Vietnamese move against Kam· Penh. pong Cham would signal that the u .S SOURCES said the town operation ~as aimed at more f Mi • . . than swb:£111g the border clear o mot, about six mµes inside of Cam an forces that ha Cambodia, was in Yletnause bee •'"-blood . ve hands and that Vietaameee . . n ~~ ~ Y raids mto troops were operating arOUhd Viel:nam. the Chup rubber plantation, about 37 miles from the frontier and only nine miles from the key Russia Sets NewsDlen's Court Date MOSCOW (AP> -Two American newsmen were or- dered today to appear for a court hearing July 5 on civil charges of slander because of news reports they wrote questioning the authenticity of a Soviet dissident's televised con· fession. Craig R Whitney of the New York Times and Harold Piper of the Baltimore Sun were handed an indictment demanding that they publish retractions of their re ports in the Soviet press. Whitney said they also could be fined. IT Wil.L BE the first time that American correspondents have been taken to court in the Soviet Union for something they have written. The two newsmen received the indictment al a 15·minute, closed·door session with the pre- sident of the Moscow city court, L. E . Alma.zov. Whitney said he told them to return Friday with written responses to the charge. THE HEARING date was set for July 4, then moved back one day because of the American national holiday, Whitney said. Th e corres pondents were charged with slandering the Sov- iet television program Vremya -Time -in reports they wrote suggesting that the program's producers pieced together film clips and faked a confession to anti -Soviet activities by Georgian dissident Zviad Gamsakhurdia. THE INDICTMENT, which was filed by Vermya's acting chief director, Viktor Pavlov, claimed the taping of the con· fession was carried out under ·'professional norms and pro· cedures." Gamsakhurdia was sentenced to rive years imprisonment and exile. The Americans' reports were based on interviews with friends of his in Tbilisi, the capital of Soviet Georgia. WHITNEY SAID Almazov told him and Piper they have the right to hire Soviet lawyers or seek legal assistance from the U.S. Consulate and that they may can witnesses to testily at their hearing. THAI SOURCES said tbe Vietnamese are in the Parrot's Beak, a slice or Caml)odia ter· rilory that Juts into southwest Vietnam, and in adjoinlog Svay Rieng Province. U.S.' intelligence sources in Washington said the offensive began in the last two weeks. Tb~ Vietnamese thrust puts them about twice as far as earlier assaults in the un· declared war between the two countries, whose Communist rulet's have...,reverted to the en· mity that has been traditional for cenlurifs between the two peoples. HANOI RADIO ln a broadcast Tuesday said Vietnamese troops annihilated two Cambodian battalions in the border .area last . week. But it said the Cambo- dians invaded Vietnamese ter- ritory. An estimated 60,000 Vietnamese troops drove into Cambodia late last year but withdrew, apparently under pres· sure from the Chinese gpvem· menl, Cambodia's chief backer. The Washington sources, who asked not to be identified, said they believe the goal of the cur· rent Vietnamese drive Is to wipe out base camps used by Cambo· dlan soldiers to Infiltrate Vietnam. The U.S. and South Vietnamese armies Invaded the same area in the spring or 1970 in an unsuccessful hunt for the Communist Vietnamese head· quarters U.S. officials claimed was there. HOSTILITIES BEGAN along the SOO·mile border between Cambodia and Vietnam in 1975 shortly after the Communists on both sides or the border defeated the U.S .. backed goVemmeots in South Vietnam and Cambodia. Downpo11r Hits DC .ThunderstomuJ, Rain Hit Most of Nation end Ntw Vortt Itel•. Tiit Wulllr\01on. O.C. lrM rec.ordlel Ill Vl\US ... llY Mrd rtll\1111, esU-tld It 11P lo 111,....quartWI of .., lfl<h Ill ltU 111•11 30 mlnu1n, Kcordlfl!I to llle N•llOMI WNtl!ff Service . Tetteperat.urn HI Le~ '° ~ •t .. " .. ., 1' ., 71 .SJ ts n NATION I WORLD I WEATHER Pre-IHglat Palave~ R.ussian cosmonaut Pyotr Klimuk , left, attended pre- flight press conference with Polish cosmonaut Miroslaw fi:ermaszewski, Tuesd~y, prior to being launched into or- bit aboard Soyuz 30 m the second Soviet International space shot. The duo is preparing to join two Soviet cos- monauts aboard the orbiting Salyut 6 space station tonight. ... Fear Reali°'d Woman Shoi· by Stmy Bulkt TACOMA, Wash. <AP> -Peggy Ann McClain, who bad wor· ried about the saf"t?ly of the streets around her suburban Parkland home, died in her own living room when a bullet tore through the front door on ber 58tb birthday. It was fired by a police officer dur· ing a shootout with a drug suspect outside. "It was fast. We heard the noise, looked and shut the door," Mrs. McClain's husband. Sam, said Tuesday. A bullet penetrated theone·incboakdoo{ and struck Mrs. McClain in the back. "IT'S FUNNY. JUST THE OTHER DAY, sbe was telling a neighbor that you could no longer feel secure in Parkland," McClain said. "You didn't feel like you could go out and take a walk at night like you used. to." Mrs. McClain had spent a quiet evening in front of the television, celebrating her 58th birthday with her husband and son Saturday night. PIERCE COUNTY SHERIFF George Janovich said Tuesday that ballistic tests showed the fatal bullet came from a .3S7·caliber revolver assigned to Deputy Richard Knabel. "My mom's dead ... over an $800 drug bu.st that became a full·scale war right on our street," said Dwight McClain, 34, who held his dying mother In his arms on their living room floor while police contlned to fire st the fleeing suspect. A FORT LEWIS SOLDIER, Spec. 4 Owen M. L ett, 21, bas., been named in warrants charging deadly assault "2d the sale of controlled substances. He is still at large. Several miles from the McClain home in the suburb of Spanaway, two undercover detectives bad made an $800 purchase of amphetamines from a suspected drug dealer. said Henry Suprunowski, Pierce County sheriff's chief criminal deputy. The suspect, be said, bad a gun and managed to get away. The de· lectives radioed for help and soon police were on the suspect 's trail in a chase at speeds up to 100 mph. . The suspect's car slammed into a utility pole about SO yards . from the.McClain home. Then the shootout began. Albu'que Amerltto ..,,.viii• Allente e.111,,....... Blrmlnvham Boise llo\IO<I BrownWlll• lluflelo OWlrh tnSC CNwlstnWV Ou<e., c1nc1 ..... 11 O.nl- Col"mbvw O.JFI Wiii Oenwr Otlroll Hertfofd ... , .... ., 5' 11 70 E1r1., morning tempar1turu l(OUl\CI IN "'110n renoecl trom .. cteorMt In Senbuf9, C..llf •• l.o IS Ill P1111ma City, FlL f:aHfornfa • Well, maybe eo ••.••.• H-IUhl Hou\ ton lnd'e"lls JK11t'Ylll9 K•n'• City LAI\ Veoet LllUI AOCIL LOll AllOll• LOlll1vlll1 -1'11~1• Ml1ml Mllw1uk• .. 71 .111 17 ., .. . ., .. ..... 02 ., 71 t;) u t) .. ..29 '1 74 ., S7 ..... 01 '° 10 n '° as ,. " ,. Al ,. n .. "' to ,, .... .. 17 11 St .. 77 U IO .. IO .01 .... .,... .... 0......, ........... ...,.,.,.., froday II YOll On ,,..,. - Vol" -ll't ~ !IO I> "' cMt bit!.,... I ""' lllCI ,0... COPY -1191141h•tG ''°""""" -'°'"<ltY II WOW dlO no- ---IW I• l!I. .... ::::;:•'" .,... _ _... ...... 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In ttie grocery ads in the Dally PJlot. • Confuted by all the conflicti ng claims? • Shop the D•lly Piiot, get the facts, compare ..... then you know you're really getting the most for your money. I •JJ I £1 Q ll•l I 642-4321 • CALIFORNIA Wednesday. Juno 28. 