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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1978-07-12 - Orange Coast PilotI 17 . . . ' ':'I • tr1 e . . I pre a s Heart Ailment Fatal To ltfo.rris the Cat WE DNESDAY AFTERNOON, J ULY 12, 1978 YOI.. 1', MO. ttJ, 4 HCTIOMS, tt rAO&I • • • 8 . Pilotless .Airplane Runs Wild LIVED NINE LIVES The Late Morris Famed Cat Morris Dies At Age 1 7 CHICAGO <AP> -Morris. the finicky 9-Lives cat on television commercials. is dead at the age of 17. the pel food company said today. Mo rris' veterinarian, Dr Barbara Stein, said lhe cat died Friday and was buried in a sub- urb on the grounds of the home he shared with his handler. Bob M.artwick. She said Morris' death was associated with cardiac complications related to otdage At 17, Morris was the equivalent of a 90-year-old huma n, she said. Morris was found in 1966 in a Chicago-area humane shelter by a n animal handler searching for an orange cat to appear in a tele vision commercial. At the age of 7, Morris starred in his first commercial for 9-Lives and for the next 10 years made more than 40 television commercials. A spokesman for the public re- lations agency that handles the account for the pet food com- pany said Morris' role will be t ake n over by a cat who has served as an understudy. He, too. will be known as Morris. ''He's a double for Morris physically and is as finicky, aloof and independent as his pre· decessor." said a spokesman. Nuke Burial Out WASHINGTON <AP ) -A White House study says there appeaN to be no suitable pro- Posal for storing nuclear wastes under the ground. INSIDE LOOK D AILSl'ARS D•ib Pilot sportswriter Dave Cunnln1ham covered the 49th All·Star classic In San Diego Tuesday. For run ctet.ils and raulll, see Sports ~tion, Bl. Phone Strike Widens NASHYlllE. Tenn. (AP· T e lephone officials reported some minor delays in complet ing long-distance calls today as a two·day-old wildcat strike s pread to include workers in nine slates. Jim Wolle. a South Central Bell spokesman, said that OC· casional delays were being re- ported but that the problems were not serious. In Ohio, Tom Cotton, a spokesman for Ohio Bell or Columbus, said service was normal except for delays in completing operator -assisted long-d istance a nd directory calls. The walkout began Tuesday when nine American Telephone & Telegraph Co employees in Nashville were s uspended after declining to cross a picket line set up by South Central Bell Telephone Co. workers. The South Central Bell workers were protesting having to work six days a week The strike later spread to Me mphis a nd Nas h vi lle; Denver; Kansas City, Mo.; Louisville. Ky: Jackson, Miss.; Charlotte, Greensboro, and Stanfield. N.C.: Detroit; Colum· bus. Toledo and Dayton. Ohio; and Indianapolis, South Bend and four smaller Indiana com· munities. So m e e mpl oyees of Southwestern Bell in Oklahoma City stayed off the job for one day, but ended picketing today in compliance with a federal court order. The walkout has not tlisrupted long-distance service, said Mike McCorstin, a spokesman at AT&T's headquarters ln Bed· minster, N.J. M cCorstin said negotiators for AT&T and the Communications Wo rkers or Ame rica were negotiating by phone to end the wildcat strike. Im pa et AIRCRAFT NEARLY CUT IN TWO AFTER BEING STRUCK BY RUNAWAY PLANE Owner Was Hand.Cranking Propellor When His Craft Left on Its Own Ocean Diver Succumbs Inflated SUit Propelkd Him to Surface A 41-year-old diver who died in a s hip's decompression chamber off Aliso Beach Tues- day, m ay have been a few days a way from returning to his rami· ly following a months-long ocean sewage outfall project. The diver Hiram Beckham of Goleta, was working 191 feet below the ocean's surface about ~30 a.m. when his pressure suit suddenly filled with air, propell- ing his body toward the surface, a Dana Point Harbor Patrol spokesman said today. When Beckham hit the s ur· face. he was rushed into a de· compression cha mber aboard t he World War II Liberty s hip Davy Crockett. a spokesman said. Beckham was reported as suf· fering a "severe case of the bends." a disorder that results from a too rapid decrease in at· mospheric pressure. Pressure at 190 feet is nearly six times the pressure on land so divers must come up s lowly to allow their body pressure to ad JUSt. Beckham was placed inside the decompression chamber in an attempt to equalize outside pressure with his body pressure A Harbor Patorol spokesman said several doctors were nown to the ship, anchored off South Laguna. But Beckham lapsed into a coma and died in the decom· pressioo chamber al about 2:30 p.m. For Laguna Beaehes ''This guy's s uit somehow overinflated," said Dr. Richard Scott. "It blew up like a balloon and he popped out of the water like a cork. He was unconscious. seriously sick and in shock· from the minute he hit the surface.·· Tough Dog Ban Passed By STEVE MITCHELL OtttllDlllty ........... Laguna Beach councilmen gave final approval to a tough new animal control ordinance Tuesday night that will ban dogs from the beach all year, except for certain hours. The councll action came near the end of a maratbom six and one hall hour session that ended early today. Nearly· a dozen citizens -mosUy opposed to lbe new ordinance -spoke before lhe council. Speakers t erme d the or· dinance unlalr to "responsible" pet owners and said the city should instead attempt to en· force its current animal laws. The new law, drafted by Coun· cilman Kelly Boyd, allows dogs on the beach -on a leash - before 8 a.m. and after 6 p.m. from April 1 to Sept. 30. Pet owners may walk their animals on city sands before 9 a.m. and after 5 p m . the rest or the year. The current ordinance a llows dogs on lbe beach all day during winter months. and bans them during the day in the summer. The new ordinance, which re· ceived a second r•ding shortly before midnight Tuesday, takes effect in ao days. The cow cU vote wu 4 to t In favor or the new la•. with Coun· cllwo man _.ly Bellerue op- posed. "l think It ls unfortunate the respon&ible ~t owners have to suffer because of others:· she said after the vote. But the ordioance received strong support from her fellow counc il members, several or whom cited personal incidents they ea.id they have witnessed on clt.y bt!:aches. Councilman Howard Dawson. who has lived near the Vlct.orla Beach ror 20 years. said he. his (See BEACH, Paae AZ) Scott , head of the medical alert center at the Los Angeles County Health Services Depart· menl, directed via radio the ef· fort to save the diver. The center also dispatched doctors to the scene. The diver was placed In· side a shipboard decompression chamber momen ts afler he sur- f aced at 9:30 a .m .. sheriH's deputies said. He died in the chamber about fi ve hours later. "Thls ls a very rare and very difficult kind or problem, when someone surfaces so rapidly after he has been down that deep," SOOU said. The pressure causes nitrogen to collect In the body. A slow ascent from the (See DIVER. P•«t A2 ) HB Crash Damage $60,000 By ARTHUR R. VINSEL OI tlle Oillty ~IMt Su.ti A r unaway plane whose pilot .vas hand·cranking lhe propellor tried to take off alone at Hunt · ington Beach's Meadowlark Airport Monday night. careen· ing into three other parked aircraft. One eyewitness. a mght in· st ructor alerted by the sudden roar of the engine. estimated damage at $60,000 or more as one a ircraft was almost sliced in half by the pilotless plane .. It never really quite got airborne. but there was about 60 feet out there where it looked like it wasn't going t hrough that tall grass," said Russ Fisher. "It may have gotten off th(' ~round about a foot." added F'is· her. a pilot trainer for Aviation Unlimited. Aviator Richard Hand of Hun- tington Beach had been hand cranking the propellor after tinkering with a dead battery about 9 pm., in vestigators said "He mis-estimated how far he had the throttle in," s aid Hunt ington Beach Police Officer Richard Butcher. who handled the first reports of the incident. The engine roared to li fe and the Cessna 172, le<ised and rent· ('d out by the Aviation Company, 5141 Warner Ave., proceeded to cruise across the s mall field with Hand in pursuit. ··He's lucky the prop didn't hil him.'· said eyewitness Fisher. He said after s tarting to taxi <See CRASH, Page A2} Weath e r Early mo r ning l ow clouds and local fog near coast . other wise sunny T hurs d ay . Slig htly warmer. Lows tonight 58 to 62. Highs Thursday from high 60s at beaches to lower 80s inland. I NSIDE TODA Y Plain wrapping of supermarket iteim hos $el off a reaction. Whi~ lhe chain says ii '$ br1ng1ng"' customers. others que$tlOn quality. Food. Page Cl. A .. c .! OAILT ftll.OT s SS Says Ripoffs Rarity JJA LTIMORE (AP) -Social S~curity Administration of. fltials, smarting from criticism of the security of their files on t'Ui million Americans, say com· ~er crime a nd ripoffs by e l>loyees have been rare. • he agency. which hes ssiooo kers. found only 14 cases ast y r and 19 this year in which lta employees made false claims ~t~ngaged in other frauds wilh SHial Security computers, Don l . Wo rtman, the acting com· massioner, said Tuesday. None ui volved large s ums, he added. The SSA already has installed sosne of the safeguards in its h~e computer system that the General Accounting Office said 1\i lacked, and the agency is ~ring up to add more safety features later this year, Wortman said. • The agency paid out $103 billion in benefits last year to 33 million people who were retired ,," Social Security, disabled, on Medicare or welfare, or to their survivors Wortman said that despite the enormity of that sum, most of the monthly benefit checks that flow ou• of his agency are for s mal' a mounts -$254 for the averagt' retired worker or $284 for a poor couple receiving Sup· pl e m cntal Security I ncomt- henefits An insider who wanted to cheat the agency on a large scale would he involved in "too many s mall transactions" to escape notice. Wortman insisted in a n interview. Any benefit c· h e c k o v e r $ 1 0 • 0 0 0 i s .wtomalically "kicked out" of the computer and reviewed, hP sa•d The-C/\O auditors did not themselves uncover any fraud 1111 a~ency employees. but the.> t·~ted past incidents involving its workers One sold Socia' &ecurit.> t·a rds to illegal aliens Another reaped S20,000 by rtdin•ctin~ Social Security pay ments to himself when someon" chcd Two fahr1catcd 14 accounts and collected $55,UOO before the.> were discovered. -One sold information to a l·ompany "in the husincss of locating missing persons." The GAO pinpointed • weak nesscs rn the computer system that lmks the more than 1,300 SSA offices across the nation ' It said access was unlimited to s ome of the 3,900 computer terminals t hat tie into the s ystem. and most could create new fi les ac; well as call up in· fo rm a ti on from existing ones Also. there wus no way of know ing precisely who was using the computer Rock Star Recovering ST. PAUL. Mmn. <AP> -Guitarist Bill Wyman of the Rolling Stones rock grou p was released from a local hospital Tuesday less than 24 hours after falling from a stage following the group's performance here. Wy man fell when h e leaned against a stage curtain. thinking it was a wall. Stones spokesman Paul Wasserman s aid The guitarist hit his head and was unconscious for about 10 minutes He suf. fered a crupped knuckle. s prained wrist. a nd strained cartilage in two fi ngers Rig Strikes Car LAS VEGAS. Nev. CAP> -A Ri verside man was killed Tues· day whon his car was hit by a tractor.t ra iler r ig near Stateline, about 40 miles south of h ere. th e Nevada Hi ghway Patrol reported. OflANGl~T DAILY PILOT Weon•dtt Juty 1~ 19f8 D•fJer Helping Limber Delay Sparks Postal Rally WASHINGTON <AP) -Postal workers came to Washington to- day to protest what they call lhe "pokey pace" of negotlatlons toward a new labor agreement. A bout a thousand postal workers came to a rally near the W aahington Monument before starting a march to Postal Service headquarte rs about a mile away for picketing there The Postal Service has made no pay propos al since talks began April 20, angerinl union leaders who accuae mana1e- ment of delaying tactics and of trying to take back benefit.a won in previous contract.a. Leaders or locala threatened walkouts if a new contract is not negotiated by t he July 20 deadline. "Our policy is if there ls no de- cent contract by July 20, there wiU be no work," said Mo Biller, head or the New York City local of the American Postal Workers Union, the largest of four unions negotiating with the Post al Service. s trike possibility. He replied, "Nobody knows about that. We. are concentrating on trying to negotlJte a contract." He baa said the talks are mov· Ing al ·•a pokey pace" because o( management delays. T h e Poat.al Servi ce has decllned substantive comment on the talks, but Postmaster General Wllllam F. Bolger has expereesed confidence that a settlement will be reached without a strike. Wblle national union leaders have so far avoided talk of a strike, Vincent R. Sombrotto. president of the New York City local of t.he National Association or Letter carriers, ~rought up the subject Tuesday. He charged in a statement is· s ued in advance of tbe dem onstr ation that "the arrogant attitude of the Postal Service toward lhe negotiations can trig ger a postal strike What a re these two men doing to this little tree in Mason Regional Park, 'Irvine? They weren't hurting it, actually. They were using it to exercise in preparation for the 9.5-mile Sea King Back Bay An- niversary Run. Some 710 runners loped a round the duck ponds of San Joaquin Marsh lo Univers ity High School and back. Related Photo, page Bl. National leaders were more restrained in their comments about a possible work stoppage. Emmet Andr e ws. national president of t he APWU, was asked by .. eporters about the "Are slowdowns and othe r reprisals by p().4'ta l workers in the wind? Anything 1s pos!:ible " he said. Although postal strikes are ii· lega l. there were widespread local walkouts in 1970, when federal troops were called out to handle the mail. Lido 14 Regatta Under Wag By ALMON LOCKABEY Delly Piiiot ....... Writ# HUNTINGTON LAKE -Skip. pers from Newport Beach and Mission Bay dominate the Lido·14 national championship regatta which got under way to· day at this beautiful lake 7.500 feet in the Sierras. 90 miles· northeast oC Fresno. Seventy-seven s kippers and crews from Oeets throughout the western U.S. showed up for the national championship. After two days of racing Mon· day and Tuesday the fleet was divided into the championship a nd consolation flights which start competition today with two rares. A final race is scheduled Thursday Dave Ullman of the Balboa Yacht Club, three-time national champion in the class conlinue.s to be the star of the show. He- had three straight victories in the preliminar,> races and three straight wins in the High Sierras F ..... ra,,eAJ DIVER ... bottom allows presu res to equ a lize gradually and the nitrogen escapes harmlessly. But surfacing rapidly sends nitroge n bubbles moving through the body. From shallow de pths. that causes a painful condition called the bends. "But when the victim came from that depth h& got the bends instantly," Scott said. "He got a whole sbower of bubbles in his blood and nervous system. "He died of shock as a result of m assive bubble for mation." the doctor said f'ro•PapAI BEACH ... wife and daughter have all been attacked by dogs over the years on city beaches. Councilman Wayne Baglin said he witnessed a dog owner with two animals off leash near St. Ann's Street Beach verbally abuse a lifeguard who ordered the man to leash the dogs. 'They were two golden retrievers, running up and down the beach and all over people at the beach," Baglin said. "We can't enforce the law If we have people taking the leash off their dogs when they don't see a un· iformed officer around.•· Rockefeller F1D1eral Set POCANTICO HILLS, N. Y. CAP) -Survivors or John D. Rockefeller Jll gathered today a t the family estate to pay trl but-e to the elde!l grandson of the founder of the Rockefeller fortune Funeral service!\ wer e scheduled tor Thursday for the 72.year·old Rockefeller, who was kllled Instantly near the family compound here Monday evening when a car driven by a 16·> e ar.old s tudent driver, David Low, of Brtarclilt Manor, sldaawlped one car and then cr1shed head·on Into the car driven by Rockefeller 's eecretary, Monica Lesko, 38. Amons those otrerlng aym pathy Tuesday were President Carter. Vice Pretldent Walter Mondale and Welt Virginia's two senators, Robert Byrd and Jennmgs Randol ph Regaua. s ponsor ed by the l' resno Yacht Club over the past weekend. The championship flight ap· peared to be boiling down to a competition of sailmakers. with four li sted among the first 10. Ull man. a Newport Beach sailmaker. topped the fl eet . followed closely by one or his employees, J eff Lenhart of Mis· s1on Hay. Also among the first 10 conten- ders in the championship flight SALT II Opens are two skippers from North Sails, San Diego. Tom Nute and Lou Brooks of Mission Bay Yacht Cl ub. Ullm an. Lenhart. Nute and Brooks arc long time com· petitors in the snipe class. Sailing conditions on this crystal clear lake a re con - sidered among the best in the world for s m a ll, one-des ign yachts . Afternoon winds reach 20 knots with smooth waters. The top 10 skippers in the Lido·l4 championship flight are Dave Ull man , BYC; J eff Le nhart. MBYC, Tom Nute. MBYC. Chris Raab. Huntington Ha rbo ur Yacht C lub : Hal Brown, MBYC; Pete Jefferson, MBYC ; Rowland Lohman, BYC ; Lou Brooks, MBYC , Cha rlie Cummings; Al amitos Bay Yacht Club a nd Stu Robertson. Huntington Harbour Yacht Club. The top 10 in the CO'lSOlation flight are Roy Woolsey Lido Isle Yacht Club; Harry Wood . ABYC; David Smith, ABYC . C r ai~ Roe , MBYC; John Marion. Lake Merrit Sailing Club. Bob Mos. HHYC; Tony Perez. BYC ; Mike Borzage, MBYC . Kelly Snow. HHYC and J{1chard Robinette, MBYC. Al the annual. meeting or tht.> class Tuesday night Ted Hinshaw. Lido Isle Yacbt Club. was elected president for the coming year succeeding Kelly Snow, lilfYC. Vance, Gromyko Confer GENEVA, Switzerland CAPI Secretary of Slate Cyrus R. Vance handed Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei A. Gromyko new American proposals today to limit the development of long- range Soviet missiles at the opening session of a new round of SALT II. Gr omyko took the plans. put a fe w preliminary questions to Vance across the table at the U.S. arms office here and then called a recess to consult with Moscow The nuclear arms negotiations were set to resume later in the day whe n Vance m ay give Gromyko a message from Presi- dent Carter expressing U.S. con- cern over the current trials of dissidents Alexander Ginzburg and Analoly Shcharansky in the Soviet Union. <Related story, Page A4) U.S. offic ials declined to characterize the first session. Despite the U.S. opposition to the Soviet crackdown on dissi- dents, a U.S. spokesman said it would not be allowed to affect the arms talks. The s pokesman adde d. however . that Vance would stress to Gromyko "the importance of dealing fairly not only with Shcharansky but all the dissidents." f'ro• Page Al CRASH ... on its own and perhaps lifting off the ground momentarily. the Cessna abruptly spun around and began pursuing its pursuer on a collision course. "I guess it ran about 150 yards," Fisher said. "He tried to stop it twice " Ha nd suffered bruises a nd his pants were torn badl y in dodging tnc aircran and attempting to grab and hold it down. Th e runa way p lane the n r oar ed towa rd Tri·Ace, 5202 Pear ce Lane, at the far north la nding end of the runway, where numerous small planes are tied down. Investigators said it zoomed between two, sllcin1 off about four feet or their right a nd left win11. then b•relled almost dead center into a third craft whlcb Is probably destroyed. Federal Aviation Adminiatra· tlon duty otficer Inspector Al Toll was al the airport today taktn1 tho toU and lnvestt1at1ng clrcum1tancea of the accident. Ray Cotter, owner of the rtrm that leaaes and rcnu out tbe de· m o llahed planes , said he couldn't give an estlmat.e pend· ln1 evaluation by insurance tn· vHtlgators. Fli1ht tnatruccor Fb htr, the eytwltneta, aatd '80,000 would be a good guess. based on the voluc or such ~urcraft The spokesman said Vance would wait until later in the talks to bring up the subject of the dissidents. He added the first session would be devoted entire- ly lo the unresolved Issues block· ing conclusion of SALT ll wruch seeks t o limit the nuclear arsenal of both superpowers. Va nce has said repeatedly the human rights issue must not in- terfere with the nuclear arms talks. The new American proposals are a imed at breaking a dead lock over a new treaty whJch seeks to restrict new missile sy stems a nd hi g h .fly i n g strategic bombers on both sides. The specific plan that Vance presented today would limit the modifications the Russians can make on new missiles during lhe life of the treaty, untll 1985. At the same time. the proposal a llows the United States to de· velop lhe MX mobile missile and a lso dig thousands of silos to hide its current a r senal of Minuteman missiles by shlfting the m from hole to hole in a sort of "shell game." The plan would make the Minuteman arsenal less vulnerable to attack. "It's going to be hard sled- ding," said a senior U.S. official, referring {o expect~ Soviet ob· jections to the "shell game" de· fense strategy known to officials as MAP, for multiple aiming points . The source a ls o s aid the Carter adminislration has not decided whether to go ahead with the MX, the mobile missile system. U.S. concern over g rowing Soviet missile power is one of the principal factors in delaying completion of the accord. The other pr1ncipal unresolved Issue ts tbe Russian bomber known as the Backfire. ... Seeks Slaip11 Adm. Thomas Hayaro. the Navy's new chief. says 15 new ships a year aren't enough to maintain control of the soas Lynn Hart HART'S John Hart SPORTING GOODS 538 CENTER ST.• COSTA MESA• 646-1919 MUICO adidas ... ~ IO\•OCO..OOI u- T•SHllTS ,'=ft .,.. IAGS '6" to '22" . Open 9 to 6 -Cosed Sunday 538 Center Mone co fl~'-Clocroiv 3!i .,, conon .id•OH 1hfflt swoe 1111 ourp0:.c S"o•t '13" 646-1919 .. D .. '1 t -. " I .. .. n f ' 1lo t ' • II ,. Orange Coast EDITION 1"odu y~s Closing N.Y. Stoeks . } s ... C . TEN CENTS ~ ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1978 ; VOL 71 , NO. 193, 4 SECTIONS. 42 PAGES "' i r Board Orders So Ille SuDllller Classes 1 I Backed against the wall by the • potential loss of $10 million in t state emergency aid, reluctant Newport-Mesa Unified School District trustees Tuesday re · instated summer school for high school seniors short or gradua lion credits. School Board Presiden• Donald Smallwood lashed out against local lawmakers who played a hand in a so-called "bail-out bill" for school dis tricls in the wake or Proposition 13. "If Senator Carpenter and As· sem blymen Manger s an d Cordova and other wizards of mayhem want to tell us how to run our schools, they s hould be here l o vote with us." said Smallwood. "I think it's disgusting," he added Smallwood ca~t a symbolic choo Morris Dies Famed TV Cat Expires at 17 CHICAGO <AP> Moms. the finicky 9-Llves cat on television commercials . is dead at the age ·of 17, the pet food company said today. Morris veterina ri an Dr Barbara Stein, said the cat died Friday and was buried in a sub· I urb on the grounds of the hom0 he shared with has handler. Bob I Ma rtw;ck She said Morris' death was a ssociated with 1 cardiac complications related to 1 old ag,. A • 17 Morris was t h e t•quiva lent of a 90-year-old human. she said. Morris was found in 1966 in a Chicago.area humane shelter by an animal handler searching for an orange cat to appear in a te lev1s1on commercial. At the age of 7. Morris starred in his first commercial for 9 Lives and for the next 10 years made mor • than 40 television commercials A spokesman for the public re lations agency that handles t h~ account for the pet food com- pany said Morris' role wi11 be taken over by a cat who has served as an understudy He, LIVED NINE LIVES The late Morris too. wall be known as Morn~ ··He 's a double for Morris physically and is as fi nicky, a loof and independent as his pre- decessor." said a spokesman. '.Media Center Doors . Open; Budget Cut 1 Doors will remam open at the 1 Newport-Mesa School District's anstructional Media Services ; Center but only after trustees I Tuesday slashed the <'e nter 's . bud~et in half for the next school t year • Th e center was Rranted i $150.000 to conttnue operation as the district 's depository for ' books, films. tapes and various education tools The board's dec1s 1on came after the center director, Dr. Sill Sanborn. had earlie r sub· Wuncil Tables N_ewport Pay Policy Review Newport Beach cit) coun cilmen voled withou4 comment Tuesday mgbt to table r e· consideration on pay policy for policemen. Mayor Paul Ryckoff, who had opposed institution of the policy tn February, as ked last month that it be returned to the council for reconsideration However. R yckoff had nothing to say when Mayor Pro Tern Ray Williams moved to table the ite m Tuesday The motion passed unanimously. Councilmen last month sus· pended all salary negotiations with the six city employee or· ganizatlons, lncluding the police. unlll the city's financial status in the wake of Proposition 13 could be more clearly est1lblished. It was unclear wh ether Tuesday's vote marked an end to Ryckoff's opposition to the policy or whether ll was taken in hght of the suspended pay negollauons. Ryckoff could not be reached today for comment. The policy mandates that policemen receive a pay and fringe oenefil package compara- ble to the t<>p three paid by low enforcement agencies an Orange County. mitteo a "bC:tre bones' budget that reduced expenditures by $137 .000 and called for a cutback of a bout eight of the center·s 20 employees. Rut trustees went even farther in their post-Jarvis cutback ef· forts by reducing runds for center by another $13.000 Bob Kelly. a teacher at Newport Heights Elementary School. told trustees there is "an absolute need" for the services off e r e d b y the ce nter, particularly those for elemen tary school students. "We desperately need to keep this place open and not at a bare bones minimum,·· Kelly said. During the pas. school year the center, located on Baker Street in Costa Mesa, circulated nearly 200,000 library books and 35,000 media items to district students. A bout 2,800 pare nu a nd teachers made use of the center in developing cur r iculum materials. More than 5,000 stu- dents teamed about pre-historic Orange County from volunteer staff members al the center's science laboratory, according lo district officials. Superintendent John Nicoll called the center an "excellent program" and said efforts s hould be made to provide it with "a transfusion or more fu nds" if possible. "I'd like to see us make addi t1onal cuts in area!> that ar(' least related to the children," said trustee Carol Martin. One of the centel'\'s features. a television studio. will see reduced use because oflhe cut budget. INSIDE LOOK AT ALLSTARS Dully Pilot sportswriter Dave Cunningham covered the 49lh All ·Star classic in San Diego Tuesday. For fuJI details ond results. see Spori.1 sectlon. Bl vote against the reinstatement of s ummer sc hool and was joined on the short end of a 5-2 vote by Trustee Duke O'Brien The day after passage or the Jarvis initiative, trustees had eliminated all summer school adult education. language pro- grams for foreign-born adults and a program for patients at Fairview State Hospital. A state provision in Senate Bill • 154 makes these programs man- datory if school districts are to receive emergency state fund- ing. The English as a second language and adult education programs probably will be re instated this fall. trustees said. Tuesday's action means sum· m er school for seniors who need credit to graduate will begin next Monday at Newport Harbor High Classes will run through Aug. 25 on a five-hour teaching day. Registration opens Thursday a nd Friday at Harbor High. Those seniors who miss registra- tion s hould <'all the school at 556-3310 or the Summer School ofCice at 556-3508 to make other arrangements School officials estimate there are about 250 s tudents who q u alify ror the graduation courses. Some a lreadv have ' enrolled at junior colleges to finish their education. Trustees set aside $20.000 to h1rP teachers for what Superin-;. tendent John Nicoll called an "instant institution ... Another $4,000 was granted to 1 reopen a limited education pro- gram for patient::. a l Fairview llospital us mg . r Athletic Travel Affected By MICHAEL PASKEVICH 01 t11e Daily ...... SIMI Bus service for high school s tudents a nd their athletic teams was eliminated Tuesday n ight , a nd Newport-Mesa Unified School District trustees said bus service for younger stu· dents may also be cut. In four separate actions. trustees cut the district's busing program by about $200,000 out of an over all budget of approx i'Trntely $720.000. The c uts are designed to minimize a district loss of about S5.2 million in property tax rev enues because of Proposition 13 · For every dime we keep in the <transportation > budget, we can r elate it to a teacher dis missal next March." said school board Presi d e nt Do n a ld Sm allwood . He has favored complete ehmlnat1on of all district bus service. but fellow trustees said they would wait before consider· mg c utbacks in home to school busing for kindergarten through eighth grade students. However. middle school stu· dents are affected by one of the four trus tee a ctions a un- animous one canceling all after school "late buses" for both high school and middle school stu· dents. This will save the district an estimated $40,898 next fall. Next to fall under the ax was the entire home-to-school busing program for high school stu- dents, with an estimated savings for the district of $72,450. It means 3,042 of the district's 9.000 high school students will be forced to find other ways of get- ting to school this fall. The motion by Trustee Duke O'Brien passed on a 5·2 vote. Trustee Rod MacMillian voled "no." saying the district should retain some fl exibility, especial· ly fo r those students living on the Baboa Peninsula who attend Newport Harbor High. J o ining MacMil lian was Trustee Carol Martin, who ex· pressed concern for Balboa Island students who have a long trip to Corona del Mar High. llowever, she called her vote a "temporary negative," sayinil <See BUSES. Page A2> SALT II Opens Flooded Flags Dry-Ing Fl ags wh1rh had b een stored in a Rochester. Mmn. firehouse wer e soaked in muddy w~ter when the building was rtooded last week. u long W1lh thousands of nomcs nd bu. messe firemen used their water hoses to wash the flags and then hung them on <c1 line u nd fence lo dry Schuller Daughter Out of Surgery Carol Schuller, 13-year-old daug hter of the Rev. Robert Schuller, was described as being in fair condition this morning 11 Dresses W ortb $4,300 Stolen Eleven dresses valued at $4 .300 were reported stolen Mon· day from the new Nordstrom department store in South Coast Plaza Shopping Center , Costa Mesa police said today. The theft was reported by a store employee who told police the miss ing dresses cost between $200 a nd $445 apiece. The loss was discovered fdllow ing a routine inventory. police said fo llowmg surgery on a partially amputated left leg yesterday at Childrens Hospital of Orange County in Orange. "Her vital signs are stable and within normal limits for a pa tient with injuries which include traumatic amputation or her left leg below the knee." said u s pokesman for Dr. Schuller . world-famous pastor of Garden Grove Community Church. Ca rol w as a dm itted to Childrens Hospital at 3 a m. Tuesday for treatment of in· j uries s uffered Friday in a motorcycle accident near Sioux City, lowa The girl was flown to Orange County Ai rport by air a m· bulance following the amputa· lion at a Sioux Citv hosoita l. <See CAROL, Page AZ> Gunman Robs Mesa Market Of $67 Cash A short. shagj?y-haired gun· man escaped with $67 Tuesday naght after robbing a Costa Mesci all-night market, police said. The armed robbery ocurred at 10 ·45 p.m. at a Utotem food store at 1913 Pomona Ave., ac cord ing to police de tective Gerry Thompson. He said the bandit posed a~ :.i l shopper before approaching a l cashier and puJling a pistol from t his waistband. I The cashier handed over th~ money at gunpoint and the ban- dit escaped in a dirty sedan with • out of-state plates, police said There were no injuries. The suspect was described a~ fi ve-feet seven inches tall, about 27 years old and shoulder-length hai r and a mustache. Coas t Vance, Gromyko Confer Weather Early morning lo w clouds and local fog near coa st. otherwise s unny T hu rsd ay. S li ghtly warmer. Lows tonight 58 to 62. Highs Thursd ay from high 60s at beaches to lower 80s lnlancl GENEVA, Switzerland AP> Secretary of State Cyrus R. Vance handed Soviet Foreign Mrnlster Andrei A. Gromyko new American proposals today lo limit the development or long. range Soviet missiles at the opening session of a new round of SALT ll. Gromyko took the plans. put a few preliminary questions to Vance across the table at the U.S. arms office here aod then called a recess to consult with Moscow. The nuclear arms negotiations were set to resume later in the day when Vance may give Gromyko a message from Presi- dent Carter expressing U.S. con· cern over the curTenl trials or dissidents Alexnnder Glntburg and Anatoly Shcharansky in the Sovtet Union I Related story. Page A4) U .S. officials dechntd to characterlte the first sesalon Despite the U.S. opposition to the Soviet crackdown on dissi dents. a U.S spokesman said it would not be allowed to alfect the arms talks. The spokesman added. however. that Vance would stress to Gromyko "the Importance of dealing fairly not only with Shcharansky but all the dissldepts." The spokesman said Vance would wait until later in the talks to bring up the subject of whe dissidents. He added the first session would be devoted entire· I) to the unresolved issues block· ing conclusion of SALT It, which s ee ks to Umll the nuclear ar&enal of both superpowers Vance has said repeatedly the human rights in ue must not in· terfere with the nuclear arms talks. Tbe new American prop<>Sals are aimed at breaking a deadlock over a new treacy which seeks to restrict l\ew missile ) syst e ms a nd high -f lying strategic bombers on both sides. The specific plan that Vance presented today would limit the modifications the Russians can make on new missiles during the life or the treaty. until 1985. Al the same time. the proposal allows the United States to de· velop the MX mobile missile and also dig thousands of silos to hide its current arsenal of Minuteman missiles by shifting them from hole to hole in a sort or • shell game." Tbe plan would make the Minuteman arsen¥1 less vulnerable to attack "It's going to be hard sled- ding." said a senior U.S. official. referring to expected Soviet ob- jections to the "shell game" de· rense i1trate.or known to officials as MAP. for multiple aiming points. The other principal unresolved bsue is the Ru slan bomber known as tbe Backfire INSIDE TOD1' ~ Plain wrapping of super-market items has set olf a react«m. Whale fhe chain says it'tr bringing i n cuatomer.t. othera questiori ql40lity. Food, Page Cl. .. D .. '1 f "' ' .. 7 Jl2 DAIL V PILOT C Lido-14 Regatta Begim By ALMON LOCKAIEV .,...., ... .., ........ -... ,., HUNTINGTON LAKE -Slup· pers from Newport Beach and Mission Bay dominate the Lido·14 national championship regatta which got under way to- day at this beautiful lake 7,500 feet in the Sierras 90 miles northeast of Fresno. Seventy-seven skippers and crews from fleets throughout the western U.S. s howed up for the nationaJ championship. After two days of racing Mon- day and Tuesday the fleet was divided into the championship and consolation flights which start competition today with two races A final race is scheduled Thursday. Dave Ullman of the Balboa Yacht Clut>. three-time national champion in the class continues to be the star of the show. H~ had three straight victories in the preliminary races and three straight wins in the High Sierras Rega"t'ta. sponsored by the r res no Yacht Club over the past weekend The championship flight ap- peared to be boiling down to a <.·ompetition of sa1lmakers, with four lis ted among the first 10. Ullman, a Newport Beach s ailmaker, topped the fleet. fol\owed closely by one or his employees, J eff Lenhart of Mis S lOn Ha) Also among the first 10 conten- ders in the championship flight ar e two skippers from North Sails. San Diego, Tom Nute and Lou Brooks of Mission Bay Yacht Club. Ullman. Lenhart. Nute and Brooks are long lime com- petitors in the snipe class Sailing conditions on this cr ystal clear lake are con sidered among the best in the world for small, one-design vachts . Afternoon winds reach 20knols with smooth waters. The top 10 skippers in the Lido-14 championship flight are Oave Ullman, BYC; J e ff Lenhart, MBYC, Tom Nute. MBYC, Chris Raab, Huntington Harbour Yac ht Club ; Hal Brown, MBYC; Pele J efferson, M BYC. Rowl and Lohman. RYC. Lou Brooks , M BYC . Charlie Cummings; Alamitos Bay Yacht Club and Stu Robertson. Huntington Harbour Yacht Club. The top 10 in the consolation flight are Roy Woolsey. Lido Isle Yacht Club, Harry Wood, ABYC ; David Smith, ABYC: C rai~ R oe, MBYC . J ohn ~la rion. Lake Me rrit Sailing r lub. Bob Mos. HHYC: Tony P<'rcz. RYC , Mike Borzage. ~1 BYC. Kelly Snow. HHYC and Richard Robinette. MBYC. At the annua l meeting of the dass Tues d ay night Ted ll1ns haw. Lido Isle Yacht Cluh. w"s elected president for the c·ommg year !)Uccecding Kelly Snow, IDlYC Proposition 13 Forum Slated Assemblyman Denni s Wangers, 0 -Huntington Beach, has scheduled a forum tonight to 1..hscuss the implementation of Proposition 13 with constituents. The 73rd Assembly District la wmake r . who will b e rhallenged by Republican Chuck Gibson in the November elec· lion, will speak at 7:30 p.m. at the Huntington Beach High School cafeteria. The 73rd district includes the c ities of Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley, Seal Beach and parts or Costa M esa and Wes tminster Train Kills Man CARLSBAD <AP> -A circus train ran over a nd killed a 23. year-old San Diego man lying on the railroad track. police said to-day. DAILY PILOT J•Oll C:-J Vt( t Pt H•~t f~ GI Mt .. Mtl\tOt"' ~tM••Jil•••M .... , .. , ........ .-."'~ "'4...0tftQlcl'tO- "''' ... " ~... llltMfW ~ ..... "~''""~' ""',..,,,..cc1oor• Co1I• Me .. OfflC9 ""tlilltq .~~:~· :·& ~~-~....,. .,.,. • 11mfJer Helping Limber What are these two men doing to this littll• tree in Mason Regional Park, Irvine? They weren't hurting it. uclually. They were using it to exercise in preparation for the 9.5-mile S~a King Back Bay An - mversary Run Some 710 runners loped around the duck ponds of San J oaquin Marsh to University High School and back. Related Photo. page Bl. Huntington Halts Most Pupil Busing By R AYMOND ESTRADA JR. Of -DMl'f ~let S!Mf Huntington Beach Union High School District trustees Tuesday halted home-to-school busing for most students in the fall Handicapped youngste rs and students who hve in Seal Beach and the Surfside area will be the only ones bused to their high schools, officials said. The action was taken to save the district about $390,000. The board also has approved a list of budget cuts totalling about $6 million due to revenue lost by the passage of Proposition 13. The busing cutback affects about 3,600 students, officials m· dicated. The school board Tuesday also ap proved $100 .000 in CO· curricuJar progra m cuts that in· eludes sports. music. drill team. drama and yearbook staffs School Board President Zita Wessa s aid no s ports programs will be ~really affected by the cuts. A total of $450,696 in dis- trict funds w ere initia lly earmarked For co-curri cular programs. Officials indicated that the c utbacks arc still t e ntative because of potential e ffects of state legislation Other cutbacks approved by the school bourd Tuesday arc Art McKenzie 'Doing Good' He's "still grounded," but former Costa Mesa police chief and city manager Art McKenzie today said he is ·'doing real good" following a heart attack he suffered last month. Reached at his north Costa Mesa home. the city's first police chief said he is reeling stronger every day. He was released from Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital about three weeks ago and is now un · dergoing out-patient therapy al the hospital. "It just takes a little time," he added. The 59-year -old Mesa former peace officer said he wants to thank a ll the friends who called to lend him support during his hospital stay. -$300,000 for replacement of furn 1 l u r c, equipment and vehicles. -La y off of about 15 transportation employe~ due to the busing cut. -$75 ,00 in computer operations and testing costs. -$112,800 in non · r e placement of secretaries who resi~n or retire. * * * F ro• Page 1l I BUSES ... she wouJd support the cutbacks if there is still a need for re· duced finances when this year's district budget is completed in August .. I think 1t"s gotten to the point where maybe we have to take a :,trong stand." observed Trustee Betty Jo Bailey. who voted for the bus mg cut Trustees took little time in eliminating all busing for high sc hool and m idd le school athletic teams. The vote was 6-1 with MacMillian voting no. The $81,000 cutback also means drill teams and marching bands won't be bused to high l>chool football games. Buses will be available for games if booster clubs want to pay for them on a "user fee" basis, trustees said. However. S mallwood said he was con· ccrned that certain "affluent" high schools wouJd have an un· fair advantage over schools with less powerfuJ booster clubs. He s uggested that funds for team busing be pooled on a dts· trictwide basis and be allotted evenly. Trustees then moved on to consider a $57 ,000 cutback to elimmate funding for all educa- tional field trips. Ra ther than cut thl.s fund. trustees voted unanimously to dole out the funds to schools as part of the yearly "resource un- its." It will be up to the schools to decide how to use these funds, but Superintendent Nicoll noted that resource units in general w ill be s lashed substantially during further consideration of this year's budget. Telephone Strike Still Spreading NASHVlLLE, Tenn. <AP· Telephone officials reported some minor delays In complet· ing long·dlstance calls today as a two-day-old wildcat strike spread to Include workers in nine states. Jim Wolfe. a South Central Bell spokesman, said that oc· casional delays were being re· ported but that the problems were not aerious. Jn Ohio, Tom Cotton. a apokeaman for Ohio Bell of Columbus. aaid service was normal except for delays In com plellng operator·auisted long-distance and directory ealla. Nashville were susJX>nded alter declining to cross a picket Un e set up by South Central Rell Telephone Co. worke r!!. The South Central Bell workers were protesting having to work six days a week. The strike later spread to Memphis a nd Nashville ; Den ver; Kansas City. Mo.; Louisville. Ky; Jackson, Miss .• C harlotte. Greens boro. and Stanfield, N.C.: Detrott; Colum· bus. Toledo and Dayton, Ohio: and Indianapolis. South Bend and four smaller Indiana com· munities . F ro• Page ,'1 J CAROL ... Car ol. who lives with her family m Orange, had been rid· mg on the back of a motorcycle driven by a cousin who s we rved to avoid a braking car and hit an oncoming car. Her cousin's leg was broken. Rev. Schuller. who gre w up o n a northwest Iowa farm, is known for his gos pel of "possibility th1nk1ng" and his weekl y television program. "Hour of Power " The pastor, Mrs. Schuller a nd Carol's oldest sister. Sheila. and brother Robert Jr. have been at the girl's bedside since s he was admitted. a spokesman s aid at the hospital Carol's attitude is said to be ·very good" by the spokes man who said the girl's physicians arc Dr. William C. Mc Master. a n orthopedic surgeon. a nd Or. Bruce M. Achauer, a plastic sur- geon. She was described this mom- mg as .. alert.. feeling good and improving " Refinery Fire Under Control BORGER, Texas <AP > Firefighters brought a blaze at the Phillips Pe troleum Corp. re- finery near here under control early today. An explosion touched off the fire Tuesday, sending n a mes 200 feet high and lighting the Panhandle sky. The fire, s m oldering in a natural gas liquids unit, would be allowed to bum itself out. sa id Phillips official Jim Ormsby. , .. ~,,_ 5oft ... ,,,.. -O..... eclocl-111!1 -•ul• T 11\y rubber "ub1 Ao1wa1tble Qt111op.t.OIC..,,,,, •26" Workers Protest Delay Sparks Postal Rally WASffiNGTON <AP> Postal workers came to Washington to· day to protest what they call the "pokey pace" or negotiations toward a new labor agreement. A bout a thous and postal workers came t-0 a rally near the Was hington Monume nt before s tarting a march to Postal Service headquarters about a mile away for picketing there. The Postal Service has made no pay propos al since talks began April 20, angering union leaders who accuse manage- ment of delaying tactics and of trying to take back benefits won m previous contracts. Leaders of locals threatened walkouts if a new contract is not negotiated by t he July 20 deadline "Our policy is ifthere is no de· cent contract by JuJy 20, there will be no work," said Mo BIUer, head or the New York City local of the American Postal Workers Union, the largest of four unions negotiating with the Pos tal Service. National leaders were more restrained in their comments ~bout a possible work stoppage. Emmet Andrews, national pr esident of the APWU. was asked by reporters about the strike possibility . He replied . ··Nobody knows about that. We are concentrating on trying to negotiate a contract. .. He has said the talks a re mov ing at "a pokey pace" because of management delays . The Pos tal Service has declined s ubstantive comment on the talks, but Postmaster General William F. Bolger has experessed confidence that a s ettlement will be r eached without a strilre. While national union leaders have so far avoided talk of a strike. Vincent R. Sombrotto. president of the New York City Mesa Cyclist Hospitalized After Mishap A Costa Mesa man w a s hospitalized Tuesday when his motorcycle clipped a street curb in Irvine and skidded across traffic lanes into a stopped car cont aining a Laguna Beach woman. Keith Space Moffitt. who turned 24 Tuesday. was listed to· day in good condition at UC Irvine Medical Center. Police said Moffitt , or 853 Center St.. fractured his s kull. broke his nose and suffered numerous cuts and bruises. The man was not wearing ..1 pro tective helmet. officers suid. Police said Moffitt was m ak· ing a right turn from MacArthur Boulevard onto Red Hill Avenue. and cut too close to the curb. His motorcycle fell onto its side and Moffitt was carried with it 65 feet. into the side of a car waiting to make a left tum. The driver of the car , Joyce McCallion, 24, of 930 Bluebird Canyon, Laguna Beach, was un· injured. according to police. T·SHIRTS .~,, •30 local of the National Association of Letter Carriers, brought up the subject Tuesday. He charged in a s tatement is· sued in advance or the dem- onstration that "the arrogant attitude of the Postal Service toward the negotiations can trig· ~er a postal strike . . "Are slowdowns and ottier reprisals by postal workers In the wind? Anything is possible." he said. Although postal strikes are ii· legal, there were widespread local walkouts in 1970, when federal troops were called out to handle the mail. Chief federal mediator Wayne L. Horvitz. who entered the talks Monday. said after two days of meetings with the two sid~s that. "It's going to take a lot of hard work to get tbe negotiations moving forward. "The parties are rar apart and the talks are moving s lowly," he said. TONIGHT CO AST COMMUNITY COLLEGE BOARD -Regular meeting, 1370 Adams. 8 p.m. OCC SUMMER LECTURE - "Eliminating Self-Defeating Behavior," Science Lecture 2. 7:30 p.m. "OTHERWISE ENGAGED" South Coast Repertory T heater. Tues day -Sunday throu~h Aug. I, 8 p.m . THURSDAY, JULY 13 OCC SUMME R LECTURE "A rt o f Communication · · Science Hall. 7:30 p.m . OCC SUMMER MOVIE ·Adventures of Robin Hood,·· Fine Arts 119, 7:30 p.m. House Brands Soviet Trials 'Depl.orabl,e' WASIIlNGTON <AP> -The House overwhelming ly ap- proved a resolution today con· demning the Soviet Union's political dissident trials a fter re· JCcting a move to include a de· mand for suspension of strategic a rms talks. <Related story. Page A4l On a vote of 380-10. the House adopted the resolution that the Senate approved by voice vote a day earlier. It says the Soviet trials are "deplorable events" that couJd pose obstacles to "the building of confidence and cooperation" in U.S.·Soviet rela· lions. The resolution also caJls on Soviet lead ers to s eek a "humanitarian" result in the trials now in pro~ress. Moneoo 6~'1,. dacront 35.,. couon ad1dn 1nr~oe '"10fl .ill purpose shot! 'I l " The wa.lUut beaan Tuesday when rune Amenc-an Telephone & TeleJ{raph Co. \'mployoes 111 The walkout hos not disrupted long·dlatancc service. said Mike McContln, a spokesman at AT&T'a headquarten In BeJ· mln11ter, N.J . Open 9 to 6 -Cosed Sunday 538 Center 646-1919 ( < •• D •• '1 I ... . .. " -. . . . ' w.ooe&day July 12, 1978 .L__. OAlL '( PILOT A3 Lobbyist Law Hit by County Panel .. .. ·;.t " Boy Bero Oavid Pring!('. 9. holds 7-month-old Raul Hermosillo. whom he carried to safety after a cooking oil fire set the baby's home afire in Orange. David broke out :i bedroom window with a g;,,irden rnke. climbed through and fo und the baby near the blaze. Shielding him. David carried thl• haby out the front door County Employees Sue for Raises Deprived by stiite legislation of a 5.5 percent pay raise guar:mteed them under a two- year contract signed in 1977, c·ounty government workers in OranJ!e County Tut·~day took their case tv the state Supreme Court The suit filed by the Orange County Employees Association asked the court lo set aside slate leJ?islallon that prohibited pay raises lo local employees unless similar raises were given lo -.1 ate workers Gov Edmund G Brown Jr made the link an issue last week when he vetoed budgeted 2.5 per cent pay raises for slate employees. Consequently, publi c employees in Orange County and other local j urisdictions have been denied raises. includ in~ those already given ir exist mg co,,tracts "Bends' Blame d The employees assoc1at1on lawsuit <ille~cs the state over s tepped its bounds by "un r easonably" fo rcing local jurisdiction!. to violate existing contracts. The suit alleges state action violates principles of d ue pro- cess and is an unjustified in- terference with a vested nJ!hL That vested right is s~n as local control over the wages and working conditions of public t>mployees. The lawsuit seeks a writ of mandate that would order the county to go ahead and grant the pay r aises negotiated last year as part of a two-year contract. The e mployees association represents roughly 5.500 county workers. County officials have estimated the 5.5 percent pay hikes would tack about $7 5 million on the county's 1978-79 budget Aliso Accident Fatal to Diver A '1l ·yt!ar-old diver who died 1n a s h ip's decompression chamber off Aliso Beach Tues· day, may have been a few days away from returnin~ to his fami ly following a months-long ocean sewage outfall project. The rover Hiram Beckham of Goleta. was work10g 191 feet below the ocean's surface about 9:30 a .m. when his pressure suit suddt>nly filled with air. propell· ing his body toward the surface, a Dana Point Barbor Patrol spokesman said today When Beckham hit the sur· race. he was rushed into a de compression chamber aboard the World Wa r II Liberty ship Davy Crockett. a spokesman said. Beckham was reported a~ suf· fering a "severe cas e or lhe bends," a disorder that results from a too rapid decrease in at mos pheric pressure. Pressure at 190 feet is nearly six limes the pressure on land so divers must come up slowly to allow their body pressure lo ad· Ex-Assessor E yes Land Buy MURRIETA HOT SPRINGS (AP) -If a foredosure move Is successful. former Los Angeles County Assessor Philip Wat.son says he expects to build a desert retiremenl community on 1.200 acres of land neor this hot springs resort. The acreage is currently un- der foreclosu re proceedinf's filed against the landlord. Morris Shenker of Las Vegas, by P lpefltters Union Local 562 of St. Louis. AUeglng default on u SlS million loan. Shenker dented the union 's elalm that he has defaulted on hl5 loan payments. JU St Beckham wtis placed inside t he decompression chamber in an attempt lo equalize outside press ure with his body pressure. A Harbor Patorol s pokesman said several doctors were flown to the s hip, anchored off South Laguna. But Beckham l apsed into a coma and died in the decom- pression chamber at about 2:30 p.m "This guy's s uit somehow overinflated," said Dr. Richard Scott. "It blew up like a balJoon and he popped out of the waler like a cork. He was unconscious. seriously sick and in s hock from the minute he hit the s urface." Scott. head of the medical alert center at the Los Angeles County Health Services Depart· ment, rurected via radio the ef. fort to save the diver. The center also dispatched doctors to the scene. The diver was placed in· side a shipboard decompression chamber moments after he sur- faced at 9:30 a .m .• sheriff's deputies said. He died in the ch amber about five hours later. "This is a very rare and very di((icult kind or problem. when someone s urfaces so rapidly after he has been down that deep,·· Scott said. The pressure causes nitrogen to collect m the body. A s low ascent from the bottom a llows presures to eq u a lize gradua lly a nd the nttrogen escapes harmle6sly But surfacing rapidly sends nitr ogen bubbles movi n g through the body. From shallow depths, that causes a painful condition called tbe bends. "8ut when the victim came from that depth he iOl the bends instantly," $(ott Hid. "He got n whole shower of bubbles in his blood and nervous system. "He died of shock u a result of m assive bubble formation," the doctor said. TIN CUP Rules Backed By GA RY GRANVILLE Ol lloe 0.lly f>li.,t St.If The Orange County Fair Cam paign Practices Commission re· commended Tuesday night that the county scrap .its S·year old lobbyist control ordinance . In the commission's view, the county's measure should give way to provisions controlling so- called influence brokers con talned in the recently enacted TIN CUP campaign reform or dinance . TIN CUP was enacted after political reformjsts headed by former county planning com missioner Shirley Grindle col· lected more than 100,000 voter sign atures on initiative peti- tions Rather than place the TIN CUP measur e on November's general election ballot, county s upervisors enacted it as an or· dinance that will go into effeet after the Nov. 7 election. T IN CUP zeroes in Qn lob· byists who contribute and solicit contribu•1ons to county s upervisor oolitical campaigns Supervisors who have accept ed more than $250 a year from the so-called influence brokers ~ill be prohibited from voting on issues affecting theirs and their clients' financial well being. I n contrast to those s tiff stipulal1ons, the existing county lobbyist control measure seek~ only full public disclosure or lob- byists public spending habits. But a lobbyist is defined as anyon e who attempts to 1n · fluen ce the decision of any super visor, county employee or county commissioner. As a result. riles m aintained l)y t'Ounty clerks bulge with thous ands or registrants who, in the traditional sense arc not µersons paid by a third party to influence government decisions lncludc>d 1n the bulky files arc regis tration cards for business executives. salesmen. lawyers and others who discuss govern ment business as vi rtual sidelights of their jobs. If the commission's recom· m endalion is followed by the Board of ~uper visors. that system will he abandoned in favor or the TIN CUP measure that targets about a dozen lob· by isl::. The political commission also voted unanimous ly to recom mend lhal the board prohibit an y county elected offic1al. em ployee or appointed com missioner from accepting gifts from those who do business with the county. Inc luded under the gift pro vision would be meals and enter· tainment totaling more than SlO a month. The commission also said the county should drop its require ment that candidates for elected office report in detail all cam paign contributions, 1nclud10g those or $50 or less. That reporting require ment imposes a hardship on can· didatcs that serves no useful purpose, the commission said tis at opted for drawing the detailed reporting line at $50. Though not part of the single unanimous vote that will carry its recommendations on to the Board of Supervisorl>, com missioners indicated the) reel the commission itself s hould stay in business Car, Card Curbs Mulled By County A proposal to limit Orange County officials' use of county cars and gasoline credit cards will be considered next wee k by supervisors. As suggested by Board Chairman Thomas Riley. elect- ed office-holders and appointed department heads could use their county cars for private ac· ti vi lies However, the county officials themselves. not family or staff member'!!. mus t be in the vehi- cle. In addition the officials would have to s upply t heir o wn gasoline and oil while usi ng the cars for private business. Supervii;or Laurence Schmit , who was defeated ln his June 6 re·election bid, was criticized earlier this year for using his car and credit card on ramlly vacations and allowing ramlly members lo purchase gasoUnc with the county card County Counsel Adrion Kuype r said cxlsUng county gulde11ne8 permitted Schmit to use the car and credit card for prlvate actlv1tles. D.•llY Piiot Staff P-o AIRCRAFT NEARLY CUT IN TWO AFTER BEING STRUCK BY RUNAWAY PLANE Owner Was Hand-Cranking Propellor When His Craft Left on Its Own Runaway Plane Crashes Huntington Damage Estimated at $60,000 Hy ARTHUR R. VINSEL OI t ... D•ilY Pllol S"lf A runaway plane whose pilot was hand·cranking the propellor tried to take off alone at Hunt· 1ngton Beach's Meadowlar k Airport Monday night, careen· 1ng into three other par ked <11rcraft The engine roared to life and the Cessna 172. leased and rent· ed out by the Aviation Company, 5141 Warner Ave., proceeded to cruise across the small field with Hand In pursuit. "He's lucky the prop didn't hit All U nfille d · him ... said eyewitness Fisher. He said after starting to taxi on its own and perhaps lifting off the ground momentar ily. tht• Cessna abruptly spun around and began purs uing its pursuer on a collision course One eyewitness. a flight 1n structor alerted by the s udden roar of the engine, estimated damage at S60.000 or more as one aircraft was a lmost sli ced in half by lhe pilotless pla ne "It never really quite got airborne, but there was about 60 feet out there where it looked like it wasn·t going through that tall grass." said Russ Fisher "It may have gotten off the ~round about a fool." added Fts her. a pi lot trainer for Aviation Unlimited. Supervisors Chop 540 County Posts Aviator Richard Hand of Hun· tmgton Beach had been hand· cranking the propellor a fter tinkering with a dead battery about 9 p.m., investigators s aid. "He mis·cstimated how far he had the throttle in." s aid Hunt· ington Beach Police Office r Richard Butcher. who handled the firs t reports of the incident Trustees Ask Fwul, Caution LONG BEACH !AP> -The Board of Trus tee s of the California Stale Univers ity and Coll eges system passed a resolu· tion Tuesday urging its cam- puses to consider the s odal res ponsibility of corporations an which.they invest Acting on the issue at the re· quest of the CSUC Student Presa dents Organization, the t rustees passed the r esolution after l ength y discussion about whether the board should in· volve itself with such issues The board itself has no power to control investments. so the resolution is simply a statement of policy suggested to the cam puses. Orange County Supervisors eliminated 540 Jobs m county government Tuesday, falling short of their immediate goal of s licing more t han 1,000 jobs from the county payroll in the wake of Proposition 13. All of the 540 positions cut Tuesd ay currently are unfilled. They amount to aboul five per· cent of the county's work force of 10,200. County supervisors had hoped to drop 1,022 unfilled jobs in or· der to avoid, or at least de1ay lay-offs of "warm bodies." But County Administrative Of- ficer Robert Thomas recom- mended that 482 of the 1,022 un· filled positions be s aved. He said 266 of the vacancies should be retained in the budget because th ey are being held for employees who are on leaves of absence or who are filling tern· porary promotions. because some of the jobs already are in the process of being filled, or because they are funded from revenue other than property laxes. Jn addition. Thomas s aid, county supervisors don 'l bavc the power to unilaterally elim inate 216 other openings because they involve such agen· cies as the courts. County Auditor Controller Vic Heim failed in a last-<l1tch effort to avoid deletion of two vacant positions 1n the county medical center collections sec- tion. He said the collection workers, who seek payment of medical bills owed by former patients at Orange County Medical Center, collect $1.67 for each Sl spent in the effort. "The loss of these two pos1 lions wiU mean a loss of rev enue." he argued. "We have taken a very firm position to try to avoid lay-offs." Thomas replied. "I think it i~ kind of out of place now to be protesting the deletion of vacant pos1lions. "We. are trying to take the conservative side." he added. County supervisors then ap· proved Thomas· rccommenda lions The 540 Jobs e liminated Tu~· day ran~e from a $548-a-month c·lerk's job to ~1 SJ.768-a-month assistant directorship of the coun ty's H uman Service~ Agency. Thomas said of the elimint1 ti on of unfi Ued positions: "Some of these departmenL'> are going to be hurt a lot more when the filled pos itions are put on the line." County s upervis ors oegin budget hearings Aug. 3. County officials said it won't be known until then whether or not lay-offs will be necessary G em T alk When you have something rare and beautiful By J C HUMPHRIES Gemolog1:1t.CfA SA BI NO CRYSTAL another US!> /or the u:onder mt!l<J/ Sabino crystal takes its name from Ernest Marius Sabino, F r e nch sculptor. craftsman and wrought Iron mold ing expert. Early in this century, Sabino devel<>Ped the use of POWdered gold suspended in flint crystal. The result is an opalescent glass of amazing beauty, which constantly changes hues when viewed from different angles and In changing llght. Sabino mastered the delicate art of controlling the temperature of molten glass so that the powdered gold Is suspended throughout the glass when It is blown Into various shapes. His h ighly-treasured pieces Include butte rflies, birds and other nature subtects, plus small statuettes. Most are from one to eight Inches tall. When he died, his original molds remained In his plant In France. where • craftsmen who ~d trained at his •Ide carried on this delicate work. Glass glftware Is one of he ~t enduring of all treasures. and the work of Sabino and his successors hH heightened the l(Jlportance of this art form. They have! also extended gold, nature's wonder metal , to another beautiful use. to celebrate. The diamond solitaire. Ont> ~1ngle diamond Set c;tmply and l'll.'gantly To sparkle on its own Of ltl!>ttnQ v.ilut•. becctuse diamonds of about one car dt and up .1rt> rJrl' Un1qut>. bec.iuse not wo d1dmonds are ahke. II you re looking for that special g1f't. comt• !.e<.' our selection of diamond so11ta1re ;ewclry. You 'll know why It s the gift when you have something rtirt• .tnC'l be1wt1ful to celebr11te 1823 NEWPORT BLVO COSTA MESA CONVENIENT TERMS 8ankAmencar6-Maater Charge 30 t'EAAS IN THE SAME LOCATION PHONE ~01 ' - •• 0 •• . , I ... ' '. . ' DAILV PILOT ·e, Just ,:·:: ~oasting Wednee(Jey July t2. 1178 Q ..... ~ To•~~''' MarpbiDe Go to It, Lady ClllES OF ANGUISH DEPT. -Yesterday a lady ~alled here to the newsroom ln a complete purple outrage because of what we'd done to her. She was in a roaring snit because we were getting ready to charge her an extra five bucks a month for her sewer. One or our intrepid news people tried to explain to the lady that we aren't in c harge of sewers. We just report on them. The Orange County Sanitation Districts are ln charge. The districts are the ones proposing an extra SS per month charge for operating their lines, pumps and treatment plants. . IT IS UNCLEA~ if she really accepted th.is explana· lion. Some of us still suspect she figures we're in on the plot against her pocketbook. Thus after thoroughly chewing us out for this extra SS we were about to extract from her, she asked what could be done about it. Our operative t'"ied to remain calm, explaining that the combined Sanitation Districts will hold a public bear· ing in Fountain Valley on July 19 to hear views of the citizenry on the proposed fee boosts. Then the lady caller demanded to know. "WelJ. who will be representing the people at this hearing? Who is go· •tir11"1"1111"'.l'., lrmJ''JT1; "'TI'11,1111·11.::i ' Person 'too Hu11y To Attend Sewer Fee Public Heanng tng '''tell them how WE reel about these extra costs?" Madam, I'm sorry. but I know I can't show up to rl'prescnt your protest at the public hearing. I'd like to. But I'm Just too busy Listen. don't you realize that the old re·runs <?r my favo ritl' ~how, Guns moke. are on Channel 9 al 6 o clock that n1~hl'' YOU WOULDN'T WANT me to miss J im Arness prowling the main stem or Dodge City, would you? Then at 7 o'clock that same evening, the Liars Club lights up the tube on Channel 5. l can't miss that. How would l J?Ct new stuff for this column? I'd go on over to the public hearing lo represent your views al 8 p.m. except for Carol Burnett. You know Carol, don't you, lady? She is a real gas. She's going to be on Channel 2 just about the time the Sanitation Board directors are getting well warmed up at their public hearing. I'd be there for you except I think Carol's going to be a lot funnier than the sewer guys MAYBE • COULD POP over to the meeting late and offer your protest about 9 p.m. Oh gosh, I just noticed the tc.>lcvision schedule at 9 on Channel 7. It's Charlie's Angels. How C'ould J possibly give up those darling girls just to llrotest before a bunch of snoring sanitation directors? Hey lady. I JUSt had a super idea about how you can get your protest before the directors at that public bearing. Turn off your own television and go do it yourself. Hote l Collapses; 3 Bodies Recovered VICTORIA, Texas <AP> -Searchers recovered three bodies <•Iler the four-story, 65·year·old Denver Hotel collapsed Tuesday during preparation for demolilion and buried a work crew in bricks and concrete, but a fourth man was still missing. After working through the night, exhausted workers early today called a halt in their search of the rubble or the landmark hote l for the missing man so they could rest. 1'UREE BODIES were taken from the ruins Tuesda,y evening. including that of Weldon Johnston of WebbervUle, owner of Johnston's Used Building Materials and Demolition, which was preparing to bulldoze the building Sunday. Johnston headed a five·man crew that was weakening lbe abandoned structure's support columns when it coUa~ed without warning, spilling debris tnt.o an adjacent street and covering :;evera1 unoccupied cars " ......... Soriet Trlab Ginzberg Faces ll ~year Term MOSCOW <AP) -The prosecutor in the trial of human rights dis· sldent Alexander Glnzburg today called for a sentence of eight years at bard labor and three years in Siberian exile . Giozburg, 41, on trial 100 miles south of here in Kaluga, is charged for the third time with anti·Soviet agitation and propaganda. The maximum sentence for the of· fense is 10 years Imprisonment and five in exile. Officials said closing state· ments in the Ginzburg trial could be expected Thursday and a verdict Friday. Meanwhile. a signed state· ment by Los Angeles Times cor· respondent Robert C. Toti\ was introduced in a Moscow court as evidence tbat dissident Anatoly Shcharansky was a spy, a Soviet official said. WITHOUT MENTIONING Toth by name, an official brief· ing reporters on the trial said Shcharansky. a 30-year-old Jewish activist who races the death penalty. "had nothing to say" about the statement. In Los Angeles, Toth said m an a rticle published in his pa~r today that Shcharansky never gave him any secret mforma· lion. Ginzburg's wife was forbidden to attend the third day of his trial after she was ejected Tues· day for an o utburst in the courtroom . Howev e r , Ginzburg's 7G-year·old mother. Ludmila. was allowed in. Ginzburg, Lhe son of a Jewish mothe r and non.Jewish father, has never considered himself a Jew and says he is Russian Orthodox. He has been active in the Soviet human rights move· menl rather than its related. but separate Jewish movement. OFFICIALS SAI D closing state ments in the Ginzburg trial could be expected Thursday and a verdict Friday. The court official in Moscow gave no details of Toth's testimony, which appeared to be a pTotocol he signed after his in· terrogation by police about Shcharansky in June 1m. The o ffi cial referred o nly to "testimony by a foreign cor· respondent, a witness, who was questioned during preliminary investigation and who cooperat· ed with the military intelligence ser vice of a capitalist stale." Toth, who has since left the Soviet Union, has denied that he ever worked for the CIA. THE COURT spokesman said experts told the close d·door s e s sion that information Shcharansky is said to have forwarded to the West about the defense industry and its lnstalla· lions "is absolute secret and constitutes a state secret of the U.S.S.R." Shcharansky is accused of having passed on information about the locations, personnel and security classifications of military-related industrial en· terprlses. Toth wrote a story about these in 19'76. Shcharansky also is accused of helping Toth to make contact wi th scientists who allegedly passed on classified information about the s pace program. gen e tic e nginee ring and parapsychology. the science of extra-sensory perception. 'Sheer Waste' GOP's Tax Cut Pkm Blasted .,...,...... REMAINS OF TANK TRUCK THAT CAUSED DISASTER An Eltlmated 135 Persona Died In the Holocaust In Spain 'Resembles Bell' Death Toll at 135 In Camp E~plosion TARRAGONA. Spain (AP) -"It looked like 8 n ame thrower," said a Frenchwoman who survived the holocaust when a runaway tank truck loaded with propylene gas. exploded in a campsite on Spain's northeast coast. Police estimated that 135 persons died as a result of the Tues- day explosion at the seaside resort, 50 miles south of Barcelona. Nine of those died in the hospital overnight, hospital officialh said. MORE THAN 2IO OTHEir campers were hosp1taliz~d with burns. Many were reported ln critical condition. Most of the 500 to 600 vacationers registered at the camp on thP Costa Brava 50 miles south of Barcelona were Crom other We:-.t European countries . 'Many or the bodies were burned beyond recognition, and identificaUon was slow. T he campsite "resembles hell or what we think hell is likt·, said one police officer working amid the charred remains of automobiles, trailers, ca mpers and tents. THE PERMANENT CAMPSITE is one of a score along the popular Costa Brava. The lunch-hour explosion Tuesday blackened more than 160 acres and was heard two miles away. Earlier reports put tbe death loll at near 200. Officials blamt:d the higher estimate on "great confusion.'' Vincente Mirabel, the head of a bum treatment unit at a Valencia hospital, said 40 VlCtims had been admat\ed there and most were in critical condition. "I don 'l lhink many will survwe." he said. POUCE AT NOON TODAY put t he death. toll at '35 and said half a dozen persons were missing. Police said the 38·ton single-trailer truck was loaded w1Lh 43 WASlflNGTON <AP> -An income-tax cut or the size advocated by cubic meters of gas when it left the highway wb.ile rounding a most congressional Republica ns would be sheer waste in an curve, crashed through a st.one fence and exploded. economy already suffering from inflation, Treasury Secretary w. Witnesses said the truck was going about 40 mph wheo the Michael Blumenthal said today. driver lost control. "Whatever benefits might be envisioned from the GOP tax cut The blast set off a chain of explosions as campers· boltlc.'<J would be quickly negated by the . cooking gas blew up. No trace of the Spanish driver was foWld. rise in prices and in interest cut backed by Republicans rates." Blumenthal told the would be "s heer waste ," "I HEARDANEXPLOSION,awhoosh,and steppedoutofmy House Budget Committee. Schultze used the term "sheer trailer to see names 150 yards high," said a Dutchman who re - The Carter administration i!i fantasy" to describe claims that fused lo give his name. backing a $15 billion reduction in s ha_rply r~ducing the ta_x on "After seconds I saw people walking out or the fire with their individual and corporate income c~ptta~ gains would provide a outer skin burned completely off. Many fell down. Some just sat taxes for the fiscal year that -~g~1~~a~n~t~1c~s~p~~~t~o~i~n~ves~timiein~l~-~~~;d;o;w;n;.;~~;e;~~ra;n~in;t;o;t;h;e;s;e;a;.·;·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ begins next Oct. 1. Republicans want to rut trutes by about 10 percent a year for the next three years. claiming that would he s uch an inc ent 1 vc lo the economy that it would pay for itself. BLUMENTHAL SAI D that as sumptioo 1s wrong because of tod ay's high inte res t rates, persistent inflation and super- heated economy. "Massive tax reduction in an economy already s ufrering from inflationary pressures is sheer waste," he said in his prepared statement. "We do not have the financial or physical resources to a bsorb such stimulus without a ddang to inflationary pres· sures." The treasury secretary was joined by Charles L. Schultze, chairman of President Carter's Council of Economic Advisers. in asking the Budget Committee to support Carter's tax.cut plan in pre feren ce to various meas ures being advocated in Congress. WHILE BLUMENTHAL said the big Roth·Kemp income.tax Midwest Still Stormy Great Lakes Cool; South Mild, Humid rna~•t•re• "' LA ~. •1-rque •s 10 Ame1lllo •s 72 All~le 'O M Atlefttk CAty 7• .. Bro-11111• ,, 1' C Mfltteft SC. 9l II 1,•l ChlY1fO 72 SI o.a1i-F041W0rtll 101 1' Dell-.. ff Oetn>ll 7• 41 ••~toll ., 1• .n 1.0V99n !04 ti u tll• Aoo '' n Ml•ml 1 7 II New OrlHM 'O 1S l .J) Nt wYor• 78 U ()411•11on't• Cl•• 10) ,. OfM.,. ,. .0 OrlellCIO •l 7J 1.1$ ,._,,,, '°' t3 lil•OIO CllY M l7 07 R-.. •S 51 Ptl~9"f-t? " 01 S.llL•k•C.llY .. 7S TUI.. 10) n WHlllntlon to 10 .02 CALI l'OtlMIA 8.tl!e"'I i.1ct '1 .. 10'1 11 llt 1' n ,, " ., '° .. ,. ., 110 IS .. ., .. ,. 111 .. M '4 " » 1' .. ,. Ji u ,. * " IJ.B.8-Ht•••• ... lllllMe,..._. '*'",.... '°"" ecren enlttn Monl•11•. "" 0.ll ... 8', ....... eo'lt K---. Wiii\ . ,_ .,_,.. ... ,,,. ..,.,. .... Me•tc... lt •"•-••• luu••v In lllt c.,..11nu .,.,. Oewtla, 11111 ""* Of 1i. pretlpltetlon,,.. "'°-°""'°"' ' Emili• b •-5i~e tor 111e tllc~I· 11en, Ille WHlher S.rvk • s•ld. The South Coe.I Air 011elllY M•~melll Dhtrk l c.tlled • flr11, ,,~ \m09 •1«1 f liftCNY In Ille WHI Sen G.tbrl•I Vell•Y AllCI tore<:ot t lmllar cOlldltlons ll•n• and In tllt !•11 f<er ...... s.nle C.lare, PoMOlla, •nO Rlv~rsio..s.n Bet'...,dlno •rtH IOd•y. H'9111 In IN~"' wHI be Ill tM mlO·TOt 10 rnkMO'S. Ille wu111er Strvlte MIO, Upper CleMrl high\ .... ,. fOrt<.ail In .... mlO '°' •llCI llltM or tot to 114 ...,_ .. ,. ~·•llntrwi._o. .. rt-. • Well, maybe 10 ...... . • But talk 11 1 0 cheap -•nd ao trenaltory. • Wh e n you want food barg•lna -prices you can count on day In and day out, th• proof la In print ••••• In the grocery ada in t he Dally Piiot. • Confused by all the conflicting clalma? • Shop the Dally Piiot, get the f1ct1, compare. you're really getting th• moet for your money. DAILY PILOT 642-4321 • .. then you know •• 0 .. ., I -... I .. . ' CALIFORNIA I PeOPLE Prop. 13 No Threat TO Cities? SAN FRANCISCO <AP> - Attorney G e neral Evelle Younger says reports that local governments may not survive Proposition 13 are like "one o! Mark Twain's obituaries highly exaggerated.·· In papers to be filed with the s tate Supreme Court, Younger sa id Tuesd a y : ''Whil e Prop osition 13 doe s limit property taxes and does make it m o re d i fficult t o impose additional substitute taxes, local ( STATE ) government will s urvive. The essential difference is that the people or this state will now ha ve to be consider ed before taxes are increased." Younger. the Re publican candidate for governor, made t h e s tate m ents in a brie' defending the state against three suits being brought by school districts and local governments The suits contend that prop os ition 13 i s un c on s li tutional. <Related story, Page AlO.l 'eiat C'a•palp Nlzed SAN DIEGO <AP> -Lt. Gov. Mervyn Dymally says he does no t plan t o c a mpa i g n for r e e l e c t io n alon gside Gov Edm und G. Brown J r. this fall . saying he'd rather stand on his own merits "t don't want to be a good guy,'' Dymally told a group of re por ters Tuesd ay. "I've got som ething to s ell -my own programs, my own ideas. A joint campaign would be a liability for me " ~ Tf~ Rejenefl LOS ANGELES <AP) As far as the 37 television stations that broadcast Gov. Edmund G Brown J r. 's June 28 speech are concerned. that was a bona fide news eveni. -not a political s p e ec t-, a s Brown 's g ub Pr na .ori a l oppone nt , · Atto rney General Eve lle G Younger, charges. A 11 thP s tations r ej ecte d Attorney Gener al Younger 's request for equal time to reply to Bro wn's s peech , which concerned Proposition 13 Colea1IS Staib VALENCIA CAP> About 30 p e r :.on s r 1d1n g M agi c Mountain's newest rollercoaster ride . Colossus. h a d t o be escorted to the ground on foot when one of the trains ran into bra ke proble ms Tuesday. Mark Macy, a spokesman for the a musemen• park. said a brake was set wrong and as a res ult the five-car train s talled ·some distance from the a ctual loading zone " ,...,,,. Res~lteduled LONG BEACH <A P ) The fat<> of ~ambl ing aboard the Queer Mary will have to wait until next Tuesda~ J ess Stewart , a 70-year.old retired auto dealer scheduled to d1!\cuss the issue at Tuesday's City Council meeting, didn't appear until after the meeting \\as over . so t he Ite m was rescheduled for the following week. Voyagers \lisit K atsutosh1 Utsumt. 38. points out a sight to his wife. Reiko. 30, and the ir sons. Ak10, 11. a nd Tosh10. 9. from their 32-foot sloop. docked in San F rancisco Tuesday. The ra mily spent 58 da ys on t heir trip from J apan and will spend two m onths in the Bay Area before traveling on to London e it her by sail or a ir -a decis ion to be m ade later State Recognizes Nevada Borderline SACRAMENTO <AP> After 106 years. the State of California recognized the present borderline with Nevada . And the <'ase might never have arisen if it hadn't been s peculated on both s ides that the present line might not be the right one, and that some or Nevada 's casinos should perhaps be in California or that Nevada should own hundreds of square miles of rich California ranchland. THE BILL SIGNED TUESDAY BY Gov. Edmund Brown Jr would recognize the 1872 Von Schmidt Line. which California requested the U.S. Supreme Court last year to recognize as the offi cial border. ll's the one currently bemg observed from Lake Tahoe to the Oregon border. But Nevada. answering in the case. proposed a number of boundary changes that would mQstly increase its arei on the California side. The 1872 Von Schmidt Llne was run and marked by the federal government. BACKERS OF THE BILL, SB 2181 by Sen. Ray Johnson. R-Chico. had cited Nevada's claim -among others -to the U.S. Supreme Court that the 1863 Houghton-Ives Litle between Lake Tahoe and Oregon s hould be recognized. That line was officially recognized by the legislatures of both s tates. and would give Nevada about 200 square miles of Northern California. California State Controller Ken Cory said two months ago he thought Nevada was making a "monstrous land grab" in its proposals to the U.S. Supreme Court. BUT JIM THOMPSO!'ll, NEVADA'S CHIEF deputy attorney general. replied that Nevada is simply "in~isling on our legal rights .' Thompson said ir the border ouestions aren't brought up now. there may never be another chance . Cory said that a ne w s urvey of the Tahoe-Oregon line could move it as much as one-third of a mile east, putting four Lake Tahoe casinos in California Get Rid Of Unsightly Bulges!! It •• • • • • .. • • • • .. • • • PRESENTING OUR NEW CONCEPT IN INCH LOSS • . ' f • NO Starvation Diets NO Pills Also W•~• "°""58tk .. ,_. ~ Aae • Dry ..... oe, sMii w,....•U..•• 't•• c:.1 .... , •• ' 4 ,...., NO Shots tMfTIMCHOM llACH .... 7142 ..... ,.., 194-7142 S-.Alle 117 .. JH ,......o.,,. •Jt·JtlJ ......... , ....... • 50 GALS OF GAS .,. ... Jill th.• •ff •• ,,,.. ..... ..., ........ , ... . . . ... Wedneeday. July 12. 1978 DAILY PILOT A 5 Anti·gay Bill Cosily Backers Spent $900,000 for Ballot Spot SAC RAMENTO CAP > -A ne w report says the s upporters of an initiative against homosex· u a I t e a c he rs s pent nearly $900,000 getting it on the Nov ember ballot. districts to fire or refuse to hire a teacher. school aide. counselor or administrator who is openly homosexual or who advocated. solicited or promoted bomosex· ual acts. rn un1 ty Churc h of Norwa lk. $2.200. The committee backing the in· itiative, Defend Our Children, also got loans from Citiiens for Sen. Briggs, $361,631; Briggs himself. $25,000. and Steven Batley, president of Starburst Consulting of Fullerton. $14,000. The same re port from the slate Fair Political Practices Commission said Tuesday that the opponents or the Initiative spent only $116,415 -but drew contributions from some or the biggest names in entertainment. Sponsored by state Sen. John Briggs . R·Fulle rlon. tl drew about SO supporting contrlbu· lions of less than $1.000 each from persons In other states. ANOTHER BRIGGS initiative to ban smoking in many public places, Proposition s. cost its supporters $59.310 to qualify the report said. THE OPPONENTS included actresses Carol Burnell. Patty Duke c.nd Marsha Mason: actors J ohn Austin and Dennis Weaver. playwright Neil Simon. and re· cording executive Neil Bogart. Their contributions ranged from $100 to up to Bogart's $2.500. THE BIGGEST supporters in· eluded Alan Masters. a La Mesa accountant. who gave $2.540: But the oppone nts . mostly from the tobacco indus try. r aised $330.350 a nd s pent $248.841. Large contributions we re $26,447 fro m Lorillard. $104.655 from R. J . Reynolds In· d us tries. $66.111 from Brown a nd Williamson Tobacco. $56.848 from Phillip Morris. and S61,668 from the 1'obacco Institute. Linda Hinojosa. a La Mesa public relations woman. $2.SOO : The initiative. Proposition 6. would make it easier for school William Phe lps of Airlines G rQu nd Sc hool. F air Oaks . SS.000: Cart Karcher. president of Carl Karcher Enterprises of Ana heim . $5.000 ; Lore n Gunllier. an Orange County re· t1ree. $3,400, and Calvary Com· Solon .Jibes at Recess From Associated Press Dispatches W ASlilNGTON -Since Rep. Otis G. Pike, D·N.Y .. decided he'd had enough or Washington and was going to retire rrom Congress. he has taken delight in poking fun at some of the more obvious congressional foibles. His latest target was the July Fourth recess. which the House prefers to call "home district work period ... The congressm an noted that the House q uit for the holiday on June 29, a Thursday. In a news release. Pike noted: .. A 4th of July recess does not me<Jn you get the 4th of July off. It means you get the week surrounding the 4th of July off. Plus the preceding Friday. It's a good deal." * 1 NEW YORK -Folk sing0 r Joan Baez says a dispute between her sponsors forced cancellation of a July 4 s~h s he had Pl8:flJled to. give in the Soviet Union 10 support or Russian dissidents. The 37.year -0ld New York-born entertainer. known for her outspoken stands against the Vietnam War. had hoped to ·~ m a ke the rem a rks be for e Monday's start of t he trials in the Soviet Union of dissidents Anatol y Sh ch a r ansky a n d Alexander Ginzborg. ORLANDO. Fla . -Debbie Rhyne may not look like Elvis Presley. but a Central Florida f'O<'k group promote,. Is hoping a lilUe plastic surgery transforms the 23-year·old woman into a spitting image of the •ate singing star . (,..--------..... ) "The world's first "EOPLE one a nd on ly fe m a le E l v is im p e r so n a t o r .... ________ __, .. " say s Danny O'Day. who severa l months ago promoted plastic surgery that made a young man resemble Elvis '"I mean. w~ got so much play on th at . you know what I m('an" The people hC1 ve taken thi~ Elvis thing so rar. you would thmk ·How much farther can at go"' We ll . here 1t goes.·· O'Day says he's got two more clients heading into the hospital for plastic surgery to look like rock 'n' roll 's late great stars -one young man who also wants tC\ resemble ElvtS and another who hopes to look like singer Jim Croce. O'Day . 29, says he picks up the bills 'or the operations II OLYMPIA. Wa~h. -One politician has put hot air lo a now l use. Gov. Oby Lee Ray fulfilled a childhood fanta!:iy by piloting a blimp The state·s fi rst woman But her forum. a concert with o th e r Am e r i ca n pe rforme rs in Le ningrad 's Winte r Palace Square. was canceled because of a dispute betwe en the Russian and uu British sponsors. gove rnor . a se lf -sty le d transportation junkie. occupied ' the Goodyear blimp's pilot seat for 19 minutes recently. gently nudging the huge air ship in a wide arc around this waterfront capital. Miss Baez instead made a sightseeing trip to Moscow and returned this weekend. She told an NBC· TV Today Show interviewer Monday that had s he given the speech, he r message would have been In a great country like that. one should not turn away and im pr ison d1ss1denL-;. but one should welcome and s upport them ." * MONTREAL -Margaret Tradeau h as received the lead role in a romantic comedy tentatively set to be filmed in southern France. a s pokesman for a production company here has confirmed. Richard Hellman, vice president of Prospec Films I n c .• said Pri m e Minist er P ierre Elliott Trudeau 's estranged wife would act in "L 'Ange Gu ardle n " IThe Guardian Angel >. a $1 million bud g e t F r anc e -Ca n a d a production. TRUDEAU It is Mrs. Trudeau's second film Last year she starred alongsid<' Patrick McGoohan m "All The King ·s Men." a thriller still to be released. The new film. due to begin production by the end of the month. will feature her as the wife of a wealthy industria list who falls in love with a cabaret singer. By Duayne 0 . Christensen, 0.0.S . 1907 Wu• luta A.,.. Wt1IJ I ... ltl-1311 "Whee! This feels great!" she exulted. "Now af l can only llAY stop usang the wrong feet " to maneuver the vehicle. Riding a llhmp was one or the few remainin~ ite ms left on the governor's check-off hst of ··Things I Want lo Ride or Pilot," drawn up when she was a girl Miss Ray always boasted an untraditional streak . She changed her name from Margaret to Dixy Lee an memory of the South and the rebel genera l. TOKYO -They may not be as revealing as the Watergate tapes. but the public will soon get a cha nce to hear some or Emperor Hirobtto•s private. tape-recorded conversations. The imperial household has announced that taped conversations between Hirohito and gue5ts ranging from Sadabaru Oh. Japan's home run king. to famed aviatrix Va e No:rokl will go on sale Aug . 31 as a Ion~ playm~ re<'ord Thl' conversations havl' been recorded at thl' emperor 's twi<'(' annual garden parties since 1972 His household gave perm1i-.s1on for 3.000 LPs to be m ade from t he tapes. Some of the material has been aired on J apanese radio and television newscasts. Wuuf~wltk •• D •• ., I -... . .. .. . . . . -. ... .... (,• • E ' .. it ri I p Robet1 N Wttd/Publlsher Thoma>t l<toev1l l Ed1tor Oran99 Coa::.1 Daily P ilot .. 0 a ag.e ________ ·W·ed·n·86d·a·"·· J.u.lv-12···'·97·8·---------Ba·r·ba·r·.t·K-re·l·b·IC·h·/E_d.lt·or·l·a·I P·at,>e-·E-dl.to·r·-· MOre Court Tests Due on Initiative An a ppt.!a l is pla nned by the Arne t a nd C.J . Segerstrom development firms f oUowing a recent Orange Cou~t~ Superior Court d ecision upholding the Ma rc h 7 munic ipal vote that rezoned their northside lund for sing le -family ho m es only. .dManv obs erve rs feel the Issue of whethe r Cc;>sta ~csa res1 ents ha d the right to rezone land by 1nlliat1ve, h owe ver sm a ll the a crcaf?e, eventually m ay be settled al I he Cali fornia Supre me Court level. Cost a Mes a cit y officials there for e ca n look for wurd lb expcnsivt> and tim e-cons uming days in court. l t is a n in te resting test case and it would be shallow lo s uggei;t that the developers s i mply accept the zoning cha~ge for the 63.8 acres near South Coast Plaza. T hey ob viously fee l otherwis e and have every right to fight to protect or de velop their investme nt to the fullest. Still, the attorne ys for the developer s do not a ppear tp have the strongest case when they claim the re zone move was born out of overreaction and a la ck of knowledge on the part of the homeowners . Thc ultorncy:, tl:.um thc sign ers of the initiativc thut L·ntled up on tht• lrnllot rc a lly didn't know what t hey wen~ s igning. •mu th111 the rezonc vote itself w a:, 1ust an l"<tension of this ignorance. T his r a lion a ll' has more tha n a passing rese m blance lo thl' crie!, tha t s prang up from foes of Prop. 13 the people don 't know. Cons idering th(' pc..•oplc·powt!r a ttitude th at now pre va ils <.ind the fact that few j udges would touch the .Jarvis initiative with a 10-foot gavel. it a ppears that the h om eow ne rs initiative proba bly is perma ne n t. One won ders if m ore <.:ourt challe nges (I r e really in o rder. Past Reniemhered 01w ''' I h(• m :qor f al'tor ... in Costa Mesa ·s busine::,.., .11ul population gnrn th O\'t•r t he.· p ast 25 years was thl· o ld ~ant:1 1\n~1 1\rm~· Ba:-.c..• that stn•tchc•d o ut on~r a la rgl' 1~1rt 111n of thl' l'lt~ IJ<.'I Wl'Cn 1942-46 ·r1><.1:.i~· un i ~ ;1 ~mall portio n of what was a 1.283·uC rl' f;1c:1l1t v n·ma1m. <1t the Air Nat ional Guard s ta tion on :';;('w1w1 rt Houll·rnrrl Newc·omcrs tu thl· c.·1ty arl' probably unaware t ha t JH t·l-rnt lo<:at1o ns of Or a nge Coa st College. Southe rn C'aliforr11a College·. Cost u Mesa High School <Jnd the Mesa d~l Mi1r tract wc..·n · on eC' part of the m a ssive military f:l(•illt \' · During 1t:-. ll1wf h l'yday. the buse was lt!mpora ry tlo m l' tu :>.20.000 <:adl'l ~. flight cr e ws and t rain ing officer~. ~I :1 ny of them rl'tur1u·d aftc.11· thL• \.\ ar to plC:1y roles in thf' r11 ,v ·~ for mat1011 a nd grm\t h : On .Ju nl' 29. l ht• t•xac.·t d~lll' of t hC" t1ty's in<:orpon.1.tion 111 1!)5:t lh<.· CcJ'\t a l\fosu lliston cal Soc iety puid lribut(' to t hv old bas e• ;.ind Its impor tance tu the city·s futlJ't'e-bv lll<tting u t<1mml·m orativc plaque al the Nat ional G uard fo<·i ll l \ · It 'wa!-a thoughtful :ind fitting C('r<:mony hcr~ldin g a li.•rt 11f tht.· <'tl~ ·.., p;i~I that might h;_ivc.• bc·cn for,gotll'n .fBelated Economy Thi· Cm1:-.t < 'ommunJt~· Collc.•gL· 01!->trict ha-; luund a • \\ iJ ' a rat hl'I' o h \'1011s \~av 1n our P\'l' to "'1\'l' .1bou1 "1 I0.000 in tuxp;i~ v1· ... · morll'~· t•ad1 ~ t·ai· I 11:-.lt·:id ol m .11l111g nut <:<1talog" for c..·ad1 11f 1t:-. thrct· • 1 .impu!-t':-. l'ath '-l'nll' ... tt>r. plus miscrll~incous hrot hurc~. 1 lw d 1:-.1 ntl \\Il l m :tkl• thl'l'>l' publitilllOn~ <1\'aila blc.• al a ':mt'I \ ol lm·:it 1011~ Onlv a din:ctiomtl brochure will be• rn;1ilt·il out to ll·ll p1·oplt· wh1·n · to pil'k up thl' public<t· t 11111:- 11" s :m '-'~tf·lh.·nt id l'\t, <.•v<:n though $140.000 is a sm a ll ... twn· ul Llw district's S75 million 1977·78 budget . a nd the ll:-l' of' privall' L·nt<.•r pris L' is comme ndable. flowt•vcr . this is t he kind of post · Prop. 13 mo ve th<.1.t h:1::-. t·1tizcns usking : Why didn't it h appen sooner'! ThL· duller uf co m munity college publications in · ma1lhoM·s was <Jill' of the m ost \'isible signs of the wa~tc lh:it <Iron • m :inv \'<Jt•·rs to bac k the J arvis amendment. Offww ls h~1\ t· 1ndicute d lhl' new procedure is ex · 'H'rlml·nta l a nd I h.tl m uilings m ight res ume ir enrollment ·d rop:-. sh:1rply The) ::-.hould n ·mt•m hl'r thut tht• community colleges · \\Nl' st·t up to :-.(•n(• pu blic need!->. If the public h as to bl' • h ound<.•d a nd t;,1 tull'U with :.s blizzard of mailings to attend l't·r ta in c l;1s~l's. 11 1!-time· to al-kif thoc;;e class es a re n~all~· . IH't•Ch •<I • :Opinions e xpressed tn the space above are lhose of the Daily Pilot. ·Other views expressed o n this page are those of their a u thors and artists Reader comment 1s mv1ted. Address The Daily P1101, P.O ;Box 1560. Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Phone (714) 642·4321 . • Boyd/Sanka By L.M. BOYD -Name or that coffee called ~sank a is ::i contraction or the • F re nch phrase "sans caf· • feine." Arc you awa re how il icumc lo be developed? The top m an in a big European coffee company, Or. Ludwig Roselin, had been looking for a way to t ake out the car- f e i ne . Then a shipload or s uc h be a ns in 1903 w a s ~swamped with seawater. and i {hc spoiled corfcc wus turned ~over to researchers . T ha t ( ~31ly soak led the m lo the de· : caffclnation process. I (. o~a r Gloon1y Gus J hote waste! TcWlnkle Pa rk Is a aood example -newly plpnted trees a rc d ying and trees wa lling to be plonted a r e dcrnd Our t ax dollars paid for them. B.M F /\ free glas s of water with a meal In a restaurant cos ts alout 12 cents. Or so say re· s e ar c h e r s a t Pu r du e Un iversity. They ca lculated the expenses of the water itse lf. ice. broken glasses, dis hwai;hing equipment a nd labor . Al exander Dum as the Elder wrote his novels on blue paper. his poetry on yello w . and his nonfiction on rose. Sweet. Q "Aren't most couple~ in M ex ico m a r r ied In t h e Ca tholic Church?" A . Not m o s t T h e estimators s ay m ost couples In Mexico -seven out or 10, they figure -aren't married in an y church . Or any st ate orflce , either . They're llnkcd in what 's called "fr~·union'' m a rria ge. Our Love and War mon ls not. as lamlliar as he might be with the romantic cir cumsta nces In Mexico. But he describes free-union mar riage here as Ute buddy system in the wading pool. ·'Where'd the 'Muppet.s' .iet. tbat name ? .. asks a client. Their creator J i m Henson and hla wire J oan Nebel concocted It from a combination of "puppet" and "m a rionette '' Rowland Evans/Robert Novak Sadat Seeks Stronger U.S. Role CA IRO With h is "sac red m ission" of an ove rall pe ace plun under Israeli checkmate. Egyptia n P r eside nt Anwar Sada t now pins all his hopes on the fact that J imm y Carte r "has st arted to play a run role" in the Mide ast pt?ace process for the first time P r esident Carter 's gradua l c h ange fro m symputhe t1 c med iato r l o th e r o le o f "principal ac· to r " wa s sign a lled in Mr. Carter 's invitation to I s r a e l and Egypt to send the i r rore1gn m1n1st l'rs l o m ee t w it h Secretary of Slate Cyrus Vance in London later this m onth. T hal Am e r ican ··initiative." Sadat t<>ld us in an exclusive interview at h is summ er seaside palitce an Ale x a ndria. m arks a maJor change. NOT ONLY does the London m eeting get Sadat off a painful hook. lt also opens the way lo m ore Amer ic an pressure on Is rael -regarded by Sadat as essential to sa ve his tatte red peace plan. Sadat acknowledged that he has been forced by Israel to re t reat time and .1ga10 from h1~ orig inal O\'erall Pl'ace plan d ro ppin~ h1 ~ talk about :.i l'a le sl anian state. forgetting h1!'> pledge lhal the Pa lestine Libera t1on Organization 1 PLO). not J o rda n , mus t be the West Bank's bargaining agent with ls raoel. and on lesser parts of the plan he took to J erusale m last November In the face of !his Israeli "in· lra nsigencc." we a sked . how dot•s Sadat j ustify sending his fo reig n mlnis lt•r for a nothl•r ro und of face·tc.i fJrc ta lks "1th l~r t1l•I '' REC-AlJSJ.:, he said. the I.on do n m (•clJOg "1s a Carter JO 1tiut1vl·:· not Sadat's. If it fa1b and no one here expects sue Mailbox cess -It mus t be followed by a distinctly American pla n. As Cl precedent for specific American proposals Sad at used the exam· ple of the Nixon a dministration whe n it drafted the plan that broke the deadlock over Egyp. lian-lsraeli dis engage me nt in the Sinai peninsula after the Oc· tobcr 1973 war. ··n enry !form er Secretary of State Kissinger> told m e there was a deadlock, t hat the old lady I for mer Prime Minister Golda M e 1 ~ was ve r y s t ubborn." Sadat said. "So l s uggested an Amer ican proposal." T hat time, It worked. Thus, if Is rae l's refusal now to fix a timet able for e ventua l Palestinian se lf-de ter mination -and to renounce Its "right" to J ewish settlements in historic Arab te rritor ies -deadlocks lhe London ta lks, it will be lime for another U.S plan . "I think it 'lhould be done." Sadat s a id AFFABLE and relaxed on the s urface. Sadat ne ve r the leh must be h aving s leepless nights a:. time runs out on him He is ' 1 I 1hit1k its tAken root." more pointed these d<.i ys in h1:- cr il1cism s of Israel ·s ha rdhnl· P rim e Mini s t e r M e nahe m Begin. more direct in his pra1:1c fo r Is rae li Defem;e Minlstt"r Eze r Weizman and for what he. c·alls "the Israeli peace move· ment ·· "M r Bl·gin 1:-. afr.iid o r Pl'ac~:· he s u1d. "We s peak two diffe re nt lang uages " Begin's refusa l to admit tha t lsr al'I . after its 1967 conquests, agrf"t'd to withdraw Crom m ost of lht• West Bank 1s "lypicJI" of Megin 's finding ··so m e tli1ng . anything to hide behind" JO or· de r to avoid peace. "It a ppear-. fo r soml' re ason tha t he dol'sn 't want to reach a n <.igr eemcnt " Nol so We1zma n Al dinner 1n Jerusalem la s t NovembL·r. Sada t told Regan how mu<·h ht· liked Wc1zm an "and Begin W (JS '1•ry ha ppy. bul he 1s not ha1>1JY now." Wc•i1.mun ~plit with Hegin lust month over Is rael's str..ttegy 111 dealing with the U.S. on Sadat's pei:icc p lan . Began is now trying to exploit that conflicl ~1 re veali ng s ign of ho w few negotiating weapons he has left SADAT is now undl'r vic ious prl'.'s~ure from a l most lh~ enlirl' t\ra b world to admit that hi" d aring J crusah."m peate m1s~1on ha s fail l'd. S yrian Prt.>s 1dl•n1 llaft•1 Assad wunh ~Jdal t11 make a humll1<1t 1n g p uhl 11• dcdar<itu m of fa1lun· l\:gcn:.1 \\OUl d scllh.' for J ··privall• kt lt·r·· from Sad <tt t u dll Al :.i ii hea ds of sla h.· adm1tltn~ fa1lur" .ind agrec1n ~ to .in a ll /\rah meeting to plot a new courst· But admission of failure would be a bitter end or Sadat's peact- d rcam and prnb<1 bly of "'" JO b For President Carter, 11 would b<' cala mitous It woul<l wip(' out thl• largest single m \'C'Slmcnl he had m a de in ht" l)cl<."agUl'rcd forc•1gn poltcy Mon• 1mportan1. 11 would /,!IVf' a t runstc•n1te nt Vi('tur v to th1 !-\ovic.•t Union a nd 1ncv 1t~1bly trill gl'r a nt•w Aml'l'll'<m dl·t·h n<· .•.. I c u d e r 11 I 1 h e w 1· s t " 1 t b n 1taclys m1c c.•rre(·ts in lh1:-. rn11sl s trnteg1(' part of the globt• Illegal Aliens a Federal Responsibility To thl· 8d1t111 Rl't.·cntl}. c1111· to prE-ssurt· gl•nc ratl'd hy ··1.utJOo leader-.. Atto rney General Griffin lkll ad vised loca l law <·nfo rcement a ge n cies to stop enforcing t; S lmmi~ration Laws hecaust· only the fodcr al governme nt in thl' guise of the U S. lmm1g ralion Ser vicl· has the a uthority to de· tain and deport ille~a ls. It has a lways a mazed me how the feder al bureaucrats can sit in W ashlngton. listen to a select few . a nd cast an all·knownin g declara tion over the heads or the m asses. Realizing that Mr. Bell is only mouthing what s tatutes alre ady exist. I wonder how he expects local la w enforceme nt to d ea l with the ever ·incr easing problem of non-Eng hsh speak· 1n g i ll ega l s inf il t ra ting Ca li fo rnia a nd ot he r s tate borders by the thousunds. Re· cent estimates suggest that Los An geles and Orange Counties alone have a million a nd a half Illegals. 80 percent of whom are Mexican. Chicago. report local immigration officials. has over 600.000 illegal Mexicans. not to m ention the illegal etlien influx in to other m ajor U.S. c ities Municipal a nd st<1te law en· fo rcE>m enl personnel, es pecially in the Southern California a rea . are continua lly hampered when encountering Mexican illegals who have commilled crime s. viola ted t raffic laws, or are Ob· s er ved in a set of sus picious c irc ums t a n c es. These i n · div id 11als have li t tle i~ any ide n tification. c a nnot speak Eng lis h. and prove to be ig· noranl of many of Culiforrua 's la ws . FO il T ll E m ost part . the victims of crimes or acci· dents involving illegals have little or no recourse against the i llega l due to t he ir highly tr ansie nt and unstable economic nature . In fact. Me xicans and othe r lllcg:ils are ma ny times o<>ported rather than held for t ria l a nd /or c ivil liti((ation . Within a short ~riod of time. many of these sa me Individuals will wander ac ross the border to ta ke up where they lert orr. Anothe r faction In Callfornta falls victim to the ln'1ux or II· legals in the form of t he In· dtvlduul property owner who pay" t aitcs tho\ In turn s upport our libe ral we lfa r e 11yate m . Each day illegals receive some type of support whether It be monet ary, medical or pollce and Clrc . So J say lo Attorney Gcncrol Grtrrtn Bell. pressure Con1ress to increase immigration person· nel a nd actlvate m o re stringent pc naltlea fo r Ille g a l bo rde r cr os!llerR nnd their American e mploye rs Concentra t e o n pos1t1\'l' <•ltl0rn;1l1vt·s 1n:-.tcad of llfl':-.s1n~ local law l'nforcement \\ho c tinnot closc th('1r t·yt•s lo \ 1olatwns of l~1ws. rcd t•r al or ~tall', d ue to ttw t·ou r:-.c and s copt· of thl·lr profc.·s!'.1on In s im pler t(•rm s . 1f thl' federa l la'W t•n f orceml·nt ;.igcnc1cs w<1u Id c1o lhe job they arc directe d to do. local law enforct'mcnt wouldn't have to take up the sl~1ck IJ.KANE Gett.hag Louder To the Editor This 1s a n ·1lhcat 1on of Joseph lr \'mc 'e. .June 28 response to my lett er of Jlln l' 7 r('ga rd1nf( airport noist• c mtinating from Or~111 J!e C unly 1\1rporl rl 1gh1 opt> ration~ Commercial ;md 1>rivatl' Jel a irc ra ft d o n o t Jus t ~•<·t ~irb 1 l rar i l y. they <H l ir respons ibly They do not fly fl ight paths directed by t he Orange County Airport They t ii k (' 0 rf W I l h . ' m 8 g n C t I C pnratneters " as they s ec Cit The s a me applies to height:.. Do you want to know a bout tht• real effects or aircr»fl noise" i\sk J ane Mos mann an lrvanc T errace . She is a homeowner who had noise monitoring equip· ment on her house. Mr Irvine's l e tt e r so un d s li k e t h l' burea uc ratic pup which we con t lnua lly rece iv<'. Things like "with in llmitutio ns of thc·11· equipment mul·h h:is been done to rcdurc nm st•:· docs not tl!ll ui; a nything Tll F: CRU F.L. daily fact 1s t h.it the nois e• gets wo rse. the noise becom es more frequent. the privall' JCl a ircraft Is more noticeable . I have listened to Jet s t aking off at 5 30 a.m . within the last four weeks Ir is not gelling bette r . 1t is getting worse Until wP aggres111 vcly put pres- sure on Air Colirornl n, /\Ir West and Orang<' County operations to fly high. fl y more quietly end to conform to th<' prescribed head anl{S, we arc doomed to be Insult· ed wllh hure:iucratlc stroking M e-v1denced in Mr . Irvine 's letter. If a ll of us jus t wring o ur ha nds and bleat to the moon as done by the inhabitants of the Warsow Ghetto. we are doomed to suffe r the sa me fn te. Impact· ed victims. (let on your hind legs and r aise hell ! Supervisor Riley, please pay oltenlion. WILLIAM M. MONROE S4Mlr~b Ooo•ftl To tho Ed..ilor: Nobody e3r cs? Two re malntna colonies or gn:>und squirrels that have lnbabltcd tb low hills where the Ne wport Center Is belnfl constructro are doomed. These - !>mall animals iJrl' <1bout 111 ftl·I t he gr1 nd1ng :-.t e l'I of lhl• h11 llcto1.er ·s s hovl'.'I hft t>r ho\\ m a n y <'t•nturiC's of c x1s tanl.! thc·n· God ulont• know.., ON £ COLONY lotat1·d tu tht· right of lht• drive to th<' lrv1nt· Ct>Untry Club J USl off Cn;1 ~t l lighway momenta rily 1s a bout to be des troyed. Some of the n · m a ining town could be relocated deep in the hills south of Corona del Mar. This colony Is locatt•d t o t he le ft going no rth on Ne wport Center Dr ive from Coast Highway across from tht' new law office buildinj.! w t'·re leaving town unlll tht• f 1 rst part of A ug usl but 1 f you wou ld car e to he lp. pC'rhap<, s om<' of you can att now o r w:ut unti l wt• return to :-.::ive and n· lon1 l e some• o f th es t• l1 t1 II' creatures Wntc.• P 0 Box 274. Corona de l Ma r 92625 or gN togcth<•r e arlie r your s e l ves They have been pushed back lo this last sm all field and lht•v need your help; Ws a ll the wor(d they ·ve got. DOREEN and JAY BURCHETT E ntpire Building To the Editor . · I see in thl.' Daily P ilot thut Coastline Commun11y Collegl' hus won th<• bidding for B:iyvll'w S<'hool wit h u mC'eting scheduled this next week to st•ltlt• on tht· fina l bid I attended the .Jum· 14 meeting o r t h e lruSLN•.., lo ohs e r vt' whelht•r Prop. 13 would make any difference in the planmn~ for Coastline . When Ite m 4 11 cam e on t he a ge nda about Ba yview. one ser ious speaker from the audie nce s aid "It can't be business a s usual " But It was . The board voted to start the negotiating for t hl' fi ve.year lease . This was their res ponse to the taxpayers· revolt Whe n Mr . Rodda introduced the motion "sub1ect to th<' ex lstencfl of Coos lline Community College " he d~w a loud round o r a ppla use from the au<l i~nCt· T here arc many of us I and not foculty members from OCC ancl Golde n Wcs l > who question thf' ~o und n e~s or the Cons tlin l' policies. and In lig ht of Prop. 13, there is no excuse for the board or trustees to bt committing tMmtselvcs lo a lease for a "col· lege without walhi." EVEN IF th e r('gulur clnssr ooms in the school dis· Quotes •·tt 's a newspaper 's duty to pnnt the news, and raise hell." Wilbur Stort11. atatement o/ th4 omu of Llw Chicago T1me1, 1861 tri('t.; r:i1<;1• th1•11 11•ntal ft't'' th1-. ,.., no 1u ... 11f1<'.1l111n Thf• d1 -.,1ri1·1 ... pokt•..,rn .m "ho 1.d kcd .1huu1 l'll'-1 dfl'<'llH'O\'"' ' I' lhmklnl! long r<IOJ.!<' 1n .. 11·ad ht· 'hould lw th1nk1ng ;1hout h1>" 111 1 111 h.1rl.. I ht• l'Xl.it•ns.-... ot < 'oa ... 1 l11w ancl t ry1ng to m.1k1· 1h1· progr .Jm lllOrl' U('('t•pt .t hl<• lo I Ill' l.t\ payers C/\ncl this ... houlcl prob :1 bl\ IO!"llldl• USl'rfl0l'" I ('·oasllinl• may ht• '4-l nnlO J,! manv accoluf11.•" from th•· 11111 s ide .world but tho:-.t• of 11~ v.lw pay thl· l11lb st•1· 1t a!> u f1m• l"\ :impl(· of t•mp1rt· hullding .'vl1 S1mo11, Uw ma n 1n l'h:11 .L!t' nf db tnhution of bri>ehuf'I.'' ha ... JU:-1 ,1nnounl·1•(1 h1!-. l'hang1• of polu·~ h ut only tht• prn..,un• of Pr"" t:! in:-t1gall'<i h1!-> l'l't'.1f1H' IH'" plJn And. to gl'I into ,1 h1dd ing har tit• "1th 1•11h1·1 of thl· C;1rdPn Sl·hoob. both pr" ,11\· '""' 11ut11111, " h c1 mu' t run l · t 111 n \\ 11h1 n .1 l>ud gL•I. "a' II ul.\ lhl· ult101 at•· 111 <11 ... r l'A..ird to lhl t.l\pi1yt•1 ... \'IHG lM/'\ so r11 Stttokt:-II urf" To the Eclt101 Jn r eply to t hl' r>t'r'>Oll who wrolc lo Gloomy Gu:-. and ~1gnecl himself G S F . he a pparently d1d n 't do his homework heror\• .;ay111 g ··s mo k er~ h urt onl y I hem selves '" Thel'c ht•S been a good deal of rrsca rr h on thl' s11hJN't or smok ing loh<t<'l'O ;rnd itx l'ffrcl on both -;mokcr-. 11n<l non smoker" 01w sl udy found lh;1t u commute r confllwd to a lr:11n''i <;mokt· filled bur cur for an hour c11n ahsorh a s m uch of t he carci nogen known us DMN as a pc~on who s mokt•s 17 lo 35 filtl'r <'igC1rcue~ :i day . <Ne w Y o rk Time~ editor iol. May 5. 