1978 DAIL v PILOT AS Solons OK $15.2. Billion Budget Anti-ahortion DeIDocrats Vow Fight on Funding SACRAMENTO (AP> -As· sembly Democrats bavf: broken a d eadlock over their $15.2 billion version of 1he proposed state budget, but tbe action only delayed confrontations over eborUon funding and govern- ment spending limits. A nti-aborllon Democrats agreed Tuesday nlgbt to vote for the budget in a preltminary form. clearing the way for a 55-22 vote that allowed it ut pro· ceed toward a two-house con· ference committee. But they warned they would not yield again on any form or Gov. Edmund Brown Jr.'s $34 million budget proposal to con- linue funding Medi-Cal abortions for poor women "WE WILL STAND as a bloc against the budget if it contains provisions that are to us moraJly and philosophically repugnant." As sem blyman Alister McAlister. D·San Jose, told his <.'olleagues before lht vote. He said he was speaking for 12 other Democrats. He told reporters he was will· ing to accept abort.ion funding in cases of danger to the mother 's • lift. rape or incest. But he said current federal restrictions are too liberal and he would not ac- cept any state funding that replaced withdrawn federal dollars. The federal law approved by Congress and President Carter last August allows abortion funding only in cases or rape, in- cest. and danfer or death or severe physics bealth damage to the mother. Those conditions cover only a small fraction or previously funded abortions. BROWN ORDERED the state Me<li-Cal program to replace the withdrawn federaJ funds. saying the right lo an abortion shouJd not depend on a woman's in· come. The budget proposal. which includes restrictions after the third month of pregnancy. would cover about 86.000 abortions If McAlister's group holds firm, Democratic leaders will either have to yield on the abortion is~ue or reach an ac- commodati~n with Republicans over the spending limit proposal that GOP members want on the November state ballot. The budget vote was one inore than the two thirds majority neede d for pass age . One Democrat voted no and one abstained . Of the 23 Republicans. 21 voted no and two were absent. ""~ RE PUBLICANS w · hheld their votes as part heir de· mand for an Assembly floor vote on a proposed constitutional amendment by Sen. George DeukmeJian. R·Long Beach. that would limit increases in s tate a nd locat government spending to the percentage in· crease tn the cost of living plus population. A similar proposal by lhen- Cov. Ronald Reagan was reject- ed by state voters in 1973. But Republicans say the recent passaite of Proposition 13. a $7 billion property tax cut, in· d1cates the public mood has chan,ged. Though Brown and Assembly S p eaker Leo McCarttw. the Democratic leader in tttf lower house. say they want a slate spending limit. five hours of closed-door negotiations Tues- day failed to produce an agree- ment that would e nd the GOP boycott. THE STICKING point ap- parenUy was Republicans' in· sistence that the measure move out of a Democrat·contr.olled committee to the floor before the Legislature begins a recess in early July. Assembly GOP leader Paul Priolo of Mali bu told reporters that · the Republicans were will- ing to wait until Aµgust for a floor vote on the measure. pro- vided the legal deadline for qualifying November ballo.1. tneasuresis extended-fronr.fune 29 to Au~. 15 as expected. He said McCarthy offered to put a measure on the Assembly floor an August that was "ge nerally within the parameters of our legislation " But he said McCarthy would not agree to act before the recess and did not give satisfactory guarantees "I TIUNK WE'RE quite far apart." Priolo said. McCarthy. D-San Francisco. told reporters that the Democrats would proceed with a spendmg hnut proposal on their own for action in August He blamed the breakdown on "the rather passionate feeling against the governor" in the Republican Caucus. The six-member conference t'ommittee will try to reconcile differences _b.e_t~een the two versions of t.fiebudget." Besides abortion funding, they include state employee pay. prison con- struction. and University of Ca liforma tuition. THE ASSEMBLY generally fol1owed Bl'own"'l> -rec-ommen dation for a state pay freeze but proposed a 2 percent raise for some employees making less than S23,000. The Senate ap- proved a 5 percent raise lor all state workers. Under terms of emergency state aid to local governments approved last week. the state pay raise will be tho maximum allowed for local government workers and welfare recipients. The Assembly also wants the freeze applied to legislators and Judges. ' APWi....,... SER~ES TIMc- Jane Russell Ex-actress Serving Four Days Bombing Link Widens SANTA BARBARA CAPl Jane Russell. 57, one of the mov- ies· glamor queens in the 1950s, 1s serving a four -day jail sentence for driving while intox- icated, authorities say. Munici pal Court Judge Joseph Lodge revoked probation and sentenced Miss Russell on Mon· day. and she began serving her sentence that night. authoriltes said Tuesday Briggs Suspects Said Tied to More Blas.ts Miss Rus,se"ll, who lives in nearby Montec1\o, was put on probation following an intoxicat- ed driving conv1ct10n in 1976. She was arrested and charged a second time followmg an acci- dent last March, sheriff's de· partment officials said. Owking SH.Ypect Aided San Francisco police attempt to aid a man they identified u~ Greg Uartlow. 31, after he swallowed balloons they said might have been filled with a heroin-like substance. Police claim Bartow is a known narcotics dealer. LOS ANGELES <AP I - Evidence round in an apartment used by ltve members of a rev· olutionary g roup links them with other bombings across the nation, authorities claimed in a lt'tler filed in Los Angeles Superior Court. The rive -Cla>1on Van Lyde- graf. 62 . Leslie Ann Mullan. 33 : Judith Emil y Biss ell , 33; Michael Justesen. 27. and Mark Curtis Perry, 29 will be tried Oct 30 on charges of conspiring lo blow up the Fullerton office of state Sen John Bnggs. DEPUTY DISTRICT Attorney Robert Jorgensen, urging Tues· day that Van Lydegraf's bail be inc rcased from $200,000 to $500.000. alleged a typewriter found in the· defendants' apart· ment was tested by the FBI. A hearing on Jorgensen's motion was set for Friday Jorgensen said the FBI de· termined the typewriter was used to type a weather Under- ground communique regarding a bomb placed at the Anaconda American. Brass Co. in Oakland on Sept. 10, 1974. The bomb was discovered before it could ex· plode. ){e said the same typewriter also was used to type a note in which the Weather Underground claimed responsibility for plant· ing explosives J an. 28. 1975. in the U S. State Department in Washington. D.C. and the Federal Building m Oakland. JORGtNSEN SAID a docu· ment entitled "Origins of Fascism ." found in the same apartment. was typed on the same typewriter as was used to type a number of other Weather UndergroWJd communiques. These communiques claimed res ponsibility for explosives m- c1deots at Gulf Oil Co head- quarters in Pittsburgh, Pa .. on June 13. 1974: at the Kennecott Copper Co. headquarters in Salt Lake City, Utah. on Sept. 5. 1977. and at the U.S. State Depart· ment. PUC Oversees '13' Savings Distribution SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -The California Public Utilities Com· mission is taking steps to assure that any tax savings received by utilities or transportation firms because of Proposition 13 would be passed on to customers. Miss Russell. who currently does televis ion commercials, gamed national attention in her first film. ''The Outlaw " The movie was directed by the late Howard Hughes. who had her wear scanty outfits considered risque at the time. Streetu:alkers To Get Jail? 'East Area Rapi-St' Hits Again In action Tuesday, the PUC ordered an investigation to de· termine effects the new property tax cutting amendment will have on rates of companies un- der its jurisdiction. Under the proposal. utilities and transportation companies will be required lo set up tax in· itiative accounts to insure that any tax reductions are passed on to ratepayers and any new tn· <.'reases in taxes, licenses or fees are ren ected in rates. SAN FRANCISCO (AP> -Al- leging that prostitutes prowl "rampant" in two or the city's most popular tourist areas, the Chamber or Commerce. the police chief and the Powell Street Association are demand· 1ng jail term s for the street walkers. San Francisco Municipal Court came under fire from all three parties Tuesday for being sort o n prostitutes. Police statistics show 90 percent or the 1.450 prostitutes arrested so far this year served no time in jail. SACRAMENTO !AP) -The "eas t area rapist" has attacked a 23·~ ear-old woman who lived alone m an apartment coniplex hi s 38th victim, the Sacramento County sberill'i de· parlment reports Bill M i ller . sheri ff 's spokesman. said Tuesday it was the first lime the rapist has str.uck in Sacramento since April 14. and only the seoind tame man apartment complex His last four attacks were in Da'vis and Modesto, two in each city, M1llt·r sa1d Debate• Propo•ed LOS ANGELES CAP> Gov. ( J Body Exh..,.ed SJ'ATE LOS ANGELES CAP> -In or- d<.'r "to prove or d1spr0ive ------------certain physical evidence con· Ken Reitz, Younger's cam- J>aign manager, said after meet· ing here with the governor's aides Tuesday that the attorney general would respond by July 7. when the two sides meet again. Subpoena Duobef#ed SACRAMENTO CAP> -The Sacramento Union says a re porter is refusing to obey a Superior Court judge's subpoena of tapes and notes from an in terview with a witness in the El len Della murder trial cernlng the case ... sheriff's in- vestigators have exhumed the body of one of the 13 victims at· tributed to the Hillside Strangler Sheriff's Lt. Phil Bullington said Cindy Lee Huds peth's body was removed from the mortuary Tuesday and returned a few hours later to check certain evidence, but he would not elaboralt:> OAKLAND CAP> -Attorneys for Wilham and Emily Harris say the woman they're accused of kidnapping -Patricia Hearst Defense attorneys Tuesday told a judge that Miss Hearst, kidnapped more than rour years ago and currently serving a prison term on a conviction of joining her abductors in a bank robbery. could not accurately testify because "her experiences over the past few years have af. !ected her ability to perceive. rec· ollect and communicate." .. .. .. • • • .. • • Starting July 1 all rates col- lected to cover propert' tax ex- penses will be subject to refund. rate adjustment or balancing treatment. The two business groups saiO- the situation Is particularly bad on Powell Street. where tourists wait to board the city's famed cable cars. and in Union Square, at the heart of San Francisco's shopping district. Edmund G. Brown Jr has p~ posed a senes of four televised gubernatorial debates prior to the Nov 7 general election. His Republican opponent, State At· torney General Evelle J . Younger. as expected to reply to the proposaJ early next month. The Union said Tuesday that the order was issued Monday by Judge John J . Boskovich to re- porter John Hammarley. -"lacks sufficient memory" to ·•t...illlllh.• testify against the pair. • ............................................... _. rtists Dunk the Ta% Man Cl A charity event to ralae funds fot an En cinitas church w\ll feature a game that is , bound to lure mo t or the crowd. ln a re· h~orsal for the August event Is San Oteao County Assessor E C Williams. who Is dropped into u box of water A baseball was thrown to drop him this one by San Diego Padres pttcher Randy Jones. ' • HERB • • ! FRIEDLA~DER • ,. IS MAKING • G REAT DEALS • FREE: 50 GALS : Ot'GAS • l···•~ff''li'•lf4l h1"11t ttfft••l41tl•lt.,,H . ~ orOll.('llr\~(;t.:s • .............. -·~ ............. ,., .. ,. nto•a u t••.,.>•.,.c•• « • e HONDA e • Jt 11'M .. H•llh~ • it w nn wro1 ... 1 ... ~, ,. •1n •••• * • * • * * * * ·: • MG·TRIUMP·H • • e JAGUAR e « : Fl1\T·LANCIA ! • Ut n~~ft&._'!:!!::;:111•:_,m « .... * •• *. *. * * * •• • e TOYOTA e • • • •• 1.. .. -c.......... • it c • .,-c,,.,,~ "' .... « •*********** ... : :\IOTORll0)1 f. ti • S.\LES & RE~T.\LS ti RESERVE ~OW : it 537-7777 Ext. 500 -tr .. .,. ••••••• ** ... • e LEASING e lt All M•~H-f'-~ • 0..-tllf •hr "s3f'H7T'Ext~ JO-O- it************ Your Dally Piiot can be Recyclfd, Or•1199 CoHI COllfOt h I,,. offlcl•I ~CllflOCtnt~ lor Cott• MtM J1111e 29-July 2 Thunday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday. View nearly eighty professional arti.sts and craftsmen displaying thetr onguial works, including olls, watercolors, seascapes and abstracts. It's another Fashion Island expertence. And 1rs free. In Newport Beach on Pacific Coast Highway between MacArthur and jamboree. '-rile dllfennce between better & best!' 0 I or•noaeoas1oa.1vP1101 Editorial Page ........................................................... . .ti • Wednesday, June 28. 1978 AObert N Weedt Publlsher lhOmH l(eevil /Editor Barb.Ira l(r~lblChlEdltori.t P~ Editor This Tax Sho\Vs Fiscal Wisdom The J ~~ne City Councll's adoption of a tax against new development, called a systems development charge. ought not to be perceived as a sneak attack on taxpayers Lo recoup Prop. ~property tax revenues. The council had deliberated the charge for more than a year before Howard Jarvis became a familiar name. It certainly is true that the council m ajorit y j ammed thl'Ougb the tax to beat a July 1 cutoff date provided in the legis lation against ne w taxes; with or without J arvis. il would have been enacted some time this year. Irvine also found itself in the lucky circumstance that the Jarvis losses did not devastate the tax base. Because the city is Qne of few in the slate s till grow· ing rapidly. this single maneuver, the systems d evelop· mcnt charge. ena bles the city to pick up the whole loss und more. The council majority apparently felt il fair that new dL•velopmcnt should pay for new municipal services re· quired to support it. It simply shifted from one form of taxation to another to recover revenues. without direct effect on existing resi· dents. A dispassionate analysis would respect this as fi5cal rcspol'l'Sibility District Needs Unity .. Last week's approval of a county study to determine whether the Capistrano Unified School District should re· mam intact or be split into two or three s malJer d istricts tame at a good lime. Tht.> study was prompted by a petition from 250 San Clemente residents. They said local voters might be more likely to s uppart school construction if they knew that new srhools would be built closer to home and not at the other end or the sprawling Capistrano district. On June 6. Capistrano Unified voters defeated the fourth consecutive ballot measure in less than three n·ars On the same day. California voters approved Prop l;j, clim1n:.sting bond or lease-purchase elections as .t method of financing school construction. So the question is no longer who will suppart school bond clet'l1ons lo fund new schools, but how Capistrano st•hools nm <:ope with an influx of 8,000 new students ex· pl'ctcd in the next fi vc years. H d<><?~ not seem appropriate to break up a strong un- rf 1cd school district. with its wealth of •resources a nd wasoned admimstrator:; Still. the county study will be \\OJ'thwh1lc tf 1l convinces the dissident element that thev '-land stronger tog ct her than apart and that the syst~m 1s worthy of thc11 s upport Hard Decisions Last week Saddleback Valley Unified School District t rustccs 1·eversed an earlier decision to delete s ummer school programs for specia l education children. The move highlights grave problems facing school trustees. Certainly, one cannot argue against the validity or af. fording handicapped c hildren every opportunity to learn and bring them selves up socially, physically and in tdlectually with their peers. lfol the fact remains that t rustees are up against a wall fin;:incially. Reduced available funds under Prop. 13 \\ 111 mukc it increasingly harder to grant concessions to :1dvocatcs of distract programs ranging from remedial 1 cading to athletics. All district programs simply cannot survive the pro· 1ectcd S4,2 million decline in SVUSD income. That means trustees are going to be faced with hard decisions about ranking priorities in an era of limits. Trustees arc not going to make many friends when it C'Ome~ down to cutting progrnms favored by many in the <:om m unity . But tuts must be made and trustees should be willing tu fJ<.'c up to that as lhe elected representatives of the pub~ They. not the puf)lic. must finally m ake the de· tision on cuts. howc·vcr lonely that responsibility might hl' The 'oitc of lh(' electorate has bellowed out strong ~uppor1 t'o1· 1imlts on spending. And that's the way it is. • Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views expressed on thts page are those of their authors and artists Reader comment 1s invited. Address The Dally Pilot, P.O Box 1560. Cosaa Mesa, CA 92626 Phone (71 4) 642·4321 Boyd/Drawing