1978. > G S F also said lhat. "The $30 m illion Califano hus proposed fo r his a ntl·smok1nJ:! campaign \\Ould be helter spent warning young IX'<>J>k a bout thl' danger-. of a lcohol n nd the problems II caust•s families of alcoholws • My rt-ply to th3t 1s tha t 1r purcnts would set thl' right ex umplc at home . thC'1r c·h1ldrE'n woul<ln'I become alcoholi cs and cause the probll•m:; which hl' speak~ of l resent having to us<· part or my luxt•s to educate the chlldr('n or pnr C'nts who keep h q uor available and the n cry because their chlldr('n become olcohollcs T S HITTER • l..cttn-a from reodrrt ore '"lcnmr Thr right 10 condtnat Miers to fit IPQCt or tLlminott libel 1.s reaert1ed Lttttra of JOO word& ur leu wdl be given prdrrenct All l~lf'T'!'I muat 1n cludt ttgnoturt ond maihn11 oddrtu but nomt1 mo11 bt wtthht ld on rt'· qw11 rf wflw1mt reo$on 1$ opJ)OT'f'nr POC'frJI Will not b~ publ111w:d 7 •• D '7 I -... . .. .. . ORANGE COUNTY QUEEN IE . < • J •' SMART ' ALECK ,.. t "There's one In every organization, but moet of them don't boast about it." "Got a problem:> Then write to Pal. Dvnn Pal. wdl cut red tape. getting the answers and.action MOU need to solve inequities in government and bwiness. Mail your questicn.s to Pat Dunn, At Your Service, Orange Coast Daily Pilot, P.O 8 0% 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. As many letters as posft~ will be answered, lnlt phoned mqurries or letters not including the reader's full oome, address and business hours' phone numbercamwt becon!ldered Thiscolumnappearsdm· ly ercept Saturdays · · Lo111 Naaw May Be on FU~ DEAR PAT : Between 1953 and 1955 m y father bought $500 worth of shares m a new insurance company in Yuma, Arizona, for me, and another $500 worth for my brother . Shortly after making this purchase my parents moved to Georgia for a few years. The information about these shares was lost during that tifl}e. My father is deceased and my mother can't re member the name of the in· swrance company. ls there any way I can find out'! S.J.M., Costa Mesa Your best bet would be to contact the state or Arizona's consumer assistance office: Economic Protection Division, Department of Law, 159 State Capitol Building, Phoenix, Ariz. 85007. Request the names or currently licensed insurance companJes in \luma. Then write to each company, Including as many details about the purchase as possible. U you prefer to have professional help la your !>earch, contact Tracers Company or America Inc:., 5091'tadison Ave .. Ne w York, N.Y. 10022. StDelterblfl Dat1 at 49 A H1'e1 DEAR PAT : I've been trying to read up on the metric system, but I've never seen how air tem- peratures are measured. C an you find out and let me know? C.G., Irvine Jn the United States, Celalus la lite metric scale for temperature. It used to be called cet1U· grade. Like the centigrade scale, ll naaa from O degrees -freezing-point of water -to l M degrees. the bolling point of water. To get u Wea of various temperatures lo the metric system, a room temperature or 20 degrees C woald be tlte same as 68 degrees F . Hot summer temperatares of 77 .95 degrees F would range from 25-35 degrees C. and cool winter temperatures of 41-51 degrees F would range from 5· 15 degreesC. Tmee:e Ple1Ue, Reader A•lu DEAR PAT. I read about your action line col· umn in the Expert Consumer Handbook and de- cided to ask for your assistance. I'm a senior citizen from Massachusetts who has not been able to 1-\l't satisfaction from a firm in your city, StarCrest of Cali forni a . I ordered a "Perma Tweez•• hair remover March 9. When my check had been cashed a nd no shipment r eceived, I wrote a letter of inquiry. It wasn't answered, nor were several followup letters F. F .. Chelmsford, Mass Glad to be or service. T. E. Stephens, opera- tions manager for StarCrest, apologizes for your inconvenience. He says the item you ordered was out of stock, but one was Joca&ed for you and mailed. Proaaised llef-d N~ lff.ue4 DEAR PAT: I ordered a pet stain remover from Argon Chemical Labortatories in late March. It was ineffective, so I mailed it back in mid-April, and requested a $10.95 refund in accordance with the product's 30-day guarantee. I enclosed a letter of explanation with the returned product. That let· ter was not answered, nor was a follow-up. H.R., Costa Mesa Aragon's spokeswoman says yoar reflllld will be m alled by luly J. The long delay was blamed OD computer processing. ... (Paid Advertisement> PUBLIC NOTICE OllAMM COUMrf HOUSIN6 AUTMOIUTT IOCHAI STOPS TAKIH• SIHIOR CITlllM HOUSIM• Afft.ICATIOMS · -The Orange County Housing AuthOrity lOOiA) announces that it will ceaae to accept new appllcatlOns for the Section Eight Housing Assistance Payments Program from elderly, handicapped and disabled families effective immediately. This action by the Authonty becllme necessary due to the extensive waiting llst of eligible elderly appllcant1. and the Insufficient number of units for ekler1y under the Authority's present housing allocatlOn from the Federal government. - The residents or the unlncorPOrated area of the County and the cities of Buena Parf(, Cotta Mee&, 1 Cypress. Fountain Valley, Fullerton. Huntington BMch. 1rvlne, Laguna Beach. La Habra. La Palma. Loa Alamltcs. Newport Beach, Orange. Placentia. San Oemente, San Juan Capistrano, Seal BelCh, Stanton. Tustin. Villa Park. Westminster and Yorbe Linda are ..ilfected. Tht AuthOritv will announce when funding la av•llable . . . ,. ... , .......... -........ ,..,.. Wednelday. July 12. 1978 DAIL y PILOT At U SC Vlee Presldeat Flournoy Appointed By 0 . C. h USTINGS Of .. DMty ,. ... Sutt Houston I. Flournoy, state controller during the Reagan years and himself a former Republican candidate for governor, has become the chief lob· byist for the University of Southern California. County to Cut Day Camp Fund A summer day camp program for children in Fountain Valley and San Juan Capistrano a s well as six inland communities won't receive any finan- cial help from Orange County government this year. Supervisors Tuesday approved a modified version of the park program wruch had been operated jointly in the P.ast with city governments . The county still will make its parl<s available for city-operated recreation programs and offer the help of park rangers for talks and nature walks. But. because of financial cuts brought about by passage of Proposition 13, supervisors won't supply the $13,800 available last year to transport youngsters lo overnight campouts at Featherly and O'Neill Regional Parks. Floumoy's appoinlment as USC's vice president for governmental affairs, was made by the school's Board of Trustees. He became dean of the USC Center for Public Arfairs after losing his bid fo r governor to Jerry Brown in 1974. *** STATE SENATOR John Briggs, R-Fullerton, is a history-maker of sorts. Although no one has taken the tJme and effort to confirm it positively, Briggs apparently is the first person ever to have qualified two initiatives for one statewide ballot in California. The two Briggs-backed measures -one dealing with the death penalty. the other involving the out- lawing of homosexual teaching and teachers in public schools-go before voters in November. ••• MIKE CURB, the Re publican candidate for lieutenant governor, and Dan Lungren. the GOP hopeful in the 34th Congressional District will help fellow Republican Chuck Gibson get his campaign started Friday night. Gibson is trying to unseat Dennis Mangers, D· Huntington Beach, in the 73rd Assembly District. A cocktail reception for Gi bson is planned for 7 p.m. Friday at the Huntington Harbour home of Arvel and Phyllis Batche lor. It's a $.SO per person fundraiser. Anyone inter ested in a ttending should contact 'Gibson's campaign headquarters. 18565 Beach Blvd .. Huntington Beach, telephone 847·9604. S«!ul.ptor at Work Taylor MacNeil's wo rks will be represent· ed in the Fourth Annual Sculpture Invita· tional at th e Or a nge County Fair . Julv·l4·23. A Laguna Beach resident. M::. MacNeil 's abstract bronzes have been shown in Arizona and California . Planners Mull South County Use Proposals Orange County Planning Commissioners will commendation to supervisors, they decided to ship try again to come up with recommendations on the proposals on without any recommendation. controversial land use proposals in El Toro and Kuyper, however, questioned whether the South Laguna. items would properly be before s upe rvisors County supervisors Tuesday followed the ad· without three agreeing commission votes and sug- vice of County Counsel Adri an Kuyper in seeking a gested the proposals be sent back for another re· commission recommendation before deciding view. whether to approve or reject the proposals. The commission, with just three of five mem· bers present, split June 26 on whether to endorse plans for a tenant·owned mobile home park on 232 hilly El Toro acres a nd a 25-unlt South Laguna condominium project. Since commissioners had been advised that they needed three agreeing votes to forward a re· " , .: B._d. ntOMAS dlJLV20 • 7:00 PM-9:00 PM RODEO dtJLY 21, 22. 23 . ' El11IN BISHOP. ' dULV17 7:00 PM-9:00 PM One of the proposals is by the Leisure Heights Investment Company which 1s seeking a change in land use designation on their land from open space to medium and low.density residential. They hope to develop a 617-space mobile home park offering senior citizen residents a home and lot in the $45,000 to $50,000 price range. The land is located along El Toro Road south of Cook's Corner. The second proposal 1s by property owner Robert Dolley who is seeking a change froria medium to heavy density residential for his 1. ( · acre plot on the seawa rd side of Pacific Coast Highway north of Bluff Drive in South Laguna. He hopes to develop 25 multi-story condominiums When the proposals were before the planning commission earher. Commissioner Gus Lcna1 n· was absent. Since then a commission vacancy also has been rilled County officials said the proposals would be presented again to the commission July 21 and be torwarded to supervisors fo r acllon July 26. CIRCUS OF TAIWAN JULY 15,.16,.17, 18 RONALD MCDONALD MAGIC SHOW JULV17 2:00 PM-4:00 PM · Lhwnock Auction J.ly22 Pepel Felllily D•y ~18,19.H Chlldnm'• Dev '-'v14 & 21 4H-FFA Eahlbit. •IC ... •• D .. .., I ... ' .. . ' ! ' i •• - • 4 RECORDs PROBED Tilt-: 1-"AMIL\ R' Bil Kt'im e -P UBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE BOSTON CAP> Hun dreds or lhou:;wnds or dollars lo expend•turei~ at Boston's John 1'' Ken nedy rederal building cannot be accounted ror because or raise, lnade quate or non-existent bu ii ding records. the Bos ton Globe reports. The most recent of sever al probes by a uditors from the General Services Ad · ministration ha s ~entered on contracts for office partitions at ?K facility. /~uilt Nixed FRESNO <AP> -T he ~th District Court of Ap peal h as overturned a heroin sale conviction or a Modes to man on grounds h<' was denied a "I'll never understand girls if I live to be 13." Mother Slain s peedy trial Eugene ------------ Delbert Cave wa!> found ~u Illy by Stanis laus County Superior Court Judge F'rank S P1er~on of selling Clnt' gram or heroin to an undercover agent m October. 1975 Woman Faces Murder Rap Deaths DULUTH. Minn <AP> -An adopted daughter of millionaire Elisabeth Congdon has been charged with conspiracy in the murder of her mo~her. !ess E l-. ew·L-.-n than a day after her husband began a hfe prison '3 'I~• ic-term for the slaymg. Marjor1e Caldwell , 46. was freed on $1~.000 LONDON tAP> Vis· bond set by St. Louis County Court Judge D~v1d S. ('OUo l Rotbermere,. who Bouschor and left the Duluth federal building rontrollcd <J flr1t1:>h Tuesday with her attorney and son. 1lt'w!>paper empire for Mrs Caldwell "intends to st<.1y here and fight lll'ttrly half a (·entury these i:harges. There's no place for her to go," ;'.~d . wed the da~E:~ter, of attorney Honald Meshbesher told t he court ltxa~ 011 mJgnatt. Ken I\l .ss Congdon 83 heir to a timber fortune, 1wth M urch1~on. dwd at 1 : h hi!> LnndCln home Tues· Wl:IS s mothered 10 e~ ,,...----------.] i.lay r11ght lk was 80. be~,on June 'l:l .. 197_7. He ( /N SH O RT 111~ company. Associat· nurse. yetma P1et1la. ?1. . t•d Newspap<>rs Ltd., an was beate~ t.o death with '----------- nounccd the death but a candlestick did not ~1ve the cause D eath J~odre• WALKE A W"Ll(EA HUGH I IBUOI 49" •4. "'1\'"'d aw•y "'"'"°•Y July 10. 1918 at ~uth co'"' Cammunlly Ho•p1tal H• w.i. " rf\•Ot.""' OI UQ\11\11 B••<n •or •S yetH\ Surv1v1nQ '' ~ t>toltwjr t-f8rrv of """".,•m. C•llfCJf'nld dnd many trutnds •n tn<' L<'QU'ld 8•6cn Me~ Pri•••~ tuner~I l'!rVll,.4.lo wtre held dt tne Shet ttr La9un.1 &!.Kh MOrluMy Sneller L~qvn., Bo.en Mortuary o"t(IOf' STINSON M"RK ALLEN STINSON, ..qe 10, ot l'OuM••n Vallty. Co\lttornt• 01"' S6tur Ooy July I , fq79 ., • •t\Ult OI d motorcvct" Mctdo'nt H• hMI tu\I re ontty ~fl\ Ot~hdrqecl trom 11\e U S Armv He h \urv1W'd bY' h1\ tatr~, Donato M 54""°" ot Fountain Vall•Y "''mother Col~ C¥tt• OI s.tcr•~n •o, bfot~t\. R&nd~U C Slmson, now <,etVon9 tn I,... U S N•Y •bo•lrd ltw u s s w 1c1111a, Oon•to K Sunson. ot r..rMt~ PU\. °'°"'°"' ~ncl Cr•10 ""en St•Mon ot FOU11t~1n v.,11~v C•hlotnta A'"'•' Jut.., A Sltn\On ol S..cra~n 10. C.•tdorn1• t-'t t\ P•t~rn..-1 9ron<1m<1tlV'r ~tl•f' M S1tnwn ot HUI' t 1n91on Park C.a1tlor n1«t ono h1\ m•t••n•t 0•.11t1omotlltt Oorotnv e.-."''~ o• S..<t•l'nf'nto (4t1 torf\14t Fru~nd\ tnd'f <All trom t'tOQn to q 00 PM Wedf\~S.ddy ~· Pu:rc.-8 f0\ Smfl" M ortu•r1 *'" '" tvn~r4t '"'"''~\wilt br CondU(tto*d lhur\dav July 13 t9'8 ~I 11 '"O A.M qf'• Jonn Sta,, ott~;•tlno •l'lfl'tmt"nt w OI tW' 1n tf\f' C.OOd She~rc.J (t"mf"t+"''V P1ttrc.tt Oro\ Sm11n M ortuarv Utttclor\ ~61:1'1 HLL IROAOWAY MOUUARY 1 10 Bro.1<Jw.iy Cn'>ld M •" .. J h 4 ?-91 'l1) SMITH· TUTHILL-l.AMI MOtlTU.AltY WlSTCLIFf CH.Af'll 427 E 171h St Cost.i MP<;J 64b·4888 "tEtlCE IROTHUS SMITHS' MOUUAltY fi27 Main SI Hunl1ngton B<•'!r"l 53&653<'1 SHlff9 MOtlTUA aY 976 So Coast Hwy Laguna Beach 494-1535 1533 N Et Camino Real San Clemente 492·0100 rt:lt( FAMILY COlOHIAL f UHH.AL HOME 780 t Bolsa Ave Westm1nc;1er 893·3525 PACIFIC Vll W MIMCUl.AL PARK Cemetery Mortuarv Chaoel 3500 Pac1hc V1P w Onve Newport Beach 644-2700 M~COaMICIC MO•TUA•IES Laguna Beach 494-941 5 Laquna H ill" 768-0933 San Juan Cao1s1rano 495 1776 HAUOlLAWM· M0"'4T OU'ff MOITU.AlY_. MIMC>al.Al rA•• MOf1 uary-Cemet tJY Crematory 1626 Gisler Ave Costa Mesa 540-5554 I.Al rz.IH•llOM llUMUAL HOMI 848-2424 COSTA MESA 613c•94150 , Neptune Society Clt1MA110N eullll"~ u JCA 646-7431 y--le4..C:wl'Y• .. "-'" ..,., __ ,.,..... wnrit• CM""',_,.,.... .. CoMnd~• Win N ote ATLANTA <AP) -Because of a revolt against property taxes. county governments are. finally gelling some attention. says the new president of the National Association of Counties ChC:trlotte Williams. elected Tuesday as the association's first blac.:k president, said at a news confer cnre that ~he wou ld work to educate bureaucrats an d ci tizens abou t co u nty government. "Counties have a real Identify problem, .. shf' s aid. "Even our schools don't teach about cnuntv government.· Weapon Bunte d SCOTTSDALE. Artz. (AP I I\ renewed search for the weapon used to kill actor Bob Crane has been started. police said Tuesday. "We have plans lo search a spec1f1 c area for the weapon," said Lt. Ron Dean. "And we plan to continue our interviews "-ilh his acquaintances.·· Dean said the weapon is belteved to be a lire iron. lug wrench or a pipe. PoUo Warning b•.wd SAN RENITO. Texas <AP) An outbreak of 11olio in Northern Mexico could pose a danger to unimmunm.•d tourists. according to the director or the Cameron County Health Department. Dr~ Verne Goerger said Tuesday that reports from Mexico show a "considerable amount" of polio in that nation's northern region. Coerger said the outbreak appears lo be centered in Tampico. about 250 miles south of Brownsville. The health department director is advising tourists to be sure their polio immunization is still good l}erore crossing the border. Air Carri~r O""d WASHINGTON lAP) Congress. signaltng an end to the era of giant aircraft carriers. still wants one more large-deck ship built. The Senate on Tuesday joined the llouse 1n voting for a $2 billion nuclear-powered carrier the Carter admm1strat1onopposes. Rut at the same time, the Senate approved a policy statement requiring that future carriers be substantially smaller and less costly than the current neet of large nuclear-aod oil-powered carriers. ·Bmtlber' Bond ~:i,000 NEW YORK {i\P) -Ladislaw Fraczek. the Polish immigrant accused of holding four hostages at the World Trade Center with a fake ha nd grenade. was held on $25,000 bond ea~ly t~ay after pleading innocent to charges of k1dnapp1ng and possession of a weapon Judge Stanley P. Danzi~ .set. bail in slate Supreme Court after court off1c1als found a Polish interpreter for the defendant. Fraczek had held police at bay ror nine hours Monday. threatening to set o(f a grenade and ~o pounds of dynamite he claimed he was carryl~g 1n a satchel. The satchel was found to contem a bundle of Russian bread loaves. e Polish Oag. a Polish Bible and a bread knife. police said. PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITTOUs•ustMISS NAMe STATEMENT T11• lottOWlftQpeMOn lt001"9buslnen H II ENE' llOUTIOUE, 1910 So COe•I HIOll•O. L.aguN tlffCll. C.. '7'11 N•'l'erell H AVlll.,,y, 71W Ocfffl Vlll•,So ~~.C. mtl T llh l>\ISll't'Si I> <-.cted 11\o an 1n OIYldu•I Ne.,.,_,,N A\1111...,y Tiii, •I•-· ... "~ wn11 IM CoUlllY Cltrll Of Or~ '°"'1tY on JUflf >O, 1'71 PVBU C NOTICE "CTITTOUS I UllNIU NAM• ST/ITl!MIN~ Tiit 1011-1119 JlertOnt 1rt 001119 bvil~·:Te:E TUNIS, m 11111 SI., 0 Hu"llfWllOJI INtfl. CA~ 1 errertu & ""9t'• °""''· • 12th St "A", H\lfttlftO!on l!lae<fl, CA ~. bvtlMU ll tondo.Klff l)y f!lll tn• dil'IOll•I T trT9ftU o..m. Tlllt tl•l-t -tlttd wllll tllt '°""'' Cttf'll • Or..-oe County on July t,1m ~"" pvo11.-Or'~ co.ti 0.11, l'ltot, PUBLIC NOTlCE NOTICI 01" P\le~JC lfl/llttNG elFO•E TMI! CNIANOe COUNTY M>AaO Of' $UH•VllO"U>N P•IHl.VATIC* FOlt ...... OVAL Of' •1• ,.J; OltANO«COUNTYAttt..O•T IALTlltK/ITtV• ,UTu•u1 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN .... , the Oranoe County Bo ••O ot Wc»trvl\Ms wlll llOIO • publk hterino 10 con•lcle< 11w IOltowlno l>"QC>OUI on A\1911\I t, 1'11, 11 Ille llOvr Oft 30 <I m ., or es ,_ 11w .. .i1er ., IN> -no• permlh , et tri. Hall of .t,dmlnl•tra11on, 10 Civic Genter Drive S..nl• ARA. C.lllornl• PROPOSAL P,.selllallon tor •I> Ptov•I Of Ille Fll!fl Envlr-nttl tm llf(t Rel)Orl tor Or•• counly "1'90rt Allernellve F11111res lo •nable tono renQt Pl•MlllO tor Ille "lrport. Severot 11111nallvt tutVN level\ of W"''« Mt H IAlllltlleCI k;r •Ir j)IU..t, 9<1netal evlellon, and elr ur90 -ration\ The retallve tnv•ron""'"t•I l~u 01 tne •ll11nellve futurn .tre dlKuswd tnd mHllllU to mllloete IM lm~Cll 'WO· ou1eo COMPLIANCE Wt TH THE CALIFORNIA ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY ACT , , ... , -n IOUflCI Illa! !Ills P<OIK I rn•r ll•vt a slQnitk..,1 ..tw.w •lfect on Ille en•trOflfntnl A Or•lf EnvlrO(I ,,.,.nt•I 1-1.11-1 hn tlfffl Of"• ~red, dl•lrltluW<I lo< llUbllc ,..,,lew. •ncl ••<Ofnmtndtcf10t •Pll'O••• by IM Orante C.ounw Pl-4"9 <ommlsslofl.. A COl>Y Of IN ~ FIMI e11t tS •••ll•bl• tor your review •no· In· •Pecllon 11 Ille Envlronmtnl•I Str,.l<ts Ol v,.ton, 81 I North B•ot d,.,•v. Suitt 201. S<1nt• Ana Qtllornle '7101 Tl>t proposed Ft,,.I Et R Wiii be , .. vltwed •ncl con~ lor adeQ...,.;y br ,,,. Boaro of Suoe•v•son •I ,,,.. s.me tlmt anc1<1a1to1 tN>he•r•no All ""''°"~ wlSllino 10 c~nt on I,,. •dtQU•Y OI Ill<' Envlronmtnt•I tmp•ct Rep6rt art in.,IKI 10 1>rtsenl lhtlt •t1tws btlore lh• Board ot Supervisor\. I! f\ reciu..steo that •nv written reSPDn>e be submitted to lllt Boaro ot SupetvtSo•s pnor lo th~ hurtno Oete . FOR FURTHER IN FOAMATIOH Envtronmental M•naoerntnt Aoen<y, EnvtrontrnPMtl !>•r•lces Olv,.IOn. 811 Norlll Brotdw•y/Suilt 201, S•nta .t,ne. Catllornl• t2101. Telepl>o<1e 1114) 83H7H or 13'-._ WH EN RESPONDING REFEA TO· EIR !01 -OrMIQtt County Airport l.t,tternall,,.. Futurfl) Oated JU11121, 1918 BY OROER OF THE BOARD OF SUPE RVISORS OF O RANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA JUNE ALE)(ANOER Cltrk Ol lhe Bo.rd ot Supervlsots 01 O•-Counlv C•lllorn•d PUBLIC NOTICE F07Ml1 Publl\hed OraflO" Cont 06•1• Pl•ot 1------------.....,..-i July 11 14 ?•·""" l \91' FICTITIOUS BUSI HES) NAME STATEMENT tSEALI T"~ follow1n9 Of'r~n" drl' Oo1n9 hU\tnt:i~Sd\ Publtsheo Or-Co." Oltly P1101 July I? 1418 PlJBU C NOTICE C.OUNTR.,. (lEG"NCEL!O 11~ -·------------Newl>Qrt Bl.o '"''•M<'w.C"cnu1 MM•on O••on 1111 Ot•mono B•r Bl•t! 01.tmonollar CA41l&) PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOUSBUSIHESS NAME STATEMENT The loll-•nq persons are doinQ 04.ISl~\•S BEAC.H FOREIGN C AA SERVICE ~ s Coast H .. y laQun• Be.ch,CA'12•11 v 1ncet'\I J L•monQell1. 378 VIiianova RO C.OSI .. Mc'sa, CA976U StevenleQert,&J8W llthSt CO\ta ~H.CA~'26 ffllS bus1""S\ os <onoutled by a oener•l 1>trtnersnlD !>!even Lt>Qere This statement wu ttled with 1'-• Count1 Clefll ot OranQC County on July I 1q19 F0'7lll Puot1snco OrtllQE' Coast OtilY Pilot July 1?, 19,16.A.,g.7, 1918 PUBLIC NOTICE SUPEAIOlt COU"T OF THE ST ATE OF CALI l'ORNIA FOR THE C.OUHTY OF ORANGE No.A-'Mtt NOTICE OF HEARING OF PETITION FOR P"OeATE OF WILL ANO LETIEllS TESTAMENTARY FOlt AUTHORIZ.t,T IOH TO AO MINI S TER UNOEll T14E IHOE~ENDEHT AOMINISTllATION OF ESTA HS ACT E Slltlf' ot F'REO 8 HE RMAt. O<>ctlS.O Su••n La,..., /Ill M.tmmot" •v• \I.an NUV\ CA9UO\ th1\; bV\,t'\e\\ I\ todOu( 1\'d by • 11m1t~ds>tttlnersNp MartOr1 Ouon Th" ''•1-nt was ltleo w11n IM County C:terll. ot Or•noe County on July I, 1q18 ""'284 Pubtt\-0r.,. Co••• Dally Piiot, Ju•v11.14 76,AUV 1.1471 PUBLIC NOTICE C"41U NOTICE TO CREOITOllS SUPEllllOll COUAT OF THE STATEOFCALll'OllNIA '011 1'HE COUNTY OF ORANGI Ho. A·ttoo4 Esla ll' ot ETHEL e HOLMES, aka MR'>. ETHEL B HOLMtS ~ka MR'> RAY M MOLMl'S Otce.tsed NOTICE tS HEREBY GIVEN to tne cno11or~ Of tne abOv• "~m"' aeceaent tnat all il"'"'"' ha•lrMJ clolms ao•1n~1 tne HIO 0..<telenl •rt "*'!UtreO In lllt them, wun ttwt ~(ej.wr-, vouc.~r\, '" tne otf1ce al I~ cll'rk ot lht• aoov~ en 11111'0 cour1. or to ou•W!nl lfl~m wtln lhe ne<P\\tlty YOU( htr\_ to t~ un Gef\1Qn•d at I,,.. law allt<t ot ERNEST J SCHAG JA 01 MESERVE MUMPER & HUGHES •HO von l'armon A.venue, Suite 330 Nf'WPorl Btac h Caltl0tn1a 92MO ,.h•CI\ '' 1"4! 1>lare 01 b~1ne~) Ol lne undtrstQ,,..., In au mt.\Uer\ oien••rnno lo thf' e't•t~ 01 ~A•d de<tdent w•lh•n tour mon111s ~fl(lr lhr tu~t pul)ht1tt1on ot tn•s not•<t OaleO Jllllf' 21 1418 WILLIAM R HOLMES E AKUIOf 01 ltw' Wiii ot tl>t •-na~ d~ ERNEST J. SCHAG JR. MES£ lt\IE, MUM PE II & HUGHES 444t ""' K.nn.n Av• , $1<11• JJO Newport hacll, CA '1 ... (714l 1JJ·l9H l'IC'Tt TIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT f P\fl to11ow1nq e>erson\ arr-cJotnq DU\• ntt••• B"ER & 0 AHTONt REPORTtNC. SE AVtCE. 0 \ T\ISltn A.ve H t •l>Orl Bue 11, CA '111>43 Oorotny N Baer, O S Tu'''" A.vf' Newpcrt ~Kl\, CA 9206) Geor-9•• 4nn o •Anton1 S<hMttr-1 HllloreloAve CCKt•Mtsa.CA'l•tl> Tn1s bvStrwt1\ •\ conducte-d b• • Qe1>erol Plr1no!r"11p Georllt•"nno "nlon• '><,,,,.uer Dot"otnyN B~r Tll h \l•temt"nt wa• 111.0 wolh Ille C.ounty Cter1101 Or•noe C.ounly on June lO ... ,. FOt6•U Publl•heO °'""<I" Coast Da•IV Pilot Juty s. 11, t9. 1~.1q1a n11 78 PUBU C NOTICE llU11t E'<nt• No. u.ns NOTICE TO CREOITOllS 011" BULK TAAHSFEll IS.Cs .io1 .. 101 U.C.C.J No11tt 1\ herf"by oiven to fre<htors ot the w1tn1n named part1e\ 1hat a C>utlil transttr 1\ tnt~ to t» maM-on C> ... r\Ort.tf property h"re1nn•l~t oncr1bed Tne n.ttnf'(S) ~"° bu\•f"P\ .. dO<lteS!t ot the intended trM't\ferOf' tsl ,.,-. G AOUP THERAPV l "C llOl H1r110t Boule••ro Co\ta """.,. CA 97616 rn~ n.t~•\I MMJ OU!t•nt'~ "oort~'> ot tf\e int~ tr..,'!iiterwt\) art: JOHN R PRIMETT ancl IRENE M PRIME TT 613 lro~ "v•n,... Corona del Mar CA cn~n T~•I 111e P<QPtrlv ~'11fltnt ner•to 1s de\<rlbf'd 1n QeN"tAt a~ M.1it~uat~. '\UPPI•~\ ITM"r<hand•\P r-qv1pmen1 •nd ·~ iocet..061 (;ROUP THER4PY 3)03 H•rbOf Boulevard, Costa Mew c:a111orn1a Th•I sa10 bulk 1ranste1 ts 1n1enaeo lo oe coMummat ta at tnt 0111<~ 01 G RAM ERCY ESCRO W C:OR POR" TION. 1401 W .in SI Sutll' 111, Los AllQl'le\, CA '!0010, on or alter July 11 H'8 NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN Ill.JI OONA.L O E HERMAN nas ltlto ~f11n • l>f'1llt0n tor P«>Oale ot ""'" ind IS)l>•nc.e ot Ll'lle" Te\lamentery •no tor auth0f11~hon •o aiomm•~tl'r un ~' '"" 1n<1e~t aom1nl5lrM•on 01 Estate\ Act reterentt? to whtch ., rn•o~ tor tur1ner o.arhcuiars Mid IMI '"" time ar>d pl&<~ 01 nea11nq tne ~me ha• l>ei!n "" tor "uoust t. 1'78. al 10 00 • m . 1n tflf! courtroom ot Oe!>art~nt No l 01 uio COU'I, .JI 100 C1v1< Center Drive west. 1n 1ne Ctty ot S,,nta Ana C•1tlorn1e Doted Jvty tO. 1978 WILLIAM £. SI JOHN, County Cletk Attw11e ,t let Eae<lllOr Published Or~ CO.>I Oaoty Pilot June28,JulyS, tt 19 1418 7•'!0 18 !>o tar as '' known 'o said int~e-o f an~tttre"t\I ""'d 1n l~nd ed Tr~n~•trort~1 u~ tllt' 1011owll\Q •OCI• 1--------------t tlon•I bu\fntr\~ nttf'nf'\ Af'KJ addreSle'\ OAVIO £.BURTON I UllTO!l,<;AULOIN, THOMPSON &NELSON 1'24 Paint., •w , Wflllflt r, CA -2 AllOf!tOhl ,._ ...... hl-r Publlstwd OrortQI! C.0..st Oall't Pilot. '"'' 17. tJ 14 1q73 PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE R·1tS71 SUPElttOll COUltT 01' n1c $T.t,TI! 01' C/ILll'OltNIA FOii THE COUNTY 01' OllANGE NO .... UU7 NOT ICE 01' HEAltlHG 01' PETITION F0tt AN OltOElt OlllEC· TING CONVEYANCE 01' llEA~ ~ltO~ERTY Est•te ot J AMES l"WREHCE S ISSON, •k• JAMES l SISSON SUPIRIOll COURT OF THE Ouea\ed STATE Of' CALIFORNIA FOlt HOT ICE IS HEREBY GIVEN '""' THECOUNTYOFORANGE ARTHUR II SISSON PETITIONER Ne. A-tM21 n•' hied ller••n • Pfllt1on •or .tn Or~r NOTICE 01' HEA lt l HG OF Otr•<tonQConvty...c•otRutPrOl)Or Pl!TITIOM FOR PltOIATE OF WILL ly lot .. ted In fhf Countr ot lO\ AND ~l!TTEllS TESTAMl!NTAAY A.~ft\, .,_ ... ,.n. FUll•lonA.,.. ANO l'Olt AUTHORIZATION TO AD• Norwalk, C.llfOfnoa LOI II, B1oc• f' Ml!ll$Tl!R UNOEA INDEPENDENT Tract u.o a-17 P-"3 ol Ma~ \0 AOMINISTllATIOH OF ESTATES Rollert l c.orni-Norm• c '°'"' ACT 10 COITIDlete <onlracl tnter9<1 Into by Eslolf' ot EVELYN M HERMAN 0.ted•nl bttore "'' c>e•1n Wl'ttrftott ,na EVE L YH MAY HER MAN veltllOner pray• lhal 1111! Court m••e OetHHd •n oro~r •~1t1or111no •no Otrec llflQ NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lhal p.,ltljon•t lo 'omplf'lf I~ tMm' 01 DONALD E HERM"N n.,~ fllfO contr1c1 -Cly Oecedenl, J"""'' l••!rttn • petition '°' P•ooate ot Will Lawr..,u Slsston akA J l ""'S L S•non ano l\W•t•<t 01 Utters Testament.try, to Robefl L Corlt\ •nO Norma C encl tor aulllOfltallon to 4dmlnl~tor un Corlts on -Wble< I to Inf' concurrent Oet ,,,.. 1nOeQenclenl admlnlStralton ot performance by the t>Urcn•~•" ot the Estain Act. reler•nc" to whicn ts 1cls to be IM'rtormeo bv lllm .,,., •II mecie tor turthe• 111rt1<ulars, •ncl lhet oth•r <1rders, rtterenc,e lo which '' tllt time •nd !>lece ot lltanno the wmt mtOe tor lurtNr 1>11<t1Cul&r\ .,,,., that has !Men \et '"' "uoust t. 1•111. al 10:00 the llme -!>l«.t ot t>eltf•nQ Int ~mt 1.m .. In 1ne courtroom ot Otpartment llH betn set for July 2' 1q11 •I 9 Oil No. 3 ot Hid court. at 700 Civic Center a.m • In the «>llrt•OOM ot ~CMrtment Otlve WUI. tn tne O h ot !>ante Ana No > ot WICI court at 100 C••t< Center Cotltornlo. Ortve West. tn tllt City 01 Santn Ana Doted July 10, 1'178. Calltorn10 WILLIAM E. SlJOHN, Olltd July 1, 1'71 COUlllY Clerk WILLIAM £ St JOHH DAVID I!. IUllTON County Cler•. auttTON,GAULOIN, THOMSON lltETT "OltN A Nl!UON ltllt Cy1tllll• """""' IU4 ~·'" , ........ foW. P•s.Menl, C.•-· .. 101 Wlolttltr, CA "'6a Ttl. UIJI HI ..... Att"-•l•l lor: io.tJ,1-r Atter ... y fer· ~"le<ltr Publ"lltd Or•nQt (OHi O••IY Pilat. Publt\lled Ora1191 COHI 0•11Y P1101 July 11. ll. 19, 1m July 11, u, 11, 1971 2M4·11 P1JBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE JUNEoALEICANOlll Clef~ ot IN 9Nt'Oof$-¥t_, o10r.,.. c-tv. eantoN11• w1tn•n ,,,. ,n,,,.. v&ar\ ldi~t .,_,,._, Non\.' Oate!lJUM17 1'178 John R Prt"'1'1t trene M Prlmctl tntended Tran'\fert~\ Gr•m•r<t EKt'DW C...-•tlon M07 wot'"' St., s..lt• 111 lot A nt•I ... CA "'20 PuCIMheO Or•nQe CO<l\I Daily P1101 Jutr 17 1918 7603·/8 PUBLIC NOTICE 11·1'i70 SUPEllt()ll COUllT OF fHE STATE OF CALI FOllNIA FOA HIE COUNTY OF OllAHGE No.A•tMll N OTICE OF HEAlllNG OF PETITION fOlt PltOBATE OF WILL ANO FOii LETTl!RS TESTAMEH· T/llt'f ANO fOlt AUTHORIZATION TO AOMINISTElt UNOElt THE INOE PE NOE HT AOMINISTRATIOH OF ESTATES ACT E\1•1~ Ot CECt L R GARREfT o. ... ~ NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lhal c ICEtTH G"RRETT has 111!'0 lle•t•n • ~1111on •or Prooatt 01 w 111 •nO '°' luuance ot l•ll~" h"lamf'l\t&rv .,,0 for AUlllOrlt•llon to "dmlnltttr una.r th• tnOeP"n<lltnt Adm1n1Jtra11on ot E't61ts •<t. rtlettntt to which •~ madt '"' tur1,,..r 1>art1cu1ars. ano 111<11 int lime ano p1act ot nenrino the ~­ "•' l>t>•n set '°' A119ust t 1q13, at 10 00 1 m .. 1n lllt court•oom ot Oepartmenl Nn >of ••IO court, 01 100 C1voc <Ant•• Or••t Wtsl '" IM City ot Santa Ana Cal1forn1a Datto July & 1971 WILLIAM E St JOHN. County Clttk ANDl!llSON, ADAMS a BARNES, A Law Ct ..... 1t1-I •toe Nerti! R-..i BIYO ll•Mm•M.CAttno Aller,.." tw· .... lt ..... r Pubhs-0r•"9'! Coast 0..oly PllOI July It. 12 II, 1'78 t&JO II PUBLIC NOTICE c.....,. NOTICll TO Cltl!OtTOU $UPlltlOll COUltT OF THI! STAT• Of' CALtf'O'INIA F'Olt Tltl COUNTY 0 1" OttAlfG!'. NQ,A·- Estete of MARGARET LENAGHAN C:HR•UEHSON lk• """"G"REt L CHRISTENSON oa MARGARET CHRISTENSON. OeceeS4!d NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to '"" <rt<lllOf\ Of lllt -.,. NmtG M<-1 ll'lal •II PtnGm lla•lftQ (l&om' f>4•inU IN "''d ~t •rt rtQ<11rt•d to lilt 1"-M, wit" UW tll<•'-Wf v vou<.t'tet'l,. ti'! 1,,. omu 01 111e et•r• ot ,,,. •DO .. e11 tllleo co11!1, or to ore~t tMm. wltl'I 11'1~ "*<t0MY •OUChtr•. to lh .. un O•• '1onea •t Ill• ••w oll•t • 01 INllLl/IM v SCHMtD1 )66 S•11 Mle11•t Orlvt. S11llt JOO. NtwPOrl ltHCll, C.lllllfn!A t?MO, Wlllcll I\ IM .,i.w.e 01 tkAlMU OI ,,,. unetniQM41 ,,, all malt~\ penatnlftQ to lllt tttatt 01 ••14 09(.0.111. wllllln to11r monltlt •lier Ille llf\t 1>Vbl1Ctllon ot '"'' llOHU. Ot1t0 J-21, tm MARY PL.Alt A...,,.nlttr•lrl• wllll Wiii AllM8CI to llW hlalt OI • .,.,... ,,_ Ot<tOtfll WILLIAM Y SCHMIOT ., .. ~Or .. .... , ... lftw,.r\ 9"<11, CAftMI , .. moww:rv NATION I OBITUARIES PUBLIC NOTICE P UBLIC NOTICE lt·letll SUPEltlOltCOOllTOf THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA 11'011 Tl4 E COUlfTY OF OllANGE NO. A·0141 '" the Maller ol lh• E•l•h o t "LFR EO M HAWll.INS, Oe<ta~O Not1ct 1\ nf'rtbY 01v~n to u ..01tor-'\ "•vino ctatms ~1nit lht' w 1d O.c:r denl 10 tilt w10 <1a1rn\ '"' ltw ou t<" o• tllt <Ito 01 tl'tt •tor•~•O coutt or •~ Or~\-ent tntm IO tt'H' IM'dt't\IQMd •t tnt o ltoce 01 OOUC.LAS E C.OOBE BALL !4UNT HART BROWN A. BAEAWITl P 0 Boa Iii/ 17D Llnotn Avtnut lon9 B•dCI\ C•tllorn16 ~I. ""'"<" ldllt• olt1ct '' thf' ol•te ot bu\1ne\\ ot '"• un de• slgrwd in all matter~ 1>"• l•1n•no to •••O ,,,,.,, Suc11 cldlm\ w11n tne ,,.Ctsst•Y •OIJCIWIS mus! be 111..0 or C>rt•Sf'l'lltd ., &tfOl'fWld wUh1n fOUf month\ dllM Int tlr>t p..bllc•hon ol 1nosno11ct O•ttd Jllllf' " 19/& eeat11t• v Haw9'ttt\ e •K'llOf o• ,~,. w,11 01 ~10 O.ceOf'nt DOUGLAS E GOO BE SALL.HUNT,HAllT, BllOWN an<I BAIRWI Tt P 0 Bt1 IHI UO L1n-•n Av1nw Lon9 BHcll, CA '*' Pubh\""<I Or""'O" Cu•\I Jd '· Pdut Jy.nt ,, n df'CJ Julv \ t' t111 PlJBUC NOTICE l'IC'TITIOUSIUSINHS NAMeSTATEMl!NT Tiit lollCIWtllO__. tSdo<flQllUSlnltU H t'IAE MOUNTAIN U :ECUTl\11: Su I t Es NO I 610 Ntwport c;.-.1ar O<tvt Su•te •U ,..,._, kacll, c.. t2...:J A•<,..,,, J4 t--ufl•t 1 T•I Port 1,11.,,,.,q11 <:tr<"' N<!wi>0rt S.ecll. Ce .,640 ff'ill\ bu\HM\'\ •\ conchKttd O\' • ",,., ., ~"~""'" ••c"-rdA fult~r Tht\ •l•lfl~nl w•• 11100 w1tll Ill• County Cito ot Or.-Count~ on J...,e >O. ,.,. F"6'1'U PuDt1v1.a Ornnoe Coast Oa11~ Piiot July\, 17, !', 1l t•l8 H l .. 18 PUBLIC NOTICE ,.ICTITIOUS •USINESS NAME STATEMENT f "'' to11ow1onq oer~on-. art' dotttO bu•lneu O\ EXE CUTIVE PAAIC JEWELER~ '•'I Buen Blvd Sult• '" S HUf>I "l~IOn B .. tl\, (JI 41 .. I t-tOwdr'J O•v•d Svbn•c' t&hl Ahont Lii Hunl111Qton Be..cn CA O•le Evorett M.tso<1. t9021 L•k• pa1n1. Huntington Se.ell CA l "'' bU\1nfl\1" '' conduc lf'd Of' o Qtntr •I p.tr1ntont11p '10wtrd 0 S..bnock OaltE ~ r f"I•\ \t•ltmirnt ••'-fttf'd ""'''"' tn.-Count v Cit•\ o• Or•nO<' C<>untv on Ju~• '• 1'11 F"6lll Puolm•eo 0r•"'1" '°"''' Oa•I• Pil<H JM"~ 11 >9 Juty ~. ll t•I• PUBl...IC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMEHT r~ ... to11ow1no °''"°" ,, dOu'lq ou •· ntn "' D BEAM. ,. o Bo• 1n1 .l••l v1~ Oou,. to :1 •A N~woo, t St.ten Cttt•o•n•~ fl?MJ M ... ,., Ann , •irb•H., 809 , F •Icon "01 C. An4rw1m. C.41tlorno~ 9780• rtH\ bU\1f¥h •1 CondV<ltO b 't dft 1n CllvoOv•t M•rv Ann S:41trt)a1rn Th" Sl•tom<•nt wd> tll<'d wtlh lh• Count• ""' ot OranQt! Counly (In Jun• 11 1418 , .... ~ Publt,n.d Ordl\Qf' CO•h1 Oath• P1101 Jul't U •r>d Jutv ~ 17 19 1978 "'' PUBLIC NOTICE l'tCTITIOOSIUSINESS NAME ~TATEMEHT '"" IOllOWtnQ O--r'W>tt t\d01nq bu'\tnt-\) l l'C.UhACH£VR0 N to04Sc Coa\I HW'f L•O""'-B··•tn (.ttttorn•t:tef7t>5i1 "'""""'n Je>nn tiut!w 1•tl1 -p-,-''8_U_C'_N_'_O_T_l_C_11:_:--'1 :.Z~','tmoOr ""' ""'"" ·c C.•"'or"'" " .. _ Tn1\ Ou,•N"\.\ ., (onc::IUCltd D• "'" '" ------------101v1du"l•f'f'W"lit•" J<•rty FICTITIOOSBUSINESS 1111\ ~t•l..,....n1 wes ltleo w11n llV' NAME STATEMENT County (.tr,. ol O<inQI• Coul'lvon J11nr , ,,,. fot~1nq Def'W\ 1\00•nq b\r\11\t>\'\ JO ,,71 ., F-•7' Tl1E llH ltLZtE IS7 \I (l~or \I PwOll\heO Of..,,.,.. C.O.O\I 0<1•'• PtlOt Cos•H ••e .... CA Jul•' tt ·~ 1'. IOl8 l~ /8 C.t~nRoy Lo•r "813tn'>I Aul., l--------------Hun11n9t()(I S.-6<1\ C.A •,f>A.'I fht\ bu\JnfA\ • '01'\0vt.1•d bv dn 1no11-110U·tl GI'"" Roy l OY(' lh•\ \lctl,.~nt w rt\ fll~ w11n trw Co\olnt\' Ch ,., ot 0'""9'~ Counlv on Juh l 1~18 Fl)t1011 Pu!>l"t\4'U 0td"QI (O.l>I O~oly ~tlOI J•llVtl IV 2•.A,UQ 7 1918 PUBLIC NOTICE F ICTITIOUSBU5tNESS HA.MEST"TEME•H The tnllOWlnQ ""-"'"""'' dtt'Oomo OU\1 ""''•' LAC.UNA (.U">IDM WINOOW'> ' LAMPS, 11•.t Ounn•"O 0fl'lt' Loqun .. Be~<" C• en .. ~, C4'ro1 A 5n10 tJU Ounntnq Onv;• l•Quna Br&cn, C• •7•S• 0Avtd l-Stl•s> 1l1.t Ounmnq Or1v1 LeQun• Br<0<n C:~ ~l•~' ------------1 Thi\ bu~•M~' '' condu(tt<J b>; dn '" PUBLIC NOTICF. Ill! ... SUPElllOlt tOURT OF THE ST A TE OF CALIFORNIA FOii THE COUNTY OF SAN BERHAROINO NO CW ll ... OllOEll TOSHOw CAUSE FOii CHANGE OF NAME In tht ~""' Of in. AOOf•(dhO"' o• OAAYA. SUZANNE JUMP(R tor Cll•nQ• ot H.,,,. fhf' 4PPt•f.-t tun 01 OloRYA SUZANNE JUMPER •k• O"PYA. SU7 AHNE OE. VAUl I tot <f\aflQC' Of ,...,,.,,~ ""vtng bet-n tiled 1n to~.Ht ctno 11 &oe>e•r•"9 tram "'3~ AOOh• .&t•on 1~1 OA AYA SUZANNE JUMPER •~• OARVA SUZANNE O•VAU\ I t••• f1l.O an aPC>l•C4hO" ()l'QllDl)*U'-0 th•I M• n•rne D" cllano•a to OAAYA SUZANNE OtVAUl f Now. t~t' 11 1\ ~r~by orOPrrrd ancl Olre<led Jt>at alt l>f'r\on~ 1nter~\I t-0 1n \••'1 mauer oo dOOPar twforr lh1\ covr-1, 1)..tO N Mountain """''" Orit6'•0 C•tn o,n1a '" Ot-oartmf"nl l ON' or tn• 1111> O<IY ol July 1418 at 8 )0 o'c 10< • ., m ot w10 Ody I<' '-"hO'lllf' t dU\4'1 wtiv \U( h appllt.Jllon tnr cnan~· nf name iMulo not~ oiontttl 11 " tur1ner ordolrl'I! 11>~1 • < ooy 01 th" Or du To YI<>" C.u~f II<· ouott~•wo •n tn~ Orano1· Coa •I O~tly P1 to1 a n&WSP•t>"r o• ~fW,dt ( HC: UllthOf"I or1nteo 1n \41'1 county 111 l('(tiot f"'N.r NUn Wtf\• •O' t(k.tr \Utt ~\\IV ......... "'k' or1or to tht! O•'f ot \id•O hf>.Ar•no Datl!O thtS Ith day ol Jun.-1<11~ l(ennttn C. t1e0<9rtn lo JuOQo> Of WoO Suprr-10t Court JOSE PH OltOCIAIC IUI S.vl~ wtJttrn A.,.nut Lot Afttfl05, C.111"""• -J Attor"tr tor A,.ik •nt 0•'1'101.1"' (droLA Sn10 ffH\ ~t4tfrTWnl Wd~ •1lf'd Wtltt ttM• Counl• C It'" l)t 0.,~"0" Count• 01\ Ju"" Ill 1911 F0'6tJO Puouu~rd Or~ C.M\t Of'''" Pilot J"'' ~ 17 19 7b 191' Ho/ t• P UBLIC NOTICE FICTITIOUS BUSI HESS NA~l ~TATlMENT r f\f 101•o'tlttn.Q C>f'rwn' dr• au•no Ou\1fk. \\ 4\ WEST \lfR~•NG IOOlS IJ; w w 1~on Ave-::\) to\141 Mt , ... C.•t1for ,,,. '7&:"1 Aflr 11*r 0 ~ctll~• ,,,.,, Ill W W tl\O" AVf> : "' C 0't• M ("'\ff C:a lttorn•• '1'1&71 O•v•a J Wttr,.,,, 13•) Nf'wMrt 8htO ~ U, Co\ld ~\d C.dit11orn11t 41&11 T ~.\ DU1"Hl(~~, ,, ( onot1t •~o CY ~ 0,..,,,,.,. 0~''""'""•1'1 /\Ortiit~ 0 ')(•Ur ! ' \fW'I f n1\ \lllfNTit "' W;t\ Ill~ ,.,tr, '""' t.nunly CIN ~ ')' Or\tn\w C•iU'''" 011 Junt /I 1q)d F-h l>'40t1\1'f'O Or11~· c..oo~t t>,,,,. P1101 Junt· 78 tlf\CS Julv \ 11 111 11115 ?•~I~ Pt'BUC NOTl('E FICTITIOUS BUSl .. ESS NA.ME STATEMENT r f'lf' IOltOW•t'liQ 0--f"-O"I-. 4§,,.. 0011'\Q bu•• ""''·~ ll M ll([' f ('1to(t1•" IN IEAHAllON,Al I,.<) MM•O"" Pubh•-Or-CAM•I Ot•I• 1>1101 A•~ C 11 CCKl•M<>Y C • .,,.,, J.,nett.18-Jul'tS 11 '"" 7:167 18 Joh"M ,,.,,,,.,,, 1o-<11fhoq11tw~ Or S.ntaAM C4 '110$ E ,,,.._\I (Mnq _., '-•••• CJr t-turl 1ngton 8r.cf'I Cct •?••& Th•\ o..,,,n, ''lo ., unau• t":."O rY • ·------------j Qf'Mf,.IJMfl"" f'\f"!IP R·J301, E rN'\I Cllf"'l Pl'BLIC NOTICE NOTICIOF Thi\ \t•l•mi nt """'' II t"CI .-. .. fn '~ TllUSTEE'SSALE COUf\IY (If"~· O.•r><t (<>uni. nn 1ue• l°""No ll-Ol4 lO t•IS T <, Ho 11210 1 . H•Ul c 0 M M u N I ' y " u N 0 I N c. Publtsneo °'""'1f' CO•" Doily P1101 CORPORA.TtOH e\ duty <11>001nl.O JlllYS t7 to.16. tq11 HJJ I~ Tru•lte under lht t1>110 .. on9 Mtcrtbeo ------------- dHO ot trust WILL SELL "T PUBL I( AUC HON TO THE HI C.!4ES1 BIOOE A FOR CASH IPtyilt>lt •I ltrnt ot Ule ii\ Pt'Rl.IC NOTICF. tewtul money al I,,. Untied Sl•I•" •II S~501'14 rtQlll lltltano lntert\I convtrro 10 •no NOTlc;E OF TllUSTE E'S SALE n<1WMldbyllunder,,.1dO....Oot lru\I HO F·T7W 1ntht&1topertytltre•n4tterotscr•~O LOAN HO U.-IOJ TRUSTOR· SCOTT OOUGlAS On August• 1478, <11 tt 00 d m M AVNA.RO •nd PA ULA J IMPERIAL CORPORATION 01 MAY NARO nusl»no AllO w.1, ., IO•nt AMERICA·~ OUl\o ~Ol>O•nll'O Hu"rv ten•,,ts vno~r •nd ourw.nt to ~o of fru\t BENE Fl(IAllT COMMUN IT v r11<ordPd S.pt~mo.r ?, t•I• '" 1ns1r FUNOtNG CORPORATION " <Or No )U4, on boO~ t7Jl>.O. 1>•0~ 11'.l'I ut oor•UOI\ Ott1c1.-t RN.ord' 1n t~ ott•c~ of th-P Rt!Cord"' Oecembor 11 1011 ,., ln\lr County Rf'CorOf'r 01 OranQ<' County NO 18U)tl'000•44.)(lo•Q1'1&6010 111<••• Sl•ltt o• "'"'°'"'• Will SELL Al R•tord .. nllW Ofl•tfOttll• R.coro~• Of PUBL I( AU ( l•ON TO Hl (,H E.ST Orenot County ,.,,o o~NI ol lru\I 'llOOEP ~OR CASH (p,1v•b" •I llm• dU<rll>l'"""'0"°""'""0'00-rtT ot u te on l•wful mont'Y ot '"" Untt•oJ lot "ot TrMI 113) 1n "'" C•IY ol Sttlt>I •I "" Soult• ''°"I .. ntr•t>Ct to tnrtl\t I\ l>"r t'lldl>r"'<or°"d '"Book 111 '"" Ounqe County <'•d C'ourtt>o11v (, P•Gt\ 11 28. •"" i• ~no JO o t I~ ot S.•nt• AM Stt1•r vi (.<1lolorn1a .111 Miscoll•neou• MAP\ in'"" Olli<• ot '"" rtQhl 1111• itno tnltre•I <on••Yeo to COU'lh A•<O•Of•O' •••O(ounly Mid now ""'O tlV I .. ,....., '<110 n...a Qt HOOt 8urnh,.m (irtlr Irvine ff'v\t 1n tr. CHQPf'r1Y '•1UAlf"d tn W•d CtwnlY .,.., SIAt• ~rtl)MI ., LOI 4 OI C••llOU'•• frA<t No >oeia 1n ,,_ (Jl'f ot Nf'twOOff • 11 ., "''..,.' tcJO'f1.\ O' COM~n Of' 9••<" ., ~on 'm•P '~'eof rti s1Qf'\•t1on1\.\hown,.b0vf! now•rr'":ty1\ cores.cs in 8ooP 91 l.HtQt''\ off" 11 11"1 Ql•I'" as 10 •tHomc>t~IMWH or cor t< I c•u~·•• M•-<t ll•,,..,.,_ M<I~. "'°'o' nuu ot ••1a Or-Cour>hr TP\• btntl•<••r-1 undf'' \410 Tht ,,,... <lddn~'~ _And orrwr com OH<I01 lrU\t,tl"t'fft0nOf•D<eacnor ,,,..,. M\IQN•llOn ,1 •nv ot 1"" •eat Ot••utt •n •~ ot11to,.t1on\ , .. '"''" Pf'OOtfh Of"'li(tlbfiliQ •bOvfl ,, out00f°14"0 thtr•bY f'litfttofor'P' t-.f"(ulfld •nd O. 1, b~ I•~• '-"•a.' 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''°""1 ~1.rtd S ••d '-"'" ""'" Ot ,.,,,_,,, bv \aid 0 .. •rt f\f Jrv\t, to •H blll wltllOvl Ctln.,.n•nt Of '"~"fnt\o, '" •~1 ~I with onttrt>I lhtroon •• '"""" or 1tn(l41t0 r~r'(llnQ 1111• provloeo •n MIO nottl\I, MfvMKet. •i PO\\l\~lon.o,.ll(umDr.omt' IOCMYI"" a1>v unoor '""' "'m' Of w•O o...ct °' ,..,,,.1111110 r>rtnctp.ot wm ot 1ne no1to 1 ''""· '"'· clla~s encl ••j)tftH' ot wc11re<1 by WlO Dtotd Ol Trv•I with 111 tl\4t Tru,1 .. •r>d OI the trvth crut .. d lert\I ... In U Hi nOlt 11rovlO•d llYW•OO-olTnnl .av•llCt\ 1lany UflOOtlhtltrm,OfU ICI The l>tnftlelf'Y UtlcMr Wld 0..0 ot 0..0 OI Trujl, lttt' Cl>•1QI\ •NI •• f '"" lttr•IO!Or• .. oc.,tad •nd ~ ,,.,, .... Of , ... TrvtlM -Of IM l'U•I• 11Vtr'4 to ... 11tldlnlQfltd • writt.-. u .. t.01>y~O..CSOfTr11t1 O.tl•r•lton of Dtrl•1ttl ..wt 0.....,.. !>tto ,.,. will r.. 11e1e1 OJI futt'll<l'r tot \•tt •no • ••lll•n Nollo ut All911ll I, 1'71 It II AM •I IMOltKt OI Ottevll d"4 ll«tlon 10 S.tl T ... 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' .. • \ I J • • ~ NATIONAL I CALIFORNIA Ne Ket1 Prince Charles won 't re cei~e a n expected key to the city of Edinburgh, Scotla nd. because city fathers decided he ha~ done nothing to de- serve it Carte r Issues Fowth Ve to On Funding WASHINGTON (AP) Presi ~nt Carter 's fourth veto since taking offi ce is against legisla· tion that would have authorized money for conservation pro grams on military posts anr' publ ic lands. Carter said the measure was too expensive TUE MEASURE would ha\•e extended money authorizations through 1981 for cooperative federal-state programs. The bil' covered fish and wi ldlife con servation and public outdoor recreation on military ba!'es, in 11ational forests a nd other publi A lands Carter s aid tn hi s veto message that the bill \\Ou Id have raised appropriation authoriza- tions from $23.5 million in 1978 to $51 million in 1979 a nd S61 mill ion in 1980 and 1981 . "' . . .. . ASH, NASH Clash A nti-smoking Groups Butt Heads WASHINGTON <AP> -Two anti -smoking groups, pre- sumably united in their hatred of burning tobacco. may become locked in court battle over the s im ilarity of their na mes. Get ready for ASH v. NASH. The aggrieved group is Action on Smoking and Health, a 10- year -old outfit claiming to be "the onJy national nonprofit or- gani zation devoted solely to the problems or smoking and health and nonsmoker's rights " ASH FILED SUIT in U.S. Dis· trict Court against NASH -the National Association for Smok- ing and Health, Inc. -claiming trademark infringement, unJair competitior and common law deceit. ASH says it's been busy for a decade distributing news letters. broc hures. fundra1 s ing mater ials, s pecial "ASH re- ports .. on s m oking related topics. when along came NASH in 1975 The s uit says NASH is pe<ldl 1ng an "anti-smoking spray can " and anti-smoker senti· ments. ASH is especially dis- turbed on the latter, pointing out that it is a~ainst the noxious habit, not the smoker behind the cigarette T HE II-PAGE complaint IS full of complications It seems that ASH learned thal NASH was to be sold but it apparently l'an't find the group The com- plaint says NASJl's last known <1ddress was on East Jewell A nmue in Denver smoking material with the con- tents of the can " The s pray sells for $4.95 a can with dis· counts for bulk purchases. TH E INTEREST of ASH in NASH was aroused when people started sending in a nationally syndicated column praising P a ul Wright as "a genuine American hero.• Wright is iden- tified as the founder, executive d i r ector a nd principal in- corporator of NASH. The columnist, Bob Greene. quotes Wright as saying, "when you see someone s moking in a public place, ask him politely to put his cigarette out. Ir he re- fuses spray the hell out of him .·· ASH says people were con· fused and un certain on whether NASH really was ASH. And. ASH claims. NASH intentionally used marks designed to look as if they originated with ASH. TH E FEDE RAL court is asked to put a stop to all these actions and to assess damages for injury. lt also is asked to seize "all profits received from the sale or gbods or ser vices" Identified as comin~ from National Associa· tion on <or for> Smoking and H ealth or NA S H ." Neither Wright nor anyone else with NASH <'Ou ld be reached for comment Hazardous Exports Blasted by Panel WASHINGTON <AP> -The Carter administration has been criticized by members of a House subcommittee as doing too little to prevent the export of hazardous products and substances that have been banned in the United States. Such pesticides as DDT, such drugs as the contraceptive Depo Provera, children's sleepwear treated with the name-retardant Tris and certajn baby pa cifiers are among the products and sub- stances that have been restrict· ed here but sold elsewhe re. might be one of them. The task force has representatives from most federal aepartments . Dr i nan asked if a "mora l policy" shouldn't be established to prevent the sale overseas of products deemed unfit for tbe American market. ' Wedneedey, July 12. 1978 DAILY PtLOT A 9 Happy Coupl.e AP Wlr..,i.ato Linda f'raschcll a and Peter Saraceno s m ile " lot these days. The couple. from Melrose Park. Ill.. had planned to marry when Peter was released from the Marine Corp:-. two years ago. But he almost died in an a uto accident shortly after. Linda was at his s tdl• through nearly four months as he lay in CJ coma, thc.·n hclp<'d him r ega in h1' speech and use of his limb~ Sunday the couple w1l! b(· mar ried and Pete r will mun• down the aisle with the mcJ of a walker. ASH is concerned that its re· putation "as a source of expert advice and reliable information i n the field of s moking and health and nons mokers' rights" might vanis h like a purr of smoke through confusion w1th the more ctirect-a'Ction NASH. Rep. Robert Drinan, D-Mass .. said that at a mini mum. other nations should be notified when products or su bstances have been banne d in t he United States "WHY CAN'T THAT be done today? It seems to me to be so elementary," Drinan asked pre- s idential cons umer a d viser Esther Peterson. Highway Deaths Rising Accorcting to the suit. NASH's a nti-smoker spray "in essence directed the user to s pray a smoker and-or the s moke r 's Mrs . Peterson said that an in- teragency task force established by t ht' president in May is ex- pected to make recommenda· tions 1n Scotem bcr a nd that More Drivers Breaking 55 MPH Spe ed Limit t he main reason was that drivers are increasmgly violal· ing the speed limit. &1Jmunnb &1Jutttr Scribe Cited WASHINGTON <AP > -The death toll on U.S. highways rose for the second straight year in 1977. and the Trans portation Department says a major rea- son is that more lhan half or America's drivers are breaking the 55 mile per hour national speed Lim.it. Among other reasons. it said. we r e the growing automobile population. the greater number of miles driven and an increas- in g numbe r or bicycle s. m oto rcycles , mo -peds a nd smaller cars on the road. BUT AFfER TWO years of decline. the trend was reversed in 1976 and continued to climb in 1977 A department survey 1ast year disclosed that the average speed in those two years had been in- ching up gradually and had r eached 58 mph on rur a l in- tersta te highways and 56 m ph on ur ban interstates. '6nrp. For Contempt t\ e·rr Family nwrwr CUSTOM SHUTTERS Regular-Wide- Stationary Louvers tor your windows CAFE DOORS ~QOM DIV10ERS SACRAMENTO (AP> -A judge cited a Sacramento Union reporter for contempt and or- dered hjm to jail for refusing to turn over notes and lal)('s. but delayed the sentence. Reporter John Hammarley was given 3 days by Superior Court Judge J ohn Boskovitch to ap- peal Tuesday's order to the state appeals court in Sacra mento. Hammarley said his attorney, WiUiam Shubb, would appeal. The Transportation Depar t· m e nt reported 47 ,671 traffic deaths last year, an increase of 4. 7 percent over the 45,523 who died in 1976. Thf> toll in 1975 was 44.525. The 1977 figure was r eported Tuesday. OFFICIALS CITED several factor s for the increase. but said The 55 mph speed limit was imposed Jan 1, 1974, as a fuel con servation m easu re in response to the Ara b oil e m · bargo. DOT credits t he lower s peed with reducing t raffic deat hs dra matically, from 54,052 in 1973lo4S.196in 1974. A General Accounting Offict- su r vey said the major ity of drivers exceed the speed limit because they feel the gasoline shortage is past and the savings in ruel is not worth the 1nronve· nience of slower driving. Trustees Pick Particular People Select JOHNSON & SON Home of the "Golden Touch" Al l CUSTOM DESIGNED, FINISHED & tNSTAllED T HE CASE STEMS FROM Hammarley's in- terview with Edward Gonzales, a witness in the 1977 slaying of Ellen Deli a. who reportedly was en route to Lell state officials about abuse in drug pro- gra ms. School Chiefs Your Sat1Sfc1ctioo Assured --One Year Uncond1t1on<1I Guarantet> On ALL Wor~ f3uy Direct From the Manufacture .. Ca ll for FREE Es\1mates er=: Mrs. Delia's body was found in Feb. 17. 1977, lying in a field near the Sacramento airport. Ham- marlcy said Gonzales contends he was the driver of the car in which she was killed. The Sacramento County public defender 's of- fice. which is representing defend ants in the Delia trial. first sought the tapes and notes in a sub- poena LONG BEACH CAP> -Dr. Gail Fullerton bas been named president of San Jose State College a nd Dr. L loyd J ohns president at Cal State Sacramento by the trustees of the California State University and Colleges system. F ulle rto n, 5 1, t he ---------- O ld World Cr aftmans hip Sherwood Shutter Corp 3655 W. McFadden et Harbor Santa Ana 839-3360 1-771-0200 MRS. DELIA'S EST RANGED husband . second woman to hold suc h a position in California. and J ohns , 48. had served as ad- ministrative vice presi- dents at the schools they now head. Michael, is one of four defendants in the case. Hammarley said the Sacramento Union is paying for his dcfen1:1c •Spiral sliced for easy serving • Honey 'n Spice Glaze •Cooked 30 hours t[ • · Q • Nationwide shipping service H l \(! OlttglllO · · · • Full service Delicatessen 6'n~~ey . 01d world cheese shop WJ ;' ~ •Sandwiches to go. J g!~~,l!~!!ls I AlllHO? rll H ? ~HIC11"11 WHJllNDI l~IOr Y-'--,._a T•-• Alo"t tiONEY BAKED HAM r Y r Lunctl Dinner Sneckl F ULLERTON, w ho has been at San J ose Slate since 1963. s ue- English Gets Second Place LOS ANGELES CAP > -A nationwide survey of bilingual educational programs has concluded that the programs are teaching youngsters their native language -but a l the expense or learning English. ceeds John Bunzel, who is becoming a senior re - search fellow at Stan· fo r d U n ive r si t y 's Hoover Institution. Johns has been in the Cal State system s ince 1964, serving previously as acting president at Sonoma State College and professor of educa tlonal adminjstration at Cal State Northridge Johns replaces James Bond. the first black to become president of a large university in the Wes t whe n h e w as n a m e d p reside nt o f Sacr a me nto State in August 1972. "Johnson & Son seemed to ben d over back wards to get me what I wanled". SUE REPELLA Orange, Cahl. ANOTHER SATISI FIEO CUSTOMER .JOHNSON & SON I* I 2626 Harbor Blvd. •Costa Mesa • 540-5630 3700 I. COAST HWY• c-de4 Mw • r HOHI 6 7J.f000 Opening Soon 1n Huntington Beach. Beach & Garfield J4nahe1m. El Toro Now Open . Oranga, Palm S rin s, La Habra The survey was conducted by the American Institute for Research in Palo Alto at the request of the Health. Education and Welfare Department, a nd the results were made public by Los Angeles school board member Philip Bardos. Halliday's Summer No cane balls. Or. Flanzer likes to keep everything straight. Which Is the only way you'd like your dentist's pitch. And since Dr. Flanzer believes in playing the percentages, there's a good chance you'll score big: a complete course of dental treatment for a lot less. Want to find out the score? ActT.., C4,. ........... t Dr. Arnold tt. Flanzer, ODS 170 L 11"' str.t Costa Mesa "We've put too much emphasis on getting fluency in the mother tongue. and not enough time getting the youngster up to fluency in English," Bardos said. According to a summary written by survey director Malcomb Danoff, the federal Title VII Spanish-English bilingual education program ln schools nationwide "did not appear lo produce gains in student achievement over and above what would be expected had the student been assigned lo a traditional classroom." COAST COMPUTER CENTER Hcnor.,._W.. ,.... .. , '' Poa..=:T10M CAU.6';:£ ,, ...... COITAei.sA , ............. DtlfrtWer .. ......_..ALE Starts Thursday July 13th 11th & Irvine Ave., Ntwpor1 l t.ach, C.allf. (i 14) 64S.0791 "•P:" ··-~···· .. ····-........... I .. ~ , t>t b ta tll' im Im ly 1ut 'ee VC 1cd \Ce ~ tl the or .Hi<t thi, \O l tnd lhe ~ng the L E WM l9T7 bO ial"'i 1 lhc • the t at •• 0 .. •; f -... . . . " - ' I , .•\ J 0 DAIL 'I .. ILO I Weonesac1v, Ju1v 12. 19/8 Tax Revolt Seen Many States Following California the Colorado Spending Lim1la 8l.!1!UISE COOK "The people 1n ldoho /eel }illt Wee lion Committee . .,,..,...,.,"_ people do all ocrosa the country: The sharp talk of tax revolters ls taking on a cutting edge. With sign atures as their weapons, proponents of pro- posals similar to California's Proposition 13 a re advancing from t.alking to testing. They are pushing property tax cuts and spending limits onto state elee tion ballots SOME LEGISLATURES are taking the hint and looking at property taxes and spending on their own. Gov. Dolph Briscoe of Texas. for example. called the Legislature into a special 30-day session beginning Monday to "construct a tax reduction and limitation program." Gov. George C. Wallace of Alabama announced plans for a similar special session on July 31 In New York State, the Legislature passed, and Gov Hugh Carey signed. a law that would allow renters to deduct part of their rent, as property tax. on state income tax returns. An Associated Press survey found a t ax-c ut initiative already certified for the Nov- e mbe r ballot in Ida ho a nd s imilar tax or spending pro- pos a ls spawned by petition drives virtually certain to be put to a vote in Colorado. Oregon and Nebraska IN MICHIGAN, whe re the d<'adlinefor filing signatures was Monday, backers predicted success by .. a squeaker " BaC'kers or tax-c utting or spending initiatives were still collecting signatures in Illinois, Montana, Nevada and Florida. Petition drives in Utah. Washington and Arizona were unsuccessful . a lthough Arizona residents still can vote on state s pending. via a pr oposed con· s t itutional amendment, ap· prov<'d earlier by th e legis lalur• THE IDAHO TAX-CUT pro- posal drew more signatures than any other initiative in the state's history, more than twice the number need ed to get the meas ure on the ballot. Don Cti ancc, Idaho Property Owner:> Government is growing too big." - Don Chance. Idaho Property Owners' A&&oe1Qfion. "Anger. Tettnlment, fnatrotlOrl!' -S.H. "Zeke" Brewer Jr. "Tht LJD Petition Drive" in Nebrcuka. 'The people ..• want the /at and wa&te taken out of government." - J ack Orr. Col orado Spending Limitation Committee. Association, explained why: There is loo much interference by the federal government, loo much control of private property . . and a property tax which is unfair .. Like Proposition 13, Idaho's "Initiative l" would limit pro- perty truces to 1 percent or the market value. In California. that meant a cut of 57 percent on the average. In Idaho, it would mean a cut of 41 percent. "BY THE TIME WE get through counting, we will have ce rtifi e d som e 62,00 0 s ignatures," Chance s aid. Only 26,000 signatures were needed to get the issue on the ballot. Oregon officials have until Ju· ly 22 to certify signatures seek· ing a vote to limit property truces to l ~ percent of market value. .If approved, it would reduce pro- perty taxes by an average of 42 percent. Backers n ee d 61,646 signatures to get the measure on the November ballot; by the Ju- ly 7 deadline. they had turned in an estimated 200,000. S.11. "ZEKE" BRAU£R said his Nebraska .. LID" group had turned in 77,911 signatures by the deadline last Friday; 45,131 are needed to get the measure on the ballot. Brauer's proposal calls for a 5 percent ceiling on increases in local government budgets. Sponsors of an amendment to limit increases in government s pe nding in Color ad o to in creases in the cost of living sub- mitted 101,960 signatures on July 6. almost 39.000 more than the 63,040 needed. "Our amendment is not a tax· cul measure." said Jack Orr of "IT'S A SPENDING limita· lion amendment . . . The goal is to bring growth in spending within an acceptable range without disrupting the necessary Junctions of government.'' The Coalition for Political Honesty, an Illinois group, is trying to get an advisory re· ferendum on the ballot to have the legislature "freeze property taxes ... until the property tax burden on owner-occupiers and renters is reduced by 25 per· cent." The coalition has until Aug. 21 to gel the required 625.000 signatures. Spokesman Patrick Quinn said more than 55.000 have been collected so far THE ILLINOIS referendum would not be binding. but, said Quinn : "Politicians understand the language of votes." Leaders of unsuccessful pell lion drives generally blamed a lack of time for their failure . In Nevada, for example. a group known as "Con cerned Citizens to Reduce the Tax Rate" got only about two-thirds of the signatures needed to force a vote on a plan to offset infla· tionary increases in property values. COORDI NATOR DOUG Cameron blamed low interest in Las Vegas, lack of time and too few people circulating petitions. Another Nevada driv e. sponsored by the ''Peoples Ad· voe ate Committee." would a mend the constitution to limit laxes. To become law, the plan would have to be approved by the voters in Nov.ember and again in 1980. Backers have until Aug. 9 to tum in signatures. The campaig ns have some law maker s worried. "If a ll things government does are in· itiated by the voter, then there is no need for representative gov· ernment." said state Sen. John M . Mutz of Indiana. speaking at the National Conference of Stale Legislatures in Denver. .. There are lots of suggested r emedies for reducing property taxes. but some of the m are too complicated and cannot be com municated to the electorate." TAX PROPOSAL WOULD CUT MICHIGAN'S PROPERTY TAXES IN HALF Volunteers For Reform Sort and Count Petitions In Lansing For Exeeoted Killer 'Love Growing Deeper' SPRI NGVILLE, Utah IAP) - Nicol e Ba r rett , f o rme r girlfriend o' executed killer Gary Gilmore. nearly joined him an death in what authorities believed was an abortive suicide pact. Now, 18 months after a firing squ•d killed Gilmore. Mrs. Bar- rett seems to love Gilmore "almost deeper," Gilmore's mother says. Mrs . Barrett was raised In this community of about 9,000 over whi ch Gilmore's ashes were s pread. S he moved afte r Gilmore's execution and lives in Oregon . whe r e Gi lmore's mother, Bessie. also lives . MRS. GILMORE said in a telephone interview from her home outside Portland that Mrs. Barrett calls her frequently and asks about her son's early years. "She asks me about Gary when he was young and could listen to that for hours. She said she wishes she could have grown up with him," Mrs . Gilmore. said. Mrs. Barrett won't tell friends or buslness associates where in Oregon she lives. Even Mrs. Gilmore said she doesn't know .how to contact the 22-year-old d ivorcee. Mrs . Gilmore says she and Mrs. Barrell have struck up a warm friendship since ber son's 'DOING FINE' Nk:ole Barrett January 197'7 execution, the first in the United States ln nearly 10 years . Promote L aw r ence Schiller. who ror $25,000 bought exclusive rlghls to Mrs. Bar- rett's story. says he doesn'< know where she li ves. He said Mrs. Barrett has re- cci ved nearly $20,000 so far. $10.000 of which is in a trust fund ror her children. and would re- ceive the rest upon completion of a movie about Gilmore. Schiller. who lives in Los Angeles. said author Norman Ma ller had inter viewed Mrs Barrett for the book Maller is writing on Gilmore . The book will be finished next year and the movie will follow, he said, MRS. BARRETT used to hitchhike the 40 miles from Springville to the prison for daily visits with Gilmore, who was sentenced to death for the murder of a Provo motel elerk . He lat er admitted kllllng a service station attendant the previous night. It was here that Mrs. Barrell took an overdose of sleeping pills two months before Gilmore's Jan. 17 execution in an apparent suicide pact with the man who made world headlines in demanding death over a lifetime In prison. The 36-year-old Gilmore took a s ub-lethal drug dose in his prison cell and would hav re- covered without aid, doctors said. Mrs. Barrell was round unconscious the same momtna on her apartment sofa c:lutchln, a picture of Gllmoro to her cheat. -. . -. . . . . . NATION I WORLD - -~-....... ODDS ANO ENDS CLUTTER SMITHSONIAN STORAGE ROOM WHILE AWAITING DISPLAY Attic Offerings: Many Are Submitted, Few Are Chosen Gifts Not All Wanted Smithsonian Takes Only the Best Junk WA SHI NGTON CAP) -The Smithsonian Inst itution may turn down your son's favorite model airplane or that strange bug you caught in a pickle jar. but each year curators accept donations of thousands of items found lying in someone's attic. secretary. was more selective. He wrote that he did not want to fill the Smithsonian with a ··series of domestic feather dusters" or "grasshoppers from Indiana." Every day. people walk into what has been called "the na- tion's attic." offering what they believe will be splendid addl· taons to the national collection. pla s tic models of famous a irplanes. dozens of political campaign button~ and a 44-ton malhng machine THEY ALSO TtRNED down what a would-be donor thoughl was Martha Washington's wed· ding dress. It was found to be machine-stitched. • Since its founding. the Smithsonian has had curators who looked with varying degrees of interest on donations from the public. FOR INSTANCE. during the ad minis tration of Spence r Full erton Baird, who became the second secretary of the Smithsonian in 1878. its annual report listed donations of •·sealed bottles containing water fro m the Dead Sea .. _ a chicken with four legs ... a liv- ing duck." But J oseph Henry. the first SOME 11DNK THAT what has been gathering dust in their own a ttics will make curators and visitors happy. Sometimes they're r ight · "T he institution added 1 •.2 million items last year, many from just plain folks. But the Smithsonian turns down many more donations than it accepts. For example. curators r ecent· ly rejected "meteorites" that turned out to be ordinary rocks. And the National Portrait Gallery is frequently offered paintings of George Washington. Curator Robert Stewart says he's always looking for the best pi cture of a famous person, but "Judging by the number of George Washington portraits we turn down -about two a week every American artist pro- duced a Washington portrait at some ume in his career " Tricentennial The Museum of History and Technology has a similar pro- ble m . Herbert Collins. the political history curator. says it seem s every old attic 1n America contains a copy of the 19th century reprint of the New York Herald Tribune' story on the assassination of Abraham Lincoln Philadelpma to Cerebrate ANY TRUNKS that don't have that repnnt, be says. apparently have the comme morative hatchet marlcing the lOOtb 3.J'l· n1ver s ary or George Washington's death. PHILADELPHIA CAP) -Philadelpb1a, still hung over from the bicentennial, is about to have another birthday party ll 's the tricentennial, not the nation's, but the city's, and it's only four years away. The Air and Space Museum is offered as many as 50 rock samples each year, with only an average or one a year t.urning out to be a real meteorite. And there are continual offers of old pilot licenses or flight uniforms. ll 's happening because Billy Penn stepped ashore from his ship, "Welcome," at the foot or Dock Street. convenient to the Blue 'First Lady' Independent Of Husband ROME CAP) -When Socialist Sandro Perlini was elected . Italians gained a president but they got a first lady in name only. Mrs. Carla Pertini , a crusad· ing feminist. has decided she won't move into the sum ptuous pre s idential palace , th e Quirinal, with her 8l·year·old husband. LIVING IN mE palace would mean she would have to accept many social obligations that would interfere with her work as an assis tant professor in psychology. "My wife will never come to the Quirinal." Pcrtini told re- porters. "But we will see each other. l 'U go and see her every day." The president need walk only a few hundred yards for the dai- ly visits, down the Quirinal Hilt to the Trevi Fountain where the Pe rtini family maintains an apartment and where his wife is expected to live. "MY WIFE INTENDS to con· tinue with her professional work and I respect her desire." Pertinl said "On the other hand. how could I stop it? I always wanted to be a free man and I can't object to the same spirit in others." There was no hint of any dis- agreement between the couple as news leaked out that the P erllnt s wo n 't be livin g together. Pertini says he considers hi s wife, 24 years his junior, "my best friend." The couple met when Pertlni was orpnlzing an- ti-N azl and anti-fascist resistance in northern Italy. TUEY WEaE married in a civil ceremony In 1946, making them the first presidential cou- ple not to be united In a religious ceremony. They have n o children. Mrs. Pertlnl has worked as Parlia ment reporter for the Genoa dally II Lavoro and also ror the ft!rhln1st magazine "Noi Doiine" "We Women" Anchor Tavern. on Oct 29. 1682. aceording to a historians' best guess. Hr"; HAD PR E VIO USLY !>tepped ashore at New Castle. Del.. and Chester. Pa .. creating some confusion as to what he was looking for. Al a ny rate. Philadelphia claimed Penn as its founder. stuck a statue of him atop City II all and now has staked out 1982 for its 300th birthday party - which has a few people edgy It's not surprising that tricen- tc n n ial planners are a bit gun shy. Philadelphia's bicentennial celebration. while a barrel of fun. was not all that it was cracked up to be. Only about half of the predicted 20 million tourists showed up, and New York City s tole the show with the "Tall Ships." EDWIN WOLF II, director of the Philadelphia Library Co. and a member or the steering com mittee putting together plans for the latest bash. has suggested that it might be wise to use the word tercentenary instead oflricent~nnial. He figures it would put some verbal distance between 1976 and 1982. "Bicentennial has become a something o f a dirty word around here," he noted. One man offered a collect10n l)f old a irplane cards a nd brochures. Those were turned down. but curators found he also had an interesting collection of airline maps that may be ac· ceptcd SMITHSONIAN CU RATORS <.'valuate any offered item for authenticity and for historic, sc ientifi c o r aes th e tic ::.1gmricance, and judge its condi· tion and preservability "Whenever we refu se an offer, we try lo refer the owner to a m ore appropriate institution s uch as a state historical society or a local museum ... says the m- s ti tu lion's r<.'~istrar, 'P hilip Leslie. But. says Collins. "some peo- ple don't bother to call or write. They just leave their artifacts m the exhibition halls." A COMMON ITEM lert in the halls is the insect trapped in the pick1e jar -ten without a clue to th e would-be donor's identity. At the National Portrait Gallery. curator Stewart re- called an unusual walk·in offer. the artist who offered to donate a portrait of George Washington. saying it would be very realistic liecause he was in touch with Wa shington's spirit. More Woillen Now At Work-Bureau WASHINGTON <AP> -The percentage or working-age women holding temporary or permanent jobs reached a new high of 56 per- cent in 1977, the government has reported The Bureau or Labor Statistics said 46.4 million women aged 16 and older were employed at some time during the year. That com- pares with 44. 7 million -55 per- cent of working-age women - who held jobs during 1976. THE FIGURES, based on a bureau survey conducted last spring, are consistent with pre· vious r eports showing more women working because or greater Interest in careers and to sups'lement family incomes. Nearly 61 million men worked at some time during 1977, up from 59.5 million t he year before. the bureau reported. The propartion of working.age men who held Jo~ during the year was 81 percent. about the same 38 In 1976 . In all, 107 million people 16 and over were employed at some lime during 1977, three million more than ln 1976. The number who h e ld jo b s . re presents 68 percent of the worklng-age population. THE GOVERNMENT !iald 19.5 million people encountered some unem ployment during 1977, about one million fewer thnn in 1976. Thl' number who were jobless fo r -.ome p eriod o f time rt'presented 18 percent of n•· tlon 's workforce. . , ............ . 1 ' .. D .. ·. '1 I -... . .. • 1 • • • • IN SIDE : •Boating •Televisio n s •....... ·.B·u•s•lne .. ss .. ··E•n•t•e•n•a•in•m .. e.nt .................................................. i,..~~ts Wednesday July 12.1978 DAILY PILOT r-~. O•llY Pilet ,....._ llY LH Pay,_ 710 CONTESTANTS TAKE OFF FOR THE START OF THE SEA KING BACK BAY RUN IN IRVINE TUESDAY NIGHT. BRIAN HUNSAKER WAS THE WINNER. Garvey Trades Popped Stitch for tiy DA VE CUNNINGHAM Of U. O.tlly Pllet Sutt S~N DIEGO If Steve Garvey is healthy, he'll get his one or two hits and make an impressive showing in the All-star game He's bei!n doing that for five seasons now But if Garvey is afflicted with the mumps or has his chin cut open, watch out. He'll knock the ball all over the park, drive in the winning runs and win the Most Valuable Player trophy With 20 stitches in his chin. Garvey singled, tripled and walked. drove in two runs. scored the tie-breaking run and led the National League to a 7-3 victory over the American Tuesday night a t San Diego Stad \ufT" ' "I DON'T HIT with my chin ... the Dodger first haseman said. .. so at didn't affect me I think I popped a stitch on the triple. but that's OK. I'll ~ladly trade a popped stilch for a triple .. It marks the second time Garvey has won the MVP trophy. The first came in 1974 when. as a write-in candidate, he t¥>mered lo highlight a 6·3 National League victory. He had mumps during that game. . Garvey injured his chin Saturday when a pickoff throw from patcher Bob Welch hit him in the face and opened a large laceration. GARVEY'S TRIPLE off the top of the right field waU led orr the eighth inning in a 3·3 deadlock. Moments later he scored the winner on a wild pitch from the Yankees' Rich Gossage. It was a dismal inning for Gossage He surrendered three hits und a walk to the first four batters he faced and drew the loss. but Garvey, the perennial Mr. Nice Guy. had nothing but praise for Gossage "He threw hard and had good breaking pitches but he gol * * * long Trip Is Short For Keough SAN DIEGO ll"s been a long trip in a short time for Corona del Mar High graduate Matt Keough. Two years ago he was a minor lea~ue infielder who was asked for the first lime to take a crack at pitching. Tues d ay h e appeared in his first major league All-star game as a rookie for the Oakland A ·s. ··And I hope it's not my last ,' Keough says. "This meant a lot to m e." KEOUGH WAS s ummoned from the buJlpen with runners at second and third during the third inning. lie faced two hitters. giving up an infield s ingle to Ted Simmons and getting Rick Monday to fly out. .. Billy Martin dido 't exactly bring me in during an easy s ituation ... Keough says 'It proved he had confidence in me, and that helped my own confidence.·· But with the headlines going to the ~tevc Garveys and Rod Carews', Keough was just a background figure in the 1978· mad-summer classic. It was a chance for h.im to see old friends 1 n Newport Beach and relax a bit. behind and had to come in to a few guys ... Garvey s<11d . "I thought the ball I l11t was going out. truthfully I was surprised to sec it come off the w<.111 .. And Gossage·• "WHAT CAN I SAY? They kicked my butt,'" the deJecled Yankee mumbled "Physically I felt super They just have a very good team ·· Overlooked JO the aftermath was Minnesota's Rod Carew. who broke an All star record by becoming the first player to hit two l'Onsecutive triples JO one g<1 me Each or Can•w's s hots went to the gap m left -center and each r esulted ma run. BEFORE GARVEY'S heroic:-. 1t appeared Carew and Kansas Cll) ·~ Georgl· Hrt>ll would vu, for Comm1ss1ont.•r Bowie Kuhn's St>t> GARVEY. Page 83 AP Wt,..,...lo "THIS IS the first time in five years I've rea ll y been back here." l(eough says. I came back earlier for a t r ip to Anaheim but I didn't get a chance to do anything. This time 1 • m gonna get to the beach. That's wha Southern California is a ll about. ALL-STAR MVP STEVE GARVEY GETS A CONGRATULATORY KISS FROM WIFE CINDY. Will Keough someday emerge as the type of pitcher who will be so hounded by fans and the media that he will lose his chance to relax at the All·star break? "I don't know •m just trying to hold my own right now," Keough says. "If I'm back here 0.11, P11et Pllelo"' LH P•,,_ next year. we'll see." ANAHEIM'S TRACY AUSTIN SHOWS HER WINNING FORM -By Dave Cuttnlngham But Oranges Defeated Austin Wows Crowd By ERNIE CASTILLO CM -Delly ...... StAlfl Al least for the time being, Tracy Austin has l!Olved the Anaheim Oranges women's teMis woes. Now tr they can just do som ething about the rest of the team Austin. the 15-year-old Wonder Girl of the racquet world, not only was the main attraction but also the only wlnner ror the Oranges in Tueada)'. nl&ht's 3()..28 loss to the New Orleans Nets ln World Team Tennis play before a crowd of 3,144 at the Anabelm Convention Center. WHILE SHE WAS serving, Austin was Jnvinclble, never dropping as much as a slngl~ play. And while she was receiving, she played the s teady, t.ndamental and non.fl ashy kind of tennis more becoming a proven veteran. After llvinJ Wendy Turnbull-a proven player ln her own rieht who ta ranked among the top 10 women ln the world"-flts with her \WO·fisted backhand and consistent baseline·tO·baullne volleys. Aust.Jn p0lashed orr Turnbull'' s ubstitute. Trish Bostrom.· b) wl.nmng two straight gall'les without giving up a point . Earlier in the 6-3 victory. Austin bad reeled off a string or eight unanswered points against Turnbull who was forced lnto making numerous errors and seemed to be pressing throughout against a player who is years her juruor A Ub'Tll'ls, WHO ls filling In for the ill.)ured Rosie Casals, lsn 't even getting paid for her services since she would like to retain heramateur statu.s. The deal sounds \oo good to be lrue but It does have a catch Austin signed for only three matches. Qtherwtse. the maJor news was the play of Renee Richards, the Newport Beach tranasexual who was on the Nets' winnlna mixed and women's doubles teams, and what evolved as a fast serve contest in the men's division between the Oranges' Cliff Drysdale and the Neu· Many Relsaen. Rlchard1'. who says she is now accepted See AUSTIN, Pa1e 8 2 Top Swimmers Compete MV Invitational Begins Friday Olympians. past and ruture. will be s howcased when the sixth a nnual Mission V1 eJO Invitational swi mmin g championships get under way Friday. As usual_. the host Mission Viejo Naaadores figure to dominate the three-day meet at the Marguerite International Swim Complex. located at the corner of Marguerite Parkway and Trabuco Road. Pre llms are scheduled for 10 a.m with finals beginning at 5 p.m each day. H e a ding the Nadadores ' entries are Brian Goodell and Jess~ Vassallo in the men 's division and Dawn Rodighlero. J ennife r Hooker and Alice Brown In the women's division GOODELL, WHO HAS been with the Nadadores since he was nine. was the 1976 Olympic gold medallsl a nd world record holder in the 400 a nd 1,500 freestyles. This past season. he was named UCLA's athlete or the year after . wlnnl 1g three NCAA crowns and followed that with a pair of ~titles at the national AAU championships Vassallo Is the American record h older In t~e 400 individual medley and has the world's best lime thJs season in the event. He won the 400 IM title 1t the 1978 AA U Indoor cham plonahlps. Browne la a rormeT world record holder who still holds the .. I ••tAN OOOOILL JESSIE VASSALLO American mark m the 800 free Rod1ghiero 1s the national high !'chool record holder 1n the 100 breaststroke who recently was named co-winner or the CIF :-wimmer of the year award after leading Mission Vie JO I hgh to another champ1onsh1p. Wooker. like Valene Lee. 1s an AAU champion swimmer. NADADORES COACH Mark Schubert has another Olympian in the wings, Chris Woo. A native Hawaiian. Woo joined the club after a successful season with the UCLA women's team In all. the meet is expected to attract nearly 800 wammers .ncluding athletes from South America. Canada. New Zealand and Japan The meet ~erves as a final l'hance for American swimmers to qualify for the U S. World Games trials at Woodlands, Tex. T~t trials determine Ule U S t'nt r1cs to lhl' 1nlcrnat1onal affair in West Germany, making ~everal races this weekend at Mission V1eJO extremely crucial. THE NADAOORES' strongest competition for the team title i~ l'Xpected to come from the Santa Clara Swim Club. the El Monte Aquatics Club, the Beach Swim Club a nd the De Anza Swim Club. Th e meet is especially important to the Barn1coai family o( Mission Viejo. Three members-Karen <12>, Steve 1 tt> l and Sheryl <13)-quali(ied for the mvttational. A high plac:e could earn Sheryl and Steve: e chance at the World Games. the AAl! long course nationals or the dual meet against Can4lda while Karen 1s shooting for the national Junior Olympics. Steve . a hig h sc h oo t All-American as a freshman and sophomore. rinished 10th in the 200 back in lhe national long course m eet and 11th In the short course nationals. S HE RYL, A FREESTYLE and backstroke swimmer. ft! the )Ounges t quahfler In the lm tong course nationals and bu already qualified for this year's natLonals In Woodlands. Karen, however, could be Uie best a ll-around swimmer in the ramlly. bemg equally adept at all Rtrokes. . .... ... ... ... .. .. .. . ..... ., ...... _ ...... . ' -. .. . .. . .. • : :4: _a_2 ___ o_A_1L_v_P1_Lo_r __ ~....._ _____ w_edneeda _____ v._~_1v_1_2_.1_e1_a~--------------------------------=---------------------------P-E=O~PLEINSPORTS /BASEBALL /TENNIS Plauers Wa 1t i11 Ltae ~ Preside nt Ford Awes AU-stars From AP Dlspatebel -SAN DIEGO -Like star-struck kids waiting to see their favorite ballplaye r. baseball's stars lined up for a hfndshake from • former President Gerald R. Ford before the start of Tuesday night's All·star game. . The ballplayers. who moments before were being hounded by &ereamang kids begging autographs. themselves wa1tme sheepishly in tine for their chance to meet Ford. ''Hello, Mr. President, it's nice to see you, sir." said ~ .Philadelphia outfielder Greg LU%1.nSki "You know, this is the . ""1'0ng sport. It should be football." Ford, a former University of Michigan football center. hugged Luzinski, who was then ushered away to make room for the next player. "He's a hell of a big guy," Ford said as the burly Luzinski left . Even the umpires wanted to get in on the show. Clutching their own baseballs, they filed past Ford for autographs. "You guys are just like politicians." Ford told the umpires. "You're never right." Even batting star Rod Carew was taken in by the former President's visit, shyly taking his ou•Lo iroao place next to Ford a s photographers and newsmen crowded by. But Los Angeles Dodgers second baseman Davey Lopes was clearly non· plussed by the visit. Lopes, covered with sweat as he did leg stretching exercises in the center of the clubhouse floor, looked over his shoulder to see fo'ord bending down to shake his hand. "Oh. hello." Lopes said. "Nice to see you here." When Ford left, Lopes was asked if he had ever met <• President before. "Hell, no." he said. "I don't go to the White House .. .---------Qteoce ef dae •••-----..... A BC commentator Howard CoseU s aid it while Rieb Gossage was being blasted by the National League in the bottom of the eighth toning in Tuesday's All-Star game. "The Nattonal League has been waiting for him all night " Ritn tor /tlcDowo..,,,. Set f'ridat1 Funeral services for John T. McDonough, veteran National 'J1ootball League referee. will be beld Friday at I p.m., at the First l>resbytenan Church, Santa Ana. McDonough, 61, died Monday night after a long illness. The 1940 Stanford graduate bad been an assistant superinteodent or Orange County schools-, CIF area commissioner and a charter m ember of the National Foot.ball Foundation and Hall of Fame. McDonough will lie in state at Fairhaven Mortuary Santa Ana. Thursday, noon until 9 p.m His wife. Beth. requested that in lieu of flowers, donations be made to the American Cancer Society or the National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame. E b eteltere 111 S port• • • . FOOTBALL Detroit Lions first round draft choice Luther &adley signed a mulli·year contract with the team Tuesday .. ·~0rrensive tackle Doug France became the 18th veteran to begin pre season training w ith the Rams. although the team's quarterbacks are the only veterans required lo attend the lO·day training session . . . The Kansas City Chiefs added running back Horace Belton to their tralning camp roster, bringing to 57 the total numbers of players in the camp . . . S&eve Pnece. a nine.year NFL veteran with the Seattle Seahawks. said be will retire from pro football rather than re port to training camp next .veek . . Auburn, which had its 1957 national champibnship football team barred from post·season bowl games for illegal recruiting, has been again accused of breaking the NCAA rules in football and basketball BASKETBALL Red Auerbach is negotiating with two ,....National Basketball Assn. teams, including the New York Knicks. " while he decides to remain Boston Celtics president and general t manager under new owner John Y. Brown .. ~ Rick Wllson of Louisville. a second round NBA ~ draft choice, has sif{ned with the Atlanta Hawks )ii • Seattle SuperSonics Coach Lenny Willdns 't has signed a five.year contract in which he is to remain coach and player personnel direct.or for three years and then assume an "executive position for the final two. OLYMPICS -Mayor Tom Bradley appears i to have made the city's latest attempt to • :.alvage the 1984 Summer Olympic Games a S take·it-or·leave·it offer to the International LENNY w1L.u1n ! Olympic Committee. Bradley said the city should withdraw its bid f for the Games If the IOC refuses to s ign a contract with the private S organmng committee. : BASEBALL Detroit's Rusty Staub thought he should havt• : been with the American League Tuesday in San Diego. ··1 deserv•· : tr> be on the team You take Jim Rice, Roel Carew. Ron Guidry. : They're automatics. They should be there Hut .,. ... ....,._. Clippe r Meet,_ S k i pper Former Yankee great Joe DimaggLO talk~ with Billy Martin prior to Tuesday's 49th annual All·star classic. If they were talking ~tratcg). 1l didn't '<\.Ork a s thl' Am e rican Leag ue dropped their seventh s tn11ght. 7 :1 UCI Seleets Base ball Coaeh Steve Hertz. 27. has been !>elected hl'ad baseba,Jl coach at UC Irvine. the Daily Pilot hai:; learned. lll'rt.t attended Pierce JC for one year befo re transfenng to Gonzaga where he pitched for the Bulldogs and compiled a 19·8 career record. Hertz. who will assume his duties 1mmed1Cite Jy. becomes the fourth UCI baseball coach m the college's history. He succeeds Eddie All en. who re· signed in May after two seasons as a $1 a year coach . After ~raduation from Gonzaga he signed with the Minnesota Twins a nd spent three years in that organization before entering the coaching r anks at California Prep High School in Encino 11 (' returned to Gonzaga as an assistant baseball coach in 1976 where he also served as c;port s 1nformat1on d irector. director of in· tr amurals and director of the school's pavilion Hertz comes to UCI after one season as head coach at Gonzaga University in Spokane. Wai:;h . where he led the Bulldogs to a 32.'16 record and the cha mpionship of the Northern Pacific Baseball Conference. Gonzaga advanced to the finals of the• Distract 7 regionals. before losini:! to Arizona St<1te A graduate of Taft High in Woodland Hilb . "I 'm vt'rv excited and look forward to the t:hall<.·ngc.· of · gt.>tllng the Irvine program going .ij!ain m u pos1t1ve d1rect1on. I trunk the potential fo r the proj!ram at UC Irvine 1s unlimited and I l·ouldn't think of a bette r place to be ... Aoki Leads British Open Japanese Veteran Sets Early Pace With 68 ST ANDREWS. Scotland (AP) The treacherous 17th. the famed "Road Hole .... punished Tom Weiskopf with a double bogey a nd e n abled Japanese veteran Isao Aoki to set the early first -round lead today in the 107th British Open ~olf championship. Aoki, a slender 35·yea1 ·o!d who leads the J apanese order of merit, holed par.saving putts of 30 and 20 feet on the last two holes of the Old Courre at St. An· drcws and escaped with a 4· unde r· par 68. Weiskopf, the leader a lone un· Ill he made six on the 17th was a "llr1Jk t> buck at 69 still out 111 thl' mild. overcast weather. We is kopf s har ed second with Spain"• 21 year·old Seve r1an o Ball <'Sl<:ros America n Ray rloyd ancl /\ustrahan Jack Newton. rccC'nt winner of the Buick Open and ii playoff loser to Tom Watson in this championship thret• year:-. <tgo. WATSON. the d e fendin g champion . Arnold Palmer , Hall' Irwin. Hubert Green and J ack Nicklaus. who is seeking a 15th maJor professional Lille. all had late starting times on the uni que. 6,933 yard. par·72 layout that 1s the birthplace of golf Ben Cre nshaw headed a ~roup Of l'<Hly f1mshcr:. <Jt 70 Johnny M1ll ('r ~hot 73. Ed Sneed and Lel' Trevino. a five·llme runner·UP this season. matched 75s J erry Patt' shot 76 Mast e r s cha mpion Gary Player of South Africa m ade a 74 that included a brilliant putt to s ave a bogey on that troublesome 17th that wrecked so many early hopes. or the fi rst 36 men to play the 46l·yard par four. only 11 were able to match par A COUPLE of birdie threes coming home put Andy Bean one under par by the 15th. Nicklaus 1o1.·as also one under par at the 15th. He birdied the par three lllh to go two under. but a six on the long par five 14th lost h.im a stroke Nastase Survives Disputes From AP Dt.pa&.elte• NEW YORK -Ille Nastase survived a series of dispute& with match officials in the th1rct set and kept his mind on tennis just enough to o u tlast 23-year·old Peter Fleming. S-7, 7·6, 6·4 Tuesday night in the round·robin. WCT Invitational Nastase. who earlier this month was fined SS.000 and sus pended for three months by the Men's International Tennis Council because of a series ol incidents of misbehavior over the last two years. maintained a running dispute with linesman Miguel Cros lin after Croslin called him for two root.faults and a lso made a number of line calls against Nastase. At one point during t h e decisive third set he appealed a call to umpire John Stahr. only to be threatened with a penalty point unless play r esumed immediately. Nastase appealed to re feree Lee Jackson and tournament director Gene Scott, but the call stood. In another night .match. Phil Dent easily defeated 43·year-old fellow.Australian Ken Rosewall, 7·5,6·1. John McEnroe made his American pro debut a s uccessful one as he defeated Australian veteran John Newcombe, 1·6, 6·4. 7·5 and Poland's Wojtek F1bak easily topped Billy Martin 6 2. 6·4. DibfMc Bree:e• CINCINNATI -Top·seeded Eddie Dibbs scored a shutA>Ot in his opening match al the Western tennis championships, beating Bob Kronaugh, 6-0, 6-0. Ricardo Cano was the first seede d player to fall out of competition, los ing to Eric lskerski 6·2. 6-0. Other seedea paayers beaten included Egypt's Ismail Er S hafei. who was u pset by Australian P eter McNamara. :J.6, 6·3, 6·4 and Marcelo Lara of Mexico who was ousted by Mike Cahill, H i. 6·4. In othe r action. Bob Webb defeated John Bartlett. 5·7, 6-4. 6.:J. while Terry Moor beat Gary Plock 6-4. 8·4 : Joe Meyers downed Bill Lofgren, 7~. 6-4: Francisco Gon zales. P uerto Rico beat Andy Koblberg. 6-4 . 6-2; Ivan Molina lopped Van Winitsky. 3-6, 6-3, 6-4;and Gene Mayer defeated Henry Bun is 6-4 6·2 AdwAd"a~• NEWPORT . R .I. Top·seeded Arthur Ashe easily defeated unseeded Chris Dunk. fi 2. 6·3. in first·round actiOn Tuesday In the Fame Tennis Championshi~. In an earlier match. unseeded Tim Wilkison upset fifth seeded Colin Dibley of Australia. 6..C. 4.f). 6·4. In other singl es act ion. 40·year·old Manuel Santana of Spain defeated Woody 81otcher 6·7. 6·3. 6·3: John J~mes or Australia downed Sashi Menon of India, 6·2, 6·1; Mike Machelle of Pacific Palisades toppet4 Australia's Rod Frawley. 6·1. 6·4; and Dick Bohrnstedt beat former UC Irvine standout Scott Carnahan, 6·3, 7·5. : I m next l 'm right behind them and I should lw : there. too.·· Staub leads AL designated hitt..r" t with a .299 a verage ... Bruce Sutt,r, 111·1· rchl'vcr of the Chicago Cubs. was nam«>d Pl11y1•1 or the Wttk in the National Le&f(UC•. Mw1rtl y "VOU {'OULD SAY I let 1t gel 11w11 y , tmlcl lht• tall American "' 111 1111111>11ullv t'ulm und c·om )tlllll'tl d1•11111t1• hlH Hhaky f1ni:-,h II • 11 llttlu ll111t1.1ppo1nlln~. hut 111nl ,,.., 1111111• I f1111·.tw1I l)OOrly 1l111•bfl'I 111N111 I 111 11111 of lh1• .:ull 111111 llllfHttlll Baseball Standings : , a fter the award was announced. Sutt.ur vitc·tlf'tl -. • 12/3 scoreless Innings for the NL AIMil.Mr11 on•I J picked up the victory . Cinctrmotl'• Hparh 1 Anderson predicted it would take 00 virtm Ir•• I•• , win the National f.cttl(u1•'1t We11tern lJlv l111t111 ! . Acquiting bl ack pluyer8 first htt11 put th• ~ •USTYST'AUI Natio nal League ahead or thf' Anw rll11111 ~ League. said San Francisco Giants' first ba11e man Wllllt Mr t 'ov .. v ~ For the first time, baseball's winter meeting will tw hfllff 111 ! · Canada next year. • . .. .. OTHER SPORTS Ron Ballat.ore, who has served 011 l11•1t1I .. swimmmg coach at Pasadena Cily College since Sept'.. 198'1, hlf11 ! been named the new UCLA head swim coach . . University or : Michigan defenseman Dean Turner passed up his lsst \wo ye1r11 or " college eligibility and s igned a lhr~·year contract with the N11w I York Rangers ... Dominating the women's event.A. the hO!ll Wetit I Germans defeated the United States 252·237 In a tri·nallon junt<.11 track and field meet . UC Irvine's LaMonte Kln1 won the lon1t jump (25.9121 S perts ... a..l'-,T~ • RADIO: -Soccer -The Surf meet Fort Laudorctall' at ! Anaheim Stadium. 7: 15 p.m .. KFOX C93.5 FM>. KORJ <SM.3 FM l : TV: Tonight -The Aztecs meet the Soundert al Sciatltle. : 7:30 p.m .. Channel 11. • Wiiii 11u1111 111 lht• flu ld 111 1~:. St u r H 'l'nn~lc· With l•:I t•n Hc• I 1111 I la 1111uu I 1111111 V 1.t 111 •1 1111t11 lfllfllllll l1t•lal111I W111 1111 II I 11v1011111 11•11111111• q1111l 11 lln 11111111 will h t114I Jl1I 1'11•111 111111 ,,, 11111111111 I I 101 •II 1'1r1111111ll1 V11 tl•·~ lll1tl1 111 f11t ut m •ll111111I V1tll1•ylt11ll 1\111111 Ill 111111 fr.I Jl11 q11 111111 ,,, I I 11 1 '" 111 llPCllllll ''/"''' 111 1111• I V/\ •I l 1111tl11flt1l11 llhl11l1111 ·111 .. ,..,,.," 111 n 1, l11l111wl1111 l1111 l•ht'11 111ril1•li w1tl1 "'· will h1111I 'r'llC •1111 ff1 hlMV. l111 11J1I 111 f 111•1t1tll l'MllllfhV 11 1111 lh1111 ltrflnk 1111 lhn All •I 111 111111111 Muudal' 111 l':I I'""" on the WTI' circuit, and John Lucas, the only professional playing tennis and basketball. are 8· 1 as a tandem alter defeatint the Oranges' team or ,. Francoise Durr and Anana Amrttraj, 6·4, ln the : opening match. , -f" After Austin gave the Oranges a 10-9 lead. i Richards teamed with Bostrom to defeat DuM' and 1 Austin, 7-6, in a nlne·polnl tiebreaker \hat left ~ everything up to lbc men It looked like thr Net• would MO thln1111 quickly In the men'• double bout when RCJlttf't'n 1rntJ Andrew Pattli.on took o 4·2 odvantitft'I rl•ht ort the bat. But Drysdale, who kept tho rrowd plu•~ll wllh bis bla:rJng aervea and body en•ll•h, holpe1I earn the Oranges a 6·8 deadlock that put th l"•m score al 29 29. t The Neta' Marty Reissen powered four ' unreturned aerves paal Mark Cox before Oranaes layer coach Clilf Drysdale took over. 'The match soon turned Into a f Ht serve contest befott Relssen. who finished the nisht with four aces. won in a Uc·breakcr. tt wu four apiece In tbe tlc·btetker t>eroro li wide return by Dry1dale ended the match and prevented a super tie· breaker Ironically. the Oranae11. In two previous meellngs wtth the Neta, had won b)' forclna \he match l.nlo overtime. And thou3h Dryldate wH distressed at la.Ina \l\.ree Ue·br akera and with the larce number or 4.3 1ames his team lOJl, like everybody else. he was awed by the play of Aualln "DON'T WAIT! ORDER ~~¥: TODAY11 WIUASI ALL MAHS ALL MOOllS AMERICAN LF./\Gllf. Wefil Division A II 1(1•!11 W t, PCt. GB 46 40 .S35 K "llHlllt Cit v 'l'f')(llH 0 11 kln111t iM 40 .~24 M 111111•1111111 <'hll'UJ(ll S1•111th· '1Z 41 .500 2~'.I 4!1 44 41M 31 :1 :m 14! .481 41v :114 40 .452 7 :10 ~ :Ml t7 l•:a11l Olvb1lon l\O"<IOll ~.7 Zli Kl<7 Mll w11ukl'f' 11< :1!1 !17K ., Nl'W Y111 k •111 :IK :14R I I' ' U1alt1 m1111· 11~, '10 !\2!.I 1:1 lktrmt 42 42 !iOO 1511 'kvt•lun<I JU 46 459 Jll 1'oront11 :12 ~1 376 26 f""41.tY'• \o,. '4Atlon•I .Alt St~r'\ I AMt'fH' Ml All ~··" ' , ... .,., GMfMt' NO O•""'' .CllMIUl~O ,--,·~o. ..... 10101110 .. 1~ .... (l\treq<> .. t -YO<• ,,._,,, •1 ~fOI" n "''"""\.Ot• •' O•tt•tn0'• • tt ••>\•\ (.rly •I ~llW-" " ( ••••l•ftO •• o.--••nd " 0.lrlHI •I '-"tie. " • ,t~I Nt\TIONAL LEAGUE WN&DM1lon Sun Francisco Dod "C',.,. Clnclnnotl Sun Diego /\ tlnnlu Hou11ton W L Pct. OB ~ 34 .60S 50 36 .581 2 49 3'7 .57~ 3 42 45 .483 lO'h 31 47 .440 14 36 46 .439 14 •:as& Division Phtludelphia 47 34 .580 Chi<'ul(O 43 39 .524 4112 1'11tsbur~h 40 41 .494 7 Montreal 41 45 , .477 81h Nt•w York :u; 50 .419 13'h !'ii l,C)lll!\ 34 53 .391 16 fM.tf'•k • .. "'•llon•l 1'11 S.6'• '· AtMfiUtl All SI•••> T ... ,.,~ '40 0 .• ....,\K-fed T__.,., 0.-. D...-n et \I LO.M, ti ~n 0 1fl90 al ~ao<> S•n l'r..clteo•I fl'ttt-Ofl,tl HOV\l<>t\ ill__,., .. \, II "t• Vorll M CIM.'-11, n Only O•,,... ~"'° JOHNSON & SON LEASIM6 ••• ALL MAKES ALLMODILS MIW , 600 W. C OAST HWY. • MIWPOIT llACH • 646-0U Z • • ... . . .. . ~ ...... '\ .. OR USED . . .. D .. '1 f ... I I .. : . ' ' ' . . " BASEBALL /SOCCER /GOLF Wednesday. July 12. 1978 DAILY PILOT 83 ,.,...,.~., GARVEY ••• • Most Valuable Player award. Brett knocked in Carew in th~ first inning with a double. got him home again in the third with a sacrifice fly and singled during the fifth. But th~ rest or the Americarr League hitt.ers were silenced by a s uccession of four pitchers following the departure of San Francisco's Vida Blue, the starter BLUE SURRENDERED all three AL runs in his third All·sta-start. His first two appearances came as an American Leaguer with the Oakland A's · "I've never had good s uccess in an All-star game.·• Blue said It was the seve nth straight victory for a National League team, and Dodgers Man ager Tom Lasorda had an explanation "You've never seen so much enthusiasm by our players. They wanted to win." Lasorda said. "They were pulling for each other, patting each other on the back They're an outstanding group· Garvey agreed that the National League's attitude meant the difference. ''Spirit and enthusiasm are the keys. When we made a comeback you could see the guys jumping a ll around." Garvey said. ''After beating each other's brains out for half a season. it was a real joy to pull fo-ea<'h other " THE CROWD of 51,549 was the largest to ever see a baseball game in San Diego. and it was a vociferous bunch. cheering wildly for the NL and. in particular. the San Diego Padre representatives, Dave Winfield and Rollie Fingers Before the game they booed all the Dodgers. their rivals up the freeway. But the boos t urned to cheers when Garvey won the game "One gu> yelled from the stanrts, 'I love you today but I'm ~onna hate you tomorrow,' .. Garvey said "And I think that's Ot< • AME.RICAN NATIONAL Ca1ew lb Brei! lb (;o\W9tP Ritt' It Lrmon If 7 ... ~ ,, t•an\ rt F1SI«. Sunc11>Ur9 c T l>OmlKOfl pll Lynn cf -MoMy2b Wtule2b Poole<'e>h Parek U Palmer P Kt'OUQfl p Howellpll So<ense11 p ... ,,. ph Kern o Guidry I> .. t'ttlH:lb •• r 11111 ' ' 1 0 l t , 7 0000 4 0 0 0 0000 ' 0 1 0 1000 1 0 0 t 0000 1 0 0 0 '0 I 0 70 00 1000 I 0 0 0 l 0 1 0 t 0 0 0 0000 I 0 0 0 0000 1 0 1 0 0000 0000 0000 31 l. l Ro~lb LOCHIS 7b Mor9•n 2b Cl•rk rf Fo\ler cl Lu1lnskl If f'l"91tt'SP 51¥~11 pll S..tt•r p NtfJkroo G•v•r lb Simmon• c LonUIK•OflU -arrt R-rso Wlnfleld If 8owau 8-C Pocoroba 81.,.P Smolllrf Ger 30 • ., r ••I '0 1 0 I 0 1 I l I 0 0 1 0 0 0 ' ' 0 0 1 0 I 1 0 0 0 0 I 0 0 0 0000 0000 l 1 2 2 3 0' 0 0 I 0 0 7000 0000 7 t I 0 3 I 2 0 I 1 I 1 0000 0000 JOOO I 0 0 0 -JJ 7 10. ainertc•n tot 000 oe»-3 National 003 000 04•-7 £-Lemon OP-Amerlun t LOB-American • Nattonal 1 28-Brell, Rose 3B-C¥ew 2 Garv•~ SB-Bowe, Breit. SF-Fl!>I<. 8••11 P•tmttr Ktou9n !.o• ... l><I· K•rn C.u•c!rv Voli•Q• tl• IP H R E.R II SO AMERICAN ,~, l 3 •J 1 0 3 1 •o ~ t 0 0 0 ., ' • 4 NATIONAL l "' 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 t ' 0 0 0 4 I t 01.... l 3 3 ' RO\lf'ro 1 0 0 0 2 F onl)trS 1 t 0 0 0 1 Sutler IWt '"-0 0 O O 1 N1et.ro •, 0 O O o O WP-Ro0trs Go\>o89f PB. 5'lndtle•O T-2.:•. A-)t.S49 * ALL·STAlt NOTlS Do manavers orote<t ,,,.,, own Ill•~ our11111 lite AtMt.tr 9ame? Al ~ktooer 1 111 Mar1.ht 't•rted 9all1more's Jim Palmer IMl..O of IN ..,..,... s !IHI pllcl'ler In the ""' n•ll. his --°"'*"'· "Guidry l\aYt'I 0ttn tnrowlnQ .. 111 ll•S u-• l•P tatetr." Martin e•ol•1ned Mart111's NL counlerp•rt. Tom uM!f"N, -a 1.s1-rn1""i. swllcll and out t,,. Reas ~ -111 c..,tor lletd, mov11111 "" own th<a MeMay to rl9fll "-•r's •rm Is • little It~ and I Oon"I want lllm "' a P051Uon wller• lie moQM ,..,... to INlkt a 1>'9 11'1'-." I •sord<t ~o _., II ..... , meaM Is 111411 IMY •II ll•v• llolll a '"'!Ofl left, .ncs no one's about to 1eo941rdlte 111~ c.hanen l)y rislo.1119 an Injury In • mid·.,.•~ ulllblllon . AmonO Ille guests In commlu._r ...,.. •""41's tloll was oilman Mani11 Daris, -Is Interested In ~•no • ma1or lell9Ufl -111111 tranclllw In o.nwr •. PrwtMlolll ~ visited bolll ctUl>llO<l.ws before tailing In ttte .,.,,. from Ills tic>• on -lint INlw ~Ide New Vort Mell pltt,,.r Pat ZKflfY ofl..-.cl Ford • chew ot t-uo llul Ford polll•ly oecll...O APW~ Golf Roundup , . .. . Whittinghill Evenl Slated for Los Al Thirteen Orange County golfers will be among 88 amateurs teaming with 22 celebrity golfers in the eighth annual Dick Whittinghill InvitatioRal Tournament at Los Alamitos Saturday. July 29 County golfers set to compete in the tournament are Walter Cervantes. Newport Beach : Dick Eckelman. Placentia; Joe Ellett. Westminster: John Ferguson. Buena Park· Joe Fors. Huntington Beach; Walt Raymond. Tustin; Robert Reed. Santa Ana: Don Smith. Stanton: Don Tatro. Anaheim ; Marc Bingaman . Westminster ; Donald Smith. Orange; Jack Nelson. Fullerton; and Branko Cavic. Huntington Beach. Celebrities taking part in the tourney in addition to Whittinghill, who is the morning disc jockey on KM PC. include Claude Akins. Jerry West. Scatman Crothers, Leslie Neilson. Dennis James. Billy Barty. Bob Boyd. Rod Dedeaux and Gil Stratton. meeting wil~ be held Tuesday at the same restaurant as the ladies. Tournament play is Saturday morning and Thursaay afternoon. U1,1es are $25 per yeir l n a recent Low ~et tournament at Newport Beach Club: l. Steve Schader, 50; 2. <tie) Art Briggen and Ken ~st. 51. Briggen won second on matched scorecards . Top finishers in the Partners Best Ball tournament at Costa Mesa Country Club iochide · Fran Lewis-Marine Asslnas <guest), first place <65>; Jae La Pointe-Jean Van Way <g1*5ll. s eco nd place (67); J'at Wilson-Jenda Horn <guest>, third place <69) . • At· Big Canyon Country Club, winners in the Women's Club T & F tournament-A Flight -include: 1. Eleanor Leatberby, 30~; B Flight-1. Jane Martin, 30'1i ; C Flight-I. Mary Kay Moore, 321"-t. Par Four tournament: A f'light-1.Mary Albertson, 3&: B Flight-I. Kathleen Meyer , 43 ; C Flight-I. •·ama Danley, 41. CINCINNATI'S PETE ROSE GETS READY TO APPLY TAG TO BOSTON'S FRED LYNN. The amateurs will be shooting for a n impressive prize list which ranges from a new car lo vacations in Tahiti. Europe and the Orient. Jn addition. they will be treated to numerous tee gifts and havi ng stewardesses serve as their scorekei!pers. Stars Picked For All-stars Surf Takes On Strikers The event is staged for the benefit of the cancer unit al Long Beac h Communit y Hos pital. J o n R obert s. Dun can McFarland a nd player -coach Dodge Parker of the OraDge County Stars have been picked for the Western Division in Sun· day·:. International Volleyball Assn All-star game at the El Paso Civic Center. Sulmlwlz Acquired From Aztecs • PITCH-AND-R UNS-The Newport lieach Women ·s Assn. has scheduled a general membership meeting to be held at 1:30 Monday a t Mr. G's Restaurant <at t he New9ort Beach Golf Cou r s e>. The Women's Golf Assn. is now open to new members. Any woman 18 years or older 1s eligible to join. If you're interested. be at the meeting or call 979-9067 By ERME CASTILLO Of Ille Dally Pilot St.ttt In the North American Soccer League's biggest clearinghouse sale. the California Surf came up with the best bargains. The Surf, which a month ago acqui red Los Angeles Aztecs castoff Steve David, picked up another NASL All-s tar from the s ame club. Wolfgang Suhnholz. thi s week for futur e considerations Thus. there will be a reunion or sorts tonight (7:30) when the Surf hosts the Ft. Lauderdale Strikers at Anaheim Stadium THE STRIKERS have won five straight games and it's no coi ncidence that the s treak started when the club purchased controversial George Best from the Aztecs. who in addition to ridding themselves of three AH -star players. have also had major s hakeups in the front office. Bes\ and Suhnholz nlayed maJor roles m the Aztecs' two victories over the Surf this year and general manager Paul Deese is more than glad to get GEORGE IEST WOLFGANGSUNNKOLZ when he led Toronto to a 3·0 wm ove r Minnesota. A native of Germany, Suhnholz is considered to be one of the league's top midflelders. In 14 games this year. he has scored five goals and added one assist. He will be counted on to handle the playmaker role for the Surf. which has been lacking one all season. Obviously. one of his biggest assets is the fact that he has worked before with one of them to JOin David on a David. two-time NASL leading ln fairness to equal time. The Newport Beach men's club 1s seeking new members. The next The All-stars are selected b) the players and match the top players from the Western and Continental divisions . Wetl...., Olvisi.t Robert•, Mefarl...a P•fker IOra1191 CouQ!yl, lu•t E~m•rd, lhtOe Reynold>. 8t-6t10 O.Frello, Rose•,,,,.. W9'1<icll l~nta 8drtHl••t Wiit Clle-1;1111. L1ncla Ferrwndl!z l~•lllel Hol•ry JOM\OR (S.n Oteqo1 Ceftl.....,tal 01v1s. Jon St•nlty, U.rrv IHMOe CO..nv.,rl, G.irth Po>thllt , Gu\ MtP. "••o Su1we11o.ert IEI P•,OI Ju.,., 1. 8111 Wardrop, ~coll Engll>ll V••ormar 11.,10.,1, l•IT'• Corotro MtrC.dO• (;(inralt• !Tucson· Los Alamitos Racing Results rejuvenated front line I.hat could scorer. be one of the NASL 's most ~TllftNT productive. JOHN JACKSON will be in the e~1':~~.''t~~''.1•J.:!!; :.':.:":·.:ff~ R•~~:~ ;.-:.,~.~;~.~;!· ~0:-.,,~~~ ~~:~ Saying "the future is now" goal for the Surf. which is 11·13 e.aci. 1uone12111a1c1s.2s.eo ea.act• 11-11paids.wMo. and admitHng dissatisfaction at after a 1-3 road trip. Al Anaheim Second •«-All is 11.,,11,. • '°· s '°· >IO; s.ve11111 rau-e1w, va1enu .... •·*'· J.'lt. 3 oo. AutlOIU.-. "·'°· 10.00. Jaaolll Jon,' 40 Koko H•llll. 3.00, 7.IO; f'i9-. 4 10 the Surf's lack of scoring and stadium. the team is 7·4. Tllird rao-MI•• Alable It, l to, 3 00, , .ii. Elghlll race-Fast Jet Win~. HO. 3.10. uo. second place standings in the Fort Lauderdale is 13-10 and Ri~:,';:';".::_.~~:w':':O~~:t~~.2011111,, la:~111~.:.C,00;0::~~60~" Too. uo." American Confer ence West. bne of the hottest teams in the Su!Mt'G•l"-1.uo ... ..o Cr"A<urJaoeo •• 1eo "'"'" rec-s..1u Aooens, soo. uo. loo. Deese figures Suhnholz the key "'-NASL now that Best has setUed u ~:,c1:~::,~1~ :. ''°· , ., well :::~~~.~~~;.,·~· ~~: L~ •tu• u o u lo the Surf's ma.Jor goal-Soccer dowo. 8reo. i..40.1.40, ... ~.uo A-ance s.1 .. Bowl '78. _.:.:.:.:::....~~~~~~~~~~~~.....:.........:....~;....-.:__~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ SUHNHOLZ. who scored two victories in the Aztecs' 4 ·1 victory over the Surf early in the season. was first team All-NASL last year and was the MVP in the 1976 championship game SEWNG 'UN FQR 54 'tEARS STOREWIDE SPORT SALE UCI Cage Sched~e Set SPORTING GOODS Hundreds of RED TAG SPECIALS Many More Than We Can List Here! UC I rvine will play 26 basketball games during the 1978-79 season. opening the campaign Monday night, Nov. 27 against the Univers ity of Portland at UCl's Crawford Hall. After facing Northern Arizona the following night at Crawford. the Anteaters of coach Tim Tift will not return home until Jan. 4 when they tan gle with Weight Program Laguna Beach High School is conducting a weight program at $20 per participant. The sessions run for six weeks nnd classes are Monday. Wednesday and Friday al 4:30 to 6:30 in the evening or Tuesday and Thursday between 7 :30 and 9:30 in the morning. Mac Murray College. H ere is the compl ete schedule UC lrvlM hSketNll SdlN<lle Mon. Nov 27 u. of Pwlland lhomeJ Tu.s .• Nov 28 -No. Arizona (home) Sat. Oec. 1 -al St Mary"s, I Sal , OK • -at ""9rl Sound, 8 Mon , Oet t1 -a• SeetUle PiKllic, 8 rhurs. Dec u -at u ol P0<11•nO 8 Wf!d , OK. 20 -at No Arizona Fro • S.t . Oec: 79 JO GllU<no lourn•rnent •I UC Santa B•rbar• !UCI. UC Sant• 8ert>ar•. U .,. San 01~. Puqpt Soundl Thurs . Jan ' -Mat Mun•r 1-1. Sat , J•n • Por"ll-Stete Cnome> Thurs . Jan t1 -at Cal State ILBI'. I OS Sal • J•n t3-at UC S.nta Bart>ara•. I .OS. T.,.s . Jan lb -Loyola lhomeJ Thurs • Jan 11 -P.cif1c '. lhOmel Set . Ja11 20-Fre\l!O Sl•te• lhOmel Thurs., Jllft 2S -Cal Stale Fullerton• U1ome1. Sal , Jan 21 al Cal State Fullerton• Thurs . Feb I -•I S.n Jow State• Sal • ftll. J al Utatl Stale' Ttiurs . Feb • -Vt.Ill Stele' lllomol s.1 .. F•ll. 10-s.n Jow SI.ate• ChOmel Tllur~ .. Feb IS -at FrHno State•. Sal .• Feb. 17 -al P.cillc ·,•;OS. Thur~. Feb. n UC Santa 8arlNlr6' lllo!TM), Sal., Fell> 2A-CAii SI••• IL81' ltlomel. 'clenolH PCAA game. All 9a11'1M 1Je91n al 7:JO p.m., unless otllt!rwllf! mdlc.ted. A It hough southpaw Carl Hubbell fanned fi ve s traight American League sluggers in the 1934 all-star game, the 'I alional League lost the game. 9·7. e;~~ :f45 ~=~ f IUMNINCi SHORTSf s I I's 16 • ..,s1us • ..,12us' ts •SWIM TRU*S Laguna-PUA of Hawa11 1/2 Price •PUA SHIRTS of Hawa11 1/2 Price •!HR.A TID SURF R.0115 TEHNIS KAWAS.UI GUPMITIRUUl •Converse Reg. "49 95 SZ4.'5 •Newco Reg. $21 .50 $14.50 •Converse Reg. S12.95 SUI TIMHIS lACtclT Strung With statite nylon Reg. Sl-45.00 s...no.oo5 I 15 MIN'S TIMMIS CLOTMIS Shirts-Shorts-Sweaters SAVE 50°/o SPICIALIACtc CAHNOM •lAPHm TIMMIS lACtclT R-. SZ05.00 SAYUJ0.00$135 • T'IMN9S IAU.S Wilson-Penn s I" c ... J Lirn1t 8 Cans •L.AOllS'TIMMtS Dresses-Shorts· Tops SPECIAL RACK 50°/o Off I SU TE IOARD) •JAW1 Reg. ue.oo SI I.ti •COKnt•trAL Reg. s 15 95 st.to • wt.th 6 Trwb l/J ...... SWIM I SPORT IALLS I ·~SAVUOO Volleyball The Offic1a1 1980 Otymp1c Ball •-.12us 'I 6'5 •MIKASA SOCCIUALL s 11 '5 #311 .... S24.t0 •VOfT#CSJ SOCCIUALL saso ... Sl2.tl •YOfT#CSJJO SOCCIDAU. a-.uuo'I 3 95 [ CAMPIMCi •HtlOO tel CHHTS All MOdels Save 20°/o •MOSCiMllTO .... Spray Can by CYlter 1-.sut89c IASBALL 1/2 Price ARCHERY All Bows. Arrowa. Quivers. Gloves & Targets 1/2 Price GOLF All Golf Clubs R.-941/J Hush Puppy Golf Shoes .H"9 Off All Hunting Clothing 1/2 Price [ IACI PACKING I •l&TYTSHtaTS '2'5 R-.u.t1 •CHAMOIS SHIRU s9ts -..siuo •SUMSNHI sunaDOMI TIMf a-.s1uo$57so •CASCADllACtc ,_.CK_.. JACtclT a-. Ht.ti $15" RSHIMG AU.LUlll T....._,Yolty Type SMril s3•• •-.sus LEATHER· CORDUROY SPO«T JACKETS SPORT SHOES s.teAMo.ty Odds & Ends Tennis-Baseball Soccer-Jogging Yachting-Sandals Cross Country-Football 70°/o OFF IOw Mew Sida An W Sii lllS All Famous Makes r-.OH70°/o •LAMCNS«IS Short Style R-. s111.oo s7 400 •DYNA ST Al Medalist •-. ""·"'9950 •lOS~ SProAm a-. SIH.00$7 4oo IACQUETIALL •DUtl&L MM'HITI IAOUIT a-. SU.tis 1995 THE FUll CIRQE Of AUTO BEAUTY snao SWIM SUITS For Guys & Gals 50°/o Off •FAMOUS Dtllll OMCIALUT1U LIAeullAUS s I" #tl .... SUI 20°/o Off .................... flMWIClllO~ •YOfT ..,IOU.OUT u.u.s s2so •-.suo Wat.th for it in the DAILY PILOT Not all eolort-etzea IEWPOIT IUCH FASHIOllSUllD 644-2121 Moft. ttwv flt lM Slit. 104. Sult. 12·5 DOWITOWN SANTA 219L4tll 547-5723 Moft. ttwu trl t :JO.t ... t:J04. ""'· 12·5 ... 25°/oOn NEWPORT BOCH TElllHS CLUB PIOSllOP 644-0052 Limit • Cana CDllTOI #1UW (213) 924-1625 ..._tlwvfrl.lM '--lCM. .... lZ..S • • 1 J ...... -•• ~ .. "' ......... . ............... ,, ..... . . ' •• D .. '7 f -... ' : . .. " . J , ... OAIL Y PH.0 T ' ' . BOA TING I BUSINESS Hotel Turning Casino? Benihana Owner to Convert Old Shellburne ATLANTIC CITY. N.J CAP> -A Japanese buslnessman and the owner of the Benihana of Tokyo restaurant chain said they would convert the Boardwalk's aging Shelburne Hotel lnto a modern casino hotel complex by next s pring. "We want to be the second casino ,'' s aid Benihana Chairman Ro c ky Aoki of Englewood, who is partner in the proposed casino hotel with Takashi Sasakawa. a Tokyo businessman specializing in Japanese motorboat racing. AOKI OWNS THE Benihana restaurants in Newport Beach and elsewhere in the United States family. longtime owners of tbe Shelburne and other hotels here. They said they have an option to buy the hotel 'for $14 million after four years. SASAKAW~, THROUGH an interpreter. said the renovatio°' would be financed with personal funds and, if necessary, througl> Japanese banks. The developers said several Americans would alS4> have minor lnterests in the new com- plex. including the MaJamuts. Minnesota businessman J erry Polinsky, Atlantic City auomey Martin Blatt and Lyndhurst at- torney Gabriel Ambrosio. Ambrosio recently negotiated with the Malamuts for the hotet. NEW OWNERS TAKE OVER SPAACRAFT MARINE MANUFACTURING FIRM Mark Crutchfield (Left), Biii Messenger Survey Plant Aoki and Sasakawa said they would invest up lo $35 million to renovate the SSO·room Shelburne EARLIER Tms year. Aob a nd Sasakawa bought 80 percen\ interest into a group that in- c luded Polinsky and Blatt for the purchase of the Howard Johnson's Regency Motor Hotel here. into a 519-room casino hotel with Cassel. well-known yachtsman a 35.000· to 45,000-squar~·foot and businessman who operated ca sino, a theater. meeting By AL LOCKABE V ~11, .. , ..... 