Room By L.M. BOYD q Question arises as to why lhat special sitting place in old·timey houses was calJed the drawing room. It was where the ladies retired after dinner lo leave the men at ta. ble to lheir cigars a nd liquor. Because of the ladies' retreat thert>to. lhe name origmaUy was the '"withdrawing room·· Q "llow much money do Donny and Mane Osmond muke"1" /\ Rt"PQrts vary, But those who c laim to know say they each gro!ls about Sl.500 a '4Cek Dear Gloomy Gus Two effects or Prop. 13 may cancel eoch other out. I refer lo laying orr police oHlc rs when thousand s more kids a re roamins the street.a due to summer school cancellation. A.R. What sort of breakfast ap peals to you? President U.S. Grant liked nothing be tler to start oH his day than a cucu mbe r drenched in vinegar. More men than women in France use cos metics. Q . "What's the longest stretch of highwuy with no traffic lights?'' A. Interstate 75 between Sault Ste. Marie. Mich .. and Tampa, Fla. Jl 's 1.564 miles. Q. ''Why was the Quon!lcl hul of World War I I so called?" A. Because it was first built at the Quonset Pomt Naval Air Station n ear Greenwich, R.l. In 1941 ror airm en. T he greut He"'avyweight Jack Dempsey earned jus t about as much money througho ut his fighting career as did Muhammad All in losing his last match. To that tlsl of inap· propriate nam«is, add bllndworms, which ore ne ither blind n or worms They're leetess h u rdg, Among dogs, the terr iers bark the moat. Amons cats, tho Penlana meow lhc least. The averaa humari btlng ls an 18-year·old Chines 1lrl. Earl Water A Million Here, a Million There l''or an inkling or the rat con· tent of government. consider Governor Jerry Brown 's state budget for the forthcoming fis· cal year commencing July l. as he i nitially proposed it last Janua ry. lt totalled $16 billion. This did not LOclude properly tax relief money subse· quenlly pro- vided in SB l or money f or s tat e emp lo yee salary raises a nd numer- ous new pro· gra m s the ~overnor was pushing. Adding those. lhe aC· tual budget would have ex· Ma ilbox ceeded $18 billion or $8 billion more than when he took office Just 3 11~ years ago. A quick study of the planned budget reveals that Its proposals represented an increa se for state agencies Cor next year of at least $2 billion over last year. That increase alone wou ld use nearly every penny or all the taxes collected from every bank and corPoralion. I t is more than one-third of all the income taxes extracted from every Individual. It is more than half the total of the last full budget s pent by former Governor Pat Brown in 1966. his last year in office. BUT THE increase is worse than that for 1t doesn "t include any of the increases in the mulU· ~- ( ~l!f . HE ~\N'T GQIN NOWHERE. I YANKED THE. DISTRlMORCA?. billipn dollar budgets of health· welfare agencies which cover s uch program s a s we lfare, Medi·Cal. unemployment, men- ta l hospitals and aid to lhe aged . all of which are so vast they defy easy analysis. Neithe r does It include educa· lion which. in the face of declin· ing e nrollments, was s lated nevertheless for increases in state funds of nearly a hC)lf billion dollars for all levels How do budgets get so rat? It starts al the top. The governor's immediate of . rice budget was set at $3 .5 million. up $600,000 from the 1977 figure. T h e four a)'.lencv secretaries under the governor. his cabinet. proposed budgets totalling $3.8 million. an io· crease of $1.7 million. Also pan of th~ governor's office are the orfices or t.:mployee Relations. Planning :1od Resea~ch and Em(•rgency Services. These three had ti c:omblned budget of $7 6 million. up $4.5 million. So the total costot running the gov· ernor's office for one year comes to almost Sl:S million and represents an increase of nearly S7 m1lhon between 1976·77 and 1978·79, almost a JOO percent growth• ALTHOUGH most other stale agencies wtre not «iuile so fast with the burk, neither were they Scrooge!>. Consum er Affairs added S8 million for a total S38 m1ll1on. Genera l Ser vices showed :i $26 million increase to Sl88 m1lhon. Housing and Com. mun1ty Development went up S7 5 million t o a total Sl2.5 million. l~ Highway Patrol in· creased $25 million for a total $223 m1lhon : the Department of Motor Vehic les a dded $24 million lo boost its budget to $151 million. Solid Waste Manage. mc nt Jumped from a $2 million budi;:l!t to S20 m i llion ; the Department or Education came out with $239 million, $67 million more than its 1977 budget: P arks and Recreation upped $27 milh.on for a total S83 million. and Indus trial Relations jumped lrom $6S million to $87.6 million. The figures go on and on in a wh1rli.,g dervish of spending. Evt?n lhe Legislature boosted its own budget Sl2.5 million to. totaJ $57.5 million. · TllEBE IS little reason to doubt this same frenzy of spend· 1ng ex1sto; at all levels of govern· ment especially the schools. with tbe result government has become utmost uncontrollable. As the late Senator Everett Dirksen quipped. "You add a m1lhon here and a million there an<I pretty soon you are talking big money.·· Tax. Calendar Change Would Aid Schools To the Eciltor. Schools and local governments could turn S3 into S4 plus S ince property t axes are based upon a fi scal year begin· mng on July I each year. schools a nd local ~overnments arc coerced almost in entirety to the sam e fi scal year Schools in particular thus are put tnlo a rather ridiculous situation budgetwisc. Schools must pro, duce a budget beginning July 1 and e nding on June 30. However. no tax funds arc available to th<'m until after the December 10 deadline for the firs t one·halC of property tax payments . What do they do from July 1 until the end of December'' The logical solution, of course. is to budget and maintain a large sur. plus. Secondly, thex.._may borrow funds, paying intef'5t which in· creases their costs. IT WOULD seem more than logical to move up t he due date for the first one-half payment of property taxes to a Sept. 10 date ror the 1979·80 fi scal tax year and possibly to July 10 for the 1980·81 fiscal tax year . Since tax bills will be general· ly much lower. there wouldn't be any excessive burden on the <1verage taxpayer. The benefits: Schools would no longer need such excessive surpluses and in each of the next two years the s urpluses accumulated could be used to offset lower tax income. Also. by moving up the due date for property laxes. by one· fo urth or a year, the result would be to increase the tax Income by one fourth (or that particular year. An advantage for the taxpayer might be moving the second prop· erty tax deadline awa):' from the April 10 date since s tate and federal mcom e taxes closely follow The period around April has a lways been a bummer for businesses because of co~n t ratc.-d due dates for taxes. Sance county assessors will no lon1tcr have the burdensome job o( reevaluating property to the rormcr extent. it wouldn't seem to 11;train them by pTOVld1ng tax bills three months earlier. DOYLE PHILLIPS s .,,,...iiou To the J<~ltor Wh y not e n courage your Mailbox readers to contribute helpful Ideas to overcome the jobs/services reductions cau11e<l by the passage of Propositon 13? Surely the contlnuin~ growth or Culifomla connot be stymied by s uch 108ses of funds to meeting ever lncrcnslntr nc.cdg. My contr1but1on to th stott or Ideas relating to con~tructlve ef torts would ~ for the state to Immediately implement lt&lll•· tk>n to replue the lost revenue from non·res1dents and toun sts. This class of visiting people de· serve lo bear their share of state costs r ather than have free ac· cess to beaches. parks. etc. This and other ideas. such as a $tatc lottery. may do more than offset the lost revenue. The dis· senting factors likewise deserve to be heard from -in perspec· t1ve with the greater good. ART WEISSMAN Di1dll1uio11ed To the Editor. Althou~h it was probably simple·mindcd of me. one of the things that has kept me afloat in the contaminated political waters of the last few years has bc.,-i the hope that there remained a few men in public life who were '-'till unwilling to sacrifice their own in· tc~nty and pr\nciptcs ror political expediency I CLUNG to the possibility that Sen. Alan Cranston was o ne of those people. a nd l applauded his opposition to Prop. 13. lie knew then -as he knows now -that Howard Jarvis is a fortuitous de· magogue who h as done a n enormous disservice to the state and ultimately, I suspect to the nation When Cranston fawned over Jarvis in Washington this week. he lost my vote and my respect. I'm sorry for us both. JOSEPHN. Bf;LL .\'offero To the Editor: I am appalled al the effects Prop. 13 is having on budget cuts to those less fortunate than we a re Homeowners enjoy a profit. often hlgh and unrealistic, when they self their homes. Then they welcome high evaluation. Home buyers are aware of the cost of taxes when they buy their homes. If they are too high, then the price of the home they have chosen ts too hl&h. A pproxlmately one fourth or the payment Is tax deductible, lowering It still more. I N ORANGE County, the services we received for our monty were worthwhile. In most cases the money saved w11 not necessary lo maintain a decent stnndord or llvlnl{, only Lo alfonl more luxuries. This Is not t.h case with the poor, blind, aaed, unemployed or disabled. Where Is the conscience of the people? Why iRn't Jarvis stand· Ing trial for drunk drlvln1 and driving wttbout a license lnstead of being treRtcd ats o bcro ln Washington" T . JONF.S Tl.w ao •ltt' To the Editor Repulsive IR the word to ~ln this letter with. Why rcpulsl\· - because or what the politicans are doing in the wake of Prop. 13. The politicians have shown their boldness year after after year by defeating any bill that would have lessened the tax burden on the people. Now that they have been overwhelmed at the polls. they have set up their operation to divide and conquer. HAS THERE been any talk about wiping out patronage jobs" Any talk about wiping out useless projects? Any talk about c urbing pensio n s f o r th e pollt1c1ans'! Any talk about only allowing a politican one pension and that one being dropped to a sensible figure? Perhaps these things have been mentioned and I have missed them : however I doubt it. This is the waste the peopl<' have set out to end and this 1~ why so many of us voted for Prop 13. The politicians know this: however they are makm~ cuts in schools. police. fire d e partments and co unty workers trying to pit them against the w or k1n 1t homeowners. ll is time the teachers. police. fire men and county workers and homeowners joined force~ statewide and voted these very c:lever men out or office. IM them look for a lucrative job and pension somewhere else. Don't let Prop. 13 go into the state sewe r : unite now before it's too late. WALTER L. BIGNEY Airport 1\'olse To the Editor: ln your letters to ~he editor section ·or J une 7, a teller from Mr. Willinm M. Monroe headed .. Aircr aft Noise" deS'erves at· tention since it leaves lhc im· pression that both commercial airlines and private jets are not acting responsably ut lh Oranl(e County Airport. The county m1lnt1ln itvcn noise monJtoring devl~s lo the take off arHs and lh se units are hooked lnto a computer at t he noise abatem n t llead- Qllartcrs at the airport The noise trom each ruaht is Uiu.' re- corded and printouts or noisy Olghta ar e cllsc~lled In Ute reg· u lar pilots m eeting" by the commercial air lines . An ffpcelally noisy night Is handled lmmed.latcly by telephone for corrective action. WITWN the llmltltlon of their equipment. these 0P1r1tor a re acting res p o nt' b 1 y. to0peraUvely and are ~ccmed about nol8e. The same type of mooltonna Is In etfect for private jcit o~r1- Uon1 and each vl•llln• jet la gJnn a copy or the notM 1bat.e· mcot procedures on landing for sen1ce. etc. Ever y e ffort is made to obtain cooperation from pn.,ate pilot<; and generally this 1s obtatned During the first quarter or 1978 only rour private Jets took off after u ·oo p.m . As lhf newer generation of private JCl s such a s th e Cessn a· c1tat1on. Lear 35 and Jet Star JI 's become more available. this n()tse sour<·e will be greatly re duced. 1To s um up. much has been (tone lO reduce noise al the Orange County Airport and the pilots arc indeed actin g l'Cspons1bly JOSEPH E. JRVlNE F.xccut1ve Director Community Ai rport Council Chur'°h .~e.-d11 T\1 1 lw Ec11t11r I wa!> d1sturbl>d after reading that Ml'!>sr:.,. Cannonito and Tucker want to halt church services an lrvmc schools Most chul'ches presently meet· 1ng in schools arc engaged in a building program. Until these proJects are comple t ed. a I remendous void would be creat- ed by rlosang school doors lo church ~roups on Sunday morn· ings. One needs to-look no farther tha n the front page of this newspaper to realize we need lo encou rage the growth of churc hes in Irvine. I can't help but wonder if th~ gentlemen un· dcrs tand the end result of what they arc asking -or if they just don't have a nything else to do with I heir time. BILL TAYLOR r_.u ,~eedlD To the Editor. Your new!lpaper has always been admirably alert to the needs or do~s and pets an general. T here Is one thing I would like you so very much to write in your newspaper. an<,1 lhot i~ the real Importance of hav1ng a dog's na me. address and telephone number glued to· the collar or flea band. In that way the agony of l o~t dogs i s practlcal l y eliminated. F.!lpeclally with dogs going along on vocation trips or other outln11s. It Is most e!iscntlal to have tln Identification. Not loog ago. I got m y own do)t back lhut wuy. COBY JUDA • utter1 from rcoder• o.re wtfcomt. iht rlQ11t ro condenu lf'ttm to flt IPOC" or eltmtnate label u rtter'Dtld. uttn1 of 300 woTd.t or ltu wtU ~ given prf/~rnace. All ldtttS must In· chldt flgnoturr ond marling odtlru1 but namH ma.11 be ll1WllWld on rt:· ~ll I/ lllf /lcilftl rlOIOft ti oppaTfflt. Pottf'JI will not bt publhhcd TOCKS I BUSINESS Wednesday's NYSE COMPOSITE. TRANSACTIONS 2 p.m. (EDT) Prieea .. ~~""' ~ .... S&*\ "" '-' .... ~ ,.. ~ .... Pfll*I 0.. °'t 't""" 0. V9 't ~Ow t119 l't-0.. (~ I>~ I°"" (lo>., (hQ "' 000\ L\M C~.q 'I I°"" C. ChQ L u. ...... j ,1~ ! l".t: ·~ ~· " 1=: ,·:1· ·' ,i ~" ... "' :::.~:· '::ii ~ ~:.:·~ =rrr ... ·10 .t. ~~ ·~~ .~ :::~ i:~ ~ ~ ~: ~ l:~. , '' ::: ~·i4 u• mP • 111, ·.,. • -.1~ ,.. ,. 10 i d10 * --.. I u1 41 14111--. ~.,. UI? IO ~~t!: ~ .-.101 " uo .. J ~. 11t TeM< llfS-IO . ~ 1M;:: 111 t ts I .Xll.UI ·-111.e• I .. ,:; .. -\It Ull .. 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MM I -t n I + '°' .a. f; ~: 11~ '1'=' ~ r:2t: $to JJ llt =: ~ .J,i ,: ftt· .... i-vi1m'n ?:IT ,:J ~t;: ~ ... ~· \'o .. ~ ·"'1 ,. " • "' E '~' ' Ra M!lll,.. , I '" 1116-i. ~·· IGI' 11 ii . t ~· ... , H<e I 10 .!! 17~ + -.._., .IO 10 Ml \It• ~111tf:>• I, 6 t 20 , ~ f'wlt111'e S 40 J "' ' 6t ..... :f:'' J ft ..... _ -.to II ~ ... lllMM 14 111 Ia• V. Put 1.l' l U ,, 2 21 -... Al ~ ~ ~ ... ~ ,-rt~1 .. t~;-:-;.:. it-r.c ij =.::: ~~\1 j': .. , t • ~ fio ~.CM ti t~ t;-., ~ It e I + ,.. anvu I ti fl...-.. Ii-" S ,_. • j;iiMT,;. • • YI II 1 • t • • a W\'t• ~ &~ • ~ ••• ._ tfllttl ~ M' .. ,...,_ =~ t J )t .,..._: i,; llor 1' '1 16-... tAJU-~~ ~II ii, ":~ ~"":: s~~: ~ ¥=:R~" , ir~ ;~'":-..--., ,;.:.. \t -: ,...... '°' • • ~ 111-,-J..•.. • .. "•!)!' ! Ut t M ~\It M tt !•lit-lit I .. • •• .:I u-: ~ . ., 'H ....... ... .... . • • "" L ... JS 'I ... c ..)4 ~ ~ • I.ft ~ t ff?::·.... ... • .. ' .. :···~ fl! 1 ... ' --~ ·:r~.~ ir!t: --.. u .... •S.' tO] 1 ~i=::::· t111J ~' -:: .. : ·,o;IJ 'ji ,(~.~ t 'f ti 11-. ..... :.. .. ~, t1~" ,, t·11 s;,_+·~ i: J~ ~· .. ~ =~ .. -,• I~-! d t=:;:~ :e: ti y ~ ! ~ f:. ,~ ~\Z ~ ' ., : : ~·-"1i f m::°1 c ~~i~ ~~·e ._.,~ ,;" ~:'! i~I~'.~;~ ,.._.;:t ,ri ,; 81 : § ~~ri: I ad t ~ \. • ti .. . • ~ i= .t 'j ~ ' I!~ '-~~· 'T. ! I.! r.i-Ill • ! r.~.:::: ,,. ) -;· . '"' : rn;! t: ••• s ,:.:,1 " -~: = /- Prop. 13 Backed SAN FRANCISCO (AP > -Federal Reserve Chairman G. Wlllia.m Miller said Tuesday the tax revolt In Callfomia rdfflmt1 bJa be.lief that mort! governm~l funds abould bCI U'an1rerrec1 to tbe priv•te a.ector. "It hat beeome apparent lhat gov. emm~t tpeodin,g does not alwayt produce tb desired rHult - economically or 10clally -and m.., not be the most etle.otlve way ot reaching our desired objecUvea," Miiler told the 1Mual meettni or a ci•lc froup called the Bay Area Cound . w.dneedty,June 28. 