11,., ....... New Duo 1t for 15 years. The firm was r o o m s and a Ben i ha n a Sparcraft. on•: of the Harbor founded nearly 20 years ago by restaurant. Area's best-known and most sur-Terence Hanna . a not ed They said they would locate CLOSING DEAL? cessful marine industries. ha~ sailmaker, who later sold it to the casino, which would be Rocky Acid The Howard Johnson's owners recently declared the deal void and instead reached agreement ror the long-term lease Of the hotel to Caesar's World Inc.~ which owns the Las Vegas casino Caesar's Palace. been sold in its entirety and 1s Cassel. larger than the present one in quarters for Diamond J im now being operated by a p111r of Sparcraft is known throughout Resorts International Hotel Brady and a favorite of George Purchase Sparcraft young marine experts, Mark the i'ndustry as the manufac· Ca sino. in the Shelburne's M. Cohan, Al Jolson and John Crutchfield and Bill Messenger. turer of a luminum s pars for ·'kitchen . and meeting room Philip Sousa. among others. Cr ut c h f 1 e Id . 2 7, a n d sailboats such as masts, booms. areas" near the Boardwalk. They said they didn't know 'Messenger. 26. formed a cor spinnaker poles, plus a quality The businessmen said they how much of the older pal't of poration known as Crutchfield line of snapshackles and other would maintain the outs ide ap-the complex. which dates to the The Aoki and Sasakawa group is suing the hotel's owners in the matter. Messenger Corp . and will hardware for sailboats. pearance of Shelburne's main late 1800s. would have to be operate Spar er aft under 1t!> Under the new ownership. building. which was named lo razed during the renovations original name. Crutchfield will be president and the National Register or Historic Aoki and Sasakawa s aid they OTHERS HAVE expressed in· T H E NE W 0 W NE R S M cssc·nger cxecut1 ve v ice-Places in May. have a 30-year lease agreement terest in the hotel since casino purchased tht! firm from Al president THE HOTEL was once head-for the hotel with the Malamut gambling passed here in 1976 . .--~~~~~~....:......----...:....;.----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~...;..~~~~~~~~ Care A.hoy! Tips Outlined By The Associated Press BOATING TIPS ISSUED Government -0Hic1als say the fatality rate in recreational boating accidents is on 'the increase after a downward trend for the past few years So the Coast Guard has issued a few tips which. officials say, can help ensure safety in the waterways -EXAMINE \'OUR craft carefully and m<.1kc needed rep<.11rs P<.irt1cularly <:heck the fu el. electrical and vcntilat10n systems. --Make sure adequate life preservers and fi re extinguishers are available Examine your own boating knowl edge and. 1f you are not sure how to cope with every emergency. take a boating course from t he Coast Guard. U.S . Power Squadrons, Red Cross or state or local authoritie:. -ONCE ON THE WATER, keep a carerut lookout This may seem elementary. but the Coast Guard reports that many accidents rl'· suit from inattention Finally. have a courtesy marine ex- amination at your local Coast Guard Aux · 1liary Flotilla. 1l will tell you if your boat meets federal and slate requirements. Hawaii Races To Start Aug. 5 W:J1k1k1 on lhC' island ol Oahu. Hawaii. is the focal point this summer for :-.omc or the most ~la m o r o u s raci n g \ a<'hts in the world ~ h1ch will st art com pct1t1on Au~ 5 in thl• first Pan Am CllppN !-it·ries sponsor<'d hy the Wa1k1ki Yacht Club Some of the mc,-.t famous racm~ yachts in l'XllstenC(• will be com pctmg ror the Pan Am Cup in lht• five -r ace st•ri('s climaxed hy th(' 4100-mile Around lhl' Stall' of Hawaii ract· LARGDI,-contingent 11f 14 yachts will be from thl' slate of Hawaii, with {he mainland furnish1n~ eight, New Zealand nine. Japan seven, Australia six. Canada !!IX, Tahiti three, and one each from II o n ~ K o n g . Net h erl and s , an d Singapore. The eight entriei; from the U.S. mainland in e lude J im Kilroy 's Kl aloa. Irving Loube'!. Bravura . H a rr y Moloshco's Drifter. Bill Lee's Merlin. Bill Pa~ quint 's R agtim l'. Sumner A Long's On d1oe. J acob Wood'c., Sorce ry. a nd Da ve Cuckler's Hawkeye. Many of the yachts. including Klaloa. will come to Honolulu after co mpetition in lhl' BOATING Southern Cross Scncs of Auslraliu, the Chma S1•a race and other Puc·tfH· t·lassics. URIFTER ANI> M e rl i n . th e• two ultra-llRht·displacem1·n1 boats which havl' hecn fighlin~ close battles in othe r Ion ~ distu nt·e races. are even now on their way to the islands in another bow-to-bow race for first to f1n1sh in the Victoria to Maui race. Sorcery will go direct· ly lo Hawaii after re- <'eiving trophies for her recent vi ctory 10 the 3,571-mile Lo!> Ang<'les to Tahiti race First race of the scrie!> on Aug. 5 will lw a 100-mile ci rcumnav1ga· lion o r the island o f Oahu Australian Wins SANDHAMN, Sweden CAPl -Frank Tolhurst of Australia In "Arunga 111" won the second rucr of the ~.5 meter Gold Cup event Monday. Albert Fay of Texas in "Wild/ire". who won tht" first race Sunday, put up a good fi&ht in the early part of the soiling but hnd to wllhdrAw when the boom broke. Defendln1 champion J Robert Symonette or Ba ha mu In "John B." was runner-up followed by "Bln10 fl''. skippered by the 75 -year-old Norwestan Kina Olav V. third also ln the fi rst rice. ·When you look at a package, we think you shouldn't liave to search for who made it, wonder what's in it or be an engineer to read the directions. THAT'S WHY we at't' 111trodt1l'tn ~ uur new ~ :-.implcr and fa~lcl'-10-l'L'ad l'Ull)pan y :-.ignatun.:. (It\ 4ll th e bottom or th1 :-. ~Id .) We're ,jmplifying our pac kage~. our I itcrat un:. and even our bu sinc~~ form~. In the month~ aht!a<l. you ' II :-.~L' many examples of our new ~ommunicati on s ~y~t c m . We.:. hope yo u·11 agree wllh th i~ basic premi~e: the clearer. thr better. Clearer so that you get th t: right produl't for the job. Clearer ~o that yo u get the pert'o r- mance we intend and you have a right to expct:l. AND WE BELIEVE that receiving messages i~ j ust as important as sending them. For 76 years. 3M ha~ worked hard at hearing you, at being responsive to your needs. We have tried to look at the world through your eyes ... to see things as you, our custofl)ers. ~ee th em. Our job i~ to offer products that solve problems for yo u_... from electrical tape to facsimile tele- phone copying machines. from a tooth coating that prevents cavities to an ion-scattering ~pectrometer. Whether our product is small. big, ~i mple or complex, it comes from a com· pany th at hears y.QY. 3M Center, St. Paul , Minnesota 55101 3M .. -.. -. .. ....... -.. , ....... ,. •• D .. '1 f ... . .. .. . . ~ . . .. I Busines s Wednesday, July 12. 1978 DAILY PILOT 8:i Becoming Million aire 'Easy' By JOHN C NNIFF •f'~AUIUI Want t.o become a millionaire? Don't despair, you're probably on the way to becoming one But when you do, there'll probably be plenty of reason to despair. Whe11 Goal's Reached, Prices Will Match Inflated Worth Why ?_ Be ca use prices pro- bably will be in the m · mons t.oo. T he Mil- 1onaire st a - tus we r efe r to is th e ki n d p r o - du ced by in- flation, which rais e s t h e prices both of what we have a nd what we buy· And SO, tUNNIFll' relatively spea king, we're pro· bably no better off. Still. it is true that many peo- ple will become millionaires in fact, multimillionaires if the administration 's 1978 infla- tion estimate of 7.2 percent 1s continued for many years into the future. You can work out the numbers yourself, and quite easily too. because a n approxima tion or how long it takes to double a figure can be obtained by dJv1d· ing its rate or growth into 72. By chance. the prOJC~led 7.2 percent inflation rate divides 10 times into 72, which means a d oubling of prices eve r y 10 years. CONSIDER THE pr ice of your home. U it has a ma rket value of $50,000, it will be double that after 10 years. Afte r 20 years it will have a price tag oi $200,000. and after 30 years a value of $800,000. T hat's not a million , but neithe r is a $50.000 home the up- per e nd of the scale today; it is. instead. close to the median. wh ich m eans th a t ha lf the homes are valued higher and half lower than it. 'Bottled Dought' Comes Extra Dry FRESNO CAP> -Reme mber the pet rock'' Two Fresnans a re trying to top that invention with their own bot· tied California drought, not d raught. John MaUock. 23. and Michael Wool. 24, report brisk sales of their Drought Le Drought Extra Dry. A plug by J ohnny Carson on T H EY H AVE SOLD 1.200 his nightly talk show boosted ca_ses of the ·:brew" tha~ .c<?n· s ale s of the spe~1alty of Dry tams no calories, no a~1 f1c1al Rock Vineyards. a Berkeley post sweetn~rs and no synthet ic pre-office box. se_rva llves. Su ggeste d r eta_ll "We figured we JUst had a price of t he 1977 estate bottle 1s California market. but 1t 1s goi ng $4. nationwide . . and we are gel· For the !'loner. t~e buyer gets tmg inquiries from overse as, · an attractive Riesling-style bot· sa ys Matlock. • tie. a taste ful label and an ex-HE SAJD IN that area where planatory folde r C<?mplete wit h the Californi a drought wa~ li ght s e r yl_ng s ugg est1 o~s ~nd a,. ly publicized. the product is n· ce rt1f1c ate of authentif1cat1on. ferred to a~ CaJifornia a1 r The $75.000 home, doubling m pr ice every 10 years, would have a market value or $600,000 a fter 30 years of 7.2 percent innauon. St ill not a million. you say. True, but after 40 years it would be. YES. AND AFl'ER 40 years a S5.000-a -year college education would go for $80,000, a $7,000 automobile for $11 2,000, an 80· cent package of cigarettes for $12.80 and a $12 steak dinner for $192. before tip. We ll. you say, it all evens out Rut it doesn't. Unless it contains an inflation escalator clause. the payout of your insurance policy will be in those old doll ars. And yo ur bank a ccount wHI have diminished. Your paycheck m ight also fall to keep abreast , especially after a certain age -that age depend- ing upon the business you're in and the com pany you wor k for. And there a re oher problems. m any of them CONSIDE R THE problem of capita l gains With houses hav- ing a ppreciated so greatly, how could a retiree. for example. af· ford to pay the income taxes due o n s uc h illusory profits? He m ight have to forego selling. Yes. 1f he could afford to do so But never forget tha t real estate taxes are based on the va lue of houses. and that could produce a situation in which a person couldn 'l afford to con· tinue owning a house Those who have studied infia· lion contend that the disease eventually consumes itself, lead- ing to defl ation. a mong other things, and even to var ious im- moralities. including tax cheat- ing. THE CHANCES OF a 7 2 per- cent rate continuing indefinitely 1:1re the refore moder ated by the INVEST WISELY Ships' Take ove r Set? ,.., rnm,.. . '>:J~lod K.;in.• ,.,, I R,:•11•,,fV••'".f f'""¥v 'ff'' ., A:j..,)I'' M1t , .. ~, f. )il•f;:..,.., n;,.e 1:>0 "" ou1~0tmonq ,.,.. Dow lo~ l'ldu~mol lwe<oqe 1 ,. 1 be r::Jod 10 eaplcar> m, opo•oo<h •o you ,,, you• tMv('n1AnCta 1041 L l r"d St .• ...... leecll 90l I 4 121Jt 4J4-46H NYSE SAN FRANCISCO CAP > -The gove rnment has moved to take over three Pacific Far East Line cargo shi'QS, virtually sounding the death knell or the finan C'ially trou bled st eamstup line The "preferre d ship mortgage foreclosure" complaints covering some $21 million owed on mortgages were filed in U.S. District Court on Tue s d a y by the Ma ritim e Ad- ministration and involved the Golden Bear . Thomas E. Cuffe and Atlantic Bear , all tied up in San Francisco. A s imila r a ction was filed in Baltimore covering the company's Atlantic Bear ca rgo vessel. PFEL fil ed to r eorganize its fina nces under Chapte r XI of the fede ral Bankruptcy Act in J anuary, listing assets of $179 million as or last Nov. 30 and liabilities of $131.S million owed to 1,155 creditors. COMPOSITE TRANSACTIONS O...•~, ........ -............. ~ ... ,_,..,.._ .. ,_... ,, .... ~ ..... c .......... ,.,, •··~,,....r.,....1-it.-,...,...,.,*"' ... '"•"""'-r .....,, -°"'•'"' ••' ,,.,,. 'I y '"' .... ., -· .,., . 1r1.-•• ,. • . .. ~· ~ ... -· ... . . . " . , ....... probability that a collapse might occur. letting out all tbe aid that Wt!nt mto pufring up the balloon. Defl alion has occurred in re- latively recent years, tho ugh none has been so total as the big bust of the 1930's. In those day!. you could buy a brand new. two. s tory. three-bedroom, 1'<2·bath house for $3,400 That sa me house 1s selhng to- day for close to $60.000. which gives you an idea of how muc h the dollar has been infla ted in Just 45 years. It's a n enormous amount. isn't it" YES, OF COURSE. but 1f you go back and figure 1t out , that rate of increase is only about 7.2 percent or so. lhe s ame rate or infl a tion expe cted for 1978 That's perspective. The answer'? Most economists believe that some inflation must be tole rated. and that it can be tolerated without great danger lo the econo my and to society But they'd probably limit it to 2 or 3 percent. The official projection for 1978 is 2 or 3 times t hat. Af'W..._.... LAFAYETTE MAN'S CASTLE TO BE SOMEONE'S HOME Doug Allinger Uses Recycled Materials. No 'Junk' Castle No Tract Douse Ma n's Dream Built of R ecycled Materials .. LA F AYETTE f AP I Ad for a subur ban home Q u aint brick castle. ear ly Fair y t ale s tyle. perched high atop a secluded knoll. comes with m usty wine cella r. winding staircases. comer turrets and a tall m ast flying the Jolly Roger g uess I JUSt don t li ke tract homes They fall apart. Most 1Jf t he m are Just a bunch of JUnk The 5.500-square foot home m this s uburban community about 20 miles east of San Fran.c1sco 1s m ade of 100.000 bricks s alvaged rrom d demolis hed Oakland church '"l t "s made with all recycled ma terials. and we make some things, like hinges and window· frames, on the JOb, ' Alhnger said ''CRAZY HUH?" mused Doug Allinger as he stood outs ide th~ medieya l-lookmg struct ure he began building 11 months ago a nd hopes to sell for a nywhere from Sl million to $7 mil hon "Beats me why I did 1l. I CEILING BEAMS and other timber caml' from an old build ing in San Jose An outdoor s tairwell was fas hioned from r1 vete d hunks of o ld boiler plates. Ove r 1~1lf• Countt~r NASO Ustinqs "W e had an architect do some plans but we don·t follow them. I design as I go. ' ALLINGER HAD worked as a grocery clerk. laborer and hod ca rr ie r befor e learning t he <·as tle-building bus iness from his uncle, a rchitect Carr J ones. who left a stnng of feudal-er a homes 1n P i e dmo n t . Mo ntc la ir . T iburon, Belvede re and Palo Alto before his death m 1964. • ' It I • • 10 II n I] .. IC 1 > IS • 1 t~ ,. II IA ...... 118 10 1,101 11 I.WI 77 S<I 1J Up s a 11d Do.,... Pel Up 1SO Up "U.0 UP 100 VP 16 I Up 11.t Vo 11 S Up 11 • Vp II c Vp I I.I VP tO• Up 108 VP 10.t VP 10.6 Up 10.0 VP •.I Up "-' Vp • 1 Up •.s uo ·-~ Up "' tl: : : (" tl: : ~ \. Up 8 l Advan' MJ ~<Ion-a uncMnQ1'<1 total t\\Ul'' N~w htQl'h ..... 10'!1¥\ Toi•• \die\ !0()11\,~,~; MUTUAL FUNDS INVESTING ' C.pll '§ "9l NL tllun T• y 1¥ tncom ) 44 , 161 MIO ll.10 " n l'und "lJ IS .. Sw In¥\ , " • SI COMPANIES Ufvln Bullock F•lrfld IO O'I 10 '1 r,.1 \h 1085 11 .. 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"'" ~ .. l f ~ ~ ~=: ~ u: ·j· ,..J u~·~ r.1 .)(I, ,1 1 ul ~=2~ ::::: l.~ 1~ sl~ ll;';: ~ ·'8 . l •• ; "• tH 1 6 I'+ • • gu11Dr 1.40 • ttl ~\<. • '-' l 9 lit-~· Merdllh 1 I 16 >3 • IOI cli ~11 , ,_ ,,.. R • J . 11<11Lt11. '·; 11 1IO 11'4 "" 1 • · ·" Ma"LY • 18 198 1ta.. • It. · • •l ' • '"' ,,, -\.\ s= Pf A~ .. tlOO 2>''0 • I I ,tt-1' MtS.Ptl 411 12 3'11 )7\oo 1"' L 1i 10 S) i•"' ~. fM ' '1 ~. Of .. 1400 JO \II ( • I 1....: ~ MeUI» .-U It 1i • '" 5im I 1 1~ I' '• ,_ , 11 'It + \lo Pf' t 10 , > H"-"-~ 4 \4 • ~ MUii I 10t I 4 20'lt t •'t 1 4 I.... . 1--~ E Pf' 2.)1 1'S 24'-• ... .. • \lo MGM I IOI> I) .. .... "' tnF• • ... • ~. NO ill u. 1 ~ + \I& pr 2 IS l220 71 -w 1 · • .!. "-Mtl•I" 1 1 IS 52\.<. • "° mltr l i I• 0 • \\ • "' • Of I.JO ·· l20 t0 + Vt 0 'f ·1 I.II ll'CllG' I to • • 14\IH 111 0 • I + I .. ~ ... g111c111 .11>1S "10\lt-V. -\'.,Ml'IWLpU 4' • ?1\lo . Oat ''5 ' 1' 1~~ lf~ ~l,l·, '<Ao. ynAm 10 1 » ew.. 1. .,,, Mnw "'' 1i ' 1 '•"' • ~ llSIO . 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I~ = v.,, ~~ I ' ~~ "' I 'i ,ft u •• ) • 1 11 ·~ Eo.ro l '•• \.o ~1 j ii~· i,. ~I 4'10 • 1H •''" ~'l If ,,. '• ·• • ~ . . ll:f3111Ht aoi D~ -m;; .. J ~· ';;;,'f;.:,H ~ i ~ iii·. • i.. t ,.. '~ n· . •' ~,,. u ~::·~ J@.°'~1' · .. lf ~ 1E: ~ ~:;If. ,I · I!~·: ;: mi1~110 '} ~ ~· "'; t: :t :1 ff ~· :~ '. ff u. ... ~ , ... ~i>''t . fJ ~,.!· .. f; , "ru HS· 'It a '.I 'f lrl ~" 111 1§ 11 • ·~ 1 it.. .,.. 1ra1r t ti V:. !tit t i• f JO m .,.. 1 ti! 1 I n • 1 ' • 4\-., nre 1 M a 11 ~ -. ~ OI '' n~ 1 IW1 JO 1t 14"t 1 ., t .. 1••• Lifeline Rates Extended SAN FRANCISCO CAP> -The state Public UULI Ues Commission has extended lifellne electric rates to res· idential air conditioning for t he first Umr. Tht special rateii were approved Tuesday for the Nttctles att1. Under the PUC rulln1. customers in that desert community will get S50 kilowatt hours per month dun na May ttnd Octobel' and 650 kilowatt houn per month for June throush Sep tembcr al lower llfe11ne rate1<. The kilowatt amounts rerresent the minimum amount o power an Qvcroge ramlly would use ror air con· d1Uonm8 during lhos.e months STOCKS I BUSINESS • Dental Fee Rise ~ Called Moderate (~ By SVL VIA PORTER s.c-, •• w. ... In a letter than could be a top accolade in 1978'~ inOa· tionury utmosphcrc. President Carter recently wrote Dr.~· F'ronk Bowyer. president of the American Dental Assoc1a' •: tion· ) "While sct>kang deceleration in the medical care sec·~ to r. we note favorably the more moderate behavior or den• • list fees which havt• increased at significantly lower r;ates ~ thun physicians' h~cs and most other med ical care prices.:• . . . We recognize tha t this more moderate trend in den· .i tists' rees is in part related to substantial increases in den·;. • tist productivity and th(' r elatively greater resp()ns1veness :. or dental Cees to compet1taon... ;: STATISTICS CON t.IRM THE WHITE House assess· ' ment. Agarnst an increase or 7 7 percent in prices for aH cons umer services last year. dentist lees rose 7 5 percent. phys1c1ans ' fee~ Jumped 9.J percent and the cost of semi· private hospital rooms rose 11.5 percent. In the longer span be tween 1967 and 1977, the overal[ rate ror consumer ser vices was up 94 percent. dental tees wer e up 85 percent. phys icians' fees rose more than 100 percent. and sema·private hospital room rates went up 200 percent. Today. the average American pays 0 6 ix•r cent or his persona l 1n Money's co me f o r d l.'nt a l W h services. virtually the• ort sam e percentage as 10 a nd 20 years ago A s ;,1 percentage of total health care costs. dental expenses have declined rrom 10 9 p{'rcent tn 1950 to 7.5 percent in 1960 lo 7 percent m 1965 lo 6 5 pe rcent m 1970 to 6.3 percent in 1975 . De ntists are "the professional group which has had the s mallest increase in their recs:· says Barry Boswortll. directQr of the Preside nt's Council on Wage a nd Price Stability ... They're more willing. perhaps. than some other groups to cooperate in trying to do better." This has oc· ~ curred while the cost of maintaining a dental practice has risen and frinJ!,e benefils for employees have risen rapidly Outlays ror consumable supplies a nd service" have climbed substan\lally a nd average expenses 'or operating a dental omce have ballooned 100 percent since 1967 How has the profession achieved this record" <I> GRE/\T E R PRODUCTIVITY. DENTISTS treat 43 ' percent more patumts and handle 18 percent more patient v1s1ts than a decade ago and the key reason is the aux· 1hary personnel they employ. A dentist with a full·tlme as. sist ant raises his productivity by around one·th1rd. while a dentist with a hygienis t and a full·time assistant can boost , his product1v1ty by 100 percent. the association says Modem instruments s~ up the dentist's work as well as : make the pat.aent's visits more comfortable . 121 Preventive dentistry has cut back on the pat ient ..... need for extensive r eparation and restorative treatments Frequent exams equal fewer major dental problems. 13 I Ninty.fi vc percent of dental costs are paid private · ly. compared Wlth 45 percent government funding of other ! aspecL'> of health care . Dentists want any national health ' plan to include dental care. particularly for children. But they want to focus t he use of limited public funds only to those una ble to a fford denta l services. The ADA says these de ntal ~erv1ces should be provided through a pnvatt! SyStl•m or de liver y and that benefits s hould bt• ad ministered in the private .:ector VPxt Prepatd dental insurance Market Continues Moderate Gains NEW YORK I AP1 The stock market showed a: mode rate gain today. keeping the rally it began nearly a: week ago alive. The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials, up 15.SO. points last Thursday through T uesday, closed ahead'. another 3.64 at 824.93today. · G amers outpaced losers by about an 8·5 margin among, N w York Stock Exchange.Jisted issues ; The technica l rally that the market launched last week' picked up new impetus Tuesday from unconfirmed rumors. that T exaco had d iscovered gas in the BaJtimore Canyon. off the New J ersey coast. St0<-k• In Tia~ Spotlight NEW VORIC !API· S.tl<!S, 4 Pm Piie• and ""' ,....,. ot ow llfleen most active H•• Yorl Stock Ea~l\atlgf •UU•). tradi"9 nal~lly •l mott 1'\MI SI T•H <O Inc • 9'1,000 2S Scott Papff JIS,000 1Sht -"-P>l,on .... . m .1co •) -.,., Pel Inc ti4,000 S..-"' • 2'-R•maoa In. ?M.too 1v. '·• Amer Hess, 2u.e00 ,av. • 1 Se•r1Roeo llli,SOO n~ • ..., 8tfl Pel • 715,000 .... '"' UAL Inc... 111,60() JI.... • .,, AmTT • '"·200 \'"" • .. AICN 168,400 41\• • .. Gull 011 16T ,200 lJV. , . ~t8~ f:~ m:~ r,t; : ~ SQull>O Corp. lSl.400 16 -1-..i AMft"lt"an Lradrr• lip• and Doten• Ptl Up IS.4 Up 12' Up 11 t ..EW YORK fAP" Adv<1nc.o 0.CllMd u II( h• n<Jt!d Totet IUUH N•w r119n• flrMw low~ HEW YORI( APl>tO• llnil PrtYIOll~ day w .... ttQO • Monl7' •GO ... Ye•r .000 • T-YffrS -Jan 1 to oat• 1977 to date t91t ro d•le WH4T A~ElC 010 HEW YORI( IAPI AO .. l'Ced Dtocllned v11cn.noed Tole! t\•.,.\ New h1qh, N•w •ow• Odd Lot• UD 11 I t----------------UP 10.T Up lOJ Uo 101 Up •• Up 9.6 vo a • uo 10 8: n VP 11 UD II Vo I 0 Up •' UP •t Ut> &I uo .. Uo ti uo •• VP •I UP oe u~ "s ... •• D .. '7 f -... • I . . . T .:RTAINMENT i MOVIES Wet.lnesday J1>'V 12 1918 DAIL y PILOT B 1 G Rating Endangered Species? BY 808 THOMAS "-·-1'¥ft• ...... HOLLYWOOD -t s the G R a ted movie becoming an endangered species-> A view of the film market and the industry's Code and Rating Administration would Indicate !>O. rorbiddenl was give n to 6.7 percent. most of them hard-core porno. "MOST COMPANI ES are afraid of the G rating," remarked Samuel Z. Arkoff. pre s ide nt of American International Pictures. "They 're afraid that teen-agers wi ll be turned off b u s i n es s . C p 1 c t u r t• s a r e generally harder to st·ll ." Arkoff ad milted. "But some projects seem worthy of the effort .. ALBERT RUDD\'. who produced the R-ratcd ''The Godfath er " a s w e ll as ··Matilda." explained : ··The mate rial of 'Matilda' was always G. and that's the way we J ack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Assoc1at1on, denies tha t thl· G r ating 1s undesirable "I AM CONVINCED that ratings have nothing to do with box-office performance.·· he said. "The only exception is the X . which can hurt because some theaters won't play an X film and some newspapers won't advertise one. su1lablt· fo r the entire "am1ly, yet both an• rated PG . "I Mispect that's because of the relationship of Christopher !Plumme r \ a nd Nane lll' I Newman I who live together <in ·v elvet" I but aren't married." s uggest e d writer-produce r Bryan Forbes. "Also because of certain words that are used." Al'WI ........ CONSULT YOUR local listing and you'll find precious few G-rated movies outside of those offe red by Disney and the "four-wall" operators. who hire theaters and hype children's movies with television spots. The 10-year history of the rating system. sponsored by the Motion Picture Association of America, signals the falllng trend. In 1968 when the ratings began, 41 percent of the films reviewed were classified G, meaning they were considered acceptable for family audiences. G films fell to 27.7 percent the following year. a nd they have 'ftlo•t ce•panle• a~ alrald ol the G ,....Ing. 'l'llefl're afraid tlaal t~ger• "'HI be turned oll ..,1aen they •~ a G. • ··success depends on the movie itself. J 'm s ure tha t Paramount would h ave preferred a PG on 'Saturday Night Fever' <it is r'ated RI. Yet it is doin~ a fantas tic business. The same with 'The Godfather' and 'The Exorcist.• J don't think they would have made 20 cents more if they had been rated PG." But the worst word this reviewer heard was "bloody. · which may shock the English but not Americans. An MGM executive s uggested the car chase that ends in an explosion might have prompted the PG Yet the ~equence seems no more violent than what children sec nightly on the TV cop shows. STILL SUFFERING Singer Fargo ~ . when they see a G. believing it to be a children's picture. I've heard of some producers who deliberately took a G picture a nd asked for a PG r ating bee a use of that." made it. Whal attracted me to going for a G. was seeing the great old movies on the tale show. H's almost a cli che. but I couldn't help thinking. 'Why don't they make movies like that anymore?' UTCHINSON. Kan {AP> untry music singer Donna rgo is still s uffering· a viral ness that makes portions of r bod} numb. The malady has ced he1 to cancel a Sept 14 pear ance at the Kansas State been sliding ever since. American International has rarely presented a G film. but 1t b a s one thi s s umm e r in ··Matilda." s tarring Elliott Gould and a boxing kangaroo. Arkoff a lso ex p ect s th e forth coming "Ch omps ." produced by Hanna-Barbera. to beG -rated. "Those pictures were not trite or trashy or relegated to a children's audience. yet today they would be rated G Too many people feel that the G rating means 'for children.· Not true Th e G m ea n s 'for everybody'." Valenti denies that teen-agers were turned off by the G. citing evidence from his daughter. 14. and son. 12. "Wh en they and their friends talk about films, 1t 's not a matter of ratings but 'How is the movie'"" MI CHAEL E I SNE R . production head of Paramount. s ays the studio didn't aim for a PG with "Heaven Can Wait · "We just sent it over and that's what they gave us." But he added : "I suppose there is some kind of physiological ncgatjvism about the G rating with kids who m ight think it's some kind of w1 Ide mess movie. Some people believe a G means the picture is o;o clean it's Juvenile . It'!> unfortunate." In 1977, only 11.5 percent of films were rated G. The largest category was R I children must be accompanied by adults > with 43 .3 per cent. PG I parental guidance advised ) followed with 38.5 percent. The X <children TWO SUMMER <Attractions. ir. fair s ecr etar y Bob ttschalk said. KRIS KRISTOFFERSON AUMacGRAW :> UA "'4UVIFS 4 : ., ....... "-• • o.-. ,,.., ..... 990-021 --• MANN -: m SOUTH COASI Pl A/A II ~ Sunlto..-i.ft St'"' co ... ,,, .... ~') Jl'.>1 • J TATUM ONEAL CHRISimfER PWMMER ANTIOf Y HOPKINS NANmE NEWMAN -1"1.VEIYJrr Wl'timJ'rodllcr &lldlllrtdat 111J BRYAN roRBES · .-i.11c bJ FRANCIS LAI iPG I I-·a-~~· MGM -~ IN EVERY GIRL IS 1llE WOMAN SHE IS DES11NED TO BECOME' ..• AND IN EVERY WOMAN IS THE GIRL SHE USED TO BE. Starts Wed., July 19 at Edwards Bristol SPECIAL PREVIEW SHOWING ' RUDAY, JULY 14 AT EDWARDS CINEMA CENTER edwards BRISTOL CINEMA lllSTOL AT MACARTHUI 540-7444 "Heaven Can Wa it .. and "International Velvet." seem "Unless you arc Disney, which is the greatest name in show --;===================~ WILLIAM tEE HOLDEN GRANT O\MIEN €)MEN JI Court Ruling Hits Polamki LOS ANGELES I AP I Movie director Roman Polanski. currently a fugitive living m France. has been ordered to pay some S300.000 to an Italian film company for d movie Polanski failed to produce. SuJ>('rior Court Commissioner Leo Rich ruled that Polanski and his partner in a producing firm. Yael Productions. must return an advance payment of nearly S270,000 plus $59,000 in interest to Titanus S.A .. of Italy T H E DEFA ULT JUDGMENT against Polanski and partner Andrew Braunsberg came in -..-irm \i<XXWiD -4' (Al>ll -... .._-JfllJACa!S-•~CASl.T -----·llDKlllWAIS&IA~ "l'IAAI'( ro•----·'"TllOA 1!111(14 -.llOBERJST(,ll.()004AUMCIJ1!1 ..... kAICW,llUlS{ll iu ... ---• (PGlo ...... BA""~-----------..:..=.=:::: Pepsi.Cola T ICKET OFFER TO GR.EASE: F'1rst Matinee Performance WedDellday. Thur!lday, Friday and Sa1urdav Now thru July I!>. Details at Food Stores. NOW PLAYING UA CINEMA fl ~ •?:i •llO ·~JO ·IO •IOOO Costl M~ 17141 ~00!>94 11~11~•150 • •~· 100•9 ID The first time was only a warning. a c as e filed by Titan us a n d a New York firm . liiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili~ Gorgeous Produc tions. which had assumed Fii1 C~ ft( OelUXP PAHA~ ~ responsibility for the production EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENT AT EDWARDS LIDO CINEMA ~,;n:a:uu:lg~ ...... :;~· ---.. The llallan company said Polans ki had contracted with 1t in April 1975 to produce the film. ·'The Pirates." The written agreement provided financing for the film and advance payment to Polanski's firm. -· S1EllBrtlS SIUIJ THE ULTIMATE EXPERIENCE! (JACK ANDERSON J REVEALS in the DAILY PILOT -Unforgettably vivid storyteDing full of passion, pain and power. BRIU..lANTL Y ACTED." ' -lloOi...oe.WABC·TV THE SCREENPL.\ Y, WRITTEN by Polanski a nd Gerald Brach. was ::.c heduled to begm production in August 1975. J twas never begun. the 44-year -old Polanski. whose last film was the highly acclaimed "Chinatown." bowed out of anotht'r film deal -the Tah1t1 production of "Hurricane" -this year because of his legal proble ms. He fled the United States last February to avoid sentencing in Santa Monica for an admitted sex offense against a 13-year-old girl. THE DIRECTOR TOOK refu ge tn France where bis citizens hip protects him from extradition. He cannot leave that country without n sking arrest. It has been reported that Polanski will begin directing a film there this month. He is also said to bt' writing his autobiography. Producer Buys Two Scripts Producer William Im merman has purchased two original'screenplays written b y Jose ph Garofalo for filming un- der the banner or Im- merman's Scone Prods Both arc comedies. They mark Garofalo's initial screenwriting cf forts. descr ibed as •·s emiaulobio graphical. .. "Joe the Broker" con- u.:::m•::a=:E"'C•:m:.=~= JUST WHEN cerns a stockbroker for organized crime figures. ~~- He&ll&r LOM·llt&T ... VDU which Ga rofalo in · THOU.HT dicates is part of his own background. l.TWll ·B e nny a nd the Falcon" concerns the .... Tl troubles lhat develop after a man discovers a 11 llCK cache of dfamonds in lhe Tl THE _t_ru_n_k_o_f h_is_c_ar_. __ _ MDVIII lllifll[!rAN .CANMON] IPGI ..,k Mtit&Y MANaMI • ''""'"" ~c· T'OfCY MJN#J I~ Mm1man cawaav ,~ S-11t1.,., fWK ~·IOI ClMJi·gf fDWAltDS ~ktATll-flaM S"'7 ~ ~E EMWOiS • "9M1d "'4 Oi!'ttltd :,y ILA~E lDWAaOS Untied Art11t1 Starts Wednesday July 19th! McCAil& MU.MILLIR ... . -... Your Oelly Piiot can be R9qCl9d. Orenve COll\t COllf!Ot I\ I hi' Offl< ••I rrt ychnq cenlrr for CO'll• Mew • Nf'W'<>n k YO AT flA UOO NEWPORT IUCH 673-1350 ... ~ ... ·•·<·"· ' .. .. .. ... .. . . -............... ' . . , . . ~ . . . . . . -. . .. . . •• D .. -~l.Y PILOT \Noone.day, July 12 1978 Tele1'isi0n TONIGHT'S LATEST LISTINGSA EVENING e.1)0 I D • NEWS EMERGENCY ONE.1 The ~· t•ll• a ~ down eller 1ne po1<>1 IUfferl I "-1 a!IKI 0 WILD, WILD WEST • PllA8E DON'T EAT '1'HIDAISIES "Mow 0Yer. MOlOfl • STAEET8 OF 8AN FAANCt800 Pereonal lreoe<Jy prompts 1 naroo1ic1 olhCer to c1e1m •"Ille tor a life 8 OVEREASY Eddie 8r1cken. Or Nancv Reynolds on denial ca1e tor lhe elderly. onergy-uv- •ng Ups; raJl<oad engineer Frank Valasell al WO•k (A) I!) IT'S EVERYBOOY'S 9U8INE8S "Human Relat1ons' I C88NEWS A8CNEWS ~ MY THREE SONS 11oeo1 Jee11 Ltmmon. Shir. let M..claloe f.lol>tng 10 11411 • promotion. a young 1n5Ufanoe man 'lends" h11 opat1menl 10 Hn•O< elleCU· llv• 12 nts . 30 min I 8 1m EJGHTIS ENOUGM Double Trouble Prob· lems develoj) when Tom and Abbey breek up and he begms dallll<,l an a1trK- 11ve dlvornee (R) Q MOVIE • • • 'Solomon And Sheba" ( 19S91 Yul Brynner. Gina Lollobriglda 1sr&eh1os re11011 against the romance of Queen Sl\oba and their king. (2 hrs ) ti) MOVIE • **'""Bus Stop" I 19561 Marltyn Montoe, Arthur O'Connell Th6 lives ot several !revelers are changed wtien they aro stranded al a snowbOUnd bus slop (? hrs ) tJl) WESSEX TALES SI-tak• pa.•I 1n a f81heft-lle"41S.-IOOI QUIZ lhOw onlt to have his team come oul a poor second Lonely Lad 'Tile Wllhefed Arm When a wealthy farme< returns 10 his tarm accompamed by his new br•de, hos former mistress and mother ol his lllegillmate son acquires wllch·hke powers 81 MlCHAEL~CKSON Tom HayOen lounde< Of lhe Cempa1Qf1 lor Econom IC Democracy, and heed of Solarcal, discusses solar -oY Doug McKeon portrays a lonely youth emotionally ctis rupted by his parents· lrou bled m a rriage in the tc lcv1s1on movie. "Daddy I don't Like It Like This.·· to air tonight at 9 on Channel 2 61) TRAINS. TRACKS ANO TRESTLES "Bench Work And Wiring 8:30 '1!) OVER EASY Dick Gregory Hamel Pllpel Equal Rlgl'1S Amendment hOW to read medu;al prescrip11ons manner Sc;ott Nichol plev• banJO (A) G!) MAL ESTATE ANO YOU "How Much To Pay?. (J) TO TELL TME TRU™ @) MERV GRIFFlN Guests Alan King, Juhel Prowse, John McCook. vu. 1age People. Doney Terrio 7:00 B CBS NEWS NBC NEWS I UARS CLUB • ABONEWS BOWLING FOR DOLLARS G) ILOVELUCY M1s&dvenlures w11n lhe Ricardos and Merttes as lhe)l vacation 1n Florida Q) THEF.8.1. A commef(;1al a1rtlner. car. ry•ng 1nspec1or Erslllne, Agenl COiby and ll'le!r p.ls- oner. Cfasties In a remote mounla1n area enabling Ille killer 10 mal.e his 05Cape/ fll) MACNEIL I LEMRER REPORT I!) GARDENING FROM THE GROUND UP C::ac1us And Succulents' lj) JQICEA'S WILD 7:30 fl BETWEEH TME WARS "Japan Invades China Cr1· Sl9 In The Fat Ebst In 1937, Japan 1n1hate& a11. ou1 war with China. bogtn· mng. In elfecl. Iha lall ot lhe British Empire and lhe end of Western superlomy In lhe Far EaSI CJ SMANANA GUHi lotley Gora I H&WLYWEOGAME MATCM GAME P.M. JOKER'S WILD at NASL 80CCER LOI Anoetea Atlecs -~ Seallle Sounders 9:00 0 CBS MOVIE "Daddy I Don't like 11 like Tll1s" !Pre"11ere1 rn11a Sh11e. Burt Young A young chtld lmds 11 1mposs1ble 10 sallsly his patents e .. pec. tallons ond Withdraws 1n10 a world ot his own CJ BLACK SMEEP SQUADRON Forbidden Fru11 Pappy C'hann~I Listing• 8 KNXT (CBS) Los Angele'l fD 28 TONIQHT Host· Clele Rober1$ I!) STARBOARD · Voufl<,j. Cole And Paugh Cl) S12a.ooo OUESTION @) FAMILY FEUD has a passionate reunoon w1lh an army nurse 1Saman1na OuBarry) una- wa•e that she •s a geoeral s d~le< (RI C KNBC I NBC! Los Anqetes D KTLA llna) Los Angeles '9 KABC· TV tABC) Los Angeles ()) KFMB (CBS) San Diego 0 KHJ· TV (Ina ) Los Angeles ~ l<CST (ABC) San Diego 1D l<TTV (Ind) Los Angeles •:OO IJ Cl) CAROL BURNETT Gues1 Steve Lawrenoe (Al 0 GRIZZLYADAMS 0 Ml CMARLIE'S ANGELS Sandcastles Tile Angels staf'k a murdere< wl\ose 1arge1s a•e young women a1 lhe beach (RI fD GREAT PEAFORMANCES • KCOP· TV (Ind J Los Angeles 9 KCET· TV !PBS) Los Angeles e'i> KOCE·TV !PBS) Huntington &acn ' Track 01 T~ Cougar Adami t1ac;l(5 down a !or .._ pet cougar behevod 10 have gone m9d IA! 0 MOVIE Thealer In Ame•1ca Secre1 Sennce" A Union officer trapped Oehond • • •''> "Tne Apar1~1 Rape Victims Aided But Publicity Impairs Reporter's Healing SAN FRANCISCO I AP I /I. telev1s1on reportl'r, who soui.tht to help rape v1ct1ms by candidly di c ussing her own rape, says the publicity surrounding her disclosure has slowc·d the heal· ing of her psychic wounds. ··when I'm in lhE.-strc·ets. an Testauranls. l thmk of myself as a r ape victim. I'm tired of bt>ing scar ed. I JUSt want 1t to be all over." Carolyn Craven suid m a n interview hcfore th" ainng Monday of a series on rape she produced for /I. BC TV's Goo" Morning, Ament'a " m eals in my room. J wouldn't walk out of my hotel ;it night I couldn't " EVEN r~ flER 21st-floor suite she did not feel secure. nagged by the fear that someone would climb through a window and rape her. as Stinky did. ··I still jump at every noise. even though I'm behind a door that is bolted and c hained." she ~aid . Ms. Craven sayi:. her rel.J t1ons hip with her boyfriend. which was strained by the men ICll ::ingu1sh after the rape, has "become normal again ... H ER SON, GABRIEL. who cried at ht'r door whale Stinky threatened to kill him 1f he did not return to h15 bed. JppNir~ to ha\'<' recovered St inky remains at IC1rge. although he has not struck since he rapl'd Ms . Craven Ms Craven plans to conlinut• hl·r «umpa1gn against rape. "Until there as no more rape. I will fightagain:.t 1l " Three-hour Sampl.e TUB~ TOPPERS KNXT fJ 7·30 Betwl·~n lht• W<.trs ·Japan Invades Chana Crisa~ in thl' Fat· East." In 1937, Japan intliatt!s all out war with China . Fence ' A pol!W officer PONS U a fence lO OblAtfl evidence linlunq two ~ thieve. wtlh .s murder IRI 8) HOGAN'S HEAOIS Hogan IC"-11 10 d11&1>1t a crack Germen anll•llt· crstt ballllf'( Shoo• 1:451 HEW& 1:56 HEWS 2:00 ~HEWS • "Oadefy-0" ( 19591 ()Id(· Contino. Sandra Giles A lrucil drrver. hlfed 10 dr._,. • oe•-sv eat tor "' unc>er'NOrld geno. worlc • ., KTLA 0 8;00 "The: Apartment .. ti) GET 8MAAT -~EOABC HEWS a polloe ullderCOYer "Oflll'4. ·• Jack Lemmon. Shirley MacLa1ne in 1960 movie. Hoping lo ~et a promotion. a young insurance• m <1n ··tends" his ;.1part ml'nt to seni or CX('CUti Vl·:-. ~RNING 12:00. TWILIGHT ZONE Ap1>1entlce angel C•ven- de< hes a hard ttme earn- ing hi• wings ( 1 hr , 25 M4n I D MOVIE * • "Pr. Rald«a" (1950? R1cih1rd AllenboroUQh, Oeorgto Bake<. KOCE ~ 9:00 Ev('nmg ~1t Pops. Arthur Fiedler ;rnd lhl• Uo::.ton Pops Orchestra arc joined by Hen ry Mancini. CD MIQM MOPES 8 HONEYMOONERS "The Goller" Wl'len Ralph nas 10 learn hOw 10 play gOlf 10 lhal he can 1<>4n "'' t>Ots In a foursome, he resorts to hav11'19 Nor1on leach him 2:168 MOVIE • • "8ack From Eternity" ( 19561 Rot>en Ryan, Anita Eltbe<g Conledet1t1e line~ becOMeS enamored of a Southetn belle and ''* 10 d1tcrodll 1ne tu5j)IC;IOl1S of her retected suitor While Mainl.,ntng his d1sgulse as a Rebel ofhur '1!) EVEHINQAT POPS Arthur Fiedler and lhe BostOf'I Peps Orcnestra are JolntlO by Henry Mane•· nl, who offers Selecllons trom nit h11 ballads COie Porter g1ea1S, Tcha1kov· Slly's ··captioe>o 11a1ien" and Oohbe's "ProcesaiOf'I Ot Bacchus" from "SyMa • ere also l>Offormed (f) MOVIE • * * "Duet Al 0.&blO (19661 James Gamer. Sid· ney Pouter Sevora• peopie are beset will! hardship wnen 1h0y 1ranspor1 a toed ol emmunlOon through Apache 1err1tory (2 ht!I) 9:30 at MERV GRIFFIN GUfflS Alan King Juliet Prowse. John McCook. Vll- 1!9e People, Deney Terrio 10:00 U POLICE WOMAN "Bullercup Kiiie<" Pepper and BUI searcn tor a mut· Oe<er who lea\185 a butler· cup on each VICllm as h•s calfl!!l! c11d (R) O <W STARSKY& MUTCH The Pt6904l • HulCh s hie is on the hne aa S111.-y searches lor an lnle<n&· loonal h1I mao carrying a deadly a.sease. (Part 2 ot 2l(Rl Q HEWS Q) LETS MAKE A OEAL m> MOVIE • • '• Rainbow Over Te~as ( 19461 Roy Roge<s. Dale Evans. A singing COw· boy falls In love with 11 wealthy .i!rl ( 1 hr I 10:30 8 at fl) NEWS 11:00 a a• Cll o HEWS 0 MOVIE • • ··The Love God? ( 19691 Don Knolls Edmond O'Brien The edl· 1or C1I a nature magazme returns from 11 trip to find himself the Objeel OI mas- sive atlectlOll and also lwo IBWSUllS (2 hrs ) at THE 000 COUPlE Aller being 1aun1ed by Oscar as being sol!, Mur- ray lhe oop arrests h•s poker-playing buddies during a game Q) AMERICA 2NIGMT Guest· Sherman Hemsley till DICK CAVETT Guesl Wilham Sel11e New York Times column1frl and author or "Before The Fall 'IP art 2 01 2) I!) MA~EIL I LEHRER REPORT 11:30 IJ Cl) MAWAll FIVE-0 "Oraw Me A Kiiier" McGarrell 1nves11gale£ a se11es ot slay1ngs that occur every Six weei.s (R) CJ TONIGHT Gues1 h0s1 Aol>erl Kleon Guests V1ncen1 Price. Leo Ourochef 8 LOVE, AMERICAN STYLE 'Love AnO-ll'le Plc1c1.1p" Holly and Paul rMneel their hrsl ~Ung "love Aod The Falhef' Phy1hs lath« IS 1n J811 so How••<J v11M1S him 10 as>< f0t het nand 0 @) POLICE STORY "Tile Other Side 01 The 12:308 MOVIE • • •, "W e're Not Married" ( 1952) DaYld weyne, 01nger Rogers l'1ve coup1415 11e sur1Y1* 10 leern lhat lhe;r mamao· es a1e Mlegat ( I hr , 25 min) G) MOVIE • • • • ··wel> Of Evl<IOlnGe ( 19591 Van JOhneon, Ve<a Miies A youno men altempts 10 prove lhat Illa 1mpr150fted lather 1s inno- cent ol murclef charges (2 hrs I Q) MOVIE • •'It · Rider~ 01 Vengeance" ( 19531 RIGll- ard Con1e. V1vece Lind- fors Alter h•s wile 1s murde<ed, a prospector searches tor 1111! lcltlert and teams up With a man who was robbed ol his estate ( I hr • 30 min I 12:37 t) Cl) KOJAK "Down A Leng And Lone4y River' A youno peychOlo- g•SI ($1an Bart>er• Allen! seeks Ko1ak's help In •ind· •no het recently pa•olod 11ancee (RI 0 [§) A8C MYSTERY MOVIE • • ·Alien Lovet" ( 19751 Kate Mulgrew. Perr.ell Rot>er-IS A lonely I~ tans In IOve w11h a u11e ..... 5'0f1 image lrom ano1her d•menSlOO (R) 1:00 0 TOMORROW Guests Al Goldstein put>- h6her and ecmor ot .i new 1ablold called ·0ea1h" Caoary Conn. 1ran51exual talk snow hOltess 0 MAVERICK "The Shefltf 01 Duck N Uoat MOVIE • • • "Gunman's Wall1 ' ( 19S8) van Heltln, lab Hunter 3:250 NEWS :uoe MOVIES • • "TM S•nt$18< MOtlll ' t 1967) Harald Leophll'I, l<annOor 4:00 Q MOVIE • • • "A Night To Remembet" 11958) Ken- neth ~e. Ronald Allefl. 4:15 8 STEVE EOWAN>S 4:30 G) MOVIE • * "The Son Ot Or Jekyll • ( 195 I) Louis Ha~ord. JOdy LaWYenoe Tlaur•da fl'• Daglil• .. Hoef~• ~RNING 11:30 at • * • "The Man From The Diners' Club" I 1963) Oanny Kaye. Cara Wllhems. A sca11erbfa.,,ed employee un1nlentl0flally Issues a c:rodll C81d to a gang51er (?hrs .. 20 min 1 AFTERNOON 12:00 U ro Be Announced ( 1 hr ,30m1nl 3:00 ®l • • '" "Svddentv S1nq1e ' 11971 l Hill • HolbrOOIC. Barbara Rust\ Alter d1VO<e•no .,,. wife ol ion yeer<J • .i man 15 dtS&at·1 1Sll8d wtlh htl !Mogle Ille unlll he meets a lastlOon mooef ( 1 hr • 30 min I 3:30 fJ * • '" "M_,,be I'll Come Home In The Spring'· ( 19701 S;Mly Field, Jactue Cooper A youog girt returns 10 ,,_ parent1f hOm8 alter rvnotog away ' and Irie& 10 adjUsl 10 thelf NO<ld of double SlandafdS. (lhr .30m.nl 'Champagne Music' Welk's Formula: .· Most SuCcessful ... l . STATELJNE. Nev IAPl ·Some m1ghl call it corny lfnd even laugh at the squeaky-clean entertainment or Ldwrence Welk and hrs "champagnt-music makers .. The phenomenally successful Welk can laugh. too -all the way to the bank. · Nearly eight years after being bumped from the ABC network: •~wl..,._.o Welk. 75. has the most popular <ind successful independent pro- gram on television. with more than 250 stations tn the United Stal es and Canada and a view mg a udience est1 matl'd at mort• than 36 million s ays that's particula rly true m s m a ll towns and rural farm areas where fam ilieo.; wa•r h s hows together HASN'T LOST APPEAL I Lawrence Welk SIX 1'10NTllS AGO thts week ::.he chose to go l>cfor<' television cam eras and bee.tr the patn and t•m barrassment o f recounting •ht?.horror of her rape He r stor y received international exposure and she traveled the lalk s ho" circuit as what 5he calls a "pro· fessional rape victim.·· PBS to Air 'From Paris' DURI NG i\ R ECENT tn tcrvicw between ::.hows al Har· rah's in this Lak<.' Tahoe resort. Welk said his ratings now arc "a little better" than when he wa!) on the network a nd. as fa r as he ·s concerned. going tndepen dent is the best thing that hap- pened to him. WELK BANKS 0:'11 that family audienc<.' l k ~"Y" there 's no'. question <tbout betng able to suc.,- ccssfully use the saf1')e formai he's employcd for 40 years or. mor<' We lk. raised :i Catholic. says he keeps getting the family au- dience as other televis ion show9 "t ry to SN· how far they can go and how permisswc they cao Ms Craven was the 60th known victim of a notorious Bcrkl'ley man with a foul odor that earned him the nickname "Stinky." She had written about him three limes as a reporter CorKQED-TVmSan Francisco She says the response she rt' <'Caved from other rape fictims. who said they were helped h)' ht'aring her talk about the ex perience. has been gr atifying "PART OF ME says that it's wonderful. . But another pan of me says I want to go on about the rest of my life." she said However. h<tving to recall re- peatedly the terror or that night ~ix months ago has delayed her e motional recovery "I know 1t makes me afr<.eld of strange men io the streets." Wh i l e co mple tin g the te levision series. Ms. Cravt•n stayed in a Manhattan hotel Ordinarily she would have dined out at night, but ·'now I eat m} Bl JA \' SHARBUTT AP Trintsl-. Wrli.r It's on non-commercial PBS. but you 'll see a few commercials along with the s how's song-and- dance numbers, dramatic cf· forts. comedy skjts and views of nightclub life. Why the ads? &cause the pro- gram is a three-hour sample of what French viewers see, in· eluding commercials. It's called "From Paris With Love: An Evening of Frenct-Television " MADE BY W E TA I n Washington. D.C .. the Gallic s pecial will air on Channel 28 at 10 p.m . Friday, Bastille Day in (''ranee. Fred Flaxman. the show 's ex- ecutive producer and writer, says the progr am evolved partly beca use h e s tudied at the Sorbonne in Paris, ls wed to a French woman and often visits France. "I've seen a lot of French TV, n a turally, and I 've ofte n FROM Fash ion Island Newport B each . . . ... . - thought. 'Gee. /\mcncuns would really love this, .. · he said. YANKS SEE A lot of British wares, but rarC'ly shows from France. he added. "so I thought of trymg to do this special and ~et it shown here on Bastille Day, their national holiday .. H e also made 1t. he said. "tn hopes it'll go over and spark in· terest by American viewers in what t<.'lcv1sion is li ke in J apan. /l.ustraha and other countries." In fact, he said. he plans tC' do more international s hows. "WHAT I PLAN to do IS get only programs produced in the countries we visit, to reflect the local culture the re." he said, meaning he won't seek, say, a J apanese-la nguage "Starsky and Hutch" episode Ile calls "f rom Pan s" an ex· periment ;is well. as an ex· pcrience If it clicks. he says, he hopes it leads to a weekly PBS series of foreign cultural shows, mainly dramas, k ind o f a g lobal "Playhouse 00." that might start 1n the fall of 1979. Israel Sets 'Holocaust' TEL AVIV -The TV film "Holocaust" will be a ired an Is rael within the next few months. the Israeli broadcast authority decided after lengthy debate. It was argued th a t the Amer ican movie would cause mental torme nt to survivors of t he Nazi concentration camps "lt 's painful anytime you open a wound," a uthority spokes man Moshe Amirav said. "but we've decided that the educational value or such a mm merits its showing." The four-part movie wi ll not be shown on four consecuti ve nights, a s it was orlg1nully broadcast in the U.S. Welk. s peak i ng in t h at trademark accent he got while g rowing up in the German im· migrant town of Strasburg. N.O .. says as an mdependent he can 't be "bounced" out of a commun.ily One station might drop his show. but he can go to another station m the area. "As long as the ratings are good. that 's what counts ... he says. WELK SAYS THERE have been some overtures by networks to sign him up again. but. "I like it this way. It 's morc secure." The decis ion to cancel his network s how. says Welk, was based on the assumption that he catered to an older audient'l' viewed as "not being the buyers of America .. But Welk says tha t thinking was faulty. because "there are more and more young people joining us than e ver before." He be ·· ~ llis format. he says. "is to try.j and not do harm to anyone.· • with his s how. He goes so far t14 to us<.' only a bit of Dixiela~ m usic in hi~ act even though it ·~ his favorite. because, "I'm a! great believer in pleasing peo{ pie. not pleasing m yself... : • • WELK USED TO employ ~ gadget thal measured applause_: to figure out what his audiences,. liked best Now he says he can.1 tell instincttvcly what ·s weak o~ strong tn his show. • He say~ he has had people tea; him they "don't really know~ what it is about my show. but~ they always seem to feel good~ when it's fini shed. :, "The reason for this 1s I didn't; Irritate them ." he says. "Wei don't have loud m usic or so~ quest iona bl e things they re~ sented ." 4 • ... • • • • . . , • STEREO SOUNDS OF THE HARBOR ,.._. _____ _, .... . ··"·~"" ... .......,.,,,,. .. .... , ... . .. . . .. . . ... •• D .. '? t I I -... .. ~TERTAINMENT I MUSIC BOX usiness Gi1Jen ight to Ban Kids . ·SACRAMENTO <AP> -Businesses can ban thildren lf it's shown ~ey disrupt bus iness and disturb other patrons, the attorney general ys. ; Tbe opinion. which does not have the force of law. was Issued Tues· ay in answer to a question from Assemblywoman Leona Egeland. -San Jose. . • Mrs. Egeland asked if a movie • ' eater that b&Med children un· er 15 on Friday and Saturday igbta unless accompanied by a arent or guardian violated the nrub Civil Rights Act. business and its patrons by an identified group of persotls who constitute a significant propor· tion of an identifiable class, re- asonable use restrictions may be imposed on the class." APWlr ....... LOSES LAWSUIT Dustin Hoffman : 1'BE OPINION BY Deputy At- (or n e y Gen e r al C arol e !Kornblum said that "on its iace" the situation described by Mrs Egeland would appear to ltiolate the act, which bans dis· triminatlon based on age. Dustin Hoffman Loses Court Suit • But she added: LOS ANGELES <AP> -Actor Dustin Hoffman bas lost a court suit that sought to prevent the r elease. distribution or alteration of two of his films. • "Howeve r, if a bus iness 'stablishment provides convinc· blg evidence of disruption to its The ruling by Superior Court Judge David A. Thomas came in a case involving Hoffman's films, "Straight Time" and ''Agatha.·· The actor, who sued First Artists Productions. claimed the company reneged on its contractual promise to give Hoffman creative and artistic control of the films . . . ,Fury' Optioned • : New World 'Pictures has op- t ioned "Fury in the Fast Lane" (rom a screenplay by Joel Rapp e nd David Brod. It was in return for that promise, Hoffman said. that be agreed to take oo salary for his roles in the films. collecting only a percen-tage of the profits. In a suit filed last February, Hoffman asked the court to declare a breach of contract because First Artists. he contended. had not permitted him to determine artistic content or complete certain scenes. • : Rapp will also produce the dis- s:o-themed feature. MATINEES SATURDAY & SUNDAY "THE BUDDY HOL-t. Y STORY" (PG) . CAPRICORN ONE" (PG) "CLOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND" "THE DEEP" (PG) "THE CHEAP DETECTIVE" f PG) "HEAVEN CAN WAIT" CPO) "AMERICAN GRAFFITI" CPG) "THE STING" "ClOSE ENCOUNTERS OF THE THIRD KIND "'THE DEEP" (PG) "CONVOY" "EAT MY DUST"(PG) "GOODBYE GIRL" (PG) "RABBIT TESr "HEAVEN CAN WAIT" "AMERICAN HOTWAX"(PG) "BIG WEDNESDAY' "THE ENFORCER" (R) "DAMIEN: THE OMEN 2" (R) "THE SENTINEL" ALL OIUVt·INS OPEN 6:)0,.M.. ..... HTLY Cllild Under 12 ,.," Unleu • Kkldle Play1round .... Wedneeday. July t2 t978 DAILY PILOT 89 Festival Earns Cheers Laguna S11mmer Conrert Receives Ovation Organizers of the Laguna Beach Summer Music Festival must be well pleased with the quality of their opening concert and the ovation it was accorded in the high school audltoriurn. Certainly. af this kind of a rtistic excelle nce prevails through the remaining two con- certs. we shall look back on this second season's work by the in· fant organization a nd count ourselves fortunate indeed to be the recipients of s uch heady s um mer fare PIANIST DELORES Stevens and John I leitmann. flute. got the season off to a splendid start with beautifully delivered works by Johann Nepomuk Hummel and Charles Kocchlin The Loechlin sonata for piano and flute. one of the composer's last works. was particularly pleasing. Our artists maintained a n ad mir ab l e balance throughout the three movements and gave a vivacity and verve to the anime el gaa that orten eludes other performers. On to Ronald Purcell and the usual magic from his gifted guitar. He gave us a wide range of composers and periods but this writer's greatest applause was for his dazzling rendition of two works by Heitor Villa- TOM BARLBY ,18 Mualc Boa · Lobos: the prelude No. 4 and the elude No. 11. lt was a brilliant Purcell re- cital. but one wondered If his rendition of "Listen to the Mock· 1ng Bird .. was entire ly ap- propriate. Oh well. it's summer Let ·s relax. CELLIST MA SATOSHJ. Mitsumoto. the revered music director of the summer festival, joined Ms. Steven and Stevens and Hietmann fo r the Cinal offering of the opening concert, a spirited reading of George Crumb's "Voice oflhe Whale." Those of us who set great store by the New York Camerata's re- cording or this asto nis hing tribute to the humpba c ked whale were delighted by the Lagunans' interpretation The y s howed t heir great strength, perhaps, in the con· eluding Sea-Nocturne. Crumb gives us here the very soul and song of this s ple nd 1d sea creature and our trio rose to the challenge in splendid fashion. -CHORDS AT RANDOM - No less stirring s tuff at the Hollywood Bowl in its opening week with James Galway doing so many splendid things with that magic flute of his . The effervescenl artist gave- us a program or Vivaldi and Mozart and it wiU be long re· membered by those fortunate enough to be there. He had the backing of a Los Ang e l es P h i lh a rmon ic Orchestra that responded nobly to the urgings of Calvin Sim mons throughout a delightful summer evening program. BE CONCERNED PREVENT LAST7DAYS ENDS TUES., JULY 18 STARTING WED., JULY 19 PETER SELLERS IN 7.97 Pickwick 8-Track & Cassette Tape Carrying Case Model 245 9.97 Pickwick 8-Track & Cassette Tape Carrying Case Model 244 "REVENGE OF THE PINK PANTHER" This baby's just what you need if you're traveling light. It's a sturdy, compact case built to handle all your moves with room for a dozen tapes. For the quick gtttaway, gtab a 12-pack to go. 5.99 The Pickwick 90 Minute 8-Track 4 Pack The mid-size carrying case for all your traveling music. This cese packs up t o 24 of your tapes ... your best selection right at youc fi ngertips, no matter where you go. Room. comfort. style and economy ... what more could you ask for in a mid-size. 12.97 Pickwick 8-Track & Cassette Tape Carrying Case Model 225 Get a load of this! A carrying case to take it no matter where you take it. And you can take a full loat. This big trunk holds 36 cassette or 8-track tapes, enough to take you just llbcMrt any· where. Pick it up ... you know it's going to hold up. If you like to go with all your favorite tapes, this is the Cate to hold 'em. 3.33 The Pickwick 60 Minute Casaat'1t 4 Pack. Sound complicated? It isn't. You get four 90 minuw 8-track tapes Keep those tapes in order with this Mndv ltOfege unit. _It come& so you can record your favorite tunes ... end we're tossing in a free filled with four 60 minute tillWtbts. You c.n mount it JUst lbo4rt He...-t '""'°" .... ... .,..c.... ............ Altttur a.....,._ .. ...... eo. ......... ,.....,. (PG) Delly 2:15, 6:00, 7:30, 10:00 ' -..... ----------· anywhere and load up with the belt of your tasae llb,..-y. Your Family Discount Store · fOA9'ANCE 1101~ tww1nn.1 .. • ".,..",. ~ANOE 100 w..11 c;.,., 0. ... LAKEWOOO 2110 C...«>t• ~ ..... I AUENA ,AAK 110!> Bf.cl\ 8 .... t'«>OOLAlllO HILLS 7t!JOO V•nnov 81 .. 1 GRANADA HILLS 11000...1\.-11t St .. ... .. .. ... . . .. .. .. .. .. ' ........ . . .... .. •• D .. -.. .. ; • ·' I . . . ' , . 8J0 DAILY PILOl W9dne1dtY July 12. 1978 ENTERTAINMENT ·~··,....... LARGEST PRIVATE COUECTION? Harold Moos With 50,000 Books .... ~~opter Down ·;· Crash Hurts Actors OCEANSIDE (J\P) -Two actors were injured sltghtl.> when a helicopter crashed in a to~ato fi~Jd during filming of "Attack of the Kille" TqU>atoes," a spokesman said. The two, Jack Riley and George Wilson were being filmed by cameramen of Four Square Productions when the crash occurred on Tuesday. They were taken to Tri-City Hospital, X-rayed and l(eated for bruisus A hospital spokesman said later t~at_ they har' been releast.'d. Pilot Tom Watts escaped inJury. Riley has appeared on television as one of the psychiatrist's patients in the Bob Newhart Show the s pokesma n said. -f.llll A AH M.l ITU CAITI THI CHIA, OITICTIVI IHI ""' uaarr nsT ''°' -Y. NO '.USU IOY KMllOfll u••tJltf.~W:l..,, 11• •· .. JITOfHUOM e All IU( OlllW CONVOYl'°l PlUI S,llD TU, lf'OI t lUOT OOULO e IAMIS laOl.IN CAPllCOIN ONI l'°I fll'lUI TMI INfOtlCll 111 auion OOUl.O • -• UOl.1" CAl'alCOllN ONI ~ -TMI l..,OICR1t1 IOYIOll- IAWS 21Nl IJ1)0 e J:ot e Scat e .... & IO:at ta.eY. NO 'UKI t'l'LVUTH HWOMC F.l.S.T.(Nl fll'lUI COMAIPOI 11. GUI-e Jll(OUll-llllft THI GIHllC' nCOON111 fll'lU$ A Dt,,lllNT STOIY fl l •URT UYHOLOS "THl IMO" &Al '·"' "" U.fl ... -M4.t·ll Wtlhr MGtlllm ''HOUSI CALLS" "'TUllMI._ POtHT INI "CLOSI Ett<:OUMTHS Of THI TMllD IUMD" ........ 1-111-.45 "''' __ ,..__..,-~.,. - ClllOn 90UUI e -· -JN CAPllCOIN ONI fPOI "us WOUOI 10 11* Of WOlll (POI M/ef JfYJtOlM e IAllY ,IUD THI INOISI ~LUI lOYI DIATHcPOI -T'' -MTSlUIOUt VISITOtll M C.Af FIOM OUTll WACl(OI , ... , fll'lln 1NI IHAQOY D.A.IOI JAWS 2 t'°! ""' GUY LUY DOWN('°) IOlllf, NO "'SIU TNI INOi-i "". LOVI & DIATHIPOI THI CHIA, OITICTIVI C"I ""' THI°'"'"' IOllT. NO MaNS Joo-•-·-fU/4111&11 He's 'Paperback King' Collector Claims He Has 50,000 Titles SPOKANE, Wash. <AP> Harold Moos doesn't have a library card. but he's got his own library of more than 50,000 pa per back tltJes. He says it's the biggest collection of its kind in the country. "l read a few years ago about a man in California who claimed to be 'King or the Paperbacks' because he oad 12.500 titles,. Moos said. "I PROBABLY had more than that at the time." General fi ction dominates Moos ' collection. and the collec- tion dominates Moos. About half of the books are stacked on s pecially designed s helves in Moos' basement. wh e re he 's ins talled a humidifier to keep the books in good shape. ANOTHER 25,000 or so are boxed and have been indexed in a book the size or a telphone directory. The boxes take up two rooms in his house and fill the garage. Moos, a sales manager for Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. in Spokane. started collecting the books about eight years ago but doesn't remember exactly why. "I USED TO read about four or fi ve books on a Saturday af. ternoon while in high school. I also used to spend a lot of time on the road and read a great deal." he said. He buvs about 150 books a week f .. o·m two booksellers. but "they've got to be perfect or I don't want them. Condition is a must." Moos said he fi~ures he's read PRODUCER FILLS CAVCUSPOST The vacany on the stee ring committee of the Caucus ror P roducers. Writers and Direc- tors left by the recent death or Bruce Geller has been rilled by James Komack. Committee chairman Charles Fries said Komack would also serve on the A BC networ k liaison committee for the caucus. about 15 perc~nl of his collec lion "l 'LL a £AD seven or eight books in an afternoon when I'm at my lake cabin, .. he said Alistair MacLean is Moos' favorite writer, but he'll Often turn to Raymond Chandler's de· tecti ve stor ies or Kenneth Robeson's science fiction . A trip through the library is a trip through literary history. You'll find Steinbec k. ftem· ingway, Caldwell, Fitzgerald. as Second Week well as Agalha Christie. Max Brand. Rex Stout. Nick Carter and thousands more WHATE V ER THE title , there's a good chance Moos owns it. Moos opens his library to friepds each day. And if one is stuck in the hospital, Moos is there. laden with a couple dozen paperbacks. Moos' hobby is a never·ending one ·'What would I do with all of them?" he said "Maybe 1 could trade them to someone for a cou- ple of Cadillacs ... Cffi Lineup Tops Sonuner Ratings NEW YORK <AP > -CBS has won the networks' battle for the prime time TV viewer for the second week in a row with a summer lineup that included the week's two most-watched programs. At the top of the A.C. Nielsen Co.'s ratings for the week ending Sunday were the CBS comedy hits "Alice" and "One Day at a Time ... CBS also listed No. 4 .. M -A·S·H " a nd "Barnaby Jones." tied for 10th. The strong showing at the top contributed to CBS' rating of 14. compared with 13.3 for NBC and 13.1 for ABC. CBS had won lhe week before with six of the 10 most-watched shows. THE NETWORKS say the r at ing means in an average prime time minute. 14 percent of the homes in the country with TV were tuned to CBS. The rating for "Alice" was 21.1. and Nielsen s ays that means of all the homes in the country with televi~ion. 21. l per· cent saw at least part of the pro· gram. NBC's best for the week was a repeat of ''Colombo." third in the ratings. and ABC's top·rated show was a rerun of · 'Starsky and Hutch .. No. 7. T E N OF THE J J top-rated shows were reruns. The excep- tion was an episode of "Switch"' on NBC. fifth in the ratings. Four of the six programs at the bottom of the r atings were on ABC: "Fat Movie,· a Friday movie. tied with NBC's "Chico and the Man" and .. CBS Reports" for No. 60; followed by ··Hardy Boys-Nancy Dre w Mystery" and "Free Country." ..Man from Atlantis" on NBC was last. Here are the week's Top 10 shows : "A LICE.'' WITH a 21. l rating representing 15.4 million homes. and "One Day al a Time." 20 4 or 14.9 mi!Uon. both CBS; Big Event-"Colombo ... 20.2 or 14.; million. NBC: "M·A·S-H." 20 or 14.6 million. CBS : "Switch." 19.4 or 14.1 million; "All in the Fami- ly ." 18 .9 or 13.98 million ; "Starsky and Hutch.·· 18.6 or 13 .8 million. and "Fantasy Is land," 18.5 or 13.5 million. both A BC ; "Quincy," 18.4 or 13.4 million. and "Charlie's Angels," ABC, and "Barnaby Jones," CBS. both 18.2 or 13.3 million. He re are the next 10 shows : "Love Boat." ABC: "Lou Grant." CBS . "Barney Miller.·· A BC : "Hawaii Five-0 ... CBS: "Three's Company:•· ABC : "60 Minutes, .. CBS. and ABC Thurs· day Mov1e-"As h Wednesday," tie: "Rockford Files." NBC. and "Carter Country." ABC. JOHH TW.4YOU.A "GaliSl"INf "OONA FLOR & HER ~ 2 HUSBANDS" (R) --------------- Visit Mae and over 200 other Great Stars at World Famous The BlggUt Gathering of Stars In the World. A IJllVlRSAL PCT~ ~1 lEOflffi.009 PANAVISDr' CID is a good day MM ll TOO m!.l!ll FOii YOUMU CMUllll ..... Ulll'l'f~"'-C>•'••'"'°"• ..... _,., ....,..., .. W•lf•O to advertise in the 1=::::::::==:::__-------:----:----- NOW PLAYING EDWARDS' NEWPORT •Z Newport Beach 644-0760 OAILY-t:*'4:00 t ·JO.t:U •lt:OO CINEMA WEIT • t Westminster 892·4493 IUEll PARK DRIYE·IN Buena Par!( 821·4070 Daity Pilot Classified Section. What CAN You Cet lor a dime these days?'? TODAYS COMPLETE STOCKS DAILY PILOT a ·rt . THEATRES-ORANGE COUNTY M111••s .... ,....,... "" · '"CAT fllOM OUTll IPAcr SO. &&AST PLAZA ,...,.,......,..., ... CttUMtU ALM ,.,. 11111" "'W ... '"' '°°".,,....TOO" W.1111 ,.,........,.NMiel MAH'S "HEAVEN SO. COAST PUZA CAN WAtT" (PG) ~:-= ~~ 12:•2:3M:ICM:25 w..nn !!!!>~ 1:20--10:11 "IAO MIWS IUH eo TO U.PA!lf'6 .......... ...... ~HOIO"C .. I .. , . , ... "'SATWDAY~...-· C•I ............ Party Goers Elton John and Lana Hamilton. w1f e of actor . Gt•or gt' Ha milton. arrive at Ne w York s Studio 54, whe re they were to cele brate the signing o f John to a contract with RCA records ·r/JTUnDllY '-~\llllAM !IOI ()~U>J ?, J' N IGHT II (.RAM FEVEn . · Q\Mff.' IOH"' ra,..~01 r.. r."\MEN TT. PLUS (R) V .ll' "THANK GOD __.............,'"'==.,..-:::;;"==,.... IT'S FRIDAY" rds BRISTOLCltOA oo .... ,°' ,., ~d'TMW \ ttllt)l()w 40-~1 .. 4 , • ~e\ VOllf mtn<I' ;-~ ~ ~ BURT ,. ~ ,._ REY~ _ · iJ1el/ .: ...,; ,_ ... THE IEHC)., "f!-US (P.O.) "TIE NORSEMAN" ~ ' -' . . . . . ' . . . . ~ . . . ,. . . • •• D .. -.. '• ' . , . . . . , . .. • INSIDE: •Slim Gourmet •Special Diets •Ann Landers •Featuring ... DAILY PILOT Fo CJ Plain Wrap The sl!permarket .chain that offers it stresses the savings. Competitors question the quality of the products, but customers seem to like the idea. By JUDITH OLSON °' ttie o.11y ,., ... s~ A pound or all·purpose grind cof- fee is $2.29. Paper towels are 44 cents a roll and peanut butter is 78 cents. Comparable prices for these items-with pretty labels and the benefit of a national marketing campaign behind them, may be $3.29, 71 cents and $1.05. By buying "plain-wrap" prod· ucts there is a savings of $1.54 oo Just three products. However, .. plain WTap," which has been offered by Ralphs markets since March, is being looked at by other chains with cau· ti on. Some stores. such as Safeway, say they already have an ex· tensive line or private labels and don't need to introduce another, lower-priced section to their inven· to r y Others question product quality. But the plain rpdoucts and the savings they bring with them, seem to be popular with customers . "I've been using the products since they came out a few months uo." said Linda Schadel, a Costa Mesa resident, .. They are compara- ble to name brands in most cases but cheaper. "Tbe toilet paper is a little skim· py but the food products are really good."' Ms. Schadel s aid, but sbe noted that she would buy the more ex· pensive goods if she were enter· taining. Mrs. David Rappold, a visitor to Newport Beach. bought plain· wrap paper towels. "I've never used them before," she said. "If it's not what I want I won't buy it again." She reported later that she round the towels satisfactory and was more than happy with her savings of 27 cents. The no-frills packages. which are labeled simply "peanut _but- ter." "coffee" and "tomato j uice," were introduced by Ralphs after a six-month study. "We decided to start on plain· wrap about eight or nine months ago when we beard that the generic program was introduced in France and then came to the U.S. in Chicago. "It provided an alternative for our customers," said Brian Bittke, Ralphs ' vice president for sales "It was a third a lternative." BITTKE SAID he feels the new line appeals to ex1sting customers but has drawn new ones in, people who would normally not go to a Ralphs because or inconvenience. "When customers could see a substantial savings they felt it was worth going out or their way." The company is concerned with providing nutritional value while: DMIY l'llet ,._ lly l'•lrkll 0 '0-11 SOME OF THE canned goods. :.uch as the peaches. have more pieces than a name brand would. <See WRAP, Page C2> Plain wrap: 'An alternative for our customers.' Plum Good With the plum season in full swing, try plums with hats or top ice cream with sundae sauce. In s ummer's fun-filled days, hospitality romes easy and often s uddenly. You share a late a llemoon cool drink w1lh friends and mv1te the m to dinner. Ur. the children come home from a sw1m hringing the neighborhood team with them. You're thankful theo for all the quiC'k food tricks learned in less-stressful times. Fresh California plums are a social life· save r m s ituations like Uus. Tart·sweet and Juicy, they're refres hing before-meal snacks for the hungry swimmers . A colorful plum bowlful serves a dual purpose a s table centerpiece and an elegant out-of-hand dessert with a wedge of cheese for spur-0f-th('-moment suppers. BAKEDPLUMTOPHATS fl rresh t:ahforma plums <about 1 pound> Sugar cubes Cinnamon, nutmc~ or allspice Pastry for single ~ inch crust 1 egg, li ghtly beaten !iugar Whipped cream or ice cream With apple corer, carefully remove pits from plums to form cavity. Arrange in baking pan, 3 inches apart. Put 1or2 sugar cubes and a dash of spice mto each cavity. Roll out pastry v. inch thick. Cut six 31h -inch circles. Top each plum with a circle of pastry. Brush with beaten egg. Sprinkle with sugar. Pour water into pan, 1 it-inch deep. Bake in preheated 400 degrees oven 30 to 35 minutes. or until pastry is golden brown but plum still holds its shape. Let cool 10 minutes. Serve warm, with cream or ice cream. Serve chilled fresh plum wedges in glass dessert rushes topped with fruit-flavored yogurt. Strawberry, lemon or vanilla yogurt are especially tasty. Arrange fresh plum halves on a bed or lettuce, fill each center with a cream cheese ball rolled in chopped nuts. Serve with French dress inf'. Top shortcake (purchased or home-madel with chilled fresh plum slices, whipped cream and a dusting of ground cloves. For a refreshing change from frosting, s andwich two round yellow cake layers with glazed fresh plum slices: In a skillet , combine 1 Jar plum Jelly 00 ounces), 2 t ablespoons dry white wme and 3 pounds sliced fresh plums. Cook over low heat 10 minutes, stirring con· stantly. Spool hall between layers, top with rest. Saute fresh plum sections in butter and a pinch of cinnamon. Delicious at breakfast <See PLUM. Page CZ> Jubilee Cherry Yogurf Freeze and Cherry Almond ChM•ecalt9. .-.------------.. -..- Baked red plum top hats. Cherries Jubilee J UBILEE CHERRY YOGURT FREEZE 1 (14-ounce> can sweetened condensed m ilk Y.i cup recons tituted lemon juice 2 <8-ounce> containers cherry yogurt 1 ( 16-ounce) can dark, sweet, pitted cher ries. drained, reserving liquid 2 tablespoons sugar 1 tablespoon cornstarch 1 teaspoon reconstituted lemon juice 2 tablespoons kirsch or other cherry flavored liqueur In medium bowl. combine sweetened con- densed milk and lemon juice; fold in yogurt. Pour into aluminum foil·lined 9-inch square baking pan. Freeze 3 hours or until firm. In small bowl, mix I/• cup reserved cherry liquid with sugar and cornstarch; set aside. In m edium saucepan, heat remaining liquid with l teasp<>(2f\ lemon juice, stir in cornstarch muc- ture. Cook and stir over medium heat until thickened and clear. Stir in cherries and kirsch; heat thoroughly. Cool slightly. Remove frozen yogurt from freezer 10 to 15 minutes before serving. Tum onto cutting board; peal orf foll. Cut into squares. Serve topped with warm sauce. Return remaining yogurt lo free%er. Refrigerate leftover sauce. ROY AL CHERRY ALMOND CHEEsECAKE 1 v. cups graham cracker crumbs v.i cup sugar v.i cup butter or margarine. melted 1 envelope unflavored gelatine 1/.a cup waler 2 (8-0unce> packages cream cheese. sof. tened milk 1 (If.ounce> can sweetened condensed v.i cup reconstituted lemon juice t teaspoon almond extract t cup < ~ plnt) whipping cream, whipped 1 (21-ounce) can cherry pie filling 'Ai cup blanched slivered almonds In small bowl, combine crumbs and sugar; stir in butter. Press crumbs on bottom or 9-lncb springform pan, or 9-inch square baking pan; chill while preparing filllng. In smaJI saucepan, soften gelatine in water; heat and stir unU1 gelatine is dissolved. In larger mixer bowl, beat cheese until fluffy: mix in sweetened condeued milk. SUr In gelatine, lemon juice and extract. Fold In whJpped cream. Tum into prepared paa. Chill 3 hours or until set. Before serviD,. top with pfe fillin1 and nut&. Refri1erate left· O\'ert. ., Competitor's sign questions quality. Best Buys The general outlook for fresh produce m the coming weeks is excellent. Good buys can be had an both fru1L<; and vegetables as suppltes and quahty continue to be good for the con sumer. FRUITS The most drametltc change will be in the plum s1tuauon. Early Santa Rosa supplies are about exhausted. The fruit remaining is ex- cellent in fl avor and very reasonable in price. New vanel.ies on the stands will be LaRoda and Eldorado. Here too, quality ls great with prices extremely low. The peach and nectarine market is very good. Quality and prices are good. Seedless grapes have begun a downward slice in price. Supplies have picked up. Flavor is excellent. The tropical fruit situation is somewhat mixed. Mangos and papayas will be low in pnce with quahty very good. The banana situation is peculiar. Supplies are coming from Ecuador and the quality is only fair at best. Because or the need to move the item consumers can ex- pect to see lower prices in their supermarket. Citrus as a whole is in a bad state Quality is off and prices are high. This situation will re- main for some time. Limes are the exception. The sizes may be smaller but the prices are very low. The only dis mal area in the fruit situation revolves around cantaloupes and cherries. As indicated last week the cherry season has peaked and the ~radual price climb because or lower volume will take hold this week. A brief supply lag 1s being experienced as far as can taloupes are concerned . This will correct itself within 10 days. Honeydews, crens haws and watermelons remain good buys. VEGETABLES The news here , for the most part, is very good. Leaf lettuces, including romaine. are moderately priced with good quality. All squashes and beans continue to be good buys . Improvement can be seen in corn as local s upplies begin arriving. The leaf vegetables such as broccoli and cauliflower are improving dramatically in terms of pnce and quality a s supplies from Salinas and Santa Maria arrive in heavier volume. Chinese cabbage can also be added to the list or good buys. .. 4 Cucumbers aod tomatoes will have slight improvement in both quality and price. It will be some time before these items return to normal. Carrot quality is up but little relief in terms of price can be expected for at least two weeks. As a whole the potato and onion market i!!i off in terms of quality and price. The best buy for the consumer 1s the red rose variety potato. Quality is very good and the price is reasonable. Little change can be expected in the russet until th~ arrival of the Washington Norgold variety m approximately two wee ks. ...... ~ ..... ft •• . . . . . . . . ... -... •• D .. '1 " '. \ " .. C"~ DAILYF'ILOT Rice pudding wffh strawberry sauce. Rice Is Very Nice Those who think dessert is the best pctrt of t he m eal take heart ! With u ltttle bit of planntng, you don't have to feel guilty about cat- m g a yummy dessert. If, that is, you serve the right kind of dessert Take n ee pudding, for t•xamplt•. It can contain many 1ngred1ents that add to the nutritional <:ontent of the meal. Fruit. eggs, milk. cot- 1 agl' c·hc•l'-;t• they're JI! respl•ctable foods to st•r ve. /\nd l.111 of them l'Ombtne Y.Cll with rice 10 make some of the most delightful rice desserti, your family has ta sted. If you have to try 1l lo believe it, here are two recipes that are hard to beat. VC'lvet Rice Pud- d ing with Strawbe rry Sauce. with its cottage <·heese. eggs. milk. and rice actually contains l'nough good quality pro- 1 ei n to bc served as t hc l0ntree So. it's a good re- t·1pe to keep 1n mind 1f I he m cul is to be a tossed salad, or one con- taining hltle meat. Peachy Rice Custard 1s another s p ec i a l dei,sert Egg yolks, milk. and cream bake M11th the rice and the re- .... u It i n g custard-l ike dessert 1s served with a ru m -f l avor ed peac h s auce . Sweet and flavorful to be s ure. But also nutritious. Rice ... 11 puts the fut" back into Dash of sail 4 or 5 drops red food coloring Mash or proct•ss cot· tage cheese in blender until smooth. Turn into :-.aucep:m: stir tn milk. rice, s ugar, salt, and lemon peel. Cook ovC'r m edium heat about 20 minutes or until thick ctnd cr ea my, s tirring o ften . Stir a sma ll amount of hot mixture into the eggs; return all to hot mixture. Cook I m1 nutl'. ~lirrrng con- stantlv Add v ani lla Cool. Meanwhile.'. mash l cup s traw bc rr1e:-. Combmt' with jt'lly, salt. and food coloring. He:.it lo boiling. S tir in re - main ing berries and cook about 1 minute Chill. Spoon pudding in- to serving dishes. Top with s trawber r ic:-. Makes 6 to 8 servings. PE A C H Y RI CE CUSTARD 6 egg yolks ''2 cup sugar 2 cups half-and-half <cream and milk> 1 cup milk 2 "teaspoons vanilla extract 2 cups cooked n ee· Peach Sauce" Place egg yolks in a lar~e mixing bowl and b e at until thev arc lemon colored . Grudual- I} add !>Ugar and con- tinue bcat tng until very thick Heat half-and-ha lf wtth milk almost to th(' boiling pcnnl. Pour very slo wly into the eggs, sl1rr1ng constantly. Add vanilla. Place rice in buttered 21"2-quart bak- ing dish. Stir in egg m ix- ture. Place c ustard- fillcd baking d ish in a l arger baking di s h which has been filled with e n ough warm water to come halfway up the sides. Bake at 325 dt.•grcC's for 45 minutes or until a knife inserted nC'a r center comes o ul c.:lcan. Cool. Serve with Pl·ach Sauce. Makes 6 to 8 servings. 0 PE ACH SAUCE 1.a cup s ugar 2 t easpoons <:Orn . starch Dash salt I can < 16 oz.> sliced peaches <drain ; reserve syrup> 4 Lo 5 drops yellow food colonng 2 ta blespoons rum or I teaspoon rum ex· tract Combine sugar. corn- starch. and sa lt. Stir in peat·h syrup. Cook over m <' d 1 u m h e a I u n t 1 I thickened. stirrmg con- s tantly. Add food color mg. peaches. and rum. II cal thoroughly. Ser ve warm or cold . •• .Plums mealtime <From Page Cl) v E L v ET RICE P U D-served with scrambled eggs, sausage and toast- DING cd English muffins. WITH STRAWBE RRY F R ESH PLU1'1 SUNDAE: Here's a plum. SAUCE luscious topping for your favonte ice cream: 12 ounces <1 ''2 cups> Slice two pounds of fresh California plums in cottage checsc or R1cot-eighths: reserve one cup. Cook r emaining ta cheese plums with l cinna mon stick and 11'.l cup or 2 cups milk water over low heat ~1bout 10 minutes. Mix 1 cup 3 cups cooked rice ~ugar. 1 tablespoon cornstarch a nd i,:, te aspoon FOO D Cream Puffs Have Extra Snap "It's the littlr thmgs that count" applies to t·ooklng as well as life. SNAPPY CREAM P UFFS I cup water 14 teaspoon salt 1·2 cup butter or margarine I cup flour 4 eggs 1 cup s hre dde d Cheddar chc<?se l tables poon spicy brown mustard Bring water to boil 1n one quart saucepan . Add s alt and ·butte r . Turn heat to simmer. ond <ii low butte r t o m elt Remove from heat ; add flour. stir until ball is form ed. Then add eggs 2 teas poons s picy brown mustard I tablespoon honey 2 tab 1 esp o on:-. d1ents ~nl' O\'er fruit vinegar 0 1 Vt'i(l'l<1ble sa lud Combine a ll 1n g r ~ Makes l'1:!CUp:-. o ne at a tir11e. Stir vigorously after e ach egg 1s added . Batter should be smooth and sahny. Then add cheese a nd mus tard ; s t ir Spoon with teaspoon on • greased cookie s heet. •• Wrap Bake at 375°F oven for -----------------------------20 m inutes. P uncturr sides of puffs w'ith knife to let out steam . Return to oven for 3 lo 5 m inutes more. Rt''move. cool on cake rack. Eat .. as 1s" for cocktatl snack or insert small pieces or ham <l "x2"). Makes 24 puffs. MUSTARD F RUIT SALAD DRESSING l V.a cups m ayon- na1se c From Page Cl' ill the same time reducing packag mg costs. Bittke said. The new products are purchased both from existing and new s up- pliers. Bittke said A concern with possible lack or quality ls one the m ain reasons other s tores arc not rus htng to pro- vide plain-wrap roducts . Bob Deweese. a Ralphs senior vice president, sa id the quality of his company's plain-wra p is good, however. But a spokesman for Alpha Beta was more cautions. "Lower price 1s ar rived at by lower quality. We do not feel this low€.'r quality is ac ce ptablc to the west·e rn customers." ~he said The Southern C<1l 1fo rn1a customer docs not scem r£'1uctant to buy. though, if sales at the Hun ttngton Beach Ralphs are an m- d1cat1on. "Acceptance has been extreme- ly good." a o;tor e spokesman said .. lt's a little surpn stng for such an affluent area." StweH..-.: 9 to 9 Dailv • S•day I 0 to 7 ,,(Cft lfftctfn Thws., .My I J ..... Wed.. My 19 ,.;CH w.fect to Stedl o. ......_Wt~ Acc .. feed S....,. We ll-.1 Tiit.,.... To LW q1ulllki• AMI am-S• To Dt*'I A"4 WIMiMMMn. LOWER PRICES! SWEET RIPE SWEET RIPE NECTARINES SWEET RIPE PEACHES 39! ~l lOWEST PRlCES FRESH FROZEN " USDA CHOICE TURKEY USDA CHOICE SEVEN BONE DRUMSTICKS BEEF ROAST BEEF STEAKS 4ftc .~::o 229 L~N 149 17 LI. CLOD LB. HEA TY LI. FOSTER or ZACKY FARMS CALIFORNIA IROWN FRYINI CHICKEN 69! 1it~~ SLICED BACON 1~~ IARM SLICED BOLOGNA WISCONSIN MONTEREY JACK CHEESE FRESH CUT 1~~ HILLSHllE FARM5-aHF or f'ORK POLISH SAUSAGE KAL KAH PET STEW 01 FRYER BREAST I~' FRYER LEGS & THIGHS I~ • 2 cup sugar salt. Add to plums and cook 5 minutes until '"teaspoon salt thick. Remvve c\nnam vn ana stir ·m 1 ttlf>te-ETTY,,..._.,_ 1 .... ST 89C 1 tablespoon g rated spoon butter a nd the reser ved plums. Serve hot or I __ .,.,._ " · 1 1 cold over ice cream or sherbet. NIAii BUDS 16.S 0%. cm~ne~. beaten --------------------1 IOX t•xtr!~~:a::o~~ ;::i:l: fTi fa BUllEYSECOltHB>f 120%. 89C CHUNKY BEEF SPRIMGRBJ> CHILI & 14 07.. CAH s trawberries. sliced one r CAN 12 cup red currant )...!!~..!!!!!~~~-------------_..;;;---- <JClly •UMT JAMES 69 POLISH DILL • NO GARLIC C TUNA CHEESE CUSTARD 1 cup (8 ounces> cot- tage cheese 3 eggs, separated '"' teaspoon pepper 2 cans (6th or 7 ou nces each ) tuna in vegetable oil 1 cup c h o p ped peeled tomato 1"1 c up c rumbl ed blue cheese In a large bowl. beat cottage c heese until s mooth. B eal i n egg yolks and pepper. Stir In t una and tomato. ln a s m a ll bowl b eat egg whites until sUfr but not dry; fold into tuna mix- l u re S p oon i nto 8 grea sed 6-owlce custard cups. Sprinkle 1 tables- poon blue cheese on lop of each. Place In shallow bnklng p an. Fill with water 1-inch deep. Bake in 350 degree oven for 4S min utes, until tip of knUe Inserted in c ustard co m e s out clea n YIELD: 8 servlnas. • KOSHER DILL DILL 2~~z. l.IDl•tk! . !Tune fora Sunrise Zinger. Relax with an Orange Milk Cooler. Pour a o ounce can or frozen orange juice conctntrnte into a blender. Add 2V2 cups of milk. Blend unlll fluffy. Makes obo:;uiii'lllll~~ 5 deliciously cool servings. California Milk Advisorv P••• Bo.rd ... PAPER TOWELS JUMIOIOU 160%. CAM / ---... ,,,,_ ... ~· ... -..... . ..... ., .... , .. , ... _ SPRINGFIELD MUSTARD 2 LI. JAR 39c zu. ·59c IAG 1 LI. 39c STICK FLOUR SLI. IA_.. .. · ...... -...... .. .. ... ... ·r f ( ' -... . . . .- " . Q Split o r Cut-up Quartered FRYING CHICKEN Lb. t:L. FRYING CHICKEN s12s ~BREASTS W1U'I Ribs Attached Lb t:L. DRUMSTICKS ~ g~!l~!~Hs Lb gge 0 BUTTER BASTED TURKEYS F~lig~;;~~,e 7 ge Frozen 10-24 Lt>s Lb @ Light Refreshing COCA COLA or 11 e up~ ~0~.~ u P Quart Bottle R @ Leo's Lion Size THIN SLtCED MEATS • 5 Oz. Package Beef. Triple Ripple. Turkey Ripple ril:-' ~j '~ ® 'L.> . .__.. .,, PEACHES, PLUMS or NECTARINES Mrx ·em or Match 'em ~$ s SUNMAID SEEDLESS ~~~~~~o~:'ISINS 59e SOLO BRAND PEACH GLAZE 18 Oz Jar GREEN PLANTS Plant Spectacular! Hanging or Upright Asst. Varieties ' . 99 .:~(~~-,) 1 Large $ .. ~· 6" ;~:~~~~, Pots ~-~ v.,.. "" 0 EA. Plus Ta• Star-Buy T nese are items 1emp0rarny reouceo in orice oue to manutat1u1e11o oromo11ona1 a11owa nce or by an ~"c;ept1ona1 Purcnase Everyday Low Prices TntM a1e 1ne 1ow pric:eo 11ems you 11 t11io tnrougnout lf'le store everyoay ot tne wee1< C.l'lec11. and comp11re Fa110 s wl'lere 11 111 ados uP tor iess• . Rain Checks We try our very bell. but 1n Ille event we run oul ot an 1dv.,t1se<1 1tem your store manegaer w111 CO\irteout· ty 0'"1 you a rain cn.ci. so you may p•c;ll uP tile 11tm •t tM Ot'l•l l ,. priee Wftt11n t 7 day1 Aller that ttme 11 tile item 11 tttll unavailable you may renew Ille r11n check for two aod11iona1 weeks or receive a compera- ble 111rn 11 tnfl aover11sed price Ser~lce Department Hours Ballery ano 1tf\11c1 0t11ca1essan 11ou11 may .. ary from regullf hOurl Plane call your 11ore Food Stamp S.,oppers Welcome @ Fancy Farms SLICED BACON 1Lb. $ 09 Pkg. ~ OSCAR MAYER ~ ~b~~~1~~11~~~1?.N $179 @ FAMILY PACK ~g~~~o ~~n~~u•~-~~~.f>S$1 ~bg t:L. STEAK TONIGHT \l!Y STEAKS Onion Pepper s209 1 Lb Pac~agu . °' Ptain Heritage House 6 Oz. Can ®FRENCH FRIES ~ Ore Ida £<"'"~ 2Lb sag 59e ~ ~~~k~~ Cut FROZEN Q POPSICLES '(;a~~g 39¢ Packageol 6 . . . . . . . .. , . Delicious Thawed PORK SPARE RIBS 09 Lb. FRANKS Casa Flores CORN TORTILLAS ® FRUIT YOGURT Jerseyma1d Assorted 8 Oz. Cup Sunny Oehgl'll 64 Oz 011 25¢ One Place Setting Piece LIBERTY BLUE DINNERWARE Wtth $49 00 1n Faz1o·s Special Green Register Tapes Your Choice Of One • DINNER PLATE • BREAD ANO BUTTER DISH • CUP • SAUCER • DESSERT DISH ' whett it all adds up ••• for less! I hll~t· once•!> Me or1c-c:1tve T nu•, July 1:1 111ru ~un July 16 1978 W,• res,,rve Ille r19nt 10 lim11 qu;in1111"s and r11fu1c sales to <1&1'"'" .mcJ wt'Olesaleu * T11eH pr1oe1 are only hallat>le on 1no1v1du11 oac~· ecies wl'l1cn will 1pec111ca11y reflect tPle cen11-ofl rt<1uct1on l+ormat P"ee will be cnergt<I when cents oft marcnan- OIM 11 e11l'llullt<I @ Blade Cut CHUCK STEAK Value Trimmed Beef • Lb. ® BONELESS Lb 5169 CLOD ROASTS Snoulder Beef Chuck . ® DOVER SOLE Lb 5249 FISH FILLETS Frozen ® PAN READY Lb 79¢ WHITING Frozen Fish ® Frozen 8 Oz. Pkg. BANQUET MEAT PIES or Turkey Q Asst. Flavors WESTWOOD ICE CREAM Half Gallon Ca rton 0 BALLANTINE Hot Bakery Below listed items available only in Stores with Hot Bakeries --:---...., @ Fazio1s Homemade ~ BUTTER BREAD . · __ SLICED 35¢ ,4 F$1 Fresh bakeCS right tn Ille store ~ 1 Lb. load uns11oecs WALNUT SWIRL @ ~2~!:~e~. ~!~1~9 ... $ 119 @ ~:~~LFOOD $ 39 Our own. Reg. $1 .59 ....... 1 Dell-Sausage Shoppe Below listed Items available only in stores with Sausage Shoppe @ Imported Thick SLICED BACON a;::::1~!t 99·• Lb. SWIFT'S PREMIU\ 0 ~~~~~ ~-~~~~~-Lb. 339 MONTEREY ® ~!~~-~~-~~-~~ .. Lb.$177 ,....'(.., ....... IP .. T.._.1•1 1• el Hmttt• IMclll '" ..... ................ Ceete ..... 2:~.....-~ ,.. ...... :.,~~,....., . . . .. .. .. . ••"-··'· ··"--• ........ . • C l DAIL y f'll.U I Stfr-Fry Vegetables Mushrooms are won· derrul "team pla)'ers " ror veget a ble plates which are such a good idea for summer meals. T his is esptt1ally true since mushrooms have become a year 'round vegetable with supplies r emaining good in the summer. Tod ay's recipe for • 1 teaspoon salt 2 envelopes Ll9 oz. each ) insta nt chicke n n avored broth 6 to 8 drops red pep- per sauce 11 2 cups water Chopped ctuves 1 ;i cup dairy sour cream Preheat oven to 350 F. Rin s e a nd p a t dr y m u s hroom s P lace mushrooms in a 2·quart casserole. Jn a medium saucepan combine flour. s alt, broth mlx and red pepper sauce. Gradually stir m waler untU mix - ture Is smooth. Add l tablespoon chives. Cook over medium heat, stir· ring constantly, until mixture t hickens and bu bbles Pour over mushrooms. Cover and bake until mushrooms are just tender, about 2S minutes. Remove from ove n ; s tir in so ur cream. Spoon into in· d1 vidual serving dishes . Garnish each serving with additional chopped chives. YIELD: 4 to 6 portions. - FOOD . } ' I Stir-fry J .. mushrooms ~ i and garden f vegetables. ~ I • 1 Stir· Fry Mushrooms and -------------------------------------------------------------Garden Vegetables can be the feature attraction or a scrumptious vegeta· ble plate. Serve them ove r r ice, add some we d ges or steame d celery. or whatever the .garden is yielding. plus a m o un d of c ottage c h eese. or chedd ar sticks. ~nd you have a balanced mam dish that is perfect fo r hghl sum- mer suppers. Stir -fry a method adopte d fr o m t h e Chinese is a sensible wa y or cooking fresh vegetables. They come out c ris p-tende r a nd loaded with flavor and the cooking is so quick that nutrients are well r etaine d. Slicing t he vegetables beforehand 1s the only task involved. but in this mushroom rec· ipc the slicing 1s kept to a mm1mum . Creamy Mushrooms with Chives is another good team player. tr it's baked or served in in· div id u al cassero l e dishes. it can be sur- rounded by tomato <Jnd cucumber wedges. and te<1 med with an arrangt• ment of Edam or Gouda cheese slices on lettuce leaves. for CJ balanced plate STIR-FRY MUSHROOMS AND GARDEN VEGETABLES ':.! po u nd fr esh mushrooms or 1 can (6 to 8 oz .) s l ice d mushrooms l medium zucchini 3 small onions 1 :i c up dry wt\;te wine I envelope ( 19 oz > instant chicken flavored broth 1 t easpoon brown ~ugar 1 teaspoon corn- ... ta rch ·~ teaspoon instant min ced garlic I teaspoon soy sauce 1 teaspoon c ider ' inega r 2 tablespoons s alad 111 I I c:up c h e rr y tomat~s Hot Fluffy rice Rinse, pat dry a nd slice fresh mushrooms <makes <Jboul 21.f.1 cups) or dr ai n c ann e d mushrooms: set as ide . Cut zucchini into 1/4·inch thick s lices; set aside. Peel and cul each onion mto 6 wedges. In a s mall bowl combine wine . broth mix, brown sugar. cornstarch, garlic. soy sauce and vinegar. set aside. In a wok or a lar ge s killet heat oil over moderately high heat. Stir-fry onions. a bout 2 minutes Add mushrooms. iucchin1 a nd cherry tomatoe~ Stir-fry 2 mmutes Add win t'-soy sauce mixture . stir to blend. Cover and simmer. stirring onct' or twice. until vegetables ci rc crisp-tender. about 2 min utes. Spoon over n ee. CREAMY BAKED MUSHROO MS AND CHIVES 1 pound sm a ll to m edium-s ized fresh mushrooms ~cup flour YOUA1WAYS SAVI! WITH srArlR BROS. 10W•10W PRICES BllP ... POii LOIN SAlf CK RIB ROAST T $ LARGEEND ---$13' IOAST .............. i.a. r.'~ ..... $1•• DE~UT 17! ::'at:: ....... ~ s1 •• POlllC* $1 ti OIOPS la fllSll IULI 8 9c POii SAUSAGI. LL c STA'la-. .....MICI• • '4Wl AtSlflV\ ,....._ A-'GHt ro lillllifOMRlf\IY .TURKEY WIENERS BllF LIYIR • 12~Z. PKG. . $.Al(CifO C°"""UIC:IAl O(AllRSO'I WHC>l l SA& l.S deli. I) LB . 69~ 79~ -93 C~ ,d-; -8 COUlmlY-99• KU•~ ·~T suc1onLOGNA ~l~O c• ,-1.~ • YG•111 •ac•. l.L ........ T StU VllllOS ·auet:O· TIM•l•Ul.AMIOll s l 0, ~ • _._._ • i •• KU·CtiUc. TURIEY BOLOGNA ~~: . u -- ------STnl WT . l._ r•DI• HAST HOffY •WAT Oii <It 1 'f rMSHfllOZDI s 11 • -• -• ---• .. -• CtlUCll • IONn,lU BUF WIENOS H u 11c t• ,. BITS 0' SHRIMP •IM:>l PCO-a •••• .. AST .. LI I ···--wn OSCAllMAY£1'•4'1~$ $1 •f ,.,_ .. ,llOZlN $14' ~·----•.U • 79 KO•CHUCtt•OllUU suaDBOlOGNA ~!-gz. c• • TURIOTFllln LI .... w• .. l l I 9110 .... • ftUI( SllCED BACON •U P«C LA $1 3' w i"°u'G a usnRS .LL s2s• wmodi'.. .LI • 1" ....... T OSC:All llAYEll•SMOIUfl -SOll s159 s2•• CHEESE SMOllES E-<>oz •• -m f I" l(V •~ ~ ... LI ......... LI. ~ ...... __________ _, s 11 • lllf • IVOl.CUT 99• II CIRICll SftAK l l • 1 n IUF • IOtOE• • 1 ff 1e. .............. lL LI •17• ffiUiiS'ftAIC .. LL •1 7 • 'I" •u. •UllOI-., .. LI ••• SftAK l l '2" tu.r • llOl#IO • IOHnUS •2• LI n••nAK 19 '2" lllf•SMAllfHO •2• .u •l•STIAK l• $1'A1'UI SAYas SAYI YOU MOmYt I GALA NAPKINS FAMll.Y55c 1.tKT. . . . . , .... PRICES EFFEC. 7 FULL DAYS, JULY 13 • JULY 19, 1971 ,. ·-······-···--·- , ..... -... •• ,.....,..1••-....... --. .... -., .• -.................. ~··M;~lty .... ~ ······-.. ·-~~,·-. ·••••"9-~ ,; .. ''""'•'""""--'~ .... fM.fll-t .......... ~,. .. --., --. . . ' ' . . . . • . ' . . . . . FOOD Wednesday. July 12. 1978 DAIL V PILOT ('~ Liquid Pectin Can Be a Thickener and Binder l>o ) 011 know ubout the Pectin CoM ectton''" r ('ctln. as any home <'a nnt'r knows, 1s tbe Jelhng agent that helps ho m e made Jams and JC'lhcs Jell. It·!> a natural s ubsta nce found in fruit NO'.' 1t tur ns out that pl'C t1n m ay a lso help lower rholesterol levl'ls In Britain. young m ale vo lunt t'l'r !> wh o part1c1pated in a study a t Ca mbndge Unlversi· t y s h o w t'd l o w e r • Sil• Gourmet By Barbara Gibbons rl'm a ining ingred ients, tha wed e nough to un· e xcept noodles and wrap. remove the frozen cheese. in a sa ucepan block from the packagt> r.i nd heat to boiling. Cov· Us e a sharp serrated er a nd lower to a gentle bread knife . or froze n s immer. When fish is food saw. to cut the Croien fish into two-inch cu bes Add the fi s h r ubes to the tomato mix ture a nd reheat to boil· ing. Cover and simmt•r ~e nll y 20 minute s M ea nwhil e. c oo k noodles accordi n g to package directions in boiling salted wat er Uncover fish and a l lo w to simme r . un · co ve red. until t om a t o sauc e is thick and fi s h fl akes easily. T o s erve. spoon cod and tomato sauce ovt>r hot d rained noodles. Top with s hredded cheese. Makes four servings. 280 calor ies each EA S Y FLOU NDER MARINARA WlnlUNGUINI 1-pound packa gt.< frozen fl ounder fillets. or other fish 16-0Wlce can Hauan tom atoes. broken u p well 8-ounce can p la in toma to sauce I rib celery. minced I onion. hulved and thin ly shcc'<i I c love ga r l ic. minced 1or 1 ~ teaspoon 1n st ant garhc 1 Optional 2 o r :J sprigs parsley. chopped 1'• cup dry while wi ne, or l t ables poon le mon ju.ice 11, cup water 2 teaspoons d r ied oregano. o r m ixed Ita li an !-teusoning!> I bay leaf Salt and pt'pper tu taste 6 OWlCe'-<dry> pro te an -e nrtrht•d l 111~u 1n 1 <or spaghetti I Optional 4 lublt•-. poon s grat<'d 1•xtra sha rp Romano cht•cst' Thaw unopened fi sh a:. directed in prcv1ou!> rt• cape . Comb1m• remain rng ingredients. except liog uini and cheese, m a saucepan. Heat to boll- 101::. Cover and s immer. C:ut f1~h into two-inch cubt·~ and add lo tomato m ixture Cover and sim- mt•r 20 minutes M ran w h 1lt•, <'OO k lin~uini until tender . uc· rnrd1n g to p Mc kage d 1 r t' c t 1 o n s Se r v e "Cu food 11 nd t o m a to -.tt ucc over hot dr ained pasta. topped wilh grat• Ni ch N'S<'. Serves four . 245 calories each (Wlth c he cse . 275 calor ie !> each> <'holes terol counts after -----------------------------------------------------------------------~ t wo m onths of adding 1 a nd one·<tuarte r-ounce doses of pectin to their d a il y di e t Simil a r stud ies elsewhere le nd to s uppo r t t he c on- clusion tha t pectin can l o w e r c h olesterol l'ounts F or t h e t•c.ilo r 1e l' 0 n !> C' I 0 U S , I h {' b I.'!> t ~o u r cc o f pt•ct1n I!. natural fresh fruit NOT sugar-laden Jams a nd JClhes' But lht·re is a nother use for liquid pC'c tin that can help you c ut c alorics . and m aybe <'holeslc rol a s well. In our Shm Gourmet kitc hen we like to use II· q uid p e c tin u s a thic kener and binder for ho memade low-ca loric sala d dressin gs . i.n place of part of lhc 011. You can quickly shake up a low fat dr essing !>Imply by com bining t· q u a I p a rt s I 1 q u 1 d peC'tm. 011, vinegar and water and whatever o t he r St•asonings yo u hkl' Most salad dress ings are three-qua rters 0 11 . but o u r S l im Gourmet pectin dressing 1s only one-quarter oil /\ nd o il 1s t he m ost fattening lhmg there 1s' H e r e ar e so m e 'ariations · ITAL I AN · TYLt; SA LAO DRESSING •, cup bottled hqu111 lll'l'lt n 1 I ('Up rt• d W I 0 (' 'inegar '" <'UP olive 011 or ..... ll3d 011 • 1 cup oli ve liqui.d c from can or Jar of oh \'C'!-t I I tcai.poon 1.wrlic .... 1 ll I tea!-tpoon dri l•d on •gano Prnch of coar:.cly J!round pepp~r Com bine 1n c overed Jar . refrigerate Shake befo re Sl'rVIOJ! About 30 calories per lablc!>J>QO'l G REEK S AL A D l>HE SS I NC ~U b!>t 1 tutc ll'mon JUlCC- rm n nC'~ar. dried mint lt.>a\'l'S for orc•gano /\dd a pinch of ground cm namon. 1f dC'~i rcd ITALIAN CllEE~fo: DH ESS l ~G Add 2 tablespoons grci tcd l'X t rll ~h arp 1l o m a no t·ht·l'Sl' to Italia n salad d r l' " " i n g /\ d d !> 4 t·:l!orir~ to ea<:h tables poon of drc:..s1n~ F.G G L ESS C'A E AR STYLE S,\Lt\O DRESSING 1 , <:up bolllC'd hqu1d Pl'<' tin 1 1 <'UP lemon Jlll<'l' 1 , <'UP corn or saf flov. t·r 011 •, c up liquid l'gg -.ub~tllUll' 2 tabll•:.poon" gra1cd l'Jrmt·!-an <'hN•S<' Pi nc h of dry mustard O as h o f Worcester~h1re !>UU CC G arltt· salt und pep· rwr to taste Combine 111 cover ed 1 ar S l orl' 1n refrigerator Shake up before using Scrvt• over r om a1n t• lct tU Cl', red onion Tor> with toasted hr<:ad r ubl's. 1f dcsm .•d About 40 ralorics per lablespoon 150 t .iloric!-1 per slk e of high fiber hrl':>ri I . . . COO MONTEREY l -pound packag e froze n cod fillets 16·ounce can plain tomato sauce 2 onions. h a lved. thinly shced l g r ec npepp l'r. M'eded, thinly sllcl'd I cup water 2 teas poon s ('h1l1 powd<'r <or more. to taSll'l J teaspoon ground rum In 1 tea s poon dried orega no l bay leaf Salt and pepper lo taste Optional: 6 medium Span\sh stuffed olives, thinly sliced 6 ounceis "Ide nod· dles (dry. uncookedl 4 t n blcs po o n s sh r edded ext rn ·sharri r hc ddnr or Monterey J 3ck cheese Put lh unopen d fish fi llets In a d p basin of tepld water. Comb,ne Join the fun at Ralphs Number 011e PRIZE MRIY ancl I• ------\ Aalphl-Hot Dog or plaf' Hamburger Buns ·. Tuborgor Michelob Beer SWMIJuq LatOda Red Pbns 69 per. lb. SHI Round-Bone In Round Steak per lb. 68 8Hf Round·Bonete .. Top Round Steak per lb. 88 12 oz. btls. 6 pack OcH n Sprty-lndit n River Grapefruit Juice - per. lb. Wealern Iceberg Lettuce uch - For Ralphs Number One Club Members Only S..,er • 100 Off Cordial Sale Special Coupon Savings -,_ IMIC9'ucl<·l l•dt Cul ~~Chuck Steak . Bttl r.W4: Cube Steak !Itel l0111·80MIHI r~\~1 Steak Tails , llfff Cnue>. r~\o~ Round Bone Roast W1lfl Bebr 011 Gentle Touch Soap Got«Mn Gr••n·Med1u111 or Wide Noodles ~ L• Vl<IOrtl Chili Dip ~ G1l•Color1 or Whoo Wnn IOICIOI Paper Towels Lowc-... c"""'''-"c., .... Wishbone D1'811ing Super Deli ~-·erlllld Mozzareffa Cheeee ,.N.iii&iii·+·•i·ciuii" .... Stve .37 + .02 Tu will! Coupon 0KOft tlKI Of Anori.d Colort 5 9 Soft 'n Pretty ~1k~'. Bathroom Tissue • wlthcoupon l imit One Item tnd One Coupon Per Customer. Coupon EHectlve July 13 lhru July 19, 1978. .. Utt~ C°'-C>O'\ V•lt<J Otrtl v ~ Pfl'ttnl•O ••'"' M•ls>"t ~Vf"1t>if O"'* CM» C. ••o i ~-········COUPON •••••••••• ., Golden Premium Meats 101 ~~llNILoon·I-~ (~~~~ Top Sirtoin Steak lb 229 ... , Aound-loMlet• per U\OA T" St k lb (oCICI Ip ea 119 ~ 9;;:0~,:.y;;hut Ptt Ill 159 ~i>;ts;;a~a; Pt f It> Pantry Fillers 3oi. 23 btf. l\Z1 M~~nnaise 17 01 49 b•O I ~Bi~'P~ 12 01. 59 u n 1 o sbi~r&:~ It el 59 1011 . ~ N~·auik '°' 63 1111 I ~ 816-Wi1t1 Aftf et>nclleecll Detergent Booster i:;r 211 '::' 2 39 H r 1 19 lb P;:' 129 16 01 79 1•r • •or 79 etn • 91501 103 u n 11b 239 cen 2Sor. 123 llo• Home 'N Leisure t ot 117 f>lt 1sa .tSN. 79 P-f.I FrOf'I M1uco Kahlua II So• &IL from,rence Grand Marnier 110~1°' f1omttol1 Galliano 11 ~°' bit ''°"' Scotlo!ld Drambuie •1~f.'"' Arrow GrH n or While Creme De Manthe 24 or bll 1tem1 end Prtcn Sub1ecl lo Avt1l1b1ltly ~Red1Piums ~ct;e;y Tomatoes Frozen Foods ~w& ~v~orJ~""· ~ on;;. Juice ~$;~"pizza Super Floral 430 Ftom f ranc• 5so r19 B&B .,, PHii '99 ,JO 1111 'so e•s H1<-Wal'Of 319 ••O Anisette , •• , 199 10 au . ,, 545 f'rom.1811'1•te• 949 •09 Tia Maria ~;~ ••v t O 10 4' 51s Artow Datk Of White 3' ... Creme De Cacao 14 or ,.. us Dll •U 31 s FromFt.1MI 52 reg Cointreau '·b~i°' ••u t IS t.20 lltlph• 10"4 011coun1 on C•M '••clluff 11 no tonger 1n enec1 Supel' Produce :' .39 ~=~.49 1001 65 ~9>1 1201. 93 can • l t or 2 15 pkg ~a~·;;i~ ~C .... Melons Super Bakery ~ H·;-~,;;&u;;·°' ~ f;;t;;,'teaves ~ i:MtovPinwheel :' .39 c:r .15 110,01 55 I pec:ti I ~01. 65 11419 •• 1S o1. 109 "~ .. Health & Beauty pkg 101 01 10 ••c.159 1111 • ,. N. 321 . c .. IM!Wi.-. Dubuque "Plumpers" 1::.89 ~r.~.ea Prlcet tff9c:tlv1 July13 thru July 19, 1978 Atf!IM·Or•• Om111 Onqe "One" D [J f r .. ttttt ·Wllll f rM P-t ti Kttl Aid Plastic Pitcher -1" ... We f9Mf•• llMI r19f1t 10 Hll'ltl °' r•l•M ..... to comni.1c1tl dt1lon o• w,,.iettttlt Switch to Number One •• .Switch to r • -·eD·-., r • -·~11°·-·, r· • ·(IJA· ·., I ' II ...... ,. .. c..... ..... 11 I ..... t1 •.04f11tr1t11c...,... 25 •-.n .. .,, .... c....., I "-'~l....,._ 441 II ,.,............. 11 ..... l..,.....,...... 75 I Wisk ... Extra Lean I Lux u " I Dlllrgent .. 11 Franks i.•, 8fF 11 Detergent " I I ..... -.... ,.... z ....... "'"' ..... I UM11 0..-.... o...c.....-"'c-II lllftllONM•ONc...,..,..,c.-11 Uno110..""";...°"'c....,.,..c-I c...,. ....... """ 11 ..,, Nit , .. tt1 J c....., l--.""" ,, ..,, Nit 11. 1171 c.....-...... ""' ., .... Mr 11. .. ,. L couoorv L LOu1.JUl\i J L couPOI'\ .I ------------------------l{Aea ' CMOOI • t 11111 SJ. cam MU& -SM ~. IOPOIT Ill$ .... I Wlsetl "'"111Cl• IUCll r&Sll I( YAlEllCIA. lMDA •u 11" llYlll. TISTll °"'' I Ml llYl CtSTI MW !901 WMS II.YI . llUllTllll .. IUCH 401 M lOMl AllM£• 5142 ..... MTillCflM llACH 11111 111* SL M1ll IS411 S •MMST. WfmMISrtl STOil HOUIS. 911 W,. l-t t.my .... . --------~-----#~~-~-~~~~ .... tol ~ ,. ~ • -• .._ • ... • .... -.................. ._ -.. ,, .. ce OM. Y P1l0 I W.oneeoty July 12, 1978 FOOD No-Bake Fruit Pie With everyone so con scaoua these day11 of keepiiig one's weight down. rich desserts are o n the e ndan gered species list But once in u while a special oc- casion an an · na versary. a birthday. an engagement dinner demands a special d essert. The Peachy Blueberry Pie pictured today is admittedly high on the calorie scale but so good that it 's bard to resist The creamy filling tor the pie contains fresh peaches and blueberries so plentiful right now in the markets. <Come fall or winter, the same pie can be made with frozen fruits -thawed . dra ined and sweetened 1 f necessary > The ·•crust" for the pie is a no-bake shell made with e bocolate cookies. Just cover the bottom of a 10 inch pie plate with a s\ngle layer of cookies. You 'l l need about twenty·two cookies. 2• L inches an diameter. Break a couple of the cookies to '111 an the big open spaces along the edges. Then arrange re- m aining cookles on end along sides of the pie plate. Neither t he bottom or sades have to bt' completely covered. Pour the creamy gelatin ftllang into the .shell and t'htll overnight. It wall be a star ~rformcr al your :-.pl'C rnl occasion dinnt·r Frozen Fruit Salad One food that remains popular for blistering "dog days" is smooth, chille d fruit yogurt. When it's in a frothy beverage for m. it's lunchtime possibilities increase tremendously. Not only can the new t1quid lowfat yogurt :-.at isfy all by il~clf or in c ompany wit h a sandwich. this tangy. :-.wcet liquid fruit yogurt a... also .supt>rb in those pere nnial summer favorites. salads. Here's a cool thought Frozt>n fo'ru1t Salad. An e legant molded salad, i{ can be pre- pared the night before. And it"s a stunning dish to star at a luncheon wi th its cool comt>ina· t1o n of bluebe r ry flavored liquid yogurt, rn a y o n n a i s t• a n d t·hoppcd fruit, nuts and ~:elery. Serve· it with '>lmple foods such as <:old chicken and crust,Y bread, and you'll be known· as the coolest hostess in town. FROZEN FRUIT SALAD l can (8 ounces) cru s h ed pineapple, drained. juice reserved 1 envelope un - flavored gelatine 1 .• cup mayonnaise 2 tablc!>poons lemon 3uice 1 carton <8 ounces) hlueberry flavored Ii · quad lowfat yogurt 112 cu p c e I er y , c·hopped '2 cup nuts. coarsely c hopped 2 bananas. sliced 1, teaspoon celery seed A~d water lo pineap· pie juice to make '2 cup In small saucepan, mix gelatine with pineapptc- JUice and water ; stir over medium heat until gelatine is completely dissolved. Remove from h eat. Stir in mayon· naise, lemon juke and liquid yogu rt. C hill until consistency Of Un· beaten egg whites. Fold in crushed pineapple. celery, nuts, banana and celery seed. Pour into 6 cup mold, and freeze 3 to 4 hours or until firm. Unmold onto ser ving platter. cut ln slices and serve on lettuce. if de· s ired. SHAKE •NDBINK SALAD DRESSING ~ cup strawberry. b l ueberry or peach flavored liquid lowfat yogurt. any n avor 'Al cup mayonnaise 1~ teaspoon celery seed I/• teaspoon salt Dash ho t pepper S3UCe Combine all ln1 r e - d len\.I: mix well. Chill. Serve over fruit salad PEACHY BLUEBERRY CB EAM PIE J e-nve lopc un · navored gelatin 1".I cup sugar. divided '" teaspoon s alt 2 eggs, separated 1 cup milk 11.. teaspoon almond extract 3 t a bl es 1>oo n s orange flavored liqueur or syrup drained from peaches 1 ~'I cups diced heat und sllr in almond p(laches sweetened lo extrac t and liqueur tast~ and drained Chill until slightly I cup blueberries, thickened, stirring con· !>weetened stantly. Beat egg whites 1 <'UP heavy cream. u n t i l f o a m y a n d whipped gradually beat in r e · 1 10.tnch chocolate mainlng 1" c up sugar cookie pie shell until very stiff. Fold Max gelatin. ·~ cup thickened gelatin into sugar and salt in top of egg whites. Theo Cold in double boiler. Beat egg d r a in e d fruit a n d yolks and milk together. whipped cream . Tum in· Add to gelatin mixture. t~ pie shell. Chill over· Cook over boiling water. 01ght or untU firm. If de· stirring constantly, 5 s~red, g~sb with ad - minutes. Remove from ditional fnut. Peachy blueberry cream pie for family or guests. Mmmm ... Barbecued Spareribs! And Lucky has 'em along with the lowest overall pork prices in town! A delicious difference your family can taste. With summer here. the outdoor cooking season 1s in full swing. And if you've been looking to make those backyard barbecues / / I taste even better than ever. may we suggest ~ ddding some fresh pork to your menu? You'll ~" an live and then dressed fresh locally so it can be brought to our stores days fresher. And that's a difference you're going to appreciate, because it's a flavor difference you can taste. Here's something you can ~ really sink your teeth into. find lhat once ifs on the fire. nothing will ~ "'"""""' ...... cook up and taste more delicious than ni=~.~ ~~~~ tender, 1u1cy spareribs or grilled pork chops1 ~ ;,. ~ Here's a delicious recipe from the National Pork Producers ~ ~ Council on preparing country style barbecue ribs. ~~~ Country Style Barbecued Ribs -~~ Our low prices make our meat .... -,-· ~~ case worth looking into. ·~ 11~11, When you look into the meat case at ·· ~. Lucky, nol only will you find an ~ ~ '- outstanding selection of fresh dressed pork. but you 're going to find it at the lowest overall pork prices in town. We carry dll your favorite cuts of fresh pork. everything from loins and ~~ 5 to 6 pounds country style r ibs 1/) cup vinegar 'n cup chopped onion 1/1 cup light brown sugar, packed 1 tablespoon 1hortenmg I t(>ai.poon Worcestershire sauce I cup catsup 1 1 1ea~poon celery seed l/4 cup water 1 ' 1ea1>poon salt chops. to ribs and roasts. Look who's made the best dressed list. Supermarkets receive their pork in one of two ways. either fresh or frozen. Some :>tores receive pork that's shipped in alrecldy rlrnssC?d but not Lucky. Our pork is brought Fresh Meats FRESH PORK SPARERIOS 12 9 M[OfUM Sil£.. . . . . . . . lD SMOKED PICNIC 5HOULOER 78 fAf\MU\JOHN l'I AtO'.> . • •. lfl • PORK LOIN ROAST I "101Nl i,,I .~I 0 AV(, 1111 • FRESH PORK LEG WHQlEOI\ ~HANKHAlt ••• , PORK LEG RO~ T ......... " .. 10 POP.K LOIN SPARERIOS PORK LOIN CHOPS POP.K LOIN RID CHOPS 118 1D 1.66 in 1.36 ,, 1.96 01.78 P°,~~.~HOULOER ROAST .~ • 88 ~~~~~OHN SAUSA~~1 M •49 FARMER JOHN SAUSAGE i 08 loQflA t lD llOU • POP.K NECK OONE5 1ru ,., 1n .78 FRE5H PIG FEET ,, FARMEP.JOHN DACON --~··-•rt I I »o 1,39 OLAOE CUT CHUCK STEAK io .89 n(lotOl D bl II ROUND STEAK 148 llON[l[~\ Cl()!-lOfO CitH ·''' T·DONE STEAK 0 2 .56 (1".••tAO DUt lOf"H TOP SIP.LOIN STEAK I 2.36 oo .. m " 00'< DI Cl om 'o "' CP.OSS RID RO~T "1.68 O()o<tu\\oo.QDOW (HIJC• LARGE ENO RID ROAST 10 1.86 00'<~001£1 DONELE5S P.UMP ROAST 1.66 \U,;-:)4,.(tJfnQNOl( IJf>;, ... EXTRA LEAN GROUND OEEF 1 1'•"<'lll•CUO:>?'l•I 1~ 1.58 Canned& Packaged OLYMPIC MEAL b DREAD HAl\vt'.>I OAY AOONO 5 9 IOPOI\ ~N()Wl(H ...... 140l lOAf e SPAGHffil SAUCE b 'A()f1ft )VAnlt 111\i "'• fj( IAI\ • 9 5 b LAOYLEESPAGHffil •.•• 69 r rlRE510E COOKIES b 1AA1p,..(M)VA'" t "' .' .,,., .JS ! ~~~t\IEA.NS • OI C..• .~H I' MINUTEMAIDLEMONADE1 JS b cnn1ou .lll 70i t••• • I' ICETEAMIX 1 19 b UID'l'lll • )•0 ( WI • r POTATO DUOS b ot!tHn()(lli~ '""°' OQJ, 95 , HAMOURGEP. HELPERS b f\I fJ\'(A()(M,(/\ t· '¥4'• • ,.. . .., 01 NJ~ • 6 7 ! ~ .. ~TAG GREEN 0~~ c•". 24 [ ~E1E~ Gl~NT MUSH.R~~ 85 r HAP.VEST DA'( CORN b fl 4 ....... ,,.""'"""' t )0lf4Jrrit.25 Liquor SAVE AN EXTRA 10% I NMQ~I (A'iE P\Jl\(HA~'.>Of WIN[ .v10W11\ I'> 111fV'OUY1IWlXClUOlOl b ~~~~l:~>OI CAN\ 2 6 5 (S~G~'S GIN, ", .• ~·• 8 . 79 ; CP.OWN RUSSE v.o~KA 7 . 09 ~"lwV' •~or~~ ..... ""~(...-,·.,"""""""' Health & Beauty Aids r ANACIN TADL£TS 1 47 6 FOi(, °' •00 • r MACLEAN'S TOOTHP~TE 1, f•. ~11\Ci'lll ~Pf;l(fl"'""' I Ol 'UOl • 69 J SCOPE MOUTHW~~ ,..1 t~ •89 r VINEGAR WATER001u5~E _69 ~ ' Cut ribs into serurn9 portions. o~ dnor1 d A rrange nbs on gn// or leosl 6 ~ • inches from medium (Chh color.:d} cool~ Cook l 1/4 10 I 111 hours. • :': rurning occos1onollv ~ Meanwhile. preport• bor~cue souN>. Cook onion In shortening in ~~~S saucepan over moderate heat until rend£'r bur not brown. sttmnq often. Sttr rn remaining Ingredients. Brrnq ro s1mmerrnq sroge. simmer uncovered 20 minutes or unn/ flavors ore blended ond sauce sl1gf1tlv thickened Gn// rrbs another 30 minutes or un11/ forlc t<•nd1tr. brushing frcquC'ntly ll •lh ~ouce and tuming a~ needt'd S..11.•1·~ 4 to 6. Fresh dressed pork at the lowest overall prices in town. at Lucky. that's what discount ball about. fl PAPER 0 ~8~~~~&ROLl e39 b COMET CLEANSER ~, 01 C..H . 43 r PINE·SOL CLEANEP. 89 A l(;I;'() •~OJ 011 • • ~rH•·PP.rnYTISSUE b 1r '' ,., ... , • ~•P l -...~u .79 GLAC' TRASH DAGS I . -... r.. • (I ·~, 1 . 99 r PURR CAT rooo O ut\IAl\l(llt\i nOION.17 I' KAL KAH DOG FOOD .!I CHU>l~Y(t<t(O(lf u O/ CAN.32 Delicatessen LADY LEE '.>ll(fO MfAr 11 llCK on OH F !BOLOGNA , ...... . 100l f'K(, 119 OUOUQUE HAM PATTIES 1 49 •oOI (AM • • RON DUE CHEESE b GA"'.CQn"l"-'A • .r.1 (A't .69 r COP.N TOP.TIU.AS 21 b l'IMIA l)Cl ""4 • b SCHIP.MEP.'S KHOCKWUIUT 69 HAM ROO .. ,,Ol 'M) 1 • .t fAl\MIA '°""' •101 "'Cl 1 • 15 b AMERICAN CHEESE SPREAD ,\On11"41('10 •nOl ~ 1 .39 ( ......... ,..-•01&~. t••'wt," "'f ••• ,"\ft.. •• ,...t p .. ., •'1"~'' ""'_.,.....,, _,,.qc.;..• .,,...,. " •..., ~ •'"'*"·f '\"-.. '"'~<~••v'o"' o,.o. .. ~• ·~•<CJl"'I"""".,. ,.. ..... ,.Jf .,, ....... ,_ .. .,.. "•'1,..,••,,..~WtoCJr~r ~·0•" HJ'O Dairy & F rozen ;: O RANGE JUICE 109 LAOYl lE ......... 640l CIN !' OH DOY PIUA 0 (HH \I )70/ °"'• 1.39 I' FISHSTICKS O (l~hf•I<•• ••01"'<> 1.J9 L ~!'~~H FILLET ,, I'"''· 1.49 r fNCH ILAOAS ~ VA,_.D\~ ,,.ll (H f,ftO')/ J.• t 1. 29 I' DP.IGHT u EARLY OP.INK 0 MfAhG,_Of1.AM.t C0frrf(ftrrt 'rt/l.H 45 •)01 , •••• Produce FRESH ~~~~.~?.?~~(j • 6 9 LARGE SIZE ~!~~!~LE CA • 69 FRESH ~~~~~.~1 ... .,IA .49 FRESH ~~~~~O~ .. fA .39 HANGING FERN ,, POI ... what discount is all about. DISCOUNT SUPERMARKETS ANAHllM 72G W. LA PALMA AVINUI •AHAHllM t10 10. ITAn COLI.IOI II.VO. nllll"1'0N ua NO. l!UCL.10 Av«, •IUIHA """K Mii I.A PALMA AVINUJ •o otTA MltA 2190 HAHOlll II.VD HUNTINGTON HACH 1lff0 l"OOKHU"IT ll"ffT •LAGUNA HILU Ht71 CU OT "0AO AT LA ,AZ •LA Ml"AOA LA MlfW>A ~ Cbfl" •OflANGI •IANTA ANA Hao L CHANAM blNUI Ult ao. l"llTOL IT'ltlCT •P'Ul.l.l"TON 120 HO, "AYOMONO •oA"Ol~l'IOYI U011 IUCUO AY'l. •o•"OIH o"ova • HUNTINOTON I V.CH tot1 ATLANTA AYINUI •HUNTINOTOtt llACH 110'2 MAGNOLIA AVL !MOO IOLIA CHICA AVINU& tTORH ONN DAM.Y t A.M. , •ITANTON , • T\ltTIN flR KATl.LLA AVt. Unt NWWllOIH AVSNUI •WHTllll*ITl1' •, ._ltTlllllNIT'IR •WHITTIC" ltOO WUnttNIT'U AVl..UI 1I07t .,._llfOOALI lntUT , .... &. WUl..IDltt De. I . __ ........ ._, _____ .,_, ...... _,._~, ............... ..._ ...... , ..... .. . l I ~· •I ol t \ , I FOOD . . . Wednesday, July 12. 1978 OAJL V PILOT C'I ~! The Yo-Yo World of Losing Weight on a Binge '77 fl cc rr A tr. bt (, n •7. A I< '71 s e 6 ,, f • t • •7, ( ' ' .. , • • • Tbe whole tountry seems to be oo a skinny down tuck Some people are dietinc senalbly, out others are foolishly fasting without medical i-upervision. or folJowing fad diets lhat promise lo remove twenty pounds in two weeks. There can be serious consequences to the yo-yo syndrome of losing weight too fast by de· hydrating and starving thf' body, and then going on an eating binge that puts the weight back on fast For some, the skinny goal is reached but the mind refuses to accept the fact that the body is now in proportion and at a healthy weight, and the starvation diet continues unUl the coodi· tion or the body teeters on the brink of malnutri· tional disaster, sometimes death. Overweight does contribute to Ph.Yslcal pro- blems such as biatal hernia, gallbladder dis· orders, and hypertension. It is wise to reduce about two pounds a week with a steady diet pro· gram. One way to lose large amounts of weight with sense is offered by medically supervised health spas around the country, such as the Hilton Head Hospital's WeiJ{ht Control Center on Hilton Head Island, South Carolina. The ha bit of overeating is examined in a group situa- taon and all meals are eaten together. The suc· cess rate of high weight loss bas been encou.rag· mg. because the patient not only learns what to eat but why the obesity was attained and bow to Special D iets By June Roth avoid it happening again. Here are some low calorie main dishes that are tasty enough for the whole family. The dieter gets a controlled portion and no seconds, but may nu up on a huge salad bowl and a variety of bot steamed vegetables without but ter BROILED BUTTERFLY SHRIMP 1 pound large shrimp I teaspoon olive oil Wedding and engagemenl announcements nm on Sunday m the Daily Pilot Forms are aoollable at all Dally Pilot offices or by callmg the Features Depart· menl. 642·4321 To avoid disappointment. prospective bndes are remmded to have their wedding stones, with a black· ond-wlute glossy of the bnde or o/ the couple. to tl1tt Features Department one week before the wedding 1 clove garlic. peeled and minced (Lil e 1 teaspoon finely chopped parsley Lemon wedges Peel shrimp, leaving the tails intact. Cut down the backs to the tails. clean and flatten in· to ~ butterfly shape. Combine oil, minced garlic,. _and chopped parsley. Arrange shrimp on a broiling pan : bru~h lightly with garlic mix tu.re. Broil 2 to 3 mtnutes on each side. Serve wi th !emon wedges. Makes 4 servings About so calories per serving. HERDED FILLET OF FLOUNDER 1 pound fillet or flounder 1 :1 cup lemon juice 1 tablespoon chopped parsley v.i teaspoon dried dill weed •,2 teaspoon powdered onion Soak fillets of flounder in lemon juice for at least 1. hou_r before broiling. turning occasional- ly whale 1n the refrigerator. Sprinkle with eh_opped parsley, dill weed, and onion. Broil 10 minutes, or until fish flakes easily. Makes 3 servings. About 120 calories per serving. BAKED CHICKEN Sl'EW 1 broiler chicken, about 3 pounds 1 z teaspoon powdered garlic 1 '1 teaspoon white pepper I teaspoon dried dill weed I onion, sliced . 4 celery stalks, cut into l"' chunks 4 carrots, scraped and cut into 1" chunks 2 fresh tomatoes. quartered 1 package UO·ounce) frozed cut green beans 'h pound fresh whole mushrooms l cup tomato juice . W as~. dry and place chicken in a roaster with a tight Ii~. Sprinkle chicken with garlic, pepper, and dill weed. Arrange onion slices, celery, and carrots around chicken. Add tomatoes, bearu;, and mushrooms. Pour tomato juice around chicken. Cover with lid and bake in oven at 350"F . for i •n hours, or unW chicken is Cork tender. Cut chicken into quarters and serve with vegetables. Makes 4 servings. About 180 calories per serving, without skin, for chicken. Vegetables are all low calorie. Potatoes may be added to stew for non-dieters ~"",,.. ... fOil imilk! Kabobs Italian Style l'limefora Mealtime /freezer. 1 Enjoy a Peachy Banana Flip. l\>ur 2 cups 1 of milk into a blender. Add l peeled I banana, 3 drained canned peach halves, l tabl~-poon sugai; half I teaspoon sail, 8 ......... .. 1 ounces plain I yogurt, half teaspoon vanilla extract, 3 ice cubes, cracked. Blend well. Makes 4 generous cups. California Milk Advisory Board~ ur The delicious Summertime brings too. It makes a great ac· out the back yard chef in companimenl. practically everyone -With this back yard a great way to enjoy garden.fresh foods while special, you don't have keeping the heat out of to s pend a fortune for the kitchen. Wh ether food · If You a r e your forte is simple watching your budget . burgers, steaks or lavish buy a less tender cut of roasts. we think you ·11 m eat. Then, instead of agree Kebabs Italiano is marinating it for the a great addition to the hour we recommend, Jet barbeoue scene. it stand refrigerated in J<ebobs or a ll shapes the marina d e ,fo r and sizes are fun to cook, several. hours or even outdoors They are easy ~ v er n ag ht. Add t he to prepareandrequirea "egetables a b <;>ut an fa i rly s hort cooking hou~ before CO<?kmg a nd time. As for creativity• you re set to gnll. the sky 1s the limit . But I( you don't have time' would you dream of ad· or forget to marinate - ding chunks of crusty you can still make a enriched Italian bread? great dish. Use a more Brushed with marinade, t e nde r cut of beef or th e warm to as t y select a fully-cooked m orsels are something s a u s a g e . s u c h a s to savor. bratwurst, Polish or Don't stop with three knockwurst. Brush the chunks per skewer. Slice vegetables and bread the r e m ainder or the with the marinade mix- 1 o a r bru s h with lure. It can be that sim-marinade and toast it, pie. e I e ht cholesterol . Lighter looking Jnd lighter tasting than corn 011, it's going to ma~e the foods you fry and the <.J!Jds you make tastt' Puritan 1!1 a new lund of cook· 1ng 011 made with sunflowers. So it"· very high in polyunsatu- r<1tes (even higher than corn ml) And that's why it's gomg to be an important part of your total diet to fight cholesterol u1itan delicious. So do something nic£' for your~elf and your IJm1ly. clip the coupon. and try Puritan Oil. 100% PURE VEGETABLE OIL -~----------------------------·--------- KABOBS ITALIANO (six skewers) 1 pound sirloi n s tea k, cut in I ·inch cubes 1 medium zucchini, cut in wedge!\ 18 cherry tomatoes 1 medium green peppe r. cut in wed~es l cup bottled ltalian salad dressing •,:i cup red w 1 n e vinegar 1·2 clO\(!::. garlic. minced 1 teaspoon sail l l oaf ('n r 1ched Italian bread Arr ange sll'~1 k , zuc chi na , tomatoes a nd g reen pepper m shall ow dis h . Combine sal a d dressing, vine~ar, garlic an d salt. Pour over steak and V('gelables · m arinate one hour at room temperature. Cul part of the French loaf in to 18 wed~es; cul re- mainder into 'h-inc h slices. Drain steak and vegetables; r eserv e marinade. Arrange the bre ad wedges, steak and vegetabl es o n s ax l>k ewers, beginning. dividing and ending with a bread wedge. To pre· pare kabobs on outdoor gri ll , bru s h with marinade. cook 8 ·10 minutes on first side· turn. brush again and cook 7-8 minutes on second side. Meanwhile. brush both sides of the bread s lices with marinade; brown one s ide on grill a bout 5 minutes, tum and brown other side. Serve kabobs acco mpanied with grilled bread slices. To prepare kabobs rn broiler : brush with m a rinade; cook about 3 inches from eleme nt. 7 ·10 minutes: turn. brush again. cook 7-8 minutes more or until bread is t oasted and meat is brown. Whether you call 'em Wieners, Dogs or Franks, and you've been wondering where the flavor went ... then it's time to try Schirmer's German Brand Franks. Made the tender, delicious "Old Country" way from the finest meats and seasonings. So big and so plump that each one weighs 3 ounces. too~ for rhe little Sch1nner'1 Sausage Maller on the package In · our inarlcet. Schirmers® the Sociable Sausage Available in the Dell case of: ALPHA BETA · 10¢off onKelloggS 40% Bran Flakes bign~size. Now Kellogg's~ 40% Bran Flakfs cereal comes in a big, new 20 .. oz. box. So you get mor0 of nature's fiber-rich bran. And more of Kellogg's honest wheat taste as part of your complete breakfast. And who doesn't love saving IO<t? •• D Wheat Germ Crisps \\ 11 E A T G E R M dough into ball Holl out 10 3 dozen cracker:. CRACKERS to '•·Inch lh1ckne:.s on WHEATGERM 5 l.tbl~poonb oil unfloured board Dough WAFFLE WAFERS 1J cup water will crack at f1r:.t but I'' c up::. g r a t e d I tablespoon brown :. moot h s out a s 1 t parmesan cheese :-.ugar . packed becomes thinner. Ui.ing 3 1 cup butter :i,. cup whole wheat a pastry wheel or largl' I tablespoon water flour k n 1 f e cut par a 11 e I 2 drops liquid red 1 ~ cup oa~ diagonal hnes 2 inches peppl'r seasoning •11 cu p vacu um apart Cut across first 11 2 cups flour packed wheat germ. r e· lines to make diamond ·' 1 c up vacuum gular shapes. Transfer to bak· packed wheat germ. re · 12 teaspoon 1>all ing shPet with spatula gular Rlend 011. waler and Bake in 350 oven 15 1!! teaspoon baking :.ugar.Stir1nnour,oats. minutes until light powder wheal germ and salt. golden brown Cool on Beat cheese. butter i.ea!>oning tn electric mixer Cut 1n flour. wheat germ and baking powder w 'th pas try blender until mixture rorms a dough. Shape in to 36 small balls Place o n ungreascd baking i.heet Flatten to '·4·inch thickness with meat mallet or fork dipped in flour Bake in 350 oven 10 to II minutes Remove frvm baking sheet. Coot on rack Makes 3 dozen appetizer w:ifers m1x1ng wl'll Shape racks. Makes about 21,2 w:iter and peppt' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~___;:..-.:....:..~~~~~~~~~~~ Beer And Bread VIENNA BREAD 2 packages act1v1: rlrv \'(•ast · i tabl<'spoon l>Ugar 11·2 cups hot water I cup milk t labl<'spoon sail or (S a lt and potassium <·hloridc mixturl') 7 to 8 cups flour Cornmeal I egg wh1tt• Poppy ::.1:t•d In a 3-quart mixing howl. dissolve yeast and '>ugar an hot water Stir 10 milk. :.alt and 3 cups fl our Beat to make a :-.mooth batter -about JOO strokes Turn batter out onto a noured sur face. Knead in remain- ing fl our until dough 1s very stiff. Then knead 10 minutes Wash mixing bowl in hot water. dry. then grea:-.e. Invert bowl nv1:r dough. Let dough proof until bowl begins to li ft from surface about I hour and 20 minutt•s. Rt•movt· bowl. K n t' a d d o u g h fo r 5 min utcs Shape into 2 loavt's. each about 12 1n l'he~ long Grease a bak 1ng s lwet which is about 11xt5 1ncht>S. or grease 2 :-.mallC'r baking sheet~ Spnnkll• <:ornmt'al ovt·r gn •a:-.t•d twking sheet . '>hake to ~pread l'V(•nly and d1:.t•ard cxce!'>s corn meal Placc loaves on pn•pared baking sheet. leaving about 2 ancht·.., bt.•twl•e n loan•s Cu t ~ta:-hed .1bout 1 1 inch deep at :J 1n<.:h interval-. d1agon•1lly aero'>:. each lour Beat l'gg \\hll(' 1u:-.t 11n11l frothy. brush nvc·r t•nt1n• :-.urface nf 1:ach loaf Cover with plastlC' "'rap Ll'I rt:.l· 1n .1 \\arm platl'. frt.'l' from dr <1 ft s. until almost doubled In bulk. Preheat cwen to 425 F and ptac1: .1 pan of watC'r on the flnnr of the oven. /\gain hrush each loaf with egg white. then sprinkle pop· PY seed on top Place Joa Vt's in oven /\l once turn heal lo 350 F Bak1: <1bout 45 minutes. until Ina vcs :-ound hollow "hl•n tappl•d M akcs 2 IOa\ t•:-. (; EMAN PRETZELS I packagl' active dry 'ea:-t 2 tea:.poon~ !'>ugar ' 1 cup hot wakr '• cup milk 3 table::.poons 011 4 cups nour !abouu I ll'aspoon :-.alt I E'i:lfl, beaten Coarse Kosher :-.alt In largl' m1x1ng bowl dissolve Yl'ast and !.ugar 10 hot watl'r Stir in milk and oil /\dd about half the flour . :-.t1r until <I :-mooth batter forms Turn battl'r out onto floured surfacr Knead in remaining nour until a s tiff dough form s Then knead 8 minute:-. Plare douJ:h in a greased bo"·I. rover with plastic wrap Let raise in a warm place, frN.• from drafts. until rioubled 10 bulk about I hour Shape riough into 16 rope::.. each about 10 inches long Coil each ropl' of dough into a l · ring pretzel. forming one ring at a llmr t end. center. other end Place p r etzels on a greased baking sheet, a bout 1 Inc h aparl. Brush with beaten egg. Let raise unUI puffy but not doubled about 12 to 15 minutes. Bnkf! nt 425°F . for 5 minutes Rrush again with beaten egg (add t tablespoon water if ncccsis ur)' l Sprinkle Kosher salt over top11 or pret1C'l!I Reduce heal to 350 f'' Bake obout 1~ minute., longer. until AOldcn M aJc us soft prOlt l!I I .., . -......... -_, ..... ,.., .. ,. UP TD 94 WITH STUllllT •·--------.. WISNl•E tllM fnau.a I I m 'ALA• NISUM I I -'11 ' 49c I 1£iWl ~I I I 12c . , . .. , . I ,,,.,,, .. I• ..... I~..... I ••• RlD Jill~ON •• F!!!fi1 PO IJYTS I I,,. "'"' 29c I 1£i\\ ~ ::! I I 6( . . .. ... . . •I I -::,."' ··: ... /".·.:.. . . I - I ••RID X COUPON•• =~~=' I NTATI flAICIS I I m 59c I 1~' ~ ·::: I 11 Oc . .. , . • .. I ""rt•t1W 1 •II•~• fl! p I I I ....... . - 1• IUD l COUPON •• 10' OFF : ,,.. tMl,Nt I :~\~ 11r.Aos 1 I 1 oc ... ,, 11"1 '°' ... fl•·~ eot I I •fll#fl'\ ,.. UWll• tHft1M -.o ..... I r:rJl!I' ~-.·;o ·~· co~PON ... 'f!!!J/#. FllmER I •.., LADY RAZCI : l&\l ~ 94c I I 25< ....... ·-.. ~· .... I I ..... ·~ ··::;'"" ... •· .. , .. ••••HO XCOUPON ... .. ........... -- Wheat germ crackers and waffle waters tor snacks. . Xarket J/asket"i r11cu lfflCTIYI WID .. JUl T 12, TNIU TUES .. JULY II, lt71. DISCOUNT FOODS l ll tllAlfY'ln l!Glfn llMIYIO llO Ull TO DUUIS ot fOt HUU otc.....acw \ISi A•YERllSE• ITEM HAIAllTlll l&Cll Of TlllSI IJIMS I\ 1141111910 10 .. llAOll T UllUIU fOI Ult .. 1.AC• ••nn UYO UCl'1 &I ,,tclfl(All 1 llOTIO Ill ""' '° E .... IUll OUT Of aw &D'fllTl\fD m• •• Wiii OfUI 104/ IOUI CllOKI Of • (Ollruuu llUI ...... UAIUlll, HlllCTlllO 1111 UMI U'flllCi\ ot • Ulll (111(1 llfflfllll(i IOU TO rut (llAlf 1111 ID'fltfl\ID lfl• at 1111 tOVllllUD PIKI WITillll 11 Dll\ ••• • -------.. f.llYIS MNJtlMIAl I I m -·~~TFOOI I I .. ;:.-:.-;.:...57c I I ~\-( .... , I I 8 ._, ~ •1, u • 1vr1,1 11 \'I I c •Otrt ••··•W'1• ""'''•' ... I I I , .. \ ,,., ·JI·" •1~ f!/1 1• R~D·X COUPON•• ~I "' TIASI UIS I I SJ 15 I I ~\!. ~ I 114 . ... ,, or· .. ~ .,. ,,.. • -.. I c (\:l'f)lt .... , ... .,, ...... ,fl;.. ., I I ~·~\I •••• ,,,•• MiJcs.q'Wl.N •4 llACIAlll I I m .... llAmlll I :~,~ ;;~ s5!~. : •s 1 oo . ..... ... Ill' • .. • • • I ... ,, .. ,,, ., . .... ~ I ••~ 'atD X COUPON •• •AlllKIA I OIA .. S I M1 79 I ·~Vl. 4 C I I y-I • 2oc . .,., ""' '" ~ ... ~· ~·· • I t.t\lf'O't '11 ,.••tt ttttt~ aitO ~· ,, ftl!ll\lr\'t' ~··· ,.,, • •• tlD· I COUPON •• ,._,,... I ~ I ... vna..s 1 =~\l . ·~C I •t• I ' 75 c • • "" ,., , .. • w • "" I I l~ ,.:, ··;!· :~',~"' .. .-\«' .. ____ llD X COUPON • .11 1 I 11 .. , • ·--------.. YOSS 'M SOFT fAH K sen1•11 I I u lllK"' I I ) $ 139 I 1~H :·; I I 2oc . . . . .. . .. I , .. '"' .. . I I '• ·;.,,iON • 1 H•S I U t -·-·-I :~vi .~ J09 I I 20( .. ·~: , ,. . .. • .. I ::: • ,,., • ''':. "\t • • I - I ••IUD X COUPOH •4 20< OFF I ~nM»n I m MUENSTER I =~V{ <~.!_~H I I 20< . ,. , , .... ' , I •• ti . I ... •II ! I I ... r:rJl!I'• IUD ir. COUPON •• ~ IO<OfF : • Mt .. 1~1/Ml. ,,... I :~vi ,:.:._ I 'I oc , ..... ~ ... , 1111 .. , ... 11(\.+'0' .... I • '"'!lti' .... ·••·t' '''tf'., ""n ~· I ' lt4\\ 'lt' "~' •• ltl• .. •••• RID· I COUPON _. SAYE UP 10 $ 94 FOOD ........ -... ' .............. . " .... .... . ................. , ..... _ • I ( ••• ... '77 h cc n A re b1 (, [J ·7. A I< '71 ' e 6 ii f r • '7• ( ' \ I fOOD Chicken picnic pockets are convenient. A Pocket Picnic Each summer there's at lea.i;t one :,unny day when nothing will do but to set tasks aside an<I get off by yourself But whether you choo:,e a simple walk in the woods or :.omc serious trial-blazing, a Jaunt to the beach or a bicycle excursion, make s ure you don't find yourself in hungry solitude. Keep a s upply of con· venient sandwich m ak- ings on hand against lhe time the splrit moves you to a solitary ramble. With some staplt!s from the refrigerator and canned meal s preads from the cupboard you'll be set to get up and go. Ch i cken Pi t'n1 c Pockets prove stalwart co mpanions <1t the halfway p oint 1n a woodsy trek Sit down. -mop your bruw a nd tuck int o th c:.e lady, hghtweight s<1ndw1che:,. The "pocket" 1s the in· side of a loaf of pit<1 bread. brimming with a ~esty mixture or chunky c hicken spread. chopped dill pickle and celery. and topped with s liced onion and crisp lettuce leaves. If a cool dip in a lake or pool 1s more your idea of getting away from 1l all. you'll work up an appelltf' worthy of Heim 'N' Pineapple On· The-Go. It's a hearty blend of spicy deviled ham , sweet pineapple chunks and chili sauce, s pread on a hard roll and accented with lettuce. You don't have to be a marathon cyclist to en· JOY Biker's Becfw1ches. Even if your solo outing is only a lunchtime hrcak on a shaded park bench. you'll savor the robust Oavors of roast beef spread. mustard pickle relis h and chopped onion piled on a hamburger roll Include som e raw vegetable slicks and somtt fresh fruit. c H re K E N p J c N I c POCKETS I c<1n 14~.. ounces) chunky chicken spread 2 tables po ons chopped dill pickle 2 tablespoons diced celery 2 loaves pila brecid Red onion slices Lettuce leaves In a small bowl mix together chunky chicken ~pread, dill pickle and celery. Fill pockets of pita bread with mixture Top with onion slices and le ttuce leaves Makes· 2 servanl?s BIKER'S BEEFWICllES I can 14:14 ounces> roast beef spread 2 tabl es poons mustard pickle relish 2 tablespoons chopped red onion 4 hamburger rolls Tomato slices In a s mall bowl mix togethe r roast beef spread, mustard pickle relish and red onion. Spread on bottoms of ha mburger rolls Top with tomato slices Close with tops o r roll s . Makes · 4 sandwiches. • * * HAM 'N' PINEAPPLE ON-THE-GO 1 can I 4' 2 ounces 1 deviled ham 12 c up pineapple chunks 2 tablespoons ch1h sauce 4 hard rolls Lettuce leaves In a small bowl mix together deviled ham, pineapple chunks and chill sauce. Spread on bottom of a hard rolls. Top with lettuce leaves. Close with tops of rolls. Makes: 4 sandwiches. Pulling Punches PRE-PROM PUNCH Pour cranberry JUtce <Serves 10 to 12) into a 6-cup ring mold 3 quarts ~rape cran· .ind freeze until hard berry drink, chilled When ready to serve, in 1" cup dry lemonade p u n c h h o w I m 1 x mix grapefrwt Juice and su~- 1 quart cluo soda or ar until su~ar is com. ginger ale, chilled pletely dissolved Add Lemon a nd 11 me remaining ingredients slices and stir gently. Unmold Pour 1 quart of the ice ring and place 10 ~rape C'ranberry drink punch bowl Stir until into ice cube trays and very cold ano serve in freeze until hard . to punch glasses make c ubes . In a SLIMMERS' pitcher. mix remaining SUMMER PUNCH ~rape cranberry drink. !serves JOtolZ) l'ranberry Ju i ce cockta1l, chilled 2 cups unsweetened pineapple ju1ct!. C'h1lled I quart low calorie tonic water, chilled t can 11 pound. 4 o unc es> pi n ea pple chunks. uns weetened. undrained, chtlled Ice cubes In a 4-quart bowl, combine all ingredients and s tir until well blended. Add ice cubes. Serve ~poon e d into punch glasses. Garnish with a pineapple chunk. . . . ~y. July 12. 1978 DAILY PILOT C9 Super Salmon Dinners can be very soecial. even for family meals. SALMON LOAF 1 can (16 ounces) salmon 1 tablespoon vinegar or lemon juice Cold water 2 medium eggs , beaten Vi teaspoon salt "~ teas poon black pepper 1 slice fresh bread, finely crumbled ·~ cup finely cut cele ry and leaves 2 tablespoons finely cut green onions l tablespoon finely cut green pepper Preheat oven to 350' F (180° C.). Prepare a 712 by 2V4 inch loaf pao with vegetable pan coat- ing <s pray or solid ). Dram salmon, saving Ii· quid Discard skin but sa ve bones. Flake salmon lightly but well with a fork (yield will be 3 cups. Add vinegar to salmon liquid and add enough cold water to make 112 cup total liquid; add to.salmon. Add all re· mainmg ingredients and mix thoroughly. Pact in· •o the prepared loaf pan. Bake lhour. Leave loaf in pan for 5 minutes before unmoldingonto a serving plate. To serve. cut across Width in 4 thick or 8 thin slices. INTRODUCE THE BIG ONE TO YOUR BIG ONES. When they bite into this one. they'll come away with a whole mou1hful of man- sotisfying beef frank Because there's a whole quarter pound of lusoious. juicy beef in every one. Enough to overpower any bun. Tonight. treat those hungry appetites to The Big One. And watch those big grins! \ le monade, and club 2 quarts low calorie soda. Pour into glasses ~----'------------------l a nd add c ranbe rry- ~rape cubes. Serve ~a rnished with lemon and lime slices. ROS\' G Ri\OUATION P•l NCH <serves lOto 12) 2 quarts cranberry Juice cockta1l . chilled or 2 quarts cranberry ap- ple drank. chilled I quart strawberry ice c ream, s lightly ~oftened I cup brandy or 2 t a blespoons brand y flavoring Crushed ice, whole strawberries (fresh or frozen> In a 4-quart bowl, beat cranberry Jwce and Ice crea m until well blended. Stir in brandy. Fill 1Jasses halfway with, crushed ice. Pour In punch and top with a whole strawberry. •v oav W E DDI NG PUNCH <Benet JI to U) 6 cups cranberry •P· pie drlnk 2 quart.' grapefruit Juice, chilled ~ cup s uperfine s u1ar 1 quart 1inger ale or SWffl white wtM l quan lemon·llme soda or cbampepe v. cup kirKb or ~ teHpoon almond extract 'lime for I .lk, ID.I .. 'lime fora Refriller- Raider. Cool off with a Raspberry OclighL l\>ur I Y2 cups of fresh milk into a blender. Add 10 ounces of trozen res~ :::II berries, unthawed. Add 2 eggs and a tablespoon of wheat germ. Blend well. Makes 2 generous wvir1g5. Califonua Milk Advisory Boerd! • . ' ... -' . ~· .............. .. ......... ,-. .................. _ . \ \ ••• ••• I I '77 (l Cl rr, A n: b1 t. 0 •7, A le '71 $ e 6 '71 t . r • '1• (' .. . • , ., ' • • •' f:Jf DAILY PILOl w~ .w1y 12. 1e1a MARMADUKE by &rid Anderson 800ME R 711. '•nu~""''••'•••s,-... "" 'el ~~---~----J "Can't you spend your time anyplace but garages and garbage dumps?" f=UNKY WINKERBEAN MISS PEACH . A2T+-iU'2. 1<EV1f~ AltTHlA~, WHA'T AE'CJLA'T "THE SAD New~ BE!AICS GO TO ,j'_.P.AN''? .. ~~~'..~ ,,, "''" .. ~l . by Tom Batiuk I CAWT REAW 'THINK OF At-mHING ... I'VE GOT ONE ! HOW A80UT IF WE bflR 1HAT 1HE PILOT OF OUR JET PA55EO OUT ~ CASEY MOON MULLINS WE~L,WHAT WOIJLl>YOO CH,AR<3!: 10 P,AINT OUR KITCJ.ISIJ ? GERIATRIX )OU ~~e WA.'7rf3 A WT' OF /V()t.Jff:'/ Q..I DUMS iHIN65 L.t~E: HAIK' 5f'r<A Y1 CLJl2L.~. ~Al~ ~IN7E, HAIS:Z NET"~ .... ,, .... ~ . ----- <x)lJ HAD 10 LAND 1HE PLANE <.OOROELF? By Charles Rodrigues by Ferd and Tom Johnson GORDO TUMBLEWEEDS WELL, (1(.JYS, Ai L.eAST -mis HASITT CHANGEP.. NANCY ROL.LO, THIS STEW 15 DELICIOUS -. . IT'S A RECIPE MY DAD PICKED UP IN AFRICA ON HIS LAST HUNTING TRIP ' .. . ,. .. _.,.,_, .-....... •• -.,,._ # .,. - \ ''. by Wm. F. Brown artd Mel Casson IZ~AlL.'(' fH~~IlHoW vefl:Y we. CAN eE ~m?S1NG ! ~~f:~~D . --..:: 10G~1tleJt ! fi I AM, T~T~ 'THE (5000 NEW~! by Melt DOOLEY'S WORLD OR. SMOCK MOM'S LOSl~G FAITH ltJ ~ER OPTIOAN ! PEANUTS COMICS I CROSSWORD by Cha rles M. Schulr RONK!AONK! H~K!HONK! ftONK!NON_K! ..-c... ·::,I~~ KllJ. ~! by Roger Bradfield by George Lemont by Gus Arriola TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PVZZLB ..... ACH(.)S::. I (hJngl' Cllaces 6 C:ompu1nr 1000 H) R1'()(1m.1n11' Slanq 14 Fom b.tQ01•r 15 Arll!U\I 16 Su•I Ill II SldV 1R r "' plf'Ce '2 word<. 20 OtHairw<l }I 0.>10<11.'fl the 11u1n 73 Turn.'(! whtll' 24 Boo~ nl m.i(l'> 26 Ger~ m11ed UIJ 28 Accomplish by t'ftou JO reel JI Raz~ 32 Pred1r1~ 36 WW II zone 37 Bu!lrlhM monki; 38 orus., 39 Nude 2 .vor!I~ 42 lo1r1.11 44 ReM the auto tank 45 Eng ltsh hawk et .,.. .......... h ,.. .. -• • -,,. • • • 1'. ,_ ,, ""•"-.,. .. • . ... ,., .. ·.' ...... \ iii? 0HC k1"fj out 4<) Rivt11 Pllll !>(}Ropes '>I 06'1POrO\lal ~un<K 52 UP 11nrl ldkeMl1t.1• !>!> T .JP" c;a1 lnd!JI"' !ill Wear aw.iv 60 0111 ht.'fh 61 MIO(' V'l'lrl' 6'2 Sp mJn s n.imf' 63 81111Q'> '" d 1110111 64 Svmp,11hv 65 Salr'n<lootd 1,.,n • DOWN 1 CoaN• n.ip 2 M19tJI01v M)l~l'I J Coov 4 SupOhL'(I wllh lut>I 1 5 lctlllCI' 6 f!'m.Jk>~ I N1111c 8 C11100 unt1 9 81bl1ctll vr·~ ~I 10 P1opo1 llOn.ll 1 I COfal fllfand 12 MarMIQutl ..alcano I 3 Ptants '" ~ool 19 Sm<tM All.in . .. UNITED Feature Syndicate Tuesday's Puzzle Solved lit l1$h 22 Rhod~a ~ Slnilh IS Shildt· of b<Own 26 Asian ~n !elope U War qod 111 ()pen SP<tCe 29 8dttCI \kll~ JO Amvos 12 ( le<:111r Ullll JJ Reouls1vr J'1 Owre1u1• J) Assen~~ 37 Snow w111 cle 40 Stops 41Up11gh1 42 E•Ohng 1h1~ 43 Adt-enl Su ft,, 4'i Murmur lnndlv 46 N A~r h.ghwav 47 Awess Bake• 48 B~1nrnrn1 49 Cove1e0 w11h hcht!n~ 51 Suqa• ~Ou1~t· ~ H11alhc11 lh!•IY ll4 Camp1n11 S1ear uem 56 Pealt !>1 Th11ce Pw fut S9 L A oJthlcle ••• ••• A m b (. a '•7, A k '71 $ e 6 '71 f r • •7, ( • . . .. . .. I ........................................... ~.4·,·"--(;·~--~--'-'.·.'.·.i.·.t:_.19. .. • .. • .. • ............. w.ednesda .... y .• Ju.ly·l·2 ·19.78 ............ DA.~.Y .Pl.LO·T·t·J .. I Calentlar MESA BARBOR CLUB: American Legion Auxiliary winners of the Amencamsm Essay Contest will be presented at a meeting a l 10· 30 a .m Thursday, J uly 13, at the Mesa Verde Country Club. [ __ B_o_r_os_e_op_e____,) Get Yourself a Lawyer DEAR ANN LANDERS: Pl ease don 't tell me you aren't a lawyer I already know that. 1f you were a lawyer, you'd be sitting back shoveling in money like the rest of 'em in- stead of slaving over seven columns a week. soum COAST JUNIOR WOM EN'S CUJB: Prospective members will attend a luncheon meeting at 1.1 a . m Friday. Jul y 14. at Houlihan's Old Place, 4880 Campus Drive. Newport Beach. LIDO ISLE YACHT CLUB : "Lido Night Fever " is the theme for a summer disco party a t 7:30 p.m. Saturday. July 15, al the group's clubhouse. WOMEN IN CONSTRUCTION: The Sad· dleback·Capistrano chapter will hold its third a nnua l night al the races with post time at 7:45 p.m . Tuesday, July 18, al the Los Alamitos Race Course Dinner at 6:30 p.m . For tickets. call Shirlee at 540-3383 or 492-3245 EXECUTIVE WOMEN INTE RNATIONAL: No-host cocktails begin at 6 p.m. Tuesday. July 18, in the Golde n West Room at Anaheim Stadium Dinner follows at 6:30 p.m . Game time is 7:30 For reservations, contact Rose An· derson at 634 -2000. S WEET ADE UNES: This women's chorus meets al 7:30 pm. Monday evenings during the s u mme r at Fairview Community Church, Fairview al Fair Drive, Costa Mes a. New mem· bers may attend. Call Mrs. Joan Barnett. 557-7725. ALPHA CHI OMEGA: The Ga mma Tau Gamm a alumnae chapter will hold a luncheon Wednesday. J uly 19. at Cannell and Chaffin. Newport Beach For information. call Mrs Susan Sch1ffman. 968·2430 NEWPORT CHRIST IAN WOMEN'S CLUB: An annual Mother-Son luncheon begins at 11 :45 a.m Wednesday, July 19, al the Airporter Inn. Open to a ll women. For reservations. call Mrs. Walter Tyler . 673-8877. NATI ONAL WOMEN'S POLITICAL CAUCUS: The ~roup will hold a luncheon for new and prospective m embers from 11 :30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Saturday, July 15. al Versailles on the Lake Recreation Room. 3700 South Plaza Drive. Santa Ana F or reservations. call 549-7153 Clut> Calendar runs each Wednesday m the Da1h1 J>1lot and con tams nf>t1ces of women ·sand service club meetmg.~ and event.~ /or t he following week -Thurs- day through Wednesday Send notices to Club Colen· dar. Dady Pilot. P 0 Roz 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 HP $Ul"l' to mc/udP your name and phone number \' ot ices mu.~t be m our hands two weeks m advance To request a picture. wnte or call the Fea:ures Vt.>partment. 642-4321 Ptctures are hm1ted to Jund raisers u-,xm to the public HuHfamante ANTIQUES Sho'v and Sale duly 13" 14 . l;j. lff Turn hark timt-. UrowlK' 1he e:u·lu1:1h t• 11hop11 of the past : Porit .. Lonclon , Boston. R ome. OiM'o,er th.-worlcl'I' m o81 "''a ntecl antiqueB: furniturf', Ol'CC88oric8, a r t, je"'elry, mo re. Dlsn eylaod Hote l ] 150 W. <.:erriloe 1-10 p.m .• S u n. l -6 ::;:!.OO; ''Ith t hl" ml ~t.75; C 'hlldt'c·n undl•t· 12 f rl't' t'rida~· 11nl,\", ~1·nlc11· ('illzPns' Oay ~•dmillslon $1 THUR DAV, J\JL Y 13 'Ry SV ON E V OMA RR ARIES <Murch 2l·April 19): You learn what !iho uld be done und whe n to do it. Be aware of various ramifications. Don't rush, push. cajole. chide or panic Time is on your s ide A new con- tact. possibly a Leo. wi ll help solve legal. purtnersh1p or marital dilemma. TAURUS tApril 20-May 20 >· Low-key ap· proach is best study Ar ies message. Accent on e mployment. nutritional needs. dealing with restless relative. You'll find ways to overcome minor delays, red tape. Keep medical-dental ;i ppointment. Individua l who taught you in past 1s due to make reappearance. GEMINI <May 21.June 20)' Good IUnar aspect coincides now with romance, creative endeavors. significant changes. self-expression. ways to gain response a nd respect from young person. Sagittarius figures prominently -so does the number 3. Ves, hor izons will expand CANCER (J une 21-J uly 22>: Your natural capabUities are spotlighted. You prove major point, views are vindicated; you'll be more secure 10 fin ancial and e motional areas. Aq u ar ius. Capricorn and Leo figure prominent· ly L•:o <July 23-Aug. 22 >: Plenty or action in· d1cated kC'y is to <Jvo1d scattering efforts . ld£•as arC' plentiful be selective. Close neighbors. relatives could impose their pres· ence. Be cha rming. but guar d precious, pr ivate moments. Take special care in traffic. VIRG-0 !Aug. 23-Sept. 22>: Arrange budget so that you can beautify s urroundings. Family member expresses constructive ideas concern· ing home. living conditions Accent on pay- ments. income potential Yes. you will locate lost article. LIBRA <Sept. 23-0ct 22l See situation as it exists define terms. <1vo1d self-deception Pisces. Virgo persons figure prominently. Ac· cent on personal appearances. taking initiative. making new contac ts Aura of glamor s ur rounds you. Make the most of 1t 1 SCORPIO !Oct. 23-Nov 21 >: You have ~UP· port behind the scenes You need not be in- timidated by those who whis per innuendoes. Bring pnorilles into focus. tum toward goal. Soon you will be leading, not following key is direct- ness . confi dence, an end to fear s. doubts. nightmares. SAGITfARIUS I Nov 22 Df'c. 21 l: Accent on romance. wis hes, frit'n<lsh1 p. creative en· deavors. profit from career or business efforts. Pisces. Virgo figure prominently This can be l'Xciling. productive Sctr-estccm can ~oar if :.·o u so permit CAPRICORN I Dec 22-Jan 191: New ap· proach to authorities. professional superiors brings most productive res ults. Stnve to imprint style, to gain more independence. Civic duties. pu blic offict', s pecial duties <1nd homors grab spotlight. AQUARIUS 1J an 20 Feb ISJ : Intuitive in· tellect is honed to r<1zor sharpness. You perceive what can occur. you gain glimpse of future Read. write. travel. break down age. languag£•. social barriers. Open wade the lines of com· munication. PISCES I feb 19 March <!0 1 Good fortune awaits if you <1re adaptable. d1!->play versatility. dig deep and you strike pay dirt. Accent on ownership, lease. re ntal, s ales. purcha se. fi na nces affecting partner, mate. If Jnly 13 Is your birthday, you were on your own early s eparated physica lly or psychologically from one or both parents . You arc emotional but t(Jugh, sens itive but strong. August will be your most significant month of 1978. Aquarius. Leo. Taurus persons play impor- tant roles in your life. JULY SALE fRANCI6-0RR W 1•dd111y and engage· mcnt an11ouncements run on ~unday m the Daily 1'1/11t l"orms are avmlable ot all Drul11 Pilot of/1ces or hq calling the Features Deportment. 642-4321 Tn avoid d1sappo1111 me111. prospectwe bnde~ nre rt'mmded to have their weddmg stnnPs. with r1 hlack-and·whllP glossy o/ the bndP or of the couple. to the Featurp~ Depart· ment one week before the weddmg fine stationery corona del mar 2nd and Final M arkdo'Wn Help us make room for fall and add to your summer wardrobe at fantastic savm,s. [LLEN CARTJER LADIES HAB£RDASHE:R Storehoun1 h\onda.)t thtouah S&b.trda)t-1 o a. m. to tJ :ao p . m. wm be open SW\ar thrpuah iub' from 11 noon to tJ p.m . 131 Fes~iQ" lsl4nd Mall. Newport lkoch. CA 92660 (714) 769-1 no You say you want to he lp people. Well. I need plent y right now. My wi fe and I went to an open-air theater las t week and s at ri g h t be hind a couple of gabby women. We asked them very nicely -twice 1f they would keep their traps shut so we could hear the lines. They said they paid to get in, JUSt like we did. a nd were th ('r(' t o ('njOY thcmsdves The noisiest one yelled. "If you don't .. We've always told Johnny we 'd rather he be short and smart than big a nd dumb (lo ng pause>. like some peo· p ie ." It works ! - OKLAHOMA READER DE AR OKLA.: Your come back s ays it all. Thanks for sharing. DEAR ANN: When the m an wrote to pre- sent his case for the bat· te r e d hus band . yo ur r esponse, "Sor ry, I'm working the other s ide of the street," wa!> un n ecessarily s nipp y Wh y? -H OUSTON HAL DEAR HAL: ~y plea was In support of bat· tered women a nd the need to provide ror hous· ing this abused segm ent of society. \\'bile the re a r e unque s tionably many battered husbands around. the number of battered wi ves b vastly gre ater and the ir in- Jo rid widespread. DEAR ANN: I feel our c hildren (ages six ancf eight ) :should be paid ror t h e c hores they do around the house. My hu s b and s a ys they should NOT be paid that as members of t he family they owe it to us to contribute t h eir services. The kids get an allowance of $2 a week. What do you say, Ann? BILOXI DEAR BILL: H 's a wash. I favor assigne4' chores, which should bto performed in exchange for the allowance. and r ecommend e xtra pay for extra work. Children should be offered a n In· centlve to do more - a nd money is a good- one. hke 11. move." ------------------------------- After 25 minutes uf * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * .. listc•nin g t o thos e magpies my wife lost h e r t empe r a nd slam med the noisiest one over the head with he r umbr e l l a . T h e woman let out a terrible scream w hic h could have been heard in the next coun t y . T h e manager rushed over , too k our names. re· funded our money and asked us to leave Yesterday my wife re· ce1vcd an order to ap· pear in cou rt The cha r ge 1s ass ault and battery The loudmouth \\as neither assaulte d nor ball£•rcd Shl· had on a w 1 g tha t a l)ulle t ,,.__ cou ldn't have pierced. """"" Must my wlf(' go t o lt court and defend herself against lh e~f' phony lt charges'' WHERE'S JUSTICE? lt * * * * HUNDREDS OF * LA-Z-BOYS® IN STOCK * * Immediate FREE DELIVERY .--------------------* COSTA MESA/ NEWPORT 369 E. 17th Strut IWH._.~ .... I MISSION VIEJO * loff A•trf P\iy I 28892 * Marquerite Pky. 495-5902' * D EAR W.J .: Sinc e you a lready know I'm lt not a lawyer , I don't have to tell you that. I * will tell you, howe ver , ""'-- that you'd be tter hire 4lf" on<> because your wife rec<>ived a s ummons a nd this m ea n s n o __ ,,_.., 10·• ......_ -·"""k l IO·• Fri. 10.7 ~ ... 10·' ""'--""f'" and Fabrics k L 10-1 ~ 642-8657 foolin'. The ''loudmouth" m ay not hne been battered but a blow on the head is cons ldert!d assault - a nd th e r e's a l a w against It. DEAR ANN Our neighbor's d aughte r 1s getting married and m;, d a u g h t e r 1 ~ a brides maid along with two other neighbor girls Last night the bride's mother held a shower in the community center bui ldin g . After the s hower she presented the three bridesm aids with a bill for S52. They wer e to share the cost equally. Since there was cake left over, t h e g irls divided it to take home. T h e br id e's moth e r s tormed out of the build· ing. c a ll i n g them "hogs." P lease set me straight. Were the gi rls wrong to lake lhl' cake'' Also. was 1t thc·ir plac(' to pay for the shower ? Wh at are th(' duties of bridcs m;Hds these days" '-------~----.... ------------~ ********************* 11LOVE BOAT11 VOYAGE INTO THE PAGES OF HISTORY '-. - Take a "Love Boat" cruise to the Mediterranean Sea. Departing Nov. 8. 1978 aboard the Golden Odyssey. Personally escorted &. hosted by Jeraldine Saunders. author & c reator of TV's "Love Boats" series. From $1598 per person plus port tax including round trip air to Athens & a two week cruise. CRUISE PARTY. July 14, 1978 7:00 p.m te> meet' Jeraldine & introduce he• newest book "A Complete G uide to a Successful Cruise." Robinsons Lido Buffet Fashion Show. Refreshments. By reservation only. ". - ASK MR. FOSTER PHONE 644-1661 TRAVEL SERVICE ROllMSOH'S NEWPORT CENTER .., ~ • ... , NEED UPDATING DEAR UP : I cannot imag ine s uch gall as handing the bridesmaids a bill for a shower , un· Jess it was agreed in ad· vance that they would ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ pay for it. As for ta king .:.--------=========::::=:------------, the cake home -if the r girls accepted the bill they a uto m atica lly be came "hostesses,'' which entitled them to It. DEAR ANN : I have an answer f o r in · sensitive p('ople who com pa r e the s ize of c h i ldren. Our son is sm all for his age. I'm tired or biting my tongue when acquaintances <I'd h ar dl y call the m friends) make remar ks such as "Is he t he s hortes t child in his class?" Or ··1 can't believe he's seven. Look at how much taJle r my son is ." I inve nted an answer oul or desperation 12 years ago a nd It has never failed to stop the questioner cold. J ust smile lllld say sweetly: Call 142-5171. Put • few word• to work for ou. <iordon Nelson of London will be at South Coost Plaza in C.OSta f'kso at the Regis Hair Stylis1s on Sunday and Monday. July 16 and 17 and Crowning Gby on Tuesday and Wednesday July 18 and 19 LoCol persons wishing to toke port os a Hair Model in this advanced training seminar covering the latest style cuts, please coll The Regis Hcirstylists at 540-8888 or Crowning Glory at 546-7186 . . A •• D .. . " .J. Coca Cola 2ums •• age . The great bl& bottle for more fun Schlitz Beer u• •211 Carton of twelve 12 ounce cane Paul Masson cm1 s221 Burgundy, Chablis or Roee ... Quart FRESH 79c_ TROUT Mountain variety ... net wt. 6 oz ea. Ocean Perch ••• s25~ Fillets! ... fre8h from the Pacific' Fish Fillets ••..• s 119 Van de Kamp's ... frozen .•. 12 oz pkg. Super-Burgers will make it a Super-Summer! B11rg1rP6'iBB = ............. : .. ~ltl. Lear enouah to offer hearty 8atisfactioo . . . flavorful, for full value! Lean grind-doee not exceed 22~ fat content Our own mix, with frellb egp Gro111d Veal • • • ooc Lean! Our genuine milk-fed veal Burger Buns •lllT• ........... Jlc Complete your Super-Summer plan.a with a package of 8 Springfield buna Burger Sauce .:. "" ............ 59c • Hellman's brinp it to you to make the day co nplete! 12 <>% Sliced American CllESE ••• s 1 09 Real cheese, with Wisconsin goodnee·! Springfield 12 oz Chopped Steaks .... s 1 •? Our leaneet ground beer -does not uceed 16% fat! 3 per pound Ground Beef=: ~1 ·~ Does not esceed 30% fat content Ground Beef lfmT .s14~ Doee not exceed 16% fat content Ham Loaf .... s1•t Ham, pork. freeh eggs, bread crumb& MUT $149 BALLS~ • Our own blend, with fretlh egge Chili Beef •••••• s 1°~ Coarse ground for hearty chili B111f l118' :o:Jr.E.. ................ ~2.ll I Heini ... Chooee Hamburger, Mot bog, Sweet Pickle or lndia-10 oz POTATO Cl•S 59c Regtl)ar, Barbecue or Ripple Eight ounoee of Soringfield value El Rancho •.. the Better Way to start the Super-Summer! Dressing 11111. ~ • age Delme French, 1000 laland-16 oz Liquid Woolite • 1129 Cold water aoep ... gentle! 16 oz Grahams =:11 •.• 59c Favored treet. from Firee1d~l l oz ~=: 59c For aure reeulta! Half-gallon Tomatoes • • • • • • 39c Hunt'a-whole peeled! 14 1!: oz can Sea Bass •••••• s21~ Fillet.a -to offer more good eating RA:.>unCl cut of u.S.O.A. Cho\ce beef ... boneless and rolled for a great roast for the rotisserie Tuna ......... &sc . Stuffed Clams4 i s1 Matlaw's ... Net wt. 2 ouncee each Fresh-Water $4" SHRIMP Large size ... in the ehelJ The best of Spirits! R£DUCID $1.70! G1G s7•• Compare the value! 1.76 liters Bacarcl Rum •• '1099 Silver or Amber-1.76 liter-.ave 1.70 Amsetto •••••• •s•• Hiram Wal.ker'&--il&ve 1.00! fifth Scotch ••••••••• s54• 7 Bone Roast.~1 2~ Chuck cut U.S.O.A. Choice beef Chuck Steak ••• 99\ Center cut U.S.D.A. Choice beef 0 Bone Roast •• s1•~ Chuck cut U.S.D.A. Choice beef Bumble Bee! Make a ealadl 6 1/2 oz Margarine • • • • • • 79c Muola ... Crom com oil! 1 lb SAUSAGE BRATWURST SAUSAGE ITAl.1111 STYLE $ 159 a ...-rs s 1 s9 U F.... 99c ::: . =~ .. . =:a. .... .:. • . l1w York Strip • ......... ~I.IL Wheaties • • • • • • • 95c For you ud Bruce Jenner! 18 01 Loin cut of U.S.D.A. Choice beef .. .naturally aged, trimmed for value! <-.W Ya. STUI ••• Ut .. , Gorton's Clams 79c snm.o iOlls& 59~ And. we uee frMh egp! Net wt 8 <>% Sliced Bacon ••• s14~ El Rancho'• thicker .. ranch atyle" Beef Roast :C.°!. !21~ Chuck cut Choice ahoulder clod ::•59~ Frcnen, defrosted (S l) '-. JAS) Cbooee Chopped or Minced-6 •n oz Laura Scudde'a 12 ounce jar Lauder's-reduced 1.601 Quart Lord Calvert ••• s54• Super Fresh Produce 'PB1ch11 =TONE Cocktail•• "' ••• •1 1• = Save 1.60 on Caruulianl Quart Ctue ducocmta do not apply co reduced price i.lems Heublein'e-all varietiee! 8 oz Brown 229c Onions •1 Delicatessen Cheddar:: .......... s 1 s~ EJ Rancho's own .•. great for ehredd.ini, for cooking, for pleasure! Mozzarella 1111 •• s111 Precious (12 ... J.8) c• ... J.•) Bits o' Bacon ••. 99c Wilaon'e-100% real buoot 8 oz IOIR''69C CHEESE Garlic, Pepper or Plain--4 oz Polish Ham s•• . •&•• Polka-100% lean! No wute or fat Corn Tortillas • • 25c. J>inata-lor a laCO tl'Mtt t.• OI suca -69C IWd Label S.U., Jack, Muem 01 PAPAYAS ..... .......... ......... 69~ Prices in effect Tlw.r. July 13 throU/lh Wed. July 19 Open daily 9 to 9 Sunda,y 10 to 7 No taln to deolaa Ocean Spray, for health! 48 oz Wheat Chex. • • • &9c Ralat.on'• fine cereell 15 oz ~~d. 39c. G~ fresh ••. tender •.. all peen Barbecue 59c Sauce ' Kraft-Plain, Hickory, Hot-16oz • I .. ~ " ' Frozen Food I I . Chicken Pie , .. DE ..... Jsc 1 Flaky C1U8t, taaty filling-and ao easy to eervel 7~ oz pec.kage • • I • "' Petite Peas • • • • 45c Enchiladas ••••• s 111 -~ C & W •.. tiny and sweet! 10 oz Van de Kamp'• Beef or Cheeee-19 oz Wheat Bread • • • &sc Chilly Pops • • • • 79° . : Briclceford-you bab it! two 1 lb Great American treats-pkg of 12 tm :.=" 39c:. ::U:.·$129 Treee.teet. •. from Florida! 6 oa Jobnato"\'a Double Croat or Dutcb ARCADIA . PASADENA SOUTH PA S ADENA HUNTINL TON BEACH NEWPORT BEACti EASTBLUFF IRVINE · · LAGUNA HILLS ~tin, •• ,·'"\! ~·1.nf1 fl1JIU"' t;'Q w ( nl1.,rt'10 n1.d ' "'"''"' "''"' 141.rd1r-r;'f\F" W:trnr1 ., I ~·'J·· .... c, I • •• ~. w, "'' 111.,.1 ;'.\',I A-.,ff, .,,, l'• (I, ~· ''") .H lt1 M 11 ,, .. 1,,,,., .)1r-..a1 M P11lfol\ , ... , ... ""' ,,. f'M,1•1•, 1.t·•FP' f u1 0' .. l"Q~Q'C:wt"'• ('".'"•"'.l".ft 1111••' >tAd•n,t-.C.tl {l11fr11 1·,·n.r.•,ui,1 fA,lrdiP\1'1tp 11lffr •'pll\nr-.(•111f•1 .... uulhlnP .. '"'""·'~µl&.J,1 •-.a ................ ssc uam PL11m ............. no • .-•.••...•....••• 7IC mt9 -············ "° c~ Wide or Estre Wade-18 OS OJ)9l1I at.oppect draina ..ally I 32 0& Twice .. Frwi-AJpina M Rott! .96 01 Th• ont that apnedl llO euilyl 1 lb • o..am ............. 37c STAY FE 11111 PllS ....... lie •· ISPOSaE lllPllS ........ $1.51 UI PEPPEi--••••••••••••••• lie Pet .•• 1 PMt way 10 9CIOGOllli•I 13 o. ~ a new INedoml pecbp ot 12 Kimbl ... for Toddler. .•• pecU,t ot 12 SfhOlln(t flnt st1bc5 In 4 OWiet WI • .. .... ,. • .# ............ #-· .... # ~ ,, •• . ,. , -. ......... , :· .. •• .. .. ,. . -· . . . ~n89day . July 12. 1978 DAILY PILOT --~rt-tEODOR6 ROBl~ts--,,.~ •loll-A~ • Kar-A-V• • Slema * lt•non • Lei .... TilM * M•sa S,.Cidti•s D/o OverCostb' · !J '73 IMTBtNATIONAL SCOUJ4•4 '72 FORD f'tNTO 2 DOOi <4 cyl.. <4 speed trans .. radio & heat er E xcellen t lranspcrtat1on at lh1s low price' Lie IJ876FBR Slk. #197SA 6 cyl., 3 speed trans... 4 Wheel drive. locking hubs. removable top. radio. heat9f & off-road tires. Lie. f683JEV Stk. #1990CT s12ao '76 MGI lOADSTO <4 cyl . 4 speed trans .. AM/FM stereo wllh cassette. tonneau cover & radial tires lie 11229ROH Slk. #18318 '76 GMC 4x4 I/• TOH f'tCKUP VS. 4 speed trans . 4 wheel dnve. pwr steering. auxiliary fuel tank. radio. heater & off-road tires Ser w 519696 Stk. llP3501T '76 FORD LTD 1 D00tt LAMD.lU VS automatic trans . oower steer mg POWer brakes. Power windows. pcwer door tocks AM/FM stereo & vinyl roof Lie lf315P\JVStk 111641 A '75 FORD Gll.U(AD.l2DOOR A" cond1t1o n1ng. AMI FM stereo radio GOOd Sharp Car Lie •996MYI Many Others 1n Stock '71 ME':ICURY C.lffi C:f'l. 4 speed. radio. heater rallye wheels. radial tires Lie #5 12COO Stk. ll 10 16A '1759 '77 FORD CH.lHAD.A 4 DOOR VB . au!omal1c trans . owr steering pwr brakes radio heater wtsl w tires & wheel ..covers Loe If 107SWS Stk .t537A ROllMS-READY UUDCAH t•...,. Uud C• Wt So4I M¥•1 H,.,. , ..... ftlHt 1.,.111 r .. " ,_ • f'HFOtlMI HCl • SAFITY A..0 • HUAlll.ITY loOwOwo-... h co..4ifl-"9 0.....-1 'II BRAKES ..,...,.. •. ro.~lr•'­"1•-• s,~._, ./ ELECTRICAL H_.. ..... ,..h.I..,...., -Powtt Sr•'- ./ FRONT EMO Wk ... .-.s...c ... -St.M .. Sr••- " POWER TRAIN ,, ............ .... • ~,._c Sup. .....,.o;...-. ./ LUIRICA TIOM L.M.Ot1C ..... -..... Oii Rlfw 2112 ACRES OF TOP CARS IACkEO IY OVY S6 YEAltSOf SllVICE TO ORAHGE COUtolTY An P'te•• Alt! Pwv~ fa;. IL~ ,.., c ... , "'~ &..-to"''°' s- Df o Over Invoice · '52 DODGE rtel(Uf' 6 cyl .. flathead. 3 speed trans. radio & heat0f A classic truck 1n good cond1 t1on1 L ie #558145 Stk. J2066BT LOW SSS '71 VOLKSWAGEN 9 f'ASSfMG.H IUS 4 cy1 4 soeeo trans tuggage carrier radio & heater Lov.i. m11es ei<cellent cond1t1on Lie. 11150EAOS1k •193781 '74 CADILLAC coun Df VIU.E J actotv 1n-.O<P [llU\ to 'ot Ot'd•et '""'""-..d oot~n) poo1 tq 'Jlt? 1t drtv dHtvrrn+nu •Otdl tO~t ,,,, .,,, otr .. rtno~ •tt th1~ dd '71 FORD LTD4DOOa va. automatic. pwr. steering. pwr. brakes., air cond.. vinyl root. radio & heater Lie. J589IVIPO Stk. I 1970A '68TOYOT4 CORONA DRUXE 4 OR. 4 cy1 . auto rran~ AMIFM , ao •O 1 inted q1asc; whee• C.OVE'r~ Loe :xOV384 Slk 111 /818 '77 GMC WJ..dow Vmt RAU.YI STX VS. automatic. pwr seat. pwr windows. pwr door tocks. AM1FM stereo vinyl root leather seats, factory air cond & till wtleel tmmacutate! Lie. #SS6L Fl Stk #2462AI VS. auto . pwr Slr & brks. factory air. tilt wheel. <iru1se control. custom 1nl . rallye wheels. long .i!.'!."' ... ...;i• whtbase. 3rd seat. 16.000 miles s 7 '7 6 PLYMOUTH Y AUAMT 4 DOO• 6 cv• auto Iran-.. d•• cond111oning Power <;leering radio hearer 111nyl roor •o mtles ltC •518PAI S •k 11 1584A Lie. # 772UCC Stk 11246 1 AT DATSUN Z CARS 1·280Z & 1·260Z. All with tow m1!es & ready 10 go• Lie 4700KZZ rric.d.,_ s4779 Salea: Mon· Fri 8 to 9, Sat 8 to 8, Sun 10 to 6 Service & Parta: Mon 7 to 9, 1\.aea -Frl 7 to 6 Parts Dept: Sat 8 to 1 pm 10 Acres of the most modern FORD fecH"le• on the WHt Coast. lS40~8211 2000 HAR!32,B_£9.§TA MESA 841•0010 ' ... ,.II ., OAll " OtLOT Wltdnnoax July 12 1978 The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast DA.ILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad (642-5678) One Call Service Fast Credit Approval . ~ \~ 1.:.1 ~~:.~~.~ ........ ~.~~ ....... ' ~::.~~ ....... 1~:.~~~ ........ ~::.~~~ ....... j~!!!!.~~~ ....•... ~:!!.~~ ....... I~::!~~ ...... . G ... ral I 002 Gftltt"af I 002 GaMroJ I 002 GttMt'al I 002' GNHOI t 002 GIMral I 002Ga•r.e I 002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• E..QUAL HOUSING OPPOAlUN'TY r.Msher's Notice: AlJ real estate advertised ID this newspaper •~ sub J~ to the f edera l F'u1r Hous ing Act of 19614 wtuch makes 11 illegal lo ad vertise "any p r e fcrenc<>. hm1tat1on. or du,en mination based on OCEA.HROMT 3 Bdrm . + den home on :»x8S ft lot; frpl.. bw It· ins. patio. beamed ce1I· ings. S375.000 673-3663 642-22.53 Eves associated BRO l'fRS llEl\1 T(JRS J D.''. W Boitint) r 1 ' ~t.b i LEASE OPTION This lovely home 1n Lhe Bhlffs is completely UP· gr aded. Custom wood. tile decor, 3 bdrm, 3 bath condo in fantastic loca- Uon. Close to park. pools & tennis club. Ready for occupancy 759· 1501 ~ Walker C l r.e Real FBt.ale race. color. rchg1on. Sl'X. ---------1 or national ongin. or a n Sell your own hom e Tnple>C. 2 Br ea<'h. 2183 tntent1on to ma kl' any FJXED • not 'lo fee. AS· Pomona. CM S12S.OOO such prcforcnce. hm1ta· slat in ads, fin. etc. Real· Marshall Rlty, 675-4600. tioo. ord1scnmmat1on .. ty Free Homes. 530-2224 --------111 nus newspap(!r will not knowingly accept any advertis ing for r eal ~'tale which is in viola- tion of lhl! law R.E. AOVlSORV SERV RT FOlt A ICING OMLY $90,900 Three bdrm plus study in this charmini: brand new lJstmg. Decorated in lvl.y eartb\ones w /M C>Ctcan ~--.t.: tUe Stroll in your own lllOltS: Au,,llC'fTISfl'S lush landscaped yrd thadd check tMir ads 7~·1.501 ==di=;;; (~1Wfili!41$i§i DAILY PILOT atsUftlH Real Elltate v.i•ty for the first In-.:,;;;;;,;;;,;;;;;;;,;;;;;-_, correct IMeriioft ...,. .... FAMILY HOME ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Here's the cha nce for your ~rowin1t family to live' in Newport Beach & there's plenty, or room. too! 5 Bdrrns +-den. rnllTored bar. all on a beautif ul I rec lin ed greenbelt . /\ ll!r ri fie value at S184.200 673-4400 HARBOR USTSIDECM 3 Bdrm. 2 bath + Fam .. + qwet street an pnme area. xtra clean. pro· fess1ona lly landscaped SPECIAL FINANCING 1\VAILABLE F HA/VA OR O W NER WI LL llELP FINANCE. Celli 546-5880 --~~HERITAGE . • REALTORS 2 STORY~ HDRM + PO()l..FAM RM &IEACH Walk to the poundln1t surf from this executive 2 story home. Italian en· try. huge rooms . vaulted ceilings To see is to buy. Call 963-7881. ()Atv JU '.>• lt')JUf• 1(.\tt.f "'''' l9·1*1M MOUNTAIN RETREAT · .:a .. =-_. FOREST FALLS San it.r .a. VERDE Be rnard ino Nationa l M~.-: Park Five.' bedroom. S63,IOO study. hobby room. ram1 · A Div"ion °1 2 BR studio type condo Lv room. Two fireplaccs . ,._'.''-'.r.ho•r•l•m··~ •. t•m•l'•n•t t.·0_1 w/bltns . c rpts. d r ps. & abo\ e t he s m oi.: ,.. clean & sharp! Priced ;ii most '~ ar rc 1ncludC'~ low for fast s ale. home plus two lots Call H ... elOR VIEW HILLS JACOBS REAL TY for <Jt•ta1 I~ ""' COLE OF NEWPORT SPEC TA CU L AR · 675-6670 REALTORS forever Catalina. ocean ------ vie ws 11ug(' m a i n · a~•cH 1 .... COME 67S-SS 11 tenancc rn'1• lot This 3 llOA " Bd r 1 WITH VIEW EXECUTIVEESSTA.TE ho:: i/ ana,':°:i1~a:u~~ One 3 bd. 2 ba & l, 2 ba. l OHLYSl 6 ,000 Jt·~cl t h~hly upRraded. ba ·bothwitbstonefrplc. U~l()U~ IN COSTA MESA VA. WITH POOL -4 bdrm pool home in Westside Costa Mesa. new carpeting. 6300 sq. rt. lot. $84,000 with VA terms . PRIME MESA. YEIDE -Location and house. 4 bdrms. 2 frplces. den and great rear yard lds cping. $128.000. SLEIPll -3 bdrm. 3 bath, near beach in Costa Mesa. New, formal dining, sunken liv. rm .• study and a lge lot. Just $99,500. U~l()UI: lif)MI:§ REALTORS' l Hf N/C£Sr P£Ol'lE SH LING THE Nf ATCST HOMf <, CORONA DEL MAR. 675.(j()()() MESA VERDE. 546-5990 • CALL US GeMrGI •002 ........ , •..•................................. . I \\ I.:--. LI Y '.; TAYLOR CO. 1<1-:A L T OHS ·,1 111 ·1· 1 ! l·lfi CAMI<> HIGM..AHDS-OCl.AM VIEW Nice quiet location away from traffic no ise . A great family home for children. 4 bedrms. family rm, formal dining & small bon us rm. Lge encl. court yd. 3 private beaches. $169.500. WESUY M. TAYLOR CO., lEALTotlS 2111 S.JH .. lft ... lood HEWPOU CEMTEI. H.I. 644-49 I 0 lntrodocmg this 5 bdrm air cond . even a mini wood panelling th.ruout. beauty Uuycrs choice of puttini;: J(recn ! For t he Low maintenance duplex premium crptin~. L~e dJscemmg buyer sttkl.l\R w/unlimited investment Getter• 1002 GaMr.. I 002 fmly rm w /frplr. frml privacy. eleJ(ancc and pot.enllal Always rented d in 3 b aths. :i c a r ~eren 1t y Offered at l~l loc~t1on just stepS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• garage Heavy ~hak l' $!75.000. to bench. Complete with ---•1•V-o..t---•I .. , 00/o DOWN•• Near schools. p~rk & sundecks & ocean view. I 1,..E I BLOCK TO I •y ~ pool. 759.1501 646-77ll. SMASHI~ LASALLE ~ • ,,~ll l<t\1 1 ~ ?~11 [ Cow H•1 Co•OIU dr 111· Madel on cul de sac in Xtra large patio. 3 bdrm • Uruversity Park. Adaja· 3 baths. cathedral Cl'il· cent to wide ,::reenbelt. ings & community pool Real E.state Country kitchen. large give this ~ntrally l<><:at· -----1 farruly room. enormous ed townhouse family ap· MESA VERDE SftACIOUS TWO FOR ONE master suite and loads of peal. Many upgrade·~ G.RELllo.llROOK ..,,_, this Balbo s•~rage •'--uout. Close lo a nd owne r will h <'IP 8('Sl valUl' 1n th•~· ~. .., unique a .., u u r· 0 1 •O.< "'00 beautiful arl'a. 3 lafl!l' Near So Coast Plat.a lsland investment Two pool. jacuu 1. tennis a nd anance. n Y ..,..,., · ~COATS & WALLACE ':::J:P REAL ESTATE, INC. A l OCAllY OWNED COMPANY ~E RVINC I HE SOUrH CUASI AREA SINCf 196i TOP SALESPEOPLE FOR JUNE JIM IOW91 .............. Serving Costa M esii·lrv1ne Huntrngto n Bt>aC::h ·Newpo rt Be.1«11 ---- t Gt•r• 1002 GtMrol 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~COATS & WALLACE '::rfl REAL ESTATE , INC. .", lOCAllY OWNED COMPANY SERVING THE SOUTH COAST AREA SINCE 1963 OWMa ""YEIY" AHXIOUS -Escrow on the ir new home closing -really need to sell their 4 bdrm 2 bath home an Ne sa de l Ma r for $85.950. Great loc ation. close to parks. schools & s hopping. It's vacant a nd r eady. Submit your offer. c• 546-4141 HAllOll UGHTS - Enjoy the lights of Ne wport from your balcony or from your yacht. 42' sli p included in lease price of $795. Cal 640.6161 Servtng Costa Mesa-Irvine Huntington Beach-Newport Beach bdrm,,. 2 baths. O\Cr· l mm:icula te . <11ry. 2 separate houses on one librar y . Offe red <1 l 759·l50l ::.il.A'd ramity room. fpl<: ~tory .. 4 bdrm .. fmly r m lot. Loaded w/charm & $l34,900. r=:--."91.,. .... ,.• I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~~~ ull this near s chools. home m move in condi impossible to duplicate. park & shoppin~ Now uon. So~nng c¥thedral $295,000. , ... c ant A!ikin ~ onlv ce11ingi. in h v rm & hul'e AU NEW S79 900. Call54().Jl5l · mstr swte. Central a ir & New 1 y r e m o d e I e d · many other upgrades ~HERITAGE REALTORS 1-·or a deughlful treat call duplex. quality thru-out for appt. Only $123.500 Best buy on 8.1 ~.000 ~949t REDUCED llUffS PA.llA.DISl I {~awournamtJJ Fantas~I~~!~ on the R 1 Es lsland. Use your connec· OHLY $167,500 ea tale tions on this fixer upper Lw.h gardens greet you ________ .. dup le x. Reduced lo · tn the charm in~ courtyrd H E W 0 H T H $225,000. entry. This single story 3 M .... RkET MESA VERDE bdrm .. Ululb.. cond is "' totally upgraded. Every Coctlpletely redecorated Super fa mily home.5 BR. roumlookslo <1 garden or & r em ode le d 4 B R. den. formal dining room greenbelt. N B at best. home. Kitchen like new. & living room. Owners 75!Hf>Ol trash compactor. water have a ne w home so try sortener & intercom are Sl.29.500. some ol its features. To '" thl• lovoly homo oull 0 ~p,,.. HERITAGE MIWLISTIMG! 546-5880 -=· aLlitj' .-. BAY AVE .. charming 3 ..,_ ..... _,~ -~ bdrm .. 2 bath home. dbl. liliiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil . • REALTORS hn ck frpl.. jacuzzi. patio --------Balboa Island Realty & 2 car gara~e! $195,000! """'"",.."'"'('"'"'"' ..._lay Prop. HAUOR YIEW 673•1700 R-~ Somerset-New Listing ~· Lovely 5 Bdrm home VA 0 DOWN .. 67S.7060 *' with many rtras EnJO.Y New c arpets & paint ~~~~~~~~~~;;;;~;~ Newport Beach to its make th1s 3 bedrm honw • fullest Call for det&JI::. ~parkle. Huge back yard ~ OPEN HOUSE REALTY ;;!'' PETE R OWH YOUR OWH AVOCADO GIOYI 3 Bedrm. ram rm. forced air. Hardwood floors. i--------· too! Jus t lis ted. Call ~7171 CW'IN I ( q •II\ lt>N 'C'M! N«I •• THE -REAL l ESTATEHS i -_) ~ I I ' ~. Ill Ii \ \ I I 1 '1 ' -) .... , : or" • ~,. ~,. Real ElltateSaJes EARN 80% of your neJCt commission. Interviews are conflden· Llal. call Jackie Irvine Meadows R.E ~ '1751 752-0283 IR Tlw Harbor' Rustic 2 s ty. galle ry staircase. 25' family rm. pvt loft. massive fplc. fonn din, chef kitchen. pool ! R ed C arpet. Roberts RE536-9311 MOVtHGm Need housing lnlo." Call toll free 1..8()0.525-8920 Ext.GU74or GU40 No obligation. A service ol Affiliated l ndcpendcnl Brokers. IRVIHE 4 BDRM $89,900 Spacious 4 br. 3 ba patio home located In one of o ur mo~t d cs1ra b lc areas. Freshly painted & newly carpeted thruout plus many xtras. You can't afford to mass this one. J ust listed. 646-1711. *VETS* 0 OOWN-0 CLOS! NG Homes 1.n all areas ol ORANGE COUNTY YETAGT. Call 541-0IOO 1002 Ge•r• 1002 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• llEGANCE IN MESA VERDE "Below Market P rice" Spacious. newly decorat- ed. well planned. 3 Bdrm home w /large klt<'hen-f am 11 y ·d In in )t .i r l'a +gracious larAe hving IEER room. orr impreSSIV(.' t.'n HELP ! ILUFFS PttOIA TE Court says sell ! Priced well under market! Ex· ecut1vl' townhome liv Ing ! Walls or Mias~! BrcathtaJung view! Onel' In a hfe time opportun1· ty . Fo r d etails <'all. 645-0303. POCXmOOK7 tcy. Lar~i: covered usa· You'll enjoy the tasll' of ble patio. lar~e ba<.'k t he hig hly up gr adi:d yard & detached garage. champagne cpts & l'slm A must to see at $99 900. drps .st a modest pn c1:. 400ll.,.~ DYi ••• Fr o n t u n l l r ael•S C.M. r -·o. ""'aa'm Ope n reellnl(. J l)te +... • -r=m... neighborhood strN•l. l~~·1~1!-,~~ .... ~-~~I bdrms. spncious w. a bun· • 1 dance of slora~c. Ask mi: $83,950. Lowe~t pm •t:d R r ook v it'w con do :WS.9491. A.DULTCOMDO $56.900 for the discri minutlng couple. L1trge ma,ter suite. formal dlnin i: .., guest bedrm. C.ourmel lutchen. c>Ctra larJtc liv. rm .. t•nc losed pat io . Secluded & qwet. Pool & recreation hall. Call for details 963·7881 ()P(N 111 <1"1\ IUf\ •Obi NII NEWPORT HEIGHTS FO~ESTE OLSON ' ' EXCLUSIVE •·c-.-c...- French doors lcadm~ m· 2 STORY lo a garden like settln1o1 411 + DEH enhance this charmm(( home. CompMe ly n • + HUGE FA.M modeled & highly up· Located near bl•J ch graded thruout. Grt.'al 10 S73,000 assurru. ble loan vest ment potl'nl111I 1n No new loan l'OSL'i Best this quiet. h11(hlJ dl'!i lra· r111an('lnjot d\'Dllabll' Act ble Newport Beach urcu Now' Call 963·6767 64{).77J f. (»'~ f11 ·1· ol '•ll• 'UN fJIC I · !Q<l!,l~!.~14f (9111111 100 GtMrill 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $91,500 S@ ~4\)µ-/], t.~S • Real »>tale That lttfrlguing Word Gome '1fifh a Chudle Gfltffal 645·9161 1,•1aun ~II. macnab / tr vine ?-realty . . .. NEW WAT E R F RONT home with boat !\lip. Coral Cay Below mkt. Skr.556-4380 DICOUTOlt SHOWPLACE CLASSIC llAUTY t'ant.altlc tae 9dd on rm Jy rtn W/J4' used bri<'k fri>lc. Lge bdrms. each w/Wallc·ln clout Hua(• yrd ·rm for pool. 4 bdl'"m. f rml din rm. ltllchen tlOOk. wet bar. Motivated lldltta say aubrnlt your clfer. Please .Phone to· day to see. S45-9dl ~ Walkt:r 1; I t!t? Real bl.at•. f41oM '°'CAY I. '°'1Alf -----O t_,_ 1ene11 ol 1!>41 '°"' ttrombl.d ""O'cil &< law •o 1.,.,.. '°"' '"''Pt. ...,.c;, I HOGHUT ' I r I I' I I 002 Gewer-• I 002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• SPACIOUS MASTll SUfTI To satlsry the particular -plus 2 b e drooms and fa m lly r oo m . Community pools, Jacuul an d tennis. Uve it up in Un1versity Park ror $102,900. 14 COUMa&.... • co. 644·9080 111\ IAN.IOAGUeMHILLIRD IN •Wl90M ClffT'lfl CAMIC SHOllS VtlW Fantastic single story res. w 1ocean & Catalina view! 4 BRs. 3Y'l baths. formal dining rm. family rm -all pror. decorated in "earth" tones. P ool is s e c l uded ln prh•a t e courtyard & only s teps to 3 private b each es. S345 .000 <s u b j . t o cancellation or existing escrow> Appl. onl y . Do n na Oods b a ll 6«·6200. <H-118, M2·12l5 6444200 '°I Dovtr Ori ~ Htrbor View C1t1ter lrvlM •l C41mtN\ V•ltey C:.tlltr 752·1414 , . . ' .... ...... -- MEWPORT IEACH OCEAM VIEW IALIOA ISLAND FRENCH REGENCY LAGUMA IEACH OCEANVIEW COLONIAL EMERALD IAY J•lf listed this MfMrb ....._ bMroom, fOftlity roGM. diflill9 rOOM hOllllt wlita opatt beOM c~ and CotGlhta sunMts. Thfs Is the ~ ,_ly llw. rric9d to MN todoy at Sl SS,000. MYSTIC HIUS Rolli199 CJl"ftft hills and canyon •ltwt frOlll HNs .wty deconrted fflrff bedr--. two .................... haclL ........ MffilMJ, deck .ct patio, perlect fOf' CMlfdoor .......... ..,. • ..... fOf' .... else~ ta.Hy. s 154. 900. SPECTACULAR WHITEWATER VIEW fro• thi1 spaciou1 low mohtteRanc~ ............... redwood hw. Thrff b.drooms, 2 >14 baths. c..,_.afy upgraded Giid ift l•111ac•late condltioR. Many utrcu. _......, a klnje wfne celcr. walftut finish shldy md smile.. mosaic htb. Must we ot $295.000. 644-7020 2123 SAN JOAQUIN HIUS ROAD NEWPORT IEACH '002 Gftwrof 1002 .•....••.•.••••............................... MESA DB.MAR TWO STORY This la rge 5 bedroom . beauty 1:<1 located on one of :he best st reets In Mesa de1 Mar. ~aut1ru1 1y landscaped & decorat Real E}\tat<' 1002 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• sra.actlD Y ALUE! Ch<.i rmmg Newport Becte.'h rondo with 3 large bd r m s . J ba ths. secluded patio & a pool. Convenient to beach. shopping & schools Just r educed to $89.500. CtlLOUM GlOWH/CiOME7 Perfect Baycrest home for couple m a ybe f avo r it e au nt o r house keeper. 2 Separa te suites. huge family rm . & dining rm.. 2 frplcs. RV·boat space. Vacant - ready! $179.500. IOI.AL FAMILY HOME T hi s beautiful home ha~ 4 bdrm~ . rnmily r m .. 21 bat hs & fo rmal d1 n in ~ r m . G reat location n r schools & shopplnR. The yard as .i delight, with many lovely trees. The p rope rt y h a s b e e n kept 1n immaculate cond itio n by t he original owners. $199 .500. I . . . ... UDO REALTY • 673-7300 I Yiedneeday.July_12. 1978 * DAIL v PILO't Pil ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• MUA VKDI REDUCED TO S89,000 Attractive 4 bdrm . 2 ba. home in 1mmac condition. Xlot loc. ••c• ••Y Fme 4 bdrm., 21,!i bath fomlly home on quiet cul de sac. Oversiied pool playbou.se, extra storage. S 179,000. ' IAYFltOHT ~everal fine bayfront homes with pier & slips BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Bo rn.le 011v1• N B b 7S bib 1 Ge.ral VA TERMS Low down• Low pay ments' 3 Bedrooms• 2 Bath.s • Pri ccri to Sl•ll ' SS2.000 REDCARPET754·1202 GOOD MEWS!! PRICED REDUCED T0$66.300 CIOfie lo beach. 3 Bdrm, I ba. Costa Mcsn $66,300 ''"~"-"'-----....., Cut commut<'r lra\1•1 3 Hdrm, 2 ba. S<·al U<•ach. S&Sconstrucl1on $95,!JOO. So. Calff. Realty 646-4529 546-5605 BAY& BEACH 450 NEWPORT CTR. OR. 759-fill A Flcllllout Buelnen Name State-nt filed with the County Clerlt It valid for 11"'9 re•rs •tier which time contlnulnt bu1ln""' 1111111 mil•• Pubrlcellon 11 n.c.1HfY o nly II t here ere ch•ngH. Cell the legal Department al the DAI LY P I LOT tor I nformation end n•t••••ry lo<me. 642-4321 f lt. 332 CoroM .. M• I 022 c.r.. .. Mw I Oll ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• l.UYTOIUY 1-------1r¥111e 1044....... 1044 ()l.Tit:t olfer11 10',{ down & 1 h.119S U.._.ITS • •••••••• ••• •• •• •• ••• •• ••••••••••• ••••• ••••••• terms Lovely 2 BR borne ~ • " on R·2 lot wtroom to Two 4 Plexn b\ald 2nd un1t, Genlune Xlnt rental area.,, owner value al $1.38.500. Call for m:iy r-arry. $98.500, C.11 lppl. 6'0-5112. 540-9922 . ,, . ' ' .. I I 1 • 0 • 11' ~. I & I II • • , IRVINE TEI RA Cl lmmaculalA? 3 br 2 ba home. SlSS,000. Prin. OD· ly. By appt. 759-1897 MEW DUPLEX Just what your accoun· wt ordered. Cirst user's wnte-off! A smashing new duplex for on ly $210,000. Come see 425 lns, open dally l-4 P.M . Or·~ EASTSIDE Spacious 3 Bdrm with oversized family room. quality built with shake roof. fplc. and bwltins Now vacant. S e <' anytime. Owner will carry financing. Call 540-USI ·~~ HERITAGE • • REALTORS VACATION AT IJ)ME Sa1hog, swimming, tennis. volleyball and shu!Oeboard plus a lake. spas and pools. All of these a menities are yours. Pick the pla n and price home from these beautlCul new Woodbridge homes. ASPEN MOOEL- CREEKSIOE $92,900 ASPENWOOO-BROADMOOR 107 .500 WILLOWS-CREEKSIDE 110,500 WI LLOWS-CREEKSI 0 E 118,000 POPLAR-VlLLAGER CONDO 69,950 ASPENWOOD-BROADMOOR 109,900 OAKWOOD-BROADMOOR 99.900 For information on any of these Woodbridge specials. call today. f!j WOODIRIDGE REALTY 551 -3000 '&ou;,na de/ t/ltm flw/~ • 67.J-8~9~ .,._..,,.°"leach I 040 H...HncJIOfl leach I 040 ---------..... .... ..... ... .. . . . . . ...................... . 3Br. 2Ba. fresh painl. va-JOG TO BEACH Lease option, 3 BR. 2 ba, c3Jlt, lrg cov pat.to. Mesa Super buy. highly up· assume 7% VA. 16642 delMar. graded, 3 bdr. Just burn Rhone Ln. $78,900. 2435 E. CoHt Hwy .. CdM S81.500 557-8470 your toothbrush & move _67_5_·20_18 ______ _ ------------------m. Open Sonday 12 noon REAL ESTATE RUSTIC 3 br, 2 ba. frplc, BY OWNER lll :;old. 5151 Sparrow. COUNSELOR patios. well decor ated. Mesa Del Mar. $83,950 I l::dinger I Bols a Ch1cu p R 0 p E R T Y Guest house $153.000. By bd, fam rm 546·3797 l\ftl. MANAGEMENT Single owner. 640-7030. JIR + POOL farruly & multi·plcx un· MESA VERDE lii::'"'CH ~LS SOO its Tax defernng ex· COf"OM dtt M.-I 022 C..... dtt M• I 022 FtXER + l5'A -• change. Sellers & buyers ~:.~.~ ........ !~~!!.~~ ......•• ............... tOU L.GgllM~ 105°2 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Lingo Rul&Tan GOLF COUISE PROPERTIES I. OYllU..OOtUHG GlHHS -S.., ee4 •It,,_..,. cOY..-.d ,.tto. • co.cltke I 1J. Three b e d r oom, tw o bath COftdo. ••• S95,000 2. EXCLUSIVE A•EA OF IL MIGUIL COUMTIY CLUI -FaMlly -.... wfttr •lew, COYend brick patfo, firepff. pool .ct lac11nl. t:o.-~.. d9ft. 2112 batt. ho.e .... SZI0,500 l . ON THIE UTH FAl•WAY Of EL HIGUa GOLF COUSI -le•IM th ..try. Wit ....... alcl.g glens doors. uwtnil ••c-sytt... ...er... hb 1 ....... ... be•oo-. '°-' IMdroa.11, -..ey "°°"" l ...... ..__ ... $249,000 495-1720 Im. 1044 ~leach IOU ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Perfect for new family 3Br. 2& + fam rm. Nr schls & Henlage Pk $78.500. Terms avail. 4891 Gainspart Circle £ + E lrvffte Inc. 975-0650. S15K BELOW MARKET Sacnfice! Btful lrR nu JBr Wdbrdg. 673·4311 . Agt. ••• G. McClllaugh 735 Calle Valart• s..ci....nte You are the winner o{ 2 tlckets-($13.00 Value} to the JULY lS 8·00PM Performance ofthe Royal Llpinan . • Stallion Sltow allhl' ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER BA,_ BAY ~--------•1 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Pnrne lluntmgton Beach available Gary Bosler. ,...... •----------• i•••••••••••••••••~ Huge 2300 sq fl family location near schools. 96G-4388 w 1h eatl•d ponl for r---------·I home.Needssomcf1~1n · parks. shopping centers ---------Orangelreeplan4 onthe S85,900 .i Lrg HR . cae: Take advantJi.te no" & golf course. $1550 total POO!J-$76.950. 4 Bdrm + lak~ 1 br & loft. Ccn- Newport R1\1<'ra 2 !>tory PlJBLICAUCJION beforeseller starts torc 1nvestmentto qualtfy1n~ pool-beautifully fenced llair. beautiful!•· dt• 4 br, s pa c i o u s & customized home on pn ,. cul-da·sac Fo r dts· cnmattng buy<'rs Roger Nelson Really 586·S330 July 14, 15. 16 Call &12·5678. ext 329. t<T chum your tickets. ..... Huge ram rm. Rll(antit· decorate.646 7171 buyer!> Owner will help w tblock wall Heavy corated. pool. tenn ..... Ocean view, walk (o patio Walk l() pvt tennis ow. ''t •1• "\ '' ., • "·. ' r.nancc Take Jd\ an !>hake roof. Some de· gym, & recreation room beac h. 2 br + gue t cru.. Call 646-4-177. 225 Ocean View, Ml [ I Ca 67 b b 11 .,. 900 3 695 3 d __ K_E_Y REALTORS "Sr4S:O·ioi~;:: ~d.· 110111 ILlllS ca. ® lfl!Hit1 ·~~: J! ~~ ":' : ' ~~r~.'::·.~i~:; .. I ~.':; ~~,:"""" ;;;.ft~i;;.~~~. ·=~~ '::!~m ~.~r.:.·&PM OVER 50 YEARS OF SERVICE IT"SCOOL' M.,.ad•I M"' [ ® lff$1ll = ... 6'6~381J. "'"· HAVECRAMPS? '9""$6 2 ,SOO home on a qw•'t, i.h.1dy Aucuon,J~.ly tS.llA;\t CORO ...... DEL ......... area.4Br.b1g pool.dcn1· . == Hort.Our 1042 ~/nout~.~~~rnsf:;~; Prime location. Walk to ~ l r c e t T h 1 :. Auction su JeCL lo pnor "A ~ bar S'97.500. Owner will BEACll CONDO 3 BDR ••••••••••••••••••••••• neighborhood •!\hows re:il sale Ed Htddle Rltr I · T Lo el 2 Bedroom hel f • p neap on b dbl .. ,,,,, 000 Model m The Racquel town & beach. 1 Bd own 88 rvme errace. V Y P tnance n 21 ~ a, gar . ..,.,, · H U N T I N G T 0 N Club ....... Id be th" answer I 1 ·k pndeofownersh1pOnl~ 6t6· 11 +De n. In P a rk·Like Setting. ly.Callownerforuppt. 96.1·7079or 6S2·4278 HARBOU R /\REA youa~;iookingf'Or40r5 r.:;:;J.~~ut.nwe:l~~r~ S!l9.500. CALL i 5 l 3rni Surrounded By Trees And Flowers. $-18·7530 OWMf' Wiii Ananc~ EXECUTIVE DUPLEX Bedrooms · :t baths · bldg, gar . laund facil . • SELECT llave something you want Just A Littl e T. L.C. To Make It One Must Sucri f1 ce-D1vorcc' ~ & S Po o I h o m t• Scott Really 536-7533 great corner location . Must !\t>e lo appreciate. PROPERTIES ~~ 5~~~1 Clas~~r1 ~do:.~ Of The Finestln The Area. $174,500. ~e3su~ir~tridbr Nho;~~. Completely upgraded. Dramabc 4 BR. 3 ba. pool. ~:;...~de~sk~~;~~·~-~d ~adoy on :nh~~'~ats ---642·5678. s how 5 11 ke mod<> I Callowner,964·1132. 150' doc k . By ownr _.. > ...... 0 p 1 7 \:\1 $395.000. Days. 7141 497-3818 SllK • ~JNll SHELTER 881 DOV,.. DRIVE fi31·180 S89.500. nn on y v,' LANOING ·'100 M001';L. 898-3533, Eves; 846.w.lO . .g r1 Klll'I. or after 5PM 557 677H Must sacnf1ct'. Reduce<f Open Sat & Son t2•5• 4022 Fox "ale. by owner. Top-e T R L WA T M N N B B A CG 0 L H L Sl0.000 4 Br. 2sty. brh 3 D1abl0Circle of.the-World, 3 BR. 2 ba. I CREAM PUFF t·ar itar Huge hv rm lutchen den, Xlnt cond. S ~ I ER E T l E H SJ A H l 0 L G I 0 New patnl, carpl'l. ;ip S<>pr fam rm w1frplc. l'""iM 1044 ~~~~~~~~~ $12.5.000 714 /535·40\'l Q YA U 0 A 0 RAT 0 N X B 8 TY TA STA R GA'ZEKi!~ plianrc:.. m ak•• th1" form din rm Sweepin~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• HR 8 T W GE IE KA BEG A 0 U OS t--""""""-t-r---11oCL\YR l'OLl\:->:---T"----t ~htafter.golf c.'our:.e. i;ta1r1 to mass1\•e mastcr r--------- T GER CL N NS GEST 0 0 HR E IC t-t r.,.,,0...1~""''"'~. ~ 4 BR. 3 Bu <it SHi.500 A ~u1te & ~Ul·~t qrtrs WHAT'S YOUR V '"«••cl••11 •• •~.S•••• BEST BUY • Imm l'd Priced below mkl for PLEASURE? E 0 G A I W N 0 U H U 0 B l T L T 0 G To dMI«> ~~le>< Thundoy. possession OAC qwck sal<' Shorelln\' As U I BAO C W H 0 0 HEWE JO SU t •cod...,.d\w rr\PO"d"'ll 10 """'tie" HALPIHCHIN sociates.17ll •964·2S?ti. Bike to the lake from u R A l G S E 01"'°"'Zod-oct>-rlh ''9" ----------your cozy 2 Bdrm. 2 bath " l 0 K H L E S G D G 0 E "°"' ~==-~:._ REALTORS Townhom e in Wood· N T L S G S AH D U G N Q R l 8 D S N l= ~..... &l.._ 675-4392 NO DOWN bndge. Feeling lazy·• 0 A T 0 R B 0 ·-JOeo...--.. °"'"" 3 BR. 2 ba. nr beach. W N D 0 I A U I l U E l :-~~:;:" ::::= ~~:!!!~ St.roll to the pool close by S l A E 0 V E H S U C S U T AN I L D ,:=..., ?!-., .. ~. VA TERMS parks Beautiful. o~ner, Want so!Jtude'.' Take a E H G H p Y S K Q R s I N o t H L N L :~...... ;~ • ..;-Nice Eastside locauon ~ 109-t sunbath on your secluded N ZAG E RE AH E U 0 110,-~"-" ~=:".,.. llas 3 br. l3<4 ba. lot:. of 2 ir.TORY redwood deck Th ts Y L W C N E G o.w.. or.:" n-used bnck. 2 patios & ti. ~· home has all the ftnl! ~ ~ ~ ~ r ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ; ~ ~ i ~ ~ i ~ 11"""=.:c~-1 lit: :t ~=-.., ~':::.1c.f:;~a~1tvt:t:~~ $S9.~c;>'e~~~r~-like ~~e~~0k:~ ~ i>:i~ lnttr1Kt °"' Hidden wof'Ck below apc>ett rwetd. bK . -d. up, down 01 dlatnneUy. Find e.c;ti ,,,.; boll 11 in •• c.n. HDgln Igloo Tint r.., .. Houseboet Wil'MfTI Yuru Triller Grm Hut uk1 Dwtlllng Ouonaet Hut '" Brick House ~ Sod House log c.bin :'= ~~ ~=-Real EBtate. 731·5581. entry to huge living ONE! $88,500. "~ .. _ ,.,.._. room Formal dining C•for D""""....tl '0 " :!~ ".,~ OWNER 38 11 b '.... I d ...,_ 1 f*.=:.;..;;..-l 10WH11 ~,'!"'.,.-111-0 -, -r, • au.,,, o verlooks enc ose 6 ......... 7211 n weo 11111oo11 • '" atrium ou rme ne;: , ~ fam rm 1'·· yrs n"'w G t "'"' ~ ~=..,.., :!=:.,. $84.000. 770·1522 dys. kitrhen. :.wet·1.11ng stairs 15"'-Mr:r e&To 546-5060ev. tosecludedmostersu1tc. rit11 " r,~ :;=..., & chtldrens quarters. aOo<e• ==~""' ::='" wner s acri 1c1ng /JD.NIGEL GAILEY bi A558CIATES THE PRICE IS RIGHT! .for lh1s San Lws Rey Moder tn Rc1ncho San Joaqwn You'll be only steJ)6 to the golf coun;c and you ·11 love lhe twinkling n1 ghl l1 ~ht view of Irvine. Sec II now• HfXTTO GOLF COURSE Bea utifully k e pt I bedroom family homl· Lots of views• 21 2 Baths . 3 car garage Qwet loca uon; 5 minutes to bu:.. beaches and freeway $189.500 C5J Coldwell .Bonker 3 Monarch Bay Pl u a Laguna Niguel •96-7222 831-0836 HARMONY 2ll0el llAdO .. -.. A, VA o r JO-"'O rm townhome. <;, c<ni ®"·J ... ,1r {JN•••"' Near Schools ICcrhfla Realty Woodbridge Sycamore 2 L09lllNI leach 1048 Quiet street. t-:Z care 847-6061 546-9366 sty sgl family home. 4 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Tomorrow: Hard to SpeU Beautiful ocean vu home on qwct cul-dc-sae w/lg. patio tor entertaining. 2 BR. spacious double lot $137.000 IT'S SO EASY TO PLACE A CLASSIFIED AD O You may use the handy order form printed below to furnish us w rth copy tor your ad •P lease note that the bottom portion of the coupon may be clipped and affixed to your envelope. saving you the time to write our correct address. We pay the postage• e u you need more room tor your message. 1ust print or type 11 on another sheet of paper and marl 11 e You may place your ad by phone. 1f you w ish. Just dial (71 4) 642·5678. ,,,, ,,,,, ,,,.,, I l l 1 111 I #I II II I I ,,,, I I I olll, Ill I I ,,..,,,~~1##1111111111 USE THIS HANDY ORDER BLANK. WE PAY POSTAGE! 4 WORDS MAKI OHE LIM~ AD LISS THAM ) LIMES J ,,.., - $4.95 S'-10 $7.ZS PAYMENT ENCLOSED D SEND Billo 4 f'IMIS - $1.45 llUO SIZ.75 1 14 ,,.., nMtS -- SIJ.70 125.95 Sl7.J5 sn.10 SZl .00 S40.Z5 TOM411ttCOSl P\11 ontv one word 1n eacn sp-lbove Include y0ur sldres Of P"°"8 nu'"'* The COil o1 Y'OUf lld 11 a1 the eno of lhu 1..,. on wll!Otl tne leet woro or YoUr Id Is wflt1en Add •3 00 ertre 11 YoU des.re use ol DAil Y PILOT Bow HMOll Wllft m1111«1 reoi1es a BOX SERVICE ORDERED .. ,.,,..H#-Hll .. •Hrl ... P'-#H,_,,~_. .... ,. ... ,, ..... ,, ..... ,,._.,.._,,, ... , ... , ... ,~llH•-•'"'-l'H ..... # ........ # .. , .. , ... , .................. , .... ##H#..,C·IH¢ .. llH•""IH• ... #HI._,,..,.,,,,,..,_.,,.,, •• _, ... _ Cto11ifled Dept. BUSINESS REP\. Y MAIL ••llltSt a.ASS f't.'"wllf NO 1t CO!UA U(SA CAl.ftOMHt~ OrancJe Coos~ Dmly Piiot lox 1560 Ct>sto Mesa, Calif. 92626 -------------------- yard. Sunny 4 bedroom BR. 21'2559ba. 33h1ghly up. NEW HOMES in LagUJla home with dining, eutini; Best pnccd 3 br home on graded. ·00: Beach. Joseph Heun, Kr -, area und firepla {·(' market. Perfect starter 01._ Bid Call 94 8818 Patio. $83,900 BKlt. C..11 house Under Si0.000 UNIV. PARK IRV. DA.I I r 4 -540-1720 Roger Nelbon RcJhty La Salle. 4 Br 21rz ba "#I I" Cafff0ntla" BY OWNER. Ideal 1500 sq rt. 3 Bdrm. 2 ba. bit-in lutchen. Cathedral cell- ing tn l1v. area. Ne"'IY der. Colleg Park . $82,000. 975-5682 or eves. 957-0350 MOVE NOW! Vacant 3 bedroom and family room and bonus room! Great Mesa Verde area! Call now! RED CARPET 754·120'2 DmtaPoint 1026 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4Br. centra l air. sprlnk.Jers, Jrg cov patio. new ext paiJ"lt. 33001 Big Sor. 661-3351 agent Ocean vu condo or hrbr. 3br, 2'~ba. May lse opt 115.000. Omni 661·10021. 496-7786 &Toro 1032 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Dllt«S Ot4 THE HOUSE! Thls SUnwood 3 br. 2 ba deserves a toast. Prtv&C)' mountAln view. Pror. landscaped. pon den, many upl{rades & more '85.900. IYOWHH 22832 Foxborouah Way .. 32182. ............. 1040 ....................... SlrS Resale Sp,ctallsu. 3,4 or S bdrm models nail. aome w Jpoota. ~ Pennington Propettlet 586-5330 absolutely best buy m area. F'remtum home 2 DOWNTOWN frpl Everything done. H.I . UNITS 1\Jr-cond. "all-papered, Fourplex with one 3 BR mirrored. All elect & three 2 BR. Jll kitc hen. Plush cpts w/fireplace!> Only 5 Yrs Move in clean. $121.900 old . Real pride of Owner552·8584. owner:.htp Great 1n come. Super tn\•estmcnt. Cill ror full details. 540..3666 Wftelc-.11 REAL ESTATE Townhome 2 Bdrm. 111'2 ba, S62.900. ($.1000 under market value). Loan Is assumable. t Olk from llunt. Harbour By owner. 642·9620 at 6P M •HACH CUSTOMS• •3 Bdrm. 3 bath. dlrung area , fnmlly r oom. carpets. drapes, bltns Corner lot has RV ac- cas. Big 2 r11r ~arage wtalley entry. Walk to park. schools & stores Immaculate home in & out $114.900 Call to see •3 Bdrm. 2 b:uh. dining area. family room. bltns. carpels. drapes. :? car garage w /alley acce:.s . Anot.ber unit can be btult In rear. Reautlfully malnta lned property. SI 14.960. C10&e to 1chool11. park le stores. -.a Bdrm, tVJ bathll. pool. dlnlnll aru. s unken ram!)}' room w tSpan1sh Ule, ~ flr11placc1, bltoa, carpets, draP«\ . 2 car garage on al ley + stora1e area or. boat hou1e. Walk to park • scboo&s le buch. VeO' nice proci-tty. sic.uoo Cal I Dl-8836 .RED CARPET' 3 IR·YACAHT! Rtduc"9 $3000 Excellent Un1vers 1ty Park locallon. 3 Bcdrm beauty on major ~recn· belt location. Huge living room. Formal dining rm. Black slate atrium Superb, single story home Steps to pool and tennis! Immediate Oc· cupancy! Owner has purchased-hurry, call to· day' Now only $90.500. 7!\2-1700 Oi·tr., f I •J • '' '\ l(Jfv r()I t ''"I• [~NMKI CHAMPAGNE T~TE BEER POllETBOOK We have a Plan 2 and l'lan 6 In Orangetree. Both located ON T HE WATER Totally UP · graded with many addt· t1onal features. Teonl:s. gym . pool. spa and S&l.Vlas. Under $53,000. UMIVBSITY ,._. Want Ad Help! 23-4 Adams Ave .. ll '42·5871 t----~---'-- 3 bf 2 ba aal fam home ln vm 1 .. 1 lncl. "T2 Toyota. 0wnr I Agt. 552· Ul32 Comforts Of Home without the bother 2 1 __ Hiik I OSO Bdrm .. 2 bath 0 Y 0 12 ,._,-- block to LagunJ ., Main •••••••• •• •• •• •••••••• • Beach $85,950. $62.SOO. t'ondo. lo down, lo paymC'nb. 1-·1 IA terms 3 Rx Up&Sov~ BR. l ha . \U , pool Needs paUlt & caJ"P(:L'i 1_8J0._04_l2 ______ _ LOCJllftCI ....... 1052 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Loads of pot e ntial Sweeping ocean views • Laguna location 2 Bdrm .. hUl!l' den & 2 baths. $121,500. Laguna Niguel NORINSREALTY Realty .. * 494-IOS7 * WALk TO BEACH SUMMER IS HERE HANDYMAN Brand new 3 BR home SPECIAL w/larAe family room DUPLEX Many decoralor d e ATVIC'l'ORIA BEACH signed upgrades. Close H E R E 'S A R E A L to shopping & schools. SLEEPER: Located orr Pnced t.osell. .. $107.500. the ocean side of the 495-5220 496°2413 hwy., WlTH EASY AC· 493-9494 130.5050 CES.5 TO THE BEACH. 1--------Single story arch1tec-LA*efoftst 1055 lure, built on level lot •••••••••••• •••••••••• • W/ALL SORTS OF' R E M 0 0 E L POSSIBILITIES. The l arger unit ha s LEVERAGE SPACIOUS LIV RM By owner, $10.000 down, W 10 PEN RE AM t-: D SHOO/mo. 4Br. 3Ba, den. CEILING. MASSIVE bonus rm. 2 wetbars. nu f1REPLACF. OF' OLD credit needed. 957-1998. BRICK. ETC. Compact 1---------kltchen & dining area Ry Owner · Sacrifke~a.lc w/French door opening 111..S.OOO. Lg. 4 bd. 3 ba, 2 to secluded palto. Unique story. 2300 sq ft. cul-de· b a t h h a s D B i~ . . ac. ate. beaut. decor. p U L L M A N & ceramic tile entry, 2 M A H O O A N Y frpl~. cover. patio, auto. PANELED WALLS IN ~prlnk ler, 3 car gor NAUTICAL DECOR. w/opener & more. A'!!· This atructuralb' sound. i;ume SB0.000 note. quick older duplex la in NEED escrow possible. Hurry. OF PAINTING &~ __ 1-MiS _____ ~ MI NOR REPAIRS. If MtsioeYhtfo 1067 you have desired a ••••••••••••••••••••••• PLACEATTllE BEACH W/RENTAL I NCOME, Owner /Bro ker Mus t UU1 fNI Y be your 1a11t aaultlce lhla tm . cban« at the pnce of ma cu late 3,000 sq /ft ex tie SI st 900 home. ln MLulon Viejo sE'E Prof. landscaped, and nnsoNETODAY! I dccorat(d. Buy for ~s•a-.. ••'"'·TY· SM>.000 under current -__.. --. L Market Valuo. ~1-21600 ms1 Cat Hwy, LaJuna ,.._ 4t4-07l I Se1J Idle rt~ros 64.i·S&?a I I I OMLV PlLOl °'*' ......... ~ ........... Othet-... lat• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• m;; .. ;..~....... . ...... ~~ ....... MHm!!!~MUU .... "' Ml.,...... • ... S.Ck•• 1076 .................. . ...................... ·····················~· .............................................. ~ tban> 3 br, 2~ ba. •EXCITING• Swedish lrplc. tenrus, poola. RV pa rkln~ --fr • zooo ............ d ............ Net ........ U.fw••••d .,..~ .................................................................... . ....................... ,......,__lea l140 c..t.Mna lll4 ......... 3244 D&IPLIX/127.500 •••• ._ ........ ~········· ••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••• THl._.S OCUMSM Not c!:!:-='•mall ~ ~pts. a..y U•"'9 S72,900. Hunlinanon ~\Uit.t 1W7Ulada..on 2 Beac b 968·2297 or br. a bl. Lie Uvtna rm 963-0867 IREN. A 1bort drive f rom S1SO frpl dowb pool! Ex l br. Cl)U. dJ'1)8, stove. Go see lhts! 3 br. z ba, Orange Co. &lves YOl.a a loc s hr. Fee '4S·•OOO l:aundry rm. guraae frplc. d8hwhr. kids fr btthly desirable area e<x>NSUMER'SOUIDF. Quaet adult~. no peta. pet.'4 olt ~ 004.~ M wltb fantastic jrowth ~ Jlfl 1235 mo 642·0S38. 973-2971Agt,OOfN! and po$1Uve cub now ""~ frocn your love&lment.. ••••••••••••••••••••••• WANTl!:O: Jo;xct•ut1ve WilloW$. snal 2 Br h:w ForcompletedetaUa. •Small I br. lge yrd. trom Color:ldo wishes to tptc, 2 car gar. pvt yd, ''bi&h deashy " un· with all lbe beMlft.t ol llL.tbit 3 bdrm .. a.,,. ba.. Su c~ bviat 1 rormal dlnln1 rm , luJLury Townhomea draautic 1900 sq n. avall1ble. Priced troni -------~ beaut.y 1.ltf rtJht on the rruoo. NOW._ tM time greeribeltl Cuatorn de· lo buy. 481· 2790 or <201c12~. Terrific loca Mesa Verde Condo. CnttY Uoa. With mlnumht down Club Villa 3 bd. zi,., b1. total moolbty payment Poot. By owner 545-2034 onlySlSf.~. CLX9303>. C411197M62' Mow privacy.1210 UUI pd. No rent home 1n Mesa KlS mo. Ille 559-0253 aft ........... ._ pd.S.833-8974 Verde·Mesltl <M Mar or 6 30 eqUllll. Will pey $600-S'TOO ---------\631E.17lbSt. SA ..._..U.fwWllMd prmoon t·2yrlse.lea5e. 3 br 1"'1 ba COlldO. W/D, ••••••••••••••••••••••• Must have <1 br. OpUons : rdrig. $410 mo. ~1589 DUPLEX!! Ga•ral 3202 fam rm, Jltl' & pool. 973,..673 Ask for Mr 2 duplexes in S an••••••••••••••••••••••• Please call 114nS1·922'1 Hoyt. corator fcatW't:S & spot· &U.aato, '-Uvuout. Don't wait -AIO--¥..._l_THl __ l_U_C_H_ fortheprieetoaoup .. act Ultimate REEfo'GATE Cel,.,.PKHk DulwxtsJ Mobile Home Sal • OMta S. 1100 2706 llarbor. Ste 208 ••••••••• ··~· • •••• •• • • • f4o.5tl7 oow4'C&ll t.oday l WEST condominium ~.t---Aleri...;;;._. t_s.o. __ sseo ___ • Rarely available. now three 1l $137.500 to NIWPOaT' HltGHTS SBr. 2200 s C bouse. can OWt8 DISPlll4TE be converted to dplx. BU1 Dblwcte Newport S• Over 7000 sf lot. SIOS.000 Park: corner lot: va Southlaoders631·2l33 cant. retd)' ror quick 1-w '-" "1 2000 move-10: only saa.soo --~ Clemente. cklee lo ocean. •HOM EFJNDERS• after 6PM -~W-OO_D_B_R_l_OG_!!;_. -- Ablolutety the best deal 1000s of rentals l200 cottage utl pd kids 2 br + den. near lake. IY OWHB MIWPOltT HTS. , ~ Hats 11'1 comer SILICTIOMS ., .kit. 2 heir a ba, family nn MOTIV A TID ' tfi bollu.s rm· 1119•500· Victorian charmer with ·,~7044.0poSlu>day. _ ... .,._ , __ ,..... 3 -au•·• 1111:....,.. atasa: OOVERSHORES bdrma .. sep. aues t Owner must sell 4Br. quarters . Asking 38a. pro( lodscpd, & de-Sl.52.000. AruOous. m11ke cora ted w /jacuzzi at otter! pool. BllD microwave, OCIAM Y•W many oth er xtras Hilltop giant with 3 $229,$00. Opn Sundays bdrms .• 3 baths. famity 12-5. 1531 Highland Dr. rm .• 2 frplcs., shake. -~--------• wood & brick. $179,900. 4 CUSTOMHOME ~~irsa! i . Br. 2 bath. Finest 3 Bdrms .• famUy rm .• re· ,~rt Hts area. Beam modeled home; shi.tl&led . ers. formal dining rm. walls. rough wood & ,·1 ch more. 631-4516 Agt. bricks. 1149,900. Also uced to Sl.39.SOO anxioUs ! '.JfA...~lulbbtt . ·~Assldm Call 646-4463 Mariner's Cove REALTY Sl~.000. BERrnAHENRY REJ\l..TORS 21.SDelMar 492·•121 !71·2786U) ••••••••••••••• •••••• • • PAMOUMIC ...._HCNmStote Citoff&Ou• Oc.a9I VMW .._, 714 Mi-8895 Brand new San Clemente • lUX'W')' custom homes LOW PAIK l&IT available w /beoe{ils .ot Unusual in beach area. ~Clement~coastal liv· Super delux dblwde mg. Homes tnclude w~t· Cameron. Looks like ban. greenhouse wan· show model. S28.SOO dows, Nutone food cen· (72.75xx> ten & much m<M"e. YOU Mobile~ Store MUSTSEE! Pricedfrom 714 aAo-8895 Si!28.000. AJI offers will be•----"""---consi~red. F\all Bkr. co-LOWDOWN ~~~on 498·0200 or ,AYMEMT Will buy lhis exceptional S-,,_ • l2X56 Skyline w Jenclsd C•iatr-.o 1071 porch & full awnings. •••••••••••• •• ••••••••• Perfect tor retirement. duplex. Wrap·around view, backs on course. Two 3 Bdrm .. 2 balb WI· Its. EJtcelleot cent dis· lritl Sl65.000. · Sp•llhM...io.t Convert~ lo 3 Wlils Ont· que property. newly re· modeled wilh Impressive facade. Ocean view. $195.000. MORIHS REAL TY * 494-8CS7 * IACIC TO Only S16.500.(66·SS07l MATUlE ............... Stor. 30 UNITS Atop or knot l in 714848-8895 FAST CLOSE Capi.strano. secluded a t SUPH IUY to town ' $100.000 4' Allareu·allpncea 128S2brkid·petyard MIS. SS2-4268 Owner 1 $112.000. or trade. Ast. SAMPLE: Small fee. ~-Ol'U Agl 7141'97-~ SJ95 lbr gar rncd yard •HOMEF'lNDEltS• ~2brpets,yard •--------Woodbridge 3 BR. 2 ba . $.1503brkidsok garage 0..,... 3226 den, trplc. s n gl h5" San Clemente, by owner. BUu_I Span style duplu • red tile roof. 1oraeous ......_ Psnf 1111• 3207 ...................... . toil course view, atAalned ••••••••••••••••••••• •• S450 3br kids pet g•r yd al.us windows. Each unll IAYFltONT CONDO .ma~if!uFo~. w /a trlum . B e aut ~pd. C"Ommun pool" parks & lake. L6e. stlOO mo. ~35$4 J anel. evu 599-9996 2Br, 2'h8a. 640-1336. Luxury l BR. 2 ba unit 1--------- 2bouses l lot. $79,SOO. Beat w/View AvaU monthly. BToro 3232 -------- offer. Orange Count". or lease opt. $595 .... •••••••••••••••••••• New luxury WoodbridKI.' " I twnhme. Jrg 2Br. 2'1'J lia 541-4054 640-29111 val . now. 3br. 2ba, +den & bckyd. $625/mo 4.Br. 2ba. 3Br, 2ba duplex ow' $325. 3br. 2ba. On ~·r:,:.~~ ~~~~t 114-980·107Sor6J2.3983 on Balboa Island. Bay ocean.smree.~ Agt nor-w db Id c · •CONSUMER'SGUIDE , ~. oo r ge ross1nK view. Newly remodeled. 1----------Twnhme. 2Br + den. ~szss~.~000~. 7~52-~l!na~P~1P:_._.J---------l~'-~•s111••11i!'· Yllhy 3234 2~8a. cstm decor. nr 4-PUX THE POINT ••••••••••••••••••••••• lake. SS40tmo 559-5598. Deluxe Tiburon condo. 3 ----------Co6ta Mesa 4 large 2 Spacious 4 bdrm home Br. 2~ ba. wee. bar. Ale Cute 3 br, 2 ba. frpk , bedroom units. 2 have Just 'h blk. to jetty. on """""' .... gs,847-4525. dshwhr. gar, fnt'd yd le t. s G t Ocean Blvd. Family rm .. ·~"""'----------..... ds k A separa 8a 10 • rea .-,... , pet.s o . $445. gt. location. nly $154.500 3 car garage. $900 .Per Beaut 4 br. 2 ba, 2 sty no fee. 964-2566: 973-2971 David Bourke. Realtor, month w/frplc. dshwhr. cpls. 546-9950. k.tds & pets ok. sszs Agt, Tastefully done. 2 BR. 2 nofee964·256697:J..2971 ba. house. Wood bndgl•. Carden pauo backyard. I lu:fiu40ft l.ach 3240 ad.J. to park Avail Aug the end ot a cul-de-sac. a 1970 dblwde Vasa le OWNER WILL WXURY AHXIOUS! d ecorator's dream 2 bdrm, 1 ba. lo lo park AHAHCE AVAM-AREE home. Subtle earthtones .... ....._le II w/oodles or plants greet rent. Priced right ;,l flridlt of OWMnhip NEWPORT Duplex: like new. blk to bch. Must sell. 839-0730. FOUR HOUSES ••••••••••••••••••••••• I ~.rno.640-7880 OPENHOUS~ New~egant 2 bedroom l.agmo leocJt 324 tr l• ,, • ~ .-OC INVITING! YoU iJlstde & out. Giant $17.500. t70-14XX> e>n..ge Ca.ty '11ln Lido Sands. oaly steps VACANT! upstairs family room ....... t4-Store Beauli!ull townhouse un· 1'wo separate houses on two large s&icl75 R2 lots. $95,000 each. Agt 673-7737 or 54~ ,, 01v1~1on nr ltarbor lnv{";tmf'nl (.'11 -t-den <SS751 Cedar &c ••••••••••••••••••••••• wt.Odow home. 5 Blocks S700. Blue Lagoon Villa 2 to beach Pnvate 2-car + 2, ocnfmt on pvt bcb. z gara11e . Fu 1 ly main· P o o I s . t e n o 1 s . L to' beach, temus Ir com· w1wet bar, balcony, & 114 848-8895 its. Can clo1e on one munity pool. A s pic & Need a place lO move lo view of distant hltls. week on contract. AlTO. 3222 span 3 Bdrm single story lmmed'! Seller will con· Bright master suite, liv· LAGUtolA HILLS or subject to. Underlying New duplexes & 4-plexes. •••••••••••••••• .. ••• ••• tamed yard Adults. No 714-499-3217; <113-703-0230 Wilh buge family room sider renting Ult close ot ing room, & dlnlng area Owner moved north lSl assumable or owner 1 and 8 newty added laving escro-. Big, beaut. look out at lush private Must sell will carry~,.% Will ac· room. Sl37,900 rarefree rondo in the yard w /party g ivers this dblwde Lancer. commodate exchange. Buy direct rrom Ute de· Jasm!ne Creek. lg 3 br. ~-~ lBlb St •11• ~ ~"ctous 3 br C)(.'ea.n vaew veloper. (714)639-6704 ram rm & study Braod ~ ~ ~ 3 units Easiside, 2 BR. l ~-.::.1 ~c;~: i:,~·· Br. 2Ba. country kll. 494·S225 C4 for Details fabulous Bluffs. 3 BR. 2'h Jacuu:i. For a one Qf a Price s lashed S2 .ooo. Call 752.1920 bae.a .• enclga~ages.Sell Lea Holmes. Dayi; c racklln frpl. :.upe r or trade. Netl Beatty 833.3030 eves 1213 1 clean. gurdener , $460 3BR.3ba,new2-stycon Realtors 9'7-4U!i • Call to see 847 ·334l temp ..... real ocean view. 6<1S·4095 •---------· f'rpl 2 Btks to lhe buch ... • 644-7211 ~:ijii~5. kindexp<nen<e,call Oen::An~z!a(~~v1·11-8895ageS.tonN.B. ' ~&~~ • Sl37 500 ~n s ~ar H'-TS Be.ach~ $300 21>r rrp1 yd .1 ~======-==-• ' Clubho uses. pools. Pllvw--E ... ._ ..... """ • ldd/pet fee64S-4900 /Jn "41u(L Gl\ILEY & l\SSUll l 5 New S&S home 3br, 2ba. North Lagu_na. $750 den $575. Rent. lse opt. 1 BR + bunk l'tTl • dm lllt. lalll, ~deposit Call rm. frpL deck: all new Cheer846-553l tiled kitchen & ba., laun-8ackBayByOwner.2300 beach , boat s lips. 3 10,-Till:lOP.M.t New3br2Ya bahouse+2 •CONSUMER.SGUIDE SQ ft. a trg bdrms. 2 ba, L~!ilil!I!!!!!• bdrm. $35,000 terms . 1---------br l ba house. Both have --EHT---11 s.-.A.C._l_Of'T __ _ , .J1Ving rm " d1.mng rm. Owner/broker 675-MSS • ._________ 2 c ar g a rage s . R ,_ • •HOMEFINDERS• lr r I 2 V--y 631-4920 WEH,..VEWH"'T fireplaces. & pat ios. 38dnns.,2ba .patlo.So w h dry. 81g fenced yud. 3 Bl.ks. to the beach, North Laiuna. Ou11lex. S450 lttra g am• Y rm. Ullll9 •---------""' ""' Reduced by Owner. or hwy. New carpet e ave (pie's, skylight entry. 1.e1y 1091 2 Br, Ul6l Mercury 8x5l'. YOU HEED 000 089 M t.lfet1meserv1ce A.gent 4~-7551 Jat-uzz.i. 1167.500 642·8135 '----~'*~-~---••••••••••••••••••••••• patio. skirtin g • new For your lst investment Sl98. 642 7 drapesAie~i;~ o. 22 loc. toserve you , , ·--1--------• t hlr SISOO lo be LotsforS* 2200•-----------36yearsmbusmess ~Hih 3250 Nl:WPOltTHEIGHTS ",.c:':cM.-._ DOH'TMISSTHIS'! wa eedr 'TU-4. 921 or an exchange up. we 2 br l ba ~A~"'-r dryer WHATAGU/\RANTEE• ••••••••••••••••••••••• mov have the personnel w/lh"' ••••••••••••••••••••••• ' • .. .......,, · • •. a.BR.2 BAwitb lots of I -1 ... yv~ . . . '" OFRCoe.ILO'-u~ stove. refrag . ga r . Whysettlcforless? ~l+dinekidsoets wood. new carpel. shake •-"' •s:" Can assume 8~% loa~. 4 Best Buy Beach area '71 expererience. lrnowledge .. ., ~''" ga rd e n e r Sc\ 9 5 CALI..' Small r~. 557-<l824 .TOO{. & greenhouse on ex· 4 br 2 ba, lg family rm. BR 2 Ba. 2 •tor)'. like f1eetwood 1 B Adil t &know how Huntington Beach 114-833--1700 557·0824 •HOMEFlNDERS• !lt<tila deep lot $l2S.900. formal dining rm, rock new. Huge lot w/RV ·ac· pk · r. pc Our listings include 27.000 sq. fl. lot near i---------•· 'Olll 640-SUl fireplace, 2000 s q fl cess. Super clean. Uni· · 75&-091l,S47·7897 many singl e family Pacifica Hospital , s Lovely house avail July Why pa)' renl when you LAllJ-~ l2S2 1• . ' .... ,,, •" '• .... J f '• f•lO• If I )i>f IJ•, . ·512,000 dwn $1075/mo owner. 3Br. 2&. nice • indoor BBQ. mo~e- 1 ~ today no Qualifying. 957-19911 home. $11.5,000. 557-6075 que "country styie liv KIDS&P!TS homes&condos +. PointsShop.Cntr&CiVlc 15. Mature couple. no can b~ this 64f trlr in ••••••••••••••••••••••• orSS7-6154. Owner. ing". All this for ooly ArUstic Mobile homes 2 ~le.'(t'S · · · Sl i 5M&up Center SlJS.000 pets Gardener. $400. 5-Mar park 11cross from 2 BR, ocean View home'" E8.500. 6Uruts... . .$22SM David Bourke Rllt 615-1258 H 8 State Beach Pool. pvt community. Tennis. ttlVl£W IJJJrnN~i~: ymrn Beautiful mobile homes 1210TnUruptslc·x·es . ~~~~&20~ 546-995<> ,..-_,.-a-.... -~------..... Jae. clubhouse and all the pool, beach, avail Sept l «ft I -·-·--·----Ill cent. Orange County ... ..-aT Fl'WMI 3224 fun ot llvinR at the beach ~-Ref's 493 7747 SI o.ooo DOWM 962·4471 m 8103 Family-pet parks. 2 & 3 264-plexes ' ... '175M&up LOTS ••••••••••••••••••••••• for a s mall investment.·--------- Broadmoar 3Br. 2Ba, 1 _________ brdmsfrom $23,4\fs Call Can we help you find HARIOR RIDGE ranqu1 I P anoremll' Call now . mus t sell Missioft Vittfo 3267 guarded gate. comm today! See today • financm1f' IE ST VIEW IN View 3 mstr sz Bdrms. $12.000tofr 960·5844 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• p00l. jacuzzi, tennis. ott.-RM Es.. Tomorrow may be to YOU BET 2 Va b a · Fr P 1 c • s e P 536-771 I ess Cast1Ue El Dalt .., .. "',000 balance No ••••••••••••••••••••••• late! NEWPORT GEORGE balcony It yard Auto Plan. t:entral air. 3 Hr -~ ,.. "'......,.~ 1~ I 2112 DW h ~per sharp 3 br conao • qu1Utying. Owner will .....,.Hmmts 714/957-8005 """'"""'" ~ • garage oprirs . . t.ra.s S49S. IREN 96&-2297 or w1vu o( tulLs. Frml din carry.957-1998. f.ar-5* 1100•---------comp,beauufully cpt"d" mit.famrm.$47Sfmolst' ••• .. ••••••••••••••••• • VIKING BEAUTY in park Approx 35.000 sq ft Zooed draped thru-out. To see 96J.-0867 · No pees. Ca II 644· 72 J l leodlHCMIMfbtt" nearbeachw/lovelyclub R·3. Allows 22 units . call673-2282. 3t>rl""1ba$350pool•Yd& Agt 3 br. 2 ba, Cp, dw, re· •EXCITING• (acllltJes.ZBdrm2batb. Location SE. corne9r•-,..-_-------,-1-pet.Smfee645·4900. -... ...;._._--rt-.. ---... --3-1-69 'Best.buy in Westcliff2 bd, duced lo $134,:iOO. lncl. +FR w/wetbar. $36.SOO. ---------Warner & Sims, H. · ..... ._.rs_.._.... •CONSUMER'S GUIDE 1'4f\'PO!I -• 2 ba $81.000 or lse opt. land. llMtlaqtowlch Ofters accepted •---------(213)597·~ before you pay some ••••••••••••••••••••••• -~_7_522_o_wn_er_1_a"'""gt ___ 1 Marina Realty642-8850 Aboolutelyy breathtaking 646-4380. Rltr SIDE IY SIDE ..... ....&..u_ ._ __ 1 ~Rg UeNnAcRyOUfNo0r .• lc ha1e1 4 BR.2ba. good rond. $430 NO FEE! Rouses. condos . .._ -• mo .. l.st & l~t & cleaning du p I ex e .s . R en l :t I lyOWHER i-------•1 2U&t. 2.Br. 2.8.a, rumpus knogtforScH 1200 DUPLEX TrirPrtts 2300 CONSUMER'S OUlDE dep 960-3005 Pavibon.67S-4912Bkr. i.....-wnabl• loan 1:1:1. .. "', GREAT nn & b~r. 1975 Royal You can hve tn a lovely ••••••••••••••••••••••• Many have and are glad tOI> ... .,., '---~ .. l0n 5•Park. Ten· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sh b 2 b r I ~ I 8 llk t 4 B 1.Jttr 3 ha.POOL. lamll) ~..... three bedroom apart· By Owner 10ic481 br. sgl they did"Savetime.gas arp 4 r. a, rp r. ">"<'n. uy eren • r, ~· 2 fireplaces,~ so nis courts, swimming, lOACRES ment and ha\•e the adult CM Park nr shops &money&onfee ('J>rt. fncd yard Kids & 3 ba, jacuz2.1. etc. 1712 ~. lathe & plaster, eul· EXPECTATIONS? jacuzzi. social activities in beautiful Murneta secunly or a handsome S7.SOO/ofr64&-664S I OOO's of lt...tah! petS ok. $455 A.gt No ret. High I and . $325 .ooo e·sac. rrice r~duced and much much more. Valley. Surrounded by monthly rent check from Kl~PETS WELCOME 964-2566or 973·2971 home. Agt ., 631·0900 Would rou l lkt-a 1JTD12) horse hes h ·' I.I'>'" si7.ooo. 7141496-4024 ... _a"l1'ful y appointed · · TanC ' as it s the other apartment. all MountaiH. Dnert, 6.ar .. 900 Gr"'at 1 br. 2 ba, -1. 51::•v1EW $162 900 ~ .. CalfcwMa Pociflc own water well. Terms ·in good condition °~at a ___ _... z.aoo ,_ " .• ,.. llOA OwllerlAgt . apaciousexeculivehome ' IX llWMlll'"f .. Open 7days9·7 dshwhr, fn cd yd. Kids & UnobstrtJ('lcd view or . ti . 0 Mobile Home Realty FARGO. tho!le high n stnl't costs. ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,,,, .. , ok. 5"3S Agt 1110 fe-e. HF#PORT ~;,~B W~~syouou:~ 20706HarborSte208 <714)677·5691 Callt-Oday 752-1920. RANCHO Ranch style home on "'l 964':'2566or973·2971 ocean and Newport room for a family & the A CAPISTRA~ acre. r. 3 ouse full security. Tenr11-,, CUSTOM 540-HJ7 OR 522-0530. J qU .. IL 3 b 2 b h Beach. 3BR. 3ba. New. Gorgeous ranch sttle QIJlion of entertaining in· 17 ACRES 3 acre vit!W patte\s from Bachelor + bath a pt $24$2brlud.-.1oets cute J acuui. 5 w 1 mm ini.: ct.$U>m built in Newport! doors or around the pool BANI Loaded with oaks. 3 BR. p• .. CE 125.000. Entry gates. all separate. 642.1334. eves S3503br2story kids JOOO/mo cons1oer lse opt Qwet cul-de.sac. Red & jacuzzi? U so. we 2 BA home. with your ~ ulil. Horses welcome. 642-6S78 Small fee. 557.()112.t Agt JOwner. A.sit for R0tl brtckr:;thway and while I ht l be bl to REPOSSESSION ---TIES"' •HOMEFINOEMS• 2996 o mg JUS a e own priva te lake, ,-"""".... Forw_ ocaJl544..s983ask Char~·"g 3 Bdrm.Zbaln at (714132S· or eo11 rail ence 2 M asslve _..,,. peel u ....... " s J fireplaces. Beamed ceil· ,....,.,. your e\ie a ons Adlt & family park. low secluded area. Terms 10,..Till:JO,.MJ forJ1m8ishop quiet neighborhood. $1002br bchhseydgar at C714J 8J2·.,144. pec1 Y U\gs. Huge family room ~~'lannowaf!~53Sa 71e. price. down. fast nncsession. FARGO Outof~ Drps/W/W cpt. frpk . $.S25Sbr2styk1<1i;o1c SeaviewHome. ,...... '"""' r~¥ <714) 676-5717 • 2 TRIPLEXES * 5495 645-3905 645-3009 Srnall fee. 55Hl824 8 Y>/lJ f\ wet bar. True Late models. Let. us help OR522·2080 Nr Lake Park. Mi.o lo Propetiy 2550 . . dfOMEFINDERS• Bluffs Plaza conao. 4( 1"· .~untry style kitchen. ~ put)'OUinabomeof your ---------b 38R •••••••••••••••••••••••$US. 3 br 1 ba. carpets. 21, ~-end unit. rp r. i "'~ntastlc 66' covered o~:......U-u~ S....__ .. -.Property 1400 ~-~: ~~· ~R.: i ba. s CORO .... A drapes. W/D. stove Kids Townhse. 3 BR. 2 ba. pool. 5575. 675·5364. 644·577t. >""Uo! RV parlnng-and 21 -~ ,_..... ••••••••••••••••••••••• gar. fprplc'it: $189,000ea. "" OK/nopets. 548·S98l jac, sa una. voile) ball, 2"12 V1st.a Hogar · 1l);~ehr. w":1rc~r~o~~J ~ ,. 133' OCEAN FRONTAGE 111»-ma Alabama, HB ~ 00W,::r·1 7 h"~~ ~Id 4 bdrm. 3 ba. family veryquJet.S39S.96J·0749 2 Br. ocean view. rrpit-. TD Full pri ce JUSl MewporfC..t.r •EXCITING• SUperbrestaurantloca· 536-1718 Professionallydecoraled home.Bi -level sundeck. lmmaculale4 BR.2ba. n ewly de corated • . ms.ooo Hurry call to-tion, Carlsbad. One or a SAN CLEMENTE int.enor & landscaping. Close lo ocean. R.V. ac-frplc. Nu pamt & c:rpn:. garde ner. Adults. Oil day!~ kind, $280,000 Hurry! •1::•cH.TRIP•Rv Aar condit ioned . 3 cess. 189fl Pa rkcresl ,, mi from bch $515. Pf'ts Monttily 1575 001""1'1 ~·1'"'""'0"•"''"' SoPedfic,aroclM WR M RE A L T Y -~ Bdrms. $82.950 l'O~ $575/mo 673-6733 days, 21041 Barb11aos Cirde. 646-8746eves l ~ I hir•.byoww Get away from it all in 0 w n e r I agent . Spacious, sparkling 3-2·2 down.C811 714 -737~. 752·0327eves call9683636 Ocean! S2502br boat slip ·~~'lfllH* ril!!~~:iiJ.'2fk ~~ii7':.~~~··COl-71_4-434-____ :-:-----~f5~*-r::c;;oRnv al PriPf«e-Oc.-side N;_t1:::,_~~~ 2br 3:;::1~:1~c.t~~~~h· ~'t6T:s~~~'SGUIDE much storage. rrplc. So. Pacific decor in• • ,......, l600 REALTORS 2 ac3BEDROOM •CONSUMER"S GUIDE $400 962·7019 3 BR. 2 ba. A-frame bt·h UDO ISLE BEST BUY pool. jacu.ui, sauna. 2 Park. Priced to sell al ••• .. ••••••••••••••••••. _2l5_De_l _M_a_r ___ 49_2_-4_12_1 VA FHA A... . .... _ ......J• Da h bse $575 yrly lsc Ownr 2800sq. ft. sprawled ovel' car gar. cathedral cell· ·-GARDENTOWNHOME $395 .... r l n .,.. ......,.. w .,,.,.... 3244 · · \~lots+ nnfor2paU06 lngs&IDOfe! Veryq\14et. ~'!7,·~.iFHl,_~>c REAi.ESTATE'S San Clemente Brokers 4 2Car Garages ydfeeMS-4900 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 64S-0423,G46..J666 •" X·lrg bdrms. 3 ba. wlk to bch. Priced below ----m •e.LT wtit.s acl'068 tbe street l·4ll·'924 •CONSUMER.SGUIDE RENTALS HARBOR VlEW frplc. spac lvng rm, mod market 182.500. Owner Mobile Home Realty ~ Crom ocean. Concrete n.. r 1 2706Harbor. Ste208 1~•M~ 8,_,., lo beach. rmanr-t.H 1-757·1623 • Super nice 4 br. 2 ba. 2 BR . I ba . . $425 ["rto mo ux s pac exe1 kit + bar, service porch. financing at 93 ava\l. 54"-.. 9~7 .,..,. .. ~, '"""' _...,. d $225 000 D1any extras . S595 3 BR. 2 Ba $.500/S75 .. me. many xtras + poo1 ~bl gar, nr tenrus. pvt 714·768-$11. _, ~ TODAY Ing arra nge . . 731·4537 or 979-6896 3 BR.2~ Ba $62.'> &spa. SOOOrno 640 5043 bc h etc . OWNEIC1---------•---------Call for brochure BJ '-M Lasse rooth·"-20 ""'·--48R.2, Ba. •c"ctG40 : fJ NANCE AV Al L BLUFFS l LEVEL VIEW 311-$11,100 ll'a opport\.lllity k;nocldng AssOc Brokers 768 7R39 "' t. . n ""' "'"''""rJagenl l'l • _.. Harbor View Hornes. 4 :...:.... OWN'"' end unit 2 br 2 ba .... _of liv'-o -a-for at the door. We have ac. or pme & cedar fortsl 4 ToSBR. 1"7 ba . $1i75 BR r 11 -000 r.RG7~ · · u...o m., ¥ ... '"" threemobilehome paru wtsome pasture. 5 spr· IUDS/PETS OK SBR,2"281.l $675 · a m rm. a up . Sl57.000.0wnet.G44-420l the money. l2JCS2 New from three million l o GETIHVOLVED ings & orchard. 5 yr old EASTS I DE . l r g grad«i. nu crpt.5. Park · 5 •..aY OWMEl Mooo wit.h 8 by 32 expan· eleven . Call us now. U you're ready to move CIL'illn built farmhouse. townhome, $395. 646·48.a. Uke backyd. 542·2932 ',,.$IO,OOO ~ffoll Beautiful, lee lol, loan do ' Sm p c l o . k 752-1920. up or slart your iovesl· 1560 sq n. 5 m i. west Of 675-8258 Harbor View Hms. 4 Br, 2 ··~2£resb t ~dedo.t2 usum. 75&-191S. $192.SOO. <~.!-e...__ J 9lJAIL ment program then Sh1ngletown. C&lH ---------ba. ram rm Nr schl:-. • • Ar. den. n a • ..-.. c o ,.._OM .,._..1'ield Pl. -,,_ _... come lO the experts at $132.500. 916147•·3340 Newport Heighli. 3 BR 2 I l>ell FAST. Owner's anx 1-~-""_n_.;J011:1_.c1_• ___ lll82 N. State Col&eae 1al Quall Place Properties Ba, D/W, fplr. gar. pvt parks. PoO 5 S?SOtmo . • ~-.il)World6lH6!JO HOUSlllAUTIM. ~J~r:•> Ababelm PLACE ~~,.PI~~1~\~:~ -,::::;. 2100 yard.~mo.642·51?2 gardtwtrpd 640-Q89 ••-------1 Elegant decor. VanLuil ~ PllOPBTIIS,.. "'"""'"h. to serve, small ••••••••••••••••••• .. •• $190(1lrn bacb +pool ForUGM: wallpapers 3500 SF or •. ..._ .,lOlb k"cW ts d " hr 211 ba. Uvang rm. SI0,000- ~'·lri':e reduct10n! Owner , • ecp1ou1! Elegant trl· ---el lwnbome. 4 brs. form. dining overlooks ., m:&.mUo hv nn. Hurry! st b uy in aru ac • . .900 Ca u 845-722. beau\lful home ~ i200 -~---.._---Store---10,.TIS:JO~.MJ eoo\llh to care . Call Want Beach property for ... Sman~~-~roeJ dining rm. den In lovoly S.F. \ot, w/!ormal dining --------752-l920. exec home In Anabelm. •HOMEFINDERS• 'tS23CAMPllSDa:IRVl"E N 8 r e s 1 den l •a I + f1m rm. w/used brick Assum• b 1 e s· re · $100,000 NICI J '-'II AIL CaUS35-2334 or$35-0568 ne1gbbornood $975 mo FP & large Uviruc rm. ~:F:fufuntals, RIDUCTIOH TVA Realkf* $2952brkids + ~ar San Joaqwn Townhome , 1_642_·_54_1J_e_\les ____ _ Home ove rlooks large ... PrimeSMopinaCtr. p• •CE w-............ 2900 Smallfee,~7-0824 covered patio & C71411-.. lt5 On Beach Blvd,. In HB ~ --•HQMSFJN'OERS• golf course view. 2 BR . W('11td1ff 2 br. 2 1~ ba be.a t.lfull k t rd 1---------d b •••••••••••••••••••••• • 21 1 ba & den, $600 mo townhouse, reln a. :il.OV<' & ,uatb ~haeSeg:re~nt •WALKTOBEACK• Produced spen a le$S NOPHTIIS"' OWN Prope rt y l nJBRhouse,Wcst.s1dc.l~e ~t448 an 6pm pvt pnt10. gar. Pool & c...... te •·--'e" wit-·' Single wide 60' long, ~~alye~~ .. ~~g Scott fO,.. Tll l :JO ft.M.J Inglewood. Hawthorne ren«d yard. dbl Rar & salinu Washer & dryer ...q.-ra . 9 .. v •· '.., e ncl'd porc h. S Star ..., t.y --·~ -or So. Bay arell? workshop, s ubmit on Beautifully decorated i\ 9650. 675--0840 & nut lret!3, .irape arbor Park. Pool & jacunl. ••• ..WTIWl.IX WIU.'AY CASH!! ldds &c pets. S42S mo. 1st bdrm. 21, ba, fa~ rm. nr •---------:l:;:_~eat.h~U°~~ a: Must sell 960·5844 or 1Y IUILOB r Ph Tom O'Alletlandro & last + $200 de~it pool. ten.ms. s~ ~·•le~ 1200 bacb kids Pt't3 yd see this beauty! c a11 1_SJ&: __ m_1______ sil .. f• 0... l-4BR.111atrJltUBR. T.O.fll0'8TllS Call Leslte <il S49·00'76 or morea.seS38-3600 ~,!fi~bo:S~~~ 646·4380, Ruth Laurie New '17 MX56'. New adll 14 ttu ti I°"' allaJ)ad0usdelWleunill (2131 '7•-8907 or (7141 aft 7PM. call Joe at 3 Br. 2 ba Boutafully dee •HOMEFlNDERS• R.kr. park . Ful I e rt on . lrYIN Bike lo bch from here ~1anytJmeor 1714) 557·TT33 Comm poal. tcnn'5 •--------- Ludie aped Ofr . Youuelbewtnnerof UU.oot f • P 2412 lM6-5ZZ1 lll8Plll. Qindo, ad.Its, 2Br. 2.,.,Ba, courts • ~ mo. Gtdnr Waterfront. 3 bdrm, 2 ba. 1.m..$114n. 2&Jcteca-<Sl3.00V&lue> Dllaware.HB.W.l718 dblaar. Blt·ins. incl. Can be lse1opt. comm ten n 1s / pool totbeJULY 1' I 1......,.. ..... 640--0096 752.oa3or54&-17Sl Agt. Newpor1 Shores $725 mo . • Walk to Bead!• Single l 100PM Perfotn)aAce _... •• -"' ........... ,........... . ~ wide to' lon1 w /encl oftbf 2 l:Jr ~ + 4 f br aptl . ...._,_..,llMcl Be.aut2Brcoodo.ramrm. Woodbrid ge Estates •---------~~&rtially Cum. 5 ..,..Llflhw l~ated In tood rental ....................... D/W ardn patio $355 Townhou~ Lincoln arbor View, a ~u.t 4 1tn k w)&JI •urer SNllm.,, area ol L•1una Beach ...... l.a.d 3106 wiminormalnt646-'2166 tl'.IOCk-1 3br,2~ba.prof. BR. tam rm. 2ba. Mon- clu and .-00 &i attbe Ocean view, l blk lO ••••••••••••••••••••••• d et•1n•d patio & t e110 All s.menltl11& Jacuul. Mnl ael l. ..... AH .. J'"" bfach. R10.0llO. PO Box ~ .. n. 2 ... _ f l 1 3 BR •. 1 ba, Jieyrd. $37S. 4 landacaplna. Av1ll. Aug . Avl'll monthly. $675 lflO.•Of&af.Ml.Don't ""' "'• tall:IAIBcb.~ eu.,.. &NI, rpc, l\un· BR. 2 ba, trpl lite yrd lit.640-mt Auberman Co . 759-1.Ut. bey befoc:ie you ~ lh11 OQNVENTION • :=;;.;:. rm, P~ patio. Steps 147S. 96W388 OC' 152· 1920 --------837 0066 locl UOn. CENTER O.diUacstoCo·Cuts to bch. No kld11 peLs a:ktorJohnY 3 Bdtm. l~ bn Condo.•-------- '74 Dbl wd. 2 br. 1"' ba In adult .Pk. Ideal Joe 7'SCMICllXf ~,wlmds Julyl4,U,l8 Whateveru .. Fad ~s rtq. IS1$1mo )'rly · Ne w t pt/drp:s. W JD New 3br 2~hou.se w/£rpl. CaJJ eq.5178. est.. m ..o Rod 'emofftbe market lse. ~J6218 wknd1cves. ~II wnh EASE' M.ups. pool. SUS. patio. 2 c11q11rage with cla1myourtlclttta. Wlt.btClu1tfiedAd W ·8000, ext 261 M·F, lt'aaBREEZF. 833>9100 days. 836-06~ o~ner. Very quiet al ••• Cal1Now!t&W878 WPm. CWa:lficdAda&42·56'78 ~ ~75mo 842-7089 ... , .. , ...... .._ ... ,.. ... ._., ......... .. . . I ii I .:;. : ... : ' . : . . . .· ,. Apertni•nh u.tw.. -... .. Retttah 4200 Office lt...tal 4400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• WednMday. July 12, 1973 DAii. Y PILOT ......... u.t.nl.a..d 4' Iwata......,._ .,_ , ..... ~ Mlwpwt .. ec:h 3169 NB. AvaU Aua 1. swtablo 2::J0.500 aq. n dlx ore w. •••••••••••••-••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• tor top eJCt:c 4 BR. 19th St. CM from $1~ ~aeou Loet & 'o.ct 5 lOO Lott Ii h411td SlOO ...... ,. • .._.. UH ..... , .... • 3107 llullil4•••• 3140 ATUEACll" elegantly furn. ocn vu. mo.Tom540-2200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• l200 utll pd pool! KJCis hiolne. Vy lg ~I Sl300 ----------••••••• 4610 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••• Newport llts J BR 2 bo STEPS TO BEACH S300 Zbr utll pd p00I' mo. lo Oct l. melds pool Medical unit, good c M ram rm. pat . dbi aar Cute 1 bdrm, huge yard Seawiftd Villate Kl00ds.Nysdu~~~-~~0 ~ ma1nt. & grdn r. le.¥ Io cat 1 on o e 1 u x e . Wan\ed 14 rent garage for Storage LOST DOG FTlend 4c pet to 3 hllle girls Wht ZSlb 'shaggy. female Puh 1.ost 1n Lost : Tan rem•H R1 daebaclt. Vic . fa1rview & Belfaet Reward. :>-'6-4060 etc ~ 6'2 7945 lJLJI pd S31S. yrly New t"2 bdrm luxury • thereafter CbHd. 11ml pet ~able $411 2103 Ok 714 644 Ot84 , 8'T35438or833-6118 adult .ipts In 14 plnniJ •I Br liluH privacy. 9l6-52S-7573 NEWPORT liEAC tt H a rbor Ju ~ mt-2~ from $290 I pool:i. tt!n pool, new crpt.)i Adul~. ·----------(Airport> arc\I R~cPp Ca II 548·M97 ~sjlavest/ Corona Highl1ndi; 1.1rl•11, LOST. Champagne toy Monaro r + en. • CGpk"'-leedt lll 1 nu.. w l~rfalls. ponds! no ~l!I $325 833-897 or 1---------· lion & 2 oki. w pvt b;1t' s:595 Ca ll M~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •'tom San D1oao f'rwy 833-16.:IJ Fabulous 7 Bdrm Pen-$375 Ron Henry. Bkr .....:. CdM Aruw)I to Smok,• poodle. "1'iger··. Vil' •••trft•••• ••••••••• • •••• Ple!lk cull 673 0433 Cu rf it-Id . E 111:. & ....... LostorFou.ndapet •Call Brookhu r st . F .V . 9lg c,_ TowMw WaJk t.o b~h. 3 Br. 2b41. dnve North on &och to 1---------I.house w/forever view of 979-0066 ZBr. deo " wetbor. Ocdan vu. $400. '937587. McFod<h'n lhen We1:1t on WATERFRONT Bay Avail weekly S750. ~ 5005 Animal A l1 ~1qJnt·e _963-__ :J&_w ______ _ 2 ...,811 . frpl. cubic. 