1978 s DAILYPILOT 87 Legal Tangles Firms Avoid Hiring Wives 8 1 IOBN CUNNIFF ,.~ ...... .....,.,.. NEW YORK -HUJband.s •n4 wives worldn1 fot t&e same company are produclna legal and marital headaches that may force some concerns to reneae on tbclr commit· menll to equal employment opportunities. Some companies already have decided to avotd bl.ting spouaes because of Ptt.tems of duaJ absenteetam. acbedul· lna conflict.a, and damace to morale. said Professor Euaene Jennlnp. who bu atudled the phenomenon. Btrr. BE SAYS. THE BIGGEST deterrent to hiring 1pouaes. wives especially, ls the web of legal tanalea that.- only now an appearlni, leas than a decade after com· panl~ bqan affirmative action programs. Companles often are accused of nepotism when they employ spouses, said Jennings, and accuaed when they don·t of dllcrtminattoo. It's a no-win situation rraugbt with unseen. perverse c:Onsequences. be saJd The profesaor's ac· qualntance with the problem is an orfaboot ( J. or bis role as con· NE"'S ~N ~L"SI fidential adviser to cor· 1-. "', Iii ,... • • poratlon chairmen and presidents. who In· --~~~~~~~~~~--- creasingly rind their concerns lbreat.ened by legal action. "They began hiring spouses four, five or six years ago, forgetting what we had le&J'Md many yean ago." sai<t Jennings, referring to a maxim of personnel relations that s uch dual employment was unwise "MANY COMPANIES A.RE PlJLUNG back." he said. "not formally, because that would be Uleul. but quietly. They don't want a backlash against women, but they don 'C know how to avoid elblcal and legal problems." Jennings. management professor at Michigan State University and author of many volumes on personnel activities, cites these situations as heJping to produce a negative attitude toward dual employment: l. The wife, administrative as· slstant to a corporation president, con· vinces him to look ravorably on her husband ·s cand idacy for plant manager. The husband ·gets the job over more qualified 'applicants. One of these applicants claims ravoriUsm. quits and sues. Alarmed, the president removes the husband. l'he wife becomes angry, accuses lbe presi· dent of sexual advances. and quits. CUNNlfll' THE MESS WAS SE1TLED OUT of court. but among other things, the company lost a qualified plant manager and an administrative assistant . 2. The •ire manages a branch bank: her husband 1s loan officer at the central office. She turns down an appll· cant for a loan. He sues. claiming she could not argue ef· fectively with her husband for lhe loan. Tbe company ls advised by its lawyers to settle out or court, and to separate the couple in a business sense. When she is replaced by a male subordinate she sues, claiming discrimination. Publicity causes two other loan applicants to s ue. All cases were settled out of court. 3. A CHEMIST IS PASSE.D OVER for managershlp or a department, allegedly because he would have a conflict of interests ln managing bis wife, also a chemist. Sbe sues. claiming dbcrlminaUon against women. He quits. Tbe only job he can obtain requires that he be away from home during much of the week. returning only on weekends. Her relationship wtt.b her employer continues to· deteriorate. She quits. The couple divorce. This case also was settled out of court but. Jennings observes, nobody won. The company. the individuals and the marriage were damaged. a situation he maintains l5 not uncommon. 4. A COUPLE MEET AS SALESP ERSONS for the the same company. Ten years later. the husband ts re· gional sales manager: bis wife is still a salesperson, although her record is as good and. perbaps better. She sues. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission found discrimination against women, and the company i~ attempting to negotiate a resolution. Says Jennings: "There are oo legal guidelines. and nobody knows bow to set them up. Some compames would rather back o(I from hiring spouses, especially wives. but they can 't do that officially. In discussing the situations with company presidents. Jennings say~ he too is caught in a no-win situation. Whatever advice Is given. he says. may have perverse COii· sequences. "l lry to minimize the damage ·· Prop. 13 Said Help To New Homeoivners Spedal to The Daily Pllo& SACRAMENTO -The top official of the statewtde California Builders Council says passage of Proposition 13 should open the door to home ownershJp for many people. but that "knee-jerk" action by som~ local governments may "wash out" that prospect. Emmett S. Clifford, CBC president and executive vice president of McKeon Construction of San Mateo, said the income qualifying factor for individuals p~haaing a home should be substantially reduced as a result 0£ Proposition 13. He explained that on an $80,000 home, for example, the reduced property tax would result in an Im· mediately monthly savings ot approximately $133 "TIDS MEANS THAT A FAMILY coold purchase lbaf oome with $500 less on their monthly inc?me. The net ef. rect ts to make home ownership available to a substantial numbe.r ol '-1nllies who .couJdn't otherwise e.Uov lt by stJmulaUne new bowslnt as well as resale activity." Clifford said. Clifford added, however. that the 'utter confusion·• In eome communiUts ovtr what to do about lost revenues from Propoeillon 13 cou.ld negate any envisioned ex-panslon of the housing market. • "Many cities in panJc have or are plannint to aub- stantially increase sewer fees, bedroom taxes, permlt fees, or even freeze construction under the 1ulse that housln1 doesn't pay for Itself. In some cases, they may even be 1ett1n1 even with the voter by slowtn, down the govern ment process, whether It involves a c.llben complaJnt about ~· pickup or a request to bu.Ud a bome . "WHAT TR.ESE COJIMUNJTIE.8" DON'T re.Un l!I that tt ll thoH communJUes that have encour11ed gn>wth •II eloQg -Carily 1rowtng auburban communitJH - \.bat are the off und r PropositJoo 13. tbe no·crowth and t.be o&der cities are bu.rttni most because they lack the ruldentlal and colnctdln1 Industrial tu bue." Clllford contended. Olttrord pointed out that the ''lmee-~Tlt'' response of communltJes ll also hnln11 delrhneo~ etreet oo the c:o&t ol houslQa. He laid that in the t.btte weeks foUowtna puaace Ol Proposition 13, the new r tnit11ted b)' com· mu.nltla may have lb• ertect ot ra1sln1 the averqe pric. ol a new houM ln CalltomJa fn>m between ll.000 to S2.00(). ,. I .. Ila OAILYPILOT W.OnMdey, June 28, 1978 Television TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGS ...:------------------~------------------------------------------------------~: • EVENING 1.-00 I e • NEWS OotEAG£HCY ONEI A 1en1or fire captain .,_.. at the ,_ metl\oda UMd by SQu~ $1'1 Ski~ patamedlCI I;) GUNSMOKE A younQ lndlan t>oy helps rede«n 411 e•-cav11ry SOI· ~ who WIS f9Sl)Onslble to< Cflpplin9 """ dunng an ettlClt on th• boy'• vttlage. CD NA8L SOCCER Los Angeles Az1ecs VI New York Coamoe (I) AOAM-12 An unliltely '#II-hef()I c.atch a kilter Si) EL.ECTf'llC COMPANY (11) rrs EVERYBOOY'S BUSINESS ··~ Locatoon" i:CBSNEWS ~wews- 9:30 AOOl(JES me son and daugnter of • man who died on prieon ore determined to seek reYet>ge t};) OVEAEASY Edie Adams. Arflne Broo- zatt: canned food 1111!01)1 Ellen Goldberg. c:olumn.11. (R) (11) REAL ESTATE ANO YOU • Whet Cen You A.Hord?" Cl) TO TEU TliE TRUTH @) MERV GRIFRN Guests· Olcll Van Dyke. Ann Miller 7:001J CBS NEWS 8 NBCNEWS 0 UARSCLUB G ABCNEWS I;) BOWUNOFOR DOLLARS IE AOAM-12 ll"s Malloy's b•rthd8Y··•nd a case 1><ovodes the P«lect presen1 fD M~CNEIL I LEHRER REPORT CD GARDENING FROM THE GROUND UP , · HOU$411)18nt s .. ()) JOKER'S WILD Dude Rancher Jeff Bridges stars as a drifter who goes to work on a dude ranch in the movie .. Rancho Deluxe," airing tonight at 9 on CBS, Channel 2. 7:30 6 BETWEEN THE WARS "The Pt>ony w11·· Hiller's tectteal e"or In assuming th&t England wouki'lrot go to war 10 defend Po4end triggers WOfld-Wer II and 1hree years of controversy over American neutrality. 