588-lOOll.675·3760 Mc•'adden to Soawind Spacious 2 br. 2 ba &den. SALlSBURY R.E. SUB-LEASE Ground p 1 & V11l11gc t71o0893·519ll Speetecular view. Lux-673_0000 floor. MacArthur Phm1 •••• •••••• ••• •• ••• •• ••• League 537 2273. no fee Found female Kitten. Vic WOMEN'S HEALTH REWARD! SSS Large F Pac Coast Hwy & Morn secunly 00 te11nuJ. C..... .. Mw 1122 unously upgraded. new 900 + sq ft Be au t SllOO/mo 675·5SlS •••••••••,•••••••••••••• MEAi llACH carp-0ting & druper1es paneled. separate encl CLUI Great Dane , 7 yrs, 1ng Ca nyon , CdM YEARLY. Lge 3 br, I'-'! &CIVIC CEHTIR Sandy beuch. beautiful Beach-weekly, 1dei1l loca-glass exec ortlce. Full ba. 1 house from ocean. BRAND Nf:W. Spaciouti gardens. overlooks lion. Nr bay. beuch & space or shore, pi.rt1ally Exciting o~portunlly , all blue/grey Please rail _67_3--_3684 _______ _ eqwpment included 49-i· 1003 ext 70'J 2 CATS. longhair fem ~mo.Lge3br,2bu,'h • deluxe3&4Dr Allbltns. BallJoa lslund Boutshp Pavilion New l b r , furnw/detk.cha1rs.ad· block park & bay/beach, ~J .. frplcs. iiar. lge yd 520 availalllc. Adults 110 i;teeps 4. Redec. 2 br, ding ma ch copier , BERTHA JI EN RY REALTORS LOST. Iris h Setter. Siamese,blue silverOea 215De1Mur 492.4121 female.whitc tlt!acollar col lar. Lt grey fem. 1"'1 blks to ocean $600 fl., .. '!<!':C,&_ Yorktown · Just West or petli. Sl500 monthly sleeps 6 $225 wk . $100. typewriter. Avail 1m· mo 675-tl018or67S-677S _ U.~ "" ·· Beach Blvd. 960·2219 or _67_3-84_· _1_4 ______ refundable cleaning dcp. med. 1·757·3607 --.. -Jamboree & Bnslol. NB 673-3472 Vic. CdM Beer & Wine bar (or i;ale 540-5937 Reward by owner. Nwpl Blvd, ----------1 Reward fem Samoyed CM. 2 person operation. Lost Vic Irv Terr, CdM. wearing lags. Ans 'to Call aft 12noon, 548·8501 . Welsh Terner looks like GYPl!Y Amber Cst Hwy S.Cletntnte 3276 GARD~N AM'S 536-17l8 Block from wuler & ~~:=o · 673 6293 or ••••••••••••••••••••••• CORONA DEL MAR $i!05 2br PoOI! Kids gar Shores urea 3 br. 2 bu Seosc~Vlllage 2 Br Townhouse. frplc bltns.Smfec645·4900 duple x Yrly l11e YocaffoftRewtals 4250 Pool. tennis. Some ocean •CONSUMER'SGUfDE 1714)956-5871 ••••••••••••••••••••••• I-level twn e, 2Br, 2Ba & Catalina v1'ews. Clo0 e •----------P S d I " aim pnngs Vacation ... en, tenn1i.. poo . lO Fashion Island & rme Bachelor apt. Neur bcuch 2 BR. ocean vu. k1ds 1petll Condo on Mission HIUs Jacuu1 Ad l t s S450. beach. 644.2611 ~00 Includes ullhllei.. OK. ulll pd. gar $.500. Country Club 96S·M30 Avail Aug 1 &IS 6890, un,_ _________ I 847·9939 &l2·0919eves 6pm Rtntals to Sitar. 4300 -3 bdrm 3"2 ba new cpts, 3Br. 2Ba. xlnl location. l..ge 4 br. 21 ~ bu. encl Eeach! Jbr 2bu sundeck dis hwasher.' patio & d06edgar. 1 y rold put10. New decor. l blk ~6N~ie~~;~UIDE garage SS25 Lse. 960·101·1 bch $600. yrly 673·2507 • 673-7513 Agt 2 Br. 1 ba. frplc. yard. S-Clemente 3176 Ra.1'/LfASEOPT. •2br twnhouse. lh ba. gar,$3S01mo.960·5376or ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3 Bdrms . 2 b:i . frplc . frplc, pool. walk beach. 67S.fi670 2 Br, lge por<'h. walk to condo. Carpets, drapes, ssso. 83J..8974. 833· 1653 beach. fenced yd $325 $l50Mo.Agt.497·3388 Townhouse. lov<'ly, spac Eves498.0318 ----:.:..-----2 Br. 2 ba. beam ceilings, & home·l.Jke. 2 br with ------ WANT LARGE ROOMS? xlra lrg Kids ok . pvt. gated entrance+ 2 Huge NEW 3 BR. 3 ba. $495/mo Ph 673-6962 art patios Some with lltl spUt level Ocean vu · 6pm garage Sw1mminR pool. skyhtc deck 4-car Jacuim Tennis courts I prkg. $6SO mo. 492·7715 O.EAN APT FOR RENT, blk to Huntington shop· S395 Jbr ~ids gar \11ew' Small fee 557·0R24 •HOMEFlNDERS • 2 BR apt over garage. pmg center mall. Adults. $400 mo. Walk to beach. No pets From i'lJ5. 644-8581 Seawind Village, 15555 Huntmgton VIiiage Lane•. H.B. (714Hl98·9961 ----------12 Br. 1 ba. frplc. garage. s-.-... lst & las t. $395. mo. Capistrano 3278 1142-5290. Lux townhouse ai>ts ••••••••••••••••••••••••----------garage. 3Br . ·2 ha. lrml Harbor Lane. I mile from Coda Mesa 3824 din. entry k1tch SSOO ocean. 3 hr. I'~ bu, rrpk, ••••••••••••••••••••••• 96-t·1507 bnck oat10. S47S mo. LA MANCHA APTS Comm ·,ioc,J 4!13 rooo Large 1.2"3 bedroom ~J+dint' fncd yd kid~ Sma II f <'f.> 55 7 01:124 •HOMEFINDEltS• garden apLS. Ds hwhr. bllns, encl gar, gas bhq Pool Gas Pd. 778 St·ott rt. 642.5073 Beaultful 2 br conrl_o. all EASTSIOE 3 Br 2 Ua. no e-ctras. pool . patio. 4! kid~ pets. $390 184 21st SI., OK S310 pr mo Avail avail July 15 546-6985 now 400-8895 -------h., ew 2 br. 2 ba. all bltns. frplc. enc l gar, patio. Houses Furnished or u..fwMslwd 3300 ••••••••••••••••••••••• CORONA DEL M1\R lndry rm. $350. TSLMgmt 642-1603 Charmin g t'Oltage. BR l Ba. cpls. drps, hdwd ON . u~ed bnck lndry fac1I. fresh paint. frpl. 2 BR. I bu Bcacll S26.'i mo. 200 Apt C. E. dose S.'525 16th Pl ace 644-0452 Comv. furn 2 BR. 2 bu. O 2b b I' J l·bllr to beilch. SR51l $17 r} ~ a J>C1!> · ac Boyd n"altor!. 67V ill'"' S1rnna. Sm fee 64;>·4900 "' . ' ' '"' CONSUMER'SGUIDE C~IYms Funlllshed 3400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• New, beaqllful, spacious t'Ondo. ocean vww. furn. :Hxl21•bu,1tar 4114·651!1 ~--- MESA PINES 1 Br $285. Pool. jacuzzi. adults. no pets 2650 Harla Ave. CM !Mesa Verde Dr. E . off Harbor Blvd). 549·2447. 3 Br. 3 ba in Eustbtutr. ---------NB. on greenbelt Xlnl Br. l ba, quiet Mesa tond. Nr. park. i.chl & Verde cul-de·sac. Older shop·g. SOOOt mo 833-398.S cluld ot. $295. 1st/last + c213> 240.0400 $100. Refs. Ph: -198·1936 ToWftho.ts• br 2 ba. den. covered Unfw1'isMd 3525 patio. new • p a1 n l & 3144 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •BRAND NEW• IRVIME'S MEWEST APT COMMUNITY HERITAGE POINT An apt community de signed with you m m md featunng 8 Spacious floor plans Furrushed or un furn is h ed I 2 & J bedroom <1pls Availuble ror occupancy June 201 h FEATURING •Park like sellln~ •Lighted tennis court!. •Recreational fac1ht1cs ,, Pool & jacuzzi •Gas BBQ •Sparkling clean laun dry ' •Garden patio kitchen •Open ~am ce1hng~ •Klngs1ie bedrooms •Large walk-in closets • Pnvale dressing areas ,, Accented walls. Delw.e 3 bdrm. Jl'r~:. st Crom ocean Concrete steps to beach decks. garage. refng S39S1mo. B J & As!loc Brokers 768-7839 L.rg 2Br + den. wlk to bch & s tores, frplt, nu crpts /drps. S3301mo. 492·1096. ONOC~AN!' S240 2br ulll pd K&P SJIO 3br 2b:i util pd K&P Sm rec 545.-1000 •CONSU~l ER'S CtJIDE I BR. dec·k. \ 1c~. pn\ Uc). walk to bch \tilts. no pets. 5225 I !)!1~741!!. I ~!l:astl ------Apartments F..mished or Uftfurnlshed 3900 ......•...•............ T111'-: EXCITING PALM MESA APTS. MINUTES TO NPT BCH. Bach. 1&2 BR from S230 & up Adults. No Peb 1561 Mesa Dr (!; lllks East or ~ewport Blvd I !lam !lµm 54t; !186(1 -----Rooms 4000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Room w 1 kitchenette $5() week & uµ 543.9755 Ambassador Inn in Costa Mesa. 2277 Harbor <.A:-n trally located, 235 rooms MANY with k1trhen, phone & 1V. Sw1mminR pool, Jt1cun1. and rec room Daily & weekl) rates !ilartrnR rrom SS4 a week •••••••••••••••••••• ••• carpet. etc S425. 7S1·2060 2 hd. 2' 2 ha. e~d gar, 1 br. cpts, drps. no pets. puuo. frplc. No Peh $2M. mo Irvine. S4Z mo 5Rl·lii985 645.2274 ,;ft 6 Neur corner or Walnut & Jeffory off S A Frw:. 1714 )559-7000, s orry no I pets. Rental center open daily 9 am lQ 7 pm ~m1shed room. Costa MesJ 646·2318 ----Lge I br. util pd. E·side. Bradlord Pl. 3Br. I' i& covered deck. S2A5. mo. e n c g a r . n o P e l s 366 E 20th. 646·4387 $360/mo. 556 1977 ~etree 1 BR lake con 1 Man off1Cl' wanl~d. ·do. AC. rec racil . SJOU. Balboa Island or Nwpt 644-9548 Up to S225 mo. <197·37~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• •IE SB.ECTIVE-*· Gama reliable roommate. 645-7464 •SHARE A HOME• Female roommate wunt cd lO share 3 BR. 111 ba ~'Ondo w 12 19 yr old work ing girls. Nr Beach & Atlanta. II B. f'rplc. nr pool, walk lo ocean SI 35 mo. C1nd~. 536·221UJ or 67H.od4 Male 18·25 to shr hse. NB w 2 ot he r s 1mmcd S183 3J +.An l, 642·6882 2 yng prof.men seek same to shr 3 br apt. Ideal Nwprt local 673·01!55. eves Cut down U•inq Expenus! Share a ho ml' or a pt mcnl ~E ·WAru U'll.L\tlTtD tu,.. .... ~~~ ~l"dH1< C...• ~ h u u:o•W\l 1132·-11.J.I Sint·e 1971 Male 24.30 to shr lux 3 Br 3 b<i w 12 girls rrplt• D1W. t!ncl gar. $200 Ltll lnl'I 2 b lks to bt·h 960-5260 . 960· 3568 Maturl' 36yr old wumJ n w19yr old !.on looking tll share a nice home t•ondo w :. u m e 1\ m v l' r \' r~pons . neat & l'll'an & a m a n o n ., m o k t• r . huwl'Vl•r smoking tloei. not botht•r mP If '" I cre:.li~d, pb t·u II u fl 6p'm. wkdys & lpm wkndo; al 76H·1260 YnJl man. !>hr yr apt in dwnln 11.U W/!>Umt' ref's Def lOam or art l!pm. 536-6972 Roommatt• wanted . female. res p. S117.SO + '' ulll + dt:poi.ll:-. San C:lt!mente area 492-t;{)J~ Gcroqes forlletlf ...•......•...........• Garage for rent Uoofl locution Near beach $35 month 547.9939 Sgl ~arage. storage only :\fesa Verde 11rea ~6-0769 THE EFACIENT Al TERNATIVE Mo. to mo rent incl Recept . serv .. personalii.ed phone cov erage, cone. rm. mail scrv . parking & more m Newport TIIE EXECUTIVE SUITE 640·M70 Psych or M FCC rurn or fl<'e. SlSO mo. Newport Harbor (;ounsehn~ Cntr 833·1610 S1n1tle two rm ,ut te available near Or Cly airport. Full s en ires available. For mort.> in· forma tJon 7141833·36-IO OC'Clce space. C<!M. s treet level $145. mo &44·8494 Tiw IHclltive Ofc NfW'PlORT CENTER Luxunous 1·2 man Otfice• with FULL SEttVICES 110 N\:WPort CA:ntcr Dr Suite 200 644-4492 TO IUSIHESS MEM & PROFESSIONALS Valley Plaiu OH1cC'~ Nt!ar40.S 1-'reeway Complete sect 'y sv~ . Recepl & telephone Conference room Fret> coffee & i.auna 962·4812 Superior J\'l' $100 + utJl.Jt1cs Davis Brown 646 16114 Shere Dix Suite small Airedale i-·em. OP 661-1734 or 83().~:Jtio Laguna deli.tea re Blk/tan Lie no ~41. Teresa Beer & wine. All new N.8 biJ.3472. Rewurd ---------- eqwp. May trade . scR•M-tETS ~.000 Agt 494 7551 Lo8t M dog. looks likl• ft ----~-_;,;;_:__I sml Germ Shep. blk/ ·~wERS 0 l N NE R H 0 USE . whl Reward. 646-9552 M~ Orange Co landmark S70.000tmo Owner retir' REWARD for return or mg. Agt. 75t-~400 watch. <'lass rini;. & • paperi. lost at C rystul COCKTAILS by the sea. Cove. 713178 No ques· needs good operator lions asked Mr Youn,: Terms Agent. 751 1400. 960-4317 or PO Box 81!. TRA VB. AGEHC Y FRANCHISE Hunt Bch 92t;4K Lost Mane-rem Whip· pet, tan. v1r of 34th St. NB 631 1212. 673·44!*1 Though -Surly •·oyer -Mot1\•e - YOUGOTIT Pol.Jee inspector to IAldy dn ver. whom ht! had stopped" "Your drfr1ni: license seems to be vahll. madam. Now suppoM• you tell me how 1n th\: world YOU GOT IT' .. The new way lo own a travel J"cnt') Tr:H t>I Found: Brn Ger m u n Network Start vourown Lost; Capo Bch area. Shorthair. Male. clipped Exp not r;qu1 rt•d Poodle mix, gray "Hap. l ""03422 Complete support & lon1: Py .. Reward 496·7992. till ·""""' · term service provided. SIOO Reward for dark brn FOUND Sml Pekinci.c Call Mr C harle s . Burmes1: cat Mute d like dog, wht. blk-twht 714-838·9242 __ male. vie Legion St. Lag face. 6-!I mo 831·2813 F u r n S l r 1 p p 1 n g Sch. Ple111;e call 494 1581 Found : Fem. Dachshund Franchise &.lab 2 yrs in _e_v_s_. --------ITllX. 10 pds, reddish brn, great CM loc Off at well lost. Family member. 6 upx I yr. MV ar ci.I . below .set up _r~sl Sar yni. Wendy Lou, 7 3 El _51l6_-4_7_48 _____ ~- S70001f1rm 548·1622 Tues· Toro f Bl'a!(lc mix. 1-'ound Blk Lab 011 ,. Fri 9.5 __ 11 v t• r w g l I <• n ' w ht Fl·m. v1c Paulanno nr lnnshntnt 837 2289 afl I 34l Bear St 557 ·3182 Opporlunity 50 f 5 Lo 'i I U I k I"<' m FOUND Small hru\lo ~ ••••••••••••••••• •••••• Da s t' h u n d · n •' m <· Chihuahua m Newport f'or sole dut• to dint'":. "llt!1d1". \Il l' M1:.:. Vt!! llts. Tustin·C:lay ar'-'cl ~1arml' & .tulo repair JO i J 8.'J'i -093.1 &\0-201U bus1nc!>s Gd 1'11:4 loc.1 _______ __.,_ uon 642 6099 Fem Shepht.>rd Ulk ·ran fo'ound Female bl & ----II yrs 60 lb!. Ans to rrt!am cJt ~1th 'llJrite: ll}dlc S~ II B 7 14 fle a collJr Bay S1 5020 lj62.637 t 64..>4473 .. .. .. . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . ---·----.-'--Los l Brown & white Bus~nessma n wants to in· Sibenan llWlk). rem 40 'est or purchase yacht lbs Cho ker ehuin brokerage in Newport or :>-46-7562 Rcward Long Beut•h llar bor ---------- areas. Call Mr J:H·k!>on Hl 633·3894 after Ii Lost M Sµrinitt•r Found wht female do1: w /blk tan puppy. 1::1 Toro a re a. 770-3385. Money to Loc.i 5025 300 sq ft ava1• Aug 10 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Inc pvt view offlee tHONewport Ccntcr Dr QUICK CASH Brittany mix. blk wht w spots Ba~ St :irea .\n" lo ··Amo,.·· 548·9852. 581 o\555 Su::.lt' Found . 2 cats. I fl'm hlk & wht k1lten. I YTilo! (t•m Calico c·at . rollar w1bells Mti·7>UJ Personals USO fo'ash10n Island 640 10711 Dental Luh s11pcc m 1::1 To r o DI! n l a I o ff 1 l' c Lease/ rent '1!14·2792 CdMOFFtCES I st Mo. Rent FREE Bnghl & cheery new ore suites. So or Coast Hw) Available now' SF.I:: to Appreciate $395 Call Ltnda 675 2311 4450 ••••••••••••••••••••••• E SIDE C ~1 Shops . olk's, hobby. \lo holesale. gen use f'r. S8S 548 724!1 NEWPORT BLVD. C.M Pnmecomm'l I04:'al1on 4950 sq .ft. 494 !>608 1st & 2nd Tnua Dt•ed loan.i; arran)!l'<.I for 11 ny rruson. Credit no pro blem. Borrow on the m creased valul' or your home (;all today for fast. t•ourte<lus inf or ma t1on ~~j~~.~.~- L1ceni.ed Homt' Loan Brokers sen ing ~o Calif for Ii) rg <.:u II our n l' d r t' ,. l " I I I t' l' . 714-837 .3744 lsl . 2nd & 3rd T D ·,. Cl-edit no problem 738-4271 Arranged by Coast Home Loan:. LOST S~!t\LL B1W CAT Spiritual Reade-Nume ··Tu ··Collar i.ays ••.••..•....•....••••.. 'Shi• hl'loni:s tn K 1 m IRl5 So. El Camino~al RJy .. I( round rail Myr San Clemente. t-un)111: t le M cG 1:e <t l SIJe tr c r __ •_·o_r_u...:.p..:..p_t._4_9_2·_7_2!M __ MortuJ ry ~94 1535 RELAXJNGMJ\SSJ\GE REWARD BobJames-w c M11.tsc:ur LOST. July 4. Vic Cumro Shorl>s. flrcy rem Tcr· rll'r mix Sl·hnuu7er c I 1 p p l' d ,, n ' l o ··Leonard " H\:v.ard 675·1689 Lst m<tll' Sc hnau1er' Fritz t.:nthp~d C'ars Reward ms 5582 Outcall S.9. 494-St l l FOXY LADY Outcall MasSCNJt M/C 731-356 t PREG~ANT" Carin1t confidenual counseun~ & ref~rral Abortion. adoµ t1on & keeping APCARE LINDA& Vic.kl OukaftMcnsap For ttw Fun of It! KlDSOK .Apartments Fv"'lsh.ci 3 br, t 17 ba. pool. S300. l.acJwta leach 3841 F. $150 mo + '~ util WANTED gar t or ---------• workshop in Cdm Call 5400 Sq. Ft. DO YOUN EEO C,\SJI" lst. 2nd & 3rd Home owner loan:. J..051. Fl'malt• -.1hcr Poo. die, toy ro min size. groomed. Lamb s tyle. hJd o n flea c·ollur. Reward. Vic Nwpt Blvd & 16th. C M 646-3427 or 646-9609 Serving all Orange Co 835-731.J ••••••••••••••••••••••• mo. 645-8084 lOam lo 7pm lcAoa Island 3706 ______ .....;;__ ••••••••••••••••••••••• 559-6077. OCEANFRONT DELUXE GuestH~ 4150 673·4865 Showplace or town arranged fast Borrow $1000. $100,000 rlex1ble ll'rm ~. 1w .. 1 credit no problt•m C::ill us noobhgauon Lo!>t W1d l' i-11\t'r brocdel. bru:.s starfish on top Vt<' Npl Bl·h. H4iward 675 3292 •QUALITY ESCORTS• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Huge 2 BR. E /Side. util 1 Br apt, Bayfronl lot. pd .. open beam clgs, fncd $350/mo includ util. Isl & yd, S315 mo. 646-4387 I & 2 BR from $420. util incl. 646·0505 last+ Sl.25d<'PoS•l Yrly. Spacious. quiet J bdrm Studio apts. '• blk to Musl be non·smok.cr & townhse apt w 1lge pvt heuch. S'260 incl. util ~et person. 673·fi866. patio. Pool. Adults. Sorry Permanent Stv & refr1i.t HiefittcJton leach 37 40 no pct.;. S400. &15·3381 or llotel Catirornrn 493-7137 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _67_S._594_!J______ or49-1·2797 SMALL BEACH HOTEL SUpcr clean 2 Brt. l ba , f~. 2Br. I 12 8a condo N CU ff ROOMSS37.!'i0 Wcek s1dc C.~1. S285. Adlts. 319 Or. belo hwy Ocean \'U, Apt $165/mo 536 3037 Monte Vista.1131-2997 lrg patio balcony. i\dlts. L •-h 37 .... no pets. $600 OCJUIMI ... oc -East.side. 2Br lBa m tn-49-1·3017 673 5069 ........................ plex. frplc. crpts. drps, ---- Oceanfront apt I bdrm bit-ins. enc gar. luun. V1 ctor1u Beach I Br li2S Also 2 bdrm $725 Wtr1gas paid, older <'hild w gar Utll Ptl Balcony. ut1l incl 'trly Adults. OK. no pets. S335. 203 oc View. cable 494 1401 •••••• •••• •• ••• •• •• •••• Wanted to rent Marug1: lor storu1l;l' Elegant retirement home Call 5'\l!-549i near !>Jim Springs . --------- Pm-ate & sem1-privatt• Office Retlfal 4400 roomb. gourmet food . 2 ••••• •• •• •• ••. ••. •• •• •• hot mmcral pooli.. ramily typl' atmosphl'rc Cull 7 I 4 J 2 !I !J II IS I f 11 r brochure Summer Retttals 4200 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 3Br 2Ur WEEKLY . $.100 . $200 12935thSt, NB 213·966· 1711 Exccut1\le swte A1rportcr lnn area. 320 sq rt. corner ofr. all services pro· v1ded Plaza Exccut1\ll' Suites. 20ll2 M 1chd son :;212. lrvme. 752 OZ:H FULL SEttVICE Possibly unfum Avail Ogle. 548 3281 C\ cs mid-Sept 497 1082 wkends --------~ Mewpart .. och 3769 2 BR. l b11. I car gar. UI Lal(una Bch apt. beach, for rent 675·5531 Waterfront NB. 2 bd. on the home. patio. S2511 wk 540-6299 or 557 ·OS-18 DB.UXE OFFICES Personal telephone n· ccpt1on1st. s~c·relar~. con!eren.ce room. corfc1: & hosp1taht)I i.crv1cc~ Excellent locot1on. nl'u r freewavs ••••• ••••••••• ••••• ••• 0 E. <;osta Mesa St. S325 STVS TO llEACH 4 Br. 2ba, s.s<>O I Br. lba. yrly. $300 3 Br. 2ba. Penin $650 SUMMER REHT AL Bayfront. 4 BR. 2 ba. on big bay. $850 Week associated BROKFRS llEAI TORS 2 1'1' w ~glf)•,J &1 1 16 1 WEEKLY mo. AJ(t. 645·4095 Dix 2 BR. refng, all ulll . encl. gar Children 0 K. 1960 Wallace . S305 :>&8-9560or agt 833·9781 lrand Spank"9c) .Ww Twnhs. Apts 11/1 Mii. Fr hach 3 lldrms. 11 t Baths 1''ireplaces. Pattos Dis hwasher.Disposals. Laundry FnciltUes 3Br · · · · · · · · S350. 1175 MOftrOYia St. 2Br... . . ~. 129~lh St. NB. Agt on premises Sat/Sun 213·966·1711. 640-0357 4 IW' 2 ba, laltoa 11• 2 Lge l dR. bltns. pool. ll*.1..i1 I Wl4a. D /W • $255. Adults. no pets. 423 $600 ......... 6/7'. w &y 548·!1516 540-2345 Wait•• ... 3791 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Bachelor Apt. $150. mo. 642·73S3 A' all now $1000 mo Mewport leach 3869 Sp11c. 21 J ha, nin•ly furn ••••••••••••••••••••••• Laguna ho me {.;ijtuhna BAKER CENTER 1714 ll:l79 2161 PARK NEWPORT vu. Walk to bl·h 49-1· 7430 ...... JClll'lt s Stanley 4091/1 Daihlla CdM Bachelors . l or 2 Bedrooms & Townhouses From S329 .50 Spectacular spa. totnl ret realion proAram, soc1nl program. 7 pool!.. II tennis courts. Al 1''ash1on Island .• Jamboree & Sun .lnaqwn IUlls Road. 17 I 4t 644-1900 Nwpt Hgts lovely arcu, <! bdr Iba, pnv. patio. gur. no pets. $325 mo. 5'18·5804 or4lM·3223 Nice 2Br Oplx upstairs. frplc. W t D. garage. adults. no pets. nr Lido Isle shopping. Avail ap· prox 7 /15. Lse. credit ref S500 mo 4!>4·6303 September Rcntul~ F\Jrn nr Unfurn 3Rr. 288, $525 Summer rental llunt in gt on Ha rbour. s pe1 toculor I BR. 3 ba. pool. 60' boutshp, S700 wk. Ju. ly & AU!-\. Work, ll9>1·3533. home. IYl6 6050 Dalhoa Peninsula 1 BR. sl(Jrl 5. compl furn, $1110 wkly Ml>-6238 f\Jm. Studio w /k1tch in 1..agunu w1patlo. Close lo bch Wk or Mo. Sip:< 4. Starts $165 494 -71111 2 DR OR BACHELOR ,\pt. • ~ blk 10 beach in Newport Reasonable Wkly rates. ll73·3601 You ure thl' wmner of 2 t1ckets· t Sl3.00 V<tlue > tolhl!JULY 15 8.00PM Pcrformuncc of the Royat LJpinan Stalll• Show at the ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER July 14. 15. 16 Call 642·5678. ext 329. to claim your tickets *** EucutWt Row Inc Lovely 3 br 2 ba beach apt 0 f c s p a c e 1 n °'1 oceao. ,\\•all by werk. Newport Airport Area. July lS·Aug S. Cull R t h 2 3 95 "°"' •uc e<:ep ion. p one ser v • 1 '7 ·l......, or .....,.2444 conference rm. kllch . rordeta1ls ----------1 seey serv. dictating & ---------•I copy m~chlne. l''rom $320. (714)752-7170 Super sharp. yrly l5c •Bach-pr1vary. util pd A)l uttl. paid. Lge I hr, 2Br. ll)a, $300 No pets. Sl6S. Nr S D. & cpt.s. drps. bltns. refnl(. 9 mos, upstairs unit Wt atil hcrYt ._..., O.G. Ftfiy. 833-m4 S215. Adults. no pets. i-~antasllc b1ch. S250 .......,. Polleblt .. 64S·8579orM8·1Sl7 Yrly,uUllnc.slps 2 frowtSJSOto QN THE WATER ~d Bachelor Loft. rcfrig, A~~~.t~~~~l7ll $100,.,-wk. Del Suit ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1tove. pool, adults. no IN RAYSHORES Two 08 8$ Q_,.. lt02 pet1. $260. 646-2901 2 bdr 1 ba. beam cellln1111. bedroom ttoll hou~c & 3 w 1270 ft ••••••••••••••••••••••• 18 OCC di patio. gar. Nwpt lli\s . bdrm charmer. Cto11e to L'31U· sq 12621 f<'l ower Street. Seer~LaS.1ie~·4. No_ p ell /k Ida . $a25 pvt beach ln gated com Al-nlties Garden Grove-Lnrgc S211S 897·422.S. 64S 1682 munlly. $3~0 to $425 Udo one bedroom •P•rlmentJI Steps 14 boat •Up. bay & week. close 14 aboopln1 Laun· D.. PoMt 3826 beach. a Br condo ll<'wly BEACH lN FRONT or ,_....... Y ..... d.q.• f1clfllle1 No ....................... p&1nled. completely lhl11 decorator 4 bdrm Newport 67M662 CbJ.Jdttn; no peta. Call I bd. newly decor cle11n, llhutlcred. dbl !jar w /lot.a home w1r11bulo111 view of Dinny or Donne al 1714) adlt.a, rel & dep rcq. 1275. ot st.oraae It auto o~Mr OOATINO 11ctlvlty and IAYAtOHT OFFfCIS a!U·lOU. 833-9703 24' boat 1Up. 17$0/mo Jelly l.ots or privacy. Canntty Village-New uf S ll 11 AV A t L J\ D LE . fi 00 r ..... P11l1 .. lt07 ............ ad 3t40 &:I0-17l7af\fSpm WEl';KLY In JULY .'\t ~~~:~ .. t~~ ~icw11~ I~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••Steps to beach, 3 yr old •wk. patloa .park1n1 4' $!:50ftlrrtltf1lddscic loc SHARP. ~ach. 2&3 BJ\, duplex. l,,l(O bedrm , W•14f10ilt..._s Janitorial Included 2808 Smre.~. frpl , dlsbwuber, bltns, yrly I c S.aln c.1611·1400 Larey tto l\ve .• Ne •CONSUMER'SOUtDE 11.raite. patios. 9e0-23$8. AIC lat 675-1908 --------•I 873-1003 Mei.a Verde p .. Plaza 1525 Mesa Verde Dr i:: Ce>1>la Mesa 545-4123 2482 2-188 '\jewporl Blvd. Costa Mesa Approx 90() sq ft . plenty or pnrkmJ.( S500 mo 642·3490 • 506 W. lalboa 30'x65' lldfJ. 1950 sq ft bldg for ll'U!>C n<'Xl door to Bills ~kt Ternf1c IOI.' for most re twl bu;, i.uch as b1cyl'lc or mo!X'(I shop. bN1ch up pard etc Only 31t' per ""' ft or $600 per mo for this hu;hly dl'S1rable 10\· l'.illl 8111 lfavcn Ml 6(H:J llUHAVEN REALTOR 541..0013 W 19th St CM Bids Store10fflcc C·I Zone 2 cu 300 sq fl a.Joininl( units sus. ea or $200 ror both 644·9877 lndustriat Retltat 4500 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1400 s.r orrce & 1otar In lnlne indu1H hid ~ W 14 .000 to R.000 s f fenced yd. 550·t802 STERLING f'IN ~\'C~ ilol/955-16101 bkr I ~1.Trust Lost Rik Cat. white puws. nose & throat V1(' Tunlerock Vii.ta aµls & Un1\ ll1 gh Da)i. 833·523-t. Alt :'ipm R33·001i OaedS 5035 ••••••••••••••••••••••• FOUND. 'mJll ll1m1tll· LOWEST Blk1Whl Do.:. fll•a roll11r \'1r lllth & Monrn .. w . c: ~ 673 19'.J>I lntettst Rates tst T.D.'$, also 2nd T.D. Loe.is. Fairest Terms sinrc 194!1 Scrtffer MhJ. Co. 642-217 I 545-061 I Rct1n'<i couple ha:. mont') to ll'nd \st & 2nd TU :- A~cnt. 1-837 Ji-14 21% YIELD SR0.000 2nd T D 11n Escondido·, most 'Pl'l' tacular vie w 211 acn•i. lw lnA d1v1dcd . behind Isl T 0 . "• of ~ale•< pnc·t•. 10'~ interest. all du1· :I yrs, 20'"f dist 75J..18261493· I 153, l'Vl'l> Invest S'J0.000 for :I ,\ r~ JI 1or,. fully se<·ure<I Wntl' Adc300. Dail) Piiot. llo;oc 1560. Costu Mt1i.u Ca 9262ti FOUND \'it• 29th & 30th St. NB. i K Blk I.ab pur. M Apµro' 2 moi. 556-9798 Found Germ :.h<.'P mix pupp) l:"emalt• nr 1::111~ & Dclawart• !!&! ~18 l,()ST Whit<.' Poodle I} Pl' ll•malt• do~ Wt!arin~ Lon,11 Bl'Jt°lt t.1.1:,,, ,mswers to ··Au~1l' ·. IO!>t 7 ,, in ~e~u Verdt· ar1:a. C:~I Pleuse t•all 5.u;.!)215 Keward Found Lri: uld 11old doJ1. ft•malt•. \'It' 1-: (;ostu Mes a R<IH·H20ll Found Golden Rt•lnt•vt•r . upx I yr. mt1l1• Cu ll 645 ISOll 4.000 :i q rt. New Almwa1Nnts/ warehouse spac(' 118 In· Penoaals/ f'ound Terner rn1x , mall:! tn·rolor 3·5 yr-. 645·150& dustna1Park.894·S3S1 Lott&foUftd Found Iris h Seltl'r. ••••••••••••••••••••••• malt•. ap:c 2 year~ Ap· Lost & Found 5 300 pears purebred 645· 1508 Ph for app't 1135·3'i 1!) ENJOY COM PLI M'EN TAHY "CHAM PAGNE" With models ol' 11 tol.K'h of class · E::it:ORTs·· "OUTC1\LL. ~5 OOtl:! WE MES> MEW FACES If vuur fa<'l' h J , L'ha.rurt er. 1:0. h 1 ~h rash1on or looks hkc thv 1t1rl next door. call for 1111 appointment for .1 personal mt.crv1ew You t'ould be modclin~ '" earlv as next week• So don:I hc::.1lutc. CJll nu" and ask for Elsie or J111· (IW. ~I 5600. ~cw Yori.. West Model:. °'411crs or eqwpmcnt ll'll at K1lpatnck's TV bcfon· .lun1• l . please conlut'l (HO.. 70f!!} Sm<'f•rc. lonely male, llll. seeki. sincere lonl'ly h•m for r<.'lat1nn s hip c213 J592-4!27:'1 H unt llarbour VlOEO MOVIJ:: PARLCJH f'rt!c 20 min introdm·tor\ visit. no purchase rt'<i A1so dance & r 111> sessions OANCEOFFUM 2060S. Euclid. Anahclm F:xrlting rl'cording. 534·1581 SoclalC~ 5400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• For rent or Lease 5000 sq ft industrial bldg. 7.0ned for Mr. corn er of Pullman Sl & Puulanno St, CM. Fenced. paved. parldnlJ. hre spnnklers 110·220 wired Inquire W A. Oosta, 11<11$49·9671 ••••••••• ••••• • •• • • • • •• Found Spnnger S paniel. LOST-FemGerman brn1wht. F. vie M1si. Shepherd Blk & tun V1eJ01EIToro 831 3662 Please cal I 963-53511 --'---------·---------Reward f'ound . M11I~ Gflrm11n SINGLE? Shepherd, Conn1:ct1rut Call INTROVIEW forthc REWARD Brown & It" .:3249711 Nd!' S S I ' 1ntelllgenl & dis<.'r-t.>r l 1500 sq rt $350/mo. 1310 white pnnger punic m1..od1c11I unn urgently. way to meet new sin~ll' '.. CM C t ct 811 rem. "Lucy .. 1..otlt 711 Ph 673·3472.642·3MO rv>ftnle 7"'" ..... 11. .,,.,gan. on 1t 1 681·1875 ---------• ..-~~ .. ~~--~..,.~~~~~ Burnell Busl nessj..;;;;;;::;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;::::::::::::=IPound CollH'. Vic _ Prope rt1e:i 8rokeruge Brookhur~l/Yorktown Co. 752·8011 96.1·4632 $1.62 per DAY -,..o-un_d _C_nt-. -lr-~-d-ar-k m> sq. rt .. 600 amps. 208 volt.I. 3 phase. airlines 4c elcctric1ty lnstollcd ror machin 1hop. Rusldina located at 1580' Producer Lano, HuntlnRton &ach. Contact Mr. Bowm an 1213)327 6361 between 8 am &4pm. Storege 4550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• l>Owntown C M Prl me location. l250 mo. M ·344>1 or 54·3270 Wanted to rent geraae ror 1toraae C.l1$48·M97 'n\at's ALL you pay gray Vic Vlu nlers. tor 8 Udo Isle Call 67&-6582 30 d•y Md $100 Reward, Lost Oog. In thti Elkhound /Shcp. DAILY PltOT SERVICE llRECTORY 00 rr NOW ' 64a..~7t lona hoir Blk/bm bOdy. wht feet. Wht tall. male. M2·01~. Uit min poodle Long t11il & rrd lc1111h N1.1meli . "0irl .. Allpau plaze. Reward 493·77~ Fd 2 male Cats Huge frcy Pcttian ~ Grey wtth Bllt. stnpe . C~M 8713412 •1' ........... , ................. - *** A.nltNMwy ,_, ... 1 45' 5 Greeate" U, l"IM You are the winner ol 2 Ucket.s· t $13.00 v •lu• I llOthcJULV 15 8:00PM Performance Of the Roytllu,m. s ...... at the ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER July 14, 15, 16 Olll MZ·S67~ ext. 3211. lei clai(n your tkketa. · ..... ' ... -... .. W•ct..,. ·-'k ' ••~la C_jgeder =-;~_ llt ' 1 ....................... ....................... ·····•···•············· .•............•.•......••..................... DATA PROCESSING • n.-ield Cot am.all bwil nessea 4' profou1005 Cw.lom proarammlnK Reasonable Southwnt Atfh Jtt..,..,.. Services ~'7-0162 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •S.vt Mo~y· C. ,. ..... Drivewaya•Parking lot ••••••••••••••••••••••• •Repairs •Seulcoatlng Carpenter. Free eiit. Any •Lie. NB. C M S &S sue Jobe! Call Allan or Asphalt 646-4811 Tony. 646-8649 .......... lnd carpenter. comm1res. ••••••••••••••••••••••• + painting. Reason. Woriong mother has 7 yr. rates. John. 531·8082. K.J Hullman&Son. Elcp. Japant.'le GaJ'dener Lite huullng-movrng. ~tnodel&addluooa Complete yard serv1<.'tll G•rage-Yard cleaning. ~or MS-<tSU. Rell able & neat. N pt Reaa. rates. 642-0705 Ll~ns''<i k Booded. Deb. Cdl\t area. 645-oe&t _ lbm1de•l•1 Cal1Corn1a Coastal GicadiRc) ••••••••••••••••••••••• St'rvtcc New. remOdi:I & ••••••••••••••••••••••• Want a REAU... Y CLEAN haWina. Free estimate11. Haul s luploader dump HOUSE? Call Oingham Call Max at492·6393. trk. 'grading, tree wrk, Glrl. F)-eeest. 645-5123 C\ltltom Remodeling & demoUUons etc. 831-1257 Immaculate Cleamn~ Co. Addlttons Call Vince ,. _____ ~ c-..... For those who deserve LenhOIC&Assoc. 673-7404 ~-~·· thebest.551-~79 ······················· ---------Geo contractor. additions S" aluminum seamless Ro&emarie'1 Houseclean· & remodeling. Bob raingulters w/baked on ing. Rers. reason. Own Hardesty. 548-~. enamel. Cstm bit on job trans. 642-1403. 645-3439 old girl attending El _64(). __ :soo_i _____ _ =~ N~ ::I':~d c-pet Ser-flu ~~od~k:'c1r as~'!:il!~~~ her to school. 7AM · 5PM ••••••••••••••••••••••• eonstr. Lied. S56.fl241 TheGuttermen. 542·1242 DlRTY WlNDOWS! .......,.... CALL LYNN ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~1711 960-5844 Prefer lJl mother with Shampoo & steam clean child In same school. Color brighteners; wht Bectrictll General Handyman . 497-3156. cpts10minh4tacb.Clean ••••••••••••••••••••••• Painting. carpentry. bv, din rm. hall SJS. Avg roofing, masonry. Any Loving cb11dcare, nutrl-rm $'7 .50. couch $10, chr HlMsd IMdric home maintenance or re· tion conscious mother ~. Guar el.im pet odor Lic327136 00•14 modeling projects. J . th AtdtsJ 9 , ..... jP.arilM) ....................... ..•........•...•......• The Moppets. th111'11 our t'rOI pamtm&. Ext & Int. name. Cleaning t:i uur l'.ow natQ. Reis Frve aame.Cal1S48-2392 est 53M7llO.S36-4383 Xlnt rleaning, ~xper . dep. reason. Own tran:. .557·3726 Lv Message Custom w.upapennj( All work Ruar Free est. G7~168 "-o & OnJ-T--. laa ... • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Pumo tuning & repaJt. 2.5 lte-Rnof For Lt.>ts11 ~rs exp. Muster'11 degree Call Anytime in music. 122.~.t.hts mo. 894·°'21 ••••••••••••••••••••••• _o_n.1y_11_0-48_1_s ____ 11,... Senic. ........ ;..,..,. ••••••• •• •• •••••••••••• Rainbow palm tree l'i-. L..dlcapilNJ H --ous_e_P_a_tn_tl_ng-.-ln-t-.. -E-i<-i Neatpatcheb&tl'i<tures perts. neat & cll-un. any •••••••••••••••• ••••••• ter. Free estlm.a tcs. John FttH EST. 893· I '439 hgt 494· 7600. 494 5752 Di g · It Landscape. Beck ~2151 Rea.son. pnces. Free e&l. Call anytime 646-7CY10 Landscaping Tree tnm· mmg. Clean-up. 8 yrs exp. Free est Noboru. 848-4043 or 897 ·2862 lnt. ext. serving area for 7 yrs. Pror qual work_ Reas. Ins Dave. 586-8425 PtUnting your home. apt. or ofrlce? Call .. Local Color" tor free estimat- i.ngserv (714)642·~ . ••••••••••••••••••••••• Rel'OOfiog, asphall shingl-ltlter & Exter painting & papering. W11llp1tper 30% tni• Call after l2 noon oCC, lrg selection. Roger ~1'7 .549·1684or673·5tSt Umwy E O .... , R ••••••••••••••••••••••• UR PEn.1 .. EXPE T ~ T~ • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• PERRY'S f'l.UMBING Tutoring by risadin g We cleoir any drain or spt:cnahst also math. sewer anytime: f'ree ~·530after5pm estunalel. CAii for low wknd rates 673-3181 Credentialed Elementury ----------1 Te11cher will tutor your PoolSenlce, Repain k·8th Cr child Carol • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Wegner SS 1--0622 Lido Pool Service. 9ual. ~ Cle••"J svce. Harbor /Sad · ••••••••••••••••••••••• dl~back Vly. 645-0247 . ServinG CM INB/lrv . ca Reas. Coast Cleaning ...._.. & R.,.W Service ~51111 ••••••••••••••••••••••• pref2-3yrs. 646-3881 Cpl repat.r. lS yrs expr. ELECTRICIAN-Priced Wa\&gh. 631·2233 .__.. i Oo work myself Rers __ ,Sen us s.'ll·OlOl. right·free es~imate on Hcmg ••••••••••••••••••••••• ----------1 largeorsn1.a11Jobs. ••••••••••••••••••••••• VlVJANE WOODARD CahrilNJ Licensed 673--0359 OCC Student. 1 Ton truck 5""5HIHE GIRLS Professional h<>me and office cleanin&:-Fully in· sured. Free estimate. RE work & empties welcome. 540-9525 HOUSEKEEPER Energet.lc yng lady will clean your home for $5.00 hrly Call G31-2219 aft 5. Brickwork. Small Jobs. Painting. remodel. Get ti clear \'lew from ··A CLEAR VIEW" Co NB/CMIJRV 631·0217 Newport, Costa Mesa 4t plumbing f'restS6t-2467 Addition. remod el alt lrvine.67S-3175eves. Pa1nt1ng, lnL qual types constr. Free ~l mat.enals, rates negot11t· Low rate-.. L1c'd 548-8250 ,_..iltg/PaperinCJ ble. 4~-0589 R-"-Cousl Window Cleanmg COSMET ICS ••••••••••••••••••••••• Complimentary Facing FaciaJ&MaJce-up We ddings, s ummer••••••••••••••••••••••• Trash, tree trim. Ron 842·5703, 979-6489 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------.;:::~••••••••••••••• ai hrs. Fr~ eslarnatb E~~-~~s:~~Tri~~s . p~~~M!1t~~~:~r ~f,~~· REPAIR & REHOOF. All1ii&12--566Biii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ELLERY DEATON parties. wine Utsli~g. WE.STERN FENCE CO ~.. Cabana-For The fine Wood&Ch . ll k For Ad Actien CHEAPEST hauling m Xlnt housecleamng done Free Est Cal t Gene Also exp wallpapenng type::. :. h 'n ~I e ~ I' town. Fr. ests. CHEAP' by lady w/exp Dependa-5$2-04S8 Free e&L 67S· 1338. rockshakei. t•ompo tJr ~Repair ArtorCatenng. 64S·9&8. Lic#~lSl ams~-1837 642-2995or64S-1390 ble.own trans. 847-3637 ---------640-0473 Freecst.~l·S930 Pamung. 1-:xtr 1tntr. f::x· ••••••••••••••••••••••• Janos European Caler· Mobile Bicycle Repair Al ing Summer parties. ~dl"'-9 Hauling-yard & garage Housecleaning Efficient. pr'd. honest. neat. rells. Do you want the beat ror WALKER ROOFlNG cleanups. Lawn installa-exper, references. Llc'd004·l04SDav£-less? Call Dan for free Lie 1132641!!1, all types can a Daily Pilot AD-VISOR 642-5678 Your Home For Appl banquets, weddings ••••••••••••••••••••••• Call891·1455. 66l-246i •VERY LOW PRlC~* tioo & removal. Tree & G31·4929 est. s yrs exp. 640.al97 roof111g, free t.'lit 1192-~ s hrub removal. Rel. -----...-----Fine Exter. Painting by -t--..-~-· ,. _ _,./C -.....1... OnGarderungMa1ot. -__...~ --"' C*Cnrnr George 549-2015 . ......... ............. . ..... .. . . . . . . .. . . ... . . ---"-------- Divorce/ Bankruptcy Foundations. retaining Clean-ups. Hauling. sso walls. blocks. patios Landscapmg. Jmmed. AttlOOTypmg. 960-5419 556-8241-l.ic'd servicing. 642·9907 Frank Ivens. ell--03114. Deboruur Housecleaomg R-Stnor. St. uc .. ins. Try Painting & minor home 642-6059 Service. Reason. ratei.. me.836-555S~ hrs repairs . 4 yrs exp. Good refs. 642-0221 Bonded 536-8478 Steve Students: Hauling, yard & ---------YOUNG MAN. 5 yrs expr · garage clean.up. Sell th.tags Cast with Daily in wallcovenng. f'ree Classilied Ads. your one· 1 536-8877 Pilot Want Ads. ests. 645-8576 Andy stop shopping center Roof repairs & roofing lnstalnn~ v~nt:. Free est. 646-0049 Loni.:. Roof· ing. Want Ad Results 642-56781--------- ·~~ HelpW..ted 7100 He4pW..ted 7100 HetpWo.tted 7100 twp We.Md 7100 HatpW...t.d 7100 H.lpW..t~ 7100 twpW..+td 7100 HefpWClllted 7100 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ASSEMBLERS Bankin• Cashier (rood) ELECTROMIC!. ., F ttime. Exper pref'd 7005 Im med openings for peo INSTALLMENT 0 a y s & n 1 g h t b F.amHigbSchoolCredits-pie w ,exper. 1n PC LOAN Newporter lnn. 644·1700 Bo rds & · G Call Barbara ext 523. l..A ......... denl StudyRead-a wmng. row-PROCESSOR ••••••••••••••••••••••• CLERK TYPIST lndJv.'W/good appear & pleasant manner needed for loan broker Cirm. Some phone work. Near Fashion lsle. 6444182A ,.....,..,.... ing co. xmt bens. Apply EOE. mg, Math. Soelling & Scientific Drilling Con-lmmed. opening. Exper Study Skills Open enr<>ll-trots 4040 Campus Or. req'd. S.al commensurat e Cashier. part lime. Thurs-Cocktail Waitress meat. Total cost $200. NB. or call 557•9051 & w/exper. Please Contact Sun. Call Barbara for School Woolbright Academy askforRayGilman Doris Mitchell. (7J4) appt.S40-32.80 Earn up to $300 nor wk. 1.3811 Beach, Wstmoster_. ----------cco """" c · , · ,... 897-2855 .-....,,,,,....._., or ao in.erv1ew Cas h re r s W e need Low tuition Placement __________ ,Attendant. part time. for appt. cashiers at our Go-Lo ~ISL 751·9194. paralyzed young woman UHION IAHK ~"Se ---------REAL ESTATE LICENSE SCHOOL OFFERS •Crash Course available *Mat.en a ls provided. •Small classes for personalized inst rue t ion •Choose own taste-<iay & rµght classes •Placement-up to 80'H commission Free3Weel Sales Tramm~ C• Fw Detoils lll-1001 493·0'4'42 Kate Ila Real Estate School 32031 Cammo Capistrano San Juan Capistrano personal Car~. Sat/Sun O ~-rve gas station m ,. __ ....._,1 W~ll ~ 610NewportCenter r San Clemente. Must be -..... 10..S. Balboa Isl. 675-5652 Newport Beach 18. Apply at lOlO s. E l Ex per. req 'd. Must be 21. ............ CTIV£ F,qualOpporEmployer Camino Real. San Apply 1n pcr::.on. ~"-"' Cl t Sept Gulllvers . lll482 GIRL emen e. c a · MacArthur Blvd. Irvine. rabu.lous pay for a very I•---------Caslner Fee Pa>d oll'·ac.ot1ve. soph1st1cale<l Ban1ung Tellft-Troittff girl to model pnvutely LEHDIMGPLATFOIM People oriented pers for a few hours a week. SECRET ARY sought (or PR pos w /sav· Girl selected must be ex-ings & loan. Call Kay. Cockt.aJI Waitress r /time & p/llme Food Waitress. No Phone Calls Please. Apply morns, Sargenll's , 1143W 19thSt.C.M trcmely groomed. very lmmed open1n~ for 833·2700. Also F'ee Job!;. stable & be over 18. Ut· career minded 1nd1v_ Oenrus & Dennis Person· Comparuon. hve-m , FIT. most pnvacy. d~cret1on w/comm'I &/or Install· nel Service or Irvine. 2082 for sem1-1nvahd. Some & res pect 1:. assured. ment lending exper. Re· Michel.son medical baC'kground Plcascwntedela1ledlet-q 's good secretarial prer Call Mrs t-'oster. wrto: Class1C1ed Ad ,2SL sloUs Xlntadvancemcnl CIRCULATORS 645.:!099forapp't. D;1lly Pilot.. P O. Box po1enllal Get signatures for Nov. 1_1560. Costa Mesa 92626 Conti.ct Bud Davies election. S6·S10 per hr Companion, P rr. ovcrmtc Au To M 0 T J -V -E 8'48·1234foroppt. Easy, no exper nee. r . care for elderly :.tmi- "ECHANIC Exper'd, time or full. 18 Or over. mvalid. 4 mtestwk _ Call health/life ms Pd v:u:. TEUSS Call n2-1noor551-0934 Mrs Foster. 645-3099 for /\pply m person. Ben lmmed openings ror Clerical _ Receptiooist app'l Warner 's Garage. 410 W tellen; desiring advance position open ror bright, Coftlpanf0tt/Hskpr 5th St. S.A ment potential. Apply m personable, errlcient m· Quallried h V{'·ln lady person at Goldenwcst & dividual lO perform basic Care & lite hskpg for !-=<linger or MagnolJa & respons1'bll1t1es A1' val'1d widow AUTOMOTIV~ Adanuoffic" :.em1 ·1n -.. .., '" curate typist. good spell· Comfortable COM beach Jallis W..W, 7075 MATURE DRIVER mg, 10 key, bookkeeping home 4 day~ pr wk S132 ••••••••••••••••••••••• for our Service Depl. ~Cl" •tc experience desirable !l5S t313 European houskecper, ex customer bus SECON· 6 Salary open. 833·0610. --------- cl. coolr for Christian DARY DUTIES: m1sr y Bank Cook aide Pan1t1mc. ctderlY cpl. or d<iy work ta:.ks for Service Mgr . Clerical Help Must have Transport a 4923256 lil(hl Jan1tonal. etc. Wl:HAVSTJNEFOAYOU! Neededinshippingdcpl. 11on Hunt Uch · Pcrm<inent, pleasant EqualOppor Employer 546-290l lrv1nc llcadstart 842·0052 /'telp W~ 7100 pue,1t1on. Good pay Ideal·-------• -------- •• .. ••••••••••••••••••• ror i.cm1-ret1red. See Clerical COOK. cx~ncnce<l. rull !:lerv1ce Mgr .. HOWARD Beauty salon in CM needs De Cl k I lime. Apply m perl>on Acctn., Bkkpng (;hevrolet, Dove & Quail hair stylists. 65';. com· pu!J er The Beach lfovse Inn. TEMPORARY St:. .• Newport Beuch. m1ss1on. 548·3446 Orange county II arbor 619Sleepy Hollow Ln. LB ltcgister Today to work Auto painters heln.•r auto Beauty Salon in C M Municipal Court. 4601 COOK-Lunch. 5 Day wk. & ... ~ Jamboree Blvd, N.B. has Ex ed on vanous al'Counung pll.lllter & auto body shop needs Wig Stylists. 6S'if full time poMlion availa· penenc bookkeeping assign· helper. Leo's Auto Body comm1ss1on 548-344-0. ble immedlatelv, re-CaJISS7·20?4 ments. Work cloi.e lo 642-9373 ~ your home. Figure ---------Bea\Jly, Expert Hair Cut· qi.Ores 1 yr dencal cl< Counter Girl. Kust eri. Clerks to Sr Accoun-Babys itter wanted. Ler w1follow. Pays up to per. type 40 WPM.~ Cleaners. 186 E. 16th St. tants needed thruout weekdays 7.JOAM·llPM. 70%. 642·5381 Mo. Call For a ppt Coti\a Mesa.~·4243 DENTAL LAI Openings 1n C M. Orthodontic lab Will tra10 stup Clk/Typ1st Set· Up Techmci.an Wire Bender And More. F /time. long term employment. Good benefits 7514442. DIMTALASSIST Cha1rs1de fo r pro· gress1ve prac. 1n Mlsi.1on V area. 4YJ day work wk. Beauurut ok. N1cl' place t.o work. 830-JOtlO Ot>ntal ass151ant Expenenced. NB. 640-4801. DISHWASHER & General cleanupduues. Hrs rtcx1· ble. 6 Day wk. 557-2074 Sectl"Oftic Techs lmmed openings & op portunitlcs in an estab. co 1n Orange Co. a1rprt .irea. Applicants l o troubleshoot. repair & teSt electronic systems Recent analog & d1g1tal exper req'd. Interview by applonly. 5S7·90S\ ask for Busch. f:MP&.OYMEKT OFFIRID Small llt.e manufacturer needs rull time welder will\ general shop eit· perience. Call 979-2290 days & 5-48-9801 eves & weekends ~nwftt Co.sellcw Direct sales exper. & de· sire for IL1CratJv(! career Wlll qualify you for tralll· mg with world's larges t employment :.er v1ce. Call Elllt· O 'Brien 54()..5001, Snell.U1g & Snell· mg or Newport Beach Agency, 4340 Campus Or. •DRIVER• Mature. over 18 Good d.nvmg record. Oehver g raphic s upplies tn Orange Co. Full time. Med /dentnl plan . $2.85/hr + incentive Call Mark. 751·2686 1--------------- DRIVER Exec ~v to Sl2K FUii t1me dnver for local Lit<' Bkkpn~ ~ dehvencs. Xlnt dnvmg G Ofel2duv ''k $300 record req'd. Phone for ~pr/ConstrU<' Sl2K appt (7141 557 9212 ask lrvme Personnel Agenty ror Mr West. 488 E 17th Cost.a Mesa Newnnrt Stationers Inc .~tc:.? -642-1470 ~.,., -- DRIVERS E><per boat m echanic Men or women 25 )'rs or Eqwp Installers . xlnt older. Know the <'OllSl workin~ cond & bt!nefit:.. p a l' I r I c II M a r i n l' c1tic:. Net $180 a week or 71416-16-SOJl mon· Or ange Coal>t 1---------- Yellow Cab, 17300 Mt FllERGLASS Herrmann. Fountain Nat'I co now hinng hand Valley <~o or Slater lammatorl> & chopper betwn Ncwhopt.• & gun operators. Wages Euelid I open. Mechcal & life ins bens. Apply 2581 Kelvin Ave. Irvine 754·6341. FUii or p1t1mc Must h:lVl' worked 1n fiberglass S4 Hr 847-8310 General Office. matur..-. GUARDS good typist vanC!d du lies. 1-'enn rellat> 1-\i ll·l1me goodbenefits.6425997 3rd Shift. ·p1t1me i:.t General ore t'BX answer shlft Ret.Jred welcome. 1118 serv oprs lmmed Car & phone req'd operungs ror cxper'd or Irvine Complex. Ci>ll ~. ext 191 for 111 qualified oeople Rate or tcrview Equal Oppor pay dependtng uoon ex-per _ Apply in person ,_E_m_p_l_oy_c_r_m_1r ___ _ Mon-Fri 9am-4pm 155 Rochester St. C.M. General Otf•ce, 01<'- taphone Typ1sl 1n Newport of(' P It• me days. Call 675· 7611. GUARDS Full & p /llme. All areai. Ururorms rum. Age=. :!I or over. R e tired welcom e . No exp\!r nec~s. Apply. Un1vt:rs1tl Protection Service. 1226 W. Slh St. Sanui Ana. ln- ll:rvw hrs 9· \2 & 1·4 \1on- Fr1 Large Newport Beacn Shoppmg complex seeks 1-----------mamtenaoce engineer Ha1rst~llsts & Man1cun~t Positi on require s experd w1Collow1ng for nurumum 1 yr cxpr with boOaung beach area. AP electncal & mech~n1cal PIY in person. 32t. background. Good start-Manne. lialboa Isl. Aslc Ing salary and benefits 1_ror_Ttn_a ______ _ with s table company Handyman. mature ror 644-2020 btwn 9 AM & guesthomemC.M nooo. 646-6716 ~HAL OfftCE Mu.st Cl1JOY phone con· taC'l . w o rkin g Hardwart> sales clerk. full time. 46 hour week. Rion Uardware. ask ror Phil wtcustorners & deta1l •---------- worlr. Va<'atlon. ~tck HB.PWAMTB> p11y. profk !!haring & 14-16 Years01d health msur. t pply. Work p lume eves & Sat Mon-Fri liam-noon Pay eQUlil to amb1lion Barden·s Pest Control. Eom mm $15 to max. tv ID6 Randoroh St, Costa dale soo wk. on sales nf Mesa. well known product. Call Gen'IOfr Fee Paid anyt1me645-8616 Traitlft to $650 HOST /HOSTESS l-:nthus1ast1c lnd1v wtll ~Ol'tly oays. /\pply TUl' l'n!oY vanely po:, w Jac or Thur Jpm. Charley 11vt-t'o CJl l Kay, Brown-s Reslaurant. 833·2700. Al:.<> 1-·ee Jobs. 16160 Bt?ach Blvd. llU Oeruus &t UcnnL'> Person -- nel Service of Jrvmc. 2082 llOTELS Michelson Hotel rcher mgnt a1K.1tnr GIRLFRIDA.Y R E or Banlong cxper prd Great upp<>rl \ anety C:all Hiii Daven· port :5;.: \1 151, t..'VCS 673.61132 NCR 4200 ~xpera•nce /\pply m person Hunt mgaon Beach Inn. :!J 11:! P.mr1cCoast Hwy. IW HOUSEClEANlf'lG HB.P OrangeCo Newport hom e . Ph 833-04ll ext200. Deadline Hobert Half:. 644-6141 Boat Manufoctur.r ror application:. Tuesday Couple wanted to manage Driver & Maintenance p lime for rental !>lOrc Cult! drivers Ile No t1ckcL'i Goldenwe?>t Ren. tals, 7081 Weslmmster Ave. Westminster FURN ITUHE ofllct· 1--------• "flt Prr. Mon Fri. Wknd work avail Mu~t pro\ 1de own traru. Collc~e slu dents welcome 540-9~ Account.emps Fiume Job openmg for t July 18th. 1978 al SPM small busanc:.s. Ptllmc. SOOS. Main. Ste SUI Babysitter ln my home. ~I-Coat Touch up Man. E.O.E. Mr Ha\1642·1&34. "' T u u .• k re''i. Prefer mature I d t I Electronics rurniturc. c-ommercial C'Ontrart ~nil'' w11 h whole11all• des1~11 firm Design NewPort 640 8<!2:! ,.o. ower. mon l>dn mme star . nqu1rc 1._ _________ "-uples or lnd1v1duals I Th ,.... r o woman H. 8 . 847-0047 i\J I y h 94 w 1• "" n e..,.tyo range _ __ aJU<! a ac ts. 7 Clerical wanttng to supplem~nl 114/835-4103 Banlung l8t.h St. CM 1)4!).9177 family income. Will not 1Mtc6ntftt Loon Boats *JR. CLERK interfere w /present job. TECHNICIANS ,_Crt>n-ewl-- ACCOUNTS PAYABLF Offiur/AH't Mey Call for an interview. Aggressive. mdepenaent-PACIFIC -kSR. CLERK G7_$-_0230_. ---- bank seeks a career SEACRAFT *Cl.ERIC'L ASST COURIER Nii rehablt'. rrunded installment Loan ft rnuturc 1nd1v1dual twice omcer1Ass't Mgr. Xlnt CORP. Varied jobs with & a month. 714 752 2225, And General <.:lerical oppty for advancement. without exper. In i;ood ll·Spm. Duties Required. ,\c Send resume In con-Manufacturer of quality ofcsurroundings. Call to· -..:..-------- cw-acy in detail 3 must. fidencc to· ad lf1119. Daily crws1J1g sailboats_ day!!! CUSTODIAM Neat & legible handwrit Pilot. P .O. Box 1560. MO FEES Large Newport Shopp•nR ing essential Skill in _Cos __ la_M_es_a._Ca __ 92626 __ ._ We have immediate Complex need lndlv1dunl t · 1 o k r .... r 11 ~Q~ office • able to work on own in· oper a ing .e) Banking operungs or u1c o OW· lt1ative to c lean caJculator & typewrner ya 11!.R ing· 0 overload rsr 1llliel>. Pn•fer oooessary ~ Milt Carpenttn .....,,....SMO.,IUIO Exper prcf'a. Lile t)'P-Min. 3 yrs exper Must 11m1tonal expr. & flcx1· nvn-ftg\ in". Neat appe11r Sal 557.00.1.1 ble working 11ehedul.e . ,. have complete • rtJ 1 & Call Mrs. White <.'l1mmensur1tle w •cx~r knowledge or all milling 3'1ZJ BIJ'Ch St. N .8 . Good ista ng so ury tor interview appt F.quaJ Oppor Employer btnef1L" with stable l'Om· ,_. DosW.. Please contut'l ope!li:c-'--pany 644-2020 btwo !l AM Doris Mitchell -r---.... • & noon. AMOCi•s. Inc.. 558-5280 ror appt. Mm. 3 yrs ex per. COSTA MESA UMION IAMK Delivery SETYOUROWM WORKING HOURS! Trend~tu "Fleic 1'1me" allow~ you to bt•ot 1h,• rush hour lrnffk or Just sleep ln a lllUt> IOn!l('r 1'1ui. & "top or th<' lhw" bcncf1t:1 ure your:; 1r ynu have lhl' followln.i quul1Cicut1ons •S H Tl•: ST TF.CHNICJJ\N N1•cdcd ror our R 0 lh•p11r1 mcnl i Ycafll rollc11~ or t'QUI v11lcnt In ch.•ct roo10 f;ood knowl,-d14t• or 11'1. log1&· & t ra n io 1 .. 1or l'lrcmtll :l Yl•ur11 or mo1 t• c x p ~· r I t' n l' 1• 1 n 1• 11 r l' *Summer Jobs EARN VACATIONS$ Ntt'dt't1 lrn1nc>dlnlf'h ./Chrilt ./Cleril Ty-'•h ••:'! ~l>M l <l's.Nor TY'Mh 1eo WNtl , "St.t Typ11h ., Ac.ca a: ..... CM, "looedl..,-n "'°°",........ S.C..••···· Wl\l\\11' WI\ h1'111t SH 1714) 556-7075 610Newpon.CenterDr F.qual Oppor Employer Newport Beach memories. Toppay -4dayweek.On· CLERKS Mainl, dollv, ull around ly qualit y orient.id helper for Int dc1l&:n WOl'k wh<•n· vo11 wan1 .~ crarumcn wl\o take studio. 5dy wk Sal com • s K ,. !:'.: s T whC"n Ytl u wa111 1i. Uh F.qual Oppor Employer pride in their work need UTOTEM !!]~~!12wtcxper <.:dM. TBCHNlCIAN ror our VOLT l.ol\ll At "h1111 • 1~ to $9001•---------apPty .,...,...... 2nd ~l\lft tU'Cded till ll'rm lltu1lllnnl111\h l"\ll ...ca; . 751 1343 Openin,a Now A~ullablc edJ r dll)' ,\ VAt'•l 1(111 '"' ()lependabJe pers sought BANKINT~ • -s 3301 So Su-S\ S A for full or p /Ume clerk! Dtl•ery·Sale• m atety Minimum u 2 lfoll fHI "" 'u111111 111 n n ror advanceable variety ~ · san · · · on 2nd & 3rd shirts. No l' Hr. Must have own yoim1 l'x1~·n1•ncc• lcl\tln1t uvul nbh• ore poa. Call Willa , Oncallposlllonsare cur-Booklteepcr,ptorf.tlme. exper necessary·wC tran!I. Pltlmo. ~-9. & Lr0uble·11hootlnl( 1•11rl' Nf.\'to~IC .\ttt 1, 833-2700. OennLoe & Oe n-rent.Jy available In our Sm! acct'g orrice. Avail train. Advancement OP· 631'°842 mcroorll~ A.Pf\ y ol.s Penonnel Service of Laguna Drfice with pre· lmmed.1!9'l·550S portwut1es to lh()Se who 1_:.;.,_ ______ _ lrvlne. 2082 Michelson. VlOU.S retail salC$ and tor qw..llfy. For lnlormat.!on Dental ANl. !xpcr. only. Excellent work111y en •VOLT* financial experience, In· IOOICKllPH goto our nurest. market M. V. aroa 495-0223 or vlronmcnt. ll~r•I frin.il' Administrative volving con1ldcrablc Cd wtf1•11-s. Banft expr or oontact lbe persoonel _&11_-'543_______ bcneCll• & compollllvt• -• ••y ~to$950 "'· "-~ ,Jfi ., ratea with • ICrC)wlnM '~"~" public contact .• ,,plng & hclptul, for mortgage "' cea. Dl'ntJ.I a1th1t.ant looklna 1 Management oriented flexlblllty in working nrm In Newport Center 1.2442LampeonSl tor chollenge or ex-computer firm. 'IN111t-•VtCll pera will excel w/well hours are requi red. We Ca11Mrs.Garo7!it·L511 Garden0rove537-4840 pandad duuea In pro· n n<l resume or appl)' In 14 .. 4741 known corp. Co 11 Rill. otter a progressive ala rt· £4ua1 Oppor Employer penioo to !H Ca mnUtt Or. :44 ~ 11 .. GUARDS SECURITY D\w lo our r.,c""' t'X pt11\. .. l0t• pro.irnm Wl•lb 1-'nr~n t:1111rd .Sl•rv1Ct>S 1:. h11,n~ ~•'l'Ullt)I At1t1rcl' tor IRVIHE/ NEWPORT HACH SAN TA AHA / ANAHllM FULllflTOH I IUIHA.,AH COSTA.MESA& THI WHITTIH AREA TOP GUA.RD ,AY ·~ "'"'''h~d ''"'" 111 l"' '''lfl Mood<i> •) td&} H ~m II waLSFARGO GUARD SHVICIS IU2 w.c .............. lllelnt-.CA Ott l\t11111IA\ t\1•-1111111 Wrd _,, ... ,111,, 1'hllt 11P\, IOnm n11111 l l 1\SfiU l·'r11l11y ... UO'W w_....,. .. .-111 .......... c ... N"h• '·""' N<I (' 0036 833-2700. Dennis & Oen-inaSJIU)'. Plea.~ecallor Bus Driven. Scbool bus, -1r•ulve proventlve Arl"OlllfrOmtk't\lrf'lllt n1s Pereonnel Service of wrlte for an appoint for Sepe_. IUM to •tart. o riented practice TKMOATA CORP 17'·tUO USI THI Jrrioe.2!082Mlchelson. ment. Jack Hoel or UcroqorwUl&caln. a.ERK TV"PIST. Perm Yed~al + pen1lon & lftUt lfou:.l•kct>per & baby~1tlt'r for lmll)' wl-.! ch1ldn:n. ll\t' in nr out. lull or purt 11m1• Frrngl' bcn,•r1b l\luiol b1: malun•. non 'mnlw1 own trrin~ ('.;ill IMC} TJl-t 11ous1o:Kt-:E1•1-:n 11.1"· 111 1 l''l' I. I. C II J\ I<(; t-. l~!'llO!I to run houi.t'tmhl 111 Nt.>wpo1 I l11•;1t•h lh.'11!)0nt<1b1hlll.'l\ tn<'IU\I•• 1·11,... or 2 .i1rl11 12 & 1~ .11111 hou,ek~''ll1na du111•' ~fu51 II(' mature. 0tlli:n mi;i, ocr..ouJ bk <m<I IJ. .1 b I t' I 0 r 1• I a I t• I (I l°'1nag\•l"t 38 l• 11nvt•r n1"" t\n <'n~rjlet ll" J>\'r.ll"ln With h11th i,t.111· 1lurdi. o l nt•ulnl ~i-­ • I 1nlln<'~l' 6' or1tJn11u llt"I .1, '4Cll ;j!'j Ii ~·rMm Who t'l\IO)'). the Jrtl> I) do• ,1rooh• Mu:1l <.In'"'" <'Ur 1~ llrovldl'<I Should ~· I It•' I b I t• r c )I .H .1 I n ~ wr«krnd s ~nvrlv pnvJt~ room and bu\h ~A IAt)' I!> $5$() p /mo S.•ntl ~umc to I' O Hie>' IBi.'Hi In tn'-'· CA m 13 -----ll~ekCCJX.'r. l'XP W/car 1><>rm ~ 1lay wit for cf1, obh'tt lody R(•fo; '7AA 1921: -------llOU3dtl-eper. hvc·ln. lov d)' home in N 8 • salary Ml(Otlable. 6(4 2323 Hllkpr. Cook. Llt•. matun: womon Mu1il drivl' Mobile home Moms. Cl hr t:-S1de C M 84$-'408. Pegay Boyd, (714) s.se.oen EOE P1ume.Tradea11oc.of-Pt0llt.1harin1JPl•n.Mon· SllndarclMemonC11 10.0rant"lM'11i1'W'Y DAILYPILOT ADYllTISIM~ ------·-· -· nee nr o.c Airport. Of. 'niun. te2·3319. oivlllon M•l\"~' "PAST J! 62 DAY Salet=n ror Orange ~L!,,:T WISTIR.... CMtl•/MkB Oct & dJctaphone eitper Dmw Ala~. X-rav lie.. An A&>Plied MaanoUca Co Equal OpJIOr .mployor lllULJ•• • Mf Co. lne 751-4675 ~ " IO'w--i-......tonti-Perm :!Olh. •week.PW.CA. " 3400W.Seocralrom at'ulfY0upayfor • ~ s~ vl..,.4 S ~in'"".,"' So~. "-t I..... INC. 83S-8Ul ~M"!,'8d ..!!°3000•chool. Costa • a 30da.v ad in tho ART NEEl>t.E WORK '"'" "9 ..,. --"" ....,. SantaAna.CAt2'104 To Place you r SHVICI ' ResllONlble adll wtu · attOOEIToro Road Ca1hler,elfl)tr1tneed P~ CllritTypltt 17l4>540-3805,exl213 "'Faal Reault" DlllCTOIY DAILY PILOT per In needlepoint. knit L8gunaHllla,CA926S3 len-ed. PennaMOl part Pormantnl position aa Dental Aul Chrsd. SBVICI tlni. crocb HlnM & AlfirmatJveAct1on tin. DCMMUoo. 2CJ.2S hrs t(aloff for accounting ftume. aood benefits l::QualOpportunlly Service Directory For Result DlllCTOIY CNWel. Wanted for Potli· i':qualOpportunlty pr wrc No weekends. depJ. lo NB lnsur. co H.B.em.5032.Me.-3540. £mp\oyor Mir id Call Now Service Call l1oo in art n.eedlt..-work t:mployerroa&e/feroalc Good pay Apply ln Ut.et.YJ>ln1akttla.80.htrr Make 1our shopping l~~~~~~~~l 642·1671 DOITNOW! ahop. some retail ~xl)er ~· U4T t; CoHl llOO. Good co. benellta •I• b.v ualn1 tho Dally SELL Idle 1tern1 with a 642·1671 64~1671 5belpt\al;mi;;immM5--..,=,..---all;:;;;;;:9=•m:;;;;o..LW~aot;;;.;..Ads._ ___ ea_·_ll_t.a_-N7-..8-=ttwy==='cCorooa=:===dti==M=•r=.::::.1::::~:::==:::;;;:;;;====;.J•PUot_.actiiAin.:=_..,'edi;:;;;;:;.~;:;;;m---..i~Da111:;::~~~lol~C=lau::;~~cd:::.:;A:rt~.Ll.. ......... ·,.~.1 .. ~ ... ~::: .. :::bt=:.:'":::::::~~~~--------~ . ' -. . ........ . . .... W..ted 71001HitlpW..tH 7100 Hetpw-.. 7100 HftpW_..d 7100 HetpW•tH 7100 ... Wmhd 1100 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• w.dneeday. July 12, 1978 • OAllY PILOT ' ••• O,.eh• MAIDS PfTSTOUM•I R.E.&tlrs ~rvlce Sta. Attendant ...... W•t.d 7100 Coh 1035 ,.......... IOIO 'Jbe Sltaw ffM PU.ui 1n ApplyU\f*'liOClonl)• Alt ORTRAIN~E IUSY & NEflJING exper'd. Jl\tll or p111me. ••••••••••••••••••••!•• ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••-•••••••••••••• El 1\>ro ~full fr JK. Baba Motel 2250 llmJwo.rker Notalra1d Apply.Arc0Stat1on.11th WATCH KEA Persian klllena CFA re· Movlna-muat sell 8 pc. tunie.dAy&r:ut•PQ)lh~ NeY.-portBl.CM of Ions hours . e d ay Ua;QuirHomesolMeu &Trvine.CM To HSISt ~~gtnOt glatered Exce llent liviJ:IPQ)rnftdiAdt.e i:.et now •~ad. We are a run -1 ff wt-"fk Good permaoent Verde la "pluaacd into" quality Beautiful Iona S27S. aee lo •pprec faml\yrHlauranl wa.tb MMa_!.d~• w~~1ted~ea~-~ future for rtjbt peuon a relocat ion referral Secretary, good omce Service Station Atten w/development ot de· hair. Show qualit y . a..?an sreat pnde in produrtai """'· hou ""'9!tl nwy, 642 5$22 tervice lh•t hllli created atllb, 1horth1md helpful dant.. uyer·d Day & licatt precise lnatrumen· '38·9D ---------.nd people If you lll\JOY Lag8ch41M-4892 a demand for more but not rc<qu1 red Eves. Ful "p/llmu. Ap· tation for 011 field Good WANTED: Blick w~lilut P~le •have an O\.ltao Mault,caance bey wanu.'<i ,._CNS A:.ieo. salesJ>t.'(>ple. We are b111y S49-tl56. ply. She118su.uon. l7lh & ~orkf 1ngTcond• E+OcEo. Free lc.lttena. nve weeks or oak pedeetal Lable In Ing !)l'l"500a1Jt.y we m••hl The Seacbft Mott'!. lOOI lmmcd n~ for 1111hv und need help ! t:x · c._ Irvine. N . ...,ne its op pa)' . old.11.B. good cond. (or Mother. have what you .ltf'() look s co.. H ~92 who ta people oriented. p er I co c ti d o r new ~•tcwy Sc1enlific Drilling Con· 84.2-@'7118 ~. 5.36-8280 l.Q3 for Apply It wy. Good obooe Lech, Able to ulespeople m11y apply i'~or &rowing core ln Service Sta Allen~. 1-ull & trols Newport Beach . Straw Hat P1:u.a handle 11chedullna or Attn1.ctive <antiques) of· recreation field. C.an· p/la~e. cxper d. lite ~'7-9051 ask !or Ron Ut· Burmese KltteniJ S20 2 cooches. 1 7' iota as. l 24402 Rocltficld Blvd for MAINTIHAMCI nurses. Enlhus/self fl~ & top quality <peo· didate should be id or· mech 1 knowledge. App Ue. each. No papers ava1la anllque V1ctor11n lovt> l"DOC'l"lnfocull831-t230 All a r ound exper'd !>tarter. Salary+ bon~· pie> assoclutes to work g a n I ae r w 's h a t p ly.2590Newport Bl.CM ~Iii • ble.Oiall67S.58S4. seat $120. 673·612' or general mnlnteoance S46-88lllorttpp't. with Contact Sundy pe rsonality for bu&y Servic .. Sta. J'ttnndunt ;u•csM m.OZ39aCter6:PM Insurance BllUng. n!cep- Uoo. fihng typing. full time in 1 girl orhc.'c. 7S2·9300 worke Bo abl l I Ct h T " '\ " ••••••••••••••••••••••• "-. 1040 r. " o 1 Orlowski or Jim Wood ai P ones yprng SS · f/tJme. Apply. Chevron .....,.. furniture. paint. lite Pickup& Delivery Dnvcr 540-5990 60WPM & dJcti.ph. S7SO l.2.$l N. CstHwy, L:t¥unii .wt.,.1 1005 ....... ,,. .............. . plumbing & gen'I repalr . for delivenn.i in Costa tos~ Send resume to : Beach. •••••••••••••••••••••••Golden Retriever pup· Salary based on exper. Me:;a area. Must have Restaurant Hw.ahManagementCo. piea. AKC Field Ii show Custom be vel glau & Wf'Olliht iron corree tbl 640-0966 F/time position, Apply. valld Calif. he & good 2 ex p e r cocktull ~PaseoCerveza ServicestatlOnhelpw•nt· JONA'MiAN'S pet. Shots. wormed . Jarutorial positions avail. Notional Systems Corp. dnving rec Apply at. w~1tresses & ho11tess. SultesC & o ed. expenenced. 4·12PM. ANTIQUES raised wtrLC Xlnt d1sp · Pff night work Pays 4.J61 Birch St. N.8 . <Neur 2120 Harbor Blvd. CM Aliso's South. 1670 Nwpt SanJuancap.92675 2800 W. Coast Hwy. WHOLESALEOrJLY C213) 0-1561. Maple dining set. hutch. drop·lear table. 6 Wmdsor chairs. 2 Capt. chairs. 4 extra leaves. Beauuful condition Old enltance ball table & mirror. Maple nlc·ntlc stand. Frigklaltt fro11t· free refrig. avocado. 64.S-2819 or 213 fl47-0321 well. Miss. VieJo. Irv. OC Airport) Equul Qp. or call 6*-DiG4 ask for Blvd. CM. 64.2-8293. NewportShcll ENGLISH SHIPMENT CM & NB areas. Call portunity Employer Claud. Secretary needed. Typ. ON SALE NOW'! *** Marfori• G•ron ~9~AM~·l~O~P~M~. 97~9 :!_36:~S2~-l·--------1---------i 1011tl'S ltAG & MOP lnJ, shorthand. 4r bkklllg Serv Sta Help needed Im· l~ MT. LANGLEY ---------•Plumbing. Exper drain Women needed ror desirable Salary open med. f\Jll or p/t. Apply FOUNTAINVALLEV 246 M.:atd9a A••· s-c ........ JewelrySalelfNln MaleforShopAssemop& cleonerwanted. BusySo. Housecleaning Serv fMS.1612 !lSOE.CstHwy.N.B. 968·1331 Jewelry ex~r not req'd. packaging. Possible Lag Co. Great pay . 548 Matur_,. Wall trum 10 all sales&delivory.SSS-1750 495-J465. ~ave/message __ .{(1_57 ______ Secretary, excellent typ· Sewlng·Overlock cxper phases oC busUlei.s. Xint SALES-CREATIVE 1.11g. shorthand reqwred. Top pay. 1580 Monrovia. You are the wmner of 2 t1cketa· t $13.00 Value> t.otbeJULY lS S:OOPM Performance of the car eer oppor. Crt!at MATHIA&. P.R./Culto.MrS.....c Fem ale deslKner /· mag card A• legal ex· N.&642-3472. working conds. Co. COMTROL CLEIK Person to work dJrectly Jeweler orrers rasclnat· per. pref. ~cellent co •-__.-.r_i.....-...... -..,,-........... --- ****** WHOLESALE CA RPETING nr. new. luxurious golden shag $3. yrd .• drps, pwr mower dryer Satonly 891·7167. benefits. Exper in mal'I & produc· w/cl.lent.s in proj. coord. lng. perm pt-bme pos1 benefili>. Salary com· _......-nm Kirtc Jew.ten uon control helpful. Must & cust. serv. Both field & lion to maUJre. respons mensurate with ability. ~c TOmETRAOE JDR.-..llDy't 2911 Croddy Way Roy .. u,ta.. S.._Sltow at the ANAJIEIM CONVENTION Costa Mesa 545.~ have good skills an typ-office dulles. Salary +. per:.on w /sales ex per. Send re:suma to· Law Of'· For tndust'I shop. Must ing. filing & gen'I ofc Mail resume to P.A.C. or N.B. 673·4734 Oce. 610 Newport Center be able t.o shear. punch & Santa Ana. Ca. 540·2911 Couch. it'. brown cnushed velvet, like new. $250 894-6247. e\'e8 Jr.Accountant duties. Cood benems. AppJ y in pe r s on Dr. 11 1220. Nt!wport form. Exper. req'd. Call ,_ ________ 111 Must be exper'd thru E .0.E. Call for a ppt. weekaays: 1682 •·c" Salesclerk, experienced. Beach. 92660644-9311 630·6200 llam·4 · 30pm Antique Music Boxes! 1'nal bal. Knowledge of 557 ·9051 U k for Mr. Langley Ave, Irvine. some slull in hemming ---------494-72376pm-8pm. Slot Machines! com Pule r syst e m s Stevens. pants necessary Balboa Se<'ret..ary. P rr. alleast 20 Clocks! CENTER ~Sale IOSS helpful. Please call for . Pre.school t eacher & Peninsula 675-3910. hrs/wk. Leasing com· Shtpping & Rece1v1ni;. HUGESELECTION appt 645-!iOOO ext 520 M AT U R I!: W O M A N teacher·aide. Huntmgton Speak with owner only. pany. 644-8385. Must have dean driving .._-rte• July 14. 15. 16 ••••••• •••• •••••••••••• Olli 00·5678. ext. 329. to . da.Jmyourtlckets. Garage Sale: n!fng. gai. · · · p /timc LO welcom e BchHeadstart.842·00S2 record Small manuf ----------1 newcomer:. & contact SA LESCLERK-Needed --------• plant. 11.8. tt94 ·5351 l1ttttNtkMtal *** dryer. corner gr oup KEYPUNCH Data .:ntry opr. Day shift. l n·house com · puters. Req 's speed & ac- curacy. Key to dtsk ex- . per. helpful. Salary open. Xlnt benefits & working conds. Apply. National Educat.Jon. 4361 Birrh St. N.B. (Near 0C Airport> Equal Opportunity Employer. merchants F1ex1ble brs. Pr.-Schooa Teac:h.r for manne dlstnbutor. SECRET ARY EOE. r-.....M~...:,.. M · · ..,._......... Mustsacnfice A.K C. reg. game tllble w /4 chairs. toys, books. etc. 498-254S Need car. lite typing. Must be born again. arine expe rience NoSbNecessary Open Wed.Ulru Sal. Shih·Ttu. 1 mos o ld 547-3095. Start in Call Mon·f'ri. necessary. call 549·9671 Musttype60-65accurale · Student. part llmt! for 1802Kettering, Irv. female 6'2·1445 Trinkets & Treasures .........,IC-"-'0-..CE 8:J0.12:00 call Beverly. rEoOr EupMptF. /&H de tails . ty & be familiar w/<flc· general maintenan ce (714)754·1777 Yard Sale. 9347 El Vaill· --m SlS-8909.536-1439 -·-·-·-'------1 taphone . for appt work on boat. Call•--------•IAKC Female Poodle . 13 Ave. FV Thurs·Sat 12·5PM, t yping. dailYJ.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiimiiiimiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiml SoMKMrk please contact Ila,..· _bet_w_ee_n_4·_6_P_M_64&-_262S __ 200 Yr. Old Baker.> rack & wks old, brown. $100. _O_NL_Y_. ______ . charge entries. 644-6813 Pnnting Mature 18 +. t-•!T pos1· i0::·Fl~:~.a~~\~~~.. Swttchbocrd Opr. armoire al3o 200 yrs old. can 768-5583 af\ 7pm. 8' l'OUCh. 2 reclin chrs, 9 X M.clcal Sec'y IMMEDIATE I.Jon. 557-8444. 620 Newport Center Dr. f\Jll & p/l. Will tra m. Mrs. Ca rt. w ra g ht . German sh 0 n h a 1 r 12 braided rug. antique Exper for busy ofc Typ-OPENING Sales. female. trainee N.B. 644.seoo Must be relia. & abll! to 846-503J or640·7320 Pomtl'r. JO wks. A KC. pine tbls. s· car ved ho 1ng. 1nsur. bkkng ~ omcE considered for outside Equal Oppor Employer work e~s 1wknds. Pb good hunting breed 1100. lei. Model 12 Wlhchealcr .• ~. phone 645-7565 751·3003 eves 30 .. ma pie c hopping H,; a""a o.7 2547 :.ales w/sml mfg com· ---------Collectors & Decorator:.. block. 21~·A Palmer .a '"' O't • APPLIANCE QPR pany Have re liable Teacher needs babysallcr 2 fine Eng. ant. table!!; l English Springer Span Md 1 tram •. goodopportunaty SecntcrySll,JOO starting Sepl1 II mo oval burled walnut 1• / h 7f 4 t\1 CM. e 1ca r ecept ion1 :.t , 1 Month assignment·lo f~ Pa1tl pu~. uver w t. . • . . Landscape Installer . mm front orrice. expenenct-d Start $500-$700 + l'X· 0 k daughter Prfr S. Ir\ me veneer top. corrce tbl AKC regis, Ch backgrnd. Good prH•es. Ioli. of I yr exper. mui:.t be able 10 mi.urance. 546-8240 or operate A.M. 2650. 2850 penses. 540.1045 utgoing exeedr seed. s 833 2498 h I Wkdy!i 213·326·5132. ceram1Cl>. baby thtngi;. t II kl Electrostatic presse1> & -=iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiii-I career motiviit In iv . -gt. unusua ly beaut. E ""'" ·• 02 whlchr. TV. ster compo· to ins a sprin er i;. 644-0-199.CM area 1250 Mult1lith. Please • for !>Pl't1al pos. Call T1: .. CHER ., h I $950.1Early1800 mahog. ves. 714 . .....,..,7 plants. trees. seed & sod. SALES F ~ /~me oo l tbl S700 nents & lots more good Must also be w1lhnJ! to MedJcal Assist. Urology t'OOtact Personnel Dept. Barb. 833-2700 Also ec Nwpt Beach. Interesting game or consu · Doberman. f emale. 2 1 Uungs. Sat/Sun. L5lll & work hard. Call 675-7ti33, back o r c Mat u r o ff Alf DAY Jobs. Dennis & Dennis opportunity for pcr~on ,._P•ri•ces_n.e.x.•b•l•e .• 64_2 .• 855_2_ yrs b I k /la n. pro r. 16th. Crnr or Park &. <9am-7pm) woman. Typing, stenllz· Iii\ PACIAC muTUAL Personnel Service or wtexpr. Od startin g 1• tra111edS150.640~72 Adams St . downtown Landscape Supervisor, mm 3 yrs exper. mu:.t be able to supervise and m· stall sprinklers. plant trees & shrubf.. also seed or sod. Must also be will· 1ng lo work h ard. 675-7633. (9am-7pm1 legal Advertising Clerk-Typist Poi.1tion now available for ass1stunt to Legul U1rcctor of the Daily Pilot lllg&x ray N.B. 5411.2247 'el NICE PAY!! lrvme. 2082 Michelson. l "H """2 HB sa ary . .,......._. Halltrees. 2 beaut iful AKC German Shepherd MEN WANTED 700NewportCenter Dr .,, Eng Ii s h pr 1 c e d f 1 Call R h -------Newport Beach En.Joyable phone work Teclln1c1ons. KT . .; .. wholesale Eves 540.6018 pups or sa e. 1c . Moving Sale: Earth tones W k h EqualOppor Employer with good s alar y + SECRETARY P.A.B.X, Top wages. full 546-8995aft6pm sofa. loveseat. ratta n or w en you want to bon & · be fl Ca ded work. All shifts avail.---------• uses comm1ss1ons. ne its · r prov1 . French Reproduc tion. Cocker Spaniel pups. 2 sofa & a rm c hair. Factory. warehouse. Prodr&How Worl&en ~vo:~11~:· s~~~~~0~v"a if. f''inance executive seeks 54().J066 ~::;.ty 8~~::;r·,n~i~fc8 male. 2 fem .. AKC. $15-0 =~~Y ql:~\~hJ"r! gen'I laborers. Daily & 2ShlftsavaH. s.30AM 'lil Good speaking VOICC & talented individual with Teltt-Tr~ $460 6402314 _e_a_S36-0ll62_~------grp. bkshelves. hide·iJ· _w_eekl __ Y_P_a_y_.556 __ ·194_3_-i ruush Tues & lOPM •til phone exper. helpful. above average t yp1n l( FeePa1d FreetoY 1045 bed. gas d ryer. nltc Nurseaide.cxp'd 7 l03.11 finish Tues nights Ap· Coll ege s t u dents. sk1llsand experi<'ncedm Influential savings & 1832 f1int Lock musket. •••••••••~•••••••••••• stnds.drps,desks.mhw. to 7 Country Club Conv. prox 12 hrs each. Apply h o u s "' w i v l' i. & all sel'rclanal dutiei. loan will apprec1ute your f81r cond. $200 or best of· galore' July 14 9am-5pm. llome !)49.3061 m person. Pennysavcr. moonllghlers this i!I an Posit ion entails hca vy cashiering background. fer. 644·2834 • free to gdf hom5e. 3 yr odld July t5 8am-3pm. 4092 ---------1 1660Placenlia.CM. idealJOb. stat1:.tical t yping . C..llLesbc.8332700.Also -spayl!d em amoye Mamamta.lrvtnc.OBlk Nur.Jng ----"'------• managing petty <'ash Fee Jobs. Dennis & Den· AppliancH 80 I 0 Nd ctuldren. fncd yrd. W !Sch I> RH, aU shifts QUALITY CONTROL Call 833-8095 flow. heavy telephone nl!i Perl>onnd Service of ••••••••••••••••••••••• _493-8 __ 7_:13 _______ ,--·-0--00----- LVH, all shlfh Weaving inspector. 2nd For A Personal lntervw commun1ca tions. Sur · Irvine. 2082 Mi chelson. FR G II T DAM/\ GED Crt!nn. Shep·Malamute, 2 MoVln~ sale! Bookcase & Shaft. Background m cessful candidate will HOTPOINT SALE. 3308 yrs old. Neutered. good l adjoin w ldesk. $150. AlDES.allsturt& weaving or knowledge or TIME/LIFE have matunty and ex TIRE & Gcn 'I .c\uto W. Warner nr llarbor. w/kids ~12 Gold velvet chr. $35. Di el P erson n e l , wood&yarns.Wemake pcr1t!nce. Exccll~nl Service.Appl). Newport SanlaAna.979·2921 Record·a ·callans mach. Gene r al office t·x· Housekeepers woven wood shades. Ap· Libran·es Inc benefit package. l\pply Tire. 3000 E. Cst Hwy. --Blkt.ab puppy.freetogd S75. Adding mach. $30 Competitive Wages. plv Kirsch Co., 17352 r • Ul person at· CdM •Washers. dryers. c(('nn hmc. 2 mos old. M. Check protector . $40. penence and Llgbl typing Conl.<.lct Mrs PhllUps al Armstrong Ave. Irvine. Equal Opp Emplyr m/f late models. yr g uar 55&·9798. Lady Ke nmore wshr. skills r equir ed <35·40 Lido Com·. Center. 1555 54().8503. U.S. DIVERS Tow Truck Dnvers ex· $100 up. deli vHcd. 5i() Misc. paint & small wpm1. Typing test will SUpenorAvc.N.B. s.11.11:s• •DY per·d. Top pay Apply. K.ing's.636·2840 M,C Free m a le Doxie 3 tools. etc. 228 Magnolia be administered to ull ---------•Real Estate Sales ~ -3323 W Warner G&WTowtng.1000 Irvine month.'I old Free to good ST CM "~ applicants OfffCEMANAGER .. .-.. rsWekofM l8to40yrs.ofa11e. SantaAna.CA92702 Ave.NB642·1252 Washer · Dryer D•!t· home.S3l·~ __ ._,_._i.,.... _____ _ Automobile necessary for occasional local dnv. 1ng. l:.'xcellcnl company benefits Manne hardware store· T" SHOW-Of'f22 1-·ashion 17141540·8010 hwasher StOO ea Colur ---------•Silkscreen equip. china. S1mpleacl''l background FREE 3 WEEKS lsland.N.B Combtnatfon TVSl00.646-58411 Mixed Cocke r ·Terril'r silver palio sturr. clotll . preferred t;xl'cll yn•INING -----------Anl::qualOpportun1ly TYPESffiER / Sean; Washer $100. Com P upp1l's. u ll male gumball macb. build benerils . Dana Po1n1 9'\A SALESLADY Employer M ff op. c.'Omm·I Speed Queen S56-J2.t3 da)'s or art. 5. mat tools. dsks. book~ area .As k for T om .... weor.er Exper'd, Gift Shop. App· ~~~~~~~~~ TYPIST d.ryer$175.846-3680 548·5405 21541 Ann's Ln Laguna 493-4455 ............. •-..-..oty ly. Buggs International.,.._________ Sch For appointment for in· ---------1 .._ .... ~~........... """"West"UffDr.N.B. •• CASH PAID Gt!rmao Shepherd. male. --------.Ab Olut4 ly o prior """" ' *SECRETARIES* £vpe r 1'e n ~"d with to oodho 2•~ old terv1ew. plea!tc call Optometric orr.ce. part s "' n " '~ R 8 me ~~yrs Hanes 1060 ~321, exl. 277 tJme. neat. 01 utgoang . & training or expen ence S~E1sM At;,~~111gh Cbom· Receptionist. tyiw 50 ':f:;!T:~~ ~(cc:~ Pt~~Y ~[o~ ~ ~~ s~7.8el~ 1 g 81k fW!. 64&-9os:J · ••••••••••••••••••••••• DAILY PILOT ":1l7ll!....,.ng to earn H B neecssary. nuss ons . ...., on w.1· Xlnt phone \·01ce "' I .. h o-I D I l " W l S ddl s· o u .,.,,, •Personahzcd mi:.truc· ness & residents & appts forouromcc bene11ts . App Y .,.,tween Apt-si wbt rerrlg hke .-em.a e a mat an mix." es em a e· •me :JJO W. B:iyStreet Costa Mt::.a t::qual Opportunity Employer PACKERS Needed ror lighting r1 x· lure co. S.16·2901. Irvine Legal Sect ExJ>('r with a Partner w11nlcd .. ta~c lake charAe anihty & cm over expa_nsaon proJet1. in phasas on domci.llc & Orange Co. Op':r for ~ c1vil llt1gat1on work for a f•!'ure income •Ihm ti Newport Center law of· yrs. For uppts only cull face Sal open t1l 1) &1&4533betwn9--llam 64().6440 Part lime help want~ for sandwich shop located Legal Secreta~ ·exp Nr near Or Cly airport. Call Orange Co Airport I bef 11 or aft 2 Mon-Fri lion In your own area. Riidar Employers Pay All l''ees 4PM & 6PM. Monday r r $200 Call mo's. good with children 1.5" padded seat· white *Professional on the job burglar alarm being In· Lil Reinders Agency through Friday Ask for new. ~t· ree . ~119 buckstitched and tooled •-·~log. trod•"'ed. Th.is 1~ 11 r"al 208 . hS s 04 DaveGutlerrel. afLGpm .559·5524 --------nlcket conchos-goodeon '"' ... , "'" "' ~· 40 ire l, te 1 ORANGE COAST ~ 1. Pit Bull. to a good home. diuon $175. 645-4.248 or *Upt.o80<ro commiss1on. oppty. Call Mr. Vowell. Newport Beach 833-8190 1vsed rerni;:'s frost-free. g r eat f a m ily dog . 548.33781\nytime *Choice of top oChct: 1Lam-4pm. 1213> •130·7589 CallforAppt/Estab·64 OAlLYPILOT washers. dryers Servel 979.3c52 or 631 4973 ----""----- locations. or (714 ) 6'16·3107. 330W. Bay St.. gas re fr•!! Bl'st AP· I Debby I ~ellaMous 8010 Be your own boss with a ---------1c-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii C~ta Me:.a phante. 210 1\dam:.. llU. top notch profl'SSlonal or· SALES 1• l::qual Opportumt:r 536-0911 Co111etshcp pup. Gentle & garuzation. 3 openings for allract1\'c SECRET ARY l::mploycr --------loveable. Frt•e to good LUGGAGE TAGS Kat-II R ~ :.. a I es I ad i es l o de· IOOtUCEEPEtt Maytag wi:.hr & dryer. home 645-8999 rrom your business tard t:'I G ea moostrate ··Anti f<'og·· at Golden opportunity for Tii!:~~~!~rs~cl~g1u03~:y $350 for l.>ot h. G 1:int ---------1 Send one card for each FordttaihcaU Orange County Fair. the.right pers,on Hcayy w o"'r l~ Pr II l' l':. s . fr eezer . Sl50 <.:a l1 4 8cuut1ru1 pupp1e:. to a tag plus one s pare We 8ll·IOOl 493-0442 $3.00pr hr+ "?nu:.. MP· typmg &.sh skills Lite ina lY""!>eltin•• service. 644-8878 good home r eturn pe rmane ntly ly in person. Sp. !'120 an bookk' 'Pl11" Phone ex " ,,~ .. Call 64f.·ll342 sealed attractive tag & New Products Pavil lion cc ,,. · • The Office 549·2188 19"' Hotpoinl rcfng. frm.t. 1 RHl&toteSales per. Only qualif1ed1-----·-----free.uscd 3 mo:..8esl of· JO m o old Ge rman !tlrap. meeting a arinc ••••••••••••••••••••••• g1rl0Cc. 751·1831 __ 8J3..J294 • New llccnse"L wanted, on ralrgrounds. Thur:.. al persons appl.Y. Must Typ1~t •· r'•""Pl•omst f or 1.0 . reqwrcmcnt.s. Pre· '" II M K ~ "' '"~ fer. Call 675·2234. Shepherd. Male. shots. to h --will tram. Call for appl. t2 noon or ca r. en have neat uppearance & summer or longer. Flex•· ood ho 536 228tl vent loss & t efl ~ 1-'or a Legal Secs'yl.lmm t2 yrs ~1dt. Part time sales 640-7320. beM ur rp hllYAMa lTh64 5·41140 pleasant personality. bit: nours. Accurate lYP· Window Fedder air cond1 g me . . personalited tag enclose exper no req · Retired or semi-retired" 1---------ore urs. Xlnt co. benefit~ & good ml'(. Outgoing personah· I.loner l.J.000 B T.U. $70 To good home. M. Scottish wallpaper . fabric or Heavy lraru.cnpllon ex· Tool · pply co interest· R1.>eeplionlst Salcs per:.ons . Help worklngconds.see Bren· ty ror customer cont.act 17141552-6471 Terrier 2 yri. old ··Day Glo" paper & Wl' per nee. Ty1)e 65+ Xlnt 'Cl s~ to ~ull on ;0 Permanent Ptr position. needed. pick your own da. 540-9100. Nabors lll·JO hrs per wk Plaza, 536-8372. 963-0739 will bllck & tnm your salary compirn,· pa id ~ m n . · no typing necessar y· hrs. Call eves, 847·2359 Cadillac. 2600 II arbor 2082 .M 1chclson 112 12. lic:y«:t.s 8020 tiqt:. Or try two card:; ""n"fils. R"'ply Bo. v "19~. dustnal plants in .Santa Fl 'bl h 0 r..-!.1..-8050 k .. k ~ " "' 'r J h Id eJu e rs, near r. Blvd. Costa Mesa lrvllle. i52·02J.I •••••••• ••••••••••••••• ~ bac to .,ac . Daily Pilot P 0 Box Ana/Irv area. S uu Cly airport 7H/7S2·0869 SALES PERSON· Retail. ••••••••••••••••••••••• PRIC .. :S l560 Costa ·MCl>a Cal havecxpencnt-emeithet R. M. Abrams Company. ------.---Typlst -leital/word proc $.!euor31S5 92626 ' electronic a i.:.embly RECEPTIONIST Perm. full time. 1819 Secretary Marketing. this exp helpful but not re-Cycle & Company **I BUY** 41~ta0s Sl 60c.i ---------1 tools. or cullln~ tooli. b d k " Lo-"-N Compensation on com Goodtypmg!tk1lls.Gen'I Newport Blvd .. C M usy es requires 8 q"tJ NB luw orftcc. GRAND Good used Furniture & li9tags$1.50ea. "' misi.ion bas is With ofc d ut ies Xlnl co. Well groomed. well or-6446400 Apphances-OR I wi ll 10ormore Sl.40ra COUNSELOR g u a r ant c e d d a 1 1 y benefili. Newpor t Ctr. Sc*s Penoft ganized person w /good ---------OPIP!li...ll.._.G sell or SELL for You Sales Tax Included A position b avail ror a amount al start. 633-9460 Call644-3344. E.O.E. Plumbing & Gardening S/H & typing. Min 2 yrs Warehouseman needed ~ " MASTERS AUCTIOM NO CARD? person who ha:. tht: de William Davis. Tools !•'or Depl. 48 Hu P tw k expencnce req'd. Xlnt for manne distributor SALE 646-1686 & 833·9625 Draw your own or :.end · l j · RECEPTIONtST Wlmds a must' Some benefits. Salary S7SO·S800 Some boating or manne dd h •· sire o 0111 an aggressive lndu:.try Bell --------1 name. a ress. p one "' mortgage loan co. doing ---------Push button console. eves. Apply Kt!rm Rima mo. Call Bar bara • experie nce help(ul. New & used bikes. big 7 pc Bdrm Set. modem we·u make ont? card per business In So Oran~e ,.ART TIME OHL y Busy reception area . Hardware. 2666 llarbor 714/~7-7100 or send re· Warehouse experience discounts. lOspds S97 SO Mediterranean. Ort ho tag. Add 25< each Co. Calif. Real est. Must now be "mployed & Variety of additional Blvd. Costa Mesu sume to P.0 Box Cl9568. necessary. Call 549·967 1 .. ach CniHn box sprng & mall. $225. Send check or money or · · d " d t' tc yp ---------Irvine.Cal 92713 E.0 E. for a ppt & detai ls . d ti cense rcq 11 1 re . Cree to work in my small u 1es rcq accura · SAUSPEASOH F H FoiMMa,eds 962·7845 er to. PreferencC' will be given appliance bus. or air ing. Apply. Kirsch Co· l Secretary Part t t1me . E.O.E. M/ / Moc.~a bikes parts· ---C-.-.. ,, .. -1-P-A_ID ___ , PILOTPRIHTIHG to college graduate tre:ttment cqwp M /F. l7352 Armstrong Ave, Housewares & p/t me Huntington Beac h Warebou.'lll access Repair s all ~ P.O. Box 1560 w/pnor exper. in the 6·10 pm or M t T hur lrvme.540-3503 Cashier. hrsS-9pm Mon-H.eacbtart 842-0052 ~Tnw to$12,000 makes. Buy sell·trade· f or gd used furn. anU· Costa Mesa.Ca .~ field ot finance. real est.. 6-lOpm. & Sat 9:30am· fTi Start min wage. Ap· ~ consign. _:Q~ues~~&~c.:,:lr~TV:....:."::..s:::.95::,:7:....:11.:.:1.::33::_1=--:---:---:---:--- 1nsurancc or ucrQunling. 2:J()pm. $400/mo sal or ~~Of~tto $150 P3'_ ••-H_....w... s.a.;ty Offfcen ~e7~~=e~· l~ds:r~ip Di70 NEWPORT BL. CM Whitt Indian cotton sofa Oeslgnekrsr Leftovers, SoLtrv XJ.nt sal/comm schedule prolit sharing program Donv"ryttung~.ava1l " ...... -.-u &tab'I secunty firm b I .. C II V &&2·7910 + loveseat. pecan rmBr mtS400to r .a erm'ts uol l mlt ed r N ' < -HarborBlvd.CM II bl a I 1··Y · a u n . lble ..., .. Lg "•t chair P ' whichever you pre o ...,..... needs re a e men & 833·2700. Dennis & Den· w/cane cocktatl tl.>ls. bro ..,.,. "'' · personal growth & Im· exper nee. Some mgr OP· w/hvely ofc 0 lnt'l co.•----------women for uniformed p I Se I f velour sofll / lovllseat , S300. Bdrm furn ~-$400. med. income. Send re· pt Y avail. 1-·or interview Cal1Jinni. 833-2700. Den· SALIS set"urlty positions in rus ersonne rv ce o Practically new. smallest parquet: game set. cof· AntJques $20 up Hdbrd & s umetoG.Kaufman,620 t"allafllPM.979-3860 nis & Dennis Personnel Resp.person wanted for Costa Me:;a . Full or Irvine. 2082 Mlt'ht:lson boy's MotoX.2whlr.$30. fee Ibis . ser H r + spreadS225.Sleepersofa Newport Center Dr. ste Service of Irvine. 2082 sales in one ot Orange P / t I m c . R el i r e d Dr. Call 833-8788. bookcases. Queen bed & SJ.2S. Sat & Sun IH 332 211 Newport Beach, Qi PIXAMwerSerf. _M_l_che_ls_on ______ 1 Co's largest lighting ftx. wekome. Phone main Selling anything with a C_,_1 beigehldeabed.5S9·63'76 ~~ning Canyon Rd e2660. All shifts avail. Exper • tu r e s h owrooms · ofc collect for u Collt.u Oaity Pilot Classified Ad l•df m.t 1030 ""' •0 ....... r11taylCE pref'd. but will train. ~Onist 546-290L.lrvlne. M ~sa appt. <2-13 I b a 11lmple matt.er ••••••••••-••••••••••• Waterbed. ,. hdbrd. new · "sWa'Vi'SOI ro~~~7~1~~6E~ll Deli~~:!s lo s mall Screen printing 2SS-Ol51i. jl.llit~all642-567B. Elecll'IC automatic super ~~ ~~~·o_,~~ck~O ~;t~g~8~c:s~c~~ For 2nd T.D. Broker in BX ofc. l!eauUful 3urroW1d· lmmed Job ope nings: HelpW..W 7100 ~W..ted 1100 8 or regular m o vie · M2-4448 Newport Beach. p lngs. Some Ille typing & Girl Friday. lite typing. ••••••••••••••••••••••• i.•••••••••H••••••••••• viewer 4r s plicer. new Comer & eJld lbls, chairs. -.-------- Resp for servicing. l'OI· Ans we r 1 n g sc r v 1 ct! aen'I ofc duU"3. Startinjl Graphic arllsl. Screen condition. Sl5 $45·2083. books he Ives. d 1s hes. "0 ·Scope w /probes $135 lecli<>M. for«losures. & o~ralorfull & Prr. Call ~I to $750. Call Coastal prlnteN & prod1.1Ctlon ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;===:;;;.i mtsc. $4-$400.646-283!1 TS-413 Signal Gen.$75 . .SSS.3561 Pe rs on ne l Agen t y . help. Wllllraln. 540·5656. , 8ltll Tent. $40. 5'8·3$48 payoffs. SUperv\s~ staff ---------540·60S~. 2790 lforbor. n.atyetlWhetl•IMc9' " Drexel dinlng table & 4 of3. ~~I. PIX n-rator CM Set•retary & ......_ ...... II $162 Mr BAJ chra . Add1t1ooal ch rs For s ale Marklln train -r Full lime :1ccretarlal lsrl15 s • T.-. • an • pw• nvall Blrch. 494·5884. ~~;toiler. Call Bob Mus~~~~ld;:tmud . ::r~~~.&~~fcl~ks~!: • ......, 5's M9r. position In Newport • Al•••~ .. O,ul111 ,_ '"'-t'sAU.youpay Blue -oral sofa SUS. Lge liable i ndlv . Hrs Seml\rlllleydlv.ofnat'I Beach otrlce. J ob re· rora "' Uol AlhlellcCI bm apcnlnp. ~II & Part 6 :30am·t2 n oon. Call co. w1ll pay relocaUon quires an accurate typlst L•dK .. I ...... tamce Ta ulr:I g JOday ad painting sis. Coffee table v u ;t· ~. Company ben fits, Sandy640-1460. expenses ror •HN311ve w It h d I c t a P h o n c In tb.-~. 982·2l72 benh1p. ms. Clll a er Call5S7·0S20 tt5ulta orteoled perM>n transcrlbiq abltil)'. You Through I.be use or cluarooin as aa tht Job 8 mos old wattrOOd. llke _ep_m_,S7)44 __ 7-4-· ----~~ =e ~c:f. dr;;!~~ ,.,.#'.e,~.fd'-' ;i!sY~1'!:fr;:..!. ~ ~~. ,..~bl:rr~~~ ~~~n,::f.l. =1l8~!m1~~ 2!.~:! f~ IAILY PILOT r::..:r· or best oner SAMPLI SAU V~· ft.. 71t• ...... u _ .............. ·-lanm...... i..........r.1•· .. """"nt. ~··rt == . aom• Ille -... r " ."'"-., DIC Exch.lllve .... •lAdtet Clll YYOctw-e ....... ,... l"'IADUI"' _, -....... ~, ...... ""-' .. I kl landscape lnstal ation 4' maintenance E ~.......... 40hlru aport when asalsllna busy al 125-$30.000. C.ll J1ple •P na wor na .-.Pat1QftS, Walnut bdrm n t. tpl ....... "'••• .. • MACHIMIST mar. Call Marlon. What.on .540-l001. So~U· with ID automated ac· .......... drftler. mlrror +cheat coetaatt.rowl«I. <Mostly N.B. ~.needs. Class A 833-2700. Also Fee Jobs. ln1 " Snelling o f ~ p.yable ayateT. The prorram Is 40 hn per wt fOC' 11 wka DIBTOIY + 2 nite lbb. kl hdbrd t':'8::S~nta~,~~ Machlni.tt for Brid1eport Oennll & Dennis Person· Newi>ott Bea.ch AJency. Sa. ary commeoaura Uc durina ~cb tbe pertlclpant ts paid suo per w,..at.trbed $400. a ·· rnd Port Kimberly. ·N. e. MIU• llardtl'\le Lathe. nelServiceollrvine.2082 4atOCampusDr. with expertenc:e "•bl · hr DO IT NOW ! &amelblw/24"le1rs100 . .._., CSoM loluance preclslon Mlchelsoo '1· Call 114t5U·7m. · Ptakl hld~al>"* 1oCo $1001--------- work. E:ic"r recfd. Top P«Won a"rculators Al· ~~: uAyl: '1A :ew r: ~ tft:CRETARY /TYPIST These art' Cr:TA funded poslllont .. requlre '4J..W71 fr more. O'T~.J186 Qrcle wtaviqa, all alics. '*" E.O.E. 551-tO:ll au 8JW111Ve, neat. 15.10 hr. maehineahop. pan tlma. hall llme, sh orJh•nd UunUni Beach ~ldeney & LS wt{a prior '-=========I Notur&l Qldar Mexlc:1n lllenJ to choose rrom. ror ... Adama. C•U Tvcs Wed 8 8 PM MW10'7 belpfw. apply In S)etlOn tanemp meot. 1-I di I Very Reaioubly pr1«d r ·, 15'1 884' t o Mr. r 11ut ... a l AoDllcat ona wlll bt accepted 11ntU 'Piii TM taw.t draw In the co onaa n nil n \a. ~ Matd . Uve-ln. tor 0 r..:,JP · · • TTlde your old ttulf for Robert Beln, Wllll1m Su,_. JuJ,y lltb at tbe Employment• Weat. .• a Dally Plttl lleadboatda8al·J7tS •"'--------- EmaraldBaJrwlde.nl. 751 oew 1oodlea with a Frolt•AUOC.1401qull Traloinl~&«.S31Mall1St .• H.b. CtuttnedAd.CaUTodlY F\nd wbal 1'.'00 wa.nt lo wt9&CHAll ==eau:::«:::'2211'7::·==1:=0illified;;::::Ads:=:;:::;:tu-;S1113.~~;:ua~lned~:11C1.::_:•~M11~d::•:: .. :z.i.:; ... :'°':::ri:;•:•:;t1L==.l.!!!!!!!!!!!!.! .. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!U.~ DallYPilotau..11\eda XlnlCoed .._.,... ' -. DAil Y PllOl • loah.Powtr f040 # ~.~! ........ !!.'.! Mals:rc~/ f I SO '1tul• ,_ IOeC ,.. 1oa1 1o• ~"• :H' Cu.sU>m bit F/B. bait 14' Hob1e wLth trailer z .................... , .. .. Wean•oay Ju'Y 12 1&78 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 4 WM.t Dri••• tSSO AMto\ W..t.ct 9 590 A.to•, l•fl~ ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ..,,__. tol O tllllk, twin Chevy. full 114111.$.Best o<rer Hond»MC450Mod forks . • •••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~·u. ... ea·•·• -·.... Pure~Slame.e lottens ••••••••••••••••••••••• canvas. slpa a ~500 S48·7658 custom scat. headers. .,. -rvn ~l~ F ,_ M""'t -· aJ /boo •. Owner must sell Call•---------runs-looks perfect Mov· 1.1' abo e ........... A 5w1m • ~-ree puppies ~ -"'· um w m.,. d 673 """" 67"' ...... ~ Columbia 26 Mkll. '69. t 11 """' 7711 t ~ w1pu:;;.-ctttt"r. Ii Keeshoad~7-3172 h.rdwr Beat ofrtr over ys ._,evs .,._,... main & working jib. ~= se _... o va~ acceuon ant "-& Qr9mt IOta S200 2131~7 6331 19T7 13' Boet.on Whaler. VHF. depth rinder. 10hp •------ oUtr t$2-$&ll ••••••••••••••••••••••• Johnlon g HP. Iona shaft . w/20 hp Mere. $2500 ln brd. holding tank. ·n Yamaha 175lT 162 m• Wanted Tent tralltr or ••• clean S290oroffer 673'3088aft6. $10,500. 714/545·1450 xlnteood~1 Apacbt! soUd wall. 1i:ood ~ A6ia1 ~ CLASSIC BOAT Columbia 21 Sa1lbolll ~.ai I I ., Wiii RA.re 26' Chnscraf\ Con PRICED FOR QUICK \."11JU t on. I P tiv. 11a90 Goo .. • Johnaoo 5"'8JIP long shuft, t In en ta 1. 1 9 s g 8 11 Big, fast. comfortabh: ~~~~d" r tin \111 g f-t• v•y l1~ Johnson 50HP V ·4, varnished wood. Two daysa1lor. Open cockpit ~,,!~~6 !7~ ~~-~o~ Vouaret~wtnneror SlSO. 962·5618. eng . lop condition . seats 8. Xltlt bay cruiser CC. Yamaha Q A so 2llckeu·tS13 00 Value> •-~.Po-90 ... 0 2ll/IJ88.60S7 & able off shore boat. F 4 Hond 979 ....... ti 30 9 JO John Wayne leM iS club fmly membership. Only Sl.380. Hurry 644~ Excrcycle, Walton. $85. 548-3036 lotheJULY 15 :::': •••• :."':" •••••••• .::. ----------sails & outboard. Nwpt PM a .,....,. : · S:OOPM Performance For sale 18' Soutbcoast slip avad. Must sell ror olthe I•--------run·a-bout. Excell cond. oaly $1650. 499-4940. •oraf Lipinan FOR SALE Restored cove r . Slip :.>' clipper marine. 1975. ~-u-... 1975 24' Relnell Sedan ~~7~2-,, B . B .C . SJ.200 fig. VHF. fath. knot· ~--.. Bridge, OMC 225. xtra .,..,.....,.,.., ·77 GS750Suiuk1 xlnt condition S41J.0820 al the cleim,dual stahon. VHf''. ---------m ete r . 9.9 hp. Elect '68 Kawasaki A 7 JSO. bkc 4S gal display rl sl' tank ANAH E IM depth finder. bail lunk. n· Glaspar. tri-hull. Walk start. 99.950. 846·3033 new. xtra parl.4. st blk1t w /flu or cscent llt1ng CO~VENTION many xtras. Priced to lhru windshield. 120 hp Col. .ia. di'esel. 9 bag" 962-7887 COSTA MESA AMC/JEEP #I IN CALIF. 1971 CHEROKH $6995 tJ8A16NN 1277831 32 Cherok~i. In Stock OVERSTOCKED CJS Pickups WogonL>ers $1300 D1scounl on some models 2S2A Harbor Blvd COSTA MESA 714/549-8023 along w/beaul wooden CENTER move. Mere. 110 dr. Wolstrom • ..:.:.:...:..~-----stands1cabinet.s $150. 55 July 14, 15, 16 $I 0,100 lJp·lrlr. FUii canvas lop sal\i, loaded ""/equi P· '7' Yamaha R0350. hkl' Jeep CJ i 1976. lti .OOC gal dt•play fis h tank Call 642·5678. ext. 329. lo & boat cover. Seats 8. ment. well ma[nt. P.P. new. lom1·s. $650 rrules. xlnt cond Best of· wltluorescent llt1ng claimyourtickets H•RRIS-.....'S USCG approved. Top 556-9133 SS7·1949a(t5pm fer 552.7231 a I o n g w I w o o d c n • • * "" "" cond $3350. 552.5321. Luders 16. 2 complete sets ---------- st.and/cabinet Sl75. Call --------SEA RAY IOATS 32' Lowmal\ Trawler. ofsails.goodcond. moor· uno Hondu. ll.OOO mi. xtra Trw:ks 9560 768-l260fordeta1ls Splo~meW fro G;:n d 3101C<»&st Hwy,N.B. s111gle screw, fly bridge. in g Newport Har bor. cle~77SS5or9682875 Sa Bo •• o. anu carv art 611•2547 newVHF.newautopilol. Ma ke ofler Also 14· · · veway nus oingo. case, circa 1922. $\500.1~~~~~~~~~~ stereo, 220 gal gas. 120 Lap s l rake s k 1 ff . 1978 VZ400 Yamaha. used Need 977, 913. !152, 961. PhoneOO·l.304. I· 213/llN> c""" 8:W. 812. 850. & 897 Will 31 • 8 t S , h wtr. holding tank. sips 6. _...,,_, only 4 hrs. same as ne" spbL 4lM·7263 Kimball console piano. er ram prti1s er n icely decrt 'd . H unt $1495 675 1257 like new (J yrs>. trad ff:eady to fi sh. enc Hrbr slip avail $9SOO. l01z· Stinger. brilliant yl· --------- Cok>rTV. works good S50 s tyling. $1200 Oys binun1. VHF. CB. AOf'. Pvtpty Call846-836.5. lw color impregnated. WANTED 00 or 100 CC Rt!el power mower. 646-6393 Xlnt value. $24,000 Call lo u g h I 1 n e a r dirt bike ror \4 yr old starts easy $35 64S.152S 675-0255. 18' Lyman cocktail boat. polyethelene w /contrast· boy l'ii. call 759 !1529 or Spmcl Piano, perf. condi· -.-. --.-----rblt 6-cyl Chrys . eng lng blk deck. Has S6 sq fl 640-1405 Iv msg Msct.._..ous lion. $600. Discount 10 24 sktpJack F .B. Low Many xtras. S1595/or bst dacroo sail wtanod1zed _____ _;.:. __ W..ted 108 t perspective s tudent or hours. lots of eqwpment. ofr 493.7533 alum mast & boom Hull '78 Yamaha End 11 ru ••••••••••••••••••••••• Sr. citizen. 963.7460 great shape. &15-9079 11 1 J ---------wt 1s only 95 I~. She 1s OT 175 Brand New $875 WA"(f£D· Backpackmll _54&-899 ___ 1_<W_1 _____ loots. SaH 9060 unsinkable. scuff proof. or Bsl offer 557-8393 equipment Duck or 18~5 Emerson Square 33, Owens Clasuic Sedan. ••••••••••••••••••••••• req's no nialnt.& 1s \Cr) ---------~oose down sleeping bwg. Baby Grand. S2000 lotta boat for~ · 7 5 C A p E o O R y efficient on the wtr . s.500. Super Cleon! 2 man tent w lfloor. 549-4132 •w•663()""""". TYPHOON. 19' full keel. 768-1260 '76 Honda750F Lomtlcs. b k k k ~ .,..... sloop, basic boat $4000. Hob good pnce. Perl cond ac pac mg pac ctr. ---, Machines 8093 ·---------i With trlr & extras $.5500. ie 12' Monocat, new, S3t>-771l or 960·58« 547 ·3182 •••••• ••••••••. ••...... 5'&2-9e6l COl?lplete . $650. 968·2466 ,.,.. Singer sewing machine SEA RAYS! -------_aft_6:_30_P_M___ MotorHomu, Sale/ IM..._nh 1013 new. Portable S75 * * • HOBIE 14 Rent/Storage 9160 •••••••••••••••• ••• ••• • 545-2423 N Ev E R A G A I N Shirt.y Rippey BI l r 0 r . 7 Ii N ll t I s . • •••••••••••••••••••••• aHEIDAMAMr! Spor+incJGoods 8094 13 12Wllalbooll Absol ut ely prl m o . Rent a 1977 Execut1vc Pref e r abl y an old ••••••••••••••••••••••• SALE lalboa 546-9311. Motorhome or M1n1 B ,, motorht\me from Herb Fende~ aseman. but Ne w (Fenwic k· Qui ck J You are the winner of Santana 21 Friedlander Call JnY ol Jnythmg m good w(l rkmg Bass rod & reel combina· CLOSE·OUTS 2tickets-($13.00 Value> HAS EVERYTHING • these number:. ('()Odtt1on for around SIOO t1on. $35. New I Garcia· lo the JULY 15 Btful cond IClJ-3228 898 777 ~~~ Call661·626111ft ~~~n~1~~~~~nr.'i.~~no~ 24' CUDDY !i:OOPM:fel~~rmancc 16' Rac ing Sailboat. 537:;777 --Ste\'ens dbl bl 20 ga RoyalLipe·uan "1''1reba ll ... & trlr 828-8888 Urums ll µ1.-ce Ludwig !lholgun. S85. Marlin CABINS PIC)/bslofr 494·7092 w1th 6Zlld1Lencymbal~& Jl}JOnne.S85 545.2083 Stmli3ont•hShoe w RENT z:r fireball. :,t:lf extra !.Cl of new h1rnd~ • Venture 17. :\1ust scll lhts contained. Lotsofxtrus ••••••••••••••••••••••• I . ALLEN .· I GMC TRUC~S 1971~ CA.IAUBO l~-w­o•' ••"°°""" ~ control ........ ..,_.....,,, ... _... & ~T6f9o 1971 GMC RALLY WAGOM t ~~-~1~ ~u·1::' c:::1~ CUltOm 100 OioG. & t1N w'-1 ITOR299U614ll021 57976 WE HAVE A GOOD SELECTION OF JIMMYS. SUBURBANS &VAN CONVERSIONS Excell cond R 1r l. TY.Radio, Side curtains. camper /\NAfiElM week.Makeoffer 6452283 b7J.8474 HiA, Stereo 8098 covers. fish wells. 100 CONVENTION 675·8900 ---l••------1 gaL ruel. CENTER ·NEW ·79 31° Pace Arrow tw0=~~~ Complete PA s ys tem. ••••••••••:•••••••••••• Dynaco 400 stereo power Model 400 CJD speakers. amp. PEAVEY stereo Garrard 092 tur ntbl. 800 mix i:r. 2 spkr Marantz 2270. S900 or cabinets w two 12· Alter bestoCfer 979-4626. s pkrs & horns. $950 loah & Mcrin. Mark. 83!1·53114 , Mike Ecpii,...nt b/5~9874 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Peurl drum :.t'•· 2 i:ym . ~ 90 I 0 bah.,. ~nJrt' tom tom. ••••••••••••••••••••••• h a :. ., Ci o o d c• o n d C A N 0 F: N 1> n a ;)441-82tl9. 645 \ 2.14 · · C a t a I 1 n a · · . I !I • ~ • , fiberglass. 2 mo old. xlnl URUMS t'our Piece :scl cond . wtmtr mount. S385. w/ZildJlan cymbals $100. O/B·2hp Evmrude. used -~::::·~::d. walnu~ !.~~·a1:./w~~~ t6~~;0 c a s c • R o s c w o o d _11_1_.i_M_r_. N_ie_ls_en ___ _ keyhoard xlnl cond. loah, MaifttettCllK•/ _497-2574 --s..-v•~· 9020 Offic Furniture & ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~pmtnt 8015 2 brand new Wins~ow self· •••••••••••••• •••••••• annallnl( 4 man hfe rafts Tnm tabs. headi.. xtras Includes Tamdcm Trailers 121 228 H.P. MERCRUISERS Stock 11552 & 554 Sll,9 38 Stock i!Sil! 11 I 240 H.P. O.H.C. Sl4,596 NOW OPEN UNTIL BPM 1 Days a week J uly \4, ts. 16 U DO 14 ;i.4068, mint cond. Sips 5 Loaded Weekly ,.. -··--· ,.. Call 6'2·5678, ext 329, to W/trlr.SJ.400. r e ntal only 646·2136 claim your tickets. 536-803() days. 646-6595 eves *** 24 · Trimaran w /trlr & 25' Executive. Diplomat '75 Enckson 29. s uper molor. S850. llfor renl. $350 Pl'r wk. 9' boat. wheel. spm. many 89'7·6954 p er m1 496-2 14 5 or xtras. S'lJ.SOO P.P. John loats, Slips/ _9'J6._504_o _____ _ 675-9060. Al 640·2427 Docks 9070 lllnns Forces Sale Cal 20, full equipt, '74, Hkc ••••••••••••••••••••••• \~4 2-1' J:;xccullve motor nu. $.S,500. 714·644·8510. SUPS.AVAIL.AILE home. A 1t:. l'/B. P1S. cvestwkends . YACNewport646.0551 auto. trans. aux gen. like• new. only driven 16,000 m1·:.. Sl!>.000. 979-0121. 2101 So. Vale. S A 22· South Coast Albatross beautiful condit ion . $1000/bsl orr. 640· 712.1 or 675·1714 SALTY CLASSIC flXER·U,,ER 30· Avalon mooring. In front o( Sean 's & swim area. $25.000. 673·5099. loots. SpHd & Ski 9080 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Roomy. Germ an built, F or Sale· 19· custom 58" all steel yawl. Dsl made. Jet p<>we rcd s ki aux. sobd mag int. Great boat a nd trailer. top long dist.ance crwser or cond. s.ID-0378 RENT New '78 22· Motor H o m e Load c·d Day /Wk I Mo. 675·51132 Trailers, Travel 91 70 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ALLEN ( AUi l LA(• Ul U\MUhll l- ~M(. lRuc_-.\ \•" U•eoqo f-•Y ,.,,,.,, t •1• l AG.UNA NtC.llt L • '70 Datsun PU 1 cyl .. .i s peed. rac.1n ht:atcr C11m,>er s hl'll <85832'1'11Slk :i l718BTt Sl565 THEODORE ROBINS FORD 2060 HARBOR BLVD. CO$TA MESA 642 · 0010 ·m Chevy PU. good cond SUIOO or bst ofr. Call aft 4pm. 960-2589. Robert WEIUY C&.IAHCA~S •TaUCM ~ CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Ha rbor Blvd crn,1 A MESA 546-1200 WE PAY TOP DOLLAR IMW ••••••••••••••••••••••• ORAHGI COUHTY'S OLDEST & Salei. Sen 1c.i Lc<11s1ns; RoyC.-.er,lnc. RollJ l\oyce UM w 1540 Jam borec Newp<>rt Ueach 640-6444 FOR TOP USED CA RS ·711 2002 Sunroof w /Visor FOREIGN.DOM ESTIC AM 1FM c·a~s Mort.> or CLASSICS Must sell $&S95 t7M • U your car 1:. extru clean 833·7123 see u.., first ---------14UER IUICK BMW 2002. 1976, "unrf. 2925 Harbor 91,d. A 1C. stereo. auw. <·ull Costa Mesa 979 2SOO _498_·_:n_~------ WE BUY USED CARS CAL.LGART1' UsedC..r Mgr 540·5630 ltHl\SO\ \\SO\ • LINCOLN · ME.RCIJRY 2626 HARBOR Bl VO COSTA MESA W£1UY USED CARS! We're: thl' n~w t:hc\ rolcl dealen;h•P m lht• In lnl' Auto Cl•ntcr Wl' nci:d your ust!d c:ar' JOE MAC PHEtlSOH CHEVROLET 21 Aulo Ccnll'r i)l"Vl' IRVINE 768-7222 WANTED! 1lltll BavanJ. AM 1 r'M •\·spd. real flnt• 499.37111 i6 3 o SI. !>ll\er w 1blu1· Int . lo m1. mmt cond . Sl2 ,SOO I' I' 642 · 066S a fl 1PM '76 2002 Green sunroof AM FM 53fi-i681 76 120021 A ir . am -fm :stereo Si.950 or best of rer Oay'I 833·9800 Ew:> or wk l'ndl> S45·922tl Capri ,715 ..•....•............... ·72 Ci.tpn l.i cyl Air cuntl. aulo. Best orrer MS ·i6511 ·1 1 Capn "ood condition. 10 m1. AM /FM IHrk. S1 100 833 1252 dys. '73. Vii. AM l t'M l'as:;. xlnt cond. yellow t•Xt('r blk tnler S! 100 Mt ll &\2·320CI ·------Ldll' m od t-1 Tt,) ot.1 ~. (;APRI. ·74 ag, -t :.pd. xlnt \'ol\~. P1ekt.ps & \an:. t•ond $2 ~:;0 Wur~. Ca II u.-. todJy' '\!fi 325ll or home 673-GS;i!I 190 H..-...1i.tl Ceote Mo• "" .... uo> .. uo .. uo Sludent needs dependabll· tram. Mui.l bt• rl'ason.i bk Lanl· 548 233.5 Autos. Imported . .....•.......•....••.. '701 ••.•............•...•.. ·-;.a MJ ~\·r.il• :\lJr1•k . PHfrct r11nd . loach•d i\.11651! ~I. 711 dlt5 Ot!Oi rail co1ln1 Alfa Romeo 9705 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '71 Spydcr MINT CO:'loD Must sell S3300 (;.i 11 642· lSOfi 9707 ••••••••••••••••••••••• BILL VAN 9720 ·····•·•·•··•··•······· •DATSUNS• LCS? s.4edion Of.t.U~s SALES· LJ::ASI NG PARTS-SERVICI.-: We Need Clean Datsuni. • COSTA .. MESA DATSUN •... 2845 HARBOR HLVU 540-64 10 540-02' ~ BILL VAM '73 Dul:sun 2401. I !IP .. 11r n>nd . ,\ M FM. 54! .. I;! I mile~ l:~n1uttful 1:cmd1t11)n ( 71151 IT.I I 81LL VAfll PORSCHE-AUDI \3621 Harbor Blvrt Garden G rovt' 636-2333 ! Exec Desk. Shelbyville. 44"x84 ", xlnt cond S375 ~ Adler elec· typewriter Sl25 Workbenches sis t Swivel offtce ch.i1rs. SlS. w1canop1es Make ofr 673-8119 MHDHELP? HARRISON'S SEA RAY 3101 Coast Hwy. N B. 631-2547 h\'e aboard. llig h adven· --------- ture ill yours for just 30' Searay Wee ke nder. soo.ooo. must sell. imma<". pro· fnsi-Yachts ressionally maintained 7· by skipper. Two 454 675-2650 Crusaders. 41> hrli. c\cc Divorce salc '77 Mc Too custom 21· 5th wheel Used twice llas i.tara~e· perfect for tel·na~Ns . pet. dart bakes. b1cyelc~ $7950 hi.t ofr CJll &i().83113 or le ::l'I· e mess 1976 FORD RAfllCHERO With CAMPER SHJ::LI. Spht .. eats. ti It w hi:-t·I. AM FM s tereo & mJg wheels LlKE N EW ':' ·74 Audi Fox Auto. 14 trade H .o 4H milt'" 1063LGT1 $3,295 ltLL VAH PORSCHE-AUDI 1.3621 Haroor Bl vd NICECARS - SUPER SAV1NGSI DATSUN SALE! Elec Add1nn Mach 2 t'1le Ca bin cu.. OrafltnSt t\rms f'ountam Valll'Y are:. 892·2t 13 Help yourself to a Heaping selection of Qualified Hopefuls an the DA ILY PILOT HELP WANTED ADS Get GREEN cash for WHJTE elephanth wtlh a Class1f1ed Ad Call 642·5678 HOllE 14' refrig & :.love. sip:. 1.:; With trailer. t'Xtras . Call art 6pm. 640·7822 Good cond. $850. 642·7089 BefSpm. S40-33S3 ~*•******************************************«Tnmport~on ; FIND VDUR NAME : c:a::;;:;~;i .. ·~:·;; • • • ~ .. I .. .. .. .. ,. Jt .. .. .. .. ... l( .. .. SEE THE ROY AL LIPIZZAN STALLION SHOW SATURDAY JULY 15 8PM .. • 1\ g l'C<ll ftlffiil.' ... ..,ho'". filled with * ,. tolor. excitement. * comedy & beuutif'ul ,. • hor sL•s. ln uddition ~ to tht• dpizzuns thcrt• • • CJl'l' ~l'VCl'<•I oth(•r >t breeds or horse~. .... .. • t'V(!O mul e~ & a pony. :and they a ll perform ! HI music. .. .. .. • Spl·cial rates for group~ . • PerrormancL· • • times arc: * • ~:Ou PM : Fn . J ul~ 11 .. 2· 00 PM. 8:00 PM : Sut. .July 15 it ,2:00 PM : Sun. July 16 • Phone :r714 l 635·5000 • • • .. .. .... ,. .. . , I . . •••••••••••••••••••••••• «Older camper -!·sale. wm « truck . $150. SlO\ l' & • refrig. 640·2700 _ • '76 Ford Camper \'an. ful· • ly eqw1fd. lo m1. aft 6 • call 640-7822 from 11·5 c11ll • 540·3383. ! ·72 Volkswagen bubble.op camper. This one has • everything. Porsc•he • engine. new tires and • battery. Excellent cond•· • tion. 59.000 miles 830·3157 « « CABOVER Camper for • shor t bed true k X Int • cond w t xtr as. $900 • _6.1_1_-03~1_7_or_646-840~ __ 2 __ _ • 11' C10 Funt1me w/Jacks . « Sps 6. lmmac. $1500/ofr . • 675-5832 .. « .. • • Buy now before vacation Beautiful c abo ver camper. S500 Ph 979-2133 MotoriHd l ikes '140 « ••••••••••••••••••••••• • Peugeot 1977; 1500 mi's, • xlnt cond. $340. « Call 897-62U4 .... " -• ., • ' • ,... • =" .: ..... Moped. Peugeot. less than l yr old 962-8933. Good cond . . . ... CONTRACTOR'S Office trailer. 1i'~22· A1r 1h~al Xlnl rond S3000 640· 1391 Jw+o Service, Parts & Accessories 9400 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Must sell, Orn~ Coty mobile phone-.. E ves. 673·93t>:J ••••••••••••••••••••••• 9510 ••••••••••••••••••••••• 390 short blk eng Brand new fctry pacl:ed with heads $4001 best offer Must se!I 492 1315 9520 lES.92\81 $5288 Nabers AUTO CENTER Otv of Nabers Cadtlla<' 1425 IAKat ST. ACROSS F ROM FEOCO COSTA MESA 540-9109 Mu!il sell ·711 Chl!VY '·• Pi.; Tire~. rims. !'>lCrt·o la!)t> deck. CB Lo m1 Clean Bob Aft fl P :'ti 646-7907 '77 Ford 1'" 100 Pickup. lo nu·:.. Eves. 673-936.1 .......... ... .. . .... ... ---------- CLASSICCORVAIR ·72 LUY. xlnt cond. n"" CONVERTIBLES rad.tab. ong ownr. 59.000 Pvt pty S36-99'J3 nu's, best ofr 497-4301 l9:>4 Porsche. ;ooo m1 . on new ('ng. xlnt c nd AM/FM l'LISS 84i 7555. 968-Z.875 4 WhHI Drin~ 9550 ••••••••••••••••••••••• '73 lntentationm Sc0Mt4X4 'SI Chev) "~ Ton Pl,;. needs work Bc~t orrer over S300 675· 7623 ·74 Lov. air. c·usl. shell . boot. AM1FM tape qu.id . tires. nms. 71-11ckado 1n tenor. dll new c·q >t S27S01offer 494· il22 Vans 9570 ••••••••••••••••••••••• Chevy '73 350 V .11 cng. ~. Garden Gr"' 1• 636 2333 '76.AUDI FOX Spe>rty white:! door with red Lil tenor A1 r rond . auto tran~ . radio T his lcnffil· 'alUl' .11 S-l\50 1~RJF1<.:all6-15 3ti61 or ~ C ORT F O X LEASI NG 1H6 NEWPORT 8LV0. COSTA MCo;A 6•~·l661 BILL VAN'S 'i6 Audi 100 LS I dr. auto. air. K track 34.~3 mile~ 1326-NJE I $4695 llLL VAN PORSC HE-A UDI 13621 U:i rbor 81\ll Garden GrOV\' 6$ 2333 llLL VAN ·77 Stiver f'"ox Sunroof a u l o . J 1 r . .. I L' r ,. 11 < 1S3SCU1 ~.995 llLL VAN PORSCHf·AUDI 13621 Harbor Blvtl Garden Grov1• 636·23:13 '10 5 10 2 OR. Au10tn•t.c """"''CIP rwdtO trw!:l1'~ 4 on•• •9 300 ...,...., ~"'10fut"'V ,,. Detl Of'lofJ .n •own' ?9?9LBI 5 1444 '73 6 I 0 COUPE R&tH't l'\tCt' & ~ l001 W\tr, •u,om1hc... TtatK AM· t:M taJ'\+,u~ • (/f"ly :13 000 mtl~', 50GH())l 1 5 1888 '74 1210 2 DR. t. ,,, .. 'ftMo car _..,.. 4 JOeiflO tr1ntfT"•U.c>n 6 ••eo 1828MC9 '75 121 0 COUPE HA 'Ct-49ACK $uC)ef" lt~I~ r•r ••'" eo. ~+911Qrt • \oewJ ,,.,,. " AM/f M •-.7Q'IMWM1 52444 '71 200SX COUPE Like hEWI low -A 1~a11v IOtO•O' AutOl'N'f t' 41t C0,,<1 AM/fM If.,_, 4 mo<_,1f12SXA• 6 cyl.. 3 speed tram, . 4 wheel drive, locking hubs. removablt• top. radio. heater & off·roud llres. 1683JEY > T van. mags. greal ron· IMW 97 12 54666 Sl999 THEODORE ROBINS FORD 1060 ltA1180R Ill VO CO~TA M(~A C.•12 0010 J EEP. '75CJ5. 6 cyl. z.a,000 m1 848-4076 '76 GMC J i mmy ll1gh Sierra. like new 29,000 mi's. air. V-8. cruise con· t rol Loaded w1xtras Brand new overs1ted oft road tires 50,000 m 1 warranty. Call 1714> 557-9051 1962 Ford FlOO. Must see to app reciate . Must sell Best off' or \rade for ski boat. 548· 7821 '7' GMC ¥•TON 4X4 l'ICIUlf' V8. 4 speed tra ns .. 4 wheel d:rtvo pwr. steer· lrta. aux. rue\ tank., radio. heater & oft.road tires. 15l98U $5794 . . .._ ... . .. ' dlt1on. 528-5555 1968 Chev van V·ll. 4-:.ipd. xlnl cond g47 ·7555. 968-Z.875 9580 • •••••••••••••••••••••• ..,6 MIZ.280C Sunroof. spe<!d control. and mu c h m ore' Beauuful metallic pumt A uruque automobile for the particular person Has had m eticu lous care Chetk our aur al' live lease rate. (607PQQJ 0.11645·3661 or see ut ~ C ORT F O X LEA S I NG HU NEWPORT 8LV0. CO$TA M£$A 60·lHI 9590 ••••••••••••••••••••••• WIWIU.IUY YOUI DATSUN . PAID FOR OR NO't' TOPOOL.UR FOaTOPC~lS BARWICK li A.TSU"' ...._ 1' '1.1nl •, 1· ,. ·• 8~1 ·J .l .S,.HJ.) l7~ V A student nd• bu111c transportation tnder S4(.0 Nack 64$.6410 ... -... .. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1978 BMW's HERE NOW! COMPLETE IODY SHO, MOW OPEN EXCEl.UNT SELECTION OF IMWRESALES Wt: muy h:ivt• your rwxt cu In our Inventor)' Call us today• 131-2040 495.49441 &I U 'UOAOWAY UMfll AMA 835·3171 111111\TIMAlf' O"IYIHO MACtttNl •USIDIMWs• '72 2lm ap. (544LJA 1 '742002A.A1C11SMLPO > '75 530! Auto <0J8MTV 1 '78~.upS1R1549PllZ) '78530i .Lu~lll()6PllM 1 '796361. S1Rcs81RCS1 CloMd Ott S.ltda r • suru srtelAL DIMO SALi!!! SI01 ·1210.· FIO. ALL Altf ratCED TO SIUHOW!I! 280Z '':'8. uuto. A C. 6000 rru s . m usl i;ell. S8500 54(1 1219 494•0GJI) '74'~ 2tiOZ 2+2 Bron1.1• Air :slcreo. Ol'W r11dl11I-. 31.000 m1 Mml <'ond P\I pt, 776-Jt\iR llli'3 Datsun 2-IOZ. uut11. A1C. mag>. AM 1 t'M. xlnt cond $4150 83'i (l()SO l'Xl ~ weekdays. 491 2tHH eves & weekends '78 Special Edition 280Z, lo aded $2000 down. T 0 P P P 675-l:iM. * DllVEA * * Ll1TLE. •• * SAVE A LOT SHOP & COM}>ARE 8ARWICk OAT\0,.., ' ' I '\ ! • BJ l;JJ :~ 49 J.J: l!i Wa.ntAcb Call~5678 . . ' n i ~ . ~ I I .. " .. ' •, •. ... .. . .. .. •. '• :--.· ... .... ... ~ ~ " \ ... • ~ ' ~ 4.vtot. l•poti9<1 A.Mtot. Ua.d Autot, Uted •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Wednesday, July 12. 1979 •• DAILY PILOT ._._,...,wted ......._ .. ,....., Aldo1,..,ort.d VoliawCICJtft 9770 C11•111e: 9915 Chrytlet-9925 A.tos.UHct ..._U .. d AAltot.Ute4 •··•·•······•·······•· .............................................. ·······••·•···•···•••·· ...................................••••..•..............................••.•.................••.•••••.............. 0... 9720 Mwcc••.._ t740 ronc:tlt t7S0° '77VWDasher.b1ckfrom ltnSIYILLI '77 CHIYSLH DodlJt 9935 Mlfc.-y HIO Oldl•llY• '955 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••••••-••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• Europt! pickup. Jo mi. W~ASTac>IOOfl COIDOIA ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• '74MIZ 4IOSLC II.I. YAtfS aunrool, stick, must sell Le l Gori~ sold. Sunroof. 'ts Dart, 2·dr, 6-stlct, ORANGE COUNTY'S tm Cut1111 Supreme . Orl 1 l nJ1l tbri,1out ! USED914'5 Beatofr.2U /59Z·S22'7 at er interor. tull ateno,powuwtodowa & clean in~ o ut, nu NIWIST :dntcar.deat.h ln r1mily. Automauc,pwr.alcenng ..,4 914.i.oWbiteUn~' '14Bui,lowner.lom1's. ~n[a~ai~~:l~~t more! Make your offer! nc'lala 24 MPG. $59S LlNCOLN·MERtURV rnust sell.~.67~. ftalr~ (4230). POISCHl-AUOI xlnt cond. S2300 (arm CB, tilt steering wbeel &c C819RKP) cau 645-3661 or •m1 Dealership 1s now OP EN 1_eves_. _____ _ $16,995 l36Zlllarb0r8lvd 87).3898 wittwbeeJcovers.21.000 Melt... Pord '940 RAYFLADEIOE PWio "57 HOWAID CIM•rolet Garden Grove 636-2333 'tn VW Squareback, new· miles. CS213). •••••• .. ••••••••••••••• LINCOLN-MERCURY ••••••••••••••••••••••• OOVEltQUAILSTS. ·s.s 3S6C Portie Nevada ty rblt. radials. SlOOO/bst $11 ,711 1S.18AutoCenterOr. '7S Pinto Runabout , aar. !Near MacA~ur, car Must sell this week ofr. 847 ·5034 or 962·1W3S Nabe SO Fwy-Lake Foreat wt .US /F'M, PS/PB. 4·sp. Jamboree &Bnstol>. . · rs IRVINE 847·2011 833·3420 NEWPORT BEACH ~Victoria, CM 1~·0238 '76 Rabbit, only 17,700 mi. U0.7000 133-0116 . ..,., 91.2 di 1 4 · d r . s t. a n d a r d . •UfO C....,.. im Squire Wagon, v ·6 eng. A JC. auto •. P /l:i . P/8.44M ml. Very clean $2650. 492·8084 'TI 280Z.silvercpe,auto. u• ,newra as.new 30 /4 2mpg, AM /F M " _..,.,.. fully load e d , immac ·62Claaalc220SE cpe, uni· ~:~·u1:8.':h~~.;~~t steroo, great condition! Div.of Nabers Cadillac ro.nd. xpertly tuned. I que car, reasonable. AutoWorks CM S3400. 642·6244 eves. ACR014!!FIRAICO!A. ,!!;co nu's.&U-6694. P.P. 557·1868 • · 842-7622dyo. ~ •• _, '78280Z PrisUne ol Huntington . YW . COSTA MISA Mercedes ~EL. 1973. Beach 1s offering lacquer m Sqrbck, (uel mjec· 540.91 Of Alrcood .. sereo cassette. 28.000 mi on new engine. paint. metal finishing & lion automatic $750 mags & CB Metallic aunroof.newlires.allex-fendernar\ngtoPorsche 646-4660aft8PM brown & Excellent cood. tras. 957·8191 during !AUM842) 29.000 actual business hn. owners. 536-7888. miles Reaautt $6800 '70 ~. lvory w /bl')l'n, 9755 ·72 Beetle. xlnt cond. $1900/0r best orrer 6"·9548. ---S48·2196 immac, air, full power, ••••••••••••••••••••••• ---------1 nu tires & valves. 125K TEST DllVI OUI • '00 VW Bug Gd cond. '74\AJ 260Z, A/C. auto, .mi's. Must see to ap·' "LE CAR AM / FM. $900 AM/FM tape, mags, predate Of......aRye..a. .. 642·5881. P.P. louvers, S4200. 751-0930. SS500 ~· ',,_ 5"1 '11 RABBlT , 6 0 • ,Good inveotory in stock 2 0 ed 4 pd 7 atsun 610 Sta Wag. "'18 2400. A.IC. eleo mrf. Haitrywhlletbeylast! r.s an, s S3500 or bst ofr. 586-123-4 lvocy/t.obacco. :n mi on· .MIRACLE S40.U45 19770LDS CUTLASS SW11M1 c-F\lllY lll:tary ~ lncludillg lktotY •" CO<ld (208SfV~ 55995 ~~ Aft 6 & wkods ly 833·7238.640-9286 MAZDAflBtAULT 1977 7 pass. van. Coverts ·n 4.5(6El.. all xtras. snrf. 2l!i0Harbor Blvd. !or camping. 18.000 1977 TOYOTl '76 8210. htchback, AM I l<'M radio, nu tires 38.000 mi's. S2500. 495-6568. I_.. t 22'" ·· COSTA MESA miles. 34 mpg, blue & ST.ll-AAJ w.lla-..... ...... c~. e c. • .. mis. h 7 0 ""''-"' ""~ A·lcond .... ".950or ...,'""'& 645-5700 w 1t e S2· 234 or 1 . A.. ~ ' ............. 968-7343, 8. ........ ..,, llld 5 ·-----1 • '76 280Z. xlnt cond. ster cass. mags. S6 100 t213 )973·1600, an 1714>*-3851 ...e over lse al $318/mo. Ws Royce 9756 . -----"-lulOn t~> P.P.~. ••••••••••••••••••••••• 70 VW BUS. 7 pai.s Xlnt $ 3 995 ·11 MB 280 4·dr sedan. #1 DEALER IN U.S.A. ~13~3 1 owner. 51995· m>O. Completely over· /tauled,979-3209 JRR ,RCOAYRVER '72XJBnUtGC.o$lnd800. '78 2llOZ Datsun, Must sell. Eves; 673·9363 '74 MIZ 240D Sdn ROLLS· ROYCE CAii 548-5635 AM/F M . A 1C, auto IM4J•mllorH • FiGt trans, P JS, Newport &uc11 1970 VW Bug w /no engme. ••••••••••••••••••!?!.~ 1 Owner. 135,000 mi. Serv 640-6444 $275/or best. Call 9·2pm, •75 131-Clean 22 ml , red e vaal $7SOO Ph ClOSEOSUNOAn 549-8793.S.epm,673·3808. 823·065 l or 642· 18811 stereo/cass, auto. SJ.500 ---------1Toyota 9765 '70 VW 1s ts $500. Needs 00-6049,979·7613 '67 2505. xlnt cond. all ••••••••••••••••••••••• front end & body work. service records. s.1ROO '74 COROLLA _960-__ 361_1. _____ _ 1976 FIAT 121 SPORTCOUftE ~-1230_ 4 speed trans., air cond1 Vol•o 9772 • 4 speed. radio & heutcr MG 9742 t1oruog, an exceptionally ••••••••••••••••••••••• clean 2 door - SALE Priced At S2395 -t629PKJ). Priced at JUSt ...................... . m·er wholesale bluchook ·n MBG 8.000 mt. /'f\I II al trk tape. new rc~istra - OML y $2375 lion Raemg stnpe $4900 ~·1239 .... ,.. ........... llllllM'tliol'~Ooaa M• 1915 MG MIDGET '42..ertl Slltra nice with only ===========-1218.4'7 miles! Equipment '75 128 Sport mmt cond 4 • Spd, ~.000 mt. l'l295. t 642-2210; 548-U58 ··n Spider, beaut. eqw p'ct. Take over leue + SlOOO 49!M409 ·74 Fiat 128 Wagon, R II. 15.000 ma 's, Sl5UU 546-239!1 fn c ludes 4 s p eed, AM/FM & rally wheels tMJMYV> $2999 NEWPORT DATSU N .. , .. I, I '-, '\1 \\ j••I' J .. ' 833·1300 MGI 9744 ••••••••••••••••••••••• ·1~ Flat 124 s port coupe .. 73 MGB Very good Be t Su p er c l e a n mus t ri s ~llcriflce now S3000 ° ertakes 77~8243 492·7848 aft 6 I .... 9727 ••••••••••••••••••••••• •••New'78 HONDA Cars ' MANY 1977MGI ROADSTER 111.L VAM '73 D Toyota Celi c:i Silver. S speed. stereo. air c ond . ma gs, (~) '$5,295 IS:ORE YOU IUY A USED VOLVO, Se~ us al South~rn Orange County's Volvo Headquarters. MARQUIS VOLVO MISSION VIEJO 831-2810 495-1210 llU. V AM 2 S w e d 1 s h \' o I v o PORSCHE-AUDI Mech an 1 cs now at 13621HarborBlvd Jvan·s. 1995 Harbor Garden Grove 636-2.333 Blvd . C M 645· 1982 lt71 OLDSh 4 DOOi "OIESB." l'ully lacto•v •QU•PP•d Including *',. whHlo Like bt8lld NEW'~ (1311741 MUST SEE TO APPRECIATE lt76FOID THUNDIRlllD Ll~e NEWl'1 8ngN Nd e.i.not. lull power l wire whHll SNtp! (lllHWQ). 5 6995 1978 Ol.DS DIESEL W Jt.GON QPau Fu•-wccino .,.,eo er...,. • only 600 ""'"' 14711 771 SHOWIOOM MEW To Choose flroMJ . UNIVERSITY Oldl.., ... A sharp car with ma.ny extras! ~ment tn· eludes 4 s • AM/FM cassette, rally wheels & l~gage rack. (22133) , $4666 ~IEWPORT ['I~ TSUN Ope. deVille All the ex· '70Volvo. standard trans, tras. Low m ileage AM/FM, 90 . 000 m 1• 73/Beauliful. 642·9260 H09da c_.. • GMC TrMClu . . " .... 1 .. Sl700/b!lt ofr 646-4931 73 B Oorodo C-Tt. Ca II 642 · l.304 833-1300 2850 Harbor Blvd ••••••••••••••••••••••• '74 Fleetwood Talisman. Calta Mesa 540-9640 ep.1 9746 ·12COrona Mark 11. AMC 9905 50.000 mi's. collector's J.,_. 