8 SHANANA Guest· Phyllis Olll8f. &J ~EWLVWEDOAME D CRIPS NEED HOT APPLY Gary Burghott, slar 01 M A S H • l\Olts lhis e•am- lnaooo ol the jOb Cf"1919 tor Irie hllnCllC8j)p(!O. 0 JOKER'S WILD Q) AMERICA 2MOHT Gues1s· Joae Fel1C1ano. Lou Rawls. The Singing 8ond1n1a. fD 28TONIOHT , ~ 8T6$\80ARO • '"Hot Lips And Fingertips'" •.'f (J) l121,0000U£8TIOH @) FAMILYFEUD 8:00 1J ()) CAROL BURNETT Belly Wtllte end Stew M81'11n t<>tn Caro4 In a wild spool ot IClenc:e fiction end llOllP operu (RI 8 GRIZZLY ADAMS "'The Seareh" Adema rec. es agamst time to locate the cub ol • dyinQ coug., t>etore hunt8fl ltnd 11 (RI 0 MOVIE o-t Roddy MeDowlil ., MOV1£ • • • "FllrninOO Rold" C tll49) Joan Crawford. David Brian Whtie strand· ad 1n • 111'*1 town. a cami- v11 dencer becomes lnvolYed with orooked polt- tlClt1111 Ind murder. (2 hit.) ID NOVA "'Alaakl: The Cloalng Front18f" A1uu·1 luture Nlng• lo thft b«tlance u C<lngr... decklM llOW h " 11\ould be used and whO tnould UM ot. (l!)BOC~ MEMORIAL FESTIVAL ··sld Dawson's New Chica. i Rhythm Klngl" 1:30 CA088-WfT8 OVER EASY Edie Adams: Arline Bton- zaft. canned food satety: Ellen Goldberg. COiumnist. (R) t:OO 1J Cl) CBS MOVIE • • •'Ao "Rancho Deluxe' --rivni Jllfi""'Br~ ~ Waterston. Two young men. determined to tree 1'*"*9Mls Of the r~ 111>11111n of eontemporary Ille. becX>lne alrNess drift- ers. 8 DAVID FROST Guesll: Wanen Beatty Ryan Ind Tatum O'Neal, Gerry Retterty. 0 9 CHARUE'S AHOEl.8 "The Sammy DIMS Jr Kid· nap Caper" The Angels ere hired to protect Sam- my Devis Jr. lrom kldMPP«S. (R) CD MERV ORIFFlN Guest~ Dick Ven Oylce. Ann Miiier, Susan Ford. Phyllis Cllesl8f. fl!) GREAT ~ "'Norman Conquests: Round And Round The Gerden" Norman·s lunl\'8 appearance wtien he Is llYPPQMd to rendez\lous wf1h Annie In the vlllage. llUQ0981S lllat hfs weekend IS g<>ong 10 mtSfore. (Part 3 of3) Channe l Listing• 8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angeles • * * "The Wolf Men" ( 1938) Claude Rains. Lon Chaney Jr. A man realizes, alt..-he has suttered .., attack by a WOii, that he is beComlng a -ewo11. O lm OOHTIS ENOUGH CD AUSTIN CfTY UMrTS .. Guy Clark I Steve Fromholl.. Songwroter Clark S1f101 his ,,_t hits Fromnott. Of ··Te1tas Tr!IO- gy" lame llllO• abOul lite 1r1 lheSout,_t D KNBC (NBC) Los Angeles g KQA (Ind ) Los Angeles • Troal M1rr1age·· Torn di•- llPP<0\191 when hos oldat daughter. M&ry. moves 1n10 an aplrtment with ,,... lllOU (Don Jolm9on) (R) I;) NASL 80CC£R CalllOfnoa Surt vs Chlc&go Sung G KABC-TV (ABC) Lo'J Angeles (I) KFMB (CBS) San Diego 0 KHJ-TV (Ind) Los Anqeles ®J KCST (ABC) San Diego CD KT1'V (Ind) Los Angeles 9-.30 D TWIUOHT ZONE David Et11n9ton comes upon an Old monastery oc:cul)led by a 'Truth· ordef whoeh la l!Olding a belgn o4d man prisOnef Q) KCOP· TV (Ind ) Los Ange1es fl!) KCET·TV (PBS) Los Angeles e KOCE·TV (PBS) Huntington Beach 0) CAROl BURNETT AHDFAIENDS 10:00 D N8C REPORTS "Escape From Madness'" Tom Snyder reports on the 5ABC Shmvs Toppe rs LOS ANGELES CAP) -Th e fiv e m os t watche d t e lev 1s 1on s hows nationally last week were hght com- edies from ABC. leading that network to firs t place in the week's rat- ings war, according to A.C. Nielsen ratings re- foased Tuesday. "Three's Company, .. the adventures of two girls and one boy shar· ing an apartment, was the we e k 's mo s t watched show, the rat- ings service said. The program bagged a 21.4 rating. meaning it was watched by a n esl~mated 15 4 million viewers during a sum· mer week heavy with re· runs an appar e nt national prochv1ty for frivolity OVERALL. AB averaged a 14 7 rating for prime time, followed by CBS wiUt a 13.5 and NBC with 12.7. The n etworks s ay these fi g ur es give th e percentages of homes with television in tbe country watching a particular nelwork dur- ing an average minute or prime U me. "Laverne & Shirley" was second with a 20.8 rating, 15.2 million viewers: Charli e's Angels was third with 20.7-15.l million; fourth, ."Happy Days" al 20.2·14.7 million: and fifth "Love Boat,·· 19.1-14 million. The top-ranked non· ABC show was CBS' comedy favorite, "Alice:· which drew a :t9 rating. T IED FOR seventh place was N BC's "Quin- cy," the highest r ated non-comedy entry, with two CBS offe rings, MASH and ''One Day at a Time," an with an 18.3 rjltinit and 13.3 million vlewers. "Fantasy Is land." another ABC show, com· pleted the top 10 with a 17.8 rating, 13 mlllion watchers. The lust watched show of the week, Nleleen said, was CSS' "Baby I'm Back.'' a comedy about d rather who r tum..'I alter aban doolng hls f amlly for many years. That show dttw a 6. 7 million rating for 4.8 million vttwers. AfJ ......... UNIOENTIREO YOUTH TALKS ABOUT HIS LIFE OF CRIME TV Documentary Probes Uves of Slum Hoodlums View From Ghetto Yomh Cri~ TV Special Powerful By JAY SHA R B UTT LOS ANGELES <AP) -Filmed In the slums of New York and Newark, N. J ., it's depressing, often violent and obscenity-filled. But the National Education Association recommends it for viewing. The show? "Youth Terror: The View From Behind the Gun," an ABC News special airing tonight at 10 on Channel 7. It's a powerful study of crime, despair and rage among those cities· ghetto kids, most of them black. It offers no official theories or statistics aboul skyrocketing youth crime. proposes no solutions. All that comes in a followup panel show ABC will broadcast at 11:30 tonight. "YOtml TERROR" simply offers a look at the bitter, violent ghetto kids whose lives seem summed up by one youngster t his way: "We're raised like animals, so we act like animals." The one·hour show has no nar· ration or on-camera reporter. Its ap- proach is impressionistic. Only an occasional off-camera question is heard from lhe show's produce r. writer, Helen WhiUle)'. lt's mostly a ertm montage of street talk and slum ure, a bit or kid play here, a deadly gang bJttle Utere, a glimpse of a junkie taking hls htroin fix In a rubble·filled alley. T HE GENERAL m EA is to hear from the experta ln youth terror, t~ kids themselves, nlmed by two gutsy rnmeramen, Don Guy and Bryan An· derson, ln the streets, in abandoned, battertd buildings and In 1hetto apartments and hideouts. The first witness: A bearded youth who publicly waves a gun. boasts that "this is what talks around this neighborhood." To be rough, ready to kill to protect yourself, your self-image or your turf, is a constant theme. There's also a startling scene of one boy at an apartment window, firing off three shots. HAVE TO FAULT the show here. The impression is that the kid 1s try. ing to kill som eone. But Miss Whitney says be was shooting in the air. not aiming at anyone, which the program doesn't ex.plain. A chilling thought by several slum kids is Utat when their parents beat them. it helps to hit the stroe« and ease the rage by beating on other kids. As one boy says, th.is "takes the pain away." Other recurring themes: You can't get a decent job. crime pays, ll's okay and necessary to steal, and the prospect of jail ls oo big deal. ONE YOUTH VIEWS the last tbu.s· ly. "Court ls a waste or time. They smack you on Ute band end you go on &Rain... ' Bits of hope amid hopelessness do occasionally pop up, the most elo- quent this plea by an Uftmployed black man : "Give those people. 11omcthlng to live for. and you'd stop crime." But that the young people have so little to live for l3 palnfulf y evkkntiit "Youth Terror.