9730 ••••••••••••••••••••••• AM/FM. air. auto. 46.600 ••••••••••••••••••••••• item, xJnt cqod. $7500 (>r ••••••••••••••••••••••• 1973 Stationwagon. gd mi's. gd cond. $1900. '64 Rambler . recently . bstofr. 646-i;;95, Bm . lt74 JAGUU cond /clean. AM I .FM . (714) 842·3612 aft 6pm overhauled : good cond. .73 Cadillac sedan, blu w Sl.300 Clean $250. 499-2327 'AJ6L a73·5716 1977 Celi.ca GT Coupe·5 After6 p M. Ask ror .Ji m w twht vinyl lop., Xlnl A loaded beauty with less ---------speed. air cond .. Al\1 /FM ---------cond. $3100: 9tl84044 than 31,000 mil es ! Ponc.IM 9750 stereo w 18 track. deck MUST SELL ·74 AMC --------- Automatic, pwr.st.t.--enng ••••••••••••••••••••••• rack & more! Must sell! Hornet 4·dr. A/C. auto. ·7o CDV. blue. leather m· & brakes. leather. stereo llLL VAN'S <New Celica just came P/l:i, P/B. xlnt cond. lo ter · wht vinyl lop, full "-d 1 k · c I pwr, stereo FM. Nu tires. ~ufo~(H oor oc i. USED 9 I 4'S ~L9303a&lasi"r~r9~T:k or rm·s.$1995.551·6477 battery & mumer, $15SO $7777 ·7~914.2.0 Blue (811PRJl '72 Carina. complete new l~~:~~nd~~;g~~· i~ct;s -~-i-r -0_m_1os_~4_v~-~-1_5_3o_d_a_y_s_. llLL VAN engine. AMWM stereo, great S400 firm. See at ,._ NEWPORT DA TSUH • .,. I ' ·, ,· IR PORSCHE-AUDI new tires. wht cxt/blk Brown's 76 Station, 34242 -ro 13621 Harbor Blvd int. S1EB5 080. 631·3624 Doheny Park Rd. Capo ••••••••••••••••••••••• Garden Grove Bch 197 6 CHEVY . SUper deal! 74 Celtca GT CAMARO SJJ-1 300 1972 914. ~-7 liter, oeeds Mags. am lfm. 52.000 m 1 '74 Sportaboul V-8. xlnt J------9-7-... -2..;.i work·lernf1c ~uy. $3200 $2,S001o(fer 494·5346 cond. fully loaded 28M VB. air cond . ·rallye ......... ~ as 1s. fmancmg a\'aal S2500/b f a•s 97.,.. wheels & only 20.000 ••••••••••••••••••••••• c: ••• .<Dnu 1!111 T c d ml. c;t 0 r .,.. . ,,, miles 1067PUFl ,,. '""""' o~nta orona .i r sedan, air. xint cond lkidc 9910 $4688 '65 Porsche 356C. clean. $1250 642 08N •••••••••• • •• •• •• ••• • • • Nabers redJblk, r easonabll' An original c ar at a p p 'i() Toyota Corona. I dr ·77 Park i\\ enue. 14.000 ma Like new cond. Way auto. r h. SlOOO under mkt 642·0908 AUTO CENTER super savings: 4 speed. 557 l""" rally wheels. AM tFM -----·-"""--- stereo. luggaae rac·k & low miles. t!t58KX V 1 $4666 NEWPORT DATSUN ........ '. ''•' ' i"' I~ ! I r 8 33-1300 536·8721 llLL VAN'S USED 9141S i6 Bw ck Skylark, a neat Dav or Nabers Cadillac ·72 Toyota Corolla Wai: car Loaded. 17.000 ma ·s 1425 IAJCElt ST. for sale as 1s S250 Call Whtte Bargain, $3700 ACROSS FROM FEDCO · 14 914 · 2 o Copp t' r 960-3671 640-8999 COST A MESA IS46MO> Tri•-" 9767 -------540.9109 llLL VAN ••• ;;r.-;••••••••••••••• CodHloc 991 5 i---------'77 Camaro. silver. T·top. lo mi. auto. power, $5600, 64().7154 POISCHE-AUDI ·75 TR7 AM/FM cass ••••••••••••••••••••••• 13621 Harbor Blvd air, lo ma's, very clean ' Grove 036-2.333 MS-1430or 646·1106. K__,.Gh'9 · 9735 '74 911 , whale. oir. /\M / •••-•••••e,•h •••••••••• FM cass, 20M mi's on •7412 TR6. mml. '68 Ghia "CleNn " nu =t. OBst ofr over ssz~n.~5.'iN7.s220. ext 100 radials. AM/FM cuss. . 962·2300. ·'tV'fl), ancy . Hra, cover, + xtros VolkswCIC)H 9i7JJ ~Jhst ofr 67ll·5812 llLL V AM'S •••••••••••••••••. ••••. • ••••••••••••••••••••••• '77 MarkV lmmac' P.P. 640-84t4 Weekdays, 9.5 1977 IOIC.4 T S9Ulll WAGON V6. a utomatic. pwr. steering, air cond. & AM /FM stereo. !1413). $4381 Nabers '71 Ford LTD Country .a.UTO C..,..H Squire Wagoo. A/C. P /B. ,._ _...' P /S, low miles. good Div.ofNabersCadtllac · '78 MK V. Diamond cond. Trailer pkg. $1.500. 1425 IAKa ST. Jubilee. 460 V-8, all op· or oiler. 645-2788 ACROSS FROM FEDCO Uons, 9M miles. 752·1978 , F d G 1 COST• MIS• 10 or a axy. 2-dr, "" .,. Corv.... 9932 P/B/ P /S. 63M mi, $800. 540.91 Of ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~all 7orwk.nds. 1----------1 ·73 Marqws Brougham Corvette·Bids now being Ford Ranchero. 6 cy. 4-dr. loaded, xlnt cond. taken on Indy 500 pa~ stand a rd trans. & 846-2.575 after7 PM. '74 Wuon. AM /FM·8 trk. jdcond. $1800. 81~ 1'75FORD PIMTOWJ.GOM Pretty car Ir really loaded with air cond , pwr. steering, d~lwce in ter1o r & mo'f e' t32SMCH). '2222 NEWPORT DATSUN . .. RlJ 1300 car in stock. F1etcher camper shell. S795 or Jones Chevrolet 6633 best offer.492-612l·Gary 1972 Mere Bro~gham. ~ . 9960 Westmins ter Ave. •61 RANCHERO• Good 4-dr, fully equlpd, new ••••••••••••••••••••••• We11t m1n ale r . ca. condition 260 VS Auto . llr_h. S700/bsl o fr . HT•nsALI Cob h ood 154 1898. ' 892·4'44 ra jet eads. G Lo ml, lSK. '16 Volare'. ~~~~~~~~~I work truck S600/best of· ·m Marquis waaoo. A1C. 4-dr. 6 cyl. $3300. Call .,, .. Co be' 1 h (er.559-586l or847-86SS. radio.rrsprs.•utotrans. 64S--,.41. •u rv 1ge, eat eri-~-------P IS. PIB. Very good --------- int, AM /FM 8·trk, T·top, '73 Ford LTD Country Sq. cond. SSS0.892·3111 WANTED : Slant 6 Plym AIC. ammac. new tires. Wp. AJC, AM /FM. New ......,,_._. 9952 ln good rwinlng cond. $9.500.19,000 m1 640.1751 brakes. new tires. Good ,....,_.., with good eng. for r--9933 cond. $2200613·2692 ••••••••••••••••••••••• younger brother Reui. ___,.. '68 Mustang 289. auto. 5.1J.8280 •••••••!'••••••••••••••• '7'2 Station WagoQ, 10· Good cond. $900. or best -,,-.--a.:--------- '77 XR7. Cully equip, aar pass. xlnt cond. AIC. offer. 847.3239 """'-9965 cond .. PJS, low ma, vmyl 640·5021 1---------••••••••••••••••••••••• roor. leather upholstery. F 1 .70 Gt T . 4..,.. '65 Fastback Mus ta!lg· ·oo Ventura. 2·dr . vin top. 540-1145 ors~e · onno "'"'"· Good classic matenal. x.lnt.auto.A1CP1S.P1P. • .. , nu tares. brks, tune· UP S2000 645· 1825 sooo. 548-3849 9935 $1.SOOFin:n. 898-4946 "DOES IT AGAIN .. WITH THE ALL NEW LANDMARK VAN HOW OH DISPLA T IH OUR SHOWROOM IT~S VANT ASTIC!! Everything about the Landmark says quality. Including a peppy, two-htre. fuel-injected engine. 'Ni/ reliability and efficiency, a host of luxury features: •nylon cere>ehng • vinyl headliner end door panels •ice boa. sink bar • suede cur1111ns • 2 roar speakers • 4 plllow·beck bucllel seat~ •double bed converltble sole • peneled wells • choice ol 2 designer P••nt schemes • lull 1nsulal1on • delu•e op11ons at eatre cos& SCIROCCO-CHAMPAGNE EDITION II Now available for 1mmedf1te dellvetY "The elegant 1p0rts car It goes as good as It l()()l(a ... t 1974. Orange. good rond. ~ uul.O slick Call 675·9124, ~1 evenings, wkends ~ ~-- USED 914'S '73914-1.7 Black !9003481 llU. V»4 IOtlSCHf.AUDI 13121 Hablvd OLKSWAGEN Soles-Ser•lc• 0rCMCJt CCMlftty's s .. 111.C...t.r • TEST DRIVE A DIESEL SEVILLE '76 Monte Carlo. s nrf, power wind, A M / FM e..tr. :n,ooo mi's . A.skmg S4600. 752·0360, dys. WkendsJeves. 552·1352 ·75 Monia2+2, clean. xlnt cond, leaving area. must selJ. $2300 or best offer 646-3S4l f ~ 9731 ,. ···················~·-· •• ••• NMcyDowd 1244 l"IM Newport leech You are t.be wlnnf'r of 2 Uckef.3·(Sl3.00 Voluel to the JUL V 15 B:OOPM Performan<'e -0f the ~u,au. St•Oll Sltow ., t.h• ANAHEJM CONVENTION Ct;:NTER h.tY 14 l01 \8 ean..-.ut.121,to claim ,_-ut'kec.e. \ ...... '13 RX-2.. Xlnt cood. New ~l. SJIOO Call Garden Grove 636·2333 Top Dollar Paid for Used vw·s COMMOMWULTH 197S carrerra, 29,000 mi, MOTORS elec. w indows. A I C. leather Jnt.. cassette, SINCE 1953 polyurethane p aint, 1442So. Brtstol black, new Perelli tlres Santa Ana Best otrer. l907 Seashore 546-0220 Dr. NB. fn5·5344 Approx. 2 ml. No. of lft.L VAN'S South Coast Plaza. P •MPERED 'VW '74 Super BeeUe, sun· • A * r·r. AM /FM. Rulo, red. •PORSCHES• xlnt cond . si .eo o. 644)-1440. • Nabers Cadillac .?6011 t-t.11 h111 Ill\ d C.m1.1 M\•;.1 " 10 •I IOC> 62 Spyder. good shape, SHOO. Also, 61 Ramp side t ruc k . $650. Ev s. 549-4168: 7sg.6348 dys · '70 Impala. 4·dr, air . $1000/or besl oHer. 1 ownr. PP. ~3878 or 5'48-6459. '11 ~Jazer K·S, posl rear, 8 track. FM stereo, CB & PA. Good 'cond. S2400. 492r"5IM '78 9U SC ~pe !llack, 1-------- (tk. 29UMX> Rabbit, air, AM /FM '!~!!~~!!!!!!!!. '78 tU SC ster, lo mt's, gd cond. ...:i ·11 Chevrolet fmpal• Good eng. Ple~e call t f74 CADl~C eves. 559-S286 Cc>ude ll &h t blu e S2800 640-8358 <•040JN) . • S b '78 911 SC 69 «tUare ack $600. Ta.raa Red <~UD'I'> 879-2361 days. 960·~08 •77 Tu.rboS1lver l800195l evalrwltndt.Steve. '71 Turbo Brown l8*98> 1968 BaJ• Bua rebk eog ·n.,en ~Black ~t. wb'1.1 & u,...: • > SID. t"et, aft. 78 81 l S Tora• ~. '81. White <310120> ·75 9J 1 s "IS VW Babbll. atereo. T•J1• Yellow <030RTE> 4-dr. ltlnt 0200 Alk for llLL VAM ~hard m.-8298 fOlSCHl.AUOI iO White Bus Oood rond 1*l Hetbor 81\'d SUCJO. Call Sfl·5t48 or Cart»n Grove 638-2333 1146-2212 CbuPf DI VILLI '7T CHEVETTE. Low m l, Vl,•utomatlc, pwr. seat, racks, AM/FM. Great pwr. windows, pwr. door cond. ~torr. 846·1142 Jock~. AM /FM atereo, vin)'I roof. leather teats, 77 ~oni. Cerio, loaded, Ul\ Wbffl factory air Landau I r M tte ... o. cond. c818LFT), M885.848·ltm;842-833q $3720 ' iH1onurr t<Oel~~:, ' ) "' I ••l\,.f• •J-I' (()•,TA Mr ·,a f 1. ,,1111,.1 Cl.a.Uc 19'M CrQuwotlh Kainmbaclr Chevy wan Rad.lo, ~·~r, fact ale. .taa rick, tao.It, $ spd. btt 9'« 4 cyl ovl'Mad um. r1Uye whlf. 2$,tclO m1 M,000 OI' bit otr. t71• 5Mt8'74 or823~t80 FREE TICKETS!! At .......... vw ...... ,,... C•fw •• s..f IOCC• tlcbh ... ...-r•• wt. , ...... ,. fw .. VW S11oot o.t -• a•1111•1 ova.sTOCICED OHM>OD USID UlllTSll MAHY TOCHOOSI PIOMt ..,.~ 1 door, 4 •o••d AMIFM •••r•O detv•• 1nter1or 1794M0lll SEVERAL L'ATE MOOEL BUSES ~ &CAMflAS .... ~. ,, 1 .. . ·- BRAND NEW 1978 CHRYSLER CORDOBA VS engine. power brakes. Power steering. split back bench. torque transmission. cloth interior. tinted windshield. GR78x15 glass belted radial tires & pin stripes. (SS22H8R186197) . . . CALLU.S. f01l ~~u~1£ . ' '77 PLYMOUTH '77 PLYMOUTH VOi.Aili SIDAM FURY WA~ V8. automatle trans.. radio. heater. VS. automatic trans .. radio. heater. power steering & brakes. w/s/w tires. power steering. power brakes. w/s/w vinyl bench seat. vinyl side moldings. tires. vinyl tap & air conditioning. 'SX~ge rack & custom e)(tenor (164SHOJ < YO). 53995 · •4195 '76 BUICK 11¥111.A SIDAM • va. automatic trans.. radio. heater . V-8. automatic. air condrt1onlng. power steering & brakes. wl slw tires. power steering. power brakes. ractio. air cond.. POW9f wmdows, AM/FM n eater. whitewall tires. vinyl roof. stereo. split pawer seat. trlt wheel & (856AKUl cruise control. (525PUYl. 5995 54395 - '77 CHRYSLER COllDOIA COUPE VS. automahc trans .. heater. pawer steering & brakes. wlslw tires. air cond .. power windows. leather Interior. split power seat. AM/FM radio & vinyl tap. C638SCNl 55595 '76TOYOTA WAGOM 4 cyl., automatic trans . AMI FM stereo radio w8 track. heater. power brakes. & arr condrt1onrng. (820PVJJ. 52595 . -. . .. -., •• ···-,... __ # .... , ...... . '77 PLYMOUTH VOL.Alli COUPE V-8. automatic trans . radio. heater. power steering. power brakes. w/slw tires. air condrtron1ng & vrnyl top. (777SSH). 53695 '71 FORD MUSTANG MACM t V·B. automatic. arr cond1tlon1ng. J)9wer steenng. pawer brakes. radro. ~ater . raised lettered trres. ('453BSXl. 51595 ... -. ' .. GIANT OVERSTOCKED IMVEMTOllY OF llAMD MEW 1971 CHIYSLE• COIDOIAS MUST IE MOVED OUT! THe SAVING-OPPORTUNITY OFTHEYEAlt '76 DATSUN 1210COUPI 4 cyl . 4 speed transm1ssron. radro. heater. oower brakes. w/s/w tires & air condrtroning (470PHL) 52595 '76 DODGE . SPOITSMAM WAG<>..._ VB. automatic trans.. heater. oower steerrno & power brakes. 1 ~ passenger model. (015875). 54295 ., A T LAS CHIYSLll PLYMOUTH SllYICI HOUIS: MOM>AT THIU FllDA Y 7:00 A.M. TO 6:M P.M. SATUIDAY Nt A.M. TO WO P.M. .. B11ntingto n Beach Fountain Valley EDITION f t e rnoon N.Y . StoekH t l . VOL 71; NO. 193, ~ SECTIONS, •2 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA W EDNESDAY, J ULY 12, 1978 TEN CENTS l ' Council Rejects Mile Square Plans .. ,, J Reacting to public pressure, FoLtntain Valley City Council members Tuesday voted un· animously against two proposed plans to develop the 86-acl"e northwest sector of Mile Square Regional Park. The decision, however. Is only advisory to county government. ·Developers, s ports en thusiasts, nature lovers and nearby residents all locked horns in a verbal fight over pro· posed commercial use of the park as opposed to allowing it to be passive and open. About 60 people applauded re- marks by various Fountain Valley homeowner group spokesmen who claimed the pro- posed plans would greatly in· crease crime. nois e . itlaring ·-----------------.~..-. ...._ Morris Dies Famed 7Y Cat Expires at 17 CHICAGO <AP> -Morris, the rlmcky 9-Lives cat on television . commercials, is dead at the age of 17, the pet food company said today Morris' veterinarian, Dr Barbara Stein, said the cat died Friday and was buried in a sub- urb on the grounds of the home he shared with his handler. Bob Martwick. She said Morris' death was associat ed wi t h cardiac complications related to old age. At 17, Morris wa s the equivalent of a 90-year-old human, she said. Morris was found m 1966 in a 1 Chicago-area humane shelter by an animal bandier searching for an orange cat to appear in a televisaon commercial. At the age of 7, Morris starred in his • first commercial for 9-Llves and for the next 10 years made more than 40 television commercials A spokesman for the public re lations agency that handles the account for the pet food com- pany said Morris' role will be taken over by a cat who has served as an understudy. He. LIVED NINE U VES The Late Morris too. will be known as Morrts. "He 's a double for Morris physicall)' and is as finicky, aloof and independent as his pre- dPcessor ." said a spokesman. I Council OKs Plan Huntington Dump Draws Opposition The Steverson Brothers Mud Dump. no s tra nge r to con - troversy, came in for heavy c ritic is m from Huntington 1 Beach residents and city council m embers Tuesday night. And while attempts to im- mediately close the 37-acre dump were rejected, the days of continued dumping there appear lo be numbered. City councll members. -Directed City Attorney Gail . Hutton to draft findings of fact that may result in closure of the dump as a pUbl.lc nuisance. -Indicated they would try to help the property owners sell the d ump site · -Called for a resolution to be readied to prevent further dumping operatibns. A decision 1s expected early next month. The mud dump near Edison High School and the Edison power station at Hamilton Street and Magnoha Avenue has been operated by th e Steve rson Brothers since 1950. Oil field wastes were dumped there until 1971 when the site was declared a public nuisance by the City Council. A company representative said that only cement, asphalt and soil bad been dumped at the site since then. But nearby residents, who have complained frequently about foul odors and safely and traffic haiards, contend that oil sludge is still being dumped there. Their statements were sup- INSIDE LOOK DALLSTARS Dally Pilot sportswriter Dave Cunningham covered the 49th All·Sllr classic Jn San Diego Tuesday. For full details and results, aee Sports aecUon, 8 1. .. ' ported Tuesday by Mayor Pro Tempore Richard Siebert who said he saw trucks dumping oil waste materials on two OC · cas1ons. Councilman John Thomas un· successfully called for an im· mediate ban on dumping of all materials. "All that is being hauled In to- day will have to be hauled out one day," Thomas said. In a letter to the City Council, Carl Steverson, president of the company, indicated he would like to sell the property. He said the property had been m escrow previously, but the sale fell through when the city failed. to approve a zoning ~hange. Swimmer Off To Florida From Cuba MIAMI <AP > -Walter Poenisch, a retired Grove City. Ohio. cookie baker, has begun his Cuba-to-Florida swim, ac· cording to Havana radio Cuban President Fidel Castro reportedly talked with Poenisch and then escorted him to the Cuban coast, where he began his swim Tuesday night. Poenlsch. who celebrated his 65th birthday Tuesday, hopes to become the first person to awlm from Cuba to the United Slates. He charted a 105-mlle course from Havana to Marathon, Fla. Ch rls Drury, a publlclst for Poenlsch. had not received word yet late Tuesday that the swim had begun. Poenisch planned to make the swim in a shark protection cage, accompanied by hls wife, the pllot of a support boat and a diver to ward off sharks. lights, traffic and parking prob· lems ne ar the c orner of Brookhurst Street and Edinger Avenue. But entertainer-turned recrea- tion facility developer Johnny Mann told the crowd and council the potential problems are not all that bad. Mann said he wants to build a $4 million concession with 12 softball and four soccer fields at BB Limits Pupils' Usage By RAYMOND ESTRADA J R. Of, .. O.ity Pllet St.ti Huntington Beach Union High School District trustees Tuesday halted home-to-school busing for most students in the fall. Handicapped youngsters and students who live in Seal Beach and the Surfside area will be the only ones bused to their high schools. offi cials said. The action was taken to save the district about $390,000. The board also has approved a list of budget cuts totalling about $6 million due to revenue Jost by the passage of Proposition 13. The busing cutback affects about 3,600 students, officials in dicated. The school board Tuesday also a pproved $100.000 in co curricular program cuts that in- cludes sports, music, drill team. drama and yearbook staffs . School Board President Zita Wessa said no sports programs will be greatly affected by the cuts. A total or $450,696 in dis- trict funds w e re initially earmarked for co-curricular programs. Officials indicated that the cutba cks are still tentative because of potential e ffects of state legislation. Other cutbacks approved by the school board Tuesday are: -$300.000 for replacement or furniture, equipme nt and vehicles. -Layoff of about 15 transportation employees due to the busing cut. -$75,00 lo computer operations and testing costs. -$112,800 in DOD · replacement of s ecretaries who resign or retire. Incumbent Slate As semblyman Dennis Mangers told ·the school board Tuesday. "i( you (eel like you are agoniz. tng over the budget this year - the worst is yet to come next year." Mangers said thts year's state legislation was merely a stopgap measure that balls out school distracts for one year. Mangers, who is challenged by Republican Cb~ck Gibson in the November 73rd Assembly Dis- t rt ct election , said the legisl ature must cul back on stale mandated programs that take local control from school boards. Sclwller Girl 'Fair' In Hospital Carol Schuller, 13-year-old daughter of the Re v. Robert Schuller, was described as being in fair condition this morning following surgery on a partially amputated left leg yesterday at Childrena Hospital of Orange County in Orange. "Her vital signs are alable and withtn normal limita for a pa- tient wtth injuries which Include traumatic amputation of her left leg below the knee," said a spokesman for Or. Schuller, world:ramous past.or of Garden Grove Community Church. C arol was admlUed to Children's Hospitel al 3 a.m. <See CA.OS... Pace AZ> no taxpayer cost. The developer wants a 35-year lease with 2 per- cent of the profits, or about $50,000, paid to the county each year as rent. "This is my baby . . . my heart. soul and body is in my proposal," said Mann who has produced a patriotic television show. "Orange County is the bastion of Americana." Mann declared. "We chose Mile Square Park because to us it was the most perfect location in the U.S .. " Mann added. Mann said be would provide security guards and charge Sl admission for spectators of the various softball games to be played by people of all ages. Mann's plan and a proposal by VTN Consolidated Inc., calling for such facilities as a swim • lake, skateboard park and bicy1 t'le motocross. were both turned down by the City Council . But the City Council's protest ' is only advisory. The council recommendation will be passed along to the Orange County Harbors. Beaches and Parks Commission. The final decision on the park development will be m ade by <See PARK, Page A2) uce O.allY PllM Su" Plloto ~IRCRAFT NEARLY CUT IN TWO AFTER BEING STRUCK BY RUNAWAY PLANE Owner WH Hand.Cranking Propellor When Hf• Craft Left on It• .Own Rt•naway Plane Crashes HWllington Damage Estimated at $60,000 By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of IM o.lly Pllet St.tt A runaway plane whose pilot was hand-cranking the propellor tried to take off alone at Hunt- ingt on Beach·s Meado wlark Airport Monday night, careen· m g into three othe r p arked aircraft. One eyewitness. a flight in· structor alerted by the s udden roar of the engine. estimated damage at $60,000 or more as one aircraft was almost sliced in half by the pilotless pla ne . ''It neve r really qui\e got a irborne, but there was about 60 feet out there where it looked like it wasn't going through that ta ll grass." said Russ Fisher. "It may have gotten off the ground about a foot," added Fis- her . a pilot trainer for A vlation Unlimited. Aviator Richard Hand of Hun- tington Beach had been hand- c ranking the propellor after tinkering with a dead battery about 9 p.m., investigators said. ·'He mis-estimated how far he had the throttle in ." said Hunt· ington Beach Police Officer Richard Butcher, who handled the first reports or the incident. The engine roared to life and the Cessna 172, leased and rent· ed out by the Aviation Company, 5141 Warner Ave., proceeded to cruise across the small field with Hand in pursuit. "He"s lucky the prop didn't hit him." said eyewitness Fisher . . He said after starting to ta xi on its own and perhaps lifting off the ground momentarily, the Cessna abruptly spun around and began pursuing its pursuer on a collision course. "I guess it ran about 150 yards," Fisher said. "He tried to stop it twice." Hand suffered bruises and his pants were torn badly in dodging the aircraft and attempting to grab and hold it down. In Supreme Court County Employeeil Sue for Raises Deprived by state legislation or a 5.5 percent pay raise guaranteed them under a two- year contract signed in 1977, county government workers in Orange County Tuesday took their case to the state Supreme Court. The suit filed by tbe Orange County Employees Association asked the court to set aside state legislation that prohibited pay raJses to local employees unless similar: raises were glven to stale workers. Gov . Edmund G. Brown Jr. made the link an issue l11l week when he vetoed budf.eted 2.5 percent pay raises or 1t11te employees. Conse quently , public employee• In Orange County and other local Jurladicllons hive been denied ralaest lnclud- tna those already given qi eidst- tng contracts. The employees association lawsuit alleaes the state over- stepped i.s bounds by "un· reas onably" forcing local jurisdictions to violate existing contracts. The suit alleges state action violates principles of due pro- cess and is an unjustified in- terference with a vested right. Thal vested right is seen as local control over lhe wages and working condltlons of public employees. The lawsuit seek.I a writ or rrandate th•t would order the county to go ahead and grant the pay raises negolJated last year as pert of a two-year contract. The ern,ployees aasoclatlon represent.a roughly 5,500 county workert. County officials have estimated tbe s.s percent pay hlkes would tack about S7 .5 mUllon on the county's 19'78-79 bud act. The runaway pla ne the n r oared toward Tri-Ace, 5202 Pearce Lane. at the far north landing end of the runway. whe re numerous sma ll planes are tied down Investi gators said it zoomed between two. slicing off about four feet or their right and left wings, then barrelled a lmost dead center into a third craft which is probably destroyed. Federal Aviation Administra- tion duty officer Inspector Al Toll was at the airport today ' taking the toll and investigating c circumstances of the accident. ~ Ray Cotter. owner or the firm • that leases and rents out the de· ' molis hed planes, s aid he couldn't give an estimate pend· ing evaluation by insurance in· 1 vestigators. 1 Fli,ht Instructor Fisher. the eyewitness, said $60,000 would be a good guess. based on the ! value of such aircraft. Co a st Weathe r Early morning low clouds and local fog near coast, otherwise sunny Thursday . Slight ly warmer. Lows tonight 58 to 62. Highs Thursday from high 60s at beache~ to lower 80s inland. INSIDE TODAY Plain wrapping. of aupermmkat item! ha.I ut olf a naction. While the chain aaya H 'c bringing '" customers, ofhns queation qualit11. Food,~ Cl. th DAil Y PILOT HF Wedl?!!O!y. July 12, t 971 Lobbyist Law Hit by County Panel By GAltV GRANVlllE °' tlw Delly ...... •utt The Orange County t'u1r Cam paign Practices Commission re· ommended Tuesday night that the county scrap ats 5-year-old lobbyist control ordinance. ln the commission 's view, the count y·s measure should give "-'ay to provisions controlling so· called influence brokers con· Delays 'Minor' t a\ned tn the r~enlly enackd T IN CUP campa en reform or· dinance. TIN CUP was enacted alter Political reformists headed by former county planning com· missioner Shirley Grindle col· lected more than 100.000 voler signatures on initiative pell· tlons. Rather than pla~e the TIN CUP measure on Novembe,r's general election ballot. county supervisors enacted it as an or· dinance that wlll go into effect a fter the Nov 7 election. T IN CUP zeroes in on lob· byists who contribute and solicit contribu tions to county Sl,Jpervisor political campaigns. Phone Strike In Nine States NASHVILLE. Tenn. tAP· - Telephone officials r eported some minor delays in complet- ing long-distance calls today as a two-day-old wildcat s trike s pread to Include wo rkers in nine states. Jim Wolfe. a South Central Diver Dies From Bends Off Aliso A 41-year-old diver who died in a s hip's decompression chamber off Aliso Beach Tues· day. may have been a few days away from returning to his fami- ly following a months· long ocean s ewage outfall project. The diver Hiram Beckham of Goleta. was working 191 feet below the ocean's surface about 9:30 a .m . when h1s pressurn suit suddenly filled with air. propell- ing his body toward the s urface. a Dana Point Harbor Patrol spokesman said today. When Beckha m hit the sur- race, he was rus hed into a de compre!ision chamber a board the World War II Liberty ship Davy Crockett, a spokesman said. Beckham was reported as sul· ferrng a "severe case of the bends," a disorder that results from a loo rapid decr ease in at mospheric pressure. Pressure at 190 feet is nearly six times the pressure on land so divers must come up slowly to allow thei r body pressure to ad· JUSl. Beckham was placed inside Lhe decompression c hamber in an attempt lo equalize outs ide pressure with his body pressure. A Harbor Patorol spokesman said several doctors we re flown to the ship, anchored off South Laguna. But Beckham lapsed into a coma and died in the decom- pression chamber at about 2:30 p.m. .. This g uy·s s uit som ehow overinflated." said Dr. Richard Scott. "It blew up like a balloon and he popped out or the water like a cork. He was unconscious, seriously sick and m shock from the minute he hit the surface ... Scott. head of the medical alert center at the Los Angeles County Health Services Depart· ment. directed via radio the ef· fort to save the diver. The center also dispatched doctors to the scene The diver was placed in· s ide a shipboard decompression cham ber moments after he sur faced at 9:30 a .m., s he riffs deputies said. He died in the chamber about five hours later ··This is a very rare and very diHtcult kind of problem, when someone surfaces so rapidly after he has been down that deep." Scott said. The pressure causes nitroge n to collect In the body. A slow ascent from the bottom a llows presures to equalize gradually and the nitrogen escapes harmlessly OAANOE COAST "'~ DAILY PILOT ttwOr~ C....u 0.11¥ ~ .... ,..,"~~•UOfn ... _ .................... --byti-()t-~' Pub&l\fM"9Cbmo4ft'I .....,,...tdl,..,.,.," =u:::.::"'.i!-:..::·: . .:=-t..:::..~· t•tn V•n•y, '"'"'"'· ~ . ..._, V•O.~y •nG ~llO<ll"°"lhCooll\I A"--''°' '""' " _,.,.... ~, ... o..,• -~" ,,,. ~;::&1~~~1.,C::.:-~~'~ no wt'' e." .. _, .. _ IPtf'\•OtM#l"'O~•~ JM••'"""' '-'"-e PrnHlirl"lt •"Cl o.""".t.MI~ T-.emu ICHVtl €1110' .... -... "'....,,,. ... MIMQ<"9 ( 11'1 .. CM .... M ~M• •tc-1" Noll Ant\lMlt M•f\At1f"O [()lteit\ •-tt•·-Wf\I °''""Cl<'"°""'' (0010' H\lntlnaton 8ttetl Oflke 1111J'1101h-•t<n M4ll11"t9 .t.Od'•" p 0 8o• "° '1t-.d OfflCH l•l~.!~~:·~~ .. ~~;:"~' i.-•-M<• YtlltJ• HIOI ~· ... ':1...,, •l,.,.,,OtrMllr..,..,,y TelephoM ('714)~ Clullfled A«IY•'11""9 ~ ,,_..,.,,,o..-c ....... ~, ... H0-'2.20 c.,,,9111 "" Or~ ~"' "'*'"" ... c-=:~· ... -"r."~"'" .. ~ ...... .. ,.~~':.;J:.-:r~~;· •,,.c'.~ .... ~~::.:~ :i (.., ..... ,_ 'We-et•o OM!-.. Id et ~· -M c.11,.•~•• kll•cri•t .. ~ .. ,.,,,., n M ...... 1111r " "l.,, " t0 _,,,, "'''".,' 9'--s.s•-tM• • Bell spokesman. said that oc casional delays were being re- ported but that the problems were nOl serious. In Ohio, Tom Cotton. a spokesman for Ohio Bell o( Columbus, s aid service was normal except for delays in completing opera tor-assisted long-distance and directory calls. The walkout began Tuesday when nine American Telephone & Telegraph Co. employees in Nashville were suspended after declining to cross a picke t line set up by South Central Bell Telephone Co. workers. The South Central Bell workers were protesting having to work six days a week The strike later spread to Memphis and Nas hville. Denver; Kansas City, Mo.: Louisville, Ky ; Jackson, Miss.; Ch arlotte, Greensboro, and Stanfield, N C. ; Detroit; Col um· bus, Toledo and Dayton, Ohio; and Indianapolis, South Bend and four smaller Indiana com- munities Some e mploye es o r Southwestern Bell in Oklahoma City stayed off the job for one day. but ended picketing today in compliance with a fede ral court order. The walkout has not disrupted long-distance service, said Mike McCorstin, a spokesman at AT&T's headquarters in BeJ. minster. N.J McCorstin sajd negotiators for AT&T and the Communications Workers o r America we r e negotiating by phone to end the wildcat strike. Proposition 13 Forum Slated A ssemblyman Denni s Mangers, D-Huntington Beach , ha s scheduled a forum tonight to discuss the implementation of Proposition 13 with constituents The 73rd Assembly District l a wmak er, who will b e challenged by Republican Chuck Gibson in the November elec· lion, will speak at 7:30 p.m. at the Huntington Beach High School cafeteria. The 73rd district includes the cities of Huntington Beach , Fountain Valley, Seal Beach and p a rts of Costa Mes a and Westminster New Principal Robert Barbot. 32, is the new principal of Marina High School in Huntington Beach . Barbot replaces Charles Weaver who has become personnel director for the Huntington Beach Union High School District Barbot. who lives with his wife a nd two children in Huntington Beach. has been an assistant principal at Marina since 1975. Huntington Crash Victim Funeral Set Funeral services are scheduled Thursday morning for Mark Wayne Stinson, 2{), who died in a motorcycle c rash Saturday in Huntington Beach. Ser vices will be held at J t a.m . in the Pierce Brothers· Smith's Mortuary chapel in Hun- tington Beach. T h e youth , r ecently dis· charged from the U.S. Anny. lived in Fountain Va ll ey for 11 yea rs before moving to Seal Beach recently. The 9 a.m. Saturda y traffic ac· ciden t occurr e d on Wa rner A venue near Al gonquin Street when Stinson·s motorcycle col· lided with an eastbound auto. No a rrests have been made in con· \nection with the crash. police said. The crash victim is survived by his father. Donald M. Stinson of Fountain Valley; mother. Coleen Carter of Sacramento: brothers Randall C. Stinson. serving aboard th e U.S.S. Wichita. Donald K. Stinson of Grants Pass. Ore .• Craig Allen Stinson of Fountain Valley. and a sister. Julie A. Stinson of Sacra mento. lido-14 Regatta Gets Under Way By ALMON LOCKABEY O.lly PllollMllfttW•tt., HUNTINGTON LAKE -SkJp. pers from Newport Beach and Mission Bay dominate the Lido-14 national championship regatta which got under way to· day at this beautiful lake 7.500 feet in the Sierras, 90 miles northeast of Fresno. Seventy-seven skippers and crews from fleets throughout the western U.S. showed up for the national championship, Arter t\VO days of racing Mon- day and Tuesday the neet was divided into the champions hip and consolation flights which start competition today with two ruces. A final race is scheduled Thursday. Dave Ullman of the Balboa Yacht Club, three-time national champion in the class continues to be the star of the s how. H«!! had three straight victories in tho preliminary races ind three s traight wins ln the High Sierras Rcga't'ta. sronsorea by tbe r reano Yach Club over the past weekend. The championship flight IP· peared to be bollln1 down to a competiLIM of sailmakera, with four Uated among the fiJ"IJt 10. Ullm1n, a Newport Beach sallmaker, lopped the fleet, f otlowed cloeety by one or his employees. Jeft Lenhart of Mis· saon Hay. Also among the nrst 10 conten· d~n; in the champlonsbJp ntghl a re two skippers from North Sails, San Diego, Tom Nute and Lou Brooks of Mission Bay Yacht Clu b. Ullman, Lenhart . Nute and Brooks are long time com - petitors In the snipe class. Sailing conditions on this c rystal c lear lake are con. s idered among the best in the world for s m a ll, one-design vachts. Afternoon winds 'reach 20 knots with smooth waters. The top 10 skippers in the Lldo-14 championship flight are Oave Ullma n . BYC ; Jeff Lenhart. MBYC, Tom Nute. MBYC. Chris Raab, Huntington Ha rbo ur Yac ht Cl ub ; Hal Brown, 'MBYC: Pete Jefferson •• MBYC : Rowla nd Lohman , RVC ; Lou Brooks, MBYC : Charlie Cummings: Alamitos Bay Yac ht Club a nd Stu Robertson, HunUngton Harbour Yacht Club. The top 10 In the consolation flight are Roy Woolsey. Lido Isle Yacht Club : H"rry Wood, ABYC: David Smith. ABYC; Crali Roe, MBYC : John Marlon. Lake Merrit Salling Club: Bob Mos, HHYC; Tony P erez. 8VC; Mike 8o1"Hle. MBYC; Kelly Snow. HHYC and Richa rd Roblncttc. MBYC. Al lhe annual meellnJ of the c l1 1a Tues d ay nlaht Ted Hinshaw, Udo Isle Yacht Club. was elected president ror the coming year succeedina Kelly Snow. HHYC> 11 -. - Supervisors who have accept· ed m ore than ~ a year from the so--ealled infiuence brokers will be prohibited from voting on issues affecting theirs and their clients' financial well being In contras t to those stiff stipulations, the existing county lobbyist control measure seeks only fuJJ public disclos ure of lob· Fro• Page A J PARK. • • the Co unty Board o f Supervisors. One Fountain Valley resident. Ellen Tewell, a private recrea- tion facility designer. s aid she had 191 petition signatures from local r esidents favoring the softball-soccer facility. Mrs. Tewell said she also has about 800 pe tition s ignatures from non-Fountain Valley resi· dents who want more athletic fields at the regione1l park. Mrs. Tewell also challenged s pokesme n for homeowne rs groups as to how many residents they actually represented. Bob Skla r . s pokesman for Citizens For Mile Square Park. said he represented about 4,000 residents who oppose the Johnny Mann and VTN proposals. Another opponent of park de- velopment, Dave Hall. a Foun- tai n Va ll ey Hig h Sc hool graduate. s aid the J ohnny Mann <.1nd VTN plans would destroy the nest of about 10 nearby bur- rowmg owls. The owls. who make their homes in the ground near the 86·acre area, are near extinction in California, said Hall. Hall also claimed someone had recently dug up several of t h e nes t s and s h ovels. "Someone has been trying to get rid of the issue by getting rid of the owls.·· Hall said. Mann asked the council if the owls were really an issue since there are fewer and fewer of them .. Fountain Va lley should look to their own -s omebody's kill· ing the owls,·· Mann said. Mayor Marv Adler and Mayor Pro T ern Roger Stanton s uggest· ed Mann look elsewhere in Foun- tain Valley for a softball field concession site. But Mann s aid he would con· t inue his drive to build In Mile Square Park. "l know this isn't ove r yet," he added. Fro• Page Al CAROL ••. Tuesday ror treatment of m j uries s uffe re d Friday in a motorcycle accident near Sioux City. la . The girl was flown to Orange County Air port by a ir am · bulance following the amputa- tion a t a Sioux City hospital. 4 Die in Crash LOS ANGELES <AP) -Four persons were killed. including a mother and he r two young daughters. when a speeding car that was being pursued by police crashed into two other cars in southeast Los Angeles. byists public spending habits But a lobbyist is defined as a nyone who attempts to in- fluenc_e the decision of any supervlsor, county e mployee or county commissioner. As a result, files maintained t>y county clerks bulge with thousands o( registrants who, In the traditional sense are not persons oald by 11 third party to Seek. Title Lis a Bozanic. a 17-year·old se n i or at Hu ntin g t o n B eac h 's Marin a Hi gh School. will be competing in Santa Barbara this weekend for the Miss California Teenager title. If she wins. Lisa, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Bozanic of Hunt- ington Beach. will go to Atlanta for n~tional com- pe tition. Ocean View Budget Eyed Oce an View School District Board of Trustees me mbers will hold a discussion-only budget study session tonight to talk over reinstatement of a number of employees who received Prop. 13 layoff notices No action is to be taken before the regular boar d meeting scheduled next Monday . Tonight ·s session will be at 6 p. m . in board offices al Beach Boulevard and Warner Avenue. Ois lrict officials said the or iginal layoff notices sent more than two weeks ago arrect more than 200 non-teaching personnel Fountain Valley Sets Deadline Friday is the deadline for Fountain Valley residents to submit a pplications for the city's volunteer Trame Commit· tee. The five-member unit meets the third Wednesday of each month at 7:30 p.m. Applications a re available at the City Clerk's Office, 10200 Slater Ave. For more information. call 963-8321. Lnfluence government decisions. JnC'ludl'<i in the bulky files are registration cards for business executives. salesmen, lawyers and others who discuss govern· m e nt bus iness as vi rtua l sidelights of their jobs. If the commission'!! recom- me ndation is followed by the Board or Su pervisors. that syste m will be abandoned in favor of the TIN CUP measure lhal targets about a dozen lob· byists. The political commission also voted una nimously to recom- mend that the boa rd prohibit any county e lected official. employee or a ppointed com- missioner from accepting gifts from those who do business with the COWlly Included under the gift pro- vision would be meals and enter- tainment totaling more tbao $10 a month. The commission a lso said the county should drop its require- ment that candidates for elected office report in detail all cam- paign contributions. including those of $50 or less. That reporting requirement imposes a hardship on can- didates that serves no useful purpose. the commission said as it opted ror drawing the detailed reporting line at $50. Though not part of the single unanimous vote that will carry its recommendations on to the Boa rd of S upe rvis ors . com missioners indicated they feel the commission itself s hould stay in business. It was created last spring when s upervisors responded to the TIN CUP call for politicul refor m by adopting their own or· dmance. The commission's powers are limited to reviewing campaign material of candidates' for coun- t y offices and making public comment when the mater ial violates undefined ethic stan· dards. In the wake of the TIN CUP :,teamroller. the commission was also assigned the task of rec om mending to the Board of Supervisors how the TIN CUP measure can be reconciled with the county's own reforrn or clinance. Storm Spawns High Surf Along Coast? Storm swe lls generated by heavy weather off Mexico could bring high surf to the Orange Coast by Thursday or Friday. lifeguards said today. as they viewed a veritable lak1t offshore "lt·s as calm as a millpond but 11 is a ver y beautiful day," s aid a s pokesman for Hunt ington and Bolsa Chica s tatt· beaches Hun ting t o n City Beach lifeguards said surf near th+: municipal pier was also running only one to three feet . but sug. gested board and body-surfers may be in for some action. "Surf is very hard to predict. we don't know the velocity of lhl' Mexican storm winds." said on+: official. Calm waters a nd relatively light beach attendance resulted in only a few rescues of bathers Tuesday, all lifeguard agencies reparted todav Lynn Hort HART'S John Hort SPORTING GOODS 538 CENTER ST. • COSTA MESA • 646-1919 M(ll(O Medco Tl\e l•mou• tdlOU three llflpe IOC04!< ano ell purooso .no<t with slip 50"-cononl~ polyester sr adidas .._~~ -IOCO\O<ll ,,,_ T-SHIRTS .~ 'l4' IAGS ., .. to '22" . Open 9 to 6 -Closed Sunday 538 Center ) I Mon.tco 6!>' aocrootJ6" rot1o<14d1dll~ thret.• ~lttl)\I .. 11 UUIPOMI stto•r '13" 646-1919 ,, r 0 d v I' h 1· r <I b n 10 iO ~d rn I~ rs It .. If )( :R it> /at Id. be 111· us rr rnt CALIFORNIA I PeOPLE Prop. 13 No Threat To Cities? SAN FRANCISCO <AP) - Attorney General Evelle Younger says reports that local governments may not survive Proposition 13 are like •'one of Mark Twain's obituaries . highly exaggerated." In papers to be filed with the state Supreme Court, Younger sai d Tuesday : "While Proposition 13 does limit property taxes and does m ake it more difficult to impose additional substitute taxes, local ( STATE J government will survive. The essential difference is that the people of this state will now have to be considered before taxes are increased." Younger, the Republican candidate for governor, made the s tatements in a brie' defending the state against three suits being brought by school districts and local governments The s uits contend that prop osition 13 is unconsti tutional. <Related story, Page AlO.\ .Jehtt Ca•palp Nl~d SAN DIEGO CAP> -Lt. Gov. Mervyn Dymally says he does not plan to campaign ror r eelec tion alongside Gov Edmund G. Brown Jr. this fall. saying he'd rather stand on his own merits "I don't want to be a good guy," Dymally told a group of reporters Tuesday. "I 've got something to sell -my own programs, my own ideas. A joint campaign would be a liability for me " &pal Tf..e Rejedefi LOS ANGELES CAP> As far as the 37 television stations that broadcast Gov. Edmund G Brown Jr. 's June 28 speech are concerned, that was a bona ride news even~ not a political speect>, as Brown 's g ubPrna~orial opponent , Attorney General Evelle G Younger, charges. All thP stations rejected Attorney General Younger's request for equal time to reply to Brown's speec~. which concerned Proposition 13 ~Staib VALENCIA <AP> About 30 persons ridin g Magi c Mountam's newest rollercoaster ride. Colossus. had to be escorted to the ground on foot when one of the trains ran into brake problems Tuesday. Mark Macy, a spokesman for the amusemen• park, said a brake was set wrong and as a result the five-car train stalled ·some distance from the actual loading zone " l•AW Re•<-laedulftl LONG BEACH <AP> The fat" of gambling aboard the Queer Mary will have to wait until next Tuesda) Jess Stewart. a 70-year ·old retired auto dealer scheduled to discuss the issue at Tuesday's City Council mee ting, didn't appear until after the meeting "'as over. so the item was rescheduled for the following week. Voyagers Visit Katsutosh1 Utsum1 , 38. points out a sight l~ his wife. Reiko. 30, and their sons, Akio, 11. and Tosh10. 9, from their 32-foot sloop, docked in San Francisco Tuesday. The family spent 58 days on their trip from Japan ~nd will spend two months in the Bay Area before travehng on to London either by sail or air -a decision to be made later State Recognizes Nevada Borderline SACRAMENTO <AP> -After 106 years. the State of California recognized the present borderline with Nevada. And the rase might never have arisen if it hadn't been speculated on both sides that the present line might not be the right one, and that some of Nevada's casinos should perhaps be in California or that Nevada should own hundreds of square miles or rich California ranchland. THE BILL SIGNED TUESDAY BV Gov. Edmund Brown Jr would recognize the 1872 Von Schmidt Line, which California requested the U.S. Supreme Court last year to recognize as the official border. It's the one currently being observed from Lake Tahoe to the Oregon border. But Nevada. answering in the case. proposed a number or boundary changes that would mostly increase its area on the California side. The 1872 Von Schmidt Llne was run and marked by the federal government. BACKERS OF THE BILL, SB 2180 by Sen. Ray Johnson, R-Chico, had cited Nevada's claim -among others -to the U.S. Supreme Court that the 1863 Houghton-Ives Line between Lake Tahoe and Oregon should be recognized. . That line was officially recognized by the legislatures or both states. and would give Nevada about 200 square miles of Northern California. California State Controller Ken Cory said two months ago he thought Nevada was making a "monstrous land grab" in its proposals to the U.S. Supreme Court. BUT JIM THOMPS01', NEVADA'S CHIEF deputy attorney general, replied that Nevada 1s simply "insisting on our legal rights.' Thompson said if the border ouestions aren't brought up now. there may never be another chance. . Cory said that a new survey or the Tahoe-Oregon line could move it as much as one-third of a mile east, putting four Lake Tahoe casinos in California Get Rid Of Unsightly Bulges!! .. •• • • • • PRESENTING OUR NEW CONCEPT IN INCH LOSS NO Starvation Diets Also We.,.cl ..... MOM-'-tk4',... LHltlt Aa.. Dry ..... Ofr,.... W,...._•ia..•• wWt1a Ct.ihr '', , .... ...., NO Pills NO Shots HUHTIM4HOM llACH .... 7142 ..... .,..., lt+.1141 s-teAM 117 .. JJO fl II Os•• fH·Jtll Wedneeday. July 12. 1078 DAILY PILOT Anti .. gay Bill Costly Backers Spent $900,000 for Ballot Spot SACRAMENTO <AP> -A new report says the supporters or an initiative against homosex· ual teachers spent nearly $900.000 getting it on the Nov ember ballot. districts to fire or refuse lo hire a teacher, school aide. counselor or administrator who is openly homosexual or who advocated. solicited or promoted bomosex· ual acts. munity Church of Norwalk, $2,200. The committee backing the in- itiative, Defend Our Children. also got loans rrom Citizens for Sen. Briggs, S361 ,631; Briggs himself. $25,000. and Steven Bailey, president of Star burst Consultin(( of Fullerton, $14.000. The same report from the state Fair Political Practices Commission said Tuesday that the opponents of the initiative spent only $116.415 -but drew C'ontribulions from some of the biggest names in entertainment. Sponsored by state Sen. John Briggs, R·Fullerton, it drew about SO supporting contrlbu· lions of less than Sl.000 each from persons in other states. ANOTHER BRIGGS initiative to ban smoking in many public places. Proposition 5. cost its s upporters SS9.310 to qualify the report said. THE OPPONENTS included actresses Carol Burnett. Patty Duke and Marsha Mason: actors John Austin and Dennis Weaver, playwright Neil Simon. and re· cording executive Neil Bogart. Their contributions ranged from $100 to up to Bogart's $2.500. THE BIGGEST supporters in· eluded Alan Masters. a La Mesa accountant, who gave $2,540 ; Landa Hinojosa. a La Mesa public relations woman. $2.500: But the opponents. mostly from the tobacco industry, raised $330 .350 and spent $248,841. Large contributions were $26,447 from Lorillard. $104.655 Crom R. J . Reynolds In· dustries, $66,111 from Brown and Williamson Tobacco. SS6.848 from Phillip Morris, and $61,668 from the 1'obacco Institute. The initiative, Proposition 6. would make it easier for school William Phelps or Airlines Ground School. Fair Oaks. $5,000: Carl Karcher. president or Carl Karcher Enterprises of Anaheim, $5,000: Loren Gunltier , an Orange County re· liree, $3,400, and Calvary Com· Solon .Jibes at Recess From Associated Press Dispatches W ASffiNGTON -Since Rep. Otis G. Pike, D·N.Y .. decided he'd had enough or Washington and was going to retire from Congress. be has taken delight In poking run at some or the more obvious congressional foibles. His latest target was the July Fourth recess, which the House prefers to call "home district work period." The congressman noted that the House quit for the holiday on June 29. a Thursday. In a news release. Pike noted: "A 4th of July recess does not mean you get the 4th of July orr. It means you gel the week surrounding the 4th of July off. Plus the preceding Friday. It's a good deal." * 1 NEW YORK -Folk singor Joan Baez says a dispute between her sponsors forced cancellation of a July 4 s~h she had planned. to. give in the Soviet Union m s upport of Russian dissidents. The 37-year-old New York·born entertainer. known for her outspoken stands against the Vietnam War. had hoped to r.-• make the r emarks before ~ Monday's start of the trials in t the Soviet Union or dissidents A nato l y Sh c haransky and Alexander Gi nzburg. But her forum. a concert with oth e r American performers in Leningrad's Winte r Palace Square, was canceled because of a dispute between the Russian and British sponsors. Miss Baez instead made a sightseeing trip to Moscow and returned this weekend. She told an NBC·TV Today Show interviewer Monday that had she given the speech, her message would have been: In a great country like that. one should not tum away and imprison dissidents. but one should welcome and support them." • MONTREAL -Margaret Trudeau has received the lead role in a romantic comedy tentatively set to be filmed in southern France, a spokesman for a production company here has confirm~. Richard He llman, vice president of Prospec Films Inc .. said Prime Minister Pierre E llio tt Trudeau's estranged wife would act in "L 'Ange Guardien " <The Guardian Angel>. a Sl million budget France-C anada production. TltUOEAU It is Mrs. Trudeau's second film . Last year she starred alongside Patrick McGoohan in "All The King's Men ... a thriller still to be released. The new film. due to begin production by the end of the month. will feature her as the wife or a wealthy industrialist who falls in love with a cabaret singer. ., Ouayne D • Christensen, D.D.S • ORLANDO. Fla. -Debbie Rhyne may not look like Elvis Presley, but a Central Flonda rock group promote,. is hoping a little plastic surgery transforms the 23·year·old woman into a spatting image of the •ate singing star. (---------] "The world's first _,r;-0 ,0 LE one and only female c. ..- EI vis impersonator---------- .• ·• says Danny O'Day, who several months ago promoted plastic surgery that made a young man resemble Elvis "I mean. we got so much play on that. you know what I mean:' The people have taken lhts Elvis thlng so rar. you would think 'How mucb farther can it go"' Well. here it goes.·· O'Day says he's got two more clients heading into the hospital for plastic surgery to look like rock ·n· roll's late great stars -one young ma n who also wants to resemble Elvts and another who hopes to look like singer Jim Croce. O'Day, 29, says he picks up the bills "or the opera ti~ OLYMPIA. Wash. -One politician has put hot air to a novel use. Gov . Oby Lee Ray rulfil\ed a childhood fantasy by piloting a blimp. The state's first woman governor. a self ·s tyled transportation junkie. occupied the Goodyear blimp's pilot seal for 19 minutes recently. gently nudging the huge airship in a wide arc around this waterfront capital. "Whee! This fe~ls great!" she exulted. "Now if I can only uv stop using the wrong feet" to maneuver the vehicle. ltiding a i.>Ump was one of the few remaining items left on the governor's check·off list or "Things l Want to Ride or Ptlot.'" drawn up when she was a girl. Miss Ray always boasted an untraditional streak. She changed her name from Margaret to Dixy Lee in memory of the South and the rebel gener al. TOKYO -They may not be as revealing as the Watergate tapes, but the pubhc will soon gel a chance to hear some or Emperor Hirohito's private. tape-recorded conversations The imperial household has announced that taped conversations between Hirohito and guests ranging from Sadaharu Oh, J apan's home run king. to famed aviatrix Vae Nozoki will go on SCI le Aug. 31 as a long-playing record. The conversations have been recorded at the emperor's twice·annual garden parties since 1972. His household gave perm1ss1on for 3,000 LPs to be made from the tapes. Some of the matenal has been aired on J a panese radio and television newscasts. inut~itlt ... ~ .. ~ ., • "\1ednet day Julr 12. 1978 Robert N. Weed /Publisher ThOmas K"vll /Editor Barbara Kr~lbicti 'Edltorlal Page Editor •tr oranoeeoas10..••v"'101 Editorial Page ............................................................ Police Charges Demand Attention Charg~ or poltcc brutulity ag;unsl some Hunlmgton Beach pohce officer s h ave arisen several times ul reeent l"QOnths. Until now. the allegations h ave been brushed aside by the c ity council, probably bccaust• council officials felt that they were politically ins pired. But officials last week st a rted to pay close attention to the charges that police used excessive force in quelling th sturbanccs July 1 a nd again July 4 St ate m ents from apparently credible witnesses who dd not appear t o bP miscreants prompted this change in »ttitude. The council ordere d an rndepcndcnt investigation by the distnct attorney's office in one of the two incidents last week Prior allegations have been ta ken by in· dividuals to the U.S. Commission on C ivil Rights . Things a r e not easy for an offacet in the beach com- munity who must keep law and order among thous ands of unruly youths -particularly in Huntington Beac h. where ~ f ourth of July m elee has tx•come traditional. It is easy to s t•t• how a <'rowu of taunting , provocl!t1ve .vouth::-. can get an offker 's a drt·rwlrn flowi ng llut police officer~ c.tr <' train<.•<! to handll' the !'!1tua t1on ~ind not blo w th ci·· cool They ;m.-paid to do thts a nd paid well If there ts a problem 1f citizens arc bt:tng abU\<.•d 1t must ~ e liminated and climinatl'd quickly At this point the council is reacting properly to the situation Parade Worth Keeping The Fourth ol July Parade has been a tradition in lluntrngton lkuch for 74 summc r5 but it h<.1~ had to ~ur­ ' I\'(• some anxious mom<•nts in tht• r ecent pas t l\ c:oupll' ol yt•ut::-. ago tht· paradt• caml· under I ll'l' \dwn it °"w" k·u rnNl tha t <:ity contn b utions had l'l!lc.·n to mor·f• than S50.000. Offic:iub took ;1 dim v1c•w :.ift<.•r it wa~ pointed o ut that t ht·v had a~f't•t•d tu ::-.pend onl) hulf thut n mount And agCJan this yc·~1r lhl' particle faced a pcrilou~ night ur t wo bccaus<.• of thn passage of Prop 13 and the loss in c ity revenues But officwls dl'dd cd that the patriotic event would go o n anyway bccaust• expenses had been budgeted from the ·p,..cvious year and much of the money a lready had been :spent Cit~ <•ouncd memlJt·t~ ma<.lt· it ckar. how('v(•r. that th1• parad<.· will h ~1vc· to ~upport itself in coming year!'! without city s ubs 1d1t•s wh1<:h havt.• lx·t·n ,.unning 1n tht· · m·1Ahhorhood of S2U.OO<J to S25.000 C1v1c leadt·rs !'lay they an· opllm1!'.tll' that the paradt• •l':Jl1 t·nntrnu<.'. th:1t 11 c:~tn t•V<.·n ht• bNt<.·r with mort• lor:d · 1wrticipatio11 and homt·gr m\'11 t ah•nt ; We thtnk so loo : ll would s un•ly b•• too bad to hav<.• the Fourth ::-.hp b'r . \\ 1thout foeling gooc,epimples brought on by th•• murrh{;~ nf Sousa and other oncc·:J·year h1ghli~hls. Th<.· paradt· hus bc·cn going on too long t o bt· d1M.'on · 11nuc•<.I now /\nd 1t s houldn·1 IJt• -·Belate d Econo01y Tht• Coa:-.t Community 'ollegt· Dr~tnc:t h:.is found :1 : \\a~· :1 rat ht•r ohnou-. \\ ay in our t'Yl' tu ..,~ \'l' ti bout : s1.10 .000 in taxp~1~'('r!'!· mont·y ea ch yN1r ; lnslcud of m~uling out catalogs fur e a ch of its thrct• . t•a m pu~t.·s each !'!em<.•stt:r. plu!> miscellanl'OU~ btochurcs. 1hc <l1strn:' will makt• tht•::-.t• publications av:.iilable a l a ; \'"lf'lcty of lot·CJt1on-. Only a directional brochure will be · mailed out tn ll'll pt•ople wht•rt• to p it'k up the publica· · ttons. lt s a n cxccllt•nt idea. C\'en though $140,000 is a s m<ill !'!hare of the dis trict·s $75 million 1977-78 budget . and the u:,c of pnvatc f'ntl'r pris<> is commendable . JlowC\'C't'. this is the kind of post -Prop. 13 move that ha~ citizens a sk in~· Why didn't it ha ppe n sooner·1 The clutter of <·o mmunity college publict1t1ons in ma1lbox<.•s '.\.1~ nn1• ol ttw mo!'!t \'t!'!iblc !'!ign~ of th<.• wash· th~it drove rnanv '•>ll·r~ to hack the .J<Jrvis dml'ndml'nl. Officials h :·,, t• 1nl11t·att•d tht! m·w pr ocedure I!'! t'X pl'rrmental <1nd lh~ll m ailing:-. might l'L'!'!Ume 1( enrollment drops shar ply Thev should rt·m<.•mher tha .. tht• communily collegt·~ were sei up to serve pulJlic: ne<'ds. If the public has to bt• hounded and c:.i 1olt·d with a bhaard of mailing~ to a ttend C'<'l'tCJ in cla..,s<.'~:i t t!'! time to a!'!k if thosl' classc~ an· re<Jlly · Ol'l'dCd • . Opinions expressed 1n the space above are those ot the Dally Pilot. • Other views expressed on this page are those of their authors and : artists. Reader comment is 1nv1ted. Address The Dally Piiot. P 0 Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71 4) 642-4321. . ---------------------------------------------------. -• Boyd/Sanka By L.M. BOYD Name of that coffee called Sanka is a contraction of the French phrase "sans caf· • feine. ·• Are you aware how 1t • came to be developed? The lop man in a big European coffee company, Dr. Ludwig :• Roselin, had been looking for :: a way lo takt> out the caf· J elne. Then a sh ipload of :, s uch beans in 1903 was ;, 5wamped with seawater. and • the spoiled coffee was turned • over to researchers That !laity soak led them to the de £ cafreination process. . . Dear Gloomy Gus l sorl of envy that police olflcer who's belng "punished wit}l u 30-day suspension - with pay! Could use a month off wlth pay myself. J.B.S. A free glass of water with a m eal in a restaurant costs about 12 cents . Or so sa y re· sea rche r s at Purdue University. They calculated the expenses of the water itself. ice. broken glasses. dlshwashing equipment and tabor. Why the milk production or ctairy cows falls off just bcfore an earthquake is another mystery. Q. "Aren't most couples in M t-x1co married In the Catholic Church?" A Not mo Rl . The estimators say most couples in Mexico -seven out of 10. they figure -aren't m arried m any church. Or any state omce. either. They·re linked tn what's called "free.union" marriage. Our Love and War man ls not as famlllar as he might be wlt.h the romantic clrcumstancea in Mexico. But be describes rree·unlon marrlaae here as the buddy system1ntbevndln1 pool. "Where'd the 'Muppets• aet t h at n ame? .. asks a c llont. Tbelr creator Jim Henson and hls wife Joan Nebel concocted ll from • comblnaUon of "puppet" and "marionette." R owland Evans/Rober t Novak Sadat Seeks Stronger U.S. Role CA l RO -With his "sacred mission" of an overall peace plnn under Israeli checkmate. Egy plia n Pres ide nt Anwar Sadat now pins all his hopes on the fact that Jimmy Carte r "has started to play a full rote" in the Mideast peace process for the first time. President Carter 's g radual chan ge Crom sympath e tic m ediator lo the role of "principal ac- tor " wa s s ignalled in Mr . Carter·s invitation to I s rael and Egypt to send their foreign m in isters to m eet with Secretary or State Cyrus Vance in London later this month. That Ame rican "initiative:· Sadat told us m an exclusive interview at his summer seaside palace 1n Alexandria, marks a m aJor change. NOT ONLY does the London m eeting get Sadat off a painful hook. It also opens the way to more American pressure on Is rael regarded by Sadat as essential to :.ave his tattered peace plan. Sad at <.icknowledgcd that ht· has been forced hy Is r ael to retreat time and again from h 1~ original overall pN1n• plan d r opping hi s talk about J Palestmi::m stall'. for~ellang ha:. pledge that the 1'<.1lest1nc L1bern lion Organization I PLO>. not J p rdan. mus t be the West Bank's bargaining agent with Is rael. and on lesser parts of the plan he took to J erusalem last November In the face of this Israeli "in· tra nsigence." we asked. how does Sadat Justify sending his foreign ministl'r for another round of fare· lo· fun· la lks with b rut>I" BECAUSE. hl' said. till' Lon don meeting "1s a C<trkr an 1l1ative. ·· not Sadat's. If 1t fails a nd no one here expects suc- Mailbox cess -It mus l be foll owed by a distinctly American plan. As a precedent for s pecific American proposals Sadat used the exam- ple of the Nixon administration when it drafted the plan that broke the deadlock over Egyp· tia n · Csraeli disengagem ent in the Sinai peninsula after the Oc· tober 1973 war. .. Henry Cformer Secretary of State Kissinger) told me there was a deadlock. that the old lady I form er Prime Minister Golda Meir> was ve r y stubborn." Sadat saad. "So I s uggested an American proposal." That time. at worked. Thus, if Isr ael's refusal now to fix a timetable for eventual Palestinjan self·delerminataon -a nd to renounce Its "right" to Jewish settlements in historic Arab territories deadlocks the London talks. it will be time for another U.S. plan "l think it should be done,·· Sadat s aid. AFFABLE and relaxed on the surface. Sadat nevertheless must be having sleepless nights as lime runs out on him. He is ''I thitik its +Aken root.'' more pointed these days in tus criticisms or Is rael's hardJlne Prime Minister Me n ahem Begin, more direct in his praii:ie for Israeli De fcni>c Minister Et<'r Weizman ond for what he calls ''the Is raeli peacf' move· m cnt ' • .. Mc·. Bl•gin 1s afraid o f peace." he ~aid ... We speak two drff<.'rcnl languages." Begin's re fusal to <1dmit that Is rael. artcr iL<; 1967 conquests, agreed to withdraw from most of the Wes t Han'< is "typical" or Begin's finding "something. anything to hide behind" an or- de r to avoid peace. "It appears for some reason that he doesn·t want lo reach an agreement." Nol so Weizmao. At ctlnner in J<•rusale m l<1 sl Nove m ber Sad<•l told Begin how much ht• likNI Weizman "and Began wa:. very happy. but he rs not hapµy now.·· We1zman split with Begin last month over lsraer!:> str<1te~y in dealing with the U S. on Sadat 's peace plan. Begin is now trying to exploit that conflict - a revealing s ign or how few negotiating weapons he has ldt. SADAT is no w unde r v1c1ous on~s!>urc from a lmost the enllrt> Arab "AOrid to "1dmil th<1t hi s daring J crus<ilc:m pt:ae<· m1lis1on has f:1il<•d. s~ n an J>re-.1dent llu ft'l Assad w:1nts Sad;.tl lu m <• k '· a h 11 mi Ii :t t 1 n g pub I 1 c cit•ciaratwn or failur<• Algcr1a Aou ld -.l'llll' t01 .1 'pr1vak let ll'r .. from Suda! lo ail Arah heads of state <idm1llm~ failurl' <1nd agrl'cin~ to :.an ail·Arab meeting to plot a new course But admission of raaiure would bt• a bitter end of Sadat's peac.•c dream and prob<tbly of his JOb. For Preside nt Carter, it would be catamitou!> It would wipe out thC' largc:-.l ~angle in- \t'Slmcnt ht• had m<idt• in hi:-. b<'lt'afWl'rC'd foreign policy Mon· 1m(1<lrtant. 1t would g1vP .... t rnni>cendenl \'t(•torv io !ht• Sov1C'l Cmon ;inc1 tnl•vituhlv Ing gt•r a nt•w /\ml•n t«•n dt·cl1nl' a:-. ll•adt•r ol th1· W1·~1 with t•atacly"m1l' effect!> in th1., most .,lruteg1c part of the ~lobe lliegal Aliens a Federal Responsibility To the &htor Recently. dul' lo pressun· j.!encrated by .. L<1t1no leaders." Attorney General Griffin Bell ad vised local la w e nforcement agencies to stop enforcing U.S. Immigration Laws because only the federal government in the guise of the U.S. Immigration Service has the authority to de· lain and deport illegals. It has always amazed me how the federal bureaucrats can s it in Washington, listen lo a select few. and cast an a ll-knowning decla ration over the heads of tht· masses Rcalizin~ that Mr. Bell 1s only mouthin~ wh<1t statute~ already exist. I wonder how he expects local law enforcement to deal with the ever.incr easing problem of non-Englis h speak ing ill egal s infi l trating Ca lifornia a nd oth er s tate borders by the thousands Re cent estimates suggest that Los An geles and Or ang<.' Counties atone have a million and a half illegals. 80 percent of whom arc Mexican. Chicago. report local immigration officials. has over 600.000 illegal Mexicans. not to m ention the illegal a hen influx into other major U.S c1t1es Municipal and stule law en· forcement personnel. especially in the Southern California area. a re continually hampe red whe n encountering Mexican illegals who have committed crimes. violated traffic laws, or a re ob- served in a set of sus picious circums tances . These in· dlv iduals have little if any identification. cannot s peak English. and prove to be ig· norant or many of California's laws. FOR THE mos t part . the vlcUms of crimes or acci· dents involving illegals have little or no recourse against the illegal due to the ir h ighly transient and unstable economic nature In fact. Mexicans and other illegals Me many times deported rather than held for trial and/or civil litigation. Within a short period of time. many of these same individuals will wander across the border to toke up where they left off. Another faction In California falls vlcUm to the Influx o( II legals In the form or the in· dlvldual property owner who pays taxes th•t In turn s upport our liberal welfare system. Each day Ulegala receive some type oI support whether It be monetary, medical or police and llre. So t say to Attorney General Griffin Bell, pressure Congress to lncrca.,e lmmt1ratlon person· nel and activate more stringent penalties for meul border cro11ers and their American cmployers Concentrule on positive altt!mallve~ instead of pressing local law t·nforct'mCnt who cannot clo!>C thl'lr eyes to violations of laws. federal or stalt'. due to the course and scop e of their profession. In s impler terms. if the federal law e nforcement agencies would do the JO b they are directed to do. local law enforcement wouldn't have to take up the slack. 0 . KANE Bond Worth .'ior bag To lhc E<htor . I altcndc.'<i the.• ftrl•work:. :.how cin July •I at llunt1nglon Be<1ch I h gh School It "'a:. sponsored l)y t hc city of Huntington fkal'h I "as impressccl l'>y lhc spec l<tcular' Thc city should be com pliml·nt<'d. particultffly 1r thl' cost was <1bsorl>ed l)y thc t icket CO'>t I "a~ particularly impressed with the lluntangton Beach Con· rcrl Dand which performed at this show. Though their ap . penrance was. unfortunately. brief it is apparent that this is an exciting and professionally com pctent group. I left wanting to hear more from the m. l was disturbed by the a nnoun· cement during the :.how that thb band may not be together aftt·r this summer due to hudget prob lems. and thl' Jarvis effect I spoke with the band director after the show. a nd learned that lh<' annual cost of the group is about SS.000. I can't believe that that relatively s m a ll amount should be saved at the cost of losing to the city this wonderful band. I HEARD on TV recently a member of the Los Angeles City Council suggesting that the Los Angeles Police Departm ent dis· pand their so.p1ece band because its cost was $300,000 per year. Considering that our band sounds far better thun lhe police band It seems we may again be "throwing out the baby with the both water." l a m no expert in these things but it seems that It would be most difficult to re form tlus band if its members were lo move on to other volun· teer groups. Fortunately. I will get to hear three more concerts et least. as I will be attending th<?lr Sundoy Serenade Supper concerts ot the Oolden West College am· phltheeter <5 p.m . > this Sunday and the following two Sundays hn 't there some way thl~ fine group can be kept together' LLOYD DAVIDSON T~ Dbrn•l11at~• To tht Editor I havt JUSl been mode aware ot ~o mc o r thi• mos t di!> t·r1m1n:1tOQ Ol'\.\ t;1xt•<, ~<·t to clalt· on an) ~i nglt• 1ndustr~· wh1t•h \\('fl• p:t~sNt by tht· I lunt rngton {leach Ctt) Coune tl ont• day befon · th(' Proposition 13 dl·adlinl' Thesc new taxes \\t'rc lt·v1C'd spccifi<'a ll y against thl' pe troleum industry LET'. LOOK at the taxc.!. J. A new lax of SSOO l}{'r abon· ground oil or w:ttl·r t;1n k or ~my ty pt' 2 Annual otl or gas wdl fl'l·:. ra 1 ~cd from S96 lo S200. an in· crc.•asl' of 108 0t•rn·n1 3 Pl'r b<irr1•I l:J'<l'" on pro duc·l'{l oil and gas up 2fl p1·r('t•n1 1 ft a1st·d fl'l'~ lor .1 rt•drall or n·\\or~ l)l'r "AC'll l rom S IOO to $500. Up 600 pt.·rt'l'nl 5. Raisl' 'mnual wt•ll in~1wc-t1on pt·r m1t from S!'iO to SHXl. up IOO pcrcent fl Do uble otl rt•la tt•<1 wa~h· "':Iler pt.•rm1t I rom SJO to S60 J>L·r \.\ t•ll up lOOpcrcl·nt 7 Raise rN·ovt•ry ht•Jtl'r permits from $100 to S200 -up too µcrn·nt H. Ra1Sl' oil .VE'll uctivut1on pe rmit from $100 to $500. up 500 Pl'rCl·nt It appt.•ar-; tht• f!l'nllt·mt·n of the Ci ty Council nc-vl'r ht·ard of thc rule of diman1~hin1? rt·turns Mr. John Thomas. I am told. sugge~IC'd the nC'Wl·St "tunk t<1x · anct hl' l'arns his li ving from thl' pctro h·um indust ry Mr Rob Mand1t• \Olcd for the· ta~ in l'r easc I wonder if ht· would h<1 vC ~upported a S500 pl'r yC'ar new C'ity tax on his tow trucks The politicians have still not understood lht• mand<•k of Proposition 13 DALE JOHNSON Ladder Hay Foll To the Editor : The Prop. 13 pol IS bo1Ung over' which isn't quite the ~a m c as the "cup runne th over .. ' Huntington Beach City School District held a bourd meeting and decided th follow· ing: 1 To authorize o S percent pay c ut to a ll c lassified and certificated employees. effective with the coming school yetir •A !l&lary freeze would have been more In tine with s urrounding !lchool districts: and no doubt accepted by oil employee!=i Consumer prices have already risen 7.2 percent so far this year, which doesn't mix too we ll With a pay cut 1. 2 To send. laYorf notices to ap. proximately 200 c lassified employees. Including school clerks, Instructional aides c II bra ry and cla!l!lroom ). noon upervlsors. night custodians, etc. All of the c loyotr letter~ are quite .. (Inst:· stating "you will not be re-hired ror the 1978·79 -.('hool year. you m;iy appl\ f11r ) our unemploymt•nt "t:tt• SCHOOi. ~l·c rt·tarlt'!> in tht· thrl'l' middle schools ure expect · t•d to relurn and t.lo th<> job of th rel' other office clcrk s. plus tu kc a 5 percent pay cut·> And what about the hhrarit·s •n e ach of the 12 schools. some of the fan est m thc county "ho will run a nd maint:11n tht·m·• Perhapl'i the parents of the com mun1ty will all bt• tht•rt• to help enroll students, nurSl' tlw sick ;ind bruised all d:iy. monitor thc Jhsenll't'!>. makl• llJl 1hC' dally Cll · tc·ndancP \\h1ch mt·an ... SSS 111 tlw -.t·hools. rcµorls r1•qu1n•d h\ tht· stall• :l /\pµrll\cd .1 nt·W po-.1t1011 1n lht· clr~tncl that ul 1b-.1~tant Supt.•rlnll·ndent. P1•r ... un1wl ' Suµ· port pcrsonnt•I ml·flt 1110t'd .1bt1\ (' art' likt• thost• pcopl1· <11 tht' bot- tom of thl' ladder holding it up lor I ho:-.1· on top Th<ll IJdder might IU!>t f<Jll' GENE llA'-SF-:N s-o~ llurt# To thl' Editor In n .. ply to th" rwr~on who \\l'Otl' to Gloomy Gu::. ;1nrl ''~nee! h1m~e lf C: S F . hl' :appJrc•ntly d1dn ·1 do his homework IJC'fOrl' sa) 1ng .. Smoker~ hurt only lhemSt•l\cS' ·· Thl•re nas bt•l'n a gooc1 dl•:tl of research on th.-~ub.il'<..·t of "'"'ok m g tob.Jl•co and tl!> c•ffect on both -;mokl'rS a nd non . .,moiwr'> Onc· !>ludy found lhat a rommuter confim'Cl to a tram's smoki> ftlll'cl bar car for a n hour l'an ahsorb ai:. much of the cu r c inogl'n known as OMN as a person who s moke:-. 17 to 35 filter cigarette!> a day. (New York Time~ editorial. May 5. 197H. l G S.F'. also said lh:.it. 'The $30 million Califano h::i -; proposed for his ant1 ·smoking c;1mpu1gn Nould be better Sf>t!nl \\aming youn~ people about thl' dangers or a lcohol a nd the prt)hlems It ca uses Jami lies of alcoholics.·· My r e ply to that 1s t hat if parents would set th~ right ex- ample at home, lhl·•r children wouldn't becom<' alcoholi cs and l'3U8<' th<' problems which hl' speaks of. I resent having to use port or m y taxes to educate ltw children o( parcnt.<1 who keep h· quor available a nd the n c ry ~cause lhC'ir chlldrc>n bccomt" ulcohollcB. TS IUTTER • IAtren from rtode" ClTl' w.lcomr The nghl ro condfnst ltttf"f'I to /It l'(KJCt or .. tanunolf llbfl t.t rtl~ 1Afrer1 of .JOO u!Or'da or lf'ss will be given prtf tN!""' All ltltr11 m"-'I m• clud<" t1gno1&1rt 011d mcnhng oddrt'U but nomt• m~ 0,, IA.'lfMrld on rt· qtU'JI I/ 1uflktt11t rm..'0!1 ts appcrt•nl Potlf'}I will not~ pvblWlc'd Irvine EDJ TION t I 1\ I T oday's Clos ing .Y. toek!ii t '-VOL 71, NO. 193, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WE DNESDAY, JU LY 12, 1978 TEN CENTS .------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------;....;...;..;..;;.;;..;...;,~..;.;..;.;, ______________ .;..;;;.;.;;...;:;,,;;.;..;..;;.;; r ' ~ ' Center Plans A program for development of a · University Town Center core complex of apartments, offices and retail stores was approved Tuesday by the Irvine City Council. f The town center is located on 1 Campus Drive. The property- { and the plan-is owned by the Irvine Company. t The plan outlines development J guidelines for the 48·acre com· mercial core. It is part of a lar ger development that in I t . . eludes peripheral res1dent1al building. The council had tied develop· ment or the housing projects to building of the commercial core. Tuesday's acceptance of the core guidelines allows the Irvine Company to proceed with plans for the first phase or residential building. That includes development of a low.priced housing project by Shapell Industries, and of a senior citizens care home by Morris Dies Famed TV Cat Expires at 17 ·CHICAGO <AP> -Morris, the finicky 9-Lives cat on television · commercials, is dead at the age of 17. the pet food company said today. Morris veterina r ian. Dr Barbara Stein, said the cat died Friday and was buried in a sub· urb on the grounds of the home he shared with his handler Bob Ma rt wick. She said Morris' d e ath was associated with cardiac complications related to old age. Al 17 . Mo rris wa s th e equi va lent of a 90·ycar-old human. she s aid. Morris was found in 1966 in a 17 I Chicago·a rea humane shelter by an animal handler searching for an orange cat to appear in a , television commer cial. At the I age of 7, Morris starred in his 1 first commercial for 9-Lives and . I for the next 10 years made more than 40 television commercials. LIVED NINE LIVES The l ate Morris j A spokesman for the public re I latlons agency that handles the too, will be known as Morris. account for the pet food com. ··He 's a double for Morris pany said Morris' role will be physically and is as finicky, take n over by a cat who has aloof and independent as his pre- \;::! Cost Called High For Irvine School Trustees of the Irvi ne Uniried School District are expected to re1ect bids tonight for construe· lion of Northwood Middle Sc h ool. unless $200.000 is knocked off the lowest bidder's J asking price. The lowest bid, according to Gene Hartline district business superlnt~ndent, still is $300.000 over the state maximum allotted for the school. of $3.8 million And, he said, the surplus was twice that before negotiation on the contract. Hartline said that if the bid isn 't reduced an addi Uonal $200.000 by the time the board meets, at 7:30 p.m .. he'll 1 recommend that trustees start the bidding all over. ' i That would d e lay th e scheduled January, 1980, open· ing of t he school an extra se mester and, Hartline said. because or inflation, increase the costs for building it The board meets at district headquarters, 2941 Alton Ave .. off Jamboree Boulevard. If trus te es r ejec t th e Northwood bids. the district will advertise for new ones in four to six weeks. Northwood is to be the fourth intermediate grade level school in the district. and will be at- tended by students from the northern Irvine community or Northwood. Those students now attend two other middle schools, Venado and Lakeside. Hartline said that because of population growth, the new school will be needed no later than fa ll , 1980. \ Telephone Strike ! Still Spreading NASHVILLE. Tenn . 1AP· Telephone officials re ported some minor delays in complet- fog long-distance calls today as a two-day.old wildcat strike spread to include workers in nine states. Jim Wolfe, a South Central Bell spolcesman. said that OC· caslonal delays were being re· ported but that the problems were not. serious. In Ohio, Tom Cotton, a spokesman for Ohio Bell of Columbus, said service was nonn1l except for delays in INSIDE LOOK AT AILST.4RS Dally PUot sportswriter Dave · Cuonlnaham covered tbe 49th All·Star classic In San Diego Tuesd1,y. For full details and results, see Sporta section, 81. completing operator-assisted long ·distance and directory calls . The walkout began Tuesday wh en nine American Telephone & Telegraph Co l'mployees in Nashville were suspended after declining to cross a pi cket line set up by South Central Bell Tele phone Co. workers. The South Central Bell workers were protesting having to work six days a week The strike tater spread to Memphis and Nashvil le ; Pen ver ; Kansas City, Mo.; Louisville, Ky; Jackson. Miss.; Charlotte, Greens boro, and Stanfield, N.C.; Detroit ; Colum- bus, Toledo and Dayton. Ohio· and Ind.ianapol1s, South Bend and four smaller Indiana com- munili~. The walk:out has not disrupted long.distance service. eald Mike McCoraUn, a •pokesman al AT&T's headquarter ln BeJ· minster, N.J . Southern Ca l ifor n ia Presbyterian Homes For the town center core. the Irvine Company proposes to build 18 acres each of com- mercial and office uses. Ten acres are planned for 300 lo 400 apartments. Two acres are set aside for a community theater. Specialty food shops, banks. restaurants, service stations and a car wash are among proposed retail businesses. <See CENTER, Page A2> Tahnadge Due Audit By IRS WASHINGTON IAP> -The· Internal Revenue Ser vice will a udit S en H er man E . Talmadge's tax returns for 1975 and 1977 in the wake or reports of irregularities m his financial affairs. the Washington Star said today. The news paper. citing "in· formed" but unnamed sources, s a id the civil a udit of the Georgia Democrat by the IRS could lead to a criminal in- vestigation as well, although the agency will not take any official steps until the Senate Ethics Co mmittee completes its own look into the Talmadge case. Thal panel h as had Talmadge's financial affairs un· der review for a month, and may take several months more Lo finish. The Star said t he Justice Department has begun to show interest in Talmadge's situation as well, although department of· ficials declined formal con· fi rmation on grounds that it was inappropriate to discuss any potential case. Talmadge's press secretary. Gord on Roberts. s aid the senator's office was not a ware ·o r any IRS audit, eithe r planned or under way." or of a ny Justice Department in- terest. Roberts said he spoke with Talmadge before issuing the statement Grant Given To School In Irvine Irvine Community Summer School, a pare nt·organized alternative classroom program formed when the Irvine Unified School District canceled sum- mer school. has been given a financial boost by the Irvine Company. Kathy Politopoulos. chairman of the group, said the company has volunteered to underwrite the school's projected deficit of $5,500. Tuition recs will raise $12,000. enough to pay teachers. The Irvine Company donation will be used for classroom supplies, rental or Deerfield Elementary School and administrative costs, Mrs. Politopoulossaid. The four.week school program, for grade8 ki ndergarten through sixth, begins Monday. Rock Star Recovering ST. PAUL, Minn. <APl -Guitarist Bill Wyman or the Rolling Stones rock group wu released from a local hospital Tuesday less than 24 hours after falling from a si.ge tollowlng the group's performance here. Wyman fell when he leaned against a stage curtain, lhinkJng it was a well, Stones :ipokesman Poul Waase1rmao said. The 1utt.an•t h.it his head and was unconscious for about 10 minutes. He suf. rered a chipped knuckle, s prained wrist, an d stC'•1Ded cartUa,e In two fln1er1. • 'limber Helping Li1111Jer What are these two men doing to this little tree in Mason Regional Park. Irvine? They weren't hurting 1t. actually. They were using it to exercise in preparation for the 9.S·mile Sea King Back Bay An· naversary Run. Some 710 runners loped around the duck ponds of San Joaquin Mars h to University High School and back . Related Photo. page Bl. Postal Pact Pushed Proposal's 'Pokey Pace' Protested WASHINGTON <AP> -Postal workers came to Washington to- day to protest what they call the "po key pace" of negotiations toward a new labor agreement. A bout a thousand posta l workers came to a rally near the Washington Monument before starting a march to Postal Service headquarters about a mile away for picketing there. The Postal Service has made no pay proposal s ince talks began April 20. angering union lead er s who accuse ma nage mcnt or delayin~ tactics and or trying to take back benefits won in previous contracts. Leaders of locals threatened walkouts if a new contract is not negotiate d by the July 20 deadline. "Our policy is if there is no de· cent contract by July 20, there will be no work," said Mo Biller. head of the New York City local or the American Posta l Workers Union. the largest of four unions negotiating with the Postal Service. National leaders were more res trained in their comments In County Surgery about a possible work stoppage. Emmet Andrews, national pres ident of the A PWU. was asked by reporters about lh$-" ~trike possibility. He replied, "Nobody knows about that. Wt? a re concentrating on trying to negotiate a contract." He has said the talks are mov- ing at "a pokey pace" because or management delays. The Postal Service has declined substantive commcnl on the talks. but Postmaster General William F. Bolger has <See POSTAL. Page A2) Schuller Girl 'Fair' Carol Schuller 13-year -old daughter of the Rev. Robert Schuller. was described as beinR in fair condition this morning following surgery on a partially amputated left leg yesterday at Childrens Hospital of Orange County in Orange. "Her vital signs are stable and within normal limits for a pa· tient with Injuries which include traumatic amputation or her left leg below the knee." said a spokesman for Dr. Schuller. world-famous pastor of Garden Grove Community Ch urch. Car o l was adm itted t o Childrens Hospital at 3 a.m. Tuesday for treatment of in· juries s uffered Friday in u motorcycle accident near Sioux City, Iowa. The girl was flown to Orange Count y Airport by air am bulance following the amputa· lion at a Sioux City hospital. Carol, who lives with her family in Orange. had been rid· ing on the back or a motorcycle driven by a cousin who swerved to avoid a braking car and hit an oncoming car. Her cousin's leg was broken. Rev. Schuller. who grew up on a northwest Iowa farm . 1s known for his gospel or "possibility th inking" a nd h is weekly television program. "Hour of Power."' The pastor. Mrs. Schuller and Hun~ington Halts Most Pupil Busing Ry RA VMOND ESTRADA JR. Ol IM Delly l"li.t Slllff Huntington Beach Union High School District trustees Tuesday halted home·tO·school busing for most students in the fall. Handicapped youngsters and students who live In Seal Beach and the Surfside area will be the only ones bused to their high schools, olfic\als said. The action was taken to save the distrtct about $390,000. The board also has approved a list of budget cuts totalHng about $6 million due to revenue lost by the passage ol Proposition 13. Th• busin1 cutback affects about s,eoo students, officials in· dk•ted. The school board Tuesday also approved Sl00,000 In co· cur ricular procram cut.8 that In· elude. sport.a, music, d.-111 team, drama and yearbook staffs. S~hool &.rd President Zb41 Weasa said no sports programs will be greatly affected by the cuts. A total of $450,696 in dis· trlct funds were initially earmarked for co·curricular programs. , Officials indicated that the cutbacks are still tentative because of potential effects or state legislation. Other cutbacks approved by the school board Tuesday are: -•·• for replacemen' of furniture. equipment a nd vehicles -L ayoff o l a b o u t 1 ~ transportation employees du to the busing cut. -175,0t In compute r operations and testlnl co ts -S I U,810 I n n on · rrplocement of secretaries who real~ or retire. Carol's oldest sister . Shella. and brother Robert J r. have been at the girl's bedside since shl' was admitted. a ~pokcsman said at the hospital Carors attitude 1s said to b<.· "very good" by the s pokesman who said the girl's physicians a rc Dr. William C. McMaster, an orthopedic s urgeon, and Dr Bruce M. Achauer. a plastic s ur geon. She was described this morn- ing as "alert, feeling good and improving." A family s pokes man s aid Carol is expected to remain m the hos pital for scverat weeks. Coas t We ather Early morning low clouds and local fog near coast, otherwise s unny Thur s d ay . Slight l y warmer. Lows tonight 58 to 62 . Highs Thursday from high 60s ut beaches to lower 80s inland INSIDE TOD" Y Plain wra pping of aupermarkst it~ hos stt oil a reaction. Whale the chain s ays H '3 bringing i n customer&. othera qu11tton quality. Food . Page Cl. r\:.f OAIL Y f'tLOl Split Final Meg 's Divorce .Official Laguna Votes Dog Curbs Victim Wins Right FORT LAUDERDALE. Fla 1 AP> -A 73·year-old physical fitness fanatic suffering from .. Lou Gehrig disease" has the right to have himself disconnect ed from the respirator keeping ham alive. a judge says An assistant state attorney said Tuesday's ruling, which is not to take effect for 10 days, will be appealed to the 4th Dis trict Court. Judge John G Perris issued the order Jess than two weeks after making a bedside visit to Abe Perlmutter, who argued it was an invasion or privacy to de- ny him the right to order th<> respirator disconnected. The former New York City c abdriver, who friends say s wam. played handball and led group exercises every day at a retirement community near here, had begged doctors to al low him to dle. When he vis ited Perlmutter Ferris asked if he knew the con ~f.'quences or disconnecting the respirator "It can't be worse than what 1 · m going through now · Pe ,.lmutter replied . Perlmutter was stricken two _vt•ars ago by the discasu that killed baseball star Lou Gehrig. amyotrophi,. late ral sclerosis His lungs deteriorated a nd he was hos p1taJized at Florida Medical Center in Lauderdale La kes in Ma) The respirator was connected M uy lit Doctors say he would d1t· within an hour 1f 1t were· dis nmnected l'crlmut\l'r. who has been ruled ' mentally competent.· wrkcd the respirator tube out of his wmdp1pe soon after it wa., eunnccrnd An a larm s ummoned nurst>s. and hts arms werr• ~t r<IJ>Jll'd do\.\r aft er h 0 con l 111ut•c.l to pull out th<• tube J't·rlmuttcrlhen sued The state attorney's of'ice <:o ntcndcd that a nyone unplug g1 ng the respirator would b<> aid ing "self-murder" and would b(' gu1 lty of manslaughter under Florida, .. However. Ferris ruled "RI~ fallacy of the slate's position 1s that the termination of such ex tra<>rdinary treatment is nol hom1c1dC' land the,.cfore not ·~elf-murder'>. but is the result of the free C'xerc1s~ of the con stitut 1onal right of privacy rt n:llurally follows that the deuth that t:nsues is expiration of natural causes and no• an un L1wful hom1t1d<.' 1-'l'rn~ quoted liberally from r ht• K;iren i\nn Quinlan casC' in 111::. ruling Th'· comatosc M1::.s t2u inl:1n was 1.hsconnecled from hi€! ~upportmg machines after the ''frw Jers1.•y Supreme Cou~ g;i"c 1ls approval. The young w(lman 1s still altvc an :l Ne.,., .Jersey hospital P erlmutter was nol 1m med 1alcly mformed of Ferris ruling His a ttorney. David Hoines. said he thinks the case is unpreccd~nted because the pa- tient in the s uit has remained ('Onsciou. ... Smoking Ban Jlote d Jn WA SHI NGTON IAP> -The District of Columbia city council Tuesday tentatively banned !-.mok1ng m most public a reas of buildings in the capital. but the move will not affect the federal polita('ians· legendary "smokt• fille<i rooms·· The council's measure does not a pply to federally controlled or owned buildings, such as the Capitol. <0ongrcss1onal offices or offices or thf' presidential staff or federal bureaucracy OAANOE COAST DAILY PILOT ~.:t.~:!.:?-"~·~·=·=~~~ '°"'' ""°""'""' °""°""" -... ""''-... ~~''='-=~~~"~:~ .. ~ ?~· ''"" V•lftt lr••ft-S•HfMM'-V•ttll'r •ftd ~64-t<"'~ttot(/H\I /4).1,.._t~lfrdl t• '' ~,.,,_,,, S..tfvrft..tft """'~TI ,,,_.. ~;~°(~~:·~~t':o~~z.:;,. m wtu "'1 tlte-.flN W... "t-'~ftt •ftO Pvtall1"""' JK-lt~ ..,,,,.,., .. ,.°"'"'"ndc,.,~,..~ f-otll-\Oll .. ,_, ..... .._.... --·.-oCa.t.., CM<'ln" W.• ........ ,. ..... '"""'•~I Ma~, ... , omc.. CA>\IOW\• lJllWt\18"•~1,.,... ~.,.~~" lll•c;..__..°"..,.I Hllf\llftqfb'\ 8•K .... 1111~ D4tlJ(fllt 80v""••Ud w.-•V•ll"' nio•uParttwo •• ~ Olf>OO ~(-#f Tei.,1tone (1U IM2>4Ut Cl•..ifled Ad"ertltlng 141-5171 MOO .. bet• V•tley ~Ottl(p 511..QtO ' ..... "'" (lt-"1• ~M-MOO ~r·t~ =. o;,:r,, c~~~ .. ".::1"..;:.'~.~ M•lt•, tr ••fftflWf'IM~h ... , •• ._ '"•' ... ,..,Ofti1<•4I •HMvt ,_.. ... , pet MU\~ ft ........... 1- ~~~::,._~':';:::;~r..~::'·~:· '~~:, ~~o mo"t~'' by f'ft•ll ,. '° MOnt.,.,, ...... ,. ... " •• ,.,..,~" -~Of'ltl\l'W' Behind a S irecessful M a n AP Wfrfp/IO!o Joan Mon~alt.: playfully hides from the cameru beh111cf Vtt l' Prrs1de nt Walt er Mondale as the two wait fo r gul's,ts lo a rrive for Cl d inner honorin~ Sen Robt.'rl Byrd. D -W. Va • al thP \"l{'l' pres1dcnt1<.1I n·:-.1clent<.· 111 Was hmgtt>n. D.C Tuc!:>tla.' Lido-14 Regatta Gets Under Way By ALMON LOCKABEY o..lty Pl..,. ... th•eWnttr H UNTINGTON LAKE -Skip pers from Newport Beach and Mi ssion Bay d om inate tht· Lido-14 national championship regatta which got undl'r way to- day al this bcuutaful lake 7,500 f<'et in the Sierras. 90 males northeas t or Fresno. Seventy-seven sk i pper~ ano crews from fleets throughout llw western .S. showed up for lhc national champions hip. Afler two days of racing Mon· <l :,y and Tuesday the fl eet was divided mto the championship and consolation flights which start competition today with two ruces A fi.n al race 1s scheduled Thursday Dave Ullman of the Balboa Yacht Club, three-time national champion in the class continues to be the s tar of the show. Hc- had three straight victories 1n the preliminary races and three s traight wins in the High Sierr<.1s R ega\'ta, s ponsor e d b y the r resno Yacht Club over the past weekend The championship flight ap pcared to he boiling down to a competition of s ailmakers, with four listed among the first 10. Ullman, a Newport Beach s ailmaker. topped the fleet. followed closely hy one of his employees, Jeff Lenhart of Mis sion tsay. Also among the first 10 conten ders in the championship night ure two s kippers from North Sails, San Diego, Tom Nute and Lou Brooks of Mission Bu y Yacht Club. Ullman, Lenhart Nute and Brook ~ arc long time com- petitors in the snipe class. Sailing conditions on this crystal clear lake arc con- s idered among the best In the world for s mall. one-design vachts. Afternoon winds reach 20 knots withsmoolh waters. The top 10 s kippers in the Lido-14 championship flight ar~ na ve U ll man . RYC : Jeff /nine Hunts Cement TIUef lrvine police today sought n poss ible black marketer o r plastic c~ment. 'fhe George M. Raymond Co. or Montebello, a plastering con- tractor working an apartment <'onstructaon site ntar J effrey Road and Walnut Avenue. in northern Irvine. told police 'rucsday that 200 bni:s of cement have ~n atolcn That's enouah to stucco four houses. Company officials valued the loss ot Sl.000 . ,, Lenhart, MBYC. Tom Nule. MBYC, Chris Raab. Huntington Harbo u r Yac ht C lub , llal Brown. MBYC ; Pete .Jefferson, MBYC . R owland Lohman , RY(', Lou Brooks, MBYC, Charlie Cummings: Alamitos Ray Yacht Club and St u Robertson. Huntington Harbour Yacht Club. Tht· top to an the consolation flight are Roy Woolsey. Lido !sit' Yacht Club: Harry Wood. ABYC, David Smith. ARYC. Cra1 t! Roe. MBYC ; J ohn Marion. Lake Me r rit Sailing Club. Bob Mos. HHYC; Tony Perez. BYC ; Mike Borza gc. MBYC; Kelly Snow. HHYC and Richard Robinette. MBYC. At the annual meeting of the class Tuesday night T ed Hinshaw. Lido Isle Yacht Club. was clecled president for the coming year s ucceeding Kelly Snow. lUrYC Mesa Cyclis t Hospitalize d Afte r Mis hap A Costa Mesa man Wal> hospitalized Tuesday when his motorcycle clipped a street curb in lrvine and skidded across trarfic lanes into a s topped car l"Ontaining a Laguna Beach woman. Ke ith Space Moffitt. whn turned 24 Tuesday. was listed to- day in ~ood condition at UC Irvine Medical Center. Police said MoCfitt. of 853 Center St.. fractured his skull. broke his nose and suffered numerous cuts and bruises. The man was not wearml{ a protective helmet, officers said. Police s aid Moffitt was mak ing a right turn from MacArthur Boulevard onto Red Hill Avenue and cut t.oo close to the curb. Has motorcycle fell onto its side and Moffitt was carried with it 65 feet, into the side or n car waiting to make a left turn. The driver of the car. Joyce Mccallion, 24, or 930 Bluebird Canyon, Laguna Beach. was un- injured, according to police. F,....Page A I POSTAL ••. experesscd confidence that a settlement wi ll be reached without a strike. Whtie national union leaders hove so far avoided ~lk of a strike, Vlnce11t R. Sombrotto. president of the New York City local of Ule National Assoclatlon of t ett<'r Carriers. broul{ht up lhc s ubJect Tuesdoy Ban Hits Beach Activities Laguna Ueach councilmen gave final approval to a tough new animal control ordinance Tuesday night that will ban dogs rrom the beach all yeur. except for certain hours. The council action came near the end or a marathom six and one ha lf hour session that ended early today. Nearly a dozen citizens -mos tly opposed to the new ordinance -spoke before the coun<'il. Speakers termed t h e or· dinance unfair to "res ponsible" pet owners and said the ::ity should instead attempt to en force its current animal laws. The new law, drafted by Coun- cilman Kelly Boyd. allows dogs on the beach -on a leash - before 8 a.m. and after 6 p.m. from April 1 to Sept. 30. Pet vwners may walk their animals on city s ands before 9 a.m. and after 5 p.m. the rest of the year. The current ordinance allows dogs on the beach all day during winter months. a nd bans them durmg the day m the summer. The new ordinance. which re- t·e1 ved a second reading shortly befo re mid.night Tuesday, takes C'ff<'ct in 30 days. The council vole was 4 to l in favor of the new law. with Coun- cilwoman Sally Bellerue op· posed. .. I think it is unfortunate the responsible pet owners have to s uffer because of others," she said after the vote. But the ordinance received strong support from her fellow council members . several of whom cited personal incidents they said they have witnessed on dty beaches. Councilman Howa rd Dawson. who has lived near the Victoria Beach for 20 years. said he. his wife and daughter have all been attacked by dop;s over the years on city beaches. Councilman Wayne Baglin said he witnessed a dog owner with two animals off leas h near St. Ann's Str~t Deach verbally abuse a lifeguard who ordered the man to leash the dogs . 'They were two golden retrievers. running up and down the beach and all over people at the beach." Baglin said. "We "an 't e nforce the law if we have people taking the leash off their dogs when they don't see a un· iformed officer around.·· Refinery Fire Under Control BORGER. Texas <API Firefighters brought a blaze at the Phillips Petroleum Corp. re- finery near here under control early today. An explosion touched off the fire Tuesday. sending names 200 f eet hi gh and li g hting the Panhandle s ky. I LONDON <AP>-Prmcess Margaret's divorce from Lord Snowdon has become official. The princess. only s ister of Queen Elizabeth II. was granted a temporary decree May 24, but under Britain's no-fault divorce system. the break became a bsolute Tuesday. '.fhe royal divorce was granted on grounds of ir· retrievable breakdown of the 18-year-old marriage. They h ad been separated for two years. London gossip columnists are reporting that Lord Snowdon. 48. may marry his !ilm assistant Lucinda Llndsay·Hogg. Margaret. 47. says she has no m aritaJ plans. In Capo Beacla Low-cost Hou.sing Pact Authorized By KATHV CLANCY Of tlle o.lly ,.,.._Matt Fifteen Capistrano Beach families. now living in what has been called some of Orange County's worst housing, soon may aee new hope in county gov- e rnment's promise of better homes. Supervisors Tuesday a utho rized negotiation of an agreement with officials of a Long Beach firm who want to build new lower -cost homes tailored to each family's need. The firm. Affordable Com- m unities <AFCOM l or Long Beach already is building a lower·cost housing project an Seal Beach. county planner Peter Major said Major said AFCOM officials have proposed a way to build lower cost single-family homes to serve the Capistrano Beach families at what seems to be lit- tle county cost. County officials as early as four years ago said that 36 homes in the area of Doheny Park Road and Las Vegas A venue violate county health laws and must be vacated. And while past efforts to r e- locate the families in homes they can afford has failed. Ma- jor said the new proposal shows great promise Still •t probably will be a month or more before details of AFCOM's proposal are negotiat- ed. he said. and up to a year or more before any new homes are built. .. , think m the past we have been overly optimistic:· Major said, "and we have always come up with a blank." or the 36 families in the barrio a r ea. recent county r eports show. JS would need county help in relocating .· Those families range in size from two to 11 persons and their '3m1ly incomes vary from S600 to Sl .300 monthly A FCOM officials a re cons1der- 1ng two Capistrano Beach ::.ales for the lowcr·cost subs1d12ed ri€'- velopment. Ma1or said One is on vacant CalTrans l:ind adjacent to the San Diego Freewa~ near the barrio Another possible s ite. Major said . is land east of Del Obispo Street west of San Juan Creek. Construction could be sub· sidized through a state housing assistance agency, Major said. a lthough the county has set aside ~.000 to assist in the ef fort if nec~ary. In other action. supervisors gave tentative approval to a $255,000 allocation for the Orange County Housing Corporation to provide 20 low- cost homes in El Modena and Anaheim"s Colonia lndependen· caa. f'ro• Page A J CENTER ••. Orrice buildings would s ur round a ped estrian·orientcd town square. The council made several stipulations for de velopment. It rejected a Planning Com- mission recommendation that future concept plans rule out auto traffic in the town s quare. qy a 4 to 1 vote lhe council de- cided that issue could be re· solved in later stages of plan- ning. Mary Ann Gaido cast the no vote. The council also turned down ;1 commission recommendation that no more than 30 percent or the apartments be exclusively rented to adults without children. A housmg stuay a lready 1s be- ing done that will include mat- ters or adult family ratios in apartment rentals. The council preferred to wait to see what the study re')()rts. Otner matters to oe con- sidered by the lrvine Company 10 development plans include· -A pedestrian access to the university campus . crossing over or under Campus Drive. -The feasibility of building apartments above retail stores. City s taff members and the Planning Commission had rec. om mended that planio; include this a s pect. The council m<.tJori - ry. however. went along with an Irvine Company plea to make lhc possibility less definite. The r ompany cited possible market mg problems. Income Top Seen LOS ANGELES !AP> -Ur~ ing action that 1s "fair. just and right to taxpayers:' Los Angeles County Supe r visor Kenneth Hahn has proposed a county t·mp loyed physicians' income c0 iling of $65,000 annually Lynn Hart HART'S John Hart SPORTING GOODS 538 CENTER ST.• COSTA MESA• 646-1919 Me~oeo The f11mous adtdH thlH 51f•pft SOCC!' ano all PIJIDOSe shor1 w11n >hP !)()'' co11onl60'io polvH1or sat• ~d ~--./~~ -. , .. ...,,..... So~ IN~._, Our-OOICI ... _, O"P 'Olt ,.,,¥ ruoo•r ""'• AOHH••O'• ...,__IC_ '26" adidas ""'".•~ -adi<fas T·SHllTS ~ SJO IAGS ., .. to '22" Open 9 to 6 ~ Cosed Sundny 538 Center Monaco b\> 1S.i. II"' J(> , counl'I Ad1d1u 1llr1H1 ··'"'"' all putP'>)t' ·.non 13" HttfU bt!•~•Oll( .,..._ •• ,.. ........ "'°,. .. "'u•••• , .. ,.~ , ... ,._ t-h•o., n••' ..,.,. u..-#9 ... ._~ '29" 646-1919 17 Laguna/South Coast ., . Afte rnoon N. "'a Sto'"•ks .. J J I J J ·, t v oL 71, NQ. 193, .. SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAl.1 FORN IA WE DNESDAY, JUL y 12, 1978 TEN CENTS i ;Laguna Curbs Beach Titne for Dogs · I Laguna Beach councilmen ; gave final approval to a tough new animal control ordinance Tuesday night that will ban dogs from the beach all year, except ; for certain hours The council action came near the end or a marathom six and · one half hour session that ended early today. Nearly a doien cl(izens -mostly opposed to the new ordinance -spoke before the council Speakers t ermed the or- dinance unfair to "responsible" pet owners and said the d ty s hould instead attempt to en· force its current animal laws. The new law, drafted by Coun- cilman Kelly Boyd, allows dogs on the beach -on a leash - before 8 a.m. a nd after 6 p.m from April 1 to Sept. 30. Pet owners may walk their animals on city sands before 9 a.m. and afters p.m. the rest of the year. Tbe current ordinance allows' dogs on the beach all day dwinl winter months. and bans them during the day in the summer. The new ordinance, which Te· eel ved a second reading shortly before midnight Tuesday, takes effect iq 30 days. r !Sparks F .. 1nng l iD •• ! ecISIOil Due I ~ • f By STEVE MITCHELL Of tlle ~l'I' f'li.t Swff Sus pended Laguna Beach police Chief Jon Sparks met 'behind closed doors with City Manager Fred Solomon for more than an hour this morning. · following a City Council meeting l Tuesday mght during which a parade of Sparks' s upporters spoke in favor of the top law en forcement officer The new city manager , who took office July 1. said after the meeting that he will probably announce Friday morning whether he pla ns to fare the veteran police offi cer. Sparks was suspended July l by Solomon following a fight at t he I vy House, a ba r and restaurant near the police sta· tion. The husky chief allegedly pummeled a fellow bar patron after shovrng a long-stemmed carnation in his face. during the June 29 incident. The chief. charged with bat Morris Dies I c~=~ ~,~:.t Expires at 17 fi nicky 9-Uves cat on television t commercials, is dead at the age ., of 17. the pet food company said ! today ' Morris' vet e rinarian . Dr. I Barbara Stein, said the cat died Friday and was buried in a sub· urb on the grounds of the home he shared with his handler. Bob Martwick. She said Morris' death wa:. a ssociated with cardiac complications related lo old age At 17, Morris was the equiva lent of a 90-year·old human. she said. Morris was found in 1966 in a Chicago-area humane shelter by an ammal handler searching for an or ange cat to appear in a television commercial. At the age of 7, Morris starred in hi s first commercial for 9-Lives and I for the next 10 years made more t than 40 television commercials. 1 A spokesman for the public re· I lations agency that handles the f.· account for the pet food com- ) pany said Morris' role will be taken over by a cat who has f served as an understudy lie. . l t LIVED NINE LIVES The Late Morris too. will be known as Morns. "He's a double for Morris physically and is as fin icky, a loof and independent as his pre- decessor,·· said a spokesman. Bends Kill Diver . l In Aliso Accident A 41-year-old diver who died In a s hip's decompression chamber off Aliso Beach Tues· day. m ay have been a few days away from ret urning to his fami· t ly following a months-long ocean l sewage outfall project. T he diver Hiram Beckham of Goleta, was working 191 feel below the ocean's surface about 9:30 a.m. when his pressure suit 1 s uddenly filled with air. propell· ing his body toward the surface, a Dana Point Harbor Patrol s pokesman said today. divers must come up slowly to allow their body pressure to ad· just. Beckham was phtced inside the decompression chamber in an attempt to equalize outside pressure with his body pressure. A Harbor Pat-0rol spokesman said several doctors were flown to the ship. anchored off South Laguna. But Beckham lapsed into a coma and died in the decom- pression chamber at about 2:30 <See DIVER. Pa~e A2> tery, has pleaded innocent in municipal court. A large group of citiiens showed up at council chambers Tuesday night to voice s upport for the police chief. But the council ·went into ex· ecutive session shortly after the meeting began. leaving the crowd outside for nearly an hour while council members dis· cussed the bar incident with the city manager. <See DECISION, Page A2) Postal Employees In Protest WASHINGTON (AP > -Postal workers came to Washington to· day to protest what they call the "pokey pace" of negotiations toward a new labor agreement. A bout a t housand pos tal workers came to a rally near the Washington Monument before s tarting a march to Postal Service headquarters about a mile away for picketing there. The Postal Service has made no pay propos al since talks began April 20. angering union leaders who accuse m anage - ment of delaying tactics and of trying to take back benefits won in previous contracts. Leaders of locals threatened walkouts if a new contract Is not negotiate d by the July 20 deadline. "Our policy is if there Is no de- cent contract by July 20. there will be no work," said Mo Biller. head of the New York City local of the American Postal Workers Union. the largest of four unions negotiating with the Postal Service. N atlonal leaders were more restrained in their comments about a possible work stoppage. Emmet Andrc!ws, national pres ident of the APWU. was asked by reporters aboui ihe strike possibility. He r~plied, "Nobody knows a bout that. We ar e concentrating on trying to negotiate a contract." He has said the talks are mov· ing at "a pqkey pace" because of management delays. The Postal Service h as declined substantive comment on the t alks, but Postmaster General William F. Bolger has experessed confidence thllt a settlem ent will be reached without a strike. While national union lea<lers have so far avoided talk of a strike, Vincent R. Sombrotto. president of the New York City local of the National Association of Letter Carriers, brought up the subject Tuesday. ' . The cowicil vote was 4 to 1 in favor of the new law, with Coun· cilwoman Sally Bellerue OP· posed. "I think it is unlortunate the responsible pet owners have to suffer because of others," she said after the vote. But the ordinance received strong support from her fellow council members. sever a l of whom cited personal incidents they said they have witnessed on city beaches. Councilman Howard Dawson. who has lived near the Victoria Beach for 20 years, said he, his wife and daughter have all been attacked by dogs over the years on city beaches. Councilman Wayne Baglin said he witnessed a dog owner with two animals off leash near St. Ann's Street Beach verbally abuse a lifeguard who ordered the man to leash the dogs "They were two golde n retrievers, runrting up and down the beach and all over people at the beach," Baglin said. "We can't enforce the la w if we have people taking the leash off their dogs when they don't see a un- iformed officer around.