·· It's a aad, dlsturbln1 joll of reality, a needed reminder that "Good Times" Isn't the ghetto. not by• Iona abot. I - TUBE TOPPERS KCET@ 9 :00 -Great Performanc,es. The final segment of "The Norman Conquests" is presented as the loose ends of Alan Ayckbourn's trilogy are tied up. NBC EJ 10:00 -Escape From Mad- ness . Singer Rosemary Clooney is featured on this examination of the pro- gress that has been achieved in the treatment of mental illness (see story below ). ABC fJ 10:00 -Youth Terror: The View From Behind the Gun ... A startling documentary about crime <see review below>. enormou• "rldeS made "' the lut qullfler-oentUl)I in the treatment of the men· .... -taltyltt ea NtW8 G O A8CNEWS a..o8EUP "You1h Terror The v- From 8etlllld The Gun • lnteMews W11h youlhtul offenders reYNI wny tt>ey brtlllt the law. whO tlley rob and r.ow they cnoose their VICtim• I =MAK.EADW. * •'It "Enemy Of The Law" (19'3) Tait Ritter. Dave O"Brlan. The laKIS Rllllg8fl Irick a gold thief Into r-affng the location ot the htdden gold C 1 hf.) t0:30 CD ti) NEWS 11:00 I e a ()) o HEWS LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE "love And The AWllien- 1119" Mlchael tilts 10 tutor two actors 111,the lllm he's dtreetin9 "Low And lhe Small W~.. Wendy and Robetl try to help out a friend on need 0 MOVIE • ·~ .. Fighting O'FlynM" 119491 Douglas F .. rt>anlcs Jr.. Helen• Cart8f Two rtvals •nempt 1he e&ptUte of Napoleonoc eoents on 1111 Inst! castle 12 hfs I tD TH£DOOCOUPLE Oscar tea1111 thet Fell•"S new gtf1tnend IS not jUSI the llt>rarlan he thlnlcs She •S (I) MONTY PYTHON'S Fl. YING CIRCUS tll) MICHAEL JACl<SON Guest Or. Tllomu Unger• lelde< lI!) MACNeL I L.EHRm REPORT t1 :30 fJ ()) HAWAII FlVE-0 Denny goec undercover as a navv c:or'*"*" 10 '10Cl • drug nng opetlling "°"'a navy_. (R) D TONIGHT Ouellt hOlt· John Devld- son Gues11: Dan Kuchtn- 1111. Sue Gr~. Florence Henderson, Jerry Van ~tOVE. AMERICAN SlYLE "'love And The JealOus Husband'" John wants to 1es1 hos woe's fidelity ··love And The Free Weeltend" Tony Invites Lourie to snare an apart- ment tore weekend. 0 9.l A8CNEW8 CLOSEUP FOL.LOW..UP Dave Marash holls a lo41ow·U9 report OI\ .. Youth Terror; The View From Behind The Gun ... CD HOGAN'S HEAOES An ellte German dnnslon btYouacs neet Stllag 13 and creates problems tOf Khnll and Hooln· (I) GET 8MARf A KAOS muler of dis- ~tries to .._.,,,ate a w11,_ 11981nst KAOS. fe CAPT'IOHED ABC NEWS t.«>ANING 12:00 &J TWIUOHT ZONE Gut!tl'ltlf Lutze returns to the town of Dachau aner spenc11n9 ~ ltl South Amtlflea CD HIGH HOf>ES OJ HONEYMOOHERS Thinlcong that he IS to be named 'RllOCOOn 01 The Vear· Relph reheanles an ad llb speech lor the occa· s.on Si) DICK CAVETT Guest: poet / author Rob· .. , ~ Wenen (PM t ot 2l 12:JO D MOVIE • • '• "F1ankan1ta1n Meell The Wolf Man . ( tlM31 Lon Cheney. ttona MUM)' A ....,aWOll Mell· tng •e•ea1e •uns into l-tlltl4!entte111'1 rnooste< t 1 hf .. 2S mK\ I CD MOVIE • • • ··c.ught" t 19•9) J-Maaoo. Batbara 8el Geddes. A young woman Is 18fror-atrlclten wl'4ln she real!ZM '* -husband Is a ply(lh<>Oath. (2 ht1 I 8) MOVIE e-+ e "Outlldfl The Well" 11960) ~d BaMtwt. Marllyn Muwell An e•· eCHMCt helpS the polloe rtlCOYaf a m4lllon dol4ars worth Of llOlen money. ( I hr . 30m1n I SI ..MACNf.lt. I l.EHAER REPORT tt-.zr a w Ko.we '"Acu Of Oeloerste Men" A m aelt accountant !Eugene Aoc:na) linds h4 11te totally Changed when hos bO&s IS kllled by I 1n11* !RI 1:00 8 TOMOAAOW Jeannot Szweu:z. dorector of "'Jaws 2.'' W111 d!ICUSS htscar-. D HEWS D MAVEAICI< "The Spanish Dance< 1:'6fJ NEWS 1:558 NEWS 2:00 8 G) NEWS &J MOVIE • e "'The Bleck Cer· ( t9• ti Basil Ratl\bOotl. Nlgel Bruce Alt8f a will •S made public. a sef18I ot l>Rane murders occur. ( 1 "'. 25 min, 0 MOVIE • • '"Amsterdam Atta"" ( 1967) Wllllem Mertowe. Catllefine Von Sctletl A young llOYelf•t. accused of murdenng hlS ••·mistress. attempts to cleat himMlf white beCO!ftlMJ more lnvOtved on bladllna11 and scandel (2 "" ) 2: 151) MOVI£ • • 'h ··eompaniont In NlghtmNe" 119671 Mef\lyll Douglas. Anne Ba•ter A muule<8f strikes "811 the pat1en1s at a r-arcn 1ns111ute tor the emo1oonat· ty d1s1urbed 12 l>rs I ~-MOVIE • • • '"TIMI Black Kolghr · f 19541 Alan Ladd. Patricia Medina. K1119 Arthur lfnds I Ill ~ '" Ill ufMcftO""f' llntght wf\o halpe thww1 .,.. • attGmPt to -1twow U. , 111!'9 (2M I s:21 e NEWS 3:SO 8 MOVIES • • "Day The Earth • Fr<>ie'" (19641 NIM An<*· aon. JOhn Powef'a. A vengef\11 wltdl biol I CM Iha IUl'I, causl119 the WOtld to.,_, ( t hf., 30 min.I • • "Rivet Patrol" ( 19481 Jonn Blythe, Wally Patch. Authorities attempt to Pf'&o vent amuoon119 thl'ougllOUt the European nation&. (I hf) 4.-00 D MOVI£ • • •.f ··An ~ Ot Murd«'' ( t9•81 Fredric March, Edmond O"Brleft. LOYe compe1a a greatly resoect· ed judge to oocntnlt a mer• ~-llliftO ~t'~~--- 4:15 U STEVE EDWAAOS .a:.ao. MOVJE • • "The Stage To Tuscon" (19511 Rod c-on. WrtM Morris. T ""° men Mt °"' to in\llllltl-gat1 the hljlc*ong of ti• gec:oechel jU9t befofe the outbreell of the CMI Ww. ( ' "'·· 30 min ) Tllur•day'• Dayfinae /tlo..,les ~RNING 11:$0 CD • • * '"HlflOw" ( 1965) CMOI L ynley. Elr8fll Zlm- ballsl Jr. A Hollywood star· let becomes dllllllusloned an<I 1ums to a Mte ot llJco. hd (2 hfs • 20 min.) AFTERNOON 12.-00 a •• '..\"Flame Of New Oflelns'' (19'1) Mariene Oie•rlch. Bruce Cabot. G<>tng to New Ortew>s to try lie< ludt. a beauty hOoks the 1own•s rlct1est - baCheb. but ""'' otf wiftt a dashing riverboet "'roper. 11 Iv -30 l'Nn.) S.-00 ®) **~"Stand Up Md Be Counted" ( 1972) Jacqueline 8'sael. Stella SI-a. The 8Clions ol a women·s ltbbet creates l)foblcmS IOf several rela• ltonShlpS ( 1 hr • 30 mon.} 3:30 U * • ''1 "lost HorlzM- ~Pllrt ti( 1973) Pettlf Rnch. l1v Ullmann. A kidnapped diplomat discovers Shan- gro-18, a p'80e ot eternal peaoe. (' hi' .• 30 min.) ,. Mental Illness Viewed ByTOMJORV NEW YORK <API Rosemary Clooney was singing at a party at Los Angeles· Ambassador Hotel June 5. 1968. the night Robert F. Kennedy was shot as he le rt Ute same hotel. "I couldn't handle Utat death:· the entertainer recalls ... That's when I Jost touch with reality.·· Miss Clooney talks about her developing depression and later recovery in "NBC Reports: Escape From Madness.·· to be telecast Wednesday a t 10 p.m. on Channel 4. NBC News correspondent Tom Snyder is host T H E HOUR-LONG SPEOAL, reatunng Miss Clooney and golfer Bert Yancey, a victim of manic depression. considers recent developments in the treatment of several forms of mental illness with the use of drugs and techniques or psych<.'logical and social rehabilitation. '~In 1.954, there were 600,000 patients in state and county mental hospitals, and the figure was rising, .. says Earl Ubell. who produced the special for NBC News. "Today it is down lo 180,000. "There's literally been a revolution in the last 20 years in the treatment of psychoses, .. he says, "Mostly through the use of drugs.'.' UBELL·s APPROACH TO the complicated and sensitive subject was to Ii mil the scope of Ute report to "the narrow con~tellation of symptoms generally called madness, which affects about 10 million ,.,.._........ COIWNG BACK FROM MENTAL ILLNESS Tom Synder With Rosemary Qooney Americans." --------------------- Further, he says, "the program uses a very an· cient medicaltechnique-Utecasestudy ... In that sense, the candid interviews with Miss Clooney and Yancey demonstrate that people suffer· ing from psychoses can and do recover. "But there's always a 'but, ... says Ubell, "and here it's Ute fact Utat for many patients, drugs don 'l work. or they won't let them work. And the whole structure of how we deal with mental patients who are discharged is not intended to support them." UBELL AND JUS NBC News crew visited Madison, Wis .• and the Program for Assertive Com · m unity Treatment, which deals with people who spend Uteir lives in aod out of mental hospitals. T here, st.arr members help patients find homes and jobs, see that Utey take prescribed medicine on schedule, and use their leisure time constructively and enjoyably. •'They· ve shown they can keep people outofhospft.als, "the producer says. "~ape frorp Madness" examlJM!s, in addition, a controversial program at the Soterla Center in San Mateo, Calif.. which de·emphasizes drugs and fOC!Uses on human contact in the treatment or schizophrenia. UBELLCONCLUDES. "NEYl:R before bas the outlook ror the mentally m been so bright. Not only are the prison·like institutions dying, but new treat- ments allow the mentally lit to Uve deeent, humane lives int.he community. _ "On tbe horizon, the research in biochemistry of the brain promises even greater advanc~ in the treatment or serious mental disease.·· Olivia Wins Role ln'Roots' Sequel LOS ANGELES <APl -Olivia De Havtlland, w}lo beaan her carrer playing Melanie In "Gone Ylith thC! Wind," has been slcned for a stamo1 role ln "Roots· The Next Oen raUon." She plays the wife of Henry Fonda and the m~tr ol Richard Tbomu In the 12·hour mlnl series, which wUl air on ABC ln 1979. They are the leadlng white family ln Henoing, Tenn. The ries la baaed on Alex Haley's story or bls family from Alrtca to the preaentdt,y. WINNER OF 7ACADEMY AWARDS ·1nc1u~lng Best Orlgf nal Score Best Fiim Editing Beet Co1tume Dfftgn (PG) Dally 2:15, 5:00. 7:30. 10:00