·· Dally f'llo1 St.llf Pllolo AIRCRAFT NEARLY CUT IN TWO AFTER BEING STRUCK BY RUNAWAY PLANE Owne r Wa s Ha nd-Cranking Propellor When His Craft Left on Its Own Runaway Plane Crashes Huntington Damage Estimated at $60,000 By ARTHUR R. VJNSEL °' ... ~·'I'~ staff A runaway plane whose pilot was hand-cranking the propeJlor tried to take off alone at Hunt· ington Beach's Meadowlark Airport Monday night. careen- ing into three other parked aircraft. One eyewitness. a flight in· structor alerted by the sudden roar of the engine. estimated damage at $60,000 or more as one aircraft was almost s liced in half by the pilotless plane. "It ne ver really quite got airborne, but there was about 60 reet out there where it looked like it wasn't going through that tall grass." said Russ Fisher. "It may have gotten off the ground about a root ... added Fis· her. a pilot trainer for Aviation Unlimited. Aviator Richard Hand of Hun· tington Beach had been hand· c ranking the prope llor after tinkering with a dead battery about 9 p.m., investigators said. "He .mis-estimated how far he had the throttle in." said Hunt- ington Beac h Police OfficPr In County Surgery Schulkr Girl Carol Schulle r . JJ.year·old daughter of the Rev. Robert Schuller, was described as being in fair condition this morning following surgery on a partially a mputated left leg yesterday al Childrens Hospital of Orange County in Orange. "Her vital signs are stable and within normal limits for a pa. tient with injuries which include traumatic amputation of her left leg below the knee." said a spokesman for Or. Schuller, world-famous pastor of Garden Grove Community Church. Carol was admitted lo Children's Hospital at 3 a.m. Tuesday for treatment of in· juries suffe red Friday in a motorcycle accident near Sioux City, la. The girl was flown to Orange Cou nty Airport by air am· bulance following the amputa- tion at a Sioux City hospital. Carol, who lives with her family in Orange, had been rid- ing on the back ol a motorcycle driven by a cousin who swerved to avoid a braking car and hit an oncoming car. Her cousin's leg was broken. Rev. Schuller, who grew up on a northwest Iowa farm. Is known for his gospel or "possibility thinking" and his weekly te levision program , "Hour or Power." The pastor, Mrs. Schuller and Carol's oldest sister , Sheila. and. Officer Said,, 'Stable' in Laguna Crash Richard Butcher. who handled the first reports of the Incident. The engine roared to life and the Cessna 172, leased a nd rent· ed out by the Aviation Company, 5141 Wa rner Ave .. proceeded to cruise across the sma ll field with Hand in pursuit. "He's lucky the prop didn't hit: him ... said eyewitness Fisher. He said arter starting to taxa on its own and perhaps lifting off the ground momentarily. the Cessna abruptly spun around and began pursuing its pursuer on a collision course 'Fair' brother Robert Jr. have been at the girl's bedsi de since she was admitted. a spokesman said at the hospital. Carol's attitude is said to be "very good" by the spokesman who said the girl's phys icians are Dr. William C. Mc Master. an orthopedic surgeon, and Dr Bruce M. Achaucr, a plastic s ur· geon. She was descri bed this morn- ing as "alert. feeling good and improving." Co a st We athe r When Beckham hit the sur- f ace, he was rushed into a de· compression chamber aboard the World War JJ Liberty ship Davy Crockett, a spokesman said Workers Turn to Courts Shawn Davis, a Laguna Beach animal control officer, remains in stable condition al Mission Community Hospital after her a nimal control vehic le was struck rroro the rear by a heavy truck. Early morning low clouds and local fog near coast , otherwise sunny Thur s day. Slightl y warmer. Lows tonight 58 lo 62 . Highs T hursday from high 60s at beaches to lower ~ inland. Beckham was reported as suf. fering a "severe case of the bends," a disorder that results from a too rapid de<:rease In at· mospberic pressure. Presaure at 190 feet ls nearly s ix time1 the prasure on land so INSIDE L<HJK AT AILSl'ARS Daily Pilot sportswriter Dave Cunningham covered the 49lh All·Star daaslc ln San Diego Tuesday. For full details 1nd results. a~e Sports sect.ion, Bl. ' Coumy Employees Press for Pay Raise Deprlved by state legislation of a 5.5 percent pay raise guaranteed them under a two· year contract stgned in 1977, county government workers In Orange County Tuesday took their case to the state Supreme Court. The sult filed by the Orange County Employees Association asked the court to set aside state legislation that prohibited pay raises to loc:al empl oyees unless similar raises were given to state workers. Gov. Edmund 0 . Brown Jr. made the link an issue last week when be vetoed budgeted 2.S percent pay raises for slate employees. Consequentl y, publi c employees irl Orange County and other local JUrlsdicUons have been dented raises, includ· ing those already given in exist· Ing contracts. The employees associaUon lawsuit alleges the state over· stepped Its bounds by "un· reasonably" forcing local jurisdictions to vlolote existing contract.II. The sull alleges atate action violates principles ot due pro- cess and is an unjustified ln· I terference with a vested rl~ht. That ~ested right ls seen as local control over the wages and working condllions of public employees. The f aWRuit seeks a writ or m andate that would order the county to go ahead and grant the pay rabe5 negotiated last year as part of a two-year contract. The employees association represents roughly s,soo county workers. County officialis havo esUmatl'd the 5.5 percent pay hikes would tack about $'7.5 mllllon on the county's 11118-79 budget. . ' j Mrs . 08vis, one of two animal control officers for the city. was traveling north on Coast Hifhway at• about 9:45 a.m. when the accident occured. Police said sbe bad stopped in the 600 bloc:k of Coast Highway to aJlow another motorist to pull Into a parking space when she was struck iri>m the rear by a tru~k driven by William Carey Mlddlemaa. 212 9lh St .. Hunt· lngton Beach. The impact caused head and neck Injuries to the 23-year-old officer. offtclals at the Mission Viejo holpltat said today. Police were still investlaatlng the crash this morntn1. INSIDE TODA l' Plain wra ppi ng oJ supermar~t items ha$ set ojf a reaction. Wlule the chain 1ays it's t>r1 ng1ng in customers, others question quoUty. F'ood, Page Cl. .J2 DAILY PILOT USC SS Says Ripoffs Rarity BALTIMOR E <AP > $tl<·ial S ecurity Admin1strut1on of ftcia ls, smarting from crili1'1~m of the security of the ir f1lci. on }70 million Americans . sa y rom puter cr ime and ripo ff~ by e mployees ha v(• been rare. The agency, which hus 85,000 workers, foWld only 14 cases lust year and 19 this year In which its employees made false claims or engaged in other frauds with Social Security computers. Oon 1 Wortman. the acting com missioner , s aid Tuesday. None involved large sums , he added. The ~ already has installed some of the safeguards in its huge computer system that the General Accounting Office s aid 1t la cked . and the agency is (!ea ring up to add more safety fc a t urc•s l a t e r t hi s ye ar . Wortman said The agency paid o ut Sl03 billion in benefits last year to 33 mi Ilion people who were retired on Social Security. disabled. on Medicare or welfare , or to their survivors Wortman said that despite the c•normity of that sum. most of the monthly benefit checks that flow out of his agency a re for small amounts -$2S4 for the a verage retired worker or $284 ro r <J poor couple receiving Sup plemental Security Income benefits An insider who wanted to t•heat the agency on a large i>l'ale would be involved in .. loo m<1ny sma ll transactions" to es cape notice. Wortman insisted in a n 1nter v1ew. Any benefi t c h ec k ov e r $10,000 i s .iutomat1cally "ki cked out" of 1 he computer ancl reviewed. he said The GAO auditors d id not themselves uncover anv fraud by agency employees. but they cited past mc1dents involving its worke rs One !'iold Socia· Sec urit: curds to illegal aliens Another reapl'd S20.000 b) rt'cJ1rec1.Jng Sociul Security pa)' An enu. to h1m:,elf when soml'Oni' 1l1ed Two fabricated 14 C1ccounts <•nd colle1:ted S.55.000 before they \\ 1·r<· dJscuvt.•rc<l One solo information lo a compa ny "in t he busines!> or locating missm~ persons." ThL• GAO µmp<>inte<J ··weak n1..·sses in the computer system 1 hat links the more than 1.3()() SSA offices across the nation ... It said access was unlimited to :-.ome of the 3,900 computer terminals t h at t ie i nto the :.yste m. and most could create new fil es as well as call up in rorm at ion from existing ones Longtime Laguna Beach R esident Dies Long tlme Laguna Be ach res1 dent Clara Katherine Taschner d •cct Sunday at South Coas t Community Hospital or acute pne umonia und heart failure Shl' was 67 :\1 r s Taschner lived at 1139 <;nv1ota nr. with he r husband Vt•rn. a local realtor The coupl<> harl lived m Lagun a Beach for 25 years Mrs. Taschner was involved 1n the Facts Com mittee of the Art Colon y a nd the Repu b ltcan Women's Club ::,he was also mvolved in the Lag u na Beac h Taxpa yer s Association In addition to her husband. Mrs Tashncr is survived by a ~on . Bruee Tuschner of Newport Beach. two grandchildren. Dana and Scott Taschne r of Seal Be;1ch . a nd a brother , J ames Heddin)!er of M1s:.1on Viejo The family requests that dona t\Ons be sent to the Multiple Sclerosis Socie ty 1n li e u of flowers Services will be private ORANGE COAST 1. S< DAILY PILOT f¥0r.,.. 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"'"' ...,. ftO•ocfwt .. •11'-"' 1ptc t•• ,,.,,..,._..,. •f ( ...... .,.1 ....... 'f'(e.-. '''" M'••t• N1it _, Ott\•• ..,..,. (.aHtar~'Uf \wtllu ,••••Oft ~Y ,,,,..,. U )t ,.._.,.t9'fy ay fti!alt M tO ~tftfy, rr!HU••• .-.1.--\l lt......t~•· 1inaber Helping Linaber What a re these two men doing to this little tree in Mason Regiona l Park. Irvine? They weren't hurting it. actually. They were using it to exercise in preparation niversary Run. So me• 710 runners loped around the duc k ponds of San Joaquin M ar sh to Unive rsity High School and back. Related Photo. page Bl. for the 9.5·mile Sea J{jng Ba.:.ck~B:..a~y:......;..A.:..:.n.:..:.·------------------ Delags 'Minor' Phone Strike In Nine States NASHVI LLE. Te nn. <AP Telephone of£icia ls re ported some minor delays in complet· 1ng long-distance calls today as a two-day-old wi ld cat s trike spread to include workers in nine states. J im Wolfe. a South Central Bell spokesman. said that oc· cas ional delays were being n ·· ported but that the problems were not serious. Jn Ohio. Tom Cotton. a spokesman for Ohio Bell of Columbus. said service was normal exce pt for delays in completing o perator ·assist ed long .distance and director y calls The walkout began Tuesday when nine American Tele phonc & Te legraph Co. employees 1n Nashville were suspended after declining to cross a picket line set up by South Central Bell Telephone Co . workers The South Central Bell wC1rkers were protesting having to work six days a week. The strike la ter spread to Memphi s a nd N a s h v 11l t.· Den ver ; Ka nsas Cit y , Mo Louis ville. Ky, J ackson. Miss.: Charlotte. Greens bor o, and Stanfield. N.C . Detroit; Colom· bus. Toledo and Dayton. Ohio :rnd lndfanapol15. S<>uth Bend and four smaller India na com munities. So m e e mpl o y e e ~ of southwestern Bell in Oklahoma Cit y stayed off the JOb for one day , l>ut ended picke ting today in compliance with a federal court order. The walkout has not disrupted long.distance s~rvice , said Mi ke McC orstin, a spokesman at AT&T 's headquarters in Bet..!· minster. N J . McCorstin said negotiator.; for AT&T and the Communications Wo r ke rs o f Ame rica were negotiating by phone to end thC' wildt·at stnkt•. SJC Group Sets Week Activities Rock Star Recovering Mesa Cyclist Hospitalized After Mishap f"ro• Page A I The city-sponsored San Juan Ca p ist r a no s enio r c itize ns orga nization has anno unced pt ans for this week 's act1v1l1es .1l th e ir ne w loc a t ion . th1.• Capis trano Valley Ch risll;.in Sc hool'" Fellowship Hall. 32032 Del Obispo. ST. PAUL, Minn. (API -Guitarist Bill Wyman of the Rolling Stones rock group was released from a local hospita l Tuesday less than 24 hours after falling from a stafile following the group's performance here. Wy man fe ll when he le a ned against a s tage curtain, thinking it was a wa ll, Stones s pokesman Paul Wasserma n s aid. Th(' g uitarist hit his head and was uncons cious for e:sbout 10 minutes. He suf· fered a chipped knuckl e. s pra in e d w ris t , and s trained cartilage in two !fingers E'ro• Pa~ Al DIVER. • • p.m "Thb g uy':, suit so me how overinflated,'. said Dr. Richard Scott. "It blew up like a balloon ~nd he popped out of the water like a cork. lie was unconscious. s eriously sick and in s hock from the m inute he hit the s urface." Scott, head of the medical alert center at t he Los Angeles County Health Services Depart· ment . directed via radio the ef· fort to save the diver. The center also dispat ched doctors to the scene . The diver was placed in· s ide a shipboa rd decom pression r hamber moments after he sur· faced at 9:30 a .m .. s heriff's deputies said. He died in the chHmber about five hours later. "This is a very r are and very difficult kind of problem. when som eone s urfaces s o rapidly a fte r he has been down that deep,·· Scott said. The pressure causes nitrogen to collect in t he body . A slow ascent from the bottom allows pres ure s to e qualiie g ra dually a nd the nitrogen es capes harmlessly Elsie Craft Rites Held Services we re held tod ay for longtime Laguna Beach resident Els\e Theresa Craft , who died Sunday at the Laguna Beach Nursing Rome. Mrs. Craft, a widow. hved for 33 years In the Art Colony. She was bom in Indiana in 1892 and was a member of St. Paul ·s Luthera n Church \n L aguna Beach. She is survived by a brother George Moderhack. of North J udson. Ind.; 10 grandnephews and grandnieces A Costa Mesa man w a s hosp italized Tuesday when his motorcycle clipped a street curb In Irvi ne and skidded across traffi c lanes into a stopped car conta ining a Laguna Beach wom a n Ke ith Space Mo({itt, who turned 24 Tuesdav. was listed to· day m good condition at UC Irvine Medical Cent er Poli ce said Moffitt. or 853 Center St.. fractured his s kull, broke his nose and suffered numerous cuts and brui ses The man was not wearing a protective helmet. office rs said. Pohce said Moffitt wa~ mak· ing a right turn from MacArthur Boulevard onto Red Hill Avenue. and cul too close to the curb His motorcycle fell onto its s ide and Moffitt was c arried with it 65 feet, into the s ide of a car wailing to make a left turn T he driver of the ca r. Joyce McCalhon, 24, of 930 Bluebi rd Canyon, Laguna Beach, was un· injured. according to police. County Plans Funding Meet In San Juan A public workshop to discuss the c ount y 's Co mm unit y Development Program will be held T hursday in the Capistrano Unified School District board room. 32942 Calle Perfecto. in San J uan Capistrano. The 7 p.m meeting will be conducted by the Housing and C o mm unity Deve l op m ent divis ion and is expected to draw citizen participation to discover activities eli gible to be funded under the county progr am. Residents of Laguna Beach. Irvine. San Juan Capistrano and C a p is t rano Beach a r e en couraged to attend. For more lnformahon. call Marti Maram at 834·5366 Skylab Wobbling S PACE CENT E R . Hous ton 1 AP) -Scientists at J ohnson Space Center say it likely will be Thursday before they attempt m A ne uvers t o cor rec t th e altitude of the 85-ton Skylab. which has been partially without power since Saturday. The giant satell\te began wobbling around Its Earth orbit when an elec. trical power fa ilure affected its romputer and gyroscopes . Split Final Meg's Divorce Official LONDON <APl-Princess Margaret 's divorce from ~rd Snowdon has become official. The princess, only sister or Queen Elizabeth ti, w as granted a tempora ry decree May 24. but under Britain's no-fault divorce system, the break became absolute 1\1e~ay. The royal divorce was granted on grounds of Ir· rctrlevable breakdown or the 18-yenr·old m a rriage. They had been separated for two years. London gossip columnists are reporting that ....ord Snowdon. 48, m ay marry his film assistunt Lucinda Undsay·ijou~ Margaret. 47 . says be bas no marital plans. · • • DECISION DUE ... Solomon told the audience thal he was requesting the closed door session "to provide the City Council will a ll or the facts. I ex· pect no decision to come from this meeting." But Councilman Wayne Baglin expressed has displeasure with t hl' p r opos ed c l os ed door ses:.ion "lf we have not had too many executive sessions in the past, we have given the public the im- pr ession we have ," he said. •• 1 ·m not going to protest the c x- ecut1 ve session, but I would hope the community would question each councilman as to his pos1- t1on on this " When the council returned from the c xecut1 ve sess ion. Mayor Jack McDowell a ttempt- ed to move along to other busi- ness. des pite requests from several citizens to s peak. Baglin c hided the mayor . say. ing that he would like lo hear pu blic commcl'lt on the matter. His r equest drew support from fellow council members a nd ap- plause from the crowded council chambers. L a gunan Do ris Boisser a c handed Mayor McDowell more than l.500 s ignatures in s upport of Spa rks. saying the names represented a c ross·section or the lifestyles in the Art Colony "The incident <In the bar I was unfor tunate." s he said. "but Jon Sparks is a remarkable m an." She cited his eCfectiveness as a police chief, his innovative ap· proach to law enforcement and his compassion for elderly and young people alike. Allen Robertson. representing the Laguna Beach Coalition for Human Rights. s aid the Police de pa rtment before Spa rks was made chie(. "Was not always sens1tivetothecommunity ... 111fl!ICO Moalco The famous 6<1odos tl'l•ee s111pe socce• 11no <111 purpose short w11h shp !>~ co11onl !>O''li p01v1111er •I" _.......,_ !IQll leet--°"'--" """"ono tol• ,,,, ..... .,.,., """• "'"'""'" ~..OICl4tdl '26" .. This city likes .. on Sparks.· he said. "He responds when problems are broughtto him ·· L aguna Beach attorney Ste wa rt Katz said the question is "not what punishment we should mete out to Jon Spar ks. but how badly do we want to punish the citizens or Laguna Beach'? "In the past two years l'\'e yet to hear a complaint or heavy handedness on the part of the police in this city ... Forme r Cit y Council can didate Maggie Meggs quoted ~cripture. folk sayings and her own brand of humor in s uppo1t of the suspended chief "Why, llis successful rape pre· vention program alone is worth for giving him having his hand an the cookie Jar for the past 50 years ." she Qui pped. Sue Mutley, a member of the South Coast Me ntal Hea lth Board , praised Sparks' efforts in working for the alcohol detox· ificalion center in Dana Point. P etition s ignatures we re col lected over the past week and a half by a group of volunteers backing the chief. Refinery Fire Under Comrol BO RG E R. Texas IAl'l F irefighters brought a blaze at the Phillips Petroleum Corp r<> fi ne ry near here under control ea rly today. An explosion touched off the fire Tuesday. sending flames 200 fe e t high and lig hting the Panhandle sky. -adlcias T-SHIRTS .~. •]•• IAGS '6" to '2J" YoKa lessons and needlecraft are :.cheduled on Mondays at 2 p.rn. Appointments can be made by C'alling the city offices, 493·1171. for prop<!rty tax und renter"' c·rt:'d 1t <issis t an ce o n Wednesd<iys. I ns t ru<'l or Le Von Thor p c o n d u c l s i n I c· r m e d i a I 1· P o l y n c :-.ian dan c in g 1111 Thursdays from 2 lo 3 p.m unrl bc·ginning Polync~1an dancing from J to 4 pm n ndge and oth1•r table ~amt• .. nn· planned fo r Fridays from :! tn 5 p m f\ g r oup bus nut in g 111 E n s c n ad a 1 " v 1 a n n l' d f o r Thursday. Thl· bus is s cheduled to k av1· lhl· c·1ty offices <.il 7:30 a.m ,\ :-.1d e t rip t o Las P layas ti \' T1J U<111<1. a stop al the Rosan lo n cach llo tc·l and t1 m t.• for 'ihopping and !>aghtsecing an• included in thl' day's itinerary f<t·turn i s pl a nn e d for approximately i :30 p.m. Cost of lhl· trip is $25 and inc ludes lunc h e on and J bi lingual guide Copter Crash Victim Dies LOS ANt;E L ES 11\P > Georgia Wyatt. a Santa Catahn;1 Is land res ident inJurect in .1 helicopter crash. hets died thn•t· days after the Catalina Airline-. craft lost power and plunged 1n to t he ocean A spokeswoman a t San Pcdrn Pe ninsula Hosptt3l said the 33 year-old woman died Monday Whe n she was taken to tht· hospital after tht• cras h on Fn da y ne;.ir l he Los An gelC>:. Har bor shl' was described as an "d eep shock ... ------- I Mon111;0 b'• (t,,,' 'fl J•,1., l lfflt1n .JtJifJoj't rnrCJd l'W '-'ll"t1'1'V•t.:.,ft\,·'l utt na oo•c1111y oe-000<1 1110·1••~ ...,,.oo~ot t:'OM• iuOOfl' •0'• NylOI\ ft•el '"D loyl<l(e Nt/fi<t_,_ •2t" Open 9 to 6 -Closed Sunday 538 Center 646-1919 ) • 'I 7 CALIFORNIA I PtOPLE Prop. 13 No Threat To Cities? SAN FRANCISCO <AP> - Attorney General Evelle \'ounger says reports that local governments may not survive Proposition 13 are like "one of Mark Twain's obituaries highly exaggerated." In papers to be riled with the state Supreme Court, Younger sa id Tuesday : "While Proposition 13 does limit property taxes and does make it more difficult to impose additional substitute taxes, local ( STATE J government will survive. The essential difference is that the people of this state will now have to be considered before taxes are increased." Younger, the Republican candidate for governor, made the statements in a brie' defending the state against three suits being brought by school districts and local governments The suits contend that prof osilion 13 is unconst tutional. <Related story, Page AlO.\ '°'"t Ca•paip Nl~d SAN DIEGO IAP> -Lt. Gov. Mervyn Dymally says he does not plan to campaign for reelection alongside Gov Edmund G. Brown Jr. this fall, saying he'd rather stand on his own merits "I don't want to be a good guy," DymaJly told a group of reporters Tuesday. "I've got something to sell -my own programs. my own ideas. A joint campaign would be a liability for me" Equal Thae Rejed etl LOS ANGELES CAP> As far as the 37 television stations that broadcast Gov. Edmund G Brown Jr. 's June 28 speech are concerned, that was a bona fide news even.. -not a political speecto, as Brown 's gubPrnaLorial opponent, Attorney Ge neral Evelle G Younger, charges. All tbP s tations rejected Attorney General Younger's request for equal time to reply to Brown's speecl•, which concerned Proposition 13 Colou• Staib VALENCIA <AP> .About 30 persons riding Magi c Mountain's newest rollercoaster ride. Colossus. had to be escorted to the ground on foot when one of the trains ran into brake problems Tuesday. Mark Macy, a spokesman for the amusemen• park, said a brake was set wrong and as a result the f1ve ·car train stalled ·some distance from the actual loading zone .. luUtP Rn~hed~d LONG BEACH CAP) The fat0 of gambling aboard the Queer Mary will have to wail until next Tuesda) Jess Stewart. a 10.year-old retired auto dealer scheduled to discuss the issue at Tuesday's C1ly Council meeting, didn't appear until after the meeting ~as over, so the item was rescheduled for the following week. \'oyagers \lisit Katsutosh1 Utsum1, 38, points out a sight to his wife. Reiko. 30, and their sons, Aldo, 11, and Toshio. 9, from their 32·foot sloop, docked in San Francisco Tuesday. The family spent 58 days on their trip from Japan ~nd will spend two months in the Bay Area before traveling on to London either by sail or air -a decision to be made later State Recognizes Nevada Borderline SACRAMENTO <AP) -After 106 years. the State of California recognized the present borderline with Nevada. And the rase might never have arisen if it hadn't been speculated on both sides that the present line m1gbt not be lhe right one, and that some of Nevada's casinos s hould perhaps be in California or that Nevada should own hundreds of square miles of rich California ranchland. THE BILL SIGNED TUESDAY BY Gov. Edmund Brown Jr would recognize the 1872 Von Schmidt Line, which California requested the U.S. Supreme Court last year to recognize as the official border. It's the one currently being observed from Lake Tahoe to the Oregon border. But Nevada. answering in the case. proposed a number of boundary changes that would mostly increase its area on the California s ide. The 1872 Von Schmidt Llne was run and marked by the federal government. BACKERS OF THE BILL, SB 2180 by Sen. Ray Johnson, R·Chico, had cited Nevada's claim -among others -to the U.S. Supreme Court that the 1863 Houghton-Ives Line between Lake Tahoe and Oregon should be recognized. That line was officially recognized by the legislatures of both states, and would give Nevada about 200 square miles or Northern California. California State Controller Ken Cory said two months ago he thought Nevada was making a "monstrous land grab" in its proposals to the U.S. Supreme Court. BUT JIM THOMPSO~. NEVADA'S CHlEF deputy attorney general. replied that Nevada is simply ·'insisting on our legal rights.' Thompson said if the border auest1ons aren't brought up now, there may never be another chance. . Cory said that a new survey of the Tahoe·Oregon !me could move it as much as one-third of a mile east, putting four Lake Tahoe casinos in California Get Rid Of Unsightly Bulges!! PRESENTING OUR NEW CONCEPT IN INCH LOSS . NO Starvation Diets Also w • .,.. ...... ~'--Uftlilt ·~ • Dry ...... °" Sldll w,.,.. ........ I '11 C4111,_ "' I lzawJ...., s-. ... 117.0JJO , ... o •• , • . ,,.,,., NO Pills NO Shots ......... u1.tt0t ~ ,,, ..... ., 50 GALS OF GAS tJt.,.~ttlth-"•t hrn• ... .,... •• ~,...,,.._. ~ or 011 . ('llA~<a:s ,,. .. ·~---.,. ... ,_, '"' • "'••& ,..,_ ... twrur Wednesday July 12. 1978 DAILY PILOT AS Anti·gay Bill Costly Backers Spent $900,000 for Ballot Spot SACRAMENTO <AP> -A new report says the support~rs of an initiative against bomO!iex- ua I teachers s pent nearly $900,000 getting it on the Nov em her ballot. districts to fire or refuse to hire a teacher. school aide. counselor or administrator who is openly homosexual or who advocated. solicited or promoted homosex- ual acts. mun1ty Church of Norwalk, $2.200. The committee backing the in· itiallve, Defend Our Children. also got loans from Citizens for Sen. Briggs, $361 .631: Briggs h1mself. $25,000. and Steven Bailey. president of Stbrburst Consulting of Fullerton . $14,000. The same report from the state Fair Political Practices Commission said Tuesday that the opponents of the initiative spent only $116,415 -but drew rontributions from some of the biggest names in entertainment. Sponsored by state Sen. John Briggs. R-Fullerton. it drew about SO supporting contribu· lions of less than $1 .000 each from persons in other states. ANOTHER BRIGGS initiative to ban smoking in many public places, Propos1llon s. cost its supporters $59,310 to qualify the report swd. THE OPPONENTS included actresses Carol Burnett. Patty Duke and Marsha Mason: actors John Austin and Dennis Weaver, playwright Nell Simon, and re· cording executive Neil Bogart. Their contributions ranged from $100 to up to Bogart's $2,500. THE BIGGEST supporters in· eluded Alan Masters. a La Mesa accountant. who gave $2,540 : But the opponents. mos tly from the tobacco indus try, rais~d $330.350 and spent $248.841. Large contributions were $26,447 from Lorillard, $104,655 from R. J . Reynolds In- dustries, $66.111 from Brown and Williamson Tobacco. SS6.848 from Phillip Morns. and S61.668 lrom the Tobacco lnst1lute. The initiative. Proposition 6, would make it easier for school Linda Hinojosa, a La Mesa public relations woman, $2,500 ; William Phelps of Airlines Ground School, Fair Oaks. $5,000; Carl Karcher. president of Carl Karcher Enterprises of Anaheim, $5,000 : Loren Gunltier. an Orange County re- tiree, $3.400. and Calvary Com- Solon .Jibes at Reeess From A~lated Press Dispatches W ASHJNGTON -Since Rep. Otis G. Pike, D·N. Y .. decided he'd had enough of Washington and was going to retire from Congress. he has taken delight in poking run at some of the more obvious congressional foibles. His latest target was the July Fourth recess. which the House prefers to call ''home district work period.·· The congressman noted that the House quit for the holiday on June 29. a Thursday. In a news release. Pike noted. "A 4th of July recess does not mean you get tbe 4th of July off. It means you get the week s urrounding the 4th of July off. Plus the preceding Friday. It's a good deal." .. • NEW YORK -Folk singor Joan Baez says a dispute between her s ponsors forced cancellation of a July 4 speech she had pl8!1Jled. to. give in lhe Soviet Union in support of Russ1an diss1dents. The 37-year-old New York-born entertainer. known for her outspoken stands against the Vietnam War. had hoped to fr~ make the remarks before Monday's start of the trials in the Soviet Union of dissidents Anatoly Shcharansky and Alexander Ginzburg. ORLANDO. FJa. -Debbie Rhyne may not look like Elvis Presley, but a Central f1onda rock group promote,. is hoping a little plastic surgery transforms the 23-year-old woman into a spitting Image of the late s inging star. ( ) "The world's first prQ1'LE one and only female Ci Elvis 1mperso nator ---------""' .. ·· seiys D anny O'Day. who several months ago promoted plastic surgery that made a young man resemble Elvis "I mean. we got so murh play on that, you know what I mean'.' The people have taken this Elvis thing so far. you would thank 'How much farther can it go'!' Well, here it goes." O'Day says he's got two more clients heading into the hospital for plastic surgery to look like rock ·n· roll's late great stars -one young man who also wants to resemble EIVls and another who hopes to look like singer Jim Croce. O'Day, 29, says he picks up the bills 'or the operations Jt OLYMPIA. Wash -One politician has put hot air to a novel use: Gov. Oixy Lee Ray rulhlled a childhood fantasy by piloting a blimp The state·s first woman But her forum. a concert with other Amer1ca n performers in Leningrad 's Winter Palace Square. was canceled because of a dispute between the Russian and British sponsors. Miss Baez instead made a sightseeing trip to Moscow and returned this weekend. She told an NBC· TV Today Show interviewer Monday that had she given the speech, her message would have been: governor. a self .s tyled transportation junkie. occupied ' I.he Goodyear blimp's pilot seat for 19 minutes recently. gently nudging lbe huge airship in a wide arc around this waterfront capital. In a great country like that. one should not turn away and imprison dissidents, but one should welcome and s upport them." • MONTREAL -Margaret Trudeau has received the lead role in a romantic comedy tentatively set to be filmed in southern fiance, a spokesman for a production company here bas confirmed. R ichard Hellman, vice president of Pros pec Films Inc .. said Prime Minister Pierre E lliott Trudeau's estranged wife would act in "L 'Ange Guardien" <Th~ Guardian Angel>. a $1 million budget France ·Canada production. TRUDEAU It is Mrs . Trudeau's second film. Last year she starred alongside Patrick McGooban in ··All The King·s Men." a thriller still lo be released. The new film, due to begin produclfon by the end of the month. will feature her a9 the wife of a wealthy industrialist who falls in love with a cabaret singer. By Duayne D. Christensen, 0.0.S. 1907 w ........... .,.. W1111 •ubt lfJ.tHI .. Whee! This feels great!" she exulted. "Now if l can only ltAY stop using the ~rong feet"' to maneuver the vehicle. Riding a i>limp was one of the few remaining items left on the governor's check·off Jist of "Things I Want to Ride or Ptlot," drawn up when she was a girl. Miss Ray always boasted an untraditional streak. She changed her name from Margaret to Dixy Lee in memory of the South and the rebel general. ) TOKYO -They may not be as revealing as the Watergate tapes. but the public will soon gel :J chance to hear some of Emperor Hirohito's private. tape-recorded conversations The imperial household has announced that taped conversation!' be tween Hirohito and guests ranging from Sadaharu Oh, Japan·s home run kmg. to famed aviatrix Vae Nozokl will go on salt• Aug. 31 as a long·play1ng record The conversations have been recorded al the emperor's twice-annual garden parties smce 1972. His household gave permission for 3.000 LPs to be made from the tapes . Some of the matenal has been aired on J apanese radio and telev1s1an newscasts. 1 ,,. I.. .. '(' Orange Cocl~I Daily P1101 Editorial Page ................................................................... Wed11esday. July 12. 1978 Robert N Weed Publlsher Fire\Vorks Rules Need Reworking Now that the :,mokl' ha:, ~Nlled. un urgency fireworks ordin;mcl· approvt•d hy Lhc Laguna Beach Cit y Council prio 1· lo lh(• Fourth of July holiday nl•cds some reworking That ordtna n c·t· a llows the d1schur ge of legal firework:-. on the city 's beaches a ny tame or the year . T he oouncil. in 1t!-. ha~tl· to prevent fires in the dry hills sur· ro unding tht.' c ity. e ndorsed un ordinuncc w hic h has many w(.•nk points . As at now reads. residents Jnd visitor~ to L agunu H('uch cun fire off spurklcrs. rockets and other fl ;,i mmu - blo fireworks displays a ny t am(• they please o n city beache~ Thut could m ean a lot of burned feet 1f the or- dinance remains in its present form Not only did the ordinance fail to res trict firework~ on tll(' bl'Jth to the Fourth of July date·. it <1bo ignored a longt1mt· ordinance dealing with the subject. In fact lilt' c ity allornl·y :-.u1cl ht· would be ::-.urpri!.ecl to h•:1 rn thC'fl' \\Us ::-.uc:h a n ordm:mcc. Thcl't' is. und his foilurc to find 1t points up the hust<.' in whic h the urgency 1:1 \\ v. :1s tn•t1H•d l'hv ha:-.lt' idea ul tht• Ill'\\ Ol'Ull1~1nt't' I~ :-.ound l·nough It 1wrm1h li1M:hargt· of t1n.•\i.c1rb 111 r l·stnctl•tl b..-aeh a1T;,,as und thu!-i pl<itl·~ u good mea::.un• of tontrol on Fourth uf .July disµla)s. But it dearly nl'eds rl'working. parti<:ularly to 1•l 1 m male lhr y(.•ar around prov1:,o Guidelines W elconle S;111 C lemente foundl'I' Oil' 1 lan:,on would probably be µlt•u...,l'd with thl· rit y's n('W 7.l)nmg :.imcndme n t. which l'!-it ~1bl1~he:, arl'h1tt·l'lur;,,il J.!u 1del111l':-. for the <H"l'a JUSt in l.md of th\• munu:ipal p1t·r \\"lwn ll:mson clrc•\\ up plan~ tor S<Jn Clemcnll' in tht· l;.ill· W2th. lw ... a id . ··our ht•:.it h :-hall al w<.1y~ tw Ire£' I rom lnu d.' -gurdit·~ and dl'l 1 ll•ml·nt \\'(• bt•ll(•V(' bt•aut~ lo be an .1:-.:-.t•t ~1:-. \\l'll a:-. gold and :-.1lvl•r or tabbagt•:, an<.I pol ;1 tOl':-. .. San Clementl· ·:-. bowl al't'<l tit the b<Jsc of the llanson lm1lt µ1 t·r hmm 't bt·en ~o beautiful of late . The City Coun- nl l'stablish<'cl a r edevelopment area thC'rC', but passage of Prop 1:J killed pla ns for• restaur a nts. a sho pping mall iJrtd lundseapt•d parking . Tht· new <Jrc.:hil t'rlural guideline& are not <JS s t rict as J1 <111so1l'..., nng 1rnlls. which 1w 1 u11·cc1 that a II build rngs b<' 'J:-.h1mwd 1n ..i "Spanis h" mmk. wilh while exteriors and ft•d t rll' rool:-. Hut till' gur<khne .... t•.Jrr~ cm lht· I lan:-.un ~µ1nl. rcquir· Jng th,11 IW\\ hu1ld1ng .... 1n tlw J>H'r bowl :.in·a <:onform to t h!' e11~ ·s · Sp<rni:-.h ht·r1t~l).~l ... ~·~le. t.>:>.t'mp hficd b~ H an:-.on·-. San Cll•m"•nll' honll' \\lm·h :-.til l ::.t;.mds on :1 bluff <1hon· till' pll'r No Classroolll Cuts lll·l·ommencJt-11 l'Uh 11l tht· $35 million C:ip1stn1no l nil 1t•d Sl'hool 01s tntt budgN. propo!-.t•d last wt·l·k h~ 7iu1a·nn1<•ndc•nt .h·1 umt· Thorn:-.lt•y. rl'flN·t .1 c·ommun1t \ m.11Hh1tt· lhat Prop 1:1 n1thad,-. '>hould not .1ff<·<·t l'lu:-. .... room lL1twh1ng l\t tht't•t• rt•t•t·nl puhl1t lnrums on the: h11dgt'l. p t1r<.•nts :incl lt»H:lwr .... lll'J .. \t•d l'ap1:-.tra110 l"nifit·cl truslt't'" and ;1d m1n1stralur:-. not to IL•t f>l'l>p 1:1-1mpostd buclgl•l rut:-. !11n11n1sh tlw t11:-.tntl 's t•mplw:-.1s on quulity t·dutat1on 111 h;1 :-.1t• s kills Communit.' -;pokt'..,mt·n s uggl'Sll•d m:.iking up lo~t rt•\' t'lllll' h) <:harg111g lt•t•:-. for t1lhll'l11.::-.. Im:-. tran:-.portation .irul othc•r p1·ugramo., or s t•1·\ ltl''> not c:-.:-.cntial to b<1s 1c.· 1·l,10.,:-.room 1ns trut't11m Thl•:-.t· rt•t·omm(•ntlallons 'ind others h:1H· been in· {'1>rpor:ikd 111 Thnrn!:llt·~ 's propo:-.ul. which lrustees will (l1stus:-. mt•r the nt•xt thn•t· Moncluy nighls. l>dore adopt- ing a l tnal hudgl'l on Aug 7 Tht• '-''<t't•pt 1onal l'ffort towa1·d c.:oopcrat1on s hown by tru:-.tt·l''>. administrator-... tl·uthe rs <ind pan:nts s hould h1•lp 1·<1~1· l ht• t ran:-.111 011 to rl'duted :-.thool distril't "l'l'\'1t•t•:-.. m:111<· illl'\ 1tahh · hv llll' p.1:-.s;.1gl' of Prop 13 • Opinions e).pressed m the space above are those or the Daily Pilot Other views expressed on this page·are those of their authors and artists Reader comment 1s rnv1ted Address The Daily Pilot. P O Box 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626 Phone (7 14) 642·4321 BoydJSanka 8)' I~.M. BOYD Name of that coffee called Sanka 1s a contraction of the French phrase .. sans caf· fe int: " Are you aware how 1l :came to be developed'' The top m an in a big European ·coffee company, Dr. Ludwig ·ltoselin. had been looking for :,1 way to take out th(• car :ceine Then a s h ipload or ::.u c h bt'ans in 1903 was ~wamped with seawater. and ~the s po iled cofft•c was turned :-over to rese<irchers. That ~ally soak led them to the de· ·~affeinalion process. " Ho w would you like lo take 1;a ride on that Jumbocruiser, ~the German bus that's so big :4t bends in the middle when it :iurns a corner? So would I • '\J nderstand il carries 144 :l>assengers and has a kitchen : and ba r as well a~ restrooms. ' . . . . . . .. • ' . . ... • .. 0 Par Gloomy Gus Too bod the young folk who wel'C so quick to blame the old folks for air pollution fro m In· dus try have been equal· ly quick to adopt their air-polluting cigarette habit. In a single block on Ar- rowood Drive in Mentor. Ohio. five of the six couples l1v1ng on one sidl' of the street have twins T he odds against such· 650 million to one. A free glass of water with a nwnl in a restaurant costs ubout 12 cents. Or so say re· sea rchers at P urdue University. They calculated the expenses of the water itsetr. ice. broken glasses. dis hwashing equipment and labor. Alexander Du m a s the Elder wrote his novels on blue paper. his poetry o n yellow. and his nonfiction on rose. Sweet Q. ''Aren't mo!il couples 1n M exico m arrie d in the Catholi c Church?" A . Not mo st. Th l' l'Stimators say mos t .couples in Mexico -seven out of 10. they figure -aren't married in uny church. Or any state office. either. They're linked in what's called "free-union" m arriage. Our Love a nd War m an Is not a& familiar a s he might be with the romantic circums tances in Mexico. But he describes free-union marriage here as the buddy sys~m in the wading PoOI. "Where'd the 'Muppcu' get that name?" asks a cllcnt. Thelr creator Jim Henson and his wife Joan Nebel concocted It from a combination or "pup~t·• and "morlonctte " Rowland Evans/Robert Novak Sadat Seeks Stronger U.S. Role CAIRO -Wi th his "sacnd m1ss1on" o( 3n overall peace plan under lsruch checkmate. Egyptian Presid e nt Anwur Sadat now pins a ll his hopes on the fact thut Jimmy Carter "has startcd to pl:iy a full role" in thl· Mideast peace process for the first lime Prcsidcnt Carter's gradual cha n ge from sympathetic m ediator lo the r o le o f "principal ac- l or" W<I S s ignalled 1n Mr Carter's inv itation t o I s r a e I 11 n d Egypt to send their foreign m101c;tt•rs to mel'l with Secretary of Stutc Cyrus Vance in London later this month. That American "1nit1ative." Sadat told us in an exclusive interview i:ll. his summer seaside palace in Alexandria. ma rks a maJor changc. NOT ONLY docs the London m eeting gel Sadat off a pamful hook. It sbo opens the way to m o r e Ame rica n prcssur(• on lsr<.icl regarded by S<.idat a1> essential lo :-.UVl' his tattl'red peace plan Sadal uckno"lcdgl'd that he has hl't'rl lorc(•tl In hracl lo retreat time and Jg~in rrorn h1.s or1g1nal overull Pl'UCt' plan dropping h1.s talk i:lbout "' Palestinian :-.tale>, forgetting his pledge that the P<.1lcstine Libera· tion Organization I PLO J. not Jorda n . mus t he the West Bank's bargaining agent with Is rael, and on lesser parLs of the plan he took le> Jt•rusa lcm la!>l Novem ber In the face or this bracli "in transigenn• · wt· asked, how docs S.tdat JU.st1fy :-.ending h1i. rort•1gn m1n1sll'r for anolhl'r round of f.lt't' to filN· t:.ilks "1th lsra('I" BEC'Al'SE. hl' :-.aul. lhl' Lon don ml!t.'llng "1s ... C:art.N 1n itiat1Vl'." not Sud<it"s If 1t faib und no on(• herl• expl'cl~ su<.• Mailbox Cl'SS -1t must be followed by a distinctly American plan. As a preced ent for s pecific American proposals Sadat used the exam· pie or the Nixon administration when it drafted the plan that broke the deadlock over Egyp· t1un Israeli disengagem ent in the Sinai peninsula after the Oc to ber 1973 war. "lle nry <former Secretary of Slate Kissinge r 1 told me there was a deadlock. that the old lady 1 former Prime Minister Gold a Me 1 r I was ver y s tubborn.· Sad at said. "So I s uggested an Amer ican proposal. .. That time. 1t worked. T hus. if Israel's rerusal now to fix a timetable for eventual Palestinia n self·delerminalion und to renounce its "right" lo J cw 1sh settle ments in historic Arab territories deadlocks the London talks, 1t will be time for :m other U.S. plan ''I think it s hould be done. ·Sadat said A FFABLE and relaxed on the s urface. Sadat neverthe less must be having sleepless nights as time runs out on him. He is ''I thil'1k its t~ken root." more pomled th~M· daY'· in hi.s c·rit1c1~ms of Israel's hartlhn4: P rime M 1 n Is t t• r Ml' n a ht' m Begin, more d1rer1 1n his pra1st• for l sraeli lkfen1>L' Minister Ezer Wei:.~man <.ind for what ht' talb "lhc Israeli pt•att• movt- ment " .. Mr Begin 1.., afr;11d of peac-e." he s<11d "We speak two different languag1.·s " Uegin·.., refus al lo admit that lvacl alter its 1967 conques ts. agrct•d to withdraw from most or th1• West Jbnk 1s "lyµ1nil "' <if lieg1n '.s finding "somt•th1ng anything lO hld1· behind " in ur dt'r lO avoid pt•ac·<• "It appear .. for .somt• rt'us'on thul he docsn ·1 want tn rC:.tl'h an ugrC't.•mcnt " Not so Wl'11man Al dinner 1n Jt.•rusalt>m l<a:-.1 :'\nvcmbt•1 S;.1dal told H<:i,:1n how much hl· hked We1zmun ·and Begin wa .. \'ery happy. but tw 1' not huppv now .. We1zman 1>pl1t with Begin last month over Is rael's i.trategy 1n dealing with the U.S. on Sada t 's peace pl an. Begin 1s nnw trying to exploit that confhct a revealing sign of how few negoltatmg w~apon~ he has ldt SADAT 1:-. ·now undt•r v1c1ous pr"·<>M1n· from :ilmo~l th1· 1·ntm· Aral'> world t1) admit that h1:-. dunnJ! .lt•ru.sJlt•m 1w<1t•1· rn1ss1on ha'i f,1ill·<I S\ riJ n l'r e..,1dcn1 l1Jft•1 h.,ad ";1nh ~JdJI 111 makt> J hum1lia11ng µublic fit'l'laratll)n of fo1lur<· Al~l·no.1 '-' ould ~Pltlt.• tor a · privatt· lt•t lt·r " from Sad.Jt to ;,ill Arab ht•ads or slak udm1tt1ng fa1lurt· and agrl'l'1ng to an all·Arnb meeting to plot n nc•w course But adm1!>:-.1on of fa1lurt' woutcl hl• a biller l'rt<I of Sud at 's peace dream and prohably of his JOb For Pn•.s1d<:nt C:arkr. It would bt• t•<1l<1m1tuu-. It would w ipt• out lh1· laq!t'"I -.1ngll· 1n H''>tment hl· h.id m.tCh.· in h1.s bt·lt·a~ut•recl fon·1gn poht·y ~I on• important. 11 would g1vt ..1 1r.tn~Cl'IHh•n1 \ll'101v 1q lht Sov1l'I L'n1on t1nd int·v1tt1hly'l rig gt·r ~1 nt·" Am1..·rH·:1n dt·l·ttnl' <1 .. It• :.i <.J 1• r of I tw W 1• .s I . w 1 I h <·alutlysm1t· l!HC'tl.s in th1!. mo~t .. tr.1tcg1t· purl of lht• globt· Illegal Aliens a Federal Responsibility To lhl' Editor Rt·n·nlly. tJ111• to pressur•· gencrnkd b~ ' L:illno leaders. /\ttornl'y Gcncrul Gri ffin Bell advised local law l'nforcemenl agencies to s top enforcing S lmmigrnt.Jon L<tws bt•causc only the fl'deral gon·rnmcnt 1n thl' guise or the us lmm1grat1on Ser vice has the <iuthonty to de- tain and deport illegals It has always amazed me how the federal bureaucrats can sit in Washington. listen to a select few. and l'aSl :m all-knowning declaration over the heads of lhl.' masses Realizing lhal Mr. Bell 1s only mouthing \\hat statute~ ulready cx1<tl. I wonder how he expects local l<.1w t:nforccment to deal with tht• CVl'r increasing problem of non English speak· in g I 11('ga1.s I n r I It r a l 1 n g Calirornia und other s t ate bo rders by the thousands. Re· cent estimates s uggest that Los Angeles and Orange Counties alone have a million and a half illegals, 80 percent of whom are Mexican. Chicago. report local immigration officials. has over 600.000 illegal Mcx1l'uns . not to me ntion the 1llegtil alien innux into other m3JOr U.S. cities Mun1c1pal and s tate law en· forcemcnt personnel. especially 1n the Southern C.:ahfornia area. are continually hampered when encountering Mexican illegals who have committed crimes . vfolatcd traffic laws. or are ob· served an a set of suspicious ci r c ums tances T h ese In dividua ls h ave little 1f <tny ide ntificatio n . cannot s peak English. and prove to be ig- norant of many of California's laws. FOR THE m os t pa r t. the victims of crimes or acci- de nts involving illega ls have little or no recourse against the illegal due to their highly trans ient and unsta ble economic nature. ln f:i ct. Mexicans and other illrg:.ils a rc many. tirnes deported rather than held for trial und l or civil litigation Within <1 short period of lime. many of these same Individuals will wande r across the border to lake up where they left off. Another faction In Cnllfomhi falls victim to the lnrtux or 11. legals in the form of the In· dtvidual property owne r who pays taxes that In turn s upport our liber a l welfa r e Ryst em. Each day lUcJ(als receive some type or support whether 1t be m onetary, medical or police and fire. So I say to Attorney General Griffin Bell. prcssur~ Congr~ss to Increase lmmlsrrallon person· nel a nd activate more s tringent penalties for illeaal border crouers ond their Amerlcnn e mployer!! Con centrate on JlU~ll l\t' :Jllt•rll<Jll\'t:.S instt:Ud or pn1s1>1ni.t lol'al l:iw e nforct·ml'nl whu ('t1nnot dost· their eyC!t lo violation:-. of laws. federal or .. tall'. dut• to tht• cours <.· and .. copl' of their profl'ss1on In :-.1mpler terms. if the federal law l'nforccment agencies would do lhc Job they a rc directed to do. lotal law enforcem ent wouldn't h<tvl' to take up the s lack 0 .KANE Canynta Ne~d To lht• Editor I rnu.sl lakt• umbra ge with your l'1Jt1orial of Julv 6, in which \.'OU n •commcnd a f~iur lant• h1Rh~a:. thrc1ugh thl' Lugunu CJnyon Tru1·. thl•n• h;I\ l' Ol'l'n man:. ~cn<,ele>s., dl.'alh.s through nl'gliJ!Cfll'l' on the parl of t•rrut1t 1 m pa I ll' n I '' n d . ., o ml' t 1 ml'.., drunken drivers. but <irt• bigg(•r und faster Ian<.~.., the only solu liurl'' I think not WH:\T II.AS been needed. at least in the 20 yearl> I have d aily dn ven the Canyon road. is a solid metul or cement d ivilfor sm ack d >wn the middle. with no passing at any lime. The Cdnyon road is a beaul1ful d rt v l' !> o. n a I u r a II y. th t' American hue and cry i.., for bulldozers to slash and f'tOug1· and putrify the lovely landscapt• Whe n. dcur people. will we ever lt'arn'.' MARY 0 MOORE 1~n ·Secret • To the Editor: As a longtime r esident of Lagun3 Oeach . l object t o Ronald Steinberg's assumptions that w e taxpaye r s w e r e 'secretly" saddled with the S6.75 millio n purc hase of Sycamore Hills. I'd like him to know that the vote rs in Laguna elect ed the present c-ouncil in anticipation of 1ust '>UCh a solution to the GrPen !)ell pro!)lcms I be lieve if Mr Stt-1nl)('rg had bothcr,ed to poll th<', vott'rs on this matter. he wo uld have s 11vt-d himself lu w vcr fees and a court h assle Wl· had clear sailing on this is- ~ u e unt i l the "investment bro k e r " s tarted rocking the bout. Plcaiic. Mr. Steinberg. do us a ll o favor -disembark '1l the nearest port.-of·call ! HARRY WITT 8•d8•1Rn• To the Editor Sur vey~ tokon in Laguna Beach have. to the dismay or local merchants. proved r esl· denu d o \heir purch asan g elsewhere: costs ure just too high In town. An ex a mple o f the poor mt·n·h:.int c·uslom1·r n ·l<1twn:-. thal keep locals awtiy 1s tht• gus s tation in the ccnt(•r or town that keeps prices 10 t·enls to 12 cent:-. J g~llon hjgher rhan i.t<.1t1on1> ont· mile to the north or south We locals art• gelling wise. but neaven help th(' poor tourist' MRS KA' ,Jfnre Paf rioo To the Editnr M Ul'h has b(•l•n .sa1<1 :rnd writ ten about Prop 1:t bl'fon· 11 took plal'l' and evt•n mon· "'" as th1.· populace 'le\\'" thl• <lra'>t 1c• t•ha ngt' its p:.issu1w "111 tmng .1bout ,\" th1• 1·u t b.1d,., .11HI It' organ111nj! an· mulll'<t O\ l'r thl· real't1on ot m<tn~ t•1(1tt·n-. 1 .. ,,.., Pmouonal. in !>Om(• 1n'>tanct"-. a.s was tht•tr dt'lerminat1on to cffert its p;1ssagc 1 lnwt•vcr. <1~ <•hange :-.lowly gets lnlo nrh1t. 11 hctomc:-. apparent that alLhough lhl' pC'O· pie asked th<il th1·ir <il·n·1<·c·1> or toys be takt·n away ~omt· of !host' most involVl'd in dcmanrl- ing these withdrawals arc now th<' most audible 1n protcstin~ lhl' loss or certain privileges lh<•l .1frccl them 1nd1v1duallv unrl as t•ititens llcretofore. po1>~1bl~. we have aJI been spoiled brat!>. with too many toys llowt'vt•r. out ol th(• prc!-.t·nt C'haos there t·mergl•s one factor. far ,:t reater than bringing pro pc•rty taxation to a rcasonl:lblc• level Th"• c1ti1.cns of California have at lost. s napped out of their ll'thargy. indifferenn·. cynicism. und the us ual l'Op·out of "let the other fellow d o 1l" . GOVERNMENT by. for and of the people with proper represen· t a lion. a s was originally in- tended. has resurfaced and also lhe responsibility or each 1n d ividual to assume his or her tas k in bringing about what 1s JUSt and fair in reor ganizrng and n1tb<ll'k~ arid abn lht·ic .1clcti 11 onal rl• ... pon:-.1h11il\' 1n h1•1ni.: kno" lt•diwblt• l'nuugh 111 bnng ;1hnut gel()(! go\ 1.·rnnwn1 Thl·n· comt•., ,, t1ml' \\hen .1brupt t•hangt· c;in e1nd doc..s bring about a <.·ri'>1., When thl· 'late of uff;ill'" I'> al <'fl.SI'> ll'Vl'I, thl' affa1rc; of the• <,lt1l<.· 'ihould ex ('('t•d thl' 1mp11rl:inl'l' or .tll pohl 1t•al purt1t''i Cit.'. rnunt:.. anrl sLatt• gon•rnml'nLs mus t nol bt• dJIO\\l'd to USl' ('Utllf:l('k' lo ('f lt·t•I a 1int· parly huilcf11p C'ul had\:-. .shciulcl hl· nonpar11:-.1rn The lavoff., ..,h,>uld tw rn<.idt· on 11nn1·1·~·--~an ;1nrl 11wflt•t·f\1al 1·omm1lll't'"· li 11,1rrh .ind hun·au1·1 ~•I'll'" ;inti 1111 1111t .. "h1·11· pt•r ... 1111111•1 1., 1rwl I 11·1t•rH 11\ "l'I \ lllj! lhl• pulil11· In till' m1·Jm~hll1·. to bnng Jhout good rt• 11rg;rn1£<1t1on and goorl g11vt•rnnwn1 "h.11 Lh1:-. c·ountn lll't'd:-. .inn hJ.., lnni.t nt·cck·d· ~1n· m11n· palnoh und ft•\\ l'r pohtn·1;111:-. l':LINOR !JAVIS ~m•Jkt• II 11ro To tht• Echtnr In reply to thl' P<'r ... on who "roll' tu Woo my ti U'> Jnd -.1gne<I h1 mself G S I''. he .1pp<11 ently didn't do h is homt·wurk heron· ..,3ying "Smok<•r ., hurl only I ht·msl'ht•s' · The re h<A~ bt·t·n H good dc>al or c·escan•h tln Lhl• :-.U llJl't'I of "mok· mg tobu<'l'O und 1h <'frt•c·t on both s moker:-. ;inti non :-.m11kt•r.s. One i.tudy found th<il a ('Ommuter <.'onf1ned to a train·.s smokc·filled bJr car for .m hour can absorb ;1 ~ much or the carcinogen known as DMN as a person who s mokes 17 to 35 filler cigarettes a d ay. <New Yor k Time-. editorial. May 5. 1978. > G.S.F. also said that. "The $30 million Califano ha<> pror>oscd for has ant1-sm ok1n g t'ampaign >Nou ld be better spt•nt warning young people <•boul the• dange~~ of alcohol and the problem ... 1t l'<I UM'S ramilil'I> of <il<'<>hoht·s .. M v rc•ply to that 1.., thut 1r J)<arent~ would :-.t•t the n!!hl ex ample at home>, their children wouldn't bccomt' alcoholics and c·ausc th JlrOl>lcm:-. which ht• speaks of. I resent having to use part or my taxes to edut:<itc thl' c hildren of pa rents who keep h quor availilblc und then c ry because their children become alcoholics. 1' S RITTER • • Letters Jrom rtCldtrl ort wtlcomr Tht nght to condtnst letters to fit $fl0Ct' or ehmmote label is res~ Letters of 300 word.os or ltu wrll bit gtven pre/"tnct ~II ltttt'rl mu.'t an cluck-11gnoturt or.d mailing addres~ but Mmtt may btt w1thlwld on re· ~at 1} tuf/1cicnt n•oson '·' opporfftf P~t'll will not w pu.bllshed. • 1 J I • I f '' Orange Coast ED ON Toda)''s Closing N.Y. Stoeks t t VOL 71, NO •QJ, 4 SECTIONS, ~2 PAGES ORANGE COUNTV, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JULY 12, 1978 { . ; J,.1 , TEN CEN rs l N J \ s lBeek, McLaughlin Newport Planners 1 . • ' I Newport Beach City Coun· cilmen appointed Allan BeeY and Ht!len McLaughlin to the ci ty Planning Commission Tues- day night after debate mark~ by the controversy that has sur· rounded the appointments since April. The seven-member com mission has been wilhout two members since the municipal elections ir which forme· com m1ssioneri:: Jackie Heather and Paul Hummel were ele<'ted lo the council. Attempts to fill the two vacan· cies since then have been stalled by politicaJ maneuvering. Beek, 2120 16th St., an engineer for Rockwell Intema· tional in Anaheim. was nominat· ed for Mrs Heather's former post along with former council candidate William Morris. Beek Morris Dies Famed Tr Cat Expires at 17 CHICAGO <AP) -Morris, the fin1d.y 9-Lives cat on television • commercials. is dead at the age of 17, thf> pet food comoany said today Morris' veterinarian. Dr Barbara Stein, said the cat died F'ridav and was buried in a sub· urb on the grounds of the home he shared with his handler. Hob Martwick. She s aid Morris' death was a ssociated with cardiac complications related to old age Al 17, ~orri s was the equivalent or a 90-year·old human. she said Morris was found in 1966 in a I Chicago-area humane shelter by an animal handler sear<'hing for I an orange cat to appear in a televis ion commercial Al the f age of 7. Morris starred 1n his I first commercial for 9·L'ves and for the ~xt 10 years rt'ade more I than 40 television commerC'1a1s. A s pokesman for the public re lat1ons agency that handles the account for the oel food com pan) said Morris' role will be takel' ove b} a cat who has served as ar understudy He LIVED NINE LIVES The late Morris too. will be known as Morris. "He's a double for Morris ph'ysicall) and is as finicky, aloof and inde pendent as his pre- decessor." said a spokesman · Media Center Doors Open; Budget Cut Dour:> will remam open a· the 1 Newport Mesa School District's Instructional Media Services Center but onl) after trustees Tuesaay s lashed the center 's budget ar hal• for thP next school year T h e <enter wa., granted $150,000 to continue operation a::. the district ·s depos itory for books films. tapei. and vanou., ' educauon tools The board '~ decision came aft.e the center director Dr Bill Sanborn. had '!arlier s ub · Council Tables · Newport Pay Policy Review· r--ewpor .. Beach ci'Y coun cilmen voted without comment Tuesday night to table re- consideration on pay policy for pohcemen Mayor Paul Ryckorr. who had opposed institution of the policy in February, asked last month that it be returned to the council for reconsideration llowever, Ryckoff had nothin., to say when Mayor Pro Tern Ray Williams moved to luble the ite m Tuesday. The m olion passed unanimous ly Councilmen last month s us· pended aH salary negotiations with the s1>. city employee or· ganlzations, inchadiog the police, until the ell> 's fmancial status ln the wake or Proposition 13 could be mo~ clearly established. It wa& unclear whether Tuesday·~ vote marked an end lo Ryckofrs opposllion to tl\e policy or whether ll was taken In light of the s us pended pay negotlaUons. Ryckoff could not be reached today for comment. The pol\cy mandate~ thal policemen receive a pay and lri.n&e benefll package compara· b\e to the top lhrM paid by law e.nrorcement agencies in Oranae County. milted a ·oare bones" budget that reouced expenditures by $137 .000 and called for a cutback of abouc eight of the center's 20 employees. Bui trustees went even farther -1n their post-J arvis C'utback ef. fort~ by red ucing funds for ccme by another $13,000. Bob Kelly, a teacher at Newpor. Heights Elementary School. told trustees there is .. an absolute need" for the services offereo b y the ce nter. partiruJarl> those for elemen· tary school students. "We desperately need to keep this place open and not at a bare bones minimum." Kelly said Durin~ the past ~c-hool year the cenler, located on Baker Street in Costa Mesa, circulated nearl) 200,000 library books and 3~.000 media Items to district student::. A bout 2,800 p a rents and teachen. made use of the center in developing curriculum materials More than 5,000 stu· dents learned abou1 pre-historic Orange County Crom volunteer staff members al the center's scien<'e laboratory, according to district officials. Superintendent John Nicoll called the center an "excellent program" and s aid e fforts s hould be made to provide it with "a transfusion of more funds" if possible. .. ,.d like Lo see us make addi· tional cuts In areas that are least related 10 the c hildren, .. said trustee Carol Martin. One or the center 's features, a television studio, will see reduced use because of the cut budget. INSIDE LOOK ATAILSTARS Dully Pfm~ sporlRwr1ter Dave Cunningham covered the 491.h All-Star clasaac In San Diego Tuesda). For full <letalts and result.I, see Spon.s sect.ion, 84. •• won the appointment on a 4 to 3 vote with Councilmen Paul Ryckoff, Williams, Don Strauss and Hummel backing him. Mr s . Mc L a u g hlin . SS4 Seaward Road. Corona del Mar was nominated along with Newport Crest resident David Shores for Hummel's former planning seat She won the appointment when council members Evelyn Athletic Travel Affected By MICHAEL PASKEVICH Ol t!M ~lly Piiot 5~ff Bus service for high school s tudents and the ir athle t ic teams was eliminated Tuesday night , a nd Newpo rt-Mes a Unified School District trustees said bus service for younger stu· dents may also be cut. I fl four separate actions. trustees cut the district's busing program by about $200,000 out of an overall budget of approt.. imately $720,000. The cuts are desi~ned to m1mmize a district loss of abouL $5.2 milhon •n property tax rev en ues because of Propositio., 13. "For every dime we keep in the !transportation. budget. we can relate it to a teacher dis missal next March ·said school l>oard P residen t Donald Smallwood. He bas favored complete elimination or all district bus service. but fellow trustees said they would wait before consider· ing cutbacks in home to school busing for kindergarten through Pighth grade students. However. middle school stu· de nts are affected by one of the four trus tee actions . a un- animous one canceling all after school "late buses" for ooth high school and middle school stu· dents. This will save the district an estimated $40.898 next fall. Next to fall under the axe >¥as the entire home·to·school busing program for high school slu· dents, with an estimated savings for the district o' $72,450 It means 3.042 of the district's 9,000 high school students will be forced to find other ways of get· ting lo scnool this fall. The motion by Trustee Duke O'Brien passed on a 5·2 vote. Trustee Rod MacMiJlian voted 'no." saying the district should retain some flexibility. especial· ly for those students living on the Baboa Peninsula who attend Newport Harbor High. Joining MacMillian w as Trustee Carol Martin. who ex· pressed concern for Balboa Island students who have a long trip to Corona del Mar High. However. she called her vote a CSee BUSES, Page A2> Hart. Ryckort. Williams. Hum· mel and Strauss voted for her. rhe two new commissioners will join the commission ten t:lays after filing statements of economic mteres t mandated by state law. During the discussion of the appointments. Councilman Don Mc Innis loc ked horns with Mayor Ryckoff over a proposal which could end with the firing of O'le planning commissioner. Com mi'i.4'ioners are appointed to four.year terms. A memo to city cowtcilmen from City At· •orney Dennis o ·Neil indicates that at least one or those terms must expire each year acc-ord· ing to the city charter. "For some un expla1nec\ reason no member or the plan· ning commission will ha,•e ~is term of office expire in 9711 · Stories Outdoors . O'Ne>1l wrote. Mayor Ryckoff. who sought , the memo from O'Neil, indicat· l ed Tuesday afternoon that he ' would ask for the alteration or ! the term of an already seated · commissioner to ex pi re this . year to comply with the charter. At. the evening session. Mrs. 1 Heather tried to head off that at· tt:m Pl by altering the term to <See PLANNERS. Page i\2) Joan Du~an. c hildren's assistant a the Balboa brancn library had an attentivP audience O<la}' for the weekly outdoor s tor}' hour hosLed by the library. The sum· mer program is held at the branch locat· ed at 100 £. dalboa 81\<1. on Wednesday~ at 9 .30 a.m. Similar story events are held each Thursday and Friday at the Coron~ del Mar branch and Wednesday at thl' West Newport branch. 4 Projects Exempted Newport Bends Ruks on Traffic Plan Newport Beach city coun· cilmen Tuesday exempted four developments from the city's new building restrictions. but a l the same lime indicated they plan a major change :n the rules under which they will approve future building projects. Reports prepared by traffi<' consultants and certified by city traffic officials. indicated no serious traffic congestion would be generated by the approved projects which are: -Bayside Square, an office building on a 1.2S·acre lot at Bayside Drive a nd Marine Avenue. -Westcllrf Grove. a 29·home development of the Irvine Co. at Westcllff and Dover drives. -The eight-acre Bank or Newport commercial and res 1dential project al the comer of Ens t Coast H1 g hway a nd Avocado Avenue in Corona del Mar. -A 1.6-acre addition to Koll Center Newport at the corner of MacArthur Boulevard and Cam· pus Drive In a related ·ote. councilmen Schuller Girl 'Fair' In Hospital re ruse<.. to exempt the l rvin~ Company's Civic Plaza, based on their contention that substan· tial work hasn't begun ;n the Newport Center development. Thal move came on a 5 to 2 vote with Councilmen Don Mein ms and .Jackie Heather dissenr ing. The Irvine Compa.1y contendi:. , that Civic Plaza is m the same ~ class as a dolen other major de · i vetopmcnts in the city g ranteo 1 exclusion from the council's new t building restriction policy because s ubstantial work had bel{un di . . h 1· I An or nance g1vmg t c po acy • th e force of city law doesn't take 1 effect for another two weeks. Confusion about administra· { e<' BUILDING, Page A2J Coast B11 Nemport-Mesa Carol Schulle r , 13·year.old daughter of the Rev Robert Schuller. was described as being in rair condition this mormng followtng surgery on a partially amputated left leg yesterday at Childrens Hospital of Orange County in Orange. "Her vital s igns are stable and within normal limits for a pa· tient with injuries which include traumatic amputation of her left leg below the knee," said a s pokesman for Or. Schuller. world-famous pastor of Garden Grove CommJnity ChJrch. Trustees Reinstate Summer School Backed against the wall by the potential loss of $10 million In state emergency aid. reluctant Newport-Mesa UniCted School Di s trict trustees Tuesday re Instated summer school for high school seniors short or gradua tlon credits. School Board Pres.den Donald SmaHwood lashed out against local lawmakers who played a hand In • so-called "oail-oul bill" for school dis· trlc\S in th wake or Propo5ition 13. If Senotor Carpen.er and A8 st m b t )I .n en M angers and Cordova and other w1r.ard.a or mayhem wan. to tell us hov. u:> run our schoo.s. they shOula be here .o vo.c 4iltl us," aald Smallwooa. "I think It's dlsgtA4tln", '' he added Smallwood cast a symbohc vote against the reinstatement of s ummer school and was joined on the short end of a 5·2 vote by Trustee Duke O'Brien. The day after passage or the Jarvis Initiative, trustees had elimina~ wl summer school, adult education, language pro· gram6 for foreign-born adults and a program for patients at Fairview Sta.e Hospl.lll. " state provts on In Sena e 8lll 154 mak~ thest: programs man· oaLory I( school d1s .. r1cts aire o receive emergency tate tund· Ing. The English a~ a second languaae and ao.\A1t educaition proaurns probably will be re· Instated this fall. ~rL&Slees said. TueJOay·s action mean:S sum· m.cr school for seniors who need credh lo flraaua t will oocln \See 8CHOOL. Pa1e AZ• . I Carol was admitted lo Childrens Hospital al 3 a. m. Tuesday for treatment or in· juries s uffered Frida y in .., motorcycle a<'cident near Sioux City, Iowa The girl was nown to Orange County Airport by air am - bulance following the amputa· lion at a Sioux City hospital. Carol, who Hves with her family In Orange, had been rid· ing on the back or • motorcycle driven by 1 cousin who swerved to a void a brakin1 car and hit an oncoming car. Her cousin's leg was broken. Rev. Schwier. who grew up on a northwest Iowa farm, 1s known for hlit gospel of "poss1b1Uly ~hl nk lng " and his w eekly etevislon program, Hour or Power " fhe pastor. Mn . Schuller and C.aro1's oldest slater, Sheil&. and \See CAaOL, Pafe AZ> "eather earl.1 morning low clouds and locaJ fog near <"oast, otherwise s unny Thursday. S li g htly warmer. Lows tonight SR to 62. Highs Thursday from njgh 60s at beaches tu tower Ms inland. •!\SIDE TODA 't' Plain wrap ping of supermarket item.t ~ set o/I o reaction. WhUt the chain s ays H 's bringing In customeTs, others question q11olit11. F'ood. PO{lf Cl •••• Al DAILY J1!,.0l N Newport To IJmit Building Developers in Newport Beach. who have been roping with the city's new policy that ties new construction to traffic improve- 'ments. are not facing a reduc- tion in the amount of future building they will be allowed. Tuesday. councilmen voted 5 to 2 with Councilmen Don Mein· nis and Jackie Heather dissent- ing. to order reduced density proposals drawn up by the city Planning Commission. The order authored by Coun- cilwoman Evelyn Hart, did not specify how great the reduction as to be It is to apply to all parcels with planned community woings on which the re a re no buildings Planned community zones can a pply to residential. commercial or industrial property Last September. councilmen ordered city planners to review the city's general plan with the 1iiea of lowering densities on all undeveloped parcels, regardless of zoning That revtew has bogged down while comm1ss1oners await the ''om plet1on or a computerized traffic model designed to tell them how traffic would be af- ferted by planning changes. The model isn't expected to be completed until this rail. The general plan revisions won't be taken up until then Mrs Hart indicated that the reductions she wants to see can be recommended independently of the general plan review. Councilman Paul Hummel, who voted for Mrs. Hart's mo- tion noted, "It's been so long since the general plan review started, I'm not sure even the planning commissioners know where they are " * * * Fro"' Page A J BUILDING lion of the policy came up not long ofter the Civic P laza vote. when Ryckoff was s uccessful ln pushing through a substantial change in the policy The policy and ordinance both prohibit the issuing of a building permit to any project which will add more than one percent in traffic to already congested in tersectioos Calculations by city s taff members. setting up the con- gested intersections and the volume or cars using them havP. been based on an average of the whole inte rsection. During a Tuesda) afternoon :.tudy session, Ryckoff said he wanted that changed so that t!ach direction of travel through ... given intersection could be Jnalyzed separately Over the objections of Mein nis. who said such a c hange s hould receive public notice and be discussed at the next council meeting, Ry('koff pushed his change through at the evening council session Embarrassed councilme n found themselves rescinding the action Jess than an hour later when they discovered that the traffic reports on the four pend· mg projects were based on the previous total intersection method. r a the r than on Ryckoffs "leg" system The rour projects -Bayside Square, Westcliff Grove. an ud· dition to Koll Center Newpo1t and the Bank of Newport parcel m Corona del Mar -were then approved. The changes proposed by Ryckoff wtU be brou~ht back to coun cilmen at the ir July 24 meeting Income Top Seen LOS ANGELES <AP> -Urg. 1ng action that is "fair, just and right to taxpayers." Los Angeles County Supe rvisor Kenneth Hahn has proposed a county- em ployed physicians' incomo <'eiling o' $65,000 annually DAILY PILOT ••titn•-... •tt \ldtl'lt •• Pvbf1"'9' '"'" c_, .,,,, .... t(ltfll\•"'9Gfi"""•'""~' -....... .. , ... .. T-···-111\•11•••"'' ,,,, .. OWlnM.~ ................ " ... , .. _...,,Mt~Cf!Mr\ 11tnfJer Helping Limber What are these two men doing lo this little t ree in Mason Regional Park. Irvine:• They weren't hurting it, actuall y. They were using it to exercise in preparation for the 9.S.mile Sea King Back Bay An· m vcrsary Run Some 710 runners loped ar ound the duck ponds of San J oaquin Marsh to Universi ty High School and back. Related Photo. page Bl. F,.._PageAI PLANNERS which Beek was eventually ap- pomted so that it would have ex· pired on June 30 and making the appointment a four-year one. ending in 1982. Huntington Halts Most Pupil Busing She was backed by Mcinnis. who Ryckoff tried to rule out or order Mcinnis refused to accept the ruling and challenged the mayor to poll the council. The vote was 4 to 3 in MclMis' favor with Mrs Heather . Williams and Mrs Hart voting on his s ide. Mcinnis then produced Les Steffensen who c haired the committee that wrote the c harter Steffensen backed Mcinnis' contention that the pro- vision about expiration or terms was m eant to apply to the original commissioners and not necessarily to subsequenl ap- pointees. Their arguments failed to im· press a majority of the council a nd Mrs. Heather's motion to change the term of one of the pending appointments f ailed. with Ryckofr. Williams. Hum- mel and Strauss voting it down. Balboans, Cops to Meet Residents o f Balbo a 's Peninsula Point will have an OP· portunity to become acquainted with the police offi cers who serve their area during a meet ing Thursday night. The meeting, sponsored by the Peninsula Point Homeowners Association. will get under way at 7:30 'p.m . al the Peninsula Point Racquet Club. On hand to talk about law en· forcement in the area will be Capt. Kelson McDaniel, com· mander of lhe department's patrol divison, as well as some of the men who patrol the Balboa Peninsula f'ro•PageAI CAROL ... brother Robert Jr. have been at the girl's bedside since she was admitted, a sookesman said at the hospital. Carol's attitude is said to be "very good" by the spokesman who said the girl's physicians are Dr. William C. McMasler, an orthopedic surgeon, and Dr .. Bruce M. Achauer, a plastic sur- geon. She was described this mom· Ing as "alert, feeling good and improving." By RA VMOND ESTRADA JR. Ol tlle O.Uy f'li.t S .. ff Huntington Beach Union High School District trustees Tuesday halted home-to-school busing for most students in the fall. * * * Frortt Page A I BUSES ..• "temporary negative," saying she would support the cutbacks if there is still a need for re· duced finances when this year's district budget is completed in August. "I think it's gotten to the point where maybe we have to lake a strong stand," observed Trustee Betty Jo Bailey, who voted for the busing cul. Trustees took little time in eliminating all busing for high sch ool and mid dle school uthletlc teams. The vote was 6·1 with MacMillian voUng no. The $81 ,000 cutback also means drill teams and marching bands won't ~ bused to high school football games. Buses will be avail able for games if booster clubs want to pay for them on a ··user fee" basis, trustees said. However. Smallwood said he was con· cerned that certain "affluent" high schools would have an un- fal r advantage over schools with less powerful booster clubs. He suggested that funds for team busing be pooled on a d.Js trictwide basis and be allotted evenly. T rustees then moved on to consider a S57 ,000 cutback to eliminate funding for a ll educa tlonal field trips. Rather t han cut this fund trustees voted unanimously to dole out the funds to schools as part of the yearly "resource un· its." ll will be up to the schools to decide how to use these funds. but Superintendent Nicoll noted that resource units in general will be slashed substantially during further consideration or this year's budget. Oil Leak R eporte d SARAJEVO. Yugoslavia ,APl -More than 7,000 gallons of crude oil leaked into the Drina River when a worker forgot to tighten a screw on a tank near Zvornik, in central Yugoslavia a government commission said The leak continued for two days until fishermen noticed it Split Final Meg's Divorce Official · LONDON <AP>-Princess Margaret's divorce from Lord Snowdon has become official. The princess, only sister of Queen Elizabeth II, was granted a temporary decree May 24, but under Britain's no-fault divorce system. the break became absolute Tuesday. The royal divorce WBS granted on grounds of ir - retrievable breakdown of the 18-year·old m arriage. They had been separated for two years. Handicapped youngsters and students who hve in Seal Beach and the Surfs ide area will be the only ones bused to their high schools. officials said. The action was taken to save the distnct about $390,000. The board also has approved a lis t or budget cuts totalling about S6 million due to revenue lost by the passage of Proposition 13. The busing cutback affects ttbout 3,600 students. officials m· dicated The school board Tuesday also app r oved $100.000 in CO· curricular program cuts that in· eludes s ports, music. drill team. drama and yearbook staffs. School Board President Zita Wessa said no sports programs will be greatly a11ecte<l oy the cuts. A total of $450.896 in dis· trict f unds we re initially earmarked fo r co-curricular programs Officials indicated that the cutbacks arc still t entative because of potential effects or stale legislation. Other cutbacks approved by the school board Tuesday are. -$300,000 for replacement of furniture. equ ipmen t and vehicles. -Layorr or about 15 transportation employees due to the busing cut. -$75,00 In co mputer operations and testing costs. -$112.800 in n o n replacement of secretaries who resign or retire. MUtCO Me•oe:o Tll4t famou~ ad•O.as 1t1ree s111pe soccet •no all porpoSe 'horl wilh sltp 5°' co11ont5<l'\ pOIYetltr •i tt , .. ~ elo" ... -,._ °"'"-4IOIOH-""'"' 01111 •O•• ',,,, IWDH• llwOI "OtwtltDI• Ofl,,,_..,I( .. ..,, '26" Newport Skippers Lido-14 Race Under Way By ALMON LOCXABEY C»lly l"lleol ... tllltWl'l .. r HUNTINGTON LA KE -Skip- pers from Newport Beach and Mission Bay dominate the Lido-14 national championship regatta which got under way to· day at this beautiful lake 7.500 feet in the Sierras. 90 miles northeast or Fresno. Seventy.seven s kippers a nd crews from fleets throughout the western U.S. showed up for the national championship. After two days of racing Mon- day and Tuesday the fleet was divided into the championship and consolation flights which start competition today with two races A final race is scheduled Thursday Dave Ullman or the Balboa Yacht Club. three-time national champion in the class continues to be the star of the show. He- had three straight victories in t he preliminary races and three straight wins in the High Sierras Rega't'ta. sponsored by the r ·resno Yacht Club over the past weekend. The championship flight ap· peared to be boiling down lo a competition of sailmakers. with four listed among the first 10. Ullman. a Newport Beach ~ailmaker. topped the fl eet. followed closely by one of his employees. Jerr Lenha rt of Mis· s1on Hay. Also among the first 10 conten· ders in the championship flight are two s kippers from North Sails. San Diego. Tom Nute and Lou Brooks or Mission Bay Yacht Club. Ullman. Lenhart. Nute and Brooks are long time com- petitors in the snipe class. Sailing conditions on this crystal clear lake are con· Funeral Rites Set Friday for Humphreys Funeral services will be held Friday in Escondido for Balbou pioneer William L. Humphreys. who died Monday at the age of 79. Mr. Humphreys. whose family or iginally brought him to Balboa m the late 1880s. was the father of Robert L. Hum phreys. a member or the Coast Commun1 ty College District boa rd of trustees. Mr. Humphreys. a member or a pioneering California famib . hved in Balboa for 30 years before moving to Escondido. whe re he died. A rormt>r employee of th<• Pacific Telephone C.:o .. ne was best known in the Harbor Area for t he bay front apar tment house. Humphrey's Perch. that he and his family maintained for many years. Ile was a member of the local Masonic lodge and Shrine Club. He leaves his son. a resident of Cost a Mesa. a daughter . Joye<.' Ackerman of Pasadena. and 10 grandchildren . Services will be conducted at 9·30 a .m . at McLeod's Mortuary in Escondido. Interment w1 II follow at Rosedale Cemetery an Los Angeles. --·-adidas· T-SHIRTS ,-.,., •]49 IA<iS '6" to '22 .. s1dered among the best 1n the world for s ma ll, one-design vachts. Altem oon winds reach 20 knotswithsmootbwBters. The top 10 skippers in the Lido-14 championship flight are Dave Ullman. BYC ; Jetr Lenhart. MB YC. Tom Null', MBYC, Chris Raab, Huntington Harbour Yach t C lub ; Hal Brown. MBYC; Pete Jefferson. MBYC; Row land Lohman. BYC : Lou Brooks, MBYC . Charlie Cummings; Alamitos Bay Yacht Club and Stu Rol>ertson. Huntington Ha rbour Yacht Club. The top 10 in the consolation flight a re Roy Woolsey. Lido Jsll· Yacht Club. Harry Wood. ABYC: David Smith. ABYC C r 3ii? Roe. MBYC: J ohn Marion. Lake Merrit Sailing Club: Bob Mos. HHYC. Tonv Perez. BYC: Mike Boriage, MBYC; Kelly Snow. HHYC and Richard Robinette, MBYC. o\t the annual meeting of lhl' c lass Tuesd ay night Ted Hins haw, Lido Isle Yacht Club. was elected president for th~ coming year succeeding Kell} Snow. J-GIYC. Fro'" Page A I SCHOOL ... next Monday at Newport Harbor High. Classes will run through Au~. 25 on a five-hour leaching dav . Registration opens Thursday and Friday at Harbor High. Those seruors who miss registra tion should call the school at 5'>6·3310 or the Summer School office at 556-3508 to make other arrangements. School officials estimate t hen.• are about 250 students who qualify for the graduation courses. Some a l ready havl' t•nrolled at junior colleges lo finish their education. Trustees set aside $20,000 lo hire teachers for what Superi n lendent J ohn Nicoll called an "ins tant institution." Another $4,000 was granted to reopen a limited education pro gram for patients at Fairview Hospital. • Art McKenzie 'Doing Good' He's "still grounded." but former Costa Mesa police ch1er and city manager Art McKenzfr today s aid he is "doing real good" following a heart attack he suffered last month. Rea~hed at his north Costd Mc:w humc. the city's firs! police chief said he is feeling stronger every day. He was released from Costa Mesa Memoria l Hospital about three weeks ago and is now un dergoing out-patient therapy al t he hospital. .. It just takes a Jillie time." he added. The 59-ycar-old Me:,<.1 former peace officer said hl· wants to thank all the friends who called to lend him support during his hospital stay. I Mon8CO C>!> <lacror J!>,. conon 11d10.,,.1hrtie '""" "" PU•l>UW ~hort ., 3" UrttH l\~c1etly 0 ... ~°'"4 11111 lrH ,,.,ltOfl .. 0'0 hle ruCO•r \Ot• Nylur. J\ee1 4.\fU teayt.ce Ntt"9 "*"I0"9'• '29" London gossip columnJsts are reporttns that Lord Snowdon, 48. may marry his fllm assistant Lucinda Undsay-Hogg. Margaret. 47, says she has no marital plans. Open 9 to 6 -Closed Sunday 538 Center 646-1919 17 • • ~ , ' .. . ' I CALIFORNIA I PeOPLE Prop.13 No Threat To Cities? SAN FRANCISCO (AP> - Attorney General Evelle Younger says reports that local governments may not s urvive Proposition 13 are like •'one of Mark Twain's obituaries . highly exaggerated." In papers to be riled with the state Supreme Court, Younger s aid Tuesday : "Whil e Proposition 13 does limit property truces and does make it mo re difficult to impose additional substitute taxes, local ( STATE ) government will survive. The essential difference is that the people or tbis state will now have to be considered before taxes are increased." Younger, the Republican candidate for governor, made the statements in a brier defending the state against three s uits being brought by school districts and local governments The suits contend that prop osition 13 i s unconsli tutional. <Related story, Page AlO. l .loitat Ca•paip Nlzed SAN DIEGO <AP> -Lt. Gov. Mervyn Dymally says he does not plan to campaign for r eelectio n alongside Gov Edmund G. Brown Jr. this fall, saying he'd rather stand on his own merits "I don't want to be a good guy.'' Oymally told a group of reporters l'uesday. "I've got something to sell -my own programs, my own ideas. A joint campaign would be a liability for me" f'AltMal Titne Rejenefl LOS ANGELES (AP> As far as the 37 television stations that broadcast Gov. Edmund G Brown Jr. 's June 28 speech are concerned, that was a bona fide news eveni. -not a political s peect-, as Brown 's gubPrna.oria l opponent, Attorney General EveJle G Younger, charges. A 11 thP s tations r ejected Attorney General Younger's r equest for equal time to reply t o Brown 's s peecti . whic h concerned Proposition 13 eo1os ... sialb VALENCIA <AP> .About 30 pe r sons rid i ng Magi c Mountatn's newest rollercoaster ride. Colossus, h ad to be escorted to the ground on foot when one of the trains ran into brake problems Tuesday. Mark Macy, a spokes man for the amusemen• park, s aid a brake was set wrong and as a result the five-car train stalled ·some distance from the actual loading zone " •••aw Rest-lted~d LONG BEACH <AP) The' fat., of gambling aboard the Queer Mary will have to wait until next Tuesda) Jess Stewart. a 70-year.old rf'lired auto dealer scheduled to discuss the •~sue al Tuesday's City Council meeting, didn't appear until after the meeting "as over. so the item was rescheduled for the following week. Voyagers \lisit Kats uloshl Utsum1, 38. points out a sight to his wife. Reiko, 30, and their sons, Akio, 11, and Toshio. 9, from their 32-foot sloop, docked in San Francisco Tuesday. The family spent 58 days on their trip from Japan ~nd will spend two months in the Bay Area before traveling on to London either by sail or air -a decision to be made later State Recognizes Nevada Borderline SACRAMENTO <AP> -After 106 years, the State of California recognized the present borderline with Nevada. And the <'ase might never have aris en if it hadn't been speculated on both sides that the present line might not be the right one, and that some of Nevada's casinos should perhaps be in California or that Nevada should own hundreds of square miles of rich California ranchland. THE BILL SIGNED TUESDAY BY Gov. Edmund Brown Jr would recognize the 1872 Von Schmidt Line, which California requested the U.S. Supreme Court last year to recognize as the official border. It's the one currently being observed from Lake Tahoe to the Oregon border But Nevada. a nswering in the case, proposed a number of boundary changes that would mostly increase its area on the California side The 1872 Von Schmidt Line was run and marked by the federal government. BACKERS OF THE BILL, SB 2180 by Sen. Ray Johnson, R-Chico, had cited Nevada's claim -among others -to the U.S. Supreme Court t hat the 1863 Houghton-Ives Line between Lake Tahoe and Oregon should be recognized. That Line was officially recognized by the legislatures of both states, and would give Nevada about 200 square miles of Northern California. California State Controller Ken Cory said two months ago he thought Nevada was making a ··monstrous land grab" in its proposals to the U.S. Supre me Court. BUT JIM THOMPSOl'i, NEVADA'S CHIEF deputy attorney general, replied that Nevada is simply "irn;isting on our legal rights.· Thompson said if the border ouestions aren't brought up now, there may never be another chance. . Cory said that a new s urvey or the Tahoe-Oregon hne couJd move it as much as one-third of a mile east , putting four Lake Tahoe casinos in California Get Rid Of Unsightly Bulges!! It • • .. • PRESENTING OUR NEW CONCEPT IN INCH LOSS NO Starvation Diets Also w ....... .. MOt4-s.;c.I ... u....,. Aae•Dryae.•Olpae. W ...... •U...•• •st11 C4 fw 'fl I twxf..., NO Pills NO Shots ~TOHllACH ., .. 7142 ...... ,..., lt4-7142 f.,:txO 11 Ut.Jtll ........ v....,., .. 1tMUI , • .. • • • • • • Wedneldav. July 12. 1978 DAIL y PILOT AS Anti•gay Bill Costly Backers Spent $900,000 for Ballot Spot SAC RAMENTO CAP> -A new report says the supporters of an initiative against hom<>sex· ual teachers s pent nearly $900,000 getting it on the Nov ember ballot. districts to fire or refuse to rure a teacher. school aide. counselor or administrator who is openly homosexual or who advocated, solicited or promoted homosex· ual acts. m unity Church of Norwalk, $2,200. The committee backing the in· ihative. Defend Our Children, also got loans from Citizens for Sen. Briggs, $361,631 ; Briggs himse lf. $25,000. and Steven Balley. president of Starburst ConsultinR of Fullerton. $14,000. The same report from the state Fair Political Practices Commission said Tuesday that the opponents of the initiative spent only $116,415 -but drew contributions rrom some or the biggest names in entertainment. Sponsored by state Sen. John Briggs, R-Fullerton, 1t drew about 50 supporting contribu- tions of less than $1.000 each from persons in other states. ANOTHER BRIGGS initiative to ban s moking in many public places. Proposition 5, cost its supporters $59,310 to qualify the report said. THE OPPONENTS included actresses Carol Burnett, Patty Duke and Marsha Mason: actors John Austin and Dennis Weaver, playwright Neil Simon, and re- cording executive Neil Bogart. Their contributions ranged from $100 to up to Bogart's $2,500. THE BIGGEST supporters in· eluded Alan Masters. a La Mesa accountant, who gave $2.540; Linda Hinojosa, a La Mesa public relations woman. $2.500 : William Phelps of Airlines Ground School. Fair Oaks. $5.000: Carl Karcher, president of Carl Karcher Enterprises of An a heim. SS.000: Lore n Gunltier. an Orange County re· tiree. $3,400, and Calvary Com· But the opponents. mostly from the tobacco industry, raised $330.350 and spent $248.841. Large contributions were $26,447 from Lorillard, $104.655 from R. J . Reynolds In· dustries. $66.11 l from Brown and Williamson Tobacco. SS6.848 from Phillip Morris. and $61.668 trom the Tobacco rnstitute . The initiative. Proposition 6. would make it easier for school Solon Jibes at Reeess From Auoclated Press Dlspa&cbes WASHING TON -Since Rep. Otis G. Pike, D·N.Y .• decided he'd had enough of Washington and was going to retire from Congress. he has taken delight in poking fun at some of the more obvious congressional foibles. His latest target was the July Fourth recess . which the House prefers to call "home district work period." The congressman noted that the House quit for the hohday on June 29, a Thursday. In a news release. Pike noted: "A 4th of July recess does not mean you get the 4th of July oH. Jt means you get the week surroundmg the 4th of July off. Plus the preceding Friday. It's a good deal." • 1 NEW YORK -Folk sing0 r Joan Baez says a dispute between her sponsors forced cancellation of a July 4 seeech she had pl~ed. to. give in the Soviet Union m support or Russian dissidents. The 37-year-old New York-born entertainer, known for her outspoken stands against the Vietnam War. had hoped t o - make the r e ma rk s before Monday's start of the trials In the Soviet Union of dissidents Anatoly Shcharansky and Alexander Gl.nzburg. But her forum. a concert with other American performers in Leningrad's Winter Palace Square. was canceled because of a dispute be_t ~een the Russian and •Au British sponsors . Miss Baez instead made a s ightseeing trip to Moscow and returned this weekend. She told an NBC-TV Today Show interviewer Monday that had she given the speech, her message would have been. In a great country like that. one should not turn away and tmpnson dissidents. but one should welcome and support them." • MONTREAL -Margaret Trudeau has received the lead role m a romantic comedy tentatively set to be filmed in southern France. a spokes man for a production company here has confirmed. Richard Hellman, vice pres ident or Prospec Films Inc., said Prime Minister Pierr e Elliott Trudeau's estra nged wife would act in "L'Ange Guardien " <The Guardian Angel >. a $1 million bud get France -Canada production. TRUDEAU lt is Mrs. Trudeau's second film Last year she s tarred alongside Patrick McGooban in "All The King's Men." a thriller still lo be released. The new film, due to begin production by the end of the month, will feature her as the wife or a wealthy industnahst who falls in love with a cabaret singer. BJ Duayne D • Christensen, 0.0.S . 7'07 .... * ........ Wut1 ' 1°• ltS.IHI ORLANDO. Fla. -Debbie Rbyae may not took like Elvis Presley, but a Central Florida rock group promoter is hoping a little plastic surgery transforms the 23·year-old woman into a spitting image of the late singing star. ( J "The world's first .,EOPLE one and only f<'male El v i s impersonator--------- .• " s ays D a nn y O'Day, who sever a l months ago promoted plastir surgery that made a young man resemble Elvis "I mean, we got so much play on that. you know what I mean? The people have taken this Elvis thing so far. you would ttunk 'How much farther can it go?' Well. here it goes ." O'Day says he's got two more clients heading into the hospital for plastic s urguy to look like rock 'n' roll's late great stars -one young man who also wants l<\ resemble Elvis and another who hopes to look like singer J im Croce. O'Day, 29, s ays he picks up the bills 'or th~ operations Jt OLYMPI/\, Wash -One pohUc1an has put hol air to a novel use. Gov Olxy Lee Ray (ulfilted :.i childhood fantasy by piloting a blimp. The state's f irst woman ~ove rn o r . a se lf-s t yled transportation junkie. ocrup1ed the Goodyear blimp·s pilot seat for 19 minutes recently. gently nudging the huge airship In a wide arc around this waterfront capital. "Whee! This feels great!" she exulted. "Now if 1 can only u v stop usmg the wrong feet" to mane uver the vehicle. Riding a olimp was one of the few re mammg items left on the governor 's check-off list of "Thmgs 1 Want to Ride or Pilot, .. drawn up when she was a ~1rl. Miss Ray always boasted an untrad1t10nal streak. She changed her name from Margaret to Dixy Lee in memory or the South and the rebel general. , TOKYO -They may not be as revealing as the Watergate tapes, but the public will soon get a chance to hear some of Emperor Hirohito's private. tape-recorded conversations The imperial household has announced that taped conversations between Hirohito and guests ranging from Sadaharu Oh, J apan's home run king. to famed avwtrix Vae Nozokl will go on sail' Aug. 31 as <i long-playm~ record. The conversations have been rcrorded at the emperor's tw1re-:.innual garden parties smre 1972. His household gave pcrm1ss1on for 3.000 LPs to bc made from the tapes Some of the material has been aired on J a panese radio and television newscasts. I • .I .. 17 Wednesday. July 12 1978 ThOmU Keev1l t(d11or orange Coast oao1v Po to• Editorial P~e ................................................................... New Trash Plan Deserves a Trial Thl' Nl!wport Beach C.:1ly Ch urlc r m very clear l:in~uu~c ~uy~ the cit~ has to pick up the tab for trus h col· lee lion out of gene ral fund money. Newport Beach city councilm<'n arc cau~ht in a bind. The voters h •1ve told the m in l>qua lly c lelir terms to c ut dawn on 5pcnding. But some of the city's res ide nts arc raising objections to r educing trash pic kups as a means to accomplis h tha t e nd. In light o f the dile mma, councilme n t•rc ('Onsidcring a ballot m easure. They would u~k voters to g ive them a better indication or how lhl'Y feel about t wicc weekly Lr~sh pickup by c h a n ging lhl' c hart er so the city could bill the m for a t ll'ast part of the coM While ttll' e fforts of the council to do what the citizens want arc commendablC'. 1t might bt' u bL·ttcr 1dc u to adopt .i w:.iit ~mu :-iL't.' ultitudt-before putting any mcus ures on I he ballot T he dl•t.•1sion to !!O ••head ''1th the Nov1.:mbt.·1· bullot propo~ition muc,t be made u~· Aug 14. Tht.> ne w sing le tra:-.h pickup scht.•dulc ''on't go into <'ffcct until Oct. 1. It would bl· bl•tlcr tu g ive lht• city a n opportunity to US(' the s ingle trus h pickup before comm1tting city fund~ to :.i ballot m easure on ~u ch u simple issur Success for Seniors It wa~ lcs5 thun a yl·ar ago thut Newport Beach :-.cnior c1t1ze11s o pe ned the cente r the c ity bought for them 111 Corona dl'l l\1ar r\l the liml'. th<.•n• w(•rt• ;.1 few hundred pt.·oplt! w ho lrn'ml·d tht· Vnl•ncb of OASIS I Oldl'r Adults Sociul. In· 1<1rmatirnwl. Sl'l'\'IC.T > C1.•nte1· and they o pened the ir pro· gr<t m in onl' wing of the s rhool tomplt.•x bought for ttw 1·l·ntl'I' "ith a gr;.1nl from lhl' ft·dNal I lous ing and l 'rban Dl'\'l"iopmcnt Ucpurl ml•nt Thb month marks u milestone in the h istor) of lhl' t<mtc r . The private s chool which ha d occupie d tht.• two o ther wings of the center has move d o ut. making way for t h e senior s to makt· us e of the full complex. And th<.· mem bership in the f',rie nds has comforta bly t oppe d thC' 2.100 mark City offic ial5 a rc m oving ahead with pla n;; to build a 7.500 square fool multi-purpose room which will complete 1 ht.• facility at Fifth a nd Marg uerite avcnu<.'s . A full-lime <·uordinato r """I be hired thi~ yt.'<1 1' to help the senio rs in t fw s c·hl·duling of lhl·ir m:.iny social \tnd educ at ional pro · ~r<1 ms · From thi~ vantage point it'::. hurd tu lw l1e Vt.1 that lhl' h •11t t.•r a nd thl· gl'tJnl thul paid for it Wl're thl· source of :J b1lll·1· runtron·r~\. Thl' s utcl·::.::. of the center ~hould lw ~rat if~·1ng to ttll' in a ny s upporh.•rs who b<tt.'kl'd 11 through !ht.· troublinJ! tinw:-. Belated EconoDly The Coa!-.t Com mu nit~· Colle gt.• D1~tnc:t h:i ~ found a '';I\ i.I ruthcr nbvioul> wav in our ('Vl' to ::.av(• about t; I 10.000 in t axpayt•rs · m oney· l'iJCh ycai· I 11::.tead of m ;11lin g oul cat<Jlog~ for l'ach of its thr<.·<· 1·.impusv~ t'<tl'h 'il'mes t c.•r . plus mi~cd lu neous brochures. Jht· d1stritt wi ll nwkl· lhl•st· puhll ('Utions ;1vailubll· :.it '"' '~·ril'l ,. ol lo<·:1t 111n:-. Onl\ <t d1rt•ctional brochure.· w ill be 111:i1h•tl out Lu tl'll Pl'opll.· whcrt.• to pi('k up th(• publi(·a · l 1011 .... It"·; ;111 l"Xl't.'llt•nl lcl(•a. l'\'t•n thoug h Sl40,000 1::. a l>m<tll .... han· or the di!:-.tr1t't .., Si5 milhon 1977-78 budi:wt. (jnd lhl· m.~· l)l privalt· r nll•rpnsc is commL·ndablc . I lowcwr. thb 1::. the kind or post · Prop. 13 m ove that h us citizen~ ask in~ Why didn'lit happe n s oone r '! T he dutte r of community college publications in .;ma tlhoxt·~ ""a::. one o f the mos t vis ible s igns of the wast4! -ih••t drove manv vote r s lo back the J a rvis a m e ndme nt Olficiab hi1\e indicated thC' new proce dure is CX · J.>t·nmt•nt<.11 and lhal m aili ngs might resume if enrollme nt Jl rup::. ~hurply T hl'.\' :-hould n ·rnembcr that the community collcgL·:-. ·,H·n· ..,d up to .,cl'\"(• µubltt need~ If the public has to be ht1undt·d an<I t•,11u lt•d with._. hhzz;H"d ol mailings to ;mend n·rt.1111 d~'""l'"· tl 1.., l1ml' to .1:-.k 1f tho:-l' t'l<t:-.:-.t·., ar t• n•allv lll'l•Ch·d . • Opinions expresseo In the space above are those of the Daily Pilot. Other views expressed on th is page are those of their authors and artis ts Reader comme nt 1s invited. Address The Daily Piiot. P O Bo" 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (714) 642-4321. Boyd/Sanka ByL.M. BOVD Name of that cofrCl' called • Sanka is a contraction or the : l''r c nc h phrase .. sans car. feinc." Are you a ware how 1t : came to be developed~ The : top man in a big European • corfc<' company, Or. Ludwig ·Roselin, had been looking for : a way to lake out the caf. : feine. Then a s hipload of ! s u c h beans in 1903 was ~swamped with seawater, and : the spoiled coffee was turned .. over to researche rs . That ~ salty sQak led the m lo the de· ~ caffeination process • : Alexander Du m as the •E lder wrote his novels on t. blue paper , his poetry on Ii' ycllo~. and his nonfiction on ~ rose. Sweet ~ Dt>ar Gloomy Gu Too bad the young folk who were so quick to blnmo the old folk~ for air pollution from In· dustry have been e-qual- ly quick lo adopt th Ir air -polluting cu~arette habit. J .C. In a single block on Ar· rowood OriVl' in Me ntor. Oh io. five of the s ix couples li ving on one side of the ~treet have twins. The odds against such 650 million to On{' I low would you like to take a ride on that Jumbocruiser. the German bus that's so big It bends ln the middle when it turns a comer? So would I. Unde rstand it carries 144 passengers and has a kitchen and bar as well as restrooms. Why the milk production or dairy cows falls off just be fore a n earthquake is another mystery. Q ... Aren't most couples in Mexico m a rrio d in the Catholic Church?" A . Not mo s L The estimators say mo.~t couples In Mexico.-seven out of 10. they rigure -aren't married In ony church. Or any st~te omce. either. They're linked ln what's called .. rree·unlon .. marriage. Our Love and War man ls not as famlUar as he might be wtth the romantic circumstances in Mexlco. But he describes free-union marriage here IS lhe buddy system lnlhe wadJng pool. ··where'd lh~ 'Muppets' ael that name7" asks a cllenl. Their creator Jim Henson and hl.$ wire J oan Nebel ~coeted ll from a combination of "puppet" and "marionette." . , Rowland Evan /Robert Novak Sadat Seeks Stronger U.S. Role CAIRO With his "sacred mission" or un overull peace plan under tsraeli check mate. Egyptian Preside nt Anwar Sadat now pins all his hopes on the fact that Jimmy Carter "has started to play a full role" in the Mideast peace process for the first lime President Cart er 's g radual change from sympu the ttc m ediator to th e rolf' of "principal ac· to r .. wa s s igna lled in M r Curter ·s 1nv1Lat1on lo t s ra c l a nd Egypt to send their fore ign ministe rs to m eet with Secretary of State Cyrus Vance in Londoo later this month. That Ame rican "initiative." Sadat told us in an exclusive interview at his summer seaside palace in Alexandria . marks a maJor change. NOT ONLV does the London meeting get Sadat off a pa inful hook. It also opens the way to m orl· American pressure on Israel regardl'd by Sadat as l'Sscnt1al to s:.in· h1 ~ tattered peace plan Sadat acknowlcdgl'd that h~ has been forced l>y lsr<iel to retreat time and <.ig:iin from ht~ origi na l overall pe ace plan droppi n g hls talk about u Palestinian state . for getting his pledge that the Pa lestine Libera lion Organization (PLO >. nol Jordan, mus t be the West Bank's bargaining a gent with fs racl. and on lessPr parts of the plan he took to J erusalem last November. In the face of lh1::. l!.rae lt ... n lr<1ns1gent•t•." W<' asked. how docs Sud<it JUSltf~· ::.ending his forei g n m1n1sll'r ro r another round of face-to·f:J C·l· tulks with l~rat•I '' BECAUSE. h<• saH.I , thl' Lon do n meeting .. is a Carter m itiativc, .. not Sadat's. If 1t faib -and no one here expects sue Mailbox cess -1t must be followed b)' "' distinctly American plan As d preced ent for specific American proposals Sadat used the exam pie of the Nix<>n administration when it drnfted the plan that broke the deadlock over Egyp .. t1an·ls raeli disengagement in the Sinai penins ula afte r the Oc- tobe r 1973 war "Henry Cformer Secret ary of State Kissinger> told me there was a deadlock. that the old lady 1former Prime Minister Golda Ml•trl was very s tubborn:· Sadat said "'So I s uggested an American proposal ·· That time. 1l worked Thus. ir ls rael"s refusal now to rix u t1me tablt> for eventua l Pa lest tman self-determination and to renounce its "right" to Jewis h i;eltlem ents 1n his toric Arab territories -deadlocks the London talks. it will be time for .mothe r U.S. plan .. I think it should be done." Sadat s~ud AFFABLE and relaxed on the s urface. S ada t neverlhl'les::; must be having slecplcs~ night;; .JS t1ml' runs out on h101 flt• 1~ ''I thitik it s tAken root." mort• pointed these duV' 1n h1~ crtltC'tfims of J:..r<it·I ' hardl1nt• Prime M1n1s l1'1 Mt•n.1ht•m Begin. mor<' direct in hi~ prt11l<l' for l s r a <'ll lkfcni.t• M 1nbtE>r Ezer W«>izman ~nd for what he calls .. the Is raeli pe~et• move· me nt ·· .. Mr Bt'gi n i " a fraid of pPacc•. ·· hl· $a1d ... Wl' s peak two different language' ·· Begin·, r d u»<i l to a dmit thil t Jsrat'I ~ft (•r its 1967 l'Onque~b. cJgreed to withdraw from mosl of the· w l"·l Uonk 1:-. • I :i µ1 c.i1 . or Ut·~1n ·, f111d1ng ·,om1.1th 1n~ anyth1n~ 10 htdt' behind · 1n rir dt>r to avoid peact> · It ·'flt)t•t11·, tor !oomc reason that hl' doei-.n l wa n t to reach an .igrecmenl · Not so We1z man. Al dinnn 1n Jt>ru -;a tem las t November. Sadat told Begin how rnuch hc ltked We it man "and Begin wa~ very happy. but he is not happy now." We12man s plit with Begin last month over fsraer s strategy in dealing with the U .S on Sad at"s peace plan. Beg1 0 1s now trying to exploit that conflict a r<>vea lmg s ig n or how ft•W negotiating w<•apons hl• ha:. ll'l1 ~AOAT 1~ now undt·r \ 1c1ou~ pr('~\Urt· lrom Jlmu'I t hi· t·nl1rr· Arab ~orld lo .1d m1I that h1~ dann~ .Jt:ru~all'm pcac't' m11>s1on h.J~ fJ ll <'d S\r1 Jn Pn•,1denl llJft•t. Ass<.i d want•; SadJI lo m akt• a humiliating publ1t· declat'i.ltion of fatlurl•. Algeria would settle for a "pnvall' let- te r '" from Sadat to ;ill Arah heads of state admitting fa1lurt· a nd agrec•ing t o an a ll ·Arah m eeting lo plot a ne w l'ourse Dul adm1ss1on Of railurt.· would bl' a bitter t'nd of S<.1d:11 ·c. pcar1.· drc•om and prob<tbly of ht:- JOb Fot Pre~1dcnt C ,, r1 l'r 11 \\OUld bt· t·alam1tou' 11 l,\tlu ld l,\IPl' Ollt lhl' largl'\t 'Ingle In \ t•~tm1•nt ht· h:.HI mJch• in lw' bdl·. l.!Ul'rt•d l<>rl'IJ.:I" polln Mon· 1rnport.1r.t. 11 '>'Ould ).(t\1 ,1 I raf\M"t.'n dcrn \0 1C'lc1rv lei thl' Sovwt L:n1un and 1nt•\·11 ,1hh trig g1·r ;, nt·w Am ... n e..in dl·tl1nt• ois I 1• <• d l' r 11 t th I' W •''I w i I h rataclysm1t· t.'ffcct:-. 111 th1' mo,1 slratl•g1c.-part of the gluh1• Illegal Aliens a Federal Responsibility To I hl· Editor RC'C'entl;. dul· lo pressur"' gene rated by .. Latino leaders:· Attorney General Griffin Bell advised local law enforcement agencies to s top enforcing U.S. Immigration Laws because only the federal government in the guise of the U.S. Immigration Service has the authorit y to de· tain and deport illegals It has always amazed me how the federa l bureaucrats can sit in Washington. listen to a select few. a nd ca st a n all·knowning declaration over the heads or the masses Realizing that Mr Bell is only mouthing wh:it statutes <.ilrcudy exist. I wonder how he expcds local law C'nfo rcement lo deal with the l'VCr increasing problem of non Eng lish speak ing il lega ls 1nftlt r at ing Cal ifornia a nd other s l at e borders by the thousunds. ne cent estimates s uggest that Los Angeles and Orange Counties alone have a million and a half illegals. 80 percent of whom are Mexican Chicago. report local immigration officitils. has over 600.000 illegal Mexicans, not to mention the illegal alien innux into otht•r major LI S cities MuniC'1pal and ~tall' law en forcement personn<'I . especially in the Southern Calt forniu ar ea. ore continually hampered when encounter ing Mexican illegals who have committed crimes. violated traffic laws, or are ob· served in a set of suspicious c irc ums t a nces . These in dividuals h ave little if any ide ntification. cannot s peak English. and prove to be ig- norant of many of California's laws. FOR THE m o s t part , the victims or crimes or acc1· d ents involving Illegals have lllllc or no recourse agalnsl the tllcg:tl due to their hlghly transient a nd unstable economic nature In fact. Mexicans und oth('r 111(.'gals u rt> m any time!, de ported rather thun held for trial a ndto r c ivil lltlgation Within a 11hort J)t!rlod of time .. ma ny of these same individuals will wander across tM border Lo take up where they le ft ort. Another faction in California rails vtcum to the lnnux of ii· legals in the form of the In· dlvldual prope rty owne r who pays taxes that In turn support our liberal we lfar e ~ystem F.nch day tllegttls receive some type of support whether It be monetary. medical or police and fire. So T !lay lo Attorney Gene ral Griffin Bell. pressur(' Cong~ss to lncrcase lmmlgrolion person· nel and activate more stringent penalties tor Illegal bord er crossers and their American employers Con centrate on po~tll\'l' alternallvc!. 1n'Ll•ad of prcs~ing loca l law E!nforccmcnt who (•annol clOSl' lht•1r t•ycs lo violations or laws. fede ral or s t ale. due lo the• course and :-,cope of their profession. In s imple r terms, if the federal law enforcement agencies would do the job they are directed to do. local law enforcement wouldn't have to take up the slack I> KJ\NE 6eitb19 Loudt!r To lht• Editor Thi~ 1-; :.i repllt•:it1on of .loM:ph In 1m"~ Junl· 2!! rC'~pon~l· lCI m) I l• I l l'I U f J Un l' f r l'J.( a r cl I n g u1q>0rt noiSl' emao;,llng from Or<•OJ!l' Count~ J\irporl flight operations Commt•rc·1:1I und privatl' Jt:l a i r (' r u f I d n n o t J u ~ I ;1 <· I :.1rh1l r uri l v. lhcv ,H'l 1r rc~ponsibl y 'They do not fl y flight paths d1n•cted by th<.· Orangt' County Air port Tht•y tak e o ff with '"m agnetic parameters" as they sec ftl Tht• ~a me applies to heights Do you want to know about tlw real effects or uirl'rnft nols1•'1 Ask .J anc Mosmann in I rvinc· Terrnee She 1s :i homeownl'r who h:td nois(• monitonnl{ <'QU1 p mcnl on hl•r house Mr In-ml•' I {' t t l' r <, o u n d .., I 1 k l' t h t· bureaucratic pcip which wc con t1nually rN'l'ivt• T hings hkt• ·within lt mila t1ons o f their equipment ... much has been done to reduce noise,·• does not lcll us anything. T H E CRUEL. daily fact IS that the noise gets worse. tht.' noise becomes mor<.' frequent. the private jet aircraft Is more noticeable I have listened to 11•t s t uking off at 5·30 ti m within the last four Wl·cks It 1s not gcllm~ better 11 •~ gettutg 1,\01 ~l' lJnt1I we aggres!.t\ely put pres .;url' on Air <.:ulirornit1. Air Wc:1t .md Oranf(c County operation:-. to rly t11gh, fly morl' quietly end to eonform to the pre:scrlbed head· ings. wt• are doomed to be lnsuJl- ed with bureaucratic st roking as evidenced in Mr. Irvine 's letter If a ll or us julil wring our hands and bleat to the m~ as done by the inh:ibttont.s o( the Warsaw Ghetto, we ore doomed to sutfer the sam e fate. Impact. cd v ictim~. get on your hind legs a nd raise hell' Supervisor Rllcr- pl casc pay attention WILLIAM M MONROE S4ulrr.b Doo••d To the Editor Nobody cares" Two remaining colonies of ground squirrels that have Inhabited the low hllls where the Newport Center Is being constructed are doomed. These .. mJll antmJ b a n · ..ibout 10 foci I h t· g ri n d I n g ' l l· t.' I o f I h t· hu lldo~t·r·._ s hon·I <.i rter hu~ many t•enturie~ or l'XISltn~ there• Cod u Ion<' know~ ONE COLONY located to thl', ri~ht of the drive to the trv1nc C<>u ntry Club JU~t off Coa~l ll1~hway momentarrly 1s .ibout to bc,destroyed. Som l' of the n· main1ng town could be relocated cleep in the hills south of Corona dt•I Mar This <•olony 1~ localed I o t h t' I NI g ,,. n i£ n o r l h on Nl•wport c'."t.'nlc-r Drtvl' 1rom Coa:.l I lt ghw:1; :icros' 1 rom the nl'~ la~ ofrtn· bu1ld1ni,: Wt• rt• leaving town lmltl lht· fir~t part of Augu..,t b111 1f you would 1·a re tu ht·lp. 1wrhJP' ~omc of you C'an :1c1 n<1w or "''-'I' until we retur n to ,,ivt· and rt· loc·at C' so m e of the~l· l1 ttlt· C'reaturcs Write P 0 Rox 274 . Corona dc l Mar 92625 or gel toget her earli er you r <.l'IVl'" T hey have been pushc·d buck to lhts last s mall (1c ld and thev need your help. 11 ·~ all the worid they've ~ot DOREEN an(! .JAY BURCHE1·r E "'pire Building To thc• Editor I 'l'l' in lht· 0:111~ P1lo1 lhat Co:i~t ltnl· Com munil ~ Collt•gt• ha~ "'on the b1ddanf! ror Bayv1cw School with a ml'C'ling ~chedulcd this Ol·Xt WCl'k lo <it.•ltlc on l.hl• final bid f attended the .June 14 meetin~ of the truslcl'.; t o o bserve whether Prop. 13 would mak<' any difference m the planning for Coastline. When Item 4 11 ca m e o n t he a~<'nd a abou1 Bayview. onl• ~erious s peak«>r from the audience said "'It can ·1 be busmes!> a~ u~ual ·· But 11 wa:. Thc board voted to ~turt lht> negotiating ror thl· '"' ~C'Llr lt.•u.M! Tht!-wa:-. I hl'I r re,pon~t· to thl· luxpayer' rt•\oll Wtwn Mr Rodda .introduC't'<l the motion ·· ... ubJl'C"l to th<' 1·~ 1stenct· or Cousthnt.· Community Cotleg€' .. he drew n loud round of applause rrom th<• u ud1 en<'1· Thc rt' nre many or us land no1 f:lculty me mbers from OCC and Golden Wcstl who question the soundness o( the Coas t11nl· policies. and in hght or Prop. 13. there is no excuse tor the board of trustees to be committlnR the mselvrs to a leui.e (or .... col lege wtlh<>ut wutls · E V E N I F I h t· r v f! u I .s r dassroom1> in th{· 'chool di~· trtcts rtll t.' their rentul ft.>cs. this 1s no ju!ltlficntlon The• district spokesman who talked about .. cost ()ffcctivcness" is thinking long rango. fn!ltead he should be thinking obout how to cut back the expenses of Co. s tline and 11~1n~ 111 rn~11<1 1h1· µrog1 .in• molt• ollTt'lll. b'1 111 I hl• I.I\ pa~ 1·r' • 1\ncl t ht~ -.h1rnld pruh· Jhl\ indudl· u~er It·(•.., • Ct1.J'-ll1n1• m.1y ht• wirn11ni.: m<.iny al•c·oluck~ Imm l h1· uut srdl• world but t hoM · or u~ ~ho pay thl' bills ... el' II ~"-a r1nl' I''< amplt• of t•mptr<.' butldtnf! l\l r Simon. th<.· mun in c harl!c or dt' tributwn of brol'hUrl'" h:" 111~1 Jnnounc·<.'<1 his c·hange or JX>ll<·~ but c1nly lht· pre~~urt· ol l'rup l:f 1n~t 1i.:atccl ht~ tn·~1t I\ l' nt•w pl:rn /\n<I. 111 At·• into ,, l11fldtnl! li;.11 lh-\\1lh 1·1tlwr of lhl• C.ird1·P Sdwub. holh prl\ ;11t• 1n~111ut111n ... \\ho mu ... 1 l un1·11011 1,\1111111 • bud).!d. \\il' lrul\ lht• u111m,111· 111 <l1~ri·l!anJ ru •ht• la<pt1~1·r' \"I It(: I'\ I,\ ~OTll BOIUllWI To thl' Editor I <I vl'ry mud1 llk1• 10 10~~ .1 puhlic bOUflUt'l •n the· gc•n1•r:at cit rl'<.'l ton of t h1• Nt·'>' 1w rt Ut·dth PotiC(' Department and more· p rt•c·•~l·l y Iowan! .in un1<1c n· 11f1NI young offtc·l·r whn 'olOppe('f me the• otlwr dav lor ;1 1•;1rl'!t•.;!- clri v1n g t•r-ror th:.11 1·on~111u11·<I .• 1·h•:ir n){11• '1111;1111111 Tht• 11suJi -.1t•r1•ot~ pt• 111 1h1 n l ;11 ion h<1ppv · pollt·1· 111f1n•1 11lhnit out his ·quot.• 111 l1t•kc·t~. \\ ,,, QUIC'k l~ ;10(! h;1 pp1ly dl' rn o I 1 ' ti 1• d I n ' I t• .1 <I I \'I-•• ' J.H"I\ ilt·~t·cl 111 mC'<'I .I -.t n(•t'r(• C'ourtt-ou~. <·on ~n1·n11011' J nd t•ons1dt•rut1· youn~ man who wu' seven • without tx-ing ..,olcmn ,1 li ght lOuc·h, bul ;1 firm ont'. he h.·t me· go with <• warnmJ? a nd in so domA occomphsht>d more. in my o pinion. for th<.' dl' partment wnd for lhl· c·uus<· 01 I rnff1c sttlcly > than ht.• could <'On t't•i vably have· 1f hl' d "mph· "'ntt<•n out thE> t·11 :i11on 1 a~ tw h;1(1 1·\'l'ry tcchn!c..1 '. 1u-.1111<·:i1wn 101 clo1 ng • I ('O~~H:!\O ,, ch pMlm1·n1 1,1n<1 an 1nul\·1du!l ! 1 tl1Jt hJ~ ,, pol1q 01 looking bc)und llw 111 1ru<·t1on to otht•• t:•rlor' Thi' humun nnd thoughllul .11111111h• dCSl'rVl'S our t1dm1ru11on 11 c·t•1 t<iioly hu~ mine• Thi:; lctkr is M mpl~ J "..tY 01 ~uy in tt '"lhu nlt you <Jlld more. 1t l!>l to l'Onvey my rl·~pcc1 and my ns!lur<tn<'t'~ th.11 I will try henceforth to drive· with the. "U m l' considerat ion wh1d1 wus shown to m<.' Wll.Ll1\l\f fo: J.F:R~ER • IAttnt from reader• "'' u.'f'lct1mr Th<' nght to condtn8t ltr:f.'1• ro /•t fPOCi' or f'l1mmote l1btl •~ , .. s"'7td Ltrttn of 300 wor<t.t or 1 ... u Will bt- gsvmi prt/ertnct. 1W wttert must 1n elude ngnoh1 re end 1001/mg oddrt ia ,,.., "omt• mov be WithMld on , .. qut1t 1/ 111//ic1ent rto.ton t.t tlpf>OM'.l l'od'l/ wrll not be P11bl1.1h«1 . • J 17 . ' l t ' Saddlehaek ED ITI ON ,,fternoon N.Y. toeks t VOL. 71, NO. 193, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESUAY, JULY 12, 1978 TEN CENTS . fLobbyist Law Hit by County Panel : By GARY GRANVILLE Of-. Deity f'I ... S\Mt The Orange County Fair Cam· paign Practices Commission re· commended Tuesday night that the county scrap its 5-year-old lobbyist control ordinance. In the commission 's view, the county's measure should give way to provisions controlling so- o.alled inrtuence brokers con- tained in the recently enacted TIN CUP campaign reform or dinance. 'tlN CUP was enacted ah.er political reformists headed by former county planning com· missioner Shirley Gr indle col· lected more t han 100,000 voter signatures on initiative peti· lions . Rather tha n place the TIN CU P measure on 'November's gener al election ballot, county s upervisors enacted it as an or- dinance that will go into eff~t after the Nov. 7 election TJN CU P zeroes in on lob- byists who contribute and solicit contributio n s to co unty supe rvisor political campaigns. Supervisors who have accept· ed more than S250 a year from the so-called influence brokers will be prohibited from voting on issues affecting theirs and their 1 Pay Suit Filed County Workers Protest Deprived by state leg1slat1on o f a 5.5 per cen t pay raise 1 guara nteed them under a two· year contract signed in 1977, county government workers in Or a nge County Tuesday took their case to the state Supreme Court · The suit filed by the Orange County Employees Association • asked the court to set aside state t legis lation that prohibited pay I r aises to loca l employees unless si mila r raises were given to s tate workers Gov. Edmund G Brown Jr made the link an issue last week whe n he vetoed budgeted 2 5 percent pay raises for state employees. Co n seque ntl y, pu b l i c em ployees in Orange County a nd other local j u risdictions have been denied raises. includ- ing those already given in exi st· in~ contracts. The e m ployees association lawsuit alleges the state over Morris Dies Famed Tf Cat Expires at 17 CHICAGO <AP> -Morris. the finicky 9-Llves cat on television commercials, is dead at the age , of 17, the pet food company said today Morris' ve'le rin·aria n. Dr Ba rbara Stein, said the cat died Friday and was buried in a s ub· urb on the grounds of the home he shared with his ha ndler. Bob I M artwick. She said Morris l d eath was a ssoci at ed wit h cardiac complications related to \ oldage A t 17 , M o rri s w as the equ i valent of a 90-year-old huma n, she said. Morris was found in 1966 in a Chicago-area humane shelter by an animal handler searching for an o rnnge cat to appea r m a te levision commercial. At the age of 7, Morris starred in his first commercial for 9-Lives and fo r the next 10 years made more than 40 television commercials A spokesman for the public r" lations agency that handles the Hccount for the pet food com pany said Morris' role will be ta ke n over by a cat who has ser ved as a n understudy He LIVED NINE LIVES The Late Morris too. will be known as Morris. .. He 's a double for Morns physically a nd is as finicky, aloof and independent as his pre decessor. ··said a spokesman. Bends Kill Diver In Aliso Accident I 'I A 41-year-old diver who dJed in a ship 's d ecompression • chamber off Aliso Beach Tues- } day, may have been a few days : away from returning to his Cami t l I I Orang_. Coas t Weather Ear ly morning l ow clouds and local fog near coa st , otherwise sunny Thurs da y. Sligh t l y w armer. Lows lonight 58 t o 62. Highs T hursday from high 60s at beaches to lower 80s inland INSIDE TODAY Plain w r a pping of napemtOT~t it~ hG$ aet olJ o reocHon. Whilt tM chain aa11• ft'• bdngtng fn cuatomer1. oth~r• qaieition qsialUJI. fo'ood, Page CJ. ... .,. ly following a months-long ocean sewage outfall project. The diver Hiram Beckham of Goleta. was working 191 feet below the ocean's surface about 9:30 a.m. when his pressure s uit s uddenly filled with air, propell- ing his body toward the surface. a Dana Point Harbor Patrol spokesman said today. When Beckham hit the sur- face, be was rushed Into a de· compression chamber aboard the World War II Liberty ship Davy Crockett. a spokesman said. Beckham was reported as s uf- fering a "severe ca se of the bends." a disorder that results from a too rapid decrease in at- mospheric pressure. Pressure al 190 feet is nearly six times the pressure on land so divers must come up s lowly to a llow their body pressure to ad- jus t . Beckha m was placed inside the decompression cham ber in an attempt to equa lize outside pressure with his body pressure. A Harbor Patorol s pokesman sald several doctors were flown to the ship, anchored ofl South Laguna. But Beckham lapsed Into a coma and died in the decom- pression chamber at about 2:30 p.m . "This guy's 1ull somehow overinflated," sold Or. Richard Scott. "It blew up like a balloon ond be popped out of the wahir like a cork. He wu unconscious. serio~ly sick and In shock from tSee OfVER. Paae AZl s tepped its bound s by ··un reasonably" forci ng loca jurisdictions to violate existing contracts. The s uit alleges state action violates principles of due pro- cess and is an unjustified in ter ference with a vested ri~ht That vested right is seen as local control over the wages and working conditions or public employees. The lawsuit seeks a writ of (See PAY, Page A2> Schuller's Daughter Said Fair Carol Schuller . 13-year -old daughter of the Rev. Robert Schuller, was described as being in fair condition this morning following surgery on a partially a m putated left leg yesterday at Childrens Hospital of Or ange County in Orange. "Her vital s igns are stable and within norma l limits for a pa - tient with injuries which include traumatic amputation of her left leg below the knee." said a spokesman for Dr. Schuller . world-famous pastor of Garden Grove Community Churc h. C a r o l w as a dmitte d to Childrens Hospital at 3 a .m. Tuesday for treatment or in- jur ies suffered Friday in a motorcycle accident near Sioux City, Iowa. The girl was flown to Or ange Cou nt y Air port by ai r am· bulance following the amputa· tion at a Sioux City hospital. Carol. who lives with her fa mily in Orange, had been rid· ing on the back ol a motorcycle driven by a cousin who swer ved to avoid a braking car and hit an oncoming car. Her cousin's leg was broken. Rev. Schuller. who grew up on a northwes t Iowa farm, is known for his gospel of "possibility thinking" and his weekl y television program , "Hour of Power." The pastor, Mrs. Schuller and Carol's oldest sister . Sheila. and brother Robert J r . have been at the-girl's bedside since she was admitted. a spokesman said at the hospital. Carol's attitude is said to be "very good" by the spokesman who said the girl's physicians are Dr. William C. McMaster, a n orthopedic surgeon. and Dr. Bruce M. Achauer. a plastic sur· geon. She was described this morn- ing as "alert, feeling good and improving." A family s pokesm a n s aid Carol is expected to remain in <See CAROL, Page A2) .Rock Star Recovering ST. PAUL, Minn. <API Guitarist Bill Wyma n or the Rolling Stones rock group was released from a local hospital Tuesd ay less than 24 hours after falling from a stage rollowing the group's performance here. Wyman fell when he leaned againRl a stage curtaln, thinking it was a wall. Stones s)>okesm an Paul Wasserman said. The 1wtari11t hit his bead and was unconaclous for about 10 minutes. He su/· rercd a chJpped kfluckle, sprained w r is t , and strained cart!laae In two flngcra. clients' financial well being. In contrast t o those s tiff stipulations. the existing county lobbyist control measure seeks only full public disclosure of lob- byists public spending habits But a lobbyist is defined as anyone who atte mpts to in- fluence the decis ion of any supervisor. county employee or county commissioner. As a result. files maintained l)y county clerks bulge with thousands of registrants who. m the traditional sense a re not persons 'paid by a third pa rty to lnnuence government decisions Included in the bulky files are registration cards for business executives. salesmen. lawyers and others who discuss govern· ment busi~ess as virtl.lal sidelights of their jobs tr the commission 's recom· mendation 1s followed by the Board of Super v isors. tha t .iyste m will be aba ndoned in favor of the TIN CU P measure that targets about a dozen lob- byists. The political comm1ss1on also voted una nimous ly to recom· m e nd that the board prohil\,it any county e lected official. employee or a ppointed coro- ISee LOBBYIST. Page A2> t O•llV l'llOI St.ttf l'- A IR CRAFT NEARLY CUT IN TWO AFTER BEING STRUCK BY RUNAWAY PLANE Owner Was Hand-Cranking Propellor When His Craft Left on Its Own Runaway Plane Crashes HIDllington Damage Estimated at $60,000 By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Ol tlle O•ll'f l'llet Sta-ft A r unaway plane whose pilot was hand-cranking the propellor tried lo take off alone a t Hunt· inglon Beach's Meado wlark Airport Monday night, careen· 1ng into three other parked aircraft. One eyewitness. a flight in- structor alerted by the s udden roar of the engine. estimated damal'(e al $60,000 or more as one a ircraft wets almost sliced in ha lf by the pilotless plane · · tt never reall y quite got a irborne. but there was about 60 feet out there where it looked like it wasn't going through that tall gr ass ... said Russ Fisher . "It may have gotten off the ground a bOut a foot." added Fis· her, a pilot trainer fo r A v1at ion Unlimited. Aviator Richard Ha nd of Hun- tington Beach had been hetnd cranking the propellor after tinkering with a dead battery about 9 p.m .. investigators said . "He mis-estimated how far he had the throttle in." said Hunt in glon Be ach Poli ce Offtcl'r Richard Butcher. who handled the nrst reports or the ancident. The eng1ne roared to lire and the Cessna 172, seased and rent· ed out by the Aviation Company. 5141 Warner Ave .. proceeded to rruise across thC' s mall field with Hand in pursuit. Q ··He 's lucky the prop didn't h1l him.·· said eyewitness Fisher He said after starting to tax• on its own and perhaps lifting off the ground momenta nly, lhl· Cessna abruptly spun arouncl and oegan pursum~ its pursuer on a colh~1on .::~urs<' Worst Yet to Come? County Sees Prop. 13 Impact Delayed Wh il e most non-city service area budgets will increase in the fi rst post· Proposition 13 fiscal year . Orange County officials predict the "true impact" of the property tax limitation measure won't be felt until next year. Saddleback Va lley service a r eas , whic h are mer e l y budgetary designations for por· lions of unin<'orporated te r- ritory, are Leisure World, South Laguna Hills, El Toro. Mission • Viejo and Aegean Hills. Most significant a m o ng service area budget increases is the El Toro section with a pre dieted Sl.2 million 77-78 budget compared with $774,000 last year. The increase, according lo a * * ... Viejo Advisers county Environmental Manaj:!e ment Agency spokesman. 1s duE: to a carry-over of ~rant funds for E l Toro Community Pa rk Other increases ranged from $4,000 in South Laguna Hills to $242,000 in Aegean Hills. EMA spok esm an E r ni e Schneider said Tuesday the tn· creases were due to E(rants car r ied over from last year for park development. lie indicated county offtc1a1s would study potential park dl' velo pment. howeve r . to de · termine whether or not to pro· ceed with building plans. "We're putting a ir our re serves into these budgets to keep the m at a reasonable lt>vel this year ," he s aid. "Next year . * k • when the reserv~s i.lrc gone. Nt' could have real problems · Schneider said ~ounty off1c1als would use two factors in de- termining which parks to <h .. ·elop One criterion .voulo be thP i>roportion of ~rant money to prope rty tax runds necessary to develop the facilities. For example. ~ proposed park which IS runded 80 percent by grant money would receive a higher priority than a park ex peeled to be built with a 50·50 split between property lax funds and grants. And county officials a.so will cons ider the impact on service area operating expenses 1f the <See PROP. 13. Page A21 A It * Bigger Budget Expected By WlWAM HODGE Of .. o.llf ...... S\lft Despite pre-Proposition 13 wa rnings or vast budget cuts and declining public services. Mission Vi ejo Municipal Ad· vlsory Council members were told Monday they could expect a bigger budget this ye ar than 1977-78 naures. But the approximately $150,000 increase -to 11. 7 milUon -could leave a false sense or security to those con· cerned with tbe planned com· munlty's perk and landscaped s lopes upkeep. That's bccaulJe county of· flclals are allocaUng reserves and contingency (unds to ~l the budget to reasona ble levels -for the first post-J arvis year "We could be \I\ big trouble next year." county Environ men tal Management Agency c EMA~ representative Ernie Schnelder INSIDE LOOK AT ALLSTARS Dally Pilot s portswriter Dave Cunnln1ham covered the 49th All-Star classic in San Diego Tuesday For full details and resul ts. see Sports section. 81 · conceded Tuesday "We're ollocatm~ all our re ser ves trying to maintain these cCo unt y S e r v i ce A rea l budgt?ts." he continued "We'll be hurting the following year when reserves and contingen- cies aren't available ." Schneider told MAC members Monday county orrtclals planned on savtng some of the funds in- cludt d In the proposed 1978-79 budget. Over S900.000 Is set aside ror park de velopm nt that mlght not be approved. · ·w e ·re goma to ha ve to look .1\ where we can rut back so we <'an m a ke 1t. n t>xl yea r ," Schne1dtr S81d. C See FUNDS, Page At) .. .. " '., . -sa Parity Sought On Panel Charging that too many Sad· dleback Unified School Distnct •mployecs serve on the district's ~oint Budget Committee. a valley area organization is call· 1n g for more representation bv tommunity organizations or in· dividuals. Saddleback Arca Coordinating Council's <SACC) executive board has recommended a parl ty between district employees -.nd community representatives. The recommendation, said SACC orr1ciaJs, is to be sent to the distnct board of trustees The budget committee was establisht>d earlier this year by Ponald Ames. assistant superin t endent ro r i nstructional :services. when he was acting 1tupermtendent In the absence or Supt. Richard Welte. Ames said this w eek the 'budget committee is only one or several which makes budget rec ommendations to the district s uperintendent and was formed to consoUdat" reports and the thinking or three other commit tees with budget recommend& ttons for consideration by the board of trustees. The Joint Budget Committee Ames said. is composed of the pres ident and an additional member of each of the district's thret> employee bargaining un 1ts: by two members or the Sad- dleback Valley Administrator's Association; the president and a member of th4' Education Coun cit . the chuarman of the dis- tnct 's Blue Ribbon (.'ommatlee I a <'Ommumty group formed to review budgets I and by district business manager Gilbcr• Moreno and ha msc:lf. The budget committee. which has met four tames. seeks com ment from lhc public. Ames flOtl'd ··Ther e wui. no a ttempt to "taek the committee," he said. hut notPd that voting on budget rl·t'•>m mcndat1ons has hcl'n un :m1mous "\\Ith a flow t•xcep t 111ns ' Ai:.k1•d what µromptcd SAC("s hid fur mon1 rcpn·scntat1on on lhc <.'ommittce. Ames said. "I don't l'ccl I shoulci comment on •hat • SACC exeru t1ve board member Marcia Rudolph, who µropos ed the comm unity rcp"esentation recom mendation, -;<1 1d she believes "the com mum · ty at large 1s somewhat sus p1<'ious of this kind of setup la d 1strict·cmploye" dom i natcd committeel " #'mm Page 11 I FUNDS ... Ile su1d only S517,000 1n ''>1t1matc,'<.1 p'"opcrty tax revenue i. included in th(• Sl.7 million ~udget figure Last year's prop· crty lax support wa:. $862,000. MAC mc·mbers expressed con· t.•ern ovt'r the elimination of ~I reel sweeping ~ervices in the <'Ounty service a rea budi;(ct. · · 1 think W(' ·re going to be in for I rouble if we don't get somP k 1 nd o f street s weeping ... Chairma n Ted Keene said Scvt>ral me mbers su~gested contracting for street sweeping un tht' community's major o.1rteraal strC<!ts. sud· al> La Paz Ho ad The coU11c1l 1s scheduled to meet July 18 at 6.45 p m. to con s ider any final odJustments to the budget That meeting will take place Jt MAC offices. 27021 La Paz Rd., Suite 2K, m Mission Viejo Oil Leak Reported SARAJEVO, Yugos lavia CAP) More than 7,000 gallons of crude oil leaked into the Drlna R i Vl'r when 1.1 worker forgot to tighten a screw on a tank near Zvornik, in central Yugoslavia u ~ovemment commission said The lea~ continued for two day:. until fishermen noticed It OR ANOE COAST 'D DAILY PILOT '""'Or~ CO.\t o ..... P1~ will'l..wfW<l\ I\.(°"" btfW'Gl"""flt"w' Pr"'\\ 1\cwbtlv.-dbytn.Or~ ( M\I Puft41Vllf'tO(Otn04f'I' ~•-1.t .. I~.,., OwOt•"'"~ Mo,_,-!., '"''°"~ h\de• '°"" CO\t• Mf"w ... WtMtff 0.IKh HVftU""'°" ... ._,,......,. l61ft Ytllt., trv1"" \tiHIW«' ¥11 .. ., •"4 ~:=~'t~~~~·,~:r~';t. P"'H'W•l.MI• N~·~~l"Q ,,1,uu I\ .. uo Wl\,t n • ., \trHI CO\tA lllM\4 C••1M1n1•9"" .... ,., N Wt-flt ... ,., .... ,.,,_, Pubf,yvw JHkll (-~tC• ,....~,~· •"'411 w .... """'~ 'T9't'fft•tlC•nH la1t0t , ... .,.. .. """""""' 1Mn•o1.,. ~ .. ,., CMllH" LM• .,._. .. """ ""'"'"'' ~4'"~'"'1 ldOon S.ddltbtCk V t llft ()mce ))101 l• .,., .... •t \an O(f9t ,,_., OfflcH C:O\IOMo•• »0Wt>tl!ht.1- """h"O!Oft 8'1oth 1111S .. -.thto•ll .. ltf~ l •0.,...11•.._h 11 .. O'-'tt 14,.., T~t(114)~1 CltHHled AdYtltlllfll ... ..,. ~-· VllO.r-Oltl(t 111 .. 110 '''"''"'"'(lt-•tt-teoo ~-·i: :=. o:::r. (~~.=~~~lat f'ft:Tttt ef' •ctw!Ti\#M f ltO ~"If\ ..... , .. tl !ft•dtit<td •UNhff ... (,t i .. fMIUlfili\ tt .. ...,.1 ... 1- --~, ... "'' ......... C..t• ~ ... (•l1f•tA•• \VOH'••t•on e; c•rr••r O ~ ""°"''"''" ~-...... u ,. ,,..,..,.,,. ftttllt•ff -· .... ·-ii ,._,~ly W.on..o.y. JUiy 12 19'8 'limber Helping Limber Wha t are these l wo men doing to this littl<> tree in M ason Regional Park. Irvine'? They weren 't hurting it , actually. They were using it t o exercise in preparation for the 9.5-mile Sea King Back Bay An mversary Hun Some.: 710 runners lopeo a r ou nd the duck pond~ of San Joaquin Marsh to Cn1vers 1ty lligh School ~nd back. Re lated Photo. puge BL Fro,,. Pagr :I I CAROL ... the hospitaJ for several weeks and will be filled with an artificial limb sometime in the near future. Telephone Strike Still Spreading "The leg is described as clean and it looks as though t he re will be no problem with infection." the spokesman addf>d. Viet Visit U.S . HONOLULU IAP) A six. man Vietnamese delegation mt•t with U.S. officiaJs today to ex· change information about Viel nam war dead. The meeting al the Joint CC1sualt v Resolution Center marked the first V1N namese visit to the U.S. outside the United Nations sincl..' Com· munist takeover or the Southea~t Asian nation NASHVILLE. Tenn. <AP-- T e lephone officials reported some minor delays in complet· ing long·distance calls today as a two-day.old wildcat strike ::.pread to include workers i11 nine states. Jim Wolfe. a South Central Bell spokes man. s;11d that <>t" t.·as1onal del<ty~ were being rc- porll'd but that the problems wcr€' not serious .. In Ohio. Tom Cotton .• 1 s pokes man for Ohio BC'll of Columbus. suid scrv1ct.• was normal except for delays in <'Om pleting operator -assisted lvng-d istancc and directory t·alb Split Final Meg's Divorce Official LONDON U\P> Princ·e:,~ .Margaret's divorce from Lord Snowdon h as become official. The princess. only sister of Queen Elizabeth JI . was granted a temporary decree May 24. but under Britain's no-fault divorce system . the break became absolute 'I\1esday. '.fhe royal divorce wus granted on g rounds of ir retrievable breakdown of the 18-ycar-old marr iage They had been separated fort wo vcurs. London {!OS!:iip columnists urc reporting that Lord Snowdon. 48. may marry his film assist ant Lucinda Lindsay.Hogg. Margaret , 47. says s he has no marital plan~. Front P~ ,1 J LOBBYIST LAW . • • The walkout began Tuesday whc.>n mnc American Telephone & TelC'graph Co. employees in !'lashvtllc were s uspended after declining to cross a picket line sl't up by South Central Bell Tl'll'phonl· Co. workers Thc South Central Dell workers were protesting having to work six d;1ys a week The !>trike later spread lo Mcmph1 s and Nas h vi ll e : Dt•n ver: Kuns as C ity. Mo .. Lol!is ville, Ky. J ackson. Miss .. Charlotte. Gret.>nsboro. and Stanfield. N.C.: Detroit; Colum· bus. Toledo and Dayton. Ohio'. and Indianapolis. South Bend and four smaller Indiana com· munities Some t•mp l oyee s of Southwestern Bell tn Oklahoma City ~taycd off the job for one dCI y. but ended picketing today 1n complianct• with u federal tourt ordl..'r Thl' walkout has not dis rupted long-distance service. said MikC' McCor stin. a spokesman at AT&T's headquarters in BeJ minster. N.J . :\I cCnrst1n said negotiators for AT&T and the Communication:-. Workers of America were 11l'$!Oliatini:: by phone to end the wildcat ~trike. Girl, 3, Hurt SOUTH GATE IAP> -A 31 ~·ycar·old South Gate girl found burit'<l alive 1n a construt'· tion trench near her home was reported in critical condition at Martin Luther Kin~ Jr. General llosp1tal Beach Time Limited Laguna Beach counctlm('n gave fina l approvnl to a tough new animal control ordinance Tuesday night that will ban dogs from the beach all year. except for certain hours. The council action came near the end of a marathom six and one half hour session that ended catty today. Nearly a dozen citizens -mostly opposed to the new ordinance -spoke before the council. Speakers lermed the or dinance unfair to "r esponsible" pet owners and said the ~ity should instead attempt to en- force its current animal la ws. The new law. drafted by Coun· cilman Kelly Boyd. allows dogs on the beach -on a leash before 8 a .m. and after 6 p.m DIVER ..• the minute he hit the surfact-. · Scott. head of the m edieal o.1lert center al the Los Angele~ County Health Scrvic~s Depart· ment. directed viu radio the cf fort to save the diver. The center a lso dispatched doctors to the scene. The diver was placed in s ide a shipboard decom pression chamber moments a fter he sur faced at 9 :30 a .m .. s he r iffs deputies said. He died in the chamber about five hours later "This is a very rare and very difficult kind of problem . when someone s urfaces s o r apidly aCter he has been down that deep," Scott said. The prcss urt.· causes nitrogen to collect m thl· body. A slow ascent from the bottom a llows pres ures to l'qual izc gradually and the nitrogen escapes harmlessly. But surfacing rapidly send~ nitr ogen bubbles mo ving through the body. From s hallow depths. that ('auses a painful condition called the bends "But when lhe v1ct1m came from that depth he got tht> bends instantly." Scott sa id ''fl(• got a whole shower of bubbles in his blond and nervous system "He died of shock CIS ti re!>ult of massive hubble formation." the doctor said .Rockefeller Funeral Set POCANTICO .llLLS .• ~. Y <API -Survivors or John D Rockefeller III gathered today at the family estate to pay tribute to the eldest grandson or the founder of the Rockefeller fortune. Funeral services were scheduled for Thursday for lhl' 72-year-old Rockefe ll er. who was killed instantly near the family compound here Monday evening when a car driven by a l ft ·ye a r · o Id s tud en l d r 1 v t• r . Uavid Low. of Briarcli ff M<1nor. sides wiped one car and thl•n crashed hcad·on in to lt11..' (·ar dr i ve n by Rocke fell er·.., secretary. Monica Lesko. 38 Among thost> offering sym· pathy Tuesday were President Carter. Vice President Wa lter Mondale and Wes t V1rg1n1a 's two senators. Robert Byrd and Jennings Randolph from April I to Sept 30. Pet owners may walk their animals on city sands before 9 a.m. and after S p.m. the rest of the year. The current ordinance allows dogs on the beach all day during winter months, a nd bans t hem during the day in the summer, The new ordinance. which re· celved a second read ing shortly before midnight Tuesday lake:. effect in 30 days. The council vote was 4 to I 1n favor of the new law. with Coun· <·llwoman Sally Bellerue OP· posed. "I ttunk it is unfortunate the responsible pet owners have to suffer because or others ... she said after the vote. But the ordinance received strong support from her fellow council members. several of whom cited personal incident!\ they said they have witnessed on city beaches Councilman Howard Dawson, who has lived near the Victoria Beach for 20 yea.rs. said he. his wife and daughter have all been :.ittackcd by dogs over the years on ('ity bt:aches. Councilm<1n Wayne Bagl1n said he witnessed a dog ownel' with two animals off leash near St. Ann's Street 'leach verbally abuse a lifeguard who ordered the man to leash the dogs '_They were two golden retrievers. running up and down the beach and all over people at the beach." Bagi in said. "WC' CCln 't enforce the law if we have people taking the leash off their do~s when thE'y rlon 't see a un 1formed officer around " Copter Crash Victim Dies LO~ ANCELES IAP I Georgia Wyatt. a Santa Catalina l s 1and res ident injured 1n a heltcoptt.•r t·rash. has died thn·~ duys after the Catalina Atrlin<·~ l'rart lost power and plunged in to thl' t>Ct'an A s pokeswoman at San Pedro Penms ula Hospital said the 33· Vl'<tr·old woman died Monduv. When she was t uken to llie 'lOSpatal after the crash on Fri day near the Los Angeles .ta rbor s he was desert bed as in 'dCl'P shock ... The Los Angeles County cor- o n c r 's office scheduled an a utopsy to determine the cause of death Fro• Pafle '' I PAY ... mandatl' that Aould order tnc t:ounty to go ahead and grant the pay raises negotiated last year a:-part of a two-year contract. The employees association represents roughly 5,500 county workers. County officials havl· estimated the 5.5 percent pay hikes would tack about S7.5 million on the county's 1971Vi!I budget Train Kills Man CA RLSBAD CAPI -A c1rcu!> trutn ran over and killed a 2J. ycar-~ld San Diego man lying on the railroad track. polit'e said to· dJy missioner from accepting girt.-. from those who do business with the county Included under the gifl pro vision would be meab and enter tainment totaling more· than $10 <1 month. The commission also said the county should drop its require· m ent that candidates for elected office report in detail all cam paign contributions, including those of $50 or less. m 1~s1oners indicated they feel the commission itself should ~lay In business. It was created last spring when supervisors r esponded to the TIN CUP call for political reform by adopting their own or dinancc. The commission's powers are limited to reviewing campaign m ute rial of candidates· for coun. ty offices and making public com menl when the material violates undefined ethic stan d ards Lynn Hart HART'S John Hart SPORTING GOODS That reporting requirement imposes a hards hip on can didates that serves no useful purpose, the commission said as it opted for drawing t he detailed reporting line al $50. Though not part of the single unanimous vote thal will carry its recommendations on to the Board of Super visor s. <'O m· In the wake of the TIN CUP s leamrolltr. thc commission was a lso assigned the task of rec. o mmcnding to the Board of Supervisors how the TIN CUP measure' can be reconciled with the county's own reform or- dinance F"""Pa~AI PROP. 13 IMPACT • • • park ts built. "We need to he concerned a b out the bottom l ine," Schnelder said. "If we decide to build a park we need to look at Lhe cost of maintaining It. "If the maintena nce costs ex· ceed the level of support we <'On e x peel from property t axes, then the park probably would not be built." IL Is the "bare bones" opera. ing cost of a service area which con c"e rns c o unty oHiciala, Schnelder said. Hejredlcted the service areas woul have to rely "mostly on property tax" r~venues next year lo covrr operating ex penses. And that could present greve p roblems in 80me a rtaa Mission Viejo, for exempt • faces a $362.000 drop ln propert> tux revenue to about SS00.000 . $800,000 1s needed to maintain the community's existing parks. slopes and road medians. South Laguna H ills and Aegean Hills also face simlhtr problems next year. South Laguna HUis can expec. only $90,000 in properly tax in· comtt to support $157,000 in oper ations while Aegean RIUs faces a $56.000 deficit between existing operalln1 expenses and projected income. . El Toro's e>c.lsting operating expenses are *350.000. The area can expect lo receive S2~~.ooo In property taxes. Tht' wollcd community nf Lebure World Is In the best shape. Residents there can ex pect 1119,000 In tu money to ~upport a minimum operatlna bud"et of S94.000. ' 538 CENTER ST.• COSTA MESA• 646-1919 ..1 .. co .... '-{ ..... aon •••• ,,., -0...-*"-'" ono •Ott I•"• •••D•• null• 1101v11,el• Ot!llOOttol< Ill(" '26" adidas .. •-· T-SHllTS ,-.,. •3•t Open 9 to 6 -Closed Sunday 538 Center I Mone co G'.J OJC.h.1n 4'l rt 1tt1n 1d•CJ...t\ t"tttU -..11 ,p. .HI 'JOf()() ,,.. ~hnn ,, 3" uatru :IO.C1•t11 metOCHICI tl11> I••• h•u-el &•otir• •ut>O.• to'• Nyton n••• '"o l ••V*9 "'-"'-IOtlfl ~ '29" 646-1919 • .I .. ' I ' Bog Bero David Pringle. 9. holds i·month-old Raul Hermosillo. whom he carried to S<Jf ety after a cooking oil fire set the baby's home afire in Orange. David broke out a bedroom window with <1 gurdC'n rake. cli mbed through and found t he baby nC'ar the blaze. Shielding him, David carried the baby out the front floor Victim Wins Right To Cut Life Aid FORT LAL:OEHL>ALE. Pia I AP> · A 73·year-0ld physical fitness fanatl<: s ufr<'rtni,: from .. Lou Gehrig d1seast-.. has the right to have h1ms1.•lf d1sconnec·t ed from the respirator keeping him a li ve. a jud~e sayi. An assi!-.lant !-.lat<' atlorm•y said Tuesctay ·!> ruling, which 1s not to takt.• cffN'l for JO day~. will be appealed to lht• 4th Db trict Court Judge .John G. Ferris issued the order lei.s than two weeks .ifter malting a bedside visit to Abe Perlmutte r. who aq~ued it was a n inv<Jsion of privacy to de ny him the right to order the respirator disconnected The former New York City cabdrive r . who friends say s wam , played handball and l~d g roup exercises every day at a re ti re me•nt comm u n 1 l y near h ere. had begged doctor!> to al low him lo die When he visited Perlmutter Ferris asked if he knew the con Robbers Plucky Mk:XICO CITY IAI» Polirl' wen' sC'~1 r rh1ng J'uescl cty for twCl n1t•n who usl•d ro-.isterl ch1tkl'ns Lo rob a Ml''<H'O City bank Thl' two men got aho111 S87,000 1n the robhery :11 the Small Business Bank 'Bant·o d<:I f'c.•queno Comerc101 in "uburban N a11calpa11 Polin· <;aid lht• pair tolcl bank cmployt•t.•s they had a bomh in a hrown paper bag wh11:h l lw~ would l'X plode 1f not J!IV(•n money from the vauh .. They left the b<JI! behind when they fl ed The police born h sc1uad said the bag con tained two r oasted chicken~ sequences of disconnl!ct mg l he respirator. "It can ·l b<> worse than what I 'm going th r oug h now.· Perlmutter replied. Perlmutter was stricken two years ago by the disease that killed baseball star Lou Gehrig. amyotrophic lateral scleros1!> His lungs deteriorated and hl' was hospitalized at Florida Medical Center in Lauderdale Lakes m May The respirator was connC'cted May 18 Doctors say he would die within an hour if it were d1s connected. Perlmutter. who has be·en ruled "mentally competent. .. Jerked the re5pirator tube out of his windpipe soon after it wa<; t·onneckd. An alarm s ummoned nurses. and his arms were s t rapped down a ftl'r he con 1 inued to pur out the tube Perlmutter then sued. The state attorney 's office contended that anyone unplug- g mg the respirator would be aid · 1ng "self-murder" and would bt• guilty of manslaughter under Florida law However, Ferris ruled. "The fallacy of the state's position i~ that the termination of such ex traordinar y tn•atmenl is not horn icidc <and therefore not ·sclf·murder'>. but is the res ult of the free exercise of the con st1tutional right of privacy. It natur:.illy follows that the death that ensues 1s expi ration of natural causes and not an un lawful homicide " Perris quoted hberally from the Karen Ann Quinlan case in h1~ ruhnJ!. The comatose M1!>~ C.)uinlan was disconnected from llfo·supporting machines after the New J ersey Supreme Court gaH' its <tpproval The· younit woman 1s still ahve m a New Jersey hospital. P e rlmutte r was not 1m· med1atelv informed of Ferns· ruling. ·His attorney. David Homes. said he thinks the case 1s unprecedented because the pa tient in the suit has r emamed conscious. Flooded Flags Drying Wednesday.July 12 1978 DAILY PILOT All Unfilled Supervisors Cut 540 Jobs Orange County Supe rvisors eliminated 540 jobs in county government Tuesday, falling short of the ir immediate go~I of s licing more than 1,000. Jobs Crom the cowity payroll an the ..., ake of Proposil ion 13. A II of the 540 positions cut Tuesday currently arc unfilled They amount to about five per- cent of the county's work force of 10,200 County suf)t!rvasors had ~oped to drop 1.022 unfilled Jobs in or· der to avoid. or at least delay lay·offs of "warm bodies ·· Rut County Admini5trative Of· f1cer Robert Thomas recom mended that 482 of the 1.022 Un· filled pos1l1ons be saved He scud 266 of the vacancies should be retained in the budget because the) are b e ing h e ld for l'mployees who arc on leaves of absence or who arc filling tern· porary promotions. becau~e some of th<' Jobs already are m the process of bemg fi lled. or because they are funded from revenue· other than properly taxes. In addition. Thomas said. county supervisors don 'l have the power to unilater c;illy 1.•liminatc 216 other openings bec<1use they involve such agen· ('1es ~.is the courts Count) Aud1tor·Controller Vic lll'1 m fa1k·d an a last ditch t•ffort lo avoid deletion or two vacant pos1t1ons m tht• count) medi<•al ('entl'r rollections sec lion • lie said thl' collection workers. who Sl'<.'k payment of medical bil l<> owed by former patients at OranJ,!C' County Medical Cente.r. ·olll·l·l Sl 67 for each Sl spent m lhl' l'lfort 'The los5 of these t\\o pos1 ~ 11ons will mean ;.i loss of re\ l'll ut.•. ··he argued. Car, Card Curbs Mulled By County A proPosal lo hm1t Orange County officials· u5e of county cars e1nd gasohnc c redit cards will be considered next week by supervisors. As s u ggested by Board Chairman Thomas Riley. elect· ed offlee·holders and appointed department heads could use their county cars for private ac· t1vities. However. the county officials them belves. not family or staff m embers. must be 1n the vehl· c· I<' In add1t1011 t hl' officials would havt' lo s uppl y th e ir own gasoline and 011 while using the c·ar!> for private business. Supervisor Laurence Schmit. who was ddealed rn his June 6 rc-clcct1on bid. was <"riticized earlier this year for using his car and <'redit card on family vacations and allowing family mC'mbcrs lo purchase gasolinl' w1lh the county card Cou nt ~· C ounsel Adrian Kuyper ~a id ex1sl1ng county guidelines pcrmitH"d Schmit to use the car and crccht card for pri val(• act1v1t1es "We have taken a very tirm posit ion to try to avoid lay-offs." Thomas replied "I think it is kind or out of place now to be protesting the deletion of vacant po5itions ··w e are trying to take the conservative side," he added. County supervisors then ap· proved Thomas' recommends lions T he 540 Jobs eliminated Tues- day range from a $548·a·month clerk's job to a $3,768·a·month assistant directors hip of the county 's Human Services Agency Thomas said of the elimma· lion of unfilled p<>s1taons "Some of these departments ar e going to be hurt a lot more when the filled positions are put on the line.·· County s upervisors begin budget hearings Aug. 3 County officials said 1l won't be known until then whether or not lay ·offs will be necessary. Court Eyes Ortkring News Data WAS ll lNGTON I AP I Sup r e mt' Court Ju s tice Thurgood Marshall 1s weighing arguments on whether the New York Times should be forced to surrender to a New Jersey court mformataon a Times rePQrter collected on the "Or. X .. curare murder cas<• Marshall was expected to rule· !>Ometime today whether lht· newspaper must comply with an order t hat 1t hand over to Bergen County Superior Court Judge William J . Arnold notes. tape recordings a nd documents collected by Times reportC'r Myron A. Farber Marsh a ll h eld the stat e judge·s order in <1beyancc for 24 hours on Tuesday. saying ht.• Belaind a S1u.-~essf 111 Ma11 .Joan :\londalt• pl:.iyfull~ hide~ 11 om t ht· l'~1mt·ra b1.:h 1n<' V1t'l' President W<iltl·r :\londak ... ~ till' l\\O \\Ult ror gue~ts to arnH' tor <.i dinner hononng St·n Robl'rt lh rd. D W. Va. <Jl the.· \H'I.' pr~s1c!1.·1111.I! rt" .. 1dl'n<'l' 1n W<.1shmgton. DC Tuc.•scfa~ low-cost Housing Pact Authorized would study written a rguments Bv KATHY CLANCY t'\ FC'O M ·i. proposal an• neJ,tot1at before m akmg his fina l ruling on 0t1iwo•11vP1101si..11 l'd. hl• stlld . tt nd up tn a y~ar or an e m ergency r e ques t b.r F ifteen Cap1stre1no Bt·a(·h more tx>fon· any nl'W homt's an· l awyer s for the T am es and families. now li ving in what na-. hu11t Farber. Justice Byron R. Wh1te been called some of Orange · 1 th1nl-. in lht• pa~I Wl' ha\'l' had rejected the sam e request County's worst housing. soon been ov1.•1·l) opt1m1st11:." MaJor earlier Tuesday. (Related s tory, may see new hope in county go\ -;e11d. "and we have alwJys come Page A9.> crnmenl 's promise or better up with a blank ·· The 1nformat1on was gathered homes. Of t hl' 3'i lam1ht"• in the barriu by Farber whtle preparing S upcr\.1 So r s Tut•s c'a) .trf:i. rN'<•nl l·ounty report... stones on five hospital deaths al a uthorized negot1at1on of an ~ho~. 15 would nt.•t.'d county hclll Riverdale Hospital in Oradell. agreement with officials of •' in n •lo<'attng N.J ,inl965andl966. Long Beach firm who want to Tho~t· fam1hl'" r:.ingC' in Sl7l' No charges had been flied in build new lower-cost horn(·~ 1rom lwo to II pt.•r-;ons and their tht· case. But a fter f''arber 's tailored to each fam11y ·s need t;imil ) 1ncomt>:-. \ ary from S600 s tories appeared 1n 1975, Dr T he firm . Affordable Com· to Sl.300 month!) Mano Jascalevich was indicted mun 1 ties I A F'COM 1 of Loni? J\ F'COM offie1al" an· t'Oni.1der on f1V<' counts of murder. Beach a lready 1 ~ building " 111g 1~11 C;ip1~trcino Heaeh silt>~ JascaleVleh was 1dent1ficd on lower·cost housing prOJt.•ct 1n 101 llw I0\\1•r 1·0~1 ... uhsadiwd dt· ly as "Dr. X" in initial new~ Seal Be~1ch. tounty plannc.•r \(•lopment. ~l aJor s wd s·tones II<' 1~ accused of com Peter MaJor said. Ont· •~ on \,<Jcanl CalTrans milting murder by using curare. Major s aid AFCOM offic1ab land <tdJa<'c·nl to the· San Oieg11 ;.1 powerful muscle relaxing have proposed a way lo build Frc•c.•wav m.•ar th<' barrio. drug. llis trial ts undc.r way. lowN·COSl singh'·famlly homt·~ /\notht•r pos~1ble <>1tt·. Ma1or with Judge Arnold presiding. to serve the Capistrano Beach ..,.i 1d. b land t.·asl of Del Ooispo Arnold ordered the newspaper families at what seems to bt-ht· SI rc·ct west of Se1n .luan Creek. and Farber to surrender all tie county cos t Constru<'l1on could be SUD· materials on the case. saying he County officaab a~ t"arl) a~ "1d1zC'd through a slate housing would review the information four years ago said that 36 ass1stanct· agl'ncy, MaJor sa id. confidentially and then decide homes m the area of Doheny although the· l'Ounty has sci whether to give tht· malenul to Pa r k Road and L.is Vl'ga~ as1d<· S.100.000 to :lss1sl in the <·f JascaleVlch'i. law)cr for use in Avenu<' violate county h('alth 1or1 1f n1.•ct:ssar) the trial laws and must be vace1led In other .1ct1on ... up<:n1sors Lawyers for the Times argued And while pasl efforts to re· 1-·"l' lt•ntal1\t· appro"al to Cl that the JUdge first should have· locate the families in homes S257>.000 alloc.1t1on for th1· Strike FWld Hl.l to make preuminary rulings on they can afford has failed. Ma Orangt· Cot.r.1) !lous ing whether the information is JOr said the new proposal '-hO~'-Corporation lo pro\.1dt• 20 low WASHI NGTON <APl -The material to the case and great promise cost hom"s 1n El Modena a nd airline mdustry's 19-year-old whether 1t 1s pr1vile~ed from d1!> Still 1t prob<ibl) .... 111 be a Anuhe1m·.., Coloma lndcpendt:n "str ike benefit'' fund is under -~c~l:os:u:r~c~~~~~~~~~~~~m~o=n~th~o=r_m~o~r~e~be~·f~o~n~·~d~e~ta~·i~b~~o_r~l~·1~a~~~~~~~~~~~~ fire from 1awmakers fed up with the Northwest Orient Airlines shutdown that has disrupted the nation's air traffic since April. G em Talk By J C. HUMPHRIES Ccnwlogtsl. CIA SABI NO CRYSTAL nntllhrr ti.Sf /or tlw u:ond1•r mt•tol Sabino crystal takes its name from Ernest Marius Sabino, French sculptor, craftsman and wrought Iron molding expert. Early in this century, Sabino develOPCd the use of PoWdered gold SUSPended In fl int crystal. The result is a n opalescent olass of amazino beauty, which constantly c h anges hues when viewed from different angles and In changing lioht. Sabino mastered the delicate art of controlling the temperature of molten olass so that the powdered oold is suspended throughout the olass when it is blown into various shapes Hi s hlOhly-treasured p lece.s Include butterflies, birds and other nature s ubjects plus small statuettes. Most are from ooe to eight inches tall. When he died, his orlQIMI molds remained in his plant In France, where craftsmen who had trained at his side carried on this delicate work. When you have something rare and beautiful to celebrate. The diamond solitaire. One single d1Jmono Set simply and elegantly To c,parkll' on 1t <; own Of IJ<;t •nq value. because d1Jmondc; of .1bout onl• cc1r J t Jnc11.r, .Jrt:.' rare Un1qu1.'. bcc.iu~ no t wo cJ1.~monds art.> a11k1; If you re 1ook1nq 1or that s1wt 1a1 gift.com<· see our seli'.'Ct ion of d1 a:noncJ <,Olltdlfl' 1ewe1ry You II know why it" the <i•ft when you nave son:ethtnq r.tfl' and beaut 1ful lo cclcbr dtl' . . . . . ~-.... Flags whlch h ad b een stored in a Rochester. Minn. firehouse were soaked in muddy water when t he butlding was flooded last week, along with thou.41ands of homes and businesses. Firemen used their water hoses to wash the fla~s and then hung them on H line und fence to dry Glass glftware Is one of the most enduring of all treasures, and the work of Sabino and his s uccessors has heighteneji the importance of this art form. T~y have also extended o<>ld, nature's wonder metal, to another beautiful use 1823 NEWPORT BL VO COST A MESA CONVENIENT TERMS B.inkAmencard-MaSIE!f Charge 30 EARS IN THE SAME LOCATION PHONE 548~1 r ,t;i DAil\' PllO t ·~·. Just ·c :·:~ Coa ting ,,. . Wedneldey. July 12, 1171 Q wltll,.~ To•~~''' Marplaiae Go to It, Lady CRIES OF ANGUISH DEPT. -Yesterday a lady <:ailed here to the newsroom in a complet.e purple outrace 'because or what. we'd done to her. She was in a roartn1 snit because we were getting ready to charge her an extra nve bucks a month ror her sewer. One ol our intrepid news people tried to explain to the lady that we aren't in charge of sewers. We just report on them. The Oranfe County Sanitation District.s are in charge. The districts are the ones proposing an extra S5 per month charge ror operating their lines. pumps and treatment plants. IT IS UNCLEAR if she really accepted this explana- tion. Some of us sUU suspect she figures we're in on the plot against her pocketbook. Thus after thoroughly chewing us out for this extra $5 we were about to extract from her, she asked what could be done about It. Our operative t.;ed to remain calm, explaining that the combined Sanitation Districts will hold a public hear· ing in Fountain Valley on July 19 to hear views of the citizenry on the proposed fee boosts. Then the lady caller demanded to know. "Well , who will be representing the people at this hearing? Who is 10- ~ llll"'~trTt11'JT1; ""'l'J1!;j•!l'll.'', ,I Person Too BU$11 To Attend SeweT Fee Public Hearing mg to tell them how WE feel about these extra costs?" Madam. I'm sorry, but l know I can't show up to .repr esent your protest at the public hearing. I'd like to. But f • m JUSl too busy Listen don't you realize that the old re ·runs of my favorite show. Gunsmoke, are on Channel 9 at 6 o'clock lhat nif.tht? \'OU WOULDN'T WANT me to miss Jim ArnejSS prowling the main stem of Dodge City, would you? Then at 7 o'clock that same evening, the Liars Club tights up the tube on Channel 5. I can't miss that. How would I l?et new stuff for this column? l 'd go on over to the public hearing to represent yo~r views at 8 p.m . except for Carol Burnett. You know Carol, don't you, lady? She is a real gas. She's going to be on Channel 2 just about the time the Sanitation Board directors are getting well warmed up at their public hearing. I'd be there for you except f think Carol's going to be a lot (unnier than the sewer guys MAYBE~ COULD POP over to the meeting late and offer your protest about 9 p.m. Oh gosh. l just noticed Lhe television schedule at 9 on Channel 7. lt 's Charlie's Angels. How could I possibly give up those darling girls just to protest before a bunch of snoring sanitation directors? Hey lady, I just had a super idea about how you can get your protest before the directors at that public hearing. Tum off your own television and go do it yourself. Hotel Collapses; 3 Bodies Recovered VICTORIA, Texas <AP> -Searchers re<:overed three bodies after the four·story. 65·year-old Denver Hotel collapsed Tuesday during preparation for demolition and buried a work crew in bricks and concrete, but a fourth man was still missing. After working through the night, exhausted workers early today called a halt in their search of the rubble of the landmark hotel for the missing man so they could rest. THREE BODIES were taken from the ruins Tuesday evening, tncluding that of Weldon Johnston of Webberville. owner or Johnston's Used Building Materials and Demolition, which was preparing to bulldoze the building Sunday. Johnston headed a five·man crew that was weakening the a bandoned structure's support columns when it collapsed without wa rning, spilling debris 4nto an adjacent street and covering several unoccupied cars Sori~t Trlab Ginzberg Faces I I-year Term MOSCOW <AP> -The prosecutor in the triaJ o! human rights dls· sldent Alexander Ginzburg today called for a sentence of el1ht years al hard labor and three years in Siberian exile. Giozburg, 41, on trial 100 miles south of here lb Kaluga, ls charged for the third time with anti-SOviet agitation aJtd propa&anda. The maximum sentence for the of· fense is 10 years imprisonment and five in exile. Officials said closing state- ments in the Ginzburg trial could be expeeted Thursday and a verdict Friday. Meanwhile. a signed s tale· ment by Los Angeles Times cor· respondent Robert C. Toth was introduced in a Moscow court as evidence that dissident Anatoly Shcharansky was a spy. a Soviet official said. WITHOUT MENTIONING Toth by name, an official brief· ing reporters on the trial said Shcharansky, a 30·year ·old Jewish activist who faces the death penalty. •'had nothing to say" about. the statement. In Los Angeles. Toth said in an article published in his paper today that Shcharansky never gave him any secret informa- tion. Glnzburg's wife was forbidden to attend the third day of his trial after she was ejected Tues· day for an outburst in the co urtroom . How eve r , Ginzburg's 70·year-old mother, Ludmila. was allowed in. Ginzburg, the son of a Jewish mother aod non.J ewish father. has ne ver considered himself a Jew and says he is Russian Orthodox. He h as been active in the Soviet human rights move· ment rather than its related, but separate Jewish movement. OFPICIALS SAID closing state ments in the Gin1burg trial could be expected Thursday and a verdl('t Friday. The court ofticial in Moscow gave no details of Toth's testimony, which appeared to be a protocol he signed after hla ln-t err o ga tion by police about Shcharansky in.June l977. The off icial referred only to "testimony by a foreign· cor· r espondent, a witness, who was questioned during preliminary investigation and who cooperat· ed with the military lntelligence service of a capitalist state." Toth, who has since left the Soviet Un.ion, has denied that he ever worked for the CIA. THE COURT spokesman said experts told the closed·door session that information Shcharansky is said to have forwarded to the West about the defense industry and Its installa- tions "is absolute secret and cons titutes a state secret of the U.S.S.R." Shcharansky is accused of having passed on information about the locations, personne l and security classifications of military.related industrial en- t.erprises. Toth wrote a story about these in 1976. Shcharansky also is accused of helping Toth to make contact with scientists who allegedly passed on classified information a bo ut the s pace program. genetic e ngineering and parapsychology, the science of extra·sensory perception. 'Sheer Waste' GOP's Tax Cut Plan Blasted ............... REMAINS OF TANK TRUCtC THAT CAUS!D DISASTER An Eatfruted 135 Peraone Died In the Holocauat In Spain Death Toll at 135 In Camp Explosion TARRAGONA, Spain CAP> -"Jt looked like a flame thrower." said a Frenchwoman who survived the holocaust when a runaway tank truck loaded with propylene ga& exploded in a campsite on Spain's northeast coast. Police estimated that l3S persons died as a resutt of the Tues- day explosion at the seaside resort, 50 miles south of Barcelona. Nine of those died in the hospital overnight. hospital officials said. MORE THAN 2tO OTHER'" campers were hospitalized -Nith burns. Many were reported in critical condition Most of the 500 to 600 vacationers regis tered at the camp on the Costa Brava 50 miles south of Barcelona we re from other West European countries. 'Many of the bodies were. burned beyond recognition. and identification was slow. The campsite "resembles hell or what we think hell is like. · said one police officer working amid the charred remains of automobiles, trailers, campers aod tents. THE PERMANENT CAMPSITE is one of a score along the popular Costa Brava. The lunch·bour explosion Tuesday blackened more than 160 acres and was heard two miles away. Earlier reports put the death toll al near 200. Officials blamed the higher esUmale on "great confusion. ' Vincente Mirabet, the head of a bum treatment unit af a Valencia hospital, s aid 40 vJcUms had been admitted there and most were in critical condition. "I don't think many will survtve." he said. POLICE AT NOON TODAY put the deatl\. toll at 135 and said half a dozen persons were missing. Police said the 38·ton single·trailer truck was loaded with 43 W ASHJNGTON c AP> -An income· tax cut or the size advocated by cubic meters of gas when it le rt the highway while rounding a moat congressional Republicans would be sheer waste in an curve. crashed through a stone fence and exploded. economy already suffering from inflation, Treasury Secretary w. Witnesses said the truck was going about 40 mph when the Michael Blumenthal said today. driver lost control. "Whatever benefits might be envisioned from lhe GOP tax cul The blast set off a chain of explosions as campers' bottieo would be quickly negated by the cooking gas blew up. No trace of the Spanish driver was found. rise in prices and in interest cut backe d by Republicans rates," Blumenthal told the would be "sheer waste," "I HEARD AN EXl'LOSION, a whoosh, and stepped out.of my House Budget Committee. Schultze used the term "sheer trailer to see names 150 yards high," said a Dut(:tunan who re- The Carter administration is fantasy" to describe cJaims that fused to give his name. backing a $15 billion reduction in s ha_rply r~ducing the tax on "After seronds I saw people walking out of the fire with their individual and corporate income c~p1ta! gains would provide. a outer skin burned completely off. Many fell down. Some just sat taxes for the fiscal year that -~g,;1g;i;;a;;;;n;;;;t;;;;1ci;;;s;;ipuri;;;;;;;;to;;;i;;;il;i;ni;;v.;es;;;t;;m;;e;;;;n;;;t;;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;d;;;;o;;;;w;;;;n;;;;;;;;.Othe;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;rs;;;;;;;;r;;;;an;;;;;;;;in;;;;l;;;;o;;;;t;;;b;;;;e;;;;s;;;;e;;;;a;;;;.';;;;' ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.,-begins next Oct. 1. Republicans want to cut laxes by about 10 percent a year ror the next three years, claiming that would be s uch an incentive to the economy that it would pay for itself. BLUMENTHAL SAID that as· s umption ls wrong because of today's high interes t rates, persistent inflation and super· heated economy. "Massive tax reduction in an e conomy already suffering from innauonary pressures is sheer waste," he said Jn his prepared statement. "We do not have the financial or physical resources to absorb such stimulus without adding to inflationary pres· sures." The treasury secretary was joined by Charles L. Schultze. chairman of President Carter·s Council of Economic Advisers, in asking the Budget Committee to support Carter's lax.cut plan In prefe rence to various measures being advocated in Congress. WHILE BLUMENTHAL said the big .Roth·Kemp income-tax ... Midwest Still Stormy Great Lakes Cool; South Mild, Humid 'l'eaaprr•••re• Ml La f'c, AllM>er-0 10 Anw•lllo t> 12 All•'ll• 'IO .. Allef'ltl< (jty 1' .. 8rO'tlf'llWll.. 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It tllt-ftd THHIY Ill lllt c:.trollMt ... a-,11, M t'*4 tf .,...,.~._ __ ..,,..., Emllla '' -•~ for 111t •llc:kl· M s.s, 1he Wwthtf Stt'vtce wtcj, TPle SOulPI Conl Air Ou•llly ManeeelNfl'l Obltkt CAMltCI • llrsl· Jl99f '"'09 •ltf1 Tuno.v In the West Sall G•brttl V•lfey •nd lorecnt slmlltr <-lllons ,,,.,.. •llCI In Ille JM! F•,,,..,.,.,s.nt• Cl•ra. l"omon•, •lld Alver~ a.rntrt11no .,. .. tooev. HIOI>• In tllt l'llOllllalns will lie In ,,.. ml0>7Gt IO.,,..,._, tM Wffther S.rwlce wlO, Upper cMMtt 1110111 .. ,.. tcwtc.Mt 111 ow mlCI 90s •llCI llltllt •I IOI to I 14 ~-_,, to.Kott In tllt '-t dttetU. S•rlllqeri HllMI"""" IMdl. W-1 to > ,.,. wftll ..... _.., ~._ ,.,, . ....... ~.._ .. ,._, IWt wltll ~ .. u Qllfltltns ltlr • •Well, maybe •o ...... . • But talk I• so cheap -and so transitory. • When you want food bargains -price• you can count on d•Y In and day out, the proof la In print •••• .In the grocery •d• In the Dally PllQt. • Confused by all the conflicting claims? • Shop th• Dally Piiot, get the f ecta, compare. . y'ou're really getting th• most for your money. DAILY PILOT 642-4321 ,J CALIFORNIA I PeOPLE Prop. 13 No Thre at To Cities? SAN FRANCISCO <AP) - Attorne y Gene ral Eve lle Younger says reports that local governments may not survive Proposition 13 are like .. one or Mart Twain's obituaries highly exaggerated." In papers to be filed with the state Supreme Court, Younger s aid Tues day : "Whil e P ropos itio n 13 does limit property taxes and does make it m ore diHic ult to impose :.idditional substitute taxes, local ( STATE J )(overnment will s urvive. The essential difference is that the people or this state will now have to be considered before taxes are increased." Younge r. the Republican candidate for governor, made the s tate m e nts in a brief' defending the state a gainst three suits being brought by school districts and local governments The suits contend that prop osilion 13 i s uncon s t1 tutional. <Related story, Page A10.) .leiltt Ca•palp Nlzed SAN DIEGO <AP> -Ll. Gov. Mervyn Dymally says he does no t pla n to camp a ign fo r ree l ection a lo ngside Gov Edmund G. Brown Jr. this fall, say ing he'd rather stand on his own merits .. I don't want to be a good g uy," Dymally told a group of r eporters Tuesd ay. "I've got something to sell -my own programs, my own ideas. A joint c ampaign would be a liability for me " Eqmal Ti...e Rejen etl LOS ANGELES <AP> As ra r as the 37 television stations that broadcast Gov. Edmund G Brown Jr. 's June 28 speech are concerned, that was a bona fide news even~ -not a political s p eec h , a s B ro w n 's g ube rna.o r ia l o ppon ent . Attorney Gener a l Evelle G Younger , charges. A 11 thP st a tions rejected Attorney Ge ner a l Younger 's request for equal time to reply t o Brown's s peech. whic h concerned Proposition 13 ~-sialb VALENCIA CAP> .A bout 30 pe r s o n s r id i n g M agic Mountam's newest rollercoaster rid e . C oloss us , h a d t o be escorted to the ground on foot when one of the trains ran into brake problems Tuesday. Mark Macy, a spokesm an for the a musemen• park, s aid a brake was set wrong and as a result the fi ve.car train stalled ·some distance from the actua l loading zone ·· ..... Rest-hedaled LONG BEACH <AP> -The fat .. of gambling a board the Queer M<try will have to wait until next Tuesday J ess Stewart, a 70-year-old retired auto dealer scheduled to discuss the issue at Tuesday's Cit y Council meeting, d idn't <t ppear until aft er the meeting ~as over, so the ite m was rescheduled for the following week. Voyagers Visit Katsutosh1 Utsumt. 38. pomts out a sight to his wife. Reiko, 30. and their sons. Akio, 11, and Toshia. 9. from their 32-foot sloop. docked in San Francisco Tuesday. The family s pent 58 da ys on their tr ip from J apan and will s pend two m onths in the Bay Area before traveling on to London either by sail or air -a decision to be made later State Recognizes Nevada Borderline SACRAMENTO <AP > -After 106 years. t he State of California recognized the present borderline with Nevada. And the rase might never have arisen if it hadn·t been speculated on both sides that the present line might not be the r ight one, and t hat some of Nevada's casinos s hould perhaps be in California or that Nevada shouJd own hundreds of square miles of r ich California ranchland. THE BD..L SIGNED TUESDAY BY Gov. Edmund Brown Jr would rerognize the 1872 Von Schmidt Line, which California requested the U.S. Supreme Court last year lo recognize as the offi cia l border. It's the one currently being observed from Lake Ta hoe to the Oregon border. But Nevada. answering in the case. proposed a number of bounda ry changes t hat would mostly increase its area on the Ca lifornia side. The 1872 Von Schmidt Line was run and marked by the federal government. BACKERS OF THE BILL. SB 2180 by Sen. Ray J ohnson, R-Chlco, had cited Nevada's claim -among others -to the U.S. Supre me Court that the 1863 Houghton-Ives Line between Lake T ahoe and Oregon should be recognized. That line was officially recognized by the legislatures of both states, and would give Nevada about 200 square miles of Northern California. Califo rnia State Controller Ken Cory said two months ago he thought Nevada was making a "monstrous land grab" in its proposals to the U.S. Supreme Court. BUT JlM THOMPSON, NEVADA'S CIDEF deputy allom ey general, replied that Nevada is simply "ins 1stmg on our legal r ights." Thompson said 1f the border auestions aren't brought up now, there may never be another chance Cory s aid that a new sur vey of the Tahoe·Oregon hne could move it as much as one·third of a m ile east, putting four Lake Tahoe casinos in California Get Rid Of ,I ... . ,. Unsightly Bulges!! PRESENTING OUR NEW CONCEPT IN INCH LOSS NO Starvation Diets NO Pills Also NO Shots • • • ,. ,. • .-~r.u•·,-°'"~"" • • HUNTIMGTOM RACH lt4e7142 ...... .,..., lt4-7141 r ..... o .... UtJtlJ ' ......... lll·H M ' Wedneeday. Jutv 12, 1978 DAIL y PILOT A5 Anti•gay Bill Costly Back er s Spent $900,000 for Ballot Spot SACRAMENTO <AP> -A new report says the supporters of an initiative a gainst homosex· ua l t ea chers s pent n e arly $900,000 getting it on the Nov ember ballot. The same report from the state Fair Political Practices Commission said Tuesday that the opponents of the initiative spent only $116,415 -but drew contributions from some of the biggest names in entertainment. THE OPPONENTS included actresses Carol Burnett, Pally Duke and Marsha Mason; actors John Austin and Dennis Weaver. playwright Neil Simon, and re· cording executive Neil Bogart. Their contributions ranged from $100 to up to Bogart's $2,500. The initiative. Proposition 6. would make it easier for school districts to fire or refuse to hire a teacher. school aide. counselor or administrator who is openly homosexual or who advocated. solicited or promoted homosex- ual acts. Sponsored by state Sen. John Briggs , R-Fullerton. it drew about SO supporting contrlbu· tions or less than Sl.000 each from persons in other states. THE BIGGEST supporters in- cluded Alan Masters. a La Mesa accountant. who gave $2.540. Linda Hinojosa. a La Mesa public relations woman. $2.SOO : William Phelps of Airlines GrQund School. Fair Oaks. $5.000 ; Carl Karcher. president of Carl Karcher Enterprises of An a h e lm , $5,000: Lore n Gunltier. an Orange County re- tiree, $3,400, and Calvary Com· m un1ly Church or Nor walk. $2,200. The committee backing the in· itiative. Defend Our Children, also got loans from Citizens for Sen. Briggs. $361.631; Briggs hims elf. S2S.OOO , and Steven Bailey. president of Starburst Consulting of Fullerton. $14,000. ANOTHER BRIGGS initiative to ban smoking in many public places, Proposition s. cost it.s supporters SS9.310 to qua lify the report said. But the oppone nts. mostly rrom the t obacco indus try. r a 1s t>d $330.350 a nd s pe nt $248 .84 l. Large contri bu lions were $26.447 from Lorillard. $104.655 from R. J . Reynolds In· dus lrles, $66.111 from Brown and Williamson Tobacco. SS6.848 from Phillip Morris. and $61,668 from the 'l'obacco Institute . Solon Jibes at Reeess From Associated Press Dispatches ORLANDO. Fla. -Debbie Rbyne may not. W ASHJNGTON -Since Rep. Otis G. Pike, look like Elvis Presley. but a Central Florida rock D·N.Y., decided he'd had enough of Washington group promote" is hoping a little plastic surgery and was going to retire from Congress. he has transforms the 23-year·old womari into a spitting taken delight in poking fun at some of the more Image of the •ate singing obvious congressional foibles. sta r. ( ) His latest target was the July Fourth recess. "The world's first 'E'Of'LE which the House prefers to call "home district o ne a nd only femalt> ~Ci work period."' Elvis impe r s onato r ---------- The congressman noted that the House quit for .. · • says D anny the holiday on June 29, a Thursday. O'Day, who several months ago promoted plastic In a news release. Pike noted· • surgery that made a young man resemble Elvis. ··A 4th of July recess does not mean you get ·· 1 mean. we got so much play on that. you t he 4th of July off. It means you get the week know what I mean ·~ The people have taken this surrounding the 4th of July off. Plus the preceding Elvis thing so far. you would thmk ·How much Frid ay. lt"s a good deal." farther can it go"' Well. here it goes.·· • O"Day says he 's got two more clients heading 1 NEW YORK -Folk sing0 r J oan Bae% says a into the hos pital for plasltc surgery to look like dispute between her sponsors for~ cancellation roc k ·n· roll's late great stars -one young man of a July .4 sJ_>eeeh she had planned to_ give In the who also wants lC\ resemble Elvis and another who Soviet Uruon 10 support or Russian dissidents. hopes to look like singer Jim Croce. The 37-year-old New York-born entertainer. O'Day, 29, says he picks up the bills 'or the ' known for he r outspoken stands a gainst the operations Vie tnam War, had hoped to m a ke the r em a rks b e fore Monday's start of the trials in the Soviet Union of d issidents Anatoly Shcharans ky a nd Alt>xander Ginzburg. OLYMPIA. Wash. -One politician has put hot air to a novel use. Gov. Dlxy Lee Ray fulfilled a childhood fantasy by piloting a blimp The st ate·s first woman 8AEl g overno r . a s e lf·s t yl ed transportation junkie. occupied But her forum, a concert with o th e r Ameri ca n pe rformer s in Le ning rad's Winte r Palace Squar e, was canceled because of a dispute be tween the Russian and British sponsors. Miss Baez instead made a sightseeing trip to Moscow and returned this weekend. She told an NBC·TV Today Show interviewer Monday that had she given the speeeh, her message would have been: • the Goodyear blimp·s pilot seat for 19 minutes recently. gently nudging the huge airship in a wide arc around this waterfront capital. In a great country like that. one should not turn away and imprison dissidents, but one should we lcome and support them ." * MONTREAL -Margaret Trudeau has received the lead role in a romantic comedy tentatively set to be filmed in southern France, a spokesman for a production company here has confirmed. Rich ard Hellman , vice president or Prospec Films Inc .• s aid Prime Minister Pier re Elliott T r udeau's estranged wife would act in ··L'Angc Guardie n" <The Guardian Angel>. a Sl million b u d get Fra n ce-Ca n a d a production. TllUOEAU It is Mrs. Trudeau 's second fil m. Last year she sta rred alongside Patrick McGoohan in "All The King's Men.·· a thriller still to be released. The new film, due to begin production by the end of the month. will feature her as the wife of a wealthy industrialist who falls in love with a cabaret singer. By Ouayne D • Christensen, D.D.S . 7'07 Wut ••tlf Aft. Wut11t1 fll ltJ·U ll ''Whee! This feels great!" she exulted. "Now if l can only s top using the wrong feet" to maneuver the vehicle. Riding a lllimp was one of the few remaining ite m s left on the governor 's check·off list of "Things I Want to Ride or Pilot.'' drawn up when s he was a l!Jrl. Miss Ray a lways boasted an untraditional s treak. She changed her name from M ar~arct to Dixy Lee in memory of the South a nd the rebel general. TOKYO -They may not be as revealing as the Watergate tapes. but the public wtll soon get a chance to hear somt> of Emperor Hirohito's private. tape.recorded conversauons . The imperial household has announced that taped conversations between Hirohito and guests rang mg from Sadaharu Ob, Japan·s home run km~. to famed aviatrix \'3e Nozoki will go on sale Aug. 31 as a long.playing record. The conversations have be~n recorded at the emperor's twice-annual garden parties since 1972. His household J?ave perm1ss1on for 3.000 LPs to be made from the ta pes. Some of lhe matenal ha~ been aired on J apa nese radio and telev1s1on newscasts. .. .J ~ I ~ •• • • ·-'• s• OrangeCoasro ,,.~.,, Editorial Page ......................................................... Robert N Weed Publisher Thomas KMVll l fGltOI WednesC)ay, July 12. 1973 Layoffs Reflect Poor Planning 4iddleback Valll'Y Unified School District officiab notified more than 400 classified employees last wee k of pend mg dismissals in the wake of Prop. 13. About 300 ins tructio nal aides wcrl' dismissed out· J1ght: t;mother 109 cle rica l a nd clussified supervisory e mployees were sent conditional layoff notices that m· dlca ted at least a cutback in work year s. Thus far. w ith the lone exception of work year c ut· backs in some administra tor positio ns. classified employct•s <.1rt• lcik1ng the brunt of Jarvis-ins pired c ul· backs . District ot'ficrnls urguc that classified personnel sup port cmploycel) s uch a!> custodians. bus drivers a nd m ainte nance cr~ws are the easiest to te rminatl! becaus~ lhcy require only 30-d ay notices. But. officals admit they arc in a corne r in cutting back so·called certificated employees -teachers a nd ad· ministrators -because or a failure to notify them of possible termination by Ma r ch a nd May deadlines. The education code provides that s uch personnel be JlOllfied o f layoffs by these deadlines. In effect. ther e can lw n o cc1t1ficated cutbacks b('cause officials failed to notify them. That·~ bad phrnnang Cc1t C:1inly. as Superintendent Hichard Welte s<.1ys it might have bel'n a .. rcsp<Jns ible decision " last March not Io send notice:,. but by st•n<Jing thl'm officia ls CJ nd trustee~ could have protL•ctcd t heir options in <.i post-J arvis. re· duced-budgct era. . Officials had b etter protect the ir options for next year. whe n even less budget mom•y will be available. Summ.er Rescue A group uf lrv111c parents 1s coming on like lhc Sc>v<.·nth Cavah'y. churging to the rescue of summer ~ehool. which bccuu::.t• of Prop. lJ wa:. C'oming on likt- ( 'ustei-'s L<.ist Stand. In a .Jw·v1s cconomv measun'. the school district tanceled summer school · Parents of children at Deerfield ::rnd Woodbridgt• dem cnta ry s C'hools rCJiscd their cutlasses and . behind the breakn eck banner h o ist ed by c hairma n Ka thy P o litopoulos. formed Irvine Community Summer School. It is a lu1tion-paid program a nd offers c lasses in r eading. m ath . ocean s tudy, cooking. s ports and '}\indcrg::.irten oricntution classe:,. It starts next week. for =Jour Wl'eks. It not only ~<Jn·~ :J valuable summer activity for t·hildrt·n. but rescues five lrvinl' Unified School District H·achers from unt•mploymcnt T h t· c n l h u s i a s m o f t h <.' p a r e n t s s p r e a d l'Om munitywidc. The school district re-ope ned Deerfield Sch ool for thL· pru~n.tm : the city provided the n agging .ji:.ibility 1nsuran('e r equirement. the Irvine Company dorwtcd mon<.>y to <:on•r opera tional cost s a bove those paid by tu1t10 n. So when you pa::.s h.v tht· school this s ummer. le nd an 1·:.i r to th<.• sounds ins a<k T h('y're not j ust the patte r of li ttle ft•t•t : t h ey're the r oaring hoofbeats of Kathy . l'olitoixmlo:-.· St•venth Cav<.ilry . INo Classroolll Cuts . Rl'l'omm<.·nckd t·uts m the S35 million Capistrano · l "nifictl S('hool District budget. proposed lus t week b.,. · ~Upl·rmtcndc.•nl Jt•romc Thorn!>ll'Y. rc.•flect a community · mantlatl' that Prup. 13 c.·utbac ks s ho uld not affect l'la~s room lt·a<:h1n J! : 1\l thret• recent public forums on the budget, pare ntl) :1 nd teachcr!-i urged Capistrano Unified trust ees and ad· m111istrntors not lo let Prop. 13-imposed budget cuts <liminis h the tlistrict's e m phasis on qua lity education in ln1 s ic s kills · Community s pokesm e n !>uggested m a king up lost rev· l 'llUL' bv ch<.1 rg ing fees for CJthletics. bus transportation -;ind otht•r progrums or services not essentia l to basic das~room ins truction. Thc!-l' rc.•commendations CJnd olht·rs havl' been in· · corporalcd in T horns ll.')'s proposal. which trustees will <liscu~s owr the ri cxt thn.'t' !\lond:.1y nights. bcforc a dopt· inf! a fina l bud~l!t on Aug. 7 Tht· t:xccptional c:ffort toward cooperation shown by t ru!-h.'l'S. ~ulminislrator!-i, teachers and parents s hould h t>lp t•asc lht· transition lo reduced school district ... en·1t·~~ .. madt• tnl'vitahlc by the J)CJ~sagc of Prop 13 • :.opinions expressed in the space above are those of the Daily P11ot. ~ Other views eii.pressed on 1h1s page are those of their authors and artists. Reader comment is 1nv1ted. Address The Daily Pilot. P.O. : eox 1560. Costa Mesa. CA 92626. Phone (71 4) 642·4321 BoydJSanka By L.M. BOYD Name oC that coffee called : Sanka is a contraction of the ; French phrase "s ans caf • feine ." Arc you aware how lt : t·a m e to be developed') The : top man in a big European coffee company. Dr. Ludwig : Roselin. had been looking for : a way to take out the caf. : feine. Then a s hipload of : suc h beans in 1903 was !,.swamped "'i th seawater, and : the spoiled coffee was turned : ovt•r to researchers. That salty soak led them to the de· : caCfemat ion process I J . DPar Gloon1y Gus Too bad the young folk who were so quick to blame the old folks for air pollution from In dustr~ have been equal· ly quick to ndopi their nlr po11utlng c1garctt .-hll bit. J.C. A free glass of water with a meal in a resta urant costs about 12 cents. Or so say re· searc h ers al Purdue Unive rsity. They calculated the expenses of the water itselr. ice, broken glasses. dishwashing equipment and labor. Why lhe milk production of dairy cows falls off just before an earthquake is another mystery. Q. "Aren't most couples in ~ex i co ma rried in t he Cathohc Church?" A . No t m ost. T h e estimators say most couples in Mexico -seven out or 10, they figure -aren 't married in any church. Or any state ortlce, either. They're linked in what's called "free·union" marriage. Our Love and War man is not as familiar as he might be with the romanUc circumstances in Medco. But he deacriba Cree-union marriage here u the buddy •ntem lntbe wadlng pool. "Where·d the ·Muppet'' get that name?" asks a client. Their creator Jim Henson and bis wire Joan Nebel concocted It from a combinaUon of "puppet" a nd "marionette." Rowland Evans/Robert ~ovak Sadat Seeks Stronger U.S. Role CA I RO -With his "sacred mission" of an overall peace plan under Israeli checkmate. Egyptian President Anwar Sadat now pins all his hopes on the fact that Jimmy Carter "has started to play a full role" in the Mideast peace process for the first time. President Carter's gra dual c hange from sy mp athetic m ediator to th e r ole or "principal ac· t or" wa s s ig nalled in Mr. Carter 's invitation to I srael and Egypt to send their foreign m inis terc; to m ee t with Secretary of State Cyrus Vance in London later this month. That American "initiative.·· Sadat told us in an exclusive interview al his summer seaside palace in Alexandria. marks a major change. NOT ONLY does the London meeting get Sadat off a painful hook. Jt also opens the way to more Amef'ican pressure on Israel -regarded by Sadat as· essential to save h is tattered peace plan. Sadat acknowledged lh<1t hl' has been forced by Israel to retreat time and again from ht~ o riginal overall peace plan dropping his talk :..bout J Pales tmsan statc. forgetting his pledge that the Pulesttne Ltbertt t1on Organization t PLO>. no1 Jordan. ~ust be the West Bank's bargaining agent with Israel. and on lesser parts of the plan he took to J erusalem last November. In the fa ce or this Is raeli "in· trans igence ... we asked. how docs Sadat justify sending his foreign ministl'r for anothc•r round I)( foCe·tO·fot•e t<.1lkS With lsra<'I'' BECAUSE, ht• suid. the Lon don meeting "1s a Cartl·r in 1tiat1vc." not Sadat's. If i l fails and no one here expects suc· Mailbox cess it must oo followed by a distinctly American pla n. As a precedent for specific American proposals Sadat used the exam· ple of the Nixon administration when it drafted the plan that broke the deadlock over Egyp. tian·Jsraeli disengagement in the Sinai peninsul a after the Oc· tober 1973 war. ··Henry aormer Secretary or State Kissinger> told me there was a deadlock, that the old lady I rormer Prime Minister Golda Meir ) was very stubborn, .. Sada t suid. "So I suggested an Amer ican proposal ... Thal lime, It worked. Thus, if Israel's refusal now to fi x a timetable for e ventua l Palestinian self.determination -and to renounce its "right" to Jewish settlements in historic Arab lerritori~ -deadlocks the London talks. it will be time for another U.S. plan. ··1 think it s hould be done ... Sadat said. AFFABLE and relaxed on lhe s urface. Sada t nevertheless must be having s leepless night~ us time runs out on hiO'l. He is ~'-\>.,,,....-. ''I thitik its t~ken root." more 11ointl-'<.I these days in hts criticisms of lsn1el's hardlinc Prime Mini s t er Menahe m Begin. more direct in his praise for l s rncli l.>cfen:.e Minister Ezer Weizman and for what he c~1lls "the Israeli peuce move· ment." "Mr . Bl'g1n 1:> afraid of peace." hl' stud. "WC' spcuk two dtffcrenl languJJi:C:. ... licgin's 1·cfusal lO admit thal Israel. after ats 1967 conque:>ts. agret:d to withdraw Crom mc1!>t or the Wes t Bank 1s "t y pical " of Begin's finding "soml•t h1n g, Jnylhmg to hide behind" in or dt.•r to avoid peace. "It appears for som~ rcas<>n that he doesn't want to 1each an agreement " Not so We1zman. At dmncr in Jerusalem last November. S;1d;it told Begin how much tw liked W<•1zman "<1nd Begin wa~ \'l'fY happy, but ht> is not hap1>y 110\\ • • Wcizman sµht with Begin last month owr Israel's strategy 1n dealing with the U .S. on sactat':. peace plan. Begin IS now tr y ing to exploit that conflict - a rl'vealing sign of how kw negotiating weapons he hus left. SADAT is now under vicious pressure from almost th<' entir<' \rab world tn admit that his daring Jeru!>alcm peac<• mission h;.i:. faikd !;yriah Prl'stdcnt 11 <.ift•z Assael wants S<1d <1l lo rn a I. l' ~1 hum 111 au n g pub I 11• dt•clJ1':1t10I\ of f~11lun· /\lgl'rtJ \.\OUld :-.\!ltll• for ,1 'IJI l~:Jtt• fd 1t'I .. from Sad<Jt t11 all /\r;.io ht•ads or stah: a<lm1tl1ng ra1lun.• and agrl'l'ing to Jn Lill Arah meeting to plot a nl'Y. cour:.c But adm1s!.1on or failure~ would hP a bitter ~nil of SLtdill's µcan· dream and probably of h1~ JUb f'or Pres ident Cu rll'r. 11 would be calamitous. It would wipe out lhl' largest ~ingll' 1n \'t•:,lmenl hl· hud made in hi'> twlc:.igucred rorc1gn poll('\' Mort• 1mµortan1 11 would g1\•' \1 transcendt•nt \IC'tnrv to tht• S11vu.•t Union \llld 111l·v1ti1bl y trig J.(t•r J nl·W /\m1•ri(·,1n clcc.:hnc a:-. lt·util'r of thl· WP-.t . with l'<llacly:;m1(• l'fft•cts in this mo..,1 ~t rateg1c part of the globe. Illegal Aliens a Federal Responsibility To the Editor. Recently. dul' to pressure generated by "Latino leaders ... Attorney General Gr iHin Bell ad vised local law enforcement agencies to ~top enforcing US Immigration Laws because only the federal government in the guise of the U.S. Immigration Ser vice has the authority to de· tain and dePorl illegals It has always amazed me how the feder al bureaucrats can sit in Washington, listen to a select few. and cast an ull·knowning declaration over the heads of the masses. Realizing that Mr. Bell is only mouthing what statutes already exist. I wonder how he expects local law enforcement to deal wi th the ever-increasing problem or non-English speaJ< in g i l legals in f i ltra t ing California :.ind other s tate borders by Lhc thousands. Re· cent estimates s uggest that Los Angeles t.ind Orange Counties alone have a million and a half illegals. 80 percent of whom a re Mexican. Chicago, reJ>Orl local immigration officials. has over 600.000 illegal Mexicans. not to mention the illegal alien innux Into other maJor U.S. cities. Municipal and s tate law en- forcement personnel. especially in the Southern California area, arc continuall y hampered when encountering Mexican illegals who have committed crimes. violated traffic laws. or are ob- ser ved in a set or suspiclous c i rcumstances. T h ese in - dividuals huve little if ;my identification. cannot speak English. and prove to be ig- norant of many of California's laws. FOR THE m ost parl, the victims or crimes or acci- dents involving Illegals have little or no recourse agains t Lhe illegal due to their highly transient and unstable economic nature. In fact. Mexicans and other ille~als a re many limes deported rather than held Cor trial and/or civ il litigation Within a short period of lime. many of these same Individuals will wander ucros!l the border lo take up where they left orf. Another faction in California falls victim to the Influx of il· legals tn the form or the ln· divldual property owner wbo pays taxes that in turn support our liberal welfare system. Each day illegals receive some type or support whethe r il be monetpry, mccllcaJ or polJce and fire. So 1 say lo Attorney General Grllfln Bell. pressure Congress to increase lmmlgTallon person nel and activate more stringent penalties ror Illegal border crouers a nd \heir American e mployers. Conce ntrate on pos 1t1Vl' alternauvcs 1n~teud of pressing local law enforcement who cannot clost· their eyes to \'iOlatiOns or l<tW~. federal Or '>late. dul• to the course and scope or lht•tr profession In simpler term!., if thl' federal la\\ enforcement agencies would do the job they are directed to do. local law enforcement wouldn't have to take up the slack. O.KANE Ge• fin9 ~outff9r To the Editor. This 1s a replication of .Joseph lrvintt'::. June :?fl response lo my ll'tte r of June 7 l'C'~ard in g airport noise t•manating from Orange County Airport flt~ht op(•rations Com mercial uncl pri vutc JCt Ji r <.•r:i ft d11 not JU'>t at•t .1 r b i t r a r i I y . t h c y ;i <' l 1 1 rc~ponsibly. T hey c.Jo nol fl y flight paths directed by tht· Orange County Airport. They takt• off with "mngnl'l1c parameters" <1S they '>Cl' fit The ~ame applies to height s. Do you want to know :ibout tht· re:.il effect.-. of aircraft noise " Ask Jan<' Mo. mann tn lrvint• Terrace. She is a homeowner who had noise moniloriM equip menl on h('r house Mr t r vtn<' ·::. I e t t e r so und!-. I i k c t h 1· bureaucratil' pop which we con linually rercivl'. Things like .. within limit ations or their equipment ... much has bct•n done lo reduc<' noise ... dot's not tell us anylhinit THE CRUEL. daily fact 1s that the noise Aets worse. the noise becomes more frequent. the private Jet aircraft is more noticeable. I have listened to Jets t aking off at 5 :30 a.m. within the last four weeks. It is not getting better; it is getting worse. Until we aggressively put pres. sure on Air California, Air West and Orange County operations to rty high. ny more quietly ontrto ronCorm to the prc•scribed head ings. we are doomed to be insult ed with bureaucratic stroking as t•vlde11ced In Mr. Irvine's letter If all or us Just wring our hands and bleat to the moon as done by the inhabitants or t.he Warsaw Ghetto, we are doomed to sutler the same Cote. lmpact- ed victims, get on your hind legs and raise hell! Supervisor Riiey, please PBY attention. WILUAM M. MONROE S9Mfr,..b Deo•ftd To the Editor: Nobody Clit es? Two remaining colonies or ground squlrrels that hove Inhabited the low hills where the Newport Center Is being constructed are doomed. Th .- ... mall an1mal1> Mt' about to feel t h e grinding s teel of lhP bu II doter's s hovel artt·r ho"' many centuries of l'XISting then· God alom·knows ONI:: COLONY l0<.·at1!d to lht' right of the drive to th<> I rvint· Count ry Club JUSt off Coast Highway momentarily 1s about lo be destroyed. Some of tht· n· maining town could b<> relocakll deep in the hills south of Corona dt•l Mur. This colony is locakd to the lefl going north on Newport Center Driv(' rrom Coast Hi ghway across from lht· new law office building. We 're leaving town until tht• fi n;t part of August but if you would care to hl'lp. pcrhap!'. some or you can acl now or watt until wc r<'turn to save and re locate some or the~l' lillll' creatures. Write P.O. Box 274. Corona del Mar 92625 or get together earlier yourselves They have been pushed back to this last s mall field C:tnd the.v need your help. it's ~111 the world thcy'\'c got DOREEN and JAY BURCHETT More Pa• rioo To the Editor: Much has been said and writ· ten about Prop. 13. before it took place a nd even more ~o. as the popu l <ice views t he dra!'.tit· rhange 1b passngt• y,.j lf bring about. As lh c cutb ack' ~n d rt' oq~aniw1g :11'l' mulled over. thl· reaction of many c1t11.cns 1s u:. emotional, in soml.! instances, a~ was their determination to effecl its passage. However, as cha nge s lowly gets into orbit, it becomes apparent Lhal although the peo. pie asked that I.heir services or toys be taken away some of those most involved In demMd· Ing these withdrawals are now the most audible in protesting the loss of certain privileges that affect Lhem individually :ind u~ rltlicns. lkretoforc. poss1bl). we have :ill been ~poiled brats, with too many toys However. out of Ute present chaos there emerges one factor, ra r greater than bringing pro· perty taxation to a reai.onablc level. The ciUzens of California have at last, snapped out or their lethargy, Indifference, cynicism. and the usual cop-out of ·'let the other fellow do it" . G0\1ERNMENT by, for and of the people with proper rt:prescn· ta lion. as was origlnolly In· tended. hots resurfaced and also the responsibility or each In· dlvldual to assume his or her tuk in bringing about what Is JUSl and rnlr In reorganlzlni: t nd l'UtlnH:ki;, and ~''" lht•1r al.ld1 t11>nal H''>pnn!-.1bil 1l.v 1n he1ng kno\~ led~JblL· t'OOU~h 1u lH tnj.! :1bnut io:ood J.!OH'rnment Thl'l'l' C't1m1•' :1 l11111· '4h1·n abrupt <'hJllJ.\L' <·an and dol'' bring <1bout ;.1 l'f'ISI'>. \\'hen tht· slate of affair!-1 ... •.ll cr1~1!> lt>vt·I. the a ffai,...., of the st:Jtt• ~houtcJ C>. l"C'ed lhc 1mp11rtancc o r all pohti<'al µa rut·~. C.:11 y. l'ounty. ;.ind ~late gon•rnm<'nls must not bt• allowrd to ust• rntlJacks to cf. f ('('l u one par1y huilrlur. Cut bucks should he• nonpHrti!'.an The layoffs -;houltl b•· mndl' on unnc•t<:ss:.ir\' :.irHI 111<•frt·t tu;il t• nm m 11 t c· c• ~. ho :1 rd " .1 n ti hu r<'u urr;H'll'" und on 1oh ... "ht•n• lll'r~onnt•l .... 111l'ffic1t•nl in 't•rving lhl• puhll1· In the mt•a n\\htl('. tfl bring abtiul good rl' orgun11.auon and good govcrom('nl v. hat th1'> ('Ounl1'\ fl t•t•ct... ;11HI ha' Ion!{ need Ni° .in · mun• p.1l rio1 s .Jll<I fL•Wt'r JXlltlll'IUll' l·:t.INOH DAVIS Snt•Jke II ttrf# To the E<hlor In reply to th<' person who wmtc to Gloomy Gus <rnd signed ht mst•tr G S. F . he a pparently d1dn 'l do his homework before saying "S mokers hurt only themselves!" There has bl'cn a good deal of research on lht> subJecl of s mok· in~ tobacco and it:-. effect on both !-.mokcrs :.ind non.smokers Ont.• study found that 1J commuter l'onfi11ed to a lniin's smokc·filletl har t·11r for an hour can absorh <•s much of tht• car cinogen known as DMN ai. a Pt:rson who ~mokes 17 to 35 filler cigarettes " day . CNcw York Times editorial, Mays. W78.) G .S. F. also said thul, "The $30 million Califano ha~ proJ>Osed ror hts anll-smoking campaign would be better spent warning younR J)C.'Ople about the dangers of a lcohol an(! lhC problt'mS it causes families of alcoholics." M l'C'J)ly 10 thut '' that 1f parents would set the rtAhl ex <implc at honw. their ('h1ldrcn wouldn't become alcoholic~ and tall!il' th · prol>lcms which hl' speaks of. I resent having to USl' port or my w xcs lo educate the children of parent~ who keep h· quor avalh1blc and then cry because their children become alcohollcs. 1' S. RITTER • utters from rtad"I Ort wclcomt Tht' right lo condense letten 10 fit IJJOC" or ellmmot<' libel 1s res~ Ltftf<'Ts of 300 word.• or WI$ wtll t>t givtn prcftrcnct. All ltttn-1 m"'t in· clucU> 8'gnaturt and malling oddrtsi ma nomts may b# wtthhdd on rt· qutst I/ ruf11cit'ftf rtalOft tt apporrnl. Poet'1J wm not t>t P11bluhed. I Business Wednesday-Jut)' 12 >978 DAILY PILOT Becoming Millionaire 'Easy' By .JOHN CUNNIFF ., ---.. ..... , .. Want to become a milhona1rc? Don't despair. you're probably on the way to becoming one But when you do, there 'II probably be plenty or reason to despair When Goal's Reached, Prices Will Match Inflated Worth Why? Because prices pro bably will be in the millions too. The Mil· ionair e sta· tus we refe r to i s the kind pro · duced by in· nation. which raises th e prices both of what we have and what we buy. And so, c.u111u,rir relatively speaking , we 're pro- bably no better off. Still. it is true that many peo. pie will become millionaires in fact, mullimilhona1res 1f the administration's 1978 mfla lion estimate of 7.2 percent 1s continued for ma ny years into the future. You can work out the numbers yourself. and quite easily too, because an a pproximation or how long it takes to double a figure can be obtained by divid· ing its rate of growth into 72. By chance, the projected 7.2 percent inflation rate divides 10 times into 72. which means a doubling of prices eve ry 10 yea rs. CONSIDER THE price of your home. ff it has a market value of SS0.000. it will be double that after 10 years. Arter 20 years it will have a price tag or $200,000. and after 30 years a value of $800.000. That's not a m1ll1o n . but neither is a $50,000 home the up· per end or the scale today. it is. instead, close to the median. which means that hair the homes are valued higher <tnd half lower than 1t. 'Bottled Dought' Comes Extra Dry FRESNO (AP) Reme mber the pet rock" Two Fresnans are tr ying to top that invention with their own bot· tied California drought. not draught. John Matlock. 23, and Michael Wool. 24, report brisk sales of their Drought Le Drought Extra Ory. . A plug by Johnny Carson on THEY H A~ E S~LD 1.200 his nightly ta lk show boosted ca.ses of the .brew that con-s ales of the s pecially of Dry tams no calories, no art1f1c1al Rock Vineyards, a Berkeley pos t sweetn~rs and no synthetic pre-office box. s e_rvat1ves. Suggested r etail "We figured we ;ust had a price of the 1977 estate bottle 1s California market. but it is going $4. nationwide . . and we are get· For the !1lone¥. t~e buyer gets ting inquiries from overseas." an attractive R1eshng-style bot· says Matlock. • tie. a tasteful label and an ex-HE SAID IN that area where plana~ory folder C<?mp lete with the California drought was light· ser~ 1.ng su gge st 1 ~~s ~nd a• ly publicized, the product is re· cert1f1cate of a uthent1f1 callon. re rred to as California air. The $75,000 home, doubling in price every 10 years. would have " market value of $600,000 after 30 years or 7.2 percent inflation. Still not a million. you say. True. but after 40 years it would be. YES. AND AFTER 40 years a $5.000-a-year college education would go for $80,000. a $7,000 a utomobile for SJ 12,000, an 80- cenl package of cigarettes ror $12.80 and a $12 steak dinner ror $192. before tip. We II. you say. 1 l all evens out. But il doesn't. Unless it contains an tnflation escalator clause. the payout of your ins urance policy will be in those old dollars . And your bank account will have diminis hed Your paycheck might also fail to keep abreast. especially after a certain age -that age depend- ing upon the business you're in and the company you work for. And there are oher problems, ma ny of them . CONSIDER THE problem of capital gains. With houses hav- ing appreciated so greatly, how could a retiree. for example, af· ford to pay the incom e taxes due on s uch illusory profits'? He mig ht have to forego selling. Yes. 1f he could afford to do so But neve r forget that real est ate taxes a re based on the value or houses. and that could produce a situation in which a pe rson couldn't afford to con- tinue owning a house. Those who have studied infla- tion contend that the disease eventually consumes itself, lead- ing to deflation, among other things, and e ven lo various im- moralities. including tax cheat· mg . THE CHANCES OF a 7.2 per· cent rate continuing indefinitely C1rc therefore moderated by lhe INVEST WISELY Ships' Take over Set? f'I>. l\;JMI' ' ::,;inf o' j I( l"" , ~m ~ Ro)"cwJ 1·"~ ,...,.., 1 ll.d v1·,t>t M~ < '°''' I :><It;)! , h:>vl' b n"" c..J!p><lor"""1 Ill<' (lo., Jon~ lndu\ln:J! Avt>roqe t ... ~ be qjod to &ploon m~ opo•ooch •o you ,,, you• t on--entef'Ce J04 I L Jrd St .. L...,.._,.tOl14 CJ I JI 434-46'5 NYSE SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The government has moved to take over three Pacific Far East Line cargo shi~s. virtually sounding the death knell of the financially troubled steamship line. The "preferred ship mortgage foreclosure" complaints covering some $21 mHlion owed on mortgages were filed in U.S. District Court on Tuesday by the Maritime Ad - ministration and involved the Golden Bear, Thomas E . Cuffe and Atlantic Bear. a ll tied up in San Francisco. A s imilar action was filed in Baltimore coverin~ the company's Atlantic Bear cargo vessel PFEL fi led to reo rganize its finances under Chapte r XI of the federa l Bankruptcy Act in January, lis ting assets of $179 million as of last Nov. 30 and habilit1es of $131.5 million owed to t,155 creditors. COMPOSITE TRANSA(:TIONS ~-... ,._.,..,,,.,.. ....... ,.. ~·-·· .... •t-1"1 -............ ,,.... • .,.. ............ t ... ~• ...... '-"'.J/'- . .. ' I ... !:::! : : ,,, tt .. ----· '. ... -.. #1 .. .. ... ': .. probability that a collapse might occur. letting out all the aid that went into puffing up the balloon Deflation has occurred in re lative ly recent years. though none has been so total as the big bust of the 1930's In thos e days you could buy a brand new. two· story. three-bedroom. l l,el·hath house for $3.400. That same house 1s s elling to· day for c lose to $60.000. which gives you an idea or how much the dollar has been inOaled 10 JUSt 45 years. It's an enormous amount, isn '( 11" VES, OF COU RSE. but 1f you go back and figure it out. that rate or increase is only about 7 2 percent or so. the same rate of inflation expected for 1978 That's perspective The a nswer ? Most economists believe that some inflation must be tolerated. and that it can be tolerated without great danger to the economy and to society But the y'd proba bly limit it to 2 or 3 percent. .,w, ......... The official pr0Ject1on for 1978 is 2 or 3 times that LAFAYETTE MAN'S CASTLE TO BE SOMEONE'S HOME Doug Allinger Uses Recycled Material s, No 'Junk' . \ \. Castle No Tract House ~ Man's Dream Built of Recycled Materials LAFAYETTE IAP I /\d fo r a s uburban home Quaint brick castle, early Fairyt ale style. pe rched high a top a secluded knoll. comes with m usty wine cellar. winding staircases. com er turrets and a tall mast Oymg the J olly Roger ''CRAZY HUH?" mused Doug Allinger as he stood outs ide the med ieval-looking s tructure he began building 11 months ago a nd hopes to sell fo r anywhere Crom $1 million to $7 million "Beats me why I did 1t NEW YORK CAPI ComCIH ..,. ,.,,_. lnftatnd I \ ~ht'.~~1;:::l"t!'t~I Cm lShr lJ• I ]). :~:~~</,,, CmwTrl 18', ,.,, • ., •on•• Se<'1f'it1f'\ COMG•n l&' • lb~· tntermk Oeiilf'tS A\.YI ~ OVftr C:onP~p .... J. 4)i,. tntmtG\ ,,,. counter Bank Ct11wto 76' 11 11\BkW\n lnwt•nce & tndu\t· CrO\\(O ,.,. ' ,, .. tw~SoUI at \loO• CuttrFrd I , .. J•mWPt AEL tno ,,,. •.. g:r~E>'tt> ••• Xl , Jam•b• AFAProt ··~ •• J ,., ••• J1ftyFd AVM Cp 7'• l~ Dal• 100 19·. Xl JQ1.lynM guess I JUSl don ·t like tract home!'.> They fall a part Most of them are JUSt a bunch of Junk The 5.500-squa re foot home in this s uburban community about 20 miles east of San Francisco 1!> made of 100.000 bricks salvaged from a dem olis hed Oakland church CEILJNG BEAMS and other timber came from an old bwld 1ng in San Jose. An outdoor stairwell was fashione d fro m riveted hunks of o ld boiler plates Ovt•r The Count••r NASO Listinqs ·It's made with itll recycled ma terials. and we make some. things. like hinges and window fra m es. on t he Job.· Allinger said "We had an architect do some plans but we don't follow them. J design as I go · ALLINGER HAD worked as a grocery clerk. laborer and hod ('a rrie r before learning the <.'as tle-buildmg business from his • uncl(•. a rchitect Carr Jones, who left a stnng of feudal-er a homes 1n P iedmo nt. M ontc lair . Tiburon. Be lvedere and Palo . Alto before his death in 1964. l'. l"' No•~ll lbltri 1111, SohdStS ,:,~: .! '·I YI• 1 &1 ~rl•yM SS'• S6 SCalWtr llp• and Down• 8 • 0 Xetfo s• ... SwG•C:o " ''"' CJ\i. •o .. Oll•rTP 1q~ '°'" SwEIS• ,.,. ' '•*• 1s 1• ,~,. .. Ovf"'r~A·' s•. b'. St..,dyn u~. \.fl! I NEW YC>f'K CAP I The te)jl-1ng hsl .... • PC:A Int tl"9 " • ~::~~~· n•. 111 .. \.how' ,,,. °""' tM Count•• , .. 1. ,~ •• Pab'otB 18•, .. 19 70 , .ioo ,\ •nd ..... r..,ts IMI M W-90nt' up a , • PacG•R 11 1P,. Stefl St .,,. ,. ... th4' most --II>(> "'°'' be~d on ,,, • 18 ~::it , .. 8 .., Straw Ct J7'' JA percent of ,....,. r~dll!U ot "°'''"" ' 1 C> • 10' > Super Er , .. ''· tor I uttdil• 10 Xl» Pf>MEnl 11 • 11"-TIME DC I 1 NO Y(Urlttf"\ tr.01nq ~·ow '' .,~ IM"f AOdlsnW p, 9\o O•vlM411 H 11 Ka,.Stt p1 1P.. ,,,, Pet~rMH 18 18~ TAmH,. ll I• Ud..0 N•I -e>HCeo<ll.f9e c1Wn91'• ••• tnr Adv Ron n. ] g:~~l>."c.9 '10111 11'• ~troll I )'I '°" Tf'<umP h \I d1llt'r-.tKf Del-IM Ot~tOV\ cJOS:•ftQ K4t1Ydr ,. . ,.,, AavM1cr 11 ,,,., '111' '°'. K •m•nA "'• lA'· P•tltf)On 7S 1 16'7 T•nn~nt )() 1' btO Ortl f' MM1 tOO.Y .. " t~t btd pttCf' Alt>erh .. .... 0.tC.tnT ,,,. 1J • Ka mp""m u 11• P•t'dA 1tt lOl-4 " • T11f•ny •&'. 11i. UPS Al••Altx sr u1,, O.ttnt8 n•.nJ. K•t•Gr,. "-I'• PtPrceSS 1t n' Ttcw-•rv •7loo ,, •• N•mt' l.M\I (11(1 Pct Allcotnc t~. ••i.. 0e .. ~y£1 7 • , .... K•y~m I J P.nkrtn JO=>. JI ' To\CoCp ... . .. ;6r'!.0.'~~~ I I > UP 7S 0 :~r~~ 17 ll 01.Cry\ 73' 1 14\. 1Ce.,n1l I) • tS-"9 P1onH18 11 • 11~ TrrrsOcO II ,, ••• . ' . Up uu 13', , ..... D1•nCr1> 1~ 76 1 ~=~,,!~ Jll I J~ Pla"tl,.fl' J • lritoPd ,, SJ' w n11Ctm II ' UP 100 A Furn Oocutel • •loo I) U Pogo Pd 1t • 11 TrotnO<; ,. • • Bid In• ''· .. UP ,. 1 l'.1-16] 116 OollrGn 101 • io•. K•vrF•b 7~1'>'• PO\\I\ ,. 1 T y<,0nFt1 J1 J1~1 ' py(FCI IJ' • ' I P Uo 17 ~ "'Greet 17 .. I] OontO\n 7JI I 18 • ICoyC:Fd 13'• U 14 Pr09ro 1 • 1'. UnMcG1t 8'· ·~ 6 Bt•~•u' I • '• Uo 17.\ AMICfO\ n,. 11•,.. OorUtG\ 1ol , 10•. Key\ Int 10"• ""' Pb!ovN( 10 ' 10· .. US S..•<1 ·~ .. lb .. I C:<1mbMc> \'. ..... uo ti.• ATvCOtl"I .... ., ... OoyteOR H 1\ 1 Kltl"lb<llt 1~. 20\. PurtBen 71~ 77'' U5 Tr<" " 1•11 8 Amie or ] I 16 .,,.,. Up II• AW•k!f19 1l11'> l•1h OunUnO 1\1 .. U I IC1nqlnl 1S'• u~ PutOCaD a•._ a~ UV•8V> 71'• 1•""' • P•~(OA \ ' UD 11 1 Aml•rr 3'.] s •• o ... r.rort ?•·. 11·~ Knape\! ·~•1'-Oudillnn' ... \ UpPpnP •• , .. 10 KO~IFd :t()lti . , uo IOQ Anadlle .. ,.. ••11 EbertlM ' 11, Ktal~ 11>.. 73\, Rwtt!>Pr I l 'h V•ly(,." .,, .. ,o~ '' APactnt \ . " Up 10.1 AnheU\B 71\11 , • .,. E<onL•t> 10'• ""' Lotnuln t&a-:. 19'-1 Ran.ill 10 ,, V•nOu-sn 1\ IS~ " FtE•e< ., . ., Uo 1011 Ant.Cp '" ... EIP .. EI tO'• tft , L•ndRe~ 7', l Raycllrn ~ I>() \lant f'Sn \'o ~·· tl E\Att #t • . UD 10.• ArdMay 71. ''·) EIOtr84' 1' • • LdMCO 10 11 R•i;mnd 2'P • 2b1 • Vtlcro ~ . "'' 14 RuckE,.q I'• ' .. Up 100 ArkWGs 17lo. 11•n EleNucl \ \~ lfdSto• 161 • II R~cgEQo V~NB•n 11'• 11 ·~ Comt.., 111. , .. Uo qg AsdCot• 711., n•.., EIModut ~·I O'• Lin Be" 34''> )I tO' 101-. W\QNC.' ,.1., I \I. lb Hun I Ml a . ' Uo 48 AllGULI IS', IS'll EnrOrv 10•. 71 LOQ<!lt n ,,,,, 131 • Ro.:idE • f>l · ll') Wf'l>l>R\ 11•, \)'. II 0<1t11m I• .. Uo ~I ~:;::~~ '>'• ,,, Entwhll . , ~·. Med•C.E 1~\. 1til..• Robt>My 18'• 1QJ;. Wqn!WA ,, •• 11\.o II AVM C:p I • " Uo Q \ 1-4\.w u•,.. ~\\:~~~. ,, •• 111 .. ~:1r:.~· ''· j Ro,f'IO,, j• .... Weldtrn '" I .. CmplU'<l I • '• UD q ) B•am R• 1f'• 11\rw Xl' • 21 JI~ 3111. ROU\t' 8.,. "'"' :~~l~ .. Q I /I, 10 t oqn1tr,.. t " UD 9 I Basic Rs l'• ·~ Fa bri , .. '" MOIAUt 1µ. 1&'•• RusStov 1b ., 1]•·• l .. J' .. )1 C.enov~ I '• Up q I BauettF .,, , 11'. F10UnLI 1'>1 • 71 Maul LP ,~, .. "'·· Scldl·~· 1 ·~ ••• ~~~~~i. ) '• ••• 17 Vi con ' ., Up q I BaytsMk II' o 11'\\ ~:if sh:, 10 1040! Mc Corm 0 1S' 1 ScanOdt )''• ]•11 J7' • Jl 111 Coml)U' ... ., Ull 8 1 Bullne , ... a~ lb') 37•. McOllav •&N· ,,,., ~~·~~ 0 •8 WOO<ILol 7\' • I• 1• F •H!Src ij • uu 8 ' BetrLdb JS•• lb FIBottn II II~. MldS•W IQ 10 X)l,. 311,. :~:,;;~ ~ .. , .... ,~ Put>ct>CO , .. . '• Up 8 J 01bbCo 11\' u• ... ~:~~n~ q\,. 101• MOIOCao 10\I, 10·~ S..1\0••lt ''• ~~ •'· 1•. DOWN) B•rdSon 11 2e•, 6' • .... Midi Alt\ Svcmsir 1J+ 1 141~1 I ZtonU '• J1'4 11•· Namt.~ Ld~t Ch<J Pt! Br rte hr •.• 1"' FllOQr "'• l?\oe 1 11 16 1 "• I rnt('9£• ,. t I 011 18 ) 8lkH1llP 71!>\ "''" Ft•WdlU .. '• MldlB_, 1\ 1• .\.\.Sfl.lfl .-..m11mnry I CiltOtf'' \ . t. Ott "q 8onanL• s"" s•. For~\10 tS 1. ,., •• ~:~~e~c. 11"· 781~ I Cnttll>"V I . Ofl " . Bnnk\ ,... "" ~:~~.:~~ )! I ) ..... 11 • • Httrdw .. I/ ' '" Oft 16 I Broo"-S 17 2111, ''· a•. Mon!Col 6"" I NEW YORK 11\PI MO'' d( ltYf' OVft ' Ml'1 ~y ,. J Oft 13 0 81'WTOm 171.{,i 731. Ftan•EI u~ 111• ~:~:id 1q•) 101• lh,. (Ounte, ~<;:;~ \Ug?~ieO Ac.~~d NA\0 ' <;u.irdCh I '• Ott 11 1 Brwn1n9 1''·• u1, Frndtc~ , ... ) 1\ 1f,'. ,, •• N~m,. (nq I l 10510• lf)'4 ' 011 ti 0 Bu<•t>tt s .. ~·. GnRIF\1 , • ., q IMoroRr' l'. • Par,11dyn 110.000 I) ... 1)'111 ' Anttr-irn I ' Ott 100 Buc•eye u n ' C.nRe1n\ 111 "' IMo•I,.~ IA 18~ MOvtft., 131.100 •• IA.._ ... .. Nu<lr E ~ • I Ott 100 ~~r~~~~ s , ... GovE ~n 17lA 1JI) !Mote hM q1 .. 1o:a.. OBt>I'• 111.SOO • 11 It 1 13 16 • I t• 10 W'tutfc• 1 '• Ott 9 I "''' )1 G••enM1 17 • 11 • MotCtub s .... •• EnRw 113 000 I • I ,, M,.~n<ll>O d '• Ott 811 CanradH i.... l'. Grey Ad• 1Q 37 M uf'll•r ,, 7] .. , N~#pP>I 101 100 Q•. . . ... 11 O"''"Mtq 1 • . 0 11 8 J C.oSwCo q1-, ''• Glltnht t-4 1S''' ~:;t'l.~r ,,, 1 ,, AoddE • 87 • .00 JOO, I• tl Cot>l>NU<I It I 011 BJ C4olnA1r , '" Gvrooyn . .. 16 " AOu•\~r 8}100 n • 11 •• • 14 RO Proo I • . 0 11 81 C.ple<h ..... 10 . HroRow ,, .... I] • Natl 1Dl'f I\, 8'• Hardw; 1•.SOO 17 I]'• I" IS CnSB•NY t1 I Ott I I Care Co n .. 1•1 Harr,c;:o U""t t-4'• N~R\n ~·· . . 0dYlln ,.000 l I 16 1. 1~ • I 16 16 1RE f, I .. Ott I 1 CenVtPS lS'• IS"-H•r fNI u•. 1•>.t.. NwtckRE .. , .... 1>11 JOO I • ' I\ 1b II SO•Q ,, I " Ott II Clltl"ILH ll'• , ••• Henr•df 10·. ,, ·~· r 1&• '" PosiSul • . OU I 1 O>esUtr 1011 111. Holobm , • 1 • .. NJNC.a'o IS .. 1\\.,. •o"'""'"'o ... ,q P-Ell 1 • .. 011 I t C1rtfeF s 1 •• , Hoover 111 •• n. N•ehn ~ 76' 11 Ofoc lintel lit 10 MMk IV t 011 . , C•llUtA 371• 37t..., HO<llRS ''• 7..,. "41fthn 8 1~"-JI'. Uncnanq~ 1 IOI 71 Ol•onf.. J ' . Ott 6 I CllzUtB }.t~ JS ' Hu<h P•p tJ, U I NoC•rG' 10 10 .... Toldl •'+\tit'' 1 IO" 77 Sonomv1 \1 • Ot• 6) CltJrkJL «l " ' HyitlCO 1' I II NoEOI 11n s.n. \S•• N•w "•Qn' 19 13 Wn01ISI> J • '• OH 61 CtowC:p 13'. 13 .... HY•ltlnt ••• 4\oo NwlNC.\ 10 • 10· J N~w low' •O O'IS~I~\ CrilldWID ' .. Ott so C:otqVrnt , . .., ]'. 1noNu<I 6 6 • Nw\tPS 11'. 11"' fot.i• '\di~ lleQdPrt' • . Ot• S9 MUTUAL FUNDS tNVESllNG • C•Pil s "~ NL t trun r. Y18 rncom J.U )161 MIO 1310 1•11 Fund ••33 tS61>1Sw '""' 191 ISi COM PANIES Utvfn Bullock Fllttld IOQll 10 97 Tr\t \h 10.M 1186 MFO tJ )t 11 67 II tQ407110 Swln GI S61 6.1) NEW YORK IAP) Bullclo. U St. 13 ll .. eoeraled .. und> TrPaSri 143 MCO 11 /0 tQ08 Pl•n tnv 17.0S tl 10 So~t tn 11 •7 12 .. TM loltowtng quo-Ca non I J3 • Ot A(l' Ldf I 00. ll lnoustry l 60 MFB t•., IS 'Ill Pltqrlll II IS 17 16 SPeClra F \ ., NL 1a11ons. suPPlled by Dt•ld 7 TO 7 9) Empit 18 lS NL rntcap 1 00 loll I MMB 9 It 9 S6 Phlrrld 10 SS tf U Sl•te 8ondGr the NalloMl As\0(1· Monti\ lJ 111 ISOI> Four E II 4J NL In! '""' qq3 t08S M<llhtr\ lb., NL p,,(~ Fund\ Com F • " • 67 ation of Se<urllle\ NIWS •71 1001 Hr lc m tJ•ll•OA Inv Gu•d '11 Nl Merrlll Lyn<l1 (;rwtll 10~ NL D•• Fd .,, } I) Oultr\, Inc. .• ltft N"l'\/n 13 60 .. .. MonM I 00 NI Inv lndlC I J3 NL 8a\lr 10 .n 10 H •roco"' y SJ NL Proo F UAI s 01 t,,. D"'"' at Wh•<h CGFuno 10.20 II.OJ 001" t? ., I• 11 In• 80\ Q,. 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'-hW.I,.~ 110 • " ::::. :: I~ l:'ot l'I.· 'U =: ~= -.. r:i:: ~ ,! t. ~ =~111~i· '° i 'TJ ;:: ~ • • ,. • -Yt PG 11otus . 1 » -..-I~" ., •Yi ...., • ... ,...,,,. ,~ s ,. n-.+ i., , , I ,. ts~ ... 1•.c4* 14 .. ~· ,.. .. Atir u•: _,. ., . ~ -~ ... ~ " = R•kl!Clt •• u 1~ ,,. • n f'1t ... OS ... 1J 11 'p;·· · U Ill .tO et ij"· . =t15·•, to') ~ Ell • ~ !tllllf I t • gt·:· flf a; .. 11J 15! ~ E~-, ... ' ~ '""• t: 1'=f ~=, J j ::.~.~ ~-ltO ' J +• !!~.!I ~ S ·~ ··;.;. K I.to • D7 \41 •itlft ,. 1 • ,.,..,.. • • • dNIT .. .. • Yt .... ,._.,_,,. A , ,. It, ....... t.--... • 4 Xerox Troubles Grow HARTFORD. Conn. <AP> -A federaJ court jury has strengthened i t s findln~ that Xe rox Corp monopollJ.ed tbc office copier field at the expense of SCM Corp. Arter the nlne ·m e mber Jury changed two or its 49 fact·flndlng oot· nlons on Tuesday, U.S. District Judge Jon O. Newman ordered It to reconvene July 19 to hear evidence on how much money. lf any, SCM should fel for the anU·trust viola· lions the Jury found. SCM says lt ls due $11.S million for lost prorlts In copier deals, $48.2 mlllion tor the vAluc Its copier dlvlslon would have had without Xerox's conduct , and $16.2 million in lossH from a Xerox marketlna plan. Dama1es can be tripled under al\U· trust law. .. STOCKS I BUSINESS ; l.ower Than Average :. :...-: ... ·~ Dental Fee Ri§e ~ ~I .. ;.· Called Moderate ~: By ... VI. VIA PORTER ~ ~ Se<tllf irl • Wlft l n u letter than could be a top accolade in 1978's anfla· ~ honary utmosphcre. President Carter recently wrote Dr.~ Frank Bowyer. president of the American Dental Associa· ~ lion . ~ ··while seeking deceleration in the medical care sec·~ tor. we note favorably the more moderate behavior of den·~ list fees which have increased at significantly lower ratA!S ~ than physic\ans' fees and most other medical care prices ~ .... We recognize that this more moderate trend in den· tists· fees as m part related to substantial increases in den· tist productivity •ind the relatively greater responsiveness of dental fees to compel!tion." STATISTICS CONFIRM THE WHITE House assess·~ ment. Against an increase of 7.7 percent in prices for all '!. consumer services last year. dentist rees rose 7.5 percent, physicians' fees Jumped 9 3 percent and the cost of semi-.. private hospital rooms ros(· 11 5 percent In the longer span between 1967 and 1977, the overaJI rate for consumer servil'C!> was up 94 percent. dental rees were up 85 percent. phys1c1ans' fees rose more than 100 percent. and semi·private hospital room rates went up 200 percent Today, the avernge American pays 0 6 per cent of his personal 1n co m e for dt>nt<ll services. virtually th<> same percentage as 10 1 Money's Worth -, ... and 20 years ago. As a ...,_...;i~-.------ percenlage of total health care costs. dental expenses have \ declined from 10.9 p~rcent in 1950 to 7.5 percent In 1960 to 7 • percent in 1965 to 6 5 percent m 1970 to 6.3 pe.rcent m 1975. Dentists a1·e "the proress1onal group which has had the sma llest incre~se in their foes ." says Barry Bosworth. director of the Pres idenrs Council on Wage and Price St ability. "They're morl' willing. pe rhaps. tha n some other groups to cooperate in trying to do better ·· This has oc· curred while the cost of maintaining a dental practice has . risen and fringe benefits for employees have risen rapidly. ~ Outlays for consumable supplies and services have~" chm bed substantially and average expenses for operating "' a dental office have ballooned 100 percent since 1967. How has thl' profcss1on achieved this record? • (I I GREATER P RODUCTIVITY. DENTISTS treat 43 ; percent more patients and handle 18 percent m<?re patient v1s 1ts than a decade :.igo and the key reason 1s the aux- iliary personnel they e mploy A dentis t with a f~ll-tim~ as· , sistant raises his product1v1ty by around one·lhard, whale a dentist with a hygienist and a full time assistant can boost : his productivity by 100 percent. the association says. , Modern instruments -;peed up the dentist ·s work as well as make the patient ·s \•1s1ts more comrortuble. 12 • Preventive dentistry has cul back on the patient's • need for ('Xtens1ve reparat ion and reitorat1ve treatments , frequent exams equal fewer maJor dental problems . ' 13 > Ninty·fi vc percent of dental costs are paid pnvate- ly. compared with 4~ percent government rundmg of othe r aspeets of health care Dentists want any nati<?na l health·, plan to include.-dental l':.trt•. particularly fo r chtldren . But • they want to focus the u~c Clf Ii m1ted public funds only to those unable to afford dental services. The ADA says these dental services s hould be provided through a private system of dchnry and that ben(•(1ts should be ad· ministered in the private sector .. THE DESIGN AND ADMINISTRATION or the dental • component of a national health program should take into • cons ideration the differences between the delivery of den· tat care and other health services ... says Bowyer. • "However . dental benefils 1n a national health program should be clearly delineated and mandated m a manner identical with all other health benefits " Whatever hes •n the ruture. the recent past underlines the fact that dentc,il car1: costs have risen lt-ss in proportion • to other health costs Next Prepcnd dental msuroncP Model Design A modelmuk(•r al United Engineers & Constructors. Philadelphia. puts fitting into $350.000 plastic model or a nuclear power pl ant that will be used by the engineering firm to double check construction drawings. San Diego Utility Customers Soaring • SAN DIEGO fAPl -San Diego Oa.s & Electric Co. of.: tlclals soy rupid county populaUon growth Is expected to : push the utility's total number of electric customers past : the 700,000 mink this month. • The firm will have added more than 1~.000 electric: customers in about 3\l'l year~ this month. with no slowdown . In sight .. REGARDLESS OF JIOW l\t CH con~ervatlon our: cusk>mtl'1 pructicl\, this hiah ~rowth rote can only mta.n • that we must rapidly dcvrlOI) new en ray sources to con· tinue our current level of service." com)>an y President· Robert E. Morris said The current San D1tgo Gas & Electric customer· arowth rate Is S.-44 percent per yur, ma.king the firm the lourth·fastest growlnl ullllt.y tn tho nauon, Morris sa.ld. --